V '8 l i! i. J i THE NEBRASKAN-HESPERIAN. !i.? "I 'I 1 '1 " 1 i . s !"1 ' it I J ( . i, ;l i. I; i 'i, I II t , ' IS'!1' I' in THIS WEEK'S EVENTS. Faculty recital In chapel Wednesday cveuing. Y. M. G. A. meeting Sunday afternoon at o'clock. Musical program In chapel Friday at chapel hour. IJocse meeting Friday evening. Everyone Invited. English club Saturday evening at the homo of Cal Atwood. Literary society meetings Friday evening at usual hour. Geneva meeting, Y. W. C. A.. Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Regular meetings of the debating t lubs Saturday evening. Foot ball game with Kansas City medics on the campus Saturday at 3:30 o'clock. PERSONAL. A. L. Doal, '98, has entered the law jchool. Miss May Prentiss, '99, left last Fri day for Albany, N. Y. Edgar A. Balrd of Omaha has en tered the senior law class. Judge Reese made a trip to Fremont Wednesday and returned Thursday. Miss Laura Woodford was pledged ast week to the Kappa Alpha Theta. E. R. Morrison, '98, has returned rom the east and has entered the law school. Miss Tinol Bratt of Beatrice entered the university last week as a special student in music. H. G. Shedd left Thursday morning 'or Iowa City, where he will visit ex Chancellor MacLean. Miss Mae Burr entertained for Delta Gamma Friday evening at her home on Fifteenth and H streets. Frank Manchester went to Omaha Tuesday to be present at the wedding of his s!ster, which occurred Thursday. Miss Louise Burruss of Geneva and Miss Katherine McPhecly of Minden 'vere pledged last week to the Pi Beta .'hi. Carl Engberg, Instructor in mathe matics, has been kept from his class or the week past by a severe attack of . ever. Miss Alice Boyle, Katherine Sterling .'nd Laura Hunt were elected to mem ership in the Palladian society Friday . vening. R. A. Tynan, '99, is at Deer Lodge, Mont. He wont west partly on account f his health, which he writes has rreatly improved. R. E. Benedict turned out for foot iall practice Monday for the first time 'his season. He will play his old posi tion right half. Mrs. Louis Marshall entertained for Kappa Kappa Gamma Saturday after noon at her residence on Twenty-first and Washington streets. George Shedd, formerly of the uni versity and now principal of the Ash and high school, was a guest at the ?hl Psi house over Sunday. R. D. Kingsbury returned Thursday and will soon be back on the foot ball team. He is in good condition, having played on the Givnd Island base ball team during the past summer. Edwin P. Samplo, a graduate of Kan--as university ard a member of Phi lamma Delta and the law fraternity of ?hl Delta Phi, spent Monday In Lin coln, visiting at the university and with his fraternity brothers. C. C. Norris, who was In the univer sity In 189-1-5, is now at San Francisco, waiting until hla regiment is sent to ho Philippines. Ho is n sergeant in Company M, Thirty-second volunteers. Wayne Larrabeo of Company M, First South Dakota volunteers, is sick in the hospital at the Presidio, San Francisco, Onl. Mr. Larrabee was for merly a student of the university. While in the Philippines he was a clerk at Gen. Otis' headquarters and later at Gen. McArthur's headquarters. Paul Fitzgerald has returned from Philadelphia, where he has been attend ing the national convention of Sigma Chi. H. D. Landis was elected as dele gate, but on account of sickness was not able to attend. Mr. Fitzgerald took his place. Later portions of tho pro ceedings will be published. Among other things, A. A. Bischoff was elected praHor for this province. LOCALS. Gregory the Coal Man. Books. The Co-op., 322 N .11th. New books. University Book Co. New books. University Book Store. Full line of writing tablets at Univer sity Book Store. Will Johnson of Omaha visited the Phi Psi boys over Sunday. Nebraskan subscriptions taken at the University Book Store. Lectutres and regular work in the college of law began Tuesday. Whatman, Crane and Weston draw ing papers at University Book Store. Two new members were received into the Union literary society Friday even ing. The membership of the university Y. M. C. A. has reached one hundred and sixty. Ben LaSelle of Beatrice was shaking hands with friends on the campus last week. Full line of tablets, writing pads and notebooks at the University Book Store. Only a few days left in which to se cure season tickets for the Y. M. C. A. Star course. Uncalled for shirts and underwear at half price. Harper's shirt factory, 1012 0 street. Our university pins have come and are going fast Get one at tho Univer sity Book Store. Students should see Charles B. Greg ory (class of '91) at Eleventh and 0 for coal and wood. Old cadets were assigned gimp Wednesday and hereafter will drill In the manual of arms. Students may leave laundry at The Co-op. for the Best Laundry Co. Best work and prompt delivery. The date for the sophomore hop has been finally fixed for October 20. It will be held in Courier hall. Wait for our new consignment of Waterman pens, every style, to be here this week. University Book Store. Perfect comfort nnd beauty com bined in Jenness Miller shoes for ladies. Price ?3.50. Mayer Bros, Over twelve hundred students have registered this year. Five hundred and forty-live of these aro new students. Bicycle and camera supplies of all kinds. Typewriting and mimeograph ing. At "Tho Co-op.," 322 N. 11th St. Factory to feet University shoes. ?3.00; Regent shoes, $3.50. No better shoes on enrth. One price, one profit. Mayer Bros. Oamoron's cafe is tho best place In town for students to board. Open at nights tho year round. 