u 1 .. i i v v u s o o n u o q a U V ri t e a n to a t" a 4 ' The Nebraskan. WwVtjr Nonpnicr IkkiipiI l!viry 1'rldnj Nnnn nt tlw Unlvermty ut NVIimkKh, liNTKIlKll Ad HKVMvl'I.AM SlAII. MATTKII. V, T. ItlLKY, MnnnitltiR Killtur AMrlTK. MIm Jo l.ottrltlco, Knclt.v a I.. Slmtf Mllltiirv J. 0. llllrliinnn, I.oml C. K. AilnuiK. ...... Lot'iil 1.. D. Xlnrtln ,. ....I.ornl HKt'OHTMl. S. n. Slnn r. 1). Wild l'rircjxryrnr... $ ." Uy innll .S I'rlro piT ninnlli . .10 Aiultvm nil Cowmniittmln") tu Tiik Nriihakkan, UnlwrKliy ol Ni'litu kit. dollnra la Hip sum paid for tho use of tho grounds for tlio Kansas anio Why cannot our malinger stnlo Ills own prlco to thoso men, then If It Is not granted let us fit up a flold for our own use. It would not take imu.i more, Tho same thing Is true In regard to the Omaha games. Wo are now prac tically at the mercy of tho Omaha inn verslty cluh. One hundred and sov onty-slx dollars and fifty cents. oxaetl one-third of tho receipts of tho Iowa game, nfter all tho expenses were taken out, Including advertising. Is the amount this organization received for tho use of tho grounds. This Is simply outrageous. Add to this tho condition of tho grounds. Compllinontarlos were distributed among a number of boys for clearing the grounds that Thurs day morning. A little of tho work was done Wednesday evening. This was noticeable In some places where it was dry. A little attention paid to this matter Wednesday foronoon would have put the grounds In good shape. Further than this, no accounting for those compllmcntarles was made to the business manager. Tho ushers also were Issued passes. We must make different arrange ments for next year. Money comes too hard for us. Better play in an open field and pass the hat for contributions. We would no doubt receive more. If we make arrangements in season we can secure almost our own terms. Iowa deserves lots of credit for the way she pluoklly played through the football season. In t'ie face of the their purpose. The question Is not one grwuost uiiucuiues. ami win no en of sentiment or of what will mk the thtisinsm nor oncouragoment, she dog most Impreashe showing, but of bus!- gHy Pt at It. and sent the strongest ness. wholly. How to dispose of the , tm against Nebraska that she had books as to make them most useful is yt met We are sorry Iowa vented Someone tells a story of a man who professed to bo a great admirer of Dickons. Ho possessed a very fine edi tion of the complote works of his fa vorite author, which ho prosorvod In the original state, with unout pages. He would not allow anyone to handle them or look at thorn, under any cir cumstances, and ho dusted them care fully over day. Tho remonstrants against a departmental library seem to have a similar notion of the purpose of a library. A library is not meant to be looked at and to serve merely as an Imposing spectacle. Impressive of the saying that of making books there is no ond. Tho university does not buy books to put ihom on shelves In a building where visitors may see thorn In orderly rows, and mnrvol at their number. Hooks are bought to be used, and the more they are used the better they serve HANDY VOLUME GLASSOS. 16 imi bouiiil in I I1R1 i) Ik. C loth 21 Cents per Volumo. ByMntl,25o. flcrnololiclmcr Co.'o Hook OM'AKTMIiKT. The Abbe Constantln, Ludovlc Hel evy Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lew la Carroll. Tho Autocrat of the Ureakfast Table, Oliver Wendell Holmes. Uacon's Essays, Francis llacon. Beyond the City, A. Conan Doyle. A Bird of Passage. By .the author ot "Ships That Pass In the Night." Baa trice Harradcn. Book of Golden Deeds. C. M. Yonge. Black Beauty. Anna Sewell. Browning's rooms, Robert Browning Burns' Poems, Robert Burns. Carlyle's History of the French Rev lution. Volume 1, Thos. Carlylo. Carlyle's History of tho French Rev olution. Volume 2, Thos. Carlylo. