The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, August 01, 1896, Image 6

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THI COURIER.
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H WE AND OUR NEIGHBORS If
THESHN
77e first of American Newspapers
CHARLES A. DANA, Editor.
Society in Washington, and for that
matter all over the world is much more
interested In the president's wife than
it is in the president himself. Emer
son .ay that life is only a little con
versation, and I say that you can not
have conversation without society, un
less one has a constitution like Macau
lay's and it is not reported that he
talked to himself. His idea -of a pleas
.a'nt party was where one voice" and
that .on; Jils, talked all the time to
many ears.
From gay Dolly Madison tothe gra
cious Mrs. Cleveland, the people .have
intruded upon the privacy of the presi
dent's family. The. people want to
know how the president's wife looks,
what she wears, how she brings up her
children and -what they say and do.
By unremitting effort President and
Mrs. Cleveland have kept their chil
dren In complete seclusion so far as
the newspapers are concerned. In
consequence, gossip, unable to under
stand such conduct, says that the
children must be witless. In point of
fact they are bright and pretty, and
Mrs. Cleveland believes that the Idle
tales about the children will not hurt
them as much as publicity would.
The president Is not a sovereign, but
hU wife occupies the only throne in
America. Mr. Cleveland's three hun
dred pounds of resentment at the
American people for taking so much
Interest in his wife Js so much waste
choler. Mrs. Cleveland has a gracious,
womanly manner, a trick of remem
bering people and of listening to any
one who is talking to her with perfect
attention and the manner of being es
pecially delighted with him, that sug
gests the stones told of Recamler's
tasclnatlon. It Is thoughtfulness for
others that has made Mrs. Cleveland's
administration so successful. She ap
plies the golden rule in society and in
forgetting herself she will be remem
bered longer than any one of her pre
decessors. If the Chicago convention
had been allowed to Indorse Mrs. Cleve
land it would have done It by acclama
tion. Simplicity and entire self-forgetful-ness
characterize Mrs. Bryan. Her un
worldly absorption in books and babies
and her husband Is shown by her clear,
direct, uncalculating glance. Her life
has been one of study. She is an only
child and her mother was almost a life
long invalid. "She was such a thin
little girl," her father said, "I hated to
punish her when I thought I ought to."
The doctor said she must be kept out
of doors. Luckily she did not like ln
;door life and all day long she tagged
her father, and her little dog Frisk
tagged her. They dug in the garden
and 'her father made funny rhymes
that she whispered herself to sleep on
at night. Long before she could read
sheTcnew the names of the bugs and
'worms that her little hoe and his big
one turned up fn the garden. The man
'showed the little girl with what exact
perfection all the insects were made,
and how they clung to the earth. By
the time she was ready for books she
"wis Xin to everything they told about.
She idealized the earth and Its gener
ating and regenerating character.
.From a puny child sje has grown to
'be a strong woman with a rare power
of endurance and concentration. She
and her father sat on the porch at
'.night and he told Greek and Norse
"stories of the stars. He told her how
far away they were from them and
from each other though they looked so
neighborly. He told her what a speck
the world would look If they could
look at It from Venus. Then he took
'her In his arms and crooned his" own
funny nan's mother goose. The Idea
of the immensity of the universe and
the relation of the world to the solar
11 Sunday
in the World.
Price Re. n copy. By mail, $2 a year
Aillrr.. THKSL'X, NfwYork
We have for rent a centrally located
I
BRICK BLOCK IN LINCOLN.
system seldom enters a child's mind
The world is vastness, mystery, but
the door-yard is a large part of it.
Over there behind the goose-berry Daily and Sunday, by mail
bush is a wild spot, and the orchard
beyond it is undiscovered still. The
sense of proportion and perspective
that Mary Baird acquired from her
father, has had a great influence upon
her. Her father says she never told
him a He. I don't believe she ever told
anyone a He. Her words have the
Quaker llteralness and simplicity of
long habit. If she should be the first
lady of the land she will be a sweet ex
ample of 'womanliness. Early star
gazing or her father's influence trained
her to think of things abstractly, na
kedly, without the Impediments of
custom and fashion.
