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About The Nebraskan. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1892-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1897)
Gas Team Constitution. (lontmnotl Kroin Klrm IMko.) 4(.ir-r ThirHPni'nini'vtrpiiHiiror'H)iiill HOC. ! NIC HOC OtniWllrtBUIOl Hllll to chnnr-ii from tho Junior pIubr, and ahull hold olllco during tho aohool year for which elected. See. I. Tho board ahull connlBt of ono momhor from civch olnHB, oxce.pt tho Honlor hobs, whloh Hhnll have two. ono of which Hhnll ho tho nrcaldont of tho iiHROclntlon. Seo.n. Members of tho honrd ahull ho ohoaon hy tholr rosnoetlvo olaasoa, and ahull hold olllco during tho school year for which elected. ARTICLE IV. Section I. It shall ho the duty of tho president to prealdo at all meetings of tho nsROchitton. He ahull alao proaldo over the dellhoraUons of tho honrd In which he shnll huvo tho right to vote. Sec. 2. It Rhull ho tho duty of tho secretary-treasurer to hoop a record of all meetings, and of all moneyB re ceived and expended hy this associa tion, and to do aiich other hualueaB as appertalna to tho olllco, See. 3. It shall ho tho duty of the honrd to arrange all schedules for games, to decide all questions of dls- ,.,.!.. Iml'..n ..lin ntnuu ,.! II tw.t Inn. .., .. ....X... ..II .,..... ....... ... ..... rointivt to .Minies. nn.l to aeeure mil. plres, referees, etc. ARTICLE V. Section 1. Any student shnll ho ollgl hle to hold olllco In this association, or to play In any scheduled game who is regularly registered In tho Unlvorslty. Sec. !2. Eligibility to representation In class teams shall ho as follows: Freshmen must have not more than two courses of hack work. Sophomores must hnvo credit for four courses: juniors, ton, and sonlors, seventeen. Sec. 3. In every case the registrar's record shall he the Imals for determin ing the credits, and nn momhor of ono class shnll huvo the right to represent a lower class. ARTICLE VI. Section 1. Hoforo any scheduled game shall he played It shall he re quired of the two contesting classes to submit to the hoard the names of all players one week In advancco f game. Sec. 2. It shnll he the duty of the hoard to approve or reject the mimes of players according as they fulfill or do not fulfill tho requirements of this constitution. Sec. 3. In every case the names of players of teams shall he approved hy the hoard hoforo any scheduled gnmo shall ho played. ARTICLE VII. No member shall play In any scheduled game who has played In a regular game on the llrst teams. ARTICLE VIII. Tho election of oftlcers shall take place tho third week of each school yenr. ARTICLE IX. All mbemhers of tho hoard shall he present before business shall bo trans acted. ARTICLE X. These rules mny be amended by n two-thirds vote of tho board at any regular meeting, provided the amend ment shall have been posted one week in advance. FRESH.-SOPH. FOOT HALL. The second of tho series of games for the InterclnBS championship will bo played on tho campus to-morrow morning. Both teams are evenly matched, each having several experi enced players. Following Is the per sonnel of the two teams : The foot ball team of the freshman class Is composed almost wholly of old material, of men who have played on high school teams. They have had vory Httlo team practice, hence team work will probably be a little ragged. About half tho team are training with the second eleven, and In this have a slight advantage. The backs will be as follows: Tukey, who needs no in traduction, will play quarter; Hcffener, .lir ivlll nlnv full hnu hnd oxnnrlfinpo