The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, July 27, 1901, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE COURIER.
1
" iiiiiiiiumniuuiiuuD T4MSIMM
WNCOI.N TRANSFER CO I THE LINCOLN ACADEMY .
Office lOthandQ Sts. Phone 176.
An accredited School to the State Universities of
WE DO . . .
Piano and Furniture
Moving
WE CARRY . .
S Iowa and Nebraska. Prepares for College and Uni-5
" versity. Summer School now in session. Address 5
J or call upon J
5 AJLJRKD M. WILSON, Ito.- I. (Yale)
Prliolim.
WE SELL . .
All Grades of Coal.
A Fine Line of Car
riages and Buggies. .
I If You Want First-Class Service Call on Us.
loOOIIMMMIMl
tTT--imniTTtniiiiiinoioioiiiiijiajii
Lawrence Fossler, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
F. Clark, Mr and MrB. Will Owen
Jones, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hardy, Mr.
T.C.Munger and Dr.Guernsey Jones left
Wednesday evening on a three weeks'
camping expedition in the Medicine
Bow mountains, Wyoming. At Lara
mie Professor W. C Knight joined the
patty.
Misses Mariel, Ellen and Frances
4 Gere left Wednesday evening on a trip
to Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Wash.
ington, where they will remain through
August
Miss Annie Ha wee left on Wednes
day for South Bend, Indiana, where
she will visit relatives. She will also
visit the Pan-American exposition be
fore returning to Lincoln.
Mrs. M. E, Towne, Miss Towne, Mrs,
Castor, Mrs. Newbrandt, Miss Frank
and Miss Blish spent last week at the
Pan-American exposition. Mrs. Towne,
Miss Towne and Miss Hulhorst will
spend the rest of the summer at the
Thousand Islands in the St. Lawrence.
Mrs. A. Y. Whiting and Misses May
and Adelloyd Whiting left Tuesday for
Buffalo. They will also visit New York
and Boston, returning to Lincoln in
September.
Gregory, The Coal Man, 11th & O.
Doctor E. J. Angle and Miss Clara
Angle are spending a week in Chicago.
v. Doctor and Mrs. Joseph Scroggs are
at Chautauqua. They also will visit
Beaver Falls, Penn.
Miss Claire Funke is entertaining
Mias Marian Connell of Omaha.
Mrs. R. II. Oakley and Miss Oakley
went to Chicago on Thursday, to re
main a week.
Professor and Mrs. Allen Fling are at
Lake Mincetonka. They will visit in
Lincoln en route to their home in Ne
braska City.
The beet equipped and most popular
dining hall in the city is the Palace Din
ing hall, 1130 N street. Sunday dinners
a specialty. Beet attention paid to fam
ily board. Give it a trial.
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Reed are in Los
Angeles, California. They will return
to Lincoln the tirst week in August.
Miss Stella Kirker is visiting in Chi
. cago. She will alBO visit in Fayette,
Indiana, and Buffalo, N. Y.
Misses Maggie and Carrie Kindel
berger of Wheeling, West Virginia, are
guests at the home of their cousin, Mr.
Jacob Yungblud.
Dr. and Mrs. S M. Sherman and Mr.
and Mrs. L. P. Sine left Saturday night
for Yellowstone park,
Miss Georgia Camp, who has been
the guest of Lincoln friends during the
past month, has returned to her home
in Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Carter and family
will spend the remainder of July and
August in Colorado.
Mrs. Evangeline Winger has returned
from a month's visit in Chicago, High
land Park and eastern Indiana.
Say! Before buying a buggy see the
Humphrey Hardware Co.
Mrs. E. R. Wells and son Frederick
are visiting in Reading, Pa.
Mrs. F. D. Levering and Mr. Alex
Berger and two children will spend the
next six weeks at Grand Lake, Colo.
Mrs. T. J. Merryman is entertaining
her mother, Mrs. E. A. Winget of St
Louis.
Mrs. Thomas Chapman of Cincinnati
is visiting Mrs D. G. Courtnay.
Mrs. W. M. Leonard entertained Mies
Mabel Miller of Canton, Illinois, this
week.
Judge Frank R. Waters has returned
from Marietta, Ohio, where he was
called by the serious illness of his
mother.
Misses Florence and Margery Winger
are the guests of their sister, Mrs. True,
in Tecumseh.
Captain C. E. Williams of the Lin
coln Gun club is enjoying the cooling
breezes at Home, Colorado.
Mrs. C. E. Yates and Mr. Willard
Yates spent Sunday in Plattsmouth.
Mrs. J. H. Auld is entertaining her
niece, Miss Gertrude Marshall of Knox
ville, Iowa.
Doctor and Mrs. F. W. Tucker are
spending the week at Sylvan Lake.
Mrs. M.E. Van Brunt has returned
from Hot Springs, S. D.
Dr. Carr, surgeon. 141 South 12th.
