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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 4, 1904)
- VALENTINE DEMOCRAT I. fll KICK , I'nb Kher. TALENT1NE , NEBRASKA Panama can bardly wait for the dlg- phig to begin. Even the coffin trust thinks It can squeeze the unfortunate just a little harder. An Irishman snj's that big hearts and big pocketbooks seldom travel hand in hand. The public had grown to regard Gen eral Jirnlnez and General Wes y Gil as the limit ; but now comes General Ma. New rich gold fields have been dis covered in Mexico. There's no use talking. That country will have to be Anglo-Saxon i/.ed. A total of 211,000 laborers are need ed in South Africa. Now is .the time to run immigrant ships headed for AjnerJcan ports sou * by sou'-eiht. : French government has a watch man stationed near Mout Peloe. Pos sibly the volcano's quietude is due to his holding his thumb tightly over the top. If the Sultan dies of cancer the "peaooable" nations will have to se lect somebody else to yell "villain" at when they want to hide their o\vi cusseduess. The men who unloaded a lot of worth less skj scraper stocks onto John I ) Rockefeller are heroes in Xe\v York now ; but wait until J. D. gets his hooks into them. If the wjipgishness of some of the members of Congress continues to de- relop the editor of the Congressional Record may be tempted to take to the colored supplement If those young Chicago outlaws were Setcrmined to lead lives of violence ind bloodshed why didu't they join i football team aud do their killing lawfully and honorably ? Apropos of Jlr. Carnegie's praise of Hie blessings of poverty , it is to be noted that the men who describe these to the moat roseate terms are usually wnspicuous for their success In dodg- hig them. At the bottom of this lawlessness , to Chicago and elsewhere , is the sin ister fact that all law has fallen into contempt just in proportion as it has failed to be invoked against all offend ers of whatever class. If that panther which Is poking around the Rockefeller estate doesn't find himself doing duty as a rug be fore long , he may boast of being the snly critter that ever bothered John D. and didn't get skinned. Politeness forbids the guest to eat the sweatest part of a sparerib , lamb rhop or chicken , because it lies next to the bone , and the bone must not be taken in the lingers and gnawed. The servant , the cat and the dog are luckier than the master and his fam ily. It is announced that Chili has sold to Great Britain two big battle-ships which Avere being built on the Clyde. Manufacturing nations do not usually buy warships unless there seems a prospect that they may be needed in a hurry. Possibly there are events goIng - Ing on in European cabinets which the public little appreciates. Prrs'dent Eliot is right when he says ( hat gir.s and young women should be moderate in athletic exercise and bhould not try to compete with young men in the more exacting forms of L-\eiv-s3. : Now that Prvsident Eliot has given good advice to the girls , which they will doubtless heed , let him turn his attention to the boys and prescribe ilue limitations for them. Is it best j for Harvard students to risk life and 1'iinb for the sake of a possible vic- lory in football ? Are there no limits be.\omi which even young men ought not to go ? The educational problem among the poor will be a step nearer solution if women's clubs , or men's , adopt a sag- uestlon recently made by Miss Addams of Hull House. She proposes that each club establish as many public school "scholarships" as It can afford , pay tea a widjw , for example , the wages her child could earn in the factory , on con dition that the boy or srirl keeps out of the factory and goes to school. Many a struggling mother would bear her burden blithely if she could see Btich a way open to educate her chil dren ; and everything thus done to help her and them would be for the benefit , lee , of the United States of to-morrow. A Chicago business man committed ulclde , leaving behind him a note sayIng - Ing , "I am tired of carrying burdens. " What a mistake. All of us carry bur dens. Some of us are heavy laden. Tasks bend backs and whiten hair. \VY11 , what of it ? If the burdens are not those of conscience , if they are tiie bmdpns of finance or of family or 1 ibor for dally bread Happy we ! Did \ou ever see a woman bf the Orient nrry n great water vessel on her head ? Ifow Avoll poised she Is. With her chin I teli un she moves easily. What grace n 1 strength. It Is the load ! Gravity. Instead of hindering her , helps the wo man. So of your burdens. They kold poji down. You are careful of your footing. Imagine yourself without re- Hpoiisibility. What fantastic tricks your