The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 19, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE DAILY NEBRASKA N
' 9
1
The Daily Nebraskan
Saatias A. Lknh, Nafcraaka
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
I tha
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
UnaUr Dtractlaa ( ha Stuaaa Puhlkatlaa
Baard
EMBERr
1-1 . IQ25 .Hi&J
1925
Published Tuesday, Wadnasdar, Thursday,
Friday uri Sunday noraingt during tha aca
daaafc )rar.
Editorial Offtcaa Unlvarslty Hall 10.
Office Hour Aftarneoaa with tha axcap
tion af Friday and Sunday.
Taleplianas Day. B-SSS1, No. 142 (1
rui Nisht, B-6S82.
Buatnaaa Olfica University Hall 10 B.
Offica Hour Afternoon! with tha excep
tion of Friday and Sunday.
Telephones Day. B-S891, Ja. 142 (2
rtnra.) Night, B-OM2.
Entered as second-class matter at tha
postoffice in Lincoln. Nebraska, under act
of Contreas, March 3, 1879, and at special
rate of poataca provided for in Section 1 103.
act of October 3, 1917, authorised January
2, 1922.
eease his political duties and go to
studying.
The Cornhusker basketball team
won the first game of Ita eastern
trip from Drake University at Des
Moines by the score of 14 to 15.
Dick Rutherford played a stellar
game and was largely responsible for
the tide in the last half,
Ames stopped the victorious Hus-
kers in the last game of the trip byj
administering a 25 to 1 1 defeat. The
secret of the Cyclones' victory lay in
Cornhusker quintet and the fierce,
irresistible team work of the Aggies.
Rutherford and Campbell played the
most consistent game for Nebraska,
although the Cyclone defense held
them down to fewer goals than they
registered in any previous game of
the trip.
Twenty Years Ago
Smele Copy, S cents
A committee of law students ap
pointed in mass meeting waited upon
subscription rate Dr. Roscoe Pound in an effort to have
lM " j him reconsider his resignation as
ddsn tf fhA Taw Ctntr4
The common sentiment of the
whole body of law students was voic
ed in a set of resolutions which was
presented to the Board of Regent.
These resolutions were couched in no
doubtful terms. They made it very
plain that Dr. Pound was the man
for the place, in the minds of his
students, and made it equally plain
that to fill the Dean's place would
be an exceedingly difficult, if not im
possible matter.
ton railway reached Crete and crawl
ed on westward. In 1874 the present
party of the first part acquired the
Palmer Interest in the Express and
Mr. Palmer assumed the principalship
of a new preparatory school for the
state universtiy at Lincoln. While in
Beatrice he established the Nebraska
Teacher, the typesetting and printing
bejng done in the office of the Ex
press. That newspaper passed into
new hands in 1888 and its publication
was discontinued only last year. There
is at least one sincere mourner.
Falls City Journal.
"The Falls City Journal appeared
in 1866 and is still influential in
southeast Nebraska. The Pawnee
Press came later, in 1868, and is pub
lished by Hassler & Flory, the former
one of noted family of printer-jour
nalists in that section. Nemaha,
Richardson and Pawnee were the cor
ner-stone of politics and all else in
Jth eearly days, the former cutting so
great a figure in fact that for a gen
best fellows connected with the press
of the state, J. H. Alden.
"Kearney was prominent in the
early '70s, with the Journal establish
ed by L. B. and E. M. Cunningham
and the Central Nebraska Press by
the aggressive Webb R. and Rice M
Eaton. In 1888 the Press was taken
over by the present editor of the
Hub and has been published continu
ously ever since. The Lexington Pio
neer was printed first in 1873 by B
F. Krier, a printer from the goven
ment printing office, his service cov
ering a full fifty years. His son, H.
T. Krier, succeeded him.
McBricU and Cady.
"Two men noted in Btate journal
ism were Gen. J. C. McBride and Hon.
(Continued on Page Three.)
