CAPITAL CITY COURIER, SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1892 "WOMAN AND HOME. INTERESTING INFORMATION ABOUT THE WHITE HOUSE CHINA. The CiiiiiIiik Wiiiiiun Few Wo mm Man Hitter II1-1I Mum I'muit French Women The MhkIc l"uwir of n VoIci. Women Mny Tntirl Alnup. A very full net of presidential chlim vni bought In Abraham I.IiicoIii'h time. It Is of finest Fretieh poreehiln, with n liordor of crimson purple ir plum color, with deli cate linen mul dots of K'old, nml tlm plutes, plnttcrs nnd unuccrs Imvu ullnhtly senl lopod c(1?es. In tliu eenter of the platen nml on the sides of the dishes mid small pieces Is 11 very spirited version of tlm coiit of nrms of the United States, with tho motto "K plurlhiiH uiiuni" tipoti 11 clouded background of nohl. A platuiuiil cup of this set ivro now In possession of Miss Hen rlettn I). Lyon, of Stnten Island. Thlsde sign Is very dlgul lied mul appropriate, mid, with tin1 substitution of u him; border with Kilt ours of liidlun corn, was repro duced for Mrs. Harrison, I'lntc.s of this Abrahnm Lincoln net Hold at I lit; (Jovernor Lyon Male for $I.'J.1 each, and little, covered custard or egg cups for f l,M) each. I have recently had soinoof these plates olTens! to mo for twenty-live dollars apiece. Por tions of this set t 111 remain and nro used nt the White House. The General firant net Is well known and Is very handsome. The border Is of buff and gold, broken once by a small United States shield in high colors. In tho center is a well painted spray or hunch of flowers, many being the wild flowers of tho United States. The coll'ee cups of this set were ordered for use. at thu wedding of tho president's daughter, anil woio known as the "Nelly (irant cups." Of the beautiful and costly set ordered by Mrs. Ilujes too much Is known, and too ninny cheaper copies have been sold, and tuny b seen in any largo china shop, to make it woith while to give any detailed description here. It was made at Limoges by tho HiWllaiids, as was a No thu "(irnnt Bet." It makes a line room decoration when the pieces are arranged In the beau tlful bullet that President Arthur had tnnde for it, and is more satisfactory iu tlint position than when in use on the table. It may lie asked how all these pieces of presidential china came to be found iu pri vate collections, and offered for sale and so generally distributed over thu country. A very reprehensible custom existed un til recent years (and indeed may still be possible) of selling at auction at the end of each presidential term, or In thu middle if thought necessary, whatever household effects the house steward and house occu pants chose to consider of no furtliiir use. These presidential sales weru of course eagerly attended by relic hunters. At such a salu in President Grant's d a lot of "old truck," as it was irreverently called, valued at S-VH) brought jii.TlK). Mrs. Enrle's "China Collecting iu America " Tlm ('inning Woniiiii. Miss Hebecca S. Itlce, principal of the Chicago girls' higher school, has spoken of "thu coming woman" as follows: Will the women of the coining genera tion be like the women of a generation agof Fathers and mothers, sending away their daughters for along course of uni versity study, ask this question anxiously, for tliere has been a great deal that wa.s lovable ami beautiful iu the old fashioned American women. Wu shall not want to tnlsH a virtue nor a grace In thu new gener ation. Wu shall not want the eyes dim and absent from poring over books that should be bright witli homu love, nor the mind on a visit to thu stars when ft should be shedding its own light upon a house hold. Hut, friends, thu coming woman, U you send her to college ami do all you can to let her find out what she, was imidu for, will not be quite what thu passing wom an Is. I do not think you will llku her less. Shu will be freer. You may Imvu to adjust yourselves a little to accommodate her. I do not think it would be quite fair of you to expect, when she comes from college with honors equal to thoso of your son's, and, besides these, with new Ideas to which you have not chanced to give attention, all the adjustment to come from her side. If be is true, she will come back to you worthier than when she went away; but you will find It wise to give thu newly awakened abilities room to grow and bloom. You may find liei more worthy, even in thu old way of love, than ever be fore. She will want "to do something." As I aid before, she will feel it a duty to do something, I hope, .Make room for her and welcome her