feet might play. You need dDubt- less the very load you are carrying. Under the weight your footing is linn , you hold up your head AS becomes a burden bearer and your eyes are In I front where they ought to be. The man without a burden Is like a ves sel without ballast or a keel to hoit ' It down. His boat pitches and tosse with every turn of the wind. He Is lucky If he misses reef and shoal and I wreckage. No. No. Our loads ars I proper. Let us take a new grip upon them. And hold up our chins. Many corporations and large Indus trial concerns are able to devise checks and counterchecks to detect suspected employes , and even skillful bookkeeper * who have "run things" for years have been entrapped , but when It comes to applying the money of the people to purposes in which every taxpayei should be interested there is not the same vigilance and care. Until a point is reached when every official doln , . work for a municipality Is selected sr lely for his ability , integrity and industry , just as employes are picked out by men who have invested their own money in business , graft in some form may be expected to be found in American cities. Intensely practical people are likelj to exclaim against the proposition to make the anniversary of the day on which Columbus discovered America a national holiday. Such people will maintain that we already have too many holidays and that Congressman Martin's bill will merely establish an other excuse for idling. There are two sides lo the question , however , not only with respect to the proposed Colum bus anniversary but in regard to holi days generally. The old aphorism about all work and no play bo-ing det rimental to Jack's intellectuals applies to grown-ups as well as to boys. Work is not an end but a means , and when people deem recreation a waste of time they misapprehend the primary meanIng - Ing of the word. Recreation is to re create , to renew , to create afresh , to repair the waste of vital force and en ergy caused by steady application to work. It is not mere Idling. It is a process as necessary as the replenish ing of the oil in a lamp , and If it be neglected the vital spark goes out just as surely as the -lamp is extinguished. We do not have too many holidays iq this country. The trouble is that we do not even observe the holidays we have. Save on Independence Day , Thanks giving , Christmas and New Year's ob servance of holidays is confined in a great measure to the banks , the com mercial exchanges and the public of fices. Other Institutions and othei people pursue their usual activity re gardless of the calendar. We begrudge ourselves the days of rest and recrea tion which we have through our legis lators set apart for ourselves. There is even a growing disposition to util ize Sunday as a working day. Many lines of industry are necessarily seven- day occupations. The operation of rail roads , teleCTaphs and various publiq and quasi-public institutions cannot be entirely intermitted on the first day of the week. Custom has rendered it nec essary for newspapers to print Sunday editions. But aside from the Industries named there are many factories , sh p3 and institutions which now maintain operations regardless of Sundays or holidays. People appear to be growing more and more miserly in the matter of rest and recreation. This is burn ing the candle at both ends a pecu liarly American error. It Is a pervers ion of the true meaning of the gospel of work. It Is an unnatural , high-pres sure method of life which has already manifested its evil effects on the nerves of our people and which bids fair If not amended to render us a nation of physical and mental wrecks. We may not need new holidays , but we need to take advantage of those we have al ready set aside. We need less work and more play. We need not go ff far as to adopt the calendar of oui South American neighbors , who make every other day a holiday , but we might very profitably imitate their hab its of abjuring worry and letting to morrow take care of Itself. We should thus live longer and there would be fewer cases of nervous prostration among us. Had Earned Their Help. Many yeans ago , when the revivalist , B. P. Hammond , converted nearly thd whole population of Lawrence , thera ( vas an old shoemaker in the towm wk ( vas noted for his profligate habits. H ; amp to grace in the course of th revival- and regularly took a pro ii- lent place on the mourner's bench. On light Mr. Hammond Invited hist to ead In prayer. He responded with ilacrity and said : "Oh , Lord , Then knowest what a tl man I have been. Thou tlh ? st that I hare neglected my famllj h md my business to travel the path * > f sin. Thou knowest that 1 could a ; lot be counted on to do the work