Perfect In quality. Moderate In price. more than one-half million acre of that now under homestead entry i try would ever pass to patent The remaining one-half of cours would finally revert back to th < government as "unappropriated. ' That added to the 1,314,322 acres no one wants suniciently to paj § 14.00 for opportunity of trying to acquire title by five years' resi dence , would make at least on < and one-half million acres in Cher ry county alone to be disposed of and this is the land in question , How shall it be disposed of ? It cannot be sold , since congress rightly thinks that as conditions change due to settlement , that little by little these lands will be come subjugated sufficiently for settlement and that every acre of the remaining public domain should be withheld for the actual settler. It therefore would ap pear that lease say for 30 years , somewhat similar to the leases of state school lands , subject to home stead settlement or other neces- siry appropriation , would be the most practicable. It cannot be leased to the highest bidder , per acre , since the opportunities would be too great for the owner of large outfits to acquire all the range to the destruction of the "little man. " After having spent six weeks at Washington last win ter in the interest of a bill I had drawn looking to leasing I have concluded that the land might be 'apportioned , at say one cent per acre per annum rental , after sub stantially the following manner : 1st. Referendum : When the voters , of any precinct ( or pre cincts ) * desire that said lands come within this proposed act , that up on a petition signed by one-fifth of the voters of said precinct , the county commissioners be required to submit the question of leasing at any regular election , a majority 'vote being necessary to carry. That upon the returns showing the same to have carried , the county canvassing board certify .the.same to the local land office , in which district the land is located , which in turn shall certify same to the general land office. 2d. The general land office shall require that the local office give 30 days notice to all who desire to lease five sections (3,200 ( acres ) or less. Provided always , that none but actual homestead entry- men or owners of real estate or Jessees of state school lands con tiguous shall be eligible to apply. That upon said day applications shall be opened and the local land office shall proceed to apportion said lands between said applicants , giving each as nearly the amount * applied for as conditions will per mit , always keeping in mind con tiguity , subject to appeal. Note. The reason 3,200 acres is named is because it is believed that since the land cannot be farm ed in cereal products and must necessarily be devoted to cattle , that it will require at least six sec tions ( one homestead and five leased sections , 3,8 0 acres ) to maintain a family. It requires about 40 acres to graze an animal , and the six sections comprise 96 forties , therefore , would support about that number of cattle in summer , and a part at least of it must in some manner be made to grow forage of some kind , or the problem of winter food is at once a serious question to the future settler. Those already in the country have acquired the hay valleys for winter forage and need -.the leased lands only for summer , -grazing. 3d. Those requiring 3,200 acres < or less having been provided , 30 days notice should be given to riliose who desire 6,400 acres or less , qualifications t'eingsarae , an land being apportioned in sum manner as in former instance This woiiLl < 'imi > h > those having In tic lrji T iifMl- to provide fn their requirements in grazin lands. s 4th. After the two former clas ses had been provided for , the re maining lands could be offered ani apportioned in same manner t < the owners of larger herds. I should be understood that anyom being apportioned lands under an : one offering could not in any wa. participate at any future offering In this in-inner the small mar would be given preference , botl as to location and quality of the lands. In this manner also ever. } acre would come under lease without the acrimony and fear foi the small man , lease to highes1 bidder would certainly engender. One and one-half million acres at one per cent per annum pei acre , would .yield an annual reve nue of § 15,000. Of this § 15,000 , it occurs to me that an equitable distribution would be about as fol lows : One half for General Gov ernment for reclama tion fund § T,500.0C Of the remains on one half of § 7500 one-fourth to State Fund 1,875.00 One fourth to the County General Fund 1,875.00 And one half ( or one fourth of the entire revenue ) to the support of schools within the said leased territory , or where no schools are maintained , to the coun try school fund 3,750.00 $7,500.00 If the vacant lands in a single county can at this very low rental be made to yield $15,000 per year , why is it not logical they should do so ? If that small area can be made to turn that amount into the treasuries annually , what possi bilities cannot be looked forward to in revenues , when the entire' public domain shall have been leased at the same figure. Possibly Cherry county contains one-fourth of the remaining va cant lands of Nebraska. If so , the sntire leased would aggregate $60,000 annually , of which one- half should remain in state , to help maintain state , county and school governments. Perhaps it will be said that Cherry county is an exceptionally large county. True it is , as com pared with other counties in strict ly agricultural states ; but there is scarcely a county as small in Wyo- iiing. In Montana