Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Cherry Co., Neb.) 1896-1898 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1897)
MISSED THROUGHOUT THE YEAR I miss you dear in the springtime when Iho willows blossom whitcly When die sloe boughs bloom and bour geon and the blackbirds build ami sing iWhen over the sky of azure the white fringed clouds pass lightly When violets wake in the woodlands nd the corn blades freshly spring But I miss you too in summer when the waves break on the shingle When the languid lilies perfume is waft oil upon the breeze iTien creamy and pink ami fragrant the roses nod in the dingle When the kingcups turn the meadows to glistening and golden seas And I miss you more in autumn when in nisi ling corn 15 elds yellow ReajK rs sing their lays of gladness when the plovers loudly call When the woods are gold emblazoned and rhe apple orchards mellow And the bramble red and purple where the ripened berries fall But most of all T mss you when the snow flakes white are Hying When the days are dark and dreary and the nights are long and drear When through leafless forest branches winds are sadly sobbing sighing Then it is I think I miss you oh the most of all my dear Chambers Journal THE SAHIBS GOODS 1 un the bearer My master is an English sahib and not country bum like many who live in the cilA Avhere fore he trusts in me and I govern his household Further he is not close listed but leaves his money lying about so that it is ready to 1113- hjuid Truly lie is a master in every -way to he desired for does he not know good tobacco from bad and smoke those cigars that I myself most approve ofV I speak openly for this -whereof I -write will never meet the sahibs eyes Who is it that sews up the holes in the sa hibs socks -when they -want mending but IV Who is it that holds the sahibs heul first on one side and then on the other side when through exceeding slot hf illness he lies in bad and lets the tbarber shave him All these things--and more do 1 do I am the sahibs right hand without me can he do noth ing Certainly it is true that the sahib sometimes calls me evil names but that is only when the money runs short by reason of the many heavy ex penses I have had to meet in mine own household But though be is a good -master there are some tilings I cannot approve of in him for what bearer ea11 look with a favorable eye upon the young sahibs whom he honors with his friensdhip Are they not as roaring lions and is not their presence to he mistrusted in any house V Truly they have been whelped in wickedness and have delighted in rascally conduct from their youth upward Do I not remember the day when four of them entered during the sahibs absence and having thrust me aside did they not do many strange things ro the fur niture and to the sahibs most private goods Then having written a letter and pasted it upon the door they took their departure And when tihe sahib returned which was before 1 could ar range the house jus I approved of he was on the point of heating me for the confusion which prevailed on every hand but before he could do so his eye fell upon the letter the young sahibs had left pasted on the door and then he laughed and said that this was anarching order Such is the way 1 a 111 vexed by the sahibs friends I say these few things that all men may know how I stand and that they may see how hardly 1 have been treated It was one evening shortly after our return from the hills and just before the approach of the winter that the Presence called to me and having told me that he was going to eat din ner at the magistrate sahibs house aud would not be back before midnight he Shade me sit in the veranda and await his return Now the khansama the Iniflen was that very evening enter taining many friends in the babbourchi khana whkh is the cooking house so having reflected that the sahib was -thoughtless and therefore could not uu derstand that the voranda was not a pleasant place to sit in after the fall of the night I closed all the doors care fully and having exhorted the chow kidhar to keep strict watt h lest thieves should pass that way and steal what -they listtd I wended my way to the bablxmrehi khana Truly we Avere a anerry company and had many things o say to each other as we smoked our hookahs and ate such sweets as the buiuiia the grocer had sent around as a reward for our having been silent on the matter of the short weight and the inferior quality of rhe irtieles with which he supplied the sahib Then suddenly m the midst of the converse there came to our eirs from over the mud wall cf the compound the sound of tamtams and of much shouting and ringing and as we looked forth we saw that it was a marriage procession and that there was a great crowd and the glare of many torches Now 1 recoPerted that this must le the marriage of oneKhudahBux whose another lipd sewn th wedding gar T V t v - v Vs r -d worn theteioiv having looked to see that the chowdikhar was diligent in his watch I inviicd the khansama and his friends ami together we went to the bridegrooms house Ah it was -open house and such was the liberal ity that prevailed that we stayed until about half an hour of the time of the sahibs expected return But as we turned to leave 1 noticed a man hiding away in a dark corner as if he shunned our