efforts. Shu will not do her work like a man. Shu will arrive at her ends In a different way, which will probably be quite as good. Kxpect It, and he will add new elements to thought, new meanings to research, new powers to the expression of art, as she has already added oew wisdom to thu administration of thu large philanthropies to which you have so fully admitted her. Few Women Man II litem. Are women learning to hate inenf Of course there have always been and will al ways be individual man haters, just as there have always been and will always be individual woman haters. Some men are born bachelors, some women are created spinsters iu the cradle, and they continue spinsters to the grave. Thu Instinct of spinsterhood seems implanted in them, Men anil the ways and habits of men are uncongenial to them. Strength greater than their own repels them, manners dif ferent from theirs, habits which they can not share.appall and disgust them, These women do hate men, hut they aru very few and far between. A more numerous class dislike men bo cause they have been educated Into such a frame of mind by misfortunes or sorrows brought upon them thiougli male agency. They judge thu male from thu individual and look at all through thu black spectu cles presented to them by one. Hut we believe that this man hutlm craze is a passing phase of thu time, not deeply rooted If rooted at all not well nourished, not widely spread. It is a phnsu connected with the Increased activity no ticeable among women, their increased and increasing anxiety to prove to the world that they have Intellects, originallt), tal ents and powers, which they mean tu use for their own personal benefit and for the benefit of others I. e men. They do mil hate men, hut they wish to do away with the last remnants of the ridiculous Idea that women, as a sex, aru in all ways weak, while men, as a sex, aru always s'.rong. Hearth and Home. Ileil l.lnen. Ill til belli of bed llliell I hero lira less de sirable qualities now obtainable than for inerly were to be hud. Dealers say that there Is wry little call for the heavlci grades of goods, which llierefutu ate hot Imported. .Modem linen Is much I ess dura hie than that which was made half a cell tury ago, for tire reason Unit the constant call srents to be for something cheaper, therefore, to meet this uuwNe clamor mail' tifiicturcMhnvoiitailc much lighter grades, ml haw Iu many eases Introduced cotton with the linen, which N then carded and spun together In such a way that only an expert can detect It, and even thesj am often deceived. There Is no economy In buying cheap linen. It hits not half of thu wearing qualities of that which costs pos. slhly a third more. It has not a soft, sat iny feeling so grateful to a fastidious taste, nor has It the appearanco which Is most pleasing to connoisseurs. There art) many persons who do not care for linen iMMldlngt he yeararoiind. For those there Is a satin finished cotton which Is very much liked, although It Is very ex pensive, costing even more than a good grade of linen. Full sl.ed sheets are usti ally made two and a half yards long when finished. Linen varies in width from two to two Mid half yards; occasionally a piece i is found which Is wider than this, hut two and a half yards Is the standard. Many stores furnish bedding made ready for use. Sheets are either plainly hemmed or hem stitched, the latter being considered much mow desirable, especially iu linen and line grades of cotton. Pillow cases are simi larly finished; many of t hem, how ever, have half to thr quarter inch bauds of drawn work above the hems. Thu plain hem stitched is of course mote durable and makes a very pretty llnNh. New York Ledger. I'riiiul itntl i:oiiiiinleiil Trench Women. The exiles who took refuge In London at the time of the Ficlirh icvnlutlnu met thu poverty and the hardships of their lot with much courage. They never begged, and it was often dilllclllt to I -e them to accept the funds mbscrlb.. lor their assistance. The women did not accept the partially worn and soiled clothing of wealthy and charitably Inclined ladles, as most women III their condition would have been glad to do, hut managed with the cheapest mate rials to dress neatly and tastefully. Their necessities developed an Inventive spirit. The records of the Loudon patent olllce nt the beginning of the Kiglileeuth century have on e cry page such names as lllunihuu, Dupiu, Caidouel, Gastltieali, l.ehloml and t'otiralit. How ingenious they were In utilizing the most unpromis ing of materials is