12 THE COURIER. ' i QUI II HWQCM When Vflll When you travel to the mountains, : I UU the lakes or the sea vou can add to HP ,v1 the comfort and pleasure of vour trip: ; iClVCI hv startinc with the right sort of: trunks and traveling bags. We have trunks and bags that are equal to every emergency of: a long journey by sea or land. MibbR& PAINE ; illHlimilllMimilMmillllMIIIIHIlHIHMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH pgia DfliDiy3osoeipei Health and Happiness go hand in hand, Activity is contagious, and imparts Health and Wealth in this beautiful land. Convey it to others by actively engaging In beautifying the woman and strength ening the man. Thus, using an Electric Massage Ex erciser, A Home Training Outfit, or a Fountain Bath Brush; Prices $1.00 to $5.00. For sale by 1106 0 STREET. LINCOLK, NEBR. iMiMiiMegtofflCMMt8CCi)C)rcefe i 1 F A XKI V P P Q Send The Courier your legal notices JLW ICtvO"""" files are kept in fire proof buildings. CHEAPER THAN EVER oFado and gtal? Daily Tuns 18th to Sept. 10th, 190K. ..VIA THE.. GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE Round Trip Rates From Missouri River Points to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, &1 Julj-ltoB Gt-t O Jue IB to 30 $19 Sept. 1-JJ J.t7 Jalx lO-Aug.31 Similar reduced Rates on same dates to other Colorado and Utah Tourist Points. Bates from other points on Rock ltland Route proportionately lover on same datesof sale. Return limit Oct. 31, 1901. THE SUPERB TRAIN, Colorado Flyer LeaTes Kansas City daily at 6:30 p. m., Omaha at 5:20 p. m.. SUoe at 5:00 p. m., amring: Denver 11 :00 a. m.. Colorado Sp'ss Jianitou) 10:35 a. m., Pueblo 1150 a.m. Write for details and Colorado literature. E. W. Thompson, A. G. P. A. Topeka. Kane. John Sebastian, G. P. A., Chicago. F( H. W. BROWN Druggist and Bookseller. 7 mrtiitixiii 7 Fine Stationery and 7 Calling Cards J 127 So.Bleventh Street. PHONE 68 HARNESS HORSE COLLARS jlB FIRST " WflTIOMflL " BJIHK ...of LINCOLN, NEBR ' J J J Capital $ 200,000.00 , Surplus and Profits . 5455.08 Deposits .... 2,46052.18 J J J . & H. Boraham, A. I. Sawyer, President. Vice President. H. S. Freeman, Cashier, B. B. Evans, Frank Parks, Ass't Cashier. Ass't Cashier. UNIJED STAfESDEf0SIJ0J?Y. ASKYDUR DEALERTOSHOWTHfM BEFORE YOU BUY. MANUFACTURED BY HARPHAM BR0S.C0. Lincoln, Neb. J. R. HAGGARD. M. D. JLriJOLOOlxi, Xebr. Office 1100 O Street, Rooms 2J2, 213, 214, Richards' Block. Telephone 535 Residence 1310 G St. Telephone K954 ming them up for another season. This, then, is the time when it is best to trans form them into lampshades. Most charm ing as lamp shades they become, espec ially for summer houses and verandas. To carry out the scheme iB a simple matter. Leghorns or very large garden hats of rough straw are the most desir able. First should the top of the crown be cut out, when already, as can be im agined, the hat will assume somewhat the snapshot a lamp shade. Under neath it should then be wired up and down as well as about the top and bot tom, that it may be held in shape and bent gracefully, for, above all else, these shades must have a free, floppy appear ance. They do not look well if at all stiff. The trimming constate mostly of artificial flowers and grasses" which many women have on hand from hats of preceding summers. Long, deep green grasses are usually hung about the low er edge as a fringe. If, however, the edges are not in good condition it looks very well to put about them a ruff of pinked out taffeta ribbon, either to match or contrast with the color of the Btraw. A leghorn, for iustance, would be most effective with a grass green ruff about the edges and a few large red poppies scattered over its surface. Some times flowers that one has in the house are faded, but even then their colors can be intensified by painting them afresh with either tapestry dyes or water col ors. Many old straws can be helped by touching them up judiciously. On the other hand, so pretty are these straw lamp shades that it is quite worth while to buy the hats, should they not be forthcoming iu any other way. Late in the season many decorative ones are sold at remarkably low prices. To be effective they should alwayB be large. Deep yellow ones of rough straw trim med with buttercupe and grasses are. unusually pretty and cast a golden glow when the lamps under them are lighted. The wholly.rgreen ones also are restful and attractive. When a particular etyle or color of straw is desired, it were beet to buy it by the yard, and then sew it together over a wire frame. It is also in this way that the