The courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1894-1903, June 12, 1897, Image 1
t I VOL" 12 NO 24 -ffe-' ESTABLISHED IN 133G PRICE FIVE CENTS 1 ' -j0$S LINCOLN, NEB., SATURDAY. JUNE 12. 181)7. HiainMn OTnoBAvumu uBwimHiuiai ffVBUIMXD XTXBT tiTTOlUT eMUEiNiniK uimuniiiM Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH i HARRIS. DORA BACHELLER Editorr Business Manager Subscription Rates In Advance. Per annum $2 00 Six months 1 00 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 OBSERVATIONS. 2 U.$ The eastern mails are delayed at Chica go, one for six hours and one for nine hours in order to accommodate four -Chicago newspapers. The Omaha "World-Herald complainB that such dis--crimination is unjust and unbusiness like, and the latter paper hath its quar rel just. That the earlier arrival of the Chicago papers has cut into the busi ness of the Nebraska dailies is not to the .point, though it may be the reason why the Bee's and the World-Herald's sense of justice has been aroused to vigorous resistance. Notwithstanding this, the holding back of the two through, fast mails at Chicago for six and nine hours respectively, until the Chicago presses have accomplished their daily labor, i3 an injustice to all the country west of Chicago which has any business east o Chicago. The Omaha papers are fight ing the cause of the who!e west Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, the Pacific dates, and even the who!e of Illinois west of Chicago, against four newspapers in Chicago. The Journal in refusing to join with the Omaha papers in an-attempt to right a wrong is deserting the cause of the state and the west because more powerful and more successful livals are the first champions of a most righteous cause.. The Cour ier, though a humble neighbor and in another field, takes pleasure in recogniz ing and applauding truth and justice which are certainly on the side of the World-Herald and the Bee. The fol lowing from Sunday's World-Herald, is in reply to recent editorials in the Jour nal accusing the World-Herald of self fishness. The Journal judges other newspapers by its own standard. The movement to secure batter mail cervice for Omaha am' other western citifs originated from no such selfish motives as the Journal insinuates. It was originated by the business men of this and other place?. The World-Herald, true to its mission as the advocate of of the business men of Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado. Wyoming and the weft, ranged itseif on the side of the commercial interetts of the coun try. The email advantage, if any, insur ing t) the newspapers of a community is a bagatelle to the great benefit to the country between the Atlantic and Pa cific by the betterment of the fast mail service. Suppose the western newspapers may be directly or indirectly benefitted by brioging the so-called fast mail train to the Missouri river at 8 a. m. and to Denver and Cheyenne at 9 o'clock the following night by operating the train as it should be, when did it become a crime for a western newspaper to re ceive a benefit from the poetoffice de partment by having the mails run on business principles? As four Chicago morning papers are exclusively benefitted by having the al leged fast mail train manipulated in their interetts, regardless of the interests of all othsr enterprises, the charge of sel fishness will nit hold good against the Omaha papers. In demanding that the fast mail train be made what it purports to b9 and what the people are paying for a fast mail train the Omaha pa pers are only making a just demand that the business interests of the east and west be placed upon an equal footing with the newspaper interest of four Chicago" publishers. The Journal is ignorant or designing. The business men of Lincoln and Ne braska have the chance to teach it a needed lesson and make it faithful to the people it assumes to represent. Whenever fashion perfects or custom evolves something humanly perfect, it is immediately attacked by a parasite which ha3 grown with its growth and does not cease growing when the fashion has reached the height of beauty, and the custom has perfected a satisfactory and comfortable final product. In con sequence the finished result of evolu tion is doomeJ, no matter how smsll the enemy in the first place. Perhaps coffee is a greater satis faction to more people than any other of the minor an e-iities of life. To a very few it is a poisjn. But that is no reason why the oilier nircty and nine should be forced to di ink n potion made from parched corn. It would be just as fair to put all the sine people in asylums and leave the world for the insane. Coffee invigorates, cheers, brightens and encouinges the normal individual. It has taken centuries to learn how to ccok it and serve it. With a spoonful of cream it has reconciled the drunkard to temperance and kept the prohibitionist contented with his diet. This being so and everybody happy, the papers are sudden ly filled with advertisements for a sub Btitute for a drink which can not be improved; breakfast table chat all at once degenerates into depressing dis cussions about the best way to cook parched corn, and the one who loathes it and resents the insult the mixture is offering to an honor-d friend, is urged to try it. Coffee wi'I not go down be fore the insidious attacka of a manu facturer who has made a fortune