-5-? THE COURIER M W W ifei people and they are ailed upon to manage and direct its workings. Dr B L. Paine one of the pioneer church workers of Lincoln, is presi dent of the league. B. A. Woodard Is vice president and Mrs Dora Doyle Is second vice president The two other vice presidencies are held by Peter McXIchoI and Bertha Brown. Alva Townsend Is secretary and Dan DePutron treasurer Other church societies are numerous and In flourishing condition. Mrs. H. E. Harvey Is the chairman of the Pro gressive circle, the Central is presided over by Mrs. Dr Finney and the Ken sington by Mrs Charles Bobbins Mrs. E. B. Kellogg Is chairman of th South Side circle ami Mrs. Frank Gra ham of the North Side. East Lincoln circle is in charge of Mrs E. W. Allen. Star circle by Mrs. B. O. Wilson and the social afternoon organization by Mrs. Frank Lahr. B. L. Paine is superintendent of the Sunday school C. H. Gordon is assist ant superintendent. B. S. Hunt, super visor of the Junior department, Anna Hawes. supervisor of the intermediate department, Mrs. Leila Adams, super visor of the primary department and Will B. Byons secretary. W. W. Woods Is treasurer and E. B. Wood ward librarian. J. S. Leonhardt is chorister and Alice B. White organist. There is a missionary society for for eign work and home labor directed by women and also two corresponding organizations where the young ladles have charge of the work. In addition there is a Mite society. The young men and the young wo men each have a club. C. H. Gordon is president of the male organization. I. J. Ayers secretary and C. A. Mussel white treasurer. Mrs. L. C. Richards is president of the young women's club. The committee which has superin tended the finances of the church has had an arduous task. The committer consists of A. R. Talbot. J. T. Mastin. M. A. Warren. E. H. Steckley. II. A. Tebbetts. C. W. Bleger and E. M. Cof fin. The building committee is now al most relieved from duty. The mem bers who directed the construction of the church are: J. E. Miller. George A. Adams. L. C. Richards. H. K. Bur ket and B. L. Paine. "While Horsa There Is a very old custom or game or incantation played by generation after generation of high school girls. It Is called "counting white horses." The rule is to count white horses, not counting the same one twice In the same day. until the counter has re corded ninety-nine. The girl who counts must touch her right fore finger to her lips, then to the palm of her left hand, and then strike her fists together, little finger end to thumb end. AfUr ninety-nine white horses have been seen and recorded thus caballsti cally. one white mule must be counted Defore the tale is complete. After these ceremonies have been performed, and the white mule recorded with an espe cial ceremony, the first unmarried man that the irl who has made her tally, meets, is to be her husband. Well, a group of half a dozen high school girls had completed the course of ninety nine horses, but the old span of white mules that used to tug stone on a low hurg stone-wagon seems to have dis appeared from the streets of Lincoln. The girls watched for the White mule for weeks, but without finding one. But passing by the postoffice one day on her way to school one of the girls discovered the fabled magic beast. She hurried to the high-school and got there a few moments before school time. She gasped the news and the other girls seized their "things" and ran down to the squrre where the poor old mule was hitched. They stayed only long enough to perform the cere mony, but they were late. The teams ter looked upon the mule with a new sense of his preclousness after the girls had left. H- H- - Why will you persist In leading a life of crime? I am afraid It's heredity. Judge: my grandfather was a minister's son. OBSERVATIONS BY SARAH B. HARRIS A Fusion Victory MR SETH LOW'S plurality over Mr Shepard. Tammany candi date for mayor of Xew York. Is about thirty thousand votes. Mr. Bry an's plurality in Xew York in 1900 was about thirty-five thousand votes. Con sequently the new mayor of New York owes his election as much to demo cratic votes as to republican. For once reform energy was com pletely fused. The women of Xew York had much to do with Mr. Low's elec tion. The revelations made by the Mazet committee appointed by the Xew York state legislature, by the press, the City Vigilance League, the Society for the Prevention of Crime, the Society for the Suppression of Vice, the church es and the settlements upon the East side, by the Committee of Fifteen, and by the ministers, convinced most of the decent men of Xew York that national politics had very little to do