Died, Monday evening, at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Bolsbaw,
Mrs. Eleanor Cummings, aged eighty
two years. Funeral services were held
at her late home, 134 North Eighteenth
street;, on Wednesday morning.
One of the ablest and most honest
editors of the state, Mr. Ross Hammond
of the Fremont Tribune, thus expresses
his sound convictions regarding the
Bartley parole:
"The apologists for Joe Bartley, and
Mr. Bartley himBelf, say& he was mak
ing restitution of state money when he
was arretted, and had paid over 8143,
000 to the state after his shortage was
known. This, they say, was good evi
dence of his puppose to convert secur
ities into cash and repay all money
due the state but when he was arrested
he quit the work and finally went to
the penitentiary without making any
further financial restitution. It must
be remembered, however, that Bartley
was convicted and sent to prison for
embezzling the proceeds of a state
warrant, negotiated at Omaha; that the
proceeds for this warrant for $210,000
were placed to the credit of his indi
vidual account and not to the state's.
Therefore this did not come within
the category of deposits in 3mall banks
which he Bought to withdraw slowly
to prevent the creation of a panic
among them by a too sudden call.
He was clearly guilty of a very great
offense against the state, his party and
his confiding bondsmen. The anguish
and tears of his family are sad features
of the unfortunate case, but there are
anguish and tears of innocent people
in all such cases, and as touching and
sad as the suffering may be it cannot
be permitted to weigh against the duty
of society demanded by a strict exac
tion of penance in proportion to the
enormity of crimes committed against
it.
" 'He was not a criminal at heart,' is
a common expression in extenuation of
guilt. It makes a mockery of the
strict integrity and honest that is be
coming too little prized by sentiment
alists who are ready to forgive because
all men are not perfect in their deport
ment. It is a tendency in the wrong
direction and a growing one. Neither
Bartley nor Bolln should have been
liberated. It puts a premium on dis
honesty that it is not for the public
good and this, we believe, is the verdict
of the honest common people who have
tired of seeing favoritism shown the big
transgressors of the law."
A PROPHECY FULFILLED.
KMILV flUIWITS
The late Jacob S. Rogers, an eccentric
locomotive builder of Paterson, N. J.,
was a good man not to be related to.
He never manifested any particular in
terest in art, but he was determined that
his relatives should not have any of his
money. So after leaving them a few
scanty bequests he left his immense for
tune, estimated at nearly $8,000,000, to
the Metropolitan Museum of Art of New
York. The town of Paterson, where
the money was made, will receive noth
ing. How much the lawyers will re
ceive remains to be seen, as there is a
big law Buit in sight.
TtS3I8BBt
asOJSTlita.
CHOCOLATE
BON BON5
For Sale By-
Let me ask you, Billy Bryan,
Why the mischief you are tryin'
To convince the people that you're not a
crank?
Don't you know its very foolish
On your part to be so mulish
Over that confounded little silver plank ?
You are such an expert bluffer
Vh.it .-in ordinarv duffer
xi- t-i i r i.j u.. .it i:i -,: sP
luigui DC luuicu oy tiu yuur nine waiuifeugn m
tricks
If he didn't just remember
Between now and next November
That you bluffed the same old way in
ninety-six:
You went howling through creation
That destruction and starvation
Was the certain fate of every mother's son
If the following election
Didn't go in your direction
With your crazy notions of sixteen to one .
But you see you were not in it ,
Not one single blessed minute,
When the voters really settled down to bir ;
They were not so green and silly
As you seemed to think them, Billy ,
When you tried to fill them up on silver
fizz.
And I'll tell you, Billy Bryan ,
That I really think you're lyin'
When you say our party principles are
trash;
For you've put in every hour
Since McKinley was in power
Filling up your poekets with gold standard
cash.
Now to be consistent, honey,
You must give up all that money
Which you made when politics were out of
joint ;
Do we think we see you do it ?
Not one penny if you knew it
Would you give up. Do you voters see
the point ?
If this little object lesson
Fails to set th people guessin'
Till their Yankee wits see how things ought
to be;
Well own up were mistaken ,
That our taith is sadly shaken ,
And hang our harps upon a weeping wil
low tree .
K5)iSexSS
...THIS,..
(
HYGIENIC CAFE
..Handles the..
Celebrated SANH OS
Of the Sanitarium, Battle Creek,
Michigan.
Foods for the Hot Weather.
PHONE 569. Goods Delivered
ocxKirxif-icxirsio
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And Dairy 60.
Manufacturers of the finest qual
ity of plain and fancy Ice Cream,
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and satisfaction guaranteed.
13a SO. 1 2th St. PHONE 205
J. F. Harris,
No. I, Board of Trade,
CHICAGO.
STOCKS
AND-
BONDS
Grain, Provisions, Cotton.
jt ot j
Private Wires to New York City and
Many Gties East and West.
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MEMBER
New York Stock Exchange.
Chicago Stock Exchange.
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