THE DAILY NEBRASKAN MRS. 8HELDON VESPER SPEAKER (Continued from rage 1.) OLIVER THEATRE Today, 2:30 Tonight, 8:15 'KICK-IN' with Norman Hackett Mat $1 to 25o Night, $1.50 to 25c Thursday Night, Jan. 13 -THE ONL GIRL" I ' 8aved from the Harem" A 8tlrrlng Four-Act Comedy Drama This lent the Night Farce Comedy The Pathe Dally i Hanlon Bros. A. Co. Billy and Ada White Vocal lata and Dancers The Red Circle" "The Failure" "A Ready Made Maid" Sellg-Trlgune News LB655 1124 N BOLLARD'S SELECT Clases Monday, Wednesday, Frl day and Saturday, 7: SO to 8:30 Socials 8:30 to 12 P. M. HAMPTON'S ORCHESTRA Work brought to our office any morning by 0 a. m. will be ready at 6 p jn. if wanted GLOBE SOFT WATER LAUNDRY Office 340 S. 11th Plant 1116 to 1130 L St. WHITUAN.S CLASSY CANDY MEIER DRUG CO. 13th and O STREETS LC.Smith&Bro. Typewriter Co. BALL BEARING LONQ WEAEINO New, Bebnilt and Bentali 125 Ho. 13th Bt. B2030 richer and more rewardful as the years go by. The only one who says youth is the bent time of life Is one who has bad some great misfortune to embitter their later years. Youth Is the mo6t important time of life for we have more time then, unless we live a purposeless life when we are older. Don't we really do the things we wish to do?" asked Mrs. Sheldon. "If we care supremely to do something, ninety-nine times out of a hundred we do It, whether It Is Joy or duty. The real gain in a person's life Is when a person realizes this fact. We are all so busy doing things not worth doing not bad, but not worth doing in comparison with what we could do. It is for each one to decide for her own individual case, what is worth doing. "'All that you do, do with your might,' " 'For things done by halves are never done right.'" Mrs. Sheldon added: "Learn not what to do, "And learn what to slight." "Some things must be done right, some things are hot worth doing at all, and some things are worth slight ing. Teachers wear pupils out by In sisting that many things which are not worth it, must be done thorough ly. "Later in life is Is hard to change our habits. No matter what course a person takes in school, whether it is a man or woman, a sense of sight and of hearing should be cultivated. Many college graduates have 'Eyes to see, and see not; ears to hear, and hear not;' and then they miss the great things of this universe. Aim to have a seeing eye and a hearing ear. If you have those, life never grows dull. "It is more important to develop an inner sight, which is more rarely done. Take the culture studies, the fine arts. Read good literature and poetry, translations of the Illiad and Odessy, Vergil, Dante, Goethe, and Shakespeare, for there are very tew of the best writers. Time is too prec ious to do anything but good read ing. "Old Hebrew literature, our Bible, is so rich and rewardful in its study. "Youth Is the time for living but be sure that It Is a profitable living. Have a good time but do not waste It." REPORTERS' NOTICE The Cornhusker picture of the Daily Nebraskan staff will be taken at Townsend's on Satur day morning, January 22, at 10 o'clock. No reporter whose work has not been kept up and whose name does not appear in the reportorlal list at that time will be entitled to a place in the picture. Those whose names have been dropped may be reinstated by seeing the managing editor and getting their "copy" in for the rest of the semester. C. E. PAUL, Managing Editor. J IRISH FOLK SONGS THURSDAY Extended Program for This Week's Convocation History of Irish Music . r.,..U.Hnn nroeram for Thurs day morning is composed of Irish Folk Songs, and is as follows: Chorus. "St FatncKs iy. Men's Chorus, "Brian the Brave, t uoo' rhorus. "Believe me if all those endearing young charms." Songs, "Killarney. The Little Red Lark, "Munster Love Song." SPECIALIZING IN DRESS SUITS AT $17.50, $25.00, $35.00 There are some new 1916 ideas in Dress Suits and we are ready to display them at the above prices. You Fellows Who Prefer to Rent a Dress Suit You can come here and get a fresh new, up-to-the-second Suit that looks new. No old odd lots no half-worn-out suits but a 1916 model which will be fitted to look fit. ARMSTRONG J "The harp that once thro' Tara's halls." (Mrs. Raymond Murray) Chorus, "The Girl I Left Behind Me." Solo and Chorus. "Father O'Flynn." (C. A. Anderson, soloist) Chorus, "Evening."" Songs, "Down by the Sally Garden." "I Know Where I'm Coin'." "The Last Rose of Summer." (Mrs. Murray) Chorus, "Wearing of the Green." Music, as a cultivated art, assumed two forms in mediaeval times the music of the church and of the min strelsy. Church music developed from the music of the classical nations, with which It preserved a tenuous con nection. Minstrelsy in all west Euro pean countries was the art of profes sional lay musicians bards, glee men, Jongleurs, who sang the deeds and adventures of lords and ladies. Even tually the two sources flowed together to form the richer stream of modern music. There Is small doubt that the min strel's art reached a level of high cul tivation earlier in Ireland than In any other portion of the British Isles, probably earlier than on the Conti nent. Fragments of barbie poetry of ancient date are preserved in the saga literature of Ireland, along with vivid pictures of the social importance of the professional bard and the high es timate set upon his art The harp was then, as now, the national instru ment; though perhaps it Is truer to say that the harp was national to all Western Europe In the Middle Ages, and has become the Symbolic instru ment of Ireland chiefly through its more conservative retention there, ancient in Ireland, the Irish songs But while minstrelsy is undoubtedly known to us are mainly of recent date. none of them being certainly so old as the older English and Scottish songs, despite the claims of enthusiasts, who sometimes exaggerate the anti quity of the Irish traditional songs. Of the quality of Irish music, Er nest Walker says: "Few musicians have been found to question the as sertion that Irish folk-music is, on the whole, the finest that exists, it ranges with wonderful ease over the whole gamut of human emotion from the cradle to the battel field, and is un surpassed in poetical and artistic charm. If musical composition meant nothing more than tunes sixteen bars long, Ireland could claim some of the greatest composers that have ever lived; for In their miniature form the best Irish folk-tunes are gems of ab solutely flawless lustre, and though of course, some of them are relatively undistlnctive, it is very rare to meet Your Formal Clothes should be absolutely correct in every detail. That's the only sort you'll find at Farquhar's. Fill in your wardrobe today. Full Dress Suits $30 upwards. Full Dress Vests $3.50 to $6 Shirts $1.50 to $3. Ties 25c to 50c Hosiery 50cto$2. Studs 75c to $2.50 FARQUHAR'S