THE DAILY N E BR AS KAN Friday, November 2i, ig2' The Daily Nebraskan irt 'l. 'H,,,!y ''"'' "f rn.li Wl''ii in " i n. a": 1122 ' 1 17, ""'""''"'I Jiu.iinry all l nd.r ij. ,lhitl.,n or Ih. Nt,i,l,t 1-uh. Ilntln liouri . n...irV k .-r-ciil--lMM ,llUl.r nt Hip poHioff!.-,. Uc,,i. N,.,riii.ln. iin.i.r llu Actof i xiiirrt-HH. Murrh 3. 1.S7II. Bul..rl.ltn r.l ti.ou u ymr Bhula copy K, ,.,,,, Aililn nil foimmiiilfiitloiig tn TIIK DAII.V NK1UIAKKAN Stntlnn A, Lincoln. Neb. TF.I.KI-IIONK Vnlvpr.lly til KvrnlilKM ItllXMj Killlurlnl anil hiiNlui'xK offiiva In koiiiIi wi-st corner of bum'niint of Ailmliilxirii (Inn It ullU inc. IW-II Farinun K.ilitm lifflfg Houm 10-11 iiml (-5 ilai:.v llrrlirrt Himvnrll, Jr Maniinlnic lilltor Of fire Ihiiim, to II, Monday. Tinmliiy. W'i'il i.i'mcIii y . TlmmUiiy, Saliinlny. MiirJorlK My man ... Kilwurd Itiirk K.ilxrt I-. On I Oniric . Mll.liill llm Pally Neliraskan cannot unsigned communications. print Yn'crof.orary Opinion Isolation. When Universities woro young nnd thf students win) attended them tho specir.l favorites nf fortune, I'nlvorsi Him were inor or less n thing apart from tin' world, n separate sphere, licv vi iv mil m much it r'ng In tho big ti nt of life lint rather n four year sideshow Into which only a few could nfl'onl to seek admittance. Put since (hat time Universities haw ;riivii mid become such n po tent Influence as to deserve a place In (lie main show, nnd n hlphor odii ration Is generally recognized as n desirable step in the preparation of men for success in life. Tho Uni versity of today la not a thins apart. It Is n well-notched cop in tho sys tem. College Is n section of oduca- AdMM'lat Kclllnr N'lvlil Ktlltur Muht Kiiiiur I tlnnal crowth. nnd its interests lie Niiclit Heimli ch u unci y KliiNpy HiihIupmh MiinuKfr Offl.p IIoiith-4 to Dally. Clifford M. Ill,k Ann'!. IIunIiii-xh MiiniiKi-r Krmik I'ry Clrculiillon .tluium,r MkIiI l')'ii(or lor till I--i.il-. Robert F. Craig. Mil In lit IVrlurll Awn't. Night Kdltor WRITING LETTERS. Writing letters is an nrt, hut a fa miliar one today possessed In .some decree by everyone. It requires no research or study or great intellec tual effort to write a letter since it la merely a communication of events told in the natural, unaffected way of tho writer. The arrivnl of a letter is hailed with joy. Then why is it that the art is generally so miserably neglected? It has been said that friendship is a boon to life. It is also a fact that friends cannot always remain to gether. Time and distance almost in evitably grow between them, and the one big. tangible tie that remains to bind them is the letter. News papers and other printed matter may bring Information of plac.3 and indi vidual, but they can never bring with them that feeling of having enjoyeu a visit with the absent one. Facts that look cold and Impersonal in print become rich In Interest when read in the handwriting of a friend. Let ters save us the necessity of for getting much of the treasured past which is called up only through the communications of friends. Our rapid mail service communica tion is one of the high marks of our civilization. It costs two cents, a wee bit of mental effort, and fifteen minutes of time to connect through means of a letter with a friend that you have not seen for years. It is quite unlike conditions years and years ago when people were incap able of writing their own letters and had to hire masters to do It for them. Tho general excuse for failure to write is the lack of time. Thi3 world does not move so swiftly that there is not lime to live or to re member that there are others living who would like to think that they are not entirely forgotten. A letter con stantly put off until a future time may have to be put off forever. Mail service is practically certain, but life is not, and its saddest words are, "It might have been." If you would make someone in this troubled old world happy; if you would keep the flower of life bloom ing brightly; and if you would keep the memory of the past fresh, write a letter to your friend that you have neglected. with the Interests of the world in which It functions. N'eglerting this situation nltoglher. too many students enter a Unlvor city with