y K i VOL. XVI., NO. XI ESTABLISHED IN 18S6 PRICE FIVK CBNTS I I LINCOLN. NBBR., SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1901. THE COURIER, EXTKBBDIK THK P08TOFTICK AT LINCOLN AS BBOOHD CLASS MATTKK. PUBLISHED EVEBY SATURDAY BT IK CMRIER WIIII1G IID HUII6 GO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. 6AKAH B. HABB1S. Editor Subscription Rates. Per annum II 50 Six months 100 Rebate of fifty cents on cash payments Single copies 05 Tm Comes will not be'responsible for vol mntary communications unless accompanied by retain postage. .Communications, to receive attention, most be aimed by tne full name of the writer, not merely as a guarantee of good faith, bat for publication if advisable. : OBSERVATIONS. 1 4oo The Penitentiary. The good people of New York tire shocked to tlnd out that Sing Sing is breeding tuberculosis and typhoid fever. In spite of all the efforts to lessen the ravages of pulmonary con sumption the ratio of deaths from this disease has steadily increased in the prison. Expert investigation into the very favorable conditions for theprop agation of this disease in the SingSing prison, has established the fact that a factory for the developement of the germs could do no more satisfactory work than is done at Sing Sing. The ' prison was. built in 1S24, just seventy five years ago on made land between the New York Central railroad tracks andthelludson river; and the main floor is only rive feet above the water level. Its stone walls are two feet thick and the windows are narrow slits, penitentiary style. Light travels in straight lines and a narrow slit between walls two feet thick will admit a direct ray of sunlight only for a few minutes eacli day when the sun and the earth sustain certain ex act relations. Not once in seventy five years has a ray of sunlight touched the damp cells which gen erally hold two men, except in the case of a prisoner condemned to death, who is granted the solitude, and the space of a whole cell. The .cells are three feet three inches wide by six feet and nine inches deep and a trifle more than six feet high. Each cell contains about 145 cubic feet of airspace. The amount of air neces sary to each individual is variously estimated, but in England no individ ual cell contains less than 8i0 cubic feet of air and the school book phys iology assigns one thousand to two .thousand feet to each individual. The old Nebraska penitentiary cells were four feet wide by seven feet deep and seven feet high, allowing 196 cubic feet to a man, but most of the cells were occupied by two men. Therefore eacli man gets only 98 feet of the two thousand feet of air he is entitled to as a human being. His share might be decreased somewhat on account of his crime against soci ety but to starve his lungs with only one twentieth of ins proper share of atmosphere is a crime which society is committing against 287 prisoners now confined in the Nebraska peni tentiary. That they are starving for air their pallid, clammy faces prove. Doubtless all of the prisoners deserve to be restrained, but tiie idea that the prisoner is a maD who can be tortured has been relinquished, and is only practiced by mobs, thoroughly brutal gaolers or boards that build prisons. The ventilation at the Nebraska peni tentiary was so bad that it makes a visitor, unaccustomed to its vileness, faint. The sewage and drainage of the building is bad and the principle element of foulness is not the fumes of cooking. Cells into which the sun shine can not penetrate, and out ol the way of direct draughts of air get foul and fouler. Sunshine and fresh air are a cure for tuberculosis, and by the same token, the dead, damp air of the Nebraska prison propagates the germs of tuberculosis. What is the use of pronouncing a building all right, when it is all wrong? The Nebraska state peniten tiary is in an unhealthy location. It is built on an old fashioned unsani tary plan. Little provision is made for the comfort of the prisoners. The warden's and officers' rooms are large light and airy, but the cell moms are gloomy and pervaded by an indescrib able but very offensive odor. We have no right to keep even criminals in an unhealthy place. All prisons of the old-fashioned Sing Sing type were demolished long ago in Great Britain. A prisoner has just the same right to good and suilic ient air as he has to good and sufficient food. It is quite as inhuman to starve lungs as it is to starve stom achsor to dole out to the. prisoners poisonous food. The New Cells. Just at this time when the old cell house at the penitentiary has burned down, it is very fortunate that the Governor of Nebraska is a man who has made a study of the relations of the state, or of society to criminals. The new cell-room will contain steel cells with smooth surfaces that do not soak up moisture and tilth like stone walls and mortar. Built with a tall stack or chimney, in the cell-room, the heavy, foul air will be drawn up and with the new plumbing which will be introduced into every cell the new room will not be such a disgrace to the state. Why, the dungeons or the middle ages, where men rotted in darkness and foul air were not very much worse than the cells provided by Nebraska for convicts. In spite of the youthfulness