MI.JUA'jil.-lgE THE NEBRASKA-N-HESPBRIAK. If ; 30 tj.il AKTEU THK GAME AT UARVAKp, T ho Yule game has heon played. The Yale eleven won the victory. If nny there was, and -'Harvard -men won the bets. To play the game over again on paper would he an unpardonable bore, but the ame was, and still Is, a mat ter of slicji transcendent Interest, here In Cambridge, it may be of .interest to4 tell why and wherefore. Everything conduced to ma.ke this year's game of fxtraord.nary importance to the two colleges. jS'ne fwas. defeated last year at New Haven. iVttfV 'This year Yal began the season with a ne.w and com paratively green eleven. This was made viv'dly plain to 'the graduates of "ale by the defeat afHhe brfTids of Co lumb a. Then rame an exhibition of what enthusiasm can do. Coa-hes from evei-ywhere flocked "'to New Haven. Yalp men in Harvard law school, old players from everywhere, returned to their college and actually played in the line against the 'varsity ( leven to teach them the game. At the last moment Coach Sanford from Co lumbus returned to New Haven long enough to decide the doubts or the many coaches. Thus was formed the ale eleven. The Harvard eleven on the other hand, was a veteran eleven I'n.formly victqrious throughout the season, it worked along modestly d won the confidence of every Harvard man. This confidence resulted in the bets even money that Yale would not score, seven to five and five to three that Harvard would win. Very little Vale money was to be found at even these odds. At last came the game. The fea-, Hires of the game Have been printed in every da'ly paper. Epitomized by a layman it hnppened thus: On a cloudy day at Soldiers' field, just across the Charles river from Cambridge, yitrty-Ttrtir3iohsaa',jreo'plo with crimson lings and blue gatherod to watch tills struggle between jiVal colleges. On the Harvard side GoernorB "Woleott and Roosevelt took a hand in leading the cheering. Around the gridiron "John the Orangeman," Harvard's mascot, with 1i1b little don Kc, "Ann'e Raclcliffe," and orange cart drove, holding up for the crowd to sec a huge, lively rooster. The Kame Befbre Buyilig Note Books, Tablets, Stationery,, Ets. SEE OUR LARGE, NEW STOCK AT THE CO-OP. Special Sale 322 North Eleventh Street. on 5c Note Books and Tablets. New Thing, our "Flexible" Memo, and Cover Going like hot cakes. U. of N. Writing Paper, to Match. Fine -'Pennant" U. of N. Paper in Boxes. ROPER eft EOOMER. m ' m m 0 N tbest days of smokeless powders and hleh pressures why take chances on filline your face with powder. loslne U your eyesifiht and possibly yourllfe by uslne a repeater that opens on top and elects into your face, when you can avoid the possi bility by buying a MARLIN? The Solid Top Frame and Side E lectins: nrlncble Is the most Important Improvement made In repeating arms for many years. Complete illustrated catalog for 3 stamps. TH&MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. ground a fellowship -with other stu dents. Another gift is a new boat house, costing ?2s",000, given by the Harvard club of Now York. It is being built atiross the rivar within a short dis tance of SoldlerB' field. So near the foot 1ull ground, Jt could be bqgji by every one attending the game on Satur- two i day just, a constant reminder of the fact that the' athletic management sent six or seven hundred choice tickets for the Yale game to the New York club as a recognition of the g'.ft, thereby crowd ing undergraduates into corner and end seats. Some people are Interested In other t ll In tru linalrlnu fnn Km 11 w f r ! ,1 ,! UiHiwl jwo hours. Harvard was within uy tlie very lnrge aud;enc0 that uBtenP(1 to Professor Royce's lecture on "A Con- one yard of seorinK at one time, but Yule made a "miraculous" stand, so an old guard said, and the chance nevw i-unie so near again. After the game some very amusing situations appear ed. Yale claimed a victory, yet nearly c very bet, owing to tlie tie, was against caption of Immortality" last