with the administration of the business of a city: and Seth Low got a plurality of thirty thousand democratic and repub lican votes. The Committee of Fifteen, composed of prominent business men, lawyers and labor leaders, was appointed by the Chamber of Commerce. Members of the committee raided gambling house after gambling house in districts where the police asserted there was not a single one. Absolute and indisput able evidence showing the existence of collusion between the gamblers and Chief of Police Devery was secured. The committee was greatly assisted by Justice Jerome of the Court of Special Sessions. His assistance was invalu able, especially as the courts were filled by Tammanyltes anxious to block by legal conventionalities the operations of the committee, by releasing prisoners and in other subtle ways known and practiced by Tammany Judges. But with Jerome's aid, and in spite of the sympathy of the Judges with the law-breakers, a number of convictions were secured and other prisoners Jumped their bail rather than stand trial for the crimes charged against them. The most Important conviction was that of Wardman Bissert, who was sentenced to five years in the peni tentiary for blackmailing a prostitute. Some of the richest and most Infiu ential women In Xew York women who are supposed not to possess any Ideas or wishes about politics or muni cipal business were Intensely Inter ested in this election. Rich or poor, aristocratic or plebeian, women in business and in society are in tensely and vitally interested in goodness and in the suppression of crimes and opportunities for crime against their sex. There was not a disinterested good woman in Xew York from Helen Gould to the poorest shop girl and each one of these women has her sphere of Influence upon which the other does not Intrude who was not anxious to help suppress the infamous "cadet" system. All these women wre against Croker. Some thought that Shepard alone, on a ticket otherwise made up of Tammany men, would be enough to enforce the laws and punish the men who have established, devel oped and are still carrying on the "cadet" business with the knowledge and under the protection of the police. The rich women contributed nearly fifty thousand dollars to the anti-Tammany campaign. The efforts of hum bler women were Just as constant and were directed by the indignation fem inine, which is a motor of unmeasured but occasionally demonstrated power. The wrongs of the hundreds of young girls sacrificed to Tammany made fu ries of women whom poverty or friend lessness had not abandoned to Its greed. Rich and poor united to Influ ence men who never voted anything but the democratic ticket, to vote against Tammany. This republican and democratic fusion success in an over whelmingly democratic city is due to the aroused indignation and hatred of the men and women of Xew York. A large majority of the people love honor and decency. Most of the people are honest, and their regard for integrity overbalances party affiliations. A democrat's love for his party and Its principles Is tenacious In the extreme, but a fortnight ago thirty thousand democrats in Xew York renounced their life-long preference for demo cratic candidates In order to rebuke the most Infamous political organiza tion in the world. The spectacle Is a credit to the citizenship of Xew York. If non-partisan citizenship can be or ganized into a body with correlated functions while it has the chance un der Low's administration, Tammany will stay beaten. Otherwise Tammany's retirement from power will be only temporary. Seth Low An opinion of Mayor-elect Low by a former chancellor of the Xebraska university, iir. James H. canneld. ap- greatly impressed by Ms and wisdom. Although Gen was always a modest man time he was the most talked .w courted of any man in 'h Queen Victoria and the ,,-ss-archs of Europe were eclipse.) effulgence of the great Ameri. i eral Grant had accomplished r est military success of the we leave Xapoleon out of the And Europe worships milita' An hereditary, dlvlne-right ,u pies the centre of the stage n i cynosure of all eyes until , genius like Xapoleon, Weihr- Grant comes into the neignb . then there is a glory between and the people that obscures Even a modest man. like liur.' shipped by commoner and king grow to regard himself as m When asked for his opinion Hung Chang, after Chang talned him at his countrv presented him with . osth Grant said that Li was one . f greatest men In the world two were Beaconstield and T ,i By later units of measure .. Chang rates higher than i" these men. Beaconstield died having accomplished anything manent value to his nation and left only a brilliant Tolstoy has ignored his up- -gift of telling a story well r. preferred to become an n 1 ff economist and interpreter of "i, -tures. Men who are number-i second or third great of a entj" generation, counting in. .is 'lit in' at - i di ail nations, must in their Hfet it.