THE COURIER. fcS ' s er &. v &-K THE BOYS IN LIKE 6000 EMU ALL GO TO fw m. mis o sin Tf something To eat For ir fflonef. OPEN ALL NIGHT. KUQURTERS FOR WEtW. Hunter Printing COMPANY . . GENERAL PRINTERS South hmlf .... CALL BUILUIN3 Having secured from the Courier Publishing Co. all copper plates here tofore controlled by them, we shall be pleased to fill orders for Engraved Cards and Wedding Stationery on short notice and in a satisfactory man aer. loo CARDS AND PLATE S1.50 m CARDS WITHOUT PLATE 1.50 Litest Styles Elegant Work HUNTER PRINTING CO., 323 No. nth Street. U9aH9aB!SjalflaaHaKil $5 TO CALIFOENIA Is oar Bleeping Car Rate on thePhOIipa-Soak Island Tourist Excursions from Council Hiffa Omaha or Lincoln to Los Angeles or Haa ras cifcoria the Scenic Route and Ogdea. Oar UaTH Des Moines ererr Friday, and aleeyaf car rata from there is 6.50. Yon hare through sleeper, and tha Painter asangement haa a special agent aecompaaaj tM excursion each week, and you will hti Ka nare excellent accomoaauom, as ts upholstered spring seats, ara BfUIO, ana appointments perfect. Address for fall particulars, JMO. SEBASTIAN, 0. P. A. CUgt. CHA& KENNEDY, Gen. W. Paae. A. O. A. RUTHERFORD. 0. P. A T. A. 105 O St Cor. 11th, Liacola, Nab When wanting a clean, easy ahara or an artistic hair-cut, try 8. F. Westerfield THE POPULAR TONSORIAL ARTIST. who has an elegant barbershop with oak chairs, etc., called "Tha Annex" at 117 North Thirteenth treat, south of Lansing theatre. W MAS ALSO VERY MEAT BATH I THE LIBRARY 1 contain really nothing at all." SSS The Youthful Enthusiast held a copy of "Casa Braccio" In his hands. "I think Marion Crawford Is at his best in this book," he said. "It Is broader some how than "Katherine Lauderdale' and 'The Ralstons.' It has more color, gi eater depth, stronger characters. It seems more Important. Crawford in New York is like a good many other writers. Crawford in Italy Is an alto gether different and to some extent an unusual person. I have Just finished 'Casa Braccio' and as I look back upon it I see a bright and moving picture of human emotions and movements against a background of Italian. Roman richness sombre and yet vivid. The people. In their weakness and their strength, are very real, and the glimps es of Italian life are true photographs of the real thing. I never tire of Craw ford when he Is among his favorite haunts, when he lifts the curtain on this historic and fateful part of the old world, when he shows us with a mas ter's art, the deep running passion of this dark skinned people, who love with life and hate with death; when he brings out in some dusky den the rich wine of Italy, and feasts as do the peas ants; when he threads the by-ways and highways of the beautiful city of Rome, penetrating the palaces of the nobility and the humbler walks of real artists" The Cynic had been smiling ever since the Youthful Enthusiast began. Here he broke In with: "Just stop a minute and catch your breath, my young friend. You talk as if you might, like Annetta. have been fooling with Dr. Dalrymple's drugs. It doesn't pay to get excited even over Marion Crawford." "But can't you commend 'Casa Brac cio?" I think I have seen you reading it" "Yes. I have been reading it. Some times, after having seen a half dozen of what the managers and playwrights call 'refined comedies' I like to go to a play with black clouds and thunder and lightning and plenty of killing in it. That sort of thing is pleasant after repeated doses of 'refined inanity " "And 'Casa Braccio' " "Is very melodramatic and that is why it Is endurable. In 'Casa Braccio there Is a good healthy smell of blood. There is something besides the chatter and inanity of conventional life in the least picturesque city on earth. There is poison, and the dagger gleams in the dark. Ther is a touch of Dumas in the romance of Maria Addolorato in the Convent of Carmelite nuns, with a bit of Poe's horror in the ghastly perform ance of Dr. Angus Dalrymple." "But there Is much in the story that is beautiful that is not horrible or ghastly. Are you incapable of appreciating Crawford's fine