THE COURIER. tho Kansas City lire department in Paris can perform for Kansas Oity in caso of tiro in tho latter place the papers which advocate sending the department there neglect to say. Tho taxpayers, the large proportion of whom have never been out of the state, are to pay the expenses of these burly firemen, a million of whom could not teach the Parisians how to handle Are any better than they already do. If firemen and councllmenwero not in tho habit of junketing at the ex pense of the taxpayers, this proposi tion would bo received with the amazement it deserves. As it is the Kunsas City taxpayer sees no reason why lie should not send u glittering fireman to Paris there to ride about on a lire engine und condole with the firemen of Paris, whose city council or correlative body, docs not believe in sending men employed to put out tires to a foreign nation. Certain countries of the Orient have sacred animals. In India it is a cow, or a monkey, or a snake. In Persia it is an elephant. In the woolly part of America it is a fireman or a policeman, especially the former, who is shielded from labor and reserved for those occasions where, in bluo cloth and brass buttons, he can make civic occasions resplendent by his presence. That large part pf the community which neither holds olllce nor dictates nominations but Just pays taxes, has not realized how irrelevant and impertinent the fire man is. Somctimo it will learn that tho diversion of the people's money to pay for an European tour for firemen is an absurdity that nothing but a democracy would be guilty of. A monarch would bo assassinated if he proposed such a thing. The emperor of Germany was scarcely allowed to go to Turkey, though ho obtained im portant concessions for the German citizens of Turkey while he was there. Kansas City cannot claim, however; that the ignorant firemen can be of any diplomatic service to France. Around the senate of the United States hover always the agents and representatives of trusts who are se lected for their knowledge of the world and thoir good fellowship. It .is their business to be on dining terms with the senators and it is their busi .ness to prevent legislation tending to lessen the absolute power which a well organized and ably administered trust wields In many cases, perhaps in most cases, the effect of the combi nation of the producers or manufac turers of any article has been to stop the waste of competitive production and to lessen the coat of the article to the .consumer. It is only when tho trust Is able to procure extraordinary privileges that it becomes necessary to keep agents at the national capital to prevent the people from asserting themselves through thoir representa tives. An overweening respect for money reduces the real usefulness of a citizen, but "a business man" with this characteristic becomes dangerous to the ideals and the liberties of the whole people, when lie gets into the senate of the United States. That legislative body is the terap'e of de mocracy, and the stalls for the money changers should be ripped down and they themselves Bhould be driven out. Thero is a great deal of talk about the advantages of sending "a business man" to the United States senate in stead of a man who knows anything and cares anything for tho history of this government and the development of constitutional liberty. It is the "business man" who can appreciate the money value of a vote or a con cession. A good business man will not take into consideration the inter eats of a lot of plain people, whom he has never seen and whose approval will not mean a dollar more or less to him. He cannot stop to consider un born generations whoso inheritance he may be asked to vote away. This man is no dreamer, no orator, no talker. He is concerned with dollars and cents. To be sure George Wash ington, Ulysses S. Grant and Abra ham Lincoln were not good business men. None of them, had he been sent as senator to tho Unted States senate from Nebraska, would have devoted his whole time to getting a government building for Lincoln or to getting on the inside of the Nica ragua canal schemes, or to manipu lating appropriations primarily in his own interest, and secondly in the interest of the people who sent him there. Thank the Lord, none of these men were "business men." General Grant was so bad a business man that when the firm of Grant & Ward failed he sold all his personal property; the swords presented to him by a grateful people; the jewels given him by the kings and queens, all the voluntary tribute his genius and patriotism had levied from the world General Grant sold at auction in order that he might pay the debts his son had made. It was most unbusinesslike and showed that he was a man of ideals. There is much depreciation of the dreamer, the orator, the poet, and yet this country is great because of their dreams. Mr. Bryan has conquered in spite of obscurity and poverty because he is a dreamer. What "business man" even in this commercial cen tury has accomplished what Mr. Bryan has? Men of the Nebraska state leg islature: ideas rule the world: A gifted orator, who is at once a good man and an idealist, can compel an homage that a "business man" can advertise for forever and not secure. Pulses respond nxt to appeals to the pocket, thqugh votes do sometimes. Personal loyalty, such as James G Blaine inspired, is not a matter of money. The obscure Bryan was at tended by a genuinely devoted mob of believers wherever he went, and ho never bought a man. The newspapers sneered at him and called him an orator, forgetting that since the days of Demosthenes oratory has fired the hearts of a people whom cupidity has failed to move. None of the men to whom the nation has built monu ments and the lesson of whose life we are using to bring up our children were simply business men. If they were gifted with the commercial in stinct tbey were far sighted enough to appreciate the greater Importance of purity, integrity, a good name, and the love and gratitude of .their kind. America is not the dry goods stores, gas companies and all kinds of com raercial organizations, so much as it i the greatest democracy on the earth, the creation of dreamers and of non conformists, who left their business interests in England that they might freeze and starve and be free in America. The action of the directors of the Northwestern railroad in dismissing all female employes has been severely criticised by women's clubs and asso ciations of women. Even Mrs. Hen rotln, who Ib a woman of large char ity and accustomed to make deliber ate judgments and to deny herself to prejudice, condemned the action of the directors of the road. But it seems to mo that the directors in question are entitled to the consideration paid to those willing to sacrifice conveni ence and habiu to consistency. The reason for giving the conge to all female employes is that the road has adopted in its entirety, the rules of the