The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 03, 1909, Image 4
mgL;:jfelRASKJfia trtmlMUo'fcWt. .taW ' JX .ii1MH.. - i Htmti.f.-Qi,'lt, 44 V '" '' " ft Ari A J M ' w 1 v ,ivV m 'Oct :uL.'.via a;;. -Lti1 ;- DIRfcUTUrtY, !, s j;-v ,i. i- 1 1 BuilipriP .Directory $vory loyajl Jntvorsity- Bttldont 1b urged to patron' fto tUcso NotTraSkatt hdvortiaorB, anjl -to mention tho Nobraskan whllo ddr Jngrjor "" - faANRS " ' : "- ' I Ilrst Trust & Savings feAERIES ' j tfotBom ' BARBER SHOPS i Qreon'B PATH HOUSES . . .. ' I ChrlB. t300K STORES Coop. . UniverlBty CLEANERS ' J. 0 Wood & Co. Weber's Sultorlum, , 'Joo; Tho Tailors ; vCLOTHINO Farguh,ar ri ,' Magoo & Dbomor Mayor Bros. Palace piothlng Cp. i Spolor & Simon ArmBtrong Clothing Co, Corf b. COAL . i Gregory tl , Whltobroast . CONFECTIONERY Lincoln Candy Kitchen Tommy DANCING A0ADBMY Lincoln DENTISTS "- .' J. R. Davis, DRY GOODS '. . ' ... ' Millfir & Pal.no " , ' . yj . Rtidgo & Guohzol " ' ' .... DRUGGIST0 ' " '' .K.i..T RlgBB .... t ... I. ENGRAVERS Cornell FLORISTS ,C. H, Ffoy Froy & Froy FURNISHINGS Budd Full; -v 1 . J .?. Mugeo & Deomor m ( flayer BroB, Palace Clothing Co, , . Rudgo & Guenzol Speior & Simon . Armstrong Clothing Co. .: Cert's, i HATTERS .. ,i Budd .; Fuik , Unland ' v Armstrong Clothing Co,' Mageo & Doomor u ' '. Mayer BroB. Palace Clothing Co. it Rudgo & Quoprol I Spoler & Simon .; ICE CREAM, ? Franklin Ice Cream Co, ., 'JEWELERS ' ' Hallott Tucker .LAUNDRIES ' j Evans r OPTICIANS Shoan ; PHOTOGRAPHERS , Townsend' v .PRINTERS ' r Georgo Bros. , '. Simmons ' ', VanTlno , , ' . , ' I RESTAURANTS 'f ' ". Boston Luncb . i '. Cameron's Y. m, q.A, Spa RAINCOATS : Goodyear Raincoat Co. HOES Armstrong Clothing Co. Beckman Bros. Budd Men'B Bootory Rogers & Perkins . Mayor Bros. Miller & Palno Corf b. ' , jf I SKIRTS . . ' Skirt Store ', ' i TAILpRS t, Elllptt Bros. . ; f , 'I Gregory ( ' 6 i Horzs ' ' ' i . . , 'f Joe, Tho Tailor. THEATERS . Lyric , ! t , Oliver . ' TYPEWRITERS Lincoln Typowrilor Ex, J Underwood Typewriter 0. - SONGS FOR JAYHAWKERS IS REQUEST OF EAGER NEBRASKA MANAGER WANTS TO HAVE GOOD ROOTING. LIVELY TUNES AND CATCHY WORDS Monster Rally to Be Held Thursday or Friday, With Big Reception for Kansas Team Friday a Possibility. Songs for KansaB. That is what Manager Eager and tho rooting loaders want immediately. They want good vorses sot to popular tunes for ubo at tho gamo Saturday. Tho tunes must bo lively, and the words muBt be snappy presentations of tho things which tho Cornhuskers are going to do to tho invading Jay hawkers bn Nebraska field. Tho songs need not bo master plocoB of tho poet'B art. Manager Eager Bays ht ho will accopt tho stu dent productions oven If the metro is off once In a while. What ho wtints Ib not literary groatness, but "spirit." That must bo had In hirgo quantities if Nebrnska Is to come off tho field Saturday with her colors flying. Good songs will play a big part and there Is no time to be loBt If thoy nro to be of value. Contributions Bhould be loft at tho Nobraskan ofllco not later than Thurs day at fi p. m. Rallies to Be Held. A monster rally, the biggest of the year, will bo hold either Thursday or Friday of this week. Arrangements aro still Indefinite, depending on the nctlon of tho deanB rcflatlve to sus pending 11 o'clock classes Friday for the football men. If tho deans will consent to such nctlon, the rally will be hold at that hour. Otherwise It will bo hold at some time Thursday or Friday yet to be determined. Manager Eager has sent out largo quantities of advertising matter over the state and from nil indications the out-in-the-Btnte attendance at the game Will bo Immense. People from all over eastern Nobraska plan to attend, Tho reserved seat snlo at Harley's has been yory heavy and students should loso no time If thoy wish to get good res ervations. Arrangements are being mnde for the decoration of LJncoln stgrps yvih Nebraska and Kansas colors. This wllj probably be done on a largor scale than ovor