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About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1900)
HIE COURIER. I 7- i- r i a dinner on Thursday, June the seventh the "seed' as Mr. Morton has called it, to Mr. and Mrs. A V. Whiting, Mrs. was worthy oJ the fruit. The mansion Hastle of Fairbury, M 18668 Whiting, grew in ten years to a "tree," then in Adeloyd Whiting, Flinn of Evanston, another ten to the "blossom," and then Illinois, and Jenkins of Fairbury. to "fruit" as Mr. Morton has his four Mr. and Mrs. Crittenden and daugh- Pictures of the place named ter will be in Lincoln on Sunday as the your face, with blisters on your over worked hands and pardon me scratches of bramble or barbed wira on your shins, you can go on your way rejoicing. For it's the fashion, you know. ftlf guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter liar greaves. Mrs. Eubank will ba at home this By a tree lined road going south of the yellow bouse you can reach the beautiful cemetery of the Old Town. It is a place of trees) cedars, elms, and the exquisite blue spruce is everywhere. All subscriptions to The Courier re ceived bsforo the first of Jul), only $1 00 RWJttRS Garden Hose and Lawn Sprinkler?, tho best in the city, at Korsmeyor's. morning to the Daughters of the Revo- RoBe bushes were all in bloom and other lution and their friendp. Mowers added their sweetness to the place whin I visited it juEt after Memor ial day. At the highest point of tho cemetery stands a broken of! tree trunk Miss Agnes E. Persson, 1G18 L street, in btone aB a monument, with a low graduato and post graduate of Emerson fence of logs about it. It is another College of Oratory, Boston, will give Arbor Lodge, made tho resting place of private and class instruction in physical ne remembered with undying devo tion in the home not far away. Close beside it is a grave not yet marked by the monument, but it is covered with flowers on Memorial day and always. It is the resting place of Senator 1 1 ay ward. If you ever journey by the Missouri Pacific road between the city on Salt Creek and the Old Town on the River, just rest your eyes and soul by looking at the low range of bills on the south after leaving Weeping Water. Covered with a dense forest, which looks as you pass sometimes like a green carpet, so close does it cling, the hills are so in viting that one almost wishes to stop the train and go exploring. I should look for bears there. And I hope that there is no optical illusion, that the hills are really so steep and Etony that enterprising farmers will not get to The COURIER And any One Dollar Woman's Club Magazine 150 OOOCX OOOO O culture, voice culture (speaking voice) and oratory. Also cures impediment in speech. Terms: Class work, Ph. culture, 20 lessons. $5 09. Class work, oratory, 0 lessons, 810.00. Private work, Ph. culture, per lesson, $1 Private work, oratory, per lesson, $1.50. Further particulars given on request. Telephone No. 78G. Union Fuel Company, 1014 O, phono 355, coal, coke, and wood. Get a cheap Electric Fan at Kors meyer's, and keep cool. Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Scalp Treatment, Manicuring, and Switch Work. Anna Rivett and Agnes Rawling 143 South 12th street. Died On Saturday, June the ninth, 1000, at the residence of Mr. J. F. Lan sing, Mrs Mary Frank Fuller, widow of grubbing out the trees in order to make Doctor Fuller, of heart disease. Lieu tenant Townley, her brothsr, arrived from the east after her death. Mrs. Fuller was a devoted church woman, and left a request that her body on the night before burial should remain in the church. In accordance with her much, wherein she had instructed juvenile class after class in the ritual and litany of the church. Without relatives, except her brother, the recent death of Mrs. Laneing whose protege she was, was a severe blow to Mrs Ful- touched them, and they grew from dim shapes in gray to my old companions again. They ire always beautiful, restful and consoling. Probab'y cattle roam about them, but of that I do not know. I ride past on the train, and Ier who was an efTectionate, dependent distance lends enchantment. nature. The old disease of the heart met no resistance from the