- t 1 1 f I Wdhniim fiemocrat successor to CHERRY COUNTY INDEPENDENT ROBERT B GOOD - Editor Pbop VALENTINE - rrj NEBRASKA Success doesnt always bring happi ness and contentment The dentist who has the biggest pull always looks quite down in the mouth The Minneapolis Journal remarks that a woman suing for damages and holding a set of love letters is a terror to men and angels What have angels to do with it Two footpads attempted to hold up a member of the Ohio Legislature in a corridor of the Slate House at Colum bus But they succeeded in escaping before he robbed them Scientists say the time is coming when we shall be able to talk with the planets The necessity for more talk is not urgent but any improve ment in the quality will be thankfully received The habit of intellectual suspense is a most wholesome and valuable one especially where the spirit and actions of another are concerned and nothing tends more effectually to prevent un just and cruel criticism All that a man has to do in a place where he is a stranger is to bridle his tongue and his temper cultivate good feeling and kind affections and meet every advance of his neighbor with courtesy cordiality and cheerfulness There is often in one kind word one look of sympathizing affection or one small act of disinterested love more of real nobleness of spirit than in actions which have rung in the ears and found sin echo in the hearts of admiring thou sands The cost of electric power in the great railway tunnel of Baltimore is rapidly declining and in a short time -will be no greater than that of steam Electricity in the industries is marcn ing on with a steady and certain sweep The Boston Advertiser which carries at its editorial masthead the proud statement that it is a paper for the best classes exclusively prints a two column account of a dog fight But perhaps this is what the best classes in Boston want If Cuba should win its independence Spain will have no reason to regard the event as a deep humiliation En gland had to take the same medicine over a hundred years ago and the colonies she lost have done so well that she is not half sorry An electrical exchange says St Louis is in very bad shape electrically Let us hope the wives will be put un der ground before the convention crowds arrive Heres a shocking proposition Whats the matter with St Louis matrons anyway V Taste if it means anything but a paltry connoisseurship must mean general susceptibility to truth and no bleness a sense to discern and a heart to love and reverence all beauty order goodness wheresoever or in whatever forms and accomplishments they are to be seen The duke of Veragua has been wax ing exceeding saucy toward the Uni ted States of late This probably comes from Tom Palmers Veragua relief fund which when last heard from stood at 1GS It isnt wise to make these foreign paupers independently wealthj all at once Conduct is at once the aim and the test of all our learning our thinking and striving The man lives most per fectly whose most constant happiness is found in the consciousness that in doing the best he can for himself he is also doing the best that lie can for every being that is capable of having good done to it Englands decision to spend 100000 t00 in building new war ships this year would be more formidable if the fact were not known that the ships already completed are decidedly short of sail ors A landsman transferred at short notice to a modern battle ship is about as effective as a Spanish infantry maw on a Cuban mule Out in Kansas a judge has ruled that if a man calls on a girl several times and escorts her to entertainments occa sionally he is legally engaged to marry lier That judge evidently is suscepti ble to outside influences If an old maid asked him to do so he probably would issue an injunction to prevent the rising of the moon or would cheer fully declare unconstitutional the laws of natu re in a recent Sioux Falls divorce trial the fair plaintiff testified tliat for the first three years of her married life her husoand kissed her at least 100 times a day But at the expiration of that time he lxjgan to lag in his atten tions sometimes not kissing her more than a dozen times every twenty four hours The brute This unfortunate young woman is clearly entitled to a separation on the ground of extreme ruelty If we could trace out the needless Buffering inflicted by men upon each other we should find a large majority of it to be quite unintentional involun tary and even unknown to those who caused it No plea in excuse is more frequent than that there has been no Tf XT such purpose Men forget that Evil is wrought by want of thought as well as by want of heart That they meant no harm to their neighbors or friends or the public is well but their responsi bility did not end there They should have leen very sure that their acts were as free from harm as their inten tions Some people may wonder why a sci entist should devote time and energy to the task of securing quantitive meas urements of sensibility in persons of different ages and different classes of society To the careless or the ignor ant a thermaesthesiometer