I who will play full, has had experience on tho Kearney high school eleven; Jeffcry will hold down left half, and Hart right half. Jeffery captained the Red Oak (lowa) team last year and Hart played with York. In them they have two good men. In the lino Hewitt will play center. He is unex perienced, hut full of ginger and very strong. Woods and Hawley will play tho guards. Both have had experience on the second eleven. Conklln, Brown and Clinton will divide tho tackles he tween them. Brown has had experi ence on the South Dakota eleven, he sides tho training ho has received with tho second. He Is their host man. Conklln and Clinton have had experi ence on the second team. Drain and Heed will hold down the ends. Dralntlu- uIiih on tho Roi'otut olovon unit Ih eon- Hlilcrod vory good. Hood Iiiih luul ox- porlcnco clmwhoro. Tho town Is rather , . . , .,,...,. Wo,,., ,,.,, 0BH llKht. tlu average weight hclng Iobb than Jfi5 pounde. Tho Bophomoro toam Is coinmonclng to piny foot hull In earnest. Tho mon thut are coming out to prnctlco aro showing up In good Bhnpe. Tho scheduled gumo with tho freshmen hnB mado the team fool an Interest In play ing and a determination to win for tho class what they fool helongs to thorn, Tho snoro mnilo hy tho two uppor clnssca In tholr gnmo lnat Saturday has mndo the players In aophnmoro team think that nothing Is certain or cinched hoforo won, Tho tenm will avorage up well, most of tho men aro quick and actlvo In tholr playing. Whut they now nood 1b practice In de fensive work. While tho line-up Imh not heen made up, tho tenm will ho selected from the following: llummol, ho Mar, Orllllth, Plllshury, (lordon, Ucbmnnn, Render, Wells, Weasel, Waterman, l'loughend, Woodruff, Hy aiiB, and a few others. The team will depend largely on straight hard playing and run no . , - , I...... , .. 1,.t1t. IINMI till llll.' 11II1JI1, U1I1IUI11I Vlllllll.ll ! working the players hard, and says ho Is sure of winning. James WhlU'omb Riley. I've always uolU'oil groat Miuccsa mixed with troubles more or Iph. And It's the tunn who does the heal That gotrt more kicks than all tho rest. I lore In Tour Hue from ono of IiIh own poems Is JnitH'8 Whllcomh Ulluy's IiIok- ropli.v. llto Is u life which hits been soft ened and enriched by struggle and lln- appointment. Mure than any other living poet, ponaps, no snows uiu vhiuu or a thump o! fato. We aro upllftod when brought pour to thoso who huvo been made liroiitirnl by heroic endurance and ff'M'llipi W lve llllv MM"" '! brings in heart to bean with pathelle character)". Wluit could be more tuiich Iiik tann his ri'ivrlpllou or tho old father who "hud nothlu' at nil to cay when ins daughter nought 10 leave htm for un- ottn-1? She was his only eomrori. m witch Imitpluoss; If s'u loft, all the sun- bine of the old home would leave wit n hi-r. 'or then was no wife to cheer bis 'onillmTs: et Ids comfort was nothing to h.m as ioniKtrMl to bis lovwl one s hup- plin . While Mr. HUey uro aus neea erowneu with dlllloultles, yet his elilliinoou wis ennvarnlivoly me of Joy and giadnois. "Th- poet ihovihI through .i world of ehlWIiootl." says Wllll.un Dean Uowolls, "th ehlldhool of that vanished west tvhWi lav iHtwiHn the Ohio and tho Mis- slsdnpl. and was. unless memory abuses my fondness, the hupplost lanu umi e ,r lun vmis under the sun. There was no vov rich or very poor In that region, but ar'eminlltv of condition never matched biforo or since, so that the picture of tho pmccful, kindly life In ono village family l the portrait of .all village family life then and there, except when It Is marred Vy vice