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About Hesperian student / (Lincoln [Neb.]) 1872-1885 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1881)
T II E HESPERIAN ST U I) E N T . u Ratals, Mlk umirclhis nt K.ters. Hals of llie latest stylus nt Ivior's. Silk uutl cashmere muillcrs nt Ivier's. A beautiful lino of seal cups at Kiel's. Undetwear to suit all classes at Kier's. All kinds of student' supplies at Fa well's. The latest novelties in neck wear at Kier's. Choice novelties in line stationery nt Fa well's. Papei ami envelope vety cheap at Fa well's. Large stock new books just received at Fawcri's. Rcversablc overcoats it Ewmg & Co's emporium. Call at Ewing fc Co's emporium of fashion for line clothing. All the students go to Fox & Stiuvo for their books and stationery. All the goods found in n first class gents furnishing house, at Ewing & Co's. Nobby line of scurfs just received at Ewing fc Co's mammoth clothing house. Use Glycente of Roses for chapped face and hands. For sale at The Little Store. We've got a sure-enough ajsthclc in school. Its u curiosity and attracts much altcution. Student's head quaitors for coal at of. lice of Downs & Webster, 0. street 2d door wbstof llili. You can rind anything in the shoe line at.Goodrich Bios. Goods the best, and prices the lowest Students will find everything they need n the way of stationery and text books tit Fox& Struve's. Large invoico of hats and caps latest novelties, just rccoived ao Ewinjr fc Co's clothing emporium. "She has (lie complexion of an angle," he wrote to his absont chum. He is in the geometry class. It was shocking to nee some of our most devout students in attendance at those horrid minstrels. The way they catch us now in, "Oh, say, you local editor, hold on a minute, I've got an item for you." It always slop3 us. Yes, the gallery of the cl.apel is closed. George did it with a new lock and a little key. No place to loaf now except under the stairways. T. Ewing & Co. hn the largest assort ment of ovei coats, tilslerctte.s dress and business suits in the city The first snow came on Thursday, the 10th, nt 11:80 a.m. The Cadet battalion bus gone Into winter quarters. 1:. C. Lett & Sou will stand by thu stu dents and give them bottom prices on everything they buy of them. Stttdeuls are invited to cull at T. Ewing (fcCo's emporium, where thoy will receive the best goods at reduced prices. Oh. how that dapper clerk in the O street my goods store did get left! He I was sweet mi one the Univeisity girls. Can the Cadet Band sing? Oh, my, yes the Cadet Baud can sing as well as play. What does it sing? It tings "Over the Garden Wall." Frank Parks, '81, has charge of the ma terial in the B. & 31. H. R. yards at Platts mouth Frank runs up to Lincoln every little while to sec the boys. To the students'! II. C. Lktt & Son have complete stock of dry goods, no tion, etc., and will make it to the interest of students to trado with them. "Bah, Mechanics!" lie growled out, "this unfathomable problem on the inclin ed plane; it's not eiicliii'jd lobe plain at all!" His room-mate fired him. We venture to say that the jewelry store of J. B, Trickey & Co., of this city is the finest in Nebraska. Students arc especi ally favored by the genial Major. The new style of bonnets which the young ladies ire doting on now may be accurately lepresented by slammii.g a ripe tomato against a board fence. Will Jones has resigned the leadership of the Cadet Baud and George Hitchcock has been elected to fill the vacancy. The band was never in better condition. Smoker's ai tides ol the finest quality may beprocuied at Hermiughaus', north side 0 street between 10 and 11. Stu. dents should remember the location. A string baud U the latest addition to 'lit musical organizations of the Univer sity. Whether it will do as well as the Orchestra of several years ago remains to bij seen. Ed. Rich, wiio has been a great si.flcrer on account of his oyos, underwent treat ment recently by Dr. Graddy of Omaha, and is now muoli encouraged by the im provcuicut of his sight. Snatches of "Skids are Out Today," "Dancing in the Barn," "Boceacio," "Turkish Reville," etc., will be floating around the University during the coming weeks. The band boys have received the music mid it h .i tine collectlm. loo One of the Sophomores actually hail the audacity to request his professor to postpone the lesson and take the class down to see the whale because they could euter for ten cents, as school children. "Oh, dear!" burst out a despondent les live, the other day, "how I wish I could excel in something! I do believe if I should kill a man it would not be any. thing but murder in the second digree!" Some of the dror transoms in the Uni versity have always bung on hinges, others just nailed in. A carpenter has been hanging them all on pivots, so that they may swing more easily and better ventilate the rooms. Older student startles younger student on O street by calling his name suddenly, and in a deep voice. Younger student turns around, white as a sheet, endeavor ing to conceal a half-smoKed cigarette. "Ob, guicious," he blurts out, "I thought it was my father! " They had lots of fun over the innocent youth from South Lincoln who prom onadeU the the halis bearing on his back the big headline of a show-bill, "The Monster 1 Whale!" He said, when un discovered it, that he'd like to whale the fellow who put U there. She is in the physiology class, and she advised her sisteis, who are in society to eat fish. "Because the phosphorus will make us smart as you are, Toady?" they asked. "No," she answered, archery, but because phosphorus is the essential thing iu making matches." It was ut the Pu'.ladian festival, last month, that a dashing University girl con. tided to us an observation concerning a well known member of the Union society present. "He is just line a telescope," she said, ' you can draw him out, see through him and shut him up again." Roscoe Pound, one of the most faithful of the four little "markers" of the cadet battalion, is deeply interested iu military tactics. He pursues the study of battal ion movements by the use or a regiment of wooden soldiers, made by himself and uniformed iu blue paper. Roscoe is also a deligent collector of natural history specimens. We learn that Mr. D. H. Wheeler, Jr, cornot soloist of the Cadet Band, has been allured a handsome salary to travel with the Mastodon Minstrels. Mr. Havcrly was struck with bis pesonal appearance, and especially his overcoat, and conclud ed, that he would be a valuable ad dition to the street parade Besides pa rade duty, Mr. Wheeler will be a proniln ent end man, known on the stage as "Brudder Bones." He is to join the com. pany at SI. Louis about the middle of ll('t III'Milll