H3f4 -wxgisZBgj- -& yw'wr xzr- THE COURIER j m f t his evangel 1st wanderings have per manently converted sinne s from their evil ways is doubtful. He himself baa made a large fortune by bis travels, assisted by unrewarded ministers who prepare the way and collect his per cent before he leaves for another field. The annual convention of the Cali fornia State Bankers association adoptod the following in regard to the punishment of forgers, burglars and counterfeiters: "Resolved, that tbe best protection against forgers, burg, lars and counterfeiters is the cer tainty and durability of punishment.'' Tbe custom of governors to pardon auch criminals is Ahown in a state ment prepared by President Hep burn of tbe New York Banker's asso ciation. His figures cover a period of five years and show that the execu tives of tbe various states, for some reason, are inclined to cut the sen tences of safe crackers, defaulting cashiers and betrayers of trust funds 1b two. According to bis tables in tbe last five years, fifty nine bank crim inals sentenced by '.be federal courts to the penitentiary for the average term of five years and eleven months, have been pardoned af terservingan av erage term of three years and six days. Of course tbe effect of more leniency to one than to another criminal tends to multiply tbe number engaged in making a living bv robbing, banks. But so leng as the failure of a bank causes such widespread loss, they should be protected by extra, rather than fewer, precautions. Tbe Finan cial Review gives this subject due im portance in tbe November number. Perhaps no class of swindlers are more culpable than those who rob banks from the inside. Unlike burglars, bank employes understand finance, they are generally keen, well read men, and they know bow large are their chances of escape when tbey appro priate funds,held in trust by tbe bank which employes them. Therefore tbey should receive double the sen tence given to tbe lowbrowed, degen erate burglar whose ancestors have stolen as far back as family traditions reach. Yet our notions and practice of justice are so perverted that the courts commonly give tbe born crim inal, with tbe spatulate fingers and thick malformed ears a lunger sen tence than tbe man of refinement, taste and knowledge, convicted of a duplicity and treason impossible to the undeveloped man. Though the former knows beforehand that his crime will shake the faith in human ity that has never been steady enough yet for its salvation. The criminologists who advocate prison reform are not generally tuose who are ever beseeching governors for the pardon of men who have received a just sentence. They advocate with out exception though, the equaliza tion of sentences the awarding of the same punishment to rich -and poor convicted of tbe same crime. With the more stringent rule contemplated by the bankers of California tbe prison reformer is therefore in sympathy. Considering the unnecessary pic- tanGqueness of tbe meetings of tbe .wj .f wifiA9tian- which do not seem P"v mmmra w ' tfl at all affected by tbe personelle 'af the boaro, it appeals iuai wc uui mm of the puolic schools would be facilitated by lessening tbe number of the fortnightly debaters. Then, a eaestioa concerning the action of tbe . hoard under hypothetical circum ' stances would not consume the entire time of tbe meeting as it did last week. Because three men can say whet they have to in less than half of the time wquirei for seven men to work a argument for the benefit of the morning papers. Last week tbe debate was over the question whether if an applicant for a teacher's position were a Catholic she would cot receive tbe votes of tbe board on tbat ac count. Disqualification for a secular position on account of religion is, of course, an impossible position for a member of a democracy based on tbe separation ofchurch and state, and it was therefore curious that the school board, a body supposed to be chosen for evidences of culture and interest in education discovered in them by nominatirgconventions sbouldspend a whole evening discussing it Espe cially as. there was business demand ing tbe board's immediate considera tion tbat evening. In all branches of tbe municipal system in all cities of the United States it is being conclusively demon strated tbat large bodies, in which responsibility is divided to the point of individual irresponsibility fail in the satisfactory performance of the functions delegated to them by the votes of the people. In the early days when the makers of tbe republic were planning a government for the people and by tbe people it was evidently de cided that- this end was to be reached by dividing one good man's job and his salary among just as many citizens as possible. Accordingly this was done and men of affairs and executive ability are employed by cleverer cor porations, while the public business is commonly, not always, administered by men who have not succeeded in earning for themselves as large an in come as the fraction of a salary repre sented by tbe subdivided city or state job referred to. Tbat such function al ism is on the decrease may be seen by a reference to old town records. (See Howard's Constitutional History of tbe United States, page 97.) There were a large corps of offcials to regu late l-cal trade and commerce, such as sealers of weights and measures, a tiresome