The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, July 13, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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THE COURIER
V
T5?e Ivy Press
PRINTING
ENG RAVING
LITHOGRAPHING
EMBO S S I N G
DESIGNING
125-127 North Twelfth Street
LINCOLN. NEBRASKA
A Western Printing Place where you can get what you want when you want It
Daintily gotten up Booklet and all kinds of Wedding
Stationery and Calling Cards are Specialties V V
Phone 852 LESH . LEMON
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S?IETY
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SHERIDAN COAL
LANDY CLARK, Agent.
Office, 1106 O St. Tel. lOS.
Tin QttFw&zL i l 1
1 PW 4X 14 $m
S i nlH Slfa Yi 1 1
7M life I pSSl l
w ife iu
III v I i "v U
Ladies . . .
When you buy a Skirt or a Suit or a
Jacket, consider
1st, FIT; 2fl. STYLE;
?fl. MATERIAL
4th, Where you can get the best for the
least money. You can get all of these at
MAX M(DKRIS.
The Tailor,
J416FarnamSt. : : OMAHA, NEBR
vCOvV
f Qrni?WT?
J. IJJ.JU111U1U'
TiRRW
will store your iurs ana
insure them against fire,
water and moths.
in en iqtuct . imnniH ncdd
a lid OU. IIB 01. LIHUULH, lUDn gy
Gas
LFiel
Cool
Cheap
QtiicK
Clean
Safe
ENSURES;
Meals on Time
Good Digestion.
Summer Comfort
Home Happiness
Rest, Recreation
AND SAVES
Zime
Money
Labor
Space
Food
I L1N60LN GHS H) ELBIKl
MPANY,
I BORR BLOCK.
Shoes for
Little Feet
Should be selected with the
utmost care. The comfort
and proper support of a child's
foot is of great importance.
Our stock is full of the best
styles and the best makes
the selection of just the right
shoe is a very easy matter.
They are easy to pay for, too.
PERKINS & SHELDON
O Street.
CO.
With each succeeding year the change
is more noticeable in the attitude of
Londoners and Parisians toward Ameri
cans. There is an interchange of hos
pitality now existing which would not
have been possible a few years ago; and,
most remarkable of all, no English
house-party is now quite au fait with
out some smart American. Many New
Yorkers who are spending July in Eng
land on a tour of these parties, will re
turn to Newport in August with a
goodly representation of English guests.
At the seaside resorts the quiet days
of June hare given way to the opening
ru6hof the July season. Crowds of
pleasure-seekers from the heat-burdened
cities and inland towns fill the hotela
and cottages to overflowing. At Narra
gansett Pier, Long Branch, Bar Harbor
and Ocean Grove there aie more visitors
than ever before so early in the season.
At Cape May and Atlantic City the so
cial life is fully inaugurated, the first
big dances occurring on the Fourth of
July.
Newport is more beautiful this season
than ever before. Gardeners, as well
as the choicest of foreign shrubbery,
have been imported, and the discovery
of blue roses and green carnations would
not be surprising in some of the hot
houses. All Newport was out on the
water in the early evening of the Fourth.
The yachts and the detachment of a
navy fleet in the harbor were ablaze
with flags and bunting. It has been
conceded that this will be a yachting
year, and all indications point to nu
merous entertainments on superbly
fitted yachts which resemble floating
hotels, and upon wbieh large parties
may be accommodated. One summer
is very much like another; but during
the last two years there certainly has
been an evolution of the summer girl.
She no longer mopes on the hotel or
cottage verandas, lamenting the delin
quent man who refuses to come in and
dine and dance; she goes forth to join
him at his sports, which is an altogether
preferable arrangement. The veranda
girl is still to be found, for not every
young woman is equal to the hot sun
and the required effort for sports; but
the smartest girls this summer are off in
the early morning for hunting, riding or
gclf. Many of these young women are
wearing their hair in a thick braid down
their backs, and the problem of unruly
hairpins is thus solved.
