Ottawa campus, 1909-1910 Ottawa University, Part 40

Author: Ottawa University (Kan.)
Publication date: 1909
Publisher: Ottawa, Kan. : [Students of Ottawa University]
Number of Pages: 598


USA > Kansas > Franklin County > Ottawa > Ottawa campus, 1909-1910 Ottawa University > Part 40


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Get Your Meals at


THE FARMERS' RESTAURANT Corner Third and Maln.


15


THE OTTAWA CAMPUS.


C. L. Becker


Druggist EXT BOOKS and STATIONERY


Opposite the Jail


1


BEN GENTRY


A Good Place to Purchase Your


Groceries, Meats, Stationery, etc.


pecial attention given to all deliv- ery orders.


427 Mafn Street Between Fourth and Fifth


J. O. FLAHERTY,


Feed, Coal, Wood, Poultry and Eggs,


Special Attention Given to Delivery


424 Main Street.


Shanklin Draying Ind. Phone 949


The Merchants Barber Shop


Will Do Your Work Right.


. E. Cunningham, Proprietor,


219 Main Street.


.The .... Peoples National Bank


OTTAWA, KANSAS UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY


OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS


J. R. HARRIS, Pres. P. SHIRAS, Vice-Pres W. B. KILER, Cashier F. M. SHIRAS, Asst. Cashier R. A HARRIS F. M. HARRIS OLIVER SHIRAS


As an evidence of our ability to meet in every respect all demands, we ask you to review our record of the past thirty years.


DR. C. F. HERR, Physician and Surgeon,


Hetrick&Fessenden


Dentists


314 SOUTH MAIN ST.


GOOD THINGS TO EAT Chili, Fresh Oysters, and Homemade Pies, Give Us a Trial.


The Merchanst' Lunch 225 1-2 Main Street.


Good Gas Goods


208 S. Main Elder's


114 W. Second Street


Main


The Sign of Satisfaction Since 1872


Mccarthy Electric Company PRACTICAL ELECTRICIANS AND MACHINISTS. . . . Bell Phone 139 Home Phone 698X


DRS. DAVIS & DAVIS Physicians and Surgeons


Third and Main Underwood Building


Office Phones: Home 195. Bell, 155 Res. Phones: Home 57. Bell 57


J. F. TLABERT Shoe Repairing


333} South Main St.


WE WANT TO CLEAN UP WHAT IS LEFT OF OUR


0. U. Stationery AT 19 Cents Get a Box Today at the THE KAISER PHARMACY.


New Dea


BAKERY


CALL 355 .. BOTH PHONES


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814 SOUTH MAIN


The Ottawa Mortgage Company


FARM and CITY LOANS, Current Rates. Easy Terms, Money Ready.


FIRE INSURANCE BEST COMPANIES.


16


THE OTTAWA CAMPUS.


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OTTAWA UNIVERSITY OTTAWA, KANSAS


Spring Semester opens Feb. 1, 1910. New students are entering


almost daily some of the Departments. your time? Get the new Bulletin.


Are you making the best of S. E. PRICE, President.


1


Gus Tepfer


Cherry


Street


Grocery


The Store Where Groceries are Sold Clean Enough to Eat. It costs you no more. Think it over.


Nos. 620-622 Cherry Strecî, Bell Phone 302 Home Phone 208


Dr. H. L. KENNEDY


PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Rooms 3 4 Skinner Building 202 MAIN


Jewelry- That is Guaranteed to give Satisfaction


5. 5 Shomo, Jeweler and Optician


233 S. Main St., OTTAW/ KANS


Students


Do you want your Clothes Pressed in Good Shape? If so, give us a trial. ::


JNO. MONINGER


111 MAIN STREET


Sims' Caf


"The Better Place to Eat" Special Rates to Student


B. D. Bennett


COAL and ICE


che Ottawa Campus


OLDEST STUDENT PUBLICATION IN KANSAS


1909-10


OTTAWA, KANSAS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1910


NO. 18


ID MCPHERSOH LOST TO O. U. IN BASKETBALL


TAWA


WON THIRD GAME BY BIG SCORE OF 40 TO 22.


feree Was a Bluff, Ottawa Pretty Hot Stuff and That's Enough.