or tainted by guilt." How easily one Is reminded of Incidents In the boy hood of tlio poet when reading In bis "Ithynios of Childhood." ft Is a book of ooms whloh one reads tirough and lingers over anil recurs to again and again us If It were the tenderly told story of our own especl.il childhood That Is the miig'.c of It: we go with the poet Into "The lan1 That I'sod-toHo." and llnd our old friends and playmates In "The Happy Little Cripple" and "The Preacher's Naughty Hoy" and "Poor Lit tle Mnhnla Ashcroft." Didn't we sit iround the kitchen lire with lltth orphan Annie and listen In delight fill terror to her blood-curdling witch stor'.os? Didn't I.lsbuth Ann" make custard pies for in. and wasn't the good natured "Haggedy Man" Iho friend of our very own small boyhood? What a breath f he.ilth. thoughtless fun and frolic In "The Circus Day Parade." "The Old Haymow." and "Wnltln' for the Cat to Die:" there Is a gontb-r note In "A Hoys Mother" and "The Little Coat." In "Afterwhllos" It w sweetly the poet describes tho aid hlme. No word In the I tnKuaEC is so filled with dear asoclatoas as this ono, for homo Is tho anchor of our affections. How he pictures tho old moth er waiting for her children mere, wuiu InR ,iay after day for the loved ones, wnn .oi in n "Afterwhllce:" ,,,, ... .. - --- "Click the latcn tnai iocks In tho pinks and hollyhocks, And leap up tho path onco more Where she waits us at the door! Mr. Riley Is essentially the Burns of America, the laureate of the cmnym pen. nlc. In his eyes the poor man Is rich. He owns the blnl soiiks of tho hills, The lnilrthter of the April rills; Anil his are all the illamjntls sot In mornltiK's dewy coronet. Anil his the dusk's fair m'.nteil ptnrrt Th.it twinkle through the pasture bars. And litter all tho sklcw at nlKht. With glittering rcraps of silver light; The rainbow's bar from rim to rim. in beuton gold, beltngs to Mm. Mr HUey will he In Llnroln on tuo .ening of Novembor 2.', Ht will appear i. the 1-i.nnlng. under the itatronage of women's club. AT THE LANSING. "My Friond from India" will bo the attraction nt tho Lanning theater Wodnoadny evening, Novomhor 17. For throe coiiBocittlvo montliB It sorvod to test tho cupnclty of tho HIJou thea ter, Now York city, litBt Boason, whore It originally hecamo famous. It Is constant laughter from the tlmo tho curtain goeB up on tho llrst act until it descends on tho last, and It Is claimed from the appreciative re sponse whloh greots overy lino it would scum that tho pun as a form of wit had returned. If "My Friond from India" had not proved tho greatest comedy buccoss of tho past senson It would not have boon tho fault of Its author or thoso clover manngors, Messrs. Smyth and Rico, who undoubt edly posBoss all the necessary qunllll cutlona for tiBtute purveyors of amuse ment, ns has been evinced not only In this production, but that of "Tho Man from Mexico." "My Friond from India" stands to-day as ono of tho host farces that hua been given to tho Btago In u decade, Seats on salo Monday morning at 0 o'clock at tho box olllco. Prices $l.r0, $1, 7G, fit) and 25 cents. WANT18D-TnU8TWOnTUY AND no: vo gentlemen or ladles to travel for responsible, established honso in Lin coln. Nebraska. Monthly JC5.00 and ex penses. Position siondy. Reference t!n oloso solf-aiUlrcHscd stamp d envelope. Tho Dominion Company, Dupt, Y Chicago. Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pen. The standard of more than three-fourths of tho Statu Universities and lending Col cues of America. ... ... t THE COLLEGE MAN who Is particular nlKiot how his ltalr looks will tlnd that Sunt Wostorllold, alter IS years experience with college men J knows bow to out hulr; tutd cut 11 to i suit. 117 N. 1.1th. I tr vvywAwwww' Don cAiyiERON's Lunch Counter. IIS South Klevenlli. :sAA-AwvvArVvvvv: First National Bank, LINCOLN. NEH. Capital. $400,000.00 .INO. L. CAKSON, President. I). 1). Mt.'in. Cashier. U.S. FItKKMAN. Asst CashU-r It's the Place You want to no to when yon want to purchase muu.iiH'P, poriodiuuls, news papers and novels. Always on hand. Ilth and O Sts., Richards Blk;. THE LINCOLN NEWS AGENCY. C I. SPKNCKlt. Mgr g-prif lnteirolloKiiile lturviiu v , Cotrcll & Leouarfl, 172-478 Hro:ulMiy, Albany. New York. HHHBtLVlj MakerMtf the Caps, Gowns and Hoods. To the Amerlesin Colleges utul Universities Illustrated manual, samples, prices, etc , upon request. Uowus for the Pulpit ami the llench. SULPHO-SALINK Bath Honse and Sanitarium. Cor. 11th and M stroots , Lincoln, Nob. Open at ull Hours, Day anil Night All forms of bath TURKISH, RUSSIAN AND ROMAN DRS. M. II. AND J. O. EVERETT, Managing Phyeioiuns. r TA P ir HV9 444XH Metropolitan Barber Shop (Babement Burr Blk.) HAIR CUT, 15c. HAIR SINGED, 15c SHAMPOO, 15c SHAVE, 10c SEA FOAM, 10c B. J. Roberson, Proprietor. WE EXPECT TO Aluku hoiiio now friumlH this your imiong tho now HtiulontH who huvo ooino in, We Have Lot Of old friondH who uro a'uying wilh uh, and tho roiiHOii is pluiti. Tho oollogo nimi !h piu'tioiilur, lio mu,U huvo a largo iiHHortniont to Holoot from in ordor to gol tho oxuot lit, sliupo, longth, itglll'O, oto. That's Why Wo huvo ho many friends. Wo can alwuyfi suit thoir hoihIh at prioos that aro right. ARMSTRONG CLOTHING CO. Mr. Albert Turpin's -wr DANCING SCHOOL Mow opon for Soaaon 18!)7-',)S. Adult olaasos. ovory TnosdavH and Thursdnyi lnvMulo,Wcthicsdav J p. in., Saturdays, 2 p. in. Assemblies ovory Thursday Evo. Hall for rent. Special rates to clubs and fraternities. 11II2 M St, for terms, etc. Ollico hours !) to 1 1:J10 a. in., 2 to 5 p. ni. THE KENT QQLLEGE OF LAW s!,rl,,K r,V w'" opon Mapoh 8- "" du ink IVtni UULLLUCUr LHTV pioma admits to bur. Improved me hod. Marshall D. Kwlnp, LL. D.. M. D, Dean, uniting theory and practice. The School of Practice Is the Leading Feature. Event ur sessions of ten hours a week for each class. Students c.n bo self iiupportlnR whllo study njj For catalogue address M. D. KWELL, Dean, lloom 613 and 614 Ashland blk., Chlcnjro 111 When you write to your friends vho nr- coming west to visit you, just add a post script like this: "Be sure ,o take the Burlington Itoutc. It's much the best." Vou are quite safe In do ing th's because our serv ice from Chicago, Peoria, St. l-ou.8 and Kansas City. In fact all eastern, southeastern and south ern cltlts Is Just as good as our service to those points. And .hat as every one who Is acquainted with it will testify, .s the best there is. Tickets and time tables on application at B. & M. depot or c!ty ticket of fice, corner 10th and O St. G. W. B0NNELL, C. P. & T. A.. LINCOLN. NK1J. All tho news all tho tlmo Is to be found in Tho Nebrn8kan, $1.00 per year. "3S? i i i Our 'Ninety-Seven Complete Linecf Monarch are the Supreme Result of our Years of Experience MONARCH CYCLE MFG. CO. Stni nine two-cent stamps for a deck of Monarch Plavlnc Crd5. illustratlnc Lllllioi Ru5ell, Tom Xnarch Cooler ,Uc Richardson and WlUr Jones. Hepilir Hte cartV ' TWO TRAINS DAILY mmvKEN LINCOLN AND Auburn, hills City, Atchison, St. Joseph, and Kansas City. City Ticket Office. 1201 0 Street. H. O. Townskni), Gon'l P. & T. A. F. D. Cornell, O. V. & T. A. All the World Loves a Winner " Bicycles l CHICAGO HEW YORK LOlTDOl 4