Si rsv5 ,j Inn lll.L.,lll..iL. K 1 II itfll ! fTuT1 Tr ' JS ' THE DAILY NEBRASKA. i ' gJ ', , - - life rf ; '4 Tc Care NothlnK looks worRO than milled Jovpfl, and uh they uic an expensive (oni In dresH they lequlrn careful nnnagenu'iit. A flnd-clasH kIovo. out rtenra half u dozen pairs of rheap oneH. mil at the Fame time lookfl well until 't in finally cllflcardecl Cheap rIovoh riowover, have their uhoh; expensive ouch nhould never he worn In wet weather or In hot rooniH or In theatres, where the heat will emme the hands to peiHplre. for when a glove Ih once -ttained hy )erHplrntion no amount of . leaning will make It look well again. Kor nuch occasions cheap gloves are far more seivlceahle To clean liamols gloves put the gloves on your hands, ami wash them as If you were washing your hands. In wann water nnd white castlle soap, wash unill they are quite clean; then take them of!1 and hang them In n warm place to dry. Kid gloves may lie cleaned in thu following manner. Put a little fresn milk In a dish, and a piece of 'vnlto castlle soap In anothei, and have jenvonlont a clonn cloth folded thr.e 01 four tlmca, and a small piece of flannel Place the soiled glove smooth nnd neat upon the doth, and dip the flannel Into the milk, then nih off , good quantity of the soap on the wet flannel and commence to rub the r1vc downward toward the linger.,, holding It firmly with the left hand Continue thin process until the glo.e. if white, looks a dingy yellow; if col. trod, until P looks dark and spoiled Then la It aaldo to dry. without 1 lining out the Fonp, nnd the glove will. v. hen dry. n XOater Keeps It is no serret to medical men and physiologists that there Is a gient d a! Kif nouilshment in water Een that which is sterilized contains enough o.' solids to keep a human being fiom loath for o long time Dining a pio longed fast the lo.ss ed weight la un usually rnpid at first and deci eases as time goes on. Death ensues when a certain percentage of the losr has been reached, and this poieontnge v kr ac cording to the original weight Pat animals may loso hair their weight, thinner ones perhnps two-fifths, a man or woman of rather spare build, weigh ing 143 pounds, might, therofoiv, lose about flfty-fle pounds before suc cumbing. Children die after a fa-d o" from three to five d.ix.s, during which they have lost a quarto.- of then veijrht. llen'thy ndults however, hae .'anted fifty das when water has been taken A (Jernian physician reports tho rase of a woman aged 17 years, who fasted foi fort three ilayn. tick ing water froelj She lost forty -font pounds of 1 lit pounds am' el sA. from oi hanslion. A SIrIi for tlio Old Imikneprr. Time are times when the frequenter of tho great cunminsarieu would, for a little, step out from the glare and bustle and tak.' his ease in tho old a ay, In somo place when theie would no crowd, no obsequious servants, m extravagance in drei. no gilded 1 urniture, no olllce eiutern bored with bnyo and trunks and (inking with i igar smoke, no gaudy bar no aic lights, no clanking steam pipes oi grassy furnaces, no dining-room where ouu Is supposed to oat In state, and Given Away NcM'i- uiincl the rush To prevent " your having- to stand in lino, out in the sueef. vou will bi given a number which will ontitl you to your turn in ordering 11113' amount of printing for whi h the Ivy Press in noted. Invitations. Crds, and Pi (ijrrams for literary societies nd fraternities a spe i llv 11 B I V Y P U 10 S S -J5 and 127 North 1 ,'tn St. of GJoOes. look neatly new. It will be glossy, smooth and elastic soff Tim lloritn 1 KUII Unofiil. The npplirntlon of electiiclty to mu nici)al transit everywhere released from one foi m of service a myriad of horses, and It looked at one time as If the price of that useful quadiuped wero going down almost to zero. Hut tho Hoer war rented a new demand for horses nnd mules, no les than 