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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1919)
DAILY KCBRA8UN THE ' i 1 1 .1-1 i ' ia- . n S""" till ill I'a:i m : m The Daily Nebraskan UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA OFFICIAL PUBLICATION EDITORIAL STAFF v. . Editor in Chief Katharine Nphr.nch Managln Editor C.ay lord Davis A module Edt.or Helen How.. New( Howard Murfin Nfws wor Jack Lmidale EdUor omM'!!Mk ::: 8 -Mor Held Clltner BUSINESS STAFF . Busir.cFE Manager ;!n II. tiardnei 1,u " , , -,. Aeslstant Business Manager Koy jiiiii" Oificcs: New. Basement, University Hall; Pusine. Basement. Administration Building. Tfl.-.hi-.e: No nd Editorial. B-2S18; Business, H 25-97. Xight, all Departments, B6G96. Fublhod every day except Saturday and Sunday during the col-!cg- j pur. Subscription. rer prmester, fl. F.nter.d at iho postofhee at Lincoln. Nebraska, as seconders, mail mailer undor the Act of Congress ot March S. 1S79 T' ere is evidence of an admirable spirit among: the men in school in reran! to smokinp on the campus. Many have expressed the desire tlrt cards, bearinp a gentle reminder, be placed in the buihlmgs on the campiix. It is the men who do the smoking and if even they who will looe what has been a privilege, or at least n permitted m.sdo mear.or, want to see smoking prohibited, that is surely argument enough to be convincing. s conditions are now it is a hard situation to handle. Many n-cn arc .till in uniform. Some of these ciinp to the habit and privileges that they enjoyed durinp the war. There are also men back visiting who are not acquainted with present conditions. To manv faculty members and to many girls, smokinp is ob jectionable, "it is an evidence of disrespect and a serious lowennp of vtarnlM-.ls for the men to continue to smoke under such objections Few rcn would miss smokinp at school. It would moan a peneral toning- up of the campus. Don't wait to be called down by the janitor. Ticl.tVn up your New Year's resolutions and quit. AFTER ANOTHER WAR With some minor ups and downs pood times continued for seven years after the Civil War. The North was expanding-, employ.np both labor and capital on an incrcasinp scale. Many new enterprises were t arried forward. One of them was the Northern Tad he Railway. Jay Cooke & Co. financed it. The bankers borrowed more money than they could repay, and failed in 1S7S, precipitating a panic that ran from end to end of the country. Many banks failed. Credit was shattered. There followed six years of hard times, with industry at a low ebb Out in Iowa and Nebraska farmers burned corn for fuel. In the Kast the price of a day's labor fell to a dollar or even eighty-five cents a,lWe can have all that over apain. Credit-faith in a piece of paper is necessary to modem industry as steam is to an enpine. The machine will not work without it no matter who is at the throttle or what sort of political emblem is stamped on it. rutting the enpineer in a scarlet or vermilion uniform does not alter the condition. We want expansion now the old industries poinp full tilt at peace production; new and suspended enterprises taken up, such as public building, road improvement, land reclamation, to absorb the labor power released from training camps and returning from France; new markets; industrial developments in South America and As.a financed and directed from the United States. We want groat expansion m many directions. But there is a cast-iron law about it. If we put out more paper than we can redeem we shall come a crorper. Practically every bit of the expandinp will be done on paper ,on a promise to pay. r mally wc must pay or fail. This is exactly as true of government paper as of any other. When we are contracting and everybody is cautious there is little danger. When we are expanding is just when the vital necessity rises of seeing that the paper issued has real value behind it Contraction supplies its own conservatism Expansion needs all the time to borrow it from experience. Saturday Evening Post. Society Social Calendar January S Kr;.a Alpha Theta. house party. DOinn Society Party. Faculty Ha Sigma Alpha KvMton. non rart January 4 Junior Hov- Un.-oln Hotel. Vnlaxrie-Party for Junior girls. TM Onmma lVli.vhon.' dance. Janua:y 11 Sl..hor.i.-:T Ho;. Mixvln Hotel. n. Friday Saturday GEORGE WALSH In a Comedy Drama "I LL SAY SO" ' A Sunhine Comedy THE FATAL MARRIAGE" MUTT AND JEFF In "Pel Luck in the Army" Pricet 5c, 10c, 15c IT IS THE ATTENTION we Rive to correct detail thnt make our glasses riipreme. NO DRUGS used In fitting HALLETT Uol. Jeweler Ettablishtd 1871 mj q PERSONALS All.n P..h-.r V of Pierre was in! Lincoln yoMoniny. Lieut Kenneth C. I'i'"' 17 'ns m!iV vied to Mi-s Marcar I Pvhleibnugh on January 1 in Dakota fit. They will Jive in New York City. William Mourn, t-v'il. i- in Lincoln on a short furlough. Mrs. C. W. Vethe:a-d of Hebron is Visiting Dorothy Ye:l.