V .-., i$3fS" ' tf.'-ic.a V. -- m " VIM lO VM . . - -.- ", -" IbJfeae- 1-- - . " SV ESTABLISHED IN 1SSG PRICE FIVE CENTS -. 3 '.. V- LINCOLN, NEB., SATURDAY. A1AY 2D, ISU7. BXWTKBVOT OWWVOUATKt AMtaootauMxrtwm rOIUIEKOXTUT SATUXSAT CNIIE1 railTIH UIHIlUIlllft Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH l. HARRIS. DORA BACHELLER Editorr Business Manager Subscription Rates In Advance. Per annum 52 00 Six months 1 00 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 OBSERVATIONS. No one is better qualified to express the characteristics of an oriental people than Lafcadio Hearn. He has lived in Japan for maoy years. He has married a Japanese lady. He Las spent his sum mers in a houseboat anchored to the shore by a rope which was loosened when the Ecenerygrew monotonous and his'house moved to another town. In short in S3 far as a dreamy imaginative, Creole, of tho western world could, he has lived in Japan like a Japanese. His style is limpid and unstudied and in Kokoro "the heart of things" it ib possible for a cosmopolitan to become acquainted with and appreciate tho Japanese people. "Sympathy is limited by compehension. We may sympathize to the same degree that we understand. One may imagine that he sympathizes with Japaneso or Chinese, but the s m pathy can never be real to more than a small extent outside of the simplest phases of common emotional life those phases in which child and man are at one. The mere . complex feelings of the Oriental have been composed by com binations of experiences, ancestral and individual, which have had no really precise correspondence in western life, and which we therefore can not ful'y know. The strength of Japan, like the strength or her ancient fuith needs little material display; both exist where the deepest real power of any great people exists in the Race Ghost." The especial gift of this author is sympathy. He docs not read his own opinions and reasons into a foreign peo ple, but accepts theirs and endeavors to understand them. To those to whom tho ways of tho east are unknown Kokoro is revelation, it is tho beginning of a new administration and new ideas. Alexander was tired of life because there was nothing new for him to conquer. We exhausted the occidental syllogism long ago. If Eome of the old causes of misery could be forgotten, the interest of learning and experiencicg new ones would decrease the number of suicides. In Japan a gentleman does not fall in love to such a degree that if the lady changes hr'mind, it drives him to death or drink. He feels the inconvenience of disarranged plans and a tinge of mortifi cation that she or her parents should pre fer another man, but the pangs of love as well aB the rapture3 are unknown in Japan. All sorts of hysteria are un known. They live in a cool temperature. The extremes of agony and rapture they do not experience. They are placid ba bies, calm jouths, serene old men. Thoy are industrious and saving with out being over anxious or worried. They spend money on a holiday with the nonchalance and abandon of a monarch and without the vulgarity and ostenta tion of the poor man spending Irs month's earning's for a day's pleasur ing. Their gaiety is a bird's gaiety, they do not know they are happy and they do not care whether other people know it or not. Without nerves or any obtrusive convictions, no wonder Mr. Hearn likes to live amoag them. No wonder he selected a little Japanese lady, who neither expects cor uesires him to renew his vows of affection at least after every eatisfactory meal. No wonder he does not care to return with his mcon lady to a worried, bargain counter sisterhood, who might make her discontent with the hang of her kimona. Lafcadio Hearn has a business name, that his publishers make out checks to, but I have forgot'en it and so in this slight review ca!l him "Mr. Hearn.' Kokoro is a study of tho Chinese through the microscope. It reveals things only shown to the multiplying lens of genius. Ten years residence in the kingdom of cherry blossoms and we would still be peering yankees, outside of their world. As it is, we have had the honor of meeting tho Japanese whether thoy will pr no. The war reports of Red Badge of Courage Crane confirm the worst that have ever been 6aid about him. He thinks his review of the war of much more interest and importance than the event? themselves His itsignificant personality is of no interest to tto-e who wished to know the movements of the armies, and his literary stjle is puerile and as eelfconecious as a schojl boy. Compare Grant's objective com position with Stephen Crane's degener ate subjectivity. Compare them in your mind, for bring the two in actual presence and tho repulsion from Stephen Crane is as from some loathsome growth. The solemn deliberations of the seniors of the state university as to how many tickets they will demand from tho faculty and concerning what language tha chancellor shall use when he bids them God speed is in startling