. e l V A K X k VOL. XV., NO. XXIX V.-' v'-- V": ' ESTABLISHED IN 1886 PRICB FIVE CGNTS t . " f-48r' t; Si'. 7 LINCOLN, NBBR., SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1000. THE COURIER, Official Organ of the Nebraska State Federation of Women's Clubs. KBTTBRXDIX THE POSTOFFICB AT LINCOLN AS SECOND CLASS MATTES. PUBLISHED EVEBY SATURDAY TIE C0DR1ER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING GO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARRIS. Editor Subscription Kates In Advance. Per annum f 1 00 8iz months 75 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 The Courier will not be responsible for vol nntary communications unless accompanied by return postage. Communications, to receive attention, must be signed bj the loll name of the writer, not merely as a guarantee of good faith, bat for publication if advisable. Xi, y- OBSERVATIONS. 8 tfi r 2 OBSERVAT Expansion. The Swiss people can see the ad vantages of becoming one of the American federation of states. The editor of the Allgemeine Schweizer Zeltuug says: In spite of dark sides which are also found there, the United States is full of the air of free dom. Switzerland would lose noth ing if she should become a state of the United States of America. It is a well known fact that the several states of the American union are much more independent than the several cantons of Switzerland, and our country, by such an alliance would sacrifice none of her liber ties. All she would have to do v would be to send her representa tives to Washington. Economically and politically she would gain every thing. Itremainsto.be seen what the Americans would say about an alliance with Switzerland. For a long time they have tried to gain a foot hold in Europe. Every citizen in Switzerland who has the welfare of his country at heart should ponder this alliance." Democracy among the Swiss is highly developed. It has been grow ing since the beginning of the con federacy in 1315, when the mountain eers concluded a successful reDellion against the Austrian tyrant Since then the Swiss republic has grown by mutual agreement and by armed con quest. Realizing that the oriental people are about to be compelled to accept liberty of the kind that Is grown in Switzerland and developed in America this Swiss editor got the idea that it is not impossible for the people of the Alps and the Jura to join'the federated states of America. The democratic stronghold north of Italy, west of Austria, south of Ger many, and east of France, would be amalgamated with the biggest ex periment in democracy ever at tempted. J j How to Preach. The determined refusal of Chicago employers of boys to accept the sleepy, red-eyed kind that smoke cigarettes is having more influence in suppress ing the sale of cigarettes than all the laws ever passed and all the anti-cigarette leagues ever formed.The Chicago boys have discovered that they can not be employed in counting room, office or store if their fingers are dis colored by the yellow stain of the cigarette. The cigarette fiend has heard from his mother and his teach er and a sister or two, the evils of cigarettes. His mirror has shown him red eyes and the daily lassitude of the victim of a narcotic has made him more and more indolent, but none of these arguments has had any effect. When the time comes that he must earn his living, or help earn it, and the uninterested, business man, to whom he applies, examines his yel lowed fingers, or takes a whiff of his hair and clothes and declines his ser vices, the cigarette smoker begins to think that, there may be valid objec tions to the habit. If Lincoln em ployers who are served by boys whose wits are dulled and whose energies are relaxed by cigarettes, would do what the Chicago employers have, such concerted action would do more to lessen cigarette smoking here than weeks of preaching and dozens of leagues. The City and Corporations. In granting to any corporations or any individual a right or franchise to use the streets of this city as though they were the private property of corporation or individual, the coun cil represents the city alone. The streets belong to the citizens. They have been heretofore leased without rental to various companies. The to the man who weaves a network of wire over the city and puts in a tele phone service at four dollars a tele phone per month. Citizens might more properly pay a bonus to the grocer whose carts bring them groceries or to the dry goods merchant who arranges rest rooms in his store and incurs large expense just to please that part of the public which passes by or enters his establishment. The merchants and the manufacturer sup port a town. They make it a good place to live in. Their enterprise, which receives no municipal encour agement or recognition, largely sup ports the schools and churches of this city. They are doing business for what money there is in it. They charge for their goods or service what price, a fluctuating market, the law of supply and demand, and their com petitors fix. They ask no favors from the city whose healthy functional ac tivity depends on them. The gas com pany, the traction company, and the telephone company fix their unfluctu ating prices without reference to com petition and with no special or oner ous reference to the good will or