a majority of ihc counties contain larger areas , ind just so to the Pacific. A liberal allowance is provided for schools within the leased areas , ; or the reason that more home steads have been deserted by reas- ) n of no schools within their reach ihan for all other reasons com bined. Intimidation so much ex- Dloited , will not compare with it. Should this condition be brought ibout the ranchman will no long- jr fear to employ a married man vith children of school age , for ! ear least the employee vote a school tax on him. The government , having in rec- mt years begun the enforcement ) f the Van Wych anti-fencing law , jattlemen of all degrees of import- ince have been moving fences un- , il the cost and annoyance has 1 riven many out of business. kYhere they have not quit , many lave been forced to adopt new nethods , for instance : A man nvning about 150 head of Aber- leen-Angus cattle has. sold them it auction and replaced them with jrade short horns and herefords , > f course at a sacrifice , for no oth- > r reason than that with his fences lown there is no possible way for lim to continue that strain , a mix- ip due to open range being in evitable. He would prefer a given .mount of land under purchase or ease which he could fence without > eing an outlaw , protect against > rairie fires and feel assured that he iould maintain a given number of sattle upon. Although "a little aan" in the cattle sense , he de- ) lores present chaotic conditions , nd longs for some practical so- lution. . } According to the report ofth gpno.ral land o'tfic * * for the yea ending June 30. 191)0 ) , there st.i n-jmiinn 817,527,157 acres of go\ ernment domain , or public lane of which it is "safe to say at leas 500,000,000 acres lies within th so called arid or serai-arid districl That land at the small price c one cent per acre per year woul yield an annual earning of § 5,000. 000. Divided by two the ganera government would receive § 2,500 , 000 , the estimated cost of thegrea Belle Fourche , South Dakota , ir rigation undertaking. If one year' rental of these jands will pay thi entire cost of that irrigation pro ject , in the interval before thes lands could be taken t by home steaders ( if ever ) the entire gov ernment outlay for irrigatioi could be paid for by these rentals and should be. Add to this thi § 2,500,000 which would be addec annually for state , county an ( schools throughout that vast am and it seems to me indefensable tc longer continue as at present. From the standpoint of acitizei with no ranch interest whatever , but with an intimate knowledge oJ conditions , believe the public lands should be leased , first in the inter est of good order and stable con ditions ; and second , as a source ol revenue in which every citizen of this great country has the right to share. I believe the time has ar rived when a man should have no more right to take grass from the surface of the lands belonging tc all the people , than he has to take hay from his neighbor's stack , without pay. Aside from the revenue feature , the land should be under private control , in order that necessary fiVe guards be ploughed and prepared annually , bhus preventing their improvish- cnent by fire. Also , as at present , those public lands are nothing less ihan a menace to the ranch prop- jrty which they surround by reas on of the danger of communicating ire. Also , some form of private jontrol is imperative , since so soon as a man is allowed to fence ind occupy to the exclusion of ) thers , just so soon will he begin ; o preserve , perpetuate and in- ; rease the grasses , in quantities md varieties and not permit the ands to be grazed to the very jrass roots and the grasses then iramped out in endeavor to get mre off the land than the other ellow , and as David Harum says , 'get it first. ' " ' Therefore , in the nterest of the lands themselves , rith a view to occupancy at some uture time by the homesteader , hey should be disposed of in the neantime as not to invite a free ace between cattle , horses , sheep nd conflagration. At present a > remium is placed upon devtsat- og , and the time has arrived when he intelligence of congress should ie invoked in an enactment look- ag to cash returns and the en- lancement in value at the same irae. In an article of this character aany matters of detail must nec- ssarily be omitted , but I believe measure should be enacted em- odying the principal features ereiri , always keeping in mind bat the lease should be subject to omestead entry and appropria- lon. by the government for irriga- ion or other useful purpose. Did you know that our Coffees and Teas are the FINEST in town ? 'Nuff Said. T. C. Hornby. H. S. Lo'ckwood and wife spent 'hanksgiving ' with Mr. and Mrs. covel on the reservation. i. . - "r * < If you will eat more you can do more work , enabling you to earn more money , so that you can buy more do more work and earn still more money. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY X rf * n + REPUBLICAN REFORMERS. Defeated by Political Machine ant : Money of Trusts. There : ire some lively Republics tariff reformers iu Massachusetts among whom Henry A. Blackwell , win is known thereabouts as the "old mai eloquent , " in his speeches advocating the nomination of Eugene X. Foss t < defeat his stand pat opponent tok some truths that sound as if blown b ; c. Democratic bugle. lie explained t : the U'.i > -jVVican voters Hint "Our coal tax is felt in every house hold. Our lumber tax means highei rents and poorer accommodations , li is harder to live than ever before , al though our imports and exports arc greater , and we arc told that the coun try is prosperous and that we shoulfi let well enough alone. But this pros perity is more apparent than real , because * - cause the proceeds of our industries arc not fairly distributed. A few thousand stockholders in overprotected corpora tions get the lion's share. Let me as ! < you gentlemen who are present a sim ple question. How many of you . " -1 richer than you were last year ? How many of you have been able to lay by anything for your old age ? HOT- many of you see before you any prospect of improved condition ? Not one hi fifty. Why ? Because we are all subject to great monopolies which by trade agree ments have eliminated domestic com petition , and by a 45 per cent tariff these monopolies are enable ; ! to charge consumers an advance of 50 per cent upon almost everything that we con sume. "Our coal duty adds a dollar a ton to our fuel bill. Our lumber tax raises our rents. Our tariff on textile fabrics increases the cost of our clothing. Our tax on sugar doubles its cost of impor tation. ' In order to keep up these excessive rates of duty our government spends lavishly , so that its outlay r now amount to ? ! ,000,000,000 annualj- ! . The Drapers r.nd Whitman have patents and proto.-tion on their products ap proximating and exceeding ICO per cent. The iron and steel trust gets a profit of from 100 to l. 0 per cent. Steel rails , which ! Mr. Hcliwab says he can make without loss at $1U a ton. were sold recently to the Panama com mission for $29.30 f. o. b. at Baltimore ( equivalent to $40.50 at the isthmus ) , while a recent sale was made to a foreign customer for $24 a ton deliver ed at Tampico. No wonder the cost of living has advanced 421 , ! per cent ! It will go higher. All depends on the tariff. Raise it 20 per cent and prices will go up 20 per cent. Lower it 20 per cent and prices will fall 20 per cent. The exactions made by the trusts are all paid by ti.o labor of the country. In the interest ; of the consumer we call for tariff revision. In the inter ests of manufacturer and operator aud consumer alike we need free Importa tions of raw materials. Many of our raw materials come free already. Let us add to them coal , iron ore , lumber , hides and wood pulp. Let us reduce our tariff oa Canadian products 20 per cent and thereby enable our neighbors to buy more of our manufactured goods. " But the Republican machine in Mas sachusetts managed by Senator Lodge , the .personal and political friend of President Roosevelt , defeated Mr. Foss. the tariff reformer , and nominated a partner of the trust aud corporation combine. The money of the trusts and corporations' was more powerful with the mn.1or.ity of the Republican voters than reform , and those that were not influenced by money were swayed by their partisan training to vote the trust fostering tariff shackles more firmly on their limbs. All of which shows there is no vestige of hope for tariff revision within the Republican party , and those who earnestly desire reform must join with the Democrats to obtain it. As long as the Republican machine managers can obtain campaign funds from the protected trusts- and monopo lists they can control the caucuses and conventions of their party and very naturally will not smite the hand that feeds them and keeps them in power. W. H. Eichie of Kilgore came lown yesterday and mingled with riencls while attending to busi- less. Monthly Meteorological Summary , NOTE : "T" indicates trace of preclpitition ; ' " helow zero ; "PC" partly cloudy. Joiix J. McLEAX , Observer Weather Bureau. Cherry C . Teachers' Ass'si. The program was carried out as published. About GO teachers were present and muca educational en thusiasm evidenced. Ifc is not pos sible to give a review of the excel lent papers presented , but the loy alty of Cherry county teachers ic high educational standards marked the whole tone of the meeting. Much pleasure was given by the ex ercises from the Valentine school children and the songs and recita tions presented by the high school students of Cody. Mr. Oliver , a graduate of Sidney University , Aus tralia , told many of the every day experiences of the bushman of that interesting country. The teachers gleaned many facts that would lend zest to their geography recitations- J. J. McLean told us of his ob servations during a six years' resi dence in Alaska and added to the interest by showing a book made by his wife illustrating in oil tlie flow ers rnd fruits of Alaska. Nearly all the principals in the county were present. The roll call Saturday morning brought out a quotation from each teacher present and proved inter esting . A lively discussion was de veloped by the topic , "A School Ex hibit for the County Fair. " An at tempt will be made to have every school girl aud boy in the county represented at that fair by some of bis own work. Then the best ex hibits will be collected and sent to the state fair. Won't you see that your child prepares something ? All teachers in the city Saturday evening had supper together and then separated until another meet ing , expressing their satisfaction in the educational value of the county association. Cordially yours , LULU KORTZ , Co. Supt. Frank Kothleutner ancr J. A. W. Johnson were in town today from Kilgoro. Presentation Military , plain boxwood - : . * wood , ebony or stag.- Plarn 01 mounted backs. First ( [ iiality selected- I bristles. Artistic and attracti ve 4 shapes. Prices § 1.50 to § 5.00 ! per pair. Presentation - Odd cups and saucers , g Fancy plates. Cream and sugar sets. Syrup pitchers. Salad bowls , etc. You will find some exceptionally desirable selections at quick go ng prces. VALENTINE. NEB IOO aj LET US FiGURE ON YOUR L Uii \ / B E R MLS