- -ss? C "C C ' " "" t- T THE COURIER. II WE AND OUR NEIGHBORS : I. Vf: HI BANKRUPT 1 I I m Tho art department at the university has a carefully selected collection of photographs of modern French paint ings. They are interesting in them selves but more especially because they are photographs of tho pictures we read of and that the Btudios talk about. When people go abroad they generally bring back an assortment of pictures they suppose they and others aro in terested, in. frescoes in the Sistine worth fighting for," to a time which he calls "Tho good old days." There never were any "good old days" after Adam and Eve left the Garden of Eden and began to live and love and hate and and work. There were just as many good men in the war of the rebellion, even on the other side, as in the war of tho revolution. More, because there were more men. There were more bad ones too by the same token but the In Ever held in Lincoln TheH. M. TEPMAN stock of Columbia, Mo which was recently sold at sheriff's sale was bought by SAMUELS BROS for less than chapel and in St. Mark's and pictures of good increases faster than tho bad Dawnto and Beatrice. Very nice people a thousand years, which are but as a to be sute and important historical oc day, this statement will not need proof ca6ions liko the assumption and annun- but even at that date some discouraged ciation or the immaculate conception, observer of men's wicked ways will point But we have seen them all dozenB of to those days in ancient Lincoln "when times. These are photographs from tho free institutions stood for a great prin workofPuvis de Chavannes, Bonnat, cipal"etc There are bad men in office Chaplin, Louis Dechamps, Bashkirtscff, here in Lincoln, men who cannot be re J. W. Alexander, Whistler and many formed by the dignity of office or the re others. Tho portrait by Whistler sponsibility of representing 55,000 of his mother, is said to be the best por- people. There are good men in office trait ever painted. Whistler himself here too, men who represent justice, deprecates any interest tatcen in it be- who sit in tho judge's seat and who can cause it ib the portrait of his mother, neither be bribed nor intimidated. Wo He says it is just a in black and are not all bad. We are all selfish, but white and it is no one's concern to there are more honest than thieves, whom the picture is r lated, that tho more law-respecting than law-breakers, picture must please or ail as the rules more merciful than cruel. It is a good of color and form are more or leps cor- thing to cry out against corruption but 40G Ofl THE D0iiR Tne stocu: invoiced $20,000 and consists of DR GHll GUI 1 LAI CI rectly followed. Which, of course, is true, but when wo know tho picture is the artist's mother, we are not so apt to fail to see what was there before, name- not to brand c community with the crime of a few. George Washington waB a patriot, Abraham Lincoln was too, and the latter belongs in these de- ly what all people worship in pictures of generate days. He was a clever poli tho madonna. The copy of Manet's pic- tician, he pulled wires, and influenced ture, which hangs in the Luxembourg, men in more ways than one, though he of Olympia, a very ugly nude woman did nothing dishonorable. There was on a divan attended by a negress carry- many a scholar in the south those days ing a huge bouquet and watched by a whose heart burned within him when big black cat, is an eerie thing and a he refircted on the disgrace of having chilly. It is all in blacks and grays and such a man as Lincoln at tho head of whites, It is as repulsive as Zola's the nation. There are just as many story of Nana. It expresses the eatna heroes walking up and down the streets kind of horror and causes the same of Lincoln today as ever trod the streets Stock arrived in Lincoln January 3 and was put on sale Monday, Jan. 6th, 96, for Je6s than half price. Greatest cut in prices ever made in Lincoln. Remember this stock was bought for nearly a song. In order to close it out by tho 1st of February we will make prices so low that it will make goods move very fast SAMUEbS BROS Cor. lOtn and P Streets, Lincoln Neb. shudder. It was unfortunato that the cataloguers of the pictures in the Lux embourg in revising the catalogue got things mixed and Olympia's number re ferred to a title which read "Ma Mere," by Whistler. Everybody stops to look at Olympia and some of them believe anything of that Whistler. You lxnow Du Maurier says "he has no reverence for anybody, but this is going too far." A copy of a portrait of Marie BaBhkirt seff by herself, shows her a little Tartar. The portarits of her, Been in the front of her diary, look like those of any joung, lady. This is a picture of the girl of the diary. There are copies of many of the of Rome or Boston. They themselves do not know it nor ever will perhaps. You do not know how strong the rope is till it has been strained though it may look like good 6bre. Wars bring out the stuff men are made of, they develop the heroic. Now there is Mr. (Jourtnay! His fighting energy would be useful in a