valentine democrat. (valentine, nebraska) 1897-11...

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Ml fcmanjM mm xnnt1 IP fakntine enjacrHt ROBERT GOOD Editor and Prop VALENTINE - NEBRASKA Death has all seasons for his own but the foot ball season is undeniably one of his favorites Those who rudely broke their home connections to go to Klondike aro forming other ties up there Theyve legun lynching each other Judging from recent statistics ap ¬ pendicitis seems to be growing into an epidemic in the United States that sug ¬ gests the idea of a quarantine against the disease A literary critic says that Kiplings poetry is the only modern literary work which shows the results of in ¬ spiration Well a dollar a word is enough inspiration to produce quite an effort The latest rules of the postoffiee de- partment ¬ require employes to use the utmost civility in all their dealings with the public Civil service will leave no room for a demand for civil service reform A writer an a sporting contemporary Bays that the Laplanders when on ekates think nothing of covering 150 miles a day The average man in this country wbo goes on a skate doesnt think of it either The giving of 50 cents a week to his wife got a Pittsburger a thirty day work house -- sentence a deserved re ¬ buke for recklessness Domestic econ- omy ¬ mustbe enforoed If he had given her a dollar there is no telling what mught have happened to him An experienced man who has just re- turned from Alaska tells the Fargo Ar gus how to cure the Klondike fever Pick out a morning next winter he says when themiercury is below zerct shoulder a pick and go into the woods before breakfast dig a hole sixteen feet deep come back to the house at night and eat a small piece of stewed buffalo robe and sleep in the woodshed Repeat the dose as often as necessary1 Arab chiefs are regarding the discor eacy of water by English engineers in the Nubian desert with great satisfac- tion ¬ They believe it will revolutionize the country and cause villages to spring up in the heart of the desert Three thousand men are employed in build ¬ ing the railroad which is being laid there many of them being dervishes who were captured by the Anglo-Egyp-IS- an forces and they will work with a will for the money they receive One who heard Lord Kelvin and Lord Lister at the late meeting of the Brit ¬ ish Association for the Advancement ef Science was struck with their gentle- ness ¬ of voice There was a restfulness In the tones No fine frenzy helped the -- spectator to imagine for a moment that he was listening to one who made declamation take the place of demon ¬ stration How well this simplicity symbolized that true science that never mistakes vociferation for verity Quackery loves the sounding brass of long words and a loud voice If Diogenes were still on earth hunt ¬ ing with his lantern for an honest man Monrovia Ind would be the place for him to turn his steps toward Clark Geare lives there and if one recent act of his is an index of his nature he is Just the sort of manDiogenes was look ¬ ing for Geare is aweteran of the late war and some time ago applied for a pension because of rheumatism He got it but recently returned his certifi- cate ¬ and 350 back pension to the de ¬ partment at Washington saying that bis rheumatism had gradually improv ¬ ed and finally left him completely and that ho was therefore not entitled to the pension The name of the river that is now on everybodys lips should be spelled Klondike according to the rules of our Government Board of Geographic Names which say that in foreign and aboriginal names C is always soft and has nearly the sound of S as iri Cele- bes ¬ and K should always be used for the hard d and that Y is always a consonant as in yard and therefore should not be tused for the vowel I For about eight years the orthographic rules adopted by the leading geographi ¬ cal societies have agreed In rejecting the possessive case in many names The rule adopted by our Board of Geo- graphic ¬ Names Is The possessive form should be avoided whenever it can be dene without destroying the ouphony of the name or changing its descriptive application So Cook Inlet and St Mfchael now appear in all our govern- - meet publications though Cooks In let and St Michaels are 1H1 cur rentiin many newspapers Fanmers in America who are some- times ¬ unable to make both ends meet would do well to study the methods and processes of Belgian farmers Six mill- ion ¬ of people in Belgium live on a ter- ritory ¬ about equal to the State of Mary ¬ land and a ifarm of two acres is enough to support man and his family and enable blm to lay by something for a rainy day-- Ad article in Colmans Eural World tells something of the methods of the Belgian farmer and gives an telecasting insight into rural ithrift and eeonomj in the most dense ¬ ly settled country at Europe Describ ¬ ing the typical two acre farm in Bel ¬ gium the article sajs the thrifty Bel ¬ gian makes the most of every inch by heavy manuring and allowing no waste places A patch at wheat or rye and bariej- - another of potatoes etc and other garden truck even the slop ¬ ing sides of the ditches for irrigation Jbefcg utilized nod the general result is SSS33ESS325Jufe C that with thrift and economy the far mer provides about everything his fam ily needs except a few groceries and clothes while the surplus products more than supply his other wants and leave a balance to his credit which grows each year Manitoba is beginning to look Con- fidently ¬ to the United States for an overflow of population to make the vast plains of the northwest a new ag- ricultural ¬ empire Basing their con- clusions ¬ on the fact that the public lands of the United States open to set- tlement ¬ are practically exhausted the Manitobans think that as the United States now receives and has been re- ceiving ¬ the surplus populations of the old world the surplus of the United States will in turn overflow into Can ¬ ada especially into Manitoba where it is now much easier to obtain a farm than in the United States A number1 of Canadian immigration societies have already been established in this coun j try and whether the Canadians are right or not in their supposition theyi iseem to think they are obtaining the1 overflowing of the genuine American population people who want to own their own homes while their places are taken in America by the continued in- flux ¬ of foreign immigration The Klon- dike ¬ the Wawa and the Kootenay gold mines will also add to Canadas attract- - iveness and draw hardy and adventur ¬ ous men many of whom will so the Manitobans think remain and become citizens The indictment of six prominent Ken tuckians by the grand jury at Frank- - fort for poker playing for money is regarded by the Chicago Times Herald as another sign of tlve decline of poker For better or worse and without con ¬ sidering the ethics of gambling it is ap ¬ parent to any one who will think of It for a moment that poker is slowly but sur ely going out of fashion Before the war everybody played it The statesman of those days was as well known for his skill in opening a jack- pot ¬ and the savoir fa ire with which he staked all of his possessions on his abil ¬ ity to guess whether his opponent had filled or merely bluffed as for his fo- rensic ¬ eloquence After the war the game kept its hold on popular favor to but a slightly diminished degree But gradually it has lost its seductive pow ¬ ers for American mankind until now hardly anybody plays it While a few years ago poker was played in every cluu now it is forbidden by the rules of most Then every hotel saw a dozen or more games in progress Now an order to the bell boy to bring cards ana chips to the room Is a rare occur- rence ¬ Then everybody played now the same men find it difficult to recol- lect ¬ when they last opened a jack pot The game once a gentlemans game has