v VOL. XIV., NO. XXVII. KSTABL1SHBD IN 1880 PKICEP1VEC-.NT W LINCOLN, NBBR., SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1899. Entered in the postoffioe at Lincoln as second clahb matter. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY M THE COURIER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING GO Office 11.32 N street, Up Stairs Telephone 384. SARAH 13. HARRIS. Editor Subscription Katep In Advance. Per annum , 9100 Six months 75 Three monthB 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 The Courier will not bo responsible for vol notary communications unless accompanied by return postuRO. Communications, to rocolvo attontion, must bo slimed by tlio full niimo of tlio writor, not moroly nB a Riiarantco of Rood faith, but for publication if ndvisablo. : 3 O OBSERVATIONS. i o The Tariff and the Trusts. It is frequently sulci tlmt the tarilT is a dead issue. It was never more all vc,aud anti-pro tectlonistsentiments are growlngand keeping step with the trusts. The 35,000 traveling men whom the trusts have thrown out of a Job are reinforced and outnumbered by every country landlord, every pro vincial theatre manager, every dealer in goods, and every purveyor of amuse ments which the traveling men patro nize. A trust based on a protected market is boundto charge a price for its product as high as the trade will stand. The price should be based on the cost of production and distribu tion. When the monopolies arc the only dealers in the market, prices will be entirely artlllcial. They can of course be advanced to that price at which consumers will use a substitute or stop using the goods altogether. Such a course is the only protection consumers have, but it is only resorted to as a matter of necessity except in rare cases, such as the resolutions against the use of tea (and its final de struction In Boston harbor), which were made by tlio Revolutionary pa triots. Any artilicial combination in tended to shut out the competition of the world and enrich a few nt the cost of millions of consumers can not last because just as soon as the millions Unci out what it is that is shutting off their supplies and turning them into the coffers of the promoters and mo nopolists they are going to use thoso constitutional rights which are said to insuro liberty and an unobstructed pursuit of happiness. "Not that the trusts are to be destroyed. They con serve energy, cheapen production and distribution and prevent war which is as wasteful in commerce as it is of men. The conference at The Hague is nothing but the consideration of plans for a trust among the nations, for the purpose of an amicable settle ment of differences and the agreement to a non-compulsory arbitration board seems likely to be accepted. With the linn establishment of the arbitration principle tne Chinese wall we have built around our country will be so much in the way that we will probably have the courage to tear it down A New Chancellor. In selecting a man to take Chancel lor MaoLean's place, the. board of regents has a task before it, com plicated by the reasons which have led to the resignation of the live chancellors who have severally under taken and resigned the leadership of the State university. A mi.n of af fairs, of experience, of scholarship, of knowledge, of good judgement and with magnetism and force enough to convince a hundred or more legis lators every two years that his Judge ment and discretion arc infallible, is the man the regents are looking for. It is not certain they will find him. A man so divinely gifted is worth more than live thousand dollars a year. And such a man, if he be will ing to take the salary will hesitate before accepting a mission in which five men of very much more than average ability and scholarship have been misunderstood, have been the victims of politics or of an animosity as persistent as it, is undeserved. The chancellorship of the university of Nebraska, or of any State uni versity. Is not an easy job, and the man so heaven endowed as to be qualified for the duties will hesitate along time before risking thedwigcrs of the position. 1 do not overesti mate the difficulties which the board of regents is looking for a man to con quer. With an exigent faculty, two thousand or more undergraduates steeped in the doctrine that the uni versity is theirs to be governed by them either by resolutions, or in mobs, with a public inclined and urged to oppose tills chancellor or that on political grounds by dis charged employes, witli a legislature whose composition changes every two years, whoso knowledge of the needs of a university is always limited and crude, whose willingness to vote the appropriations is tempered and some times destroyed by a desire to bo known as economical and opposed to appropriations and which lias snub bed Chancellor Canfield and Chanvel lor MacLean because they wero so anxious for the wellfare of the in stitution that they were willing to devote their whole time while the legislature was in session to the en ightincnt of the various committeesl on the needs of the university, its growth, services to the state, and comparative rank among the uni versities of the country, with all these obstacles in the way of success, it is only prudent In even a confident and capable scholar to