Calendar
EDITORIAL STAFF
Hugh B. Cox - Editor
Philip O'Hanloa Managing Editor
Wm. Card News Editor
Julius Frondsen, Jr News Editor
Victor Heckler ...-. News Editor
Edward Morrow Newa Editor
Alice Thuman News Editor
Doris Trott News Editor
Roth Schad Asst. News Editor
John Charvat Asst. News Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Clarence Eickhoff Business Manager
Otto SkoM Asst. Bus. Manager
Simpaoa Morton .. ..Circulation Manager
Oscar Keehn .......... ..Circulation Manager
CLASS ELECTIONS.
Less than five hundred votes were
cast in the class elections held Tues
day on the campus an indication
that the greater part of the students
are not keenly interested in the intri
cacies of student politics.
There has been evident at times a
tendency to regard this indifference
as unfortunate and to feel that to
cultivate this feeling in a university
is to ultimately encourage indiffer
ence toward national and local poli
tics. The assupmtion that because stu
dents are indifferent to these class
elections they will be indifferent to
their obligations as citizens of the
state and nation is open to question.
As a matter of fact the reason that
most students refuse to vote at the
class elections is that the positions
to be filled have no importance. The
emptiness of a class presidency is no
torious. The Ivy Day oration is a
moribund institution, the final evi
dence of its ebbing vitality being the
fact that only one candidate filed
for the position. The student coun
cil is a body so impotent, for reasons
too lengthy to be considered here,
,that membership in ft is a rather du
bious honor.
A refusal to be interested in these
positions might be construed as an
indication of intelligence. It is evi
dent that the students have a sense
of discrimination keen enough to en
able them to refuse to become inter
ested in politics which have no signi
ficance and in positions which have
no prestige. Student political bat
tles are so frequently characterized
by pettiness and triviality that they
often become semi-comic. It is per
haps fortunate that students refuse
to be captured by the pseudo import
ance of such conflicts.
Thursday, February 19.
Mortar Board Meeting at Ellen
eration it wasreferred to as 'the state Smith Hall.
of Nemaha.' The only other news- Friday, February 20.
paper now published that was born Alpha Tau Omega House dance.
previous to the seventies, so far as Delta Tau Delta Dance at the
these records go, was the Grand Island Lincoln.
EDITOR OF KEARNEY HUB
SPEAKS TO STUDENTS
(Continued from Page One.)
THE RADIO AND THE ALUMNI.
A Charter Day program was broad
cast to thirty-seven alumni clubs
Monday evening.
This use of the radio as a medium
of contact between a university and
its alumni is new enough to present
some interesting possibilities. Hith
erto the athletic teams of the uni
versities have been the one effective
bond between the alumni and the
schools. Irrespective of whether this
is an indication ci a lack; ct otner
bonds, or evidence of an abnormal
interest on the part of the alumni in
athletics, is it true, and because it
has been true it has complicated the
work of the administrative officials,
Periodical now published by most
alumni organizations have done much
to remedy this situation, but even
they have been only partially success
ful.
The -we of the radio to broadcast
such programs as the one Monday
makes it possible for the alumni to
feel a relationship with the institu
tion which is more personal than that
created by the athletic teams and the
alumni publications. Music by uni
ersity students, speeches by faculty
members, these are features of the
radio program which cannot be dup
licated. The spoken word has an ef
fectiveness which the printed page
cannot equal. With careful super
vision the radio may prove the means
of building up an alumni interest
which will prove of genuine assist
ance to the University.
sheets. What a dream. Who were
they who played the curtain-raiser
to this fascinating drama?
"It is not a small task to properly
appraise the valor and the virtues of
the pioneers of the Nebraska press. It
can be truly said that 'there were
giants in those days.' Mostly they
may have lacked the versatility of the
newspaper makers of today, but they
were men of forceiulness and re
sourcefulness, men of rare genius
and high courage, men of imagina
tion and of performance, blazing a
trail in a wilderness destined to be
come a paradise. I hose were the
days of common things, but- their
lives were not commonplace. Those
forerunners of Journalism made ro
mance and they lived it.
Observes No Chronology.