lost its favor and with faro and roulette has become a gamblers game played seldom by any one but profes- sionals ¬ Some idea of the value and of the terest that is being shown in Ontarios gold mines in the newly discovered Michipicoten district may be learned from the report of Mr Archibald Blue director of the bureau of mines as given in the Canadian papers Mr Blue has organized the new mining dis- trict ¬ which has been placed under the direction of Mr D Boyd During the fifteen days Mr Blue was at the office there were registered between eighty and ninety claims which had been reg- ularly ¬ staked out by license holders and upon all of which discoveries of gold had been made In all over 2C0 licenses have been issued since the new regulations went into effect then about a month The new law allows miners to take out two licenses provided they are not under the same vein and a number of miners have availed them ¬ selves of this privilege As the system of mining enables miners to secure a claim at trifling expense Mr Blue re ¬ ports sit as very popular among pros- pectors ¬ Among the prospectors who have staked out claims are Lord Doug- lass ¬ of Harvick and a company in which Col EEsdale is interested The director also reports that he heard of one vein from twenty to thirty feet wide which showed free gold in prom ¬ ising quantities the samples of quartz shown him being literally covered on the faoe with the precious aaetal Many of the prospectors had no experience at all and many of them according to Mr Blue never left their camp at Wawa Most of those who did how- ever ¬ were successful in locating claims House-to-Hou- se Housekeeping Why should not a staff of servants be organized to do at any rate the rough- er ¬ part of the domestic service in say fifty or a hundred federated house- holds ¬ just in the same way that a sin ¬ gle staff could be organized to cook their meals Why should I not pay so much a year either to a bona fide co operative society or to a private speculator to have my beds made my floors scrubbed my knives and boots cleaned and other similar work per ¬ formed at stated hours every day and every week The agency which un- dertook ¬ to perform this service would organize its workers just as do other agencies which at present undertake to keep our gardens in order to clean our boilers sweep our chimneys or clean our bicycles and the labor diffi- culty ¬ which meets us in domestic ser- vice ¬ as at present organized would consequently be eliminated London Truth A Univeral Weakness I never censure -- lazy people Why not The laziest man on earth isnt half as lazy as I would be if I could afford It Chicago Record Everlastingly at It Stark Is a bi ¬ cycle crank isnt he I should say he was When it rains he stays home and runs his cyclomerer Cleveland Plain Dealer ilirilJJIHimiHi1ltfrfffWirTaCT-Mi-rTTtWi-iiii- i niiTyFf THE CURRENCY QUESTION The first regular session of the Fifty fifth Congress will soon begin and as the House of Representatives is al ¬ ready organized a message from the President is due the first day While that high executive has been jaunting about the country to escape the pes- tilential ¬ breaths of those office seekers who beset the doors of the White House his Secretary of the Treasury National Banker Gage has been busy in preparing the financial propositions by which he is reform our currency The word of McKinley has been given that he will approve the Gage plan should it pass Congress and it is there- fore ¬ to be expected that there will be an emphatic recommendation of it in the annual message From the mo- ment ¬ when that document so con ¬ structed shall be delivered to the clerks of the two houses may be da ted the revival of the currency question and the renewal of debate upon what shall constitute the money of the American people That the lines of party will be drawn definitely and dis- tinctly ¬ is inevitable and that the con- test ¬ thus commenced will outlast the present Congress and enter into and decide the Presidential election of 1000 would appear to be altogether probable It is twenty years ago that the with drawal of greenbacks was inserted in the Democratic platform by the agen ¬ cy of Mr Man ton Marble then the edi- tor ¬ of the New York World It was not then in the Republican platform And a third party known as the Green ¬ back party sustained the government paper currency But for this Samuel J Tilden would have been President of the United States The issue upon which McKinley is now proposing to risk the success of his administration the ascendency of his party and his own political future is the funding into interest bearing bonds of these greenbacks now serving as money and their withdrawal and re- placement ¬ by national bank notes on conditions which would make the lat ¬ ter more profitable to the banks It is an attempt on the part of 350 national banks to control the currency of the nation such an attempt as the old United States Bank made and almost succeeded in between the years 1830 and 1844 President Jackson defeated it when but that one bank made the at- tempt ¬ But now there will be 350 banks with the President on their side New York News Silver in the Senate The Republicans are laboring dili ¬ gently to fasten on the people of this country the chains of gold They real ¬ ize that If they fail to secure legislation during the coming session of Congress their chances of success will be entirely swept away by an increased bimetallic vote It is greatly fortunate that all these plots will be made ineffectual by the fact that the Senate as it is now constituted will refuse to approve of any bill which contemplates the issuing of bonds to retire the greenbacks and without such a vote all the plans of the gold monometallists will prove futile The New York World has made a can ¬ vass of the Senate and announces that neither Secretary Gages plan of mone ¬ tary reform nor that of the self-constitut- ed monetary commission can be adopted The conclusions or the World upon this matter are as follows The preliminary canvass seems to show for gold bonds thirty three Republicans and four Democrats a total of thirty seven against gold bonds thirty Dem ocrats ten Republicans six Populists and six silver Republicans a total of fifty two This would be a majority of fifteen against the foundation stone of the plans of both Secretary Gage and the monetary commission It is be- lieved ¬ that the majority would be even larger against the retirement of the greenbacks It is to be hoped that the Republicans will insist on urging their proposed re- form ¬ and thus place themselves on record as absolutely the friends and ad- vocates ¬ of gold monometallism All their victories in the past have been won by a pretended friendship for bi- metallism ¬ The majority of the people in the United States is unalterably op ¬ posed to the single standard and when- ever ¬ a fight is made on a square issue between gold monometallism and bi- metallism ¬ the former will go down in defeat Chicago Dispatch Bribery and Bulldozing One of Mark Hannas newspaper champions describes the methods which the big boodle boss has adopted to make his calling and election sure His first move will be to have no fed- eral ¬ appointments made in the State so far as he can control the matter un ¬ til after the Senatorial question is de- cided ¬ In short official bribery Nei ¬ ther will he permit the general assem- bly ¬ to be organized until the Senatorial question has been solved In other words official bulldozing New York World The Situation in a Nutshell New York New Jersey and Kentucky cast fifty eight electoral votes for Mc- Kinley ¬ one of Kentuckys votes going tb Bryan New York New Jersey and Kentucky all went Democratic last week Had McKinley been a candidate last week instead of last year the pop- ular ¬ vote in these three Democratic States would certainly