THE DAILY NEBRASKAM Quick Service Open at All Time. Orphcum Cafo Special Attention to University Students GEORGE OROS. PRINTING 1313 N Street WHITilAN.S GLASSY CANDY MEIER DRUG CO. 13th and O STREETS Work brought to our office any morning by 9 a. m. will be ready at 6 p.m. if wanted GLOBE SOFT WATER LAUNDRY Office 340 S. 11th Plant 1116 to 1130 L St. WARTHON'S Shoe Repair Factory and 5c SHINING PARLOR Students' Headquarters ' 1140 O Street BE A SPORT Get your Safety Razor blades sharpened. See J. W. Trenchard at University or call at 1321 O street, Wilson Drug Store. Tor Quick Service New York Chop House 1340 O St. Always Open Let Us Show You one of those new snug fitting OVERCOATS The newest styles at a price that will satisfy y ou. V i 1 nnlllAA nilOTnil I OUMt WAId UT MUWtUlunu r -Sv SMILE BRINGS CUSTOM PLEASANT FACE ALWAYS AN AS SET IN BUSINFSS. Experiments Also Have Shown That Joy Stimulates All the Bodily Functions, Especially the Cir culation of Blood to Brain. There Is a Chinese proverb which should be memorized pnd taken to heart by every young man starting on a business career, says 11. Addington Hruce. It is short and easily remembered. Here it is: "A man without a smiling face must not open a shop." Applied specifically to the business or shopkeepmg the little proverb may be applied with equal force to almost every vocation in which a man c.n engage. In one particularly interesting set of experiments a man was required to press a spring until fatigue paralyzed his finger. This was repeated at In tervals in order to determine definite ly the average number of pressures he could make at a single sitting. Then he was required to press the spring while thinking of something extremely sad. At once his average pressure power was noticeably low ered. Whereas when he allowed his mind to dwell on exceptionally pleasing thoughts he was able to press the spring far oft ner than when his mind was occupied with nothing in par ticular. Other experiments have proved that Joy stimulates all the bodily func tions and stimulates especially the circulation of blood in the brain, with resultant improvement in the ability to think rapidly and clearly. Accordingly Joy must be regarded as a body builder and mind developer of the first order. If only for this reason the man about to engage In business should cultivate the habit of happiness. But Joy does more than this. If It is a tonic 'net helps a man to carry on his business more efficiently, it is also a magnet that draws to him more business wherewith to demon strate his efficiency. Everybody Is attracted by a smil ing face, and especially by the smil ing face that speaks eloquently of inward Joy and self-confidence. Every body is repelled by the gloomy coun tenance that testifies to self-distrust, and hints at present or expected fail ure. In the one case people unconscious ly say to themselves: "Here is a forceful, capable, genial fellow. It will be pleasurable and safe to do business with him. He can evi dently make good bis promises." In the other care their unconscious comment is: "There is something wrong with this man. Best keep away." Gloom, to put it tamely, is a mar velous business killer. Joy is an equally marveIou3 business winner. Exchange. Sponge Thrown at Him, Sues. Leon Janow, who admits he Is "weak and diminutive," had a bill to collect from Solon L. Frank, 225 West Twenty-third street, New York. He got word that Frank was in the club rooms of the Fulton club at Durland's Tiding academy, and went there to collect. "When I made the demand," Janow alleges in a complaint he filed in the supreme court against Frank, "the de fendant roared at me, rushed at me, kicked me in the thigt and threw a sponge at me several times." After the sponge had been thrown at him, Janow avers, he had to go and see a doctor. He wants 35,000 damages. Hit Handicap. "As I was engaged in the very dis agreeable and undignified task of split ting up some hickory knots yester day," related Jay B. Iden, the poet. wayfarer came along and offered to rell;ve me of the Job in return for a pair of my old trousers. Unfortunate ly. I had them on at the time Industrial Pioneers Hit Devious and Difficult Trails to Gain Gtlden Returns. Opportunities for pioneering in In dustry are Just as great today, If not greater, than in the early colonial days. There Is a whole undiscovered country, the extent of which can only be surmised. It Is to be opened by those who are not afraid of difficult Journeys, disappointments and hard work, by those who