ijmymmimmjmmmmmjim THE COURIER. X word to them to mind their own business and go home. But they closed in on him and he spent uis last days in the little Island for which President Kruger's passage has been booked and where his house is being papered, painted and repaired for his venerable occupancy. Peculation. Rome of the first news that was printed in all of the newspapers as soon as the American occupation of Cuba began, was about the corruption of the Spanish revenue and post office officials. In spite of periodical reve lations of corruption and stealing principally by American municipal officers, we are still not beyond ap pearing shocked by authentic inform ation of Spanisii thievery. The rem nants of the shocked look still linger ed upon our national countenance when news of the steal by the United States Director of the Posts, Rath bone reached this country. Our only excuse for American administration in Cuba is to show the Cubans how to govern honestly and effectively. It is fortunate therefore, that postal criminals and defaulters are inevita bly punished by Uncle Sam. No branch of the service is so merciless towards a defaulter as the post office department. Mr. Ratbbone's crime is exaggeratod by the disgrace which he has brought upon the United States administration in Cuba. In this country faith in the integrity of post office offcials is so rarely shaken and defaulters are so quickly captured and imprisoned that an irregularity like that committed by Rathbone creates no heresy in the system. But the Cubans that have heard stories about how the ice man runs New York, will have their worst suspi cions continued by Ratbbone's mis appropriation of funds. Rathbone committed treason as well as robbery, for he has brought his country into disrepute in a foreign land. Captain Oberlin S. Carter, who is serving a sentence for plain robbery, perpe trated by way of a harbor contract, committed a misdemeanor ic contrast- Rathbone has made the United States ridiculous and injured the effect of the example the government is trying to set. A Spring Sunday in 1900. In the days of our grandfathers, Sunday was an indoor day. Verdure, blue skies, the robin and the melo dious meadow-lark, the spring fra grance of the earth, the trees and the flowere, it was acceptable self denial to shut them out and read a morbid book of martyrs, or the gloomiest con clusions of Job, or threats of David. The idea of propitiating an offended 'deity once a week by shutting our eyes and our ears and by barring out the scented breeze has insensibly dis appeared. Friends lunch together in the evening, all the streets are filled with strollers in pairs or in groups. Sunday is perhaps even more of a family day than it was in Puritan times. Fathers take their children to walk, read to them or tell them stories. The streets are full of family carriages. The nearby timber on the banks of Salt Creek shades the moth er, father and children. The air is full of a quiet rust'e and the hum of voices. The effect is not one of Puri lan somnolence and repression, but of movement and an indolent spring gayety. The deportment of those who still believe in all that Calvin confessed and announced is much more human and hearty than the most heretical of our forefathers. For such a one was constrained by his neighbors, by his wife and his son's wife, by his busi ness partners, by his customers, his clients, or his patients and all their female relatives to an observance and a conformity that his heart and his mind had no share in. Relievers in the verbal inspiration of every "thus saith," whereunto and Selah in the Bible ascribe the seizure of the Lord's day, and the human en joyment of it, to higher critics who have made the decalogue a purely human document. There was an idea among the older theologians that God demanded that every minute of the Sabbath day should be used in wor ship. Not on account of the benefit man received from adoration, tbengh that was admitted, but as tribute to an exacting deity who gloried in the humiliation of the worms he had created, and as penance for sins for which otherwise they would be scourged mightily. We have traveled far from that conception. Unitarians are no longer the only ones that hear God in the lark, that worship him in the Armament, that realize the globe whirling through space, and the ma jesty of