VOL.13. NO. 51. HSTABLISHBD IN 18S6 PRICE F1VK CENTS. LINCOLN. NEBR., SATURDAY. DECEMBER 24. 1898. & Hi ENTERED IX THK POSTOFnCE AT LINCOLN AS SECOND CLASS MATTER. PDBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY Bt K COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHINGIGO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARRIS, Editor Subscription Katee In Advance. Per annum $1 00 Six months 75 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 TnE Cocbiee will not be responsible for vol untary communications unless accompanied by Teturn postaKC Communications, to receive attention, must bo signed by tho full namo of tbfi writer, not merely as a guarantee of good faith, but for -publication if advisable. s 'WQO OBSERVATIONS. o o 4,- SW 0O The appointment of W. S. Summers as Uoited States district attorney is a strong one. Mr. Summers is an elo quent speaker and a clear thinker. His recognition strengthens the re publican party in this state and opens the way for a career which there is every reason to believe will be a very brilliant one. The navy has become disgusted with young Hobson and I believe a large part of the country has. A naval olli cer who was present at Guantanamo during August and September says that Hobson was actually placed for a short time under suspension by his senior officer for his officiousness in connection with the repairs on the Maria Theresa. Scores of officers were clamoring to perform the pyrotechnic errand that Hobson was sent on. yet for some reason Commander Miller of the Merimac was superceded by Hob son, who is now making so unsoldicrly and unprofessional exhibition of him self that the newspaners which have conceded and advertised his heroism .are forced to acknowledge that he is insisting a trille too much upon a triumphal progress. The extracts printed on another page are only a few of the comments cut from the country papers on the senatorial situation. I know of only one paper in the state that is urging Mr. Thompson as a candidate for sen ator. Most of the editors regard his ambition as an impertinence to the republican party and its accomplish ment as a very serious blow to the j)arty for which he has never done anything. Tiik Coukikh has from week to week printed the facts in re gard to Mrv Thompson's true relations to the paity and his designs upon it. That these articles have not been without effect upon the country press, the excerpts printed herewith will show. Most of the editors of the Ne braska country press are unacquainted with Mr. Thompson, though all of the leaders of the party are well known to them. Therefore they have obviously accepted the testimony of a publisher whose acquaintance with Mr. Thomp son is sufficiently thorough to warrant an analysis of his record, diameter and commercial and political methods. The chicken ordinance introduced by Councilman Mockett to the Lin coln city council provided that the owner of a llower bed or kitchen gar den, who found chickens scratching up his seeds and plants was at liberty to catch and impound them and exact a line from the chicken owner before releasing them. The council passed the ordinance and the mayor vetoed it, saying that it would work an in justice to poor people. The veto is in favor of some poor people against oth ers. Those who love (lowers and fresh vegetables and are willing to prepare the earth and plant seeds and weed and water are deprived of their harvest by a man who takes the unwarranted liberty of pasturing his chickens on his neighbors door yard. The hus bandman has rights which the poultry man is bound to respect, but never does. The ordiuance, instead of cre ating neighborhood quarrels would have gone far toward settling and pre venting them. Small plantations, the work and the pride of the day laborer in other men's vineyards, are destroyed by the hundreds every sum mer by witless hens, whose owners are smoking black pipes in sellish uncon cern of the destruction of their neigh bors' labor. The chicken ranchman has no more right to pasture his Hocks on some other man's agricultural triumphs, than he has to send his children to eat at a strangers' table. It is im possible to keep the hen at home un less she be enclosed in a high fence, which is said to be bad Tor her health, or unless she have a herder, which is unamerican The sheep is the small est animal herded in this country and it is well enough to let it go at that. Europe has goose, turkey and swine herders, but American youngsters have larger and more money making occupations. Birds have less intelligence than four-footed animals and of all birds the hen is the most aggravating! stupid. Uues which would merely amuse a donkey and make a crocodile weep succeed with the nen, who is not susceptible to the intuitions which keep an adult trout from swallowing a hook without investigation, and trout have had much more limited educational opportunities than poul try. The amount of damage that a criminally stupid hen can accomplish in a half hour'sscratchingand crowding of her fat body into the teeming earth is only fully realized by him who has risen with the sun and spaded and raked and planted a plot of ground, and who has thereafter weeded and watered and watched it early and