fimm I 0 J -."N-, . "v ' rT JP' rV' '' T "' "V w, . . " V- vl , Gbe ID a i I fUbraehan l'& w V W" fWt4&iWiWt4 Columbia National Bank OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Oapltal, tlt0.OOO.OO OFFICERS John a WtigUt PraaUent J. H. Wooott, Vlce-FWdcat Jee Samuel, 2d Vk-Prcatdent P. L. HH Caahlaf w. Jt. Kyoos, ami. (Jaintet A Dr. J. R, HAGGARD 'Physician and Surgeon Sptdal attention paid to dtaeaaat of icm&lc and rectal dlieatw. Rooms 312 to SU Richards Block. Rsst- esnes 1 8 1 0 C Stnt. Offics TcUchooo 636. RssfaUnc Tsispbons L y4. TMB ONLY UP-TO-DATE Billiard and Pool Pirlor IN TOWN NO SALOON ATTACHED Table mwIy eTre4 Powell's, 140 North 1 1th St. THE PIRST NATIONAL DANK OF LINQ3LM. NEIMtKA CpHt $200,000; Surplus $ 100,000; Proftts $18,319; Deposits $298,093 S. H. Burnhson, PruUcnt A. J. 8wyf, Vic-PrUnt H. 3. rVtsmsn, ChWr H. B. Bvsns, Aasislsnt Caa&Ur OK1TKP BTATK8 PKrOBlTOBT BOWLING ALLEY S ALLEYS Standard and ttguUtloa ' in every particular. I2IO O St. H.C.Thomas, Proprietor Genuine Gas Coke $9.00 per ton Lincoln Gas A Electric Light Co. 1323 o St. te&t&$4-i44 CLARY C1GADS Wid NEWS TcLAlOtt. 111 N. llth Street FORBES STABLES LIVERY. BAGGAGE AND CAB LINE CARRIAGES FOR PARTIES Ban 1 125-113 J P St. Pbon 660 Is tile worth livtng? People who eat at the COOPER t HART PALACE DINING HALL ll'itptnii t the liver. live well. 1130 N 81 Phone 498. WESTERN GLASS & PAINT Co. && 12th A H Sit. LINCOLN, NEB. BETTER BE SAFE THAN BE SORRY! A safe deposit box is always safe money and valuable papers secure against fire, thieves or other disaster. $1.25 pays for a box for three months Fire-proof storage for trunks, boxes of silverware, etc., at low rates Lincoln Safe Deposit and Trust Co: 126 N. Uth St. Reveries " 'Through (he transparent darkness the Btars pour their almost spiritual rays." Emerson can write that sent ence and be studied reverently for It. A student might write the same thing and receive a dash of red ink on the "transparent." On first thought one Is tempted to smile sarcastically at hu man criticism which appreciates so er ratically. But after all, the appreci ation Is not erratic. The essence of ex preslon 1b the domination of a per sonality. That withered violet In your book 1b no whit different from many others, yet you cherish It and glean from It daily thoughts of a lost friend. So with all tangible forms. Just as the Impersonal flower is a mine of dear memories, a vision of loved personal ity, so may any simple sntence take on all manner of color under the light of a great mind. Contradictions turn to poetry and every word glows with a hundred meanings. Carried by the au thor's power of vision the reader shakes off his reverence for mere word forms and accepts with pleasure and understanding the diction of a higher language. I stood by-the -window Just, night while the dusk fell, and watched the people go home. It was six o'clock, and a steady Bteady stream poured southward. They were all tired, from the man who swung his dinner pall and slouched heaviiy along, to the stu dent hurrying by with his books. So the most of them have gone home nightly for years, probably gone home only with the hope of supper and bed for the present, and for the future of endleHs tomorrow; all the same, all monotonous, all merged In that vast, strange unity of experience toll. When they awake the morning calls them, hoarse-voiced, through the mists; and when they lie down at night the factory whistle drones Its re minder of labor. The masses struggle they do not live; and If, held down by low necessity, they are satisfied wlthi a somewhat practical and mater ial heaven, who shall blame them hastily? N. B. This Is not the final truth; It Is only a mood. Who Is going to study days like these? There 1b the greening grass, and the sunshine, and the pretty girls hanging out of overy window, sitting on every bench, strolling up and down on every side-walk girls who blush, girls who smile frankly, girls with their new straw hats, with senior mor tar-boards, with tantlllzlng round caps stuck on the backs of pretty heads, and some with no caps at all. The wind blows their hair In tangles and frames their faces In adorable confus ions of black and blonde. Here are benches handy where two or more may chat unmolested; and long walks, up which a couple may stroll, smiling defiance at the crusty professors and "digs" they catch sight of through class room windows or meet on the campus. It Is too fine a day to study. School Is adjourned. The outer world Is most enticing, with Its distant sweep of green' rolling hills and still sun light, with the steady pulsing beat of the shops across the way and broken whistles from the yards. It makes one sick of the cramped room. It Is April. Spring Is here, and how 1 am to live through the next four months Is hard to tell, i have got the fever In my blood, and fields