s ,. fimn,t "&! W- -C X VOL. XIV. NO. IV. HSTABLISHBD IN 1880 PRICE FIVli CENTS W s u LINCOLN, NBBK.. SATURDAY. JANUARY 28.18011. H MTirvQ KNTEKKD IN THE P08TOFFICE AT LINCOLN A8 8KCOND CI.A88 MATTKU. PUBLISHED EVKRY SATURDAY m COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING CO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARRIS, Editor Subscription Katop In Advance. Per annum $100 Six raonthB 'j Throe monthB "0 One month 20 Single copiefl 05 The Coumnn will not bo responsible for vol untary communications unless nccompanlod by Communications, to rocclvo nttontlon, must bo Blanod by tlio full nnmo of tlip wrltor, not moroly ns u minrantno of Rood fiiltli, but for publication if advlsablo, s ,'Oa'' ." HRQERVATONS. S O v"V 4V00'' It Is proposed to ask the legislature to mako an appropriation to ereet a statue of Abraham Lincoln in this ilty. This whole country, the fra ternity which exists today between the sections, many cities named for him, and histories and biographies In numerable are monuments to Abra ham Lincoln. It is written in tho law that a slto should be selected and a city built thereon and it should be called Lincoln. All tills was done and tills city is a monument to a western man, who, more than any other western man, was a typical American. The humour, the shrewd sense, the tenderness, the simplicity, the forgctf ulness of trilles and the steady adherence to the main issue, of Abraham Lincoln's character is truly American. Foreigners are al ways searching for tho type American and it lias been surprising that In Abraham Lincoln they do not recog nize the complete type, even to tho vein of coarseness characteristic or a strong intellect reared in tho west where there is everything necessary to the production of a tough libre, but not much of that atmosphere of art or literature or that classical social symphony which reilnes the speech, the manners and occasionally and eventually, tho thoughts. Notwith standing that foreign writers do not appreciate either Mr. Lincoln's liter ary excellence, or his symbolic repre sentation of what is most truly Amer ican, he Is first In the hearts of his countrymen and can never bo forgot ten. In a. few years tho Cuban war will have been relegated to iho history books. It will be necessary to look it up in the encyclopedias to llnd out what It was all about. Like the war of 1812 its elTects are likely to be of much more importance than its inci dents or causes. The young Nebraska men who eagerly responded to the cull for volunteers, who left collego or business to cuter upon a routine of daily drill, of unappetizing food, and who accepted a privates humble place cheerfully, keeping In mind that they wore doing It for their country, and who linally died of fever at Chick amauga or Manila, arc likely to be forgotten. They arc buried at Chick unmuga or Manila and one of them lies in the Pad lie ocean, which re ceived his body after the funeral ser vice on shipboard. Those buried on land have only a narrow piece of board with a number and name' painted on it, to remind the casual passer-by that a soldier who gave his young life for his country, lies beneath Their fever wasted flesh will not en dure long and unless the state whom their self sacri flee and patriotic Uevo tion lias made honorable among states, recognizes it in some way, their names will be forgotten and their sacrifice will seem to be for naught. Oblivion may not be the ill it seems, but all men dread and spend their lives in endeavor to make u name which may be remembered when their bodies are dust These young men gave their future, they gave the" homes they might have made, tiicir career in poli ticsfor only those intensely inter ested in the affairs of the nation in listed, they gave their hopes of dis tinction in literature, in science or in commerce. All the possibilities and small victories and signs of future greatness they gave to their country with an heroic generosity that kept back nothing. The least the state can do and perhaps the only thing it can do, is to erect a monument to the Nebraska boys who died in the Cuban war, whether of fever or of gunshot wounds, it matters not. Too young to have made a name for themselves the state can write their names on a shaft of marble so that when the cheap little boards which mark the place where their heroic young bodies lie, arc rotted, in their Nebraska home people may read that in the year 18!)7 tliCBe boys, whose lips had scarcely lost tho tender curves of babyhood, gave up their lives for love of country and a knightly wisli to succor the oppressed. The sight of tlitse boys as tlioy marched to the station, aftercn listment, was both noble and heart breaking. With faces paled by the leave-taking, but with eyes shining with the light of high resolve, they inarched away Into a routine that tried their devotion more severely than war und to an unaccustomed dis comfort of dally existence for which no previous experience had prepared them. Instead of erecting a monu ment to Lincoln, who does not need it for remembrance' sake, let us civet one to the Nebraska boys who died in the Cuban war of 1807. Nothing that has occurred since the civil war has made so strong an impression on this country as the character and quality and appearance of the volunteers as