con venience of the public. The wires of the gas and electric light company, of the telephone company and of the traction company are a menace to the lives of the people whose streets and alleys they occupy. The ugly poles of all three companies disfigure the city. Yet we suffer these things from pur veyors of transportation, sound and light because of an aboriginal notion that the man who sells light, sound or heat is entit'ed to more consider ation than the man who sells flour by the pound or calico by the yard. The company which occupies the middle of the street or the sides of the streets and alleys should pay a yearly rental to the city. The poles and wires would be no less ugly and dangerous if their owners paid a ground rental, but the price of spoil ing a view is apt to lessen the com plaints from abutting property own ers. Merchants must buy or rent ground and erect or rent bulldinge in which companies have provided certain ser- to sell their produce. We do not al- vices for which the citizens have paid the full price. The companies have charged what price they could get without reference to their own free occupancy of the people's premises. It is not expected that any company will pay for a franchise that can be procured at the price of a little argu ment with councilman. No man and no collection of men will pay for a franchise when talk and influence will get it for nothing a year. The notion is an old one that the citizens of a town must give a bonus to a man who will supply them with artificial light at so much much per foot, or to the man who digs a well and erects a pump to supply them with water at so much per gallon, or to the man who lays rails in the street and places cars on them to carry pass engers at five cents per passenger, or low a fruit or shoe-string merchant with his whole stock in a basket or tied about his person to sell his wares on the highways without first procur ing a license, which is, in effect, a rent to use the highway as a place of business. Even the expressmen who make a precarious living by mov ing heavy articles from one part of the city to another and thereby "serve the people" and "enhance the value of property," pay a license. Yat since Lincoln was first settled, the council, in accordance with cus tom, has given first to the gas com pany, then to the street car company and last to the telephone company, the free occupation of the streets. Would it not be wise for the coun cil now, before any other company applies for the free use of the streets, to serve notice on old mendicants and new ones that the streets are the city's and the franchises thereof are for sale. The city needs the money. Taxes are burdensome because those who enjoy the largest privileges get them for nothing. But each new general man ager or board of directors that desires to sell something to the citizens through a pipe in the streets or to convey them from place to place by means of wires and poles and a track in the middle of the street naturally expects to . be given the privilege be cause Lincoln always has been piped, tracked, poled and wired without rental or consideration of any sort. Sophomore Oratory. As a matter of current experience sophomores In any college or univer sity of the first class no longer use extravagant or hyper-poetic forms of speech. Mr. Bryan has studied the oratorical models of a generation that is gone and he still uses a phrase ology which scholars and modern ora tors have discarded. But Mr. Bryan Is a magnetic speaker, he has a won derful voice, smooth, melodious, ten der, that effortlessly carries his syl lables to the furthest corner of large auditoriums. He has a frank, manly, American, open-hearted, open-minded way about him that, I know no definition for except "temperament." May Irwin has the same tempera ment: When she appears before an audience, she takes for granted she has seen all the people before, takes for granted that they like her, and in a second, they know that she likes tticm. She is not upon the stage and they in the seats. Whatever impal pable, nameless barrier there Is be tween them, May Irwin tears down and immediately, before she has spok en, sLe is with friends. Americans like this. The humblest prefers that his humility should be ignored. Mr. Bryan has exactly this effect upon an audience. His smile includes the humblest and his presence is cheer ful and stimulating. The opening words of his speech are always simple. He is on a level with those he speaks to. It is said that in a conference wjth the fusion governor and other state officials of Nebraska, he is haughty, isolate and dictatorial, but no republicans have ever seen him otherwise than cheerful, convinced of a high destiny, and sure of his un derstanding ot the needs of the peo ple and of his ability to cure a'l their ills by some legislation either for silver or against expansion and trusts. No other actress possesses May Ir win's instantaneous gift of conquer ing an audience though she may have no more than the usual allotment of private friends. Mr. Bryan is the only politician whose smile and greet ing from the platform creates an im mediate response. Other men and orators have to convince an audience of their sanity by logical and states menlike arguments. Other political orators must demonstrate their good ;i