shown by their Inven lion of a now famous dNIi, When the London butchers slaughtered their beef they wcie accustomed to throw away the tails with the lefuse. Tim French women had thu bright idea of buying them, since they could get them for next to nothing, and makiugsoiipof tliem. And thus they gave to Knghiml the popular oxtail soup, which loyal F.uglishincu now consider an essentially national dish. Youth's Companion. Tim .Mil die Timer nf m Woman's Voice. "I remember," said a well known writer, "the first 'queen of society' that I met. She i was a rjicotcliwomau who marrleil an American while he was In Kurope. Hu mors came before her to Ids home of Iter brilliant success In Loudon society and iu thu Austrian coutt, where her brother held a diplomatic position, and when shu ar rived with her husband the society of the littlu city where lie lived was soon at her feet. "I was a child of twelve, visiting in a country house near thu town. "Onu morning some one said, 'There comes Madam L.1 I ran to thu window to see coming through the trees a stout, fieckled, red haired woman without a sin gle agreeable feature In her facu. "I was amaed and disgusted. Hut when she came In and talked tu me I sat breath less under a charm never felt Iu my life before. I yras her slave from that mo ment. Her fascination was wholly In her voice. It was low, clear, musical. Thu woman's nature was expressed Iu It un pretentious, keenly sympathetic, hut, abovo all, genuine. It was her one power, but it was irresistible." Women Mny Travel Alone. If a woman thinks It Is possible for her to travel alouu she can do so In perfect safety. With caru and discretion shu may even make friends, which Is always one of tho delights of a long journey; hut if she N skeptical in her own mind of thu propriety of her undertaking shu will lo pretty sure to meet with somu mishap or accident, which is proof to her already prejudiced mind that a woman runs great risk Iu tak ing an extended tour without an escort. Of course It Is pleasanter to travel in a party, which a woman with even a small circle of friends is ablo to arrange. If she Is a comfortable sort of companion she will receive invitations numerous; out U shu Is ridiculous and spoils the pleasureof all the rest onu year she will certainly le dropped from thu list thu next, like thu woman who traveled miles to see some famous and grand scenery and then went Into hysterics for fear of an accident In the midst of the car rido through thu ravines and gorge she had come so far to see. As a rule, too, most women burden themselves with too much baggage, over which they worry and fret. Brooklyn Ragle. Women Pliynlcliins. There are i everal thousand women physi cians In thu United States. It Is Impossi ble to average their Incomes conectly, but they probably run from &HJ0 to $20,000 n year. The lut figures are of course rare. They are the great lights of the profession, even among men, who earn fiom t-'-'O.OOO to $I0,0U0 a year and upward; and women are still crusade is and reformers, A $10,005 income for a well educated, gifted and healthy woman doctor Is less rare. Five thousand, I think, is not at all uncommon; and so on down. I knew one woman, an invalid, who earned fr.1,000 the first year that she practiced. The next she received fVi.tJUO, and maintained a growing success until she dropped dead one night and put an end to calculation on what promised to he a brilliant career. Hut this woman, after graduating from the medical school and before she began to practice, spent for several )ear eight hours a day In severe private study. Such woik goes as straight to success us a healthy plant to a blossom. -Mrs. K. S P Waul In Golden Utile. Tor Voiir Toilet Tallin. It N your duty as a woman to look your best, and to help do that there are a few tilings ) ou can not well do without. First, theieis )our soap. Ho sure you have It pure and suited to your skill. To use this a Manuel of thu loose woven cheaper grade is best, as It will nut shrink as much as a better quality. Of course )ou have the liquid, paste or powder for your teeth. Then you want some ammonia to remove stains f i oiu your fingers or to soften thu water If It needs It. You need a bottleof camphor to inhale if you have a cold iu ) our head, a bottle of eatl de cologne, some of w!hii may lie put iu the water when your smii is ury aim uu 1 1 ami need invig I orating; some lumps of charcotl to takt w hen your digest Ion N out of onler. You want also vaseline or cold cream, which ever you prefer lie careful to keep