The third men's basketball game at me, played Thursday evening, re- Ited in a victory for George's team a score of 40 to 22. McPherson llege's five played Ottawa, and the sitors were not in it, in spite of the ct that they defeated Salina 42 to and Southwestern 47 to 44. Ot- wa beat Salina 53 to 33 last week. The game was even rougher than e contest last Friday night, and it alleged that Referee Royer, of Mc- lerson, didn't know the game well ough to call without assistance. hen McPherson played Southwest- n, there was a knock on the refer- ing.


Talbot, the fast forward for Mc- erson, who secured sixteen field als in the Southwestern game, was sbarred from playing under the con- rence rules, and that fact took some the ginger out of the visitors.


McCandless and Capt. George were e stars of the play again, George curing twelve free throws. Morner, the McPherson team, was a former tawa high school player. A good owd was in attendance. The score:


OTTAWA.


G FT F


orge, F


6 12


2 cCandless, F 6 0 7


derman, C 2 0 0 0 2 ckey, G


air, G


0


0 1


Total


14 12 13


M'PHERSON.


G FT F


Ware, F 3 5 1


Lichwater, F


3 4 3


John, C


0


0


0


Meyers, G 0 0 12


Horner, G


0


1 0


-


Total


6 10 16


Referee, Royer; umpire, Rice.


CLOSE PARK COLLEGE DEBATE.


A Signed Contract Goes to Missouri College This Week.


Ray Heritage, chairman of the de- bate committee of the Student Coun- cil, recently returned a signed con- tract to Park College, Parkville, Mo., for a debate to be held in Ottawa.


According to the terms of the con- tract, Ottawa must submit a question by the fourth of February, and Park College is to return within ten days a choice of sides.


The debate will be held here the twelfth of April.


Definite action as to the framing of a question has not been taken yet- but it is likely that it will be some phase of the central bank question, which the freshmen and sophomores are to debate February 15.


BUSINESS COLLEGE NOTES.


Miss Ruth Maxey and Jacob John- son are new students in this depart- ment. The enrollment is now seventy- four.


Ray Allison, an advanced student, in the commercial department, is en- gaged with his father and brother in a new grocery enterprise at 123 East Second street.


The grades of the business college students were mailed last week.


Miss Marie Lindquist, of Ottawa, was® president and Elsie Jobe, of Wellsville, secretary of the class the first semester. Both were re-elected for the second semester.


Officers of the "Business College Bank" are Chas. Marsh, president; Gene Brown, vice president; A. C. Lamb, cashier; Josephine Olson, as- : istant cashier; Marie Lindquist, tel- fler; H. B. Wheeler, bookkeeper.


A $6,000 FARM GIVEN BY MRS. CHAS. N. HUGHSTON


A SCOTTSVILLE, KANSAS, WOMAN FOUNDS THE HUGHSTON MEMORIAL.


May Be Usde for New Science Hall- No Late Developmets in Gym Fund.


One of the largest single gifts that has come to the University was re- ceived the first of this week when Mrs. Josephine L. Hughston, of Scotts- ville, Kansas, deeded her eighty acre farm in Cloud county to the trustees.


Thefarm is worth about $6,000. Ac- cording to the terms, an annuity will be paid to Mrs. Hughston as long as she lives, and at the end of that time the real estate free from all holdings, goes to Ottawa University.


The funds accruing from the dis- posal of the real estate are to be known as the Charles N. Hughston Memorial, a perpetuation of the name of the deceased husband of the donor.


The gift was secured by Field Sec- retary E. L. Huckle, who got the deed last Saturday. This is the first of several similar bequests which Ottawa University expects to get.


At a future meeting the trustees will determine what use will be made of the Hughston memorial fund. It is possible that it may be used as a nucleus for a $50,000 Science Hall fund.


"We are going after that new Science Hall some time not far dis- tant," said President Price this week.


There have been no new develop- ments in the Gymnasium fund. The committee will probably send out some correspondence before long. There is a feeling among the stu- dents that if two of the members of the Student committee could be en- abled to canvass the state next sum- mer, the $25,000 for the Gymnasium would be secured in a short time.