She was born in Perry, Illinois. When
she first went to school she did not
like it. The books and the confine
ment were unaccustomed and as hate
ful as new. She was naturally lazy
and she did not want her intimacy with
the beetles and birds interrupted. Her
father told her if she did not go to
school she would be an Ignoramous and
all the other children would get ahead
of her. So she consented to acquire
an education because she did not want
other children to get ahead of her. It
was her good fortune when she was in
the high school of Dixon to be taught
by a man who was passionately fond
of mathematics. He was a good teach
er and inspired Mary Baird with a
sense of thrir beauty and use.
When the time came that she must
go away to school she and her father
travelled over most of th middle west
to find the best one. They inspected
many and finally decided upon Monti
cello. Her first winter at this school
was interrupted by repeated illnesses
of her mother. The next winter,
though she hated to leave this excel
lent school, she wanted to b nearer
her mother, so she went to a girls'
school in Jacksonville, 111.
It was In this town that a young man
by the name of William Jennings Bry
an was attending college. At the ba
ginning of the school year the teachers
and pupils of the Fern. Sem. held a
reception In the, parlors of the school.
On this occasion Mary Baird was
standing In one of two large rooms
when a group of young men entered
the other one. She looked up and no
ticed on of them In particular and
FIRST PUBLICATION JULY 11.
To Frank W. Little. Mary T. Little,
The New York Security & Trust
Company, a corporation. The Gen
eral Conference Association of Sev
enth Day Adventists, a corpora
tion, non-residents:
You and each of you are hereby noti
fied that on the 29th day of June, 1896.
Charles G. Dawes as planltlff, began
an action against you and other de
fendants In the district court of Lan
caster county, Nebraska, the object of
which is to foreclose two certain trust
deeds and mortgages on the following
lands In said county, to-wit:
The southwest quarter of the south
east quarter of "the southwest quarter
of section 6, townsnip . range v.
,-. The northwest quarter of the south-
-j a year eagt quarter 0f the southwest quarter
98 a year of section 31, township 10, range 7.
Part of the north east quarter of the
southwest quarter of the southeast
quarter of the northwest quarter of
fiUn section 6, township 9, range 7. begin
ning at the northwest corner of the
north half of the southwest quarter oi
is the greatest Sunday Newspaper the southeast quarter of the northwest
vu-a.. t.. w&. ovviwit Wf " ---j- op - -.0
The American Constitution, the
American Idea, the American Spirit
Thise first, last, and all the time, for
ever.
Daily, by mail.
if-.. '") J, 7 J
, - V -S Mlf'1
v - ."s
- -' - . ;0t .
Complete modern conveniences: will
lease entire building' or part of it
VERY DESIRABLE FOR EITHER
wholesale or retail trade,
terms to the right party.
7, running east 380 feet for a starting
point, thence south 128 feet, thence
east 50 feet, thence north 128 feet,
thence west 50 feet to place of begin
ning. The northwest quarter of the south
east quarter of the southwest quarter
of section 6. township 9, range 7.
The south half of the southwest
quarter of the northwest quarter of
the northwest quarter of section 8,
township 9, range 7.
Lot 16 Perkln's subdivision of east
half of northwest quarter and south
west quarter of northwest quarter of
section 31, township 10, range 7.
Lots 10. 11, 12, 13, 22. 23, 24. block 3,
lots 16. 17, 18, block 6, South Park Ad
dition to Lincoln, lots 1. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, 11, 12, block 2, A. Traynor Cam
eron's Subdivision of lot 3, Fairview
Addition to Lincoln.
Lots 7, 8, block 116 Lincoln; lots 1. 2,
3, 4, 5, 6 in block 49 Dawson's Addition
to the city of Lincoln, also lot 9, block
10 C. C. Burr's Subdivision In the said
city of Lincoln, also lots 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
block 15. lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 6, 9. 10, 11, 12,
13. 14. 15. 16. block 16. lots 7, 8, 9, 10. 11,
12, 13. 14, 15, 16, 17. 18, block 17. lots 1
and 12 block 25, all of blocks 18, 19. 20.
all in Sabin's Hill being a part of
northwest qarter of section 6, town
ship 9, range 7, except that portion of
above property already deeded to the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Rail
way Company.
