4
GHT Dec. 12 edy -Drama ss rs of "The and "Coon PAN V NERY CIALTIES 25c, SOc. Wru. A. Fry. Cashier L. Falk. Ass!. Cashle, Savings Bank IOWA - $115.000.00 d Profits. $05.000.00 ' arson. John T. Jones. C. F. Lovel:u:e. J. C. :W hltacre. S.L. CloM lon ro Brown. V-Pres. f' Casbler ENS I TRUST CO. ERS Surplus. $1 5.000. 00 tOil Street. EY'S ry, d Sale RIOS l ubuque St. THE DAILY IOWAN PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT OF THE ST 4 TE UNIVER ITY OF IOWA Vol. 5 Homeopaths Meet. IOWA CITY, IOWA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1905 nual alumni clinic. The dates set UnIversity" it may be interesting to for the clinics are February 6 and 6, note tbat while, according to recent 1906, and arrangements are being statistics, there are 101 students No 57. Ceptral Homeopathic Med ical Asso- made by the committee for a large from Iowa In the University of I IIl - Prof. Smith Talks About football. elation In Session Here. attendance and the most elaborate nols, there are 286 from Illinois in The twenty-seventh sEtroi-annual meeting of the Central Iowa Homeo- pathic association is in session to- day In the lecture room of the Home- opathic hospital. About twenty-five Homeopathic doctors are in attend- ance. H. C. Parsons, '06, Is secre- tary 0 fthe association. The follow- ing is the program in full: 10:00 A. M. Regular order of business. Pap er-Erysipelas, Us Djagnosls and Treat ment Dr. J. Moorehead and Treatment ......... . .... . ....... , .Dr. J. Moorehead, Marlon Paper-What We Learn After Graduation Dr. T. L. Hazard, Iowa Graduation . . ..... .. ... . .... . ..... Dr. T. L. Hazard, Iowa City Address-Our Prospects .. .. . ... . Dr. George Royal, Des Moines 1:30 'P. M. B\ls\uess Meetin g. Clinics. General Surgery ....... Dr. Gilchrist Gynecology .... '" .. ... Dr. Becker Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, ..... . .. .......... ..... Dr. Bywater STUDY YOURSELF. and successful program of the series. the University of Michigan. It When complete the program will in- I would seem, In view of this palpable clude clinIcs by leaders on all the I fact, that the authorities of the TIl 1- more important phases of dental nols institution might do well to con- work. These clinics have increased fin e their canvass for students with- In popularity each year and they are In the limits of that state, Instead of coming more and more to be the oc- I extending it each year Into Iowa. caslons of grand dental alumni re- However, if llIlDols tax payers are unions, and aside from the education- wiIJlng to pay the billS, we have no al features, the practical demonstra- objections of course. tions of the modem developments In the profession, the alumnus finds this December 12th. 1,. G. WELD. the best time of the year to ren ew bls college friendships. BAND CONCERT. At 7: 30 tonight a free band con- cert will be given In honor of the football squad, at the audltorlus of LlbEiral Arts. Program. March, "Paul Revere's Ride" Panella Overture, "Bohemian Girl," ., . Balfe Characteristic, "Arabola," .. Hendt1x Spanish Serenade, "Anita,".. " Al1en March, "Hawkeye" .. . ...... Ram sell Selection, "Royal Chef," .... Jerome March, "VenI Vldl Vlcl," ........ Hall ALUMNUS SUFFERS MISFORTUNE The following was Clipped from a Waterloo paper: "The many Waterloo friends of Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Munger, now residents of Greenville, S. C., where MI'. Mun· gel' Is secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at the big Monaghan mills near that city, will r egret to learn that their beautiful lIt1e home, designed by Mr. Munger and built especia ll y for him, was burned on the fifth of Decem- ber." SAYS WE SHOULD DO AWAY WITH II)ITERCOLLEGIATE GAMES. BeJleves that Should be as .. Means of Physical Development for Class Teams-The P resent Evil Lies In the Spirit With Which it is Regarded. (From The Dally Republican.) "It we forbid lDtercolleglate foot- ball entirely. and IteeD football as a means of Dhyslcal development for our class teall:ls. within the univer- sity. every eVil that Is now decried will disappear." Such Is the conclu- Sion of Professor A. G. Smith. chair- man ot the Eligibility commltt and ex-preSident Of the Western confer- ence. "The whole evil In the game today lies In the spirit with which the university faculties, alumni and students regard It. The desire to win at any cost; the demand made of the cOach th/J.t he Droduce a winning team or go; the counting of that sea- son successful which shows the greatest number of victories Irrespec- tive of the honest effort of the men SECRET OF THE MUSQUAKIE NATION. Mr. Munger graduated from the Unlvevrslty In '92, and was student Y. M. C. A. secretary for Iowa 9:fter leaving here. He Is engaged in work engaged In th game are but evldenc- among mill hands under the national es of t hat spirit. committee. Mr. Munger Is a pioneer, "B rutality Is not a cause but a re- This, Says Dr. Bailey, Is the Way to Dr. Ward Talks Entertainly at As- Since this Is the first worl{ of the suIt. No amount of legislation will Develop Physically. Sembly. kind