THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Mon Tuei. and Wed. WILLIAM FARNUM In THE RAINBOW TRAIL Stirring Sequel to ..RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE" A-SMILING BILL" PARSONS In a Ealdheaded Comedy 'BILL' SWEETIE'' . Admission 5c 10c 15c Bio Show. "d j30 M"iC LAST TIMES TODAY The Best Show of the Season AMEF.ICA'S SWEETHEART MARY PICKFORD In Her Latest Artcraft Play ..JOHANNA ENLISTS" Pronounced by the Press to e Her Best Production Also" Comedy, Topical, News and Official War Pictures RIALTO CONCERT R' ORCHESTRA i-an L. Schaefer, Conductor Shows S.art at 1, 3, 5, , r. m. Mats All Seats 15c; Niflht 25 LAST TIMES TODAY ORPHEUM CIRCUIT VAUDE VILLE 2:15 Twice Dally 8:15 w nRE THINGS HAPPEN" "RUBEVILLE" Mirth and Melody Lawrence & Devarney Bessye Clifford -i Three Kitaro BVothers -roev nnii M'RRIDE Nevks Weekly Accordeonist News Weekly Orpheum Orchestra Matinees 25c, 50c Niflhts 25c, 50c, 75e VAUDEVILLE' Last Times Today Here is a corking Gocd Show The Musical Comedy "OCEAN BOUND" Featuring JOE PHILLIPS A CECIL HIRIES and a company of ten MOSTLY GIRLS' JOHNSON BROS. & JOHNSON In "A Bit of Minstrelsy" THE FOUR KING8 America's Classiest Artists FRED ELLIOTT The Broomstick Fiddler BEN TURPIN A. MARIE PREVOST In "Sleuths" LIBERTY NEWS WEEKLY ' BRADER'S PRIZE ORCHESTRA Three Shows Daily at 2:30, 7 and f Mats 15c Night 25c GaL 15c Today MAT- 2:30 EVEv 7 & 9 Otis Oliver & His Players In - "FRECKLES Matinees 10c. i, 9c NiBr,t 10c, 2Sc, 85c Ht Week -playthings" y a (MBSaBSflBSVBaBBflPBMBSaBaBVSSMBSSSaBai ASKS aa i i r.lADE FIUETUIINEL How Prisoners Used War Bread . Doled Out to Them. Avenue by Which Captive Allies Had, Hoped to Escape Was Really a Perfect Piece of Work Even Germans Admired It There Is certainly more tragedy than comedy In the cruel disappoint ment of unhappy prisoners thwarted to a promising and almost successful effort to escape; nevertheless, the gal lant gayety that has marked so many of the allied fighting men does not fail them wholly even In such circum stances. Lance Corporal Charles W. Baker, who recently recounted his prison experiences In the Metropolitan Magazine, wastes no pathos on him self or . on his fellow sufferers when they failed to get safe away through their Ingenious tunnel, and can even see a funny 6lde to the affair. Some of the other prisoners had be- j gun the tunnel and had worked upon i it daily for a month before they let , him Into the secret, which finally be came known to several hundred of the aptlvcs. i It opened from the last hut at the end of the back row and was headed for the only clump of bushes anywhere near the camp. The soil was so sandy that It was Impossible to make a tun nel In the ordinary way; a long time passed before the boys hit on a plan. After our own packages had begun to come and we had white bread to eat, says the corporal, some genius had a happy thought of using the war bread for bricks. The war bread Is as tough and as hard as rubber and of about the size and shape of a small stone block that you use for paving streets. We kept the bread burled until night Then we piled it up In a kind of crate, and'when the sentries were out of sight we rushed it over to the tunnel. It was the most beautiful tunnel you ever saw. The sides were built up like Lrick walls, and the roof was a perfect arch. The 6and that we took out was the same color as the sand of the camp, and as the ground was almost always wet you couldn't tell the dif ference. We would take it out m small tlnfals and scatter It all over the place. Of course it was slow work making the tunnel, for we had to accumulate war bread, and so to amuse ourselves we fixed it all ;np. We stuck pictures from newspapers on the wail, and we even ran a wire down from the cook house and lighted It all ud with elec tricity, A hundred and twenty yards had been built out of the hundred and fifty that the runnel had to go when a miserable Frenchman, to curry favor with his captors, betrayed the secret The other French prisoners concerned were wild vith rage and shame; and when the whole camp was lined up for Investigation and punishment the French non-commissioned officers stepped forward and begged "for the honor of the French army" to be al lowed to take not only their own share of punishment but that of all the oth ers. But of course, says Corporal Baker, the British wouldn't have that and the non-commissioned British officers gave, themselves up. It was a regular bow ing and scraping, YYou-flrst-my-dear-Alphonse" sort of proceeding. A few of the men were given five months In solitary, but most of them got off pret ty easy, because the German officers were so much amused. They thought they had taken away every conceivable thing that could be used for runnel building, but they never thought of the warbread. German officers came from miles round to see the tunnel. They wouldn't let us destroy It