civil service. Promotions are only to be made strictly according to length of service, faithfulness and proved ability. The management has an nounced" that no exceptions to this rule arc to be made. Therefore being unable to accept the idea of a woman division superintendent, general man ager or president, they were obliged to dismiss all the women theretofore employed by the road. The only dif ference betweon the directors of the Northwestern and other corporations employing women is that the former had the courage to follow a false premise to its legitimate and logical conclusion. Other roads employ women in subordinate positions and make a practice of advancing men whom the women rank, in length of service, ability, and in all tests by which promotions are made, over them. If women are not capable of being di vision superintendents, general man agers and presidents, they ought to be dismissed from the service in disgrace, as they have been on the Northwest ern. It is cowardly and Inconsistent to employ them and apply civil service rule to everybody but Woman. Tho question of equal pay for the same service would soon be settled if all employers had the courage of the Northwestern management. Women are either fit for everything or for nothing Tney should be employed as individuals and the same rules ap plied to them as to men or they should not be employed at all. '1 he North western is the first corporation to pub licly accept and act upon the inevita ble result of the premise that women are incapable of holding positions of responsibility. The road ought not to be boycotted for a display of logic and sincerity as rare 88 it is admirable. If women are capable of the general manager act such a policy as the Northwestern hasadopted will shorten her probation. If she is not the North western is still right. The Lincoln correspondent of the World-Herald gets up some lurid stuff for that paper. In last Sunday's edi tion Mr Bradley said the ministers of Lincoln had been asked by some of the other senatorial candidates to preach sermons aimed against Mr. Thompson and the ministers were so indignant that two of them announced that they would preach sermons advo cating for senator just the sort of man Mr. Thompson wants it supposed ho Is; for instance, a business man of long distance vision. As a matter of fact the Lincoln ministers have not been approached by Thompson or anti-Thompson. The yellowness of this particular correspondent's letters seems to be deepening with the sena torial situation. If the women of thiB community could be united in an organization for the sanitary and aesthetic improve, ment of Lincoln and University Place there would doubtless be much good accomplished. The city federation fell apart from its own weight and the cohesiveness of a city union Including all philanthropic, literary, religious and economic societies is likely to suffer the same fate. Much of the good work which has been accom plished Ib due to the inspiration of a devoted minister or teacher, or leader. Large and loose bodies composed of smaller bodies are apt to lack in har mony, grace and effectiveness. But only large bodies include enough rep resentatlves of the whole to accom plish large results. "You in your small corner, I in mine," may be do ing our best, and when we come to jndgment our' motives will be taken into consideration, but so long as we are isolated and unorganized we shall live in a filthy city in which a pesti lence does not break out for some rea son unknown to a bacteriologist. An effort to organize the women Into a city union for the purpose of improv ing the appearance and healthfulness of the city is one in which every woman ought to help. A meeting for that purpose will be held at Mrs. A. J. Sawyor's on Monday morning at half past ten o'clock. All women are invited to be present. I have received from Mrs. Sawyer some valuablesuggostlons in regard to the need and possibilities of such a union: To insure success it should have the support and membership of not less than thirty or forty organiza tions and 700 to 1,000 persons Some work cannot be done by indi viduals. E.G., "control of the cigar ette habit." But suppose 5.000 moth ers and sisters were to unite in de manding the enforcement of existing laws? Apply the same" to charity work, reform work, city improvement, municipal affairs, city legislation, public schools, divorce reform, educa tion in citizenship, social purity, so ciological questions affecting domestic life, etc. Some say "I cannot take up any new work. I am interested in such a line, if the council will do that work I will join, otherwise not." One object of a council is to emphasize the recip rocal obligations between all lines of moral and ethical work. Those who come to the next meet ing should be prepared to present a definite plan for a definite object, one on which all can unite. Office of P. J. Kennedy. Sb. Louis, Jam. 12, 1899. To the Courier, . i Lincoln; Neb.: My Much Inspected Courier A dear friend of mine mailed me copies of your paper of December 3 and Decern, 'bor 10. Some of the literature it con tained nerved my conquered spirits and nature to a fig-lilting- heat, and the iirJform goes once more to lay siege to the b!4ter enidi against a class of boodlers nnd destroyers of respectable and illustrious citizens' homes and their families. Inclosed please find check for $1.10, for one year to the Courier, the ten ctrJts for collection. My paiper is yet gilt edge, 100 cents on the dollar tihe world over. No matter how much' the Mealier gawg of sand-baggers and bunk-wreckers dlR-flg-ured me finan cially, my credit is A No. l.nnd my pa per gilt edge no matter who holds it. , , Every tax-payer ini the state of Ne braska should be a reader of the Cour ier. Why do I say this No one con foigefc the vigorous, manly and hu mane fight for the people's righits, freedom and liberty made by tho Ccmrier in Ornaha at the triall of the indicted cashier of the Capital Nation al bank. The steps the Courier took incite the displeasure of Uncle Sam. In this condition the people found in the Courier a vigorous allly, so able, so deliberate and1 so accurate was the gunner's fire on the federal arm of the strongest government in existence the Courier wrns escorted by the nation's marshal! to appear for contempt, before tho federal tribunal. Herod was on, the throne. The mnm ly and' womanly fight made by Morton Smith nnd Miss Sarah B. Harrils I aim informed that Mir. Smith' 'has since lost his life by accident, and1 if such is the cnise I hope and trust that his spirit Hhir.'ies on the bosom of it is heavenly Creator as bright and as brilHnnt as the planet Mars on a cloudless, starry night in a Nebraska1 skyt was worthy of their steel. The weaponls displayed' by those two noiwe people in behalf of their plun dered clients was. far more stubborn nnd persistent Milan! tho reslstentec with whidh' Dewey had to contend at V j " ' .&! v y Y