The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 24, 1937, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
Societu
qty
Vs 'A
By Johnny Howell Quarterback
ami
Mary Anna Cockle
JOHN HOWELL
as joiinisy skks it
With the coming of Thanksgiv
ing holidays which will see ninny
students going home to see ma
and pa, it behooves me to offer a
parting word of advice. The best
egg nog recipe (and those who
seem to get around tell me that It
it the best) Is found In Harpers
Monthly of December, 1858. It was
then called Harper's New Monthly
Magazine. Here It Is: "One table
spoon of powdered sugar and one
egg for every person, carefully
beat up together. One wine-glass
of wine and. If the ladles arc many,
two wine glasses of water to each
person, The liquid to be put In a
saucepan with a bag of cinnamon.
When the egg and sugar are well
beaten," the saucepan must be
placed upon the fire. The moment
it boils take It off, and. with In
finite care, O Jcrusha! slowly and
calmly pour It into the egg and
sugar, which must be rapidly and
incessantly stirred. The article
continues with an account of a
man known In history simply as
Turner the Generous, famed for
his portages. The author says that
when Turner mixed 'em you were
either under the table at the end
of three such drinks or you were
considered a man of unusual ca
pacity. t
Whiffing aside J wish the stu
dent body a very happy vacation.
Yea, you to Cockle.
AS MAKY ANNA SEliS IT
At last the opportunity has
come for writing a real society
column, the kind they have in the
home town paper where I come
from. Maybe I'm not quite up on
my style on some of this fancy
stuff, but here rocs:
Kenneth Ellis leaves Wednesday
for a short visit In Omaha at the
home of Clement VValdron. Many
informal affairs have been plan
ned In his honor including a tur
key dinner at the Waldron home
Mr. Ellis plans to visit points of
Interest in the city of Omana,
Both young men are affiliated with
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at the
University of Nebraska.
Mrs. L. C. Wicks, housemother
at the Gamma Phi Beta house and
her daughter Miss Priscilla Wicks,
a member of Delta Delta Delta
sorority also plan a jaunt during
vacation. They will be guests at
the T. Harrison Elmore home out
by Memorial cemetery in Fremont.
They are looking forward to this
trip with much expectation as they
have not been out of the city since
their trip to Beatrice in 1935.
Returning to Tekamah, Neb., to
be the guest of her parents, the
Walter Hopewells, is Miss Betty
Jane Hopewell. She will remain
there for several days in order to
renew past acquaintances. Miss
Hopewell is affiliated with Kappa
Kappa Gamma sorority at the
university where she is a ji-.nior
this year.
Guess I never would make good
on the home town paper, so back
to my dirt dishing, but first let
me wish you a grand Thanksgiv
ing. However you'd better watch
your step during vacation, if you
don't want to break into print
next Tuesday.
Maybe It Wii Dark.
As usual Flora Albin and Bdlie
Gray got a bit confused the other
night. They left a crowd of their
friends at Haps and dashed to the
car so Flo could get home early
and make up some lost sleep.
About a half hour later in walked
this charming couple with a very
sheepish look on their faces.
It seems that the"y had been
sitting in the car all this time
trying to turn on the ignition.
Finally Bill happened to glance
more closely at the dash board.
"Don't look now, F'.o, but I think
we're In the wrong car," vol
unteered Bill. So they had to re
turn to find out just where they
had parked the coupe. Next time
they think they might as well try
a Rolls Royce.
UNDER-RATED?
The Phi Gam's have, been r.om
plainlng that every time one of
their pledglngs Is announced the
heading runs something like this,
"They Join the Ranks." "We
didn't think we were as bad as all
that." they contend. I guess it
all depends on whether you're
pun-minded.
WORKING HER WAY.
I hear that one of the A. O.
Pi's, Nelle Uppitt, has a new
means of working her way thru
school. It seems that she has a
pair of those fluffy new gloves
tnat are creating such a sensation
on the campus which she rented
for 25 cents at the last game.
FAR INTO THE NIGHT.
There's a certain Alpha Chi
who stays out in town every time
she has a date with Elwood Pan
konln. The last time they were
together Elwood arrived at the D.
