I I m - i i i Bii V f k ip MALL LOSS BY EIRE INSURANCE MEN ARE MILLIONS AHEAD 1ear Jnst Past Has Been a Favorable One for Tlieru Amount of Property Consumed in the Twelve Months Will Not Kxceed 130000000 Total Income Not Diminished The officers and stockholders of the fire insurance companies doing business in the United States can look back upon the year 1S9G with satisfaction for it was one of imnciml rrrrA 1 tl mwl limsnorih for I them At the beginning of December men who had kept tab upon the fire losses for the year felt safe in predicting that -unless some very big fires occurred before Jan 1 1S97 the insurance companies -would have had a great year for profits The losses from fire in the United States during the year will probably not amount to more than 130000000 and large as this sum is it will be the smallest since 1890 The losses in that year footed up S10S993792 In 1S91 the sum rose to 143704967 in 1892 it grew again to 15151G098 and it reached its highest figures in 1S93 when the total of our fire losses was the enormous sum of 1G7544 370 Since then the losses were 140000 4S4 in 1S91 and 142110233 in 1S95 Of these sums the insurance companies have liad to moke good considerably more than Ihalf In 1892 the losses to the companies amounted in round figures to 93500000 in 1S93 to 103000000 in 1S94 to and in 1S95 to S4500000 The total of the losses in these four years was 001000000 and the total paid Knit by the insurance companies was 372 000000 This amounts to about G2 per -cent of the total losses and applying this same rule to the losses of 1S9G the t v 11 1- A l i A ance companies snare woum ue uuuul SSW00000 and it may fall below this This would leave a margin of 4500000 extra profits to be added by the companies -either to dividends or surplus in hand The experts declare that although the premium charges of the companies may have fallen behind during the year on ac count of hard times the natural increase in income from investments have probably Jcept the total incomes of the companies up sto about the same sum as last year Hard times these lame experts declare POPE LEOS DELICATE HEALTH iDeath of Cardinal Sanfelice Has Greatly Affected His Holiness In spite of official denials the reports ithat the health of the Pope is very deli Icate are confirmed by private advices According to news from Rome received by Cardinal Richard the Archbishop of JParis the condition of Pope Deo is very disquieting The death of Cardinal San Ifelice greatly affected his Holiness as Sanfelice was Pope Leos probable suc cessor to the pontificate and regarded the jDreibund as a possible means of bringing about a reconciliation between the Quir Snal and the Vatican Emperor William when he visited Naples last spring asked Cardinal Sanfelice what attitude he would take up if elected Pope but the distin guished prelate declined to be drawn out In view of Pope Leos present condition of health it is stated that sonie of the JPowers have already signified their wishes regarding the succession Frtnce Belgium and Portugal favoring Cardinal Parochi the Vicar General of his gSjL ypgf LEO Xlll tiess while Spain Austria and Russia sup port Cardinal Vannutelli the Prefect of the Congregational Index A bill is about to be introduced in the JNew York State Legislature limiting the height of buildings to 175 feet It will Slave the indorsement of the city authori ses of New York and will probably be passed The fire department the board of public works and the real estate men are opposed to sky scrapers In the California Assembly Belshaw jhas introduced a resolution instructing Californias delegation in Congress to prork against all Pacific Railroad refund ling bills flfefe Haunis Taylor For the first time since last May our minister to Spain Ilannis Taylor the oth er night met the Queen Regent It was at a banquet at the palace that the meeting occurred and it was watched with deep interest by European diplomats present After the dinner had been concluded the Queen spoke cordially to Mr Taylor and conversed with him for some time avoid ing however all mention of either the Cuban problem or any question of politics Hannis Taylor is from Alabama He re ceives twelve thousand dollars a year but does not enjoy a wholly pleasant position as things stand Although he fully ac cepts Mr Clevelands policy and theory of presidential irresponsibility to Congress in foreign affairs as stated by Olney yet as the visible representative of the Unit ed States in Spain he has to bear the brunt of the fury of the Madrid mob only tempered by such police protection as the authorities are able to afford It is cer tain enough that were it not for such pro tection the mob would tear him to pieces and destroy the embassy His position is something like that of a man sitting on a keg of gunpowder with a lighted candle in his hand If there is an explosion he may be able to get out of the way in time and he may not Dr Taylor was born in New hern N C in 1S51 In 1SG9 he removed TR iCtTffcjrr VKW AG CE AGREE TO ARBITRATION And what will poor Canada do now poor thing Chicago Tribune Tasually have a disastrous effect however Hipon insurance profits from another cause incendiarism No one questions that J1S96 was a hard times year and yet the fire losses have fallen off to Mobile and was admitted to the bar The University of Alabama conferred on him the degree of doctor of laws in 1S90 Mr Cleveland appointed him minister plenipotentiary from the United States to Spain