have been cast against him Now deduct these fifty eight electoral Totes from the 271 which Mr McKinley received and there are left 21 Add these fifty eight gg agVjjy-gSSBa- - c votes to the 17G of Mr Bryan and he would have 234 That is a majority of twenty one in the Electoral College In other words the Democrats do not need to gain another State They need only retain these three New York New Jersey and Kentucky and they will elect the next President New York World Growing Deficit The Dingley tariff law was passed by the last Congress for the special pur- pose ¬ of furnishing sufficient revenue for the needs of the government It has been in operation now fifteen weeks and it has produced in that short space of time a deficit of 42000 000 What is worse still it promises to continue adding to the national debt at even an increasing ratio so long as it remains on the statute books At the rate of about three millions a week the deficit created by this hum- bug ¬ revenue raising measure will be no Idss than 60000000 by the first of next January and by the time it will have been in operation a full year this deficit will have mounted to close on the two hundred million figure which is twice as much as the conservative opponents of the bill originally pre ¬ dicted and which is therefore likely to be largely exceeded Considering the promises made by the Republicans as to the consequences to follow the enactment of the Ding ley bill the actual result is decidedly grewsome It is as if a friend had in- vited ¬ you to partake of a plenteous din- ner ¬ at his house and then presented for your delectation the skeleton of his cook Underconsumption Not Overproduc- tion ¬ The strawboard trust finds that in one day with modern machinery and thorough organization it can produce twice as much as the country can con- sume ¬ in the same period nence an apparent overproduction is brought about The overproduction is of course only apparent because it is caused by the inability of the masses of the people who constitute the home market to purchase and consume more than their income permits Their in ¬ come in turn so far as they are wage earners is limited by the extent and power of consumption of the mar- ket ¬ of which they are a large part Thus we have a vicious circle St Louis Post Dispatch Lively Times Coming in Ohio You may look forward with entire confidence to a disgraceful row in the next Ohio Legislature all arising from the election of a Senator Contests are already announced from the doubtful counties and if there is any opportu ¬ nity for stealing members M Hanna can be relied upon to try it It will probably be a repetition of the situa ¬ tion following the campaign when John Sherman announced that Ohio was di ¬ vinely commissioned to purify the bal- lot ¬ in the South and it will incidental ¬ ly illustrate the desirability of electing Federal Senators by poptilar vote In ¬ dianapolis News Gorman Still a Political Force Because Senator Gorman cannot be re elected to the Senate it is assumed that his political career is ended That does not necessarily follow He is re ¬ tired for four years without question but Arthur Pue Gorman is a resource- ful ¬ individual His party is disorgan ¬ ized but if the Republicans of Mary ¬ land make mistakes it would not be surprising to see him revivified in four years when a legislature to choose Senator Wellingtons successor is to be elected He is a force still to be reck ¬ oned with Those who calculate other ¬ wise are shortsighted Springfield Mass Union Prices Go Up Wages Go Down The glass manufacturers are work ¬ ing the McKinley prosperity in the us- ual ¬ way They have put wages so low that the workers have refused to ac- cept ¬ the terms of the manufacturers and there will be no immediate re ¬ sumption of production In the mean- time ¬ the Manufacturers association announces that it has advanced glass from 5 to 10 per cent The jobbers would import glass to meet the de- mand ¬ which is greater than the sup- ply ¬ but they are prevented from doing so by a prohibitory tariff imposed by the Dingley bill Louisville Dispatch What McKinley Owes to Hanna President McKinleys debt to Hanna is unquestionably very great Hanna by devious methods made him the can- didate ¬ of the Republican convention Hanna procured the enormous cam ¬ paign fund by the use of which his elec- tion ¬ was compassed Hanna in short made McKinley President so far as such an agent can be said to have ac- complished ¬ such an end That isr had it not been for Hanna some other Re ¬ publican would have been nominated and perhaps elected Boston Post Heroism of True Democracy This has been a Democratic year The elections of 1S97 have shown that the Dempcracy rebounds from the downfall of 1896 stronger and more confident and combative than ever Democracy exhibits every quality of heroism It has courage it has the genius of recovery and reconstruction it knows not the meaning of dismay Defeat leaves it without fear Danger finds it without cowardice It is a miracle of vitality of valor and of hope Washington Post Telling Some of the Truth Chauncey I Filley in a signed arti- cle ¬ says that the McKinley campaign managers paid the St Louis pla glass works to close up their plant and re- main ¬ idle during the campaign to in- fluence ¬ the wTorkingmen to vote for Mc ¬ Kinley to open up the mills When one of the Republican bosses turns States evidence it makes mighty in- terest ¬ n readin Piatts Future in McKinleys Hanai If President McKinley desires to put the finishing touches on the career of Thomas C Piatt as boss of the New York Republicans he has an excellent excuse and opportunity for doing so now Piatts power in the metropolis is hopelessly shattered and his influ- ence ¬ in the State outside of the city is languishing The only chance he now has to recoup himself is afforded by the dispensation of federal patronage which the President has turned over to him Through his influence at Wash- ington ¬ the defeated boss may be able to come to the front again Detroit Free Press Vast Sums for Pensions The cumulative result of years of pension giving is the monstrous annual burden of 140000000 a year a sum nearly equal to the revenue produced by our customs tariff The commis ¬ sioner reports that the list is still in ¬ creasing It is time that Congress was made to heed the citizen vote the vote of the taxpayer who will beyond all question make a powerful and effective protest against pension extravagance as soon as he can be made to realize the unworthiness of a very large pro- portion ¬ of the pensioners New York Times Too Narrow Minded Republican statesmen should broad- en ¬ generally While they take such a comprehensive view of the Hawaiian question they should widen out on the tariff It doesnt consist to argue that we need a mid Pacific station in the in- terest ¬ of extended commerce and then regulate our tariff laws so as to de- stroy ¬ that commerce Nashville Amer ¬ ican Polly of Paternal Legislation We regret to observe a growing ten- dency ¬ on the part of many worthy peo- ple ¬ to demand paternal legislation Such legislation is not only unwise un ¬ necessary and undemocratic but it causes a great many people to lose re- spect ¬ for legislation that is not open to such objections Atlanta Constitution Trusts Outwitting the Law The failure of practically all the le- gal ¬ proceedings against trusts does not prove the justice or legality of these conspiracies of greed It simply shows the astuteness of the trusts in dealing with the bosses who control legislation and make judges New York World Every Politician for Himself The argument that Governor Bush nell is too much of a Republican to op- pose ¬ Mark Hanna for United States Senator might possess considerable force in any State outside of Ohio But there a mans first choice is usually himself Kansas City Star Pictured by Lightning During