or an algo meter is of no consequence whatever but that such delicate aids to psycho logical study have great value will be evident even to the masses in the near future Dr Arthur MacDonald who is a specialist in the United States Bu reau of Education has developed some interesting neuro social data Of espe cial moment are those that relate to school children one thousand seven hundred and seven having been the sub jects of the doctors simple experi ments Whatever may be the scientific value of Dr MacDonalds measure ments their practical value amounts to much A tabular statement of av erage sensibility as to locality heat and pain has been prepared present ing which the doctor says that any pu pil 20 per cent about or below these averages for its age should be reported to the family physician ought per haps to be taken away from school or if permitted to remain should not be re quired to do the average amount of school work Bright pupils with weak bodies are now too common but with the assistance of the clever psycholo gist they may enjoy a measure of re lief sufficient to give the physical self a chance to catch up with the over rapidly developing mind Practical science is only the refinement of com mon sense Chicago Times Herald A poor negro long out of work which he had diligent ly soughtmad with hunger and desper ate against society saw a purse lying in the lap of a woman riding in a street car He seized the money bag ran was pursued overtaken and with a certain penitentiary fate ahead cut his throat The fashion that depriving women of pockets compels them to carry purses and other articles of value exposed to the vision of poverty and want is bru tal It is amazing that women right minded kind hearted and rational in all other things condescend to submit to it They are miserable slaves of dress makers Dressmakers are slaves of style There was never a style that so idiotically ruled a sex and there was never a time when that sex claimed to be more intelligent or half as independ ent Lead us not into temptation ought to be carried on the corsage of every woman as of old the fable placed on the breast the bag containing the wearers foibles The poor fellow whom the sight of a womans displayed purse drove first to robbery then to suicide leaving a family to the mercy of the world is not the first victim of a fash ion that for its cure only needs a pair of scissors to cut a pocket hole or to rip open a seam to make place for a pleat that would conceal access to a pocket without detracting from the grace of the garment Cannot the Womans Club and the various other philanthropic ag gregations of women of which we see and hear so much spare a little time from aesthetics poetry parliamentary law political economy and other high er kindergartening to devote a little time to expounding that very old but always salutary phrase Lead us not into temptation V Which being con temporaneously translated means Women in heavens name put pockets in your gowns and stop driving men to felony and suicide The grand jury has done in its day worse things than bring ing in a moral indictment of women who carry purses in their hands and watches secured only by frail stick pins on their busts A Bee Hunt An Australian savage comes up to an Irishmans idea of human skill for he bates the bees A native seldom fails to get honey when he discovers the bee he has been watching for The following description of a natives bee hunt is given in Mr Arthurs Kan garoo and Kauri Warruyallah the chief of a tribe went with two little nets to a small pool filled his mouth with water and then lying down his head hanging over the pool he remained quiet for an hour apparently looking at his own reflec tion in tQie water Then the hum of a bee was heard it went over the pool round the blacks head now on one side now on the other and now close to his ear but not a motion be trayed the bee hunter But when the bee dropping close to the water gave notice by the change of its tune that it was about to sip the chief with a snort squirted the water from his mouth over the little buzzer Before it had time to re cover from the unexpected douche he seized it dexterously by the wings Then he prepared it for the chase by fastening to it a bunch of wild cot ton with some gum The bee was let go it made for the hive slowly at first on account of its novel burden which impeded its progress and showed a sign in the air for the chief io follow Over bramble and brake went tlie chief accompanied by the men of his tribe and in half an hour halted at the foot of an immense gum tree into whose top the bee had gone The chief mounted quickly but cut ting notches into the bark with his stone tomahawk In a short time he brought down a quantity of honey comb a small piece only of which con tained honey The Australian bees are stingless When a man saves his money people think he steals it FitOM SAP TO SUGAR CURIOSITIES OF THE MAPLE SUGAR BUSINESS How the Sap Is Obtained and How Manufactured Into Snjrar and Syrup A Profitable Thin for tlie Farm ers of Vermont State The Maple Sugar Industry The process of making maple sugar