the Idea of paining an edu cation completely within tho bound aries of its campus. Although in their home communities they may have been Interested In some phase f national or international life, nl though they may have been ardent levspnper readers each evening, their four years at college are marked by a decided disregard of every problem which confronts ration or world. Thry become lotus-eaters in regard to outside affairs. They study political science, and don't oven know who has been elected governor of their home state. They absorb his tory, and fail to follow the makers of history today. They study the past, and totally disconnect themselves from the more important present and its bearing on the future. They sur round themselves with the walls of the University, and live in isolation for four precious years. To be sure, the student who thinks matters over is practically .".ever guilty of this failure to keep in touch with the world. Hut the fact remains that all students do not ponder then choices to any considerable extent, and too many are inclined to take the easiest way of complete forget fulncss of the world during their stav in an educational Utopia. What Universities need is not only stn dents who digest the contents of text books, but readers of newspapers, periodicals, and modern books which keen them well posted in current events. If University is to mean what it should, we must keep in touch with the world. Michigan Daily. Thanksgiving Proclamation U-NOTICE ALL-UNIVERSITY CHURCH SUNDAY. Have you planned your Sunday program? Is church attendance a part of it? For those students who have not yet made church attendance a reg ular part of their Sunday programs next Sunday is the time to begin. It has been designated as church af filiation Sunday when every Univer sity student is invited to unite with the church of his preference, either ated one. as a regular member or as an aff ill Special invitations have been is sued to University students to at tend church Sunday. The Univer sity student pastors, committees from the various churches, and the religi ous secretaries, are co-operating in helping every student in the Univer sity to find a church home by Sun day. The union of all the forces which are watching after the spirit ual side cf the students' lives in ob serving next Sunday as All-University Church Sunday should result in a very large student attendance at the Sunday services of Lincoln churches. Many churches are planning special services appropriate to affiliation Sunday. Every effort is being jnade to make Sunday services attractive to the college student The observance of tho Sunday be fore Thanksgiving as All-University Church Sunday is a custom which calls for the response of every stu dent in the University. lN"(iflci of gi'iK'rnl Interest will be printed in thlt column for two eon-eru- ive davx Cntiv hIiom Id he 111 the Ne- liraskan offl.-e by five oelock.! Palladian. Talladian will meet at S o'clock Friday evening in the hall in the Temple. Miss Erma Appleby, Univer sity Y. W. C. A. secretary, will tell about her visit to the Passion Tlay he past summer. The meeting U open t; all students. Unitarian Church. Pr. Samuel Eliot ot Cambridge, Mass., president of the American Uni tarian Association, will be the special preacher nt Al-Souls' Unitarian church, Twelfth and II streets, Sun day mill iilng at 11. Subject: "The Faith of a Free Church." Vesper Choir.' Members of the Vesper Choir re port at tho City Mission at 7:30 Sun day night. Music will be furnished bv the Choir. Oovernor McKelvIe finds a few things to bo thankful for, to which ho calls uttentlon In his official proclamation for tlio observance of Thanksgiving day, November 30 in Nebraska.. Ho says: "Tho president of. tho United States has designated Thursday, the thirtieth day of November, as a day of thanksgiving, to bo observed by the people of the nation. "Verily, this should be n day of universal observance In Nebraska. How many aro tho blessings for which the people of this common wealth should bo grateful! Again, rich acres have yielded up their bounty to the husbandmnn, and upon every hand thero is evidence or na ture's boundless contribution to f.ie prosperity