T the com J. i. &! THE PASSING SHOW. "art thrust upon us from all quarters this week. You nee an international Well, Souea is in uwn, the great and committee of artists or aa one nsws oniy John Phillip. Oae does not have to paper put it "a committee of interna read the papers to know that. In every tional artist?," has been here judging the dry goods store jou htnr the orchestra pictures from all over the world that that is kept for the diversion of shop- are to be exhibited in the Carnegie gallery pers plaing "Tha Stars and Stripes next month and deciding which shall Forever." Every newsboy on Fifth hive Carnegie's $5,000 prizer Of csurse avenue whistles "El Capitan" all day the awards will not be announced yet, long to the accompaniment of "Naw that comes off November 3rd, when An York W-6-r-l-d.'' Every lad in town drew Carnegie you see I put Andiow as he hurries to see bis best girl in the first and President McKinley, who evening hums 'I Too Was Born in owes Andrew half a million dollars Arcadia" as he hastens on his joyous worth of votes and knows it, and all way. The town is possessed of Sousa, Ihe rest of the push will bo here, full of him, and half a million people Too committee is made up of the fol are unconsciously two-stepping to lowing gentlemen: Winslow Homer, of "Washington Poet." Ho has been here Scarborough, Me.; E. U. farbell, of a week, plajingdown at the Exposition Boston; William M.Chase, ofNew York; every night and giving dinners and Will H. Low, of New York; Miss Cecilia luncheons to the newspaper fraternity Beaux, Edwin Lord Weels, of Paris; every day. He is just the same genial John M. Swan, of London; John La gentleman. I see no change in him ex- Farge.ofNew York; Frank Davcneck, cept that that wide white part on tbo of Covington, Ky., and Frank W. Ben top of bis head has grown eo wide and son, o! Salem, Mass. so white that it can not be called a part I was lucky enough to be invited to a at all any more. Like Caesar he begins dinner given for these gentlemen, and I to need a laurel wreath to cover his basely bribed the hostess to aek Mr. Low to take me to dinner. Not because he was Will H. Low, but because be was R'b3rt Louis Stsvanson's dearest and nearest friend, the man to whom "The Wrecker" was dedicated. In the head, for when a man's hair begins to depart from him even the seductions of glory can not hold it and fame is as ineffectual as hair restorers. Well, I know of no man of music in America who has been growing laurels more words of an immortal poet he rapidly these last eight years than th;8 "Talked of many things; same Johtj Philip Sousa. Indeed I am inclined to think that be is the only man who has written music that is characteristically American. Of couise it is all "popular music" as the phrase goes, but that is tho music that lives, that music of the people. What is ' Cavcleria Rusticana" but a melange of Of seas and ships and sealing wax, Of cabbages and kings." That is not quoted correctly, and I know Eomeone in Lincoln who will catch me up on it, but never mind. When a seasonable opportunity came I quoted a phrase or t:vo of some verses that Stevenson once wrote to Mr. Low, eyesionispidie. 1 saw my Dreaic in a moment The personal pain and sense or Ics3 were acute stitl after three years. I apologizoi simply and directly. He saiJ he hoped he had not been rude, the folk music of sDuthern Italy? What Thegenial dinneitable expression left his gives Bizet's "Cannon" its persistent faCi in a moment, he gave me a pene vitality but that old Spnaish waltz song trating look and then dropped his gravo MUIUU IB 11 D b.liliai I1IUIIJ i uuci a BlICCl song of Seville, mind you, that many a pretty cigar girl has sung to many a young sjld.er. So I really cannot see that, it is against Mr. Sousa that his music terms ana tingles with tne but that tho subject was too painful a nervous vivacity of the Ameiican people, 0De for a dinner pai ty. I said no more, that it is bursting with national lire, but he inconsistently would talk of Nor is it quite fatal to his reputation nothing else that evening. Tho name ss a composer that the newsboys once mentioned was not to be forgotten, whistle bis marches everywhere There "The sad fart of it." ho remarked, "is is music, juBt as there is poetry, which that tLe world really never cot tho appeals alike to the many and tho few. heart of Louij. I have lived in many in which primitive virility of the theme countries and known many men, but the is not dissipated by abstruse develop- personal charm of that woman-man was roent nor buried under technicalities of treatment. That is the music that lives in people's hearts which is, on thu whole, a safer placo to put it than in tho sweetest experience I have bad on personality and quite froze up at the mention of his family. I could see he did not love the hoard of stepsons and ponderous folios. I honestly believe that stepgrandsons that lived on that one sousa 8 marcnes will become classics in the same sense that the Stauss waltzes have. When all is said they are quite irresistible. I wish wo could have a small war or two, that would bring out tho fellow's mettle. When I saw Rud yard Kipling last summer he mentioned Sousa as one of the men whose work delighted him. and said he was always wanting to write verses t tho tune of tho "Liberty Bell." And just the other day Sousa told mo that Kipling was the most musical poet of his time and that ho was going to set tome of his "Barrick Room Ballads" to music. They go together ss did Heine and Schubert, those two, sort of by first