Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1901)
& THB COURIER 11 ' 3methtag flew m girls and $oy$ TtUMNG the nast vear "St. Xi'Mml-a" m.o. JLF . which li.a been for nearly thirty years tMMMinff children's monthly magazine of the wwMf and now the only on-). has introduced mu ul'ioiiuii.'iu9 wmru nare oecn ox '! attractive and hao greatly increased tfcedfculation. Onpof these is "NATURE AND SCIENCE." Dia't bother mo I'm too busy" is too often 'ttMiWBark from a growu-up person to a child "We IMlly wants to know. 1 ho editor of "Na tare and Scienco" gives careful attention to every Question asked by his yonntr readers, and We,ill write to 'St. Nicholas' bout it has Meoae 'ho m-tto of tho department, which cnataias interesting short articles, beautifully JUMtrated, tellin of four footed animals, bird, insects, water animals, plants and what ever partains to nature. "STVNICHOLAS bEAGUE" i ma organization of thoso who read the rnaga lineiwhethoraubscrlbersornot) without dues, aadrt' offers prizes each month for tho best Jrmwtaurs. photographs, poems, stories. nuzzlex J2ad pMzlo answers, omeof the work sent in j 'oy yoang folks snows remarkable talent. Noose who does not see"M. Mcholas"can i realise what an interesting magazino it is. and bow exquisitely it is illustrated ; it is a sur prise to young and old. Of literature it con tei&a tho i hoico-t, and in art. it has ne'er been mrpMsed by any grown fo'ks' periodical. The new Tolumo begins with November, IPO . and tbatBbscnntion prico is 13.00 a vear. If thprn - ebildren in jour home, you can hardly to be without it. FASHION LETTER . Lady Modish on Coiffures. JBOYJS AJVD GIRLS whe read this advertisement and who wish to find nut more about The St. Nicholas Iague ad its system of monthly prizes may address, "without cost. Tho St. Nicholas League, Union 'Bqaaro. New York. "Tie Century Co., Union Square, N. Y. JT.JOOUS HD IK COURIER . $350 i 4 o ooocoi H. W. BROWN Druggist and Bookseller. Wtiittnie,a Fine Stationery and Calling Cards 127 So.Eleventh Street. PHONE 68 INDIVIDUALITY THE FASHIONABLE FAD. When a woman has once successful solved the not always easy problem of 'now to wear her hair becomingly" sbe has gone a long way toward solving the always difficult problem of "how to look her best." American women in the very recent past have been over-inclined to think that the dress made the woman. They are rapidly, however, acquiring the knowledge that the dress itself is only third, compared with the importance of being w II groomed before getting into it, and the necessity of paying b rict at tention to the details of her ensemble af ter the is in it! Frenchwomen have considered their gowns last and their heads and hats Grst for many a long day. If a Paris innnt must, by some unhappy chance, economize in either her gown or her hat, she will sacrifice the gown unhesitating. It really is astonishing, if a woman is Men coiffie (happily hatted) and Btnartly K'vefJ ner individuality that Paris does not impress us as she once did. The great thing at the moment in fashion is individuality, and the women who can develop that alluring character istic successfully are today the only really well-dressed women in the opin ion of the super critical, that is. To return to our muttons, that is, to our coiffures. One of the prettiest of the new fashions of wearing the hair originated with Mrs. Tommy" Tailer, I am told, whom it suits tremendously. Mrs. Tailer parts her hair in the center of her head, and has it dressed low on her neck and very full and wavy on the Bides, almost concealing her ears. On the top of her bead, well forward, a lit tle to one side, Mrs. Tailor wears one huge rose of whatever color best suits her frock, and several sprays of rooe leaves. ThiB coiffure of Mrs. Tailor has been imitated widely, but scarcely success fully, "because it is so individual," ex cept by Miss "Fifi" Potter, who is quite the same type of beauty. Miss Potter wears her flower the other night it was a huge silver rose very much on the side quite over the ear which a Carujenesque as well as turned out above the throat, how little picturesque air. the rest matters. Diamonds have never been so much The importance of good collars and worn in the hair as now, nor have they the right kind ot boas, be they fluff or ever been so artistically and becomingly fur, is incalculable to the cachet of the B8t- 40lJil 9 00000 IsEGAb NOTICE -'a. "The Courier" is 10. A complete tile of 'kept in an absolutely fireproof build iag. Another tile is kept in this office ,aad still another has been deposited iliewhere. Lawyers may publish legal kotices in "The Courier" with securit) Mthe files are intact and are pre jStvod from year to year with great really well-dressed woman's day toilets. The dressing of the hair wben she is en grande toilette, is yet more serious. Last season there was a perfect rage for tufts of things feathers, bows aigrettes, or what nut to be worn in the hair. Ihey were becoming to just about one woman out of a hundred, and that, too, was about the percentage that un derstood bow to wear them. The rest of the women persisted in adopting them, despite the fact that by so doing (hey were destroying all hope ot an artistic contour. This season tufts are no longer "the tning," which is something for anyone with an artistic ee to offend to be deep ly thankful for. Fashion in coiffures has progressed as much as fashiou in cowne, and on about Really, the safest thing for the aver age woman, endeavoring to look her best, is, when it comes to having