It is Baid that not in years has there
been so fashionable a commencement
as this year's at New Haven. Many of
the graduating class were men represent
ing New York's very smartest inner cir
cle. Numerous yachts from Newport.Bos
ton and New York came up for the final
event, the boat race at New London,
and, taking it altogether, probably no
outgoing class of Yale ever enjoyed a
gayer week. In New York the arrivals
from Europe and the constant passing
through of prominent persons have
given a zest to tocial life. Most of the
men are still in the city and are avail
able for short suburban excursions in
the evenings and dinners at some of the
restaurants on the outskirts of the town.
Dinners, by the way are good form only
in the severest simplicity. Delicacy,
shortness and superfine quality now are
the ruling watchwords.
John A. Sizer, son ot E. It. Sizer, was
the victim ot a painful accident last
Sunday at Kearney, where, with hiB
brothor.be was visiting his aunt, Mrs.
0. W. Hoxie. In removing the chamois
skin from a revolver the wrapj.ii!,'
caught and the weapon was discharged,
the ball passing through Master Sizer'b
hand and lodging in the thigh. He was
brought to Lincoln Monday, when the
bullet was extracted, and the patient is
rapidly recovering.
Postmaster H. M. Busbnell will de
liver an address on the subject "Com
merce in the Corn Bait" before the
trans-Mississippi commercial congress
which will be held at Cripple Creek,
Colorado, July 1G-19. Mr. Buehnell
will leave on Tuesday. Several other
Lincoln representatives will be present
at the meeting, among them Messrs. W.
D. FitzGerald, Morris Weil and Morris
Friend.
Mrs. E. H. Barbour and Miss Eleanor
Barbour left on Wednesday for the east.
They will meet Professor liarbour at
New Haven in the fall and will be pres
ent at the Yale bi-centennial which will
be held in October.
Chief Justice Norval of the supreme
court was in Lincoln Wednesday. Judge
Norval has served for twelve years on
the bench and while not an active candi
date for re-election, still would not re
fuse to accept a nomination if it were of
fered to him.
Mr. and Mrs. Ned C. Abbott spent
Monday in Omaha, leaving for San
Francisco Tuesday evening. They will
sail for Manila on the transport Thomas,
July 23. They will occupy the posi
tions of government teachers in the Fili
pines, under the direction of Superin
tendent Atkinson, a Harvard graduate
and well-known educator.
Mrs. Stotsenburg, widow of Colonel
Stoteenburg, has had a severe surgical
operation performed. She is recovering
slowly. It requires a year for severed
nerves to knit, and meanwhile the pa
tient is subject to a nervousness incom
prehensible to one who has never been
subjected to the shock. Mrs. Stoteen
burg is very brave and her temperament
assists recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Tobey left
Tuesday morning for a three weeks' trip
through Colorado. Thej will visit Den
ver, Manitou, Colorado Springs and
other places of interest, after which Mr.
Tobey will attend the meeting of the
Trans-Mississippi congress at Cripple
Creek July 16-19.
W. E. Blake of Burlington, Iowa, gen
eral solicitor of the Boston Investment
company ot this city, accompanied by
Mrs. and Miss Blake, also 0. J. Ernst,
Mrs. Ernst and Miss Grace Ernst, will
leave next Tuesday on Mr. Calvert's
private car, for a ten days' vacation trip
through the Black Hills.
A meeting of the Humane society will
be held this evening at 141 North
Twelfth street, ground floor, at 8 o'clock,
R, J. O'Hanlon, general organizer of the
American Humane association, will ad
dress the meeting.
Mrs. Helen Woodville, accompanied by
her little daughter and maid, left Tues
day for Colorado Springs. Mrs. Wood
ville has been spending several weeks at
the Lincoln hotel.
Miss Willa Cather, who is known
perconally to many of our citizens and