nMM igjwTk A mtmmmmM i mmu IHE VALE NTINE DEMOCRAT CHERRY CQUHTY INDEPENDENT GOOD Editor and Publisher Official Paper of Cherry iy Xebraiska 100 lev Yenr in Advance IlHlMlilIEt KVKItY THUUSDAY Kntcrcd at t he Post oltici at Valentine Cherry county Nelirnbka ha ScoikI 1hss matter This paper will be mailed regularly to its subscribers until a definite order lo discontinue is received and -all rears are paid in full Advertising rates 50 cents per inch i per month Hales per column or for long time ads made known on cation to this office THURSDAY MAY 14 1896 Onr Platform Following is the platfoTtn adopted by the Democrats of Cherry county in mass convention assembled Saturday April 18 1S96 Wp the Democrats of Cherry county in mass pouvonlion asstinbltddoroaflirai our allegiance to ttir principles of the Democratic party as formulated by Jefferson and exemplified by the illustrious line of Ids successors in Democratic leadership from Madison to Cleveland We still denounce the Republican doctrine of protection ns a fraud a robbery of the great majority of the American people for the benefit of the few We slill adhere to and maintain the Democratic doctrine of a tariff lor revenue only We believe the interests -of the masses of our population will be best conserved by the collection of such taxes as shallbe liinitcdlo the uecesslties of the government honestly and economically administered We express our faith m the time honored doc trine of theDemocratie party as to international trade relations an interchange by which the countries participating shall enjoy reciprocal advantages We denounce the sham reciprocity scheme of the Republicans -which juries with the peoples desire for freer exchanges by pre tending to establish closer relations while en acting prohibitive tariff taxes against those countries of the -worn that stand ready to take our entire surplus of products in exchange for i commodities which are necessaries and comforts f of life among our own people Appreciating the condition of the public mind with reference to the financial policy of this country and recognizing the importance of a propersohition of tins question we unhesitat ingly express our unalterable opposition to the free and unlimited coinage of silver except by international agreement and until snch agree ment can be procured we favor the present standard of value We denounce the action of the Republican county convention in intention ally omittinir to state its views on this important question as a r petition of the cowardly and uonesL practices oi mat party Finally we endorse the administration for its excellent conduct of public affairs its vigorous foreign policy and its un parallelled management in maintaining the pnblic credit against foes from witnout aud foes from within It is interesting to know that de spitethe the democrats carried Louisiana by 37000 majority A number of young ladies of Omaha have organized a society ana pledged themselves to never marry men this leayes a chance - for native dudes and titled foreigners If as Colonel Ingersoll says he is i lecturing in order to put out the fires of hell his reason for going to Omaha is explained The Bee and World Herald are published there The money question is dominant McKinley refuses to say yfhat he thinks on the money question Mc Kinley is to be the republican candi date for President Was there ever a better opportunity for the democracy rNew Yerlt World At the municipal elections held throughout Indiana last week the democrats made decided gains such well known cities as Ft Wayne Shel by ville La Porte Yinceunes and Terre Haute being among the places where democratic gains were largest With concerted action and faithful adherence to right principles demo cratic principles a democratic presi dent will be elected to succeed Grover Cleveland Bight will triumph in the end and dining the coming campaign the democratic party will be right There are 60000 or more fourth class postmasterships not yet in the classified service and according to the Chicago Post these ought to be placed there Every federal employee whose duties in the main are of a clerical character should be under the civil service system We would like to know what tip Mark Hanna has given the free silver states about McKinleys ideas in finance If he is a gold hog as John Sherman says why are the free jilver states supporting him We are afraid they will be disapointed in him in that issue Delphos O Courant Hep The Valentine Democrat is im proving with each issue - It is ably edited along the line staked out by Thomas Jefferson with a fidelity to sound money free trade and low tariff Its publisher Robert Good is deserv ing of the federal and local patronage he seems to be enjoying Rushville Deftiocfat nii man puoxrkjur v lion was intended lo show that Great Britain wus enjoying an era of great prosperity while the United States was in the throes of financial and in dustrial depression and the inference supposed to he drawn was that this state of affairs was caused by the Wil son tariff superceding the McKinley tariff No figures are given in sub stantiation of the statements made and the reader is supposed to swallow the article without attempting to ascertain its truthfulness According to the Bee the life of British industry depends upon the tariff legislation en acted by the United States By main taining a high tariff we could kill British industry and make England a desert island for England depends upon her manufactories for her popu lation and wealth How sad it