THE COURIER. man in a c immunity had money and -tower. To-day trad is the business of lifo instead o war nod if the consumers are to be deprived of the power to buy and Bill the hird times will continue until the serfs are freed. "Trusts restrict production and take poseefsion of the channels of distribution, wages are reduced and in many cases shut otl altogether. This in turn diminishes the nation's purchasing capaci'y so tlmt tho farmer has to feed h's co-n to the hogs or burn it for'ack of a cus'omcr. Hbving fewer or no ur hypers bo has less or no mony, tbocgh the intccst on his moit igga has not been lowtrol and the com bined manufacturers of agricultural implements mbke him pay more for machines and tool than they ask the british or German farmer over .'1,000 miles across the sea.' The Lexow committee has simply looked into the case without at'emptiog to cure it. The peop'e ran do that by taxation, cs Mr. Ingalla suggests. Lsst week a committee of citizens called at the Courier office to consult with the editor on the dbn-e.-s and dis omforts o! t e spitting habit cemmon to members of the unfair sex. The spokesman of the cemmittee thought the city council should be tequett-d to pass an ordinance making it a criminal offense to Bpit anywhere except in the gutter or in a cu9pidoie. "1 think,'" she said, "that the street cars are the worst of alt, for there, when you sit down, it is impossible to kerpyourskirtsoutof the foulncs3. This subject."' continued the litt'o woman, "should he insisted upon jut now when men are gett'ng excited over the theater hat nuisance. It man is going to destroy the pleasure of my walks abroad why should I be forbidden to wear the only becoming hat I have to the theater? My hat does not make him sick to the stomach nor endarger the Lea'th, though it maj the peace of his family." But the little woman cannot vote and the Dunlaps can. Their habits are making the sidewalks "no thoroughfare" for her, the street cars dcte3tbble and a'l public buildings offensive to her sight and smell. Th's spitting habit is worse in the west than it is in the east; in towns and villages than in cities. The large num ber of clean self-respecting men even in Chicago has modified the habits of the loafer who in Lincoln makes the sunny fide of a corner in the winter and the shady side in summer a spot of inde Ecrib&ble filth. The necessity for move ment and the s'reet sweepers help to keep the walks of a city passable to women. And I have seen men who spit en the flcor of a city theater ejicted by the ushers. Such action would be con sidered an outrage here. If the habit were not so common its offensiveneas would not be tolerated. As it is, most respectable men are chivalrous and if they could comprehend the sick loathing that a woman has for spitti'g they might be decent. Chewing gum end wearinghigh hatB are unquest ionably bad manners. Civilization, pubic opinion and the wish not to be repulsive to members of an opposite sex are curing many of the less obstinate cases. But man as j ou find him in Lincoln is in decent. Appeals and reproaches do cot effect him, and if spitting were made a misdemeanor the jail would Lo tco small to ho'd h'rn. However, The Courier represents every woman in town in protesting against the habit which make3 'out doors a sewer." All forms of strife are forbidden and discouraged by the higher culture. Sec ret iry Olney is said to have stepped in'o history by his arbitration treaty, which asserts that the mouth and the pen are might i r than the sword in Bet- t'ing Interna'ional difficulties. Vet to h'rn who has been introduced to human nature in its still unregeneratc state the function of physical contests is valuable in developing pluck and a spirit of fair play. We a 1 come of tightiog sto;k and the original impulse is cot yet exhausted. This city probably contains as much masculine refinement as any other i lace of the size within 500 miles and yet the Coibett-Maher fight in New Orleans emptied it of its richest and best at that time The daily papers for weeks b.