a recent thunderstorm in Nu ¬ bile a flash of lightning played one of the strangest tricks ever known It went into the photographing business without the aid of any apparatus ex- cept ¬ an object to be photographed and a piece of sugar candy for a receiving plate In the candy store of Mr Tons meire on lower Dauphin street was the candy that the lightning chose to ope- rate ¬ upon The candy was of sugar and glucose brown in color and transpar- ent ¬ It lay on a slab on a table in the midst of the store The article photo ¬ graphed was the wrapper of small American flags then lying imbedded in some melted candy on the floor of the store in front of the table but not in line of view of the candy on the table On the wrapper was an inscription in condensed gothic type reading Na- tional ¬ Flags This inscription begin- ning ¬ with the fourth letter of the first woirl and part of the third letter just so much of the lettering as was visible on the wrapper as it lay in the midst of the sticky stuff on the floor was taken uy iuu uguimng ana transterred to a piece of the candy on the table not transferred simply but imbedded in it beneath the surface the smallest frac- tion ¬ of an inch It was a perfect repro- duction ¬ and perfectly black but Insert- ed ¬ face front just as In the original and not reverse as would be the order of the letters if any one should attempt to transfer them by applying the wrap- per ¬ to the surface of the candy In the search for a clew to the sud- den ¬ and mysterious appearance the pa- per ¬ wrapper was discovered on the floor with those letters exposed which appeared on the candy Mr Fosdick says that there is a mirror in front of the table that possibly had something to do with the photographing Chicago Chronicle Swellings from Blows The swelling which follows from a blow is natures effect to protect the part from further injury and to keep it at rest while repair Is going on What actually takes place at the seat of injury is not even now quite under- stood ¬ The injury to the smaller blood vessels interferes with the flow of blood through them and the white corpuscles with part of the serum the watery part of the blood escapes in ¬ to the surrounding tissues At the same time the blood vessels in the neighbor ¬ hood dilate and the increased 3ow of blood with the thoroughfare obstructed increases the swelling It is probable that the white corpuscles of the blood pass into the tissues to assist in the re- pair ¬ as bees or ants assemble at an in ¬ jury to their storehouse but with the difference that the substance of the corpuscles is probably converted into the tissue of repair From one point of view the human body is only one gigan ¬ tic colony of individuals and the swell ¬ ing that follows injury but the rush of these to repair that breach i IfooTEfcOM EDUCATION MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PU PIL AND TEACHER United States Commissioner of Edu ¬ cation Kccommends Better Grading of Pupils Practical Journalism In Schools Educational Notes Better Grading Needed At the National Educational Associa ¬ tion meeting recently held at Milwau ¬ kee Dr Wm T Harris United States Commissioner of Education pleaded for a better grading of pupils in the public schools claiming that the classi ¬ fications are seldom as accurate as they should be Bright active well advanced pupils are herded with duIL slow less well advanced pupils Af- ter ¬ three or four months it is found that the dull ones are holding the brighter ones back and the brighter1 ones are hurrying the slow ones for- - ward at a pace which prevents real comprehension of what is passed rer The School Newspaper Did you ever try it Then start now It is brought out by the school weekly or monthly as is seen fit All the school1 act as reporters and collect items Some write little stories and essays but the main thing is school news The editors notes John Smith read a fine composition on Courage last Fri ¬ day and Avas complimented by Mr Jones our teacher There should bo items about good conduct this will stimulate We cannot go on to enu ¬ merate Will some teacher try one or more of these plans Let us hear of your success The teacher will be gratified to find some school-homema- de brighter by its efforts Canadian Teacher 2ivil Government in Primary Schools About the time that the child goes to school he begins to take lessons in civil government This also is developed on the basis of his previous home training It begins at the very door step The letter carrier the police- man ¬ the justice of the peace and the postmaster introduce him to the gov- ernment ¬ of the outer world Some or all of these officers he sees and knows and others he hears about The very mail wagon that rattles along the street teaches its lesson and so do oth- er ¬ symbols of authority that confront him B ninsdale Items of Interest Several Yale students make tuition fees during vacation by working as motormen on trolley cars The University of the City of New York has enrolled for the new year in all departments 1300 students Fourteen hundred students have been admitted and 050 are waiting for admittance at Cooper Union New York The University of Illinois has 1C00 students In 1S03 04 it had 743 The new school of law opened with twenty live students Lawrence University is to have a new science hall 22000 having been contributed for this purpose This building will cost 23000 and the ap ¬ paratus 15000 more Dr Henry Preserved Smith who was formerly professor at Lane Theo ¬ logical Seminary has been recently ap ¬ pointed to the chair of Biblical inter ¬ pretation at Amherst The will of the late C T Wilder of Wlilesley Mass leaves 10000 each to the American Board American Mis ¬ sionary Association Roberts College at Constantinople the School for Girls at the same city Whitman College Carleton College and the Mount Her mon School at Northfield Mass Dart ¬ mouth College receives 73000 and Amherst College 15000 At Pittsburg Pa a movement is said to be on foot to have placed in every public school swimming pools and a complete bathing equipment The idea is to have the swimming pools placed in the spacious basements of tbo school buildings and have the children take a bath every time the teachers or the principals deem it necessary A Curious Oil It has been found that the oil bursting out of the bed of the creek near Camp ton says the Courier Journal contains a very valuable quality hitherto un ¬ known By laying a plank or anything across the creek a person can dam the oil up and gather any amount of it and it has been discovered that the oil will burn as fast as dry paper The people through curiosity go to this oil spring dam it up on the top of the water and then strike a match to it in order to see spread over the whole surface of the water a perfect blaze This oil for lu bricating purposes is hard to surpass and the beauty of it rests in the fact that it does not have to undergo any process whatever to be valuable for such purpose The Lightest Known Solid The lightest known solid is said to be the pith of the sunflower with a spe- cific ¬ gravity of 028 or about one eighth that of cork The sunflower Is exten- sively ¬ cultivated in Central Russia and various uses are served by its different parts the recent discovery of the light- - ness of the pith essentially increasing- - the commercial value of the plant For life saving appliances at sea cork has- - a buoyancy of one to five while with the sunflower pith one to thirty five is attained About 800 cubic inches of it would weigh as much as one cubic inch of iridium the heaviest metal Rev Dr Parkhurst says in a recent etter to a friend in New York I can-- not stand by the Sunday saloon pure and simple but I do believe in allowinirr the sale of beer and light wines on Sun ¬ day provided they are the accompany rnent of an honest meal honestly paidi HA ft Cr r i 2 fH a