must be for England and Englishmen to know that upon the leniency of the people of the United States depends their hope of existence How they must tremble at the slightest hiut of a change in the present tariff The Bee speaks of the present as a low tariff yet the difference between that of today and three years ago is only 4 per cent As a matter of fact during the last decade Englands ex ports have decreased 140000000 while those of the United States have increased in like proportion The tariff has not caused the hard times The republican bred monoplists who are fostered and petted by the g o p -are responsible The article m ques tion also infers that the imports of the United States have increased at a wonderful rate but statistics do not say so During the last fiscal year the imports of this country decreased 111000000 and yet the average tar iff was 52 per cent lower The Brit ish scare is being worked to the ut most by our political opponents but thinning men do not accept unsub stantiated statements on the tariff question SHOULD BE STOPPED Ohio papers are advertising the opening of Buckeye Park which takes place Saturday May 30 This park is situated on the line of the C H V T railroad and the company has ar ranged for a collision between two locomotives each pulling three coal cars -and a caboose while running at a speed of 50 miles an hour as one of the -chief attractions of the day Pre parations are being made to accomo date from twenty -to forty thousand people to witness the novel ehxibition Six months ago the chances for the success of the national democratic party were few Three months ago even we had not much to count upon Today the prospects are bright and as McKinleys nomination by the repub licans is now assured and as it is more than probable that he will be nomi nated on a platform which straddles the finance question they will continue to grow brighter as election day draws nearer 2vow is the time for democrats to wprji in harmony nasis1 - i i - SVWr n0 T - ----- V tu on he The Democrat has always regarded J ustjn this as an unprecedented era of sen sationalism but never did it expect to see public taste become so depraved that a wanton destruction of propeity would be looked upon as a legitimate form of amusement To this paper it seem that the C H V T railroad is cultivating a very poor trait in humanity and we may soon hear of railroads advertising for men who will remain on the engines during col lisions of this sort unless the tendency to indulge in this new amusement is checked in its infancy CIVIL SERVICE The recent order of President Cleve land transfering to the civil service lists nearly 30000 federal employes de serves to be mentioned in history as one of the most creditable acts of his administration Regarding the wis dom of the principle which divorces thecivil service from politics there can be only one sound opiuion Since the first civil service order was issued thirteen years ago it has been demon strated that the efficiency of national state and municipal official and clerical labor has been increased in exact ratio to its detachment from all consider ations except those of merit Of course President Clevelands order is not binding upon his successor but it is hardly possible that the next presi dent whoevor he may be will revoke it He will probably be heartily glad to not only leave the civil service list as it is but will extend it thus rid ding himself of the horde of hungry office seekers who quadrennially be siege the White House for appoint ments threshold of a An article which rei eutly appeiireo dcutial campaign The in I lie Ouialiu Me with the above cap J lhar campaign will affect results of iqually the interests of the women and the men of the nation and yet by an absurd restriction women are allowed no voice in the choice of the candidates Should the next president he a gen uine ana earnest advocate of enfran chisement of women ana have the cour age of his convictions we would have every reason Jo hope that during his adimnistration their cause would be won Maj Wm McKinley of Ohio stands first on the list of candidates and he is the man above all others whom the women can heartily ap prove Able witty and gifted with remarkable power noble character unimpeachable integrity of honest life he is personally acceptable and advocate of woman suffreg He be lieves that every reason which bestows the ballot on man is equally applicable to the proposition to bestow the ballot upon woman Republican Journal To say the Democrats are divided in this state would seem to be a mis take if told to one who has been at tending almost every state convention as a delegate or -visitor for the past eighteen yeass We have been there and was also present ou the 29th of April and in looking over those fam iliar to such meetings it seemed that none were missing from the ranks ex cept those members who in the ordi nary course of life and business might have been overtaken by death or mov ed from the statewhile a few may have been caught in some other trap as they are set on all sides and to those of unstable minds and unsound democracy the tempting bait may have lured them in but for the few of this class that were missed we found newfaces and energetic work ers filling their places all standing up for Nebraska asking for a hundred cent dollar and upholding the demo cratic faith with the retirement of legal tender government notes know ing that when we are assured of hon est money a sound financial system aud a safe currency prosperity will