and syrup is quite interesting to the majority of people of this country AVhile some maple sugar is made in New Hampshire northern New York and Massachusetts the bulk of it is manufactured in Vermont The sap of the sugar maple begins to run about March 10 usually and continues three or four weeks according to the weather Sap will run only when the thermometer registers at least 82 de grees F and stops flowing as soon as the frost is out of the ground or directly after the snow is gone The sugar season comes when the Vermont farmer cannot profitably employ his time otherwise As soon as the weather is favorable the Vermont farmer gets out his buckets and sets to work tapping his trees as quicky as possible The ma ple trees are tapped by boring the trunks with a small bit usually a half inch bit about V inches deep and from one to three feet above the ground Trees are not tapped until they are one foot in diameter After tapping a spout made of clean maple liillliillrawllilll THE HANGING BUCKETS beech tin or galvanized iron and fitted with a hanger for holding the bucket is driven firmly into the hole made by the bit A bucket of tin or wood is hung upon the spout and the tap ping process is finished The buckets are like ordinary water pails gener ally all alike and each farmer usually paints all his buckets one color Only one hole is bored in young trees but it is not uncommon to have as many as six buckets with two spouts each hung to maples of large size If the bucket fills with sap in a day the run is a good one although twice This amount is obtained in exceptionally favorable sap days What is called a good sized sugar orchard will contain from 500 to S00 trees and in the northern and central parts of Ver mont orchards of 2000 to 4000 trees are not uncommon When the sap begins to run well the fanner and his lannly must work hard A man with a large farm will employ help outside of his family fre quently and use two or three pair of oxen or horses to make the rounds of the trees with a sled on which is the large sap tub into which the sap from the buckets is poured An or chard of 700 or S00 or even 1000 trees need not require the farmer to hire help if he has two or three boys in the family besides himself From an orchard of 700 trees an ordinary run of sap for two days will enable the farmer to collect about SO barrels Sometimes GO barrels of sap can be collected from 700 trees in one day As soon as the men begin to collect the sap the fires in the big evaporator furnace must be started and the boil ing of the sap begun as fast as it is brought in so that none will be wasted by souring or that the quantity brought from the woods may not so far ex- Sff vm j fill -- TZTJifi WT - I T TS GATHERING THE SAP ceed the accommodations at the house that while waiting to get room for it much will be wasted at the trees At the time when the sap is running freely the farmer must often keep the fires going and the sap boiling all through the night and of course he is likely to have to work all day Sun day and Sunday night It is all-important that he make hay while the sun shines When the work is hardest the fun is at its best Those who have but a small orchard will spare some of the family to help a relative or neighbor through sugaring The modern evaporator makes it pos sible to do much sugar making in a short time The evaporator is made of tin copper or galvanized iron and is so constructed tliit the sap flows in at one end and by means of partitions r where it is drawn off as syrup The sap in the pan is kept shallow about one half inch in depth and evaporates very rapidly Rapidity of evaporation is greatly to be desired not only on the score of economy of time bu because the sooner the sap is con verted into syrup after it runs Iron the trees the lighter will be the coloi and the finer the flavor of the syrur and sugar The sugar house is a rough little building with a shed half full of well dried cordwood The room is mainly fi9t i X Mt H ft fil ICIIIil It L ll t t WmlMwm itliitltJvtviAI I ilrf MJ XfiSi Uai mmWivB iMil ilsiWii tup sugaii house occupied by the boiling apparatus anu with the bunk of the man who has c watch pans of boiling sap day and night One side is taken up by the oven which is built on a bed of brick and consists of two brick walls about 2 feet apart 2 feet high and about 12 feet long A huge old fashioned brick chimney is at one end where there is also a sort of square brick furnace to hold a big kettle In the roof near the center of the ridge pole a large slot opens to the sky as au escape for the steam which rises in heavy volumes from the pans on the fire The sap as it comes from the raapiu tree is like water and has barely any more flavor than good water But it doesnt take much heat to produce flavor A barrel of good sap will make a gallon of syrup or eight pounds of sugar After being reduced to syr up in the evaporator the product s allowed to cool and settle more or less impurities being precipitated by standing The syrup is now ready for putting into cans for sale The size most in use is a one gallon can The proper consistency of syrup ih