h y T- PROSPERITY AND CONFIDENCE - re l X Tfc v MF 1 The prosperity which the Republi cans promised the country would fol low their success at the last election has not yet materialized and it is now nerallv conceded that no legislation at Washington is likely to bring it on for the very good reason that it is not within the power of Congress or the President or the two together to do so The campaign talk about its ad vent was based on either deep ignor ance of the situation or was deliberate downright lying There is no doubt that the real cause why business does not pick up as the Republicans claimed it would with the election of their candiates is that there is the same lack of confidence in the future that existed two years or more ago The scheme to re enact the high McKinley tariff does not strike the pub lic as particularly wise and few stu dents of the conditions existing throughout the world can see any bene fit i o be derived from it Such a policy they perceive will only have a ten deutjvto keep alive an agitation that shoiild have been quieted long ago The liuancial situation also ihas not been improved through the success of the Republicans It is only too appar ent now that the party leaders only used the sound money cry in order to fool enough voters to enable them to carry the election They have no intel ligent policy as to the future and there js no telling to day any more than there was before McKinleys nomina tion at St Louis as to what they will try to do with the banking and cur rency problem If the Republican party were united and had any broad views as to the needs of the country it could doubt less do a good deal toward restoring confidence the lack of which its lead ing men are still bewailing Its ele ments are not sufficiently harmonious however and it has so few ideas be yond those needed to satisfy the spoils seekers and the monopolists that even those Democrats who were inveigled into believing in its claims to a liberal and national character have to hide their heads when they reflect on their credulity Confidence is a plant of slow growth indeed when it depends on Republican nursing In the case of the United States at the present time its coming into healthful existence again awaits the development of the Democratic pol icy as to the future Cnllom Ate His Leek Senator Culloin is angry He has told Mark Hanna all about it and if KPresident again flattens him out and roils over him he will declare war When be does there will be others be hind him because the Republican Sen ators are chafing while the President is rewarding his personal friends and forcing them to indorse the men in ad vance Senator Culloms grievance re sults from the appointment of Charles U Gordon the new postmaster at Ohi cago He was a violent anti Cullom man before the St Louis convention yet Cullom had to indorse him or re tire to the backwoods while Billy Vinson got all of the Illinois plums Senator Cullom has informed Mr Hanna that he will not continue to yield to the Presidents personal inter ests in these appointments any longer Senator Foraker of Ohio has also kicked over the traces and as told in si Chicago paper he threatens to de feat Bellamy Storers confirmation if he is given any first class appointment This is another case where the Presi dent desires to consult his own inter ests exclusively and without the wishes of the leaders Every appointment the President has made it is claimed has been in pursu ance of his policy to reward friends This was the case with respect to the appointment of Powell Clayton of John Hay of Cousin Osborne and oth ers All these vere the Presidents own personal nominations and were made as rewards for distinguished ser vices rendered The biggest plum for the Illinois dele gation is the postmastership at Chi cago The President selected one of his own men for it and then called npon Senators Cullom and Mason to indorse him Cullom hesitated but the Presi dent insisted and the Senator had to either indorse him or abandon hope of any patronage at all In the grist of Indianapolis appoint ments made recently the Indiana dele gation had to swallow with the best grace possible the Presidents selections and indorse them with a wry face It is becoming apparent that there will be serious opposition to the attempt of Mr Hanna to make good all of the promises he made in the campaign for Mr McKinley and trouble is brewing lor the President Sample of How Trusts Work Before the formation of the rubber trust Bristol R L had a rubber fac tory employing 2500 persons The trust reduced the number of hands nntil only 500 found work and now even these are to be thrown out of em ployment the plant being closed in the process of concentration which is part of the policy of all trusts This little town at least has had a bitter trust object lesson St Louis Post-Dispatch What They Fear Is Discussion Republican organs and leaders have been pleading for haste in the po ge of the bill The fact is that it is 4ot delay that is so much feared by the Republicans as a debate of the tariff schedules They fear exposure of the grabs concealed under the alleged de sire to secure necessary revenue They fear to let the new bill be publicly com pared with the McKinley bill and the object of the various items of the meas ure brought to light It might be fatal to the pretense of opposition to trusts and monopolies which Mr Hanna marked out as the course of the admin istration It might show the reason for some of the large contributions to the Republican campaign fund St Louis Republic A New Era With the campaign of 1S9G the Dem ocratic party entered upon a new era with new men participating in its lead ership and new ideas fermenting among its masses It was defeated just as it had been in 