return and the visions of cheap dol lars depreciated currency taxing of many for the benefit of the few will vanish to be replaced by happiness prosperity and contentment Hamil ton County Democrat A Chicago Tribune corresponaent who says he wants to fight sends this Away off on the other shore We hear the British lions roar For having got his tail in twist We are In favor of letting you two fight it out Three engineers of hign reputation j have been looking into the project of a ship canal from the Ohio River at Fitts burg to Lake Erie and have just sub mitted an entirely favorable report to the Fittsburg committee They agree that the canal can be constructed at moderate cost and that the water sup ply Is abundant The traffic between Pittsburg and the lakes Is now carried by ten railroads and amounted laBt year to 53000000 tons chiefly iron ore coal and lumber Finally the engineers make the surprising statement that the PflTinl wnnld nnv fnr H smlf in rn nu years as the annual saving in freights P Sbility of his being would be one half It is probable that Pittsburg will now take hold of the en terprise with a determination to push It through In the course of a few years It may be set down as a rule that one can never afford not to be a gentleman It is best to learn this rule early and practice it late It is not well to say mean things of another because in most cases you will have to take it all back In bitterness of heart when he does you an unexpected favor It Is not wise to treat any one brusquely because you cannot always judge a bird by the feathers he has on It Is not well to look down on anybody be x v ai n b upon it It is not morality it is not mere conventional rule it is not simply a social regulation it is something in the nature of things that you should al ways show a delicate regard for others One who did not fail here was never known utterly to fail elsewhere The 140 bankers and members of the Board Qf Trade in Chicago who about a year ago subscribed an aggregate of 15305 to be used for the purchase of seed grain for the sufferers from drought in Kansas and Nebraska have had an agreeable surprise The crops of last year in those States were not uniformly good so that all of those who benefited by the subscription are not yet able to pay but the more for tunate ones have paid in a total of about 40 per cent on the amount which was regarded as a donation by many of those who subscribed to it The thirty car loads of wheat and twenty five car loads of oats that were bought with the money contributed saved many a farmer from utter ruin and the fact is not forgotten by those who were helped In their time of trouble It Is to be expected that the greater part of the remaining 60 per cent will bs repaid at some time in the future J UfiWW WHAT SHOULD THV POTiLTC some time in its eoura should pro- tHligi ntly it mest twicfi ti SCHOOL AOCOXPLFSH I vide tnr industrial trailing vikj njwiuua w viiwit TTMd hpfnrMliMitrcihii of the General Teach ers Association at Valentine 3ay 2 Sii by U O Anderson U A The Americans are the piost versa tile of modern peoples and the most cosmopolitan nation of which history affords us an example We are the fortuuate and rightful biers to the wealth of intellect aud industry the product and experience of bygone ages of the nations that have flour ished aud crumbled in the countless centuries of the past for nations as individuals have their periods of vig orous youth of maturity age and decay It is not a characteristic of the American people to engage in enterprises either public or private by halves They live and act upon a broader and more extravagant scale than any nation in the world And we are by no means so conservative as to content ourselves with this herit age as an all sufficiency for our exist ence We are because the youngest the most intensely vigorous active and original of modern peoples Nations at such periods in their development are important factors in universal history They bring much to pass Their events are momentous bearing misery and misfortune or showering benedictions upon -the race throughout succeeding time To esti mate the character of a people it is only necessary to study its institutions Let us for this purpose then briefly examine an institution which is dis tinctlv American that institution of which of all institutions America is most proud the free public school system What is it and what is the excuse for its existence this institu tion for the maintenance of which we annually -pay 150000000 Does it yield an adequate return Why do we support it What should we ex pect it to accomplish The American school is the Amer ican teenple dedicated to what we be lieve to be the essential condition of popular government an educated people The common school is the cradle of American citizenship the guardian and bulwark ot American liberty In a government liite ours the intelligence of the ballot the pur ity of manhood and womanhood the welfare of society and the nation and the perpetuity of its institutions de pend upon the efficiency of the com mon schools It would seem then that the system is the creature and servant ot the stats that it exists primarily for the From Yankee Doodle Doodles fist BUitR nu j na us urge amy is to ram Go it brother Go it Poet Laureate ister to the perpetuity of the state- to train the masses for intelligent citi zenship and worthy membership iu society This I hold to bo the first and sole duty of an educational sys tem for the support of which every member of society is