number of inspectors and measurers, overseers, warners of boys, persons to keep dogs out ofchurch, scavengers, viewers of land, judges of delinquents and judges of boundary disputes, blunders, of cattle, jurymen, bailiffs, commissioners of small causes and deputies innumerable. Many of these officers, such as bog reere, dis appeared with the practical disap pearance of tbe common land or tim ber owned by villages and most of tbe others were absorbed by the consta ble and police judge and we are slowly approaching the time when city ad ministrations will be in the hands of a few men indivisibly responsible to tbe people for their performance of their delegated functions. The over whelming success of trusts controlled by a president and small board of directors, is an example which the people have been slow to follow, but tbe system will unquestionably be adopted, as it is more necessary tbat tbe affairs of tbe whole people be wisely administered than that a few should receive a pension for services inadequately performed. Tsi An, the reactionary empress dowager is, after all, not such a credit to her sex. The emperor, yielding to tbe influence and advice of young men educated in this country and England, planned some measures of reform. He first decreed the aboli tion of several obsolete and useless de partments of the government, em ploying, if man can be said to be employed, who does nothing, 7,000 or 8,000 men. Other reforms cuntemp lated tbe conversion of Budbist and Taokt temples into schools, tbe eman cipation of tbe press and tbe right of petition. Reforms of such ancient trial in the occidental world it is in- I HIE 1224 O St., This fall we are showing1 a very strong- line of medium furniture, carpets, curtains and draperies. Here are two of our leaders in din ing room furniture. .naennmaaw , Solid oak dining table, top 42 inch square, very heavy and will last a life time. Six foot length, $6.50;eight foot length $8. - FREIGHT PAID ONE credible tbat for proprosing tbem and for getting tbe emperor under their influence six young men should have been beheaded in the presence of tbe supreme judges of tbe Chinese em pire, tbe emperor deposed and many more indirectly responsible for his favorites and thelrdesigns imprisoned or exiled. It may be said for the em press, however, that in order to carry out these reforms it was necessary that she should be isolated in one of ber distant country palaces far from tbe forbidden city, tbat her nephew, Jung Lu, be removed from his posi tion as commander in chief of the naval and land forces of tbe emperor, and Yuan Shih-Kai substituted in his place. It is plain to be seen there fore, that the reform of tbe empire meant the abolition of tbe empress. The only part of the program whicb was carried out was the dismissal of tbe 8,000 employes in obsolete offices. . After that Yuan Shih-Kae chival rously informed the commander of the empresses' navy that his behead ing had been ordered twenty-four hours from the time of his notifica tion. Tbe latter was modern enough to telegraph tbe empre&G,who took tbe government back into ber own bands and set it down bard in the dark ages, whence the emperor and his advisers had almost rescued it. The plot is extravagant enough for the comic opera stage, and it is impossible not to admire'the alertness of the old lady, but 1 would she had been on the side of progress and truth, but there is poetic justice tbat the nation which has enslaved and despised woman should baveto bonds riveted for an other hucdred years or more after briefest glimpse of freedom by a mem ber of the mutilatedand disregarded Lincoln, Neb. Solid oak dining chair, cane seat, brace arm. A very good thing-. We sell six of them for $5. HUNDRED MELES. sex, even though she were assisted by tbe 8,000 obsoletes and every officer and official of the old regime. cThe retailers of Omaha who insist upon an exposition in 1899. will find " that' without tbe help of the cis-Mis-' sissippi states the trans-Mississippi-' show would not have been able to turn back 75 per cent to the stock holders. The late festival wasacele-' oration of the west, not of Omaha or' Nebraska. A fete given by the dry goods merchants, the milliners, tail-' ore, hatters, grocers, hardware and " chinaware men of Omaha will be about ' as interesting and transparent as any ' advertisement and no more. The country newspapers will not advertise it, the metropolitan papers will ignore' it. To what degree 6uch a fair will be successful without government or atate aid, in the face of the opposition of the railroads and Omaha jobbers is prob'ematical so much so that good business men will not subscribe much to it. The board of directors of a busted ' bank sit and look at each other in con sternation and say they supposed everything was all right. When the first bank failed the directors met and showed their grief and their surprise by the expression of their eyes and they did the same the other day in Emporia after their president had shot ' himself, because his bank was empty ' and his friends and neighbors, even his own family, thought him an hon est man, and he was too sensitive to live after they had begun to acknowl edge their mistake. Yet depositors never lose their faith in a board of directors who look rich and exclusive, J who ride in coupes, dress well and ' ri fc &-jaiii .- - ' - "' S-ajS &-?