Capital city courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1885-1893, March 28, 1891, Image 1

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r n .T Lincoln. Nicp.kasica. SATURDAY. MAKOll -&. 1801.
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Anothor scare has gone glimmering, dis
pelled by tho colli logio of sober fait. A few
years ago many good people with the supro
macy of tho white men very much at heart,
wero alarmed by tho story that tho negros of
the United States were increasing much
faster than the whites, and threatened to
overrun tho continent In tliuo and control
tho government by the pure force of numbers.
The census of 1830 was quoted to support the
theory, and it did lend some color to the
alarm. The census of last year, however,
shows that the whiter increase 1 In number
more rapidly In the western states than tho
colored people, and that part will settle an
other scare. It is now assert I that the
census of 1870, being so soon after the war,
and whilo there was a rare II nil t in progress
in the south, did not report the full number
of colored people. Hence tho enunieratlo u
of 18N), takon with more care, indicated an
abnomlnal Increase among the negros.
lirother Jonathan will lie Ixoss of the I units
yet nwhlle.
The irnpers In tho other cities having west
ern association baso ball clubs have awaken
ed to tho fact that Lincoln has a team that
will make 1 he fastest of them "get a hustle on
'em," to use the expressive idlnw of the day.
early in the winter, because Lincoln was not
as largo as some other towns in the associa
tion, the arrogant big papers prodlcUnl that
Nebraska's Capital city would have no club,
or if it did that it would be too weak to
amount to anything. The change in their
tono sli.ee they havo seen the makeup of our
club is something amusing, and none more o
than that of the Omuha Ilee. The sporting
reports of that sheet in times past got the pe
culiar idea tn his head that by depreciating
Lincoln he magnified the glory of Omaha as
a sporting town, and he has lost no opportun
ity to sneer at the Capital ity. For two or
three wee'es past, every since Lincoln's full
club was nnuouueed, he has been tumbling
nvtr himself warning Omaha that it had "no
pudding" (to use his classic style) in our
team. Last Sunday ho advised Omaha
cranks who might follow their club down
here to buy round ti ip tickets beore stur.t
iug. When it is remembered that Lincoln has
won the majority of games in w Inch the two
cities weie pitted against each other, all this
"guff" (another classic Omahafsiu) is ex
tremely funny. Hut the llee man's change of
front is not so much for the pin k of ac
knowledging Lincoln's stiength or to wain
Omaha's enthusiasts. From a review of the
records of our players be measures the abili
ty of our team, and he issues his warning to
Omaha in order to lie in a position to say, "1
"A
M' - y -.jt . saw- i I . - 'fc Tr. T ' .. L.rlZ j- i , a "J T
told volt Nil" Your thoroughbred spotting
editor knows everything about tho business.
To admit that he does not know how ncontest
Isto turn out Is to damn himself us an author
ity. To presrvo his reputation for iulaliiiil
ity lie must play double, just as tho Hue man
is doing.
Speaking of Indians we were it week ago
did it over occur to you to wonder what they
did with their wounded and how they Heated
thoinf Many of them who wero injuted at
tho light on ouiided Knee creek were taken
by tho whites to the Flue Hldge Agency and
tiipiwul nvi.r tn the nrmvsurceous. A sllllIU-
lar fact was brought out and that was this:
Tho Indians would m penult tho amputa
tion of any of their limbs. Hather than
havo an nrm or a leg taken otr they would
let blood poisoning set In and He on their cots
rotting nway until death relieved them of
their sufferings.
"Of what sex are angelsf asked a (.mart
friend tho other day. "Female, of course,"
was the reply. "There! you make the same
mistake that everybody else does. If jou
will read tho Illble catefully you will discov
er that none of the angels of which it fcpeaks
have feminine attributes They have mascu
line names to begin with, ond are described
as though they were male beings. Another
thing. This idea of representing angels with
wings is another big mistake. The sci iptures
do not represont its angels as having wings,
and that is purely a human invention. An
gels are Hiposod to embody all that Is Kweet
and beautiful, and as no man could till the
bill, the early christians selected lovely wom
an as tho typo of nngello perfection. Then
again, angels weie supposed to move alxmt
through spuco, and tho only physical appara
tus for that purpose known to man was n
pair of wings such as birds use. A H-ifect
wimr Is a beautiful thing in itself, and so it
Is very easy to see how man cumo to picture
and to speak of angels as female Isjiugs hav
ing wings with which to lly through illimita
ble space.
