6 TEyt DAILT KXBRASEAB. ) y iSiBaDaDaBaQoeacaDgBfiaSBt ! PROFESSIONAL DIRECTOR lEofliBaDuaaDaiaaDaDaiaeiBliilil JR. HAGGARD, M. D. Offloe 1100 O Street, Rooms 212-213-214 Rioh rda Block, Telephone 535. Residence, laiO Qfltfet, Telephone L9E4. DR. BENJ. P. BAILETs Dr. May Lou 1 ho Flanagan: Office, 141 South 12th 8treeL Telephone 618. CHICAGO SHOE REPAIRING CO, trial and you will call again Hair Boles while you wait. 46o, and ill). Hiililicr liei'U 4.'o. (Jive iia a 1341 O STREET. Mrs. L. Anderson & Co. MILLINERS Special Prices to University Girls 135 South 12th St. The Only Up-to-Date Billiard and Pool Parlor tataeOUy powell'S aws'ia" nth St rb FIRST NATIONAL DANK Of Lincoln, Nebraska. Capital, WOO.OOO; surplus and profits, IM.837; deposits, t2,715.000. B. H. Burn ham, President; A. "J. Sa-wyer, Vioe Prestj H. 8. Freeman, Cashier; H. B. Evans, Asst. Cashier; Frank Parks, Asst. Cashier. UNITED 8TATE8 DB POSITORY. WE ARE SOCIETY AND STATIONERY PRINTERS Dance Programs, Menu Cards THE NEW CENTURY, 1123 N STREET. Students, Your Suitorium Is located at '21 H phone lAitlH. at No. Mill JJtrcet. Tele BLUMENTHAL'S. Those hats vmi liny of me will he taken care of free of charge SiirliiK style Uatx I U soft I'auama shapes anil Stiff Hats. Baseball and Tennis Goods V at Wilson $ Jtoll, Booksellers ct Stationers, 1 123 O St., Lincoln, Neb. Bros. Laundry Yule 1514 0 St. Phone 754 II LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Eat at Hendry's, 129 N. 11th. Fine furs. Steele, 143 So. 12th. Steele stores furs. See him. C. E. Brovrn. dentist, Burr block. The Hygienic Cafe, 316 So. 12th sU Eat at Don Cameron's. 118 So. 11th. Get an up-to-date university hair-cut at We8terflclds. For sheet music and supplies go to the MathewB Piano Co.. 1120 O street. Dr. Woodward, oculist. Richards blk ip&ri Cameron's lunch. Qounter, 118 S. 11th. VallseH and pocketbooks; 1036 O. C. A. Tucker, 1123 O street. university jeweler, Chas. Lefler of South Omaha has been pledged to Phi Gamma Delta fra ternity. The battalion has been ordered to have duck trousers and campaign hats by May 7. The Pershing Rifles met last night at 6:30, in time to have pictures taken of the company. Phi Kappa Psi will play their an nual baseball game with Phi Delta Theta on May 22. Miss Margaret Bobbitt will lead the noon-day prayer meeting today; sub ject, "Missionary Work." High School Inspector Crabtree vis ited the high school and academy at Weeping Water yesterday. "A Pair of Spectacles." Let every body turn out to help a good cause, and thus show our appreciation of the hard work of the elocutionary depart ment. The university senate, which was to have met yesterday to decide In re gard to the cadet camp this spring, was not called together, and as a re sult the desired information will not be generally known until a later date. Of course you'll hare 1o keep your room warm this winter Gregory the Coal Man . Hap Eleventh Sidles' Sporting Tennis, Base Ball and Gymnasium Goods. Agency for World and National Bicycles. Send us your Repair Work 1304 o st., Phone p 1038 SIDLES CYCLE CO. One of Sander$oiV$ $3.50 SPECIALS Try them; they are fine. The prevalence of crime and Its pre vention Was the theme of an address at convocation yesterday morning by Chief Hoagland of the Lincoln police department. Chief Hoagland Is an old nrmy comrad of Chancellor Andrews. At the beginning ot his speech the chief sa.he was not an experienced public speaker and felt greater em barrassment in standing before the crowd than he would standing before a mob. In view of some past experi ences of the chief and the students, this remark brought out considerable laughter on the part of the audience. Chief Hoagland said that the study of crime and criminals is an impor tant one and deserves careful study. He asserted that it presents a prob lem that muBt be solved or crime will overrun the land. Students, he said, are the proper ones to study it. As a caiiBe of crime the chief does not regard Intemperance as im portant a factor as many think It Is. While he declared It to ne the great est of all evils, It does not produce near all the crime, dan home Influ ence, he declared, are the causes of more crime than saloons. The reai criminals do not generally blunt their mental faculty with whisky. Evil as sociations attendant upon the drink habit had a potent Influence, but the home Is the root of the evil. These, he said, should be reformed. Criminal instincts inherited from ancestors will crop out and If something Ib not done to cultivate a better nature the child will very likely grow up a criminal. This class seldom reform. Another class, he said, are criminals by acci dent or environment. They Include those who yield to a sudden tempta t on. "Statistics," said the chief, "show that crime is Increasing." These sta tistics cannot be taken as final because facilities for apprehending criminals have grown so much better that a large percentage of criminals are caught than formerly. The use of the telegraph, telephone and the bureau of identification and a more general co operation of officers hns made arrest almost certain. 1'he general Influence of education, he thought, was to lessen crime, espe cially in the lower forms. About one fourth of the prison population have a high school or academic education. Educated persons usually confine themselves to fraud or some class of crime that requires Ingenuity. The real cause of crime In many cases, he asserted, is not desire for gain, but an inherent tendency to crime. He would send professional criminals to the penitentiary for life. In closing, Chief Hoagland declared that the number of arrests among stu dents in Lincoln is leBS thnn in any other college town from which he re ceives reports. John Koehler, '02, Is occupying the pulpit every Sunday of the German Lutheran church at Germantown. the Stuff and O Street Goods J-Iodse h.J IIBbsssI KbbbbbbbbbbbbILbbbbbbbbbbW GERMAN, SPANISH AND FRENCH Taught by mail, by use of the PHONOGRAPH. For free lesson and further information, see F. T. Wright, 1205 O St., room 21, representative of the INTERNATIONAL CORRES PONDENT SCHOOLS, Scran ton, Pa. Tbe Denver fire Clay Co., 1744-1746 Champa St., DENVER, COLO., Im porters and dealers in Chemical and Physical Apparatus, Chemicals And all kinds of Laboratory Supplies Photographic Stock fne Ivy greft Prints Things Like You Want Thflgs Printed IVY PRESS FRANK L. LEMON, MQR 125-127 Nonh 12th. Phone 832. After the party (Set your ICE CREAM SQDA at.UA NOU NU'&ftU ARMAC Y COMPANY 1400 O ST. OPEN ALL NIGHT Alegretti Chocolates .AT Rector' V