contrast to the place they hold io the govern ment of the university, To Bee end hear these bonnie brass lads who owe all they know to the state and all they don't know to themselves, a visitor from another state of things would of course, conclude that they were wise men discussing the expediency of hiring the chancellor for another year or of installing quite another faculty. It is quite incomprehensible that the in trusive wisdom of the only people who are entirely capable of running the state university into the ground should not have been recognized by tho state constitution. Petitions which contain a threat, if the wrong which they pretest against, is not at once righted, are cir culated about once a week. Captain Guilfoyle purnished the insolent ring leader of such a revolt and his action has had a very good effect upon the military department at least. The whole trouble arises from the mistaken ideas of the students as to who the beneficiaries are as to the identity of the executive, and as to the functions of the board of regents. Tho veal that the state has been endeavoring to grow into something useful has decided to con trol the pasture and the herders. This reversal of real positions is not altogether the fault of the students. Their petitions have not been discouraged, the chancellor and professors have been- in the habit of receiving petitions and answering questions from a class that made noise enough to frighten a timid scholar. Upon certain questions of privilege it is well enough for tho faculty to consider a pe tition if it contain no threat but upon matters of administration the faculty and regents should receive no remont Etrances from the benificiaries of an in stitution whose government has been as wisely constituted as the uni versity. That they have considered such demands in the past is the cause of the very peculiar patronis ing attitude of the joung people who take the dole of the state as though they gave alms. Such an attitude is unique. None of the older schools in the east, or across the water, are famil iar with such severity from student?. On the continent and in most of the eastern schools the students pay tuition and threats of withdrawal, if they were ever made, would have a pecuniary force which is altogether lacking in state institutions. The copper-cheeked farmer boys, fresh from the pon and tho pasture, really overestimate tho univer sity's need of their presence. If they aro anxiouB to 6erve the state, as by their advico they seem to be, let them stay at homo next year. Tho school is very much crowded and library, labra. toric3 and clasa rooms would be tho better tor the purer air caused by tho absence of about a hundred infant anarchists who have infested the university for several yeare. Those who are left would be grateful indeed. It is a curious but none the less a universal truth that anarchist teachings implant a hatred for soap and water consequently a company of such pupils is not alone offensive to tho eye. The unclosable and immovable nose must suffer tortures in comparison t which burning is a pleasant thought, because ilame is a disinfectant. To those who have not endured the neigh borhood of the men who have spent their university life in getting up peti tions and addressing reproaches to the faculty fur what they term abuses of various kinds, these reminiscenscs may seem unkind and certainly undeserved. But to the clean victim who has had, from necessities of the course, to sit through an hour in a real anarchist class they inadequately recall associa tions which only a whiff of the same can ever make faint with tho eamo faintness. The record of Indian agents in this country has been most disgraceful. The Indians have been defrauded and the government's plans for them foiled through tho cupidity of the agents so man times that the names and the cir cumstances of each case form a long black record in the Indian department. Since the government began to appoint army officers as Indian agents the records have been free from such stains. An abuse which has been hardest to reform. but which has been accomplished in Nebraska, is the leasing of largd tracts of land from the Indians by cattlemen for grazing purposes. For an ins'gnificant sum the Indians have leased their lands, thus defeating the ends of government which would train them as agriculturists. Since Captain Beck, of the 10th cavalry, took charge of the Omaha and Winne bago agency h9 he has been very offen sive to politicians, cattlemen and con tractors, because ho repudiated the un lawful leases and was uninfluenced by the money which was freely offered him to go in with them. President Cleve land being once convinced that Captain Beck would Co his duty. paid no attention to the requests for supplanting Captain Beck with a civilian "who would mind his his own business.' But President Mc Kmley has been induced to direct the secretary of war to order Captain Beck back to his regiment and Lieutenant