VOL. XIV., NO. XXVI. BSTABLISHBD IN 1880 PRICE FIVE CENTS LINCOLN, NBBR.., SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1801). mtomc ENTERED IN THE F08TOFFI0R AT LINCOLN AS SECOND CLASS MATTEB. PUBLISHED EVEBV SATURDAY Bt Tift COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING GO Office 1132 N utreet, Up Staira Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARMS, . Editor Subscription Kates In Advance. Per annum $ l 00 Six months 75 Three montliB ; 50 One month 20 Single copies . . . . 05 Tns Courier will not bo roaponslblo for vol nntary communications unloss accompanied by roturn poatago. Communications, to rocoivo attontion, must bo siirnod by ttio full name of tlio writor, not moroly as a guarantee of good faith, but for publication if advisable, : g OBSERVATIONS. u 1 The Ten Hour Law. The object of the bill passed last winter regulating the number of hours' labor of female employes is ambiguous. Under the guise of mak ing it easier for women in shops and otllces, the law forbids employers to require more than ten hours work a day from female employes, but does not limit the number of hours which a male employe may devote to the service of his employer Therefore when a merchant Is looking for a clerk, he will naturally select the one who has fewest disabilities and will return the largest amount of service for the salary ho Is able to offer. Now the ten hour law applying solely to females is a disability. There are 4 emergencies in every business and the prudent merchant will be cautious about employing help who can not work for him, whatever happens, more than ten hours a day without giving that employe a chance to have the law on him. The law affects the drygoods mer chant more than other employers because they employ more female labor than any other employers ex cept manufacturers and there being very few factories in the Mississippi valley, the law as it affects factory girls is of small local significance. I think the law is a vicious one and was either introduced by a hidden op ponent to female labor or by a foolish and short sighted friend. Very likely it was the latter, for it is the over zealous, friendly busybodles who pre- T clpitate us into most of the uncom fortable and awkward situations which make us tired of life. The quality and quantity of the work done, not the sex of the hands that did it and the head which directed It should determine the value of the labor, and it will, in time. In the meanwhile there Is great opposition in many and most unexpected sources to female labor. The people who discuss the subject frequently refer to the depression of wages consequent upon the entry of woman into the labor market, the limited number of jobs, the unlimited number of females ct cetera, etcetera. Hut when a woman and her children, or other weak and dependant mem bers of her family arc hungry, these considerations do not seem especially relevant to her. Asa drygoods clerk, to speak from tlic standpoint, of a customer.a woman Is more valuable than a man. Ask any woman and the women buy the drygoods and household supplies whether she prefers a man or woman to show her shirt waists, lingerie, hosiery, and the answer, except in rare cases, will be in favor of a wo man clerk. A man, unless gifted witli unusual taste and artistic dis crimination is out of place in most of the departments of a drygoods store. Every good and well bred woman must first subdue natural objections before asking a male clerk to show her articles of made-up wearing ap parjl. In any drygoods store of this city anybody who cares to satisfy himself on this subject may con stantly see women waiting for the services of a woman in the ready to wear department. Proprietors of men's furnishing stores have better judgement. No women are employed, not in Lincoln at least, and not many any where, as clerks in clothing stores. There are subtleties about the lit of a coat, about the color and style of a tie and about the shape of a hat that no woman has ever fathomed. There are occasionally men who know when a skirt hangs correctly and can prescribe the colors and style which different types of women should wear, but there are so few who attempt the mission that succeed, that the mer chant princo who thinks lie can pick him out is worthy of his title. As to the ten hours a day law, live twelfths of a day is long enough for any one man or woman to work ex cept in case of emergency. The man who has stood all day in a hot store among hurrying women on the hunt for bargains needs rest and the society of ills own sex in the club, or out in the open air. He needs it as, much as the woman who ln.s stood at the opposite counter and also ae quired an uncomplimentary opinion of her sex after the members of it havo for ten hours pawed and rum pled her carefully folded stock, A law which makes it unlawful to work the woman more than ten hours is un just to the woman in that it confers upon her without tier consent a disa bility and it Is unjust to the man I lo calise it Is an exemption which lie de serves and has earned as much as the woman. With the progress of tlmo and the development of metropolitan charac