....The Reimers-Kaufman Go.... Successor, to THE REIMERS & FRIED CO. Sidewalks, Sidewalk Flags, Building Blocks, and Tile Floor Office and Yards, 12th and W Sts. Both Phones. ULCOLN. NEBRASKA gLincoln Bussiness College AN ESTABLISHED AND RELIABLE SCHOOL Courses: Bookkeeping, Shorthand," Type writing, Penmanship, Commercial Law, Office Practice, etc Catalog Free. 13th and P Sts., - Lincoln, Nebraska R. C. SCHNEIDER Butter, Poul- Fresh and Salt Meats try and Eggs 209 SOUTH NINTH STREET. RFU. 433 ... ... AUTO. 1433 ..GAME in Season ENTIRELY IMPERSONAL rxsw r. aim -JZg. - vtwr iss 7 t- rr-AXtosk OFFICE OF DR. R. L. BENTLEY, SPECIALIST CHILDREN Office Hour. I to 4 p. m. Office 21 IS O St. Both Phones LINCOLN. NEBRASKA RECTOR'S White Pine Cough Syrup I. a quick and positive remedy for all cough. It stoqs coughing spells at night relieve, the soreness, soothes the irrita ted membrane and atoq. the tickling. It is an ideal preparation (or children as it containe. no harmful anodynes or narcotics. 25c per bottle RECTOR'S 12th and O St POTTED ! ORPHEUM Phones: Bell 936. Auto 1 528 Week Beginning Aqril 4th Very Fine Program Matinees at 2:30 15c and 25c Evening at 6:30 15c, 25c, 35c. 50c TTTlt is a pleasure to to have a Suit that fits and becomes you AND perfect satis faction to know you did not pay two prices to get it. Suits that fit and satisfy are made to order. 300 Spring Woolens em bracing the new and dis tinctive modes in Spring and Summer Woolens. Scotch Woolen Mills UNION TAILORS 113 So. 13th Street J. H. McMULLEN. Mgr. Bell 2522 -:- Auto 2372 Wageworkers Attention We have Money to loan : on Chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. Kelly & Norris 129 So. Ilth St. V: m Dr. Chas. Yungblut Dentin Bffi5, ROOM No. 202 J CI 1 LIS L BLOCK AUTO. PHONE 3416. BELL 656 LINCOLN. -:- NEBR. OISEA8ES OF WOMEN All rectal diseases such as Piles, Fistula., Fissure and Rec tal Ulcer treated scientifically and successfully. DR. J. R. HAGGARD, Specialist. Ofdee, Richards Block. W. L. DOUGLAS 3-00,3.50,4.00 tic 5.00 SHOES Bast in the World UNION MADE Boys' Shoos S2.00 anil $2.50 Fast Color Eyelets W. L. Douglas shoe, are the lowest price. Quality considered, in the world. Their excellent style, easy fitting- and long wearing qualities excel those of other makes. If you have been paying high prices for your shoes, the next time you need a pair give W. L. Douglas shoes a trial. You can save money on your footwear and get shoes that are just as good in every way as those that have been costing you higher prices. If you could visit our large factories at Brockton, Mass., and see for yourself how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better and wear longer than other makes. VTIU. W. U Donglaa name and price Is tamped on the bottom to protect the wearer atiatnat liilth prices and Inferior alioes. Take No MiiIm.II. tutc If W. L. Donitla shoes are not for aale In your vicinity, write for Mail Order Catalog. W.l Douglas, TOBBAIJtBT , MAYER BROS. Cultivate Constancy. The secret of success, is constancy of purpose. Disraeli. Making Him Feel at Home The young man with the maroon necktie was absentmindedly thought ful amid the idle "chatter. Suddenly he spoke. "It's queer how time changes a fel low," he said. "I've noticed, it in lots of my friends. They change their ideas, you know. I've noticed that if they don't get married ridiculously early they generally wait till it is ridiculously late." "What a great truth!" cried the young man with the gray tie. "If it isn't dark it is sure to be light! Even so!" "Let him alone!" ordered the, hostess. "But why matrimony?" she inquired of the young man with the maroon tie. "We were talking of golf, you know!" "Were we?" asked the absentminded one. "I don't believe a man really; falls in love after he is 30, say. Do you? Lose his head and all that, you' know or be willing to fly to the end of the earth,, regardless of his next week's business engagements. He uses sense. And you can't use sense about falling in love!" "Few people do," observed the hos tess. "Look at the individuals they pick out to fall in love with! You aren't doing it, are you, Richard?" "Of course not," said the young man with the maroon tie, gruffly. "How absurd! I was just speaking general ly. I observe things, you know. And a fellow doesn't feel sure he's got the right girl unless he does lose his head a bit, does he?" "Why, I can remember," went on the young man with the maroon tie, "when I was 19 or 20 of two love af fairs, in both of which I was clean crazy. I was so desperately mad over those girls at separate times, of course that life absolutely was not worth living contemplated apart from them! I remember I wanted to die .and so avoid the dark and dreary fu ture stretching before me when Eve lyn turned me down. And it was ac tual anguish, too! Now, if I can