oi ny customers. But now , O Lord , bj he power of Thy sanctificatlon , I am 01n from the paths of wickedness n ! ind walk uprightly before all. And Wiou knowest , Lord , that under Thj VIai nercy I will be at my bench fron. ai nornrag till night , ready to mend shop * 0 is cheap as any man in town. " Kan las City Journal. Fortune's Favor Sufficient. "What do we want with gold and > redous stones ? " said the proud moth- ir , gazing fondly- upon the baby. ri This Is fortune enough for us. " te "Huh ! " grunted the father , who had > een walking the floor nearly all night 'I'm glad fortune didn't knock twice , t our door. " Philadelphia Public Uitt9 .ledger. tt9 BEGAN AS A GROCER'S BOY. Joseph Park , one of New York's old- Ime merchant princes , recently died at he age of 79. The Tribune says of ilm that no day was long enough for Jl the work he chose to do. His farm vas at Rye , but he kept rooms at a mtel in town , in order to be near ; nough to spend busy evenings at the hop. Late one night he was walking hrough the hotel corridor , and an ac- tuaintaaee met him and said , "Mr ark , you ought to be congratulated or 'our energy. Not every man of 7 : ould go to the theater as constantly is you do. " "Yes , " was his answer. "I manage o go to the same theater nearly everjv light. " "The same one ? What theater is- t ? " "Park & Tilford's. " That was the irm of which he was the head. 'The shop was his theater of amusemen. ind enterprise. Mr. Park's father was a farmer , and it the age of 13 the boy Avent into a S'ew York grocery , and there met rames M. Tilford , who afterward be- ame his partner. The two boys cry loon began to lay their plans for the 'uture , and many were their device 'or saving pennies. "Joe. " said Tilford. one day , "what und of a suit are you going to get for he winter ? " "I've already got it , " said young Park. "Where did you get it ? " "From home. It's father's , and iiothcr cut it down. " The business of Albro & Company , .heir employers , grew , and a brunch store was opened. This did not suc ceed until Park and Tilford were placed in charge of it. Then business began to flow in , and it was not long before the two young men called on Mr. Albro , and told him they had come to buy out the branch. "But you haven't the money , " he ob jected. "Oh , yes , we have , " said young Park. "We've saved enough of your money to pay for it. " "My money ? " "What we've saved out of our tvages. " But Joseph Park was not a mere money-maker. He spent more than a Hundred thousimd dollars in the bulki ng of roads. Thirty miles of the best Macadam owe their present condition to him. He was also an advocate of good stone Avails , and whenever he ae- juired a piece of property adjoining tiis own at Rye , he would enclose it nrith a substantial boundary. Visitors it Rye often wonder at the wall stretching for miles over the country ; Dut old inhabitants are always ready : o tell them , "That's the Park wall. " tVENING PLAY-CENTERS. flic New York Hoard of 1 ducatioti'a lixperinients in Kecreatirm. The New York Board of Education ias already begun die experiment with L number of evening play-centers , some or girls and some for boys , in the imple basements of school buildingo hat used to stand idle while the street augiit its lessons. Pushing open the Leer into one of these play-centers , the isitor meets a composite rush of sounc ike the roar of the ocean , and is con ranted by a kaleidoscope of humanity rhlch gradually resolves itself Into the igures , long and short , tidy and un- : emptf Jew and Gentile , of a thousand K > ys gathered at long tables all up nd down the big room , playing check- C rs , dominoes , crokinole , and the othei armless games. Over in a corner a ow little chaps are reading , or , witb areful thought , selecting books from small library. In a room beyond , athletic boys in ah orts of humorous improvised costuuua re preparing under their director for contest with another team. Clasi- oems are occupied by intellectual oys , in the alphabet of whose d-esiros L. stands for American History or Au- lior's Readings instead of Amusement r Athletics. Owing to lack of funds , play-centera re still so few that only those o er nirteen , who cannot be commanded to o to school in the daytime , are invited > attend. But this class it is particu- irly important to reach. New York , ke most other cities , has offered foi long tune evening grammar schools nd high schools , helpful and Impor- mt in their way , but only attractive > the sober and earnest and industrl- e as , to whom the night temptations oi le street are least alluving. Besides icse Is always to be found In the o 'owded. districts a flotsam and Jetsam o f young population , too tired or