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Page 1: Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Nebraska) 1897-11 …nebnewspapers.unl.edu/lccn/sn95069778/1897-11-25/ed-1/seq-2.pdf · VALENTINE-NEBRASKA Death has all seasons for his own but the

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fcmanjM mm xnnt1

IP fakntine enjacrHt

ROBERT GOOD Editor and Prop

VALENTINE - NEBRASKA

Death has all seasons for his own butthe foot ball season is undeniably oneof his favorites

Those who rudely broke their homeconnections to go to Klondike aroforming other ties up there Theyvelegun lynching each other

Judging from recent statistics ap ¬

pendicitis seems to be growing into anepidemic in the United States that sug¬

gests the idea of a quarantine againstthe disease

A literary critic says that Kiplingspoetry is the only modern literarywork which shows the results of in ¬

spiration Well a dollar a word isenough inspiration to produce quite aneffort

The latest rules of the postoffiee de-

partment¬

require employes to use theutmost civility in all their dealingswith the public Civil service will leaveno room for a demand for civil servicereform

A writer an a sporting contemporaryBays that the Laplanders when onekates think nothing of covering 150miles a day The average man inthis country wbo goes on a skatedoesnt think of it either

The giving of 50 cents a week to hiswife got a Pittsburger a thirty daywork house --sentence a deserved re¬

buke for recklessness Domestic econ-omy

¬

mustbe enforoed If he had givenher a dollar there is no telling whatmught have happened to him

An experienced man who has just re-

turned from Alaska tells the Fargo Argus how to cure the Klondike fever

Pick out a morning next winter hesays when themiercury is below zerctshoulder a pick and go into the woodsbefore breakfast dig a hole sixteenfeet deep come back to the house atnight and eat a small piece of stewedbuffalo robe and sleep in the woodshedRepeat the dose as often as necessary1

Arab chiefs are regarding the discoreacy of water by English engineers inthe Nubian desert with great satisfac-tion

¬

They believe it will revolutionizethe country and cause villages to springup in the heart of the desert Threethousand men are employed in build¬

ing the railroad which is being laidthere many of them being dervisheswho were captured by the Anglo-Egyp-IS- an

forces and they will work with awill for the money they receive

One who heard Lord Kelvin and LordLister at the late meeting of the Brit¬

ish Association for the Advancement efScience was struck with their gentle-ness

¬

of voice There was a restfulnessIn the tones No fine frenzy helpedthe --spectator to imagine for a momentthat he was listening to one who madedeclamation take the place of demon ¬

stration How well this simplicitysymbolized that true science that nevermistakes vociferation for verityQuackery loves the sounding brassof long words and a loud voice

If Diogenes were still on earth hunt¬

ing with his lantern for an honest manMonrovia Ind would be the place forhim to turn his steps toward ClarkGeare lives there and if one recent actof his is an index of his nature he isJust the sort of manDiogenes was look ¬

ing for Geare is aweteran of the latewar and some time ago applied for apension because of rheumatism Hegot it but recently returned his certifi-cate

¬

and 350 back pension to the de ¬

partment at Washington saying thatbis rheumatism had gradually improv¬

ed and finally left him completely andthat ho was therefore not entitled tothe pension

The name of the river that is now oneverybodys lips should be spelled

Klondike according to the rules ofour Government Board of GeographicNames which say that in foreign andaboriginal names C is always soft andhas nearly the sound of S as iri Cele-bes

¬

and K should always be usedfor the hard d and that Y is alwaysa consonant as in yard and thereforeshould not be tused for the vowel IFor about eight years the orthographicrules adopted by the leading geographi ¬

cal societies have agreed In rejectingthe possessive case in many namesThe rule adopted by our Board of Geo-graphic

¬

Names Is The possessive formshould be avoided whenever it can bedene without destroying the ouphonyof the name or changing its descriptiveapplication So Cook Inlet and StMfchael now appear in all our govern- -

meet publications though Cooks Inlet and St Michaels are 1H1 currentiin many newspapers

Fanmers in America who are some-times

¬

unable to make both ends meetwould do well to study the methods andprocesses of Belgian farmers Six mill-ion

¬

of people in Belgium live on a ter-ritory

¬

about equal to the State of Mary¬

land and a ifarm of two acres is enoughto support man and his family andenable blm to lay by something for arainy day-- Ad article in ColmansEural World tells something of themethods of the Belgian farmer andgives an telecasting insight into ruralithrift and eeonomj in the most dense¬

ly settled country at Europe Describ¬

ing the typical two acre farm in Bel¬

gium the article sajs the thrifty Bel ¬

gian makes the most of every inch byheavy manuring and allowing nowaste places A patch at wheat or ryeand bariej- - another of potatoes etcand other garden truck even the slop ¬

ing sides of the ditches for irrigationJbefcg utilized nod the general result is

SSS33ESS325JufeC

that with thrift and economy the farmer provides about everything his family needs except a few groceries andclothes while the surplus productsmore than supply his other wants andleave a balance to his credit whichgrows each year

Manitoba is beginning to look Con-

fidently¬

to the United States for anoverflow of population to make thevast plains of the northwest a new ag-

ricultural¬

empire Basing their con-

clusions¬

on the fact that the publiclands of the United States open to set-

tlement¬

are practically exhausted theManitobans think that as the UnitedStates now receives and has been re-

ceiving¬

the surplus populations of theold world the surplus of the UnitedStates will in turn overflow into Can ¬

ada especially into Manitoba where itis now much easier to obtain a farmthan in the United States A number1of Canadian immigration societies havealready been established in this coun j

try and whether the Canadians areright or not in their supposition theyiiseem to think they are obtaining the1overflowing of the genuine Americanpopulation people who want to owntheir own homes while their places aretaken in America by the continued in-

flux¬

of foreign immigration The Klon-dike

¬

the Wawa and the Kootenay goldmines will also add to Canadas attract--

iveness and draw hardy and adventur ¬

ous men many of whom will so theManitobans think remain and becomecitizens

The indictment of six prominent Kentuckians by the grand jury at Frank- -

fort for poker playing for money isregarded by the Chicago Times Heraldas another sign of tlve decline of pokerFor better or worse and without con ¬

sidering the ethics of gambling it is ap ¬

parent to any one who will think of Itfor a moment that poker is slowly butsur ely going out of fashion Beforethe war everybody played it Thestatesman of those days was as wellknown for his skill in opening a jack-pot

¬

and the savoir fa ire with which hestaked all of his possessions on his abil ¬

ity to guess whether his opponent hadfilled or merely bluffed as for his fo-

rensic¬

eloquence After the war thegame kept its hold on popular favor tobut a slightly diminished degree Butgradually it has lost its seductive pow ¬

ers for American mankind until nowhardly anybody plays it While a fewyears ago poker was played in everycluu now it is forbidden by the rulesof most Then every hotel saw adozen or more games in progress Nowan order to the bell boy to bring cardsana chips to the room Is a rare occur-rence

¬

Then everybody played nowthe same men find it difficult to recol-lect

¬

when they last opened a jack potThe game once a gentlemans gamehas lost its favor and with faro androulette has become a gamblers gameplayed seldom by any one but profes-sionals

¬

Some idea of the value and of theterest that is being shown in Ontariosgold mines in the newly discoveredMichipicoten district may be learnedfrom the report of Mr Archibald Bluedirector of the bureau of mines asgiven in the Canadian papers MrBlue has organized the new mining dis-

trict¬

which has been placed under thedirection of Mr D Boyd During thefifteen days Mr Blue was at the officethere were registered between eightyand ninety claims which had been reg-ularly

