The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 04, 1910, Image 4

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THE DAILY- NEBRASKAN
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""";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
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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
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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.
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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?-
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