The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, April 04, 1896, Image 10
JBVsj3g t? fr . 'JWk : C-- " -- -XV jr " - j-jj . Ff' SA fr. - THEOOOftflUL 1 W fc--- Hlaivktr8 occunied one of the boxtm wier was ehiaing light of the old Tuee ud the Frank Halk had another. " Bat dayEveaing club which feurkhed fpar tk iuHmom Mfi't m nrettv m when or live year ago. tie baa Delia Pex presented "FJeur deLk." laee by the Omaha 'paper that Mks Sheraood, Mrs. Lambertsoa's akter, haa bee the recipient ot much atteation daring her visit ia Omaha. And I notice by the Exceleior which Jack left with aae the other day that Mwa Mc- prooounced literary tastes. He is, or at least be was, interested in dramatic affairs. lie wrote a play shortly before be left Lin coln. I beliere he was popular here, aad I am sure he has many Lincoln SBs9BQaSa Fruit Cook has gone out west to CAM J? -ALL TIM MAOAZMM ' am. - ' f f ,r-. r I T?-REVIEW"REYiEW5 -m v.-i .u-- 9 u -RKaf ihoot ducks acd ffeefte. He will come T.Liacolaa in Ibeir box at the grand back with birds and gainy stories, Jck opera in Chicago. Mias McClure, aa I do sot know him very well but you doubt!, remember, ia Mrs. W. F. "J Frank Cook has the most ac Kelky'e slater. She left thiacity a few ve and unacrupulous imagination ot ween ago to visit the Lincolne in Chi- y ''nd th1 he has- Ue 8ays that a year or iwo ago rrans: went io bidob aetaaad caaght a Ssh almost as large aa a whale. Last spring he chased ducks all over the Platte. He sent barrels of birda back atid they piled them up in the bask aad the hunter stood orer them with hia gan and a sweet modest look. When aay one re narked upon his ii ! a2M lh k1iaatkawl ail ttfitrwl an ihkwUbe the Liacolaclab'alaeJ party. thtmghbe n9lly WM trying not to ap If it k aa pretty aa the iaat two given by -to bilf too much TtiaaWiila Cather has been down from Red Cloud. I imagiue laat week's the atrical trio, Fox, Russell and Mansfield called her hither. TbeLiacoln clab has sent out notices U aa Easter daace to .be given at the Liatoln feete! April 10. I understand BBBBBManManH m. aaaaaamBaQaWf VVnwssBsnsrjB this club it will be a mighty pretty party. There ia a prospect that a lot of sew gown will be worn at this affair. It k getting late for dancing, don't you think? This ia the ime of year when oae likes best of all to do Bothiag, and usually it requires an effort even to do that I woBld like to spend the summer ia Europe, but Papa says I may consider myself lucky it I get an far as Crete. The Csautauqua aaaembly k so exciting. It k a lovely substitute for Park and London. Jack says be may rent a chateau at Crete during the aaaembly season. He says he would like to re ceive Mamma and me there. He aaya the intellectual aurroundinga would suit me to a T. Jack haa grown dreadfully sarcastic since I told him I am Eleanor. He aaya Samuel JPepys and Sir John Evelya are sot in it with me as social chroniclers. I never heard ot Mr. Pepya or Sir John Evelyn,and I don't know ex actly what he means, but I know it k aomethiag mean. Jack told Mamma that he feared I would have brain-fever aa theTesaltof my intellectual labors, aad thk time he seemed to be in earn est I don't think these letters are so very iatellectual; do yoa? Though good -see kaowe it k hard enoagh to write them. I wouldn't be literary tea hours a day every day for anything in the world. """" Yoa will notice that I have stopped ceiliag the giris by their first names. Mks Marshall and Mks Nance sounds formal ia a letter, but the editors of The Courier suggested that the aae of Jack aaya Frank Cook will go bear hunting sometime and come back with a bear akin over his shoulders. His story of the conflict will be like thisr "Everybody else ran away but I stood my ground until the bear was within three feet of me when I let htm have both barrek right in the head. He was stunned but still advanced upon me. I juat whipped out my knife, skinned him alive aad thiew the skin neatly over my shoulders as you see." He will then have the akin nailec up in the bank. Customers will want to know its history and the adventure will take rank with the legend ot Eft. George and the dragon. John Dixon haa been visiting his home in Nebraska City. J have heard that Mr. Dixon's vkite home were not made solely to seeing folks. Mks Nance gave a birthday party on Monday night for her father. The guests were L Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Kay mood, S. H. Burnham, Walter Hargreavas, J. H.Harley, Fecbet, ; i , -; Slaughter. . "J 5 .. -. ' Morrill, " v " Townley, ' ,' Righter, Yates, - - - L. 0. Richards, Mias Fechet. Mrs. C. I. Jones gave an afternoon party laat Friday. N The confectioners windows are lovely 'with Easter