The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, April 14, 1900, Page 9, Image 10

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    THE COURIER.
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H W. RROWN t
Druggist and
Bookseller.
Fine Stationery
and
Calling Cards
127 So.Eleventh Street
PHONE 68
0M &Mj m lIHlt7l
If you are going to the
Pacific Coast
Don't complete arrangements until you
have Becurtd information regarding the
personally conducted excursions
..VIA..
CLUBS.
4
wcrcS
These excursions leave Omaha every
Friday, in elegantly upholstered Ordi
nary Sleeping Cars, illuminated by
Pintsch Light, Heated by Steam.
Baggage checked through to destina
tion. Prompt and satisfactory service.
Many hours quicker time
than any other line.
For Time Table-s. Folders, Illustrated Books
Pamphlets descriptive of the territory traversed
call on
13. 13. S109sOn, Agent.
Brontl Vestlbuled
First-Class Slnepers
rAirY
BETWEEN CHICAGO AND SAN FRANGISGO
WITHOUT CHANGE VIA
Leave Omaha on Big 5 at 1:30 p. m.
AH the best scenery in the Rocky Moun
tains and the Sierre Nevada by day
light inlboth directions.
These cars are carried on the limited
trains of the Great Roolc
Island Route Denver
and Rio Grands (Scenic Route), Rio
Grand Western and Southern Pacific.
Dining Car Service Through.
Buffet Library Cars. J J J
E. W. THOMPSON, A. G. P
Topeka, Kan.
JOHN SEBASTIAN. G. P. A
Chicago, III.
feEGAb NOTICES
A complete tile of "The Courier" is
kept in an absolutely fireproof build
ing. Another file is kept in this office
and still another has been deposited
elsewhere. Lawyers may publish legal
notices in "The Courier" with security
as the files are intact and are pre
served from year to year with great
care.
(Continued from Page 5.)
each report.
State chairmen of correspondence
will report number of clubs in G. F. W.
C, number admitted since last biennial,
lines of work adopted by clubs federated
since la9t biennial.
Three minutes will be allowed for
each report.
These reports will be published in the
official proceedings of the biennial. It
is desired that a condensed account of
the work be prepared in order that it
may go out to the federation in this
form, if there should not be sufficient
time for full report at the afternoon
meeting. These reports should be type
written. The following is the list of hotels,
with terms:
Plankington house. Manager, W. G.
King. Rates, American plan, three dol
lars per day upwards, two in room; Eu
ropean plan, one and a half to three dol
lars per day.
Hotel Pfister. Manager A. L. Sever
erance. Rates, American plan, three to
rive dollars per day; European plan, one
and a half to three and a half dollars
per day.
St. Charles Hotel. Manager, F. J.
Matchette. Plan, American. Rates,
two, two and a half and three dollars
per day, two in room.
Hotel Davidson. Manager, E. T. Dor
man. Rates, American plan, two dol
lars per day, two or three in room; Eu
ropean plan, one dollar per day.
Republican house. Manager, A. L.
Kletzsch. Plan, American. Rates, two
to three dollars per day.
Schlttz hotel. Managers, Pleiss &
Heck. Plan, European. Rates, per
per day, one dollar, single room; eeventy
five cents two in room.
Hotel Blatz. Managers, Schaeffer
Bros. Plan, European. Rates, rooms,
one to one and a half dollars per day.
Hotel Aberdeen. Managers, Randall
& Hadfield. American plan. Rates,
two dollars per day, two or more in
room.
Globe hotel. Manager, B. J. Bourda.
Plan, European. Rates, rooms, one and
a half dollars per day; two in room, seventy-five
cunts.
Kirby house. Manager, Frank Cole.
Plan, American. Rates, two dollars per
days. No single rooms.
Lake View house. Manager, G. W.
Garrett. Plan, American. Rates, two
dollars per day, two in room.
Hotel Fizette. Manager! William
Fizette. Plan, American. Rates, one
and a quarter to one and a half dollars
per day, two in room.
Any person desiring board in private
homes at from one and a quarter to two
dollars per day may secure the same by
addressing the committee on hotels,
Mrs. H. U. Barnard, 2002 Grand ave
nue, Milwaukee, chairman of committee.
The regular meeting of the Self Cul
ture club of St. Paul, was held at the
home of Mrs. Shaostrom on last Friday
the following lesson being conducted
by Mrs. Jeffords:
Quotations about children.
Paper "Mothers the True Reform
ers," Mrs. Fletcher.
What Shall We Read to Our Chil
drenDiscussion led by Mrs. Bell.
Reading selected, Mrs. Stevens.
Little Nellie Jeffords sang two sweet
songs and Margaret Shanstrom recited
a Mother Gooee rhyme.
TheF. W.C.of Wayne, conducted a
very successful bazar on the 29th and
30th of March, for the benefit of the
library fund, during the session the
North Nebraska Teachers' Association
w hich began on the 27tb of March with
an enrollment of 400. The ladies of the
federation divided the work so that
each club here was in charge of a par
ticular lino of labor connected with the
display, and each served one rnoal, and
were the hostesses in turn. The clubs
have been very active "for some time ar
ranging for this event, and this enthus
iasm induced the budnees men to con
tribute liberally of merchandise, and
the housekeepers to prepare foods.