- j. affected humanity. leaving i si pears In the current number of the Vtnelr lstence tor at least - ation. it is only about tnent -since Beaconstield died, and ".- are smooth. There is no ign - Rex-lew of Reviews. The Roosevelt type is repeated in Mr. Low. Direct, scholarlv. forcible able. m with executive and oolitlcal ahilitv the5eonce passed lhls wa'- " 13 latest ..vnintim, f A0.-io ,i,"to torm an" judgment about " and the strenuous life is of a quality; and even of a frequency which should convince Americans especially of the truths of evolution and of the certain improvement of political conditions. Mr. Low is fifty years old, but he has tne vigor ana tne entnusiasms or a young man. Mr. Canfleld expresses his entire be lief in the new creed that citizens are partners in the business of running a city. He says that "The newer and clearer and more practical thought In' public affairs is that any unit of civic! life Is nothing more or less than a bus iness corporation, a very practical and successful co-operative scheme. A city charter and Its accompanying or dinances are a necessary expansion and enlargement of the constitution and by-laws of every four-corners de bating club or high school literary society or labor union, since each simply determines the ways and means of best accomplishing the objects of. the organization." "For more than twenty years Mr. Low has stood squarely and Insistently and unselfish ly and fearlessly for this theory of business principles and non-partisan' "rcuiuiis in mcai auairs. cur ing his mayoralty the public affairs of Brooklyn became as though they were ' his own private business, and as far ' as possible were administered nnnn precisely the same basis. He tried to save money for the people precisely as he would have tried to make money for himself. He regarded taxes paid by citizens as a definite Investment for a definite purpose, and he was as eager to realize upon the investment as though it had been made by or for a corporation of which he was a direc tor or the president. He made char acter and efficiency the sole test for appointment to public sen-ice and the sole assurance of continued tenure. He carried municipal administration to the highest point of efficiency ever reacneu in tnts country. This is why uie nour or their supreme need of in honest, competent, fearless administra tion ot civic affairs, hundreds of thou sands of our citizens have Instinctively and confidently turned to Seth Low." '1 J A Li Hung Chang When General Grant on his trip around the world met Earl LI. he was He may modify the institutions country, but it is doubtful. H enough of a politician. He s tent to keep just a little ahea i people. He soars and expects - follow his flight as well as r. j with their eyes and perhaps themselves. The feet of the IjJ cling to the ground, and they juj Tolstoy and wonder what he s -to do. Grant also compared Li Hung ' to Gambetta and to Bismarck. gard to this John Russell s-ajJ hind kvestern statesmen were - - llshed civilizations, the for es - -vanced empires. They did not " but carried out what was begun marck was the successor of F--u the Great, Gambetta of Mir-i -. while Lord Beaconstield .ou. l have found his ideal in the rni soul of Chatham. Li Hung "iarf, alone with his problem. Historv j. him no precedent. The outsid had no sympathy for him Tr ern nations looked upon nira carnivorous eyes. He accepted palling duties before him. He nothing. He had breadth. i"i ' niscience. He meant that Chira i grow, broaden, rise. He i k the Chinese people with an rt 'and courage that must forew him as one of the world s men of this age Yet Li. uith 'greatness, was still a Chinam.i established the China Merchant pany and brought his commcp the Hag of China, but he was, to his native ways in matter--llgion. His superstition or ift what the mass of the people in was profound. He would rr Inch from his cue nor let fuz on his foretop. He worslut dead ancestors with all the ft r true Chinaman." Considering these qualities t ily comprehended why Li Hur in spite of the Japanese del' i he was premier, never lost a larity with the people, and Dowager Empress never dared ish him severely for anything ard Croker's political doom when he transferred his resul Wantage, England. Read '! of the leaders of Tammany Hu these men going to b bossea 1. -kJhSMi V -a g-