intention. Sousa seems to have done in military music very much what Kip- poor stricken genius. Of Stevenson's work he said more than I could write in a week, though he agreed with me that bis manner was greater than his matter and his art alone his inspiration. But the strange part of Lis conversation was tho way in which he spoke. He is the IhirJ man I have met who knew Stephenson personally, and ic is the sne with them all. At the mention of his name strong men melt and becomo tender as bereaved women. Nothing in lifo'seems to till the sense of personal loss they will carry It their graves with them. What was there in this man to make men love him so, I wonder? Just here I will quote a few lines of some verses he wrote to Low only a short time before that ill-starred day in December ling has done in military verse. He has when lnat cunning was stilled forever. caught the big joy of war. He has got exultant gaiety of arms. He has caught the tramp of moving e quadronp, the eagerness of lh bat'lo steed fjr the fray, the triumphant smile on the djing lio3 of victors and all the dash and esprit and reckless gallantry of modern war. They are the kind of marches an Old Guard could die to right joyously, the "Honor and Arms" sort of thing.- La t week I called Pittsburg an art less city. Heavens! if we haven't had other artists of that august assemblages "In wet wood and miry lane, Still we pant and pound in vain; Still with leaden foot we chase Waning pinion, fainting face; Still with gray hair we stumble oa, Till, behold, the vision gone! Where hath fleeting beauty led? To the doorway of the dead. Life a over, life was gay: We have come the primrose way." I will not attempt to speak of the Edwin Lord Week's accent alone would deserve a column, and Cecilia Beam's dinner gown deserves a whole Counir.it She paints such pretty clothes, I wonder why sho wears such awful ones. Tho next day Mr. Low smuggled me into the gallery where tho public and particularly that part of the public vihich follows my occupation are not yet admitted. I wantod to speak with him about the only picture of Bougueroau's I admire, the picture of a little peasant girl which was bought and brought to Pittsburg years ago. He said, 'O yee, I remember well. Bou guereau asked me if I had seen any thingof his bonne enfant the last time I wa in Paris. O yes. it's good too good to be repeated, by him at least. He did that years ago when he was a young fellow and poor enough to be eincere." That was all I wanted to know. I should like to own that picture, but you would never know it was a Bouguereau. I never saw anything else of his at all like it. It is just a little brown peasant girl sitting on a hillside, with her clothing stained with the Juice of the vintago and a basket of grapes in her lap. Sho has nothing of the flashing, unnatural perfection of the Bouguereau 'omen, nothing of that gleaming skin, that virgical, sex-less flesh tint that has made him famous and hateful. On the contrary the is brown, quite brown, and evm a little dirty. She is not of the half world of Paris, but a child of the soil, very near to the earth. Her little bare feet are in the wet grass and her tees are curled under a little from the chill of the dew. Her coarse little hands are crossed in her lap, and her eyea are looking wistfully into the dis tance; sadly, almost aa if she looked into the years to come and saw the shameful success that awaited the man who created her. For she was done Jong ago, before Bouguereau began to paint forgamblicg balls and bar-keepers and Americans. I wonder if sometimes, as he sits in his magnificent studio in Paris, with its miles and miles of gleaming canvasses, its hundreds of white limbs and perfect curves, he doe not sicken of the hateful tint that has made him what he is, and close his eyes for a moment and long for this little brown peasant girl, painted by a hopeful boy in the days of the long ago, before be was successful and rich and famous and despised, and I wonder if he does not almost yearn to be that honest boy again. Helax. helas,le$ jours iVautrefoitt! WILL A CATHER. Pittsbcimi.Pa. K I For glove fitting- fine I shoes at reasonable prices we are headquarters j ) C I Co It Cork filled soles are com- fortable and protect the i foot from the cold damp- I ness or heat. We have a large assortment in them, f : L - - ol. I " i nf l n jlL-JJul There aro all kinds of paints and var nishes, mostly inferior, of course, and therefore expensive at any price. We buy only the best paints and varnishes to bo had in the market and you will bo pleased with their plainly evident super iority when you seo them. Paint", brushes, varnishes and all painters' sup plies at B. O. Kostka, 1211 O stroet. OH00MMMMMfrXjt)IMIIMIM( A. L FLANAGAN J01G P Street. Lincoln, Neb. Second Hand Goods Bcught and Sold. himmmhii(IX)SxS 1 Efl MftJftS BOTH MEN AND WOMEN. If you are willing to work, we can give you employment with COOP PAY, and you can work all or part time, and at home or traveling. The work is light and easy. Write at once for terms, etc.. to THE HAWKS NURSERY COMPANY Milwaukee, V1m. 3S) New Meat Maricet 101Y MEAT CO. S. 1). Sigouraer, Mngr. Fresh and Salt Meat3. Fish and Game in Season. 937 O ST. PHONE 20 1. AMERICAN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BAIK. LINCOLN, NEB. S. H. BCKMIAM, President. D. G. Wi.g, A. J. Sawyer, Vice president Cashier. CAPITAL e2.7),000. Directors A. J. Sawyer, S. H. Burn ham, E. Finney. J. A. Lancaster, Lewis Gregory, N. Z. Snell, G. M. 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