MMfeqMriMIMM .., ,.-n ,.,! , - THE DAILY- NEBRASKAN i i ft f: fc. """;V ' DIRECTORY. L,i , , I'.i'J i Business "Directory Evorj loyal lUnlvorslty Btudont Ib urged tq patron flzc thoRo NobroBlian advortlnors, and to. mention tho Nobrnakan Vrhllo do Mng; ho. '. BANKS First Trua. 4k Savings BAKERIES Folsom BARBER SHOPS Green's BOOK STORES Co-op. UnlvorlBty .-.,'.. CLEANERS J. () Wood & Co. Weber's Sultorlum. Joe, Tbo Tailor. Ted Marrlnor. CLOTHING Fnrquhar Magoo & Deomor Mayor Broe. Palace Clotblng Co. Spolcr & Simon Armstrong Clothing Co. COAL y Gregory Whltcbroaat CONFECTIONERY Lincoln Candy Kitchen t Tommy DANCING ACADEMY Lincoln PITTS DOCTORS Dr. Cramb DRY GOODS Miller & Paino Iludge & Guonzol. DRUGGISTS RlggB ENGRAVERS g Qornoll FLORISTS C. H. Froy CIIAPIN BROS. FURNISHINGS Budd Full; Mugoo & Deomor Mayor BroB. Palaco Clothing Co. Rude & Guenzol Smsier & Simon Artnwtrng Clothing Co. HATTERS , j Budd . FuUc Unland ArmBttong-Olothlng Co. Magoo & Deomor "Mayor Bros. Ealaco Clothing JSo. Rudgo & Guonzol Spoler & Simon ICE CREAM Franklin Ice Cream Co. JEWELERS Hallett Tucker LAUNDRIES Evans OPTICIANS Shoan Howo. PHOTOGRAPHERS J Townsend PRINTERS " SlmmonB Van Tlno " RESTAURANTS . Boston Lunch ' ' ' . Cameron's Y. M. C A. Spa "SHOES : f Armstrong Clothing C. Beckman Bros. Budd Men's Bootery Rogers & Perkins Mayor Bros. Miller & Paine SHOE REPAIRING Electric Shoe Storo SKIRTS Skirt, Store TAILORS Elliott Bros. Gregory Herzog Joe, The Tailor. LUDWJG. , J. ' THEATERS ' r ' Oliver ' ' Orphcum. T Lyric TYPEWRITERS . Lincoln Typewriter Ex. Undorwoo Typewriter Co. Thi First Trust I Sav ings Bank 4 Per Ctni Iniirtst A $1 opim an aooount Corntr JOth & OStrt Bring Your Next Job of Printing to I IyAN TINE PRINTING CO. and Get Satisfactory Roiulta 128-130 No. 14th St. Auto 3477 TTT UIIUOIWUUU IJpaHlllDI uu. TYPEWRITERS SOLD AND RENTED 187 No. 18th. Boll 848. Auto 2580 IfflffUsKq msmm UMJILWUL Fraternity and Sorority Trade SPECIALTY Quality Counts THAT'S WHY FRANKLINS ICE CREAM IS SO POPULAR 'We make a specialty of fan cy creams, sherbets, Ices and punch for Frat & Sorori ty partios."Whipping Cream alwayB on hand. Boll 205. Auto 8181. 1810 N St. I Electric Shoe Rep. Factory 1220 O Street Saves you Time S Money Hot Drinks arc now In season. Do you know any place where you can get aa QUICK SERVICE aa you can at ournew store? No need of being crowded. Lincoln Candy KitCnen S. W. Corner mi WWBKSS Wft!S ,24-Lfi lkl WOJV Cs?iro' 96 i!HA ITONE AND pgMK 'He, Periodical Bankers, Business and Professional Men, Mechanics and Farmers Who Go on a Spree Once in Three Months, Six Month 8, a Year, or Longer, Have Formed the ' Drink Habit, and Are Cured by the Neal Treatment as Easily . as is the Habitual or Excessive Drinker, or the Nervous Man Who Has to Drink Fronr "' Becoming More Nervous. CURfeD The business man who finds that his craving for drink Ib an annoyance and a nuiHance, should take the Neal three day drink hnhlt cure, and quit Continued froml?ngo 1 THE NATURE OF OUR ENJOYMENT OF TRAGEDY. nuu'i'lage and endless bliss in Holdel berg. I felt a reckless,- dare-devil pleasure In Karl Helnrlch's first stu dent duel. I read of all-night merry makings, and only coveted more for the sake of his delight In thorn. Not a lecture did ho attend; not a book did he open. But the Joy of life waxed oven stronger in his heart, and the heart In turn expanded, and became friendly and tender toward all living things. As the months passed he changed from the shrinking boy ho had been Into a Joyous, commanding young figure, respected and sought after by his comrades. At the height of it all, and before the first . semester had ended, there came tho thunderbolt'. His