' , THE DAILY JfEBBASnAW The Daily Nebraskan THE BEST UNIVERSITY NEWSPAPER IN THE WORLD EDITORIAL STAFF Eva Miller Editor-in-Chief George Grimes Managing Editor Vivlenne Holland Associate Editor Ivan Beede Associate Editor Dwight P. Thomas Sporting Editor Agnes Bartlett Society Editor BUSINESS STAFF Walter Blunk. Business Manager Homer Carson .....Assistant Business Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF Jean Burroughs Dorothy English Lenore Noble Lucilo Becker C. H. Cribble Gertrude Squires Roy Bedford Fern Nohlo Ralph Thorpe John C. Wright Carolyn Reed Richard E. Cook Offices: News, Basement, University Hall; Business, Basement.. Administration Building. Telephones: News, L-4841 ; Business, B-2597. Published every day during the college year. Subscription, per semester, fl. Entered at the postofflce at Lincoln. Nebraska, as second class mall matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Tomorrow is Home-coming day. The alumni will be coming all day today and tomorrow. The campus will have many visitors who will he anxious to see the old buildings and their old professors. They have been looking forward to it, planning on il. seeing it, and for many it will be their first return to the school for years. The annual battle between the Jayhawks and the Cornhuskers will be fought on the field, Saturday afternoon. The spirit is running high this year. The Kansas men are coming to win,' and they are going to play real football. But against Nebraska, graduate and under graduate spirit pulling for the best football team in the country, and pulling together, Kansas university will have a hard time. No team can win against the combined, co-operative spirit that will be shown tomorrow. The "grads" are coming from far and near for it. "The team" will always be the same incarnation of ideals, though the identities that compose it change. The alumni are coming to fight for Nebraska, the students and faculty are going to fight for the team and Nebraska, and "for Nebraska we will." Olympics seem to be a "continued in our next" performance thie year. The scrap between the freshmen and sophomores started Wed nesday, instead of Saturday as ia the custom. No one can deny that there is "pep" in these two classes. Paul Revere isn't in it with some of these men who fly around in the night hunting stolen classmen. This happened last night and night before. The spirit is fine, it is what everyone needs, the spirit of rivalry, but the methods are a trifle strenuous, and everything can be carried too far. The new men come to school with all kinds of wholesome enthusi asm, and if some one could invent a way for them to keep it, and know how to use it during the rest of the four years, he,' would be doing a service to the whole life of the institution. Thousands of men in European war prisons are becoming insane for lack of proper food and care. Andersonville and Libbey prisons are duplicated hundreds of times on the continent. The stories of suffering and misery are not exaggerated they are- true. Nebraska students are going to help in the big work of lightening the sorrow and sickness that is so terrible. Within ten days, ten thousand dollars must be pledged. Every man and woman in the University should respond. The music for a Nebraska song has been written by Professor C. B. Cornell, but there are no words, as yet. The music is inspiring, it fills the need that we have felt for a long time, that of a song that will be an alma mater song, a true representative school song. Some one should get bvsy and write some good, lively verses to the music . Don't forget that tomorrow is Home Coming Day! THE DAYS GONE BY Five Years Ago Today Manager Earl O. Eager offered two reserved seats to the Micigan game to the person turning in the best football song for the rooters. Two hundred rooters left on the special train for Lawrence, Kansas. Two Year Ago Today A specila train was to carry the Cornhuskers to Iowa on hte following Friday. ' The scrub etam scored two touch downs against the freshmen. The names Caley, Doyle, Hawkins, Selzer, Halbersleben and Porter were promi nent in the account of the struggle. One Year Ago Today Elsa Helen Haarmann, '15, and Wil- HANO MADE STERLING JEWELRY La Valliers. Brooches, Pins, Buttons Exclusive New Inexpensive HflLLETT UNI JEWELER Established 1871 1143 O St. Ham Mathew Locke, ex-'16, were mar ried in Omaha- Kansas objected to Nebraska play ing a post-season game at Pasadena. The following appeared in a forum article in the Daily Nebraskan: "All Cheer Together Are We Spoiled By Success?" Nebraska rooting needs re juvination. The old 'grads,' who helped to make our school what it is and who have every single tradition, will be back. Are we going to let them go home with the impression that Ne braska spirit is nil?" UNIVERSITY NOTICES Oliver Men's Meeting "Facing the Music," at the Oliver men's meeting, Sunday, November 19, 1916. N. J. Elliott, Gulveston, "In a Mexican Trison to Be Shot." W. S. Marquis, Chicago; "Man's- Place in Church Today." Two lively men on timely topics. Doors open at 3:15 p. m. Every man bring a man. Freshman Hop Statement Financial statement of the fresh men hop which was held at the Rose wiliie nartv house Friday evening, No vember 10, 1916, is as follows: Total receints. J112.50. Total expenditures, rental hall and service, $28; music, $.-!; printing, $11.75; doorkeeper, $1. 