4, i 1 43 V!j & v ir, K Bt .. l r ' ... - T- ; vTKjfSES;J, T - f , v (yr -ti- eT "r " v -' -T Jf ' , VOL.13. NO. 33T -rr5? ", j. v '-t ESTABLISH BD IN 1886 h. -9l . " -''V --3 LA . ;-, - av , fc; , PRICE F1VB CENTS: r ' - -ri irf- ? . - . . - k. - ?; -?' ' LINCOLN. NEBR., SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1898. SUc VAAUiXXr' -S55 f Entered in- the postoffice at Lincoln as second class matter. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY -Bt- THE COURIER PRINTIIG AND PUBLISHING CO Office 1132 N street, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. SARAH B. HARRIS, Editor Subscription Kates Io Advance. Per annum $1 00 Six months 75 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies .'. 05 Thk Courier will not be responsi ble for voluntary communications un accompanied by return postage. Communications, to receive atten tion, must be signed by the full name of the writer, not merely as a guaran tee of good faith, but for publication if advisable. I OBSERVATIONS. g The Scovil fellow who slapped Gen eral Shafter is receiving his deserts from the fraternity, who, without ex ception, condemn his impudence. The slapping was probably premeditated and his punishment was what he de served, but not what he expected. He wanted to be photographed in the saffron papers in the act of slapping the general of the army at Santiago. Instead General Shafter ordered him to leave the army. The sentence is the same to Scovil as oblivion for life. No paperi not even tue vellowest? will want his services any more. No gen eral in the army will grant him the privileges of a correspondent. His career, which he had thought to guild, is forever blighted. If General Shafter had tried him by martial law and he had received a sentence com mensurate to his offense, he could have posed as a" victim to military discipline and have retained a meas ure of dignity and consideration, but to oe treated with contempt and to be spat upon by other correspondents (rhetorically) hasdestroyed his chances for the peculiar -kind of notoriety he was anxious to gain. The adulation of Hobson, who went out of his way to do a brave deed, the successful accomplishment of which might have prevented Schley's vic tory over the Spanish tleet, suggests by contrast the hundreds of brave private soldiers who lay scattered about in the dust and blistering heat, famishing for water after the battle of Santiago. Huron's transfigura tion suggests these wounded, dying soldiers who perished without com plaining, because to the one is given glory and honor and to the others a trench and oblivion. There are very few soldiers or officers who would re fuse a mission which, whether it failed or succeeded, would confer upon the officer in command immortal fame. Death is a small price to pay for immortality. The real heroes of this war are the private soldiers who bear hardship and suffering without complaint and who obey and die in herds. The young brave apple cheeked mothers' sons who trotted up that awful lane mowed by shell at El Cano. who fell and complained not of neglect when twelve hours later found them still untended by surgeons, are heroes all the more because they died without hope of reward. To do a noble deed in the company of hun dreds of other heroes deprives the deed of dramatic setting, yet the boys who died by hundreds were'as brave as Hobson. who risked his life in company with six soldiers in sight of the world. It may be that it is un just to blame him for his newspaper created cult, but he was so eager to take the place which led to fame and the New York people are gorging him with such large chunks of it that these reflections on the dead boys who lie buried in Cuban trenches may not be unwelcome to those whose own boys carry a gun and obey orders. Civil service reform, like many others, has its draw backs. Many a competent man fail in the examina tion and just as many hoodoos take it with honors. Then a clerk or an em ploye cannot be dismissed without cause and the allegation of incompe tency and inaptness in learning the duties of the position and in perform ance is too general for the satisfac tion of a board, through the other clerks who have to do the incompe tent's work over again have items and exhibits of aching backs and over strained eyes as proofs. Under the spoil system incomietents as well as competeuts went in and out of office. A fixture was unusual, fortunately for the good of the service.- Prom the postoffices in different parts of the country there are many complaints of incompetent fixtures who were able to passu technical examination but who lack common sense, tact and quick n ess and every quality which distin guishes a good clerk. No examination tests to determine the presence of common sense have yet been invented. In the meanwhile men whom no individual finds it profitable to em ploy pass a government examination and when once set to work "by a repre sentative of the" government the ope ration of the civil service rules keeps them in to the manifest injustice of the other employes mid the postmas ter who must do the parasite's work. Then the system creates an oftice holding class whose only mitigating character consists in not being hered itary. Since the days of the forty days' waiu'ering in the desert the Levites, or officeholders have had an eye and a hand for snaps. The spoils system involved an annual or biennial or quadrennial redistribution of place and sent out a lot of only partially atrophied men and women into the world to earn their own living with out the aid of a system or a pull. In spite of these objections the civil service rules have accomplished a better performance by government clerks and is thus to be prefered to the old methods. The system is too rigid, but that is the way with sys tems. As to the Philippines the United States owes the inhabitants bf that unhappy group justice. Having de stroyed Spanish misrule this govern ment is under the strongest obliga tion to replace it by the best rule yet developed by man. The preachers and Harvard professors who have made it their mission to teach the rest of this country that it is un Ameri can to keep what we have secured by va!or. finesse and the expenditure of millionsof dollars, ignore the rights of the oppressed natives of the islands. If it can be shown that the Spanish. French. English! German or Japanese have a better government or one more easily acclimated than the de mocracy of the United States, it would be magnanimous and high minded on our part to renounce our claims. French and German coloniza tions in Africa are fairly prosperous, but Emperor William is an anachron ism that evolution will not long en dure. The beneficent effect of Eng lish influence has been shown, with some reservations, in India, but if we gave the Philippines to England, Ger many, France, Ilussia, even Spain, would prefer that we kept them. Japan has not arrived at the period of adolescence in self government and is not ready, by hundreds of years, for colonization. An international con gress for the purpose of considering what is best to do with the islands would result in a wrangle among the representatives of the powers in which considerations touching the real in terests of the inhabitants of the islands would not be discussed. It Is very difficult to decide what to do with the Philippines; but when it Is fully and audibly recognized that humanity, and the obligations of a civilized people to primitive, oppressed natives, forbid returning the latter to the hands of a conquered, revengeful, cruel race, the answer is so clearly in dicated that only a cowardly and dis trustful congress can refuse to accept the logic of the situation. To trans plant a bit of sound democracy into the orient will be like grafting a frag ment of wholesome skin into the mid dle of a chronic sore. If the fragment can be connected with the vital forces underneath the -surface that healthy spot will gradually spread until it is connected with the mainland and the whole round world become a democ racy without czar or emperor or king or a system of caste which is worse than the tyranny of all three com bined. When all other paths are im passably blocked it takes no particu larly brilliant statesmanship to walk in the only one left open The Philip pines can not be returned to Spain or presented to anv other nation without reflecting upon the flexibility of our own form of government and renounc ing the obligations of victory. Re nunciation would be cowardly, un worthy of our traditions, our fore fathers and our place in the proces sion's van. President McKinley's sturdy Americanism can be depended upon. It is not of the thin, watery Harvard quality, that fancies every thing American is vulgar and to be discouraged by all those who happen to occupy a rostrum ora pulpit. Presi dent McKinley likes this country and the people that live in it. He believes that American institutions can be grafted and bestow upon a foreign soil the blessings of freedom. To be a part of the United States will mean for the natives the establishment of a public school system, by no means jf