Each of said trust deeds and mort
gages are made by Frank W. Little
and Mary T. Little, dated the 14 th day
of April, 1894. one being given to se
cure the payment of one certain pro
missory note or any renewals thereof
of said Frank W. Little and another,
to the American Exchange National
Bank of Lincoln for 120,000.00, which
has been renewed, and there is now
due on said renewal note the sum of
$23,000.00. with Interest from the 1st
day of July, 1S96. In said trust deed
and mortgage this plaintiff is made the
trustee for said American Exchange
National Bank. The other of said
trust deeds and mortgages is given to
secure the payment of eight certain
promissory notes, or any renewals
thereof as follows: two to the Ameri
can Exchange National Bank, one
dated December 4, 1893 and due 60 days
HOLM & REED. 1201 O st
opooooooooooooooooocosooc Hunter Printincf
O GO TO -8
$ COMPANY . .
Oalifomia
in a TourlMt sleeper
It is the RIGHT way.
Pay more ami ju are
"- - extravagant. Py less
and jouareuncomfort
able. Tfatt newest, briuhu-st,
cleanest and easiest
riding Tourist sleepers
are used for our
Personally conducted
excursions to
Galifornia
which leave Lincoln
every Thuirday at
10:30 a. m., reacbing
San Francisco Sunday
evening, and Los An
geles Mon lay noon.
Ask G.W.Bon nel I cit
tit-net .iy. .t. cor 10th
and O Sts., Lincoln
Neb for full information
or write to
J. Francis, G. P. A. Omaha, Neb.
aooooooooooooobo
GENERAL PRINTERS
SMtk half ....
CALL BUILUINQ
Attractive
Apply to after date, and one dated December 31,
1893, due 60 days after date, each note
being In the sum of $15,000.00, which
said notes have been renewed and there
is now due and payable upon said re
newals 123.000.00. two to E. E. Brown.
one in the sum of $7,196.41, dated No
vember 8, 1893 and due six months
after date, and one for $7,500.60 dated
February 14, 1893, and due on or before
August 8, 1894, which said notes have
been renewed and there is now due and
payable on said renewal note the sum
of $16,000.00, two to H. L. Smith, one
In the sum of $7,500.60, dated February
14, 1893, due on or before August 8. 1894,
and one for $7,196.41, dated February
8. 1893, and due six months after date,
which notes have been renewed and
there is now due and payable upon
said renewal notes the sum of $16,
000.00.two to Everett Finney, one In
the sum of $7,500.60, dated .February 14,
1893, and due on or before August 8.
1894, and one for $7,196.41 dated the 8th
Havlar secured frost the Cottrfer day ?' November, 1893. and due six
. ..., .., V Courier months after date, which notes have
Publishiat Co. all copper plate here- been renewed, and there is now due
tnfnr nuttPAiuj w . . u ?nd Payable upon said renewal notes
fOfore ceatroiled hy them, we shaH $16,000.00.
In said trust deed and mortgage the
Plaintiff is mnrfp the tnicton fny tYia.
Cards and Weddiag Stattoaery oa 5?,d American Exchange National
"-". a. ij. ouiiiu, n. i. .Brown ana
Everett Finney.
The plaintiff prays for a decree of
foreclosure and sale of said lands to
satisfy said Hens as aforesaid, for de
ficiency Judgment and general relief.
You are required to answer plaintiff's
petition on or before the 17th day of
August. 1896.
CHARLES G. DAWES, Planltlff.
August 1.
be pleated to fill orders for Eagraved
Cards and Weddiag Stattoaery os
short aotice aad la a satisfactory aw
I CARDS AND PLATE
M CARDS WITHOUT PLATE
$.
: Style
Efcsart Warfc
HUNTER PRINTINO CO.,
33 N- th StrmL
A comrortable California trip can be
taken wry Thursday at 10:30 a. m. in a
through tourist sleeping car, Lincoln to
Los Angelos without change via the
Burlington. Remember this when ar
ranging for your winter trip. Depot
8 ticket office, 7th street between P and
streets. City office, corner Tenth andi
streets.