in c [ ffierent to spend the evening In work lat drifts about until It finds Its kind hen comes the saloon or the dance flb iH , hot blood and swift purpose , anif fla Eterward mischief and lawlessnes > a id the things done that should haven < Inb : ? en left undone. b For such the Board of Education' * C ( ises of wholesome play , open ever ? ght without money and without price Ith no condition except that those site ho enter must be over school age 'e a deliverance from temptation. test toG 2ntnry. G Frugal. "I want a-dog license , " said the man st hall. al the Chicago city Pl "All right , " said the clerk. "You might as well give me a mar- sge license as well. Two for a quar- p , I suppose ? " Yonkers Statesman..c . P < Pay of Street Car Men. ai Wages paid street car men In tb * ilted States annually amount to mort Bm $88,000.009. I to MALE AND FEMALE PACKING Wife "I am just dying to see the things you bought while you were away. " nusband " 'Eh I didn't buy aoy- thrne. " "F3ut you had only one small trunk when you left , and you have come back with two. " "Ob ! Yes , you packed my trunk for me , you know. When I came to ptart back , I had to borrow another trunk to cet all the stutf in. " A woman would rather be idolized than understood. Best in the World. Esthervllle , la. , Feb. 1st Mr. George J. Barber of this place says : "Dodd's Kidney Pills are the best medicine in the world. There is noth ing us good. I had been sick for over lo years with Kidney Disease which finally turned into Brlght's Disease. I was treated by Doctors in Chicago , but they didn't do me any good. The best Doctor in Estherville treated me for Gve years with no better success. I heard of Dodd's Kidney Pills and made up my mind to give them a trial. "I am very thankful to be able to say that they cured me completely and I think they are the best medicine in tln world. " The honest , earnest , straightforward experiences of real living men and women are the only material used in advertising Dodd's Kidney Pills. One such testimony is worth more than a thousand unsupported claims. The people ple who have used Dodd's Kidney Pills are those whose evidence is worth con sideration and surely nothing can be more convincing than a statement like Mr. Barber's. There are thousands ot others just as strong. TH EV MINI NG NU1S A NCE. Tlieie isn't anything in the world more disagreeable tliari a whining person. He whit es if it is hot. He whines if it is cold. lie wlnnes at tliis , he whines at thai , he whines at everything. Whine , whine , whine It is just a habit he has f.illen into. There is nothing the matter wiih him. It is just a b d habit. The whiner is generally an idle person or ; i lazv one VVhat he needs is to be set to work at real hard wi.ik , inen- til ; or physical. Some work that will Interest him and engage his whole uttentidn aud he will not have tim < to whine. Get the whine out of four voice or it will atop the de- velopement aud growth of your body ft will narrow and shrink jour mind It will drive away your friends. It make you unpopular. There is ' ic-thing the matter with you. Just ' your whining and go to work. ( NOT SO BAD DAYTIME Flimm I hope you are interested n the crying evils of the day. Flamra Well , nee particularly. [ guess if you bad twins , as I have , /uu'd be more interested in the crj- ng evils cjf the night , also. Phila- Iclphia Bulletin. In Sweden bricks are laid in zero veather by heating the sand for the notlar. Idaho will make an exhibit of ninerals at the vvorld"s fair that vill call attention to that state's yonderful res'iurecs. Iler unrivaled xnibit of 2oO,000 opals is now over tiaciowed by tne reports that big dis- o\eries of radiums have recenth nen made. Executive Commissioner mrtt is arranging for a display of his newest wonder. In Cuba sixteen tons of cane yield rie ton of syrup ; in Peru It requires nly twelve and a half. DIDN'T BELIEVE Thnt Coffee Was the Keal Trouble. Some people flounder around and ake everything that's recommended to hem , but finally find out that coffee ; the real cause of their troubles. An > regon man says : 'For 25 years I was troubled with ly stomach I was a steady coffee rinker , but didn't suspect that as the ause. I doctored with good doctors nd got no help ; then I took almost nything which some one else had een cured with , but to no good. I was B ery bad last summer and could not ei : ork at times. "On December 2 , 1902 , I was taken 64 3 bad the Doctor said I could not live 64Bl ver twenty-four hours at the most Bl nd I made all preparations to die. I Ble juld hardly eat anything , everything istressed me , and I was weak and w ck all over. When in that condition jffee was abandoned and I was put a Posrum ; the