THE COURIER. X. ing to state pride when the university catalog announces that freshmen in the Nebraska university have passed the same examination offered to ap plicants for admission to Ann Arbor and Princeton. The national stand ing of the university would be low ered if the entrance examinations were made to fit the actual educa tional conditions in Nebraska and without reference to what other uni versities exact. But in building from the ground on a solid foundation there are substantial advantages. In order to fit the public school scholars for the university, which is only the last and the highest four grades of the public school system, more work is assigned to each grade than its ivcrage pupil Is capable of perform iag wel!. The lack of sincerity in the school curriculum, its variety and the consequent hurry and superficiality of the training produce just the sort of pupil who without knowledge of, or practice in good English, ap plies for admission into the state uni versity. Their general education be iag what is called finished at the atate university, tbey erect a legal, Medical or commercial career on the baky foundation built for them by the public schools under the stimu lating influence of the university. Thus it happens that the court must contend with ambiguous legal papers, and that all sorts of "misleading com-' munications and documents drawn up by young gentlemen to whom Ne braska has given her most munificent gift, are daily annoyances of commer cial intercourse. When a great university like the one in Chicago begins to perceive that her alumni do not think or write lucidly or spell correctly, there is Dome hope that the unnatural system may he corrected. And in time, of course, the Baconian method of mak ing a school system conform to the needs and capacities of the scholar, instead of crowding the scholar into the system, may appeal to the Ne braska educators who have induced school boards to bring high schools into the accredited list, without re gard to the-overwhelming majority who never go beyond the high sch'ool grade and without regard to the edu cational needs and conditions of a Bew state- Jt Jt Mr. Thompson and His Plain Letter. I. E. Thompson has written and is circulating a "plain letter" evidently called for by the prevalent belief that his action after being defeated in the senatorial caucus which nomi nated M. L. Hay ward was such as to call for the defeat of the legislative 'nominees in this county pledged or 'instructed to support him for the senate. By way of excuse for putting forth his letter he therein says: "I make it that those who are seeking the truth, and the success of the re publican party, may know the facts." He would leave the Impression that the truth relative to the facts may be tfound in his letter. The value of Mr. Thompson's statement, the credit that is to be given to his word can be best determined by facts. In an adffidavit sworn to on the 5th day of last Juoc and published in the Journal on the 10th of last June E. E. Hairgrove swears with reference to the signa ture of Thompson being attached to the proposal which it has been re peatedly charged that he signed, as t -Hows: "1 am well acquainted with the signature of D. E. Thompson and know that the signature to that pa per was the signature of D.E. Thomp son." With reference to the same .affidavit of Mr. Hairgrove Mr. Thomp son in his letter says: ' One republi can, a Mr. Hairgrove, a lobbyist, wht? was much opposed to me in the last campaign, made an affidavit that he believed it was my signature." Why does this man over his signature write that Hairgrove swore he believed the signature to the agreement was Thompson's? The searcher after truth will hunt long before he find an ap preciable quantify in Mr. Thompson's "plain letter." J Jt "an 'women." Mr. Bryan said in a just-before elec tion speech to a yelling, interrogative, just-before-election crowd, that as Le traveled up and down and across America, he had noticed what a lot of wan faced women there' were. He attributed their. wanness to a repub lican administration. The poor, wan women in the crowd he was address ing at that time were doubtless en couraged to believe, that when Bryan was president all the conditions which make women pale, such as the constant care of a brood of children and incessant house work, would be changed. Women under a Bryan ad ministration, tbey inferred, would not age nor stale with time. Bryan abne, of all presidential candidates, that ever ran, is willing to promise to change woman's woe to gladness. His promises read like the confident ones of the traveling patent medicine "fakir, but as there are hopeless oges who believe the latter and buy his bread pills, so these wan women, suf fering from one knows not what pre disposition to melancholy or real misery cheered Mr. Bryan and longed to vote for a man who could promise so much so prettily. Jt Jt The Western Toman Voter. The statement that women do not vote where the state constitutions permit them the privilege is disproved by the facts in the case. Some prophet who is the author of a long article upon the history of female suffrage in the four states where it has been tried says: Very few of the western women take mush interest in politics, and not more than fifty per cent of the female vote of these four states will go to the polls .this year." The rea son, he alleges, is that "the novelty has worn off." Nearly every paper in the United States has repeated- in substance his-prediction-and the belief obtains that women in the west take very little in terest in politics. In Wyoming wo men have had full suffrage for thirty one years. The novelty might be sup posed to have worn off there if any where. Yet the official statement of the Wyoming secretary of state says that at the last presidential election ninety per cent of the women voted. Iq Colorado, not long ago, a joint res olution was passed by an almost unan imous vote of both houses of the legis lature declaring, among other things, that ever since the suffrage was granted, women have exercised the privilege as generally as men." Gov ernor Frank Steunenberg of idaho says in a recent article in Harper's Bazar that the women cast forty per cent of the total vote of that state at the last elections, and that their vote promises to increase. Any one who has been reading in the newspapers from day to day the accounts of the enthusiastic crowds of men and women that have greeted both Roosevelt and Bryan in the en franchised states will hardly believe that very few of these western wo men," whether democrats or republi cans, "take very much interest in politics. ' I claim to know just as much about women from a life-long association and from identity of sex as this dis credited prophet, who says that "not more than fifty per cent of the female