THE COURIER. k Professional Directory. S Lift. 4u - Jffice. itm.... ";;8 Dr. Ben j. P. Bailey ,...671. ) .....' Office, Zehrang Block 1 9 to 10 a m V12 to 13:30 . W .671. 1 I BMldence, 1313 U itreet ) 2 to i p m Evening, by appointment. Bandar's iz to l p. m. ana ny appointment. g?IETY J Dr. J.B.TrJckey, ( RefractionUt only 19 t Vlto 9 to 12 a. m Office, 1035 O itreet. 4 p.m. DENTISTS. I , , ... . tv I Office, room 28. 27 and I Office 530. LOUlS N. Wente,D.D.S.- l. Brownell Block, 137 I (so 11th itreet. ) 1 .. . - v . -. ( Office oyer Harley'i I office 633 Oliver Johnson, D.D.S.K : ito ' 1 1105 O street office 42Drs Clutter & Shannon -Jumo street. ggMSSgS&aSB GUMff 00to 00 . UQfc 0 SIR;, Pt 05 h fssttssff 5 4 o 4 4 i inn WEBER TONE Found only in the WEBER PIANO. No other piano tone in exist ence has -such distinct individuality. the mncHliiESS styw the only upright piano that in volume and quality of tone is the equal of the best parlor grand piano. THE HI6H 6R1DE MinBEWS PIMO . . .. the only first-clan piano manufactured ard marketed by a western concern. A piano that ib gaining favor with the best class of trade with astonishing rapidity. m. "Ok t " -. ". " ". ". ". "t P tf. AXatttievsrs JPiano Co. 1120 0 street, inooln, Nebr. J vfvfvmfv.'vfvfvfvi . . . Have You Paid Your Subscription to . . . ITOIfc 1900? All subscriptions are delinquent after July 1st. One Dollar is the Cash discount price. Delinquent sub scribers after July 1st will lose the discount. .. .. WOMEN'S LOW SHOES Black and Tan, $1.5 0. Best for the MoneyShown in Lincoln. PIRKINS. & SHELDON CO. F5SF Already the do-nothing days shorten, and plans for the remainder of the sum mer and early fall are now materializing behind the arbors and draperies where lounging robes and negligee laces Sut ter. Club meetings dissolve into porch parties, some early tourists return, but more are leaving before August wilts the last breath of enterprise. Mean while the cooled lawns, where the dust from the feet of last week's political so journers has been thoroughly washed avay, tempt even a greater number of early morning and late evening gather ings. Many of these are informal and therefore most comfortable, the coming together of congenial folk for congenial times, society in fatigue uniform. The L. A. Kensington club has sub stituted monthly evening gatherings for fortnightly afternoon meetings, com mittees of two being appointed to have charge of arrangements for entertain ing the respective meeting?. On Friday evening, July 14, under the auspices of Mrs. W. J. Turner and Mrs. O. N. Humphrey, the members of the club, with their husbands, enjoyed a trolley ride to Havelock. They assembled at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Turner at half past seven o'clock, and returned after the ride, when refreshments and a most entertaining social time were en joyed. Those present were Messrs. and Meedames A. E. Kennard, R. T. Van Brunt, C. I. Jones, Turner, Qhapin, Humphrey, Rewick, Dr. and Mrs. Wil kinson; Meedames Wendling, Billmeyer, Patrick. The guests were Meedames R. N. Turner, George Fawell, Folk, Andrews, Cantield; Mr. and Mrs. Ga routte; Aliases Folk, Andrews, Turner, Annie Jones; Mr. Hutchins; Master Robert Turner. A wedding under circumstances of most unusual sadness, was that of Mr. Clare Brigge, well known in University circles, and Miss Ruth Owens, on Wed nesday of thip week. Mr. Briggs had but just started from New York, where he is employed as cartoonist on the Journal of that city, when he received word at Buffalo of the sudden death of his father, Mr. N. P. Briggs, in Oklaho ma. While the young man proceeded on his way to Lincoln, the widowed mother and three brothers whom he had expected to meet, returned to the old home in Dixon, Illinois, where the father was buried. After the very quiet ceremony performed at the bride's home, Thirteenth and F streets, by Reverend Long of the Second Presby terian church, the bridal couple started for New York City, where their home will be at 124 West 112 street. They will stay for two days in Chicago where the bride's grandparents reside, and where a host of friends had planned an elaborate reception for Mr. and Mrs. Briggs. A visit to Niagara Falls and to Washington, had also been arranged. Mr. Briggs is notably a Lincoln product, having attended the schools of our city for some fifteen years, and being an alumnus of Elliott, the High School, Union College, and the University of Nebraska. His popularity here is equalled by hiB success' in his artistic work for the New York Journal. Mrs, Briggs, also a Nebraskan, well known in the city, this spring completed a very successful year as kindergarten teacher at Riverton, Nebraska. Her excellent work there will make her missed scarce ly less than in her large circle ot Lin coln friends, Mr. Derrick N. Lehmer, A. M. Uni versity of Nebraska, Ph. D. University ot Chicago, was married on Thursday, July the twelfth, at Decatur, Illinois, to Miss Clara Eunice Mitchell of Chi cago University. The ceremony oc curred at the home of the bride's par ents,,Doctor and Mrs. J. W. Mitchell, the bridal pair departing for a tour through the Rockies to Berkely, Cali fornia, where they will be at home after August the fifteenth. In the two years since Mr Lehmer has been directly as sociated with the Nebraska University, his work has not been a disappointment to the friends who knew him here. Few have done as well any one of the many things in which Mr. Lehmer has excelled. As amateur composer ot unique musical compositions, be is perhaps best known though this, like his proficiency in whistling, violin play ing and story writing, was but one of the ways in which he amused himBelf and others. He was graduated from the classical course in "93, having spent the vacations of '91 and '92 surveying with a party of civil engineers in Wyom ing. He was a member of the English club and ot the Union Literary Society In '98 he left the position of instructor in mathematics in the Nebraska Uni versity, having been selected to a fel lowship in the Chicago University, out of a large number of candidates. Dur ing the two years at Chicago, besides securing a bride, Mr. Lehmer has pre pared several papers for the "Annals Mathematics" a Chicago publication of formidable aspect. "Rational Tri- angles" and "Concerning the Tractri Before Getting Up.... your picnic dinner, visit the 'KEYSTONE" and you wfll find no difficulty in selecting1 just what you want for a most tempting" and dainty lunch. We make a specialty of Poultry and Fresh Fish for Fridays and Saturdays, and would like to have you remember us. Ttf Some of (f)ur dicious Summer rinhs. TH& ItBYSTOIdS. J. W. MOORE, Propr 1312 to 1316 O 8TREJEJT. ' A - f e- "w--otr A H ioooooooooooooooooo ememtg