change In my feelings ime quickly after the drink that was w aisoning me was removed. k/ / "The pain and sickness fell away kto om me and I begun to get well day to y day , so I stuck to it , until now I ai well and strong again , can eat ; artlly , with no headache , heart trou- ! e or the awful sickness of the old iffeo days. I drink all I wish of ostum without any harnf and enjoy it bj imensely. ar "This seems like a wonderfully CO rong story , but I would refer you COm the First National Bank , the Trust tu unking Co. , or any merchant of rant's Pass , Ore. , in regard to my anding. and I will send a sworn Im atement of this if you wish. You can aa so use my name. " Name given by tu ; ) stum Co. , Battle Cre.ek , Mich. oc Still there are who many persistent- es fool themselves by saying "Coffee m't hurt me. " A ten days' trial o vis jstum in its place will tell the truth re id many times save life. ref "There's a reason. " Look for the little book , "The Iload Wellvflle , " in each pkg. uf < rei GREAT NAMES IN CONGRESS. Men Whoso Patronymics Mark Them for Other MOH'B Notice. We cannot depend on the House oi Representatives of the United States 'Congress for a great deal , but we can always trust it to supply a roll call that is interesting and diverting read ing until it becomes an old story , saya the New York Mail and Express. Why is it that men of picturesque and even remarkable cognomens tend to drift into Congress , especially in the South and West ? Is it that the very nature of their names seems to devolve upon them the duty to render these namei illustrious ? Perhaps it is. The Fifty-eighth Congress Is no ex ception to the rule. There are men here whose names ought to have mad them famous even if they had nevei gone to Congrss or done anything else Not to speak of Prince Cupid Kalania- naolc of Honolulu , whose name may b the Hawaiian Smith for all we know , we have on this new roll of our coun try's fame the priceless name of th Hon. Swanger Sherley of Kentucky , that of Hon. Phanor Brazeale of Louis iana and that of Hon. Justin D. Bow- ersock of Kansas. The Hon. Jefferson Brick Is now absent from the councils of the nation , but the family is ably represented by the Hon. Abraham Brick of Indiana. There are others. Let us pick out a few patronymic gems at random : Thetus W. Sims. Tennessee. Parish Carter Tate. Georgia. Ollie James , Kentucky. Halvor Steencrson , Minnesota. Champ Clark , Missouri. Jack Beall , Texas. Carter Glass , Virginia. Arsene P. Pujo , Louisiana. The names of Pou. Snook , Moon , Dick , Cruuipacker , Mmld , Skilos , ShuII , Snapp , Gooch , Licernash , Kluttz , Sho- ber and Spight continue to decorate the roll. They surely wore not born to die. But why , may we ask , is the name of "Bird" so popular among poli ticians ? The present House has on ita list Adam Byrd of Mississippi and H. Burd Cassell of Pennsylvania , and have we not our own Bird S. Colei ind Asa Bird Gardiner always witb [ IS ? Many a congressional surname of de cided commonplaceness is relieved Li-om that fate by the given name. Chat of the Hon. Choice B. RandcII of rexas is an instance , the Hon. Vespa sian Warner another and the Hon. Iriosto Wiley another. But for the uost part the Congressmen were con- iemned by their parents to.bear the ) lain nanies of John. James , William , roseph and so on. These parents fail- d to realize that if a man couldn't jet his name into the megaphone of 'ame in any other way it might be lone for him with a quaint curious ind mouth-filling baptismal desigua- ion. The Wooden Indian. Behold the wooden Indian , Who stands outside the door , And guards , with frown and hatchet , The old tobacco store. He never beat a grocery bill. He never told a lie , He never took a longing look At bourbon , fizz , or rye. Behold the wooden Indian A mass of oak and paint ; He never made a crooked move , Iii' faith , he is a saint. He never bought a stack of chips And sat into a game ; He never rushed a chorus girl , Or flirted with a dame. o Behold the wooden Indian , * ' Who , on the other hand. o. Was never known to help the poor That fill our glorious land ; Who never heard the piteous cry Of him who starved aone Who never gave a hungry dog So much as one small bone. Behold the wooden Indian ( And clay is much like wood ) , Who never did a bit of harm. Nor yet a bit of good. His family is not extinct f ( In fact , one often meets a A lot of wooden Indians A-walking on the streets ! -Milwaukee Sentinel. 