VOL. XIV. NO. III. BSTABLISHBD IN 1880 PRICE FIVK CENT ; i LINCOLN. NBBH., SATURDAY. JANUARY 21, 18011. TiJBlBSPt Entered in the iobtoffick at Lincoln ab SECOND CLASS MATTER. PUBLI8HED EVERY SATURDAY Bt THf COURIER PRINTING HIND PUBLISHING CO Ofllce 1132 N Btreet, Up Stairs. Telephone 384. 8ARAH B. HARRIS, .- Editor Subscription Kate In Advance. Per annum. 9 1 00 Six months 75 Three months 50 One month 20 Single copies 05 The Courier will not bo resoonsiblo for vol untary communications unless accompaniod by roturn postage. communications, to rocoivo nuontion, must bo slanod by tlio full namo of tlio writer, not mnrolv ns a suarantno of sood faith, but for publication if advisablo, r00J L OBSERVATIONS. 8 Tlie gas company, in reducing the price of fuel gas to consumers, said that the price was lowered on account of the larger consumption. When the price of illuminating gas is made lower, consumption of the produce will probably increase proportionately, so that the receipts at the gas office will not fall off. If the fuel gas were of a cheaper and inferior quality to the illuminating gas and it were con ducted to the consumer through different mains, the gas company might claim that they could not afford to sell illuminating gas as cheaply as fuel gas. But the gas arrives on the premises of the consumer in the same main. That which is used for fuel oscapes through a pipe attached to a gas stove and the rest is drawn off at need from the various faucets lo cated in the house. The kitchen gas and the parl'r gas are identical ex cept in the gas company's bill, in which the former is charged to the consumer at $1.50 a thousand, with a discount of 10 por cent if paid before tlio sixth of the month, and the latter is charged to the consumer at the rate of 92.00 per thousand feet with a dis count of 10 per cent if the bill is paid before the sixth. Inasmuch as the only difference consists in the use to which the cousumor puts the gas after it leaves tho company's mains and does not inhoro in the gas Itself, and it depends upon chance alone, whether a bubble be used in the roast ing of a turkey or the illumination of a boudoir, Councilman Mockett's conclusion is sound that a discrimina tion in prico which is not based either on quality, or the cost of production is unwarrantable. When a merchant sells an article to a customer, it is, or should be, a matter of indifference to the merchant to what use the buyer puts the article he has bought. Tho reduction in the price of fuel gas was made necessary in order to compete with the lower prices of coal. Unless the cost of the two fuels were par tially equalized it was, of course, im possible for gas to compete with coal as a fuel. On the other hand illumin ating gas had no competitor, except electricity, which is controlled by the same company. Under these circum stances It was determined to sell the same commodity for two priees. If the meter showed that the gas, after it left the company's mains and passed into the control of the consumer, was used by him to cook with, he could have it for a dollar and a half a thous and feet, but if he used it to read Shaksperc by, it sets the company back two dollars a thousand feet and the bill is made out accordingly. That the company has been anxious to sell all the gas possible at the cheaper rate is shown by the extensive adver tising of fuel gas which it has done in the lust year or two. That the rate for illuminating gas is too large is shown by the large number of firms which have put in plants of their own and made money by it. Herpolsheimer & Co. for instance put in their own plant and the nightly illuminations, which cost the firm 8300 a month, now cost it less than 970. Frivate house holders can not do this. From the nature of the case they are without protection unless the municipality can protect them from extortion. General Eagan's intemperate lan guage before the commission of inves tigation should receive a severe re buke. The coarseness of his remarks before a commission of the United States government, appointed by the president himself, has shocked the country more than any accident of the campaign in Cuba. The one was due to the mobilization of an army and tho appointment of untried officials. The other was the deliberate, written evidence of corruption of the military beaureau in Washington. General Miles' military career has been bril liant and no accusation of dishonesty has eve been made against him. Ho won his honors in thecivil war and is not a graduate of West Point. For this reason his rapid rise in the army has created an unusual amount of jealousy. He himself is conceited and perhaps a trifle overconfident, but he is every inch a soldier and an hon orable man. As the commander-in-chief of the army of the United States he is entitled to a considera tion which he has not received from Secretary Alger. In consenting to listen to the abominable tirade which General Eagan delivered, the com mission discredited itself in the eyes of the American people and revealed evidences of a cabal against General Miles. Considering Secretary Alger's partiality for the Inefficient Shaftcr and what we owe Genoral Miles for turning Shaftcr's defeat into victory the American people will not be in different if General Eagan is allowed