before. To Greet Kansas. If contemplated arrangements aro completed KansaB will be given an enthusiastic rocoptlon upon tho ar rival of tho team Friday evening. The Jnyhawkers are duo at about 5 o'clock and It is planned to have a mass meet ing of students at tho station to moot them. A parade uptown with tho cadet band at the head is one of the features which la Included In the pro-' posed reception. ThiB feature is not certain, however, depending In part upon the willingness of the Kansas coach to allow his men to participate. TEMPERENCE ADDRESS DY MRS. EDITH DAVIS NOTED LECTURER SPEAK8 AT CONVOCATION TUE8DAY. GREAT HEED Of MORAL CHARACTER 8peaker Portrays Effects of Alcoholic ' Stimulants and Points Out Remedy for Existing Evils. Mrs. Edith Smith Davis, a W. C. T. U. lecturer of International reputation, addressed the Tuedsay convocation. She Is a speaker of much ability. and presents her subject in a most inter esting and capable manner. Tho num ber present was disappointingly small. Mrs. DavlB said; "It is tho fow who do tho reql work of tho world. Theso few muBt make every effort to get a hold of tho truth. It makes llttlo difference to what .de gree division of opinion goes for wo need all forms of truth and of fact and' information. What wo .heed to guard against is the falluro to go far enough in our efforts, One who jumps eight feet of a ten-foot chasm, falls. Somo things have to bo dono in its entirety to accomplish anything. "Ono of theBo things Is tho making of chnractor, and it is the greatest thing wo can accomplish. Somo peo ple develop into olther physical or in tellectual monstrosities, and Ipse sight of tho higher things in other ways. They have not tho vision of a devel oped chnractor, but it is Biirrounded by a wall. Our great need Is mornl character in ovorything. Lovo nnd morality and religion is necessary to dovolop- tho best moral character. The lack of vlBlon Is often tho curse of men of genius, such ns Poo, who know tho right purpose of life and yet died in a drunken stupor. Wo njus't get a broader vision if we aro to have tho beBt moral character. Clark's Experiment. "Prof. Clark of Clark university Is a man of this broad vision. Ho loves humanity and with such a motive be gan to experiment with the effect of alcohol on animals. Ho took four dogs, which ho treated exactly alike, except that to two of thorn ho gave dally a few drops of alcohol. Ho soon tound that these two wore more nervous and easily excltablo. more prone to dis ease nnd succumb to It much easier. Then he sought to discover whether It adds to their strength. Delicate ma chines wero made which registered every bodily movement, and he found that the two fod alcohol did not ex ert nearly as much strength. "The facts" were published. BuhU ness men took hold of it and users of alcohol aro not as competent or ns strong ns others. And now It Is dif ficult and oven Impossible for men to enter .some professions who use to bacco or drink alcohol. The descend ants of alcohol users. Are Intellectu ally Inferior to other children. In a school in St. Louis, attended by chil dren of wealthy parents, who wore addicted to the use of alcohol wero miserably Incompetent to master tho simplest forms of knowledge. Tell the'Truth. "The call comes to us to teach the truth about alcohol. It is no longer a moral question, but a scientific ques tion. No scientist will speak of alco hol now In any way, but that It is a narcotic. In Belgium, I watched eov oral hundred people who were waiting to embark to come to America. Thoy crowded the saloonii nUday. Mothers fbrced alcohol - down the tbroats of their children. The question I asked was: When thoy come to America, what will wo do with thorn? Every child miiBt go to school, which is the machine which grinds out our citi zens. There they must be Instructed against this danger. Any one mooting these conditions will be the world's greatest missionary. As wo go on we must seek the broader vlBlon of llfo, which