regit lar hours; take rest when Heeded. After all, perfect health Is the gieatest beaqtl Her. lie dainty and clean, and no matter what jour featuies you can not bo truly ugly. F.lmlra Telegram. Women In Itm I'mrt'sstntit. Women have made astonishing progress In the professions. They are found In tho pulpit and In the editor's chair, on tho stage, the platform and In the courta. They ran point with pride to llairlet Hos tiler as a sculptor, to lton llouheiir as a painter, to a book Illustrator like Kate (Ireeuaway, to an nrgauixcr like Frances Willard. Among thosu who are professors may ho mentioned Mrs. Ilaehel l.lojd, pro fessorof analytical chemistry In tho Ne braska state university; MNs Alice (bird tier, professor of history In Itcdford col lege, Loudon, elected over twenty male competitors; Miss Alice Freeman, doctor of philosophy and president of Wellesley college; Mine. Kovalerskv, professor of higher mathematics at the University of .Stockholm, ami Mine. Ogonovsky, pro fessor of Slavonlu literature. Detroit Free Press. Hint llrlKlit Clillilren Are Spitltiil. It Is a Ne mother that dives not unduly stimulate the self consciousness of hei child and thus lay the foundation for life long habits of iiU'eetiitlon, If clever chil dren do not always make clever men and women, a paitial reason tuny be found In the way the aie commonly treated. The) find giowu up people constantly on the watch to hear, and mist industrious Iu te peatiug, their original speeches, ami soon they exchange the gift of oilgluallt), which consists in seeing and cxpicssiug things Iu an unconventional manner, for the ver) inferior one of making smalt speeches. They are thus forced by the wry iidliilru thin of their elders Into taking convention al Instead of uiiconwiitlnlial views and speaking, as It weie, to the "gallery" III stead of uttering spontaneous truths. Popular Science Monthly. I'miHius Women nml Murrlitue. A survey of the lives of famous women shows that voiy man) of them weie single, ; and of thoe wlio weie mai ried most were either childless or had small families. Tills does not, however, mean either that, clever women do not marry, or that theyi cannot be mothers; it only Indicates that to lie the mistress of a large household and to look after a lloi'k of children Is a bust , nessln Itself, ami leaves the clever women who are "iu that line" no time to write I gii't books, paint Hue plctiues and that' soil of thing. Loudon Tit-Hits. Hints fur I'lipeiliii; Union. Ill papering a room It is well to reinem her tliat a loom having a cold north light should be furnished iu warm colors, an, 1 that a daik room should he clothed in sharp, light shades; that holders of all) kind lessen, by sharply defining the cor neisof a loom, the apparent sl.e of a room Iu a small room small patterns should be used. Lines running fiotn ceiling to Horn glvu the effect of height, while Hues run ning around a room lessen thu effect ot height. New York Journal. Make Your Own I'itCuum-. Thu formula for thu concoct Ion of rologn is as follows: Oil of lemon grass ami oil of bergamot,' onu drachm each; oil of cloves and oil of cinnamon, twenty drops each; oil of ncroli, onu drachm; onu half gallon of alcohol and two pints of water. This will make six pints of good cologne, for which tho Ingredients will cost abouttl.7.1. New York A'Jvvrtiser. Ciiix'.h nml l.uiiKliter. Several causes have contributed to the decadence of woman's laughter. The chief one perhaps is thu modern habit of dress ing. Full, flee laughter depends upon a perfect development and exercise of tho respiratory muscles. Confined as these are by steel and whalebone, laughter becomes an Impossibility, Jenness Miller Illus trated. Ituliher 2li,r Tarnish Sllter. Never clean silver with rubber gloves on, or in fact handle dry silver w ith them. Some chemical used in thu pieparatfon of the rubber tarnishes silver at once; ills labof lost to hold a silver sjhsiii In a rub her gloved hand nml attempt to scour it, for it will grow black rather than bright under your work. Exchange. ltitiit-roii Oilnrn In th llousii. Tho most dangerous sewer gas is odor less; decaying animal matter N not so dangerous as decomposing vegetable mat- , ter, and the dyes used In certain carpets ami wall papers give out peculiar and uu pleasant odors illflictllt to detect unless one Is acquainted with the fact. Now York Times. Important to llemt-mher I wonder how many ieopie ki. vhy potatoes should he soaked before ci ik, ig Thu potato, especially If it has spr. m i may contain an excess of a