on April 6 1893 The Latest in Epitaphs fer km Pittsburg Leader Sparks from the Wires A new ocean going yacht is to be built for Queen Victoria in place of the Victoria and Albert the present royal yacht The plate and sheet mill of the Cleve land Rolling Mill Company which has been closed down since 1S93 will resume operations giving employment to proba bly 200 or 300 hands Charles E Campbell a constable fell down a dark stairway while evicting a family at Dayton Ohio and sustained a fracture at the base of the skull from which he cannot possibly recover Joseph B McCullagh the St Louis editor left no will His estate now in the hands of the public administrator will be divided between seven sets cf heirs part of whom live in Dublin Ire land The plate and sheet mill of the Cleve land Ohio Rolling Mill Company which has been closed down since 1893 will re sume operations within a few days giv ing employment to probably 200 or 800 hands An order has gone into effect at the Union depot at Atchison Kan prohibit ing persons from smoking cigarettes in the waiting room The depot master has orders to eject any person who refuses to obey the mandate There will be no objection to smoking cigars or pipes The dwelling of Rev M L Jones at Pickens S 0 was destroyed by fire and two of his children were burned to death The father was away from home and left the place in charge of his 12-year-old son Elbert and his 12-year-old daughter Mary While both were asleep the flames broke out EDTJCATEONALCOLUMN NOTES ABOUT SCHOOLS AND THEIR MANAGEMENT Problem to Come Before the Southern Educational Association Need of Reform in the System of School Punishments Race Problems The education of the negro race will bo doubt be one of the leading ques tions before the Southern Educational Association again this year President Phillips in his last years address struck the key note when he said It is a fact that cannot well be called in question that white teachers in negro schools can never realize even approxi mately the ideal relation that should exist between the teacher and pupil This is forcibly true in elementary schools That relation requires love not philanthropy affection not charity sympathyTnot pity Occupying planes so widely separated spheres of activity so diverse without common blood or social ties common history or common interests common origin or common destiny a white teacher and a negro class will never realize the ideal school In such a case the teacher cannot ap peal to the inner life of the pupil and the craving consciousness of the child finds no responsive chord in the teach er They must meet if they meet at all upon the cold abstract plane of reason The instinct of race identity as strong in the one race as in the other as strong in the pupil as in the teacher inter venes as an insuperable barrier Be tween teacher and pupil must ever re main this chasm of race difference as deep as human consciousness itself Call it prejudice if you will as a God implanted instinct of which the teacher cannever divest himself but of which the pupil can never be educated Although it be tempered by philan thropy sweetened by religion or even smothered by fanaticism it still ex ists and will continue to exist as long as humanity Many educators of the North do not yet understand the conditions confront ing the people of the South We hope many of them will make the trip to Mobile meet with the teachers there and after mingling with the people and seeing things as they are they will return better prepared to understand the educational problems of our whole country American Journal of Educa tion School Whippings The brutal beating administered to a 12-year-old pupil by a teacher in a pub lic school the other day suggests the need of reform in the system of school punishments In some States corporal punishment of public school children is prohibited by law It is noteworthy that this pro- hibition has not weakened the discip line or in any other way reduced the efficiency of the system On the con trary reports from two or three States where teachers are not allowed to whip pupils indicate a higher standard of the schools and more encouraging results The aphorism Spare the rod and spoil the child is about as inapplica ble to conditions to day as are so many others of its kind that were quoted with unctuous rectitude by the gray beards of the past mainly for lack of a sound reason for their conduct The child of to day differs from the child of fifty years ago as the man and wom an differ from their prototypes of a past epoch The home training of children is now superior because par ents are better civilized and have a clearer insight into child nature Pos sibly the public school is largely re sponsible for this progress in that it has placed the advantages of educa tion within the reach of all Probably there was a time when to curb the barbarian that is latent in all juvenile natures a vigorous application of the birch was necessary But it can be asserted as a fact borne out by the records of public school management that very few school children now need whipping in order to be brought under discipline Of course there are still some incorrigibly bad children who are utterly impervious to moral suasion but these are too few to justify the tol eration of corporal punishment in the public schools Such pupils should be set apart where they will not demoral ize the rest of the school The excep tions will not then be an excuse for the maintenance