woman it had troubled so long, when there was no longer either a faithful, encouraging friend, an invalid uncle, a mother or a father to stimulate its beating. Mrs. Fuller was the daughter of Mrs. J. N. Townley, a handsome, capable, re sourceful woman whom all the old Bet tiers remember with unusual affection and admiration. Mrs. Fuller wa3 in the fiftieth year of her age. ' THE OLD TOWN ON THE RIVER. (Continued from Page 5.) Just before you reach Nehawaka you will see you cannot help seeing Isaac Pollard's orchard, and it is something worth looking at. You get to wonder ing where it ends before you are half way past, for it seems to stretch out in definitely. The rows aie straight, and in between the rows is ploughed ground with nowadays Blim lines of green in it. I should judge that there was cot a twig out of place in that orchard, so trim it looks, and I would be sure that no dead trees are allowed there. What a pleasure it is to wander up hill and down dale, over pasture fences, across brooks, through brush and bram ble. To get away from the b?aten track, not to know what is coming next it makes one feel primitive and at peace with the world. Golf has a great mission in this way, I think. If it were not for the outrageous clothe?, folkp, for at Arbor Lodge the sacrifice of a tree is a very grave offense. But, really, the Arbor Lodge cedar grove needs thiuning out in some way. I have tangible evidence that Arbor especially menfolks, are compelled by a Lodge has years behind it. Mr. Morton villainous fashion to don when they go started out with an idea when, in 185.1, off for a game, golf might be somebody's I think it was, he built his first lodge in delight, instead of a fad. But let it the wilderness not then a wilderness of pass. Whoever plays is bound to have trees. I have seen a picture of this a good time, because he is just a roam early home. It was not just an ordin 'ing wherever the wind or his ball ary squat, Equare log cabin with a win- listeth. With the feel of real ground dow, a door and a chimney, but there under your feet, the tanning touch of was an archtectural notion applied, and unhampered air and unshaded sun on t i 6 c c H. W. BROWN Druggist and Bookseller. Wtiltlnif'a Fine Stationery and Calling Cards 127 So.Eleventh Street. PHONE 68 t Like other (loo and delicate work requires great euro, besides a thorough knowledgo of tho art. J j o DOHn FORGET that wo guarantee all such dilll cult" -epairs, besides maintaining the same popular prices which have built up tho largest ropah business in the west. tjM oocoo-a o J j ORN BMriiS Broiul 'VeatlLtalc?cl Having for yoars been tho west ern distributors for tho B. F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, who aro the largest manu -fucturors of DAIt,Y cornfields, as they now are doing around the Old Town. I have seen these hills in mid-summer when they cool the air by their greenness, in the autumn when they warm it by thoir glory of color, in winter when they huddln gray enough amid the whiteness. Then I have BETWEEN CHICAGO AND SAN FRANCISCO rnrnniIC WITHOUT CHANGE VIA LlUi-Il tjALlUO wishes on Monday night her body reet- watched them juetas the uncanny light ed in the Episcopal church she loved bo 0f four o'clock in a March morning L?ave Omaha on Big 5 at 1:30 p. m. All the best scenery in the Rocky Moun tains and the Sierra Nevada by day light in both directions. These cars ar9 carried on the limited trains of the Great Route Island Route, Denver and Rio Grands (Scenic Route). Rio Grand Western and Southern Pacific. Dining Cor Service Through. Buffet Library Cars. J J J E. W. THOMPSON. A. G. P Topeka, Kan. JOHN SEBASTIAN. G. P. A Ohicigo, III. All Subscriptions to Tike C(G)Mir1ir in America, we naturally become headquarters for such goods and will also buy any quantity of old Balls for CASH or exchange for new ones. J J ,S UN60LW KEB. US0 8t. Phone INa. BICYCLES HI ROY'S Dl M Received before the first of July. 1900, 104-106 No. Tenth St. QENEJVUj DRUQ BUSINESS Prescriptions, Paints and Oils. Telephony 291 . . Lincoln, Nbr Only $loo MB': PATENT M Mux may be secured by oar aid. Address. THE PATENT REC0K9. Subscriptions to T&e Patent Escort tunpertnncnv bi II RIER IV 1 Ai IY FIT IJ