her hair dressed for the evening, to decide on diamonds or nothing. Anytbing mediocre in fashion nowa days is simply hopeless. Lady Cunard wears her hair high and has a band of diamonds an inch wide in the back and several inches in the front Bet in an openwork design that encircles her hair and gives the be coining effect of a coronet without be ing so elaborate a happy medium not easily acquired. Mrs. "Willie" Travers is wearing tier hair in a most "individual" manner that is decidedly piquant. Mrs. Travers' hair is very blonde and fluffy, and she wears it low in the back, full and soft on the the same lines. One may wear one's sides, and the top of her head is one big, hair either high or low, as it best suits one, and be equally smart in the opinion of the most captious connoisseur, though in Piria just now the fashion-makers are affecting the low coiffures; but we are getting so brave these days in our 3re Urn long, loose puff that falls a bit over her forehead. Mrs. "Ollie"' Iselin is one of the very few women to whom turtB are becoming and who also know how to wear them. Mrs. Iselin affects white evening gowns and fluffy aigrettes of marabout. Town Topics. "Doctor," said the student of medicine to his teacher, "what should I do to pre vent a patient from dying on my hands?" "As soon as you are convinced that the case is hopeless, be sure to recom mend a change of climate." Town Topics. SHOOTING GHOULS AT GALVESTON. The hp.ptm illnatmlcd rn n common one ilnrintr the (lavs immediate!? follotrinc the destruction of Galveston by tornado and flood. Singly and in band brutes wearing the human shape robbed the dead of clothing, jewelry, money and anything that was found ssmupon ineir bodies. Honest citizens toojc tne taw into meir own nanus anu me wora went Vf out to shoot on sight the fiendish robbers of the dead. It was the only way. COURIER SUBSCRIBERS. After February 28 all dilinquent subscrip tions due January first, J 901, will be one dollar and a half. One dollar is the cash price. After the date specified all subscribers delinquent two months or more on 1891 subscriptions will be charged a dollar and a half. THE COURIER CO. The Rock Island playing cards are the slickest you ever handled. One pack will be sent by mail on receipt of 15 cents in stampB. A money order or draft for 50 cents or same in stamps will secure 4 packB. They will be sent by express, charges prepaid. Address, John Sebastian. G. P. A.. Chicago, Rock Island 4 Pacific R'y, Chicago. Klrst Tub. Jun. 15. 10UI S. SIIKUIKP SAI.K Notice N hereby given. Thjt by virtue of .in order of sale Issued by the clerk of the district court of the Third judicial district of Nebras ka, within and for Laiu-nsier county. In an ac tion wherein Herbert 11. Sawyer Is plaintiff, and Itufiis K. Wedge et al. defendants. I will, at 2 o'clock I M.. on tho P.'th day of February, A. I. 1901, at the cast door of the court house, in tho city of Lincoln. Lancaster roiintr Nebraska, offer for salo at public auction the following described lands' urn! tenements to-ult- Lots thirteen 1 1.1 )nnd fourteen I II) in block three I Slot V II. Initio's second addition to tne cltv of Lincoln, located on the north one half of the south-west iiuarter of the south west quarter of section eighteen 1 If) lu town, ship ten 1 III I in ltuinns!eni7lKustlii Lincoln. Lancaster county, Nebraska. Glten under my hand this lib day of Jun uary A 1. linn Z. S Hll.l.NSOX Sheriff 2 NEWS and OPINIONS S .OK. National Importance 2 JTHE SUNJ g ALONE J CONTAINS BOTH. - a Daily, by mail . . . $6 a year J Daily & Sunday, by mail, $8 a year UliSvirvdavj 5ur Is thegreatest Sunday News paper ir the World. Price."c a copy. By mail.52 a year. Address THE SUN, New York. The COURIER And any One Dollar Woman's Club Magazine $1.50 The Century MAGAZINE. "The Leading Periodical of the World" Will IVIc&lcc 1901 "A YEAR of ROMANCE" BESIDES a great program of illus trated articles, a superb panorama of the Rhine John Bich Monaster's group of articles on Daniel Webster, color-pictures, etc., etc., The Century will present, beginning with November, 1900, the first issue of the new volume, Short Novels and Complete Stories by : F. Anstey, Mrs. Burnett, George W. Cable, Winston Churchill, Edwin Asa Dix, Ham lim Garland, David Gray, Joel Chandler Harris, Bret Harte, W. D. Howells. Henrv James, Sarah Orne Jewett, Rudyard Kip ling, Ian Maclaren, S. tit Mitchell, Thomas Nelson Page, Bertha Runkle, Flora Annie Steele, Frank R. Stockton, Ruth McEnery Stuart, Gen. Lew Wallace, Charles Dudley W arner, E. Stuart Phelps Ward, Mary E. Wilkins. "THE HELMET OF NAVARRE" A great novel, full of life, adventuro.and action, the scene laid in France 300 years ago, began in thr August, 1900, Century, and will continue for several months in 1901. Critics everywhere are enthusiastic over the opening chapters of this remarkable story. '-The author's name is apparently established with this, her maiden effort." says the Boston Trnscnpt. The Critic calls it "A re markable performance.'' FRIZES.. New Subscribers to The Century Magazine who begin with the number for November, 1900, will receive free of charge the three previous num bers, August, September and October, containing the first chapters of "The Helmet of Navarre," or. if thoso num bers are entirely exhausted at the time of subscribing, they will receive a pam phlet containing all of the chapters of The Helmet of Navarre" contained in the three numbers. Ask for the free numbers when sub scribing. $4.00 a ypar. The Century Co., Union Square, New York