The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 09, 1918, Image 2

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    NEBR AS KAN
1 '
THE DAILY NEBRASKA
Official Piper of the
University of Nebraska
LEONARD W. KI-1NE Editor
ARNOLD A. W1LKKN. . .Mug. Editor
K ATM A III S K N EWBUANCH ....
, Asst. Editor
3AVLOKD DAVIS News Editor
LAI' HENCE SLATER... New Editor
ADELAIDE ELAM Society Editor
vVILMA WINTER.,.. Feature Editor
OSWALD 1JLACK Sort Editor
WILLIAM CAMPEN. .Military Editor
FRANK D. PATTY Bus. Manager
GLEN II. GARDNER. .Asst. Bus. Mgr.
Reportoriil Staff
Anna Burtless Helen M. Howe
Sadie B. Finch Teresa Magulre
Katherlne Brenke Mary F. Herring
Betty RlddellJJl Earle Coryell
Viola Klelnke
Offices 1
News Basement University Hall
Business. Basement Admn. Building
Night Office, Rlghter Composition
Co B6696 and B6697
Telephone!
News aid Editorial B2S16
Business B2597
Night, all Departments B669C
Published every day during the col-j
leges year except Saturday an Sun-
day.
Subscription price, per semestsr. $1
Entered at the postoffice at Lincoln,
Nebraska, as second-class mail matter
under the act of Congress of March 3,
1879.
classes and expect to find their suc
cess In life will come the' same way.
They expect to find life an open book
and everything In it a perfect rou
tine. It Is not.
"The successful man hi life gets all
he can from books In a reasonable
time and with a reasonable amount of
effort; he learns how to classify this
knowledge and most Important of all
he learns how to apply It.- The meth
ods of application can be learned only
from association with our fellow men.
Success comes to the one who knows
to use his fellow man .and the knowl
edge of this is just as important as
the knowledge gained from books.
"Mix In college activities; attend
the literary societies; don't shut your
self up like a clam. Don't hurry your
talents but give them a chance to de
velop through contact and schooling."
during the season and the coaches will
need u large squad of candidates with
which to fill up the gaps continually
appearing.
Out of the meagre bunch which re
ported yesterday, Coaches Kline and
Sihissler were able to line UD two
foams .and a few new plays were
worked out during the scrimmage.
With twenty two students register
ing in the university up to Saturday
noon, when the registrar's and bur
sars offices were closed, the total en
rollment at the end of the first week
of school had reached 3995. surpassing
the registration at the same time a
year ago by 2S3, but still falllnr 474
short of the mark established two
years ago. Ohio State Lantern.
M'MAHON RETURNS
TO HUSKER FOLD
Error in His Enlistment Papers
and Star Halfback Again
Dons Moleskins
! Fifty-four faculty members are on
leave of absence from the university
this year. Of these eighteen are from
the college of medicine, the college of
engineering following with nine, and
the college of agriculture with seven.
The majority of those absent are
either In some branch of the army or
are engaged In some form of war
work. Many have received commis
sions. Ohio State Lantern.
Coach Olcott on the Square and
Accusations Branded as
Ungrounded
News Editor
LAURENCE SLATER
For This Issue
If the election Tuesday proved noth
ing else, it proved that every one In
the Uniersity this year Is alive to
avery activity and ready to fall in line
wherever there is good to be done. Es
pecially remarkable and commendable
is the spirit shown by the members of
the first-year class. A record of near
ly twice as many votes this year as in
any other year Is another proof that
the new students on the campus are
rapidly learning the ways of Univer
sity life and will fit perfectly into their
new environment.
Good feeling characterized the vig
orous electioneering and defeated can
didates have today forgotten the dif
ferences of yesteray and all arc
working for the good of their school as
all true Cornhuskers should. Elec
tion is over and all machines will
unite themselves to form one power-
While the tears shed over Harold
McMahon's departure to the Great
Lakes camp are still sparkling on the
cheeks of Cornhusker football en
thusiasts, comes the news that the
fleet halfback will return and again
don his football regalia in time to get
into action next Saturday against the
soldiers from Camp Funston. Head
Coach Kline received a wire from his
former pupil yesterday - morning
stating that Ihere had been a mistake
in his enlistment papers and that he
would be back in Lincoln Tuesday
evening. He hove in on schedule
time and is back in school today, on
active duty in the naval reserve.
