THE COURIER. 13 1 have a plan for selling the city the water of the Schuylkill (which the company does not own any more than you or I own it) for the sum of three and one half millions more. This is the most barefaced proposition of all and lias raised such a howl that it may not go through." The ways of diplomacy are past finding out. Senor dc Lome mails a letter to a friend which never reaches him but is opened by a Junta spy who copies it and lays it before other con spirators. Eventually the original letter is sent to Washington and reaches the hands of the secretary of state and the cars of Senor de Lome, who, in consequence is forced to re sign. His diplomatic crime does not seem to be mitigated by the fact that the letter was friendly and unofficial and abstracted from the mails by a man whom it is Jesuitical not to call a robber. Neither is his offense palli ated by the coincident appearance of newspaper criticisms of the president in the hundreds of papers in this country; criticism much more virulent than Senor de Lome's deprecatory letter. The lesson seems to be that it is not so much what one says of the chief executive of the United States of America as who says it. Senor de Lome departs with disgust from the land of freedom and justice, where jingoism refuses justice to the stranger. Not that we are supposed to care much what a Spaniard thinks of us, only our criticism of other coun tries and theirtreatmentof Americans is rendered somewhat stilted and af fected by our inconsistency. The modern young college woman who can play basket ball, run as easily and almost as swiftly as a faun, who has a clear eye, and a complexion of milk and roses, who looks straight at you and in an emergency does not faint or scream but stands by to help, is a mate for somebody more chastely imagined than an Olympian deity. She is a harbinger of future genera tions that forbids pessimism, makes it rediculous. The old woman some times referred to as the creeper and r MIIMMlllllMHIMHHIIHMOMMIMIMMIMMMIIMMMIMlMHHIIlM i The Passing Show. mhimmommimohoohooooihmcmmmmmmmmmmmomm OMMOIM "When, all when, shall I be hid From the wrong my father did? How long, how long, till spade and hearse Put to sleep my mother's curse?" E A. Houseman. This is a long story. I don't write it because I am proud of it, but I know a few maidens about Lincoln who have inclinations toward journal ism, and this may serve to dampen their ardor. Then it's rather a relief to confess one's despicable conduct sometimes. Of course you have all heard how Adelaide Moned, Marion Manola's daughter, ran away from her mother's company when it disbanded in Savannah and came north with the manager, eloped with him, the papers had it, landed at New York and came so her father's home in Pittsburg as toon as he telegraphed her a remit tance. Her father, Henry S. Moned, was in Chicago at the time of her arrival here and the girl went to his home and locked herself up. The newspaper men of the town were wild. Here was quarry worth while, "good hunting." as they call it. A runaway actress who was said to be engaged to Mr. Burrows, Sneaker Reed's nephew, and MarkEustis, David B Hill's pri vate secretary, who had eloped with a third man, and who was said to have caused her mother furious jealousy because of her fondness for John Ma son, and who, with all this, was only seventeen, locked up alone in a house out on Presbyterian Marchand street. All day long the oldest and best trained reporters of the town went out, and not one succeeded in even ho ase was greatly stirred up over the affair; declared that the father was an exquisite who lived beyond his means, a Beau Brummel who cared for noth ing but himself and the lit of his coat, the mother an unmentionable person but that the child was as true as gold and that the Lord must have been crazy when he put her with those dreadfulpeople. ner calling Miss Moned "the child" made me nervous. One may be very young at seventeen, or one may be very old. I was prepared to go to see a woman of the world and to see her by fair means or foul, and she would work me for all I was worth and I would return the compliment, and we would both be amused and each de spise the other and that would be an end of it. But 1 had not come out to pounce upon a child and wheedle out her secrets. I didn't like the look things were putting on. I arrived at the house about 6:30 and handed the dragon my card, and awaited the coming freeze-out. It was dark in the vestibule and I could not see well, but I knew that someone little and young with a voice like a child's ran up to me and caught my hand and cried, -'O, it was so good of j-ou to come! and the flowers almost made me cry, they were the first kind things that have come to me for so long. You care for ray mother, don't you? ' Here was a situation, sending pois oned candies to a child! "When we got into the light 1 felt guilty of infanti cide. Why, she was a child! this giddy adventuress, this runaway actress, this heroine of triple love affairs, a little girl whose mother didn't love her, and I was an