In a way every clti.en of tho United States
Is as good a man as the picsident, and at
least lie can freely express his sentiments to
wards the national ruler without fear of Ihj
dig Jailed orotherw isepunlslied. Secretly at
least, we cannot help admiring the courage
of any Kugllshmau who expresses contempt
for any action of the royal family that de
serves such a uejitiment. It is rather start
ling , however, to notice that ceiteiu Eng
lish papers are o'iily expressing the wish
that Queen Victoria Mould retire and let his
rojal nibs, the l'ritue of U ales boss the regal
circus. The good queen is too old and too
much a lover of her own ease to run a con
tinuous ceremonial show, and the younger
element In England want his dubs at the
head of the. government in order to have a
brilliant court that will ooniaio with the
tlnelmired and gaudily expensive courts on
- fifPllR mraVoFMPPURN -TIMES "
WHAT EASTER BRINGS.
tho Luiitiueiit. Unfortunately tho I'rlnce,
who would manage things on a magnifi
cent scale, is getting well on towards sixty
years of uge and his good mother may yet
outlive the son, whose mode of live and pii
vate conduct will not stand the testof the
American standard of morality and man
hood. V
Lincoln is a metropolitan city at last.
There can be no doubt of It, for we now have
two men paiadlug the streets at night, a big
tin bucket in one hand, a basket in the other,
and waking the echoes of th, dark hours by
shouting, "Wleiwrwurstl Hot wlenerwurst!"
Do you know that Ic isa growing custom in
the East to present relatives and friends with
Easter gifts A few years ago it was a
dainty tiling to send a beautiful card with
some decoration symbolic of the day or a
bunch of Dowers. The mania for giving bus
grown among the well to-do who wish to
impress friends with their ability to buy
things, and it is quite the proper coper to dis
tribute expensive gifts. So much so is this
the case in some circles, that in the larger
cities dealers in bric-a-brac and articles of
virtue make a special display of bits of tine
and costly wear for tho purpose, and many
of them have no connection with the religi
ous signification of the day whatever.
V
It is safe to say, however, for the benefit of
Lincoln youi'g men, thut a pretty Easter
card or a few cut llowers aie in bettor taste
if they wish to jwy a compliment to some
lady fayre, mid one cau hardly name a pret
tier way of expressing that nice sentiment
among men which is something less than
loo and something more than formal friend
liness. Nothing is more grateful to a high
In ix I woman than fragrant (lowers, while on
the other hand, tho Iwiiitlful Easter curds
now in vogue have the merit of being a last
ing remembrance.
V
Sienkiiigof society in the East, what a
funny thing it Is in Its selection of fad; for
example, when I'lirmenclta, the Siiiuish
dancer, appeared in Lincoln last season sho
crcatctt no seuuiiion, uu I to our wuy or
thinking, the loud slumping of her feet and
other actions weie nither coarse and not cal
culated tn fnsplio udmiintlon. The effect III
Lincoln was not exceptional, Ikx'buso this al
leged beauty of custllllim race alt i acted no
gieat notice throughout her tour. On. her
return to New York she legitu dancing in
concert hall of doubtful reputation. By
some mysterious operation of chance she
soon became an object of fashionable atten
tion, and It was "the thing" in the hlglctou
od, exclusive circles of (iotliam to go and see
Cariiiem IU d nice. Of course the plea was
that the visitors were simply called to the
low theatre by their admiration of art. The
truth is that the belles of Murray Hill, suf
fering from the ennui of being good, wanted
to do something naughty to relieve the mo
notony. Under tho pretense of paying hom
age to art they i rally went "slumming".
These, dainty ladies, who made up parties for
tho boor gal den, sat uinong the abandoned
women of tlcj town and wero wrapped III the
fumes of tobacco and beer. What n queer
freak for high bied, pure-liiiuded women.
