I v- r A y- V J. k VOL. XV., NO. XIX ESTABLISHED IN 1880 PRICE FIVE CENTS LINCOLN, NEBR... SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1900. Rips BVTXBXDIN THE F08TOFFICR AT LINCOLN AS SECOND CLA88 MATTEB. THE COURIER, Official Organ of the Nebraska State Federation of Women's dubs. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BT IK COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING GO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HABKIS. Editor Subscription Kates In Advance. Per annum f 1 00 8ix months 75 Three mouths 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 The Codrier will not be responsible for vol antary communications unless accompanied by return postage.. Communications, to receive attention, must be signed by the full name of the -writer, not merely as a guarantee of good faith, but for publication if advisable. 5 " ? g OBSERVATIONS. 8 The State Convention. It was a tangle of many threads to the looker-on. A few astute and ex perienced politicians kept their eye and their whole attention upon their own particular thread, tying a knot here and untying one there until they accomplished Mr. Dietrich's, 31 r. Rosewater's and Senator Thurston's nomination to the various offices they are seeking. Senator Thurston was the only one who was applauded with any spontaneous enthusiasm. Men found themselves voting by request for candidates of whom they did not approve and against others whom they liked and wished to help nomi nate. They were helpless in the midst of a complicated situation. Unless each delegation voted accord ing to orders and agreement the con vention would have become a mass of individuals, disorganized and un likely to accomplish anything that would have pleased as many a? the tinal compromise. The convention demonstrated, among other things, the strengenth of the organization effected and controlled by Mr. Thomp. son. But as an example of a part of a great, free people in the act of se lecting their state officers it was not edifying. Kings and emperors that inherit their places are quite as apt to be useful to their people as the choice of a convention the members of which select candidates not for their fitness but because they live in a certain part of the state and be cause their nomination will not in terfer with the aspiration of some other candidate for some other office. Preparations for Summer. Politics are more uncertain than the weather, but nevertheless Mr. Bryan is building a large porch on his house. A two-thirds vote is re quired to nominate the candidate in the national convention of the demo cratic party where only a majority of republican votes will be sufficient to nominate President McKinley. That Mr. Bryan will not be nominat ed there is only a possibility. The last presidential campaign demon strated the futility of chasing after votes on a train. Speeches from the rear end of a train of cars are lacking in dignity. A snorting engine does not-play second fidjlLe to any one. And when the engineer of even a Bryan special got his orders to move, the engine started, though it split periods in two and caused the orator to end his speech in a shriek. Presi dent McKinley stayed at home and drank iced lemonade and was elected. By staying at home he made the small fortunes of a number of the residents of Canton. The building of the porch has rejoiced the Lincoln hotel and boarding house- keepers, tor it is a token of delegations and of agitated conferences of the great with the great. The seventeenth street cars will be full all summer as far as D street. The hacks of this small city can bo relined and fitted to new springs, for as sure as the ex ample of Tammany has been except ed, political delegations do not walk. A hack and a stovepipe hat is the sign and seal of Tammany and Tam many is the Paris of all real demo crats. Mr. Bryan is about to confer prosperity in a small way upon Lin coln. When the delegations on spec ial trains stocked in the liberal fash ion of man on a delegation from a city, a club, or a state which pays the bills, it will be a holaday every day except Sunday. The railroads will also do a good business hauling demo crats to their Mecca and their Proph et. It is not alone the dealers in foods and drinks beds and transporta tion intramural and overland, that are grateful to Mr. Bryan for build ing a porch and concluding to speak to credulous generations frsm it this atcd. Most of those citizens who have essayed to beautify the city by a structure of stone or brick have soon er or later relinquished it into the hands of insurance companies and gone further west or returned to live the peaceful life of their forefathers in a New England village where men are passing rich on an income of a thousand dollars a year. The first sounds of the campaign are not guns and waving flags but the report of a hammer pounding nails into resinous pine, and this small part of Nebraska rejoices, for whether it rains or not, the hacks will roll up and down seventeenth, between D street and the depots, perspiring patriots will make speeches to thirstiness and the destruction of a mirror polish on col lar and shirt bosom, the neighbor