grand father was seriously 111, and sent for him. But It wns a hopeful farewell Karl Hoinrlch bade his little Kathle. Ho would return oh. soon! Yet tho old grandfather lingered on for weary months; telling ovor anu over to his grandson, as ho lingered, or the lion duties of those who are set apart to rule; of tho loneliness In which thoy perforce must liver of the stern des tiny they must not flee. .My heart cried out-at the blindness and the mistakonness of such teach ing. But step by stop I was forced to admit that there was only one way for Karl Hoinrlch. He had not tho clearer light, and he nniBt live up to what light he had. And when at last he gave his consent to the alliance on which his grandfather had set his heart the young heir's innrrjage to a high-born cousin he had never seen I had no thought of reproach, but only a poignant reflection of the dumb ag ony Karl Helnrlch himself endurod. Kathie could llnd, by Baying one word, others who would faithfully love and cherish her. Two years passed slowly by after the old map's death. Meantime Karl Helnrlch coldly and conscientiously fulfilled his duties ns roignlng prlnco, whilo tho youth that was in him died tho jdeath of suffocation. A few weeks boforo tho date sot for his maniagp a wild, irresistible impulse drove him back to Iloidelborg for just ono more day of happiness. Oh, that dreary day, with its bittor disllluslonmont! . I felt each additional disappointment before it appeared, and Bhrank boforo It. Kathie alone wns the same; and yet she was not the same. Sho was sad and quiet; tenrloss; resigned. Sho loved him as boforp; and she gave htm up, , All night Jong they sat In Ruder's garden, clinging to each other, silent; in the gray dawn they wont their sop nrnto ways. And it was not far from tiio grhy dawn when, now that tho spell was broken, I lnld my hend down on tho tahlfe, and, completely unnerved, sobbed so uncontrollably and so long that I woko my ' mother, who camo downstairs and gave mo tho scolding I richly deBervod. And I had been rending German 7 I Drinkers IN THREE DAYS drink right. No hypodermic injec tions are given and a plain contract Is glvon each patient, to effect a per fect cure In three days, at the Insti jedT IngY did not know it. I had not t reading anything I liad been living I wns Karl Hoinrlch! I was Kathie! For the moment I felt that It had all happened, and happened to me. Whj ? Because In the same case 1 would have done the same, felt the same, said tho samo Let the conditions ol our lives differ as day from darkness, Karl Helnrlch, Kathie and I wore one and tho same heart, were, own broth ers and sisters nay, nearer and closer than brothers and sisters in the or dinary sense. And right here lies, for mo, the ex planation of the mingling of pain and joy that tragedy inspires !n us. The pain is real; it is not an attenuated, sentimental, dtshwntery feeling; but out of the very reality of the pain arises tho joy. For the pain we have felt brings to us like a living thing the unity of all numan hearts, and. from that, the intrinsic worth and no bility of sheer human feeling. The historian and the political economist may rank our little tragedies, our or dinary llfe-historius with their heart aches and disappointments and Tail iires, as small and petty things not worthy to be compared for Interest and value with world-movements and the destiny of nations. Too mnnj of us, in the gray light-of theworkaday world, cravonly agree with thorn, and sigh at, tho sordlduess of our lot; but thero are a few moments of our lives when wo wnko up to the glorious truth that the worth and the reality and the sublimity of life are in the individual