the sun, moon and stars. And on Sunday in the spring time in this part of the world, the doors to the houses are open, giggling lovers are indispensable figures in the idyl, the unaffrighted children play with their darling week day toys and all Ne braska that is not sick-a-bed or eating dinner is out of doors. Three Score and Ten. At forty years every man and wo man has seen sickening sights. At forty years every man, at least knows that nearly every other man is for sale, some are bargains and others are dear at the lowest price. Considering that enthusiasms are quenched, that faith in man is almost destroyed, the cumulative evidence of ingratitude, treason and the purely commercial emotions of the times, sixty years is long enough to live. At this age almost every one is certain that the world is hollow and that the men and women moving around upon it are life less, as dolls except for the power to eat. Formerly men and women were distinguished from automata by speak ing and by the power to love and think. Machines can speak as well as men now and only the hearts of the very young and ignorant still beat faster at true stories of a life sacrificed for others. A Miracle Play. A miracle play of the fifteenth cen tury called The Third Shepherd Play, was given by the Yale Dramatic As sociation at New Haven on "Wednes day. Frank Lea Short of the Amer ican Academy of Dramatic Arts is the director in charge of the presen tation. Mr. Short's residence in Omaha for a few years stimulated, or more exactly, created a school of dra matic art in Omaha and several spirited and unusually interesting per formances by local students were given there. Of the miracle play given by the Yale students on Wednesday, Mr. Short says: "The 'Third Shepherd Play is one of the Towneley cycle of miracle plays. These plays were a great factor in the creative period of English drama, furnishing inspiration to Sbakspere, Ben Jonson, Congreve and many other writers of the period. The mir acle was originally of a religious na ture, being in fact presented in the churches. They became so popular after a time that the churches were insufficient to hold the crowds and the plays for a time were given in the churchyards. But a desecration of the graves followed, and in course of time the plays came to be presented on huge carls drawn through the streets. About this time the clergy ceased to control their production, the characters being taken by mem bers of various trades guilds, the wheelwrights, the smiths, etc., etc. As the competition among the guilds increased the plays became more elaborate. The wagons, or rather scaffoldings on wheels, on which they were given, were divided into two stories; the lower was curtained off and used as a dressing room by the actors, while the upper served as the stage. These carts were always drawn by twelve men; there is no in dication of horses ever having been used for the purpose. "All the music used will be of the most ancient character, from the period preceding the Palestrina. We have spent a great deal of time ran sacking the libraries of New York in search of the manuscripts of this old music and have been fairly success ful. All the other details pertaining to costume, language, etc., we have taken tne greatest pains to arrange with all possible historical accuracy." In "The Third Shepherd Play," the curtain rises on an old English street on a feast day. A crowd of towns people is seen, craftsmen, ballad mongers, flower girls, etc., while in one corner a crowd of men at a table are throwing dice. The whole crowd is represented as waiting for a mir acle play which is expected to arrive shortly. After a time a hjrald an nounces that the pageant is coming and a moment later the great car, nearly fifteen feet in length, is drag ged on the stage by twelve towns people. The pageant halts before the audience on the stage and the play begins immediately. The first part of the performance is in the nature of a farce. The characters are three "Shepherds," a sheep stealer "Mak" and his wife "Gill." There is a great deal of boisterous talk and joking both among the real actors and the supposed audience on the stage, and the farcical part of the drama ends with the tossing of the sheep stealer in a blanket. Therf suddenly the na ture of the play is entirely changed. An angel appears before the "Shep