sight wherefore 1 haled him forth and behold it was the chowkidhar -who had left his post JKIse up 1 cried seizing him by r W the ear in my wrath Am I to be brought to shame because of your neg ligence in obeying my commands How am I to make the sentence light for you should the sahib return and find that the house has been left for thieves to break into Hasten before me and light the lamp so that all may be ready on my arrival So Hussain AH the khansama and 1 walked slowly so that the chowkidhar might have time to do his work fully before we came But as we drew near to the gate behold he cjune running back to meet us and I saw that he trembled with fear so that he could hardly stand Ai ai I am undone he cried aloud Would that 1 had died before this evil day had dawned Then an unknown fear made my heart stand still Speak you son of a dog I cried fiercely speak and lay bare aU the wickedness that has grown out of your negligence Alas what can I say he cried for truly this is the work of the evil one How can 1 tell you how the sa hibs belongings have vanished when I know not myself but I believe of a surety that this cant be the work of no mortal man I know not how Hussian AH the khansama and I reached the house after this but when we got there we found that everything was as the chowkidhar had said for the house lay empty and the sahibs furniture had gone as if the evil spirits of the air had come and blown it into nothing ness with their breath Truly the dog of a watchman had spoken the truth when he said that this was the work of no mortal hand Cird up your loins 1 said turning to the chowkidhar run with the speed of the wind to the houses that lie on the four sides of the compound and ask of the servants whether there are any who know how this evil thing lias come about perchance you will lind some one who has stayed at home and not gone to the marriage And when the chowkidhar had told all who dwelt round about how the sahibs belongings had vanished a great crowd came running so that in a minute the house was full But every man had been to the marriage feast and no one could tell how this thing had happened At this moment the khansama seized me by the arm and pointed to the gate and us he did so my heart sank within me for it was the sahib who had re turned and with him had come the magistrate sahib and we had not pre pjired a tale Truly never before had 1 been so unwilling to go forth jiud meet the master Then ran I and hold on the step of the sahibs carriage jis he alighted Oh heaven born 1 cried prostrating myself humbly on the ground before him I am not fit to lick the dust of thy feot 1 am like a worm in thy path What is the master Girzi Khan the sahib interrupted Mjike short work of it and tell me why this crowd 1ms collected in my house Great and wonderful things have happened in thine jibseuce 1 replied quickly so that he might not be vexed with impatience It was thus I had sjit in the verandsi all the evening in accordjince with thy command oh hlgh born one when suddenly I was seized in a most uncontrollable manner witJi a raging thirst that forced me to go to my house in order to drink wjiter But sahib hardly inul 1 re acned mine own threshold when I heard ji mighty rush ing sound behind me and looking round I saw that thy house wjis en veloped in ji great cloud of dust And immediately my heart stood still with fejir so that I returned in all haste I and iii the other servants also And sahib the house was left as tiiou seest it now for the floor stands as bare as the desert of the Punjaub and the evil spirits of the air have left the heaven born neither a bed to rest his weary limbs upon nor a plate that the khan sama may set before him at meal times And all these men who live in the com pound about thine own have seen these things and can bear testimony And the crowd shouted It is ail as the bearer has said Thou did the magistrate sahib look sternly at me as if he would look down iuto my lying soul Is this tale true he asked Now my heart sank at his sternness It is true I Jinswered bending down before him in order to hide my confusion But ray sahib only wjilked up and down the veranda and said Damn damn jus all English sahibs do when they Jire angry Send for the other servants the magistrate sahib said So 1he chowkidhar ran jind fetched them from their houses where they were in hiding for they had Jill re turned to the compound by this lime Drive auickly to the Thana the magistrate sahib continued addressing the syce the groom and bring back with you two constables who will take down the depositions of these rogues Then did the magistrate sahib offer to take our master back to his house for our srhib had neither i chair to sit upon nor ji knife with which to ciV his mcjtt So they departed Now the English law is a sti nnge thing sometimes the Government will at vh the foolishness of si iitle child and at other times it will teiul the evil doer limb from limb Therefore as none of us knew its power and as there was great diversity of opinion jus to whether the magistral sahib would cause us to be beaten with cords until we were near to death or whether we would be thrown into prison for the rest of our lives we all agreed to tell different tales to the police when they arrived so that no man nnht know which was