of a system which is sure to prove baneful rather than beneficial In its operations St Louis Republic Docked a Cent a Minute Milwaukee is theonly city in the coun try which runs its school on a penny basis Probably no school commission ers In the land of the starry banner are more ingenious In inventing ways by which the salaries of the teachers of the public schools can be pared down The latest exploit in this direction Is a rule whereby any teacher who is tardy a single minute loses a cent of her sal ary and another cent for each minute lost - The teacher herself is made to report the tardiness to the principal of the school who in turn reports it to the school board and the secretary docks the unfortunate victim of an open bridge or a broken trolley wire a cent for each minute she has been delayed There Is no excuse accepted It is a cent a minute without mercy The time is taken by the school clock with which the teachers watch must agree There Is no allowance for difference of watches as on the railroads If a teacher is a minute late at the first opportunity she must walk up to the -principals office and request that he see that she has a cents worth of ab sence placed against her name In case the unfortunate has been a minute and a half late there Is a great how dye do The committee has to meet and debate solemnly whether the teacher slall suffer a 2 or a 1 cent deduction and there are few recomendations for mercy t is to the credit of the teachers that iu spite of the ridiculousness of the matter and the implied insult every time they have to play the spy on them selves every one has promptly reported any absence Most of the commission ers are ashamed of the rule but through some occult influence it is al lowed to remain Cleveland Plain Dealer Schools on Indian Reservations Schools are maintained in New Tons State on six Indian reservations These are at Salamanca South Onon daga Hogansburgh East Moriches Akron and Suspension Bridge The schools on the reservations have been supported at the expense of the State for many years and since 185G have been under the charge of the State Su perintendent of Public Instruction The populations of the several reserva tions in 1S92 was 4923 The number of children of school age on these res ervations in 1894 was 1478 The num ber of children attending school some portions of the year was 973 with an average daily attendance of 394 The Indian schools were in session thirty five weeks during the year at a total expense of 1230129 There are twenty-nine school districts on these reser vations A State Flower The public schools of some States have adopted a State flower The gold en rod is claimed by Nebraska Oregon and Alabama Colorado has selected the wild columbine Delaware the peach blossom Idaho the white syr inga sometimes called the brides flower New York and Iowa the rose Vermont the clover North Dakota the wild rose Maine the pine cone and tassel Minnesota the moccasin flower Montana the bitter root Utah the lily Oklahoma the mistletoe and Rhode Island and Wisconsin in lieu of flowers have chosen the maple tree The Class in Phvsioloy The following remarkable physiologi cal statement ocurred in the examina tion papers of a student in a Western school not long since The human body is divided into three parts the headr the chist and the stummick The head contains the eyes and brains if any The chist contains the lungs and a piece of the liver The stummick is devoted to the bowels of which there is five a e i o u and sometimes w arid y Mnst Not Accept Trasents The Pottstown Pa School Board has adopted a resolution forbidding the ac ceptance of presents by teachers from their schools The directors took this action because they believed that many poor children are embarrassed at their inability to contribute along with the other children to the gifts They also regard the practice as fend ing to influence the teachers relations with the pupils A Tigers Spring The strength of a tiger in its dying struggle is said to be almost fabulous writes Miss Marryatt in a letter from India and she goes on to describe a very distressing occurrence which took place In the Bandypoor jungle by which Captain H aide-de-camp to the Governor of Madras lost his life Captain H while staying at the bungalow on a journey to or from the hills heard that a large tiger which had done great mischief in the neighbor hood was still lurking in the surround ing jungle This was grand news for a sportsman and he lost no time for sal lying forth in search of the beast Ac cording to the statements of the natives who accompanied him the captain soon found himself face to face with this monarch of the Indian forests The tiger was on one side of a small stream and Captain H on the other and it was afterward ascertained that he had actually fired at the brute thir teen times before it sprang with amaz ing strength across the stream amaz ing when it is taken into consideration that Captain H was in general a most successful shot Seizing the unfortunate man before he had time to elude the attack the brute crushed him so frightfully that he was only carried back to the bunga low to die A doctor was procured as soon as possible but nothing could save his life The tiger must have fallen back almost instantly and died as he was found on the spot with the thirteen shots in his carcass Broke Up the Band The success of a boy in silencing a street band is recorded by the Philadel phla Record A German band of four pieces