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, lord Byron. The Coming Race. Ixml Lytton. The Confessions of an English Opium Eater. Thos. DeQulncey. Cranford, Mrs. Cnkell. Crown of Wild Olive, John Ruskin. Dickens' Story Teller. Chas. Dickens. Dickens' Shorter Stories, Chas. Dick ens. Dream Life. D. G. Mitchell (Ik Mar vel.) i Dreams. Olive Shreiner (Ralph Iron.) Dmmmond's Addresses. Dnimmond. Emerson's Essays. 1st Series. Emerson's Essays. 2d .Series, boxed. ' Lamb. Teachings of Eplctltus. Tennyson's Pooms. two vols., boxed, Lord Tennyson. Thoughts of MnrctiB Aurollus Anto nlus. Through tho Gates of Gold, Mnbel Collins. Tlllyloss Scandal, J. M. Barrio. Treasure Island, Robert Ixuls Ste venson. Twlco Told Tales, Nathaniel Hawthorne. I'nelo Tom's Cabin, Hnrrlet ncecht I Stowo. "'"I Vanity Fair, two vols., boxed, ty. jil Vicar of Wakefield, Oliver o, smith. Tho Wide, Wldo Woild. two vol. boxed, Ellzaboth WethorU (Sn.,,1 Warner). Wonder Book for Boys and airhJ Nathaniel Hawtliorne. j Whlttlor'a Poems, John Greonltnl Whlttlor. l Paine, Wnrfol & Bunstend are lead ing clothiers and fashionable tailors, 1136 0 street. : A TJ i MRBW F0R The Latest Haxr Cut THEY SAY WE'RE ALL RIGHT. S. E. Cor. 12th & 0. $kw LATEST. the whole matter. , all her spite against Nebraska. If she ) R, W. Emerson As to this there can be no serious had been In the shape she was Thurs- disputc. Books must be where they are needed and where they are to be used. The scientific department found this out long ago. and surely no one will urge that the botanical library be removed Irom Nebraska hall, or the chemical library from the laboratory building. To do so would diminish the effectiveness of the several scien tific departments by half. It would make advanced work practically im possible. So well is this known that Ihe botanjca'jlbrary is actually dlvldzjL ed into three libraries, one in the her barium, one in the histological labora tory and one in the physiological lab oratory, an arrangement which enables a student in any branch to hare the books he must constantly refer to close 1 at hand, where he needs them. Books are the reagents and appar atus of the classical or histori cal or library laboratory. The students in classical courses goes about his work exactly as "he scientific student in the laboratory, except that one usee books .alone, uliw lut other umjs books and apparatus. If all the apparatus, phys ical, electrical, chemical, zoological and botanical, were gathered in one building, the right would be an impos ing one. It is no more a hardship to remove the ttquipaeet and apparatus of the scientific departments from the places where they must be In constant j use than to remove the books of the classical departments from the places where they mn& and should be used. The objectors probably hare the old fashioned idea that classical studies involve nothing more than the daily grinding oat of a page of Latin and J sixty lines or a Greek tragedy, where such work Is done it makas small dif ference whether books are readily ac cessible oi not. Classical studies are not so understood at the university of Nebraska. If they -ware no one would care where the books ware, for so bookb would be required. The fowUhatl reason Is pnaetteully over, but matters athletic Should not be allowed (U rest. Evan