U. house at 4 o'clock in the morn
ing. Any suggestions as to a new
and different way to spend the
hours between 12:30 and 4 a. m.?
CAUGHT IN THE ACT.
One dark night not so very long
ago, the campus cop was covering
his beat as usual when he spied
someone making an attempt to
break Into the Theta kitchen. Of
course the little gal (who was Lu
cille Anderson, by the way) was
quickly yanked out by the collar
and sent In via the front door to
be met by quite a receiving line
of indignant actives. So now,
I've heard, they check up every
night to see that their straying
pledge comes in by the proper
door.
THEY WEAR THE COLORS.
Two siiiny pledge pins are worn
by Mary Jo McElroy of Ds
Moines and Marian Inheider of
Lincoln whose latest address is
the Trt Dclt house. A special
pledge servire was held for the
jirls recently.
SKKN ON AG CAMPUS
Bob Rupp.
MABEL YORKE coming to
breakfast with no makeup on, She
got her face washed In the snow.
The A. G. R.'s getting beat 21
to 3 In the Intcrfrat water polo
meet.
ARCH TREMBLE winning two
bits on a bet that It would snow.
Incidentally, Mr. Tremble's given
name is Archibald.
WILL PITNER giving a speech
in English class with his overshoes
on. What! No shovel?
DID YOU KNOW?
Jimmy Sanders wears pink
carnation In his overcoat lapel ?
That Neal Dawes has a brand
new, fresh haircut?
Dick Madison has a big bump
on his head. He ran into a wall
in dairy class?
Professor Darlington's now def
inition for economics Is, "Common
sense made difficult?"
Hattie Canada makes swell
fudge so I've heard?
Anna June Lynn has a pair of
bright red pajamas?
Rutiell Beerman likes to eat
pancakes at midnight?
Thanksgiving- Proclamation Re-
news Annual Observance
i Continued from Page l.i
commend to his tender care all
those who have become widows,
orphans, mourners or sufferers in
the lamentable civil strife In which
we arc unavoidable engaged, and
fervently implore the interposition
of the Almighty hand to heal the
wounds of tlie nation and to re
store It. as soon as may be consist
ent with the Divine purposes, to
the full enjoyment of peace, tran
quility and union,"
And In World War.
During the World war, Wood
row Wilson called a dav of na
tion".', thankfulness with these
words :
"It has long been the honored
custom of our people to turn, in
the fruitful autumn of the year,
in praise and thanksgiving to the
Almighty God for his many bless
ings... That custom we can fol
low now even in the midst of the
tragedy of the world shaken by
war, because even amidst th?
darkness that has gathered around
us. we can sec the blessings of
God... We have been given the
opportunity to serve mankind as
we once served ourselves in the
if)
Copyright 1937. Loom & M(s TonccO Co
Till; DAILY NKIIUASKAN. W KDNKSDAY.
Alpha Li.mlxla Delta
to Hold Initiation of
Seven W omen Nov.
Initiation services for seven
women students will be held by
Alpha Lambda Delta, honorary
scholarship sorority for freshmen,
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 30, at
7:15 o'clock. All active and col
legiate members of the organiza
tion will be. present.
The seven Initiates me Marjorle
Sarrar, Mary Louise Baker, llor
tense Cnsady, Dorothy Cook,
Blanche Larson, Doris Roddick and
Fern Steutevllle.
Margaret Dole7.nl Is arranging
the program for the ceremony
while Isabel Koscoo Is In charge
of refreshments.
great day of our Declaration of
Independence.
"In this dHy of the revelation
It is our duty not only to defend
our own rights as a nation, but
to defend also the rights of free
men thruout the world... We
should especially thank God that
In such circumstances In the midst
of the greatest enterprise the
spirits of men have ever entered
upon, we have, If we but observe
a reasonable and practical econo
my, abundance with which to sup
ply the needs of those associated
with us as well as our own. A
new light Is here about us.
"Wherefore, 1 Woodrow Wilson,
do designate Thursday, the 2nth
of November as a day of thnnks
givlng." Still Thankful.