the truth and thus the ends of -justice might be frustrated And after a long time had passed and our evidence was quite prepared the syce V V returned and with him came two con stables one of greater rank uid one of lesser Then did the one of lesser rank marshal us into line while he who was the superior questioned us and wrote down our statements in a book that he had brought from the Thaaia which is tiie police station And when all wjus finished it was found thit the evidence was different and that no two men had told the same Uile so the two constables withdrew a little distjmce from us and talked among themselves Listen to me O ye rogues cried the principal one when the consultation wjus finished pay attention while I speak This is a grave case How can you expect any magistrate sahib to be merciful when no two men give the same evidence and how are we to know that you yourselves may not have taken the missing goods The case lies black against you and which of you does not know that the English haw is mighty and can do as it listetli with such miscreants jis come within its grasp Who has not heard how during the mutiny the English blew men from the cannons mouth and hung true be lievers in pigskins in order that they might not inherit paradise Be wise therefore and pay heed to wluit I say for there is but one way of escape and through me alone may that wjiy be learned Bun now every man to his house and bring me as much money as you can lay your two hands on for I would have you know that I stand close to the magistrate sahibs ear and therefore can lighten the sentence for each and every one of you who will appease me with money offerings Then did we run and bring money each man according to his circum stances And when the two constables had divided the spoil they departed taking with them only the bhesti the water carrier Jind the chowkidhar the former because he was poor and had only been able to bring S annas and the hitter becjiuse he lnid left the house unguarded wherefore decency de manded that he should be offered up to the law Ah it was a merry time in the bazar then for such a case had not been known for many years and wagers ran high as to what the sentence would be so that we became the laughing stock and byword among the idlers who congregate round the well that lies in the center of the market place Truly the bullfrog croaks loudly in the night season but when the mornmg dawns the hawk coanes forth and then the song of the bullfrog suddenly ceases so it is with all loud voiced ones As for our nmstar he lived with the magistrate sahib and wore the magis trate sahibs clothes having none of his own But the loss of his goods did not weigh heavily on his soul for wher ever there was feasting or merriment there was our sahib to be seen Such is the strangeness of the sahib log Sometimes tune travols slowly and so it did in our case It was the night before the day of trial and we that is to say the other servants Jind myself were gathered round the grasscutters lire wrapped in the mantle of our own black thoughts wheal suddenly ji man appeared in the circle of light and sat down Jit my right hand and I looking on him saw tluit it was Munnoo La 11 the mess khansama who was butler to the officers that are my sahibs friends Bam Bam the man cried And the other Hindoos who were present took up the salutation and an swered back Sita Hani Open your ears wide oh ye men said Munnoo La 11 for 1 have come Jill the way from the messhousc in order to tell you a tale and to ask you the mean ing thereof Behold there once lived ji king in a great land A hunnme ruler wjis he and also ji man of great under standing yea the ants in their houses gathered not more wisdom than he But one day this king departed for a short season lejiving instructions with his vizier and other officers to guard all tilings in his absence Now when the master was away eich man repaired to his own house and did there what he pleased One betook himself to the bazar to buy ji new coat a second en tertained a large party of friends md so on each man according to his own inclination Then the king returned and it was found that while those un worthy servants had feasted aud made merry the treasure had been left un guarded and it had vanished no man knew where But the king only laugh ed and dismissed those unworthy ser vants and strange to tell the king laughs still Tell me O Girzi Khan what is the meaning of this tale Then my heart grew uneasy within me for this story wjis like in many respects to our own I know not I juiswered The answer to this ridlle is not far to seek Munnoo Lall called rising and gathering up his role jis if he avouI leave us for it lies in mine hand But knowledge is ji pearl of great price juul is only to be bought with money Then did we consult among our selves so that at hist we Aveait and fetched that which the man required The explanation is so simple Mun noo Lall continued that ye have wilk ed past Jind left it This is how the knowledge has come to my hand You must know that there was a great din ner at the messhouse to night and the magistrate sahib and your master were both invittd Now when the wine passed round tongues of all who were present got loosed aud they knew not that I could understand their jii guage And at last the lieutenant