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I .. XXVI


HOME


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2


THE OTTAWA CAMPUS.


THE RUGBY FOOTBALL --- SOME ARGUMENTS FOR IT


PRESIDENT JORDAN, OF LELAND STANFORD, ARGUES AGINST OLD GAME.


Mass Play and "Downs," Low Tack- ling, Professional Coaching Not Part of New Game.


College presidents over the coun- try are receiving copies of a recent letter written by David Starr Jordan, prsident of Leland Stanford Univer- sity, to President C. R. Van Hise, of Wisconsin University. In the letter President Jordan sets forth his rea- sons why he favors the Rugby game of football as against the style now played. This letter is published be- low:


"Will you permit me a word in re- gard to reform in football? I believe that no reform worth consideration is possibly as long as the game allows the play known as "interference," by the legalization of which the Rugby game was some twenty years ago con- verted into the "American game." As results of the legalization of "offside play," or "interference," forbidden in Rugby, we have the four most objec- tionable features of the American game, (a) mass play and "downs," (b) low tackling in the open field, (c) play directed to break down individ- uals of the opposite side, (d) the dom- ination of professional coaches, whose interests are wholly at variance with those of the University.


"In 1904, at the height of the foot- ball obsession in California, the presi- dents and committees on athletics of the two universities notified the stu- dents that no form of football having mass plays would be again permitted. Tbe students then adopted the Rugby game. It has been tested for five seasons and it is wholly satisfactory to all concerned. The game demands a much higher degree of skill and alertness. It is far more interesting to watch. It is interesting to the players. As with baseball, so with Rugby, each player must know the game, It is played not in armor, but in cotton kneebreeches, and there have been in five years no injuries of any consequence.


Tbe game is now played in the uni- versities and colleges of California and Nevada. It attracts (perhaps un- fortunately) larger numbers of spec- tators than the old game ever did. It is now played in most of the lead-


ing high schools of California. It is firmly and permanently established on the Pacific coast, unless, as in the east, it is modified to suit the pur- poses of professional coaches. It seems to me that our experience in California should be worth something to our colleagues in the East."


HAS FIVE-FOOT SHELF OF BOOKS.


Dr. Blair, the Scotch Rhetorician, Has One on Dr. Eliot-What a Re- view of the 1793 Rhetoric Reveals.


The new volume on rhetoric which was presented to the College library recently by D. C. Wilkerson is prov- ing very popular.


An examination of the work re- veals many interesting facts. It is the second volume of an edition of a Dr. Hugh Blair's lectures on rhetoric and was published in 1793. Since its publication, the book has evidently been in many hands. Many passages are marked, showing careful study.


The book is written in the quaint old language of a century ago, and "s" is always printed nearly like "f."


The volume in the library is a learned and authoritative discourse on public speaking, historical writing, poetry and the drama. After laying down his theory for the various divi- sions of these topics, the author crit- icizes the works of prominent authors by way of example.


Demosthenes and Cicero are analyz- ed to the core and the works of a Dr. Atterbury are compared favorably with them. The works of Homer, Ver- gil, Tasso, Milton anđ Camoens, a Portuguese writer, are given equal prominence. Dr. Blair finds the dramas of Shakespeare and some minor poets of Queen Anne's time, of equal importance. At one time the author strikes a chord of sympathy in the modern reader by filling a "five- foot book shelf" with the forty best writers of the world. It does not mat- ter in the least that two-thirds of them are scarcely even mentioned today. Dr. Blair was judging art, and all of Us cannot grasp the artistic point of view.


The work is of special value as showing the literary standard of a century ago.


SCHOOLS AND THEIR CRITICS --- DR.


EMINENT BOSTON EDUCA BE FAIR, CRITICISED ! HIMSELF.


He Got in a Rap at the Fellows Praise the Good Old Times.


An unusually large audience the district court room Monday ning when Superintendent Be'l duced Dr. A. E. Winship, of Bolo editor of the Journal of Educatio


"I want no one to think tom that because I am dealing schools, I believe they are perf said Prof. Winship in beginning lecture, "for they are not."