poisonous rii I lplu called sohinine. This is remowi. b) I soaking. Thu potato is related botaulca ly to tho nightshades. rood. Tho mother of John Kiiskln was in every sen so a remarkable woman. Her son, iu summing up her character, speaks of her as "having great power with not a little prlil"," and udds that shu was "elitirel) conscientious and a cousummato house keeper." A clever woman, in giving her impres sions of social life In one of our great cities, dwells with enthusiasm upon thu beauty and charm of Its middle aged wom en, adding sigiiillcaiitiy, "As for elderly women, I have encountered none." A capital wash for stained hoards is inadu by ImjIIIuu' one-half pound of slaked lime and one pound of soda iu six quarts of water for two hours. Let this settle, then pour off the clear part for use. Clean hairbrushes with warm water ami a little ammonia. It N best to clean two brushes at the same time, as they can be rubbed together. Let them dry in thu hot fcun. The happy mother with a supply of small babies has both hands and heart too full to seek, or perhaps to w ish for, outside duties and rewards. Charlotte Hronto was nearly forty when shu married, and died almost Immediately after, so that shu may bu counted among literary spinsters, A German woman has given an almost national impetus to the artificial grow th of thu nettle plant for the sake of its tenu clous liber. For chafing, try Fuller's eaitli pulver ied. Moisten the sulfate first w lieu ,ip pljinglt Oxide of .Inc ointment is also excellent. I1H00E ISLAND CLAMBAKES. What The) .tie, Mint I'lepniril mid llmr t'oiisiimeil, SMi-al Ciiriesiiiileiire. I'iiovuhinm:, July t.-Hliodo Island clambake mo renowned tho country over, but tliero 1 scarcely any onu out nido tho stato who I nt all ncnuiiliitt'd with thu irooes of piopiultig u clam dinner. All individuals not thus in formed Ithodu Islanders regard its hopelessly benighted; nml po, for tho en lightenment of such unfortunates, I linvo thought It well to glvo u descrip tion of the modus operandi of n genuine old fashioned llhodn Island clambake, together with such observation as mny suggest themselves a I proceed. It Is, ically now, an Interesting proc ess, Tim tcqulslto inntoiinls for it small bako nro a follows: A fow sticks of coidwood, a number of stones about tho sl.o of a man's head and tho smoother iitul the iiioro nearly round tho better a lot of wet seaweed, u big pleco of can vas, and last, but not least, tlm dams themselves. Tlm man upon whom devolves tlm tro inendotis lesponsibillty of conducting tho bake nml ho always lins a deep Fonsoof tho dignity of hi position hav ing collected tho inateti.il, first piles up tho conlwoo.l iu "corncob" fashion. Ho then sets llio to it. and after tho lire I has gotten well under way throws the1 stones in, around ami abovo the blazing, I crackling sticks. As tlm wood burns away ami the "corncob" structure grail-' lllllly settles the stones settle with It, j until dually nothing remains but a pile of stones so hot that It burns one's face to Htaml within three feel of them. I "Our beio,"as the storybooks say, i now covers the hot stones with seaweed, pours the (dams over the seaweed, ills-, tribiitiug them evenly, puts ou more scawet d ami over tho whole thing throws the piece of ciiim'iis, so arranging it that as little steam as possible will escape; for the stones being hissing hot ami tho ( hen wcitl iliipping wet, theie Is steam iu abundance, and it is tho steam thus pro duced that cooks tho clams; so that it is not strictly acciuatu to speak of baked chinis. Steamed clams is tho collect term. It takes about thiei'-quiiiters of an hour for the clams to cook thoroughly At tho cxpirutiou of Hint tiiuothocnuvas is removed, tho upper layer of seaweed ral;ed away, ami tho chims, stc:m ing hot, leiuoveil and placed upon tho table lendy fm thu ilinors when they shall have finished their chini chowder am! INh, which aiu always the first and s-ccoiid courses of a genuine "shoio din ner." This chowder is a grand con glomeration of liaiu, potato, onion and cneker all boiled up together, with n fuw pieces of salt pork to "glvo charac ter" to tho inixtuie. Strangoas it may seem, Hhodo Islanders really liko it, or at least imagine that they do. Following is the menu of n typical clam dinner: Chowder. Fish. Clams. Sweet Potato. Corn. Watermelon. llroun llrcnil. Ico Water. Thu fisli and corn aiu cooked with tho dams. Tho fish, rolled up iu wet cloth, and the corn iu its husk aiu tucked in among the seaweed about twenty minutes beforo