-fire and after the mill contain ed such notices as these: J. H. Harley has gone si.uth on business. Captain R. O. Phill ps has gne south to get a whiff of rcs.'SbnJ viole's. R. E More and J. D. Maifarland have a good deal to say about the interesting historical remains in New Orleans, from whence they have just returned, and so on until the list of rt side n capitalists and Iitera teurs was exit auttei. But such is the desire of statesmen to strike a h'gh moral attitude, which they cin maintain no biger than it takes to make the speech, that one of our own legislators Las introduced a bill to prohibit match g trues ot football, and a member of con gress is trying to pass a measure forbid ding newspapers to publish the details of prize tights. As to the football bill, it is very foolish. Very few men, com I a red to the number who play it, are hurt. And the football player is a man of brawn and courage that it is a pleas ure to tehold. lie it a rebuke tonamby pambtism, the idol of his mother and sisters, a worthy example to his younger brother and the chief ornament to his alma mater. The prize fight. r.s a brute. In him professionalism has killed sport. Vet he is necessary as an example of what athletics carried to an extreme will produce. The fight, which is the culmination ot months of pjn end mouth work, is at last and at least real. One or the other fighter gets Ladly bat tered and the puLlic is revenged upjn one.of them and the other one's time is sure to come. But the bill which seeks to prevent newspapers from publishing what everybody who opens the paper the morning after the fight will turn to first is an interference with fieedoui which the occasion does not warrant If it had been best the wo Id could have ben made without temptations of any kind and the people in it an interesting lot of milksops. The tendency of the crude legislator and of the V. T. C. U. to im prove on the plan of creat on should not receive any encouragement. (First publication Feb. 27) NOTICE. 20-63. Tavender vs. Field. To Anna C. Paitpottr non-resident de fendant. You are hereby notified that on Janu ary 25th, 1897, Harriet Tavender. Sophia Tavender, Walter J. Tavender, John F. Maynard and Dennis T. Kelley, executors of the last will and testa ment of Joshua Tavender, deceased, as plaintiffs, began an action against you and other defendants in the district court of Lancaster County, Ne braska, the object or which is to fore close a certain mortgage on the follow ing land in said county, to wit: Lot number 3, in block number 3, in Field & Harrison's Addition to the city of Lin coln, made by Allen W. Field and May B. Field to the Lombard Investment Company, dated May 1st, 1883, to secure the pavment of a promissory note of said Allen W. Field and May B. Field to said The Lombard Investment Com pan v for $700, on which there iB cow due 8763.10, with interest from May 1st, 18, at ten per cent per annum pursuant to coupons. Plaintiffs pra for decree of foreclosure and sale of said land to satisfy said lieus as aforesaid 'or deficiency judgment and general relief. You are required to answer plaintiff's petition on or before the fifth 'day of April. 1897. Harriet Tavender, et al., executors, etc.. Plaintiffs. By S. L. Geisthardt, Attorney. Rando.n Notes. Julia Marlowe's acting has received extended consideration in the columns of Tne Courier. It is not necessary to add to what has been said, but it may be of interest to say a word about her new play "For Bonnie Prince Charlie," now enjoying a successful run at Wal lack's, New York (formerly Palmer's). This play, besides making a feature of large legged "Highlanders" in abbreviated plaids and the skirling of bagpipes and the exploitation of the traditional pibroch, introduces one or two dramatic situations ot rather more than ordinary intensity. One, in the third act, I will endeavor to describe. Mary (Julia Marlowe), a pure hearted, simple minded beggar girl, is blindly, passioL-ately devoted to th prcrl gate Prince Charles Edward (Basset Roe). She is the only comfort of her uncle, aged, blind patient Angus (R)bert Tabor), a r'ghteous man, but stern. At a crit;cal moment the Highland soldiers become convinced that the prince has made a mistress ot the wife of their chief, Clanmorris, ana they are on the point of abandoning the Pretender's cause, declaring that they will not fight for an adulterer. They learn that the prince and his mistress are to meet at a certain house one night and they arrange to watch and ascertain it be is guilty, as they believe. It is made to appear that they would condone the prince's offense if his victim were a common wench. But if the prince has b strayed the wife of t-eir lord then he is to be abandoned. Poor Mary, loving the prince to distrac tion, hears all this discussed, herself unseen, and is at first horrified and in digoant, expressing her loathing of Lady Clanmorris. Then her love for the prince masters all other emotions and she realizes his danger. If discovered with his mistress his cause is lost. She resolves to save him by sacrificing her self "for Bonnie Prince Charlie and Scotland.' Ste gce3 to the house where the meeting is to take- place and iB brought face to face with the guilty Lady Clanmorris. Her loathing drives her noble resolve out of mind, and while the degraded woman grovels at the girl's feet Mary has no word of pity. The exposure shall come. But the sound ot advancing sddiers recalls her to