lv r L-v- VOL.12 NO 39 "f-jfe' "W ESTABLISHED IN 1886 v ?-.-- PRICE FIVE CENTS t J&-S s .v, LINCOLN. NEB., SATURDAY. SEPTEMBEh 23. 1807. "OTS 1 Entered iv TnE postoftice at Lincoln as SECOND CLASS MATTER. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BT THE COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING GO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs Telephone 384. 8ARAH l'. HARRIS. CORA BACHELLER Editor Business Manager Subscription Rates In Advance. Per annum 92 00 Six months 1 00 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 OBSERVATIONS. The difficulty which Prosecuting Attorney Munger had in securing citizens' signatures to the complaint against the gamblers last Saturday is a commentary on the real desire of the public to suppress gambling. It is all very well to blame the county attorney for not prosecuting the gamblers for he is sworn to prose cute lawbreakers, but he can not suc cessfully proceed against felonies without the support of the communi ty. There are hundreds of citizens who saw the gambling at the fair grounds last week. Yet when some of these were asked by Mr. Munger to sign the complaint they refused. A little boldness now and gambling in Lincoln will not pay so well this coming winter. Mr. Munger" has shown a willingness to do his duty and he should have the support of all respectable members of the communi ty irrespective of party or previous expression of opinion. That curious code which binds gamblers together and makes them enemies to law, is strong. Life and struggle has made cowards of men. Sift this community with a sieve which will let all the timid through and it is not for me to say that there would remain one citizen rattling about on top. Even Sheriff Trompen, over six feet high and of heroic breadth, is deferential in his treat ment of gamblers and although he was on the grounds at the time when the games were in full oik.' rat ion and the tents full of custt mers. of course when he appeared befi re the counter they ceased to pla and and all he could see. he says, "was the money and the gambling instruments." He told Gambler Gleascn that he thought he would get into tnuble if he did not quit gambling and then the sheriff courteously and considerately, finding himself de trap, withrew from the grounds. Such delicacy on the part of the sheriff, although strictly according to the rules governing callers who accidentally intrude on an interview, evidently very satis factory to the daughter of the house and her beau, is extraordinary, be cause a sheriff's duties so frequently make politeness impossible. In fact, courtesy to a felon, whetherconvicted or not, is frequently incompatible with justice to the people who pay the sheriff's salary. If the county ticket is defeated this fall it will be because a few timid republicans who yet admire braver, especially in these who draw a salary for it, are dis gusted with Sheriff Trompen's com placency to gambler?. The board of directors of the Hay don Art club has made plans to bring a splendid exhibit of pictures to Lin. coin this winter. a well as to pro vide a number of picture talks by brilliant artists and speakers like Lorado Taft, the sculptor, and Mr French, the director of the Chicago Art school. Prof. Harbour is vice president of the club and during President Harwood's adsence in Eu rope will preside at the regular monthly meetings of the board and direct theaffairsof the club with that wisdom and energy which he has shown in the conduct of his own affairs. Besides the exhibition and the illustrated lectures the club offers a scholarship which by the payment of live dollars a year entitles the subscriber to weekly instruction throughout the schi ol year and ad mits to all other privileges of the club except to the picture exhibit, where an entrance fee is necessary in order to pay the ex'tcnes of the exhibit which are always large. There are over a hundred members of the Hay don Art club whose desuetude can only be disturbed by an exhibit. An exhibit has made members in good standing out of these who had for gotten the existence of the art club and created a fund which has held them together till the next public evidence of vitality. J It is doubtful if Mayor Graham's method of farming out the city offices is a wise one. or if the jieople are well served thereby. When appli cants for the office of chief of iKilice, chief of the tire department, engi neers, policemen and firemen, secure appointments by an agreement to pay a certain percent of the salary of the place sold, their fitness for the place is not apt to be considered so much as their ability to pay. Also the in cumbent will be obliged to make enough out of the office (o reimburse him for the original cost of it. Thus, the iwople pay their representative, the mayor, an additional salary for uiakingappointments. "Would it not be better to pay the mayor such a sum for his services that he can afford to con sider an application on its merits. It is a narrow and short-sighted policy which forces a mayor to figure on the value of each appointment in his power and the correct per cent to charge the appointee, who in turn is forced by the cost of living, the size of his family, etc., to take the "ier cent" out of the people. It would le higher wisdom to get a more expen sive mayor from tlie choicest human product of the city, a man who in forty or fifty years of life has maul, fested integrity, purity and high mindedness and can not. be tempted by a few thousand dollars to hazard that reputation. The champions of the South street well urge that it is poor business iol icy to abandon a plant on which l(. OOOJias been sunk, when for -WOO more the plant can lie made to furnish the city with plenty of good fresh water. But when Councilman Mockett says, 'there is nothing of value at the South street station, save the large water mains running to it which could not be taken up at comparative ly small cost and carted away," the South street councilmeu reply to this proiositioii that this particular pump can not lie moved without destroying it, If it lie so fine and costly a pump it would seem that with care it might be moved. The proposition that you can not obtain a continuous flow of fresh water from a salt deposit through which flows an artesian stream which will come to thesurface without being forced wherever the ground is punc tured, is worthy of the attention of that part of the council which is oi IKised to the Antelope valley. The rest of the council have been con. fronted with the lesson and accepted it. It is simple enough when divested of theories and unsubstantiated state ments. jt The decision of Judge Holmes in the Home of the Friendless case is gratifying to those who have studied it. .Judge Holmes decided that the state had practically agreed to a part nership with the board of manager.. and that the state can not now de prive the board of their responsibility for, or share in the institution. Sev eral years ago the republican, politi cians tried to obtain control of the patronage of the Home and failed. In an institution whose object is to care for the old, the new-born, the sick and the destitute, iMtliticians see only an opportunity for increasing their pat ronage list and just as long as women have no vote their control of such an institution will be disputed. Not withstanding the fact that women lclongoii a board of charities, that by nature and training the sick and the unfortunate are her inalienable wards, from the moment that the leg islature makes a money grant to a benevolent institution feminine man agement will not lie tolerated. The republicans tried to take the manage ment from the women and failed, the Iiopulists have tried and failed in this first step. If justice and right pre vail throughout the course or the liti gation as it has in the beginning, the woman: board will still control the Home for the Friendless. jt Now that ten of the larger firms have shown their confidence in the city and in a new prosjerity by large gifts to the Auditorium fund, that building, which will increase by thousands the number of visitors to the city, will probably be begun in Octolier. Since the development of the plans for the building,. -ill sorts of combinations have been projKjsed.any one of which, if adopted, would make the auditorium less of an auditorium and more of a library or gymnasium as the case may lie. The city needs a library in which to house its increas ingly valuable collection and some time in the millenium future, when we have learned how to heat and light and projel cars by electricity the city will take charge of that energy and the dividends which individuals now make out of the city's needs will be turned back into the city's treasure 1kx where they will emerge to pay for parks, gymnasiums, libraries, etc. But just at present we want an audi torium: to combine it with a library would sjKiil both. The? modern library is in itself a complicated structure,not yet the finished product of experiments and the diverse theoriesof the gradu ate of the red-and-black ink library schools. To attempt to combine any thing so highly complex with an audi torium would, in depriving the audi torium of light, of air, of height and of a sufficient number of exits to in sure the safe egress of 5,000 people -i