SlilMM UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Vol. X.XVH LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, MAUCH 11, ltJUS. No. HSHKBMBHB My ltrodier. wards mother told mo that her fnco was fair, It had been a gloomy day and the long twi- with great, innocent, bine eyes. light had set in. Belated batallions of clouds were hurrying across the sky. and the splash of the lew scattering raindrops was painfully distinct as I sat in a huge arm chair in the library, staring at the live coals. I had lost the place in my book and forgotten to find it, when ray brother Donald opened the door and said shortly, though gently enough, "I won't bo back until late, Floss. Don't wait" and passed on down the hall. Dorothy died in November. I knew noth about it, but mother said it was the same week that word came that father was dead in an army hospital in the south. I remembered that for Donald, who was always busy, and half the time whistling, great, tall Donald, sat for hours at father's desk with his head on his arms, and sometimes his whole frame quivered and shook. Then, too, mother cried. Yes, indeed, I remembered, and felt Mother used always to wait for Donald, but heavy-hearted for my big brother the only now for three years I had been waiting. There lover I had ever loved. were many things I could not do for him that mother used to do, but this one thing, this waiting to say ''Good-night," I could do. Donald had grown very quiet in these last three years, for -.there was no longer one to whom ho could talk freely. T went to his room at about Ven o'clock to lay another stick on his lire and light his lamp. There were some quaint old letters on a chair by the window and some on the floor with the discolored ribbon that had held them together, and a pink card. 1 picked up the card to tuck it in his card case, when I thoughtlessly read the name, 'Dorothy St. Bride,'' and underneath, written in a girlish hand, "Thursday afternoon at three, Juno 4, 1S(!3." The name was one that Donald never spoke to me. It was mother who had told mo about Dorothy. I oven remembered a day in sum mer perhaps that very ono designated on tho card when 1 had gone to rido with Donald and Dorothy, and sat on her lap and played with her gloves, and the pretty, bright ring on her linger. It was all so unusual, and we were so happy that I never quite forgot the rido. Dorothy's dress was white, and over so soft and thin. I noticed it because it was so much thinner than tho stiff, little, white frock that I wore. I thought her face was beauti ful because sho was good to me, and after- T was still standing with the card in my hand, when I heard Donald's stop on tho stairs. I met him and said Good-night, and kissed him twice oneo for mother and once for Dorothy and I think that he understood. Elsik Mak Blaxdix. I? he Frying Pau, It is too bad that tho U. of N. students can not claim the credit for that shocking piece of originality perpetrated by tho Pennsylvania students. To refuse to lift their voices in chapel to sing the "Spanish Hymn," to stand there dumb, and let the cracked voices of the fac ulty swell the anthem alone, was rather cute. If Spain should try to retaliate by demanding that wo remove their music from our hymn books, we should bo punished, for Spanish air is written over some of our most beautiful common hymns. But neither such a calamity nor war is likoly to come from a college prank of this kind. Just a smile all around. "I told you so" is tho meanest sentence in tho English language. The Frying Pan ab hors it, and wouldn't use it for tho world. But it desires to have you hereafter read the daily papers for rather full and undoubtedly warranted accounts of student porfoxinancea down town, which are participated in ' bythe city "coppers." The Frying Pan won't have Cameras Dry Plates Films Cards Printing Paper at LINCOLN PHOTO SUPPLY CO. 101 So 11th street.