touches?" asked the Youthful Enthusiast. "About all we are getting in modern fiction nowadays is this 'fine touch' you speak of, this ultra refinement, analyti cal Howellism, and I am Incapable of appreciating it. Haggard and Kipling and Conan Doyle, more especially Kip ling and Doyle, were welcomed because they brought us something besides the heated and perfumed air of the boudoir, something besides drawing room incon sequential chatter. They brought the breezes of the field, the sound of battle, an atmosphere of strong, rugged, not too civilized reality." The Youthful Enthusiast was visibly hurt. "Well," he said, "I am glad you with your superior intellect find some thing in the book." "Yes; there are so many books that Arthur Peterson, author of "The Daughter of the Nez rerces," has writ ten and McMillan & Co. have published "A Son of the Plains." It Is a plain, straightforward story of adventure. The scene is laid twenty years ago in Kansas and New Mexico, chiefly the latter, and there Is depicted, strongly, vividly, the rough exciting life that marked that section in the time of which the author writes. Nat "Worsley, a sheep man, falls in with two young women on their way to Join their father In New Mexico, and by the display of he roism and Ingenuity that would have done credit to one of Cooper's most ex perienced backwoodsmen, saves them from an ugly fate at the hands of In dians. Nat Is a manly, taciturn fellow. He sells his sheep and sees the girls to the end of their Journey, which Is en livened by a good old-fashioned hold up. Down In New Mexico and in the meantime Nat has fallen in love with Malzie and Malzle has fallen In love with Nat; but there Is a complication In that Malzie thinks Nat Is In love with Bel, and there is another young man who loves Bel there Is no end of fight ing and entanglements. Finally a whole town Is sacked and the four young people are appropriately disposed of. The story is not without color, and the easy, direct way In which it is told commends It to the reader. Mandolins at lowest prices ever of fered. New goods. Crancer's Art & Music Co., 1131 O street. GO TO California In a TourlHt sleeper It is the RIGHT way. Pay more and you are extravagant. Pay less and you are uncomfort able. The newest, brightest, cleanest and easiest riding Tourist sleepers are used for our Personally conducted excursions to Galifornia which leave Lincoln every Thursday at 12:15 p. m., reaching San Francisco Sunday evening, and Los An geles Monday noon. Ask G.W.Bonnell city ticket agent, cor 10th and O Sis., Lincoln Neb for full information or write to J. Francis, G. P. A. Omaha, Neb. Thursday and Friday of next week, Nov. 21 and 22, we will heve a great fur sale and ex hibition of furs. Call and examine. 2 There is a larga ARE YOU ( sA j WITH family of us, and wt99v4i the number is being increased rapidly. The people of Nebraska are divided into two classes, those who take THE COVJWW and those who do not. The former constitute the family. You can get in sssg by paying two JT 5 a) dollars per year, g 939$ A SON OF THE PLAINS, by Arthur Peterson, published by McMillan & Co., New York: price, $1.23. CASA BRACCIO, by Marlon Crawford; published by McMillan & Co., New York; two volumes; price, $2.00. THE LIU IT em SULPttO-SALINE BATH HOUSE AND SillllTJIRiyM COR 14 AND M. AH forms of baths, Turkish, Roman and Electric. Russian WITH SPECIAL AnENTION To the application of natural and salt water baths for the cure Rlmeta xxicatlasm and 8kln, Blood and Nervous diseases. A special department for surgical cases and diseases peculiar to women. DRS. M. H. AND J. O. EVERETT Managing Physicians. SssstsaWK BBBaFBB9WRlmBr IS HE OAT MAECr ROUTE TO THE SOU? Come and See XJa H. O. Towwszsd, F. D. Cobnzu. G. P. A T. Agt. C. P. A T. Aft St Louis. Mo. 1201 OSt . I Xi Q OrOt ! Pnd oa 8A1 a11 OO 301 NIOONJI mo etn joj tpj NOTICE. Semi-annual rents are due and paya ble November 15. If not paid on time 10 per cent of the bill will be added and the water may be shut off and $1 additional fine cahrged for turning same on. J. W. PERCIVAL, Water Commissioner.