they marched olf. They were of such a high type of young manhood. There were no shuilling feet nor sidelong glances, The ranks were tilled with young Idealists, whose broad fore heads, clear eyes and ruddy skin showed that they were offering lives wortli living to their country. Itwas a concrete lesson of what it means to beau American. And there is not u citizen of tills state who would not willingly be taxed in order that a monument may be erected to the memory of the boys who died in the camps of Chickamauga or Manila, or on Bhipboard or wherever their fervent spirits completed the sacrifice of the body. Nebraska has never shown any formal appreciation of the soldier boys. She let them go without paying them for tho period they epont in drill before leaving the state and as sum I relays have drifted back no pub lic recognition of their devotion lias been made by the state whose name their regiments bore. Michigan sent Pullman cars after her wounded sol diers, so did Maine, und as the pallid soldiers arrived at the little towns they lived in the peop'c threw up their hats and cheered them. I think it must liavo done the sick soldiers good to know that that abstraction, the state, for which they had enlisted and almost died, was anxious to do them honor and to make them com fortable. Illinois towns have given banquets to celebrate the return of her regiments and to say a public thank you for a public service. We have not done much, cither, for the Eick or the dead soldiers. A monu ment to those who dice' may be of some little comfort to the mothers and fathers and sweethearts who have been bereaved by this war. And the stale is not absolved from doing her pari because the dead cannot hear us. The mu filed cars and the dumb lips made a contract with us before they died and theirs lias been fulfilled. What Rome died of has furnished the point of bo many orations that, after all, the dissolution of that mighty empire was not for nothing. Not that the effect of any oration or exordium is apt to be lasting, but a truth repeated a sullicient number of times wears its way into flinty hearts us effectively us tho wuter dropping from year to year upon the stone, finally hollows it The lesson of the collapse of the Roman empire has, therefore, in the course of u few hun dred years, worn. its way into the con sciousness of the world so deeply that the absorption of men in mutter to the deptli of ignoring entirely tho spiritual meaning of life lias become voluntary and recognized suicide Wo have learned that the same cause pro duces the same e licet and that the Unmans were even as you and 1. They owned nearly the whole world and traded it oil" together witli their souls for a little money. If tho character of the men a people Is content to be represented by Is vicioHs, tho fate of Home Is Indicated witli sullicient clearness to Justify newspapers, preachers and all those who have studied the body politic, in announcing the presence of dangerous symptoms. When Mayor Graham was nomi nated it was urged that he was a good business man and would manage the finances of the city well. Nobody claimed that his record was creditable or that lie possefsed the respect of tho community or that his character was at least that of the average man en titling him to represent a city made up of the good and the very bad and the medium. (Alas! there are no very good to raise the average of the very bad.) No, everybody, even his sup porters, knew that lie was without ideals and had few scruples Yet he was elected because, It was thought that the shrewdness which he had displayed in the conduct of Ills own business, would keep him within the law, and if there were any advantages in unscrupiilouHuess, the city might bo the gainer The history of Mayor Graham's administration Is exactly what the citlzons who elected him de serve. The HHine arguments are now being used to bring about the election of Mr. Thompson, who lacks the one essential qualification for an Import ant representative position. He is a man of foree.u self-made man who has done what his hands found to do with out a too fastidious examination of the task. As director of a bank which a yeur ufter his secret withdrawal from it, failed, lie incurred suspicions which are now blocking the way to the ful fillment of an ambition that when lie first announced it. was received with Incredulity. IT he believed the bank perfectly sound when he withdrew from it, It is difllcult to understand why lie did it secretly, and what means lie used to induce the president, Mr. Mosher, and the cashier, Mr. Out calt, to give him their notes and to secure them by mortgages which were not recorded until news of the sus pension reached Ills confidential clerk. As every man is held innocent by the' law, no mauer how strong the evi dence against him, until the public prosecutor shall have proved him guilty as charged, in a court of law, neither should Mr. Thompson be con demned because he has neveroxplulned now he wus nble to muke Mr. Mosher give him his note for $20,000 for bunk stock when he (Mi. Mosher) knew that the bank was looted. He should riot bo utterly condemned, but neither should lie bo elected to u position so eminent und honorable that even men of tho most spotless and untainted i , ti.-A&Mtri'Jiij-u. Ni.. t& j&.