j'jpyiffe ' jnrT'j"" Sf VTWV !JW srg3;.33r,? wwienKT?v-",5jif (''fT a, - 4 k& Gfoe ails fie bra 0ft an :: m .. L' m .. .,iSBG55SBHH IW iSiHMnlfSAffti MBBWEw iTt V 11' r .f . r - n t trf-rwnan wJ'JL;iii'i.rri.i w tlfymzAmfitotffmffflrt - - t J, I r i fr 1 if College of Itltdklnt SENIOR NOTES. R. A. Lyman, Reporter. The. Honiara have dlfipenfled with tile old ruBtom of applauding an lufitructor when ho enters or leaves the lecture room. In place of the applaiiBo they have substituted Immediate respectful attention upon hla entrance. Dy the truo teacher such attention la prized more highly than any other mark of respect that could 1)0 shown him In tho class room, and It should be every senior's duty to see that his part Is carried out. Tho abolishment of this nolfly Baluto lends an atmosphere of dignity to tho lecture room, and Is one more Btcp In advance toward the truo University spirit. It Is to be hoped this new custom will be adopted by every other class In school and by all that may como to us In tho future. Tuesday tho seniors had the pleasure of listening to Dr. Towne again on the Important subject. "The Diagnosis and Care of Smallpox." No other phy sician In tho state, and but few In this country, can speak on this subject from authority based on as large a personal oxporloncc as Dr. Towne. lie has done moro than any other one man-to wipe thlB disease from our state. Tho doctor prosontcd photographs of many cases, and these, along with his scholarly presentation of tho subject, impressed p tXSJL I WU I ; Interested in having your station ery just right? We want you to feel that our Btalonery Is what you want. We aBlt you to drop IN and examine our stock of pape trles. Tho window Is full of up-to-date styles at Gc You ought to havo A BOX Let us help you out X Hairy Porte? Distributor of Porter's UnL of X Mb. Stationery J25So. J2St. Phone 85 J I 5 4(44f44 iJI3Jr ! -IIJ--J JWI vi lIII-' !? X MENS J SHOES $ 1 ml rSHOES X v J Stylish and- nobby SHOES FOR MEN at V PERKINS & SHELDON f 1129 O 8treet X hH-HHM5H-H.H the points discussed Indelibly upon thf minds of his henrers. Within tho last few weeks tho sen iors' study table has undergone a pecu liar metomorphosls. The texts which have occupied It'slnce last September, along with the ponderous note book which represents tho accumulated knowledge of the " year, have boen dumped promiscuously Into the corner of tho room. Behind their corners and between their leaves the cockroaches play hldc-and-scok; about them the spider Is weaving his web to ensnare tho first fly of Bprlng, and over the whole tho dust-laden March winds aro depositing their sediments. In their place on the table ono sees the old red backed chemistry, the soiled Gray, from which still emenates the perfume with which It was once charged by tho organic compounds of the dissecting room, and the freshman's note book, yellow with age and worn with usage. Before the table stands the glassy-eyed senior, driven to tho borderland of In sanity . by these mementos of otler days. Why this metomorphosis? Why this reversion to things of the past? Ask the state boards., Kukl Is back In school again after spending a few days at home. JUNIOR ITEMS. T. E. Sample, Reporter. Dr. Park finished his course of lec tures on obstetrics Inst Friday. All nf tiio boys aprcclato very much the In terest ho has taken In tho work. Stump speoches aro now In order, as It Is nearly time for a class presi dent to be elected for the next school year. Question from student: "Doctor, be fore you perform a post-mortem on body, would you havo -to know whether subject was right or left handed?" No answer. Several members of the Junior class Intend to rustlcato In the Big Horn mountains near Sheridan, Wyo., during tho hot months. Dr. Qlbbs says the juniors this year aro an extra smart class, but had bet ter como ono more year. Subjects In physiological chemistry wore assigned to each Junior at the be ginning of term. All the papers read so far have been very good and instruc tive. So many of our boys were wearing the green Tuesday that one could not eat an orange In their presence on ac count of tho color. SOPHOMORE NEWS. The sophomore class was greatly surprised the other day In fact, con sternation reigned when Mason and Wlgton stopped arguing long enough to look around. Adams was seen with a guilty look hastily concealing paper balls, pln-wheela. etc , with which he had been amusing hlmseir. The silence In the southeast corner of the labora tory was so profound as to bo heard downstairs. McDonald, after search ing his pockets vainly, said very feebly, "Walsh has It." Even Bill stopped In the midst of on of his best stories; while Swaboda, declplo of Rock, told of tho Bplrella of typhoid, culture media, etc. Wanted, by the sophomores: More lectures In anatomy Jackson, ' tho famous backstop of Creston, visited Morris last Saturday. The baseball squad Is practicing daily. "Glass arms," "bad whips," "game mlts." etc.. are a few of the.all .ments common to this form of exer cise. Dr. W. "To wjjat animal is bubonic plague common?" Mr. Morris (sotto voice). "To the Chinaman." Dr. 8. "Did you ever before see hy drogen liberated In an equation like that?" Mr. Kennedy. "There never beforo was seen an equation Just like that." FRESHMAN JOTTINGS. F. Epplen. Reporter. The discovery of a new "nppendage" of the Bkin 1b announced by Fuller. Ask him about it. Now that tho freshmen aro making blood counts, they feel that they aro doing some of tho more Interesting and "real"work In tho study of medi cine. That their figures do not cor respond with those given In the books by no means lessons tho Importance of their work nor Its accuracy In their minds. Gems of medical wisdom in the latter part of the seventeenth century, as published In a recent magazine article (Munsey)- "Picking the gurrfB with the bill of an osprey, or a thorn from the back of a dog fish 1b good for the tooth-ache." "Bear's grease Is good for aches and cold swellings." "Moose horns are much better for physic than the horns of other deer." "A stone found in the head of the codfish, when pulverised, stops fluxes of blood." "The heart of a hattlesnakc Is an antidote to Its bite." That Valentine believes in tho old adage. "If at first you don't succeed," etc., goes without saying. His second product Is certainly an Improvement over the first. Persistent cultivation Is all il needs, and we have no doubt his whiskers will bp of regulation size when he is a senior, three years from now. Some ancient therapeutical measures practiced by one of our colonial physi cians might interest the students Here they are In his own words: "First I pukes 'em, then I sweats 'em, then if they wants to die, I let's 'em " The fees, however, of these quacks, aa we now would look upon them, seemed to be proportional to their skill. The average was 10 cents per visit, and the M. D. was expected to leave the medi cines at that. The diseases then were probably the same as now, but not so tholr names, for we never hear of "dry b.elly acheB," or "plagues of tho guts," rtor do we consider age a disease, as It was looked upon In those days, for it Is so included In somo of the old lists. It hnB been said that a freshman does exceedingly wel If he acquires a good vocabulary in his first year. Rob ertson Is certainly not falling behind. Restaurant Unique, 1228 O street Columbia National Bank OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Capital, $100,000.00 OFFICERS John B. "Wright, President J. H. 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