living of It. Then wo see Hint we our selves are grand, heroic, noble, In so far as w'o live up to tho light we have and do our duty as we see It. So It Is when good litoraturo stirs our souls. We see, or rothor feel, in the characters of the story and in-tmr- solves, an apotheosized humanity; and wo turn back luto our humdrum daily paths with a new strength, a now dignity, a new reverence for our selvos and thoso around -us. "Put off thy shoes from off thy foot; for the place whereon thou stnndost Is holy ground." THE ROAD-TO YE8TERDAY. Long It wound, And far It wound.. Z And ovor stony paths; And thru the meadows filled with buy That was tho Road-to Yesterday. A child was thero, A school wttB thero, But cross-roads thero were none. The world about seemed bright and Kay That was the Road to Yosterday. A cloud appeared, A momont neared The lonesome path, and passed. Tho noonday sun diffused a ray U lion tlfe Road to Yesterday. Hand In hand,' Their faces fanned . ' By Indian summer winds, A boy and girl passed on thelc way Upon the1 Road to YeBterday, ' " Helen Mitchell. 'Ml .' i: h 4 J ft f$ tute or In tho home. Call or write The Neal Institute. 1502 So. Tenth St.. Omaha, Nebraska, for copy of gree book and contract. Everything strictly confidential. Bank roforoncos. BIG MASS MEETING FOR Y. W. G. A. GIRLS MISS THERESA WILBUR WILL SPEAK TO GIRLS IN TEMPLE. "DAD" ELIOTT WILL SPEAK AT NOON Series of Meetings Held This Week for University Girls Has Been a Great Success Good Speakers and Large Attendance. With such leaders as Miss Florence Par melee and Miss Theresa Wilbur to head the movement, tho Y. W. ('. A. religious campaign Is assuming great er proportions than any similar move ment ever instituted In the Univer sity of Nebraska. The biggest meeting yet held wll be held this evening from 7:15 to 8:30 In the music hall of the Temple. Evory university girl is urged to at tend as It Is to bo especially Interest ing to them. Miss Wilbur will speak and Miss Vera Upton will sing. "Dad" Elliott will spenk at the noon meeting in the Y. W. C. A. rooms today. W. 1). Weathdrford and "Dad" Elli ott spoko to tho glrls.of the university yesterday afternoon on "What It Moans to Be a Christian." The mu sic hall was crowded and all of those who attended wore deeply impressed by the forcible manner and the com mon sense of thoso two gentlemen. Campaign Started Tuesday. The campaign started Tuesday with a mass mooting in Hays hall. Miss Wilbur was the speaker of the even ing, and chose for hor subject, "Our University Lire; Is It Such that Wo Would Like to Have It Produced In All Parts of tho World?" Tho talk was based on the impres sions that Miss Milbur received when sho recently attended tho "World.'s Student Christian Federation" at Ox ford, England, at which meeting thirty different countries werq repre sented. About sevonty-flvo glrjB at tended the meeting and all wore im pressed by Miss Wilbur's forcible wny of speaking. Tho noon meeting in the Y. W. C. A. rooms Wednesday was tho most successful of the year. Ovor ninety girls attended. The mooting wns led by Miss Wilbur. Tie-dlfloua8lon wns based on Psalms 08-19. The workers In tho campaign gave a six o'clock supper In tho association rooms Wednesday. Miss Parmelee Led Meeting. Miss Parmelee led the noon mooting yesterday. Miss Parmelee is tho fore most Y. W. C. A. speaker in tho atato and Is vory popular with university Blrls. ' Miss Wilbur met with tho ladles of the faculty last evening at half past seven. Hor 'object was to interest these ladies in tho big movement that, is now going on. Ypur car faro would pay for a nice lunch at the Boston Lunch. .Why go homo?- -'rA i y