Besi r A vail a lie c o r Thanksgiving Announcement thankful tu the Student of the University of Ne- We are Hotly lira ska for the luiRe umoiint of work they have given up this year. It convinces us that our work Is satisfactory. Call uh today or tomorrow morn ing and we will return your clothes to you Wednesday evening. Nebraska Freely Gives Her Sons To the Cause of World Freedom Olive Drab Wool Suits $22.50 Olive Drab Wood Overcoats . . 22.50 Olive Drab Wool Spiral Leggings . . . 3.00 Service Hats. . 1.85 Overseas Caps 2.00 Army Shoes. . . 6.50 all other articles of Uniform Equipment at comparatively prices. Send for our special "University Price List" ARMY & NAVY STORE CO., Inc. 245 West 42nd St., N. Y. City Largest Outfitters Gov't Contract ors and Makers of Uniforms and Equipments ' And and low- On 11th at P Street VON It Ik inornlnK of the most glorious Thanksgiving day ever known. All peoples the world over are rejoicing and glvlm; thanks that they have been liberated from the clutch of militarism for nil time. And Nvbraskans, scat tered far in strange lands, are brought closer home on this day by the bond of appreciation for the part their Alma Mater has played In the winning of the war. The university was called upon to give and she did give, her j buildings, her money, her co-operation with the government, and her men. When the summons came, they laid aside their books said goodbye to home and friends and went to serve best they could. in the sdiIiik of 1917. while the university was spending Its vacution at home, the president of the I'nited States declared war mi Germany. When the university reopened onv,rsitv April 11th, the registrar's oflice was flooded with applications for with drawal from school. The boys enlist ed In every branch of the service and very soon the campus took on an air of desertion, for in about three weeks after the call for volunteers came, more than a thousand lads had left to serve their country, some headed towards the training camps, some toward the farms and some immediately bound for over-seas ports. They went, wherever they were sent only too anxious to get into the thick of the light, and help to down the tyrant. And they went 1n such num bers that now in addition to the 2.500 S. A. T. ('. men stationed here the records in the office which are still incomplete, show that over two thous-; and Huskers are in the service of I I'ncle Sam. General Pershing a Cornhusker The greatest of all Cornhuskers is the man tt) whom the world turns to day with thankful heart, a man of unequaled genius, devotion and pat riotism, the commander of our expedi tionary forces abroad. General John J J. IVrshing. N'ebraskans have always! considered General Pershing a Xe-j braskan. He w as a first liutenant in j the I'nited States array when, from j 1891 to 1895, he was acting as com mandant of the cadet battalion and! military instructor in the university, i At that time he made his home 1 Lincoln, and it was here in lmivprsifv thai he of bachelor World-Hero! "Ther sen C. H. FREY Florist 1 133 O St. Phones B 6741-6742 tne- I 1 V 1 I ( f 3 t I ! t li- . LUNCH EONETTS SERVED I L L E R 9 S RESCRIPTION II A R M A C Y BEST PLACE TO EAT ORPHEUM CAFE 1418 O Special Attention to University Students PISJM 139 South Eleventh vji iih i i ii n m ii iiiuvei- sity, was called to Washington, to, take up duties in the chemical war-, fare division of the I'nited Slates; army. Major Frederick M. Fling went I tt) Washington to act as head of the j official historical department. He is; also compiling a history of the world. , war. Major w. . r. moui jomeu the Kngineers Officers Reserve Corps, , I Q. M. department. And many other j I well known faculty members have jgiven to their different branches of I the service, that loyal support and diligent work for which they were known on the campus. Hospital Unit, Overseas In March of 191.X a hospital unit composed wholly of N'ebraskans was ordered to mobilize and shortly after ward left for Camp Podge for a period of training. This unit bears the name University of Nebraska Base Hospital Corps and consists of 25 professional men. 100 Red Cross graduate nurses, 152 enlisted men for skilled labor, to gether with a number of ambulance drivers. The unit is now in France and is doing a big work in caring for the wounded boys. Recent information coming from France is to the effect that some three thousand wounded Nebraska boys are being administered to by this unit, and a movement is now on hand to raise funds to continue the good work. In spite of the fact that many of our boys are being returned to us, still there are many who are too ill to he removed, and there must be money to provide the things to make them well. Twenty-seven Stars Changed to Gold The uenlth of all glory la the su preme sacrlllce or those who gave their life's blood tu save humanity and es tablish an everlasting peace. Twenty seven stars on the huge university service flag have turned to brightest gold, and many more-the list Ir very Incomplete have been changed to silver. N'ebraskans tiled following the Stars and Stripes. Lieutenant Colonel Morris Nathan Uebmann. Infantry, was killed in ac Hmi in Flanders. August 3. 