THE COURIER .si ENTERED AT THE LINCOLN rOSTOFFlCE AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY THE COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY. OFFICE 217 North Eleventh St. TELEPHONE 00 W. MORTON SMITH, EOITOR. LUTE II. MORSE, - - - Dcsiness Manager. Subscription Kate In Advance. Porannum $200 j Three months 50c. Six months 100 Ono month 20c. Single copies..... Five cents. For salo at all news stands in this city and Omaha and on all trains. A limited number of advertisements will bo inserted. Bates made known on application. Lincoln, Nebraska, February 9, 1891. Rev. Luther P. Ludden appears just now to be without honor, either in his own country or abroad. Perhaps he has not done all that he might have done, but much of the abuse that has been heaped upon him is unmerited. The peoplo who are so quick to complain and abuse, do not appreciate the difficulties of. Mr. Lud den's position. The most effi ;ient man that ever lived could not distribute relief supplies on a large scale such as Mr. Ludden has done without making some mistakes, and nobody could do this work and escape criticism. We believe Mr. Lud3en has honestly tried to do the best ho could, and we admire the manly way in which he has stood up under the fusilade of spite and spleen. The legislature is well on its second month now and barring the passage of the relief measure, it has accomplished nothing. Just now there is a good deal of talk about regulating stock yards charges, and it is said that the stock yards companies will have to come to the terms dictated by certain influential members. Bill Paxton stands ready to hand over the necessary amount, and when the end of the session comes it will be found that there is no radical anti stock yards legislation on the books. What with Bill Paxton and the representatives f the telephone, telegraph and insurance com panies, etc to bleed, some of the members will take home several dollars more than their salary. The senate is, as usual, utterly regardless of public opinion. It continues in its shameless waste of public money through the employment of an army of ufeless employes. There are thirty-three senators and ninety-eight employes three employes for each senator. The senate is a fraud. The whole legislature is a humbug. The State Journal boasts of its complete report? of the proceed ings of the legislature. Why doesn't it say something about the lobbyists, the members of the powerful third house? Why doesn't it tell about the smooth bribe givers and corruptionists, the oily and fat pursed scoundrels that shadow the legislator, and "influence"' legislation? There are plenty of them in the city all the time, ami there is nothing very secret about their operations. Why does the Journal omit all mention of these most important persons? The World-Herald is the only paper that pretends to tell the truth about the legislature. Its reports aro worth reading. Metcalfe knows everything that is going on, and when ho gets down to telling the plain truth, the home office doesn't blue-pencil him. "How Shall the Rich Escape." by Dr. Frank S. Billings, of patho biological fame, formerly connected with the state university in this city, and probably the biggest intellectual crank in the country, is a compilation of heterodoxy. No bo i c ve have ever seen is so full of unorthodox views the established order doesn't suit him in any particular. Everything from political parties to the marriage rela tion is attacked. Here is an extract: "Tho highest possible evolution of man is such a degree of sexual control that there shall be no rela tion between the sexes and tho production of children shall cease. Who cares an iota whether humanity continues or not. The ques tion is that it lives at as little misery as possible." Startling as this statement iB it is not surprising coming from Billings. Something has gone to his head. Much learning has made him mad. God, ho says, is a fetich, and Christianity is crumbling to pieces. Jesus was an anarchist and communist. He combats the idea of the equality of man. Dr. Billings finds morality in a strange place, viz.: "in tho business law of self protection." He says: "Individuals owe nothing to the state." He says there may bo virtue in suicide, and ho upholds foeticide and infanticide, under many circumstances. Ho attacks our form of government. The book is thoroughly Bil lingesque. It will probably fall flat. Louie Meyer was convoyed to the insane asylum the other day. Two years ago Lincoln had two great financiers. Now one is in the pen at Sioux Falls and theother is in the asylum. The trouble in this town seems to be that everybody wants to havo a charity dispensing bureau of his own anu have somebody else furnish the stuff. There isn't too much charity in Lincoln, but there are too many people puttering away as charity dispensers. . GOOD WORDS FOR MCALLISTER. New York papers have begun to discuss Ward McAllister's suc cessor. "Nemo," tho social authority on the Vanderbilt paper, tho Mall and Express, says: "Mr. McAllister will have no successor. Tho Patriarchs may and doubtless will elect a secretary in hiB stead, but I doubt that anybody ran fill the place which he occupied in our social life. Nobody that I know possesses the requisite qual ities or enthusiam for tho work in which he took so much pride to successfully carry it on. I do not now allude especially to the Patri archs' balls, which may yet move forward for sometime of their own momentum; the outside part, if I may call it so, wherein lay his par ticular strength that place in the public ejo as the organizer and leader of social gayety which he filled so interestingly and so pictur esquely will, I fear, long remain vacant. And this is in the nature of things. There is not now so great a need of talent like his, as there was when he first took up his labors; society is already well marshalled and arrayed for the perpetuation of its existence and de pends for guidance but little upon individual effort to keep it going along the rijrht path. That this is so is largely due to him more so, perhaps, that it is agreeable for us to admit. That is his legacy, and it cannot be taken away from its beneficiaries." "Nemo" also discusses Mr. McAllister from another acd very in teresting standpoint his incorruptibility. He says: "It was in the nature of things that anybody undertaking to do what Mr. Mc Allister has done should expect to be attacked. He who stood guard over the doorway through which entrance might most easily be gained to the sacred precincts or society necessarily made many enemiee among the large and rapidly growing class composed of those who think that because they havo money they ought to have admittance everywhere. No means were spared, as I happen to know, by many of these gentiy to obtain concessions which Mr. Mc Allister felt constrained from a scope of duty to refuse; nor was there hesitation on the part of some to resort to bribery where' other means had failed. To all such Mr. McAllister opposed" a relentless and unbending disapprobation, which no cajolery could influence, and which left nothing to bo done by tho offender save to quietly subside. He was charged by many with being unduly liberal in taking up "new" people, but I happen to havo had actual proof that none got in through his means who did not first 3how good reasons for their admittance. You would be amazed to know how many people sought his advice from day to day and year to year how multifarious were the agencies brought to bear to qnlist his influ ence, in view of which it is marvelous that he in such matters rare ly erred. The good done by his service to the general body of soci ety is incalculable. Byexeicising that eternal vigilance which in society is the price not of liberty but of exclusiveness, he kept the lists free from the elements which hemmed it in on all sides, and which never ceased to menace it with the power of over whelming numbers."