ffl v?j I ! THE COURIER. u ' V ProJesaional Directory. Jffiee". .....618 tarn 871. Evening Dr. Benj. F. Bailey 0ffice-Zeh 0 inl.by.ppoinunent. Sand.,. tofebpottell10 P m I Dr. J. B. Trickey , J nm T(W t 1 9 to 12 . 1 ReftactioniBt only j Office. 1035 o .tret Jlto4p.m. DENTISTS. oaice 630. Louis N. Wente.D.D.S.HcBro3! Blk,a I I I so 11th itreet. I offle. ealoiiver Johnson, D.D.S. ffZ11"1"''! 1 1105 O street j PI,one...L10 Dr. RlltllTxI. WOOd. MSScUMhSt. lIIouWtola ( I J A. M.;2to4I-.M San Francisco and Return EPISCOPAL CHURCH CONVENTION. $45.00 trrTd ate of gale September 1911? to 2f tb. Final Limit Nooember l?ib. 1901. CALL AND GET FULL INFORMATION. City Ticket Office GorT lOtn and O Streets. Telephone 235. Burlington Depot 7th St., Between P and Q. Telephone 25. .. SOROSS The beat Shoe for women. Dear to the heart, but not to the purse, a "SOROSIS." K A model for every type of foot, a .5 Btyle for every occasion. PAINTING, Polishing. Twenty eight years experience as an inside decorator. Reasonable prices. CARL MYRER. 2612 Q Phone 5232. For sale only at WEBSTER I ROGER ....FOR. 1043 O St., u""-ul"i .... newooBo (& l)(9(9 STOPPED FRCI PrminentljCuradb DR. KLINE'S GREAT MCQVPQPSTnRPR FiU after Orii dj um. it! er hr mall, trti and D Place Your Orders with the DLL ICE CREAM UNO CANDY CO. r HH OmwirnflM, jwm Fit (Ulnu wk pmy tipreuxe onlt d dtU-tty. . mimj (tors, mi ! umpontj reilf. Ibr tJl r H mi IMrdm. pilcpiT. Spuroi. St. Vim. Duct, jMUItr,IiMta,6R.II.KLIIE.U. - fwm au-tst, miiaueipnuu iu" M. B. KETCHUM, M. D., Pilar. D. Practice limited to Eye, Ear. Nose, Throat, Gatarrh and Fitting Spectacles. Phone 818. Iluurs 9 to 5; Sunday J to 2:30. Rooms .11.3-314 Third Floor Richards Block, Lincoln, Nebr. THE DOCTORS JP THEIR II "wiac to the Large Number Who Have Been Unable to See the British Doctors, These Eminent Gentlemen Have Ex tended the Time for Giving; Their Ser vices Free for Three Months to All Who Call Before October J 0th. Owing to the largo number of invalids who have called upon the British Doc tors at their otlico, corner 11th and N streets, Sheldon Block, and who have been unable to see them, these eminent gentlemen have, by request, consented to continue giving their services free for thtee months (medicines excepted) to all who call upon them before Oc tober 10. These services consist not only of consultation, examination and advice, but also of all minor surgical operations. The object in pursuing this course is to become rapidly and personally ac quainted with the sick and afflicted, and under no condition will any charge what ever be made for any serviceo rendered for three months to all who call before Oct. 10th. The doctors treat all forms of disease and deformities, and guarantee a cure in every case they undertake. At tfaa tirst interview a thorough examination is made; and, if incurable, you are frank ly and kindly told so; also advised against spending your money for use less treatment. Male and female weakness, catarrh and catarrhal djafness. also rupture, goitre, cancer, all skin diseases and all diseases of the rectum are positively cured by their new treatment. The chief associate Burgeon of the Institute, assisted by one or more of bis staff associates, is in personal charge. Office hours from 9 a. m. till 8 p. m. No Sunday hours. Special Notice If you cannot call send stamp for question blank for homo treatment. RAMBLING NOTES. BV FLORA BULLOCK. For The Courier Home returning from brook side and mountain side, from tent and log cot tage, coma the troops of the sunburned. Gathered in crowded coaches or riding in comfort in the sleeping cars, they tell and re-tell experiences. Each one is satisfied that his vacation home was best, and finds it impossible to keep from enlarging upon the beauties of this canon or that stream. If the far wanderers could only carry to those who have sat and simmered in the- heat and drought some of the visions that they cherish! It is always amusing to listen to the talk of those who have been roaming, relating their stories to thoee who have stayed at home. I am then reminded of some of my futile attempts to explain and picture to the mind of a blind child the meaning of "mountain." For you may expatiate all you will upon the glories of the snow-clad peaks, the sparkling streams and all; yet you speak