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I TRUTH M ' AnBiJL Innnanfl Qhmt iSlft Shirt Waist I yfWipM "V """ ollOrt t&mfL Laundering Our I i Vf Btl'Lk our stor ls ' IIIM-J Specialty. After the gar- M m, lHi krfCWi Lhat "r sPril?S Hats in MHWi ment has been properly done MSI 53 00' -00 KS I3"? 3Ua " S then you receive it at your o M mMTMl lties represent the best eft orts TcWMwA u,Q : fl unv fraa LH Efl rlL Hrw of notd makers- such is ptH H SOLE AGENTS SOLE AGENTS H D;sz:y SHRTS T0 RDER SeS troy laundry , " THE LAUNDRY OF QUALITY " j Brown, Terry & Woodruff Co. both phones 102. mo main street . H Telephone 193. 166 Main Street. M Mrs. H'. N. Mayo entertained the Sewing club Wednesday at her home on Brigham street. Mrs. C. F. M'illcr of the Raleigh, Ileft Thursday to visit relatives in Chi cago and Wisconsin. Miss Mercy Berkeley was the hos tess Thursday at. a Kensington for Miss Delia Janet Richards. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Clark of the Raleigh left Thursday for Omaha and Denver to visit relatives. u AMERICAN WOMEN ADVEN TUROUS. The Spirit Which Dominates the Whole Nation Is Especially Evident in Play. The thing which has most impressed an English woman on her first visit to America, is the spirit of adventure in recreation which animates the wo men of the land of the free. Nowhere in the world do women depart so ab solutely from the conventional in their .play. Of course, there are thousands who go along the beaten paths, and journey to the seaside or the moun tains with never a thought of under t,, taking anything else, but there are a great number of others who go in for the unusual, spend their holidays in diversion which has no precedent. There is the long driving-tour for example, with unknown farmhouses for shelter at night, and the delight of exploring untraveled country, making unexpected discoveries, and meeting with all kinds of mild adventures in the quaint "back woods" where the railroad has not penetrated. The hunting and fishing camps where women share the hardships ot, "9' men in the wilds for weeks at a time.) filled this visitor with amazement, and two women, who had been on a ca noeing trip of several hundred miles over an unfrequented waterway, "took i I her breath away," according to her own statement. There is not another country in the world, indeed, where this kind of holi day is possible. Americans, more over, arc the children of men of ad venture. Indomitable daring filled the pioneers who conquered the wild erness step by step, and that untam able spirit is the heritage of their children's children. With the serious work of the frontier practically done, what miorc natural than for the-people to find an outlet for this spirit in their recreations? Our English visitor speaks of the "eternal spirit of youth ... of this great playground" and laments the fact that its pleasures are not avail able for the men and women of the older world. She declines absolutely to believe in the materialism of Americans and affirms that, as a mat ter of fact, romance is the common place of American life. Woman. o BRIEF AND BREEZY. A village policeman doesn't mind arresting a little thing like a French duke. If Wall street doesn't quit that lofty tumbling on the financial trap esc somebody is going to fall and break his pocketbook. John R. Walsh has brought suit against the Chicago News for a mil lion and a half dollars. Mr. Walsh probably wants to own that paper. Mr. Rockefeller is making it pos sible for many more students to burn the midnight oil. What Abe Ruef seems to wish to convey is that, regardless of what ' disclosures of San Francisco graft 'have been up to the present time, it isn't a circumstance to what will develop when he opens up his slices of information. The Washington correspondent of the Chicago Tribune says that Presi dent Roosevelt will make a speech at Jamestown April 26th, in which he will define his future policy with re ference to railways. " My time is worth ten cents a min ute " said F. J. Walsh a Chicago den tist to a police judge. Most people think that the- services of a dentist are worth $10 a minute when tooth ache is around. Mr. Harriman expresses a wish to sit by the President and give him ad vice. No man lives who can do that, except the Hon. Jake Riis. The Boston Herald deplores the passing of the art of conversation. But as long as Mr. Roosevelt lives, the art of monologue, at least will survive. It is distinctly superfluous for Mr. H Harriman to announce his preference t for taking chances on the jail rather H than the poor-house. M o H OLD HICKORY CHIPS. M It may have been in kindness not In H cruelty that the Czar refused to let H the Douma listen to experts. H Now Mr. Bryan has boldly dc- H clarcd for the initiative and refcren- H dum. As a political garment, that H might be classed as a pair of overalls. H iiV It is reported that Mr. Schwab Is H now to go down into his jeans for a H $2,000,000 wedding gift for his broth- H cr. At that rate it should not take H long to get the whole family mar-. H ricd off. H VJ Wk V T 9 C Ettabllihed 1864 W. P. KISER. Mgr. M omaha beer Henry m Wafcener m Luxus Beer, The Beer You Like jH KRUG'S "CABINET" BrCWlIlg fl As nutritious as any English. M Porters or Malt Tonics, fft and a Connoisseur's Vrfw M Delight. krug's "extra pale- LAGER BEER and I Light and Mild, palatable and ,m appropriate on all occasions. PflRTFR '1 Either of the above brands de s 'M livered in any part of the city. The tM DAtAPt Special attention given to bot- H : V1U IVC&Url tied Beer for Family Trade. . ' Free Delivery to All parts H 276 Nam St. of the city. lM ADAM SNYDER, Proprietor, OfficS: . - 9 r 74 E. First South St. M Telephone io6i-y ' I Phone ai8. i;H 4r fl