und ertaken by the assoolatlon. ever be able to correct It. Only tllat On Tuesday evening, at 7 o'cloclt, In the Hall of lAberal Arts, Dr. "Bai- ley spoke to those Interellted in phys- Ical trainin g. The subject, "How to Begin and Break Tratntng," In the fir st place, he said, training must be ,radually begun. No one can begin on a new task and accomplish the best work at once. One should begin and gradually talte exercise to de· velop the heart and lungs. Then when be Is In a good physical condition, he IIbould be careful dnring the sum- mer and beware of exercises so t hat later he will not have to recover what be has lost. As to diet, every man should be a The secret of the Musquakle na- BACON IAN which changes the sPirit with which . we regard the game can hope to wipe Uon Is Its religion, says Dr. Ward. out the numberless petty evils that The reason they are arll conservative The regular meeting of Baconlan loom so large In tbe J;lubllc press. Is the fear within tbem that the club will be held on Friday evening, Theoretically we are building up the world outside ma.y destroy their December 16, at 7:30. Prof. Ford will men who play the game, physlclally. sacred things-the ideals they stMve read the paper of the evening, sub- That Is the object of football as It Is to preserve. ject, "Electric Power Transmission." ot IlUY sport, but practically we are Push-e·ton-Ita, tbe chief, said to Dr. -_. --- developing teams In an attempt to de- Ward that the Musquaklell were ere at I DEANS ANP STUPENTS MEET. fellt Minnesota or Chicago or some ed from the heart of the Great Spirit - -- ' other Conference team. Under a sys- Other peoples are not pleased to Last evening the deans of the col- tem where football is confined to hear this, hence they fight the Mus- leges and the student delegates met class teams who play among them- quakies. and dlEleussed plans for the further selves, brutality would disappear. No development of the student organiza- class would permit tbe bully or tbe PROFESSORS BACK FROM FORES- tlon. This organization of brute to remain In the game. TRY ASSOCIATION. In the oppos it e Professors Macbride and Wickham law unto himself. We must forget are bac1< from the annual meeting of rules and l eam to study ourselves, the T owa Park and Forestry assocla- and then act accordingly. What tlon, which met at Des Moines, De- agrees with one may be bad for an cember 11 and 12. about sixty or seventy students who "Yet under our present system the are representatives from all the 01'- deSire to win encourages that very ganizations In the school. Tbe Coun- man. The entire moral tone of tbe ty Club movement was also dis- university bas been lowered by his cussed. act. The abolition of the intercol- HOLIDAY RATES,' leglate con tests will not do away with the InjUries. Accidents will accom- pany every sport, but It will do away with conscious Injury to an opponent which 18 aided and abetted by the un- dergraduates on the side lines. I do not claim that the remedy proposed Is the only one. But I know that It Is the only sure one proposed. It would effectually put an end to proselytl:lg and grafting for there would be n either the occasion for the one nor the opportunity for the other. Foot- ball would bo played for sport's sake and commerCialism would disappear. At the present time the game has be- come profeslonal In spirit. The phys- ical limitations of football "material" other a nd vice versa. We should be- The session was successful, and In- ware of stimulants. Tea, cofl'ee, pas· teresting. Prof. Wickham was elect- The Rock Island will sell excurSion try, tobacco or liquors are sure to do ed treasurer. Profesor Macbride Is tickets for the holidays at one and 80me harm and are of little value to secretary. one-third fare for the round trip. Among the prominent visitors at Tickets on sale December 22d, 23J, The process of breaking training the aSSOCiati on was Baron Von Bayer, 24th, and 26th, and 30th. 31st and r egu lar exercise and going to excess a German who has come to this coun- January 1st. Call at ticket omce for should also be a gradual one. There try to make his permanent home. particulars. Is much danger In suddenly stopping Prof. Shimek and J. C. Monnett ALUMNI CLINIC WILL HERE. were among the University people MEET on the program, and were unable to be present, but se nt papers to be read. Executive Issu es Invita- tion. For the Third Annual Alumni Clinic. ILLINOIS STUDENTS GO TO MICH- IGAN. According to Franklin MacVeagh, smoke Is no longer to be regarded as an Index of prosperity but, rather, of slup ldl ty .. -Chlcago Record- Herald The total registration in the Har- vard law school thi s year Is 766. are so narrow that only about twenty- five men out of fifteen hundred ever The executive committee of the Dental Alumni association of the State University of Iowa, ba s just Is- lIIed Invitations for their third an- Editor Dally Iowan: Anent your article In this evening's Free band concert at Liberal Arts try for the team at Iowa. paper on the "Iowa Cluh at Illinois 7:30 tonIgbt. (Continued on Page Two.)

