THE DAILY N E B E A SUN : L- , L A sense of humor ia the rudder that keeps the ship of matrimony from be lng wrecked la many a domestic storm. The heart la like any other muscle the more you use It, the more agile It grows; and the oftener a man falls In love, the more easily and lightly he seems to do It Mysterious cards calling for funds to fleht conscription In Ireland are he lng circulated In New York under the alleged patronage of the Geraldine club, an Irish organization. The crea tlon of a revolution In Ireland whether conscription is put into effect or not Is said to be the object of the leaders of the movement C. A. TUCKER JEWELER S. S. SIIErtfJ OPTICIAN 1123 O STREET Lincoln Candy Kitchen The Unl. Home of Light Lunches Soft Drinks Fresh Home Made Candies You get service, quality and quantity. Come and see us Cor. 14 & 0 If You Want School Supplies, Camera Supplies, Developing and Printing, Magazines, Sta tionery, Pure Candies, Come to THE SUGAR BOWL 1552 0 Street. LC. Smith &Bro. Typewriter Co. BALL BEARING LONG WEARING New, Rebuilt and Rentals 125 No. 13th St. B2080 BE PROUD OP YOUR CLOTIIES You will have reason to if you take advantage of the HIGBY Cleaning and Dyeing Service 10 Years of Leadership PERSONAL Dean Winchester of the United States geologlcl survey Is In Lincoln for a visit of two or three days with relatives and friends. Mr. Winchester was graduated from the University in 1907. and has since been in govern ment service. This summer he nas been scouting through Wyoming and Utah in search of oil bearing shale. This rock when roasted gives off the crude oil. The government believes that in a few years oil will be worth enouEh to warrant this more expen Rive means of getting it None was found in Wyoming, but Utah is full of the Bhale. To date, the government has refused to wlthdarw any of this land from entry, on the theory that requires a manufacturing process and therefore the land Is not strictly min eral bearing. Mr. Winchester Is now on his way to Washington for the win ter. Since he left a third little kid die has arrived and the father has not seen him yet. The Sigma Alpha Iota sorority gave a dinner party at the Lincoln hotel last evening. About fifteen plates were laid. Robert Simmons, '15, Law, is In law business In Gehring, Nebr. Ida Darls of Omaha is spending the week-end at the Delta Gamma House. Leo Felman. '17. of Falrbury, is in Chicago in the ' advertising business with his brother. Carleton Young, '17, Lincoln, will enter Hamilton college this fall. Mr. Ewing, secretary of the Y. M. M. C, will continue his -work In London, England, as secretary of prisoners' war camps, for the present time. L. L. Ewing, '15, of Harblne, Nebr., Is teaching school at Dalcine, Nebr. Stanley Marsh, 15, of Crete, is prin cipal of Havelock high school. "Sometimes," remarked the Man on the Car, "the Will of the Majority makes less noise than the Pessimism of the Minority." Toledo Blade. It takes a man of great courage to be a judge at a baby show. It's as difficult to find a friend as it is to lose enemies. Probably more intellectual women would marry if they were asked. Every time a man gets It in the neck he realizes how little lie amounts to. Some men get rich because of their ability to separate others from their coin. Ever notice how easy It is for a person inflicted with insomnia to go to sleep when it is time to get up? If you happen to hear a woman praising a man's wisdom it's a sure sign that he is not her husband. A man never thinks of marrying, Dearie, until his heart begins work ing faster than his head and its emo tions out-race his Judgment. Somehow, too much intellect goes to a woman's head and makes her so dizzy that she can't see she Is Ret ting on a man's nerves or trampTlng on his vanity. A man endows the woman he loves with wings, a halo and a pedestal and then leaves her to stand In a niche in the wall, while he runs off to see what other women are like. NEVER AGAIN FOR Hlf.l! MR. BURLISON DECLARES HIM SELF IN STRONG TERMS. Good Reaions Why He 8hould Make' Resolution Not to Bring the 8un- day Dinner From the City "Why, Henry 1" There was the look of a man with troubled soul In the face of Mr. Henry Burllson when he reached his home one Saturday evening. The smllin face of his wife did not lessen the look of grim determination in the face of Burllson. A wife with far less In tuition than Mrs. Burllson bad would have discovered that something had gone wrong, and Mrs. Burllson asked, "Why, Henry, what has happened?" Burllson stepped Into the vestibule of his home and dropped the suit case he carried to the floor with a dull thud. His voice had an edge like a blade as he said: "Something has happened that will never happen again If I live to be so old that Methuselah will seem like a kid when compared with me. This Is the laBt time I save 15 cents by tak ing that suit case downtown with me on Saturday and bring home our Sun day dinner in It to save express charges the very last time!" "But you haven't told me what hap pened." "You would have seen what hap pened if you had been with me Just aa I reached the subway stairs. I s'pose I had forgot to push down the clasps that help to hold the suit case to gether, and the thing was so crammed full that It was too much for the self- locking arrangement, and the thing opened right at the top of the stairs." "Why, Henry!" "You'd say 'Why, Henry!' if you had seen a six-pound Philadelphia capon traveling down those stairs, followed by three big yellow grapefruit and half a dozen apples!" "Why, Henry!" "A bunch of celery rolled down two or three steps, and a man racing down the stairs stepped on It and slipped, and he threatened to sue me for dam ages! You will find the print of a woman's boot heel on that pound of butter, and I left the dozen eggs I had bought on the subway stairs, for I would have needed a shovel to have scraped them up after they had rolled down six Iron Bteps! One of the grapefruit rolled between the feet of an old lady going down the stairs, and she gave a yell like a maniac and called for the police! A grinning Idiot caught up one of the grapefruit and flung It up toward me, and two other men pelted me with the apples!" Oh, Henry!" 