preparations for next year's football arrangements, especially matters connected with the IniKineas and, Should be started imme diately after the holidays, or after the schedule lias been made out and offi cers elected. For instance, there Is no ase megleotlng tto .secure grounds for airnes that are officially scheduled. If terms are sought carllar in the season, w can secure much batter ones. We are In a position to make a praliy strong bluff to the corporation manag ing M street park about fitting sip an atiiletlc field of our own unless iliey grant ais reasonable terms. Eighty day when she met Kansas or Missouri, tho scores of those games would not have been nearly so one-sided. She develojwd astonishing strength since she met Missouri. This behooves the other states to watch Iowa next year. A team that can strengthen itself as she did in such a short tlvne has unlim ited possibilities before it. Iowa now knows what she can do, and the race for the pennant next year promises to be more exciting than usual. Word comes to us that our former chancellor, in his new opsltion. has in augurated all the old customs and the institutions peculiar only to the uni versity of Nebraska at Columbus, O. Three rings call the Janitor: a large gong signals the close of recitation hours; cadets are assembled after the bugle call has been sounded before ch of the buildings. The latest is the formation of a Ladles Faculty club. We are Jnst wondering if they sing the four hundred and seventh hyma to the tune on the bottom of the forty-leveath page. m 'Xuneago pork and Boston beans"' met on the gridiron Thursday. The voluminous prass roports ot the event ware cut vigorously. Chicago will probably recognize the fact that foot ball Is a college game, and that the . American rapubllc does not stand wait- e Essays of Ella. Chas. Iamb. Ethics of the Dust. John Ruskin Evangeline. H. W. longfellow. Favorite Poems. Frankenstein, Mrs. Shelley. Half Hours With Groat Authors. Half Hours With Great Humorists. Half Hours -With Great Novelists. Half Hours With Groat Story Tellers, Heroes and Hero Worship. Thomas Carlylo. Heroes or Greek Fairy Tales. The, Charles Kingsley. House of Seven Gables. The. Na thaniel Hawthorne. House of the Wolf. The. by the au thor of "A Gentleman of France," Stanley J. W53nan. Ideala, by tie author of "Heavenly Twins." Sarah Grand. The Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow, Jerome K. Jerome. Idylls of the King. I.ord Tennyson. Imitation of Christ, Thomas A. Kom- pls. In Moniorlan, Lord Tennyson. John Halifax, Gentleman, two vols., Itoxed. Miss Milock. The Lady of the Lake. Sir Walter Scott. Italia Rookh. Thomas Moore. The Last Hssays of Ella. Charles Lamb. Lays of Ancent Rome. Lord Macau ley. Iays of the Scottish Cavaliers, W. E. Ayloun. Light of Ash, Sir Edwin Arnold. Iongfollows Poems. !1. W. Longfel low. L9rna Doone, two vols., boxed. R. D. Blackmore. Ijove Letters of a Worldly Woman. Mrs. W. K. Clifford. Lowell's poaaif. James Russell low- TJSK u. PEN THAT AIi.L WRITE. IS WaRRMTEO FOR ft YEAR. FOR SALE AT THE CO-OP. SIIIllUllIIIIIIlIIIlUIIIIllIllIlllltlllMIIlllIUlJtlltlllllltlUIItlltlllMIItlltllltlllltlllll.tttlc: I RIPAN S O.VC GIVES I'.EI.IEF. Miiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiujiiiiiiiiiiiiuii:iuiiuiuunuiuuiitiiiiii.Hitiiiiiiiiit;il IfYou Don't Know It lag the result of a contest between two athletic dubs with the same interest It is time you learn the ad vantages of dttiliu,; directly with tho manu facturers. It is not alone tho sav ing iu price that is of couscqueuco aiihougu that is a big item, but