hood will blossom into pop and lemon and stands, while Mr. Bryan is run ning for president on the porch of his house on D street between teenth and sixteenth streets. Ada Rerun. "The Taming of the Shrew," in the reading is not so interesting a com edy as "The Tempest," "The Mer chant of Venice," ,The Winters Tale" or "The Merry Wives of Windsor," but in the presentation it is much more interesting. The action is rapid, there are few long soliloquies or explanations and the characters are not archaic and strange to a mod ern audience. The question top, is as new and no older, and as current now as then. A woman with the temper, the wit, the will of Katharine and the determination to rule a husband, a father, a sister, and everyone else in her fam must be conquered if not far hefluke, for the peace and comfort all these others. Petru io's way'was brutal, but starvation is the shortest road to humility. Short and sharp were the pains Ka tharine suffered before she at last gladly acknowledged her master. In spite of co-education, the leveling influences of learning all women still (though few acknowledge it) really love only their masters. Petrucio, who reduced Katharine to Griselda in three days or four, was Mr. George Clark, a very dare-devil gallant from Verona; a man who takes the world lightly but has his own way through life by fertile wit, good temper, selfishness and the con sciousness of his own superior activi ty. Other men had been cuffed by Katharine, other men had wished to woo her but none dared continue summer, there-are'-the .htters, laun- after the firsjt rebuff, till Petrucio saw she glides humbly into her trainer she is too little on the stage. Uow nobly she reads her lines! If the play wright could hear her ho must take new pleasure in his verse. Deliber ately, always audibly, even when she rages, Shakespcre's words arc never sacrificed to any trumpery business. Trained by an adequate, comprehend ing stage manager, Miss Itch an is tho only American actress, unless it be Julia Marlowe, who has the voice, the patience, the intellect, to play Shakspere's plays and not transform them into something either dreary, pedantic, scholastic or flavored with the vulgarity of the modern Hoyt woman or worse still, an imitation of the French. Miss ReLan is whole some and frank. She has an exquisite sense of proportion, of womanliness, even of that which is most rare in the women of the stage, I mean, of literature. In her tour of the interior seven- states of ibis country for their own enlightenment I hope she may still play to large and satisfied audiences like that at the Oliver on Monday night. Her company is large, thor oughly trained and still under the influence of that man of letters and of the stage Augustln Daly. dryraen, bootblacks, barbers and all the purveyors of the ornaments with which the gorgeous politician loves to" deck his person though the effect is not always chaste. Other citizecs of Lincoln may build palaces of brick and stone and bronze without conveying the Impression of loyalty and devotion to the city's prosperity, that this little porch, eight by ten feet or twenty has cre- her and concluded that so spirited a maid was worth subduing, and that he was the man born to tame her. Mr. Clark's spirited, determined woo ing, wedding and breaking was tine acting. Nevertheless there is too little of Katharine in the play when Miss Rehan takes the part. Prom her magnificent entrance where the portiere is thrust aside to admit her shrewish body, to the last act where The Protector of the Innocents. Judge Holmes takes his own way In divorce cases. Discriminating deci sions are especially difficult is cases, where husband and wife allege in human cruelty, frivolity, failure to provide support, chronic absenteeism, or the statutory cause. Arter a heart to heart talk wilh plaintiff and de fendant which is oftenest not satis factory and reveals two entirely dif ferent and contradictory views of the same subject. Judge Holmes addresses a sermon to the mother and father from the bench on the subject of their duties to their child or children. Setting aside the points of difference between them, their mutual causes of complaint, their long hoarded grievances, their jealousies, well founded or not, Judge Holmes ad dresses them or their offspring. The Judge believes that no man and wo man should be permitted to ignore the rights of their children whose existence they are responsible for and have forgotten. In the course of seven yaars on the bench, Judge Holmes has been impressed with the sensual selfishness of the fathers and mothers who appear before him seek ing a divorce. They are willing in order to obtain a decree that their children of tender years should hear disgusting testimony relating to the character and conduct of 'both. It is evident that the Judge has deter mined that the corruption of the In nocents in his court shall cease. The men and women seeking divorce are nearer forty than fifty. Imbittered, coarsened, disillusioned, selfish, sen sual, one or the other or both appear before Judge Holmes leading a little girl or boy whose, wide open eyes mirror all the mother and father have