will mak'o for character." Y. W. C. A. GIRLS OUT AFTER NEEDED MONEY university association has unusual expense; THE EXTRAS ANOINT TO OYER 00 Girls Start Campaign for Payment of Dues and Subscriptions to Be Applied to Annual Budget. , " The university Y. W. C. A. opened a finance campaign last evening at six o'clock with an informal supper in the association rooms. Tho Y. W. C. A.' has extra expenses amounting to $525 this year. The ex pense has been caused by redecorat ing the rooms, tho fund for the Nash ville convention and the fund for tho Bible secretary. It was only an ex ample of tho progreasIvenesB of this brganization when thirty-six girls pledged themselves to raise enough, money to pay off those extra debts. The girls wero divided into squads, and each squad will have charge of a separate class of pledges. The girls who. have charge of tbq honorary and sustaining duos are: Alice, -.Mockott, Julia Njfgfef -ODfoytcffllhSj, nild Bllso Bnigger. i I , Gpljectlpq p -Dues. . J hw61flftte'-du8 "wniTof eight girls, the systematic giving in chargo of ton girls, tho alumni sub scriptions in chargo of four girls, and tho faculty subscriptions in charge of ten girls. In addition to the squads mentioned above, two teams liavo been organized, ono having scarlet for its color an,d tho other having cream. The follow ers of tho Bcarlet are led by Marie Thomas and tho followers of the cream by Alice Mockott. Two of tho girls on the honorary sustaining squad will aim to collect oloven dollars por day for fifteen days, and tho other two girls eight dollars per day for tho fifteen days. Tho other squads are pledged to collect smaller sums. Tho idea of this campaign is to ralso enough money to pay all of tho budget and leave a surplus on hand to carry .out somo of tho work that Is being planned for next year. All of tho ac tlvo members and tholr friends are urged to respond liberally to the call for rcgulur dues and special pledges. Meet Each Evening. Tho glrlB will meet in tho Y. W. (. A. roomB nt 5:50 every evening and report on their work. An automobile ride for the girls will be carried out next Saturday morning nnd on the fol lowing Saturday another supper will be given. Money must be raised to cover the following expenses In addition to the regular Items: Redecorating rooms $ 75 Fund for Nashville convention... 50 Fund for Bible secretary 100 Total $525 . BUDGET.... ., .. . Resources. Dues (active and a8soclate,r.''. 'po ironorary, sustaining, glftB.srtTi, 100 Seniors '..?." 25 Alumnae 50 County ralr 100 Systematic giving 150 May morning breakfast ........ 25 Faculty subscriptions ' InO Conference fund 125 Gifts 50 $U75 Disbursements. Salary $ 800 Conference expenses 40 National committee 40 State pledges 50 Missionary work 75 Social committee 50 Telephone 25 FlowerB 25; Rooms 100 Incidentals (postnge, etc.) H5 Printing 100 Conference ..,.... 125 $1,475 An epoch-making conference be tweon teachers of economics fronj many of the leading educational instil tutlons of the country was held at tho University of Chicago On ctober 22, This Is the first meeting in the his tory of tho science in which teachers have come together to discuss educa tional methods, and Is declared tc) havo resulted in a distinct benefit In various ways: (1) in a comparison of experiences and methods; (2- in a stimulation of discussion and criti cism; (3) in tho appointment of i committee to investigate present methodB of teaching the science In th$ United States, and to determine what support tho study receives in the uni- i verities. This committee consists of Leon C. Marshall, assistant professor of political economy and dean of the college of commerce and administra tion, In the University of Chicago, chairman; Professor Fairchild, of Yalo University, and Professor Cbapln of Belolt College. The educational Insti tutions represented at the conference wero: The .University of Chicago, Yale University, tfnlverslty of Illinois, Uni versity of Minnesota, Oborlln