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About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1896)
THE COURIER- r-Tr i irOBSNff HERBERT HATES W mm. - ''' v It is pleasant to review, to hear over our musical life has, after grain in selections the music of the era, notably strengthened. whole winter. And this is especially too dependent on help a few flick It has been from outside- pleasant when the selections are of the winter's best. Whoever made up the program for the music services of the last two Sundays selected with discre tion. Taken all in all, the music of last Sunday seemed the beet. . As the weather was a concentration of a whole winter of weather, so the music was the concentrated cumulation of a whole winter of music. Carl Bcbuberth's Journey has proved Bteadily on acquaintance. have come to know it better. It is not, I think, invidious to say that the quar tet has done the same. Gade's two num bers have not, I must say, impressed me WHATTHhY WROTE 1. Written for The Courier. particularly. They are clever, but lack- be no need to point to the harvest. It ing in inspiration or substance. They will show for itself. seem incoherent, without centre, a bulk of ingenious but boring workmanship. This may have been owing in part to the fact that Mr. Kimball's playing, while correct, lacked expression and clearness. I am of the opinion, how ever, that the music, like a good deal of saleably unpopular poetry is saying Bothing with artktic ingenuity. It has bo subjects to compel attention, no dazzling brilliance of developaaeat, which may excuse a petty subject. It seeaas to be just plain music very sat isfactory for hours of ease. Of the Symphonie Concertante, I would say only that both piayers seem to have gained steadily in it The same is true of the other instrumental num bers. The Tannhaeuser march went stroBgly. It is to be noted that the quartet takes it in quick time, not with the funeral tempo of so many players It was Wagner's intention that it should be played with spirit, but a misunder standing of this or the difficulty of the music leads many astray. The quar tet takes it at the proper tempo, and the effect ,k inspiring. Miss Turner's singing she sang Top- iui8"Uunstaer tne Luitee was uousu- Mrt.Yan Roaster would be pleased to baTe Mr..dcertoB take dinner with her Friday enwWt March Twenty-seventh, at half past seres o'clock. Ttnuaday, March Twenty-sixth. Mr. Edgerton accepts with pleasure Mrs .Van Roaster's very kind invitation for Friday evening, March Twenty-seventh, at half past seven o'clock. Friday, March Twenty-seventh. WHAT THEY SAID. Mrs. Van Boaster: "There, there was nobody else I could think of at the eleventh hour who would come. I am certain of Tom Edgerton. Just to think of his sitting in Billy Knicker bocker's place! However, there will be mx others, and I guess I can stand it. I need hardly wait for a reply that fool ally good. She sang with more volume Edgerton will jump at the chance to than usual, and vet keot the remarkable dine wtn m- He'd break his neck and melting quality of her voice. She should try, however, to avoid a slight indecision of tone a fault not always present, but one that she can and should eliminate. a half dozen engagements to come to me, and the worst of it is, he'll actually think I wanted him." Toni.Edgerton: "Damn these widows. Mr.Movius's singing of the Erl King anyway. Let a fellow smile at one once is too well renown to call for long com- and he's expected to dance attendance ment, especially after Mr. Randolph's until he's black in the face. I suppose very appreciative criticism some weeks Cora Van Roaster thinks she can keep ago. Mr. Movius sang in German, as me in her trait, forever. I would rather he always tthould. He was in unusually shovel coal for a half day than spend good voice and seemed to put unusual the eveniug with her. Of course it is force and sympathetic appreciation into one of. those confounded tete-a-tete af- hk voice. I think the audience helped fairs of hers, and she expects me to be a him. I think it helped all the singers, cooingdove. Well, a fellow must pay not by being small, but by being ap- for the'fun he's had I'll have to ac- precUtive. The weather seemed to have cept It would break the poor little kept at home all the indifferent. It was woman's heart if I didn't and I don't a picked audience, an audience of the want any woman scorned in mine. Just surviving fittest. And I am sure that my luck, too, that her wait-for-a-reply Mr. Movius, and the others too, felt messenger caught me at the club." this. People had come, not because . they wanted a goal for an afternoon walk, but because they wereorilling to labor, per -aspera, to the musical heavens. And they deserved their reward. Easter novelties at Roy's. Fresh flower and garden seeds at Roy's drug store, Tenth and P streets. You'll never realize what "noi i "bread'' is until you have made it of With thk week the writer of In Re- ShogoM-flour. kte Keys closes hk comment on the PearB ,ap 10 and 20 cents at Roy's, nunc of Lincoln. It hasbeen a strange - . . year in the musical hktory of the city, ABICYCLE FOR NOTHING. a year of many discouragements from The Pacemaker will give away a high which evolves oae great encoaragement. grade, WOO wheel, to the wheelman or Oar mask feu showed itself independ- wheel woman sending in the largest eat For a year it has had to exkt number of paid subscriptions, yearly or Job. There has been bo stimulus from hair yearly, by June 16. The wheel will ti!!?