it is tue certainty of satisfaction aul ilio Ktiuraulcou quality and lit tUat She makers ot tine clothing alone can Kivw you. Our clot In hi: is practically to order, li it iu"t right, uear-the Millvrerai, ana we ina.se it as. riht can be. We don't j-osn-it anyone to make better goods. We have a Full Line Matter Iboge . . . PRINTER 1115 P Street, Lincoln God Work. CMtDS. PROGRAMS. IN VI -A7IONS Fri. et Eeuomble. HTJTCHINS & HYATT SELL ALL It does tie graat eastern collegiate Go LuclJe. Owen Meredith. Marmlon. Sir Walter Scott. Mill on the Floss, two vols boxed. games, even though Chicago is one of the contestants. Missouri, as everyone expwted. is doing the ""baby act and crying abwut winning the jennanL "We beat Kan sas bon-Qjoo sand we ouglat to have the pennant- Ifs too bad, Missouri, but all t3Mi glory you can hart is the knowledge that you shut out Iowa and tied Nebraska for second jAa-oe in the mae for th cap. Some Ji the beys now ssgag&d In se curing money sufficient to pay for the library steps, which were burned to celebrate the Iowa ridory. are inlaw ing tihat J would have been cheaper to go to Omaha and have a good time In a oivlllzed fashion. If Kansas does get Hie pennant, thei-e Is one thing left for us to do turn out and give our orators an ovation De cember i. We can beat Hiwn with our mouths, anyway. An Individual by iSie miine of IL H. Mudd umpired the Doane-Kansas game. Fortunately he has an extra. letter In Ms name, whksh prevents ccmfiuslon with that of Doane. Mornings In Florence. John Ruskin. Mosses From an Old Manse. Nathan iel Hawthorne. Natural Law In the Spiritual World. Drummond. Paradise LohI. Milton. Past and Frewsnt. Thomas Carlyle. Paul and Virginia. Bernardla de St. PJerre. The Pleasures of Ufe. Sir John lub boek. Foe's Poems. Edgar Allan Poe. The Priaeeaeaud Maud, lord Tessy sos. Queen of the Air. John Ruskin. Rab and J Us Friends. Dr. John Brows. Ra-bselaE. Dr Samuel Johnson. Representative Men. Ralph W. Bw ersou. Reveries of a Bachelor. D. G. Mitch ell ilk Marvel). Sartor Resa'(tns. Thomas Carlyle. Stefiitue and Lilies. John Ruskin. The Scarlet Letter. Nathaniel Haw thorne. Ships That Pass In the Night, Bea trice Harraden. The Sign of the Four, A. Conan Doyle. Sketch Book. Washington Irving. St Mark's Rest, John Rukln. Story of an African Farm. Olive Sehrelner (Ralph Iron). Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Robert Louis Stevenson. A Study In Scarlet, A. Conan Doyle. Tales From Shakespeare. C. and M. Of Furnishing Goods, always correct in stj-le. A alto e are leaders and tho only practical Hatter, in the city. li you wUhto have the correct, style call on us and see for yourtelf. MOWING, KISG & CO., 1013 to 1013 0 Street, Lincoln. Xcb. THE COMMERCIAL BARBER SHOP. DOES THF BEST WOBK. The Finest Bath Booms in the CUy. Student jjal)tiA- evMtJud, Aw&vy tut tlio 120 North I 1th Street. W. F. COLE, Proprietor Capital Jtotel Barber Sfyop Corner 1 1 th & P Sts. SHAVING IOc. H. W. BROWN, DRUGGIST. Books and Stationery, College Text-Boo'ks. jtiid ji CosoyUUt Stock ot Standard and Miscellaneous Books 217 SO. ELEVENTH ST. At Reduced Rates. 1040 0 St. Telephone 225. J. B. U'KlGHT. F. V.. JOIINfcON. J. II. Jcti-r. VtmadtmL Xtce-Fieailent. Cxtinct. Joux A MLS. Ast'l CaUucr. THE Columbia Natl Bank, LINCOLN. NEB. Capital, - $250,000. DJRKCTOSCS: A. S. Kavnomj. Chas. Wist, Tiios. Cocmhav wmttm 1 Ud I i Ktm M3"yitti TWO TRAINS DAILY BimrEEX LIKTCOL3V -ASD- Auburn. Falls City, Atchison, Si Joseph, and Kansas City. City Ticket Office, 1201 0 Street. H. C. lOWHSETO, Oen'l V.tsT.JL. T. J). COUHEtX.. O. r.bT-A