179G one hundred years before when Thomas Jefferson was beaten for President by John Ad ams and when the people were yet in that recipient and preparatory stage through which a generation often pass es from reflection to positive action In 189G as in 1790 they were learning the new political issues in 1900 as in 1SQ0 they will emphatically adopt them As the Democratic Presidential con vention brought out William J Bryan comparatively unknown thitherto as our party leader so the Democrats of the House of Representatives have now brought out a new man new at least to us of the Eastern States as the leader of our Congressional forces Mr Bailey of Texas takes up the cham pionship at a time of depression and disaster but with a resolution and a capacity which augur well for the con flicts of the future He has sounded the keynote against the Dingley tariff bill and has placed himself and his party upon ground on which we all can stand in opposition to its principle and to its details The following one of his utterances is a maxim It deserves to be remembered by every citizen who takes an interest in public affairs I was taught to believe that econo my is a cardinal virtue in a govern ment like ours and that extravagance is not only a burden upon the taxpay ers but is a crime against the Repub lic because it is as impossible for an extravagant government to avoid be coming a corrupt government as it is for a spendthrift to preserve either his money or his good name The Democratic party of the future under the guidance of men holding the above views cannot fail to be the par ty of the people New York News McKinleys Costly Method We can agree with the President that more revenue is desirable if the pres ent extravagant scale of expenditures is to be kept up We can agree with him that what is to be done to raise this revenue should be done with as little delay as possible now that Con gress has been convened at this unusu al season for that purpose We cannot agree with him as to the best method for raising that revenue Certainly the method which President McKinley pro poses and which Congress will doubt less follow aiming at both increased revenues and increased protection is bound to be an unnecessarily costly and tmjustly burdensome one Louis ville Courier Journal Dinjrley to Outdo McKinley The original McKinley bill was known throughout the country and con demned at the polls as the worse-than-war tariff This was not an exaggera tion But the Dingley bill as framed threatens a worse-than-McKinley tar iff It will not only tax more articles than did its abominable forerunner but will tax them for the most part and on an average higher When Dingley ism exceeds McKinleyism it is evident that the franiers of the new tariff law think that the voters have little sense and very short memories New York World Poll ical Notes Trusts have no politics They pre tend to be Democratic when the Demo crats are in power and Republican when the Republicans are in control They seek favors from each party St Louis Globe Democrat Speaker Reed will be able to under stand the trouble the people of Arkan sas Missouri and Louisiana are having just now to keep the Mississippi from overflowing its banks when he starts in to keep the new members from talk ing too much Kansas City Times There begins to be talk in Washing ton about the new administration let ting down the bars just a little bit not much but just enough so that office seekers may get a chance at the places closed to them by recent exten sions of the civil service rules Balti more Sun Increased tariff rates will give ad vantages to special interests higher prices can be got for their goods in the home market combinations and trusts can be formed in these trades but for the general business of the country foreign competition will not be re stricted New York Times If there be one thing on earth that President McKinley should be thank ful for it is that his predecessor estab lished the civil service rules If it had not been done the storm of officehold ers in Washington would have devour ed the President his Cabinet and Con gress like an army of locusts The pressure is almost unbearable even now Cleveland Plaindealer EPDCATIONALCOLUMN NOTES ABOUT SCHOOLS AND THEIR MANAGEMENT Proper Way to Teach Geography Famous Pictures Are Powerful Educators The Teacher Should Not Resort to Sarcasm Ways of Teachinc Geography The teacher of geography who makes the study consist wholly or even chiefly in learning the location of places fixing in the memory and reproducing map forms and memorizing the fragmen tary and juiceless bits of information furnished by the text book makes al most as great a mistake as that made by some of the extremely modem teachers of this branch who go to the other- extreme and present little more than a succession of disconnected sto ries of remarkable scenes and peculiar occupations and modes of life in remote and unimportant lands The one method is deadening because it lacks in human interest the other is debilitating because it lacks the ele ment of serious work Pupils taught by the first learn map symbols without knowing what they mean those taught by the second have a jumble of vivid pictures as unsubstantial and unrelat ed as the impressions they get from Alice in Wonderland or The Ara bian Nights A hazy nebulous mass of facts relating chiefly to the strange and picturesque things in foreign and unfrequented countries however much entertainment the child may get in the presentation of such matter is not of much real value and should not be re garded as geographic knowledge But the wise teacher will avoid both ex tremes -he will teach only a reasonable amount of map work but having decid ed in his own mind what is reasonable for the