THE COURIER. s tlcians. "After the resignation of Secretary Bllsli and the appointment of Mr. Hitchcock, it was evident that there were serious differences between Davis and his chief." Then the former said he required a vacation, and, enjoying all the honors and pres tigeofa United States government official, he visited the Boers. The op portunity to become conspicuous was tempting and the subject of this sym pathetic sketch was not the man to resist It. He returned to America, resigned and took the lecture plat form. Before retiring he started a vice presidential boom for himself as the "coming Missourian' and the President's personal favorite. Th President objected to the false posi tion Mr. Davis thrust upon him, and let it be known that he was rigidly opposed to the election of any federal office holder as delegate to the con vention. This rebuff and the failure of his conspiracy to worm himself Into another's place, are more obvious reasons for Mr. Davis' withdrawal from the party which has fed him too long. J Competition. The common people who never talk about the common people, who never pose as willing to be butchered for more liberty to others and more jus tice are hoping that the council will grant a franchise to the second tele phone company which has asked for it. The establishment of another company here means an immediate, fifty per cent reduction of rentals which in the aggregate is a saving of over thirty thousand dollars a year to the citizens, most of whom are the great common people referred to. The suspicion is gathering strength that the telephone company already here are making extraordinary exer tions and 'using all their influence to keep the new company out. The former has charged exorbita.it rentals for so long that it is alarmed at the prospect of a competitor and anxious to use what influence and power the company has to keep out competition. I hope the council can mane it clear that tne company which has erected its poles on our streets and charged an exorbitant rental for so long is notlnc? influence which prevents the council from favorably considering an application from a new company. A reduction of rates is within the power of the council. If this were done relief from present existing con ditions would be secured without the bother of a double telephone system. Jt jit Modus Operandi. It is very doubtful if the Tired Mothers Excursion and Rest, ma neuvre will have any effect on the election of a United States senator next winter. Whose Business Is It? "With the democratic presidential candidate, a resident of Lincoln, it is likely that the state house grounds will be the place for many open air addresses before the summer is over. With the present carelessness in regard to public property that exists at the state house some of the fine trees which have been planted by previous servants of the people will be entirely destrojed. The two large evergreen trees of twenty or thirty years' growth next the band stand were tilled "on Tuesday night with large boys who backed and tore the branches in order to secure com- fortable seats. Not one of the mob of janitors who are employed at the - state house cared whether the trees were destroyed or not and apparently no official elected by the people to care for their property cared either. J spoke to a police officer who was lounging about in characteristically indolent fashion. lie replied that it was none of his business. Mr. Mc- Intee at the state house when inform ed of the damage already done to these beautiful trees, was equally in different and impudently replied to a plea for future protection, with an intimation that the state house grounds arc no republican's affairs. In his speech on Tuesday evening on the Capitol grounds, Mr. Bryan said: "There is a privilege in being an American citizen, and there is re sponsibility commensurate with the privilege. If we lived in a land where a king thought for us we would feel no responsibility for the action of that king. But we live in a land where the people determine the poli cy. We live in a land where the citi zen impresses his own opinion upon the government, where the policv of the government may be determined by one vote." It is said that Mr. Bryan has large influence with the state house officials Consequently, he might be able to teach them that a man once elected to office is attending to the duties of that office for the whole people and not exclusively for those who voted for him. AH' the citizens have an interest in the preservation of the Capitol and the trees which have required so long to grow and so much cultivation. Republicans still pay taxes. But when they venture to call official attention to the vandalism such as that perpetrated by Com mandant Fowler at the Milford Home or in the case just referred to, there seems to be nn privilege in being an American citizen. We are reminded that we have no responsibility com mensurate with the privilege, that we do not live in a land where the peo ple determine the policy, nor wfcere the citizen impresses his own opinion upon the government. The people of this community would take it very kindly if Mr. Bryan would occasional ly say some of these things to those custodians of the state's property who regard their surroundings as inaliena ble conveniences to use for thdir own comfort irrespective of the time and taxes they have cost. jt J Quivera Legends. A compilation of the Indian tales of this part of the country is promis ed by E. E. Blackman, the publisher of Qui vera Legends. About all that survives of the early occupation of the "shallow-water" country Is in the names of the streams. There are few hills and fewer rocks that the nomads named for us and the prairie which rolls in every direction, indKtinguish ably, could only be named by the white men who surveyed and marked it off into sections and counties. If the publisher qfQuivera Legends fulfil his promise after a scientific and scholarly pattern the historical and scholarly value of the magazine is unquestionable. The Belgian Hare. The hare was a" pest in Australia and numerous expedients were adopt ed to drive it out of the continent. Periodical drives were organized, when thousands were slaughtered, in fected hare were loosed to start an epi demic among the species.the mongoose a justly celebrated hare and "snake killer was imported from India and became another nuisance, but noth ing was effective until it was dis covered that the hare was good to eat. The pot hunter has made the hare scarce in Australia, and the farmers are now asking for game