THE DAILY NEB R ASK AN HUSKY EASTERNERS TAKE SPA TURKEY-DAY BATTLE Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A., Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P One Goal Kick Brings Winning Point Waffles and Coffee 15c HENDRY'S CAFE 136 North Phone B-1589 Eleventh Lincoln, Neb. HUSKERS SHOW STRENGTH Excell Syracuse Eleven in Yardage Gained and First Downs Made In Spite of Weight Handicap GOOD CLEANING SERVICE Send Your Work to LINCOLN g Cleaning & Dye Works 326 So. 11th Phone B-6575 GIIAPIfJ BROS. I27 So. I3th St. Flowers ALL the Time ! TEACHERS WANTED To fill vacancies in all depart ments. Have calls for teachers daily. Only 3 per cent commis sion. TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENT BUREAU 208-209 C. R. S. Bank Bldg. Cedar Rapids, Iowa B1392 "The Acme of Pep" B 3708 LOEB'S ORCHESTRA Music for all occasions Orchestra from Five to Twenty-Five Pieces Jazz Band or Boiler Shop Effects on request only Save Your Eyes Dr. W. H. Martin Optometrist Eyes examined without charge, we design, make, adjust and repair your glasses at reasonable charges. Office Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Phone L-7773 1234 O St Suite 5 Upstairs Opposite Miller & Paine Try Roberts Sanitary DAIRY LUNCH Open Until Midnight 1238 "O" St. Opposite Miller & Paine n Playing one of the greatest fight ing games ever put up by a Nebraska team and exhibiting as clever an offensive as has ever been seen on Nebraska field, the 1917 Cornhuskers were forced to bow to the great Syracuse team Thanksgiving Day by the score of 9 to 10. In yardage gained, first downs made, fight and real football, the Cornhuskers had the advantage of their eastern op ponents. It was a case of weight and experience against speed and fight, and the latter made the best showing. The great exhibition put on by the Cornhuskers during the fourth period when they carried the ball eighty- five yards without losing possession of it, to a touchdown, was a feat probably unequaled, in the history of Nebraska football. The stonewall defense of the easterners had been shown early in the game and espe cially was it in evidence during the third Quarter when the Cornhuskers were unable to make any impression on it. Big Drive in Fourth Quarter At the beginning of the fourth quarter the Nebraskans abandoned all attempts at bucking the line after three successful tries had gotten the ball from their own goal line to the 10-vard mark. Here an exchange of punts was made and the big drive was started from the 15- yard line. The weighty middle part of the easterner's line was utterly unable to meet the surprise attack of end runs and forward passes that were going around them , and over their heads. With Dobson tossing the ball and Hubka receiving It and MeMahon varying the attack with an occasional end run the rush was not stoDDed until the goal was crossed. Then, after playing the greatest game of his career and a defensive game that will rank with any ever played by a Nebraskan, Captain Shaw put too much weight on the wrong side of the ball when he made the kick for goal and the pigskin sailed wide of the bars. The entire Nebraska team de serves credit for the game that they played. Even the substitutes which were sent into the fray toward the end of the struggle did more than could have naturally been expected them. It was a sight seldom seen on any football field when substitute after substitute went into the line up in the midst of th-3 drive which if successfully completed would place the Cornhuskers in a position to tie the score. Not a man, however, who went into the game failed to fill the place he was sent in to play. Captain Shaw and Paul Dobson at tracted the most attention for the games they put up while Rhodes and Kellogg at the ends and Hubka were nearly as much in the lime light as the others. Wilder, Kositzky, Day, Cook, MeMahon, Schellenberg and DuTeau all come in for more than an ordinary amount of praise. The strength of the easterners can not be overlooked at any time. Their weighty line and speedy, vet eran backfield made up one of the best visiting teams that has been seen on Nebraska field. MAJOR TELLS OBSTACLES MET BY YOUNG OFFICERS Stage fright, inability tq give or ders, and lack of discipline, result ing from their home and school training, are the stumbling blocks in the way of the young men from college and civil life who are trying to secure officers' commissions in the new army. This is the opinion of Major A. It. Kerwin, commandant of the Uni versity of Wisconsin military depart ment, who, after many years in the regular army, is training R. O. T. C. men at the university. "They ct-nnot talk; they are afraid of their voices; they feel 'green' and get stage fright when they stand before a company of men and at tempt to give orders," the major de clared. "They lack what I would call 'military initiative' and the knack of handling men. "Young Americans are individual, unrestrained, unusued to obedience. They are in general much less trained to discipline than the men who enter European armies. "If a young man wishes to prepare himself for a commission, there are two things that he can do. He can practice being drilled and drilling rag mumm m- i Lyon & Healy "Washburn" Ukuleles, $15.00; Leonardo Nunes genuine Hawaiian make, $7.50 Mauna Loa brand, $4. May be had of 12,000 leading music dealers. Write for name of the nearest dealer. 51-C7 JACKSON BOULEVARD I , THE languorous charm of the Hawaiian native instruments so moving in appeal, so observably in vogue is strikingly characteristic of the Ukulele. Its tone possesses that curiously beautiful timbre, that exotic charm of tonal quality which has made these instruments so sensation ally popular. The Ukulele has a pleasing grace of form. The finer models are made of genuine Hawaiian Koa wood. It is much in request today among the smarter college and other musical organizations. It is easy to learn. Its price includes an Instruction Book. Hawaiian Steel Guitar Every chord struck upon this typically rep resentative Hawaiian instrument is marked by a weird, plaintive harmony and strangely beautiful qualities of tone. It brings, to any music, qualities full of vivid color and va ried charm. Price 88.00 and upwardi, lncludinr Steel and Set of Three Tbkrble for playing, and Instruction Book. Catalogs en application. CHICAGO fill 5? -71 m WM0MPAS X- 3 i F V V -g t V'i ft u y 1 I 1 1 tJ-" SI J -"v - 1 ' 1 AC HIE V B KENT Twenty-five "years "ago the General' Tt has'set frettnespirit ofresearch. Electric Company was founded., . . , , , It has given tangible form to invent Since then, electricity has sent its thrill tion, in apparatus of infinite precision through, the whole structure, of. life, and gigantic power.' Eager to turn wheels, to lift and carry;, .And it has gone forth.cc-operating with to banish dark, to gather heat, to hurl, every industry, to command this unseen, voices and thoughts across space, to force and fetch it far to serve all people give the world new tools for its work -electricity has bent to mans will, By the achievements which this com-. pany has already recorded may best. Throughout this period the General be judged the greater ends its future; Electric Company has held the great 'shall attain, the deeper mysteries it responsibilitirsand high ideals of, 'y shall solve in electrifying more, leadership. 'and more of the world's work. rto. iU! jfctt iriUK fii?t( i whK'?: t ,f ! others."