1 VoI7 XX. NO. 36 The Daily Nebraskan' LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 3. Ifl20 NEBRASKA, 28--ROT PRICE FIVE CENTS. HER YEAR-BOOK BOOSTS NEBRASKA Cornhusker for Nineteen Twenty-one Give Publicity to Several Cities of State. ADVERTISES NEBRASKA Book to Contain Va'uable Art Work Townsend Studio Will Handle Portraits. Nebraska's 1921 Cornhusker is to b a truly state-wide book. Tor years, residents of the state have been peeking some means of giving publicity to the high spots In No braska. For this reason, the man agers of the Cornhusker have decided to make the feature section of the innual a Nebraska section. To open the section, there will be i tVee or four-color picture, a re pfriuet'on of some mural painting rr tome o'her art work will ho made. It is the purpose to make Ihe picture one that Is Ittlng to represent Ne braska. The section will probably contain one or two pictures and a short J wrltenp of a dozen or fifteen of the most lively towns In the state. The Cornhusker management intends to cooperate with chambers or com merce in these towns to obtain proper tta'erlal for the section. The CornhupKef management ex pects to go to considerable expense to irake this section a success and representative. Jnst how the section will be made up has not been definite"- It decided but It Is planned to hsvc pictures of business and residential c?lons of the towns selected. Each Se'ected Town Given a Page Each town selected will be given t rase. TIigh class engravers have beer employed to Insure the best re productions of the pictures possible. 'r this way, the Cornhusker besides conveying some idea of the State Uni c!!y will also give some pictures of the state. The feature section is only one of tie many plans that the Cornhusker editors have under advisement The book this year, If carried out as planned, will contain more expensive md valoeble art work than ever bfpr. Pictures for Annual Soon. Arrangements have practically been enmple'ed with the Townsend studio BLOCK AND BRIDLF. firm. BOOSTS JUDGING TEAM An effort to boost the stock judg ns team will be made by the Block and Bridle Club when they give their benefit dance next Saturday , evening at the Armory. All the proceeds from this dance will be used to defray the expenses of the stock judging team when they go to Chicago to enter the International Live Stock Show and 'I" Western Stock Show at Denver. Nebraska has boon sending a tea v.i.u.ifiu mi uiu ia?i imeen yea urn uie menmers of ;he teams hav been paying their own expenses. Th "'tily assistance they receive is a sma Mim rrom tne Omaha live stock com mission firns. The team that 1 selected to go to Ch eaves a week before the show and visits a number of Iowa stock farm ana the Ames and Illinois Ajrrleni ural Colleges. It is very difficult ;iake lliis trip for less than J100 and many students who are eligible fo he team hesitate to try for th nnnors because they cannot afford he cost. If the expenses of the tri ;irp roeren in part at least, more students will try for positions on th earn ana give tne coacn more ma terial to pick from. This may re suit in a better team. ERS, 0 Make All Reservations Today For Special Train To Kansas Ten students of the College of Agri culture visited several large stock- farms around Cambridge, Nebr., las week. They were coached by Prof. . H. Savin. The men who made he trip are: C. E. Atkinson, K. A Clark, A. K. Henperly. L. W. Ingham M. V. Lambert, R. L. Schoen, C. E. Crowell, L. F. Smith, W. S. Rice and v. r. laggart. me team that goes to Chicago will be picked from these MR. FRED H. RINDGE WILL ADDRESS Y. M. C. A. MEETING National Secretary of the Industrial Service Movement here Thurs day and Friday. to handle the photographs for th wrnhusker again. This work will not begin in earnest for about rorrn and a half yet but arrange nnrs have already been made for itnden's who wish photographs for Christmas. ny students who desire photo- Paphs for Christmas and who wants to hare a print made for the Corn on.'iter at the same time may do so without added expense excert for the Price of the cut In the book. Thus Bf's may have pictures taken for wrority groups and Juniors and Seniors for the Individuals In the class sections. " Is desired that students wishing o have pictures taken for the Corn bn'ker nd wfBh to order extra Christmas Picture do thl? within u" npxt fifteen days. The regular of Cornhusker pictures for those do not want any extra prints will not be handled until after Christmas. -EX-SERVICE MEN TO MEET. There will be a mass meet inB of all ex-service men in the University today at 7:30 p. m., the Legion rooms of the Temple building. Plans will be made for the celebration to e held under the auspices of the University Post of the American Legion, November 11, Armistice Day. Candidates for Graduation. Candidates for degrees or truncates at the close of the Present semester, please report Tour intention to the office not l4tr than Saturday. November unless you have previously ne so. 