The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, February 23, 1901, Page 11, Image 11

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    1HE COURIHK.
11
V
PJIGE of The Gourier after
Fgbruarvj 28, 1901, $1.5Q
TKere are orvlvj
lays
from roW to TJ4Z END of JHE
MOflJH.
A YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION
to
THE COURIER
will cost Delinquent Sub-
more if
scribers
paid after February 28, Af
ter Feb. 28, The Courier
is $1.50.
FASHKDN LETTER.
First Pub. Feb. 1
Legal Notice.
Notice is hereby given of the formation of a
corporation under the laws of the State of Ne-
1. The name of the corporation is the The
AMERICAN KANOE & HABUWAKE COMPANY.
2. The principal place of transacting the busi
ness of aid corporation, and the place where its
manufacturing establishment shall be located,
is Lincoln, Nebraska.
3. The general nature of the business to be
transacted by said corporation is the manu
facturing, buying, selling, and dealing m stoves
and ranges, heating and cooking apparatus,
hardware, woodenware. and all merchandise
connected with the hardware business; saddlery
hardware and all merchandise connected with
the saddlery hardware business, and the buy
ing, selling, holding, renting and leasing of real
estate necessary for the transaction of said
business.
4. The amount of capital stock of said corpo.
ration is four hundred thousand r J400,000.(l)
dollars divided into four thousand shares of one
hundred dollars each. Four hundred shares of
the preferred stock aggregating forty thousand
dollars shall be paid in before the corporation
commences business; the remainder of the pre
ferred stock shall be paid for at the time of its
issue. The common stock, w hlch Is one-half of
the whole, shall be paid for upon a call of the
Hoard of Directors. The stock is non-asscss-ablc.
.
5. The commencement of this corporation i
on the 5th day of December. 1900, and its exist
ence terminates Bfty years thereafter unless
sooner dissolved by the consent of a majonty
of the stockholders of the corporation or by the
operation of law.
6. The highest amount of indebtedness to
which the corporation shall at any one time
subject itself shall not exceed two-thirds of its
preferred capital stock, its preferred capital
tock being $200,000.
7. The affairs of the corporation to be con
ducted by a Hoard of Directors consisting of
live stockholders. The officers of the corpora
tions are a president, vice president, secretary
and treasurer.
. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our
hands this 31st dav of January, 1WX).
A. H. BUCKSTAFF.
W. E. Jakway,
8. H. BURNHAV.
First Pub. Feb. 1(5-1
Notice to Creditors. E J5J5. '
County court of Lancaster countv. Nebraska,
in re-estate of George P. Itottcrill deceased.
The creditors of said estate will take notice
that the time limited for presentation of claims
against said estate is Sept. Iti, 1901, and for the
payment of debts is March 15, 1902. That I will
situt the county court room in said county, on
June 15, 1901, and on Sept. 16,1901. to receive, ex
amine, adjust and allow all claims duly filed.
Notice whereof is ordered published four con
secutive weeks in The Courier, of Lincoln, Ne
braska. Witness my hand and seal of said court this
12th day of Feb., l'.mi,
(seal) FiMMt R. Waters.
County Judge.
By Walter A. Leese, Clerk County Court.
First Puli. Feb. 1S--3
Notice of Petition for Letters. E 1524.
In the county court of Lancaster county, Ne
braska. In re estate of William Hugh Hotterill, de
ceased. The State of Nebraska, to the children, heirs
at law and next of kin of William Hugh Hotterill
and to all other persons interested In his
estates.
Take notice that a petition signed by Sarah
Botterill praying said court to grant leUew of
administration of said estate tD O. B. Polk, has
been tiled in Said court; that the same Is set for
hearing on the 2nd day of March, 1901, at ten
o'clock A. M and that if you do not then ap
pear and contest, said court may grant admin
istration of the said estate to O. B. Polk.
Notice of this proceediDE is ordered pub
lished three weeks successively in The
Courier of Lincoln, Nebraska, prior to said
hearing.
Witness my hand and the seal of said court
this 15th dav of February A. D. 1901.
(seal.) Frank R. Waters,
County Judge.
By Walter A. Leese,
Clerk County Court,
First Pub., Feb., 2-4
Noticeto Creditors. E 1507.
County court, Lancaster county, Neraska, iu
re estate of Gena Leonard deceased.
The creditors of said estate will take notice
that the time limited for presentation of claims
against said esUte is September 2, 1901, and
forpayment of debts is March I, 1902; that I
will sit at the county court room In said county
on June 1. 1901, and on September 2. 1901. to
receive, examine, adjust and allow all claims
duly riled. Notice whereof Is ordered published
four consecutive weeks in The Courier of Lin
coln. Nebraska.
Witness my hand and seal of said court thU
Januarys, 1901.
Iseal.1 Frank R. Waters,
County Judge.
By Walter A. Leese. Clerk County Court.
H. W. BROWN
f Druggist and
Bookseller.
Fine Stationery
and
Calling Cards
x 127 So.Eleventh Street.
jj PHONE 68
X0' t'OOtt7l
Tbia is the season when Fashion drifts
into a sartorial doldrum, and, her fol
lowers drifting with her, leaven the poor
'fashion writers" with absolutely noth
ing new to record of her vagaries.
Things saftorially'areat a Standstill.
