TIIE DAILY NEBRASKAN JAYHAWKS WIN FIRST GAME K u Team Wallop Emporia Nor mal 47 to 0. LAWRENCE, Kas.. Oct 2.-Ualng line bucks, forward passes and end " nB the Kansas University football eleven swamped the Emporia Normal team by a score of 47 to 0. One touchdown was scored In the first quarter and three In the second, when the Normalities went to pieces. Kansas used line bucks almost entire ly m the first half, but when Arthur Longborg. quarter, was replaced by Harvey Little, a passing game began which brought quick results in scores. Longborg caught a punt in the sec ond quarter and raced sixty-five yards for a touchdown. Frank Mandeville nined 160 yards in less than three quarters, getting away for several Spectacular runs. Pete Jones, all Valley guard in 1917. starred In the Kansas line. Thirty Kansas men were used by Coach Allen. Sophomore Men Make Boasts About Coming Olympic Battle Men are so contrary that if their cb wanted them to stay out late they probably wouldn't do it LOEB'S ORCHESTRA Business Thone B3366 Residence B3708 HI The Freshmen will not have to pur chase new hats or caps, as the case may be, until after the February examinations. The Sophomore class of the school has decided that it will be the style for the first-year men to wear the green during the cold snows of winter and, with this end in view are preparing to marshal an array of talent for the coming Olympics that will send the Yearlings to a crushing defeat. With last year's experience behind them the class of 1923 is counting on taking every event on the program planned for the coming Olympics day, October 16. In the Olympics of last year the present Sophomore class trimmed the class of 1922 by the score of 65 to S5. With a year's train ing and development to aid them the second-year men are not anticipating much trouble in disposing of the men of the green headgear at the annual scrap. In most of the Olympics held in the past, the Freshmen have been vic torious due, largely, to the greater number of men enrolled in the Fresh men class. The Sophomores with a smaller number have been at a dis advantage. This year the sides will be more nearly even. There was an unusually large enrollment of Fresh men last year and most of them have returned to school. The Freshmen class this fall is not as large as last year and there will not be much ad vantage in numbers when the two classes clash. With the support of every man in the class the Sophomores should have every chance to bring home the bacon Olympics Day. UPUin IWAlTTTJrt TRAM i WINS GRAND PRIZE : wed, t" " 3 g:SNo Twl.e lily tt:-0 9 CLARENCE OLIVER t1 GEORGIA U-.r "THE BKK HIVK" "THE CHAMPION" A Comedy with rnnch wit H MANN MOl-INER PUFFY ft 8WEENKY Knnitart Entertainers DAVE HARRIS Syncopation' Betit Brt OR KEN PRKW A Barnyard Epiole ARCO BROTHERS Ariiletim Supreme BERT ft A.EL .oKATFXLE la a Bance Fei.tttire "TOri:s OF THE PAY" H ' ' i "Riders of the Dawn" 1 The Big Picture of the Week g By Zane Grey LARRY SEMON in "THE STAGE HAND" Prices 10c, 15c and 30c Nebraska added more laurels to her crown when her Junior farmers carried off the high prizes at the inter-state fair at Sioux City, la., the week of September 20, in competition with nine other cornbelt states. The Nebraska boys and girls bread mak ing team won the grand championship prize of the fair, in addition to the first prize in the home economics group of boys and girls club demon stration. The Nebraska animal hus bandry demonstration team captured first place in its group. In addition the Nebraska boys and girls canning exhibit took first place and $400 in cash was added in individual prizes by the Junior farmers of the state. The grand championship Nebraska team is composed of Beulah Sitorious, Sada May Macaule yand Anna Mack- lin, all of Kearney. They demon strated at the fair how to make the