The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 09, 1915, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    AILY NEBRASKA N
THE D
i'
University of Kansas Gets $25,300
From Football
Football at the University of Kansas
brought a total of $26,305.61 into the
athletic treasury during the y914 sea
son by W. O. Hamilton, manager of
athletics at that university. Of this
$16,701 was taken In at the Missouri
game. Expenditures netted $18,014.63,
giving a profit of $8,290.83 for the sea
son; This amount does not Include
$4,416.00 which was paid for student
enterprise tickets.
The report shows that although
Kansas took a 35 0 defeat on their trip
to Nebraska the athletlo association
received $5,017.29 as a relief for their
wounded pride. Next to the Missouri
game, the Oklahoma game was the
best paying home game. The Kansas
Aggies pulled the third largest crowd
of the season.
The largest Item of expenditure was
the settlements given to the different
teams. This alone took $10,373.27 so
that the actual cost of turning out the
1914 eleven did not amount to more
than $8,000 Including coaching sal
aries, railroad far and everything.
Arrow
SHIRTS
are fast in color
and steadfast in
service.
$1.50 up.
Cluett, Peabodv & Co.. Inc. Maker
The University of Chicago
HOME STUDY
In addition to resident work, of
fers also Instruction by corres
pondence. For detailed Information
address
U. OF C. (DIV. H) Chicago, III.
22nd Year
TRY OUR FOUNTAIN
FILLER'S
IfRESCRIPTlON
U HARM AC Y
Cor. 16th & O St. Phone B4423
GEORGE BROS.
Ipdntfno
1313 N STREET
Photo Supplies
Films, Plates, Flash Powders,
Cyko Paper, Printing Frames,
Trays, and In fact everything
you need to make pictures.
We teach you how.
Camera Exchange
1552 O St
Our Business to Sell fill HI
l.l llll
Your Business to Buy UUnb
FRATERNITY AND 80RORITY
TRADE SPECIALLY SOLICITED
A few of our leaders:
Komo Try It $8.50
Eureka Semi-Anth $7.00
Washed Egg $6.00
Spadra $3.50
Other grades at low prices.
VHITEB RE AST
COAL GO.
107 North llth
NEW BOOKS ADDED
(Continued from page 1)
Macmlllans Magazine, 1860-1907.
Manby, J. M. A Manual for Writ
ers.
Maschke, R. Zur Theorle and Ges
chlcte der Romlsrhen Agraresetze.
Mitchell, P. C. Thomas Henry Hux
ley.
Newton, Sir Isaac. Prlnclpla, First
Book. Sections 1, 2, 3.
Plgon, A. C Principles and Methods
of Industrial Peace.
Rose, M. S. A Laboratory Hand-Book
for Dietetics.
Shuman, E. L. Practical Journalism
United States War Department LI
brary. Bibliography of State Partlcl
patlon In the Civil War, 1861-1866.
Weber. Max Die Romlsche Agrarges
chlcte Ihrer Bedentung fur das Staats
and Prlvatrecht.
Werner's Readings and Recitations
White, A. D. Fiat Money Inflation
In France.
E Pluribua Unum
When Taylor rises to remark,
On this you may depend,
He's going to talk till after dark;
To stop he don't pretend.
His mind Is active night and day,
He's neither deaf nor dumb;
His soul with what he has to say
Is overflowing some.
At home he guides the stirring plow,
Or brands the blatting steer;
He ought to lie in congress now
Instead of being here.
When mighty Clncinnatus strode
From field to forum, straight,
No fellow in the senate showed
Such license to be great
I'm speaking for Nebraska's son,
And I have said long since,
"Bill Taylor down at Washington
Would make the bald jades, wince."
I hope some day to see him go,
A mighty mark to make;
And if he fails, then shall I know
That justice Is a fake.
Bix in Dally Drift.
Meeting of the Board of Regents
At a recent meeting of the board of
regents, at which routine matters oc
cupied considerable time, action was
taken to hurry along the acquisition of
all the lots in the block immediately
east of Twelfth street and north of R,
and to secure other lots in the blocks
east of the University to be acquired
where reasonable prices may be se
cured. The resolution passed authorized
the committee to buy such lots as may
be secured and to condemn those not
purchased in this manner in the block
bounded by R, S, Twelfth and Thir
teenth streets, and to continue its ef
forts at purchase in the other blocks.
