ssssassaJMx3Slffi .wya THE COURIER I- !U 4' . n it H'. h i, nj it i u ?! K it f! N H ! Hi li I i- i 13 M engaged for each farm; the ground is plowed, harrowed and seed is furnished to those who are too poor to buy for themselves, though all families able to do so are expected to pay 81.00 for the use of the ground. Remarkable results have been obtained from these garden patches. With careful management each garden can be made to yield from $50 to tGO worth of vegetables each sea son.many of which are consumed by the owners from day to day, while others are Bold or stored for the winter. A People's Friendly club was organized by. the gardeners on each tract, and frequent meetings are held to compare notes and give and receive suggestions relating to the work. The Queen Mining company has . re cently been incorporated in Pierre, 8. D., with a capital of a billion dollars. The company is composed of Mrs. Estelia True-Nell, hei daughter, Mrs. P.-arl Young, and Mr. Oscar Nelson, whose name is said to be all the interest he has in the organization. Mrs. True Nail has been engaged in mining since her husband died, twenty years ago. Mrs. Young has also had plenty of ex perience in the business, and together they propose to develop some of the richest property ever known. The com pany proposes also to buy, lease and operate mines of all descriptions, to en gage in manufactures, and to construct and operate railroad and telegraph lines. Mies Fannie Ruth Robinson has re cently been elected' president cf Oxford college, Ohio, to succeed Dr. J. H. Thomas. Miss Robinson has been dean of the college for five years, and will re tain the post while filling the office of president. At the graduation of fifty two young women from the New York school for Trained Nurses, the following version of the Hippocratic oath was administered by the chairman of the advisory board, Mrs. Cadwallader Jone3: "You do sol emnly swear, each by whatever she holds most sacred, that you will be loyal to the physician under whom you serve, as a good soldier is ioyal to his officers; that you will be just and generous to all worthy members of your profession, aiding them when it will be in your power to do so; that you will live your lives and lead your profession in up rightness and honor; that into whatso ever house you shall enter it shall be for the good of the sick to the utmost of your power, and that you will hold your selves aloof from all temptation; that J. F. Harris, No. I, Board of Trade, CHICAGO. STOCKS AND- BONDS Grain, Provisions, Cotton. j j jt Private Wfaw to New York Gtyaad Maay G&s East aad West. Jt j Jt MEMBER New York Stock Rxchaacs. Chicago Stock ExehuM. CUeaco Board of Trad whatsoever you shall see or hear of the lives of men and women, whn ther they be your patients or members of their households, you will keep inviolably secret, whether you are in other house holds or among your own friends." If you accept these obligations, let each one bow the head in sign of acqui escence. And now, if you shall be true to your word, may prosperity and good repute be ever yours, the opposite if you shall prove yourselves forsworn. Though a surprise to both graduates and audience, the young women signi fied their acceptance of the obliga tions, and much favorable comment was heard from the physicians present. Several weeks ago the Ladies' Literary club of Gilmore City, Iowa, was the guest of the Review club of Des Moines. Last week the Review club was pleas antly entertained in Gilmore City. Among the subjects discussed were what should constitute a club dinner, picnics, programs, luncheons, straw rides and sunrise breakfasts. Other Iowa clubs are planning similar ex change of courtesies for the coming year. Nebraska clubs might adopt the idea with 'pleasure and profit. Of immeasurable benefit to the poor classes in Philadelphia are the huge recreation piers on the river front. The upper stories of these piers are enclosed as a protection against storm. The lower portion, which is nearbst the river, is never closed, and is patronized by women and children at all hours of the day. In the evening the men also go to the pier to rest and Btnoke. Lucch counters are' provided where pie, milk, roast beef, soda, ginger cakes, ice cream and other cheap articles may be pur chased if desired . "Jane Addams Hall" is the name of an institution soon to be erected in Paris, copied after Hull House in Chicago. Seventeen years ago the Rev. F. L. Pease, a retired missionary of New York city, purchased a little farm in the suburbs of Ashvilie, North Carolina, and built a comfortable cottage in which he hoped to spend hiB remaining days with his wife in peace and happi ness. The girls who came to do cooking and other household work in the cottage were very ignorart. None of them were accustomed to the conveniences of a modern kitchen, and few were able to read and write. So Mrs. Pease organ ized a small class in which she taught reading and writing in addition to house hold arts, and soon applications for ad mission came from mountain girls out ride her own neighborhood, which she could not well refuse. Five years later Mr. Pease donated his thirty-five acreB of land to the Presbyterian Woman's Missionary board for the erection of the Normal and Collegiate Institute for Young Women, a four-story structure which accommodates 225 girls. On the same site is the Home Industrial School for Girls, which is the direct outgrowth of the kitchen class established by Mrs. Pease. The cottage has been enlarged until it accommodates 108 girls, with a list of applicants all the time who have to wait for vacancies on account of lack of room. Mr. Pease died several years ago. but Mrs. Pease sttll lives in Ash vilie, and though eighty-four years of age, takes an active interest in the work of the schools. lTU II IV 9 ill ' f Ik I n L d U L I u tii m Wii? m . BEGINS OJV flONDAY, JULY ist. m The summer wares receive no considera tion as to value or cost. They merely represent merchandise to be disposed of quickly and completely, and profit is not a feature. Every department is represented in the clearing1 and every stock represents some rare bargain offerings. 'WATCH FOR THE SPECIAL PRICE CIRCULARS 7 iv w. ? v ?Jfazj?QO)mw&t(g Vliir The love a loyal man feels is always poorly expressed only the cold in love make fine speeches about it. Town Topics, LINCOJN, NBBR. w i(SJ&J&iS& 7asw Uty Preferences WE long ago learned that to argue against a wo man's preferences was a mere waste of time consequently we never tr3 We sell every good sort of typewriter in its best form. One of these will suit your requirements. Plenty of unbiased advice, however, if you require it. 1106 O Stxreet . . Telephone 759 WNCOIvN, NBR. lpP LAWYERS- Cblokerlne de Son. Ferguson $Jusfc 114 So. I2tfc fSt. SADRLeS HORSE COLLARS Ulsf lfa,.2""5-,ir-U sHOWinLN HJRDEALERTO BEFORE. YOU BUY. MANUFACTURED BY HABPHAM BROS.CO. Lincoln, Neb. Send The Courier yDur LEG ai, notice? files are kept m fire proof buildings. i ( I Hfl