THE DAILY IOWANdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1905/di1905-12-13.pdf · 2012. 9. 5. · THE DAILY IOWAN THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

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Page 1: THE DAILY IOWANdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1905/di1905-12-13.pdf · 2012. 9. 5. · THE DAILY IOWAN THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

GHT Dec. 12 edy-Drama ss

rs of "The

and "Coon

PAN V NERY CIALTIES

25c, SOc.

~vening.

Wru. A. Fry. Cashier L. Falk. Ass!. Cashle,

Savings Bank

~• IOWA

- $115.000.00 d Profits. $05.000.00

'arson. John T. Jones. • C. F. Lovel:u:e. J. C. :W hltacre. S.L.CloM

lo n ro Brown. V-Pres.

f' Casbler

ENS I TRUST CO. ERS

Surplus. $15.000.00

tOil Street.

EY'S ry, d Sale ~Ie ~E RIOS

lubuque St.

THE DAILY IOWAN PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT OF THE ST 4 TE UNIVER ITY OF IOWA

Vol. 5

Homeopaths Meet.

IOWA CITY, IOWA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1905

nual alumni clinic. The dates set UnIversity" it may be interesting to for the clinics are February 6 and 6, note tbat while, according to recent 1906, and arrangements are being statistics, there are 101 students

No 57.

Ceptral Homeopathic Med ical Asso- made by the committee for a large from Iowa In the University of I IIl-

Prof. Smith Talks About football.

elation In Session Here. attendance and the most elaborate nols, there are 286 from Illinois in

The twenty-seventh sEtroi-annual meeting of the Central Iowa Homeo­pathic association is in session to­day In the lecture room of the Home­opathic hospital. About twenty-five Homeopathic doctors are in attend-ance. H. C. Parsons, '06, Is secre­tary 0 fthe association. The follow­ing is the program in full:

10:00 A. M. Regular order of business.

Paper-Erysipelas, Us Djagnosls and Treatment Dr. J. Moorehead and Treatment ......... . .... .

....... , .Dr. J. Moorehead, Marlon Paper-What We Learn After

Graduation Dr. T. L. Hazard, Iowa Graduation . . ..... . . ... . .... . ..... Dr. T. L. Hazard, Iowa City

Address-Our Prospects .. .. . ... . Dr. George Royal, Des Moines

1:30 'P. M. B\ls\uess Meetin g.

Clinics. General Surgery ....... Dr. Gilchrist Gynecology .... '" .. ... Dr. Becker Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, ..... .

.. .......... ..... Dr. Bywater

STUDY YOURSELF.

and successful program of the series. the University of Michigan. It When complete the program will in- I would seem, In view of this palpable clude clinIcs by leaders on all the I fact, that the authorities of the TIl 1-more important phases of dental nols institution might do well to con­work. These clinics have increased fine their canvass for students with­In popularity each year and they are In the limits of that state, Instead of coming more and more to be the oc- I extending it each year Into Iowa. caslons of grand dental alumni re- However, if llIlDols tax payers are unions, and aside from the education- wiIJlng to pay the billS, we have no al features, the practical demonstra- objections of course. tions of the modem developments In the profession, the alumnus finds this December 12th. 1,. G. WELD. the best time of the year to renew bls college friendships.

BAND CONCERT.

At 7: 30 tonight a free band con­cert will be given In honor of the football squad, at the audltorlus of LlbEiral Arts.

Program. March, "Paul Revere's Ride" Panella Overture, "Bohemian Girl," ., . Balfe Characteristic, "Arabola," .. Hendt1x Spanish Serenade, "Anita,".. " Al1en March, "Hawkeye" .. . ...... Ram sell Selection, "Royal Chef," .... Jerome March, "VenI Vldl Vlcl," ........ Hall

ALUMNUS SUFFERS MISFORTUNE

The following was Clipped from a Waterloo paper:

"The many Waterloo friends of Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Munger, now residents of Greenville, S. C., where MI'. Mun· gel' Is secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at the big Monaghan mills near that city, will regret to learn that their beautiful lIt1e home, designed by Mr. Munger and built especially for him, was burned on the fifth of Decem­ber."

SAYS WE SHOULD DO AWAY WITH II)ITERCOLLEGIATE

GAMES.

BeJleves that ~ootball Should be as .. Means of Physical Development for Class Teams-The Present Evil Lies In the Spirit With Which it is Regarded.

(From The Dally Republican.) "It we forbid lDtercolleglate foot­

ball entirely. and IteeD football as a means of Dhyslcal development for our class teall:ls. within the univer­sity. every eVil that Is now decried will disappear." Such Is the conclu­Sion of Professor A. G. Smith. chair­man ot the Eligibility commltt and ex-preSident Of the Western confer­ence. "The whole evil In the game today lies In the spirit with which the university faculties, alumni and students regard It. The desire to win at any cost; the demand made of the cOach th/J.t he Droduce a winning team or go; the counting of that sea­son successful which shows the greatest number of victories Irrespec­tive of the honest effort of the men

SECRET OF THE MUSQUAKIE NATION.

Mr. Munger graduated from the Unlvevrslty In '92, and was student Y. M. C. A. secretary for Iowa 9:fter leaving here. He Is engaged in work engaged In th game are but evldenc­among mill hands under the national es of t hat spirit. committee. Mr. Munger Is a pioneer, "Brutality Is not a cause but a re-

This, Says Dr. Bailey, Is the Way to Dr. Ward Talks Entertainly at As- Since this Is the first worl{ of the suIt. No amount of legislation will Develop Physically. Sembly. kind undertaken by the assoolatlon. ever be able to correct It. Only tllat

On Tuesday evening, at 7 o'cloclt, In the Hall of lAberal Arts, Dr. "Bai­ley spoke to those Interellted in phys­Ical training. The subject, "How to Begin and Break Tratntng," In the first place, he said, training must be ,radually begun. No one can begin on a new task and accomplish the best work at once. One should begin and gradually talte exercise to de· velop the heart and lungs. Then when be Is In a good physical condition, he IIbould be careful dnring the sum­mer and beware of exercises so that later he will not have to recover what be has lost.