have all the en thusiasm of the old industrial pioneers combined with the experience of the years and the new knowledge which has come upon the world. For these latter-day pioneers there awaits at the Journey's end perhaps the pot of gold, or better still, the knowledge that they have contributed some use ful product or process to man. The country has entered upon a new conquest far greater than the first and is to be reconquered through re sources created by the new knowl edgethe application of science to In dustry. Romance and adventure are not to be lacking In the new pioneer ing, either, for those who fearlessly pursue Its devious and difficult ways. The list of useful discoveries Is long. Among some of the more sim ple that have largely contributed to the American industries are new methods for making glue, fertilizer out of scrap leather, iots In which glass is made that have twice the life of the old ones, ways for harden ing fats, which is so important In the manufacture of soap, better composi tion flooring, new Illuminating glass, utilization for low-grade copper ore, new uses for crude petroleum and Im provements in the mating of bread. Sweethearts and Wrinkles. There was love in the bakery. The young woman who was doing up the evening's bread for various customers never turned her face from the street. She found bread, paper "and twine with the sureness of the blind, and when criticized rather irritably by one dyspeptic old man, admitted brazenly that she was watching for her sweet heart. "Didn't know you had one," said the dyspeptic, laying dovrn ten cents for his gluten bread. "Didn't?" she said. "IK)k at me." . We all looked at her. She was plain, yet there was that nbout her which, we knew, meant sweetheartlng from the cradle to the grave. I did not be grudge her this quality. It was highly satisfactory to see woman command ing attention whose hair vras not curly and whose wrinkles were rather en snaring than otherwise. Both W and I felt more comfortable over our faces, which Time had already begun to pat and paw with firm, If kindly, fingers. We left the bakery mentally, at least, hand in b.and.From "We Discover New England," by Louise Closser Hale, in the Century Maga zlne. The "Gotten Glow." Gardens are not gardens these days without the goldea low. Tall, stately branches, with a wealth of golden yel low flowers, it U one of summer's showiest blossoms blooming from July until October. It seems to like this latitude so well fbat it spreads from year to year Ilk? a weed, until the gardener must ctft them away or they would overrun tbe plantation. The flower is only a little removed from the brown-yed Susan and the hedgehog coneflwer of the western prairies, where probably It gets Its growing habit Its family name Is rudbeckla, given In honor of Claus Rudbeck, a Swedish botanical writer. Of late year it has become ex tremely popular In gardens of ama teurs and professionals. It is a hardy perennial, reaches a height of five to six feet and is adapted especially to border planting. Its double golden yellow flowers &so are much valued for cutting. Ney Religions. In religion tNe Jewish outgrew the Egyptian and Assyrian,, the Christian cutgTew the Jswlsh, the western the eastern church. What next? Will it be a New Chrlitianlty or Hyper-Chris-tlanity? Shall we in our progress ?et beyond the oM Christianity of Neo-conereratlonallsm. i " I in 4vh:r A v I it ,vlvv x H s " ? " " " r ' ; , v f tit VALESKA SURATT at Orpheum this week, in a new version of 'BLACK CREPE AND DIAMONDS Genuine Hawaiian Hand made si" tW SOLE U'iS AbLNlb Southern (Slifoknia 3Iusic SOUTH:BRaDvAY- LOS ANGELES. CALIF. U - I iiiisyii The sweetest toned and most charming stringed instrument ever invented is the Hawaiian Ukulele, originated and manufactured by M. Nunes & Sons, of Honolulu. It is easy to learn to play the Ukulele. No previous knowledge of music is necessary. Our self instruction book tells how. Play solos within a week. The ideal in strument for voice accompaniment. Splendidly adapted for quartette work. Indispensible to a stringed orchest rtt FREE: History of Hawaiian Music and complete catalogue of genuine M. Nnnes & Sons Hawaiian hand-made Ukuleles. Write us to day and mention this paper. Priced $10, $12.50 and $15. In struction book included free. Shipped prepaid to any part of the United States. We carry a complete line of Hawaiian music for the piano, ukulele, steel guitar, etc. Send for catalogue mailed free on request. ALSO HAWAIIAN STEEL GUITARS S - AGENTS n