The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, January 13, 1898, Page 7, Image 7

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    January 13, 1898
THE NERBASKA INDEPENDENT
Mr, Edgerton's Poaeaa.
Voice of th Moral; poama br BdKr
too, Kubll.bed bjr Cku. H. Kerr Co., Chicago,
for ami b lndatwodMit rabUablog Company,
121 pp, 11.00,
I bar been asked to writ a review of
Mr, Edgerton's pootry, It 1 not an
easy tank to writ a coneclentiou re
view of anyone poetry, still less of that
of a friend aud aaaocinte la a commou
cause, Ever man who write verse be
lieve there I poetry In it, 1 am not
disposed to deny the belief, In ten
years service as editor of a country
newspaper I bav received for publica
tion some very bad rhyme, but never
any destitute of poetic thought or ex
pression. There must needs be a large
com moo fund of poetic thought aud
fueling among the mass of people ils
tb great poets would Lavs no audience.
Every oue capable of poetic thought bos
some power for expressing ft, la tb
power of expression so a to win tb ap
proval of tbsir fellow wbo, having po
etic thoughts, are deprived by circum
stances from developing them, Is on test
of the great poet.
This raise sharply tb question, who
are tb great poets? Are they those who
sell their volume by tb thousand and
achieve fam or are there others? It is
not tb intention of this article to de
cide tb point, but merely to rale ft a
one germane to the particular subject to
be dealt with, and Iov it to the read
ers philosophy,
Mr, Kdgerton doe not claim to be a
great poet. In fact the preface to bis
volume (which is on of tb finest
, piece of poetry in the book), expressly
disavow such claim, liut he believe
be ba found a them worthy of a great
poetry aud a great literature and as b
look out over the prairie forth man
worthy of tb them b play upon hi
own flute.
J Us them Is, of course, the social and
Industrial regeneration. It could not be
anything els with on who bos sensed
tb time w II v in. ttom speak of tb
them as tb social Involution, spelling
with a capital It. Anyone who reads
Mr. Edgerton's poems will agre with
xue that it Is a regeneration and rot a
revolution of which b writes. It may
b w shall com to tb revolution, it
would b a rash prophet wbo would
risk bi prediction to the contrary a
tb world now stand. l!ut you will
seek in vain for the revolutionary spirit
in tbi little volum. There 1 no Mar
seillaise or Ca Ira, no tramping of mar
shalled feet down tb pavcnent or
cream of Jfotcbkiss cannon from tb
embrasures Oeneral Miles desires to have
built fa tb new Chicago postoiJiee.
Tber is not even tb half-suppressed
threat of Wblttier1 anti-slavery poems
In spit of the Quaker In tb poet In
tbi volum there 1 passionate ex pre
Ion of th wrongs and injustice of pres
ent systems, but always and everywhere
tb him calm confidence In tb restora
tion of right through good will and the
baptism of ttie world at the font of
unselfishness' In tb little poem
"Awake" page 08, th author thought
1 well expressed;
AWAKE, MV HUOTHKUM, AWAKE,
fee era bat tmtU todajr
ttnto four nialr' r4
Wiib koIiUii abacklMi bound lu alawy
Aud lll yea bear it, sar
Yua of Ibat nLl lr4
Of patriot wbo Clad to mak ma free,
Aakn, than, arla.
Uo fwrtb Is all year might
fttrlk (or roar lllwrty, lured one sad bum
S frill Uit tb lorloii prlM ,
Of (ii.tif and of rlalit
lijaib It t tb tbst I to om.
Not is tb taoud IWd
Nor Id tba battl' brant
Sins, bat wltii oailuta aud wtlb tosgac es4
pe
Tb arm that tnnumn lld,
Ho noiiljr to (b front
Wltb tbo sbo batil tot tbalr Mloe ms.