As to diet, every man should be a

The secret of the Musquakle na- BACON IAN which changes the sPirit with which

. we regard the game can hope to wipe Uon Is Its religion, says Dr. Ward. out the numberless petty evils that The reason they are arll conservative The regular meeting of Baconlan loom so large In tbe J;lubllc press. Is the fear within tbem that the club will be held on Friday evening, Theoretically we are building up the world outside ma.y destroy their December 16, at 7:30. Prof. Ford will men who play the game, physlclally. sacred things-the ideals they stMve read the paper of the evening, sub- That Is the object of football as It Is to preserve. ject, "Electric Power Transmission." ot IlUY sport, but practically we are

Push-e·ton-Ita, tbe chief, said to Dr. -_. --- developing teams In an attempt to de-Ward that the Musquaklell were ere at I DEANS ANP STUPENTS MEET. fellt Minnesota or Chicago or some ed from the heart of the Great Spirit --- ' other Conference team. Under a sys-Other peoples are not pleased to Last evening the deans of the col- tem where football is confined to hear this, hence they fight the Mus- leges and the student delegates met class teams who play among them­quakies. and dlEleussed plans for the further selves, brutality would disappear. No

development of the student organiza- class would permit tbe bully or tbe PROFESSORS BACK FROM FORES- tlon. This organization conslst~ of brute to remain In the game.

TRY ASSOCIATION.

In the opposite dlrectl~n. Professors Macbride and Wickham law unto himself. We must forget are bac1< from the annual meeting of rules and leam to study ourselves, the Towa Park and Forestry assocla­and then act accordingly. What tlon, which met at Des Moines, De­agrees with one may be bad for an cember 11 and 12.

about sixty or seventy students who "Yet under our present system the are representatives from all the 01'- deSire to win encourages that very ganizations In the school. Tbe Coun- man. The entire moral tone of tbe ty Club movement was also dis- university bas been lowered by his cussed. act. The abolition of the intercol-

HOLIDAY RATES,' leglate contests will not do away with the InjUries. Accidents will accom­pany every sport, but It will do away with conscious Injury to an opponent which 18 aided and abetted by the un­dergraduates on the side lines. I do not claim that the remedy proposed Is the only one. But I know that It Is the only sure one proposed. It would effectually put an end to proselytl:lg and grafting for there would be neither the occasion for the one nor the opportunity for the other. Foot­ball would bo played for sport's sake and commerCialism would disappear. At the present time the game has be­come profeslonal In spirit. The phys­ical limitations of football "material"

other and vice versa. We should be- The session was successfu l, and In-ware of stimulants. Tea, cofl'ee, pas· teresting. Prof. Wickham was elect- The Rock Island will sell excurSion try, tobacco or liquors are sure to do ed treasurer. Profesor Macbride Is tickets for the holidays at one and 80me harm and are of little value to secretary. one-third fare for the round trip. anyo~e. Among the prominent visitors at Tickets on sale December 22d, 23J,

The process of breaking training the aSSOCiation was Baron Von Bayer, 24th, and 26th, and 30th. 31st and regular exercise and going to excess a German who has come to this coun- January 1st. Call at ticket omce for should also be a gradual one. There try to make his permanent home. particulars. Is much danger In suddenly stopping Prof. Shimek and J. C. Monnett

ALUMNI CLINIC WILL HERE.

were among the University people MEET on the program, and were unable to

be present, but sent papers to be read.

Executive Commltte~ Issues Invita­tion. For the Third Annual

Alumni Clinic. ILLINOIS STUDENTS GO TO MICH­

IGAN.

According to Franklin MacVeagh, smoke Is no longer to be regarded as an Index of prosperity but, rather, of slupldl ty .. -Chlcago Record-Herald

The total registration in the Har­vard law school this year Is 766. are so narrow that only about twenty­

five men out of fifteen hundred ever The executive committee of the

Dental Alumni association of the State University of Iowa, bas just Is­lIIed Invitations for their third an-

Editor Dally Iowan: Anent your article In this evening's Free band concert at Liberal Arts try for the team at Iowa.

paper on the "Iowa Cluh at Illinois 7:30 tonIgbt. (Continued on Page Two.)

Page 2: THE DAILY IOWANdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1905/di1905-12-13.pdf · 2012. 9. 5. · THE DAILY IOWAN THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

THE DAILY IOWAN

THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

VOLUME 5 NUMBER 57 marked comic opera success, which

FINE TAILORING Every Afternoon Except auday. and Mandays

Of the Vldette-Reporter tbe tblrty- eventb year and of tbe . U.1. 011111 tbe fourteeuth year

En terM as second-claM mall matter. No­.ember 12. 1903. at tue post office at Iowa City. Iowa. u n"~r the act of Contrress of Marcil 3. 1879.

