Conservative * TIIK FUNCTIONS Buckle , ill tllO OK GOYKUNMKNT. "History of Ch'il- ization in England , " declares : "In the year 177(5 ( Adam Smith pub lished , his 'Wealth of Nations' which , looking to its ultimate results , is pro bably the most important book that has ever been written. Well may it bo said of Adam Smith , and said , too , without fear of contradiction , that this solitary Scotchman has , by the publica tion of one single work , contributed more towards the happiness of man than has been effected by the united abilities of all the statesmen and legisla tors of whom history has presented an authentic account. " And Doctor Channing in treating of governmental functions remarks : "We mean not to deny , wo steadily affirm , that government is a great good and essential to human happiness ; but it does its good chiefly by a negative influence , by repressing injustice and crime , by securing property from in vasion , and thus removing obstructions to the free exercise of human powers It confers little positive benefit. Its ollico is , not to confer happiness , but to give men opportunity to work out hap piness for themselves. Government re sembles the wall which surrounds our land a needful protection , but reaping no harvests , ripening 110 fruits. It is the individual who must choose whether the inclosuro shall be a paradise or a waste. How little positive good can government confer ! It does not till our fields , build our houses , weave the ties which bind us to our families , give dis interestedness to the heart or energy to the intellect and will. All our great interests are loft to ourselves , and gov ernments , when they have interfered with them , have obstructed , much more than advanced , them. For example , they have taken religion into their keeping , only to disfigure it. In like manner , they have paralyzed trade by their nursing care , and multiplied poverty by expedients for its relief. Government has almost always been a barrier against which intellect has had to struggle , and society has made its chief progress by the minds of private individuals , who have outstripped their rulers and grad ually shamed them into true wisdom. The crying sin of all governments it that they intermeddle injuriously witl human affairs , and obstruct the proces scs of nature by excessive regulation Society is such a complicated concern its interests are affected by so many unsettled causes , there are so many so crct springs at work in its bosom , aw such uncertainty hangs over the distant issues of human arrangements , that wo are astonished and shocked at the temerity ity of legislators in interposing thoii contrivances and control , except whore events and experience shod a clear light It is the business of government t give each citizen , an equal chance , with in the limits of the public good , for life liberty , the accumulation of property and the pursuit of happiness. Afto : that it depends upon the individual am hi.5 intelligent efforts as to how nmcl enjoyment ho shall secure in life , libortj and property. Enlightened selfishness prompt every man to do the very best ho can for himself and his family. Every cit izen who determines , and properly en deavors , to do the best ho can for him self is , therefore , doing the best ho can for the Government and the country. If there bo a republic of fertile lands and genial climes anywhere upon this globe where each citizen is doing the best ho can for himself , that republic typifies Paradise regained , and to it I would emigrate myself , and take with me all my kindred , friends and acquaintances. In that perfect abode there can bo no extortionate taxation , no prisons , no anarchists , no fiat money , and no pov erty. As an entity , -the Government of the United States is simply'all ofiis. ' And when each is doing , within the limits of the public good , strenuously and intelligently to the best of his abil ity , the best ho can for himself , the gov ernment and the people are at the high est tide of flush prosperity. The farmers of America need individualization - tion and development by personal study and investigation. They do not need to pool their thinking faculties and their energies in vast associations , which arc too often turned to political rather than to agricultural and domestic purposes. No man should give a power of attorney to any society , organization , or person to think for him. All the drouths , all the locusts , all the chinch-bugs , all the diseases of domestic animals which have afflicted agriculture are not half such dangerous foes to the farmer as an inconvertible or irredeemable currency ; not half so impoverishing as cheap money of violently fluctuating purchas ing power ; not half so dangerous to his interests as a system of laws which com pels him to sell his products in compe tition with all the world and to buy his manufactured articles in a market whence all competition is excluded ; not half so threatening as a blind adher- ouco to the teachings of ignorant leaden and vicious demagogues. A -WKSTKKN Mr. , T. Sterling KNTKKPJU.SK. Morton , Prcsidon Cleveland's late secretary of agriculture in his cabinet , is to enter into journal ism in something like a missionary spirit. Ho has issued a prospectus for a weekly journal , to bo published at Ne braska City , Nob. , to bo called THIS CONSERVATIVE , and to treat of questions in social , industrial and political life in the spirit of its title. Of course , it is for the continuance of the single gold standard in the monetary system of the country , and is to combat free silver coinage. Mr. Morton is a vigorous writer , as well as an aggressive man in his independence. Ho invites subscrip tions to his paper from all sections of the country in aid of the work on which ho has entered , and starts out with an assured list of patrons numbering be tween 5,000 and (5,000. ( Boston Herald. Persons desiring to advertise among the best households of the northwestern country are informed that THE CONSER VATIVE has such a circulation of nearly 5,000. KDUCATIONAL , IK- xllu m i < VHMU'MKNT IN school of Otoo NKHUASKA CITY county was es- ANI ) OT015 , COUNTY tftblisliod at Nebraska - braska City by Miss Martin , in 1855. Subsequently she married Andrew Jes- son , a most worthy and successful , citi zen. Paul Jessen , our county attorney [ now absent as a soldier , at Chicka- nauga ) ifa result of that union. The second school in the county was istablished by Miss Lucy N. Bowen , an iccomplished teacher , who was educated in Vermont. She was the sister of Dr. tVurolius Bo wen. On January 2 , 18(50 ( , the public schools of Nebraska City were first opened for pupils. Then male teachers were paid $75 pei month and females $50 per month. But in 1801 compensation for the teachers was established at 50 cents per month for each pupil. During the year 18(513 ( the legislative assembly of the territory of Nebraska authorized Nebraska City to issue $15,000 of 10 per cent bonds , out of the proceeds of which a high school building should bo erected. The indebtedness was in curred and the old school building on Sixth street was completed in 18G5 at a cost of $ :31,000. : This was the first high school building in Nebraska City. The piiblic funds wore exhausted , however , before the completion of the edifice , and $1,500 was required to finish it. How to raise that sum of money was a very serious , financial problem. But the good pioneer mothers of Nebraska City and suburbs very soon devised a sort of exposition , and art loan association , a fair and festival combined. The public were invited to this entertainment at 25 cents for admission. Once admitted , the inducements for the purchase of edibles , curios and embroideries made by def t needle women were irresistible. In a single week the $1,500 had been raised and paid over to the school board , among the energetic frontier women of that day who took leading parts in this educational enterprise , was the mother of Joy , Paul , Mark and Carl Morton and also the mother of Paul Jessen , and like wise the mother of Mrs. Ed Woolsoy and many others of courage and energy. The Fourteenth street schoolhouse was completed in 1809. It cost $10,000. It was totally destroyed by fire in 1874 , and rebuilt at a costof $4,250.25. The Ninth street high school building was erected in 1874. It cost $5,000. iiioiiT iiisVKUKNi ) The provisional TAMIOT. bishop of the Epis copal church for the territory of Ne braska , was a man of wonderful execu tive ability , beside being a most eloquent and convincing pulpit orator. No ono of the pioneer clergymen of Nebraska excelled Bishop Talbot in farsightedness and correct business judgment. Ho ac quired for his church largo real estate holdings along the Missouri river at Omaha and all principal towns which ,