12.",000 having been shipped from this country alone, the expoit still continuing With all the forces of competition, urban uid extia urban, arrayed against him, C mp Is always something left for him to do, and he U a Iie asset in the woi id t niaiket. at least till furtl-ri notice New York Tribune '. riMlmil cm of A imirlriiu Collncm. "The graduating lists of the Amert can colleges this veai 'how an increase of Uf pei cent.' avs a well-known Philadelphia educator "and it tcecms probable (hat the institutions of learn ing will have inoie than their usual quota of student-, next fall ICducatior, Is beginning to make itself feU in thn commercial woi Id In Mlic: words. It is now on a p,-j'"..il, eerday basin i ii.' .Vi.'ifinri tor ollege men in nil Inane lies of business as well iu pro fesslons. Is gradually increasing. The notion that roltege education unfits men for business Is no I uger seriously consideied by the up to-datc man of business " Men Ali-Ve Ng :C the whim nf ,i (nifiug head waiter to be ompan foi people, one does not tiiic l u. .t ml especially win i a ihe 1)111 at the end of a week would not take awa ones income oi lus hiouth. The"- is in fac t, a c h.iiice especially at oui summer lesorts, for a m w innkeepei, who shall be Cue old innkeeper in a modern and niendly guise. Sat in day Kvening Post Almoit iMarrlod to M rong Mnn. What would have been a nithei - ilous complication was averted b 1 1 . c piesence of mind of a bilde at Towsoi a night or two ago To the be-t in il was ghen the honoi ot esioiting Hit bride to the all u while the gioom fol lowed with the bridesninld Whether tne- groom and his, best man lorg&t tlieir positions or both went nit a (lanie is not known They did not ei c lunigc, places but stood, the be it ni".n with the biide and the gioom with tb bildesmaid. as the- cleigyman began the coiemon.. The;.- Ihe bride leall.ed that she was about to be man led to "the other man' and objected In a moment or two she got things sti light ened out and the eoieiron proceeded It wuri a naiiow escape H iltimore Sua. l'orritt l.itnil of . nirl':i. I'r nearly three centuries an ln creasing army has been chopping away a our forests. Yot'inorc than one tb'rd of the area of the Culled fi.ates a clnssed as woodland --ovor 1 ,000,00c square milos. When the tight begins Itlun him self i man worth soinetluni,'. FKAl'n HI. ATI-: WHITINOB. Spiritualistic slate writing, if cle. orly done, always makes a marked im pression on n magician's audience, be cuiM' it utterly baffles their efforts tc detect the tilck They see a small cab met susjic ndecl :ibno the stage bj means of cords or ribbons It has ai open fiont, and is empty The magi clan turns it around so that ovor part of It may be .seen, and taps It In .-.ide and out with his wand, to show that it is hollow. C;i a stand ne.u l.. be lias a biu.U easel, a common school slate-, a bottle of India ink with a quill pen in It, anc' a few sheets of ordinal white writlnp paper. All these he passes aroune, among the audience for examination Then h lives a heet of the paper tc the slate hy means of waters, place.1 the slate on the easel, and the ease in the cabinet, together with the bot tle of ink, the- lattei busing the pen still in it Having allowed the audience to set the articles thus ai ranged in the cabi net, he throws .1 laige silk handker chief over il. Mysterious sounds aic Immediately heaid and the cabinet shakes a.- H some thing thing bad en toied it. When the sounds and the" shaking cease, he rei.ioos the hand keichief. showing an Insi . iption wilt len In bold black lett Ms on the paper and the pen. not in the ink bott'e, but lying on the bottom ot the cabinet He then ioinoe., the paper irom the slate and passes it around tor exam (nation, when the writing is imme diately iccognled as having been done with India ink. The explanation of the trick i.