THE COURIER. Br. w li- w: than thirty persons. There were 131 carpenters, 32 contractors, 49 cooks, 45 farmers, 417 laborers and 32 stu dents. The large number of cooks can be explained by the choleric tem per of all cooks caused by overheating their blood. They get into rows and are frequently arrested while chas ing objects of their displeasure with the carving knife. The forty-flve farmers were agriculturists, unused to the glittering temptations of a large city, and in the habit of being watched by their folks. Arrived in Lincoln with the price of a wagon load of corn in their pockets they in variably begin to break the decalogue. Some of them are arrested before they get to murder. The thirty-two stu dents were arrested on the general charge of being disorderly. Two hundred and thirty-eight persons were furnished with lodging, G422 prisoners were fed, 1131 persons were charged with offenses in the police court, 574 were convicted, 424 were dismissed, 107 acquitted, 1G held for trial in the district court, 20 were continued. The cost of maintaining the police department: Police judge's salary 31,500. Salaries policemen 811,878.34. Special police $390.68. Miscellaneous expenses $764.02. Amount paid for prisoners' board $642.20. Total 315,17524. Foreign Students at the University If the Nebraska legislature were asked to appropriate $20,000 or more every two years to educate the sods and daughters of Iowa, Illinois, Dako ta, Montana etc, the legislature would conclude that the regents and chan cellor were mad. Yet the state is ed ucating about five-hundred students whose parents do not reside in the state nor pay taxes for the support of its institutions. At the Wesleyau university near Lincoln tuition is fifty dollars per annum. The state university has a larger teaching force, more expensive apparatus, a larger library etc. It is fair to conclude that the instruction there is, at least, as competent and as sound as that of fered at Wesleyan. If the tive-hundred foreign students were charged fifty dollars a year tuition fees the 825,000 would furnish a needed addition to the income of ths university. The patrons of church academies in the state are also Nebraska taxpayers. They help support the university and -send their own children to the church schools, thus paying for their educa tion twice over. The expenses of the smaller colleges would be reduced by a larger attendance. But by offering foreign students an absolutely free education, the attendance at the church schools is reduced. The state has the power but no right to com pete with the citizens who support the state. The attempt to increase the attendance at the university, by admitting students from outside the state to the university, free of charge is an injustice to Nebraska taxpayers. The Educational Problem. Superintendent Greener of the pub lic schools of Kansas-City is unique among city superintendents. He is not trying to induce the school-boards to introduce new subjects so that the imposed-upon little school-children will have to include one more study in their huge, burdensome, compli cated curricula. Superintendent Greener pled for fewer and simpler subjects that should be more thor. oughly taught. "I believe," said he, "that in the past few years we have imported so many things into our schools, that children do not have time to think. I would have my boy go through the grade schools and be able to use the English language well, to know the meaning of words, to be able to read the newspapers and mag azines intelligently, to know some thing of the history of the country, and to understand something of its relations to other countries. I would rather have him know thia much, than to have him go through the en tire schools and get a smattering of everything that is taught. I do not know of a single man who ever be came intelligently great who did not build in the common branches." The average child leaves school at tne age of fifteen with a smattering of twenty or thirty subjects among which is a vague knowledge of the structure of the English language. There is an occasional intelligent youth whose reading outside of school has given him a view of the world and of literature. Be has not confined himself to getting high marks, and the all-round intelligent boy or girl is not often found at the bead of the class. Their genius is of too catholic a quality to be bound by apportioned tasks. They read the daily papers, they listen to the conversation of men. Before they enter the world of labor and wage they are in step with it, they know the manual, not perfect ly, but well enough to take them very soon out of the awkward squad. This is the kind of boy that incited the warning to teachers about the prob able career of the dull boy who is not really dull, but unrestrainedly given to thinking his own thoughts and se lecting his own reading. Seeing that these stubborn onesare unfortunately too rare the public school system should be revised so that it may more frequently graduate a boy like the one described by Superintendent Greener. The food which the first grade teachers begin to stuff into the little ones whose forms so infantile have not begun to lose their brownie outlines, is natural and simple, but the curriculum rapidly, too rapidly, increases in complexity, until the eighth graders are studying so many things, to prepare them for a univer sity course which not one per cent of them will ever take, that, of. course, they have neither time nor brain room for a thorough understanding .of English, the one indispensable, every-day necessary subject. A Great Orator. Oratory is not what it used to be. The style, and more than all, the matter of great speeches has changed. Speakers make strong and lasting effects now-a-daysby talking sense, by fitting words to the occasion, by an inspired tact. The speeches of Pat rick Henry, of Webster, of Henry Clay would not tit if tried on a mod ern audience. Structurally, the sen tences are too long, they are burdened with classical analogies and figures, with poetic allusions, with the flow ers of speech. The modern speaker does not employ a prologue, but at once and without apology, introduces an idea. In listening to what he has to say a modern audience does not think of the words. Of all the inter esting things in the world an idea evolved by. a man of action is the most interesting. The man who has something to say can always say it well. Grant's style" of telling the story of his life was so simple and so perfect that only professionals, who have labored long to obtain a limpid style recognize that there is any art in General Grant's wonderful tech nique. In the last campaign two men were asking the voters of this country to elect them to the presidency. One was a man of forty, a magnetic speak. er, whose career was only remarkable for the speeches be bad made and for one speech iu particular before the democratic national convention of 1896, when he set the hearts of its del egates on fire by a speech which took advantage of the feeling against cap ital and assumed that the republican party was the oppressor of the poor etc. The famous crown of thorns and cross of gold speech was sufficient to nominate Mr. Bryan twice for the presidency. Mr. Bryan as a speaker has a wider, more unanimously con ceded reputation tban any other man. President McKinley is a plain man, like Mark Antony. He has only a few friendly sensible words to say to the American people. The people be speaks to listen to him and the papers next morning contain his addresses. 