1 THE NEBRASKAN Vor, IV. No. . UNLVKRS1TV OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, OCTOBER U, JSOfi. PlUOR ) Cknts SUMMER ON A WHEEL FROM LINCOLN TO PRINCETON L. H. Robblns Dosorlboa His Two Month'o Trip on a Blko-ln- torostlnB Description. Perhaps everyone who ever owned u wheel, hiiH at some time or other been filled with a desire to go somewhere, to take a long trip on It. When ho was a school boy he may have gone to Wuvor ly or Roca. Who can describe tho de lights of such a trip. What prepara tions arc made tho night before; his wheel Is cleaned until It shines; his riding suit Is carefully placed where he .an get It on quickly the moment he artSop; his cold breakfast is spread out mi tiie table; his little knapsack Is Idled to the minutest detail with things which he possibly might need. Nee dles and thread, buttons, cord and lini ment all i o lo Hi' I the Knapsack. When these are ready, he retires early to rest. Hut thoughts of pleasant an ticipation interfere with his slumbers, and It may be after midnight before he ilnally goes to sleep. In the morning, lmtf before sunrise, he Is on the road. Hi does not enjoy it as much as he thought he would. The air Is cold and damp, his lingers stiff, and he is so sleepy. The bread and butter tasted til ay; he did not wash when he started, and altogether, he feels like going back homo again, and finishing his slum ber. Hut when the sun rises he begins to warm up. Ills Joints are limbering the bad taste has left his mouth and he feels better. He rides all day and re turns homo dusty, hungry and tired. II foraot his oil can and his wheel creaked half the way;, his wheel ran away down a hill and skinned his knees, und now he is utterly disgusted with wheel riding. He does not look at his wheel for nearly a week; but about Fri day of the following the "fever" attacks him again and a country wheol-rlde looks Just as attractive ah It ever did. Saturduy dnds him on the load again and Saturday night llnds him Just as sick of his wheel as ever. Mil) bu when ho becomes older he rides to Omuha, Beatrice or Fremont, and he lecelves much glory from those rides. 1 had passed ILii h all of these elementary stages, and when last June came and the St. Louis company was disbanded, I felt ready for a long mer outing on my wheel. Preparations were made ns on the Roca trip all kli.iln of things were purchased, which would in any way aid to tho comfort(?) of fcu' ) a ride. FarwcllB were duld and on June 13, dressed In a pair of bloomed an old cout and cap, at. 1 a swiater, I left Lincoln on the Koclc Island. Iowa was crossed In a night and tho first streaks of dawn found me st.imliut, on the Kock Island, III., depot with my wheel. I picked my way out oi tho city and by sunrise was on tni r.md ti C '. into. 'Die ride acioss l'llnols was uiiflv'itt f til. Illinois loads I'm If - ems id ruck t'j.d were decidedly the bout -f any ridden ovor oxcopt Now Jersey roudw. Thu evening of tho ilrst day brouc.hr me In sight of the Illinois Uvci. Fioni P.eureau the road followed this riur. The rouds were sand.", but tho bunks oi tho river were very beauti ful and pleating to tho eyes oi r. Ne braska boy. The cities of Peru. Ju huilo and Murls were passod through the next day, and Jollet ended that day's rltlo. Tho next day was Sun day. The road followed the great Michigan-Illinois canal. This Is a new dzalnage canal and Is blasted out of solid rock Its entire length. Hundreds of mem are employed on It and all along the road they were seen resting In tho woods or sitting around a beer keg. Evory half mile for thirty miles was a saloon. They were built of lath, bar rels or anything that happened to bo nour by, and they followed tho canal. Tho pioprletors probably made for tunes, as tho men were mostly for eigners, drinking men and single, and tho greater half of their wages went for drink. About noon, wheelmen, llrst In par ties, afterwards alone, were passed, most of them wore racing costumes, had sponges In their mouths and rode very hard and looked, not at the beau tiful country, on the road sides, but at their front wheel. The saloon along tho roadside weie very noticeable. All of them were filled with men and women who desecrated thu Sabbath by their coarse laughter The last twenty miles Into Chicago were as level as a Moor and tho roadB were macadamized. Signs of the city's nearness, were on every hand. Within four miles about twenty signs wore seen saying that exactly ten miles lay between them and certain sored in the city, from