"In referring to early Nebraska
newspapers and newspapermen there
is no effort here to observe a chron
ological sequence. There will not be
any attempt to dispute the claim of
the Nebraska City News to the long
est span of life, 1854 to 1925, three
score and ten, plus, and happily today
published by one of the pionaers of
the craft, Charles Hubner. It is not
necessary to give a record of its vari
ous ownerships. The Nebraska City
Press was born four years later, had
a more or less sensational career,
and is today a good example of com
petent conservatism under the guid
ance of J. H. Sweet.
"Nebraska City's most distinguish
ed citizen and journalist was J. Ster
ling Morton, who viewed journalism
in its larger aspects, dallied with it
casually, and did not fraternize vith
the hurly-burly boys. He honored
this state, as a citizen, as the origina
tor of Arbor Day, and as secretary of
agriculture. His greatness can not be
Independent, in 1869, evolved from
the movement westward following
the building of the Union Pacific
railway, and published for many
years by Fred Hedde, of the German
colony which settled in Hall county.
The present editor of the Indepen
dent, A. F. Buechler, was a neophyte
of the eccentric and hard-headed
Hedde, and is the chief inspiration of
one of the finest inland dailies in the
west. It would not be por sible how- Smith Hail-
ever to pass Grand Island without
reference to two of the most, unique
figures ever connected with the Ne
braska press, Seth P. Moblcy and
Maggie T. G. Mobley, typical fire-
eaters and sword-swallowers, who had
various newspaper connections in that
city.
Fremont Tribune.
"The Fremont Tribune appearel
upon the scene in 1868 and began the
publication of a daily in 1883. It at
tracted attention through the brilliant
Fred Nye, editor-poet, who was one
Silver Lynx House dance.
Saturday, February 21.
Kappa Alpha' Theta formal Lin
coln.
Delta Gamma formal Scottish
Rite Temple.
Delian banquet Lincoln.
Alpha Delta Theta house dance.
Pi Kappa Phi house dance.
Delta Sigma house dance.
Big and Little SiBter party Ellen
2 to 6 o'clock.
Notices
Centurions.
An important meeting of the
Centurions will be held this after
noon at 3 o'clock in Social Science
317.
Student Manager.
The Student Managers picture for
Betty Shepard, Rev. L. N. McNillan,
F. J. Murphy, M. L. Jacobs, Nar
vin K. Jensen, F. J. Scrivner, Gladys
Lux, Mark Fair, W. F. Jones, C. M
Kerr. Estermarv Eiaenbarth. A. L.
Hyde, J. A. Cameron, Mildred Nel
son, Helen Watkins, Caroline Con
nor, Alice Kaufman, Emmet Maun,
Blanchard . Anderson, W. 0. Usher,
Elinor Pickard, H. L. Rife, Gertrude
Ebers.
School of Journalism
Students in the School of Journal
ism are urged to attend the sessions
of the fifty-second convention of the
Nebraska Press Association, espec
ially the sessions Friday afternoon
and Saturday morning. Students
may get excuses from attendance at
classes by applying at the office of
the Executive Dean.
M. M. Foog,
Director.
To Members of the
School of Journalism:
All members are responsible for
knowing Journalism Week announce
ments that are made on the School
of Journalism Bulletin-board (out
side of U. II. 106.)
M. M. Fogg,
Director.
Assigned Seats
Assigned seats (for all members of
the School) at the addresses by state
editors, February 17 and 18, in Soc
ial Science 107 are indicated on the
School of Journalism bulletin-board,
outside of University Hall 106, and
at Social Science 107.
Gamut Club.
Gamut Club dinner at the Temple
Thursday at 6 o'clock. Members
should call Helen Benjiman at the
Alpha Theta house for reservations.
Plates 60 cents.
Menoran Society.
