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About The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1901)
!f .11 l"m II UlUIUli MMMMMMMMMMMWftl I x -r rivr"r"T ,-rr Ama . -mts-r-A-r 15 m-. T-.T.,. . . .-.-r - r- -- smijevj: ST1LU JjIJNUULJN AUAUEMI . . . . Office lOtlx and Q 8t. Pfaone 176 i .An accredited School to the State Universities of Iowa and Nebraska. Prepares for College and Uni-8 versity. Summer School now in session. Address 5 or call upon S i'l WE DO . . . I Piano and Furniture WE SELL . . ii WE CARRY ri Moving I All Grades of Coal. A Fine Line of Car- riages and Buggies, . f If YOU Want First-Class Soro-ino nan rm ttq I B" I J ALFRED IWT. WILSON, Ilii X. (Yale) 0omtoo000 Prliaolpcil. O0 THE COURIER. who Is known to others from her excel lent literary productions, ia the guest of Mrs. L. Weetermann. .Mies Cather left today for her home at Red Cloud . A syndicate headed by Honorable George D. Meiklejohn is preparing to bore about 3,000 feet after oil in Dakota county. The first well will be du near Homer. The syndicate has leased 50, 000 acres of oil and mineral prospecting land north of Homer, along the bluffs, to be placed in charge of Captain Dick Talbot of Sioux City. The lumber for the big derrick alone cost $1,000. There will be a renuion of the Kappa Kappa Gamma fraternity iu Buffalo on July the twenty-ninth. The headquar ters of the fraternity will be in the Wo man's building of the Pan-American exposition. The Buffalo members have succeeded in creating a wide interest in the reunion and a large attendance is expected. Mrs. Robert McGee, who hps been visiting ber Bon and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. McGee of Oma ha, rehired here on Thursday and is now the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Gilbert Cooper. Mrs. Mary Rollins, bcrn Carson, is delightfully located with her family at 2036 Severance street, Los Angeles, California. They have secured a beau tifully furnished house in the choicest residence part of the city, and will re main there during the summer and winter. j Something cool to drink, but morb 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 fans. Competent service is provided by the proprietor, Mr. Ottens, while the location, 1130 N street, is con venient for shoppers and down town workers. Mrs. John Doane has gone with her children to Cleveland, Ohio, where she will visit her parents during the sum mer. Married, at the home of the bride, 2036 Holdrege street, July 3, Miss Lulu Large and Mr. Joseph Skelton. Mr. and Mrs. Skelton will live in Council Hluffs. Congressman Mercer sailed from New "W York for Manila on the transport Mc- Clellan on Wednesday. The trip waB undertaken at the personal requeEt of President McKinley. Frank II. Johnson, formerly business manager of the Advocate, now adver tising manager of The Courier, will leave on Monday for Buffalo and New York city. Dr. and Mrs. Winnett are enteitain ing Mr. and Mrs. George S. Corbit of St. Johns, Michigan. Mr. Corbit 'is editor of the Independent at St. Johns. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Quiggle and Miss Martha Quiggle will leave tomor row for a visit of two or three weeks in New York and Pennsylvania. State Superintendent Fowler was present at the meeting of the National Educational Association in Detroit this week. have gone to Sylvan Lake, S. D., for a couple of weeks. Gregory, The Coal Man, 11th & O. Miss Georgia Camp is the guest of Lincolu friends. Dr. Lenore Perkey has returned from a trip to Idaho. Mrs. Charles M. Keefer is visiting in Denver. The best equipped and most popular dining hall in the city is the Palace Din ing hall, 1130 N street. Sunday dinners a specialty. Best attention paid to fam ily board. Give it a trial. Miss Nelia Cochrane left today for Lead, South Dakota, where she will remain for a short visit. Mies Marsland left on Wednesdaj for Olympia, Washington, where she will visit for several weeks. Mrs. John Oberlies has returned from a visit of several weeka in Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dorgan are liv ing at 1631 F street while their iesi dence is undergoing repairs. 