started to play Annie Rooney A crowd of urchins attracted by the music soon gathered around Then a mischievous looking boy appeared on the scene sucking a lemon He waited until the band was In the midst of the tune and then squeezed through the crowd and standing in the midst of the musicians began sucking the lemon with all his might The effect was instantaneous the sounds issuing from the brass Instru ments became feeble and at last they ceased altogether and the four Ger mans whose mouths were dripping moisture and all puckered up made a break for the little fellow threatening Mm with a terrible punishment The boy made his way through the crowd however and soon showed a clean pair of heels Like a Bird SmithYou told me your friend sang like a bird I think he has a horribly hoarse voice How can you say It is like a birds Jones Well the bird I meant was a crow Judy It is an Indication of a disappoint ment for a woman to class all men un der one head UJtU UU W HARD TIMES LINGER There is a feeling almost amounting to despondency that seems to pervade the entire country because the expect ed revival of business that was prom ised during the campaign has not come about and the wheels of the factories are still idle There were many who actually believed that the changing of the names of the Presidents leaving the conditions remaining the same would bring back confidence that as soon as it was settled that McKinley was to fill the executive chair for the next four years the dormant industries would awake from their slumber and activity would take the place of the torpor that had prevailed That this was a foolish expectation any one of sense might have known and none better than the men who were most ac tive in proclaiming that the day after McKinley was elected the factories would start up It was a good political dodge and had the desired effect Those who were influenced to vote for McKinley because of the promises and vituperation will have ample time dur ing the winter to sit down and do some thinking But one cannot blame the men who are so impatient to have pros perity return who are out of work and out of money to meet the necessi ties of a long winter And it is only surprising that they are as patient under the dreadful burden as they are showing themselves to be But it will be wise for the leaders of the Repub lican party to bear ever in mind that these promises stand against them and that they must fulfil them or that party and all that it signifies will be swept away like chaff before the breath of the hurricane when the time shall have come for the people to again decide who shall be the chief executive of the nation and what the policy shall be The situation at present Is summed up in a few words It is a money period of industry and that alone is active all other Industries are absoutely life less The money changers are the only ones who are doing business They have it to loan on gilt edged security to anyone who dares to venture into busi ness but they are careful not to invest it in business themselves And therein do they show good judgment for no one has the hardihood to engage in trade or manufacturing under the existing conditions It may be that their good judgment ceases there and that the time may come when they will wish that a more liberal policy had con trolled their actions for if there is not a change for the better there will be one for the worse to sucn a degree that no man can tell what the consequences may be There is a limit to starvation and suffering When that limit is reach ed by an individual the end is that of suicide or crime and the end with a multitude is open rebellion and civil war We might as well look this square ly in the face as to try and deceive ourselves into the belief that these things will not come about Utleys Weekly The Old Tear and the New The year 1S9G hasbeen a disappoint ment to pretty nearly all the world and notably to the people of the United States The prediction had been made that we would see the end of our finan cial uncertainties long before it had run its course but we are floundering in fear and doubt still We were told that if we would elect McKinley Presi dent prosperity would quickly enter our doors but the dame is yet tarrying and many of us have almost given up hope of again receiving a visit from her There is reason however for expect ing that the next year 1S97 will see the n ation of at least some of the rr nnrt til in era thnf worn pvnrvtpfl frntti the dying one To be sure we cannot tell just what our Republican political masters will try to do with us but the probabilities are that they will be care ful not to arouse any further enmities against themselves They may even try to relieve the financial stringency by adopting some of the ideas of the Democracy which were denounced dur ing the last campaign but the reason ableness of which is becoming clearer pvery day It may also come to pass during the new year that the tyranny of the trusts will be smashed although there is no likelihood that the monopolies which fought so fiercely for McKinleys elec tion will be disappointed in their ex pectations of higher tariff duties and bigger profits for themselves Of one thing we are reasonably sure and this Is that we will find a good mar ket abroad for our breadstuffs and this means more money for us even if Con gress fails to act as it should on the financial Issue There Is a slight war cloud to be sure in our sky but it is a small one and is almost