kind of bread mother used to make. They were coached by Belva Ander son of Kearney. Each member of tne team received a gold wrist watch. The winning Nebraska animal huS' bandry team is composed of Fay Galentine, Edgar Stone and Mary flhatterson. all of Inland. They demonstrated how to care for, feed, delouse, cull, etc., poultry. They were coached by Mrs. J. J. Donahue of Inland. The two teams were elected in competitive demonstrations at the state fair to represent Nebraska at the inter-state fair. All the members of the teams are under sixteen years old and received their training in regular standard boys and girls clubs, formed under the supervision of the University of Nebraska and the United States department of agriculture. rm-n --d.ui.tkm of m ooMAtr-iii-og'r. TTT M IT TTYkH III H JT Bi-A II . 1 n M r CHARLES RAY In the Taramonnt IMetnre "HOMER COMES HOME" "THE VALLFT OF 10,000 SMOKES" Aa Interesting TraveJorae "DUCK INN" A New Mermaid Comedy One Cntlnooua Laugh Rlnlte Hrmphony Oreheetra SHOW 8 START AT 1. 8. 5, 7, MAT8-J!Oo. N1CHT 8Se 1MBE1TY MON. TIES. WED. Wf Yaaderille'e Iautrhlnic facce fcj "lRIOOK M'WM" ROSE, E 1,1-1 8 AMI ROSE rrenentinc Their Comedy Novelty KARKFI8 OF J IN" FIFXPINO ft BOOMER An OrSrinaJ OfTerlnr "IN EVERYBODY'S HOME" L.A MONT ft WBIOHT MILDRED HARRIS CHAPLIN In Her Newext Feature Tleture "THE INFERIOR SEX" SHOWS START AT 4:80. 7:00, :00 MON TLBS., WEB. ALL THIS WEEK MARSHALL NEILAN rreant a MATRIMONIAL MIRTHOTAKE "DON'T EVER MARRY' Beaver's Cyrle Orchestra Willard'e "FANTABY OF JEWELS The world mntrt pretention Mnteal Art SHOWS START AT 1. S, . " IK MATS TOe. " ...imii THE AUTO STROP BArETY RAZOR Makes shavinc a pleaeure. Abaolateljr rnwumiiU&. chapman's PRrns fun Case, V. N. IS, W lilt O CREIGHTON PLAYS TIE GAME Saturday's Contest With Yankton College Ends 7 to 7. OMAHA, Oct. 2. A badly crippled Creighton football team struck a stone wall in Yankton College here today and the best that the Omaha team could do was to get a 7 to 7 tie. Yankton's score came in the third quarter when they got the ball on a blocked punt in the shadow of Creighton's goal. "Taken" Manley, suffering from a torn tendon was taken from the stands and placed in at half for Creighton in the fourth quarter and scored Creighton's only touchdown by racing through a broken field sixty five yards for a touchdown. Dalf kicked goal. POPULATION INCREASE LESS THAN EXPECTED "We estimate the 1920 population of Nebraska will be in the neighbor hood of 1,296,000," announces Arthur Thomas, publicity director of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce. "This will be an increase of less than '9 per cent, one of the lowest increases of any state announced to date. "The population of Nebraska has only increased about 230,000, or less than 22 per cent, in the last twenty years. "I believe It is time that Bome state-wide organized movement is started to increase the population or Nebraska." The following fig ares show the population of Nebraska since 1860: Increase 1920 (estimated) 1910 1900 1,296,000 ..1,192.214 1,066,300 9.0 11.8 0.3 134.9 267.8 326.5 1890 (inaccurate) 1,062,656 1880 452,402 ic-n 122,993 I860 28,841 The 1890 figures cannot be used for comparative purposes because the census of several cities in Nebraska was "padded" that year. CORNELL STUDENTS GUILTY OF CRIBBING ITHACA, N. Y Oct. 5. One hun dred and six Cornell students have been found guilty of fraud In con nection with the examination last June by a committee on etudent afTalrs, It was announced Monday night Nine were exonerated and the de gree of one was withheld -until after September this year. One bnndred and one were dismissed from the University for a year but Judgment was suspended and they were per mitted to return to the rnlverulty on pa ole. "If yon get It In tha neci. be glad yon are not an ostrich or a