laugh at anything as real as that just be cause a few years have intervened, how the dickens could I ever be sure any infatuation I might tumble into now wasn't just as ephemeral?" "I thought," observed the young man with the maroon tie, "you said jou weren't personally interested in the subject. It begins to look to me " "Rubbish!" interrupted the young man with the maroon tie. "It's far thest from my thoughts. I don't know anybody I care particularly ' about. though I do know some mighty nice girls! You just change, that's all! It becomes a matter of calm judgment and and er all that. You stop to think whether the girl is really suited to you and consider her disposition and tastes, and her mother, and wheth er you like her brother. "Now, that destroys all the romance, doesn't it? It makes the whole affair humdrum and casual. There's abso lutely nothing spontaneous about it. Why, 1 remember when Evelyn was the light of the world to me I wouldn't have cared if her mother had smoked a pipe or made platform speeches, and as for Evelyn's tastes well, to this day I know not whether she inclined to Wagner or ragtime, or preferred Shakespeare to Laura Jean Libbey. I didn't care and that's the point. I would care now. You couldn't consider a wife without con sidering what your friends would think of her. And you want to be sure, too, that you really care!" This sounds suspicious," observed the hostess. "Not at all!" protested the young man with the maroon tie. "Not at all! I just got started on this subject, that's all! No, I don't think I shall ever marry. In the first place, I'm not in love, and I don't think I ever shall be. "I really can't take such an absorb ing interest in any girl nowadays that I miss my meals in my abstraction. And, somehow, I wouldn't' die for any of them. Yet I know two or three fascinating girls. I don't think it would be wise to run the chance of making yourself and the girl miser able when you weren't quite sure. Do you think there is anything in this theory of learning to care more after you are married? It doesn't seem ra tional to me. I suppose the only real ly happy man is the one who marries Evelyn when he is 20 years old and too young to know better." "But consider what Evelyn might be when you were 30!" suggested the hostess. '"Probably not at all a con genial person or the one you would then pick out!" . "That makes it all the more compli cated, doesn't it?" said the young man in the maroon tie, mournfully. "A fellow doesn't stand much show any way you put it. This falling in love is all nonsense, anyway! I'm glad I've kept cut of it!" "See here," said the hostess, "don't you feel blue. She's all right the. right one, I mean. You just go ahead!" "Yes, go on and take the plunge!" advised the young man with the gray tie. "And meanwhile, tell us her name among friends, you know!" The young man with the maroon tie tried to look indignant, but succeeded only in looking foolishly pleased. "Oh, come now!" he said. "1 don't see why you two should think well, maybe I will have something to tell you soon. That is, I rather hope so. I I'm going ' to see her to-morrow night!" The Hardy Glove "It was perfectly . dreadful!" said the girl with the imitation Irish lace collar, as she straightened the bolts of ribbon on her counter. "It must 'a' been funny! What was it?" said the girl who was marking the price tags. "I just shriek whenever I think of it!" pursued the girl who was straight ening the ribbons. "Him calling me up like that when I hadn't seen him in such a time! You see, I've been keeping steady company now with Mr. Sykes for several weeks, so Art and me haven't seen much of each other." "I think Art is better looking than James Sykes," interrupted the girl who was marking tags. "He has more style!" "Well, he hasn't got the salary if he has the style!" said the young woman who was straightening the ribbons. "Not that money makes a particle of difference to me. but there's much more to Mr. Sykes than you'd think. And any one who makes fun of his nose doesn't know what she's talking about, and " "1 ain't got no grudge against Mr. Sykes' nose," said the girl who was marking tags. "He can have any kind of a nose he wants and welcome. What'd he do?" "Oh, Mr. Sykes didn't do anything," said the girl who was arranging rib bons. "You see, he generally comes over on Wednesday evening, so when somebody called me on the phone I s'posed it was Mr. Sykes. "'Hello!' he said. 