He told of the wonderful advare: ment along educational lines andte rided the man who criticised the res ent school system and who polt with satisfaction to the "good days." He said that the schools as much better now than they wre ten or twenty-five years ago, as automobile is better than a wh barrow. "And I know," said Dr. We ship, "that there is much fault to dl found with an automobile."


Speaking of the frequent assert that the schools are not as thoroun as they were thirty years ago, 1. Winship said: "Some people seem think that boys come to school mere for the purpose of learning how grar father did business. But he comes learn how things will be done t years from now, and the teacher wl attempts to teach as grandfather w. taught, will soon find herself in position where the law will step and take a hand."


'Dr. Winsthip traced . interesting the rise of the schools of New Yor City, which twelve years ago wer at the bottom of the list, while toda they are on the pinnacle of what th schools of a city ought to be.


After refuting the argument tha school books of today are not as good as thirty years ago,Dr. Winship clos ed his address with a plea for further interest in the chools.


Some revelations in literature that examinations have revealed: "Benja- min Franklin wrote 'The Autobiog- raphy of the Breakfast Table. "


"Cooper's works are full of thrills." ... "Pope had a club foot and it hurt his pride."


THE OTTAWA CAMPUS.


EY GET DEBATERS IN WASHINGTON STATE


SHEL '09 WRITES AN IN- -RESTING LETTER TO THE CAMPUS.


erState Commerce the Question to › Discussed in Washington-Ore- gon-Idaho Triangular.


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Hubert M. Rishel '09, writes a fine ter to the Campus, a part of which published below. Mr. Rishel en- 1


ses a clipping from a Seattle paper ling the way in which the Univer- y of Washington, Seattle, selects e men who are to have the honor of presenting the school in the trian- lar debate between Washington, regon and Idaho. Mr. Rishel says: Editor of Campus. I have been ry proud of the record the football am has made for O. U. this year, it was disappointed that William :well escaped her beating on hanksgiving. I both wanted Ottawa win and Jewell to be defeated. ley escaped what was justly due em.


This is a great country out here, a e climate, plenty of fresh air to eathe, plenty of room to turn ound in, and a pushing, free and g-hearted people to mingle with. As cNutt would say, "It's a good thing" be here.


Just now I am working in and about attle, but expect to get back into citish Columbia about the first of e year.


The debate plan follows:


Twenty-five orators and debaters ill try out for positions on the two ter-collgiate teams to be selected by e State University to meet Idaho id Oregon in the triangular debate hich are held every year in the iddle of March. Eight men will be lected from the candidates, three r each team and two alternates, the vo making the best showing being losen to lead tthe respective teams, n unusually large number are in the eld this year, so that much interest as been aroused in the forensic com- etition.


The debating coaches will assign to ach of the twenty-five men the sides hich they will take in the tryout. he candidates will then have twen- -four hours in which to prepare leir arguments, adapting them to le side which they are to defend. Be-


cause of this plan, no debater knows until he is assigned which side he is to represent, and accordingly he is compelled to read up on both sides of the question and is well informed on both sides of the problem.


The exact wording of the question which has been selected for the inter- collegiate debates is not known by the contestants, as they have thus far on- ly been given the general subject, which concerns the granting of feder- al charters to companies engaging in interstate commerce, so that on that matter also they will be


in doubt until the assignment is made. This idea is followed out for the same reason for the apportionment of sides tending to make every debator fa- milliar with all possible phases of the question. It was this system that won for the university the triangular in- tercollegiate championship last year.


Idaho and Oregon are at the same


time picking their intercollegiate


teams


to meet those selected by Washington next spring. Under the triangular plan, the two teams repre- senting each institution debate those of the others on the same night, the college receiving the highest percent- age of votes winning the champion- ship.


Washington will meet one team from Oregon on the local campus, and at the same time its other team will debate at Moscow against Idaho. One of Idaho's teams will meet the re- maining one of Oregon university at Eugene on the same night, thus com- pleting the circuit. The two teams representing each institution debate opposite sides of the question, one taking the affirmative of the question against one team and the other the negative against the other.