which it wan Inferred that the city was four miles broad. Railroads came In sight, all -seeming to be radii with one common center. And poon the city Itself came In sight with ltrf tall spires and elevators. Chicago was taking her weekly vstt. Tno streets were crowded with all sorts of people In their Sunday clothes On. ups of cyclers whirled by; dwell cairlages drawn b proud honcis spun smrothly over the asphalt pavement. The parks were full; the benches were all occupied by men and women en Joying their only holiday; little chlldien with happy faces and clean white dresses romped on the grass despite the bin black-browed policeman who watch ed them. uuwn by the lakeside wan another kind of humanity. Here on tho bioken . wii benches of the lake fior.t p r were poor outcasts, tramps and men out of work. All had that dull, fixed, hopeless look on their faces as they guzed far out over the lake to where the returning yachts and pleasure steamers showed dimly, and a few feet away, along that grand street, Mich igan avenue, went scores of elegant equipages, as luxurious as money could make them; and in them sat women and proud, handsome men. They, too, were looking out on the shining surface of the lake, but they did not see their poor fellow-men, who were nearer them. The grand build ings gazed out over the lake and they saw It all, the splendor, the suffering, tho pride, the degradation. These were my llrst thoughts, and I wandered what the thoughts of those two extremes of society might be. Hut it was six o'clock and I was hungry, so I hunted up a hotel and soon was cleaned up and had eaten a hearty supper. Chicago Is so near that there Is no need of describing It. 1 spent four days In the city and took a steamer one morning across Lake Michigan. At St. Joseph my ride really began. 1 left that town late one afternoon. I had been unable to obtain a map and so had to trust to luck and farmers' directions. It Is strange that the aver ago farmer Is so little posted on the geography of his own locullty. 1 often was obliged to depend on their di rections and very often found myself several miles out of the way by so doing. I asked two farmers within a mile of each other how fur It was to a town. Tho llrst one said "three miles straight ahead;" tho other, "go back, turn to your loft, go blx miles." An other farmer In New York was asked which way it was to Freeport. Ho said, "Illghl straight till you comu to "Wid ow Patton's, then turn up and you'll bo there." Hut I am ramifying. There are a few occasions In a per son's life when he feels utterly depend ent. Ho feels heavily the fuct that ho alono Is reBponBlblo for what may hap pen to him and that there Is absolutely no one near on whom he can call In need. This was one of them. I struck out up tho Michigan bluffs and stopped a moment and looked buck. Tho lake glistened In tho light of tho sotting sun. A white mist wus arising from tho wa ter und enveloping tho low lands be fore mo. The lake seemed to mo a groat (CoiitluuoJ on 4 tli pagu.) THEY LEAYE TO-DAY FOOTBALL TEAM'S FIRST TRIP Sioux City, Salt Lnko, Buttoand Don. vor Will bo Vlaltod-How They Will Lino Up. The foot ball boys are busy today, making preparation for their long trip west. They leave this evening at 0:05 for Umaha via the 11. As M. whence they will go lo Sioux City over tho Union Paclllc. Fourteen players, the coach and manager will make up the party. Sandy Grlswold, the well known sport ing editor of The Hoe, will Join them at Omaha. The game at Sioux City will be played Suturduj afternoon with the Athletic association team of that city. From there they go over the Union Pa clllc to Salt Lake. They have no game scheduled here so the boys will Just look over the city. Wednesday, Oct. 10, they will meet the Butte team on their own grounds. This game the boys think will be hotly contested, as the Butte team has been In practice all summer. In that burg the cool weather permits this. It will be remembered that they defeated the University club team of Omaha last July, notwithstanding that Thomas coached and captained them, but even three of our own men, Oury, Whipple and Hayward were with them. From Butte the team returns to Den ver where they meet the Athletic asso ciation club of that city Saturday. They expect to reach Lincoln Monday with the scalps of the three teams dangling at their belts. The men who will go werv selected utter practice Thursday evening. They are: Whip ple, left end; Shedd, lett tackle; Wil son, captain, l.eftaiidijveliur.center; Hud