'Going to be home this evening? All right, I'll be over.' "I had on my blue dress and I got out the chafing dish and the stuff to to make fudge. You wouldn't believb how fond of chocolate fudge Mr. Sykes is! He likes it with nuts in it, and "So does everybody else," said thi other girl, ruthlessly. "He ain't so different from the rest of the world when you come right down to it, even though! you may think so!" "Well, anyhow," pursued the girl with the ribbons, "when I heard the bell ring I ran out part way down the stairs to meet him. He sort of likes to have me act as though he was wel come, you know." "Huh!" said the other girl. "Why don't you have it woven on a door mat?" "Maybe you think you're funny!" in dignantly said the young woman at the ribbon counter. "Just as I made the turn in the stairs I ran right into him. "Xnd who do you suppose it was? It was Art!" "Well," said the other girl, pausing in the operation of marking tags, "what'd you do?" "If you could 'a' seen his face!" gig gled the girl at the ribbons. "Sort o' bewildered and scared and uncertain! There was I rushing down the stairs in my eagerness to meet him, as he supposed, and I guess he thought at first I'd been just sitting at home all these months waiting to hear him ring the door bell! Why, I just hung hold of the newel post and burst out laugh ing, and after I started I couldn't stop! I simply shrieked! I wish you could 'a' seen him!" "What'd he do?" asked the other girl. "He got hold of my shoulder and shook me and wanted to know what on earth was the matter," giggled the girl at the ribbon counter.: "And of course I couldn't tell him that I wasn't expecting him. He kept asking what was so funny, and whenever he did I'd start to laughing again. When he saw the things out for the fudge it sort of proved that I did expect him, but then he'd get doubtful again. "'Lizzie,' says he, finally, after fig uring it all out, T bet you thought I was someone else!' "'Why, Art!' I cried, just as mourn ful as I could, 'didn't you telephone you were coming?' And then I got to laughing again. . "He's bright. Art is. 'But I forgot to say who I was,' he insisted. "Then I told him that I'd know his voice among a thousand and he., told me I was just as much of a jollier as ever, and most of the fudge boiled over, and it was just like old times. Art got real cheerful until I took some of the fudge and put it away, because I wanted to save it for Mr. Sykes. I told him I was saving it for father. " 'Father be blowed!' Art said then. 'Your father'd rather have some fine cut any day than chocolate fudge! You're stringing me, Lizzie you've got some one else up your sleeve!' "I thought I might as well make a good job of it, so I told him solemn like that there wasn't another man on earth but himself, honest!" "Did he believe you?" inquired the girl who was marking tags. "I think he had his doubts," giggled the girt who had finished assorting the ribbons. "But he is coming to see me again to-night." Heraldry. According to the highest authorities, heraldry finds its starting point in the totemism of prehistoric man., In the barbaric custom of painting or carv ing the totem on pars, the bows and sides of canoes, weapons, pillars in front of houses, etc., and in tatooing it on the various parts of the body, as we have the real origin of the in signia that are so precious to the upper-tension of to-day. It was in the Ignorant superstition of the savage that he sprang from a crane or a bear or some other animal that the various "coats of arms" of the "big families" of the present time found their incep tion. New York American. Distinct in a Clasr By Itself. Union Made. (TTTThe only glove made withj jJ Seams between the fingers ASK FOR THEM AT RETAIL STORES MANUFACTURED BY The Deputy-Spangler Hat Co LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Roseine Oil THE BEST LIGHT FOR THE EYES.-. TTT Pure Pennsylvania Cylinder, Engine and Dynamo Oils Rex Axle Grease, French Automobile Oils Marshall Oil Co. Lincoln Clothes Cleaned, Pressed 1 Repaired Gentlemen and Ladies HATS Worked Over New or Cleaned and Blocked. Fixed under our Guaran tee are O. K. We have a Dressing Room and can sponge and press your clothes while you wait, TED MARRINER, 235 NORTH 11th STREET First To Doors North of Labor Temple. Auto 4875; Bell F1509 Practical Hatter, Expert Cleaner and Dye" i I I I I OFFICE: 134 South 9th Street - - TANNERY: 313-315 O Street BELL PHONE F-1617 The Lincoln Tannery ESTABLISHED 1895 HENRY HOLM. Prop.. Tanner and Currier Manufacturers of HARNESS, LACE, LATIGE, LEATHER. ROBES and COATS. - CUSTOM WORK A SPECIALTY I USE I Lincoln Paint and Color Company's Products I THEY ARE THE BEST I KOMO COAL The Best Coal in the Market for the Money LUMP, EGG OR NUT, $7.00....... For Furnace, Heating Stove or Kitchen Range, Try it- Whitebreast Coal Co. 106 O STREET. Bell 234 Auto 3228 I I I Green Gables The Dr. Benj. F. Baily Sanatorium LINCOLN, NEBRASKA , . For non-contagions chronic diseases. Largest,' beat t equipped.nost beautifully furnished. First Trust Savings Bank s Owned by Stockholders of the First National Bank THE "BAKJK FOR THE WAGE-EARNER INTEREST PAID AT FOUR PER CENT Tenth and O Streets Lincoln, Nebraska 0000000000000OW