teristics Lincoln and even Omaha will probably get rid of some of the country town habits which distin guish them now. If the merchants of New York and Chicago can close six days of the week at 0 p. in. in the winter time and in the summer season at five o'clock on five days of the week and at one o'clock on Saturdays surely Lin coln and Omaha merchants whose rents are incomparably smal'er can do so. The people in this Mississippi region have got into the haMt in the summer time of strolling down town and in and out of the stores on Sat urday night and insisting on being shown things they do not buy by pretty, tired shop girls and listless, bored young men. All the stories of goods bought by working men and women on Saturday nights could be discussed if for the next two months merchants would keep track of these Saturday night sales. I think they form an Inconsiderable and trilling proportion of the day's sales, which when offset by the cost of light, is not worth the trouble. Especially when it is conceded that a woman who wants a dress must see it by daylight, and that if she has made up her mind to purchase it she will do so when the stores are open. If she can not buy it Saturday night she will buy it on Monday morning when the clerks, refreshed by a ay's vacation will drape the folds alluringly before her critical eyes. Trusts and the Tariff. Mr. Henry O. Havcmeycr, president of the sugar trust, embarrassed the Industrial Commission somewhat, when he called the tariff "the mother of Trusts, ' but ho told the truth. "He, the chief of a particularly high handed trust, boldly declared that the existing tariff bill and the preceding one, have created and fostered all the trusts, with scarcely a notable ex ception, by providing them witli an inordinate protection, to which they have not the slightest right under the sun. Mr. Havemeyer, it is well to add, is not given to indulging in day dreams concerning the rights of the community, or the duties of wealth to the state, or the ethics of competition or any other tommy-rot of that sort, as he would probably call it." Thus writes i man who is acquainted with Mr. Havemeyer and adds that "Mr. Havemeyer found that the Sugar Trust, witli its capitalization that represents four or live volumes of water, Is enabled, without the pro tection accorded most other enter prises, to earn fifteen or twenty per cent per year on its inflated stock, and with this fact in mind lie was in evitably impelled to Impress upon the Industrial commission the racts In the case." Jt the tariff were removed, prices could not lie Ineonscqiiently raised and the many could not be so easily fed to the few, though the largeness of the market and the different labor conditions in other centres of pro hibition, might find an occasional victim among the few There Is no way to make trusts unprofitable but that of removing the tariff, levied on the many for the enrichment of the few. There is no reason why the price of the poor man's coat should contain besides the cost and profit of raising sheep, the cost and profit of making the wool into cloth, and the cost and profit of making the cloth into a coat, an additional bounty to the wool mill owner for ills graclous ncss in consenting to live in America and buy and sell sheep's wool. In spite of all temptations to belong to ottier nations he lias remained an American and we are opera bouffe enougli to give up to him a con siderable part of our sacred Incomo to 'encourage him to stay." Any legislation that prevents men from going into partnership and a trust is only a large partnership Is unconstitutional. Hut take away the special prlvelcges granted to manu facturers, and trusts, which work oppression will disappear. The trusts which have cheapened pro ductlon, and whose products are sold at a price based on that cost and not on a protected market will not bo permanently affected. Tito trusts havo no special prlvelcges not granted to all men except those bestowed by the tariff. Trusts havo raised the price of paper, of lead and iron pipe, of bath tubs and plumber's supplies and many kinds or building material. The poor man who could build a house if the price of these tilings were in pro. portion to liis wages and they would be If the natural laws of commerce and of supply and demands were not Interfered with is unable to build because the ricli men who supply these tilings are artificially protected from the natural result of an un warranted raise in prices. Prices arc like a vast body of water, which only threatens to submerge the land when men try to force it into an artlfical channel, or restrain it in seasons of expansion, Mr. Havemeyer, with his knowledge of markets and causes of high prices and low prices has given competent testimony and legislators will find it futile to legislate against trusts while leaving the 'mother of trusts" free to fill the country with new progeny, Taxes vs. Charitable Beques's. When rich men dlo they frequently leave large amounts to libraries, old ladles' homes, hospitals, relatives and other deserving objects. It is said that Russell Sago who has always 'p.t'J''s(Ht&'&T MVtja: IjHtfVrHt fcfVfffB