pause and relied. On the other hand, to encourage the man who will finally accept the in vitation of the regents, there Is the board of regents Itself a devoted body of men who have loyally sup ported Chancellor MacLean, who, so far as I know lias never allowed poli tics to influence cither its discus dons or conclusions, and who are absolutely and without reservation to be depended on while it remains as it is at present constituted. Hut the. next election may effect a change. The student body too, while lacking the savolr falreof the more sophisti cated eastern schools is composed of earnest young men and women, whose scholarship is as sound as that of the undergraduates of any eastern school in the same grade. Then the people of the state are in favor of higher education. Hundreds of high schools arc accredited, which means that their graduates enter the university with no additional examination. At the high school commencement ex ercises all over the state, every year the principals urge the members of the class to enter the university and the good will of the audiences towards the university Is apparent. The fac ulty of the university Is working liar moniously and among its number is an unusual proportion of distinguished men as well as those whose youth Is the only reason of their present and temporary obscurity. With these elements in accord, the development of the university is sure and the man who can stay long enough with us to add the impetus of a powerful per sonality to these forces will deserve his inevitable reward. It is not sur prising, however, in view of the num ber of men who have tried the place and have not entirely succeeded, that the man of genius, who Is the only man who can succeed, refuses when lie reflects upon the number of his pre decessors, to consider the advantages of the invitation the regents will ex tend to him. There are certain characteiistics which a chancellor, of all men, should possess. The first of these is an ability to get through with an over whelming amount of business in a short time. A man with a talent for leaving out everything hut the es sentials of a problem and presenting the subject thus stripped, either to an audience or to a legislative com mittee or to the faculty, or to a deputation of students, will have already conquered the approaches to the situation. Diplomacy is no longer either so popular or so sue cessful as it was before the entire resources of language had been dis covered and its limitations readied. International diplomacy is no longer astralnlng and coloring of words and the plain United States minisetrs have done as much as anyone to demonstrate the value of plain and frank statements. We have passed the youthful stage when we can not bear the truth and the man who adopts, however honest and single hearted he may be, the words and the ways of diplomacy is sure to Incur the suspicion of underestimating our No braska intelligence. In short, there are certain accomplishments which a chancellor must possess, even If he be lame in dead languages and shock ingly uncertain about dates and first editions He must, in addition to the attainments mentioned, know men and that which is neither a boy nor a man, a girl nor a woman an under graduate. He needs tact in modera tion, (if lie uses it iutempcratcly he will acquire the fame of a diplo matist.) He needs courage, confi dence and a modest degree of scholar ship and an unselfish and constant love of letters. 1 do not know that we can hire such a man to come and live among us, but whatever honest and gifted man is elected let us determine to encourage him with our loyalty, to let ills enemies be our enemies, if their enmity effects the institution, and all iirordcrthat we may not add another mortifying page to the his tory of the chancellors of the uni versity of Nebraska. The Foot of the Class. Children who arc slow in develop ing need special attention. In a schoolroom crowded with fifty or sixty pupils it is impossible for even the most conscientious teacher to take the time necessary to quicken the lazy brains Into average activity. Superintendant Saylor in his fare well report to the board of education recommends that something should be done for these children. It has been frequently demonstrated that the children to whom figures and letters are mero abstractions, take hold of the responsibilities of life with unexpected firmness and ca pacity when they leave the school room to earn their own living. For such children the manual training which is slowly bolng introduced is of great value. They lack imagination and they can not sec what the multi plication table and the spelling book have to do with their own lives. To be sure their parents are forever warning them that they will be sure to need Just the kind of knowledge the teacher Is trying to teach them, but parents are always exhorting and in consequence their offspring be comes blase and almost immune to warnings, rebukes and urgings. But through their fingeis, through the actual experience with concrete phe nomena, these children who arc at the foot of the class, have learned things that no one has taken any pains to teach them. Through the work of their hands they will com prehend the relation of numbers to their own activities and return from