Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1900)
THE COURIER- V A A K - y Delinquent Subscriptions to Tike CMrir Received after the first of July. 1900, 1.30. oxrxooo-o-o-c0 ZIE FRANKLIN Iff 6REM And Dairy 60. Manufacturers of the finest qual ity of plain ana fancy Ice Cream, Ices, Frozen Puddings, Frappe and Sherbets. Prompt delivery and satisfaction guaranteed. 133 SO. 1 2th St. PHONE 205. dmtfvwkCwfttfwBtfwvAflvvBfi ooooor vww- 6 I H. W. BROWN Druggist and Bookseller. -Wli tints' Fine Stationery and Calling Cards 127 So.Bleventh Street. PHONE 68 t ? mMjKJt soooo-o 9 C.Am Pdntium.d. Athletic Photographs J Photographs of Babies Photographs of Groups 51 , 3 THE PHOTOGRAPHER 5 V 129 South Eleventh Street. J 9 foEGAfe NOT16E6 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 tne files are intact and are pre served from year to year with great care. All Delinquent Subscriptions to ..The Courier.. After the first of July. jjl.SO place in the world and he had not the will to recover it. He confessed that he could not sleep and in all probability ha contracted the chloral habit to in duce sleep. ' Died, on Saturday morning, July 14tb, Mr. C. C. Pool, deputy stato auditor. Mr. Pool was thirty-nine years old. He was born in Kentucky and came to Ne braska in 18S0. Mr. Pool's wife died three months ago and their six orphaned children have been adopted by friends whom Mr. Pool asked to take his child, ren shortly before he died. Ruth, the baby of ten months, is with Mr. and Mrs. Jackson on K street; George, a boy of two years, is with Auditor Cor nell; Irving and Mabel, aged seven and ten, are with their graudmother, Mr. Chafin, at Verdon; Charley, age J twelve, is with Professor Bruner of this city, and Ethel, aged fourteen, is making her home with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jewell. Died On Thursday morning, July the nineteenth, Mr. James T. Beach, an old resident of this city, of Brights disease. NOT IN THE NEGATIVE. "Many ludicrous developments hap pen in the studio of a country photog rapher, aside from what the chemicals bring out in the dark room,'' said a man who had photographed rustics for a number of years." I remember one Fourth of July that a young farmer and his sweetheart came to me to have some tin-types taken together. I posed them on a flight of stairs with a balustrade between them. Wnen I came from my dark-room after developing the plate, the young fellow stepped up to me and said, "S-a-a-y, couldn't je take that over again?" ' 'Why, what's the matter?' I askedin surprise. '"We ain't goin' to like that picture a bit,' he answered evasively. '"But why not?' I persisted. "Wallhe blurted out, blushing to the roots of his hair, 'she's too danced fur off.' ne refused to pay fifty cents for a new Bitting, so at last they bore away the tintypes as they were. But the next day he came back to my gal lery, very wrathful. 'Sa-a-y,' he fairly shouted when he saw me, 'take that durned girl off this picture. I'm mad with her!' "Often, when I hide my head under the cloth to get the focus, loving cou -pies, confident that I cannot possibly see them, take advantage of the moment to kiss each other fervidly, but with great silence. I remember, too, coming out of my dark-room one time to find a rustic with one of my bottles pouring a thick, dark liquid into the hollow of his hand. 'I guess you don't mind if I use a little of your hair He,' he said and promptly rubbed the stuff into his hair. It was a varnish for negatives, made to dry and harden very rapidly, and before I could get that picture taken, hurrying feverishly, he had to go out and get his head shaved. It is really hard to be lieve how 'green' people can really be in this age and generation until a man drives a tintype studio on wheels through the rural districts of our fair land." Thus concluded the photograph er. Caroline Lockhart, in the August 'New Lippincott." "Well, there's a good time coming," remarked Eyestone. "Yes," replied Botkins, "my wife's going away, too." Town Topic3. Nebraska yelean Jnioersit (Tonseruatoi of $Jusk. One of the foargest Music Schools in the West. The remarkable growth of this conservatory is due larger to the rapid and intelligent advancement of its pupils through the same methods of instruction which are pursued in the leading European Conservatories. All branches of music taught, with many Free ad vantages. Fall 'Ecnii BMS fflonaa?, September 12tlj. Send fur New Circular Giving Full Information, to OREN K. LOCICB, DIRECTOR. Un.i-veirial.ty Place, Nebn IMMI Do you get your Courier regularly? Please compare address. If incorrect, please send right address to Courier office. Do this this week. TIME AND SPACE arc practically annihilated by the ocean cables and land telegraph systems which now belt the cir cumference of Old Earth in so many different directions. "Foreign parts" are no longer foreign in the old meaning of the term. Europe, Africa, Asia, are "next door" to us. What happens there to-day we know to-morrow if we read THE CHICAGO RECORD, whose Special Cable Correspondents are located in every important city in the world outside of the United States. No other American newspaper ever attempted so extensive a service; and it is supplemented by the regular foreign news service of The Associated Press. For accurate intelligence of the stirring events which are shaking the nations of wars and rumors of wars of the threatening dissolution of old govern ments and the establishment of new of the onward sweep of the race in all parts of the world the one medium of the most satisfactory information is the enterprising, "up-to-date" American newspaper, THE CHICAGO RECORD. FREE A larse map of tho world on Mercator's Projection, about 23Kxl6 inches In size, beautifully printed in colors, with a large-scale map of Europe on tho reverse side, will bo mailed to any address free of chanre on receint of renuest accomuanlcd bv two I'-cent stamns to cover postape and wrapping. The maps illustrate clearly how comprehensively tho special cable service of Tub Chicago Record covers the entire civilized world. Ad dress Tub Chicago Recobd, 181 Madison street, Chicago. PITKIN'SPAINT PITKIN'S PAINT May cost the most, but PITKIN'S MINT Covers the most surface PITKIN'S PAINT Spreads the easiest. PITKIN'S PAINT Looks the best, PITKIN'S PAINT Holds color the best and PITKIN'S PAINT Wears the longest. FOR SALE BY W. P. DINSLEY & CO., 240 KTortlx T&xxtti Street. U. FLEMING Sil-veirx-vcijre, Braoeieti