HIJ,JL. THE COURIER. I nmron oitxcbat A umOOMOUAM UATXWM rUBLUHKO KYZXY SATUMAY BT NDiERPRimio uimuamii Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. BAKAH I'. HARRIS. DORA BACHELLER EdiJnr. Uusiupss Manager Subscription Rates In Advance. Per annum 82 00 Six months 1 00 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 3 OBSERVATIONS. Z t vrm WHAT DOES IT COST? What does it cost, this garniture of death? It costs the life which Gcd alone can give; It costs dull silence, where was music's breath; It costs dead joy, that foolish pride may live. Ah. life, and joy, and song, depend upon it. Are costly trimmings for a woman's bonnet. May Riley Smith. The slaughter of b rtls for trimmings has begun to perceptibly decrease the numbor of songsters in America. Un less the women, for whose ornamenta tion the birds are killed, refuse to ac cept the eactitice any lorger the time will come, is coming fast when they will not wear birds because the supply has been exhausted. Field, forest and brooksie will be silent save for the rustle of leaves and grasses, the purl and patter of the water. The so!oist8 of the orchestra, the leaders of the symphony that has made summei time the vaca tion and medicine of the year since we were first turned out in the door yard to play, are being killed for their feathers. How many times, battered by defeat and treason into dispairand infidelity has faith been revived and courage renewed by the song of birds with the exquisitely modulated accom paniment of winds, waters and insects. What would summer be without the matins and vespers, without the midday chirping of the birds? Here are a few Etatemtnts fio n reliable authorities con cerning their destruction. In London, at one auction sale alone, last autumn, the catalogue included in its descriptive list of stock for millinery purposes 0,000 birds of "paradise, 5,000 imperial pheasants, 300,000 assorted bird ekins from India, and 400,000 hum ming birds. An article in Forest and Stream, speakirg of the destruction, of birds on Long Island, states that during a short period of four months 20,000 were supplied to the New York dialers from a single Tillage. It is said that in one great New York importing house there are stored the skins and plumage of more birds than are in all the museums and collections of the world put together. Four bundled thousand humming birds! Such tiny creatures a single high, note of color, quivering with con scious beauty and joy. Even these the monster will not spare. Just now while the birds are nesting their plumage is brightest and they are being killed by millions. Game bird?, domestic birds, and ostriches are protected by law and the young are cared for. There is no objection to the wearing of their plumage. The egret, a kind of heron,fiom whoso tail plumage the orcarrent callid an a:grette is made, in full beauty at the nesting season, has beccnn almost ex tinct because of the aigrettes. "It is a piratical, merciless flag, the dainty aigrette, rising among buds and blossoms on the spring hats and bonnets. The beautiful and gnceful terns which not long ago animated the seashore have been almost annihilated by the use of their plumage on woniens' hats. The snowy heron, from which the mest beautiful aigrettes are obtained, is be coming very rare, and it is predicted it will soon be extinct unless extraordinary measures are taken for its protection. In Chicago the women have become deeply interested in the crusade for the birds led by the woraens' clubs. From that centre it is expected that the move ment will be carried throughout tho country, under the auspices of the federated women's clubs. A strong, growing Audubon society is already organized in Illinois and Massa chusetts. Pennsylvania, New York and other states have such associations, or are forming them. The Audubon so cieties require a pledge from each mem ber that she. will not wear the plumage of any wild bird and that he or she i.for there are men in the Audubon societies) will discourage bird slaughter in all ways. These, with kindred associations and with the co-operation of students and lovers of nature everywhere, aro arousing such interest in the cause of the birds that it is in a fair way to be won. The school children are greatly inter ested in the protection of birds, but a Chicago teacher said the other day that it was hard to teach a boy not to kill birds when his motner weais their dead bodies or wings on her bonnet. The work in the schools must be encouraged at home. Although the death of the birds to lovers of nature is a loss which can not bs exaggerated by any material ven geance, the value of trees and grain which the birds save from destruction by eating the worms and bugs which live on them is not to be estimated. Ornithologists say that there is a larger variety of birds in Nebraska than in any other state in the union. They are sent by Providence to devour the swarms of insects which are here in correspondingly large numbers. If the race fails to ap preciate the reason fur this nice adjust ment, it must take the consequences of interfering with the plan. It is trite to speak of women as the gentler sex. If by her merciless vanity the most beautiful part of the na'ural world is destroy ed, the other sex can laugh admonition to 6corn, get other mentorp, and put and keep women in the state of subjection which their wanton cruelty dt serves. Tho only su perioiity worth having is that of the heart and theheac. When women show that they have neither by refusing an appeal to both, at the same time they resign, consciously or unconsciously, any claims to superior moral instincts. How ever women have never yet refused to aid a righteous cause, lha following pleJge of the Lincoln branch of the Audubon society, which has been started in Lincoln, has been prepared by the charter members. I villi not wear upon my hat