" t S be. BaUc 11) eft an lAJLIAJlJfJiJtOAJMjIAJMLtJttJ'XI.t ii Reveries " .-' & i "SS- IK . Wakrvilk dand'Torged Pocket Knives 50c Fully Guaranteed HALL'S 1308 O Street P r riTrrrmrrrrrrrsrrrrrv Capital Novelty Works Bicycles and repairing of all kinds. Key fitting. Tel. F 592 23JSJJth SPALDING'S OFFICIAL ATHLETIC . ALMANAC FOR J903 Edited by J. E. Sullivan The only alma nac published that contain a complete list oi American Amateur Beat-on-R e cor d a and complete list of Cham pions. PRICE 10 CENTS For sale by all newsdealers aM A. G. SPALDING & BROS. New York, Chicago, Denver, Baltimore, Buffalo Spalding's complete catalogue of Athletic Sports sent free to any acMrcs FORBES STABLES LIVERY. BAGGAGE AND CAB LINE CARIAQ9 FOR PARTIES Ban i 126-1 Hi PS. PfceMSSO 1 I California s I ! PERSONALLYJCONDUCTED J y ! Only $5 for a doable berth and jzo for a i. i iicnei Until June Jb. IWi Lincoln to Los Angeles Call and get full information. De pot 9th and P streets. City Office 10 to and O streets I 530 pictures , fF5' prominent v Hk American jfmri foreign Athletes jV Tr ... t-i v4cAne t Ua The Turlington ! EVERY THURSDAY j AND SATURDAY I went gleefully with the crowd and the wind the other day, and Baw Ted dy's smile. I could henr nothing on account of the crowd, but I made a quick estimate of his face, and knew tne newspaper would tell the rest, be cause George Washington Cline was there taking notes. George Washing ton Inspires hope and trust, with his thin figure and his wide smile, so I gave up straining my ears and watched the president. The sight of him was the best part of the occasion, anyway. There was force and concentrated per sonality in every movement as he leaned over the rail and shook his finger in the people's faces. He talked to the crowd, not at It. Whether the speech itself was merely a stock polit ical one, prompted by necessity, or not, anyone who saw the man speaking must have felt that there was great ness in him a greatness which makes him far superior to the common poli tician of today. I have been wandering about in a state of intellectual Inanity this after noon. My wits have gone wool-gathering in the warm air. I haven't even a course in bench-work to console me, because it takes two for that inter esting study, and I am a lonely soul, wandering aimless on the vast empti ness of the hot campus. If, now, I could rouse my soul from revery and pursue happiness in tangible form if I could put my bou1 Into the game out there on the field, or take an Interest In these feminine pages of human na ture, open at every corner life would mean something. But it is all a dead weight. At this moment I achieve the height of Frenchdom. I have ennui. It would be a relief to fall In love, or (ommit a murder, but the one is as far from me as the other. I am cursed with a good soul and a weak one. The gods deny me alike pleasure and pain. Tomorrow is Friday the only day I go to chapel. It is a queer institu tion, that chapel, anyway; run more as a life-Bavlng station, or a mission- post In darkest Africa, than as a repre sentative institution In a body of en lightened students. Why don't they Bhut It down completely, or make It compulsory? As it Is, they get no chance to Bave our souls, because we refuse to attend. If they make It com pulsory, they gain this chance and whatever antagonism they raise can be no worse than the present Indifference. If they ebut, It down, they save a half hour In the middle of a busy day, and at least escape the blame of conduct ing a farce. There you have the logic of it, on both aides the fence. For myself, I want to be good. I know I ought to go, and I wish they would make me whomever the official "they" may be. ... I have written another essay on the Chinese nation. Prepare to die. The Celestial mind has got firm hold on my literary system, and the disease Is spreading every minute. I am re signed to a slow death, but I advise you to touch these "Reveries" ginger ly, and avoid inoculation. The plague Is nnthinir to it. Imagine yourself or rather, do not imagine, for that is the first stage tormented with visions or gay Jackets and wide pantaloons and fivinc nic-talls. outlined against a cha otic background of yollow-and-green umbrellas and smoking punk, and you have my mind exactly. I am in the crucial moment now the tide turns. If my next fortnightly treats of some sane topic, I am saved; but if It still harps upon the barbaric infelicities of the Oriental mind, you may know that 1 am far on the way to literary dissolu tion. I have been away on a vacation. 1 returned this morning at half-past ten. It Is now 9:30 p. m., and I have accom plished nothing since except a feeble sparring match with old Thucydldee and a tussle with an English tneme. A holiday Is a delightful bit or con valescence, but return to study is ex quisite pain. Every moment feels the reopening of an old wound. I stuck my head Inside -the botany lab this noon; the hot air and the smell of baked florae, and the few listless work ers at the tables gave me a shiver. I shut the door softly and went off slng- Arkansas Hard for Stoves - $ 9.50 Arkansas Hard for Furnaces 8.50 . All grades Pennsylvania Hard 13.50 Canon City Pea - - - - 6.00 Whitebreast Coal & Lumber Co. OFFICE 1106 0 St. ing "In the Good Old vSummer Time," which Improved my temper, if not my morals and my intellect. It is nearly time to go to bed now and I am glad of it the neglected books on the table cease to be accusing after 10 o'clock. M. 8. First University M. D's. The first annual commencement of the University college of medicine oc curs this afternoon at 2:30, at the Boyd theater, Omaha. The commence ment oration will be delivered by Dr. D. R. Brower, of Chicago, who will speak on "The Art of Medicine." The graduating class is a rather large one, numbering thirty-eight doctors, who will go out over this and adjoining states with the first diplomas from the University of Nebraska medical de pal tment. Class honors will be con ferred upon Charles C. Morison, Thomas Truelsen ana Rufus A. Lyman receiving honorable mention. Mr. Morl8on also gets the Jonas prize In Biirgery and Thomas Truelsen and C. L. Ie Mar receive honorable mention. The prize In ophthalmology falls to Frank E. Osborn, Wm. P. Wherry and Rufus A. Lyman getting honorable mention. Following Is the program: Overture Tuber Invocation Rt. Rev. Arthur L. Williams. Selection Lucia Donizzetti Conferring of Degrees Chancellor Ellsha Benjamin Andrews. Characteristic Whispering Flow ers Blon Intermezzo Naila Delibes The Awarding of Prizes Dean Henry Baldwin Ward. Selection from "The Prince of Pllsen" Luders The Commencement Oration "The Art of Medicine." Dr. Daniel Roberts Brower, Chicago. "Auld Lang Syne." Benediction. The list of graduates is as follows: James Clarence Agee, Arthur Leslie Bartlett, Frederick Louis Beck, Emll Claudius Black, Oliver Chambers, Jo Blah Shaftesbury DaVies, Christine S. Ericksen, Earl Eugene Gage, James Robert Graham, David Isaacs, John Christian Iwersen, Frank Jensen, Jens Jeter Jensen, Clatilla Bernlce Job, Ed ward Christian Jungbluth, Max John Henry Koetter, Augustus Bernard Kuhl, Clair Leono LeMar, Rufus Ash ley Lyman, Robert Clendenin McCly mondB, Joseph Winlam Martin, Charles Campbell Morlson, Halbert Fletchfer Neal, Marie Anna Nielsen, Frank Ely Osborn, Owen Dale Piatt, Rose Ham mond Rice, Charles Henry Root, Orro Georg Smersh, James Westfall Bar num Smith, George E. 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