Per l'ear.lf paid before January lsI ........ $2.00 Per year. If paid aher Jalluary l&t ... .. . . 1.50

wlIl be seen here at the Coldren next Friday evening, December 16, Is by far the best work of Its kind that has been written In many years. It Is ra­tional, consistent, weIl written, both as to book and musical score, and Is deesrvlng of the wide attention It has received throughout the country, particularly In New York and Chlca-go. Seat sale opens this evening.

I desire to announce that I have a complete line of the latest patterns of Tailor Piece Goods, for . Business Suits. Black Suits Full Dress Suits. and a full line of trousering and overcoating

PRICES N\EDIUN\ Peraemesl"r ................. .. ... .......... 1.25 Planot! to rent, at A. M. GREER'S. No better work found anywhere.

We know that we can suit you. Come in and examine our goods.

Per montb ............. . ..... ....... ... ....... 40 Per sintrle copy ............................ .. 05

Office-liS Wllshlntrton Str~et. Telephone. Bell. 36OJ .

AN OPINION OF VALUE.

Pianos to sell, at A. M. GREER'S.

The last number of "Science" con· tains a review of Erdmann and Koeth- JOS. SLAV A T A. Ta.ilor ner's Naturkonltanten In alphabetls­

The Interview of Prof. Smith Is a cher Anordnung by Professor Karl E. valuable contribution to the football Guthe. discussion. It Is also Quite admirable for the courage It displays. Tbls makes it of greater value. One Is not going to critiCise so severely a game whIch occupies the toremost position In a.I1 the colleges unless he thinks the cond1tlon Is serious.

There is, however, no man in the University from whom such criticism could come with more propriety. There is no question of his sympathy with the proper kind of athletics.

ATHLETIC UNION ELECTION.

Meeting of Athletic union tor elec­tion ot omcers, Wednesday, Dec. 20, 7: 16 p. m., northwest room ot Old Capitol building. Fred Moore, Pres.

"Iowa" tobs at A. M. GREERS. The Clinton Street Panitorium

ASK YOURSELF THIS QUESTIONI 15 pieces of clothes cleaned, prelled

and repaired and 20 shines for $1.00 per month.

Why board at a boarding house 211 South Clinton St. when you can enjoy the services ot

Phone 305

the Finest RestaurBJl.t in Iowa for less money? Murphy, the liveryman, No.1 Col-

See Nosek &: Zelthhammel for Catering to Your Wants Is Our Bum- College street. strictly high grade evening dress nees. ------suits, tuxedos and Prince Alberti!. No THE COLLEGE INN, $3.00 meal tickets tor $2.26. 2211 S. tancy prices. "A Place to Eaf." Cllnton street. Good dinners, 160.

Nor can It be said that he doesn't ============================================ know.

There should be much of this frank discussion, and then there should be action. There Is no reason why Iowa should not be · among the leaders of those seeking to correct football and other athletic evils. There Is every reason why she should not be in the r ar of the procession. And the one evident fact is that the proceslon is going to move.

(Continued from Page One.)

"Our coaches know long before reg­Istrations In the universities begin, just what men they wlll have to de­, elop a team, whether five hundred or five thousand men enter school that fall. In spirit the proselyted player is a professional. Unfortunate newspaper notoriety has distorted the 'true statue of the game. Under the conditions proposed nothing Is lost that we cannot alford to loose. The , good in the game remains. Physical development and fair • contest, re­mains. The game is thrown open to the undergraduate body as all true sport should be. Brutallty, proselyt­In II. notoriety and unfairness would be Impossible.

"Nothing can be accomplished along the Jines suggested without tbe combined aid of 0.11 the middle western universities. But changes made along the lines suggested would put an end to every evil ,,-Ithout the necessity ot changing a s!ngle rule.

New Gym. Class Organized. An evening gymnasium class has

been organized to meet on Monday at seven thIrty p. m., Wednesday at eight and On Saturday at four thirty. This is to accommodate mediCS, en­gineers and those who are not able to come at the regular Ume. The phys· ical department does not advocate night exercise If it can be gotten at other times, but organizes this class to accommodate irregular students.

Basket Ball. The basket baIl team will play the

Coe team at Cedar Rapids next Sat­urday, at 2:30 p. m. Our boys are playing a good game and we hope to duplicate the work ot last Saturday.

~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~~~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~. · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ We have prepared especially for the Holiday Se~son ~ splendid showing of rich waree ; ~ etnbraclng the newest ~nd most ~rtlstlc results of gold and sliver smithing. The whold ex- ; ~ hlblt Is a rarely successful combination of originality, exclusiveness, and moderate cost. • · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ Silverware A varied assortment of patterns is shown in both ful1lines ; ~ Sterling and Plate and odd pieces. The plated ware .is all quadruple plate. ; ~ . · ~ ~ . • 1$ ~ . ~ Diamonds There is a very There are all sorts Watches : • marked uperior- time - keepers here, • ~.' and Gems & Clocks !. ~ ity in our gem-set but only one rule cov- .. ~ jewelry when compared with that usu- ers the whole-the price must purchase : ~ ally een. The design and finish of you the best that's po sible. : ~ every piece must embody ab 'olute good Watch Cases in silver, gun met- : ~ taste and thorough workmanship. aI, gold :filled and solid gold. ~ · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ Gold and Silver of di tinctive and unusual character and many rare ; ~ and beautiful articles e pecially collected for the ~