particular class in hand will re quire that the tracing and sketching lessons carefully selected shall be thor oughly learned Then be will supple ment the descriptive text with what ever may be needed to illuminate and vivify the lessons Such supplementary matter will be definitely associated with the map so that in the childs mind the knowledge thus imparted shall have a local habitation It is seldom wise to read a long selec tion or make a long talk however in teresting it may be without making frequent pauses to question the pupils on the meaning refer to the map or have the substance of a paragraph stat ed in order to insure attention West ern Teacher A Silent Educator A photograph or lithograph of a fa mous picture hung in a classroom is a silent but powerful educator of the taste of pupils The teacher may be asked something about the picture by some thoughtful pupil if not the at tention of the pupils may be called to it after a time They may be told some thing about the artist wherein he ex cels as a painter where the original painting is at present and various other interesting things connected with the artists name Sketches done by the teacher may be placed upon the wall for instance sketches of the three orders of Greek architecture or of some of tlie decorations of the Parthenon These sketches upon paper with sepia will give an artistic and refined aid to any room A glass bowl into which may be placed with a care to the arrange ment the flowers which the pupils bring will help to nourish a taste for artistic arrangement of flowers that is of great value In fact anything that can strengthen in the pupils a love for painting everywhere so much the stronger is the barricade against evil School Journal Results Disappointing President Eliot of Harvard thinks the results of our school system are dis appointing with regard to the training of the people in reasoning power A democracy he says needs a diffused reasoning power It cannot be safe otherwise If one singular fallacy could be removed from the peoples mind the country would be safe It is the in ability to perceive always what pre cedes a result what is the real reason which produces a certain result If we could find a way of instructing our children as to this fallacy it would be a great means of safety and the only way is through the grammar school program There is at present no sub ject taught in the grammar school which leads to the improvement of the reasoning power or the power of ob serving and drawing proper inferences Arithmetic doesnt do it for arithmetic is a precise and accurate science and is not available in the ordinary uses of life The exigencies of life are change able and uncertain and arithmetic is the very opposite To my mind there is no more useless study in the gram mar school than arithmetic Sarcasm The sarcastic teacher Does she never dream of the harm she does She would be aghast at the thought of whipping a child of degrading and brutalizing his higher nature by the use of force Does she never suspect that the weapon she uses is a thousand times more brutalizing and degrading to all that is good in the child than the rod could ever be Some day an angry and insulted pupil will give back to her as good as she sends and she will be horrified at his impudence not real izing that she alone is to blame for it Some sins are venial but for a teacher to sharpen her wits upon her pupils is not a venial sin it is mortal Sarcasm kills sympathy confidence and love and in return it can create nothing but hatred distrust and malice School Education In Institute When your instructor is explaining soinc difficult point or has given his opinion on some disputed question do not keep up a running comment in a ll 1 half audible tone with some neighbor equally thoughtless as yourself It is disrespectful to lifer instructor and the other teachers It is a commentary upon your own ill manners and is be neath the dignity of any one who is supposed to have ordinary politeness Exchange Procession of the Holidays As I gazed down the path of the year I descried A wondrous procession which passed by my side And if you will listen I will tell of each one Of the merry paraders whose long line began - With the bright youthful New Year lead ing on with a nod St Valentines day and the little blind god What next do I see Ah that story absurd Of George and the hatchet well give it a word But of all the paraders comes hither the worst With his dunce cap the symbol of April the First Arbor Day now advances with promise of spring Of seed time and bird time and every good thing With the pure lily emblems bright Easter comes by And then ere tis vanished we hear the glad cry All hail to the May Queen and lo she comes on As fair as the morning and bright as the dawn But sad is the contrast with gentle heart sore Comes Liberty mourning her martyrs of war Now after old Time has passed on a brief space Comes the glorious Fourth with a smile on his face Next clothed in his garments of toil we behold Honest Labor Day marching with step free and bold And then at the end of the column we see Thanksgiving and Christmas- both brim ming with glee Busy Work Devices Give pupils each a small box and a foot rule let them measure the box and write down the dimensions as fol lows Length of one side equals Breadth of side equals j Area of one side equals Area of both sides equals Length of end equals Breadth of end equals V Area of one end equals i Area of both ends equals Length of top equals Breadth of top equals Area of tops equals Area of bottom equals Area of top and bottom equals Area of entire surface equals The Teachers World Notes Archbishop Langevin decides to re open the parochial schools in Manitoba and maintain them by private sub scriptions