-


The question which has been select- ed for the intercollegiate debates this year will be as follows: "Resolved: That companies engaged in interstate commerce should take out a federal charter, conceding, first, that such an act would be constitutional, and sec- ond, that a federal license should not be substituted as an alternative."


Y. M. MEETS IN MORNING.


The Cabinet Met and Decided on a Change of Hour.


At a meeting of the Y. M. C. A. cabinet last Friday afternoon it was decided to hold the Sunday meetings at 3 o'clock in the afternoon during the remainder of January, and also through February and March, instead of at 9 o'clock in the morning, as has been the custom for some time.


THE ORATORS AT WICHITA.


Five of Nine Colleges in State Ora- torical Contest Have Chosen Rep- resentatives-Shields the Only Freshman.


Five of the nine colleges in the Inter-Collegiate Oratorical Associa- tion have chosen their orators for the contest in March at Wichita. The orators and their subjects are:


"The Evolution of UniversalPeace," -Fred Ulrich, Washburn College, To- peka.


"The Enduring Nation,"-Everett Hunsaker, Fairmount College, Wich- ita.


"The Soldier's Place in History,"- Eugene Stanley, Baker University, Baldwin.


"The Modern Vampire,"-Charles B. Driscoll, Friends University, Wich- ita.


"Lincoln, the Master Politician,"- John A. Shields, Ottawa University.


College of Emporia held its con- test last Monday evening, and the re- sult has not been learned. Southwest Kansas College, Winfield, holds its contest next Monday evening. It has not been learned when Midland Col- lege, Atchison, and Salina Wesleyan, will conduct their contests.


At Emporia there will be four con- testants. Mr. Stanley is a son of ex- Governor W. E. Stanley, of Kansas, and won his place over six others, one of whom tied for first honor on rank- ings. . Six men contested at Friends and Washburn, also. Driscoll, of Friends, is a member of the staff of University Life, and has been con- tributing some interesting "Plain Ple- beian" talks. Philip Wright Whit- comb, editor of the Review, took first in thought and composition, and ran close for the honor or reppresenting Washburn. Hunsaker was elected to represent Fairmount, there being no competitors. Hunsaker was delegate for his college at the Emporia meet- ing during the holidays to choose judges. He tied Walter Nossaman last year for second place on thought and composition. Nossaman won sec- ond place in the state contest.


Mr. Shields is the only freshman among the five.


The chemistry class was busy ask- ing questions of Prof. Groner re- cently. "That reminds me of a story," he said, "a professor once told his class that any fool can ask questions which a wise man cannot answer, 'Is that why I can't pass your examina- tions ?' innocently asked the student. "


4


THE OTTAWA CAMPUS.


The Ottawa Campus


Published Weekly by the Students of Ottawa University.


Wayne E. Gilliland, '12. . Editor Chas. H. Martin '13 .. Bus. Mgr.


The Staff.


General:


Clair S. Price .'10


Leland Jenks '13


Ross Bower


,12


Aluumni:


Elsie Dietrich


'10


Leslie Patrick


'10


. Intercollegiate:


John A. Shields '13


Organizations:


Grant Keetch


'12


Laura Sudduth '12


Rivard Dill


'12


Athletic:


Roderick Rice


'14


Personals:


Helen Hackersmith


'13


Subscription Price, $1.25 Per Year.


Editorial Staff Room, No. 17, Uni- versity Hall. Manager's address 726 Cedar, Ottawa, Kansas. Ind. Phone 1263. Editor's Residence Phone, Ind. 1266.


Entered at the postoffice at Otta- wa, Kansas, Sept. 18, 1908, as second class matter.


THAT KISSING ROT.