or dress the plumage of any bird except that of the ostrich and domestic or game birds, and I rcill do my best to influence others to take this pledge. Mrs. G. M. Lambektson, " W. B. Oo DEN, " G. E. MacLean, GlJILFOYLE, " Sarah F. Harris, " S. H. Burnhah, " W. J. Bryan, " John T. Doroan, ' D. D. Muir (Denver). " J. R. Richards. Mi68 Olive Latta, " Sarah B. Harris, " Dora Bachellek, " Josie Read, " Sadie Burxiiam. Mr Marshall Field has gone to Wish ing ton to confer with themembeisof the senate committee on finance about the tariff bill, and he has found that the hotels aro full of people on the same business. This country is too big, its interests are too diverse and varied for any one of them to bo piotected at the expense of all the others. When rt ve nue is accomplished protection should not begin. Protection protects the rich against the poor, the manufacturers from the farmers, the tiger from the lamb. So long as mo3t of the manufacturers and accumulated capital were in the east tho monied interest secured a high pro tection tariff without much trouble, a few mill.on dollars did not count when the population of the United States could b3 forced to pay it back. But the cjntie of capital has been moving west ward steadily, with occasional sp urts of speed, ever 6inco the war. It is harder to agree upon a tariff now than it was a jeir ago and easier now than it will be in 1893. A western dry go-ds merchant who has built up a biurn si the size of Marshall Field's is, and has been in close relations wi h the markets of the world. His business is so large that no selfish or narrow policy can con' trol it, a narrow policy would destroy it. A business whose employes number five and six thousand people is a microcosm. The principles by which it is ordered must be ba-ed on generalizations broad enough to administer a people's affairs successfully. Marshall Field said when he was asked if he had anything to say on the Dingley tariff .bill that he had nothing to say "except the one general remark that it is the worst tariff bill I ever saw, not only as regards the rates of duties im posed, but in the complicated and am biguous methods of imposing them. There is scarcely a line in the bill that will not have to be interpreted by the supreme court." The Germans are especiilly iucensed at the discrimination against German sugar. The retaliatory duties which Germany has placed on American pro ducts is justifiable and has injured our trade much more than American dis crimination has injured theirs. The Record's Washington Correspondent says: "The only persons who are en tirely satisfied with the Dingley bill are the eastern manufacturers and tho Ohio wool growers and they aro fighting to prevent a change. Very little is known of what the members of the committee are doing. They keep the details to them selves, and refuse to give information concerning particular items but it is generally understood that they are re ducing the Dingley rate all around, and that there will be but a slight increase over those imposed by the present law. It is understood also that the duty on wool will be reduced from 11, 12, and 13 cents to 5, G and 8 cents per pound, and that the rate on coarse wool, which is not grown in this country, may bo as low as 3 cents a pound. The committee is very much impressed by the protests that have come from foreign nations, and has sent to several of tho ambas sadors, informal assurances that there will be nothing to complain of when the bill is completed. In revising the bill the senate com mittee is trying to do bomething to Mimuluto and pneourage the foreign trade as well as to protect domestic in dustry, and it is studying the protests from other governments with serious concern. Whatever retaliation may come from the advanced duties upon manufacture! goods it will fall upon the farmer and not up an the manufacturer of this country, and there is no use for Secretary Wilson and other agents of tho government to try to increase ex ports in agricul ural products as long as the markets are disturbed, and em bargoes are raised against us in retalia tion for excessive duties and discrim inations on this side of the water. By a single vote in 1894 the results of twelve years of diplomatic necotiation with Germany were destroyed, and until we adopt a permanent foreign commercial policy it is waste of time for either the government or private enterprise to try to build up any export trade. I believe the democratic victories in Canton, McKinley's own homo, in Cleveland, Mark Hanna's home, and in Cficago are directly due to the tariff threat. The people do not want a pro tective tariff, but argument is idle. The monopolists who paid for McKinley's election must he repaid at the expense of the convalescing business interests of this country. Speaker Reed "jammed"' the bill th.ough the hojso because ho knew that it would effectually prevent a second term for McKinley. In tha senate, Mark Hanna will reply to all remonstrances 'Gentlemen, as Chairman of the Re publican National Committee, I promts, ed that these duties should be raised to this figure." Therais nothing to be said in answer to this though the bill which doubles tho manufacturer's pro- 1 ? The Courier's Great Offer to Subscribers. THE COURIER lias arranged to offer free of charge to every one subscribing- this month a ear's subscription to the most popular magazine published in this country. To ever' one sending- us two dollars to pav for one year's subscription to THE COURIER we "will give a one year's subscription to The annual subscription to THE COURIER is two dollars it is the same for McCLURE'S therefore you get Iotii? dollars ox? two dollars. Do not miss this chance. We cannot afford to con tinue the offer indefinitely. Our object in making- it now is to secure an immediate response which a less liberal offer might fail to attract. ?