The faculty of Mount Holyoke Col lege recently announced that John D Rockefeller had given the college 40 000 for a dormitory The legislative committee on educa tion of Hartford Conn decided to report in favor of granting a pension of 1200 per year to Dr Henry Bar nard the veteran educator who is now S7 years old The people of Walden N Y are much concerned about the proposition to do away with the use of blackboards in the public schools The reason given for abolishing blackboards is that they are injurious to the eyes of children At the fall elections of the seventy two county superintendents in Wiscon sin fifty were re elected Of the twenty-two new superintendents elected five are ladies making a total of thir teen lady county superintendents in the State The American University in Wash ington under the direction of the Meth odist church will have cost when com pleted from 10000000 to 15000000 Twenty six buildings will stud an ex panse of ninety acres The hall of his tory now being built will cost 2U00UU The land cost 100000 The reply of Dr Morgan of Oberlin to a student who asked him whether he could not shorten his course of study for the ministry is at least suggestive When Dr Morgan said God wish es to make an oak He takes many years to complete it if be would make a squash only a few weeks are neces sary Presbjterian Banner W C MacDonald the millionaire to bacco manufacturer of Montreal who has already given 1500000 to McGill University has just made a further donation of 000000 to that institution Of this amount 450000 is for the erec tion of a building for chemistry and mining and metallurgy and for the en dowment of chairs of architecture and mining and metallurgy The British Royal Commission on sec ondary education suggests that the uni versities are the proper institutions to take up the task of giving the profes sional education required for teachers of academies and high schools as has already been done by two Scotch uni versities The science of education ought to be studied where other branches of mental and moral philoso phy are- fully handled by the ablest professors - - A committedf flypne one from each SenatorisltHtrlct of Illinoiswas appointed at the late meeting of the State assoeiationjwith Josepb Errant Esq member Chicago Board of Edu cation as cbairnian to secure legisla tion from tne preient General Assem bly to enable set Jol boards to purchase text books hi tr open market and loan them fcee f jjupds in the public schools the j nis to have the opton of pucpiiasio them at the actual cost to tneftpoara -V i sf f m f i A t jSSfc h r - V - Two Ways of Restinar How differently men and women in dulge themselves in what they call a resting spell says the Domestic Monthly I guess Ill sit down and mend the stockings and rest awhile remarks the wife but her husband throws himself on the lounge or sits back in his arm chair with hands at rest and feet placed horizontally upon an other chair The result is that his whole body gains full benefit of the half hour he allows himself from work and the wife receives only that indirect relief that comes from a change of oc cupation A physician would tell her that tak ing even ten minutes rest in a horizon tal position as a change from standing or sitting at work would prove more beneficial to her than any of her make shifts at resting Busy women have a habit of keeping on their feet just as long as they can in spite of backaches and warning pains As they grow old er they see the folly of permitting such drafts on their strength and learn to take things easier let what will hap pen They say I used to think I must do thus and so but I have grown wiser and learned to slight things The first years of housekeeping are truly the hardest for untried and unfamiliar cares are almost daily thrust upon the mother and housekeeper Useful Sweepinjr Cap A sweeping cap that is a model of Its kind hits a deep cape attached which buttons under the chin a visor piece crosses the face just below the eyes buttoning at the unattached side this to prevent the dust from entering mouth and nostrils Such a cap is pro vided by neat housekeepers for their maids use as well as for their own oc casional handling of the broom Of the two the maid needs it the more since her dusty hair and skin are not likely to be so quickly remedied as in the case of the mistress a point housekeep ers often forget or ignore in failure to provide all possible aids to cleanliness in the housework Bananas A very delicious dish can be made by cutting well ripened bananas into thin disks and covering them with finely grated cocoanut and a sprinkling of nutmeg They are also very nice when mixed with sliced sweet oranges placed upon a delicate cake and covered with custard They may also be sliced and served with heavy home made straw berry sirup By experimenting to ascer tain the tastes of the a great many dishes can be made from this healthful fruit forming a very pleasing variety to the ordinary desserts The flavor of the banana blends very finely with that of most of other fruits American Cultivator Brownie Cakes The popular little brownie men have suggested a name for some popular lit tle cakes Brownies are baked in small fancy tins Cream one third of a cup ful of butter and add one third of a cupful of powdered sugar one third cupful of molasses one egg well beat en and seven eighths of a cupful of bread flour Add one cupful of pecan nuts cut into strips or English walnuts may be used Put a little of the mix ture in each pan and lay one half a nut in the center of each cake To Exterminate Buffalo Moths Buffalo moths may be exterminated by the use of lavender or musk or cam phorin fact anything with a decided odor will drive them away Put a lit tle gum camphor in the