late and counted the buds on tomato and pea vines onlv to have it all looted by hen devils belonging to a neighbor. The ordinance onlv granted the right of husbandry to the small landowners in the un fenced portion of Lincoln, and the voto rescinded it because the mayor thought it worked a hardship to the lazy poor who have been in the habit of pasturing their coveys on their neighbors' kitchen gardens. The Chicago people have made vio lent threats to the aldermen who should dare to vote for Yerkes" tifty tive year ordinance, but no one sus pects the threats were idle. There is an opposition of unusual strength in Chicago, which has been developed by the labor unions (and reinforced by the university settlements and sociologi cal classes and professors), to institu tions which make money by occupy ing a street. The people are com ing into their own with remark able rapidity in Chicago. It is only a little while tiiat they have realized that the streets were theirs and that no council or legislature could sell them for a consideration which went into the councilinen's or legislators' jacket. The streets are the city's and the right of way thereon must be paid for. Mr. Yerkes says that the publishers of several Chicago newspapers made overtures to-him to support his franchise fora certain per cent of what it was worth to him. He refused to divide and they combined against him. Hut the newspapers have very little to do with it. They could not excite the people's wrath to such an extent if there were no basis for the suspicion that the couucilmen were belling the people's property as if it were their own. The indigna tion grew, not from what the news papers said, though they started it, but from the pertinacity with which the coiincilmen stuck to their original intention of granting the franchise. The Chicago city council is nothing if not politic and the mass meetings seemed not to effect them in the least. Therefore the people concluded the briDe must have been large enough to offset the political suicide of every man who voted for the ordinance. Then, and not till then, the people threatened personal violence and the politicians knew the great common people were not making idle threats, and just as 6iire as there were lamp posts they would lie utilized as in the days of the French revolution and the ordinance was superceded by another. We have progressed so far in the ideas or holding property in severalty that the old English and early Ameri can habits of thought and practice of holding forest and pasture in common had begun to disappear. The present revival of communal sentiment is a consequence of trade unionism and the large place given to the study of economics in all the most modern colleges. In Chicago communal edu cation is progressing perhaps more rapidly than in any other American city. It is the most American of the large cities and is freer from tradi tion and habits. It is there that an archy and absolutism will probably be throttled and a new sjstem iuaiigu. rated. This populnr demonstration of the distrust of the people for the oligarchy which changes its personelle but never its methods or character, is an evidence of the truth of what has been said concerning the growth of communal ownership in Chicago. The city has outgrown the districts into which it was devided in the early days. This advice of the charter re vision committee will therefore meet with approval and probable accept ance. The proposition to limit the number of couucilmen to live elected at large contains dangerous possibili ties which it is well to consider. Un der the present system two coiincilmen are elected from each ward and it has been claimed that they are more in terested in the ward than in the whole city, but it is not disputed that the composition of the council is fairly representative of the city. It is nat ural fora man to be more interested in his own ward and in his own neighborhood than in remote parts of the city in which he has no property arid only a philanthropic interest. The fourteen members of the present council hold each other in check. If money is spent in one ward the other six watch an opportunity to secure a corresponding outlay in theirs. The first and the second have the same number of representatives as the fourth and tifth. As an agent for the transaction of business the council is slow, and the city has frequently to wait a long while for the accomplish ment of a reform, but the council is democratic and very near the people. It is not comioscd of a few men from one part of the city but of fourteen men from suven parts. Residents of the fiist ward might tind it impossi ble to convince five couucilmen from the fourth that their district needs as good water and as complete lighting as the districtaround the capital. So long as all men are sellish it is much safer for wards containing the poorer residents to be represented by coiin cilmen who reside in them. w It is difficult to tell from a table of city and county taxes printed in one of the city papers what it proves. The tables, one of city and one of county taxes, are copied from the county treasurer's books, but they do not prove anything because the compiler has failed to indicate the identity of t 4 ft I