taxed The question then for us to decide or at least to consider is What education is necessary to prepare the individual to the end that -he may be a worthy member of the state What kind of men and women should compose the state What and how must he be taught that he may reach the highest The first and most elementary function of the public school is to cul tivate in the child a willingness and desire to make an honest living and to so train him that he may be able to do so If Ave would enable him to earn an honest living we must teach him the -Three lls and a knowledge of the world of the natural science whose laws he must obey and apply We must train his hands to the use of tools aud implements and utensils I know there are those who object to this latter view as too utilitarian and cause the time may come when he will- aud common place too base to be dig look down upon you There is a certain I nified as rtdu2ation To this objection selfhood in every one which should ba J rAKTiPntod Wp h nr rrhf irWnJ 1 will say that no one is more un- worthy of membership in society than he who can contribute nothing to its support who cannot earn his own living but who is a dependent upon society and that the most worthy member of society is he who can and will contribute most to its welfare Xow 90 per cent of our people the percent is larger in many countries live by manual labor by producing and manufacturing and transporting those articles which must supply the pnysical comforts to the race This condition in a greater or less measure will always exist Niggardly as theor ists would have us believe this position they must admit the exigency But says the conservative do you mean that serving and baking and carpentry and blacksmithing should have their respective places upon the daily pro gram in our country or even our vil lage schools 2o I would not advo cate so visionary an idea as that what E mean to say is that the jublic school somewhere somehow aud at i may b accessble to anv child high or duty to society It must master to 1 1 - 4- 1 low Prom a financial standing the tne symmetrical ueveioprr or iui department would be self supporting or nearly so And even if it wereuot is there not as good a reason for tax ing ourselves to support a system that would benefit 90 per cent of our peo ple as for supporting our state univer sity or even our high schools ttie ad vantage of which only 44 per cent of the school children ever enjoy Could we not with as much practicability establish township or in sparsely pop ulated districts county industrial schoola I have in mind a school iu this state an Adventist school where I am informed by good authority that pupils by doing their own cooking and other work live at an expense includ ing tuition and everything else except clothing at an expense of 15 cents a day A second ana higher function of our system is to instil iu the child princi ples of patriotism to the end that he may be a liberty loving home loving American citizen and capable of cast ing an intelligent ballot Yes more than capable The duty of the com mon school is not yet performed when it has given him a broad intelligence For an education is a two edged sword with which he may slay his fellows or carve his way to the highest human service and it is the duty of the com mon school to see that the right edge of the sword is sharpened We must not only enable him to cast an intelli gent ballot but we must teach him the moral worth of manhood and the principles of republican government to the end that he will cast it We must teach him the laws ot human kindiess the duty and brotherhood of man and the iove of right because it is right The child is educated in the public schools not merely that he may read and write and cipher hut that the trained power and noble intelli gence the purity of mind and soul of thr American citizen may cend con stantly more and mon to purity and perpetuate the American republic That he can add columns keep books relate battles and enumerate dates quote poetry and read Greek will not suffice These suojects are all essen tial iu their proper order But the state demands a higher intelligence It would educate the conscience the feelings the will It would reach the hearts of men It would study soci ology and civics It would study man through the telescope of history and i history as a warning experience of humanity We mut realize that the most important pages in the -annals of the race are yet to be written and we are making chat history with every breath and every thought What are we doing What should we do When future generations look upon its pages they will say how well or how poorly we played our part We must know our present history and our present history is our present politics politics today is history tomorrow What Did I say we should study politics in school Yes better there than on the street corner Every teacher should be a political economist and every member of society should be a politi cian not a wire puller nor a political vampire who robs you of your confi dence and enslaves you by unjust tax ation not one who would place his honor and the liberty of his country men upon the market for the highest bidder not a Charybdis nor a Cer berus not one who would crawl where they should speak t praise they should blame to blame they ought to praise to truckle to authority to call black white or white black that position may be secured or retained When we look upon the education of the people as a trust for the faith ful execution of which we