After tho death of Gen. Sherman an enter
tainment for a monument fond was given at
a hlghtoned theatre, mid Carmeuclta paitlri
paUsl. This created no enthusiasm, and Is
said to have fcored u failure. Outside of the
surroundings of the concert hall she was com
monplace, and one of the curious results of
theuiralristhatshe is in it fair way to bo
dropped as a fashionable fad. 'Die belles
have discovered it new freak in the person of
Jennie Hill, u homely, coarse and very cock
ney lied example of the Loudon music hull vo
calist. See is forty-five years old, but she
pictures the tough girls of IiOiidou, doncher
know, and the dainty woman of Uotliamcau
get a glluise oi the nether world by visiting
the concert hall In which sho ei forms.
What a shammer society is some tiniest
A lady friend sends mo tho following in
which much logic is to lie found;
Mothers have a cure that you do not urge
your children iuto society lefore they are
men and women uud able to resist the allur
ing temptations of the social world. A moth
er is too often Mattered by the attention paid
her pretty i oung daughter by some society
swell, and before she Is through playing with
her dolls, launched into the dizy whirl,
where, often a few mouths bus no gi eater de
sire than to help toss uud catch the reputa
tion ball of any one who may tie so uiifoitu
note as to bo within or without the, narrow
circle. Tho happy and Innocent doll amplia
tions are tiaiisformed Into the more Injurious
atliiosplieioof this social whirl. If there Is
any one time win ii the "no I of lion" should
be used it is at the time when the daughter
i begins U think she knows uioio than those
who have i aised her, w hen her one ilesli e Is
to slop school, draw up her corset lace, have
her skirts made plain and tight uud p.iiiule
befoie her minor until it grows too small for
her and tliun become out of the brainless
lights that aie so often thiowu Into the anus
of lliul tyrant, teimed "society". "Spuie
the lod uud ssiil the child" is the rule luthei
(hull the exeeptloi., und as lieii'l llltvken
ridge says, "a longer switch and it shoiter
i-utechUm," applies equally as well to obstin
ate gill as to boys. This may seem hard to
those who believe in gentle pusutuion. The
I ule of persuasion may work with tractable
(-uiuireii, nut mere are omvrs I'jr wiiom
stlongerimMiciue is irqulred.
And then here comes Knottier from the self
Mine writer. It is lull of good sense and fur
jiUIiom ample food for thought:
Miailiii.fc A vfi iittrlv lit k'fiiliuim.
iwith the happiness of him who harbors it,
nil as such, coiKienimsi uy sen love.
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PL-K. IM
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Man's untidiness Is acknowledged and bis
wdllshness is proverbial. From time Imme
morial man has loen m tho habit of falling
back upon the transgression of Kve, which
wero It not so amusing would Imi almost pa
thetic; for had ft not Ix-eiifor Adam's ex
treme HellHiucss ho would havo Insisted iikii
Eve eating the whole of the luscious apple
and found satisfactory tnjoymeiit In jilst
looklui; on, not so, curious thut ho wanted it
tart and we will let him alone for getting the
larger half and then wanting thu seed to
plant an in chard of bis own. This seems to
lie an age whet it wickedness Is held up to
one's leverence, and vice Is extolled. Ah'
docs the young man of today think he can
set up a standaid of his own, and for the four
curdii.ul virtues substitute iiiteuiierance,
prolllgucy, egotism and selllshuess. The pure
moral titinophcru of a home hits given place
to clubs with all its contingent vices. He
who plays with fortune must take the conse
quences. "Coming events cast their shadow
before" nnd the shadows cause almost as
much anxiety as the reality and when the
crisis comes, as it surely will, the anxiety is
thrown upon the shoulders of the so called
weaker sex, w ho are then accused through
man's selllsliliesi of having been the cause of
their Imprudence. Hut why should the young
man of today split on the ancestral rook) Is
it a decree of fate? Is itdlslsdelf ill the Di
vinity that shapes our end
Sliinil Your (iraiilHl,
When you make up jour mind to take
Hood's SarsaHirilla, do not bo Induced to
buy Mime other preparation Instead. Clerks
may claim that "ours is as gixsi as Hood's"
and all that, but the scullar merit'nf HikkI's
Sarsaparllla, cannot bo equalled. Therefore
hae untiling to ' with substitutes uud in
sist iisii having HinsI's Sarsapnrillu, the
best Mood purifier uud bulldllig-up medicine.
