io THE HESPERIAN. II m l!f together in a flash. Ten minutes remained and Johnston tried running back of the V. He made ten yards bclore a chorus of backs could stop him. Next moment he went around the left for ten yards. Flippin perforated the center for five. Johnston made a fine run of ten yards going between end and tackle, but was stopped by the crowd which ran into the line and surged about whither it listed. Next time he got through between center and right guard, and got well down the field. Just as the full back got him he passed to Porterfield, and Porter and his neighbor opposite rolled over and over on the ball. Four hands being on it when the combination run down, there was some question as to who was in possession. Without very much hesitation, however, commanded Porterfield to desist and while a broad grin was lighting up the features of his adversary and the Tovvau quar ter back was repeating his A B C's to be sure he remembered them, time was called and the usual cheering ensued. The referee publically announced the score as 26 to o. But after the public had departed under that impression, he called the teams together and admitted that he was four points ofl. Perhaps a little matter of four points is not much in a score like the one in question, but the boys were naturally hot about it, especially as he responded to all enquiries as to how he figured out that result by "none of your business." He is an experienced man and very prompt and decided in his rulings just the kind of a man needed lor a referee. But he might imitate the gentlemen who acted as umpire to advant age in his manner ol addressing the players. His language is far from calculated to soothe the ruffled spirits of a disap pointed player. The score, it might be said, was 22 to o. Umpire, Wilson of Omaha. Referee, Holbrooke of Iowa City. NOTES There were several thousand spectators present, and they were present in every sense of the word. They formed a dense mass around the players at a distance of about fifteen yards and limited the work of the backs very effectively. The wedge of the doughty Ilawkejca was not visibly affected thereby, but Johnston was stopped in two good runs by a com pact mass of ununiformed humanity. Two policemen were intended to keep the crowd out of the lines. But as soon as the ball was in play, they wculd rush down the field after it and the crowd would speedily follow. J. B. White was badly injured in the forepart of the game. He showed admirable pluck, however, and continued to play. Soon afterwards he made a fine tackle, stopped the burly Iowan, but received a terrible fall and was taken from the field unconscious. He soon recovered from the shock and was feeling tolerably well Friday. '1 he Uni. delegation are indebted to Mr. Hayden, the pro prietor ol a department f tore, for a liberal discount on horns, eye-glasses, ribbon, and gold cloth. He said he had been a college boy himself. He presented us with all the gold cloth he had in stock, and kindly oflered room in his store foi our headquarters. It is impossible for one not personally acquainted with the Iowa team to name the individual plays in describing the game. Most of theii work was with the wedge, and when they ran good interference made it impossible to say who had the ball till be was downed. He said A, B, C, X, P, Q, The game was well advertised by several howling mobs of Uni. boys, arrayed in old gold and tin horns, who explored all Omaha and most of Council Bluffs before the game began. The Iowa team Is composed of gentlemen. It is a pleas ure to be beaten by men of their stamp. May their tribe increase. The above pilgrim's chorus was rendered on the train coming home by fifty hoarse voices. Tune, "Romulus killed Remus." Iowa was not represented to any great extent in the aud ience but had a very respectable representation on the field. A problem in algebra, copyright 1S91 by Q. Backe Pierce. j al plus mnl plus q plus 247 equals five yards. The referee invariably referred to Nebraska as Grincll." Once he said "Minneapolis." Ah! those specks! EXCHANGE. X, P. Q. X, P, Q. He said A, B, C, X, P, Q, The ball wer.t P, D, Q. Who was tbsi man they called "the just?" In the Hillsdale College Herald we notice a comparison of Peter the Great of Russia and Frederick the Great of Prussia. If anyone, having never heard of these two men, were to read the article he would be impressed more with the idea that they were simply two ordinary men that the writer had seen fit to compare, instead of two of our really gTcat men in history. Both Peter and Frederick stasd out with a very marked promi nence above their contemporaries. This fact the writer of the article does not make clear. The general trend of the article is to praise Peter the Great for his moral, economical, and political ideas and works, and to convey the idea that Fredci ick, although he devoted his life to the military and political aggrandizement of his country, did it because of selfish' motives. We will quote a few sentences from the article in question: "So far as a life devoted to the military and politi cal aggrandizement of a country makes a man a patriot, Fred crick the Great will receive the plaudits of those who worship success. While, on the other hand, so tar as the qualities I combined with love of country and a desire to labor for a purer civilization makes a man noble, Peter the Great will receive the praises of those who admire a true character. He may have been despotic, but the times demanded such a ruler. "What Silesia was to Frederick such was the part of Azof to Peter. The one vfas siezed for personal motives, the other for good of country. We cannot understand the secrets of Providence." Now in the first place did Frederick the Great devote his whole life to the military and political aggrandizement of his country? Is it true that we are only to remember and applaud him for lacing a patriot? Frederick, like the great founder of St. Petersburg was as much interested in governing his coun try well and in introducing reforms as he was in making it strong in force of arms. He administered his government like a proprietor of a great estate. I le watched everything himself. His fault was perhaps in not trusting more to his subordinates. We cannot blame him so much for this. He wished to build up a model form of government. Because he was not endowed with a supernatural power to foresee the future which, had he been so endowed, would have enabled him to adopt the best means for his success, is no reason why he should receive oar censure for adopting the poorest means. As far as Peter the Great is concerned, all the writer has said is true but he has not said enough. Leaving out his acts of barbarous cruelty which seem indeed to be freaks of his, come to mar his otherwise extremely pacific nature, Peter did a. HICi