The tuberculosis exhibit in Ottawa was doubtless a useful thing, and the Campus knows that Dr. S. C. Emley poured out a lot of knowledge about bacilli and other things while he was here. 'Dr. Emley knows germs when he sees 'em-that much the Campus will not deny. But Dr. Emley might take a few suggestions. When he comes to Ottawa in the future, he needn't bother about making any sug- gestions as to kissing. This town- and especially the college portion of it-knows all about that. He might like to know that the people who kiss here are going to kess-like the wo- men, they will have their way, and they are not going to be keen after any patent contrivances to keep away germs. | Dr. Emley admits that germs give flavoring to the butter, be that flavor good or bad, and the Campus believes that if the good doctor was


1 inned down to it, he would admit that there is something that gives flavor to a k.ss. It may not be good germs that make the flavor, and it is perfectly obvious that refraining from kissing and the use of sanitary osculators are not going to impart the desired flavor. Of course the number of people in Ottawa-especially the college port on-who indulge, is smal1. But out of respect to that small part, Dr. Emley ought to weigh his words well before mentioning the subject in any way whatever. Kiss- ing, like money, appears to be a nec- essary evil, and any amount of joking reference to it in a platform address is going to serve to aggravate that evil, rather than to destroy it.


The Campus in publishing the opin- ions of a distinguished college pres- ident who favors Rugby football, does not take a stand for or against foot- ball of any form. This college paper wants to publish the news and opin- ions of all kinds of people, and inas- much as the football question is a live one yet, Rugby may be consist- ently considered. The report of the rules revision committee, in the meantime, is awaited eagerly by all lovers of the popular fall sport.


* "SLASHIMORA" AGAIN.


He Plays Sherlock Holmes in a Noise Investigation.


Slashimora Red-Ink has discovered the real reason why the city editor of the Republic cannot hear Ottawa Uni- versity make a noise, and why the University cannot hear Ottawa hum. We publish his second letter, dated Jan. 22, 1910.


To Editor of Ottawa Republic, Ot- tawa, Kansas: Honored Sir: A big philosopher say, "Silence is golden"- why not then can Ottawa editor not admire University atmosphere. If Unt- versity make a noise it will surely ask for money-Sh! don't wake the elephant baby! Can rubber-tired Freshman katerhaul on backyard fence for nothing! No Freshman ask for "jim" and shall we give him stall- talk on noise? No, I preambulate. Freshman try hard to make noise and order ear trumpet for honored editor of Republic as I prevaricate in previous epistle of Campus.


Noise is noise if editor do have ear full of cotton. Japanese boy hear loud talk in Senior class over honor- able parts in class play. Surely if honorable editor hear this he may de- cide how golden is silence-when they are a row in the family.


Hon. editor, however, hear nothing


from college. I tremble much since real reason uncover. Hon. editor has ears-he hear not-shall we send him to Olathe? "No," you corroborate. Hon. editor not alone in sad affirmity. Ottawa cannot hear University noise, University cannot hear Ottawa hum. Ottawa cannot hear Ottawa hum. Why this deplorable sad state? Mys- tery-Japanese boy play Sherlock Sholmes since last letter.


Remarkable inventor live in Ottawa. Hon. inventor hate noise-make sound condenser and hide it under main street of town in big banquet cistern. As long as old man run machine rack- et of all kind gather in from town and university, scuttle through man hole and choke away in big hopper while town forget its hum and go on Rip Van Winkle prenambulation. Japan- ese boy discover Hon. Old Inventor going down to sound reducer while city sleep and rubber-tired Freshman entertain Hon. editor at noise festi- val.


Japanese boy grab old mole by four- lock and pronounce-"Aha! I have you on the hummer."


Old man say "Sh," and drag prema- ture detective underground. Take all Japanese boy's slang to get out again. "Why do Honored Inventor run such machine?" I interrogate.


"Because," old man expectorate.


"Kill noise, kill progress," I ob- stinate.


"Hate progress," say old man, "like good old times."


Hon. ed., shall Japanese boy poison old Inventor? Old inventor say if ma- chine get no oil, it stop, and run backwards and all noise roll out like flood in Marais des Cygnes.


When Japanese boy run home and tell fat man and the bald one, they collaborate, "Who is Inventor? How does he make machine work?"


"Guess," I replicate. "Silence is golden, thank you." I dissimulate and go to bed.


SLASHIMORA RED-INK.


AS OTHERS SEE US.


Lindsborg is rejoicing in the pos. session of their new athletic director, Mr. N. G. Wann, the former Ottawa athletic director. He has begun work and will have charge of all branches of athletics .- Wesleyan Advance, Sa- lina.




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