It is understood that twelve lots in
the territory to be Included In the en
larged campus of the State University
have already been boupht and paid for
and that negotiations that may result
in early transfers are in progress for
other lots. The action taken by the
board indicates that the one block
where condemnation proceedings are
authorized will be required first for
building purposes.
Representatives of the citizens' com
mittee, interested In the purchase of
the ground needed for campus exten
sion, attended the meeting and con
ferred with the Regents in the matter
of property deals.
A course of studies for the students
of the College of Agriculture, by which
all students may secure their school
work at the State Farm without com
ing to the campus, was adopted. The
agricultural practice group was en
larged to a four-year from two years.
A report was received by the Lin
coln Traction Company offering eight
to ten minutes' service from the city
to the campus. New changes in rails
and the like will be necessary, and the
board took the proposition under con
sideration.
Regent W. G. Whitmore was elected
president of the board.
Regent Brown and Chancellor Avery
were appointed a committee to visit
the Agricultural School at Curtis and
report on the improvements to be
made.
The following standing committees
were named:
Executive: Whitmore, Lyford and
Haller.
Finance: .Hall, Haller and Miller.
Industrial Eduratlon: Brown, Hall
and Whltomre.
The budget for the summer session
presented by Chanrellor Avery was
approved.
How Do You Economize?
Thnre are so many expensive items
of real value that come Into the col
lege student's life that it is a real
problem to determine the things that
one should not afford. According to
President King, the four words in .the
English language most difficult to
speak are, "I cannot afford It." All
honor to the man who honestly econ
omizes not only for himself, but better
yet, in the Interests of the people at
home. However, it sometimes seems
as though the lecture was eliminated
in favor of the moving picture show,
the play in favor of the Pantry and
the concert in favor of the Tea Rooms.
Quite often we do not look far enough
ahead to enable us to put down a
temporary desire in the interests of a
permanent need. Bad financing is
certainly not unknown among college
people. It might be well to remember
that a bank account is not necessarily
as thick as a check-book and that the
little endless, needless spendings are
a poor substitute for the great public
entertainments that should be a land
mark in the college course. The Ober
lin Review.
SPRING FOOTBALL AT
MISSOURI UNIVERSITY
Large Number of Candidates Expected
to Respond to Call at South
, ern University
The first call for spring football can
didates was issued today. All 'var
sity men, candidates for last year's
team, and freshmen, are requested to
be at Rothwell Gymnasium at 4
o'clock Thursday. The practice will
be under the direction of H. F. Schulte.
Former Captains "Chuck" Wilson and
Liz" Clay and Captain-elect Jake
Spcclman will have charge of the
work. "The spring training will be
punting, forward passing, running
down punts and faling on the ball,"
says Coach Schulte. "It is our pur
pose to get every man as near perfect
in the preliminary work as possible.
Spring practice is used in every large
school and is a great help toward
building up a winning team the next
fall." University Missourian.
Some curious bills originate in the
various legislative bodies here and
there over the country. Down in Kan
sas, a member from somewhere or
other decided that he would make
some needed changes in society by
regulating the wearing apparel of the
ladies, and introduced the following
bill:
"Any woman under the age of forty-
five years found guilty of using or
having used face powder, perfume,
false hair, hair dyes, dyes of bleach
ing materials for the hair for the pur
pose of deceiving, advertising or creat
ing a false impression f-hall be deemed
guilty of a misdemeanor and punished
according to the provisions of this act
Any woman, as above mentioned,
found guilty of having her ears pierced
for the purpose of wearing earrings,
or to be found wearing errings on the
street, at . parties or in any public
place within Kansas shall be deemed
guilty of a misdemeanor and punished
according to the provisions of this act.
Any person violating the provisions of
this act shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor and, upon conviotion, be
punished by a fine not exceeding $26
for each offense."
Strange to say the bill waa defeated.