The old court house building was used.
The proceeds are about $200 and will be
donated to the library fund of the city.
Bisland. Bronson Howard, Augustin
Daily, Augustus Thomas and Henry
.Guy Carleton, dramatists, were news
paper men.
Mrs. E. S. Buchwatur, chairman of
the program committee for the biennial
women's club convention, announces
the following list of speakers:
Mrs. Robert J. Burdette, Pasadena,
California; Mrs. Lyda Coonley Ward,
Chicago; Mrs. W W. Belknap, Louis
ville; Mrs. W. H. Kistler, Denver; Miss
Alice French, Davenport, Iowa; Mrs.
Kate Upson Clark, Brooklyn, New York;
Mrs. Alice Williams Bretherton, Cin
cinnati, Ohio; Miss Margaret J. Evans,
Northfield, Minnesota; Mrs. William
Line Elder, Indianapolis, Indiana; Mrs.
J. K. Ottley, Atlanta, Georgia; Mrs.
William C. Herron, Cincinnati, Ohio;
Mrs. William N. Neal, Helena, Arkan
sas; Mrs. Mabel Loomis Todd, Amherst,
Massachusetts; Mrs. Esther Frothing
bam Noble, Newark, Connecticut; Mrs.
Anna G. Whitmore, Denver; Mrs. Flor
ence Kelly, New York city; Mrs. Fred
erick Nathan, New York city; Miss
Edith M. Howes, Boston; Mre. Corrine
S. Brown, Chicago; Mrs. Charlotte Per
kins Stetson, Chicago; Mrs. Herman J.
Hall, Chicago; Mrs. Hamlin Garland,
Chicago; Dr. George Kriehn, Chicago;
Mrs. Paul Hemphill, Chester, South
Carolina; Miss Mira Lloyd Dock, Miss
Anna W. Williams, Mrs. Caroline Bart
let Crane, Kalamazoo, Michigan; Mrs.
O. M. E. Rowe, Boston; Mrs. Frederick
Hanger, Little Rock; Mrs. Charlotte
Coffyn Wilkinson, Syracus?, New York;
Mrs. Emily E. Williamson, Miss Dotha
Pinneo.
This does not include the speakers
for the press afternoon in charge of Mrs.
Mary Lockwood of Washington, who
has not yet announced her complete list
of speakers.
In preparing the program for the fifth
biennial, Mrs. Buchwater, chairman of
tha committee, says it has endeavored to
give the clubs an opportunity to report
upon the effocts of the ideas generated
at the earlier biennials. The three
Btanding committees on education, art
and industrial conditions have given
much time and thought to their re
spective departments, and each will con
duct most attractive and comprehensive
sessions. The other sessions are in the
hands of those well fitted to report upon
and show progress in their several departments.
The biennial program committee has
secured a room-in thcAlhambra build
ing as permanent headquarters for state
presidents and ex-presidents. As the
meetings of the federation are held in
the Alhambra theater, those for whom
this room has been provided will find it
very convenient for conference or for
moro formal meetings.
There is no danger of a dearth of can
didates for the presidency of General
Federation of Women's Clubs. Mrs.
Tod Helmutb.a well advertised New
All Subscriptions to
Tike Cowier,
Received before the first of
July, 1900,
Only $l.oo
The condescending distinction made
by critics who have failed in the world
of letters, between "newspaper English"
and literary language, between the
Journalist and the author, is vanishing
into the same limbo as astrology and
perpetual motion, according to the Kan
sas City Star. In the last ten years
many of the great successes in litera
ture have been made by workers in, or
graduates of, the daily press. In Eng
land five names stand out pre-eminent
in this respect: Stevenson, Kipling,
Barrie, Barr and Steevens. In the
United States the newspaper press has
contributed at least the following suc
cessful writers to literature: James
Whitcomb Riley, Richard Harding
Davis, William Drysdale. Stephen
Crane, Lafcadio Hearn, Kirk Monroe,
Edward E. Townsend, Peter Finley
Dunne, Anna Nicholas, Carolyn Wells,
Ida Tarbell, William Dtan Howel.'s,
Jeanette Gilder, Julian Ralph, Harold
Frederick, Roy McCardell, Benjamin
Northrop, William Allen White, Eliza
beth Jordan, George Horace Lorimer,
James L. Ford, Norman Hapgood, Bliss
Carmen, George Ade, Alfred Henry
Lewis, Helen Watterson Moody, J. I. C.
Clarke, Poultney Bigelow, Kate Master
son, Emily Lafayette McLaws, Anne
O'Hagan, Cynthia Westover Alden,
Henry Guy Carleton, Viola Roseboro,
Edward Fales Coward, Vance Thomp
son, N. A. Jennings, Florence Brooks
Emerson, Eugene Field, Jesse Lynch
Williams, Dr. William E. S. Fales,
Eliza Archard Connor, James Jeffrey
Roche, E. D. Pierson and Elizabeth
s$6$rn&rijfa
Ccle Photographs 'J
Athletic Photographs '5
Photographs of Babies
Photographs of Groups
Exterior Views -
.
THE PHOTOGRAPHER
129 South Eleventh Street. ,'J
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