to go unpunished. General Miles is a soldier before he Is a politician. lie has made charges against the beef supplied which very likely he cannot prove. There are some things which are very difficult to prove and this charge of embalmed beef is one. But in the whole course of his life General Miles has acquired a reputation for truthfulness which cannot be over overlooked in settling this matter. There is evidence that sumc of the meat was treated to a process which dried the juices and made it most un palatable. The term "embalmed" Is unfortunate both from its connection and because the meat appears to have been soaked in a salty solution which it was thought would keep it from spoiling. But General Miles, exas perated by the snubs which he him self received from the department at Washington and genuinely grieved over what he considered the unneces sary sufferings of the soldiers, called the meat which they could not oat embalmed." His selection of an ad jective brought down upon his good and gray, if withall somewhat self willed and conceited head, the wrath of the packers of pork and beef, Ar mour and Cudahy and Morris and Swift. The immense slaughter houses these men operate employ thousands of men and their products are shipped all over the world. Other nations are inclined to follow Germany in her discrimination against American pork and the testimony of so prominent an American as Genoral Miles in the ease of Europe and Asia against America, materially, but unjustly, strengthens the plaintiff's case. Therefore the unanimous and indignant protest of the packors. The immediate effect of their righteous enough pro test is apparent in the testimony of General Eagan. His protest is all right but his language is inexcusable and has hurt the beaureaucracy of which he is such a depraved repre sentative more than any of the charges brought against it. It pleases Walt Mason of Beatrice to be merry over the personal appearance of tho Nebraska women who are hum bly, and more or less successfully, try ing to oarn their living by newspaper work. The profeesion is one which has been largely monopolized by men, and men have established the style of writing, and to a great degree the style of dress for members of the pro fession. The impartial critic must confess that most any oce this side of a tramp In appearance, ora university journalist in ability, can pass the ex amination in this state. The standard is so low, in fact, that It is somewhat inconsistent of so modest a contribu tion to the auHthetic treasure of the world as Walt Mason, to crltlclso the few women whose earnings are not sufficient to enable them to keep their half of journalism, dressed in hand some gowns. Of course criticism is not dependant upon the possession of those virtues or that absolute beauty which most critics base their deroga tions upon. Yet in the cose under discission Mr. Mason is an important element of the profession, the looks of which ho says the newspaperwomen of Nebraska are a disgrace to. In common with many hundreds tlio publisher of Tun Couiuku enjoys Mr. Mason's Hot Tamales. They are a relish to the evening's reading of no small importance and this acknowl edgement of their savor is one which should have been made long ago. As the spirit is more than matter it is of little consequence that Mr. Mason's personal appearance Is rather depress ing. That blythe spirit which has cheered thousands of gloomy men and women and renewed their courage, in habits an unworthy dwelling. Never theless what is denied to six feet of brawn, tills little man can do and not half try, so the balance is struck and everybody gets what pleases hi in most after all. The life long sentences wo homely people work out do not seem to increase our sympathy for our fel low convicts. We insist, whatever the natal obstacles in the way, that women shall be fair and men shall be strong and tall. If tbey are not, we grudge them that part of our horizon tiiey occupy, and make sport of them to get them out of tbc way of more satisfactory scenery. And thus, the world in thousands of years may get better looking. o The early settlers of this country thought that the functionaries of a town or city were elected or designated for the purpose of performing some function or service to tho citizens The mayor looked after the business of the town and selected worthy men as firemen or police or wardens of vari ous kinds. Nowaday? one of tho most important functions of policemen and firemen is as ornaments in civic pa rades. Policemen in particular are selected on sccount of their size and appearance. They may be brutal, they may Le drunkards, they may have vicious histories, but whatever they are, they must be six feet tall and an ornament to the boulevard or avenue they are supposed to, protect. In places where the Are service is of any real protection the regime is that of the civil service and promotions are made strictly on merit. But In many western cities the firemen are selected because they are willing to present the mayor with fifty dollars and they are retained in the services for reasons equally unconnected wjth their fitness for the place. In Kansas' City it is proposed to Bend the fire' 'chief and twenty or thirty mon' to Paris when the exposition opens. What service