must give an account and not as a job to be farmed out to political leeches or to be paid for with money then will the province of the teacher become what it ought to be aud the school a more potent factor in the for mation of true character and citizen ship This is the duty of the hour The public school must train the child to useful and industrious toil must give him a fair start in the struggle fori bread It must give him a knowledge of those branches which will enable him to labor most efficiently and in- j whole being must quicken evriry fac ulty and capability into that activity intended for it by its maker It must elevate and strengthen the moral iibe must teach him practically suwtsa fully and efficiently toc the lessons of self denial uncompromising clevotioa to the right the true and the good mid a love for his fellow beings kind red only to that for his God True this is an awful task Yet if the public school fails in this it uuful tils its sacred mission For mark you there is no friction no sentiment iu the statement that in the cradle of one generation lies all the possibility all the brain and bone and sinew ad the elements of hope aud grandeur that will manifest themselves during the the generation that is to follow the one to whom the Iulluby is sung to day in turn will sing the lullaby tomorrow Sometimes I think of the long and perilous road over which the child must travel to strength indepen dence and usefulness The yare of strife aud toil of anxiety and longing the temptations and vice the possibil ity of failure the panorama of home and teachers and school days and bright days and dark days all flit he fore my mind like the gulls upon an angry sea and I tremble for tho youth and the nation that he is to be come But we must not we dare not waver The weak and helpless child the mischievous boy aud girl the friv olous rollicking youth to say nothing of the crude material from foreign -lands must be run through the grist mill of American citizenship the Pub lic School must be developed Into the strength of manhood and womanhood prepared to minister to the happi ness and prosperity of a vast and rap idly multiplying populace ready to shoulder the responsibility of guiding the destinies ot this the flower and fruit of the civilization of the ages And in this the present generation the strength of American government the stability of American institutions the qualities and virtues of American civilization and society will be tested as they have never been tested before A few more years and we shall see its triumph or clefeat A republican form of government is a good form only so far as it is based on a broad and liberal intelligence of the masses For in it the expressed will of the people is the sovereign power of the land which makes oi uu jnakes a nations prosperity whicb brightens or blights the hopes of thou sands which casts the sunny gleam of hope and happiness or the dampen ing dews of darkness and despair into the hearts of millions yet to be Well and widely wa it said that Education is the chief defence of nations The ignorant child becomes the dangerous citizen unfit to exercise his franchise the most sacred privilege of citizen ship unfit to perform his duty as an element of society unlit to property live unfit to properly die Teachers the nation is in our hands How faithfully and how well we din charge our trust succeeding time will tell Let us make the most of our op portunity Let us not dream that we are on the threshold of the millenium Eternal vigilance is the price of lib erty Let us resolve more thorough ly to consecrate our lives our energies and our efforts to the cause of human ity that the world may be lifted to a he dare aot climb not a shriveled I and nohler of higher purer plane prejudiced partisan politician but a broad mioded intelligent man who has well founded convictions and will stand by them though the heavens fall a politician with one face and one tongue and one aim the elevation of mankind the amelioration of soci ety the perfection of human govern ment When men are teted by this standard how paltry is that spirit which leads men to be silent when i whn when tion and of thought And let us strive to reach that state of wisdom intelligence humanitarianism and obedience to law and right living which vill insure the perpetuity of our institutions and our government as a heritage to posterity Comparison of the Theories Eroebel and Herbart next week of The English scientists who hire been excavating at Alexandria Egypt In the hope of unearthing some of tba contents of the old libraries have found that the subsoil water has risen above the old Roman level and that even walls and pavements are in a state of complete ruin The explorer In charge favors a search in the dry tip per valley of the Nile Instead of the rainy delta for the lost classics and the missing early Christian literature The American School of Classical Studies at Athens Greece holds an ex clusive right to excavate at Corinth the wealthiest city in ancient Grfcce American ami the second in general importance Its former site is covered with Kruin fields nnd presents the best opportu nity in the country to recover treasure of art and architecture There caa be no extensive excavations nr Athens bo cause the present city occupies the an cient site No great Greek clfcr hss -ret i been excavated aud as the American Fchoc expects to perform the -work for 10000 part of trfcich it has on hand there vcRl not be much delay in begin ning operations y - K T A- vf