Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 10, 1917, NEWS SECTION, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1917.
Homecoming of Old Grads at Lincoln
The
DR. BENJ. F. BAILEY
SANITARIUM
of LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
A request will bring to you an Illustrated
Booklet telling you all about this institution.
r
First National Bank of Lincoln
(ORGANIZED 1871) '
Capital and Surplus . . . . . $800,000.00
- , i V
S. H. Burnham, President.
A. J. Sawyer, Vice President.
H. S. Freeman, Vice President.
OFFICERS:
P. R. Easterday, Cashier.
W. B. Ryons, Assistant Cashier.
Leo J. Schmittel, Assistant Cashier.-
N . ' - The
University of Nebraska
Welcomes You All
The Second Semester Begins
January 30th, 1918
Better reisier "Uncle Sam" needs trained men
and women. This institution offers a complete educa
tional course that will fit you for the battles of life so
"Join Up."
,
"The Registrar"
university of Nebrask
Lincoln
a
Th Rfftitrav fcaa a let f pcUt information retarding all Jourm that It will worth whtl to hVt.
.for it U'i fTM.
MANY EVENTS ARE
PIANNEDFOR DAY
Husker-Tiger Game, University
Flay and Society Parties to
Feature Observance of Fif
teenth Annual Event.
HOME-COMING FROGAM.
Friday Might PUy given by lolrenlty
PUyeri at tbe Temple theater for
French war orphan fund. Banquets and
dancing parties by I'nlventlty of Ne
brask fraternities and sororities.
Saturday Morning Annual Olympics of
freshmen and sophomore rlasses to de
termine supremacy on Nebraska field.
Saturday Afternoon Foot boll, Uni
versity of Nebraska vs. University of
Missouri, S:SA o'clock.
Saturday Night Dances and banquets
by University of Nebraska fraternities
and sororities In honor of returning
alumni.
When Writing to Our Advertisers
Mention . Seeing it in The Bee
Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 9. (Special.)
More than 1,500 "old grads" are ex
pected in Lincoln to observe the
fifteenth annual homecoming tonight
and Saturday.
The 1917 homecoming is expected
to surpass all others. A program
ij i old grads' time haabeen planned. Fri-
-i . it-7 i
aay nigni me university piayers win
give a play at the Temple theater for
the French war orphan fund. In ad
dition, banquets (and dancing parties
will be given inr numbers by uni
versity fraternities and sororities.
Saturday morninc the annual
'Olympics between freshmerll and
sophomores to determine class su
premacy will be staged on Nebraska
field.
Inumerable fraternity and sorority
banquets and dances are scheduled
for Saturday night.
Big Day of Year.
Homecoming day has become the
big day of the year for the old grads.
Inaugurated fifteen years ago it has
become to be the most enjoyable and
important event of each autumn. It
has served to strengthen the bond of
fellowship between graduate and un
dergraduate, student and teacher, to
awaken college spirit and furnish a
stimulus for the triumphs of the Corn
husker gridiron eleven.
Ordinarily homecoming day is ob
served when the Cornhusiker and the
Jayhawk clash on the gridiron. This
year, however, the Huskers' ancient
rivals will be battled on their own
field, so the Missouri Eamc, the only
J) other Missouri valley contest this sea
son, was chosen for the event.
t Tigers Improve.
Early ir. the season the TJgers were
reported weak, and they hawe suffered
three defeats. But Owen Frank, who
scouted the Tigers in action last
Saturday, declares Schulte s men com
noe a Dowerful eleven and that three
of the stars of the team will play for
the first time against Nebraska.
A change in the arrangements for
homrcominflr dav was made by T. A.
Williams, superintendent of student
activities m Nebraska. instead ot
featuring the homecoming day with a
series of "all-university" events this
year, tne XMCDrasna management
deemed it wiser' to allow the fraterni
ties and sororities to do the enter
taining at parties and dances. The
Greek sororities welcomed the plan
and have arranged social events seem
ingly without end.