week. On Tuesday last Mr. Frederick Hollis, one of the American delegates to the Hague peace conference, lectured on -the re sults of the conference. In Boston Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higg'nson them. The captifin of each team took i 1b delivering one of the Unveil liiBtl-.the-raamlt as a defeat and as a per- tute lecture courses OI1 Amort win n,.. uupiain jjuruen, it is l tors sonal matter. Colfinel T-Mi'flmjnti 'itwl ri- tj..i reported, with broken and contrite : bath irrar1ut of Wnw..,.,! ,. ,.v,uU sKteii(l of Pennsylvania. ".,,.w a..t 1....1 ... jMVJAl .3UIUJ Uily H UIIJU lieart, Verused to go to the "Touraine" with the .boys. Captain McUride, on Uhe best of authority, wept as lrlends jiinluuodhlB jacket uitor uie contesi. . ' As usual, tliere Ib much talk of a re-'an-angemont of games between the "'big four." Yale, it Beems, would pre--for that Hurvard pluy Princeton In- The result of mnUPrilncuton'uiy Iiuvo some bearing fin liiu uiuiuuun. j'resiaoni junoi hinkB' .Cornell and Columbia ar,e Avtirthy antagonists of Harvard, but 'pojiaj'por Roosevelt favors the local jprojudlco. Speaking of Governor Roosevelt, IiIb ucont visit to Yule has catiBod Borne llioininout. Some think his effUBlon and ;gush as a b'a for favor of Yale men 1b (undignified. 'Harvard 1b happy in .being llhe roclplont of a gift of ?1 50,000 wljli fevliicli to build a club hoitBe. Something (distinctly new in the way of a compre lienllve university club Ib to bo formed, o one'doubtB the nood of such a thing, the early forties. Iiave been secured for lectures in these courses of free lec tures ih's year. Of the players, Irving and Terry, in "Robespierre" at one of the BinalleBt of theutres, strange to say, are the coiiter of interest. ORVILLE H. MARTIN. Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 22, 18!i!i. Y. M. C. A. The Young Men's Christian associa t'on Ib to bB commended for the excel lent way in which it handles tlie finan cial side of its -work. The expend'turos for tliie year will amount to about ?1.100. A good committee is organized to handle thlB work. R. S. Hunt lias been untiring this year in IiIb efforts to keep this department in proper Bha-pe. L'.ttle diniculty Ib experienced in securing funds. The work aB done by tlie unsocial! ton morJtB tlie Btijiport unci sympathy of all BtudentB and teachers Jn the IiiBtltutlon. The mil vcrslty directory is making rapid prog ress and wilj be out December 1C. Many Wnt, II.. ...... ...1 ,... i .. . ..A ii in iitiiviiiii iik i i'iiimiiiiim ,iir u uii ill turn .i..v I' , " "r; ",lJ b biuuoiiui are looking after their ad- tond so loose hut a Btudunt ieels that I dreseH. A l.ttle time yet remains in there. is nothing definite In which to wl)1,h to alfPm to tJilB juntlr. THE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC i L i l lb iU is opposite the Campus. Students contemplating tlie study of music, and those who have friends desirous of information concerning' the ;ad vantages offered, are cordially invited to visit the school and obtain an. illustrated Catalogue. You can enter at any time 1 i I I I I I WILLARD KIMBALL DIRECTOR. 2S::5C2; ... Legislative Gallery... Intercollegiate Bureau. Cottrell k Leonard 172-478 IJrodwav Alliany, New York Maker of (lie Portrait and Landscape Photographer 129 South nth Street, Lincoln, Neb. OAi.i.i'.m KSTAllLlhllliJ) 1K71 Caps, Gowns and Hood s To the American Colleges and Univer sitics Illustrated manual, samples, prices etc , upon request Gowns for the pulpn and the bench. Positions Secured! We aid all those who want GOVERN WENT POSITIONS. 85.000 places s?"'- js. J"-.- ft- Got.xs. r; . uiiiiviiin n U1UIUUU ima SriHtlllllf nnreu .n ll J . . -r, f.. salaries twir.f ;m murli .,c .;. ...... r. .. . . . . The li.mrc ,,r i.,t,, .,r ,i,' . i , "" i'""ic iiima lor uie same kina ot worK . h. Txl are.,6ll0rt' du!'.tiS ll8h.t- PositionB for life. Take our course ol Write in- spare time only. 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