-ald at Cue Kappa Alpha Theta limiM. UNI NOTICES Lvric Theatre TODAY: 2: SO, 7:30 and P. M. MRS. CHARLIE CHAPLIN (Mildred Harris) In BORROWED CLOTHES" A Jewel picture, produced by Lois Weber, that will fill every woman's heart to overflowing. W'm. Ouick's Orchestra Matinee 13c nd 2c war tax Niflht Shows rnd 3c war tay mm N. S. CAFE 139 South Eleventh Jren Sphynx 4 r ,1 l. l..-.V. Important tneetmK M Sun.lay afternoen. Jam.ary -V ttt Sigmn ' Phi Kpsilon house. Teener Society Teprer mh inv v. ill nio.-t Saturday ; f-venint'. at 7:S" o'clock in Faculty hall. Kv ilo.ly veleome. Wr.-!o-hi Camp Fire The Walohi invites all Camp Fire, Rirls who wish to become members; of Cniversi:y Camp Fire to their meet inp at r o!o,k. Jan. B. lflf. at Wom en's Hall. Pflll?dian Literary Society Olen nteetinp Friday, Jan. S. l!HJ. Good program and good fellowship. Kveiy one invited. 7:S' p. m. Pal Hall. Temple. And can never 1h- worn for a long, long spell. Afterward. That's it. such is life, look all things in the eye Per he wearing blinders, can never get ' by; Mirages are common to all kinds of , strife Mistakes cut as deep as the gash of n knife What's worth while is what's best to ; round out your life, Afterward. L 1 Ml El I v A W ' MM U lllll Hi C. H. FREY Florist 1133 O St. Tliones B C71. Starting Mstinee Wednesday (New Year's Day) Orpheum Circuit Vaudeville HERMAN TIMEERG in "THE LIOL-INN" With the fsmous Dancing Violin Girls and company cf 10 LUNCH EONETTS SERVED i..o 1U 1 1UI H A R M A C Y 11 JAMES C. MORTON &. CO. A Comic Travesty With Wonderful Supporting Bill of Features Mats, (except holidays) 25c 50c Evenings 25c, 50c and 75c Seats Now Selling Phone B-3398 GARMENT CLEANING SERVICE LINCOLN CLEANING ANO DYE WORKS S26 South 11th Leo Soukup, Mgr., B6575 No mattervlatVu av "SAY IT WITH FLOWERS" CHAPIN EROS., 127 S. 13th B2234 DAILY DIARY RHYMES By Gayle Vincent Grubb "Afterward" (with apologies) Life is much like a checker game For the moves that you make are de ciding .your fame But it's better to think with a broad mans view For the things you imagine you'd lots Tather do May prove out reverse to your inter ests and you, Afterward. For instance a man and he loves a girl And the poor soul's head is in such a whirl That he thinks that his life would gradually pine If the offer he gives her should meet with decline And he feels he would die like a with ering vine, Afterward. But a month or two passes, the boob's awake That the plan he has authored, has been a mistake; He is tired of the life of the rolling pin And the gloss that he fell for's begin ning to thin H has found that his hand, played, bids too low to win Afterward. A new pair of shoes for a trim pair of feet We'll say they have trudged home thru slush, snow and sleet Then are set by the oookstove to dry, who could tell That wet shoes will shrink fast but never will swell ALUMNI xfjinte Ida Bonnell Otstatt, 1891. is living at Dallas, Teyas. Mr. Otstatt has been captain of the Dallas home guards, and their eighteen-year-old son, Lieutenant John Otstatt, was an E. A. T. C. in structor at the University of Mich igan. Major Jonas R. Lougley, '02, is chief surgeon of the U. S. troops at Arch-1 angel, Russia. i Alumni who have visited the Alumni j Office recently are: R. W. Thatcher, I '98, who is dean of the Agricultural College at St. Paul, Minn, and Ella Williams Scott, '16, who was on her way to a ranch near Buffalo, Wyo. Lieutenant Scott has recently re ceived his commission in the Field Ar tillery from Camp Taylor. r Terein JANUARY 6th Now classes in all departments. Call and &r rantfi for all or part time work. Catalog Free Lincoln Business College Fully Accredited by Nat'l Ass'n of Accredited Com'l Schools 14 and P Sts. B6774 LINCOLN, NEBR. Dance Tonight ROSEWILDE Scfceaibeck's Original $1.25 EASTERN TRIP MAY (Continued from page 1) OUR JANUARY Clearing r SALE Hawkeyes Monday, then taking in the Northwestern aggregation at Evans ton Tuesday, then Grinnell, Wednes day and Thursday, and finally Illinois university at Urbana Friday and Sat urday. All but Grinnell college are members of the "Big Ten" circle and would have been capable of giving the Huskers all they could have handled. Yesterday's practice session consist ed of a hard Ecrimmage between the first and second teams wi:h the reru- larg showing the advantage aw iibiL 1 1 DISCOUNTS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Fred Schmidt & Bro. 917-21 "O" Street i