If ever we get to looking into each
other's fitHw over the muzzles of rill in
th settlement of the fundamental ques
tions now before the American poopls it
will be cause for congratulation that
the progressive spirit of the time found
voice in sentiments so humane and
gentle as Mr, Edgerton's poems, I, for
one, am glad that it is so, I must con
fess that there Is an awkwarduoss about
the thought of shooting reform into
a fellow-citizen, even though be be a
monopolist and oppressor of the runkHst
kind, which Itiavee it with no logic to de
fend itself before a rational mind. In
fact the suooess of the present industrial
movemnut depends not upon military
force, nor majority force, but upon the
spread of the goapel of good will In the
beai ts of men. It is true a great many
in the movement do not grasp this Idea,
but It is a good sign whim poets of the
movement do. There will oertalnly be
voting and tber may be fighting, but
we shall not vote ourselves nor tight
ourselves Into the new Industrial age that
will oome when all men ocwpt aud act
upon oue fundamental truththat uni
versal oo-oM)ratlou must replace univer
sal competition a the next step In the
progreas aud happiness of the human
raco. This is what Mr, IMgerton e in
"When th World Is Free,"-pug 'JH;
far throaab Iba later ahlaa tba .ulilna m
Of brotherhood' A bamanlt r.
foraluld bf pot, ruibct, aalat aad
Will work loatbr abas tba world to I raw,
Tboa gr4 aad po-Mjr frill uaaa aaaf
Am4 all will ahar a Ira ri.riij.
11m god of Hiaaua alia blatwt olilai
Will tw d.iaulik4 abate lb world la Iraa,
Tbr will ba Itllla lw-tb Mold Rat
WHI b aibraant-tk law ol uil
i ba prlMt will aatb with blfwdad avkaul
sad trwik allllloartah ka th aurid la I",
Tbr will b bappjr bmaaa aad baif aa
Aad bapf aowaa lalwtt hum ltif
Aad ktpkil4a. AU tba dark baa baa
IS III ba t.iala aka tba world ta haw.
Think t)f writing stuttment Ilk Himm
and li la your rapawlty as swrelary
ul th aattoual eaiiiiuill tl tb wiil
l;
any ujisg 10 run a tampai- us a
MitlfaH ifclta SIB ------ ft ft i. . . 1 i .
9 win w-w ?p'rw " J n. m f f HEf
wits a lot nl UBrvMittalrurUtl lUiurboua
tn give the party l advaaevd iib-as owe
vt wuwkMlr tiptin Ms stale lb kta!
Ids revWaar earnestly sifa that XI r,
i;lirtti will be alirsUi gt km (MHitry
on.
Mcantnv
is ts asti
(OlAkltV
w nun au.
rrlviti DliMiii
KIIN ONLY
f twlPimliti
W ! i(itoaiv
b k turn, I (.'tit.
)
USlH. pWatwa,!)
4lb sa4 far It,
UliaitA naa.
and his politics upon the same platform
together by tb campaign of 1000 and
the rest of us will all be there to greet
them.
The one strong criticism to which Mr,
Edgerton's poetry Is juatly subject is
that it is too general. It does not in
dividualize and specialize its themes so
a to bring them close to the reader. To
be the truest artist, to do the greatest
good, It is not enough to have noble
thoughts, command of language and po
etic imagery. Th poet ought to take
some particular incident or phase of bis
subject, idealize It and fix It upon the
mind of tb people, It will carry Its own
moral and teach it own general lesson.
Howabsolutely necessary this is w may
know when w recall that th only way
tb world ever came to a general knowl
edge of the true attribute of Ood was
when tb "Word became flesh and dwelt
among us,"
Tber are evoral exception to this
criticism to be found In th volum be
fore us. On of them is "My Boyhood
Horn" a genuine photograph, true and
lifelike aud charming. Here 1 on
stanza:
'Twee tbara, wbaa Uifr Hold wr blows,
Aiuld tb raauara' umrrf eh I in,
I plajrad epoa tb bar saw inowu,
A bappy boy at barraat tlrno)
And as tba aatha-bladaa, a thy kwlrred
Tbrosab tba think raj till, awt to tall
Awnm tba flalda waa faintly board
X b in ul of tb dl new bU,
Another on of th poem in which th
author ba cboseti some particular in
cident for tb ubject of hi art 1 "When
Muooln Died," one of th very latest of
bis writings, from which this stanza I
taken:
Wbn Moln dld It Mainad s Providian;
For ba apnaarad a oaa tout for a work,
Wboui, wbaa tbst work we don, Ood tanv
mond bom.