President Roosevelt points out
the things for which the United
States, as a nation, have great
cause to give thanks. The harvest
of our fields have been abundant
and many men and women have
been given the blessing of stable
employment. A period unhappily
marked in many parts of the world
by strife and threats of war finds
our people enjoying the blessings
of pence. e have no selfish de
signs asainst other nations .
"We have been fortunate in tie
voting' our energies and our re
sources to constructive purposes
and useful works. We have sought
to fulfill our obligation to use our
national heritage by common
effort for the common good. Let
us. therefore, on the day appointed,
forego our usunl occupations and
in our accustomed places of wor
ship. . .humbly acknowledge the
mercy of Cod from whom comes
every good and perfect gift."
Dearth of Drunken Marksmen
Proves Fatal to Picturesque
Thanksgiving- Shoots, Raf
fles
(Continued from Page l.i
between dunken gunner and pin
ioned bird.
Threefold Thanksgiving.
A Thanksgiving celebration fea
turing the turkey raffle and shoot
about the middle of the nineteenth
century was descrihed by a corre
spondent of the New York Eve-
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With Slap.Happy Joan Davis as their
RITZES pass themselves
"LIFE BEGINS
nlng Post, Nov. 2.r, 1801. "The old
country Thanksgiving," he wrote,
"then as now had Its threefold
character sportive, festal, and
religious - but two of its sportive
elements have now almost faded
away, One was the raffle always
held on Thanksgiving eve. Some
times It was held at a farmhouse,
sometime at the country store,
more often at the local butcher's
shop. Each turkey, goose or
chicken, all usually the relics of the
earlier Thanksgiving sales and
therefore tough and adamantine,
had its number of chances ticketed
upon it in sprawling figures.
A fair sized fowl had ten
chances of sixpence each; a fat
goose ran up to a dozen sixpence,
and a turkey, if fat, fair and not
40, to 30 sixpence or fewer nine
pence. The banker, if such the
proprietor of the raffles may be
called, had little tricks of his own.
Sometimes he loaded up a turkey,
fair to the eye but sinewy in flesh,
with many high priced chances.
Geese, rotund in figure but rank
and fishy from self fattening on
the minnows of their natal pond,
were nnother form of his deceit;
and he had a true Yankee trick of
watching keenly the gambling fer-
)us to ,Jcsl fmvls w,c the
frenzy ran highest.
Drew Trims Suckers.
Daniel Drew, Yankee stock
drover, tavern keeper and later
one of the best known Wall street
speculators of the mid-nineteenth
century, practiced all the shrewd
Yankee tricks and many more of
his own Invention in' the turkey
shoots that he ran. The shoots
took place behind the Bull's Head,
NOVKIMHKK 21. 1937
for MAI) R1TZES!
Inspiration (?) the All-American
dlixy In their latest
IN COLLEGE"
about where Madison square now
Is, and for turtle feasts and tur
key shoots the Bull's Head was
the leading resort. In the fall of
the year, around Thanksgiving
time, they would put up a placard
telling they were going to run a
turkey shoot and would advertise
the price for shots at different
distances.
"Perhaps these prices for shots
may look to be ruinously low,"
Daniel Drew related, "but it costs
money to fatten up n turkey.
But in these turkey shoots the
birds were not slaughtered as
handily as you might think. Be
cause on those occasions I'd man
age it so that the shooters got a
glass or two of toddy, or of whis
ky punch sweetened with currant
jelly, before the shooting began.
"Something toothsome like that
was usually a coaxer for another
glass and then the fellows couldn't
shoot straight. The liquor helped
also in another way. Because
when a fellow's got liquor aboard
he's pot valiant. He thinks he can
hit any mark at any distance,
which leads him to pay for no end
of shots, thus making more money
for mo without taking any more
of my birds."
Dean F. E. Henzlik of teachers
college attended the Minnesota
educational conference at Minne
apolis Friday. Nov. 26 and 27 he
will attend the Chicago meetings
of the committee of the North
Central association dealing with
the subject matter of the prepara
tion of secondary school teachers.
The dean is chairman of this
group.