'The bottle of maple sirup spread over six of the steps, and the people carried It home on the soles of their shoes; and the paper came off the soup bone I had bought, and I left it lying at the foot of the subway stairs. All Is, this is the very last time you ever hear of me saving 15 cents in that way! My lacerated feelings are worth at least a quarter, and " "Oh, Henry!" ' "I left half of my stuff ra the sub way, and the other half will taste bit ter to me when I think of that gap ing, grinning, giggling, tittering mob that saw me standing there vith my empty and open suit case in my hand and all that Btuff traveling down the subway stairs! 'Why, Henry!" Judge. Use for Onions. Onions are good for cleaning steel articles that have rusted. Rub the rust spots with a piece of onion and leave for 24 hours. Wash and polish with bathhrick dust, moistened with turpentine. Wash again in suds and scald with clear water.- Knives that have rust spots of long standing should be plunged Into an onion and allowed to stand for some time. Finish the cleaning process as above. Work Demanded of Recruits. The English recruit Is expected to put every rifle shot fnto an eight-inch ring at 100 yards. The territorials must put 80 per cent of all shots into a 12-lnch ring at that distance. The French soldier is required to put half of his shots into an l?-inch ring at the same range. LIKE THE EGYPT OF 0LU Country Has Seen Little Changs While the Rest of the World Has Been Advancing. In Journeying to Assouan from Thebes the traveler cannot fail to be Impressed by the two beautiful tem ples of Edfu and Kom Ombo. .The former, situated almost miaway the Journey, Is of special Interest be cause It is the best preserved of all the Egyptian temples. It was a center of the cult of Osiris, whose death and rising again was celebrated every spring within its close. , The festival began with deep mourning. Proces sions of priests marched around the walls deploring the death of their god In ifce contest with the evil one. In the sanctuary lay the mummy, person ified by a priest, while a priestess who represented Isis wept over her dead lord and begged for his return. At last the resurrection morning came, the mummy arose, and Joy reigned among the worshipers. Again proces sions formed upon the walls and, marching with banners snd musical instruments, proclaimed the risen lord to those who stood about. A few miles away is Kom Ombo, the beautiful temple of Sebekv the croco dile rod. whose devotees hated the worshipers of Osiris as fiercely as in later times the followers of the prophet hated the Coptic monks whom , they found before them in this very valley. Like Edfu. it dates from the days ai the Ptolemies, who built both build ings on ancient sites. The rulers oi that time were Hellenists, but their architecture was that of , ancient Eenvt. bo firmly rooted In the land were the old dynastic traditions. Per sian, Greek and Roman came ana carved their names uoon the temples, but left no mark UDon the unchanging spirit of Egypt Not even today Is there any alteration, for still the houses In the villages se built as of old, and over them rise the pigeon towers, veritable dvIods. exactly line the towered gateways of the ancient temples. "Royal Temples of the Mile," by William Warfleld in Travel. Coal From, the Arctic. A few years ago, the idea of getting coal from Spltzbergen, one of the most desolate islands of the Arctio ocean, was a topic for romancers of the Sun day supplement type. Now it is a fact of considerable moment in many of the world's markets. : A single company, financed chiefly by American capital, mined nearly 40,000 tons of coal from Spltzbergen last year. The-oeposit of fuel In the far North ia said to be singularly easy to work. It comes In a single seam about four feet thick, stretching along the coast for 30 miles. The surrounding rock Is so solid that timbering Is not needed. The temper ature is always below the freezing point In the present workings, which does away with the need of pumps. In fact the only real difficulty is that of Setting men and motion pictures have gone far to solve that problem. Yet for every ton of coal in Spltzbergen there are ten In' Alaska of at least equal quality, closer to a hungry mar ket. The arctic zone won't make s real dent in the fuel market till our big northwest territory gets in action. Notes From Commerce Reports. A German patent has been granted to H. Stefferis for making a lubricant from beet sugar molasses. . American interests are about to erect factories in China for the manu facture of dried and desiccated eggs. The Krupp works are making a burglarproof safe, constructed of steel, which required one and ore-half hours with an oxyacetylene flame to produce a hole two inches in diameter in a plate one and one-half Inches thick. The government oil fields of Chubut, Argentina, produced In 1914 more than 275,000,000 barrels of oil, which was refined there. The world's coffee production In 1914 was 893,000 tons, a decrease of 92,000 tons from 1913. Walked Three Miles In Sleep. Although never rated as a chronU sleepwalker, Mrs. W. A. Johnson, wife of a farmer living near Salina, Kan, rose about four o'clock a few mornings ago. dressed herself and walked three miles to a hospital In Salina, where, still asleep, she fell exhausted on the tens and was later found by nurses. OLIVEfl THEATRE Every Night 8:15. Mats. Wed, and Sat. 2S30 BARROW-HOWARD PLAYERS Week of Sept. 20-25 . "THE THIRD PARTY" Next Week "Girl In the, Taxi" Nights, 50c,' 35c A 256. '' Mat. 25c A 15c SPORTING DUCHESS By Cecil Raleigh Featuring . ROSE COUQHLAN See Most Thrilling Horse Race Ever Shown DOLLY AND MACK Musical Entertainers DANCOURT A MACK In "Dippy Dope" "Sace the Coupins" "The Call of the City" "Hearst-Selig News" Loeb's Orchestra Phone B 3708 325 So. 17th The Dutch Mill AT THE WINDSOR Special 25c dlnnerm? for students. One block from campus. MRS. E. J. BEAM AN Manager GOOD MUSIC 234 No. 11th St. Lincoln, Nebr. GEORGE BROS. PRINTING 313 N Street Swell, Snappy Fall Caos The $1.50 Kind V JEJ ill poyvi m amm