herds" and announces to them the birth of Christ. The men are struck with awe, and procuringpresents they lay them at the foot of 'the Manger. This Is the usual ending of the Town eley cycle of plays. Preceding the production of the "Third Shepherd Play" the associa tion will give a dramatization of Chaucer's "Pardoner's Tale," which dates from the same period. The work of dramatizing has been done by H. D. Westcott, of the class of 1900. It is entirely a play of symbolism. The curtain rises on a crowd of rogues who are supposed to represent the Follies. While they Btand there the corpse of one of their comrades is brought in and the rogues decide to avenge his death by finding and slay ing Death. The play carries them through the various adventures of their search until finally they find a pile of gold at the house of "Avarice." A dispute arises, the rogues slay one another and thus find Death. & Tyrrell, RIcketts iRicketts, Messrs. W. J. Lamb, W. B. Price, John J. Gillilan, W. R. Comstock, ScLwind, Deweese, Ernst, Msely, R. Ryan, F. H. Woods, W. C. Phillips, George El men, J. R. Inkster, A. M. Baird, Cox, J.B.Wright, Mann, R.J.Greene, C. H. Morrill, E. Bignell, Tyler, D. D. Muir, Greenlee, Hatfield, Dr.Giffen, Dr. Finney, Dr. Garten, Dr. Ladd, Judge Broady, Chief Hoagland, Gen eral Amasa Cobb, Mrs. Harris and Bayard & Guerin. Messrs. George Bunnell, H. B. Sawyer, H. J. Win nett, Louis A. Ksensky, F. S. Stein, George M. Walsh, O. N. Humphrey, C. A. Parks, L. C. Richards, Central Granaries Co., Sulpho Saline Bath Co., W. O. Faulkner, President Woodman Accident Association, Paul Holm, J. H. McMurtry, Thomas Cochrane, A. R. Talbot, W. M. Leonard, E. P. Hovey, Alden M. Phelps, Frank Ir vine, E. E. Brown, H. F. Rockey, W. B. Linch, A. W. Lane, E. E. Spencer, L. C. Burr, J. H. Ager, Doctor Wente, Harwood & Ames. Messrs. W. A. Mc Clure, A. B Minor, W. J. Bryan, E. J. Burkett. C. O. Boettcher, Z. S. Branson, A. E. Campbell, W, L. Cran dall, Walt L. Dawson, S. A. Smith, D. A. Frye, C. De France, Central Granaries Co , J. E. Houtz, C. H. Im hoff. W. H. Love, O. F. Lambertson, James Manaban, Eugene Munn, Mathews Piano Co., O'Neill & Gard ner, Sam'l. Petterson, Oliver Rodgers, M. B. Reese, A. Roberts, C. L. Sksen sky. C. L. Smith, Sinclair, Fred Shep herd, A. S. Tibbetts, F. M. Tyrrell, C. R. Tefft, Fletcher L. Wharton, G. H. Walters, Fred Williams, Robert Wheeler, Victor Vifquain, O. J. Wil cox, Nelle Whitcomb, R. D. Stearns, J.H.Graves, Oliver Johnson, J. G. Dorr. D. C. Berry, James Heaton, G. H. Walters, Robert Wheeler, Frank M. Blish, L. J. Dennis, Hunter Print ing Co., H.Trowbridge, J.E. Riggs, Fred Garvey, H. Eiche, Chas. T. Neal. Lillian Sterling, John Bauer, W. A Hawes, Union Fuel Co., Rboda H. Stewart, R. C. Manley, E. W. Brown, Western Union Telegraph Co., Thos. H. Pratt, Hoge & Benton and Wm. McLaughlin. The following names have been re ceived in answer to Stotsenberg let ters. The total amount now on hand will be reported in these columns next week: C. H. Dietrich of Hastings, W. A. Huntley of Oregon City, Ore gon, Bertha J. Bobbins of Lincoln. Mrs. D. E. Thompson, Flora Brandea of Seward, W. G. Jones of Marquette, Nebraska, Mrs. C. E. Davis, Susie Larimer, Mrs. Mark Tilton, Mrs. Ma theson of Omaha, Mrs. R. M. Turner, Mr. H. C. Shedd, Mrs. H. H. Glover of Grand Island. Mrs. George E. Mac Lean, Mrs. George H. MacLean, Mrs. John Griffith, Dency W Stephens, S. W.Miller, MaryE.B. Ely, Bessie Turner, Major Edgar S. Dudley and Jennie B. Brown. BECAUSE. The Stotsenberg Fund. The contributors to the Reception fund who have sent me an order on the unexpired balance are O. J. King, W. Wlttmann & Co., Funke & Ogden, J. B. Trickey & Co., Perkins, Sheldon & Chamberlain Co., Lincoln Drug Co., H. W. Brown Co., Judge Waters, J. H. Mockett, John S. Reed, F. W. Brown Lumber Co., Foster & Smith Lumber Co., Buckstaff Bros., Stearns No more I hear his footsteps Upon the silent street, No more the measure of his tread My pulses madly beat. The joy and expectancy My heart no longer feels. He comes I know not when because My love wears rubber heels. Town Topics. "Well," said Mr. Giddinge, at length, "I'd buy a typewriter from you if you would give me the proper sort of a guar antee." "I'll give you every guarantee in rea son," said the agent "What do you want?" "I wish you to guarantee that it will spell correctly." S -V 4 ; y -