II ld s pliidfd tuM lot llbarfy
And wbaa tb ahavkla 111, tb lead wsa
tared,
Ha laid bit armor by and ooa bl rwt,
A slory at from bara orrd blm
Wbs Uueola dlad,
Thee apecimen are strong enough to
Indicate what th author can do upon
individual themes and ought to prompt
him to further work upon them. There
is a grand poem upon ''The Mountains"
which cannot well b quoted from. It
should be read. There are several lov
poems, interesting aud pleasing, but the
volum will chiefly be read for th poem
upon tb social and religious situation
today, Whether th poet of th time for
whom Mr. Kdgerton look ahall appear,
or whether. Ilk tb boy in Nathaniel
If awtbornr tal of tb Great Hton Face,
h shall llv to And himself tb on be
seeks, tber 1 no doubt that in bis
poetry la truly expressed tb spirit of
th present industrial movement. Not
all of it is expressed, but ther is cer
tainly uo false not so far th author
has gone.
Tbs uniform hopefulness and confidence
of the book is worth mention. If a pop
ulist is a pessimist, as some of our crit
ic insiat, always looking at tb block
and discouraging side of affairs, then
Mr, Edgerton is no populist or at least
bis poetry Isn't, Hut if belief in social
reform through social regeneration, In
tb destruction of selfishness as th rul
ing force In the world's politics in a
word of tb establishment of the peo
ple's rights by the Golden Itule Is popu
list belief, then this little book I a pop
ulist as well as a Jioet,
A, E. SllKM)OX,
Lincoln, Jan, J.
Jattryal0boxofOteart,tbla
t liver ana down regulator vr
RaUlog Kgrl Uaroa.
In 189S a merchant naturalist of
Tunis bought a piece of ground in
closed by a wall, where a sufficient
quantity of water could be introduced.
In this field a large space, where ther
were fig trees, was Inclosed by wire
netting. Then he procured from nest
tbe young egrets, In 1896, by increase,
bis heronry contained about 400
egrets, Tbe females lay eggs twice a
year, In April and June; and th
young, leaving the nest after fifteen
days, mat tb same year. Those
birds be feeds on minced horse and
mule moat twice a day one animal
costing from 5 to 6 francs, sufficing
for a fortnight. Th nestlings are fed
by their mother on small fish provided
for hor. The dorsal plumes are gath
ered twice a year, In May and Septem
ber, but it la not until th bird Is three
years old that tb plumes attain their,
full beauty. Each adult bird furnishes
even gram of these per year that U,
about 108 gram, or 1-70 of a pound,
yielding a value of 85 franc per bead.
17. I'opular Selene News,
I'raventlHf Hup,
To prevent roup Is something not
very easily done, as the fowls are af
fected by th weather. In cold, dry
seasons, the roup due not prevail as
mm n a In tb fall, when th rains ar
frequent, th ground wet, and discom
fort exist in tbe poultry bouse. To
guard aialnst tb dlseaaa, th windows
hould b so arranged as to permit
plenty of sunshine in order that th
floors and walls may be warmed, and
nmUttire evaporated. While th pur
tr may be admitted when desired
through tb doors and windows. It
should not b overlooked that draught
of air on th birds are Mania to hasten
n outbreak of the U I , Hy keep
ing th floor well duatud with fin alr
Isked time, th diaesaa may be cheek
ed In the bealiialng aud the room mad
dry,- rultrr Keeoer,
r4 Tiwa.
A Uwrr wfcuse Rk was on oa 4
th uppr Hour of a tall butldiug iu
bout In eour th elevator u wort
tag, but stepped b in ord.' ta lt a
lady wbo seemed o be tw a buny pre
sd blat. lb "ett4n.'tr, It aipf
4, had ! walling r J'il one mure
aagr ta eowplvle l load, aad
when lb Udf stapM tld hut
tb dour and the elevautr shot up
ward. "Nlnaea." aiuttr4 th law
Ir, " awt always ita ua reward, "
A fw miauls Ur, huwaver, s4
lag br aaothsr "lltl," ha p4 thai
t,4 f posaaagsr alufi half way bo
tweaa ftoHM wherw they taialb4
kalt an hur-bf anl.Uat t ta
ina:hlary, "I tsk It bstk. h ttiut
tared, la lb mm tune a twfur.