~ Jewelry Holidays. The prices range from a dollar or even ~ ~ Ie s to many hundreds. ; ~ . • 1$ ~ . ~ THE ELLING PRICE OF EVERY ARTICLE IN OUR CASE IS A LOW AS t · ~ ~ CAN BE NAMED FOR GOODS OF EQUAL MERIT. ~ ~ . • 1$ ~ . ~ 20:; "'~~~~~:~. t i Washington .s. t: /f1"ri!@oh F~;;:;os;a:::l i i Street "!f1JtJ!~7~~~~1: Bank t ~ . · ~ ~ . · ~ ~ . . ~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~s~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~ .•.•.•.•

.~.~.~.

: PE • • • .. ~.~.~ The Mil

Christmas

Our Juni for the An editor.

meeting. expect

Melzner Wi.consin but .tays caU. him.

is, shOUld be rates." Wisconsin

Harvard; and A. A •

Page 3: THE DAILY IOWANdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1905/di1905-12-13.pdf · 2012. 9. 5. · THE DAILY IOWAN THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

--~aNG r~ ts ~ll tlg

UN\

Phone 30S

dinners. 16e.

~.~.~.~. <0 • ~ • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • ~ • <0 • ~ • <0 • ~ ~ • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • ~ • <0 • <0 • <0 • • • t <0 • • • <0 • <0 • <0 • ~ • ~ t • <0 • <0 • <0 • • • <0 • <0

AS • • • <0 • ~ • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • <0 • ~ • ~

THE DAILY IOWAN

.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~ • • ; PERSONAL, LOCAL AND GENERAL ~ ; Conduoted by P. E. MoCLENAHAN. ~

• '$'~'~'~'~'~'~'~'~'~'~'~' ~'~'$'~'$'~'~'~'~'~'~'$'$'

The Minnesota Daily will issue a There will be a meeting of all the Christmas edition. civil engineers in room 16, Hall of

••• Liberal Arts, this evening at 6:30 to affect a temporary organization as a

Our Junior is on time. The picture soci'!ty. for the Annual is in the hands of the ••• editor.

••• Nebraska has had a secret girls mass

meeting. What in the world may we expect next?

••• Evidelltly tbe editor of the I. S. C.

student bas some sore spots from the way he jumpl at "Iowa." More kid Itories.

••• Do you know that school closes in

one week from tom~rrow? Now is the time to dia Then relt in vacation.

•••

The masons have almost c.ompleted their work in the new engineering hall, anti the carpenters are in posses­sion of the upper floors, hanging doors and making the interior habit· able.

• •• Friends of Mrs. J. F. Brown are

sorry to know that she has had the typhoid fever since going to Laramie, Wyoming. They are pleased to know that she is much improved.

••• The National Educational Aasocia­

tion haa decided to meet at Sao Fran-Dr. E. L. Kauffman '05, of Downey, cisco, Cal.. on July 9-13. Thi. is a

il in the city today attending the meet- great chance for a cheap visit to the ing of the Central Iowa Homeopathic welt. Allociation. .. •

••• Coach Yost seems to be in line for

Professor Magowan has gone west the presidency of the Ann Arbor in­on business, and will be absent during stitution. At lea!>t he is better known this week.

••• Proielsor Patterson is again at

home after his New York trip. •••

1. K. IngaU .. of Chica~o haa been elected to membership in the State Historical society.

••• Cornell seems to be goiog around

with a debating chip on its shoulder. II there no college in Iowa that carcs to knock it off? .. ,

Princeton and Harvard are to pIa, IIIsociation football next week. They are organizing and will play games all winter, aad close the season in March.

•••

aDd more lionized now than the presi­dent.

• •• ASK YOURSELF THIS QUESTION, Wby board at a boarding house when you can enjoy the services of the finelt Restaurant in Iowa for Less Money? CA TERING TO YOUR WANTS IS OUR BUSINESS.

THE COLLEGE INN, "A Place to Eat."

••• He kissed her 0_ the cheek,

It seemed a harmless frolic; He's been laid up for a week­

With painter'. colic. - Ex. •••

St. James Barber sbop, 109 Iowa aTe. •••

Nebraska bas concluded tbat sbe See Nosek & Zeitbammel for college style an<, city style tailOring.

can't debate Iowa. Does tbe climatic conditions have any thing to do with it, or the sign of the times indicate her downfall?

••• Melzner is the 1906 captain of the

Wisconsin squad. He is a lenior law but Itays another year where duty calli him.

••• Two hundred Leland Stanford stu­

dents and six police hhd a ro.gh and I .

tumble fight recently iit a presentation of '~Uncle Tom's Cab· 'n."

••• Michigan and Chi ago will debate

on January 19. The \ question chosen is, "Resolved: That a commission shOUld be given powet to ftx railroad rates." Michigan ill also debate Wisconsin this vear. \.

••• •

The Minnesota Daily ranks the f~eshman big nine fo~tball teams as follows: Wisconsin, l>\Iinnesota, Chi­cago, Illinois, Iowa'i Northwestern, Perdue and Indiana. ou had better make another guess.