ot the nation. So it is, In factory, shop and mart gainful em ployment nnd profitable return have been given to nil who would adjust themselves, patriotically, to the needs of the times. The want nnd suffer ing and starvation that grips un fortunate humanity in other lands stand out In ghastly relief by com parison with the plentiful supply of human necessities in fills fair domain. "If we are moved to complain, it Is only because wo aro unappreclative of the benefits that have been be- stowed upon us, nnd we have no H-.bt n exnect that anyone, even the Creator, will long shower bless. Ings upon us that we have not earned and do not deserve. Rather, it is our duty to give thanks to our Heav enly Father for the blessings that have crowned this year, and so turn nnr lives to unselfish service, that we may appear just as worthy in his eye. "Wherefore, I, Samuel TH. McKelvie, governor, do hereby set apart and proclaim Thursday, the thirtieth day of November, a day of Thanksgiving, and I recommend that due observ ance bo given th's day in church and home, througl-oui the borders of this state." show Sir Robert Borden the samo Mo Gill spirit that was demonstrated to Admiral Sims. The organization of this club last year met with little suc cess. This year under tho able load ershlp of R. K. Jones, tho club has nmdo a very good start. At their first meetings, Mr. Philip Kerr, formerly tho secretary of tho Rt. Hon. David Moyd-Coorge, cx-l'rlmo Minister of England, gave a very able address on tho prevention of war. At tho meet' ing on Thursday afternoon tho ex Premier of Canada will give an Infor mal talk on Canadian politics. Mc Clll Dlly. Exchanges. he report of a number of anony- recus contributions requires once again the reiteration of an announce Calendar Friday, November 24. Alpha Theta Chi pledge party, Chapter house. XI Psl Phi house dance. Dclian open meeting, second floor Temple. Chi Omega Fall party, K. of C. hall. Delta Chi freshman party, Lincoln hotel. Phi Tau Epsilon freshman party, chapter house. Lutheran Club social meeting, 8 p. m., Y M. U. A. Saturday, November 25. Phi Delta Theta freshman party, Chapter house. Union closed meeting, 8:30 p. m. Kearney club party, 8 p. m., Fac ulty hall. Teachers' College club, Ellen Smith Hall. Kappa Delta dance, Llncolnshi" e. Mystic Fish party, Rosewilde. Kappa Sigma fall party, Lincoln. Phi Gamma Delta house dance. Gamut club party, 8 o'clock, Ellen Smith hall. Football, Ames-Nebraska. All-University party. Armory. the The pork barrel is run on ancient aye-for-and-aye system. A sniff no longer means contempt, but only hope and expectant curiosity. Unification of college spirit and strengthening of fellow-feeling, thru the erection of a number of commodi ous men's dormitories on the campus is the goal toward which the Associa tion of Unorganized Is at present di recting its energies. C. J. Sembowcr and C. 13. Edmundson, deans of men, are co-operating with Russell E. Wise, president of the association, in carry ing on an extensive correspondence with chambers of commerce in Indi ana nnd with various development companies, in an effort to induce them to aid actively in tho project by interesting capital. Few responses to tne letters have been received as yet. An Interest in the plan Is evidenced in the early re plies, however, and future communi cations may gratify the hopes of In diana men, who consider the addition of men's dormitories to the campus as one of (he most outstanding im provements that could be made to the University at this time. Indiana Daily Student, Tho death rate In Kansas from ty phoid fever has been reduced 7!i per cent, while the rato from tubercu losis Is the lowest In tho United (Sates, according to tho records of tho Slato Water and Sewer Labora tory in Tnow hall, There have been no epidemics from water bacteria dlsoases in tho state of Kansas in the last five years. Statistics furnished by the United States Public Health service place the water supervision in tho state of Kansas third In importance. The work of tho Water and Sower Labor atory ranks with tho eight loading states of tho country. Tho great diminishing of disease in tho state has proven beyond a doubt the effi ciency of this