THE COURIER. X THE COURIER, Official Organ of the Nebraska State Federatioo of Women's Cubs. KXTBBBOIK THX KMTOmCI AT LINCOLN At SBOOHD CLAMMATTXK. PUBLISHED EVEBY BATDBDAY -BT- tie mm hunk iid nblissik go Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARMS. Editor Subscription Kates In Advance. Per annum ; tl'OO Six months '. 75 Three months.: 50 One month SO Single copies 05 Tnt Cocaixa will not be responsible for rol tmtsry communications unless accompanied by return postage. ..... Communications, to receive attention, must be sixned by the full name of the writer, not snerely as a guarantee of good faith, but for wnbUcation if adTisable, r OBSERVATIONS. g OBSBRVA 1 i Highway Rights. A suggestion made by Harper's Weekly that roadside advertisements are worth one half a cent apiece has denuded a mile of country of dlsfigur iog advertisements tacked to trees or glued? to rocks. Advertisers ruth lessly destroy beauty up and "down the rcad-sider-.tba people's parks fences and trees are disfigured by tall, green, red and yellow letters. Be sides the outrage to nature it is an inroad of one advertiser upon the rights of others. For the highway belongs to all and can only be mon opolized by gift of a franchise, pre sented by a misguided council to a corporation. It is not a path through a wilderness that is valuable but the track beaten by thousands of people, and the side of the path is a good advertising medium because pedes trians have eyes and their bodies must be clothed, fed and medicated. Since the days when the strongest built a castle and enclosed all the land not similarly enclosed by an other strong man, the rights of the many are ignored and made into priv ileges for the few. The distruction of a free people's view by patent-medicine advertisers is a survival of feud al aggression which a meek and long suffering people still endure.. Imperialism. President McKinley's expression of this country's purposes in regard to China should be enough to refute the charges of imperialism made against him. All we want in China is an measurable treasure and opportuni ties stimulated the imaginations of men. And this crusade of the na tions of Christendom to China re sembles that other march, undertaken at the end of the eleventh century, when from all parts of Europe, says William of Malmesbury, "thousands upon thousands, hurried to engage in the holy war." The most distant islands and savage countries, were inspired to join the army, Welshman, Scotchman, Dane, Norwegian, forsook-their homes to join the proces sion of 6,000.000 men, who went to wrest the holy sepulchre from the Turk. In their progress they got acquainted and their -superstitious, bigoted horror of the -foreigner -was weakened and commerce was tremen dously stimulated. In this new cru sade against China the Turk himself wishes to join. It is as truly now as then a march of civilization against barbarism and isolation except for Germany and Russia, who will doubt less be rewarded with territory for their -participation in the Chinese reformation. It is as unwise for a nation as for a person to refuse to be governed by the logic of events. After the Spanish American war began the United States was obliged to accept the rules of war and abide by its conquests. The party of the opposition was anx ious that this country should champ ion the cause of Cuba. War declared, it must be ended as quickly as pos sible. The destruction of the Spanish fleet "must' destroy a power which Spain controlled with an ocean be tween itself and colony. The sinking of the Spanish fleets in the Pacific and in the Atlantic cut the wire between Spain and her col onies and the war was over. The anti imperialists pretend to think that we should "have fought"3patnin her own way, that we had no business in Fill pine waters, etcetera, etcetera. Tbey do not light their own battles so, if they ever win any. The anti-imberialists will not de line imperialism. They recognize that it is a bogy and will not bear defini tion. A man of intelligence when driven into a corner and in the in terests of free discussion will define the word, but no two antis agree, so that, republicans are still ignorant of the meaning of the charge pre ferred against the administration. Man's Summer Rig. Cool looking people increase the sum of coolness. Men owe a debt to the community to look cool. The or gandies, lawns, dimities, laces, light parasols, and white hats that flutter up and down the streets are cooling as well as cool. Tbey are the summer as much as the trees, the grass, the flowers, the birds and tbe breeze. If it were not for tbe uncomfortable, apoplectic, choleric masculine inhabi tants that uiake Lincoln look like a hot place, this city might very easily acquire a summer-resort reputation. Tbe nights are cool, there are no mosquitoes, tbe flees will not leave the dogs and there is a wandering, onen door, wide enough to let in our produce and manufactures and pro- yet withall searching breeze that will lection for citizens of the United States, who for either p'easure or business are In China. Through no missionary intention the one hun dred millions of Chinese will be ele vated and educated through the fact of the open door braced open and kept open by the powers. The world has threatened China's isolation for a hundred jears. The Chinese epoch of intercourse with the world has ar rived. There is a stirring of the na tions like that at the end of the cool anything not swathed in and sealed by woo1. The only reason why men do not discard woolen coats in summer is because they would rather stifle, they would rather invite a heat stroke than be called effeminate. A long time ago women appropriated everything in masculine attire that she thought she needed, collars, tics, vest, coat, hats and shoes. All of tbe distinctively ugly haberdashery such as the silk tile and the Prince Albert coat women have let alone. And her fiftentlrcentary when" America" was evident disapproval"har done "much discovered and a new world with im- to make them unpopular. In tbe summer time tbey are not worn by any man of sense and savoir faire ex cept on extra ceremonious occasions unknown to small towns'" remote from fashion. Their use is confined to traveling fakirs and to professional men who desire to advertise an artificial, superfluous and unseason able