certain to be dissipated Spain does not want to fight us and we do not care to fight her We bid 1896 good by without regret but we can welcome 1897 with a cordial handshake and the wish that it will do better for us than its predecessor New York News Postal Saving Banks In Great Britain the postal savings bank system has proved an unalloyed success It is a boon to Hhe working man of frugal habitsand besides cre ates a foundation upon which that sure thing dear to English hearts the annuity is built Savings banks do not suspend in England leaving depos itors nothing to show for their years of thrift and self denial And the sys tem is as simple as it is satisfactory Interest is paid at the rate of 2 per cent When a depositors total ac count exceeds 200 no more deposits can be made but buying consols through the postoffice investing any sum from one shilling upward at the current price of the day The post office will also sell stock obtained through it charging a commission of ninepence for the purchase or sale of stock in amounts below 25 Thou sands of working people thus become owners of government stock while ings banks under private management do not endeavor to compete with thej government banks Life insurance can be obtained in amounts of from o toi 100 The 5 insurance is for children between the age of S and 14 years The policies can be made payable at death on the attainment of the age of 53 60 or 63 and on the expiration of periods of 10 15 and up to 40 years Sporadic attempts have been made from time to time to establish a similar system in this country but they have failed through the powerful influenCel brought to bear by bankers who row the peoples money at a nominal rate of interest and loan it again at usury The advantage of postal savings banks is so apparent that it does not admit of dispute It Insures the de positor absolutely against loss and atj the same time gives every citizen thati saves a direct interest in the tion of his country and its institutions The assertion is vencured that with- in five years after the establishment of such depositories practically all the small hoardings of America would be attracted to them and the federal gov ernment could secure quite a revenue by becoming a money lender on a large scale to nations less favored than our own Tariff Not Currency Hon William Lindsay United States Senator from Kentucky whose defec tion in the late canvass was such a dis appointment to his friends and such a discouragement of Democratic effort in a State so closely balanced as was his is of the opinion now that a re union of all real Democrats in Con gress is among the probabilities of the winter He thinks There will be such a clamor on the part of the manufacturing trusts for in creased and inordinate protection astp force all the Democrats into one solid compact body shifting the issue from sound money to protection amalgamat ing all disintegrated elements and bringing together that which has been torn asunder You will have scandals growing out of the greed of the protect ed interests that will fill the newspa pers before July superseding every other sensation What Senator Lindsay expects ap pears to be quite certain to come to pass President elect McKinley has won whatever distinction he enjoys among the public men of his pare by his extreme devotion to high tariff views His name is identified among all politicians and in all sections with the idea of the taxation of the people for the benefit of capitalist manufactur ers The currency question he had all but ignored previous to last June vot ing indeed in Congress for the unlim ited coinage of silver at the ratio of sixteen to one but assuming no leader ship one way or the other in the de bates on that question He was and still Is a tariff protec tionist pure and simple although for the purposes of the campaign of 1SG0 he suffered himself to be put forward as the opponent of silver coinage and the champion of the gold standard He naturally feels less interest in that is sue now that the election is over than In the struggle for high taxation to which his public life has been devoted Having disposed of Senator Wolcotts proposal to reopen European negotia tions for a silver ratio by giving his full permission to the attempt the Pres ident after the fourth of March will call his extra session and the old hum drum tariff debate will be trotted out to befog and delude the nation The Democrats in Congress should welcome the opportunity of reuniting their forces and making battle against protective theories and against the tax ation of the many for the benefit of the few Adopting the American Method Our consul general at Vienna reports that the glucose trust in Austria has secured a prohibitive duty from that government whereby the American ar ticle has been shut out of the Austrian market It is curious to see how the trusts and tariffs flock together the world over Philadelphia Record The stoppage of silver coinage does not seem to have brought prosperity to India any more than to the United States judging from the numbers dy ing of starvation in the former country Despite the promise of prosperity to follow the election a large number of people are still carrying nothing but their hands in their pockets A French experimenter Camille Da reste says that the gerrn In the bens eggs is not destroyed by an electric current that would kill an adult fowl but that the germ is so modified in most cases that a monstrosity will bt hatched