••• The naticnal footbaL~committee is

called to meet in New York on next Saturday. The member of the com­mittee are: Walter Cam ,Yale; Paul J. Dashiell , Lehigh and Annapoliia; Johu C. Bell, Pennsylvant ; Prof. L. M. I Dennil, Cornell, R. D. Wrenn, Harvard; Prof. J. B. Fin , Princeton and A. A. Stagg, Chicago

••• Murphy, the liveryman. No. 1 Col·

lege street. • ••

I work and wait the whole week through

For Saturday and Sunday, Then while I wonder what to do 'rhey're gone, and it is Monday.-Ex .

A PERFECT FIT Not the kind th.t disturb. your midnight slumbers, but the kind th.t' •• Joy In your wlklng hours. A PERFECT CLOTHES FIT If garmenb arc mld~ to your musurc by th~

Chicago Tailoring Co. Ag,ncy with

W. L. SIMS, law '06 St. James Hotel.

Sec our AmplCl

, .

FOR

SUITS and

OVERCOATS

Sueppel's

. Clothing House_

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~*~ ................................................. .. : ~

; Kanak & T urecek ; ill ill W * ~ ORIGINAL TAILORS t : Leading Styles ~ i Popular Prices i ; Ladies' Tailoring a Specialty first-class Repair Work ;. ~ \Ai i 12& South Dubuque Street. , ~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~ ............................................. .

I &

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

For Christmas This store is reay for the Christmas shopping. We in­tr ouce a stock of serviceable a n sensible things suitable

as gifts for men and boys. We urge upon our friends for their own satisfaction the importance of making an early selection.

We suggest House Coats, Lounging Robes, Smoking Jackets, Bath Robes, Pajamas, Fancy Night Robes, Vests, Gloves, Shirts, Suspenders, Neckwear, Umbrellas, Over­coats, Sweaters, Hats, Caps, Suits, all of

which we offer in the high and medium grades, strictly correct in style and at lower prices and equal quality than may be had elsewhere .

MAX MAYER The Good Clothe. Store.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Page 4: THE DAILY IOWANdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1905/di1905-12-13.pdf · 2012. 9. 5. · THE DAILY IOWAN THE D AI L Y IOWAN It Is no't too much to say that "The Forbidden Land," last season's

TIME TABLE -oy-

Cedar Rapids f& Iowa City Electric Railway.

Leave Cedar Rapid, l eave Iowa City DaUy:

5:3(1 a. m. 7:00 a. m. 8:30 a. m.

10:00 a. m. 11:30 a. m.

1:00 p. m. 2:30 p. m. 4:00 p. m. 5:30 p. m. 7:00 p. lU.

8:30 p. m. lO:OO p. m. 11:30 p. m.

Daily 5:10 a. m . 7:00 a . m. 8:30 a . m.

10:00 a. m. 11:30 a. m, 1:00 p. m. 2:30 p. m. 4:00 p. m. 5:30 p. m. 7:00 p. m. 8:30 p. m.

10:00 p. m. 11:30 p. m.

Round Trip and pec!:,1 Tickets Sold at Ticket Offices only. 101lle Trip Tick t8 Bold at sta i\on. or on cars. Ball'rare. (ISO pounds) carried tree. Mlleare. (.·alue $6.SO) .old for $5.00 wlt bout rebat •

C e d .. r R .. pld s Tlok et Offloe. 324 S. 2d S t . low .. C ity T loket Offloe. Cor. Clinton

a n d Collelle S treets.

People's Steam Laundry Cor. Iowa Ave. and Linn St.

Opposite Uulverolty Do pita!.

6trlc tly High G rad e Wo rk ONLY Domestlo .. n d Gloss Finish

TOMS ~ R.UPPERT Phone. Bell C-~: J. C. 85

I L. W . LITTIG. A. M •• M. D .• M. R. C . S.

PUYSICIAN and URGEON Office over First National Bank

Resldonce, 314 Suml1lit Both Pbon

Drs. Newberry & Bywater or EASES OF

EYE, BAR, NOSE AND THROAT 8 N. CLINTON ST.

F. D. BREENE, D. D. S., M. D. DENTIST

--OFFIC~--'

Over Johson County Savings Bank.

DR. J. G. MUELLER, Plty ician and Surgeon.

Odd Fellow Block.

124~ COl;LEGE STREET.

w. R. WHITEIS, M.S., M.D. Diseases at tbe Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat.

General urllery. Offloe. 21 South Dubuque Street.

Boun: C}-Il a. m .. 1-5 p. ttl. Both Phone.

P eter A. Dey. Pres. Lovell wishe r. Casb ler G. W. Ball. Vlce·f res. ~. U. plank. ARs't Cult.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 S urplus 50, (100

Director - Peter A. Dey. C.S. Welch. Mrs. E. E. Parsons. J. L. 'rurner.

fARMERS LOAN 8r TRUS11co. Peler A. Dey. Pres .• C. S. Welch. Vice Pres.

J,oveJ\ Swl her, Treasllrer

Capital $SO,OOO Surplus $31,000

~ THE MARK OF THE BE.ST

SHIRT

, . Sole agents for Cluett and Monarch

shirt.. Coaat & Son.