Hiihib told a tale which was to this effect On that evil night when your sahibs things vanished you must know that your nuster returned earlier than lie had intended and with him came the lieutenant and the magistrate sahibs And when they saw that none had been left behind to watch they laughed and your master having opened a godown of which he alone keeps the key they placed the furniture within and made all fast again But the magistrate sahib looked on only and took no octavo part for it was fitting that he should1 keep his hands clean being a ruler 1 Then when the tale was finished there was much laughter at the messhousc jind under cover of it I slipped away to tell you how all things had happened Bun quickly now O ye men and see if all is jis I say So we ran and I having leaped upon Ilussain AH the khansamas shoulders looked through the window Jind there saw in the dusk many shadows within the godown that might perhaps be 1 ognized as the sahibs goods according ly the sweeper went with the speed of the wind to the bazar Jind liaving bor rowed many keys of the locksmith in order that Ave might undo the lock avc opened the door And there truly every thing Avas as the mess khansama had sjiid nothing gone and nothing broken Do now as I say Munnoo Lall cried Take your sahibs belongings upon your shoulders and carry them Avith Jill speed to the house and you Girzi Klian see that they are arranged jus the sahib was accustomed to see tli em Then when all is ready go Jind tell your nuister that his furniture has returned Jtny further explanation that you desire to give you must arrange among yourselves So saying he de pjirted Ah Iioav Ave Avorked that night no man van tell but at last when the sjihibs clock pointed to the luUf hour jifter 3 Ave looked round and behold Jill things Avere in their accustomed places So jis it avjis too early yet for our sjihib to have risen Ave repaired to the msigistrate sahibs compound aud tli ere sat round the fire that the grass cutters had lighted in front of the sta bles until such time jus our master should aAvake However Jill things come to an end and so at last word was brought that I might go into the presence of the heaven bom What is the matter Girzi Khan the sahib asked jis he lay on his bed Oh high born one 1 cried pros trating myself on the ground before him I hae sought an audience in order that I might lay before thee the mighty workings of providence Be hold oh sahib as Ave lay en our beds last night our hearts being heavy Avith despondency there came i mighty Avind from heaven that Avrapped thine house in its folds and Avhen the wind had passed Jiwjiy Ave went to look and lo all the sahibs furniture had return ed Let me beg of the heaven bom therefore to return and take up his abode once more in his oavii house Jind I pray that the sahib avIU not forget his uuAvorthy servant Girzi Khan in that dsiy Then did the master laugh and call out to the magistrate sahib by name and I avjis forced to repeat the btory once more Ho ho there avjis much laughter among the sahibs that day and they called us lying devils and other evil names such is the character of the sahib dog Oddities of English Aillafjes Undoubtedly the most extra ordinary township in England is that of Skid daw in Cumberland It contains but one house the occupier of which is un ible to exercise the Britons privilege of Aoting becjiuse there is no overseer to prepare a voters list and no church or other place of Avorship or assembly on Avhicii to publish one The most remote village in England is that of This tru ly rural spot is thirty Jind a half miles from the nearest rjrihvjiy station An a contrast to this nuiy be mentioned the hamlet of Ystrad about ten miles from Cardiff This tiny settlement pos sesses two important main rojids two railways Jind two large rivers A Aery unique feature is exclusively claimed by Trimley ji small village in Suffolk In the one churchyard of the parish two churches are to he i mm Service is conducted three times ji Aveek in each of these churches at the same hour The deepest well in England is found at Hamilton in Hampshire It stretch es 350 feet below the surface of the earth About half Avay down thS avoII shaft is ji subway three miles in length which leads to the seacoast On the top of the parish church toAV er in Bicknoller Somersetshire is a yew tree now live feet high juid still groAVing in i hardy fashion It is generally believed that the tree owes its origin to ji seed dropped by ji bird Perhaps the most splendidly decor jited church in the kingdom is that of Whitley Court Worcestershire It is entirely constructed of Avhite marble the pews Jire chastely carved and the pulpit is of genuine Carrara marble richly paneled Avith precious stones On the village green at Meriden in Wjirwickshire tli ere is a large stone cross which is supposed to mark the central point of England Pearsons Weekly Without Prejudice Dick And how did you proceed Fred Why I just Avent up to her and asked her if she Avould many me Dick Without first telling her Iioav much you loved her Jind Jill that soit of thing Fred Of course I did not AVjint to prejudice her judgment Household Words A Fellow Feeling My brethren said the minister you dont know Iioav happy you avi11 be if you only have ji fellow feeling ir your