tho tiinu of "opening tho bako." mid left there with tho clams to bo steamed into a condition of edibility. Uluefish, iiuicketel, swordfish, cod ami other kinds of "sea fruit" aru cooked iu this way. Tho eating of chnns is an art In Itself. A nuait 'lish of the bivalves, shell and all, is placed beforo yon, and with ,i pitcher of hot. melted butter, or some thing supposed to bo that. Anyway it is hot, yellow and greasy. You pom out a littlu on your plate. Then you pick up a clam iu thu shell with your left hand your left hand, remember -separate tho shells and reinovo thu ugly looking skin enveloping tho head and neck, reinovo thu clam with your other hand, holding thu head and neck be tween the thumb and tho forefinger, dip tho clam iu thu hot yellow greau float ing around ou your plate and then gen tly insert it in your mouth that is, all but tho head and neck. When you get as far us tho neck you must bring your teeth together with considerable energy. This leaves thu body of the clam iu your mouth, and the neck anil head outside, still between tho thumb nnd tho forefinger. A swallow most people regard inaticatlon in such ases as superfluous and tho deed Is . uo. Down your throat has glided a n. . dead clam lungs, stomnch, liver, i nils and all. except tho organs of tho head ami neck, that go to maku up it titst class, well regulated chini. Ugh! As might bo anticipated, it takes timo to master this art, and nothing amuses a Ithodu Islander more than to watch a uovicu eat chnns. Dut sometimes thu novice is so lgnoiaut as toeut thu clam's neck and head, and then thu veteran chun eater is quite disgusted. Tho hit tercan swallow a clam's entrails with out a shudder, but is scamlalued at tho spectacle of one's swallowing a clam's head, If onu wishes a geuuiiio chun dinner he must (omo to Ithodu Island, take a sail down the far famed Nairagaiieit to soiiiu one of tho beautitul summer re soils located ou its shores, and scat him self iu the big dining hall where he can ihlinlu the cool, bracing bieezes blowing I up fiom the b.iv, and can feast Ins eye upon the puiiot-.imu ot wave, lock and loiest so iiispiung to look upon. Then, I und only then can hu partake of a Ithodu Island clam dinner. There ate, indeed, many places iu New Knglund and other sections wheiu "gonnino Hhodo Island clam dinners" lire advertised, but 1 sound a solemn note of warning that all such affairs aiu frauds. The villains getting up these dinners don't know a chun trom a qualiiing, and if the dinner itself was nil light so far as the food is concerned thoso impostors couldn't servo Nairn gansott's breezes with it, nor the vision of Naiiuganett's loveliness! William c. hiu:i'i'AHi. r n Sifis "'-" i2--""' GUT TPIIB OUT 1 lave just unloaded a carload of Leonard : Refrigerators Prices lower than ever. Come and see us. Ruclp-e & ij Xw'tym iu 'f tfM- yf Vr 'mvlnt " JIV j-s.V'iili - i- " "'Aw tivi-; - Lincoln, Neb An Old School in Ninth Year. 25 Departments. 30 Teachers llenutlful, health v locution, magnificent bulhllii'js, fine eiul)tni:iit, superior nc:o n uio.hitloiiii, ktiong fucultv, comprehensive curilculutu, thorough work, high moral and cluNtlnn lullucnces on. I low expenses make tills The SCHOOL FOR THE MASSES A practlctl eduu ition without uecdloss Western You can Enter any Time This groat sc 100I is loratcd in 1 Ian t home, three miles southwest o( the toil o 11:,; in will be connected b electric Mreet car line, YOUR CAR FAP.fi I'All). In orde. that all may see our many advantages iu ths way ot buihliti js, equipments faculty, utc c will pa" your car fare from your home to Lincoln provided you are present otv tivj ; opening daj'of the fab term, Sept. 1S52 Write for particulars.' jsviul inline mil iulclris's or 1 ymiui' punplit mil wo will mjinlymi eliolui of lino IV-luoh ruler, t'li-riuotueleror veur's Hiilicrliitlim 10 our llliHiruteil elocutional iiinutlily. U.VT.V- ' LOCIUKrl ANlJlMKCt'l.llt-s, KUKl!. AiMros. VM M. :ito.l, I'res. or WESTERN NORMAL COLLEGE, Lincoln, Ueolr? ploral wr , H.. s " HH" Ml M MMfIMMMMlV ' tW SksrfV-tSHy W C-S. 'V Cut Flowers at all Seasons of the Year roil WKIIllIM.s y XKHALS AM) I'AltrlK.S. A full line of firetfiih mi' an. I lliMtl iu I'UnU sit j f,,r f,.0d I'r.eebls L its urli'is pr.iiupti) llllei Telephone :t, W. I Wm & C0. Palorr Suits, Chamber Suits, Dining Room Suits, at 1118 to 1122 H St. Morris Ct& a New Location. waste o( time or money Is ftirnUlicd ly the Normal College and Choose Tour Studies Neb. w- ' HnA Trend liter. Qoeruatory I'lirner ITlii noil U Street LINCOLN, V I