generally conceded to lie 11 pounds to the gallon and this degree of density is reached at 219 degrees Fahrenheit The sap is never made into more than syrup in the evaporator Then it is poured into a large porcelain lined ket tle to be boiled to sugar If wanted for sugar the boiling is continued until the thermometer indicates 32o degrees for pail sugar or 23S or 240 degrees for cakes Avhen the mass is removed from the lire stirred brisky for a short time and then poured into tin pails or cake molds as the case may be to harden The cake molds are often a series of parallel partitions on a large wooden board with space in them about 3 inches apart and just wide enough to admit a knife blade The molds are dampened with a sponge then the hot water poured in Little fancy tins are also used for molds The farmer AX OLD FASHIONED CAMP gets anywhere from 10 to IS cents a pound for his sugar and from 75 cents to 1 a gallon for his syrup A sugar maple produces on an average about 3 pounds of sugar during a season Compliment to a Soldier During the siege of Paris Marshal Canrobert found himself for a moment in the presence of a party of ladies They were very much agitated What is the matter ladies the marshal asked The matter said Madame Brohan in whose house the people were as sembled Why we are on the eve of battle and I suppose fear affects us Fear echoed the marshal look ing about with a puzzled air Madame Brohan rang her bell Marie she said when the maid ap peared bring a dictionary for the marshal Which was as much as to say that the old commander did not know the meaning of the word They Never Move There are but two European poten tates who manage to get along with out change of residence These are the Tope of Rome and the Sultan of Tur key The Sultan has never left Con stantinople since he ascended the throne in such tragic circumstances nineteen years ago and his Holiness has remained within the precincts of the Vatican since the triple tiara was placed upon his head Moral courage said the teacher is the courage that makes a boy do what he thinks is right regardless of the jeers of his companions Then said Willie if a feller has candy and eats it all hisself and aint afraid of the other fellers call in him stingy is that moral courage Atlanta Constitu tion Proud pop to old bachelor friend I tell you Dawson theres no baby like my baby Dawson Im glad youve waked up to that fact I knew mighty well there never was a baby like the one you described Harpers Bazar With most of your friends you treas ure ud thimrs thev occasionally do or extending nearly across the other end say that offend you i i I ISM MRS CLEVELANDS WALKS First Lady of the Land Takes a Daily Fivc OIile Tramp Mrs Cleveland always did walk more or less but since her return to the White House last fall she has let very few samples of severe weather deter her from her daily constitutional That is what it really is a constitutional Although nobody says anything about it Mrs Cleveland has been gaining flesh and she has also been working energetically to keep it down Mrs Cleveland doesnt ride a bicycle She doesnt skate or play golf She doesnt ride or hunt In fact she has none of the fun of the outdoor life that is open to women who live in an exec utive mansion and have to keep up offi cial dignity That is why she has taken to walking Rain or shine no matt r MRS CLEVELAND OUT IN THE RAIN what is on for the evening Mrs Cleve land is ready for her constitutional about 1030 Under ordinary circumstances any woman in Washington would be de lighted to be honored with an invita tion to keep Mrs Cleveland company for a couple of hours during the fore noon Most of them did try it lor a while After a couple of experiences nil but the strongest have been content to make a plea of sickness Mrs Clevelands preference is always for a black skirt This winter she has usually worn one of the wide gored black skirts of heavy cheviot Over this she has a short jacket single breasted with the buttons concealed under the flap of the coat The sleeves of the coat are not abnormally im mense A superb chinchilla cape of the new winter fashion very full and rip ply covers her shoulders Its high col lar is turned up only m the most bit ing weather It is an immense cape and must have been made to order to suit Mrs Clevelands shoulders On her head is a little black toque of vel vet and astrakhan with a couple of wings at the side and front There is nothing striking or especially fashiona ble about the outfit It is quiet and comfortable and designed for ease also The daily stretch is not less than five miles If there is time and a compan ion who is equal to it it is six or seven miles This is one of the reasons every body has been saying how well the Presidents wife looked says the New York World When she comes up the walk to the White House her eyes are clear and bright Her cheeks are flushed with the exercise and it is to be hoped that the real purpose of the train ing is being accomplished Two of the women who have held out best and have been her most frequent compan ions are Mrs Minot the daughter of Secretary of State Olney