her resolution and in the very nick of time she hides the prince's mistress and prepares to take upon herself the dis grace implied by her presence at the rendevous. The sold era break in the door, expecting to find Lady Clanmorris Instead they find poor Mary a wretched figure, the picture of misery. It is a trying moment, for Mary has been regaraed as an angel of purity. Accu sitions are showered upon her and she cowers in silence that is taken for acquiescence. Fearful that the soldiers may not believe in her guilt, and wish ing to remove the last reproach from the prince, she contrives to drop a purse given to her by the prince in recognition of her service as a ppy. It is at once recognized as having belonged to Charles Edward. The sight of it, the girl in guilty silence, with the kno 1 dge they already have, is convincing. Mary is denounced as a wanton. The prince is held blameless (such is the portrayal ot Scottish moral inconsistency), and for the moment his cause is saved. But that is not all. The men hive brought with them a judge to censure the gu'lty one, and Mary is told to get ready to stand before him. This is more than she expected, and if almost mora than " she can bear. The door is opened and the judge appears. It is blind Angus, her uncle. She recoils in horror. The soldiers are willing to spare the girl, and they tell Angus that they were mistaken and that there is no woman ia the hous. But Angjs, blind ai hi is, koowB better and he laun ;hes a terrible curse upon the woman before him. Mary shrieks and ru-hes to her u icle's arms. The old man, to'tericg with age, recognizes the voice of his beloved Mary, and the shock almos1, kills him. Up to this momeot the tension has been sustaiued at a high point Here the men withdraw and the act ends with a full explanation by Mary and a loving scene between uncle and nice. The prince does not app;ar and his absen :e is not expl lined, but fie audience forgets all about him. The i ct is a trying time on toestag) and a crying time in the audience. t t t A new administration! What wi'.l it bring? No president since Lincoln, whsn he first election brought him f ice to face with the slavery ques'ion and the nueition of the iua'ntenance of the uni in, has had to meet such an em rg ency as ex'sts at the prese t time. The greatjrupul ethat nomiia el Bryan in the las' campaign is not dead. It is, if any hirg, more alive thin ever. All over the ln I the-e is unrest Prosper ty seems af tr off and advance wi h hilt ng st sps. Wages have, in many cases, leen redu ed eioce e'e ton Bus'ne-s is at a s'anlsill. In lust y is paraltsul. Workingmen are weuy with waiting. Heroic measures are to be adop'ed, but men who for years have believed in th'se rneasu es begin t doubt the'r eftii-i n-y in the presjnt ins tunc;. There is a feel ng of apprehension pervading eve stratum of soc ety. If President Mc Kinley and h:s advisers am able to me t the demand that the tim s make upon thcni there" wdl be a safe piss'ng of a critical point in our history and the republican party and the president will emerge as strong as Gibraltar. But if the looked for change does not come what then? That wdl, indeed, be an other s'ory melodramatic, tragic. Hut this country has met oth r emergene'es and come out of the trial stronger than it everwa8befo-e. President McKioley has the cordial gool will of the people, and the people believe in him. That means much. The next six or ninemo.ths will Lea fateful period. W. Morton Smith. New York, Feb. 26, 1897. Lincoln Dry Goods Co., 1009 O street. Hanna Coal for sale by Gregory, 11th and O. Phone 343. Miss Anna Dick, modiste, has moved her rooms to 1318 O street. The Capital hotel is offering the best table and service in the state. For leg islators, business men and private fani lies it is unexcelled. Centrally located. 82 a day. R, W. Johnson, Prop. Say Boys! We have just received 243 dozen new Spring stiff and soft hats, they are on our second f ioor, Call and inspect, Armstrong Clothing Co. (First publication Feb. G.) SHERIFF SALE. Notice is hereby given, That by virtue of an order of sale, issued by the Clerk ot the District Court of the Third Judi cial District of Nebraska, within and for Lancaster County, in an action wherein John H. Fisher is plaintiff, and Sophie M. Swan, et al defendants. I will at 2 o'clock P. M.. on the Oth day of March, A. D. 1897, at the -East door ot the Court House, in the City of Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, offer for Bale at public auc tion the following described Real Estate, to-wit: Lot eight (8), ot block one hundred fifty-four (154) in the city of Lincoln, Lancaster county. Nebraska. Given under my hand this 4th day of February, A. D. 1897. John J Trompen. 3-6 Sheriff.