A 111k UpeliliiK.
Yestereny was oMnlng day at the Famous
and how tho ladies did crowd ill to sec. the
pretty elTects shown in Spring inlllenery
Mr. Ackeriuiiu and his right Isiwer, Hussell
III doii were both on hand assisted by a lHy
of accomplished salesladies, and the large
gathering was easily uud most satisfactorily
1 handled The stoie is ciy prettily arranged
and tticoruted for the oiienlng which ends
i his evening ami is proving one of the most
i MiciVhsful inlllenery os'iiingsever undertak
en in Lincoln, llutliu a Uliloilsity to eep
at some of the putty thii.gs, Mr Ackcriuuu
showed our resiiter thiough and for a mo
ment the guy sciibblei aliiuxt wished he
weie n female siiupl to enable him to wear
some nf the U-autiful head wear shown in
lliedl'pluy. Tiiiiimiiigs this season on the
lliiei'Nitterii huis are ioiiised piiucipully
ot jeweled gllc und sdu'i lucen while others
show the new sltvl effects mid make a Usiu
tlful aplvtirHiice. '1 he predominating colors
for spring aie sdwrdiuh, silver grey, yel
lows, cm nation pink, the usual umuuin of
ordinary colois following in Kipulaiity, It
would U but a feeble effort ill Ix-st for the
w vm
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FWIOIC FiVIC ClCNTH
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Os J - - i'yfofc i i .
Couiukk to undertake a description of what
the reporter saw, but In as much as the Fa
mous will continue to appear In its holiday
dress all of today uud this evening, wo
would suggest that our fair readers call and
lie entertained. It will be time well and
pleasantly spent.
Mrs. (JosK)r's now lino of spriiiglmlllinery
has all arrived, and the stock Is all complete
In overy department. The beautiful assort
ment of pattern hats, Ismnets, toquesv, etc.,
surpos any thing heretofore shown In Lincoln.
Indies ure cordirlly Invitisl to call and
see them at any time, ltcmciulicr the place.
Mrs. Ooshu 'h, 1 1 1 1 O street. U-'Jg-'.'t.
Him til Lincoln.
Mr. C. F. WiMslbridge of Omaha, was the
guestof P. Ijincton Tuesday and Wednesday.
Arrived, at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. liarr
I'arker, it young shoe merchant, on last
Friday, March the 'JOth.
As new sis scarce, I will say we have a big
snow- in South Lincoln, expect the mud next
week. Side-walks would lie very acceptable
in tills part of the Mb ward, at the present
time. Aunt Hama.ntha.
Did) on notice that flue head of hnir at
church lust Sunday I That wo Mrs. H .
She never permits herself to Imi out of Hall's
Hair Henewer.
The Plymouth Rock Punts Co. has oHiued
it branch house in Lincoln at Mil south
Twelfth street and placed Mr. J. J. Murphy
at the helm us manager. The company is
one of the most extensive clothing inuiiufac
tureis in the couutiy mid (ho locution of ono
of their houses speaks well for Lincoln, as In
none but the uietiosiltau cities du they okmi
stores. Mr Murphy has many friends In
Lincoln and will make the cotiiiiiy us kimmI
a manager as they could have selected, und
Is-iiig well NeiM'd in theclothiug line makes a
conis'tciit itud genial gentleman with whom
to transact business,
Sine your nickels until the twelltj-llvo
cent store opens. It will tie ready for huti
ness April first, at ll'J-4 O stuvt, (Sherwin's
old slue stand I Nothing higher than tweut)
five cents nor lower than it cent. Wait for
the great twenty-live cent stoie opening
I'J pieces -to in, spnng dress Manuel for Mon
day 15 cts. a jd worth. HI) cents.
J W Wimikii it Co.
Think of it The Cosmopolitan Magazine, is
giant among the pieut monthlies, uudTiiK
COUUIKH will Isith 1h sent to any nddrtws outs
year for thtee dollui. For fui tner jwrticu--lurs
read huge ndu-i tiseinent on page eight.
A pieces
all cents
all silk " Faille", for .Monday oO
J. W. W1NUKK& Co.
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