The Menorah Society will hold a
meeting-Sunday at 8 o'clock in Fac
ulty hall. A musical program will be
given.
of the progenitors of the Omaha Eve- he fe ection J the Cornhus
wwm ir, a ;( .to, will be taken at the east entrance
on the Washington Star, and died in K the Stadium at 4 o'clock Thursday
the capital city. Later and for many
afternoon. The following men are
years the Hammonds, Ross and Frank eJiibl f or the Pictoure n ?
built up the nespaper and printing
please be prompt: Steman, Davis,
n I n.i T a o i oi.lv:
plant into a valuable property. Ross "lerB' """ ou'r'
H,mmm.,.tm.i:tn, F,.V H"11"111. elKley, Adams, Buffett,
r, . , - IComstock and Herb Gish,
and is editing and banking jr. that Cornhusker,
state. Frank is in other line. The wi" following people please
newspaper is published by a company Me Mr- Larrivee at the Campus Stu
and is one of our best examples of dio at their earliest conveniece: Bar
modern journalism. br Wiggenhorn, Paul Larsen, Clay-
"The Blair Pilot, the Crete Vidett " Goar, Irma Wiedeman, Carl Gar-
and the Fairbury Gazette came early ber, Ladd Hubka, Francis Went, A,
in the seventies. Thev recall the L- Stanley, Robert Bushnell, Nat
names of Perry Selden, II. M. Welis Tolman, Richard Smith, Elsie Fur-
and Genrge Cross, all of whom have
answered to the final '30.' At about
the same time Erasmus M. Correll,
lpwyer, politician, orator, e.litor and
poet, breathed life into the Hebron
Journal. He was a state senator, be
came lieutenant governor, wholly
always genial, and as individual as
Robert Burns or Edgar Allen Poe.
The Journal is still published by his
only son.
Blue Valley Blade.
"The Blue Valley Blade, of Mil-
ford, was an old-timer. J. H. Culver,
vivil war veteran, with conspicuous
service in the civil life of Nebraska,
was an early publisher of that paper.
Also Harry Brainard, present Nebra-
ich, Robert Scoular, Eloise McAhan,
You'd be surprised how
much difference a good
heir-cut makes.
The
Mogul
Barbers
(10 chairs)
127 Na. 12th St- !
Special Examination ia Chemistry.
Doctors Hendricks and Hamilton
are announcing a special examination
to be held Saturday from 1 to 8
o'clock in the chemiBtry lecture
PAnm. Anv Chemistry 1 or Chemis-
trv 2 student who has received a C
or an I in these courses is eligible
and should take this examination.
Ag College Mixer.
A College mixer Friday at 8:30
in the Ag College gymnasium.
Dramatie Club.
There will be a meeting of the
Dramatic club Tuesday, February 24,
instead of Thursday. The meeting
will be held in the club rooms.
Kearney Klub Dinner.
All members of the Kearney Klub
and other normal students are in
vited to a dinner at the Grand hotel
Saturday at 6:15 o'clock. Reserva
tions Bhould be made before Friday
evening. ,
Bible Class.
A six weeks Bible el
day at 4 o'clock at Ellen Smith V
All Unlvpraltv -,.. ...v 1111 Hl
ested should register at theY
A. office. ' W
Vocational Education DinMr,
All students in the Cnii- ,.
riculture who intend to teach al
cutlure or home economic .
present at the vocational educate
dinner to be given at the Agricultw
al College cafeteria, Thursd.-
6:30 o'clock. Mr. Burt will t.ii. 1
"The Fine Art of Selling Yourself.
Disciple Club.
Picture for the Cornhusker win v.
taken Friday at the CamDus
at 12 o'clock.
Christian Science Society.
Christian Science Society ...
Thursday at 7:30 in Factulty Tall,
Temple.
"-..I
1,1
YOU-
may be in danger at
THE DANGER LINE
DO YOU realize what may happen at The
Danger Line, where gums meet teeth?
The Danger Line extends around each
tooth at the gum margin. It is just a little
V-shapet1 crevice, but it is vastly important.
For in these tiny crevices, food gathers and
ferments, forming the acids which cause
painful, unsightly Acid Decay.
You can safeguard against Acid Decay
and relieve conditions, favorable to Pyor
rhea, if you will use Squibb's Dental
Cream, made with Squibb's Milk of Mag
nesia. Ask your 'dentist, and he will tell
you that Milk of Magnesia has been used
for years as a safe, scientific means of
counteracting the acids which attack the
teeth and gums. Hence the great value of
Squibb's Dental Cream. '
Squibb's Dental Cream is pleasant to use.