McMahon said that his enlistment
papers had been sent into the office at
the Great Lakes with a bunch of oth
ers last summer and that his had not
been marked, that he was an under
graduate. When ie reported t oainp
headquarters he was asked what he
had been doing in Lincoln and when
he replied that he had been in school,
they told him that he belonged hack
at Nebraska, so back he came. Mac
said also that there were a bunch of
A FALSE REPORT
There has been a rumor quite pre
valent around the campus and city
that there was a shortage of blankets
and other bedding for the soldiers sta
tioned at the university. This is very
sharply and vigorously denied at head
quarters and Captain Buck wants to
make it known that all bedding needed
and wanted is at hand.
For the second successive time, the
annual dairy show will be brought to
Columbus Oct. 10-19, and will be given
in connection with the horse show.
P-esides the usual features, which are
found at most dairy shows, theYe will
be special attractions at this exhibit.
Ohio State Lantern.
NOTRE DAME WILLI!
cometo;lincoln
(Continued from Page One)
ful organization in each class which
will hack their alma mater in its en- j other Nebraska men stranded at the
tire program. Lakes who should he back in school.
The political campaign each semes-! The' are undergraduates too, and
ter is one of the most beneficial ac
tivities in which new students and old
may enter and better men and women
statements from the Nebraska regis
trar to that effect did not reach them
in time to be sent back home. They
are made each year if they will carry I m"st now stick around the Chicago
their campaigns no farther than elec
tion day. The successful candidates
will remember that honest convictions
and not enmity led their opponents !
to work against them; defeated can
didates will fall in line with the class
programs and give their hearty co-operation.
CAPTAIN MACIVOR'S OPINION
Short-lived would be the insiduous
German peace propaganda if every
one took the attitude of Captain Mac
Ivor, expressed at the freshman con
vocation Tuesday. "The German peace
proposals," he said,- "should affect us
just as water affects a duck's hack.
The peace offensive has been launch
ed with the hops of slowing up the
liberty loan, the draft and recruiting
The offensive must not succeed. There
must he only one peace and that the
peace of surrender."
give the Cornhuskers a whole week
more of preparation and they ought to
be in the pink of condition to give the
Hoosiers a cleaning,
ir me reply from tne coacn at camp
Dodge concerning a game on October
26 is at all favorable, season ticket
holders will be assured of a rip-roaring
card and the athletic authorities will
be able to rest a little easier at right.
FIRST YEAR MEN
GIVED GOOD ADVISE
(Continued from Page One)
STUDENTS' QUESTION ANSWERED
Every student has asked himself
many times the Important question,
"What must I get from the University
to make a success in life?" There
are those who say that Btudent activi
ties are the surest path and others
who claim that one goes to college to
earn from books and everything Inter
fering with such learning is danger
ous. There have been men in the
University who have been "grinds"
from the first day to the last and
have made miserable failures and
there have been who who have flunk
ed in nearly every department and
have succeeded in life. Oftentimes
these conditions and results are re
versed and a general rule has been
bard to find.
camp, although they are anxious to
get hack in the university.
Olcott Helped McMahon
Coach Olcott, former director at
Kansas university, 3s the civilian
coach at the jackie camp and McMa
hon gives him the credit of his return
to the Husker fold. Olcott went with
the Nebraska star to the commandant
and verified his statements as to his
having been in school here. He told
McMahon that if he figured in a Ne
braska victory over the Jayhawkers
November 16, that he, Olcott. would
be roasted by every loyal Kansan for
his part in McMahon's return, but that
he was glad to do it anyway.
Accusations False
The accusations which were circu
lated around Lincoln, that Olcott had
any part in McMahon's call in order
to weaken the Cornhuskers against
Kansas were branded by the return-
; ed halfback as groundless, for the ex-
Jayhawk could not have acted more
nobly in the matter.