THE DAILY IOWAN

II FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE "

SUEPPEL'S GROCERY ESTABLISHED 1879 . ............................ .

PIPES TOBACCO

FINKS I CIGARS

• IF VOU SMOKE, seE FINK . ............................ . .. ~ ...... ~~/~~' L~"'~~""""""

Capilal City Commmial Collf\Jf. DIS molnn, loUla. The r l'eoR'lllzcd lender BmOnlr bu~lness ~ralnlng schools. The larlleRt nnd tronlle t faculty at nny commercial coUelCeof the Wcs~ Beautl. tul sohooillome with mod rn eouillm nt. Oood boarding r[lc!lItJes at low rn(.Cs. Students may work tor board It necessary. Band.Orobos· tra. 0100 Olub, Mandolin Club, Gymnasium, llDd Athletics. Good sl ~untlon8 for Ilrnduates. No vaontlous. Seud tor elell'nDt Dew rota· lolrue. Address W. H. MOOAULlIIY. President.

.............. ~/~Ga r"'A

UN IVERSI TY CALENDAR.

Dec. 14.-S. U. I. Lecture Course, EU­as Day, characterist, and Orrane Truitt Day, reader.

Dec. 16.-Edda lecture. President C. K. Prens. of Luther C')llege.

Dec. 21.-HoJiday recess begins. Jan. 18.-S. U. I. lecture course. Earl

Dralte Concert Company.

Michigan students have been tak­ing signs off from business houses in

·U,\\.01 eq1

FOOTBALL AS SHE ISN'T.

"I humbly beg your pardon, sir; I fear that I have mashed your toe.

Such accidents oft occur In gatherings like this, you know."

".And I have been," was the reply.

Friday, Dec. 1.5 T he Musical Event of the Year

Toe Famous Tibetan Comic Opera

The Forbidden Land

By Steely and Chapin, Great Cast Headed by WILL B. WHEELER in­cluding the BIG BEAUTY CH01WS Magnificient Mountings, Go r geou. Gowns. Presented here precisely as

in NEW YORK and CHICAGO . 50 PEOPLE. 2 Car loads of Scenery,

Prices, SOc, 75c, $1.00 $1.50. eat sale opens Friday evening at 7.

Monday, Dec. 18 Wells Dunne and Harlan Offer

MARY MARB:LE Money deposited on certificate, in

Iowa City State Bank, can be with· drawn at any time. If left to run 6 months, it draws , per cent. per an· num.

More haaty than was rightly due. In the Brilliant Musical Comedy Sue-I fear I have contused your eye-­

And does this ear belong to you 1"

All kinds of charms /lot

"Iowa" pins and A. M. GREER'S.

C. A. Murphy, No. 1 College street - place for llvl}ry.

Best work. St. J ames barber shop.

City Steam. Dye Works

and Panitorium

113 Iowa Avenue ---LadlH 'Sklrts, Wafs,. ancl Jacket.

Dry cleaned--Men's clothes Steam cleaned.

Panitorium Club Rates SI.OO Per Month

Call up either phone

Graham & Havard Proprietors .

University Book Store On the Comer.

• Text Books and Supplies for All Colleges ' • •

• Fun Line of Pennants

Waterman Fountain Pens SOl.,Jvenirs ~nd

Art Novelties

• Sporting Goods

"Belt eve me, sir, I meant no harm. It happened by the merest chance.

r truilt that you will take my arm. In getting to the ambulance.'

'Tis now fulfilled, our fondest dream, These coJ1ege rudenesses are paat.

Kind courtesy doth reign supreme And football Is reformed at lallt.

-Wallhlngton Star .

Elias Day.

Third Number of

Lecture Co~rse-­

Elias Day, Char­

acterist. and Or ...

anne Truitt Day,

Reader.

Thursday, Dec. 1( .

seats reserved at Opera House.

cess

Nancy Brown 50 PEOPLE IN THE CAST

Great Beauty Chorus

25 Musical Hits

T oere are so Many Smile in Nancy Brown

That laughS are heard all o'er tbe town

Prices, SOc, 75c, 1.00 $1.50

Seat sale opens Thursday evening at 7 o'clock.

T hos. c: Carson. Prcs. WI1I. A. ' ry. C",bier J . C. COchran. V-Pres. G. L. Fulk. Ass!, Casbier

Johnson County Savings Ban~ IOWA CITY. IOWA

Capital. SllS.OOO'()o Surplu nd Undlvld d Prolhs. $65,000.00

DIRRCTORS: - Thos. C. Carson. Jobo T . loq",. M.J.Mooo. E. F .Dowl1lan. C.F.Lovelace. J.C. Cochran.Mu Mayer. E .P.Wbltacre. S.L.CIOM

Geo . W. Koonlt. Pree . lonzo Brown. V-Pr ... J . E . witter. Casbler

CITIZENS SA VINGS AND TRUST CO.

BANI<IDRS

fShe St. ,James .. L ead' n ll T l r s t-c1ass Hotel of lo,wa City .

Craham & Shaffer,

Rigs for ' udent s a specialty Hack fu r ished for Parties

rates

· rfg~ble Op oatte City Hall.

T Vol. 5

Foot I T"at I,