of Ne braska as a state, in spite of the alti tude and the nervous tension that in creases the activity of our minds and bodies, Nebraskans are a conservative unemotional people. Nil admirari is their motto. Two years ago when a bat talion of soldiers, parsed through Ne braska, on its way from the Cuban to the Pilipineside of the Spanish American war, the crowds at the stations watched the trains pull in and out, with characteristic Nebraska phlegm. There was noshouting.no wild unrestrained tossing of hats into the air, no demonstrations such as the troops had been greeted by in the trans-Mississippi states. The men and officers asked the reason of the silence, and were told that "It is our way." Perhaps the resentment which regards the distinction gained by an other as a personal reflection on our own obscurity has something to do with the apathy with which measures of reform, and the occasional presence of men and women who have signal ized themselves, are received. At any rate frequent reports of the dis graceful condition of the penitentiary has failed to arouse any interest. And unless the cell house had burned down it would doubtless have been very difficult to secure an appropri ation from the legislature to make the wards of the state more comfort able. The convicts have reason to be thankful therefore for the lire which destroyed stone cells soaked with the accumulated smells and disease germs of years. " Thoroughly Obnoxious." A very competent forewoman of a 'ong established publishing house in this city once discharged a printer without alleging any cause of com plaint. The president of the local printers union wrote a letter to the forewoman informing her that it was the custom of the union to request In such cases an explanation from the employer. The man's character was familiar to the union and it was only as a matter of form that she was re quested to explain his dismissal. After considering her trials with the printer the forewoman wrote the union that she dismissed be cause he was "thoroughly obnoxious." Without specifying the daily annoy ances caused by a spiteful, unreliable employe, the forewoman summed up the effect of the man's presence in the composing room, his constant complaints and petty tyranny exer cised over his associates by the quoted phrase. The president and every member of the union who knew the man understood exactly what she meant. Many a man and woman lose their jobs because they make themselves "thoroughly obnoxious." Overween ing self-esteem and a constant desire to attain a salary and an eminence which they do not earn and arc not fitted for, a temperament which be littles the work and merits of others, and an absolute absence of the sense of propriety, are the characteristics of a character thus described. Men receiving a mucli higher salary than the printer lose their jobs because they can not resist the temptation to render themselves "thoroughly obnox ious" to the company or individual that employs them. In investigating the specific caus.es why such an indi vidual was let out, a committee of in vestigation frequently blames an em ployer because a committee from the outside has not sustained an em ployer's relations with the ousted, has no personal acquaintance with the employe in question and docs not realize the force of the description "thoroughly obnoxious" as applied to the dismissed. The Cloture Rule. Senator Flatt is as much of a nuis ance, and the same sort, of a nuisance in the United States senate as Croker is in New York. One is a republican and the other a. democrat, but they stand for the same thing, plunder. Senator Piatt was very much ann6yed when Senator Carter defeated the rivers and harbors bill by talking until the close of the session. As everybody knows this appropriation of $50,000,000 included apportion ments for the improvement of obscure and un navigable rivers and creeks along with monies for rivers and harbors that repay developement. Senator Carter called it "vicious leg islation" and announced his intention to talk the bill to death before the close of the session. The majority had decided to vote for the bill. Ex perience of minorities, of their fre quent righteous cause, of their habits of independence and of reliance upon their own conscience and of their in difference to their own conspicuous isolation, for righteousness' sake in clines a student of politics, to respect, the minority which so frequently governs the majority. The minority in the Nebraska legislature, wbiclt opposes the election of Mr. Thompson is right. The minority in the United: State senate, headed by Carter wuich opposed the will of Piatt and the rivers and harbors bill was right. The historical prestige of the minor ity will doubtless prevent the minor ity in the senate from voting ,for cloture and thus yielding the salutary negative power of the minority. Betting on Salvation. The Reverend Itichard A.Morley. pastor of the Sheffield Avenue church of Cbicago,,has agreed to pay Duke M. Farson, revivalist, one thousand dol lars if in the course of two-weeks he "converts'" fifteen souls. There are all kinds of people but to rise in meet ing and request prayers inducted thereto by aman who has put up one: i 11 rs i .11 -V- ' l