at the dropping of a hat. It is only getting over tho ridge that counts. When warm air and south winds have once come to stay and have lost their newness, I suppose I can study once again. But meanwhile, what an agony! Once more the time of year has ar rived when the student begins to lay his plans for the summer vacation. He Is confronted with almost every con ceivable proposition by the agents of book companies, stereoscopic views, correspondence schools, etc., each one representing his work in the most plausible terms and explaining how easily the wherewithal for the next year's schooling may be obtained by a thrco months' contract with Ills com pany. 8ome of those who have had ex perience lil convasslng are laying plans to do some more of It this summer for the money there Is In It, while others' have contracted to canvass for the ex perience there is in it. Of course, can vassing has its drawbacks, like every other work, there are those who can make It a Success, while a greater number cannot. But canvassers will canvass, and agents will live, and the world will move on in the same old way through another summer season. NewlGbirret 'Entertained. Tile ladies of the Y. W. C. A. ad visory committee entertained Informal ly the members of the new cabinet Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. T. M. Hodgman. The various commit tee chairmen presented their policies for the work of the ensuing year, which were thoroughly discussed and addi tional plans suggested. Mrs. F. M. Hall, chairman of the state committee, was present and gave some exceedingly helpful suggestions. All are agreed that the outlook for association work In Nebraska University for next year is most encouraging. Old Weather Case. Mr. Loveland has JuBt received from G. S. Truman of Genoa an instrument such as was Issued to farmers in 1870 by the United States weather bureau for making weather forecasts. The In strument Is enclosed In a case two feet long by one In wldtlT It contains an aneroid barometer, a wet and dry bulb thermometer to Indicate the at mospheric humidity, and a wind disc to show regions of high and low pres sure, rain winds and low winds, to gether with a sun disc to show condi tions of the sky for the previous day. On the whole, the weather case was constructed on good principles, but has never come Into general use on account of Its expenslveness. It is a splendid relic of the former work of the weather department. DuteU'B CluttrB that' till. 8TKVEN8 A NEVILLE Clcur Mnfcm. Wholesale and Jtctall 1330 OS tree t K-aLLV iaaa aaataaaaaaaaam aaaaaaaar aaaaa aaaafaaaaaaaaaaaa CHDCDLATE5iBDNBnN5; Sold only by Harley Drug Co., llth'&'O Sts BUSINESS DIRECTORY. The NcbrAk?B Advertiser la thin lint deserve the trade of all loral Univer sity people. BAKERY Mrs. J. W. Petry. BANKS First National, Columbia Na tional, Farmers and Merchants, Lin coln Safe Deposit and Trust Co. BARBER SHOPS Palace BICYCLE8, ATHLETIC 0O0D8-H. B, Sidles Cycle Co., A. O. 8palding Jk Bros., Chicago. B00K8 AND STATIONERY-Co-Op,. n. m. Brown Drug and Book Co., Harry Portor, Unl. Book-Btbre, Sam uel Hall. BOWLING ALLBY-H. C. Thomas, Crescent. CIGARS, ETC.-M. D. Clary, L. L, Lind sey, Stevens ft Neville, Dutcll, Wool en berg. i CLOTHING Mageo ft Deemer, B. L. Paine Clothing Co., Cottrolll ft Leoin ard, Albany, N. Y.; The Toggery. COAL P. D. Smith Coal Co., C. B. Gregory, WMtebreast Coal Co. CONFECTIONERY R. W. Maxwell Co. DENTISTS C. E. Brown, Bentz. DRUGGISTS-Rigga, Rector, .Brown, Flegenbaum, Harley, Stelner, Weoro poner, Oliver Theatre Pharmacy. DRY GOODS Miller & Palno. ELECTRICAL GOOLd-RoBS-Elfictrlc FURNITURE Hardy Furniture Co., Rudge & Guenzel. GAS Lincoln Gas & Electric Co. GROCERS Fanners Grocery Co., Key stone Cash Grocery. HAIRDRE88ING, ETC. The Famous. HARDWARE Rudge & Guenzel. JEWELERS E. E. Hallett, C. A. Tucker. LAUNDRIES Evans. LIVERIES W. O. Forbes. LUMBER Dlerka Lumbor & Coal Co. MILLINERY The Famous. MUSIC Ross P. Curtice. NOVELTIES Capital Noyelty Works. PA4NT AND GLASS Western Glass & Paint Co. PHOTOGRAPHERS Townsend. OCULISTS M. B. Ketchum. PHYSICIAN8-J. R. Haggard, H. a Aley. PIANOS Matthews Piano Co. POOL AND BILLIARDS Powell & Son. PRINTING New Century, Ivy Press. RAILROADS Burlington, Union Pa cific, Northwestern, Missouri Pacific. RESTAURANTS Merchants Cafe. Don Cameron, Palaco Dining Hal), Restaurant Unique, Francis Bros., Hendry. SHINES Lincoln Shining Parlor. SHOES Sanderson, Perkins & Shel don, Electric Shoo Co. SUITORIUM Weber; Bros., T. A. Bnrt. TAILOR Bumstead, Unland. TRANSFER Lincoln Local Express, Lincoln Transfer Co., Globe Delivery Co. HIOH GRACE i? m l i T ?i A i j ).- i '. i ?' rMl ' ,tWP .SW 1 JL ' v,J -;, t . "C V ., , -, r - -' ' a lT. iatfTI i:" ' MMMmimi .V- &ki ...r . ...J VS.U- - X . rf, . ,- - ' '.. ,, iJlTal riaa!tVrfS it Is, "Whoop, boys," and away for the r J '" ' 7t i. X;J " '? 7, JW