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About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1897)
.- - - THE COURIER. ""Profess! on ol Directory. Telephone. Office llourp Offlco . Re... tor. O. C. Reynolds "'. - - r 5t,,5?inv Gfijj - f IIom. HlSo.lS'lli St t hull. 3to5 Social and Personal onico ro I W. L. Dayton, M.D. Jonicc.ia60Sin,t ...tioti fl)ipas-.f Hjc, l-tr, N-ho awl Throat i lies. IKM'Stiwt 2SWt5i.i Officii . Office, lira ... Office Ollico . .ccr.l Dr. F. D. Sherwin DENTIST. I Onicc. ro-ni lt lliirrlllkp to 12 a. 1 2ml tlonr file. SMS Qxt ) 1 toSii. in I Dr. J. H. Tyndale I omc-.nm.. ii..i 10... VJ I NOSE ANDTHROAT 1 "'T"1'""' f ih,i. i C A. Shoemaker, M. D. f on!co 113I LStrccl ....l""'- " ' 1'rof.oi Olu.ti'JriPii.iijnccolopv.Meuical 1 J)riU loturr Uiilieniily (. jlotim J I Dr. R.E.Cook J f E e. B r. Nobo and Thro: t 1215 O St. 9(-K!:K.)nm ) 2-5 i m ;iS,l ..., I Office. XehriiUK Hlcck 1 9 to 10 am Dr. Benj. F. Bailey 1 . i2t.i2-w ..CIS, .C71 T ,, ,T . I Onicp. Ildj O street IStol2i tor. J.S. McNay ., , , r " UpmiIpppp. S2fiRT strept I 1 tnli i Stul2am m Tr. R. E. Giffen Ken 162. 1 I Office, LaiiriiiK tlifatro 12 to 5 inn; iiy air it men t. 1 Office, LaiiclUK theatre J 2 t5 "! m ( KoMiiciicc, 121 F street j Miiiti I Ruth M. Wood. M. D. f Diseases ef Women. Oilier, Hichnnls Hide, I cor lltli anil O sis. V Residence, W so 1:1th. I 1 ,. . I Office, room 26. 27 nail I -0. LOUIS N. Wente.D.D.S.- I. Hf-wneU Mock, iw I 1 ( go III h btreet. J .J. Riser, D, D,L, -j mi Office, 1211 0trrct. over Her A. fame. I W, S. Latta.. M. D. f DixMbre of wirpn a f-jieriiilty, ' Facial ulenmihes rt-niui vil. I Ollirp aril private hos- I All hours' Y pital.lUC L. btreet. when njt 1 encased. Grenadines and Etamines. Fine dress fsforics of silk, wool and mohair; thin, cool and sty lish. See the choice and com plete assortment which we offer in our dress "oods department. Miller & Pain . O. J. KING. Fnmllv Grocer. 1I3G :v Street. Wholesale orders from consumers a specialty. 63 TLo Courier, several wro'-ts ai;o. an. nounced Unit a former ambitious towns man appired to tl o hand of ono cf tl.o Mi?s Lc'tere. Now Papa und Mammi Letter do not epprove ot pior but wortby and ambiiiouB EtiitorH forBorB in law. The joungest daubter Mips Daipy lias fallen in lovo with Uob Wallach the Bon of a former major r.f Washington. Now Bob is rr and pretty and the parent of tbo heiress do not consider him promising and they planned to get Mies Daisy away from Washington before any concerted att n could bo p!nnd by the lovers. Mr. Lei er p!arned a trip to Kurope, of tn sibly to attend the Quo ns Diamond Jubilee and May dialing room Daity was kept oat of the Eecn t, Lut came in to it by accident, through a vit-it from a scion of the house of Hrice. Young Brico unfortunati ly conra'ul ito 1 Miss Daisy upon herapproachit g visit abrcaJ and was surprif ed at a lusty exit from tbo room. Daisy was overwhelmed at the news, and ran t her n a-nma to ask if it wero true. Mrs. Letter prompUy confirmed tbo rumor, and explained that a little surprise whs bting planned, which it was thought best to keep until tha last moment. All the glory of at tending the quern's drawing toim waB p'clured to Daify, Lut for her it had no charm. Qhoughis of the re, aralion from the country of her lover wera to molancholy to permit ary scn-ation to pessess her. To her rcom she went and there in Eolitudo and tears she wrote to 'Bob'' to come prst-has'o and thwart this scheme. "Bob" came in acsordance .vith the invitat'on, lut not like the lover of yore with a ladJer and guitir. ft wa3 the following morning and three minutes beforo train t'uno. At such a imo and at the Ptnnsylvarii railway ttation "Bob" Wallach could not have Hspos'essed the Leiter family of their treasure with a po?ee of coufedeiates. Daisy, catching sight of her lover push ing madly through the crowd, evaded the watchful eye of her parents and hastened to meet bim. Willi palpi'at trg heart "Bob' reached the linger tips f the heiress and murmered, with evi lencoor pain at the seperation, "Daipy, I hear j ou are going abroad. I came to siy, God bless you and good-by." If "Bob" bad any more lines he did not ret an opportunity ti deliver them. There was a family interference of a foot ball order. It was father, mother, sisler Xancy and Biothcr Joe. on one side and ind poor "Bob" alone