laws includ ing the hare. There is no historical instance of a food animal becoming a pest. The timid, frightened little things that write editorials on the daily papers about the probabilities of a hare pest in this country might as well be shocked by the amount of food consumed by, and the rate of in crease of sheep or rattle or hogs. All food animals are fond of grain and grass, but they transmute them into a more valuable food product. The Belgian hare has provided the millions of German, French and Eng lish peasants with an occasional meal of meat. The flesh of the hare is ten der and very nutritious. His bones cook up into a soup and it is said by those who have experimented with broths for the sick, that hare soup is especially easy of digestion. Since the hare has been accepted as a staple meat we might as well be alarmed over the large coveys of a prairie chjeken or of the quail. Both haunt the grain fields and eat quantities of grain, but it is a rare farmer who will allow pot hunters on his farm. J An Expensive Rest. Almost all gifts are paid for by the recipient. Except those donations from parents to their children or from members of the same family to each other or from intimate friends, both donor and recipient know when the gift is received, acknowledged, and sometimes enjoyed and sometimes not, that the pay day will surely ar rive, It is not always possible for the very poor who receive a gift to pay their own debts. In such cases a community sometimes rewards with its esteem the man who lets his bene factions be known, and sometimes it rewards him with votes. But com munities are not to be depended upon iu this regard. Lincoln is a suspic ious community. In the last twenty or thirty years, and especially in' the last five years, Lincoln people have seen a deal of politics, and they could pass an examination on the tricks and manners of the latter. Mr. Thompson really under-esti-mates the price of a United States senatorship, and the inteligence of the voters who can send him to Wash ington or keep him here, a hope-deferred suppliant. About three or four years ago it occurred to Mr. Thompson that if he were United States senator he would be a distinguished man and would enjoy the consideration and deference that his Nebraska constituents at least would pay him. He was ham pered by a record then as he is now. He was something of a boss and men who had felt his heavy hand while he was securing privileges and bargains forthe gas company from the city would have to be conciliated. Then his close friends and allies were not of a calibre and a character that United States senators are apt to be sur rounded by. Nevertheless Mr. Thump son doubtless decided that he could reach the altitude of a United States senator by making various and con stant and well advertised donations to worthy objects. In pursuance, he got up an excursion to the Trans Mississippi exposition for the child ren of poor people who had not visit ed the show; he gave various barrels of flour to the convenient '"poor," anc he loaned the state $20,000 to bring the First Nebraska boys "back to the land that bred them." His anxiety to give something large and monu mental is so apparent that when a site for the new library was needed, it was immediately assumed that Mr. Thompson would give it and he did offer two sites. While Mr. Thompson was In Texas his allies of the old Mayor Graham days, who know nothing of the tem per and cannot estimate the tone or number of those who oppose Mr. Thompson, got up the Abraham Lin coln club celebration which resulted in Mr. Hall's production of the four teen affidavits proving Mr. Thomp son's offer of sale of his vote and in fluence to the populist party. On his return Mr. Thompson recog nized that it was his play and he is now organizing a Tired Mothers' Ex cursion to Beatrice. A Scandal. It was not Mrs. Cohen of Utah who did a cake-walk at the Kansas City convention. Mrs. Cohen behaved very well. Some emotional woman imper sonated Mrs. Cohen and every club woman who read of her performance in the next morning's papers, were shocked. They were willing to giveup for the moment the principle no taxa tion without representation. But it was all a mistake. The woman who danced and sang with disheveled locks was a fanatic who had wander ed in from the street. She was not a delegate and the morals which have been drawn from her conduct do not apply. Visitors to the convention report that Mrs, Cohen was as modest and shrinking as Mr. David B. Hill himself. It is a relief to know that politics alone cannot make a woman forget gentle birth and breeding and the proprieties of life and it has been completely demonstrated by compet ent witnesses that Mrs. Cohen's con duct was unexceptionable. V. Reserve. Lincoln people do not howl them selves hoarse when the city is honor ed by a visit from distinguished 1 democrats, not because they do not " appreciate the honor, but because we are a non-emotional people. Army officers taking their com mands from one coast to another in the late war, complained that when they reached Nebraska, although the people surrounded the station there was little cheeririg.and that of a halt hearted sort. When great musicians, actors or actresses visit Nebraska they complain that their fame and their genius are wasted on a bucolic, stolid people, unwilling to confess that the music or the acting has moved them. I think we are a sophisticated people. Some of us have been to Chicago, a few to New York, and a very few to Europe. But we are unappreciative. Like the rustic who visits jl city for the first time, we have steeled our selves against surprises and the dis play of any emotion whatever. It is therefore not because the in-V" habitants are mostly republican fel low townsmen of the democratic vice- presidential candidate that his dieting uishe. visitors excite only an agricul tural stare, but because, take us for all in all, we are cold-blooded and ungenerous. Patriotism, heroism, self-sacrifice, are as spectacles. They do not affect us. The one man to whom Nebras kans are more indebted than to any other, who gave up his reputation and then his life that Nebraska troops might be prepared to fight a worthy tight and then to fight it, has not re ceived any adequate recognition. The attempt to secure the surplus remaining from the amount subscrib ed to the celebration of the First Ne braska for the Stotsenburg fund was partially foiled by the de determination to divert these funds to the uses of the state fair. WhenCA. it is demonstrated that only the ex- -4 & 1 & y J