Ilteaeea Is It e tewardr
HOW ACTORS LEARN PARTS.
Pacollar Mathoda Are Adoptad In Mem-
srialof the Word.
Actors' methods of atudylng th linea
of a part vary. Borne memorize quick
ly. After a few rohearsals with tno
book In hand they know the lines, and
no further effort in that direction Is
necessary. Others burn much midnight
oil In acquiring tb autbor'a words.
Soma never learn them. Others pace
up and down th stage, repeating the
words monotonously, and a few go
through every action of tba play while
studying. Each gesture and movement
suggests a line. After a few rehearsals
tb stag manager notifies the actors
that they must be "rough perfect" by
th sext time, Th actors respond by
knowing about on line out of Ave.
They walk around, holding th book
behind them, like bad boys at njrhool.
When th stag manager's back is
turned they tak a peep, In this man
ner they got through th ordeal. Some
times th stag manager discovers tb
deception, 11 is wratby, but tb ac
tors tak th matUr. good-naturedly.
When th actor is playing at th same
time that a nw part Is to b learned,
rharsed and costumed h has little
tlm to spar, Learning a part la bard
for a woman than for a man. Th
actrss returns from th theater about
midnight Bb sits up lata, studying
th lines, and In th morning sh goes
to rehearsal, In th early stag of
preparation of a play tb rehearsals
last from about 11 o'clock In tb morn
ing until 4 or 6 In th afternoon, Tb
remainder of tb day I devoted to the
costumer, Wbn th hours of rehear
sal bav been reduced tb afternoons
ar spent fitting on dresses and in tb
lection of bonnets and th various
articles of an actress' attlr. Tbes
matters occupy th aftsrnoon usually
and allow only tlm for a hasty dinnsr
befor th actress must hurry off to tb
theater. Added to the physical (train
is a mental ons. Th actress Is "In a
tat," ha xpresm It, just prior
to a production. Tb rol Is disap
pointing, tb dresses do not fit, "th
bonnst la a fright and tb stage man
ager Is insolent,"
Tb "White vTomaa."
In soma part of Germany particu
larly in Bohemia, some most extraor
dinary tale ar reported of tbe "whit
woman," Tbla celebrated , ghost Is
supposed to represent a woman of very
modest appearance, excessively tall,
and ber dress entirely white. Sh is
never seen without a very long veil
reaching nearly to ber ankle, and
which is of such an Impervious nature
that no person has ever been abl to
obtain a glimpse of ber featurea. On
on single occasion, however, it Is re
ported that ah condescended to lift up
her veil, when such a blaze of beauty
burst upon the astonished beholder
that be was actually rooted to th
spot for a considerable tlm. Tb lady
never leaves ber subterranean or ber
celestial abode but for the charitable
purpose of Informing an Individual of
ber approaching death. Thus It is very
common to say in some parts of Ger
many "the white woman" bas visited
blm, meaning thereby that all hopes
ar vanished of a recovery, and there
ar not a few In that country wbo
pay little or no attention to tb dec
laration of the physician respecting
tbe Immediate dissolution of tbe pa
tient until It has been ascertained
whether the white woman baa paid
ber foreboding visit.
Tolloa Craaltlaa.
The police of San Francisco are a
fine looking body of men, and their
efficiency has never been questioned.
