THE COURIER lit & -r' tne panic of 1893 the bankers of the country listened to enough "tales of woe" to havo driven every one of them to suicide; lut for self protection as well as for the protection of tho business of the country, they had to brace each customer up with a courage they hardly felt themselves. There is not a day passes but that tho banker receives anywhere from one to a dozen letters of inquiry in regard to the credit of individuals in his town, or the value of some piece of real estate. Sometimes a stamp is enclosed for reply. Every one of these letters takes investigation, time and letter paper to answer, but there is no money in it. Note is sent a bank for col lection, the maker is notified by mail, or it is presented by messen ger, or both, and tinally collected. The bank charges twenty-five or fifty cents while a lawyer would charge 85 for tho same service. Half of the time tho note is returned uncollected and the bank gets nothing for its stationery, postage and clerk hire, except blamo for not collecting a poor note. The bank acts as a clearing house for its customers. Tho deposits of many of its business men are made up largely of checks and drafts on towns throughout this and ad joining states. The bank gives credit for them on receipt. Each check is registered on its books, a letter is written and it is enclosed in an envelope and mailed to some bank in the western part of the state, or Colorado, or Dakota, or Wyonii ng for collection. In the course of a week, more or less, a draft on Chicago or New York is received for it. This is in turn registered and mailed to New York for credit. It thuB takes two letters, postage and ten days time to get returns for what tho customers deposit as cash. Most banks charge nothing for this service and if the bank upon which the check is drawn takes out a few cents for"exchange"and4it is charged back to the depositor, he immediately begins to talk about find ing some bank that won't charge him for collecting his checks. It was only a few years ago that the Lincoln banks furnished their customers with exchange free of charge, although drafts and the clerks necessary to draw them are quite an expense. Now the banks as in most of the large cities, make a small charge for drafts, but a-great many country bankers still furnish them for nothing. The banks furnish check books, pass books, deposit tickets, etc., free of charge and if a business man wants a special lithographed chech they furnish that also. However, in this respect western bankers are more liberal than those of the east. There if a custom er wishes anything more than a cheap, plain check he must pay for it himself. The item of check books alono is quite an expense. Then, too, most banks will store in their vault for customers any thing from an envelope to a trunk of silver plate and charge noth ing for the trouble or the room. About their only source of profit is interest on loans and there are some statesmen in Nebraska who lalk about "grasping corporations" because they charge this. If a banker calls in a loan, tells a man his note must be paid he becomes a tyrant, an oppressor of the poor. Many people do not seem to realize that when a bank collects its paper, thus stopping its inter est, its only source of profit, it is not because it wishes to show its power to oppress some poor debtor, but because of a necessity, be cause its depositors, its creditors, are pressing their debtors for pay ment. The pathway of the average banker is not strewn with as many roses as a great many people imagine. SJUCgMX Cashier We never pay bills on Satur day Short But my name is not Bill ..ESSS r w i i;i yjrswi?nr um ww . rm Judging from tho start already made the Fleasant Hour club will this season have a membership of forty. The first dance will be given next Thursday, Thanksgiving night, at tho Lincoln hotel, and will be preceded by a reception to Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Burr and Mr. and Mrs. Beman G. Dawes. Mrs. Rebecca Atkins isn't the only resident of this city who has a book in press as will develop in due timo. Charles G. Dawes has been elected a member of the Union League of Chicago. Several Lancoln people who have a personal interest in the mat ter, would like to know who supplied the Omaha young women who gave the minstrel show in this city last week, with tho material in elegantly known as "local gags." In tho matrimonial race Omaha and Lincoln aro just about neck and neck, the difference, if cny there be, being in favor of Omaha; but Lincoln is going to Bhow some unexpected speed in tho last quarter. It is learned that the minstrel performance given in this city by the ladies of Omaha and Council Bluffs netted tho sum of 81. Those who read the story in The Courier a couplo of weeks ago entitled "A Complete Success" may be reminded of the financial result of tho Emerson-Osgood-Adams concert, by the showing made by the "Ethiopian Songsters." We have not been informed as to the dis position of the dollar. Some Lincoln people may be amused by this showing made by the Omaha ladies, but the fact that only 81 profit was realized doesn't rotlest particular credit on tho gallantry or ap preciation of the people of this city. The entertainment was, em phatically, deserving of much better treatment than it received. So ciety people havo turned out en masse on other occasions when the entertainment offered was much less attractive; but for some reason or other they manifested comparatively little interest in this really commendable effort of the Songsters. It is only proper to state, however, that the minstrel performance might have been a greater success if the ladies had managed things a little differently. Pass ing a large number of Omaha people down to Lincoln might havo been, and no doubt was, pleasant; but there was no profit in it. Frank Sheldon, formerly of this city, has purchased a handsome residence in New York city on Riverside drive. Mr. Sheldon nego tiated for the Aaron Burr property, the New York home of this noted Burr; but for some reason ho was not successful in obtaining the property. Otto Mohrenstecher was called to Quincy, Ills., Wednesday by a telegram announcing the illness of his fiancee. The wedding was to have taken place next week. Whether it is to be held as origin ally intended depends now on Miss Kespohl's health. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Kelly arrived in the city Monday, making their home at the Lincoln hotel for the present. They are Frank Zehrung is being generally congratulated on his artistic work in heralding the coming of Pauline HaU. Mr. Zehrung as a theatrical manager is justifying all The Courier predicted for him. Miss Minnio Gaylord, of this city, has located in Buffalo, N. Y., having accepted a position in a church choir at a salary of 810CO per year. Miss Gay Ion' received this appointment after a spirited com petition with a large number of vocalists. jijj