Of course there are all kinds of rumors
as to what will be worn this spring; but
put not your faith in rumors. They are
all utterly unauthentic, for the simple
reason that, at the moment, nobody
knows. The sartorial future is veiled in
mystery, and the modistes and milliners
are abroad on their way to see the mys
tery revealed. ThiB, much is certain,
however, that we who follow when fash
ion beckons should be thankful indeed
that for once there is no hint of that
agitating perennial rumor concerning
the revival of the crinoline and the bus
tle! It has amused me at the begin
ning of many a new season to watch the
persistency with which the "fashion
writers" have reiterated that at last the
crinoline or the bustle, as the case might
be, would flu rely be again worn. This
season it has apparently dawned upon
them, at last that women of fashion ate
not necessarily women without brains,
and that they have progressed altogeto
er too fast and too far ever to turn back
ward to the thraldom that caging their
bodies in wire means. I do hear, and
on good authority, that pleated 6kirtn
with all manner of fullness about the
hips will positively be "the thing" this
spring. But then you heard that last
spring. The fact is that it is the house
nf Paquin that is trying to eetablish the
vogue of full skirts. The first attempt
was made by Paquin some five or six
years ago, and it did not succeed except
with a very limited few. Paquin tried
it again last spring, with only moderate
success, and I question whether this
season his persistency will be any better
rewarded. Women know too much tnese
days to accept tho dictates of any fash
ion maker when it threatens destruction
to the cherished outline of their figure.
The American twentieth century wo
man, with her newly fixed desire to be
individual and graceful, will prove a
much more difficult problem for the
fashion makers to handle satisfactorily
than they have any idea of. I venture
to prophesy that the familiar phrase so
frequently heard hitherto on the lips of
the Parisian modistes, "Oh, anything
will do for the American!'' will shortly
become obsolete. Another rumor that
appears to have some foundation is that
rullled skirts are to be revived. These
skirts are tight-fitting about the hips,
and the ru tiles are cut circular. Some
of the newest cloth skirts are cut to
simulate a triple. Mrs. Alexander S.
Clarke was wearing, just before she
sailed, a very smart gown, in violet cloth,
that was made with a triple skirt. It
fits the hips closely, and is quite plain
and simple to within about twelve inches
of the hem; then it is cut off, slashed up
four or five times and edged with'velvet
of the same color. Two other "skirts"
similarly cut and edged complete the
triple skirt. The latest blouse from
Paris, which arrived only the other day,
is a simple affair of Cluny lace, with a
square little tucked mull guimpe out
lined in gold, and the sleeves are the old
familiar bishop sleeve, quite a bit wider
than we are wearing over here in blouses.
Many of the new hats have arrived and
are being worn, which is a blessing, for
there has been such a run on two or
three favorite models this winter that
one has been bored to death with con
stantly seeing them. The new hats are
mostly very flat, and many of them are
spangled. Mrs. Ollie Belmont is wear
ing one of the best of the spangled hats.
It is not as flat as most of the models,
but is more like a "capote," and the
lines across the back of the hair sre par
ticularly good. It is black, but spangled
in gold, and directly across the front is a
long Rold buckle. Mrs. Willto K. Van
derbilt, Jr., is wearing a copy of Mrs.
Belmont's hat. Mrs. William Page
Thompson wears a very smart hat done
in pale blue tulle. It is exceedingly flat
and quite plain except for some black
thistles, which-are placed on tho side
and spray toward the front. Another
hat, that is already too popular to please
a Modish, is also white, and is in white
tulle, veiled with black tulle, with the
soft folds clasped in the 'rout and again
in the back, with an ornament of black
gauze spangled in gold jnd silver. Mrs.
Arthur Paget is wearing a hat of tur
quoise blue felt that lendsitself to be
ing bent into a quaint outline, and i's
draped with blue tulle caught with a
bunch of pale pink roses, and is quite as
fetching ae any of the very latest bats
one sees that are now being unpacked
and are guaranteed to be "just from
Paris." Lady Modish, in Town Topics.
What "V" Meant.
Many years ago a young fellow enter
ed the freshman class at Amherst col
legea lad with a square jaw, a steady
eye, a pleasant smile, and a capacity for
hard and persistent work. One day,
after he had been in college about a
week, he took a chair from bis room in
to the hall, mounted it, aod nailed over
the dcor a large Equare of cardboard on
which wbb painted a big black letter V.
and nothing else.
College boys do not like mysteries, and
the young man's neighbors tried to make
him tell what the big V meant. Was it
"for luck?" Was it a joke? What was
it? The sophomores took it up and
treated the freshman to some hazing;
but he would make no answer to the
questions they put. At last he was let
alone and his V remained over the door,
merely a mark of the eccentricity of the
occupant.
Four years passed. On commence
ment day Horace Maynard delivered the
valedictory of his class, the highest hon
or the college bestowed. After he had
eft the platform, amid the applause of,
his fellow-students and of the audience
one of his class-mates accosted him:
"Was that what your V meant? Were
you after the valedictory when you tack
ed up that card?"
"Of course," Maynard replied. "What
else could it have been? How else could
I have got it?"
Maynard needed to tack no other let
ters over his door. The impetus he had
gained carried him through life. He be
came a member of Congress, Attorney
General of Tennessee, Minister of Tur
key, and Postmaster General, and adorn
ed every position to which he was call
ed. Youth's Companion.
"Aunt Ann, what ever became of that
pretty niece of youre?"
"She married a man in some kind of
business in one of the big cities out west
He must be prosperous, I guess, for she
writes me she has nothing on earth to
do but just sit in a window all day and
comb her long, beautiful hair." Chi
cago Tribune.
Mrs. Heopeck I wonder how any
body can live in such a place as Chi
"cago! Henpeck One will do almost any
thing to get a divorce. Town Topics.
Mr. Nicefellow What do you think
is the proper age for girls to marry
Miss Lena Oh, about nineteen.
"Indeed! And bow old are you?"
"Oh, about nineteen " Town Topics.
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