"rtyi"'" r" .riv rft'1' 'f7i-z?" "v - ' ' - ' UMIIIIIMH .i t. - -- .,' $$ ' IT be. all? fUbraeftnn - .i t 4 f ".s Cifase of Other Daps COLLEGE MEN fe F. H. WoodB, '90. has gone to WIb conRln on a business trip. J; r' l is ;V -, lr ( I' ' V li' i t , vr. ! ' f' h v. K C J A ft. ' Miss Annn JoncB, '02, of the Dunbar schoolH. vlflltcd the University May 2. Rev. John Marshall, '93. of Ihe Oob pel Tabernacle. Hpoke to the Y. W. C. A. laBt Sunday. Clem Theobald. '01. who 1b In the inHurance biiBlnefifl In Madison, vlfilted Lincoln rarly In the week. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rees, '91, and their two children went to Wahoo on May 4th for several days. Mrs. J Ah n N. Dryden (Miss HolmeB) has been visiting In Lincoln, but It now at home again In Kearney. Mrs-. A. C. Fling (Maude Hammond), after a vlBlt of several dayB In Lincoln, returned to her home In Nebraska City on May 2. Clarence C. Culver, Htudcnt of the nineties, on duty In the Philippines, baa a leave of absence and Is vlBltlng on the Asiatic mainland. "Deacon" Koehler. after a year at Chicago University, has come back to Nobraaka. He Is here, but will preach during the summer In KanBas. Mr. O. I. Dabcock. '94. who Ih gen oral Y. M. C. A. secretary for tho City of Mexico, together with Mra. Bab cock, 1b visiting hlB father In this city. as a rule are the most particular about their clothes. That's tohy a oeru large percentage of If 1 the unioersitu men buu their clothes right here. Our "Varsity" and other young men's styles are brim full of snap and style. They can not be equaled either by the exclusioe tailor or in other ready made garments. JUST NOW toe are selling a lot of stoell spring suits for men and young men at $10.00, $i2.5o, $i5.oo and $18.00 These suits are strctly hand tailored and are said to be the best oalues shoton anytohere. COTtlOltT , 4. CtftMMftAtffT t New Styles of Neckwea Every Friday Morning Georgo O. Henrn. '90. who carries tno Uv 3. mall on one of the Lincoln routes, was severely bitten by a Twenty-seventh street bull dog a few days ago. Rev. C. E. Tlngley "90. and Mrs. Tlngley, of Cheyenne, Wyo.. are In Lincoln. She will remain a month, but Mr. Tlngley will return In a few days. C. A. Hawxby, of Auburn, conducted a case In the supreme court Monday. Ue has been engaged In extensive ex periments on fruit trees In the south ern states. Armstrong Clothing Co I feggSSSSSSsaggasl 1221 to 1227 O Street Lincoln, Neb. WESTERN GLASS & PAINT Go. Willie Sweet, one of the earliest Btudent8 of the University, has won high office and many honors In Idaho, and now haB been appointed to a Porto Rlcan consulate. In a recent letter, Mr, A. S. Harding, '97, professor of American history at Brookings Collego. South Dakota, ex presses his continued Interest In the University of Nebraska. Success to him. eeJot 12 & 8U. LINCOLN, Nil. 1900 and 1902. Ho took his master's degree at the State University In 1900. Clyde Ray Jeffords, a graduate of the State University of the class of '98, has been appointed a follow In Cornell University In Latin and Creek. Mr. Jeffords was teacher In Iatln and Greek In the Lincoln high school In Superintendent J. W. Searson. '96, of Wahoo, waB In the city yesterday, engaged In business In connection with the State Teachors' association and the National Educational association. ! 4- ! 'I'M ' 'I- ! ! 'l-M' I'M-! ! ! ! ! i AlltAtllAlJLtAAAAJJLtAAtJttAA We'll G'0e You the "bery best Attention Ivhile you tell us ust ivhat kind of Cards ( At J 1.25 per 100 ) you tvant to go ivith your gradua tion programs. We don't deal in hammers, picks and Spades, v but ive do furnish you with the proper things in our line. And, too it is not our policy to skin you and Then Seat You, ...Wc wont to serve you properly-, .Harry Porter J25 South J2th. (Wirr)rlTrTlTirrrir Class Song of 1903. Class Song Wo are good seniors all Well favored and tall. For now we have reached our prime, We must sing a farewell As our hours wo tell. And we'll laud our class In rhyme. CHORUS: Hero'B to good old Naughty Three! Here's to good old xsaughty Three! We'll think of hor when years have passed Remember Naughty Three. The memories dqar of joyH long past, Tho bonch-work and every good sign Of the youth we'll loso Vhcn leaving here, In tho good old summer time. We must doff cap and gown, Our wild oats are sown, Now here's for the glory of strife! Some sadness we feel. But our hearts are of steel. Ab we plunge In the tldo of life. CHORUS: When parting la past. When the world UoldB us fast. When our lives aro no longer free. We'll dream much of you, And the fellowship true, Which you taught us all. Naughty Three. (Chorus) Nebraska Business and Shorthand College Boyd's Theater Building:, Omaha, Nebraska A. C. ONG. A. M.. LL- B.. President A. J. LOWRY. Principal Chapln Bros., florists, 127 So. 13th, Tel. 1C4. "ABSOLUTELY THOROUGH" The finest and most thoroughly equipped school In the West $10,000.00 expended In furniture, furnishings, typewriters, etc. Banking fixtures as flno as any banking house. Elegant roll top desks and revolving office chairs In Commercial Department; Yale lock, Oxford box desk, finished in golden oak, in Shorthand Department. Over fifty typewriters, five different stand ard makes, In Typewriter Department. Faculty consists of six teachers, all specialists In their lino of work. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING MAKES IT POSSIBLE TO PRODUCE THE BEST RESULTS. A Business or Shorthand Education will open up a thousand different avenues In life that lead to fame and fortune. We have hundreds of our graduates holding the best paying positions In banks, railroad offices, cor porations and business firms throughout the country. Any one who finishes the course In this institution Is assured of a position. STATEMENTS OF EMINENT MEN. "A business training is absolutely necessary." John Wanamaker. "Some of our students, not yet out of their teens, are making more money by shorthand than the principal of the high school." John S. Hart, Prln. Philadelphia HighSchool. "I adiso parents to have their boys and girls taught shorthand and type writing." Chas. Reade, in Tho Coming Man. THE SELECTION OF A SCHOOL WILL LARGELY DETERMINE YOUR SUCCESS IN LIFE. Apply for a catalogue bound in alligator, Ihe finest ever published by a business college. ! -H'l ! ! ! ! -b -t J; ;- ! . .. Denning Semi-Anthracite, $&50 A TON. The Best and Cheapest Furnace Coal on the Market GREGORY, The Coal Mao, Phones 343, 39 1 . 1 044 O STREET. ( -r I V & M Ar fN i .0 -1 v .fim ra - i :ic -'M r r 4M ' !-.V-ll V". 1 h. u:yW&mi VJ : t i. WGMwMT1 . .i Nv ..,""; tfNB&V - 1 1 i i i W