vote in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and Idaho will go to the polls this year, because the novelty has worn off." The novelty never wears off of politics for woman whether she is free to vote for the officers who ad minister the taxes she pays or not. In England the women who go about to the borough meetings are pelted with stale vegetables and eggs, but that does not weaken' their enthusi asm. .Women are more emotional than men and that sort of opposition only intensities whatever opinions and personal preferences they hold. Neither one party nor the other need -convince - Itself that the women of these western states will not vote. To a woman, they will vote and they will stand in line for hours if neces sary in order to deposit their ballots. I have not seen nor heard of a woman from Colorado who does not intend to vote. My acquaintances and those of others who possess friends in Colorado are not remarkable. They represent the average female resident of Colo rado. Utah is the only western state that possesses a unique female popula tion and the plural wives are meeker than the lone mistress of one heart, Bnd will vote as their Mormon hus band directs. He will get his harem out because Utah is peculiarly and very closely related to politics. No one who has attended state and national federations can have the least doubt that women are interested in politics. They are intensely inter ested in the issues involved and in the candidates. There are no neu trals. Every delegate takes one side or the other openly and with a con viction indiscribable. The large pro portion of female saints in the calen dar suggests the tendencies of women to take sides and die for her choice or faith. She is just as willing now to die for a platform and the incarnate representative of it as she was five hun dred years ago to be burnt alive for the doctrine of the Trinity or for the doctrine of transubstantiation. Jt Jt Imperialism. Mr. C. O. Wbedon has issued a pamphlet on "Mr. Bryan and His Platform." some parts of which for their timeliness and for their con crete replies to the vague, oratorical accusations of Mr. Bryan are here with reprinted: Upon the subject of "Imperialism" and "The Consent of the Governed," Mr. Bryan expresses himself thus in his platform: 'We declare again that all govern ments instituted among men derive their just powers from the consent of the governed; that any government not based upon the consent of the governed is a tyranny, and that to impose upon any people a government of force is to substitute the methods of imperialism for those of a repub lic. We hold that the constitution follows the flag." Imperialism then consists in impos ing upon any people a government to which they do not consent, a govern ment of force. If this is a correct definition of imperialism it has ex isted herefrom the beginning and the complaint against it comes too late to be effective. When our ancestors purchased Louisiana from France did they obtain the consent of the in habitants of that territory? No. Thomas Jefferson was president when that purchase by which 1,171,931 square miles of territory was added to the national domain was made. He bought the territory and the treaty by which the purchase was evidenced provided that the inhabitants of the ceded territory should be incorporated into the union of United States. Was their consent to such incorporation asked? Never. History records that the people of Louisiana were opposed to the transfer and that in New Or leans many wept when they saw the flag to which they had rendered alle giance pulled down. Suppose Jeffer son bad waited for the consent of the governed before acquiring Louisiana, when would the state of Nebraska, carved out of the Louisiana purchase, have furnished a presidential candi date? Raving concluded the purchase of Louisiana without waiting or car ing for the consent of the governed, President Jefferson on the 31st day of October, 1803, approved an act of con gress wbirb gave him imperial power over the newly acquired territory. That act is to be found in the second volume of the United States statutes at 'large, page 245. It authorized the president to take possession of the newly acquired territory and to main tain order therein to employ any part of the army and navy of the United States or of the militia authorized by the act of March 1st of that year. The act provided that until the ex piration of that session of congress, unless provision for the temporary government of the territory should sooner be made, by congress, all the military,- civic and judicial powers exercised by the officers of the exist ing government of that territory should be vested in such persons and exercised in such manneras the presi dent should direct, for maintaining and protecting the inhabitants of Louisiana in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property and religion. W.hat greater power could be con ferred upon an emperor than all the military, civil and judicial powers of a government? Jefferson derived none of these powers from the gov erned nor did he acquire them by their consent. They were conferred upon him by congress and without any carping about "imperialism" or the "consent of the governed," that man who wrote the Declaration Inde pendence accepted these powers and exercised them. When we acquired Florida by the treaty of February, 1819. and thereby added to the national domain 50,268 square miles of territory, the presi dent sent Andrew Jackson to occupy the country and to make and execute laws for the government of the in habitants; was the consent of the governed asked or solicited? Not at all. We never sought nor obtained the consent of the Mexicans to the an nexation of the 600,000 square miles of territory acquired from Mexico. Upon the people of that territory we imposed a government of force and when they revolted and murdered the governor appointed over them by President Polk, the army inflicted severe and merited punishment with out waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation on earth. The 577,390 square miles of Alaskan territory we purchased from Russia for $7,200,000 and we never thought to enquire whether the people consented to the government which we imposed upon them or not. And now we have acquired from Spain by the treaty of Paris 119,868 square miles of territory for $20,000,000. So great a bargain, so valuable an ac quisition that Mr. Bryan's duty to his country, as he viewed it, impelled him to resign his commission as com mander of the Third Nebraska, then about to embark for Cuba, and hasten to Washington to exert his influence in favor of the ratification of the treaty. That treaty contained ths clause. "The civil rights and political status of the native inhabitants of 'A -- V V -j fc:jcSLxrJt,h!,ai:i,wlii , hu.j;