giraCe." Billy Sunday. CATTLE FEEDING NOT SUCCDSSFUL Investigation by University Shows It to Be Usually a Losing Game. Cost of production investigations carried on by the University of Ne braska in co-operation with the United States department of agriculture show that cattle feeding was a precarious venture and usually a losing game in Nebraska in the last two years. Fig ures have been gathered on the cost of feeding more than 6,000 head of cattle over the state during the winters of 1918-19 and 1919-20. Not every farmer in the survey lost money. A number of them fed with profit. Snme, however, lost as much as $50 a head, and on an average there was a loss on every head in cluded in the area surveyed. In 1918-19 a loss of $50 or more a head was reported on 155 head, and in 1919-20 the same loss was reported on more than 200 head. On 795 head in 1919-20 the loss reached an aver age of $14.57. The greater part of the Nebraska cattle covered in the survey work of 1918-19 made their gains at a cost of from 20 to 35 cents a pound, with extremes ranging from 12 to 48 cents, while of the cattle covered the next year the greater part made their gains at a cost of from 15 to 35 cents a pound, with an extreme range of from 8 to 53 cents. Economical Feeding Major Factor. While economical feeding is shown to be the major factor in the cost of fattening after the steer is bought the investigation substantiates the fact that feeding usually plays a minor part in determining profit or less, and that buying right and selling right are more often the controling factors. The cattle in question were bought at about the same figure in both years of the investigation. In 1918-19 three of the droves were bought at between $6 and $7 a hundred, while most or the cattle in the study went Into the lots at from $8 to $12 a hundred. The weight averaged about 750 pounds, with a few over 1,000 and a few under 500. The finished cattle laid down at the market cost as follows: 2,293 head fed In the winter of 1918-19 cost $14.91 a hundred; 8.041 bead fed in the winter of 1919-20 cost an average of $13.83 a hundred; 795 head cost an average of $13.39. Costs were found to vary quite widely, the major por tion of the 1918-19 cattle carrying an expense of $13 to $18 a hundred, while the 1919-20 cattle ranged from $11 to $17 a hundred. In the computation of net cost, allowance was made for pork and manure. On an average these two by-products were credited to rr"' slightly more than the cost of fatten ing, other than the feed. The University of Nebraska and the United States department of agrt ent ire are conducting a five-year snrv ey of the feeding business In Nebraska. SHOE REPAIRING DEPARTMENT At your service. All work guaran teed. We use the best leather that can be bought. We repair shoes while you wait. FREE-FREE-FREE We Shine Your Shoes Free With All Work From 50c Up Men's Half Soles $1.75 Men's Heels Straightened .65 Men's Rubber Heels 50 Men's Tips 50 Women's French Heels....$2.25 Women's Aluminum Heels 1.75 Women's Cuban Heels.... 1.50 Women's Military Heels.. 1.50 Baby Louis Heels 1.50 Ladies' Half Soles 1.35 Ladies' Heels Fixed 40 Ladies' Tips 35 Ladies' Rubber Heels 50 WE USE SANDERSON DYES EXCLUSIVELY The Best Shoe Shining service in the city. Preserve Leather by having us give your shoes proper attention. Bring in Your Shoes to be Dyed Women's Low Shoes dyed any color Women's High Shoes dyed any color . 50c . 75c Black Brown - Bronze Visit the Shoe Shining Parlor That's Different WE USE SANDERSON DYES EXCLUSIVELY Hats Cleaned and Rebloc&ed Service Unequaled Work Perfect. Prices Reasonable. Women's hats shaped and cleaned 50c and up Men's hats cleaned and blocked 50c and up All Work Guaranteed. CAPITA P C L. SHINING ID) A1MMP M AND AD Next Door to Armstrong's Clothing Store Be Sure You're Right 1219 O Street