real war. He dissipates it now in scrimmages of various kinds, against churches mostly, where all the strain comes on his throat. What a different man he would be it he could ride up and down on a spiriteu war horse .flour ish a sword and cry "Down with tho English." Then newspapers would be &&fohSty(?A Have all the latest flavors for cotillions. New location. Funke Opera House block. curiouB imaginings of Puvis de Cha- full of stories of Lieutenant Colonel vannes, the present idol of the French Courtnaj's heroism, instead of the dis- paople, or rainer oi r rencn ariisis. grcceiui aitusions inai occasionally ap- There are two portraits by J. W. Alex ander, who seems to me a better artist than Sargent, though he cannot be compared with him his stylo is so- un like. He has the delicacy of Whistler with something more satisfying and fin ished in the quality of his work. Mr. Alexander, who is a young American,' showed Ave or six portraits in last year's exhibit in Chicago at the art institute, where they were much admired. His technique is worth a comment. He paints on canvas of very coar6o weave and he lays on his color very thin, rare ly mixing two colors on his palette. To this method is partly due the simplicity of his effects and tho Sower-freshness of his colors. He is a painter's painter. While his pictures hung in the gallery in Chicago they were surrounded by a group of young art students excitedly discussing his effects and his -method of producing them. These are only a few of the photographs which are all large and clear and repay a few hours exam ination. In last week's Courier Mr. New branch referred to a time "America was pear in the current and local newspap ers referring to the man who would fight. Miss Elizabeth Irwin sends tho fol ing statement of the Charity concert to tho editor of Tho Courier: I am sorry we are so late in sending you the exact receipts and expenses of the Charity concert. Many persons were 6low in reporting to us, some be cause they were sick and could not do so earlier. The entire receipts from the concert are 8526.10, the expenses were 62.70. not receipts aro 8463.30. We re ceived many generous donations, chief among which have been the kind offices of The Courier and your own personal influence. 1 or both we are grateful. If concert was tho most successful enter prise for charity ever conducted in Lin coln. The receipts are so large because Dr. Tyndale and his assistants kept down the expenses to 863.70. Compare tho net returns with those of theOmaha circus which, so far as attendance and excellence is concerned, was a great suc cess also But Omaha charity received ocly about 8300. They held the circus two nights and tho entire receipts from the two nights were about St.OOO. The woman who managed tho programs for the concert vas an indefatigable worker and tho advertizing on the programs Nebraska-Norwegian prairie story ever written. Her hero is a seven foot Nor wegian, Canute Canuteson, who had lived in hi: split-log hut ten years when the story begins. Canute was lonesome and drank whiskey at first and carved de lions laughing and men working or praying with demons on their backs. He did both, whiskey drinking and carving to keep from going crazy in the awful loneliness of the Divide. Whiskey soon lost its effect and ho took to alco hol. "Alcohol is perfectly consistent in its effect upon man. Drunkenness is merely an exaggeration. A foolish man more than paid for them. Dr. Tyn- becomes maudlin; a bloody man, vicious; dale organized and arranged tho con a coarse man, vulgar. Canute was none cert and selected his assistants. His of these, but he was morose and gloomy, assistants are able women and the doc- and liquor took him through all tho hells tor and they deserve tho universal praise of Dante. As he lay on his giant'u bed it be not too late we would like to ex, bestowed on tbem for accomplishing the all the horrors of this world and every press our inantcs 10 an ine principal nv- success oi a uecaue. other were laid bare to his chilled senses Nrthaprint-ne lt0' " He was a man who knew no joy, a man Union and to MncfnoshanTtne1 The holiday number of the Overland who toiled in silence and bitterness. P. Curtice Music company, as well as to Monthly publishes a story, with illus- The skull and tho serpeiit were always the musicians who so generously gave trations, by Miss Willa Cather. The before him, the symbols of eternal fu- ttfnnTncu Norwegians occupy the farms in the vi- tileness and of eternal hate." Canute expectations in this winter of our hard cinity of Red Cjoud almost exclusively, finally falls in love with the daughter of times. Yours very respectfully. Miss Cather has observed them for a family that moves into the next ELIZABETH W. IRWIN. years in her characteristic way, that is, "eighty," His wooing consists in going This money is to be handed over to the without appearing to. I think this to her father, Ole Jansen's house, and Charity 'Organization society. This latest story, "On the Divide," tho best drinking alcohol with him. Ihe' girl 3 V & t-, 5 s ft J.