¬

staked out by license holdersand upon all of which discoveries ofgold had been made In all over 2C0licenses have been issued since the newregulations went into effect then abouta month The new law allows minersto take out two licenses provided theyare not under the same vein and anumber of miners have availed them ¬

selves of this privilege As the systemof mining enables miners to secure aclaim at trifling expense Mr Blue re¬

ports sit as very popular among pros-pectors

¬

Among the prospectors whohave staked out claims are Lord Doug-lass

¬

of Harvick and a company inwhich Col EEsdale is interested Thedirector also reports that he heard ofone vein from twenty to thirty feetwide which showed free gold in prom ¬

ising quantities the samples of quartzshown him being literally covered onthe faoe with the precious aaetal Manyof the prospectors had no experience atall and many of them according toMr Blue never left their camp atWawa Most of those who did how-ever

¬

were successful in locatingclaims

House-to-Hou- se HousekeepingWhy should not a staff of servants be

organized to do at any rate the rough-er

¬

part of the domestic service in sayfifty or a hundred federated house-holds

¬

just in the same way that a sin ¬

gle staff could be organized to cooktheir meals Why should I not payso much a year either to a bona fideco operative society or to a privatespeculator to have my beds made myfloors scrubbed my knives and bootscleaned and other similar work per ¬

formed at stated hours every day andevery week The agency which un-

dertook¬

to perform this service wouldorganize its workers just as do otheragencies which at present undertaketo keep our gardens in order to cleanour boilers sweep our chimneys orclean our bicycles and the labor diffi-

culty¬

which meets us in domestic ser-vice

¬

as at present organized wouldconsequently be eliminated LondonTruth

A Univeral WeaknessI never censure -- lazy peopleWhy notThe laziest man on earth isnt half

as lazy as I would be if I could affordIt Chicago Record

Everlastingly at It Stark Is a bi ¬

cycle crank isnt he I should sayhe was When it rains he stays homeand runs his cyclomerer ClevelandPlain Dealer

ilirilJJIHimiHi1ltfrfffWirTaCT-Mi-rTTtWi-iiii- i niiTyFf

THE CURRENCY QUESTION

The first regular session of the Fiftyfifth Congress will soon begin and asthe House of Representatives is al¬

ready organized a message from thePresident is due the first day Whilethat high executive has been jauntingabout the country to escape the pes-

tilential¬

breaths of those office seekerswho beset the doors of the WhiteHouse his Secretary of the TreasuryNational Banker Gage has been busyin preparing the financial propositionsby which he is reform our currencyThe word of McKinley has been giventhat he will approve the Gage planshould it pass Congress and it is there-fore

¬

to be expected that there will bean emphatic recommendation of it inthe annual message From the mo-

ment¬

when that document so con ¬

structed shall be delivered to theclerks of the two houses may be da tedthe revival of the currency questionand the renewal of debate upon whatshall constitute the money of theAmerican people That the lines ofparty will be drawn definitely and dis-tinctly

¬

is inevitable and that the con-test

¬

thus commenced will outlast thepresent Congress and enter into anddecide the Presidential election of1000 would appear to be altogetherprobable

It is twenty years ago that the withdrawal of greenbacks was inserted inthe Democratic platform by the agen ¬

cy of Mr Man ton Marble then the edi-tor

¬

of the New York World It wasnot then in the Republican platformAnd a third party known as the Green ¬

back party sustained the governmentpaper currency But for this SamuelJ Tilden would have been Presidentof the United States

The issue upon which McKinley isnow proposing to risk the success of hisadministration the ascendency of hisparty and his own political future isthe funding into interest bearing bondsof these greenbacks now serving asmoney and their withdrawal and re-placement

¬

by national bank notes onconditions which would make the lat¬

ter more profitable to the banks It isan attempt on the part of 350 nationalbanks to control the currency of thenation such an attempt as the oldUnited States Bank made and almostsucceeded in between the years 1830and 1844 President Jackson defeatedit when but that one bank made the at-tempt

¬

But now there will be 350banks with the President on their side

New York News

Silver in the SenateThe Republicans are laboring dili ¬

gently to fasten on the people of thiscountry the chains of gold They real ¬

ize that If they fail to secure legislationduring the coming session of Congresstheir chances of success will be entirelyswept away by an increased bimetallicvote It is greatly fortunate that allthese plots will be made ineffectual bythe fact that the Senate as it is nowconstituted will refuse to approve ofany bill which contemplates the issuingof bonds to retire the greenbacks andwithout such a vote all the plans of thegold monometallists will prove futile

The New York World has made a can ¬

vass of the Senate and announces thatneither Secretary Gages plan of mone ¬

tary reform nor that of the self-constitut- ed

monetary commission can beadopted The conclusions or the Worldupon this matter are as follows Thepreliminary canvass seems to show forgold bonds thirty three Republicansand four Democrats a total of thirtyseven against gold bonds thirty Democrats ten Republicans six Populistsand six silver Republicans a total offifty two This would be a majority offifteen against the foundation stone ofthe plans of both Secretary Gage andthe monetary commission It is be-lieved

¬

that the majority would be evenlarger against the retirement of thegreenbacks

It is to be hoped that the Republicanswill insist on urging their proposed re-

form¬

and thus place themselves onrecord as absolutely the friends and ad-

vocates¬

of gold monometallism Alltheir victories in the past have beenwon by a pretended friendship for bi-

metallism¬

The majority of the peoplein the United States is unalterably op ¬

posed to the single standard and when-ever

¬

a fight is made on a square issuebetween gold monometallism and bi-

metallism¬

the former will go down indefeat Chicago Dispatch

Bribery and BulldozingOne of Mark Hannas newspaper

champions describes the methodswhich the big boodle boss has adoptedto make his calling and election sureHis first move will be to have no fed-

eral¬

appointments made in the Stateso far as he can control the matter un¬

til after the Senatorial question is de-

cided¬

In short official bribery Nei¬

ther will he permit the general assem-bly

¬

to be organized until the Senatorialquestion has been solved In otherwords official bulldozing New YorkWorld

The Situation in a NutshellNew York New Jersey and Kentucky

cast fifty eight electoral votes for Mc-

Kinley¬

one of Kentuckys votes goingtb Bryan New York New Jersey andKentucky all went Democratic lastweek Had McKinley been a candidatelast week instead of last year the pop-ular

¬

vote in these three DemocraticStates would certainly have been castagainst him Now deduct these fiftyeight electoral Totes from the 271which Mr McKinley received andthere are left 21 Add these fifty eight

gg agVjjy-gSSBa- - c

votes to the 17G of Mr Bryan and hewould have 234 That is a majority oftwenty one in the Electoral College Inother words the Democrats do notneed to gain another State They needonly retain these three New YorkNew Jersey and Kentucky and theywill elect the next President NewYork World