out of burnt corn, but the people who are always looking for a new doctor, minis ter, medicine or treatment have ban ished coffee for the sake of tasteless and ineffectual corn and the rest of the world is obliged to listen to its praises. Fashion had produced a sleeve that was becoming to the fat and the lean. It bs came eventually a little too large, 'but it has been superceded by a tight sleeve, which is at once ugly and uncomfort able. It reveals imperfections which the large sleeve mercifully concealed, and it prevents free movements of the limb which in bony and muscular structure is the freest and most perfect in mechan ical arrangement of any part of tho body. Thus do the microbes of style and commercial gain get in their deadly work. A recent review in speaking of the characteristics of universities in Ameri ca says that "The university of the west is undoubtedly the university of the future. It is a hard thing to say, and one that would be widely disputed, but it Is a fact that the man from the western university has that great thing, modernity, far above the eastern gradu ate. Observing people have been con vinced of this fact and we are already on the edge of the time when students from the west will not attend eastern schools and when students in the middle west will turn their faces to ward the great institutions that lie in the direction of the Pacific." The writer of the foregoing knows enough about the English and German universities, about those situated in the south, the east, the west and the middle west in this country to characterize hem. As, for instinre in the following. "Each university i tamps its charac teristics upon its cuiJents. The uni versity of Virginia gi estbem a subdu d gentleness combined with cordiality and an open hearted i e pn u 1 bea-ing a gentleman of the old scho 1. Johns Hopkins give an interest in re ei a and a cosmopolitan spiri ;Princetju. a ter tain dignity of bearing, more interested in philosophy than science; Harvard, an air ot assurance that he has been properly instructed; Vale a trifle acg es give. West of the Alleghenie. such colleges as Washington and Jefferson make theirstudents what wecall Ameri can, of which Blaine and Quay are representatives. These sudents are away from the infiuences of English univer sities, on which the eastern s;hoo's are founded. They are ambitious, in terested in American history, and ate in the midst of the new center of national life. The Ann Arbor university is very democratic. It is remarkably cosmo politan. It wa3 the first great school in this country to use the elective system aa it is used in Germany. The Wisconsin university is rapiply becoming onoot the strongest institutions in the country. It is developing Yankee ideas with western push and new life. In history it is ono of the very best. The universities of Chicago, Missouri, Nebraska and Kan sas are all marked schools. Those of Minnesota and California rank with that of Wisconsin. Only one who knows the modern uni versity practically and comparatively can tell if the types are here hit off cor rectly. The western university is much more like the German university than like the e; siTn. It is jealous of the east and will not receive inspiration from that part of the country. Nebras- kat especially is under the direct infiu enca'of Germany. The professors who confess the greatness of Cambridge or England are ridiculed. The west holds that it is only a truckling spirit who ac knowledges that the east can set us a pattern in literature, manners or cus toms. In the years of the seventies when Professor Woodberry arrived from Cambridge with a cane, a cigarette, a Harvard swing, a Bcston accent and in dentally great learning and talent, which has already made hinr. the foremost critical writer in this country, the students and some of tho faculty bitter ly resented the accent, the wa'kand the airs, which after all were nothing more than an ordinary college man's uplift over the herd but held in suspension in his case a .little longer because it was the Boston kind. After indigna tion at the regents for daring to get anything eastern out here had subsid ed somewhat, Prof. Woodberry's bril liant qualities as a teacher of literature were revealed. Sometime after a man arrived from Brown university by the name of Bennett. He wore glasses, never pronounced the letter "r" and had certain ideas about class room decorum which in connection with his eastern origin was enough to stigmatize him as "stuck up." Having sent a man out or his classroom for some horse play the members ot the class went to the chan cellor and demanded that Prof. Bennett be given his time. The only reason they could give when questioned as to why they thought he should not enjoy the privtlege of instructing them any longer in Lat'n and Greek was that he was try ing t j introduce eastern customs in the west. This 6torm blew over, the student i and the professor got acquainted to . their mutual benefit and real pleasure. Chancellor Canfield was eenmimes accused of trying to induce Nebraska university to become more eastern, but I have heard him deny the charge with some heat. Professor Fry is the latest suspect. He has many char acteristics of the Cambridge schcoi which the Nebraska student has said over and over again he will not suffer in a lecturer. A'though the Nebraska university student allows greater liber-