butjrept It as a curiosity. Even the general of division near by came In to see-It He said It was the finest piece of sap ping he had ever seen. Youth's Com panion. . Couldnt Recall It Before sentencing the prisoner the lodge read a long record of his crlm Eliding dating fiwra rly youth. Then the prisoner asked: "May I Inquire your lordship's naroer "What do you want to know my name forr sternly asked the Judge. "Well," replied the prisoner, "since your lordship so accurately described my early life, I ' bot conclude that you and I have been friends at some time. I f11 10 recall you at the mo ment though." Stray Stories. Flying as a Game. Flylnf Is a game for the young and daring and not the staid and decorous. One brilliant French pilot declared : -Flying Is a great gay thing. In III accord with a stodgy prudence and the homely, sober virtues. The thrill and throb of It must strike some chord at . in thA airman's makeup or be ! and It will ever be divorced." ' Young Aviators. - Some of Britain's best flyers are no more than eigfcK-en years old. Trm Pa more thaa treaty-five. Regulation Clothes HEADQUARTERS O. D. Uniforms and Overcoats READY TO PUT ON and wear out of the store We are catfltting scores of S. A. T. C. and S. N. T. C. men Everything, regardless of arm istice and peace negotiations Uniform making gave us a great opportu nity to show the superiority of Society Brand clothes. "Government specifications fixed the rules for all the makers and all started on even basis. Then we were able to show, in spite of Government restric tions, the distinction of Society Brand. Society Brand style begins where other makes leave off. Society Brand style came to the front as it did in civilian clothes. Inton thesii uni forms is hand-tailored the exceptional style which distinguishes them the trimmer lines, the smarter carriage and the smoother looking fit. Remember, personal appear ance counts for a lot in the selection of men for promotion. Society Brand uniforms are ready, for officers or its auxiliaries Amy, Navy, Marines, Y. M. C. A. and Red Cross. .LEATHER AND CANVAS PUTTEES, HATS, CORDS, PILLOWS, SHIRTS, OVERSFAS COATS. COM FY KITS INSIGNIA, SHOES, ETC. Mayer PERSONALS '21. returned Sun- day from her home in Woodlake. where she has been for the part three Frances Anderson, '21. spent Sat urday rod Sunday at her home !n Wahoo. . Ruth Anderson, ex-'19, i Kuest at the Alpha Phi house. Katharine Sturdevant, ex-'U spent Sunday at the Alpha Phi boua Lieut. Haroia rei". '! tioned at Camp Funstoiv spent the I . i at riin Till Oliitr i week-en a tb v hFrence Ebberson of Oakland and Mildred Shirley of Hunboldt were weekend vlstior. at the Chi Omega house. Miss Shirley Is waiting her call from Washington to go Into nurses' training. DAILY DIARY RHYMES By Gayle Vincent Crubb "ARMISTICE" Come on. pardner, thump yoi'r bead, ivm'f vo jow Hie news, yon Cuss? Get up on your feet and fill your lungs For the day belongs to us. The Kaiser and his twobit soa ml im&A Eli Shire, Pres. Have flown the Royal Coop; The guy who said the Yanks were bunk, Was finally made to stoop. He has left the halls of sauerkraut To wander out at night, Discredited by his Vaterland, . A lamp without a light. And Peace? We have it, thank the Lord; We've bent the German will With kulture dying a gruesome death, I can't but feel a thrill That out there where the flghtln' was Were Americans keen as a sword, WTio did their bit and did It brown To throttle, the German horde. So I'm atartln' to lay, some stuff away, If the moment be early or late, That when they come back 111 be primed to the ears. And raiin' to celebrate. Well, wake up Pardner and pinch your skin, I've never seen such a cuss. Get up on your feet and fill ycur lungs For the day belongs to us." The federal government played no favorites In New York, when the order cutting down sugar for candy and es tablishing a deadline for "boote" was sect out. I HAND GRENADES Have you heard that the war If over? We've hoard a rumor to that effect. Say, it's great to have an eight o'clock class after you have been cel ebrating the ending of the war, from two bells until dawn. To hear some lovely maidens talk, one would think that the A. E. V would be home tomorrow. They say that anticipation Is greater than realization. It is not. If you have ever stood for two long hours, while the chilling braazes whistled about you, waiting for a parade, you would know that the Joys of anticipa tions are few and far between. Someone has said that since the war is now over, we should no longer have to pay war-tax on our movie tickets. We wonder if this person now takes a second lump of sugar in his coffee? Alonzo Simpson says: "Now well have to buy firecrackers twice a year for our kids." China is to get a loan of $50,000,000 from the Unlled States. Ttre world rule Just now is when In doubt of where to get anything, ask the United States.