Che Conservative. VOL. i. NEBRASKA CITY , NEB. , THURSDAY , FEBRUARY9 , 1899. NO. 31. PUBLISHED WEEKI/V. OFFICES : OVERLAND THEATRE BLOCK. J. STERLING MORTON , EDITOII. A JOUUNAT , DEVOTED TO THK DISCUSSION I OF POLITICAL , ECONOMIC AN-D SOCIOLOGICAL QUESTIONS. CIRCULATION THIS WEEK 5,500 COPIES. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One dollar and a half per year , in advance , postpaid , to any part of the United States or Canada. Remittances made payable to The Morton Printing Company. Address , THE CONSEIIVATIVE , Nebraska City , Neb. Advertising Rates made known upon appli cation. Entered at the postofllco at Nebraska City , Neb. , as Second Class matter , July Sflth , 1898. A * lftSt TUE HEALTH LAWS. CONSERVATIVE i s permitted to congratulate the common wealth upon the probability of the speedy enactment of a code of sanita tion for Nebraska. A bill for such an , act is now before the legislature and we are informed that its provisions for penalties - | alties for its non-observance are strong | and wholesome. It ought to make vac cination compulsory. It should exclude from the public schools all unvaccinated children and youth. Health is the first of all liberties , and happiness gives us the energy which is the basis of health , saith Amiel. Every graduate of a reputable medical college , now practising medicine in Ne braska , should interest himself in this vital legislation. It is important that the best medical minds and the largest medical experience in the state contri bute to the perfection of the proposed sanitary code of the state. Why cannot the officers of the State Medical society convene that body at Lincoln for the purpose of discussing and perfecting the proposed law ? Any physician having a patient with a contagious , infectious or communicable disease and failing to promptly and truthfully report the same to the local board of health ought to be fined or im prisoned. Possibly ho should be put in jail and fined too. Every reputable doctor in Nebraska should be furnished a copy of the bill now under consideration immediately and the consensus of medical opinion as to its merits should be ascertained at once. It is important. WE CHRISTIANS. CHRISTIANS.and Christian people ple our sympathies for the barbarians , savages and heathen of Cuba and the Philippine islands are fomented until they slop over. We yearn to evangelize those op pressed and downtrodden subjects of Spanish misrule. We ore ready with luminous examples of purity and pat riotism to lead them up onto the heights of modern statesmanship. In Pennsylvania wo can show them a paragon of civic virtue in Senator Quay now seeking re-election , while wicked indictments and merciless courts are vainly threatening him with the state's prison. There is no barbaric islander , no savage Malay chief who would not soon learn to emulate the characteristics and imitate the principal methods of Senator Quay who is the incarnate con science of the political tribe to which he has so long given nutrition and vigor. In California the cash-ou-delivery sys tem of senatorial aspirants would like wise attract and elevate the native West Indiaumen and Filipinos towards the teachings of our higher civilization and very much ennoble their intellectual and moral faculties. The generosity and Christian charity with which the Hon. U. S. Grant , jr. , distributed twenty to thirty thousand dollars in loans and gifts , among germinating law givers of California during their candi datures for the legislature would appeal to the simple and childlike heathen of the far-off islands very strongly in be half of our highly-spiced patriotism. It would allure to paths of peace and right eousness even a cannibal. The manner in which a member of the Montana legislature , with great dramatic effect , held aloft in his honest right hand thirty thousand dollars in new crisp bills , which , he said , had been offered for the seduction of unso phisticated and innocent gentlemen in voting for a United States senator for that copper-bottomed and silver-crowned commonwealth would certainly charm the barbaric hosts of "our greater America. " The general and almost universal talk of United States senatorships , in several states , to the highest bidder could but impress the savages of all the islands with the political ethics , which in the United States , are now dominant and triumphant. Never in all the nine teenth century have morals in politics been so luminous and fragrant. Never before have the people of the United States been in condition to so elevate in morals , by example , all the tribes of the nnsanctificd of the earth. Never before could we "point with pride" to two senators of the United States under in dictment for the misappropriation of public funds. Never before could wo exalf ; for emulation of heathen such splendid specimens of Christian civiliza tion as Quay of Pennsylvania , Keuiioy of Delaware , Stewart of Nevada , and a few other incandescent samples of the coruscating ethics now blazing in American politics and statesmanship ! Poor heathen ! come in and bo regen erated. Come in and , by contagion , take our civilization while by infection you will become honest and moral. " is always a ENGLISHES- wonder to Ameri cans whore the Americans came from who employ the speech that English travelers quote , in the book they write after they get back home. Major Sir Rose Price , who wont hunting in the West two years ago with General Coppinger of Omaha , has just gotten his book on the market. Ho tells with English gusto of an Ameri can on the boat , coining over , whom he heard say : "Guess he'll be a boss Brit isher of sorts , anyhow. " Now there is at least one American who is totally in the dark as to the meaning of that Americanism. One is often struck , in the writings of cultured Englishmen , with expressions which an American , though he might not take exception to them in current speech , would never think of using in writing for publication. "No end of a lot of accidents , " "General Coppinger and self" are such phrases , noticed in the first few pages of Sir Rose's book. And in describing the packing houses , he says the " squeak" is all that is wasted , whereas American pigs always squeal , most decidedly. Our English friends tell us that we call rubber overshoes ( galoshes they are in England ) gums , and that we make ourselves ridiculous by speaking of wip ing our gums on the door-mat. The writer has never heard the articles in question called anything but rubbers by his countrymen , but here comes this English major and speaks of borrowing "a pair of gum boots. "