'Signed) FLORENCE I. McGAHEY, Registrar. Fred Rindge, National Secretary of tho Industrial Service Movement of the Y. M. C. A., will bo here Thursday and Friday, November 4 and 5, under the auspices of the Engineering so cieties. Commercial Club and Com mitteo of Two Hundred. Besides giving special lectures in variou3 de partments Mr. Rindge will give h general lecture on "The Student s re lation to Industry" at seven o'clock Thursdey in the Temple Theater. Mr. Rindge has been employed in the industrial service work of the Y. M. C. A. for the last 'en or fifteen years and has worked in nearly all the large Universities or me coun try. He has done considerable work . . . r . .1 .' . T I we a as a DiacK-iaceu cumcumn. c offered a large salary to go on the stage, but he reiuseu u io emcr Y. M. C. A. work. A Lincoln resident who beard him at Silver Bay. New York, last summer said of hlm,"In the morning he conducted his clauses oil the d en :y oi a muhmu professor and in the evening he was show." Reservations should be made at once on the special train that Corn husker rooters will tako to Lawrence, November .13, for the clash with K. U. The open season for Jayhawks commences at that time, and Ne braska students are urged to take their war-paint and feathers with them on the special train. In order to insure their share of room on the special cars, reserva tions must be made today. The Union Pacific headquarters in the Chamber of Commerce building, 204 North Eleventh street, will be open at al' hours and reservations may be made there. The schedule and rates for the trip were announced at two dif 'erent times last week in the Daily Nebraskan columns. They will be nrinted again for benefit of readers emetime this week. Students will be able to save more tnouey by taking the special student train, than if they went home tc spend the week-end and blew out a tire on the family "flivver." This is food or thought think it over! Tickets for the game may be pro cured at the Student Activities office for two dollars. Nebraska rooters will be reserved a section containing four hundred seats opposite the cen 'er of the field. A report from F. C. Mien, athletic business manager ot the Jayhawks. says that 7,000 paste boards have been sold for the big game. Unusual interest is being at 'ached to the struggle, because fans nre wondering how the Kansans will rare at the hands of the Cornhuskers ifter their conquest of the east. BRYAN TELLS VALUE OF THE SPOKEN WORD Nebraska's Famous Resident Talks to Hundreds of Students at Special Tuesday Convocation. "The spoken word will always be important as long as men feel deeply on a subject, was the statement on which Hon. W. J. Bryan based his nwiw BURNETT RETURNS 7 . ri tt rrV FROM EASTfcKH &unuun Dean E. A. Burnett returned from inn rttRici visiting Cornell University where he was the guest of Dean A. K. Mann lis mission was to attend the annua! Tr,,l flrnnt UolleCf convention or uik io.. Association held at Springlieiu, Mass. Ie visited the Agricultural College a. In tUa nolo- A.nhr.rst and tOOK pari hmtlnn of the fiftieth anniver - hat institution. Dean Burnett read a paper dealing ii-tna fnr OT- with increased approinauu prriment stations and lana grui s. The convention passeu i..ioii federal and lution favoring ium" tate appropriations ror experuueu. tations. students in the the the rhina has 20.000 lin)versitles of Japan. 2.000 In .. A universities of colleges nnu United States, and nearly a thousand n the universities of France. lecture on "The Spoken Word," at special convocation before hundreds of University students, yesterday morning at 11 o'clock in the Temple theater. The written page can never take the place of the spoken word," said Mr. Bryan, "because a writer lacks the inspiration of an audience. How ever, tne neea oi pumic speamng nas become more since we have had news papers. The press, I believe, Is one of the most serious problems in the country today. The government rests entirely on the intelligence of the people, and it is astonishing tha' such a great nation as ours, should leave its people entirely dependen on private inaiviauais ior snowieagc of public affairs. There are two kinds of news papers: partisan ana tnose wnicn claim to be independent. Of the two I much prefer the partisan kind, be cause if one knows there is poison in a bottle, ne Knows now mucn to lane and how much to dilute it. Thr partisan paper has its poison marked the bottle. I believe the inde pendent papers are absolute frauds as it is impossiDie ior a man wnn learning enough to edit a paper not to have his own convictions on r matter. These papers go into the homes