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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1919)
TUB DAILY NKHRASK. X " rli, ill Tvi "VT C B2304 saeosoe Ftone B-1392 ft DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT ROSEWILDE Southern Rag-A-Jazz Band The Lincoln Hotel Special Table D'Hote Sunday Dinner Served from 12 to 2-6 to 8 P. M. $1.25 PER COVER Music During Evening Meal Hours ocooocooooocccoeoooogcooocooosccooooooogoo: Going to Omaha Tomorrow? Let us press your Suit for you, and you know it will look just right "ABLE 139 No. CLEANERS AND DYERS "As Good as Any" "Better Than Many' seoGsooooososeeGGeeeeeoec ORPHEUM DRUG STORE OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT A Good Place for Soda Fountain Refreshments after the Theatre and after the Rosewilde Dance. Try the Luncheonette CARSON HILDRETH, '95 and '96 Day and Night Classes Lincoln Business College Accredited by Nat'l Ass'n of Accredited Commercial Schools L. B. C. Bldg. 14 & P St. Phone B6774 The University School of Musi TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR JUST COMMENCING PIANOFORTE VOICE THE BAND AND ORCHESTRAL INSTRUMENTS H PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC II DRAMATIC ART Playground Supervision and Story Telling ANYONE MAY ENTER I COMPLETE COURSES IN ALL REPARTMENTS ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director TOLL INFORMATION ON REQUEST 11th and R f 91 THE COLLEGE WORLD Dartmouth College ia Celebrating Its 15Cth Anniversary In the flrM official noccer Rame a I the University or Illinois, h team com posed of foreign students defatted eleven native sons by a 3 to 2 count st the south campus yesttuulHy af ternoon. The battle was haul Iuii throughout and some good football result ?d from the combat. The I)oan of Women at the Uni versity of Texas Is Inaugurating a nig Sister movement. She states thai ihe upper classmen are not only the loud era that they should be and thin this movement will not only aid the .Yesh men and give them an Insight ,.,ro the community spirit of tho Univer sity, but wll also give the uppcrclass men their problems to work out an1 will develop their .power of leader ship. The Daily Californiitn last . conducted a straw ballot to enable the students of the University to accu rately express their opinion on the proposed League of Nations. The bal lots stated three propositions: (1) . I am In favor of the League of Nations as supported by President Wiimj.., ! (2) I am in favor of the Lea.!, i Nations with restrictions as proposed ! by Congress; (3) I am not in favor J of the League of Nations or any doc- I trine which binds the United SMtt-.-i to vomply with the wishes ol for- ' eign nations. The vote when fount- j ed stood 124S for the first proposi- i tlon, 3S9 for the pecond, and 235 ior the last, thus giving an overwhelming majority for the partisans of the j league. j PRESIDENT WILSON IS BOOSTER FOR FOOTBALL Pays High Compliment to Grid Game in Letter to Carlisle Indian School 14 President Wilson paid a high com pliment to football in a recent letter witten to Carlisle Indian school which has just been made public. He wrote: "It would be difficult to overestimate he value of football experience as a )iirt of a soldier's training. The army ithletic directors and the officers tn charge of special training schools in cantonments have derived excellent results from the use of elementary contact games as an aid in develop ing the aggressiveness, initiative and determination of recruits and the ability to carry on in spite of boaily hur;s or physical ill comforts. These qualities, as you well know, were the outstanding characteristics of the American soldiers. San Francisco, Call. THE PARIS OF THE NOVELISTS Where stood the tavern at which Thackeray found the bouillebaisse that inspired him to song? What is the precise locality of the house whither Maupassant's Georges du Roy went to visit Madame Forestier? Where was Balzac living when he brought into being Pere Goriot and who lived 'round the corner, and what did it all have to do with Pere Goriot, anyway? These, and a hundred others like them, are the questions Arthur Bartlett Maurice answers In his forth coming book, "The Paris of the Novel ists," scheduled for publication Octo ber 11th by Doubleday, Page & Com pany. And whether you have ever given thought to such questions or not, you can scarcely help being fas cinated by the manner in which Mr. Maurce sets forth the answers. The people of "Mon'ee Crist o," "The Three Musketeers," ' Trilby," all he books of Paris you ever read arJ loved, take fi a new life In these pages and move agaij for ycur delec tation. The trails of British and American writers who have invaded Paris through their stories are also picked up and traced out for you. Kip ling, Richard Harding Davis, O. Henry, Booth Tarkington, Harry Leon Wilson all these have at one time or an other turned the steps of their plots Paris-ward. Just where and when and how and what came of it all Mr. Maurice knows and tells you in this intimate, chatty, gossipy, highly in formal volume. The result Is more than merely a book of literary remin iscence and anecdote. It is a delight ful travel book, a study of French manners and a guide to the heart of the "world's capital" as well. A number of graceful line drawings and old etchings enhance the appeal of the text "Silence la golden, you know." "Well. I dont know about silence being golden, but I've heard of people SU. making money out of a still." Boston Transcript. 1 m Have Initiative So Ind Columbus. Tbat's t lu nil son be discovered something wot lb. while. Tbat's tho rca soii Society Brand Clothes hit eoristant'y discovering some tbing worth while now friends ji-ioti" men who have style Mi : in 1 1 vo. When Christopher C sailnl our t: mike (bit we:ld round, a b:t of folks 1;k '.-in-j initiative said be con n't do it. Mnt ho bad the fore i ii 1 1 1 ;:nd fai-'hng dare to go on :vid ma' e good. Ditto Sociity Brand Clothes. In de- fi.'iice t.f s.mie who si.d couldn't be done, Siciety Mrand makers held true to I heir convictions, and today I heir product is known and worn wherever well drossei men move and have their be ing. CLOTHES $40, $45, $50 T You'll be buying clothes soon suit and overcoat, perhaps. Take a convenient hour and come in hero for a rummage thru our stock. It will prove a pleasant hour well spent to you. because it is practically impossible font wide-awake man to realie the real worth of out fall'inff in line. You may Society Brand Clothes with be eighteen, eighty, or any where between our variety will take care of you. Neither does it matter if your reach is up and down or across, we bave the size. We Shire Superior 30 , $35, Leather Coats, Sweaters, Hats, Caps, and New Toggery for the Oklahoma Game. Mayer Bros. Co- ELI SHIRE, President LINCOLN NEBRASKA I'" Right training wins the race. 11 J!-" - -J....; .... .ui'Xii?t-: rrJ StfJr Dixon's That's as true in E,llorat' ' life as on the theMc.hoi r' II cinders. s&rx. It should' be yours Vir, I .1. . mi mi -!!" rZ' vTTrnr r - , m m, 4 Si m WfrC imii Feature O'coats and Suits at $40 $45 "the master diiiLnApencr