5
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aestef
UNIVERSITY PLANS
FOUR ADDITIONAL
MONTHLY CONV0S
(Continued from Page 1.1
man Samuel B. Petlengilt of In
diana, and "old guard" democrat
and strong opponent of the New
Deal may appear on the university
program.
Cowboy Poei.
Powder River Jack Lee, famous
cowboy poet and singer, will be
available during December. Cor
nelius Vanderbllt, jr., who has re
cently returned from Europe, con
templates a speaking tour of the
midwest this winter. Vanderbllt
has Interviewed the kings of Den
mark, Sweden, and Norway, the
ex-king of Spain, the new king
of England, and has had exclusive
Interviews with Wally and Kd
ward. His travels have taken him
Into China, Japan, Manchuquo,
Korea, Jehol, and Russia, across
the Atlantic 130 times, and across
the United State 227 times.
Sir Charles Morgan-Webb, an
Englishman, received such en
thuslastlc receptions on his first
tour of this country that he is re
turning this year for another tour.
He is In direct contact with both
British industry and parliament
and is a noted authority on mone
tary policy.
Other noted speakers who may
appear here this winter Include
Ella Enslow, Charles "Tex" Stone
Judge J. M. Braude, Hon. William
D. Saltiel, Walter Mlllls, Walter
Pitkin, Mrs. Martin Johnson, Ed
ward Price Bell, Harrison Forman
Gutzon Borglum, Colonel Norman
Schwartzkopf, Frederic Snyder
and Capt. John D. Craig.
It Is expected that some of these
speakers will be definitely booked
for university convocations soon.
Prof. O. R. Martin of the college
of business administration ad
dressed the meeting of the As
sociation of Credit Bureaus of Ne
braska at Omaha Monday on "The
Undistributed Profits Tax."
You Get So Much
More Wear From
Your Garments
IK YOf HAYK THKM SAX1TOXK CI.KAXKI).
Sanitono removes fill soil revives the colors.'
brings back the original newness.
Modern Cleaners
Soukup & Westover
Phone F2377
Notice the pure white cigarette
paper. . . notice how every Chester
field is like every other Chesterfield
the same size and every one
round, firm and well-filled.
Notice when you smoke one how
Chesterfields are milder and how dif
ferent they taste. That's due to the
careful way Chesterfield tobaccos are
aged and blended.
Mild ripe tobaccos
and pure cigarette paper
. . that's why they're MILDER
why they TASTE BETTER
. . they'll give you
MORE PLEASURE
Dr. Comlru to Address
Scholastic Croup Moot
Dr. G. K. Condra, chairman of
the conservation department, will
present a lecture before the
SChclaslIC group on me evening
of Dec. 29.
His subject will be trie correla
tion work in Russia at the time of
the international geological con-
ventlon. i
Feast of Demeter, Ingathering;,
Harvest Home Made Up
PedigTee of Thanksgiving
Day Celebration
(Continued from Puge 1).
pagan thanksgiving as at ours,
those of hospitality, bounteous
food and goodwill.
Harvest Home.
In England the Saxon custom
of the Harvest Home is still ob
served in rural sections; Scotland
calls its day of gratitude the Kern,
and In North England the Men
supper is the feast that follows
the harvest. It was In England
where the feast days of the harv
est time were observed with such
revelry and gratitude that legis
lation had to be passed to keep
the farmers from neglecting the
crops for which they were so
thankful.
To the Hebrew the Feast of the,
Tabernacles, or of the Ingather
ing, meant the reunion of friends
and joymaklng at harvest time,
and to the Puritan the Lammas
day, on Aug. 1, meant the baking
of the first loaf of bread from the
new wheat and pious rejoicing.
The festivity of Thanksgiving is
of the most remote antiquity, but
the American day, In spite of Its
many ancient predecessors, differs
in its origin from the others,
rrlests, princes and rulers pro
claimed the Ceres and Demeter
days, the Tabernacle feasts, and
the Harvest Homes either for wor
ship or licentious pleasures, but
the American Thanksgiving was
the voluntary action of an equal
group of people.
21 & G Streets
leio