department. Since a great many scientists believe tuber culosis is carried in water, the depart ment considers its efforts most suc cessful in stamping out this dreadful disease. University Daily Kansas. The meaning of the advent of women into tho newspaper profes sion will be discussed Saturday morning by Professor Osman C. Hooper of the department of Journal ism. Ohio State University, at the an nual convention of tho newspaper women of Ohio, which will be held at the Hotel Deshler, November 17, 18, and 19. Trofessor Hooper has followed tho progress from tho time when women were not welcomed into tho work to the present day when capable women are sought. He will give persona recollections before more than 100 delegates. The women will be guests of the Stadium management at the Iowa- State game Saturday afternoon. Ohio State Lantern. In an effort to promote and further the interest of Dartmouth in Colorado and the near-by Rocky Mountain re gion the Rocky Mountain Goat club has been reorganized by men attend ing Dartmouth from that district. Tho members of the club will leavo for Mooso Cabin this afternoon where they will have a feed and discuss fur ther plans. The Dartmouth. PHILLIPINES OFFER TE Civil Service Commission Opens Examinations for Teachers for Philippine Schools Tho United States Civil Service Commission announces open competi tive examinations for high school teachers, primary specialists and model primary teachers for service In tho Philippine Islands. Tho posi tions are open to both men and women. The school year begins in June and ends in March and so tho ap pointments will havo to be made early enough so that the appointees may sail in April or tho early part of May. .Teachers usually rent houses in the town centers, having their own establishments nnd ser vants. Tho school year is uniform throughout tho Islands and Is at pres ent fixed at forty weeks. Thero are ten weeks of vacation enabling the teachers to journey throughout the Orient. The minimum requirements for eli gibility for appointments to the posi tions of high school teachers de mand credits sufficient for gradua tion from a college ot recognized standing or the equivalent. Men tak ing the senior year's work in college may apply. Tho other two slasses of positions demand that tho appll cants have experience. Further information may bo se cured at tho Civil Service window at tho city Post Office. Presentation of scholarship cups fo the leading social and professional fraternities will take place In the Chapel at C:30 p. m. Monday. The awards are based on the standings of the fraternities for the last semester of last year. The Tuttle cup, donated by Profes sor Alonzo H. Tuttle of tho College of Law, will be presented to the leading social fraternity. The profes sional fraternity having the best scholastic standing will be given the McPherson cup, which was presented by Dean William McPherson of the Graduate School. Following the custom of former oc casions, the Panhellenic Council, which is in charge of the affair, will hold the meeting on the regular fra ternity-meeting night. This affair will take the place of the fraternity meet ings on the campus next week. Medals will also be awarded to the five fraternity men having the high est scholastic records. The medals will be of gold this year, instead of bronz6. Ohio State Lantern. Sir Ropert Laird Borden, K. C. M G., LL.D., addressed the McGill Uni versity Canadian club at their second meeting, November 23, at 5 p. m., In the Convocation hall of the E. V. C. It was a rare opportunity for McGill men and women to hear something of Canadian politics from the standpoint of the Conservative party. Every stu dent in the University is a member of this club, and the executive hope that a large number will turn out to this, the second meeting of the club, to Remember to Attend Chas. W. Fleming's ANNIVERSARY SALE Saturday, November 25, 1922 4 p.m. to 9 p. m. 1311 O St. Iowa State chnpter of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fratern ity, was awarded the activities cup at the filial banquet of the national convention last week in Manhattn, Kas being judged the most active chapter in the fraternity. Tho next five placed