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. Governor Savage and staff attended the South Omaha street fair on Wed nesday, which was governor's day. Mr. and Mrs. John Dorgan and Mr. and Mrs. George Woods have arrived in London after a pleasant voyage. Special bargains in pants can be had now at Paine's Store. Inquire about them. Milo D. Eames has gone to Buffalo. Miss Nellie Ohler has returned from her school duties at Rosebud, S. D. Mrs. Mina D. Plumb, Brown block 1526 O street, room 1, is the agent for Chas. A. StevenB fc Bros., silk import ers of Chicago. She takes ordere for tailor-made suits, etc. Just now she Bells fifteen dollar tailor-made suits for six dollars. Misses Sadie and Louise Burnham are spending a couple of weeks at Estes Park, Colorado. Doctor Bessey attended the National Educational Association convention in Detroit this week. Mrs. D. D.Muirof Rutland, Vermont, is the guest of her mother, Mre. Wilson. Mrs. H. M. Bushnell and family are spending the month at Ashland. Say! Before buying a buggy see the Humphrey Hardware Co. Miss Blanche Edmisten has returned from a six months' visit in Los Angeleu, California. Mrs. A. A. Scott, little son and nuree have gone to Manitou, where they will remain through August. Bishop McCabe will speak in the auditorium tomorrow morning in the interest of the Wesleyan university. Mies Geraldine Secord of Papillion is the guest of Miss Grace Salisbury. Dr. Carr, surgeon. 141 South 12th, years. Funeral services were held on Monday. Omaha Notes. Mr. J. E. Butler, organist at Trinity Cathedral, left on Monday for a month'B vacation to be spent in Portland and New York City. Mr. Francis Potter, Omaha's favorite mandoliniBt, left last week on a series of twelve concerts in the west. During the coming season Mr. Potter will manage the mandolin virtuoso, Valentine Abt, touring principally through the New England states. Mrs. Free and Miss Ella Ethel Free have gone to Iowa, where they will visit for several weeks before going to Buffalo and Toronto, where they will spend the month of August. General and Mrs. Manderson left Thursday for Colorado, where they will spend ten days in the mountains. Judge Fawcett is spending bis sum mer vacation in Oregon. He will be absent until October first. ."everend Philip G. Davidson, lately of Macon, Missouri, who is now rector of St. Matthias' church, ia chaplain of Brownell ball by appointment of the bishop. Mrs. Hoagland and Miss Helen Hoag land are occupying a cottage at Lake Washington. Judge and Mrs. B. S. Baker have gone to Buffalo, where they will visit the exposition before going to the At lantic coast to remain during the sum mer months. Mrs. John Williams, accompanied by her children and her sister, Miss Amy Silver, has gone to Minnesota for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. P.L. Markel are mak ing an extensive trip through the west. Professor J. A. McLean, the newly elected superintendent of the Omaha city schools, haB arrived from Tarkio, Mis&ouri, and will soon be followed by Mrs. McLean. Colonel Spurgeon and family are spending the month at Yellowstone Park, where the Colonel was ordered to trace the trail of the Nez Perces In dians at the time of their pursuit through the park by General Howard. Colonel Spurgeon was one of General Howard's lieutenants at that time. Mrs. Kreider and Misses Nellie and Ruth Kreider have gone to Long Island, where they will spend the summer. M COilTKIiau CHOCOLATE BON BON5 For Sale By the center of the family lot in Wyuka. The only inscription for the present will be that of an only child, Howard Little ton McNay, born February 17, 1883, died March 17, 1001, a most promising former student of the high school, whose early and untimely death is deeply de plored by all who knew him. The extreme difficulty in working the stone is such that it will be several months before the monument will be in position. Montello porphyry has dur ing recent years been coming more and more into use for monuments in the United States, though as yet it is only to be seen in the larger cemeteries. MiBs Pound, Mies Olivia Pound, Mies Died, at his home in this city, July 5, Lathrop of New York and Miss Ames Mr. Edmund Schofield, aged flfty-nine M'NAY MONUMENT. Porphyritic Stone Will Mark the Family j Burial Lot in Wyuka. Kimball Bros, have just sold to Dr. John S. McNay a family monument which is to be erected in Wyuka as Boon aa completed, and which ia the only one of the kind thus far placed in that cem etery. The stone is known to the trade aa Montello porphyry and is the same as was selected for the sarchopagus of General Grant. It is three times as hard aa granite, withstands more pres sure than any other rock, and takes a mirror like polish. The McNay monument will stand in Hurrah for the Flag. It is well worth notisg that in Ha vana this year to date there has not been a single death from yellow fever, the hitherto dread scourge of the An tiles, says the Fremont Tribune. This is owing solely to the magi? touch of Americaa energy and skill. The causes of yellow fever have been removed. Everywhere the Hag goes it carries be neficent wisdom and generous freedom. di 'A'-HiS a HYGIENIC CAFE ..Handles the.. Celebrated SANH OS 6RJIPE NUT HND HEALTH FOODS Of the Sanitarium, Battle Creek, Michigan. Foods for the Hot Weather. PHONE 569. Goods Delivered sS S I w PAPER H I PAINTING, Furniture IPoli slain gf. Twenty-eight years experience as an inside decorator. Reasonable prices. CARL MYRER, 2612 Q Phone 5232. n ' 'U A Fl 'ii i j Si m ill y i - H t ? St f, ( ! I