Jones, right guard; Hayward, right tackle; Shue, right end; King, left half; II. Jones, right half; Thorp, quarter; Fulr, full back. Substitutes; Packurd, quarter or end; Wiggins, half or end; Dungnn, tackle or guard. SOM E MEASUREMENTS. Some Interesting measurements have lately been taken In the olllco of the physical director, whore fourteen of the foot ball men have submitted them selves to scales, tape, calipers, etc. The method of proceedure Is this: the age and weight are recorded, then the total height and the height of various parts of tho body. The length of upper arm and forearm, the length of foot and the total reach of arms are Inter esting Items. The tape then shows the girth of head, limbs and trunk, unit calipers show the breadth and thick ness of different parts of tho body. The heart Is examined to see whothor it Is equal to the strain and the rough-and-tumble of foot ball, and the lung capacity In cubic Inches Is obtained by tho spirometer. Of the fourteen men thus measured, Thomas Is tho heaviest, weighing 184.il lbs., and Whipple tho tallest at ti ft 2 Inches In bare feet. Puce is the short est and lightest, but makes up for It In other ways. Whipple, being tho tallest, has naturally the longest arms, and his linger tips would Just meet round a truo-trunk whoso clroumforenco was 77.2 In. Thin by tho way, Is precisely the hlght of the tallest man In the University. Largo feet are well repre sented, there being live pairs that are pvor eleven luohes long; but, of course this is essential In a lot of klukers, Corby hus tho biggest head, Humphrey the biggest neek,"Fulr leads In a chest expansion of c IncheB und u chest cu paclty of 3110 cubic Inches, though Whip ple crowds hltn for the last honor. Of tho shortest men, Pace hus a relatively long trunk,polntIng to large staying power, and Shuo has the best and larg est urms. Thomus has a massive thigh 2.1.S Inches around but Dungan's shoulders are tho broadest, and he could probubly carry more men down tho field than anybody else. These and all the rest of the separate items, when plotted on a chart com- plied by Dr. Seuver from 2300 men, make some Interesting curves, showing the relation of the Individual to the stu dent type and also the degree to which the Individual departs from his own standard of symmetry. An Interesting feature In the different curves Is the relative size of foot and head. One man's feet place him In tho 00 por cent class, which slgnllles that only one out of a hundred students has largo f foot than ho; while the girth of his head shows that L'O out of a hundred havo bigger bonds than he. Another comes Into tho 00 por cent clnss with his feet and tho 25 per cent class with his head. Still another cannot get on to the chart at all with his feet while his head places him In the 10 per cent class. This pe culiarity Is so marked that In tho av erage curves representing the whole 14 men, tho feet come In the 00 per cent class anil the head in the -10 per cent class. (Question. Is this a character istic of foot ball men?) A glance at a man's curve shows his low points at once. Thomas him a small neck, Humphrey a small chest capacity (.making up for It In size of stomach). Haywurd and Corby have smull wrists. Shue Is diminutive in hlght but his girths are line. Whipple Is low In girth of arms. Fair makes tho best curve, his measurements grouping themselves about the 80 per cent line, 1. e. he is a large man and expeptlonally well proportioned. Thomas Is also large and well built but his line shows more vailatlons. Clapp mukes the third best curve vurylng above and below 85 per cent though his age Is much below the average. The object of these measurements Is with the co-operation of the men con cerned, to see what the effect of a sea son's foot ball practice will be and to compare tho curves made later with those made now. Probably the girths will be somewhat smaller as the men "train down." Aside from the measurements, pho tographs were taken of a number of the men, showing on a single curd a front, side, and rear view of the sub ject. THE GLEE CLUB. The glee club starts In better condi tion this year than ever before, having most of tho old men ba !r again, sc mo splendid new material, and a competent director. The "xumlnlng committee put a great many new voices through the test last Thursday night and re port very good results. There will be live and possibly six vucuncles to fill this year and there arc four or five new men for euch new place. The men who sang last year and