in this order: North Dakota, Michigan, Oklahoma. Orinnell and Cornell. Iowa State Student. Tho best-known methods of quiet ing a radical, are a soft snap and soft soap. immM'iiiimmtnrrani'ii'im lli:;ilirlH?limil!!lll!IHII,IirailllTIl!lllllll!llllili!lillll'lll ci .iiNmiiimniiiiiiiiiiimiijNimiiiinuiiiimiiiiiiiiiu i muim I Blot Out The Past i You have tried the rest g now try the besfc Uneeda ch n n LI U 11 So Different 230-32 N 13th St f H E. A. Wilson Paul H.Irwin Veterans World War We specialize in 25c and 35c Luncheons and Suppers. Bread, Butter, Coffee, B Potatoes Included Get a $5.50 Meal Ticket for $5.00 f OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Waffles and Cakes at All Hours. ' I ut;iiiiiin!niitiLii;:i!ii:ni:iti:!;ii;!i:n::ui mmLiiniinuiiiTitiriiLiiiiiiUiuiiHiiiitiiiuinTiuriuuuit Columbia Plans Building Program P.lds for tho construction and equip ment of a resident hall for women students to bo placed on Fast Field, directly west of tho President's houso nnd the Fnculty House, have been called for an authority of the trustees, ncoordlng to President Rutler. If the bids aro satisfactory, work will be begun at once, In tho hoiie that the building may bo ready for occupancy In twelve months. Tho construction of a long-promised students' hall on tho south side of South Field will be under way soon. Among other buildings planned for in the building program outlined some tlmo ago by President Ilutler are edi fices for chemical engineering and for chemistry. Tho now women's dormitory, plans for which are being down up by the Messrs. McKIm, Mead and White, will have eleven floors and a basement In tho central portion, and nine stories nnd a basement in each of tho two wings. The building will bo 201 feet long and 52 feet wide, running from 110th street to 117th street, facing west. It will provide acconiin(at()lm for 3(l.-i women, together win, a f ficlent. number of rooms for H()(, ' and administrative purposes. ir,n!' xlon will iiIho bo mmln r. - .. iiirirni. nry and a capacious dlnlng-lmn, whor flirt trtul1nnra mnir nnt On tho first and second floors 0f the north wing, room Is iiia(0 for ) Womens' Faculty club. Tho comPe. Hon of this resldonco hall win Hpj free Morris and Tompkins Halls for tho largo number of men sttnlnnu n the graduate and professional school,, who are awaiting housing provision,' Columbia Spectator. ENLIST WOMEN TO BOLSTER FIGHT ON 18TH AMENDMENT St. Louis. Organization of a mH. tant woman's auxiliary Is included In plans adopted by the Association 0p. posed to tho prohibition ameni'mont for repeal of tho Eighteenth Amend ment nt a two-day conference here of state secretaries of the organiza tion concluded yesterday. Tho threo It's of our modern edu cational system are Haw, rtaw, flaw You'll walk "with your head in the clouds" if you select one of our new Scotch Softing Tweeds Special at $1.95. It Is the Best Place to Shop After All -For Freshmen For Juniors For Sophomores For Seniors .oomers OF SILK OF SATEEN FD1 1DI For Every Day School Wear Xew shipment of our well made, 'omfortalIc likxnners have been re ceived. In styles and pr-ades that, are favorites with Freshmen, Sopho mores, Juniors and Sen iors. They are priced riprht at Sateen Bloomers 85c to 2.95 Silk Jersey Bloomers 2.95 to 10.95 .Petticoats OF SILK OF SATEEN I in styles you'll like. in qualities grood enough for Christmas gift giving. in colors of all kinds and in black. Sateen Petticoats at 1.50 to 3.95. Silk Jersey Petticoats at 3.50 and 3.95. Petticoat Section Floor Two Rudge & Guenzel Co. ? By the way! Can you guess who inserted the above ad? Every tenth fellow who identifies the ad in our cap department Friday will receive one of these Scotch Softing Caps Absolutely free. Dr. Samuel A. Elliot Of Cambridge, Mass. (Son of President-Emeritus of Harvard University) President of the American Unitarian Ass'n will be the SPECIAL PREACHER at ALL SOULS' UNITARIAN CHURCH, Twelfth and H Streets Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock. The subject of his sermon will be: "THE FAITH OF A FREE CHURCH." DANCE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th. Louisiana Ragador's Orchestra ROSEWILDE PARTY HOUSE. ment made early lne the year that I