-!? nr& h bo given away without any restrictions from within. Yet. cut off in thk wav. aWlnti. ru. " jf w.hh,ij mw Hnreaf tar it will not ask help. It will ask suggestion, inspiration, stimulus. The difference is little in name, it is great in spirit. Music is more firmly founded, more deeply rooted than ever before. The work of the Sunday con certs cannot be undone, unless by de population. There has been a begin ning for great things. Of course it mutt be rtalized that the im- beginning of success is not the end of We work, it is the beginning of that, too. But that will not fail. In despondency in poverty, a great field has been made ready and sewed. Let the rain come, let prosperity brighten, and there will MANHOOD RESTORED! ZSESB&SS& SaraatoTmrAlsOTvouaCeaaa KwerJEleadieke. WakatalMss. Lost Msfcoo10cfcUr KbMou, Nervous BeaUdratasaad loss of power la GeswsMn Organs of either sex canned haMtii.MrtUBtfcrtr excessive Be of tobacco, ostam or sum- nlaata. which lestoInSrUr.Cf.iiswpUoer insanity, can be carried la Ten pcefcet. l PwI7",rKiE!raZ; Jii" Mf ",? rSr'AolTtatoTSotherwrt i..T.lsiwfaiinf. snut iB.a.w M.aishB.ssx.s !! AtjMBisLiiiiirini iorZletalteciiaTby Hi W.BBOWM and W-N.BlMUUSNOKIt. Vi Witts. ftra -2 wBim lvPLP NOTICE OF PETITION FOR LET ters. In the County Court of Lancas ter county, Nebraska. In re estate of Eliza Spellman. deceased. The state of Nebraska to John Henry Spellman and Christian Louis Spell man of Kearney, Lancaster county Nebraska and to any other persons in terested in said matter. Take notice, that a petition signed by John Henry Spellm in has been tiled in said court; that the same k set for hear ing on the 16th day of March 1896 at 9 o'clock a. in. and that if you do not then appear and contest, said court may tyrant administration of the said estate to John Henry Spellman. Notice of thk proceeding shall be publkhed three weeks successively in the Courier, prior to said hearing. Witness my hand and seal of said court thk 21th day of February, A. D. 1896. SEAL S.T. Cochran County Judge. First publication March 14. SHERIFF'S SALE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT by virtue of an order of sale Issued by the clerk of the district court of the Third Judicial district of Nebraska, within and for Lancaster county, in an action wherein Job P Kirby is plaintiff and Hamlin C. Eddy, et a!., defend ants. I will, at 2 o'clock p. m on the 14th day of April A. D. 1896, at the east door of the court house, in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction, the fol lowing described real estate, to-wit: Lot "C in Schaberg and Menlove's sub-division of lota one (1). and two (2), in block thirty-five (35), in Lincoln, Lan caster county, Nebraska, as 6bown by the recorued plat thereof. Given under my hind thk 11th day of March, A. D., 1896. John Trompen, Sheriff. AprlL S.-M. the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section eleven (11), in town snip ten (10), range six (6). east, and run ning thence north along the section line eighty rods, to the northwest quarter of said southwest quarter of southwest quarter, thence east thirty-one (31) and 53 100 rods alo:g the north line of said forty acre tract, thence south, parallel with the west line of said section to the south line of said 'section, thence west aloog said section line to the place of beginning, enclosing and including a tract of land off the west side of said forty acre tract, eighty rods long, north and south, and thirty-one and 55-100 rods wide from east to west. Given under my hand thk 14th dav of March. A. D, 1896 John Trompen, Sheriff. April. F Danger Signals Mors thorn half the victims of consump tion do not know thty have it. Here is a list of symptoms by which consumption can certainly be detected : Cough, one or two slight efforts on rising, occurring during the day and fre quently during the night Short breathing after exertion. Tightness of the chtst. Quick pulst, especially noticeable in the evening and after a fuH meaL . Chilliness in the evening, followed by Slight fever. Perspiration toward morning and Vale fact and languid in the morning. Loss of vitality. If you hae these symptoms, or any of them, do not delay. There are many preparations which claim to be cures, but Br. Beta's CatM Raet? for Consumption has the highest endorsements, and ha.' stood the test of years. It will arrest con sumption in its earlier stages, and drive away the symptoms named. It is manu factured by the Acker Medicine Co., 16 and 18 Chambers St, New York, and sold by all reputable druggists. First Publication March 14. SHERIFF SALE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that by virtue of an order of sale issued by the clerk of the district court of the Third Judicial district of Nebraska, within and for Lancaster county. In an action wherein L. M. Leach is plain tiff, and Dewitt O. Mosher, et al.. defendants. I will at 2 o'clock p. m. on the 14th day of April, A. D., J896, at the east door of the court house, in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auc tion the following described real state, to wit: Lot seven (7), in block eight(8),Houtz Place addition to the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska. Given under my hand thk 14th day of March, A. D. 1896. John Trompen, Sheriff. April. F First publication March 14. SHERIFF'S SALE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT by virtue of an order of sale Issued by the clerk of the district court of the third judicial district of Nebraska,' within and for Lancaster county, in an action wherein Joseph H. Sniffen is plaintiff, and Annie. Morrill, et al.. de fendantB. I will at 2 o'clock p. m. on the 14th day of April, A. D. 1896 at the east door of the court house. In the clfy of Lincoln, Lancaster county, Nebraska, offer for sale at public auction the fol lowing described real estate, to-wit: Beginning at the southwest corner of . T'4 Cabinet Photos $2Poo per close. AT 1B86 O Satisfaction Guaranteed When wanting a cleaa. easy shave r aa artktic hair-cut, try 8. f . Westerfield THE POPULAR TONSORIAL ARTIST. who has an elegant barber shop with oak chairs, etc., called "The Asumz" at 117 North Thirtaeatk street, south of Lansing theatre. v MA Au nnr heat math m ! -- J