older girl who had come there to lay traps for her. Haughtiness, insolence would have been easy to this. How did she look? O, like any other girl who is beautiful She was slender and carried her head well; her hair was brown with a red dish tinge in it, her mouth just Mano la's fine mouth over again, her brows highly arched, her eyes big and dark and deeply set, and much, much too sad for so young a face. Marion Ma nola herself must have had much of that same girlish charm years ago when she first left a church choir out in Cleveland aud went to stndy under Marches!, before the struggles of her life began and their fires burnt out all that was best in her. It was no trouble to get her to talk. Eversince her flight from Savannah three weeks before she had been prac tically a prisoner, besieged by re porters. Since she ran away she had not seen any of her own sex. At sev enteen a girl must talk. We went up to her room and she began pouring out such a torrent of girlish confidence that I seized my one chance for de cency and as gently as I could stated Z t t dinger, was also apt to whine and to seeing past the dragon housekeeper at MIMMIf MMIHMHIC0SMMMMMMMMMMO00 81 be peevish, her nerves made her "want to fly," and their effect upon her hus band and children was not cheerful. All those who have seen the univer sity girls in their gymnasium work have been thrilled by their vigor and grace, by the abandon of their play and their skill, by their obedience to the rules and, above all, by the signs of health that almost all of them show. The type is all-womanly, though it shows on the street and in society a directness and freedom from coquetry that would have puzzled and' embarrassed the cavalier poets. The type I refer to is studious and most of the time appallingly in earn est. The type gazes at a trifling ques tioner with a gaze so direct and un conscious that, unless hardened to it, the dilletante's eyes will falter and the conversation stumble into silence. In face of the physical results of the almcllc training of woman, all criti cism is idle. It has helped to make taem independent, self-reliant, and of immense meaning to the future of Nebraska. A story running in Collier's Weekly called "An Impossible House Party" illustrated by Peter Newell and written by Caroline and Alice Duer is on the plan of "A Houseboat on the Styx." The guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tempus Fugit are Cleopatra Washington, Napoleon, Alexander Cornelia and her twin boys, known to storv as the Gracchi. The Gracchi are Imps in everybody's way, only still when spying and listening, at other times thumping on the piano or deaf ening the guests by unexpected ex plosions! The story is very amusing would 'New the door. Our men came back dis couraged. The other papers had given the thing up and so must we. About four o'clock in the afternoon the man aging editor came up to my desk. "I know it is not customary to send the editorial force out on assignments, but the men have failed dead on this Manola business, and I somehow can't give it up. None of the New York reporters got at her, and an interview mean scooping the country, York and Philadelphia naners please copy,' you know. If you could try it, it would be a great personal favor." I don't like that sort of business. Since 1 have been here I have not written any theatrical interviews. You can't do it with any shade of self-respect. It means trading in per sonalities. But this was an unusual case, and I felt I rather owed a trial at it to the chief. Then, of course, the prosoect of such a "scoop" was alluring. The men rather threw out a challenge and I took it up. Then I began to prepare for my campaign. I had met Marion Manola several times last year when she was here in vaudeville, and I decided I fJ would strain that point just about all fiX it would stand. 1 hied me to a florist's and got a few dozen white narcissus and put my card in the box, writing on it that I hoped she would accept them with best wishes from one who THE CLUB WOMAN -2ANDS- THE COURIER ONE YEAR FOR 81-25 though It is to be regretted that the bad met and admired her mother, and CLUB WOMEN: DO YOU want the club news of the United States and Nebraska? Then serd a dollar and twenty-five cents to The Courier, Lincoln, Nebr.. and receive them both for one year. If you want a sample copy of the Club Woman send 3Tour name to THE CLUB WOMAN, I 10 School Street, Boston, Mass. It is the best club paper pub- lished. authors have r.Iaced Washington in sucb. company even as a joke. Cottier's IFeefeJy is one of the newer illustrated weeklies of about the same character and style as Harpers Weekly. It is printed on heavy glazed paper, and the illustrations in the last three or four numbers have been as good as the best. sent them out to her address. I had another point in my favor; I had known slightly a family out in East End with whom Miss Moned and her father used to board. I went out there and found the reporters had overlooked them altogether. The lady of the m if IP :lg 4M Hi Hi MIIIIIIIMMMIIIIIMIIIHMIIMIIIM