on the other. The game was brief but decisive, and in precife'y thitt?en seconds the fond leave taking was interrupted. Daisy was torn fioni the youth who held her hand ind upon his ehrvering form Para Leiter emptied the vials of bis wtath. Xcw that Daisy has gonotbroad gostips insinuate that she is the fou th j-otin? lady of wealth and beauty who had been forel by fond pawn's to take lha 'watTCure" for a similar case of too much "Bob Wallach. But "Bob" is a philosopher, and he says right manfully that if she loves him she will come back; if cot, why tia better so. To pass the idle hours until -he shall know whether it is cr is not "Bob" has taken the agency for a champagne house. Miss Marie Marshall entertained de lightfully with a Dutch lunch on Tues day evening. Sadie Burnham. Joe Mallalicu, Henrietta Hollowbush, John Lotteridge, Alice Slaughter, Fred While Grace Oakley, Guy Hurlbert and Joe Mason were the guests. Miss Culhryn Brooke entertaicg We lr.es lay evening a few friends with a c'laling dish eupper. Mr. Fred White left Fridty mornirg for Omaha where ho will assist his fa her in a now insurance office. Mr. Harry Lansing 6pet t a few days in Beal rice this week. Ho will nuke a display of the vitascope in Beat' ice, be ginning on Monday. The marriage of tLo beautiful Miss S!onof Omaha to Mr. Perry Allen secretary of the commission for sitlbrg the Venzuelan boundaries is thus de scribed iu the N. Y. Journal. Ho has been a prominent siciely man in Wash ington fr the last five years. A Yalo graduate be toik a post graduate cotir e in the Harvard law 6chrol. He is a splendid linguist, and owes his present position on the Venezuelan boundary commission in great part to .his thorough knowledge of the French, German ar.d Sp until language. lid is "air, wears -a Vandyke beard and is quite distingue. He is a member of the University club and the Columbia Athletic club of Wa3birg'on, while at Yale he received an elect on to ono of the honorary senior soci ties. Visiting one of his friends in Washington one day he cam across Mrs. Sloan's picture Ho puro Ioined it pnd carried it in 1 is pocket until the day be saw her when it was all over with him in an instant. If jou would know how lovely the bride is you must allow yourself to bo taken back a jear igo to a theater party in OmaLa. of which Colonel Henry Wattercon, tho best judge of women, horses and r.ther Kentuc'ty products, known to this generation, wa3 a member. Immedi ately on taking his Feat in tie box Colornel Watterson a attention becam lixed on tho face of a beautiful yonng wojiaa in tho audience. Upo i b ing questioned afterward he was unable t tell so much as the name rf the play. The joung woman's escort came ti tho box to pay his respects, but was in stant'' interrupted by tho Keitinky colonel. "Who is that charmit g joung woman with you?' he ake 1. 'That Colonel Wat'erson, is Miss Eo thi Shan, tho belle of all Omaha," answered the escort proudly. "Don't you lh'nlc she's prett V "Prettj !'' excliimed the Southerner. "Why, ir, she is the most beautiful woman I bavo ever seen in this or any other country." lntroduceel at the inaugural, ball, Mr. Allen told his love and tt.ey were engaged. With his sweetheart won and tho permission of his supjiior officer t take a vacition, Allen felt that thero was n thing but sunshine ahead of hi n. Tuc prospect of being sent to Par's in ths immediate future on a two years errand for ibe Venezuelan bsundaiy commission added. t his zeal. He realized that if ho weio tomatry he must Le' quick about it. The young people decide 1 they would go to Omaha at once and seik tho consent of the prospective bride's parents. They left Washington hurriedly. Tho im reitioua lover quite forgit t mentioi to his parents the matter of hii sudd mi departure, or its object. It ha. already been made plain that the young couple left Washington with tin single purposo of going to O.r.aha ar.d obtaining the consent of Miss Slrai's parents to their marriage. They have sin-e declared that they had no other intent'on at that time. But it is well knoivn that when two joung persons are madly in loie with each other cert tin of those fac ulties which are. exercised ia the or dinary atTaits of life seem to ceaee operation. It was bo in Un case of young Mr. Allen and Miss Sloan. In a - -"-TnllfittV 1 r3ii-J 'r'ii-to-fi.fc4afe-i- J.1 -