Tbey are a terror to wrongdoers, and
with good reason, for they have a
method of aubdulng riotous and dis
orderly persons which Is unique as it
Is severe. Tbey have organized a glo
club and have systematic musical
drills. To apprehend a malefactor they
do not use locust clubs, as the New
York policemen do, but glee clubs, and
lust sing the wretch down. If a sweet
siren song falls, they vorallxe some
thing powerfully dramaticperhaps
ths policemen'! chorua from "Th Pi
rate of Pensance" and that is sure to
fetch them. Criminals In their cells,
wbo have been arrested for disturbing
th peace, listen to these stern officers
of tbe law rendering "Hirst He th Tie
That Dlnds" or "What Sbsll the Har
vest He?" and come out of Jail changed
men. The Idea Is sue h a good one th it
ther Is torn danier of Its general
adoption, Leslie's Weekly,
A ralaatlal Joba,
Tb lov of fun I not unknown
among th serious looking celestials,
who durlug the last deead hav been
collecting In he Australian colonies,
A storekeeprr, wishing to advsrtls his
articles in th Chines Ungual, n
gaged a Chinaman to paint a sign,
peeling, of rourse, that It would b
wjr eiitltlng on, it did not answer
his tlp'elaUnns, tovr, fur th only
perceptible ff l It had upon th "re
lation of ths sua snd th moon as
ih t'hlnaa term thiula, was to
ftrit grtn of th brttit.Uat dittisa
iloAa, At length th storekeeper,
a fonaldrrauls bribe, oMatned a trane
latiun In Kagllik tt th a4vrtleinat.
and found It td as follows: "ia'
buy aarthlng bar; aturhir a
rt'iu," Ktehtag.
lb ttaaf Veal,
New Niir-Oh, Mrs. ilartwrt tk
bt-l ths babjfl Muthsr-What t ttf
QuUkt Is l HIT NW Nur-No.
aiMM. ao; t.m-bt -h hs eut a r4
atrl-IUftrf s ltr,
A tt Mm 4,
"Why ivia that bard drlaklsg Usaa.
ley wtttf It bat all th llnisr "Tv
fear U t't t II oa if he take It
f,"nvld I'lata rai, ,
$5.00
Send us $5.00 fey draft, ex
press or money order and we will
ship you the following bill of
goods-Eve ry article warranted
or money returned:
SPECIAL COMBINATION NO. 87
40 ll bt ftranolataa Bnaar
11.00
, 1.00
bur Rood Laundry Moan
sr.
ir Arbuukla a Colh.,
.o
.bo
,M
.60
,m
,
.116
.16
4
. Vmnnw Kvmilir&ljld I'MAl'tld
lurana oi imniim ruiwr
Hi bunt nuoolored Uia...
lb I'miiwr
Uia rholo Ida....
lb Muxtard
liat'kaK beat Yat eakas,,.
16.00
All the above packed secure
ly and delivered to R. R. station
here for $5.00.
The Farmers
Grocery Co.,
226-234 N. 1 0th St.,
Lincoln, Nebraska
Mra. Las a la the rulpli
Ktw York, Jan, 6. On January II
Mra Mary Leas will oooupy th put
pit of th rople's oburoh, of wnlob
th Rev. Thomas Dixon, Jr., is pastor
Tb Rev, Mr. Dixoa has mad tbla
etateraeat It la his intention to tak
three weeks' vacation durlngjthls win
ter, and Mra Leas will aot as his
substitute on Sunday. Sh will loo
turon "Christ or Caesar." Eugene V.
Dbswlll also address Mr. Dixon's
oongregatlon,
Wollowad the Paraal Oal of the Wladowt
Eocbestxr, N. Y., Jan. . Ex-Polio
commissioner Frederick Zlmmai
fell from th window of his offlc yes
terday and waa instantly killed, Mr.
Zlmmer wa in th aot of throwing
soms parcels from th window of hit
offlc to bis coachman, whan b lost
bis balanos and fell. H waa 00 yean
old.
ALGER'S ILLNESS.
anas Use CooOoad tb aaoratarr of
Was to Ble Bad Three Waaha,
WitinaOTov, Jan. d. Secretary
Alger has now been oon fined to hU
room for three week with a serlout
attaok of th grlpp. and hi friends
ar alarmed ooncerning bis condition
H ba grown weaker Instead ol
tronger, and Is unabl to tak x
rol.
afaeb Oold la Ebrao.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Jan, 6.-J
Rsprssentatlvss of a Canadian and
American company who visited Lab
rador for th purpose of ereotlng aaw
mill, report that that country oon
tain depoalU of gold of great rloh
neaa, and la deatlned to become a great
mining oountry. Thar exists strong
iWTioeooa waa goia u n in vuiuvu iaj
aaantitles eaualed only bv tb d pos
. M A. A 1 li A I- M 1
it of th Klondike.