under the guise of being non partisan organs, while in many cases they have used these means of carry ing out the personal views of the editor; or of corporations who con trol many of the leading Independent papers of the country. "These cases show what we are up against, and show the necessity o the governments devising a means by which official bulletins can be sent out, in reach of every citizen, giving a bi-partisan view of all pub lic questions. When the people of the country are given the light in (Continued on hage Foui) HARDING WINS IN LANDSLIDE CORNHUSKERS DECISIVELY DEFEAT RUTGERS INJIRSI EASTERN GAME Yesterday's Victory Puts Team in Class with Strongest Elevens in Country Penn State Contest of November 6 Will Prove Final Test of Husker Strength. HARTLEY AND PUCELLK STAR Nebraskans Used Series of Line Plunges and End Runs to Batter Opponents Pucelik Makes Fifty-five Yard Run for Touchdown But is Called Back By Referee. EX-SOLDIERS ARRANGE FOR ARMISTICE NIGHT Senator Harding Elected President by Big Majority in Republican . Landslide in East! GOVERNOR RACE IS CLOSE 887 Precincts Out of Nebraska's 1878 Give McKelvie a Lead of Almost 9000. Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio will be our next president of the unitea states. Latest reports at eigni o ciock tnis morning gave Harding a majority In the electoral college-with 276 votes, with many or the western states to be heard from. Early reports from California indicate that it may go republican. Majorities are being reported in New lork, Massacheusetts, and Ohio which indicate a landslide in the east Harding carried Ohio by three nun dred thousand. New York state by one million, New York City by five hundred thousand, and Massacheusetts by three hundred thousand. Harding carried Cox's home precinct in Ohio with 12 votes. Nebraska has Joined the Harding ranks with a plurality of from one hundred to one hundred twenty thou sand. Complete returns from 887 precincts out of 1878 in Nebraska give McKel vie a lead of almost nine thousand over Morehead In the governorship race. These returns give the follow Ing totals: McKelvie, 74.123: More- head, 66.88S; Wray, 42,213. The size of the Wray vote baa surprised the politicians of the stae.The latest re ports from the agricultural precincts are giving Morehead a slight major ity over McKelvie.. Reavis in the First district. Jefferis n the Second, Cans In the Third. McLaughlin in the Fourth, Andrews in the Fifth, and Kinkald In the Sixth all republicans, were elected by large majorities. A mass meeting of all ex-soldiers :as oeen called ror tins evening a ":C0 in the Legion rooms of tho Temple building to perfect plans for he Armistice Day celebrations, No vemoer ii. me program tor tne entire day will be announced after this meeting. Students at the University will be given a holiday Aimistice Day alter noon. A down-town parade, in which University ex-soldiers will take part will be a feature of the day's cele- Dration. rne committee or three, ap pointed to complete plans for the second anniversary of the signing ol the armistice, will make known these plans tonight in the Temple. I.ast year the men were entertained at a banquet in the evening at the Masonic Temple, followed by dancing at the Orpheum, and a theater party for those who did not care to dance In the afternoon the University Players presented "It Pays to Adver ise" for the approval of the ex- service men. Expenses for the enter tainment last year were deducted 'mm thp mnnpv isnhfinrihoil hv ihn people of Lincoln for the "welcome home" celebration that had been planned for returning soldiers. UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY CONTAINS NEW FEATURES The Cornhusker team defeated Rut gers yesterday, 28 to 0. Swanson. Hartley and Pucelik, through a series of brilliant line plunges and passes were responsible for the overwhelm ing defeat of the eastern trs. The defeat of Rutgers by Nebraska puts them on a par with the most powerful eastprn elevens. The Husk ers expected more opposition than was received and they found it un necessary to uncork any of their trick plays, relying at all-times on straight football. The long end runs of Wright, Moore and Hartley were the outstanding features of the game. Pucelik. played his usual stellar game at tackle break ing up play after play. The big Ne braska tackle broke through the Rut eers line and threw their backs for big losses. In the third quarter he intercepted a Rutgers' pass and sprinted fifty-five yards for a touch down, however the referee called the pass incomplete and the play was recalled. The team leaves tomorrow night for State College, Pa., where they will tackle the Penn State crew Sat urday. Penn State is considered to have the best team In the east and :f Nebraska succeeds In holding the Quakers, she will have a place