Univer sity, Ohio Wesloyan University, Roch ester University, Whenton College, Albion." jCpJlego, Belolt College, Uni versity of Missouri, Western Reserve University,, University 0f -Indiana, University of Wisconsin, "University of Michigan, and Northwestern Uni versity. i i , WITH BASKETBALL TEAM ,ir Orr--rR HEWITT MEET& ATHLETE8 FIRST TIME YE8TERDAY; v iffoWSPE&tfSKM TtffcKXCBlflfi Thirty-Candidates Out for Tryout.and Plenty of-Old' Men -on--Hand -to ', ' ; 1 8ervA as Nucleus of , : ' Neto Five. t With tho doom of football oh Tbanksglyjng flay, the timo; for now lino of university athletics wili'a'rrivo. The basketball season has already commenced. At tho call of Captain Peary and Coach Hewitt, thirty candidates for po sitions pn the tam reported for prac tice .yesterday. With many of tho old 4 veterans still to report the amount of material to mako a good team is of large quantity. Several of tho mem bers of laBt year's squad have signi fied their intention to again Join tho squad,, and with these men on tho practice floor there Is basis for tho students of the university to hope that the university will produco a winning team this year. This is tho first year that Coach Hewitt han had chargo of the univer sity squad, and io hopes'tO'Tnako a success of his Wor1& WHU tno matorial that ho hag olianflr -Dr. Clapp of tho dopartment1ofpfiy8icnl.4;culturo has held tho posftlon'vCt'coach of the has kotball teKnTP&cVlhlB lino of athletics haVbeOnVij'Vpg'uo in tho uni versity, but on account of tho incroas ing duties in the department of which hdm tth$ chargo'lre 'was forcedto re sign, and I. P. Hewitt was "appointed by the nemboril, of t.hoi athletic lioard aB the basketball coach. Hewitt Now Coach. Mr. Howltt la a graduate of tho university-nnd has coached thulilncoln -Y. Al.- O. A. basketball team for tho pastfow years "with fr marked -Btfccess. 'Ilevwas tne.inTjerpr thm university 'tonni when W was In school and hks be'eh refereo at- many of tho games which hayo boon played on the local 'door. f , R Some 6t the' members of tho class toanfs of last year nro out for practlco ahd irmonjllieBb areWverfl rroBhinon who showed varsity form diTrW thnir 41rst year. Landers, a sla:r noffbrmer. 'was out for practlco,. ns-,wnp ela0HlJt- iiur, u mujuuor oi last years irosnnttn team, who was kept from playing j. cnuso ho waB judged to bo varsily material. Jones a sub on last yearfs team, was also out for practice. Several'Of -the mon from iho. team last year -wore out. Among theao-men was Waiters, who graduated last spring, -Ho has not as .yet been a member of tho team and will -be eligi ble to play In all tho games excopt in game with teams of the "Big Bight" circuit. Wilbur Wood of last -year's team has announced that ho will bo Wt for practice. He has played to year, but has taken his degree' "but .WjJlbejjligJblQ in ftUgaines. with leums not in mo "Dig laignt." ' Bell Not Back ' ' The tcftrcljWlll bo, somewhat handi capped thlB year by tho loss of Boll, the formidable little jmard 'from last year, and tho loss 6f Potraima'k w'lll aiso DO'ioic." "retraBneit piayed" center last year, but this year ho -will bo un able to Join the squad on account, of haying an extra amount of work. Sctimidt, who won his letter lafet year in the Missouri game, will bo eligible, and with, a number of the, pld -letter men back Into tho .game there will bo a nucleus for a strong team: , Last year there was more interest in tho gamo than there haa over "boen exhibited before at the university, and the prospects are this year that with tho ise. of, th,o potable bleachers that were in, vogtm last year tho interest in tho indoor gamo wilt be mpr in tense. Nobraska last year lost tno Missouri Valley championship by only one Kame and this year 'the hopes and plans: of tho captain and coaoh,aro to pui forth a flvo that will win tho Mis souri Valley championship and also do- feat Minnesota. ? V ' -"VAWf 4jjiw-" ' ' l'jS3SSiwaa:--aw- lN !!. Bsasaawtawnrnwiinniii nmn ,NI,