118 South Eleventh street. Tho university Y. M. C. A. will "bo represented by twonty delegates at tho btate convention to bo hold In South Omaha October 12-15. The Greek department Is offering this semester what has heretofore been known as the second semester of sec ond preparatory Greek. A special class In advanced English Is being organized. Those desiring to take advantage of this class should con fer with Schuyler Miller. Tho sopohmorc and freshmen classes have organized foot ball teams, which are putting in some hard practice pre paratory to the class games. Prof. Maggi organized a class in ora tory Friday night for the law students to meet hereafter on Wednesday night from 8 to 9 o'clock in the law room. The use of tho university library for reading and reference by the general public has Increased perceptibly since the city library was destroyed by fire. Horace Rose, one of the international secretaries of the Y. M. C. A., will be tho guest of the university Y. M. C. A. for two days after the state conven t'on. The prospects are good for new ath letic grounds next year. Some of tho vacant blocks a short distance from the campus are to be secured for this pur pose. The girls' gymnasium classes began work last Tuesday morning. Miss Al berta Spulck and Miss Adeloyd Whit ing will assist Miss rfarr during the coming year. A neat little building is being erect ed west of the power house. This con tains scales for weighing the thousands of tons of coal which the university consumes annually. The law school now has an enroll ment of one hundred and twenty. It Is expected that this number wlllbe In creased to one hundred and fifty before the end of the year. Largest stock of second-hand books, most complete supply of new books, Y. M. C. A. studies, tablets, everything at the sign of The Co-op., just half block from library, 322 N. 11th. The Delian boys' debating club ad journed Saturday evening after a short business meeting in order to attend the reception of the Y. M. 0. A. and the Y. W. C. A .to new students. The library has received two large cases of books bought by Professor Fossler while in Germany. These care fully chosen volumes will greatly strengthen the German section of the library. The twenty-s'x large boxes for stu dents' books In In the lower hall of the library building have been lettered from A to Z, so that each student may use the box bearing the first letter of h's surname. A new oak bookcase has been placed In the library reading room to accom modate tho rapidly growing files of English and American periodicals. It will hold eight hundred and seventy five volumes. Dr. Ward has recently received from the government an official map of Porto Rico and the surrounding waters. It will be used In the study of govern ment collections, on which Dr. Ward is now engaged. Among the new students who have registered at the conservatory from out of town during the past weok are Grace on.ppen, Laura Phaley, Zelia Griffen, Julian Munger, Lottie Talbot and Go' neve Johnson. Alpha Tau Omega Initiated William Ely from Alnsworth and Rjiini, n Pntitrllnn. t m. . . 'I w...w..,h Hum loicaman last weok. Mr. Ely Is a son of Dr. Ely, who was re cently nominated on tho republican ticket for regent. The law library has rocontly been supplied with eight now incandescent Lghts. The library is now fitted with the convonionces necessary to a good reading room and most of the students do their, work there. THE B0K XXOFXX 3h&ikjQ&Jkimi Y . Has been known for years to University students as the best place in Lincoln to buy the right kind of goods at the right price. The department is stocked with a complete line of Foun tain Pens, Student's Note Books, History Paper, Tab lets, Pencils, and all other school and college supplies. You can buy a fourteen karat gold Fountain Pen for 69c; History Paper as low as 5e. per 100 sheets; History Covers from 9c. to 15c. each, and all other supplies at equal ly low figures. Our miscellaneous book stock contains all the latest publications as well as the standard works by well known authors, text books, diction aries, translations, etc. Music and Pictures.. We sell all the latest music at one -half the published price. We also envvy a com plete line of vocal and instru mental sheet music contain ing 4,000 pieces at 5c. per copy. Pictures framed from 25c. upwards. Depart-