dignity. Some-male. persons with the histor ical and geographical sense, realize that, the Esquimaux dress in furs because the arctic region is a cold place, and the Zulu in a loin cloth because the equator is near the fire. These people desire to conform to their own climate, which for a sea son every year is arctic- and for an other season is equatorial. -They are hindered in a very sensible design by otber men who ridicule the would-be-cool and insist that they wear tbe polar costume tbe year through. The latter made a mock and a martyr out of tbe first man that dared to carry an umbrella in the streets of London, imperturbable JosephrHanway who was in ill health and desired to pro tect, himself from the rain. Before his time tbe umbrella had been mon opolized by women. His peculiar quality of mind was not disturbed when the gamins called him ' "Sissy" or the seventeenth century slang equiva'ent fur the word which means effeminacy. He carried his umbrella and at first there were only a few brave enough to imitate him. But the most sensitive can carry it now without fear of ridicule. A garment similar to a shirt waist is now constructed for men. It is built on masculine lines and needs no coat. It is not made to be covered by a coat and is quite as presentable. Several, and perhaps many years will pass beforermen will consent to 'wear it. But just as soon as a few of tbe hrave have broken it in, there will be just as many shlrt-waisted men as there are now shirt waisted women. o J A Human Document. The Declaration of Independence was written, most, of it, by one man and subscribed by many. The man who wrote it was enamoured of free and equal. He used these words as the French revolutionists used, Liberti egalite.fraternite to work a spell. He furnished Americans with an ideal but it is idle to say we have attained it. Man is not born free and equal but bound by heredity, custom, tra dition and superstition and from the top to the bottom of human heights there are inequalities of all degrees. The document was written in an age of fine writing, when sophomores set tbe style and it does not mean very much. Had the Revolutionary he roes not given it vogue and authority it would not still mean anything to this literal, uopoetic, down.on-oratory generation. It is only sacred as a historical document and as a speci men of the best thing tbe continental congress ever publisbed. As a dec laration of the truth about man's birth it is a lie. and as a document marking the limits of the growth of the United States it is not trust worthy. J j Teachers' Wages. With an ascending scale of prices teachers' wages in the Lincoln public schools have not been raised. The same argument which induced the board to lower them applies now to their increase. Then prices were fall ing and salaries too and it was said that with the same amount of money the teacher could buy goods that in prosperous times cost her one-third Trnfre." Shels paying IhTprlce of pros perous times now and her salary should be correlated with the corn temporary prices. The raise asked for requires an in crease in the" salary appropriation of only $5,000. Tbe teachers who meek ly accepted the cut and went on with their work deserve consideration now that prosperity is circling about our heads meditating upon a suitable spot upon which tonight and abide. J The Famine in India. Pictures in the missionary periodi cals of the Indian farmer plowing with a bullock and a pointed stick for a plow explain the famine in India. It is not English occupation, for the famine districts are the northern states where Englishmen are scarce. Modern agricultural implements, and modern methods of enriching erapor rished land is what India needs. The farmers keep no stock, only a few bul locks which they use in plowing and harvesting. They have, therefore, little manure and the exhausted land produces less than fifty years ago and it is feeding many times the number of people. In the famine of 1866 two million people died, in 1877 more than five millions died. There is some--thing wrong in the agricultural sys tem where famines can occur every eleven years and find millions of peo ple unprovided for emergencies. In dia's exhausted soil must be' enriched and induced to yield what other soils, cared for with educated agricultural intelligence, yields. Budbists will not eat meat and ir relevant as it may seem famine is dep'eting the population, because he soil lacks animal enrichment. Break a cog in the wheel of growth, food and decay and nature revenges her self cruelly, inevitably, and takes seven fold of that which she has been deprived of. The Telephone Ordinance. In dealing with real estate agerits, or with any man who represents both buyer and seller, it is sometimes dif ficult to discover whose interests he represents For instance, property is listed with a real estate dealer to rent or sell for the highest price obtain able. Renters and purchasers go to this same man for bargains. He charges one or both of his customers a percent The ethics of the business are unknown to me, but on tbe prin ciple that he is the fortunate one who sells something and not he who ac quires it, the real estate agent charges his commission to the former, no matter how real a bargain the purchaser ha secured. The forego ing is not intended as a reflection upon real estate agents, but as a ref erence to the difficulties of their busi ness and what a nice balance is re quired in adjusting their relations 'to the opposing interests of their two classes of customers. Of course it is not the same thing with members of tbe city council. They are elected by the citizens 'to look after the city. They are counsel and the citizens are their clients, whatever the cause. They are sup posed to meet once a week to admin ister and audit the affairs of the city from the standpoint of the city and not to aid any corporation or indi vidual in its or his private designs against the citizens for the purposes of gain. There should be no suspicion that the council is capable of considering any subject from any other point 'of view than the city's. Yet in the council's dealing with the two tele phone companies there is, apparently, a lack of zeal for the 'city's interest "and a'tender regard "for that "of '(he "Nebraska Telephone Company. It Is 3 5 ' 1 i Y -r-4 A .4 it V - e