Cornhuskers Sadly Crippled
The squad took the field yesterJay
minus a few of the stand-bj-s. Captain
Schellenberg is still on his back at
the Alpha Tau house, and the doctor
says that he cannot get out for prac
tice this week. Quarterback Lantz is '
sick at his home in Ravenna, Nebr,
and Dana, one of the promising line
candidates, was sent back to his home
at Fremont. Ross, the chubby guard
on the varsity, -was out with a bum
ankle, and a few others were kept
away on account of military drill.
Cypreanson Lost to Team
The old Lincoln high fullback.
"Zip" Cypreanson, who won a place
on the varsity end, is named in today's
list of men to be sent to an officers'
Here is Dean Engberg's advice:
"There are certain men who are ; training camp, and will leave the lat
grinds. They go to college Just to
learn by rote. They rank high in their
ter part of the week. Losses such as
will be assigned to duty as the menials
in some military cantonment. They
will have the rating of the poorest
private in the army. If the man floes
his work well while stationed here he
will leave with a rating of either good
or excellent. If his rating is excel
lent his way is practically paved to
an officers' camp and to active ser
vice." Dean Engberg gave the first-year
men a valuable discussion of the at
titude which should be taken toward
student activities. "The successful
man in life," he said, "is the man
who gets all he can from books In a
reasonable time and with reasonable
effort; who learns how to classify thii
knowledge and most important of all
how to apply it. The power to apply
knowledge gained from books can be"
obtained only from contact with our
fellow men. The knowledge of how to
use one's fellow men is just as im-1
portant as that knowledge gained from j
books. The man who is a grind and j
who shuts himself up with his books
for all time will never gain this
knowledge for success. '
"Mix in college activities; attend i
literary societies; don't bury your j
talent like a clam, but develop it j
through contact and schooling. Take
lime to think and each day correlate
the facts you have learned. Only the
man who succeeds in school can sue-;
ceed in the activities."
ANNOUNCES HIS
FIRST APPEARANCE
(Continued from Page One)
ried clippings from its columns in
every issue and Judge frequently used
its jokes in a section headed "With
the College Comic." In this section
Awgwan's articles appeared fide by
side with the extracts from publica
tions in ihe larger eastern universi-
Our Christmas Stocks
Are Now Ready!
As a further assistance to the government in
relieving the transportation facilities of this
country from a congestion during the holiday
season, the retail stores have purchased and
have had delivered all big Christmas stocks.
Begir ; our Christmas
Shopping Now!
With complete holiday stocks now ready for
inspection, customers are urged to begin not
next month, but now their purchase of
presents.
REMEMBER
That conserving time and acting and com
pleting tasks without delay is not only a neces
szry program for this government in pushing
through its war preparations, but also a neces
sary program for every man and woman in this
country. Delays mean trouble and unneces
sary work. Aren't ycu willing to observe these
shopping rules:
Shop dunng October and rsovember, there
by permitting December to be normal.
Shop early in the day and thereby relieve
congestion in the down town stores.
Return home early in the day and thereby
relieve congestion both in the stores and on
street cars.
Carry home your packages whenever pos
sible, as the pledge not to enlarge fenes
makes this request necessary.
Be as patient with store employes as pos
sible, remembering that they are working
under both mental and physical strain.
Assist the government by advertising your
observance to the new rules to your friends
and neighbors.
1.
3.
6.
SOLDIERS' CHRISTMAS MAIL
In order to control the flood of gifts, the
department has decided that only one parce1.
will be accepted for each man.
npr.prp.l Perching is forwarding coupons
bearing the name and address of each member
of the expeditionary force, to be distributed to
the next of kin. These coupons must be at
tached to standard containers, nine (9) by four
(4) by three (3) inches in size, which will be
provided by local Red Cross chapters upon
application. All packages must be mai!ed
before November 15, 1918.
With the largest stock of useful beautiful
gift things in our mercantile career we invite
your inspection.
Tucker-Shean
Jewelers, Diamond Merchants
and Opticians
Eleven Twenty-three O Street
ORPHEUM DRUG STORE
OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT
A Good Place for Soda Fountain Refreshments after the Theatre and
after the Rosewide Oance
CARSON HILDRETH, 95 and 96
-. ) i 1 i f -O f 1 i ......, ...
-';t lif.lt..:
rtr.-r.-..-
I!
this w ill be exjerienced quite often I ties.
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