The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 18, 1919, Image 4

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    The. House of Kuppenheimer Clothes
Remember the raft that we told
here before;
The bunk that you read and raised
right band and swore
That the activity under the pate of
your head
Must be sickly or dying, or, even yet,
dead?
DAILY DIARY RHYMES
-by-GayU
Vincent Grubb
t
3
Well, we have returned to the pen
cil and pen
Just to scandalize news as we scan-
danlzed then:
Or to "pass on the joke that some
duffer has told
And to keep the down-hearted get
ting too old
Or decrepid to smile, as they go clay
by day
For that's all we're good for anl-
that's all today.
THE COLLEGE WORLD
Maryland State
All the "rats" and "rabbits" got
together and gave the school a big
entertainment. This Is the first fresh
man show in the history of the co'lege
and was pronounced a great success.
John-Hopkins
The alumni of Hopkins have organ
ized a 'varsity club. The object is to
promote interest of school athletics
in the alumni and broaden the slope
of the university's athletic campaign.
Vermont
Hostilities between the two lower
classes ended a short time ago, the
freshmen far out-classing the sopho
mores, winning by nineteen points.
Princeton
Fifteen million dollars has been left
Princeton by the late Henry Clay
Frlck.
John-Hopkins
McCoy Hall and Levering Hall were
lost In a one million-dollar Are, which
took place Thanksgiving night. '
Kansas
A good many of U. of K. men have
turned out to mine coal to help re
lieve the coal shortage. They get cre
dit for this work if their studies are
up to par.
Georgia Tech
Tech's large R. 0. T. C. is certainly
booming this year. Each regiment
and battalion has a chaperon, and
each company a fair co-ed sponsor.
Tech also will have a big rifle team
in the next national matches.
Airplane Ride for Best Subscription
Getter An airplane ride has been planned
for the woman at the University of
Minnesota who get the greatest num
ber of subscriptions for the "Gopher,"
the monthly publication of that uni
versity. IN DAYS GONE BY
O" Ve.-r Ago Today
Coach E. J. Stewart came back
from Camp Gordon, Oa., where he had
been athletic director for several
months.
Four Years Ago Today
Business staff of the 1916 Cornhusk
er announced.
1 Five Years Ago Today
Beginning of "Agricultural Week.'
Extra "Rag" publishta for "Ags.'
Eight Years Ago Today
Iowa won the Iowa-Nebraska de
bates two to one- The governor of
Nebraska presided.
STATE FARM TESTING MILK
In accordance with the provisions
of the new stata dairy law which
becomes effective January 1, the de
partment of dairy husbandry of the
University of Nebraska has begun
testing Eabcock milk and cream bot
tles, pipettes and weights of concerns
Luying milk or cream. The law pro
vides that after January 1, next, all
nersons buying milk or cream on a
Lasts of the amount of butter fat
hall have glassfare tested by the
dairy husbandry department and
stamped ,S.'a. N." (Standard Glass
ware Nebraska).
"Prof. J. H. Frandsen of the dairy
luisbandry department spent last
week In Chicago, looking up appa
ratus and studying the best methods
ct standardising weights and meas
ures. About 2,000 tests have been
made so. far and probably 30,000 will
have to be made thle year in older
, to outk tk law entirely effective. j
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PHILIPINO WOMEN ARE
EXPERT NEEDLE-WORKERS
(Ly Walter Robb)
Mxnlla Oil 20 1919 PhiliDDine
embroideries are more and more
vogue, and well they may befr
there are no commercial needlework
ers In the world superior Ur the Fili
pino women who are nor only, since
the period of the Great War, duplicat
ing with entire satisfaction the form
er product of European centers of
this fine old handicraft, embroidery,
but are also weaving the laces of old
Cluny and Valencia. Filipino women
have had skill In needlework for cen
turies, but where once they amused
with it, donating the product of pa
tient hours to the Church, they now
make it means of livelihood.
The finest product of the Philip
pines is done on pina cloth, a typical
lv native fabric woven on hand-looms
from fiber won from the spined leaves
of the pineapple, interwovea with
silk. It is delicate beyond descrip
tion, yet strangely substantial. Voi
ding gowns made of it may be worn
by the proudest bride of the Metrop
olis, and then laid away and kept for j
TU Hook ol Kiipptihannc
Useful
Furnishings
Make ideal
Xmas remembrances.
Buy them
Here and
Be sure of
The quality.
men.