corners and around the edges of your floors Keep the rooms open and as light as possi ble Put camphor among your cloth ing use newspapers for wrapping and the moths will soon leave you Ladies Home Journal Creamed Euejs Prepare six slices of toast ana Doil three eggs thirty minutes boil one pint of milk and thicken with a tablespoon ful of flour and season Chop fine the eggs pour over the toast a layer of dressing then a layer of the egg and lastly the dressing with a small piece of butter on each side of toast Set in the oven until the butter is melted and serve at once American Agriculturist Hints Sprinkle fine salt upon a flat surface and rub your hot flatirons over it whenever the irons become rough and stick to the fabric To utilize cold boiled cabbage mix it with grated cheese put it in a buttered dish moisten with milk cover thickly with bread crumbs and bake It is not the labor but the monotony of domestic employments that wears upon the woman who gives all her time to them A man may work harder but his occupations are often so varied that one care drives away another It is said that when ink is spilled upon a carpet Vr anything made of woolen the spot should immediately be cover ed iWith common salt When this has absorbed all jthe ink it will carefully takHIt on with an old knife or spoon and ripply more salt Keep doing this until the ink is all taken up Large round shallow baskets wi handles made of fine but strong wi widely woven are called salad ba They arefor washing the fresh saiaa leaves uut tne leaves tro roots and drop them into the Souse the basket up and donj isrgepan of water and then S3C place to drain tyr i SSvttM iSCr Our Arbitration In the Past The lit of sbJtIona between the United States and other powers whlcli Mr Sherman Taid before fbe Senate x the other day has been printed It ia not complete and there is no indication as to how nearly so it is It embraces thirty eight cases wlthinalmost exact- ly a century Of these nearly one half or fifteen are with Great Britain and they are the only ones of serious im portance Five of them between 179 1 and 1827 relate to boundary In one of these In 1S27 the decision was waived by both governments as beyond the cempeteney of the tribunal In four others the decisions were wholly or preponderatingly In favor of the United States The most Important arbitra tions were of course those under the convention of May 8 1S71 commonly known as the treaty of Washington There were four in all The one relat ing to the Alabama claims was by far the most momentous and Is as clearly In our favor as was that on the San Juan boundary while there was an ad verse decision on the fisheries and on civil war claims The record certainly shows that In arbitrations of great amount and of very great difficulty the United States cannot complaa of tho result Of the total of thirty eight ar bitrations only five foil through and none of any importance Of the thirty in which specific Socislons were reach- ed only six were adverse to tut United York Times Reforms Need More than a Day To bring them abont and are always mora complete and lasting when they proceed with steady regularity to a consummation Few of the observant among ua can have failed to notice that permanently healthful changes in the human system are not wrought by abrupt and violent means and that those are the most salutary medicines which are progressive Hostetters Stomach Bitters is the chief of these Dyspepsia a disease of obstinate character is obliterated by it Eagles do not have different mates every season as do birds generally they pair for life and sometimes oc cupy the same nest for many years for Fifty Cents Over 400000 cured Why not let regulate or remove your desire for tobacco Saves money makoe health and manhood Cuts -guaranteed 50c and 1 all druggists Moroccos sultan has engaged an Ab erdeen man to play the bagpipes at his court Pisos Cure for Consumption is our only medicine for coughs and colds Mrs C Beltz 439 8th ave Denver Col Nov 8 1895 We never realize how much we are capable of enduring until the test comes Selected If the hair has been made to grow a nat ural color on bald heads in thousands oi cases by using Halls Hair Eenewer why will it not in your case Prince Bismarck derives an annual Income of 228750 from the various in dustries in which be is interested Cascarets stimuate Uver kidneys and bowels Nev er Bickeii weaken or erlpe 10c It is rumored that the Duchess of is anxious to have her daughter Princess Beatrice mar ried to the young King of Servia Hoofs Is file Finest Um Mie Toi in jete Streitl Bailr It Makes You Eat Sleep Work and Happy We think Hoods Sarsaparilla is the finest Spring and family medicine I had been bothered with headache while at my work many a time having to go home and loss of sleep tired all the time and getting up in the morning weak I decided to take Hoods Sarsa parilla and felt better after three doses I kept on taking it and now I can go into the quarry and do a days work and come home feeling well and always hungry We have also been giving Hooda Sarsaparilla to our youngest child who 7as weak languid and losing flesh We could soon see a marked change He ate better slept well and in a little while was like a new boy He has continued to improve and to day is lively as a cricket and the neigh bors say he can talk more than any man around the place Thomas White Park Quarries Freedom Pa 5f B Be sure to get Hoods because Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the beat In fact the One True Blood Purlfler Soldbyalldrugghts 1 six for 5 Hnruic Pillc arethe only pills to taka 11UUU i A1 with Hoods Sarsaparilla IVIio1 opeaied tlmi sure old foil the j resi HIRE RoetSieer The poppingofi cork from a be Hires is a goodheal