bosoms Humph said one of his hearers I had ji fellow feeling in my bosom last night Jiind Ive got no diamond pin this morning New York Tribune Accompanied Her Its a shame cried the yonag Avife not a thing in the house lit ro eat Im going right home to papa If you dont mind dear said the husband reaching for Tiis hat Ill go Avith you Yonkers Statesman NOTES ON EDUCATION MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PU PIL AND TEACHER The Girl Graduate Is Xikely to Make a Mistake Kcmarkable Career of a Kansas City Teachex Vines in the School Yard What Shall She Tlo Addressing himself directly to grad uates of institutions of learning to those whose school days Jire over Ed ward W Bok in the Ladies Home Journal forcibly writes A girl reach es one of the most important times of her life when with her school days be hind her she steps out upon the thresh old of ji new phase of life What is she to do She has the power of knowl edge within her How Avill she use it It is not Jin ejisy decision this The home when she returns to it seems small in comparison with the college halls The life of her parents seems a bit precise and circumscribed compar ed to the hours of girlish companion ships in college She feels jut ji little shut in cramped She longs to put her knowledge to some use But in Avhat direction How Common ditties seem hardly worthy of her It is a no ble trait in a girl when returning home from college she realizes the ne cessity for bread winning and feels impelled to pur her knowledge to use Tinier such conditions i girl has not much choice Her duty is very clear to her Hut where the desire for ji career opens itself before i girl from simply an jibsorbing ambition then it is that the iojkI opens before her and two diverging pjiths jippejir The de sire to do something in the Avorld is ever laudable Hut sometimes ji young Avonuin is apt to misconstrue rhe some thing and to see the wrong world And here unless she is very careful the young Avonuin just out of college and stjinding on ihe threshold of ji new life may mjike her gravest mistake The author of a wonderful little clas sic for girls What Is Worth While shows the great danger which besets the young Avoman who jillows some intellectual ambition to be substituted for the simpler duties of life Ambi tion is in many avjivs the most deadly foe to ji young womans character An intellectual ambition draws many ji girl jnvay from her true phice in life and makes of her ji cold unloved Jind unhelpful avoiiijui instead of a joyous affectionate and unselfish blessing to home Jind friends We need not try to annihilate ambition this writer goes on to say in her clear wjiy bur let us keep it Avithin bounds let us see to it that it holds a just proportion to our lives We need not let our tJilents lie idle nor neglect to make the most of them there is a place jind a grand work for them all But let us keep their development forever subordinate to simple human duties usually to be found at home A Remarkable Career The Kansas City school board has just received jind accepted the resigna tion of Mrs E I Ripley who lnis Avith the closing school yejir completed her liftieth year as a teacher Mrs Kipley graduated from Oberlin College with the degree of A M and acted as instructor in that institution for two years She next accepted i po sition as instructor in Monticello Semi nary Illinois and from there she was elected as preceptress of the State Nor nnil School of Illinois She tilled this position for nine years when she ac cepted a position in the Missouri State University which she filled for eleven yejirs From the University she went 10 Shelbiim College Missouri where she remained jis instructor for seven years She then went to the Kansas City high school as tejicher jir first of the higher mathematics jind hit or jis teacher of botany In this school she has taught continuously for eleven yejirs Mrs Kipley is i sweet laced woman of TO years yer looking bright and vigorous still She is fond of long tramps out of doors in connection with her botanicjil work and often tire- out th boys of her clas who go with Ik r Yard Vine Mosr school yards are small and their ue must be principally as play grounds for the children and with such use very Iitrle can be expected from plauring in them liowering hrubs or plants It is a very fortunate case that even some shade trees succeed in liv ing and growing With great care shade trees may be secured especially if the children can be kept interested in them as they may be if properly taught and trained Bur besides these rhe yjirds must be clear for the chil drens use Still there is something to be done to beautify the place and that Avithout interfering with it as i playground Jind that is planting climbing Aines to run over the porch ind on the walls and perhaps to train on the fence For this purpose are suitable quite a number of different plants among which are our native hardy Hie European sweer clematis the lap nuese pecies and the large flowered hybrid forms prominent among wlrch are C lackmanui C Henryi and Ma dame Ivlouard Andre Among the climbing honeysuckle are eight or ten fine hardy varieties The trumpet flower Bignonia or Tecoma radcans is hardy and beautiful The Chinese Avistaria will succted very well over a brojid region Ampelopsis