expressions. Nests of tine- the aaaaea without the Mks in the preaa 'apao candy made to imitate yellow. piak, blue and green hay are fascinat iag If not realktic. I want to send Alice that duck in Sutton and Hollowbush's "thataoda its head I am afraid Bhe might think I thought it a goose. She would not if it were tilled with candy. The confection I send you is only to re mind you ot my regard. Is not Easter a lovely season? It repeats the Christ mas message to men again. Wnea I waken Sunday morning there will be a bunch ot Iillies from Jack. He k poetic without being a rhymer and he Bever forgets a holiday and the meaning of it Some of the girls object to my men tioaiag their names in my letter to you. They aay it makes them conspicuous. American beauties and Easter Iillies are coaepicHOBB also, whether Eleanor says aBvthiag about them or not .The girk are really not jealous of that Easter lilly of girls that 1 spoke of 'laat wmIc. Whuterer nlpaanm nh George W. Gerwig. of Allegheny City, enjoys k incomplete unless she shares m beea ia tows thk week. I don't it with the rest of us. Long may she He waa grada- '" y k ... ruining, ex;ik law iraieruuy parties, to which 1 was not invited, bus occurred to break my solitude thk week. Next week lent k over and parties begia again iThe Lincoln party will be gorgeous. Yours Eleanor Lincoln, April 3, 189G tern. am em em am. am ? (am am am em sm tm em cam av. -am. (ami (am. (ami (am. (am. (am. (am. (am. (am. (am. (am. (am. (am Jam. (am (ami & (am. (am. MMes y AL IT SHAW. MtenflNRCTBvtt T 1 otmmnwit t HE PEVIEW OF REVIEWS, as its name faopfies, gives in readable form the best that appears in the other great magazines all over MONTH rem $1.00. uaacaiPTtoN $2.50. the world, generally on the same date that they are published. WHh the recent extraordinary increase of worthy periodicals, these careful reviews, summaries, and qaotatioas, giving the gist of periodic! 'itera ture, are alone worth the subscription price. Aside rrora these departments, the editorial and contributed features of the Review of Reviews are themselves equal m extent to a magazine. The Editor's "Progress of the World" is an invaluable chronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past, with pictures on every page of the men and women who have made the history of the month. Tbt Ulnar? Worli says: "We are deeply impressed from month to month with the value of the 'Review or Reviews,' which is a sort of Eiffel Tower for the survey of the whole field of periodical literature. And yet it has a mind and voice of its own, and speaks out with decision and sense on all public topics of the hour. K is a skeriar combination of the monthly magazine and the daily newspaper. K bdaily in its freshness ; K is monthly io Ms method. R is the world THRCC RECENT SAMPLES 25 cents. X 23 feJ tk9i at it it - -,t ander a field glass." MHUNm alaals Csay, s ccau. REnEWRETErfS 13 Astsr Place, New York. Agents find it the nest Profitable nagazinc. ftftf5ftf 199995999999599999: ra feJ 'i&9i i&9i v. ik9 ' z. THIS ADVERTISEMENT; . Of Course you Iil. And so Would Every Reader of Lincoln's Only Weekly Paper Who Beads the COXTBIEB? 1 aa informality that some of the girk might reseat, aad they said the practice tended to detract from the dignity of these whose names are mentioned. Jack aaya the editors are right, and that I ahould Mister all 'the mea. He aaya I would oblige him if I roaId leave him out of the letters altogether, bat if I must drag him in he says! use him to ill ap I must refer "to him as Mr. Jack. How 'absurd! ;I guess he can eland it, aad all the rest ot'the mea, for that aaatter. Men are public property. Mr. Backetah haa rented the old Gillespie henee next door to hk resi dence at 17th and G streets. You re member he purchased thk property aometime ago, and had it remodelled and brought up to date.' He had some dtSculty renting it because it is ao large. I understand it will be occupied by Mra. Coatee, Mr. ana Mrs. Har greaves and Mr. and Mrs. Beeeoa. Society Reads It. Merchants Read It Wheelmen Read It Lewersof Bjse Ball Read It The Men Read It The Women Read It Literary People Read It bawn Tennis Players Read M, As a Fact, Everyone Reads It Are You in its Columns as an Advertiser? "if xot, whynot? has tmakyea knew Mm. xie waa ated from the ttate naiversity aBd was in basiatsa liere'for'a'coupleof years. He left Lincoln aa near aa J can remem ber about three years age: He has a position in Allegheny City, of the board of school comp- troMera, I think it k called. Mr. Ger- You want the best The beatk always the cheapest GOLDEN THISTLE and LITTLE HATCHET FLOUR are always the bast WILBUR ROLLING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS n tO Z-! r5T M Z&t