Hew llaparlar at St a D.
Columbia, Ma, Jan. ft. The Mia
sour I atat university is arranging a
cries of smoke talks snd addresses by
prominent men in varloua depart
ments of business and professional
Ufa Tbes addresses will be deliv
ered at intervals of about a month.
Th first speaker will be Dr. Edmond
J. James, of Chicago, president of th
American Academy of Political and
Social Science. Dr. James will de
liver two addresses, on tb SSth and
10th of January, on tb subjoots,
"Relation of th Btat Unlvsrslty to
University Extension," and "Relation
of tb Stat University to th Educa
tion of Duslnesa Men."
I BADGER LUMBER CO. ::
A. H. WEIR, Aobnt,
Corner N and 8th Sis.. LINCOLN. ' !
Phone 63. . . . ; ;
COAL & LUMBER::
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X Lowest Prices.
4
f esj
t Lincoln Exchange Mills, J
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: Cusotm Grinding a specialty
AH Iba baal f M w Soar (
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a hn jro atuaaf.
I1IITI ITT A linWAUll
ar r? 4 ""M
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The Maehlue doe not run while winding the bobbin. Lioit ittnr.
Niso-The Machine la easy to ma, doe not fatlgu tb operator,
make little noise and sews rapidly. Tna Htitcb I a double-lock
stltcb. th m on both side, will not ravel, and ean be changed
without stopping ths Machlns. Tun Tension Is a flat spring tension
and will admit thrad Iroin 8 to 1&0 spool cotton without changing,
Ksvr get oat of ordr. T Nkkdui la a tralght, ell-tjlng
eedls, flat on on side, and cannot b put la wrong. Neeblr lUa
1 rouad, mads ol rase bardHoed steel, with oil eup at bottom to
prvnt oil from gettlug on tb goods. A wusTaoxn ItnAajsos-AU
WlDgsarsVhard.od steel and ean b easily Adjna4 witk a
mwdrivar. All lost motion can b taken up, aad th MablajUl
last a III tlm. Attachmkhts Haeh Mochla U farsUhed with ta
lollowiog awtot bttd attaehmente rnnj Oa root llantm
Keller, oa I'aekag ol Mdln. ais llobbioa, on Wrjnsh,
Drivsr. one Whqttl 8erw iMver, on l'rsr Foot, on ltelt aad
Hook, oae Oil Can nll4 with oil onUaug oa Gang Borw, oaa
Qulltar, and oa loslmetion Hook.
JL 0UO.OO MAOUUVH 3TOXl. OXO.OO.
OUR OFFERS
rtltlTOat U4sa4atM wtag M aoalsMi a AaiiU4
aa4 Nraha ladpealii yat fW )! RO.
ICHN!0 "lader!!" Rewtag Mavhtaa given ava a
BMtasM atMsulataly rf af wt fue itlakaf ta RaRwftRaM
at 91 oaeavav.
rttintV-Oa l4Mia4at la MaeRlaa M$liM aaa
a4 a I ! at M iahwetb ai 9 1 a avlv
mCiaBT rAUAttaaaehlaassklPia dleawt trow lastly atrhlara, rveighl
hart pefi4 aar t-'lat i iba VU4 Utate oa a fawwaj, aef I i
FHtiaVal Woabiaat,., l aU'aio, NaU tVegv,a. Culorad.s ftaw MatbM,
IJako, I'tah, Hwli, Ariaoaa aad ttittmiMg, t kth Ute w wis) ry of
all lYMflt vharga M M W addtlMaai,
rfv raWt Mask! wUI sW state plolaly th wuat ta nhWa. t Maata
ttb kip4. oa watl O tb HMn t I'apef b t b Ml U(V hl
4i pttial as a HMioflte addraao, aad buth Moskioa aa4 pap U M
pniwptly aait
rarAvraasa at.t 0baa oa Arrt-v tnn tmawirtua
INDEPENDENT PUDLIGHING CO.,
Lincoln, Nobrcska.
EWING . . . . .
. . MACHINE
Popular Price.
FREIGHT PREPAID.