01 01b According to his Folly. b ; A young Japanese compositor em- loyed on a Japanese paper in New Cli ork was riding down-town in a City S ( ! all train the other morning. He waa le igrossed in his morning paper , and sc ild little attention to the other pas- tl mgers. But a fresh-looking young man who it next to him , and who had been tt ring him all along , suddenly askedj li "What sort of a 'nese' are you , any- ay ? A Chinese or a Japanese ? " The little Jap was not caught nap- ng. Quick as a wink he replied : "What sort of a 'key7 are yon , any * ay ? A monkey , a donkey , or a Yan- The fresh young man had no more say , and left the train quickly when e City Han station was reached. Insect Foes of Mankind. When it comes to actual facts and ; ures of the financial losses causer ! # insect pests the published papers # * d reports of expert Investigators # tmected with our agricultural depart jnt at Washington and our agricnl- ral stations elsewhere furnish thg ief and largest resource. The figures ren here are truly staggering In thelc mensity. Thus we have it on the thorlty of Dr. Howard that the ac- il money loss occasioned by Insect sts In this country every year Is nets s than $33,000,000. According to Dr. > ward the grasshopper pest which ited large areas of the West In 1874- destroyed farm crops to the value $100,000,000 In a single season. Fhere are moments In every man' * ; when he imagines he's on the ge of Insanity. Constant Achlns Back aches all the time. Spoils your appetite ; wearies the body ; worries the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's Kid ney Pills relieve and cure it H. B. McCarver. of 201 Cherry street , Portland , Oregon , inspector of freight for the Trans - Continental Co. , says : "I used Doan's Kidney Pills for backache , and other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annoyed me for months. I think a cold waa responsible for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle ra my kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills root ed It out It is several months since I ! used them , and up to date there Jia - been no recurrence of the troubled Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all- dealers. Price 50 cents per box. Fos- ter-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. GOUD ENOUGH LOCATION Stranger "Seems to me this crowded street is a queer"place for a hospital. " Native "Well , I don't know. Two trolley lines mcefe here. " _ . Looking for a Hame ? Then why not keep In view the fact that the farming lands oi arc sufficient to support a. population of 50.000.000 or over ? The imrafKratlon to Western Canada durintf the pa t sue years has been phenomenal. * * v > * * iREE iREELands Lands easily accessible , and other' lands may bo parchased fcpnj Railway and Land Companies. * Western Canada's crain lands _ produce marvellons crops.\7hilo the razin T land , contafh all the nutritive qualities for fat tening cattle and other stock. Market , School * , ICnlHvny " and nil other conditions mulcc Wentern Cnnucja . Ue l ruble jKjt for tbe horae seeker. Write to the Superintendent ItnniisraUon , Ottawa , for a de-w scriptive Atlas , and other information mation ; or to the authorized V " 7. fleimett , E01 Xc York Ufa Bldg . As you do not sweeten your mouths iy sayinji honey so y u not not gto irtuuus by meiely taking of virfaie -Ivan Pan in. > SALE Larzestseed potato zrotoeraia tbt leortdt Elegant Etoclc. Tremendous yields. Prom 400 to 1000 bushels p r act * . f@ ® 1O GEMTS and this notice we send you Jolnofferm seed samples and bbr catalogue , telling all about Teoslnte , Spelts , PraoAt. Acrid .Land Barley , Macaroni VVhentBromna , Earliest Cane , etc. bend for same today. Put Up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mtmtazd or nv herplnrtor. nnd will act Wister the tnort delicnt * an. The pain i aUayuBaod < mra T qualities of thit. ticleBrowonderfrJ It will < oit tfie toothaafi at ire , and reheT headache and eci.itl ca. . recom and it the beat nnd safest exra ) untor-lrrttant Jcnown. also an nn external ramedzfo * ns in the chest and stomach- and all rhemnitia = - u * Burnlrfc and souty complaint * A trial will provo what we claim for it , and it TnH be * toheilnTBlnablein thohoowhold. - ! Many t * oj ly-Ut is the beat of all jour pr i u-tttloau. " lnce 15 1 cents , at all drnreteta , or other dealers , or 9 ln HESEBR016H MANUFACTURING 0 17 State Street. New York Cfty. In California a great cry Is seine ir hanas to harvest the big od fruit crop this year. Thomas C. TrneblooQ , professar of atory at the University ol lliehi- m. accompanied the Michigan de- iting team to Minneapolis for the Jbate between Michigan and Mfnne- ita. Jan 14. He gave a Shakespeare- cture recital at the state normal .1 . heel at Cedar Palls , Iowa , and on , ie return trip , he lectured at Coa- allege Cedar Rapids , l&wa. It is estimated that fcheie are 1,280 mnels in the world ofsomellTfejr fee a tetal of 600 miles. Big' RisHs m