P
generations to follow. It will age a
softly tinted saffron, but It will never
ceuH to be a fabric.
The usual commercial product is
done upon standard fabrics made In
American mills and sent out to Ma
nilla stamped tor the working all ac
cording to the latest designs; or it
will be sent out to branch houses of
large New York firms established In
Minola, where the cutting and stamp
ing will be done, and where some
several hundred workwomen will be
employed at grading, finishing and
packing the provincial product. When
it leaves Manila, it is assorted and
priced upon commercitl standards;
and even the less worthy of It Is a
very desirable addition to milady's
wardrobe, while nothing is more fit
ting in a "hope box."
One will examine Philippine em
broidery, and swear that machines
have been used; but no, the sole ma-
pine embroideries is the needle and
the thimble, eked by Oriental patience
and pride in tasks well done. Pa
drones are the go-betweens from fac
tories to workers. They receive their
quotas of stamped mateiials front th
factories, upon which a price is set fori
WHAT a feeling of genuine joy to forget all about books,
quizzes, lectures, "hard-boiled" profs, and to give your
self up completely o all of the good times that the holidays
have in store for you!
It's a time when you mingle with old frienris and meet new
ones. Delightful informal parties and various other social
functions have their place
pear at your best.
A new Kuppenheimer suit anidvercoat will complete youv
holiday enjoyment. Some mighty good ones have just arrived
. new ideas in stylish sujts; big, warm Kuppenheimer ulsters
and ulsterettes; the lastvord in fashionable attire for young
Quality Clothes
"The Store for a Man's Christmas"
Uncompleted garments. Thus sup
plied they go out to the villages of
thatched houses surrounding Manila,
and pracel out the contract. Maria In
this little cottage takes a dozen chem
ises; Dolores in that one across the
street takes a half dozen; Rosa and
Gncarcacion, further along the road,
want to do three dozen, but the work
must all be bank at the Manila fac
tory by the tenth or some other day
fired upon between the padron and
the factory management and they
are persuaded that two dozen will be
their limit this time, since the work
must be above criticism and rebound
to the good name of the barrio.
In this manner the whole contract
is placed, amounting to hundreds of
pieces, and even thousands. Needles
ply to the sound of crooned Island
lullabies they ply, that children may
be fed and clothed decently for school
and all goes very merrily indeed, un
less the padron becomes dishonest
and attempts to gouge the patient
workwomen. Then their patience sud
denly ceaseB, and their hands are
stubbornly Idle until tbe wrong Is
made right. Dishonest pad rones bare
Home for
the Holidays
-and dressed in
Kuppenheimer Suits
and Overcoats
occasions When you 11 want to ap
:
been the sole stumbling block in the
way of New York houses. In building
up their Philippine business; and
even these troubles have been rare.
The movement received its first im
petus from the Philippine public
schools, where girls and boys are
given special industrial graded studies
from books. The household training
is classified as "educational;" the
training in embroidery, lace making,
crochet, etc., is called "commercial,"
since it can at once be turned to ac
count. The product ot the schools is
handled through a retail and whole
sale system, and the profits revert to
the pupils. Girls are able to buy
their books In this way, and their
needed supplies of paper and pencils.
It is very handy pin money, which
they are glad to be able to earn. Such
work has been fully organized In the
Philippine public schools for more
than a decade. The growing embrold
?ry industry is a direct result of this
practical educational work.
One New York firm has $700,000 In
vented in Its Manila field and Intends
to keep Vddiag to tul until the capi
tal employed there shall araouat to
$1,500,000 or possibly $2,000,000.
Asked If the ending or the Oreat War
and the consequent reopening of Eu
ropean fields of band needlewerk
would alter their p!af eprescntativ
ct this company salC, "by to mean.
TYe flr.J the Ph lippue product ex
cels the product of Europe, the work
worn nu quite as dependable and tbe
business in every way more satis'40'
tory. We shall only add to our Phil
ippine business, not curtail it."
Several things recommend tbls
course to the trade, not least anions
which Is the peace existing In the
Archipelago, contrasted with the un
rest and uncertainty prevailing la 3"'
rope, and th lact ihat Filipinos in
cline to peace and industry an aj
little glvej to following the advice ( )
of pamphleteers and philosophic1
propagandists. For centuries the Fl -plnos
struggled for the opportunities
which have come to them under the
America flag. Now that they
them they want to make good. Thr
are asking for political Independence,
but they waot comiwsrelAl as
social ties to grow and strength0
v.'th time
1