1 hope that all Americans read them. They are matchless specimens of the best modern oratory. With limitless tact and truth, with instant comprehension of their real friendship for a president whom they did not vote for President McKinley spoke last Friday to the people of New Orleans. The governor of Lou isiana in introducing President Mc Kinley recognized the differences of opinion that still divide the south from the north. The President's re ply was an assembling of interests and sentiments that unite the two parts of the United States. After he had finished it was difficult to find an essential principle that the north and the south were divided upon. He spoke to people who did not vote for him, who but recently had endeavored to make two countries out of one. A less skillful speaker, a less earnest patriot might have blundered. Thus McKinley on our united interests: "Lwas wondering while the govern or was talking what were our differ ences. My eyes turned toward Judge "Blanchard, and I recalled ' that we did not differ about river and harbor improvements and that we were in favor of every just and reasonable ex tension for the improvement of the commerce of the Mississippi "river." When I heard the governor tell what I knew so well and had occasion so many times to feel, how the people of Louisiana rallied around the stars and stripes and were earnestly urging for an opportunity to go to Cuba to fight the battles of an oppressed peo ple, I could not but think that there was no difference between us in the war with Spain. "And then I remembered it is only a memory how the citizens of Lou isiana gathered about the table of the ways and means committee, when I had the distinguished honor of pre siding over that committee, assuring me that they must have protection upon sugar and rice. "And then I reflected that there was no difference between us about protection. Certainly none upon the question of sugar. Then when I re member that this banquet'is 'held to night in the city of New Orleans and recall that it was your territory that has expanded into more states than any other territory that ever came to the United States, it did seem to me that possibly we were not greatly in disagreement on the subject of expan sion. .'Commerce is a great diplomat. Fair dealing makes fast friends. Com merce, like a circulating library, carries enlightenment wherever it goes. And then I remember that we are all for.the open door in China, that we may send the products of our cotton fields, made up into cotton goods, to the millions in the orient. "Am I mistaken when I say that upon another subject we are in agree ment? We are for good money and plenty of it. So when I remember what had been told me just before leaving Washington, that I must be careful to speak of nothing about which there would be differences, and my friends said: You will be very much limited in your field of discus sion;' when I come to reflect I see what a wide, broad field it is, and to discuss only those things about which we are In accord, would take more of my time than I could claim. "History can not omit New Orleans from its pages. Its age insures for it reverence and affection and its past will always engage our interest and admiration. It has the romance of antiquity, the quaintnessof ancient days, combined with a spirit of tire less energy which makes it one of the most progressive of our modern marts of commerce. Its heroic associations have secured for it an enduring place in the annals of the American repub lic. It bas not always been under the same form of government and the same sovereignty. The map of more tban one nation has traced it within its boundaries, and in more than one language its laws have been adminis tered within a period of little more tban a century. Jefferson appreciated more than any other public man the commercial and strategic importance of the city of New Orleans, and by the treaty which he negotiated it was an nexed to the United States. The standards of Spain and France were displaced by the stars and stripes. "The flag which Jefferson raised over the city Jackson successfully de fended with the brave volunteers of Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi, making illustrious in American his tory the 8th of January, the day on which was fought the battle of New Orleans. "If there are two names more to be revered than any others by this great city they are Jefferson and Jackson. Precious, however, as tbey are in your hearts and history, they do not belong to you alone. The whole na tion claims them and renders great f ul homage for their priceless services to eountry and to mankind. They be long to civilization and to the ages. What a history they have made. To have been the author of the declar ation of independence was honor enough for any life. They have made the treaty with France, adding to the United States a territory greater than the original thirteen states and out of which have been carved six entire states and parts of six others, resting forever upon the principles of that mortal instrument crowned a single life with a record of achievement with few if any parallels in human history. "Jackson's war record, the most brilliant page of which was written here, made him a hero for all time at every fireside in the land, while his declaration in 1832, that the laws of the United States must be respected and obeyed, that we would execute them at any cost, that the federal union must be preserved,;are senti ments today enshrined in every Amer ican heart and sustained and upheld by a united people, by forty-five indi vidual, indestructible states of an in destructible union. "Both of them will live in their deeds -which are imperishable. To have been associated with these great names, as you have been, gives you a most honored place in the annals of the world. "Gentlemen, it has given me un bounded pleasure to greet and meet you here in the city of New Orleans, and may I not say in conclusion that it will be my effort as president, as the representative of the people of all the states, not of one section, not of the north or the south, but of the whole United States, to do whatever I can to sustain the honor and promote i Vr v T&muwjw