similar and very small shades for candlesticks are made, and which are quite enchanting as they decorate the four corners of a table, or cast a glimmer from Borne dark corner of the veranda. Kansas City Star. Mrs. Lehr's patience was nearly ei. hausted, As for the maid, she tried to look as if she liked nothing better thin Bitting on a trunk for an hour and a hall on a hot day. Lehr came dancing down the gang. plank with a Btraw hat over his boyish lOBwuioe, a iuiuu.oi uuuar aiop 0 an tl outing shirt and enormous diamond link buttons gleaming below the sleeves ot his blue serge coat of English cut. He wore blue trousers'and patent leath er shoes. There was a rush of pa. rangers to get customs inepsctora, and when Lehr finally found his trunks, of which there were a great number, at leait one hundred persons were ahead of him in the line. He fumed and per spired a good deal and attracted consid- I erable attention, while his wife was sit ting patiently on a trunk and other pas sengers were acting aB good naturedly as an American crowd generally does. After twenty minutes the energetic f Lehr thought be could improve his sit nation. He left his place in the line of passen gers and quietly moved up to the desk. As he slipped into a position at the head of the line there one of his fellow pas sengere who had not bothered to get into the line at all stepped up to Lehr and handed him his customs tickets. This was Count Adelbert von Stern berg, who had come over on the ship with the Lehrs. The other passengers glared angrily at the man who had violated the rule of "wait your turn," and Herman Muod henk of Brooklyn voiced the general protest. "This is not fair!' cried Mundhenk, leaving his place in the line and ap proaching the desk. "Why should this man go into first place when we have waited bo long? He deliberately crossed over from a position away back in this line." There was a chorus of approval and several voices cried "Shame!" The in- epeuwjr Hb tun uesK nam ne uuu eeeu iuu i whole affair, and that he certainly would not attend to Lehr until he took his proper place in line. Colonel Storey asked about the trouble, and while he was listening to the story Lehr went back to the place he had come from. Story ordered that Lehr go back to the extreme end of the line and wsit until every other passenger bad been attend ed to. The Lehrs are going to Newport on August 1. The Mirror. HARRY LEHR'S RETURN. Harry Lehr, who has been identified as the original of one of the characters in The Mirror serial story, "The Jmi tator," returned from Europe with his wife the other day. A New York paper published the following news item con cerning the event. Mr. and Mrs. Lehr were among the first of the cabin pass engers to leave the ship, and when it came to getting their trunks past the customs officers Mr. Lehr attempted some of those pushing methods which advanced him so far in society and in the wine business. In his efforts to break the line and obtain attention be fore his turn, Mr. Lehr came to grief, and the net result was that he was thirty minutes longer on the pier than more quiet persons who were content to wait their turn. Meanwhile, his bride, who was Mrs. John Vinton Dalhgren of Baltimore, sat on a trunk attended by a maid and wondered what had become ot her husband. The other cabin passengers were so disgusted with Lehr that they made a united proteet to Colonel Storey, deputy surveyor in charge of the customs in spectors, and the colonel sternly ordered Lehr away back to the end of the long line of waiting passengers, to have his baggage attended to last. By the time his trunks were examined and checked only a single carriage was waiting, and "What Shall We Eat" Every day the same old question, What shall we eat for breakfast, for luncheon, for dinner? assails with mo notonous regularity the patient house wife who seeks to provide good living for the family in agreeable variety at a moderate cost. There is a daily de partment in The Chicago Rscord-Her- y aid which is intended to answer this question satisfactorily every day in the year. It is entitled ''Meals for a Day," and provides menus for the three meals every day, with the necessary recipes. These menus and recipes are carefully selected by The Record-Herald's house hold editor, and cash prizes are awarded to the best that are received. House wives everywhere are invited to partic ipate in the competition. For full par ticulars, see the "Meals of a Day" de partment in The Chicago Record-Herald. P. H. PIERS0N, QFain.gromsions and gtoebs. !035NSt. . Lincoln, Ner.