Growing DeficitThe Dingley tariff law was passed by

the last Congress for the special pur-pose

¬

of furnishing sufficient revenuefor the needs of the government Ithas been in operation now fifteenweeks and it has produced in thatshort space of time a deficit of 42000000 What is worse still it promisesto continue adding to the national debtat even an increasing ratio so long asit remains on the statute books

At the rate of about three millions aweek the deficit created by this hum-bug

¬

revenue raising measure will beno Idss than 60000000 by the first ofnext January and by the time it willhave been in operation a full year thisdeficit will have mounted to close onthe two hundred million figure whichis twice as much as the conservativeopponents of the bill originally pre ¬

dicted and which is therefore likely tobe largely exceeded

Considering the promises made bythe Republicans as to the consequencesto follow the enactment of the Dingley bill the actual result is decidedlygrewsome It is as if a friend had in-

vited¬

you to partake of a plenteous din-ner

¬

at his house and then presented foryour delectation the skeleton of hiscook

Underconsumption Not Overproduc-tion

¬

The strawboard trust finds that inone day with modern machinery andthorough organization it can producetwice as much as the country can con-

sume¬

in the same period nence anapparent overproduction is broughtabout The overproduction is ofcourse only apparent because it iscaused by the inability of the massesof the people who constitute the homemarket to purchase and consume morethan their income permits Their in ¬

come in turn so far as they are wageearners is limited by the extent andpower of consumption of the mar-ket

¬

of which they are a large partThus we have a vicious circle StLouis Post Dispatch

Lively Times Coming in OhioYou may look forward with entire

confidence to a disgraceful row in thenext Ohio Legislature all arising fromthe election of a Senator Contests arealready announced from the doubtfulcounties and if there is any opportu ¬

nity for stealing members M Hannacan be relied upon to try it It willprobably be a repetition of the situa ¬

tion following the campaign when JohnSherman announced that Ohio was di ¬

vinely commissioned to purify the bal-lot

¬

in the South and it will incidental ¬

ly illustrate the desirability of electingFederal Senators by poptilar vote In¬

dianapolis News

Gorman Still a Political ForceBecause Senator Gorman cannot be

re elected to the Senate it is assumedthat his political career is ended Thatdoes not necessarily follow He is re ¬

tired for four years without questionbut Arthur Pue Gorman is a resource-ful

¬

individual His party is disorgan ¬

ized but if the Republicans of Mary¬

land make mistakes it would not besurprising to see him revivified in fouryears when a legislature to chooseSenator Wellingtons successor is to beelected He is a force still to be reck ¬

oned with Those who calculate other ¬

wise are shortsighted SpringfieldMass Union

Prices Go Up Wages Go DownThe glass manufacturers are work ¬

ing the McKinley prosperity in the us-ual

¬

way They have put wages so lowthat the workers have refused to ac-cept

¬

the terms of the manufacturersand there will be no immediate re ¬

sumption of production In the mean-time

¬

the Manufacturers associationannounces that it has advanced glassfrom 5 to 10 per cent The jobberswould import glass to meet the de-

mand¬

which is greater than the sup-ply

¬

but they are prevented from doingso by a prohibitory tariff imposed bythe Dingley bill Louisville Dispatch

What McKinley Owes to HannaPresident McKinleys debt to Hanna

is unquestionably very great Hannaby devious methods made him the can-didate

¬

of the Republican conventionHanna procured the enormous cam ¬

paign fund by the use of which his elec-tion

¬

was compassed Hanna in shortmade McKinley President so far assuch an agent can be said to have ac-complished

¬

such an end That isr hadit not been for Hanna some other Re ¬

publican would have been nominatedand perhaps elected Boston Post

Heroism of True DemocracyThis has been a Democratic year

The elections of 1S97 have shown thatthe Dempcracy rebounds from thedownfall of 1896 stronger and moreconfident and combative than everDemocracy exhibits every quality ofheroism It has courage it has thegenius of recovery and reconstructionit knows not the meaning of dismayDefeat leaves it without fear Dangerfinds it without cowardice It is amiracle of vitality of valor and ofhope Washington Post

Telling Some of the TruthChauncey I Filley in a signed arti-

cle¬

says that the McKinley campaign

managers paid the St Louis pla glassworks to close up their plant and re-

main¬

idle during the campaign to in-

fluence¬

the wTorkingmen to vote for Mc¬

Kinley to open up the mills Whenone of the Republican bosses turnsStates evidence it makes mighty in-

terest¬

n readinPiatts Future in McKinleys Hanai

If President McKinley desires to putthe finishing touches on the career ofThomas C Piatt as boss of the NewYork Republicans he has an excellentexcuse and opportunity for doing sonow Piatts power in the metropolisis hopelessly shattered and his influ-ence

¬

in the State outside of the city islanguishing The only chance he nowhas to recoup himself is afforded bythe dispensation of federal patronagewhich the President has turned over tohim Through his influence at Wash-ington

¬

the defeated boss may be ableto come to the front again DetroitFree Press

Vast Sums for PensionsThe cumulative result of years of

pension giving is the monstrous annualburden of 140000000 a year a sumnearly equal to the revenue producedby our customs tariff The commis ¬

sioner reports that the list is still in¬

creasing It is time that Congress wasmade to heed the citizen vote the voteof the taxpayer who will beyond allquestion make a powerful and effectiveprotest against pension extravaganceas soon as he can be made to realizethe unworthiness of a very large pro-portion

¬

of the pensioners New YorkTimes

Too Narrow MindedRepublican statesmen should broad-

en¬

generally While they take such acomprehensive view of the Hawaiianquestion they should widen out on thetariff It doesnt consist to argue thatwe need a mid Pacific station in the in-

terest¬

of extended commerce and thenregulate our tariff laws so as to de-stroy

¬

that commerce Nashville Amer¬

ican

Polly of Paternal LegislationWe regret to observe a growing ten-

dency¬

on the part of many worthy peo-ple

¬

to demand paternal legislationSuch legislation is not only unwise un ¬

necessary and undemocratic but itcauses a great many people to lose re-spect

¬

for legislation that is not open tosuch objections Atlanta Constitution

Trusts Outwitting the LawThe failure of practically all the le-

gal¬

proceedings against trusts does notprove the justice or legality of theseconspiracies of greed It simplyshows the astuteness of the trusts indealing with the bosses who controllegislation and make judges NewYork World

Every Politician for HimselfThe argument that Governor Bush

nell is too much of a Republican to op-pose

¬

Mark Hanna for United StatesSenator might possess considerableforce in any State outside of Ohio Butthere a mans first choice is usuallyhimself Kansas City Star

Pictured by LightningDuring a recent thunderstorm in Nu ¬

bile a flash of lightning played one ofthe strangest tricks ever known Itwent into the photographing businesswithout the aid of any apparatus ex-cept