It is safe. It is free from harsh, injurious
abrasives. It cleans thoroughly and pol
ishes beautifully. It removes the danger
at The Danger Line. At reliable drug stores.
lican harks back to 1876. Tim Sedg
wick, peppery and sui generis, made
the York Times famous. It was merg
ed with the News-Times. 'Tim' en
joys a ripe old age now by writing
a column for the York Republican,
published by one of the cleanest and
Ten Years Ago
The Innocents discussed plans
whereby more students could take
part in University activities. Only
about twenty students had charge of
the different University activities.
The University of Minnesota has a
plan which would limit student acti
vity and thereby permit others to
take part. A system of grading was
used there by which every activity
was graded as being equivalent to so
many points. Whenever a student
had a certain number of points
against him for any particular sem
ester, the authorities forced him to
overlooked. The Arbor Lodge which k Pres historian. The York Repub-
he created, a gift to the state by his
sons, is a fitting perpetual memorial.
Advertiser Is Notable.
"One of the most notable of the
early weekly newspapers of tho state
was the Brownville Advertiser, with
which was associated the name of
Robert W. Furnas, later governor,
many years influential in the state
agricultural society, farmer, tree
planter, and nurseryman. His per
manent impress has been left upon
the state. His name is written indeli
bly on the early pages of ita history.
Journalism, and all posterity, may
proudly honor him. In later years
the Advertiser was maintained as a
weekly of high rank by Fairbrother
A Haecker.
"Early newspapers came and went.
The Tecumseh Chieftain sprang np in
1865. Tecumseh was then on our
western firing line. Even as late as
1870, land exploring parties to scout
out that land were organized in Ne
braska City.
Blue Valley Record. '
"Later in the sixties the Blue Val
ley Record was born at Beatrice.
After a brief existence it became the
Beatrice Express. Theodore Cole
man, a young newspaper man and
university graduate from Wisconsin,
guided its early destinies. Later
Charles B. Palmer, printer, teacher,
editor, from Berlin, Wis., was asso
ciated with Mr. Coleman. Beatrice
was forty miles west of Tecumseh,
and in 187! was the last 'jumping-off
place' before hitting the desert. Re
member that in that year the Burling-1
Hotel
De Hamburger
5c
Boy 'em by the sack
1141 Q St
In the Style
Center New
York
the real new spring hat
is the D'Orsy curl brim
full 2 5-8 and 2 3-4 inches
wide crown worn crease
in center without dents in
side.
The whole hat is made
and portioned to be worn
that way. The best color
is pearl with black band.
We feature this hat in the
Metropolitan by Dunlap.
$7.00
Famous
. YeE
don't-stop!!
MAGEE'S
Now isn't that just like a woman! You
know she doesn't mean what she is say
ing we all know it!
When she says clothes don't make any
difference she's talking the same
meaningless language.
And il you're just as careful and
wise in your choice of 'clothes as you
are not to stop you'll wear the new
model Kuppenheimer suit. It's the col
lege man's idea of a real investment in7
good appearance. ,
(QgJIJBBS
Dental Cream
Made with Squibb's Milk of Magnesia
OIKS
You Will Like
tht VAN CRAFT for
Two Reasons
tAa&e in 3 i
perb fabrics
poplin, mer
cerized cotton
pongee, and
erync broad
cloth.
MAG
EE
dOne, comfort. The sportsman, the well-dressed
man, does not enjoy ordinary collar-attached
shim.beca use, while comfortable, they are musty
ia appearance. Van Craft-with the Van Heusen
Collar attached has all the freedom of the or
dinary negligee shirt, plus the Van Heusen
more comfortable than a soft collar, better-look
ing than a stiff collar.
CTtvo, smartness. Superb fabric and tailoring
added to the Van Heusen Collar make, at last,
the ideal negligee shirt. No bands or seams in
the collar to irritate the neck. No fear of wilt
ing even in hottest weather.
Cell aU your haberdmther'M today saw!
rJJ fte Van Craft
VAN CRAFT
Shirt
.aanaw I I
jPHlLLiPS.lONES (T NEW YORK 'Tj
aVkuSSS