1918. Col onel Uebmann graduated from the mil in 1900 lth a H. Sc. and K. K, degree. He was an officer of the 23rd Reciment. New York Infantry, for many years ami was caiieu tun mi ui 'vice on the Mexican border in 1916 'The 23rd regiment was absorbed by the 105th Infantry at Camp Wads worth where Colonel Uebmann was stationed before going across. In business life he was vice-president and secretary of Foot e, Hereon & Co., Inc., and devoted his time to manufacturing electrical apparatus and wireless In struments and accessories for the gov ernment. Arthur Henry Marsh, a chaplain j with the third battalion. 18th Infantry, A. K. F.. was killed while administer ing to the wounded soldiers on the battlefield. October 7. 1918. He grad ' uated from the university in 1905 w ith an A. H. degree and was the first Rhodes scholar to be sent to Oxford University in England. He will be re membered as having been un the toast list at the Phi Reta Kappa banquet in 1917. He left Omaha, where he was rector of St. Paul's Episcopal church in July and was killed about four months later. His father is the Rev. A. E. Marsh of Blair. Lieutenant Grosvenor Phillips fath er, son of G. P. father, Bladen, Nebr , was killed in action with the infantry in France. May 28, 1917. He-was" of the class of 1908 -w" Lieuteivr;rt'.--mird Eugene Cook. ex -'20 who was with the 16Stn ry, Co. C, A. K. v., was killed n August 4, 191S. Cook attend- first O. T. C. at Fort Snelling. is staff correspondent for The N'ebraskan while there. Later it to Camp Podge where he is an instructor. He was the Ernest E. Cook of Council eant Charles Wright, ex '19, of bluff, Nebr., died in France on er 11, of pneumonia. He enlist- the field artillery branch of the ce about . year ago, and was sent ranee after a short period of train- in the south. ; idrew Emmet t Anderson, B Sc. of Lincoln died October 11 191 S. efferson Barracks of the influenza. Valdo Cornell Arendt. ex-'13. of leoln. died of pneumonia in the avia- n camp, Garden City. i ., last epteniber. David Peaii Barrett, ex'19, of Oma ha, who enlisted in the navy in th" spring of 1918, trained at the Great Lakes station during the summer and was later transferred to Nebraska for lurther training, died in Lincoln, Sep tember 27. 1918, after being ill with pneu monia. William Lloyd Davis, A. B., '08, son of Mrs. D. P. Davis. 821 So. 15th St, Lincoln, was accidentally ktlle I w hile boxing in camp. He sustained a frac tured skull from a fall and later died. He was a private in the Marine corps and was stationed at Mare Island, Valejo. Calif., at the time of his death on April S. 1918. Francis Umis DeBi iinner, A. & S , ex-'20, of Lodge pole, Nebr. stationed with the 335th Infantry, Co. A, was gassed in action August 28, and died September 9. Fletcher Lawrence Farley, LL. B.. '13. died in a hospital in France of wounds received in action. He left his ho ne in Bancroft, Nebr., to enlist in the U. S. Marines in February. 1918, and for awhile was stationed at Paris Island, South Carolina. He land ed in France June 8, and was shot while trying to rescue his officer. Joseph C. Flaherty, son of Mrs. Mary Flaherty of Plxon, Nebr., who was a special student in the law class of M8, died in a Lincoln hospital, Octo ber 18, while at home on a furlough. m iff $25.00 TAILORED SUITS If you wish a Suit that is good enough for dross and not too good for business and general wear, buy one of those pretty belted garments of wool poplin in navy blue or black; some neatly trimmed in braid, others in velvet. You'll find they meet every require ment. And the price is halved to dispose of the few we have left. U N I F O R MS Complete Outfits S A T C Overcoats Wool Uniforms Army Shoes Army Sweaters 'Jais-..id Caps Leggings Puttees Insignia, Cords Shirts Sheepskin Coats Uniforms Made to Measure Military Instruction Books Send for Catalog 14 Satisfaction or Money Back 37 West 125th St., New York City 1 i ' 1 . '!!! urn i i w v i 4 I Every Soldier Will have a portrait before he is mustered out. The best is none too pood. Let TOWN SEND Serve You A SPLENDID CHRIST MAS TOKEN SIT IMMEDIATELY "Prenrrve the present for the futun " No matter what you say SAY IT WITH FLOWERS" CHAPIN BROS., 127 S. 13th B2234 ORPHEUM DRUG STORE OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT A Good Place for Soda Fountain Refreshments after the Theatre and after the RoiewUde Danes CARSON HILDRETH, '95 and 98