Intend to sing this season again are Clements, Farmer, Randolph, Albers, Tucker, Porter, Manly, Langworthy, Norton, Jones, Spooner, and Bancroft. Lenhoff has de cided not to sing this year. Some excellent new music has been arranged for the club during the sum mer, and the program will bo composed of tho best songs ovor attempted by a glee club, Concorts around tho state are already being looked after und the boys prophesy a bettor time and more concerts than ovor before. '07 MEETS. At a mooting of tho class of '97 Thurs day afternoon Miuu JIuIho was olootod president vice A. W. Carpenter, who has loft school. Tho advlslblllty of getting out tho Annual was discussed. It was the sense of the meeting that nothing but hustling among the stu dents and faculty would enable them to got It out. A committee of ton was appointed to Investigate, and report upon tho udvlslblllty of Issuing thoSom broro. Tho Creeks were quite busy Frldey ovonlng, three of tho fraternities each lncroaulng their numbers by three. Phi Delta Theta recelvod Irwin Daven port. H. D. Whedon and J. T. Sumner; Beta Theta PI Initiated Ed Crumb, Frank Rulnund Fred Tullls; Phi Kappa Psl tried It again and Kd Elliot, F. A. Korsmoyor and T. A, MapeB ure now w earing pins. COLLEGE SOCIETY DOINGS OF THE FIRST WEEK Y. M. C, A. Applo Soolnl Knppa-Kap. pa Camas RgcqIvos Chan cellor Mno Loan. College society circles have been quite active the past week. Tho reception given at the Conservatory Wednesday by tho Ladles' Faculty club was quite an enjoyable affair. The freshman ami Sophmoro classes promise a Joint so cial In tho near future. With a couple of fraternity receptions promised In the near future tho outlook for noxt week is for continued activity. THE KAPPA RECEPTION. At the residence of Miss Maud Rlsser tho Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority gave a reception to Chancellor and Mrs. MncLean the evening of the 4th from 7 to 10 o'clock. The house was prettily decorated with smilax and cut Mowers. The receiving party was composed of Cliancellor and Mrs. MacLean, Mr. and Mrs. Rlsser, Misses Broady, Ena Rlck otts, Richards, Whedon. Tho Beta Theta PI, Delta Gamma, Sigma Chi, Tii Delta, PI Beta Phi, Delta Tail Del ta, Phi Kappa Psl, Sigma Alpha Epsl lon, Phi Delta Theta fraternities wire all represented at the reception. Misses Maggie Whedon, Margie Win ger and Addle Whiting served refresh ments. The Kappa Kappa Gamtnu young ludles huve cause to feel proud of tho way they welcomed the chancellor and his wife.. BATTALION NEWS. There ure several, more appointments to be made. Wonder if the Hefperi un expects, itself to be consulted , Ike Pace says that the small edition of Blackstone is like his Bible, hard to read on account of the small print. The registration In all departments amounts to nearly 1100. Before the end of another week we will huve about 1200. The old men are Impatiently await ing drill with the new artillery pieces. Cuptain Gullfoyle has the reputation of being one of the best disciplinarians In the urmy. The old men ure being drilled In the squad. The llrst quarter of the hour with the rltles, the next half In march ing and the last quarter In the setting up exercise. A. 11. Roso Is hunting a private secre tary to attend to his onion correspond ence. Mr. Rose has a sample onion which weighs ten pounds and is eight inches in diameter. W. A. Richmond, '04, who ranked as llut lloutonant of company "B," is now teacher of science In the Fort Col lins, Colo., high school, and also com mandant of the corps of cadets. Mr. A udvll, the tailor, remarked that hu could tell every one of the old cadets who came to bo measured by his full ehust and square shoulders, erect head and well developed form In general. This was expressly noticeable on tho members of tho Pershing Rifles. A VALUABLE PRESENT. Stuto Institutions are very seldom no ticed by philanthropic individuals look ing about for worthy Institutions upon whloh to bestow their wealth, but the University of Nebraska has been rec ognized at last. J. R. Webster, a law yer of Lincoln has donated the library forty-six very valuable volumes on pri mitive religion and mythology. Their value aggregates over $200 and they make an addition to tho library which will bo appreciated. Miss Jones says that they are Just tho kind of books that aro needed only two of them are duplicated by volumes now In the library. Mr. Webster is a college man und a mombor of the Phi Delta Theta frater nity. He has set an example that wo hopo others will follow,