but a far-away language. The vision in your mental retina they cannot see. The perfume you inhale they only guess at, the nectar you drink they have not tasted. Speaking of mountains makes me think of the wisdom of the little five-year-old maiden, just returned from Colorado. She was asked it she would like to live on the mountains. "Yes, I'd like to live on the top." "Well," her catechiser remarked, "there always room at the top." Whereat she looked up very Bhyly "Not very much." I never board a train without think ing of two things. One is whether I shall see any exhibitions of the much talked of "courtesy" of women. Sme writer has made the statement that wo men are more courteous than men. I thing it was a man who said it, and per haps simply for the sake of flattery. If he meant it, then he never sped on main traveled roads in an ordinary chair car, or else he slept all the time. Some of his sex are more observing. A gentleman riding next to me one day said: "It always amuses ma to see how eel Hah some peoplo can be. 1 here's that old lady over there. The porter asked her to let another lady sit in the chair by her side, where she had her bonnet and boxes. She shrugged her shoulders and stuck up her lip." And I heard a story of a minister wbo took a seat beside a stylish young lady. Soon a woman with several small chil dren and much unwieldy luggage came into the crowded car; not a very desir able neighbor. The miniatersaid to the young lady, "It may not be very pleas ant for you, but I shall really have to give up my seat to that poor woman." Tho young lady snapped out: "You can it you want to; 1 don't care." You cannot ride- fifty miles, when travel is hoavy.without seeing much un charitableness from Bister toward sister. Even a latent streak of selHshnees ii de veloped in almost any woman when it comes to the question of how long she may monopolise the abominably small dressing room to make her morning toilet. One gets thoroughly disgusted with the pettiness and vanity of woman kind on the train. My second line of meditation is upon the advice given to girls by some writer of Side Talks or some other effeminate wisdom. This advice was that only in case she could make herself useful and entertaining to some woman with sick children should a girl traveling alone talk to a stranger on the train. It is wholesome advice, generally, and for 6ome young persons wbo. as Sam Jones would say, "have no mammies." But for a person of sense there is no better rule than this, Talk to anyone wbo sits beside jou who knows something that you don't, and can tell it to you. It's hard enough for a woman to get any in formation in this world anyway, and of all the educational agencies not gener ally catalogued there is none so useful as a railroad train. It is possible for one to be just a human being there, on friendly terms with other similar creat ures whose names one needs not to know. Poor Nebraska! Brown and burnt and sere, not with the color of autumn, not the rich ripeness of the season. The lady from Falls City and I looked with sorrow on parched cornfields and pas tures barren. Think of leaving a land of alfalfa greenness and a garden full of late peas, beans, corn, cauliflower, squash, cucum bers, beets, turnips and large, mealy po tatoes, to come where there is next to nothing that grows, and what there is in wooden. Bah! Might as well eat sage brush and cactus in a Wyoming desert. Why don't you Nebraskans irrigate, irrigate, irrigate? The courtroom was hotter than the Soudan in a sandstorm . The judge was a wreck, the jury had wilted. Tour Honor and gentlemen." said the attorney for the defense, "I will indulge in no heated argument, but proceed at once to marshal the cold facts." And he won his case. Cleveland Plain Dealer. , "What a debt we owe to medical sci ence!" he said, as he put down the pa per. "Good heavene!" she exclaimed, haven't you paid that doctor's bill yet?'' Chicago Post. Northwestern Line. Sept. 1-10 Round trip tickets to St. Paul and Minneapolis, 811.10; Dulutb, $15.10; Mankato, Minn., $3.85; Kaeota, Minn., $9.05; Hot Springs, S. D., 14.00; Deadwocd, S. D., 813.50. Final limit to return Oct. 31st. City ticket office 117 S. 10th St. Depot Cor. 9th and S Sts. "fi Mi f SU ? ' I $i . n ? i ii i Mi ;-li SI' J.J i m h 9 1 H im t t H i Hi i r 1 ft