The French war orphan fund, for
which the University Players will give
their play, is a pet undertaking of
the University of Nebraska. The fund
has already reached $io,uuu, sumcieni
to provide for the maintenance of
lot) children wno are victims oi me
war. rracwcauy every memoer oi
the faculty has adopted a French child
to caresfor.
Modern Sanitation
Methods, in Army
Save Many Lives
Behind British Lines in France,
Nov. 9 The American doctors who
are now at work in various parts of
the British front find that army sur
cerv has advanced just as rapidly
since the beginning of the war as any
other branch of war s activities, in
the early days of the war, wounds
were of an average gravity far beyond
that expected from the experience of
previous wars, while tetanus, gas
gangrene and severe suppuration
were general and 'hundreds died of
comparatively trivial injuries for lack
of early and adequate-treatment.
This situation has now teen altered
almost beyond recognition. Serum
treatment has almost done away with
tetanus, while earlier and more ener
getic surgical treatment has largely
defeated gangrene. More and more
of the major surgical work is being
carried out in the casualty clearing
stations, and some of the most fa
mous of the American surgeons have
spent most of their time since their
arrival, in advanced1 hospitals within
sound of the German guns.
The key to the whole improvement
in surgical results has been the push
ing of the surgeon nearer and nearer
to the fighting lines. The enemy has
endeavored to counter this by per
sistent bombing of the advanced hos
pitals, but the saving of life is more
than worth the loss of life, and suit
able defensive measures are being
taken.
The doctor, as distinguished from
the surgeon, has also accomplished
wonders in this war. The small mor
tality from disease in the British and
French armies is due to his constant
vigilance. His two great weapons
have been sanitation and prophylactic
inoculation. In a scene of unparalleled
confusion and in an area of quite
primitive sanitation, his exertions
nave resulted in an astonishing de
gree of sanitary efficiency. Refuse
is destroyed or deeply buried; battle
fields in many cases are cleaned tip
within a few days; pure water supplies
are provided. Everywhere behind the
immediate front, order and cleanliness
are the rule.
The rule of the army medical officer
is not always welcomed by the in
habitants, but it works with magnifi
cent success, until camps and towns,
. which in previous wars would have
been death traps, have a mortality as
low as the most approved health re
sort. The routine work of these med
ical officers has probably saved more
ives than alt the other medical work
, of the war
I . -
SOUTH AMERICA
Offers You Great Opportunities
Roundup of 10,000 Head of Cattle on Tex Rickard Ranch, west of Paraguay river, in South
.America, near lands in Bolivia.
FERTILE UNDEVELOPED LANDS WITHIN
THE REACH OF ALL In the richest undeveloped
section ot the world's habitable lands,
MILD CLIMATE, EXCELLENT HEALTH
CONDITIONS, ABUNDANT RAINFALL, WIDE
RANGE OF CROP PRODUCTION.
NATIVE CATTLE by hundreds of thousands
fatten on the grassy plains.
GAME In abundance, Including deer, spotted
tapir, quail, wild turkey, many varieties of edible
water fowl, and numerous streams literally teem
ing with various sorts of fish.
VIRGIN FORESTS of gigantic trees and wood
for every purpose.
THE WORLD'S GREATEST STOREHOUSE
OF EVERY KNOWN MINERAL that have as yet
scarcely been touched and seem to be lnei
haustable, and PETROLEUM fields said to be the
largest undeveloped in the world.
SOUTH AMERICA IS ON THE EVE OF A
TREMENDOUS DEVELOPMENT in every line and
many FORTUNES ARE GOING TO BE MADE by
those taking part.
YOU CAN GET GOOD FARM OR RANCH
LAND by assisting LA AMERICANA SYNDICATE
defray ihe expense entailed with the securing of
a number of blocks of several million acres of
choice agricultural and grazing lands in Southern
Bolivia and other expenses preparatory to their
development Take the matter up now with
LA AMERICANA SYNDICATE
4th Floor First Nat . BankBldg.
Lincoln, Nebraska.
KEEP FIT
i
i
The Buckwheat Flour
will , prove a revelation to the
housewife and a joy to the family.