&.? t r THE DAILY NBBRASKAN. Z fc. a- x I . S! 1? K C- TV. " EA . . ;1 k'. I. ' Y ? t I ' " . .V ', S-'W 1 1 qbc Daily nebraskajf A. connolldallon of Tho HcBporlan, Vol. 31, Tho 10 Nfibrai 3 NpbrauK; myol. 4. rnnknn, Vol. 10, Scarlet and Crcai Piihllnlicd da v. oxcopt Sunday ana Monday, at tho University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nob., by tho HcBporlan Publlah Inr Co. . Board of Directors. n v t. ninui. Lauronco Fouler. it. Lcavltt. ' . .. Dwlght Cramer A. a. Schroibor. Edltor-ln-Chlbf ,.... ?vP' cJark .ManoKor. . J: trod Naughton Circulator. Walter E. Standovpn Athlotloi R. A. Van Orsdol Editorial rtoomr. U 204V6. Business Omco, U211. POBt onico, Htation a, i.in- In, Nob. omco hours of Business Managor and Kdltor, 11:00 to 11:30 dally. Telephone Automatic 1528 Night Telephone Automatic 2365 Subscription Prlco, S2 per year In ndvanco Entered at tho poBtofflco at Lincoln, Nob., as second-closa mall mattor under tho uct of congrens of March 3, 1879. Individual notices will bo charged for at tho rato of 10 centB for each Insertion. Faculty departmental and university bul letins will gWa!y bo published froo, as heretofore. THE MA88 MEETING. Tomorrow morning at eleven o'clock will' occur tho first muss meeting jf tho year, nnd it Is the duty of every student to attend nnd help in the ef fort tQ nrousetall sorts of enthusiasm. For tho benefit of now students who havo nevor been to a football mass mooting before, we will describe a fow of tho features. In tho first place, everybody gos, even the girls, and "no body goes Who is not willing to yell himself hoarse. Secondly, the meeting 1b conducted by and for the students, and nothing but speeches, yells and songs aro In order. Speeches are lim ited lo two minutes each, and no stu dent or professor will talk unless tho students demand that ho do so, while on tho other hand, anybody that the students call for will bo compelled to talk whether ho wantfe to or not. The football team and coaches, will be there, and every one tof them, even tho most bashful, wijl havo to make ,1iIb little bow. Tho primary object of the meeting is to get up lots of en thusiasm, and tho more nolso tho. stu dents make, tho bottor It will bo. f Hore will be regular' cheer leaders the.ro, and whenever a speaker runs over timo, thoy will start a yell and thon call on tho next victim. It used to be tho custom to sell tickets at theso rallies, while tho students wero under the spoil of excitement, but we long ago got by that Btago, and noth ing will bo asked of, tho audlenco ex cepting enthusiasm, and If the mass mooting tomorrow Is up to tho stand ard, theroiwlll bo plenty of that. It Is up .to tho students-of Nebraska to give tho. men tho best send-off a Nebraska team ovor got whon It loft o play on .foreign soil, for the game Saturday will bo tho hardest over played by tho Scarlet ond'Cream, and. tho team muBt feel .that there, aro two thousand stu dents horo nt Lincoln who are behind them ovory play, and 'are proud of them In any event, whether thoy como homo victors or losers. One word more. Tho Regular class schedule Is forgotten whenever a mass meeting occurs, and no matter how long It lasts, ovory student Is. supposed to Btny un til tho ond. Tho Psychological Club held its ' flrat moetlhB of tho year laat' Satur layevonlng. An Interesting paper on "Tho Probable Consciousness. 'of Pseudopodic Movement" was read and. an v informal discussion fpllowed. Tho next meeting of tho club will be held In two weeks, 'Uses and Abuses of Italian Travel. Tho abovo Is tho tltlo of a very In teresting and instructive artlclo In tho current number of Tho Arena. Tho author, Mr. Carl S. Vrooman, Is" thor oughly conversant with his subject, an'd treats It in a mna'ner somewhat now. -In regards to the benefits of Italian travel and of tho study of Italian painting, Mr. Vrooman says: Right hero tho question arises after one has studied and enjoyed Italian art for a few months, what of It? yVlll a man bo a better and more successful citizen, a young girl a bet ter wife and mother, for having seen nnd loved nnd partly understood this bewitching expression of tho soul of theso past centuries? Will not such study put ono out of sympathy with Amorlcan life? Is It not something foreign to our spirit and injurious to Its influence? A little analogy can help us to decldo this question. Why do men "who hover intend to make any possible practical use of higher mathe matics, logic or experimental physics, devote years of study to them and to kindred subjects at the university? Because suah studies develop tho pow ers of tho mind, forming certain men tal habits of exactness and consecu tlveness of thought without which any real culture or great intellectual power Is entirely Impossible. Such studies permeate and transform one's entiro mental life giving ono gradually and unconsciously the scientific spirit nnd method. Just so the fine nrts, when truly loved and studied, saturate and transfuso one's . entiro personality, awaken within ono and gradually de velop the esthetic and emotional na ture, and give to one's thoughts and work a new nroma, a now potency tho porsuaslve potency of artistic feel Ing. When once thlB sense, sometimes called taste, this feeling for beauty, Is developed In a humaa.soul, life is no longer tho same It has a new charm and power of fundamental Im portance. This development in one's nature, like tho dovelopmont In the mind of the scientific spirit or tho awakening in the soul of tho spiritual nature, henceforth manifests itself, of necessity,, In .every manifestation of that personality. If ono bo a writer, It will gradually suffuso his work with a npw and subtilo power. If one bo a farmer, It will transform his sur roundings moro and more Into habita tions worthy of a human being. If ono bo an artisan, It will seek expres sion -in work thot rIseB above tho ugly and tho commonplace. If one bo a wife and "mother, It will give to tho homo an attractiveness", a rostfulness, a domestic charm tho .value of which can scarcely bo overestimated. In this way, far from unfitting ojio for life In America, It can but give to those who havo really felt Its Influence a new and mysterious force which, as It permeates more and moire our national llfq, must dignify and exalt -It. ... Ncbraakari Calendar. Beginning some timo this week, the Nebraskan will print a calendar of nil University ovonts for a space of a couple of months In advance of tho dato of Ibsuo. As It Is the de'slro of tho editor to make this feature as complete as possible, and as this can bo accomplished only by tho co-opera tlon of students and faculty, wo re quest that all notices or meetings, lec tures, etc., bo handed In to the bfll.ee Instead .of waiting for a reporter to come around nnd get them. ' The Dramatic 'Club will hold Its first meeting on Thursday, October 19, in U. 100, at 11 a. m. Plans for' the year will bo .discussed. All memboru aro urged to bo present. , misran !p2SSSl M To Students & Glee Club Members v.'.. rill DRESS SUITS TO ORDER $32.50 ...SILK FACED AND Don't rail to Call ...1036 O nBJBJBJBJEd IBOHCtl WilBW LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES TTSiGTsb 1130 N STXIKBT LINCOLN CXXXXXX3OCXDOCXXXXXX)0O0O0O0O OOOOOOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDOO COLUMBIA NATIONAL BANK OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA CAPITAL - $100,000.00 DR. 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