-, slm pie The willing was done in advance by the perfoi i.ier. the fluid used being a solution of sulphuric acid of the pur e&t qu.illlx To make the solution fU chops of the co'ncentrated acid nre added to one ounce of filtered water Writing done- with this solution Is In vlslb'e until exposed to heat, whei po exposed it conies out perfectly black, loeduiii exactly like clued India Ir.k The heat i.- applied bj means of an electric current 1 iinning o c r wire with which the .slate is wound The cords by which the cabinet is suspended con ceal copper wiles, which conduct the in rent to the slate. Hlack .-,11k threads. suitably attached, enable the pei form er to make the sounds in the cabinet, to raiibo the cabinet to shake and to jerk the pen out of the ink bottle Seveial sheets of paper are prrparoe' In advance, each with a different in scription, tht pei foi hum- telling one in scription fiom the otliiM- by see retlv marked pin pi l k.s UNIVERSITY STUDENTS Demand High ( hits AMUSEMENTS Our P.il'iard Parlor is up-to-elato and absolutely free from i in in oral influence. Phone 586. POWELL'S, 146 N. nth DR. J. J. DAVIS, GRADUATE OPTICIAN Eyes Examined Tree. Prices Reasonable 1 338 O Street, "niIST Dr. Shoemaker's Private Hospital. Special attention Klven to ehsoasek of women nnd all RUrRicul ilise-ases X-ruy examination with no discomfort or injury to imtieut. Kt erytiiinff n homeliko us possible. Hoard and room roubouuble. 1117 LST. LINCOLN. P. O. Box 031. Telephone- 8fi nn I ? Mr.NAY. Twenty year crxper finf l!a made ovek n..ll 5,000 sets of teeth.' A Rood bet ol U Bill SI I teeth, 15 00 x 2J K Oolcl crown $5 UWIIIIUIJ 'V1"' fJ e.1....1 r.lli...r to fflllrt nill of Silver1 flnilIK, 50 cents nncj 1214 0 Street I up. Goia iiinnKS i 00 unu Teetli extracted without pain Gold fil 1 uinni 11 up IIICM'H VIOMNIHTH. Young people who are learning th Molin will be interested to know thaf a device has just been invented which 1b likely to prove of much servfee tc Ihem. It Is in the form of a supporf tor tho arm, and if is asserted that bj Its means the instrument can he al-r ways held in an absolutely correct po sition. The Inventor is a distinguished vio bJL TilE ARM REST. I i n 1st and the device is indorsed by Dr Iiboi'ilo. a Paris physician, who thinks so highly of it that lie spoko in its l'aor a few clays ago befoie thei French Academy of Medicine The sup port consists of a senii-eirele which enfolels the lower part of arm a little aboe the elbow, and which is con nected with a belt that can be length ened or .shortened according to the slzo of tho arm Its main usefulness lies in Ihe fact that it prevents muscular fatigue, keopH tho shoulder in a prop er position and finally gives the arm that power ovei the instrument which it must hae in oicier to produce tho best effects. Dr. Laborele has thoroughly tested It, and he maintains that young vio lin players who use it will learn 11101 o qui' kly and moie easily than tho.sn who do not ase it Miss Webster has prepared collec tions of minciuls during the past wick, for the University of Ctali. Cornell Cniversitv and for private collections in Kansas City . The ma terial for these collections is taken from the Morrell Geological cullectlonV entirely. Are you poing to buy Christmas Presents? & s. I f so, don't foriret to look thnu,rh eiO. IIALLKTT'S elepant htoclc of " Diainond.s. Watclun, -j Clocks, .lowolry. 5;. Sterling Silver Ware. ttold I lead Canes, iS Cinbrollas, Cut tilass Ware, S Opera (J lassos, and !j?Kverythinff usually Kept in a N 33 first class jewelry 6 tore llemi'mlwr the place IE. Hallett 11 I I () St , under Funic ()j or llcjllf-O Every new Student calls on James liearn - 237 So. nth street And hasf his measure taken for th Tamous Kalamazoo Uniforms, Manufacturid by tht Jjendersoti'JImta Co. Kalamazoo, Wlcb 4 v -1 I inillll 11. asccntb. I NEBRASKA. SSVSSf TIIK VJ.KCU- r- - I '