¬

an object to be photographed anda piece of sugar candy for a receivingplate In the candy store of Mr Tonsmeire on lower Dauphin street was thecandy that the lightning chose to ope-rate

¬

upon The candy was of sugar andglucose brown in color and transpar-ent

¬

It lay on a slab on a table in themidst of the store The article photo ¬

graphed was the wrapper of smallAmerican flags then lying imbedded insome melted candy on the floor of thestore in front of the table but not inline of view of the candy on the tableOn the wrapper was an inscription incondensed gothic type reading Na-tional

¬

Flags This inscription begin-ning

¬

with the fourth letter of the firstwoirl and part of the third letter justso much of the lettering as was visibleon the wrapper as it lay in the midst ofthe sticky stuff on the floor was takenuy iuu uguimng ana transterred to apiece of the candy on the table nottransferred simply but imbedded in itbeneath the surface the smallest frac-tion

¬

of an inch It was a perfect repro-duction

¬

and perfectly black but Insert-ed

¬

face front just as In the originaland not reverse as would be the orderof the letters if any one should attemptto transfer them by applying the wrap-per

¬

to the surface of the candyIn the search for a clew to the sud-

den¬

and mysterious appearance the pa-per

¬

wrapper was discovered on thefloor with those letters exposed whichappeared on the candy Mr Fosdicksays that there is a mirror in front ofthe table that possibly had somethingto do with the photographing ChicagoChronicle

Swellings from BlowsThe swelling which follows from a

blow is natures effect to protect thepart from further injury and to keepit at rest while repair Is going onWhat actually takes place at the seatof injury is not even now quite under-stood

¬

The injury to the smaller bloodvessels interferes with the flow ofblood through them and the whitecorpuscles with part of the serum thewatery part of the blood escapes in ¬

to the surrounding tissues At the sametime the blood vessels in the neighbor ¬

hood dilate and the increased 3ow ofblood with the thoroughfare obstructedincreases the swelling It is probablethat the white corpuscles of the bloodpass into the tissues to assist in the re-

pair¬

as bees or ants assemble at an in ¬

jury to their storehouse but with thedifference that the substance of thecorpuscles is probably converted intothe tissue of repair From one point ofview the human body is only one gigan ¬

tic colony of individuals and the swell¬

ing that follows injury but the rush ofthese to repair that breach

i

IfooTEfcOM EDUCATION

MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PUPIL AND TEACHER

United States Commissioner of Edu¬

cation Kccommends Better Gradingof Pupils Practical Journalism InSchools Educational Notes

Better Grading NeededAt the National Educational Associa¬

tion meeting recently held at Milwau¬

kee Dr Wm T Harris United StatesCommissioner of Education pleadedfor a better grading of pupils in thepublic schools claiming that the classi¬

fications are seldom as accurate asthey should be Bright active welladvanced pupils are herded with duILslow less well advanced pupils Af-

ter¬

three or four months it is foundthat the dull ones are holding thebrighter ones back and the brighter1ones are hurrying the slow ones for--

ward at a pace which prevents realcomprehension of what is passed

rer

The School NewspaperDid you ever try it Then start now

It is brought out by the school weeklyor monthly as is seen fit All the school1act as reporters and collect itemsSome write little stories and essaysbut the main thing is school newsThe editors notes John Smith read afine composition on Courage last Fri¬

day and Avas complimented by MrJones our teacher There should boitems about good conduct this willstimulate We cannot go on to enu¬

merate Will some teacher try one ormore of these plans Let us hear ofyour success The teacher will begratified to find some school-homema- de

brighter by its efforts CanadianTeacher2ivil Government in Primary Schools

About the time that the child goes toschool he begins to take lessons in civilgovernment This also is developedon the basis of his previous hometraining It begins at the very doorstep The letter carrier the police-man

¬

the justice of the peace and thepostmaster introduce him to the gov-

ernment¬

of the outer world Some orall of these officers he sees and knowsand others he hears about The verymail wagon that rattles along thestreet teaches its lesson and so do oth-

er¬

symbols of authority that confronthim B ninsdale

Items of InterestSeveral Yale students make tuition

fees during vacation by working asmotormen on trolley cars

The University of the City of NewYork has enrolled for the new year inall departments 1300 students

Fourteen hundred students havebeen admitted and 050 are waiting foradmittance at Cooper Union NewYork

The University of Illinois has 1C00students In 1S03 04 it had 743 Thenew school of law opened with twentylive students

Lawrence University is to have anew science hall 22000 having beencontributed for this purpose Thisbuilding will cost 23000 and the ap¬

paratus 15000 moreDr Henry Preserved Smith who

was formerly professor at Lane Theo¬

logical Seminary has been recently ap¬

pointed to the chair of Biblical inter ¬

pretation at AmherstThe will of the late C T Wilder of

Wlilesley Mass leaves 10000 eachto the American Board American Mis ¬

sionary Association Roberts Collegeat Constantinople the School for Girlsat the same city Whitman CollegeCarleton College and the Mount Hermon School at Northfield Mass Dart ¬

mouth College receives 73000 andAmherst College 15000

At Pittsburg Pa a movement is saidto be on foot to have placed in everypublic school swimming pools and acomplete bathing equipment The ideais to have the swimming pools placedin the spacious basements of tboschool buildings and have the childrentake a bath every time the teachers orthe principals deem it necessary

A Curious OilIt has been found that the oil bursting

out of the bed of the creek near Campton says the Courier Journal containsa very valuable quality hitherto un ¬

known By laying a plank or anythingacross the creek a person can dam theoil up and gather any amount of it andit has been discovered that the oil willburn as fast as dry paper The peoplethrough curiosity go to this oil springdam it up on the top of the water andthen strike a match to it in order to seespread over the whole surface of thewater a perfect blaze This oil for lubricating purposes is hard to surpassand the beauty of it rests in the factthat it does not have to undergo anyprocess whatever to be valuable forsuch purpose

The Lightest Known SolidThe lightest known solid is said to be

the pith of the sunflower with a spe-cific

¬gravity of 028 or about one eighth

that of cork The sunflower Is exten-sively

¬cultivated in Central Russia and

various uses are served by its differentparts the recent discovery of the light- -

ness of the pith essentially increasing- -

the commercial value of the plant Forlife saving appliances at sea cork has- -

a buoyancy of one to five while withthe sunflower pith one to thirty five isattained About 800 cubic inches of itwould weigh as much as one cubic inchof iridium the heaviest metal

Rev Dr Parkhurst says in a recentetter to a friend in New York I can--not stand by the Sunday saloon pureand simple but I do believe in allowinirrthe sale of beer and light wines on Sun¬day provided they are the accompanyrnent of an honest meal honestly paidi

HA

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