GERMAN DRAMATIC
CLUB PLAY TOMORROW
Entertainment to be Given For Gar
man Legislators Two Play on
the Program
Deutscher Geselllger Vereln and the
German Dramatic Club will give a
joint entertainment for a body of Ger
man legislators tomorrow evening at
the Temple.
Two plays will be given. "Das
Gauschen von Laude'' will be present
ed first and the following students
will take part:
Joseph Melnlcke Gretchen
Hester Dickenson Jette
Miss Webermeler Gertrude
Jeaneta Campbell Dorte
Ethel Kittlnger Hlldegard
Prof. Wedektng has charge of the
coaching of this play.
The second play, "EIner Muss Helr-
atem" has been coached by Miss Witt
man and the cast consists of:
Jakob Alexander Wuerti
Wllhelm Joe Deering
Gertrude -. . .Miss Wlttmann
Louise Gertrude Scribner
The entertainment Is being given in
honor of thirty-three German legis
lators who will be guests of the two
clubs this evening.
Mr. H. C. Schumaker, Miss Weber
meler, Miss Spauldlng from the Ger
man Dramatic Club and Mr. Wilson
and Prof. Grummann from Geselllger
Vereln compose the committee which
has been in charge of the two plays.
The first play will start at 7:30.
Football for Columbia
Undergraduates at Columbia Uni
versity feel so sure that their plea for
restoration of football is to be granted
by the faculty that they are discussing
the advisability of permitting students
in the professional schools of the uni
versity to participate in the 'game. A
poll of the campus recently showed
that opinion favored a plan whereby
all students of the university should be
eligible, just as they are now for other
teams and in other universities. The
minority point to the evils which
arose in 1905, when students from the
THE
Telephone B2311
333 North 12th St
University Y.M.C.A. Cafeteria
IN THE TEMPLE
FOR UNIVERSITY FOLKS ONLY
Quality Economy Convenience
Sfad Hour 7:00 8:S0 11:001:30 6.80-7.00.
The CO-OP
: Supplies for all University classes:
The Co-op Book Store
Cash Paid cr Vzs Bills Grex 318 Kali lift
OS SKC09TD HAWO BOOKS
graduate and professional school,
were allowed to play. It is urged by
the minority that the student board
should stipulate in its plan that only
students in the college should be ellgi.
bie to play, since it is known that the
increased registration there has
caused the faculty to open its mind on
the tabooed subject
Make Politics Clean
The following article was clipped
from the Vermont Cynlo and seems
appropriate here:
"The editor of this column is a fra
ternity man, but realizes well that he
is no better than one outside for that
reason. As long as he has been la
school he has known nothing of a fra
ternity vote which the town papers
speak of. There may be an alliance
against a fraternity man being elected
to office we are not in a position to
know whether or not there is. But If
such a thing is In existence it is just
as bad as the suggested 'fraternity
alliance It is your duty to vote for
the man whom you think is best fitted
for the place. Opinions vary as to
who this may be, but let everyone
avoid such rumors as a 'fraternity
barbarian war.' The Montana Kal
min "
Kill Bill to Disfranchise Students at
Wisconsin
The Helm bill, to disfranchise stu
dents in educational Institutions, was
defeated by the lower house of the
Wisconsin legislature last Thursday.
The real purpose of this bill was to
take the vote away from the under
graduates of the University of Wiscon
sin. It provided, in its original form,
that no student should te allowed to
vote at an educational center, unless
he was self-supporting. After a care
ful inquiry, the lawyers in the assem
bly pronounced the bill unconstitu
tional, and a substitute was presented
in an attempt to get the same results
In a constitutional way. The bill as
changed also lost.
This election means that the stu
dents of coleges or universities will be
allowed a ballot, whether they are
regular residents of the county or not
English. Trof: But that's not the
same excuse you gave me the other
day.
Freshman: No, elr; but you didn't
believe that one. Texas Magazine.
Gleaners, Pressers, Dyers
For the "Work and Service that
Pleases." Call B2311. The Best
equipped Dry Cleaning Plant in the
West One day service if needed.
Reasonable Prices, good work, prompt
service. Repairs to men's garments
carefully made.
I. t