TUB DAILY NEI3RASKAN h Eatlg Nebrajakan Property of THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, Lincoln. FREDERIC C. McCONNELL, Edltor-ln-Chlef. Managing Editor Morrill V. Reed ABBOclato Editor. .Kenneth M. Snyder AsHoclnte Editor Cloyd L. Stewart Literary Editor Chandler Trimble BuBlnoBB Managor C. C. Buchanan ABBlatant Manager J. L. DrlBColl Circulation Manager J. S. Howen SCRIBES C. L. Yochum, J. L. Cutright, H. O.' Hewitt, W. F. Goodman, Winifred See gar, C. N. Brown, F. N. WoIIb, A. R. O'Hanlon, L. W. Home, F. A. Turnure, J. II. Wood, I. K. FroBt. Loon Samuel Bon, Clarence Spier, Bessie Mason Ruth SqulrcH. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2 PER YEAR Payable In Advance 8lngle Copies, 6 Cents Each. TELEPHONES Offlco B-1888. Night Phono B-4204 Editor B-1821. Manager B-1821 Entered at the poBtofllce at Lincoln, NebraBka, aB Becond-claBB mall matter, under tho Act of Congress of March 3, 879. FRIDAY, JANUARY 17. 1013. THE LAST CALL- Saturday will be the last day of the DISCOUNT SALE of the Famous Manhattan Shirts. If you haven't bought be sure you do. FARQUHAR The Home of Good Clothes The Clothier CALENDAR. FRIDAY, January 17: Sigma Phi Epsllon, Temple. : Union. Pnlladlan. Peru Club Banquet. Freshman Law Hop, Fraternity Hall. Kappa Sigma Dancing Party. Sigma XI. Lecture. Phi Delta Thetu, House Party. Delta Delta Delta, House Dance. Sigma Chi, House Dunce. Rushnell Guild, Brownell Hall. SATURDAY, January 18: Girls Club Pary, afternoon, Tem ple. Tegner Society. KomeiiBky Club, Union Hall Spikes, MubIc Hall. English Club with Ruth Munger, Eighteenth and E. Nu Sigma Nu, House Dance. 8IGMA XI ORATOR SELECTED Keyser of Columbia University to Glvo Annual Address at Conferring of Engineering Honors. Word has been received that Prof. C. T. Keyser of Columbia Unlverstry has agreed to give the Sigma XI ad dress at mid-year commencement. He will be entertained during his stay from January 13 to January IB ,at the home of Dean Ellery W. DavlB. Pro fessor Keser Is professor of mathe matics. His address will bo of a philosophi cal nature. Ills address at Nebraska University Is one of several speeches which he will make on a Bpeaklng tour including a number of unlvei skies and colleges. , fc Economics and Education. - By CHANDLER TRIMLLE. Within the last few years the Uni versity of Nebraska has had the strange and altogether delightful ex perlance of 'growing up.' With that growth has come the sense of serious purpose, and the desire to tatke ronk among those instittuions of learning In the United States that are today turning men from their halls Into the Intellectual and political life of the country confident of purpose ana competent to handle the affairs of their state and nation. It is not so long ago that Nebraska was on the frontier. Behind her the great cities were crystalizing on the rim of the sea, while before her those adventurers who would not endure tho dull grind of the towns drove their long winding trains or covered wagon Into the great desert. The tide of tearing howecer, has not moved as fast nor in company with the tide of immigration and settlement. It was quite enough of a life work for those early pioneers to compel the unfertile land to yield a living without troubling themselves about those numerous del icate adjustments of duty and deslro that arise when men become mutually Interdependent In a closely knit social structure of cities and towns. With complexity of dependence there grows, as a necessary concimltant a complex ity of relationships and tho ever pres ent necessity for the master mind that can grasp great bundles of these re lationships in the large and hajidle life in the mass, for It is only by the focused intelligence of those few who have been able to devote themselves to the study of those larger institu tions, such jib big business and finan cial projects and political needs, tfiat the structure 1b held together and kept from slipping down Into a great scat tering of Indian wigwams, with all tho pettiness and Bqualor that such a dis integration implies. The tide of wealth swept thinly HATS SHORT LINES BROKEN SIZES All "BudT 'Why Pay More Hats" $i .95 BUDD 1415 0 Street For Dependable Merchandise see H. Herpolsheimer :-: Company :-: We serve the purest and best HOT and COLD Re FRESHMENTS in the city Huyler's Chocolates $1.00 Fountain Pens $1.00 Safety Razors Student's 3-Course Lunch, 25c (jeJhtih CtJTM7 m mm m M mW. -J M ALLKKmJZAHHHKHAAMn Jones Orchestra Fraternity Hall 3telfman Hani ijxip January 17, 1913 Limited to 65 Tickets $1.25 ji i -fc . J it !". "t -