Ycltehii rhe Virginia Creeper and the Dutch mans Pipe Aristolochia sipho are all admirable With a little more atten tion running roses might also be em ployed Vi ks Monthly Simple Interest Kulcs Four Per Cent Multiply the princi pal by the number of days to run sep arate the right hand figure from the product aud divide by Five Fcr Cent Multiply by number of days and divide by 7- Six Per Cent Multiply by number of days separate light hand figure ami divide by six Seven and Three tenths Ier Cent Multiply by number of days and ble the amount so obtained On the interest is just two cents per dty Eight Per Cent Multiply by num ber of hiys and divide by - Nine Ier Cent Multiply by number of diys separate right hand figure and divide by 4 Ten J or Cent Multiply by number of diiys jind divide by Hi Twelve Ier Cent Multiply by num ber of days separate right hand figure and divide by 11 Donts for Teachers Dont pervert good methods by wast ing precious time in teaching or level- oiling wluit your pupils know alresuljv better perhaps than you could teacl them Dont forget that A our pupils learn more during the first six ye irs of their lives than they will ever learn in any1 six yejirs of their lives that follow Utilize this knowledge Dont insult ihe good sense of your pupils by making too apparent your efforts to talk down to their under standing for ir is safe to assume that they sometimes know more than they at first appear to show Dont mistrust your students or con stantly suspect them of intention to do wrong or to be dishonest or to display in some other manner innate depravity This is the way to dull or destroy their sense of I10utr and to cause them toAu just Avhat they should not do Ex PedatrOxeal Iellts The world is a school room anil folks who convert it into ji playground are the truants of the nice The teacher who goes before his class to show off what he knows may be a good lecturer but he is a vory poor teacher Words Jire like nuts we must crack their hard shell Avith the hjimmer of understanding to get the juicy kernels of thought out of them The schoolboy may till his pockets bursting with the choicest nuts but h will remain hungry for all that unless he knows how to crack them Some tejichers have a constitutional weakness to show off themselves oth ers to show off their pupils This is ed ucational pyrotechnics but it is not reaching The understanding should always keep ji little in advance of the tongue This for those whose pupils memorize the forms of thought without gertin he substance We may pin leaves on a tree but the- will not grow there is no vital connection between the leaf jind the living growing orgiiiism rhe tree So we may pin words on the memory of a child The boy would hate nut cracking Avere he forced to eJit the hulls along with the kernels So the pupil learns to hate study when indigestible pabu lum is thrust down his intellectual aesopluigus The pupils mind at graduation should not ve ji cjiiivjis on which beau tiful pictures have been traced by the teacher Jirtist but a cultivated land scape teeming with living activities whose growth in strength and har mony shall continue through all thu a ears Huge Honeycombs In India the giant bees found in that country build in ts foists combs jis lage - any ordinary house door These huge combs hung from the limbs cf 1tftv tree 0 from projecting ledges of rock at 1 high altitude give enormous qiuintities of wax Bee hunt ing is a profe frm ii India and the hunters have a supjrMious fear of the insects but are vetfy clever in -attacking their net by stratagem Their uma metiod i to climb the tree from ji high iimb of Avhlch the comb de pends swinging btlow it i long stick with a bunch of ignited haves on t he end of it until the bees Jire driven out Oppotunty is liien taken to cut away the great comb and lower it to the ground by means of a rope Vast quaniitf of honey and wav collected in this 1111 nner may be een in thu warehou es and shops of the cities The total number of hives of bees u the Avorld is about even jind t half millions produ lug million pounds of h 1ey per annum Nothing the Matter with Montan t Compared with a good many other Slates lio condition of Mositaiui Is jin enviable one says a business man of that State When you consider that with a population of oily 70000 we pro duce each year sooMOOooo of wealth Avhat reason have ve to grumble True we have some kickers but they exist in sill communities Our laborers in the miMS get iii a day the same pay they got ten yeas ago when ev erything wjis booming W have fer tile valleys where tin agriculturist ir rigates hi- crops and injver knows what i failure is Our cattlemen are getting rhe highest prices rhey have received in years for their and our sheep rai ers ire expecting good results when the new tariff bill goes into effect All in all I should call Montana i pros perous State and with as fair pros pects for future development as any people could wish Sufficient fJroiind Whats Jenkins wife suing for a di vorce for She chums he chugged her face into the mud Jifter ji qiutrrel Does she cou ider that sufficient ground lor instituting iroceedings Detroit News The point in training children is to get them off to ji neighbors house first in the evening in order to keep thac a neighbors children at home