among he leaders in the football world. Following is a report of the game "lay by play as received over a spe cial wire by the Lincoln Daily Star: POLO GROUNDS. Nov. 2. The Ne braska Cornhuskers took their first rack at Atlantic coast football teams when they lined tin against the Rut- ( Continued ir Page Four) Organizations Department More Com plete than Ever Before Only Limited Number Printed. The University directories pub lished by the University Y. M. C. A were placed on sale Tuesday morning n Social Science building. University hall, west entrance to Armory, Law building. College Book Store an;! Aggie Book Store and will be on sal? at fifty cents today and tomorrow, or as long as the supply lasts. They are ready for distribution this year at an unusually early date Last year their sale began November 24. Only a limited number of directories have been printed on account of the increased cost of material and work- mansnip. The paper used this year is of a finer quality than that in last year's books, and the type is different. The members of literary societies are listed the same as the members of fraternities. The dormitories with the names of the chaperons are listed. The campus organizations department is more Inclusive this year than ever before. NEWS OF THE DAY RINDGE WILL ADDRESS UNI COMMERCIAL CLUB Steal $40 003 in Liquor. CHICAGO. Eight burglars crawled through a rear transom today, bound and gagged the watchman and stole $40,000 worth of whiskey, gin and brandy from the liquor warehouse of Manny, Blave & Co. More than two hours were used by the burglars in hauling away the plunder in two trucks. Record Vote Cast in Iowa. DES MONES. Ia. According to re ports reaching here, a record eany vote was cast . in Iowa yesterday. Long' lines of voters formed early at the voting booths, and their length appealed to increase rauier uiau diminish as the day proceeded. Elec ion officials expressed themselves as doubtful of whether all who desired to vote could be accommodated before the pi"Ja close tonight at 7 o'clock. Disorders Follow MacSwiney Burial. DUBLIN. One civilian was killed and a soldier and a woman were wounded in a fresh outbreak of re prisal violence at Tralee today. The death of Terence MacSwiney has been followed by a wave of violence !n .Ireland and it has kept both the soldiers and the black and tan police active in Dublin. Japan Decides on More Warships. LONDON. The leading Japanese newspaper, "Nlchl Nichi," announces that "in view of America's rejection oJ the league of nations" the Japanese government has decided that the naval construction program of eight battleships nd e'ght cruisers is in sufficient, aid a Tokio dispatch to the Pall Mall Gazette today. Fred H. Rindge, National Secretary of the Industrial Service Movement of the Y. M. C. A. will address the University of Nebraska Commercial Club Thursday morning at 11 o'clock on "The Human Factor In Industry Mr. Rindge Is a speaker of national reputation and will address a number of university organizations Thursday and Friday. The address before mem bers of the Commercial Club will bo the first one delivered. A graduate of a large eastern college and in touch with the big business executives for tho past ten years, Mr. Riudgt has a message for Nebraska students. Last Thursdey morning C. W. Nel son, credit mpnager or Rudgo and Guenzrl addressed the club on the subject of "Credit." A number of speakers have been engaged for 'the remainder of tho Thursday moraine meetings of the Club during Nov ember. University CaUndmr WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3. W. A. A. meeting, 7 p. m, Ellen Smith hall. Botany Seminar meeting, 8 p. m., Bessey hall. Omaha club rally, Temple. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4. Roscoe Pound club meeting. Playlets, 3-5 p. m., Temple. Omaha club, 5 p. m., Social Science. Student Council meeting, 7:30 p. m., Faculty hall. Blackstone Law club meeting, 7:30 p. m., Acacia house. Alpha Zeta meeting, 7 p. m., Alpha Gamma Rho house. Commercial club meeting, 4 p. m., Social Science. American Association, 7:30 p. m., Electrical Engineers. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5. Acacia house party. Pi Kappa Phi dance. Art club circus party. Art hall. Alpha Theta Chi house dance. Xi Delta tea. Kappa Kappa Gamma fall party, Lincoln hotel. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER . Phi Delta Theta dance, Lin coln hotel. Block and Bridle club dance, 8:30 p. m., Armory. Chi Omega hiuse dence. Black Masque party, Ellen Smith hall. Final girls' tennis tourna ment, University courts. W. A. A. party, 2-6 p. m., Ellen Smith hall. Law-Engineers football gam. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7. Menorah Society meeting, 8 p. m., Faculty hall. Sigma Delta Chi meeting, S p. ir., Phi Delta Theta house. 1 ......