and Miss Har mon daughter of the new Attorney General of the Cabinet SOUTH AFRICAN RULER Judce Steyn the New President of the Oranse Free State Judge Steyn who has recently been elected president of the Orange Free State was chief justice of that coun try before his elevation to the ofliee of the presidency The position had been filled by the late F W Iteitz X Vw JUDGE STEYN Judge Steyns election is considered a Boer victory as his candidacy was indorsed and promoted by President Kruger of The Transvaal Dr Jame son and his raid into the South Af rican republic had the sympathy of the uitlanders or noncitizens of the Orange Free State Steyn stood for the conservative or Boer interests and his election shows the tide is flowing r - against British domination in this part of Africa He is an able jurist a good statesman and a strong man The country over which he will rule is an independent Dutch republic in South Africa On the south of it is Cape Colony on thewost Griqualand the Transvaal on tile north and Xatal on the east Its area is 4S32G square miles The total population numbers 207503 of whom nearly 80000 arc whites The government consists ot a president and a council appointed by the volksraad The country is divided into nineteen districts with a land rost to each appointed by the presi dent and confirmed by the volksraad The volksraad is a legislative bc dy elected by the adult white burghers half of the body vacating seats every two years SONG OF TEARS Composer Who Gave It to the World Is Now Dyinjr in Poverty Frederick Nicholas Crouch the com poser of Kathleen Mavourneen is dying in Baltimore in poverty The old mans mind is gone and he raves about the coronation of William IV the cu pidity of music publishers his old tri umphs and troubles Hundreds of thot sands of people who have been moved to tears by the recital of his famous song will be amazed to learn that its composer is alive For it is an old song and is involuntarily referred back to years long since dead But it was classic before it had become old and will remain a living power in the realm of feeling until human nature is essential ly changed The poem itself was not written by Mr Crouch It was first published in an English magazine Here it was that Crouch saw it That was in 1S37 when the musician was but 19 years of age These are the verses Kathleen Mavourneen The gray dawn is breaking The horn of the hunter is heard on the hill The lark from her light wing the bright dew is shaking Kathleen Mavourneen What Slum bering still Oh hast thou forgotten how soon we must sever Oh hast thou forgotten this day wc must part It may be for years and it may be forever Oh why art thou silent thou voice of my heart Kathleen Mavourneen Awake from thy slumbers The blue mountains glow in the suns golden liirht Ah Where is the spell that once hung on my numbers Arise in thy beauty thou star of my night Mavourneen Mavourneen my sad tears are falling To think that from Erin and thee I must part It may he for years and it may bo forever Then why art thou silent thou voice of my heart Crouch wrote out his melody and of fered it to a firm of music sellers who- 1 1 l FKEDEBICK NICHOLAS CEOCCII paid him in hand just They took the piece and coined money with it Edition after edition Avas sold and tho song swept over the world Women at the Helm Among the curiosities of the Russian dominions is a group of communes In the government of Smolensk surround ing the convent of Besjukow where not only do women vote but where they practically do all the voting and office holding As the returns from agriculture art very meager in the district and there are large towns not far away the male inhabitants of the Besjukow neighbor hood emigrate to these towns early in spring to find work leaving few but women and children at home and not coming home to attend to the little mat ter of voting Inasmuch as the women have to do all the farm work as well as the house work in this singular community it does not seem strange that they rather insist upon holding the officesand not assigning them to such old men as may be about Futhermore it is said that they have for a period of several years managed all the public affairs of the Besjukow district so well that the men are quite content to abandon the tedi ous work of government to them Sometimes when the head woman of the joint communes is presiding over a public assembly of women to pass upon important financial and other con cerns certain of the men have been known to come home for the purpose of merely looking on and admiring the method of procedure or else of hearti ly felicitating themselves upon being rid of so bothersome a duty After tihat remarket the young islim who had been telHng an inane ghost story my mind was a blank That accounts for it commended a sharp young woman arid there was -an interregnum of profound silence- Truth Shopkeeper How does it happen that alt Miss Wait who will never be hangedforherbeauty Piease sir my clock stopped Shopkeeper I believe you Boston Transcript Have y ever observant sudden- iefUl maD dies and how lonTil worthless one holds out r X V i n