Z I11!1!!!1? '"? I HIIHHMNNIIMHIHFlMIIMHIIHUHMMIIHPIM WNCOI.N TRANSFER CO : THE LINCOLN ACADEMY . . . 5 Office lOtband Q Sta. Phone 176. i An accredited School to the State" Universities of 2 5 Iowa and Nebraska. Prepares for College and Uni-J 5 versity. Summer School now in session. Address 2 J or call upon S ALFRED M. WILSON, J?e; I. (Yale) WE DO . . . Piano and Furniture Moving WE CARRY . . A Fine Line of Car WE SELL . . All Grades of Coal. riages and Buggies. . If You Want First-Class Service Call on Us. " TT III Hill I III II THE COURIER. Governor delivered a Fourth of July oration at Columbus. An autumn wedding of more than or dinary interest in city and university circles will be that of Miss Lena E. An. tbony, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Anthony, to Mr. Leonard H. Robbing of Newark, New Jersey. Miss Anthony was graduated from the State university in June. She was secretary of the sen . ior class, and wbb a member of the sen X ior promenade and the senior play com mittees. Mies Anthony is a former president of the Q A. T. club and is well known for her prominent part in city social affairs. Mr. RobbinB is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. lie was educated in the State university and at Princeton. Since bis departure from Lincoln he has occupied various ' positions on eastern newspapers, and the changes have always been on an ascending scale. He is now Sunda) editor of the Newark Sunday News, a ' new and wealthy competitor of the New York papers recognized as one of the most important journalistic ventures of recent times. Mr. Bobbins' success was predicted by those who watched his work in this city on the Evening News. Governor and Mrs. Savage, Mr. Crounse and Miss Crounse, State Sena tor Edgar and Mrs. Edgar of Beatrica, returned on the third of July from Spear Fish, Deadwood. The party was organized by Mr. and Mrs. Ager and traveled in a private car but an indis J position prevented the latter from ac ' companying the rest. At Deadwood the Shrinere and the Woman's Thurs day club entertained the distinguished guests. After returning, Governor and Mrs. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. Crounso and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar, sent Mrs. Ager, who was prevented from going, a large and very handsome cut glass bowl. Delta Gamma gave a picnic and in formal dance Monday evening in Walsh hall. Thoea present were: Misses Lulu Hunt, Cochrane, Marie Weidner, Helen Welch, Cora Watkins, Sadie Burnham, Louise Burnham, Abba Bowen, Lillian Fitzgerald, Blanche Garten, Georgia Camp, Edna Barley, Gertrude Macomb er, Edith Lewis, Elsie Fawell, and Ruth Raymond; Messrs. Paul Fitzgerald, Sea crest, Lau, Abbott, Wehn, Sizer, Paine Hayes, Thompson, Holmes, Walah, Oak ley, Clarke, McCreery, Fawell, Ray mond and Doctor Orr. (r Something cool to drink, but more 1 particularly a cool place to drink it, are important elements in a summer lunch eon. Both of these requirements are met at the Palace Dining Hall, where well cooked food and cooling drinks may be enjoyed under the cooling breeze of electric fane. Competent service is pro vided by the proprietor, Mr. Ottens, while the location, 1130 N street, ie con venient for shoppers and down town workers. Professor C.W.Wallace entertained President E. L. Hewitt of the Normal University of New Mexico laBt week. Mrs.W.M. Leonard entertained Les Bobemiennes Tuesday evening in honor of her guest, Mrs. A. G. Beeson of Omaha. Married, at the home of the bride, 2232 U street, Sunday afternoon, Miss Laura N. Fording and Mr. Henry E. Gillon of Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Fisher left Monday for Yellowstone park where they will remain for two weeks, joining a coaching party on their arrival at the park. Gregory, The Coal Man, 11th 4 O. Doctor and Mrs. B. O. Koatka have left on an extended eastern trip. They will vieit Boston, Philadelphia, New York and several seaport townB, being absent a month. Miss Fanchon Hooper is spending the week in Omaha. Mrs. Roscoe Pound is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Gerrard, at Columbus, Nebr. Mrs. H.F.Hitchcock and daughters have returned from Sterling, where they visited last week. The best equipped and most popular dining hall in the city is the Palace Din ing ball, 1130 N street. Sunday dinners a specialty. Beet attention paid to fam ily board. Give it a trial. Mason, Hiland and Margaret Wheeler are spending the summer at Spirit Lake, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kellogg will spend the months of July and August in the Adirondack and ou the St. Lawrence river. Miss Estelle Downing of Wichita, Kansas, is the guest of Mrs.Frank Maddux. Mary D. Manning, teacher in elocu tion and dramatic art, Sherwood school of music, Chicago, will receive a limited number of pupils during the summer. Address 427 South 12th street. Mrs. G. D. Follmer and Misses Kate and Fern Follmer left Tuesday for a visit of three weeks at Montgomery Iowa. Mr. Daniel G. Wing of Boston spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Cooper and Mrs. Cooper's