50; refreshments, $12.10; decoration, $24.62; total, $113.97. Deficit, $1.47. to be stood by the class. James Boyd, chairman. Audited November 16, 1916. T. A. Williams, Agent Student Activities. Pre-Medic Hop All those selling tickets for the pre-medic hop settle with Carl G. Amick before Monday night, Novem ber 20. Carl G. Amick. Chairman. Sigma XI Meeting Sigma Xi will meet Tuesday night, November 21, at S o'clock in N 110. Dr. J. E. Weaver of the department of botany will lecture on " The Fac tors Responsible for the Distribution of Plants." Every one interested is urged to attend. Palladian Literary Society Palladian will hold a closed meet ing in the Temple Friday evening at 8:30. All members are urged to be out for business meeting. Palladian annual banquet will be held Satur day evening at the Lindell at 7 sharp. Junior Notice Tryouts for the junior class relay team will be held on the track at 4:15 o'clock Friday. All men in the junior class who have had any experi ence in the sprints ought to get out. There will be four men chosen for the team. Gold, silver and bronze medals will be awarded to each of the members of the winning, teams for the order in which they place. Get out and help the juniors win. Ralph Anderson, Athletic Committee Chairman. Union Business Meeting Important business to be discussed at 12:30 noon Friday. Everybody out! Union Literary Society The Union Literary society will meet in Union hall Saturday evening. A program will be given by alumni members. Visitors are welcome. ALUMNI NEWS E. F. Laune, '14, who has taken graduate work in economics at Chi cago university, has accepted a posi tion with the vocational guidance bureau of the city of Chicago. The association of collegiate alumni will hold their annual luncheon Sat urday, November 18, at 12 o'clock at the Lindell hotel. All alumnae are invited to attend. Tickets may be secured from members of the alumni committee at the hotel before the luncheon. The Mogul Barber Shop, 127 N. 12th. Best of attention given students. Meal tickets $5.50 for $4.50. Newbert Cafe, 137 No. 12th St. ' More Ushers Needed Additional ushers will be needed for the Kansas game Saturday and the fact that you have not acted as usher for previous football games will not bar you. All ushers report the day of the game promptly at 1 o'clock- A. J. Covert. Freshman Football The freshman class football team will meet for practice in the Armory locker room, today at 11 o'clock. STUDENTS PHOTOS AT BLAZEK'S From 75c to $20 per dozen. 1306 O SL High cost of newspaper materials has forced the Silver and Gold, U. of Colorado, to omit, occasionally, cne edition of the paper. This would indeed be a calamity to a weekly paper; Silver and Gold, however, goes to rress twice a week Ex. ... fcE OVEI FEATURING Hart Schaffner & Marx "Varsity Six Hundred" $17.50, $20.00, $25.00 ARMSTRONG'S Good Clothes Merchants BRIEF BITS OF NEWS Superintendent Lambertson of the Brown county high school, Kansas, was a University visitor Thursday, looking for prospective teachers. The University Business Women's club will hold its annual luncheon at the Windsor hotel, Saturday, Novem ber IS. at 12:30 o'clock. Mrs. T. F. A. Williams, associate professor of sociol ogy, will speak on "Need of Vocational Training for Women." Tickets may be secured from Viola Weatherill, Helen Saunders, Clarissa Delano or Vera Fleck. Professor Filley of the farm man agement department, is in Washing ton, D. C, attending the meeting of agricultural college and experiment station representatives. Miss Alice Loomis is attending a national meeting of Domestic Science association in Washington, D. C. Roy Horst, '20, is seriously ill with typhoid fever. Freshman theme: "They were re moving the show from the sidewalks and perches." "The good paragraph should not be more than 250 words long or sentences short." After 1917 any Northwestern law student who fails in more than one subject will be dismissed perma nently. Ex. "SPA" Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A, Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P Terminal Drug Co. FREE AUTO DELIVERY Phone B4366 Frederick Macdcnald Commercial Photographer 1309 O Street, Room 4 Phone L4022 The farm owned by the University of Vermont is being greatly improved by the students. A concrete floor has just been laid in the barn which is now large enough to accommodate fifty cows. Ex. Classified Advertising Boarding Two meals a day, 3 per week. Virginia, 16th and R. Apart ment . 238. 45-6-7-8 Lost Principles of Composition by Boynton. Return same to student activities office. 47-48-49 Will party who took overcoi. not belonging to them from U hall, Wca nesday, November 15, please return same to student activities office? 48 Quick Service Open at All Times Orpheum Cafe Speolal Attention to University Students EAT AT PUTCH mill CAFE 234 No. 11th Street SALE OF BOOKS STANDARD IN SETS AT VERY LOW PRICES tt V J U . If i S ; r a if I, LLt i J k 3 I V I l J . ii i h r i i t v fsl L j.2L la :-. L1' 4 The works of standard authors in sets many of them are De Luxe editions. We bought a large number earlier in the year from several prominent publishers who wished to clear their stocks and though we have sold a great many sets, there is still an excellent selec tion from which to choose. Here are some' of the authors represented: Ainsworth Arabian Nights Austin Balzac Browning Bulwer-Lytton Carlyle Cooper Dante De Foe Dickens Dumas Emerson Fielding Hawthorne Victor Hugo Irving Kipling Longfellow Plutarch Poe Reade Riley Schiller Stevenson Sraollet Tolstoi Thackeray Shakespeare Wilde Turgeniefi Muhlbach llllpj n" Toakcco S u "IXTHEN a dog bites me once Y T Fm through with it. Same way with a tobacco. VELVET is aged in the wood for two years to make it the smoothest smoking tobacco. 1L 1UL 1UL tudonts Register for your mtulo work at THE UNIVESITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC Twenty-Third Year just commencing Many teachers in all branches of music to choose from. Dramatic Art Aesthetic Dancing Ask for information WTLLAED KPvrRATT-, Director 11th and R St. Opposite the Campus CHAPIN BROS. 127 So. 13 -irf JJ lOWgrg ALLTHETIMb