mother, Mrs. MeGee, are visiting in Omaha. Mrs. Mina D. Plumb, Brown block 152G O street, room 1, is the agent for Chas. A. Stevens fc Bros., silk import ers of Chicago. She takes ordere for tailor-made suits, etc. Just now she sells fifteen dollar tailor-made suits for six dollars. Mrs. J. A. Buckstaff returned Sat urday from a week's visit in Fairbury. Mr. Burt Whedon has returned from a year's- etudy in the Harvard law school, itorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Grain ger, on Monday, a son. Mr. W. Stull of Omaha was in Lin coin Tuesday. Mr. William E. Blake of Burlington, Iowa, was a Lincoln visitor this weok. Say! Before buying a buggy see the Humphrey Hardware Co. Miss Edna Curtiss has returned from a week'B visit in Beatrice. Misses Florence and Margaret Wing er have returned to Lincoln where they will ppend the summer. Mr. C. T. Brockway, formerly of Lin coln but now of New York City, spent the Fourth in this city. Misses Ellen and Frances Gere re turned from Chicago Monday. Dr. Carr, Burgeon. 141 South 12th. Died, on July thirf , at the Lincoln hotel, Mr. Henry A. Richards, father of the manager. His home was in Dun dee, but for a year ho has been visiting with his son. Died, at Denver on July second, Mr. C. A. Willard, formerly state treasurer of Nebraska. He had been a member of Lancaster lodge No. 54 since 1875 and was its secretary for three years, and master in 1830 and 1881. He was a member of Gale chapter R. A. M. and had been a member of Mt. Moriah com mandry, Knights Templar, since 1876, a thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Ma son, and a member of Sesostris temple A. A. O. M. S. His wife, who is an invalid, was in Seattle at the - time of his death. OSTEOPATHIC INSTITUTE OF HEALING. Acute and Chronic Ailments Successfully Treated Without the Use of Drug Drs. Bigsby have bad yean? of experi ence in the treatment of diseases by this new method, and have been very success ful in curing all manner of deformities and abnormal conditions of the human body. Diseases that drugs and other systems have failed to cure often yield to this new Bcience. i Chronic catarrh, diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat and lungs, dyspepsia, Bright's disease, diabetes, liver, stom ach, constipation, rheumatism, female diseases, neuralgia, sciatica, dizziness, nervousness, slow growth in children, and all wasting diseases in adults, cur vitures of the spine, disease of the brain, paralysis, heart disease, eczema, enlarged glands and tumors properly treated. Young, middle aged and old and all who suffer with nervous debility, failing memory, weak eyes, stunted develop ment, lack of energy, impoverished blood, also blood and skin diseases, pimples, falling hair, bone pain, swelling of feet and limbs, kidney and bladder troubles, weak and lame back, all re ceive thorough and helpful treatment by this new method. Brownell Block, South 11th St., 3d floor, suite 4G to 53. A Noteworthy Combination. The consolidation of The Chicago Record and The Chicago Times-Herald wbb one of the most important events in the history of modern metropolitan jour nalism. People familiar with the news papers published in the great capitals of the world say that the best daily pa pers are made in Chicago, and it is well known that The Chicago Record and The Chicago Times-Herald are at the very front among Chicago's best dailies. Each covered the world's news thor oughly every day, and each possessed also distinctive special features giving it that individuality so attractive to its readers. Now that the two have been combined, all the resources and world wide facilities of both papers are united in the Chicago Record-Herald. It is in truth "a great combination" a combi nation without a parallel in American journalism. The fortunate readers of The Chicago Record and The Chicago Times-Herald now receive every day a newspaper whose facilities are unequaled by any other American newspaper. comu.a. CHOCOLATE BON BONS For Sale By Where Romance Fails. In Novels. They quarrel. They say farewell. She decides never to beo him. He calls. She says she is not in. He sends roses. Still she remains obdurate. He sees her at the theatre. She bows coldly. He writes, craving forgiveness. She yields. Happiness. In Real Lifo. They quarrel. They say farewell. He goes to his club. She remains in her room. He calls on other friends. She listens for the door bell. He attends the theatre. She spends her evenings alone. He meets another woman. She waitB for a note. He sees her at a restaurant. She smiles. He bows coldly. She writes to him. He does not reply. Misery. Town Topici. For DEklCIOUS DISHES and a COOfo PLAGE to '. Bat Them, go to the ... . VEGETARIAN OAEE, 316 (So. 1 2 tia St. ... THE . . . 1ST Willi Bl ... of LINCOLN, NEBR J j o Capital $ 200,000.00 Surplus and Profits . 54,255.08 Deposits .... 2,430,252.18 Ji 0 0 S. H. Burnham, A. T. Sawyer, President. Vice President. H. S. Freeman, Cashier, H. B.Evans, Frank Parks, Ass't Cashier. Ass't Cashier. UNIJED STAfzSbEf0SIJ0J?Y. ill v 4: '('II de f 3l at t IF 1U 1 I' n ' i -I I H J 1