' , ' ? rg 1 Mfi ' The Conservative. 11 form. The Jews were equally coiisicl- orate of their deity , and put bells on the skirts of the robe that the high priest wore when he entered the holy of holies ; this , it is explained , was to avoid surprises. When they came in captiv ity to Babylon , they found the inhabi tants of that city adoring with a whole band ; the orchestration has oven come down to us ; the Babylonians , in wor shiping a certain golden imago , per formed upon the cornet , flute , harp , sackbut , psaltery and dulcimer , and the result must have boon very gratifying to the indwelling spirit. In the Roman Catholic church today a boll is sounded when the officiating priest holds up the host , or consecrated wafer , in view of the congregation. The rattling and bumping that pro ceed from the sacred inolosuro of the Indian medicine tent , and the discords that the Chinese laundryman plucks from his long-tailed banjo before the gaudy god who is never missing from his wall , arc similar manifestations with which most of us are familiar. The explanation of so wide-spread a custom must manifestly be purely a matter of theory. To account for these phenomena is the pro.vince of students of primitive man. Many of them have sot their hand to it , but nobody knows much the more. Ono view of the mat ter is , that bells are rung to frighten away harmful spirits at critical times : it has been found to help in cases of eclipse of the sun ; and the church-bell is still tolled in eastern towns immedi ately after a death , and also during an interment. Another is that bells are purely instruments of worship ; atten tion is called to the form of a boll , which resembles the pyramids of Egypt , and also the flame of fire , the purifying and life-giving element , which must have received man's grateful adoration while ho was yet a very humble biped ( or quadruman ) indeed. It is a matter that has many ramifica tions , and altogether it is a very deep subject. Nothing is more BIG MAJOKITIES. - . . . , demoralizing to a political organization , county or state than the established fact that a nomina tion at its hands is equivalent to an elec tion. And nothing is more disastrous to a county or to a state than to hav such an overwhelming majority obtaii in any political organization within it borders. Whenever such a eonditioi exists and the dominating party bragf that it can "elect a yellow dog" to offic over the best typo of citizenslrp that iti adversaries can nominate the people ar in danger of a canine administration o affairs. This has been proved by democrats in Douglas county arid by republicans in the state at large. The yellow dog can didate has frequently succeeded in each and not a small sum has been lost in : each because of such success which was only possible by a party ascendancy that made a nomination equivalent to an election. Branding a citizen democrat , republi can or populist does not impair personal character for ability and honesty , nor does it improve it , nor change it in the slightest degree. But the suspected character , the citizen without much in tegrity and with the least real regard for the public weal , generally , if ho seeks office , joins with great enthusiasm , and much expression of fervid zeal and ardent devotion , the party which has an issured majority. ! In such an organ- zation ho is more likely to get a job of Holding office. This has been proved in he political and public life of Douglas sounty , Lancaster county and the state of Nebraska very clearly a great many lines. ' Any political party with a big ma jor- ty no matter what the best men of the party think , advise or propose is liable : o give its nominations to mere machine office seekers and to thus foist upon the state men who are intellectually and norally incapable of appreciating and properly performing the duties of pub ic sei'vants. The message of THE 1'IIKSI- . , , . „ - - - .rrr President McKm- HUNT'S MESSAGE.President loy to the fifty- sixth congress of the United States was delivered Monday , December 5 , 1898. The document is not marked by any fixed views on the reform of the cur rency. Upon this vital matter it is lum inously inane and unsatisfactory. Every gold standard advocate , from the Atlantic to the Pacific will revel in the force and vigor of President McKinloy's statement "that our domestic paper currency shall be kept safe and yet be so related to the needs of our industries and international com merce as to be. adequate and responsive to such needs is a proposition scarce// ? / less important. The subject , in all its parts is commended to the wise consideration oj congress. " And the courage with which "in al its parts" this question without any dictatorial suggestion is tranquill : submitted "to the wise consideration o congress" makes Dewey , Sampson anc Shafter lacking in bravery. The Scientific American says "th < drinking cups of schoolhouses have fo a long time been recognized as a mean of spreading diphtheria and other con tagious diseases. Out of 4188 childrei excluded from the New York schools 265 were for ailments liable to bo com municatcd by the use of a common drinking cup , such as diphtheria , scarlet - lot fever , whooping cough and mumps. Of other diseases more or less liable to be spread by the same means were measles , chicken pox and 702 contagious diseases of the eyes. Property owners A KEVENUE LAW , * . FOK NEBRASKA , taxpayers in every preciucttowncity and county of Nebraska should think.aud formulate thought in straight American language , upon the vital importance of a more perfect revenue system for this state. Bankers , merchants , manufacturers , farmers , lawyers and other laborers , , hould have theories of taxation and ad vocate thorn with earnestness , whether good or indifferent , until the present mis- rable , unjust , incomplete and inefficient aws for levying and collecting taxes ihall have been repealed , and a truthful , equitable and efficient revenue system nstitutcd in their stead. Public meetings for the reform of the revenue laws of Nebraska might pos- ibly result in judicious and intelligent egislation upon this very vital subject , f held soon in Omaha , Lincoln , Beat rice , Fremont , Hastings , Nebraska City and other populatioiial and industrial enters. From reading OVEItFJLOAVING expansion , island- CIIHISTIAN CIVILIZATION. absorbing and con- tinent-a n n o x i n g organs of McKinleyism , one must con- sludo that , notwithstanding negro slaughtering in the Carolinas and negro banishment from Illinois , that the United States is so chock full of Chris tian civilization and piety that it slops over. over.Wo Wo have too much goodness for "the homo market. " Wo are too civilized for our own health. Wo are too Christian ized to live in isolation. Per capita piety is too high. We must have islands and islands , in both the.Pacific and the Atlantic , over which our Christian civilization , with its senators like Quay of Pennsylvania , its governors like Tanner of Illinois , and a few state treasurers like Bartley of Ne braska may pour an inundation of po litical and social beatitudes until those bestial savages of the Philippines are up to their chins in civilization and Chris tianity. There will shortly NEW TEXTILE SUBSTANCE. ly arrive in Eng land from Assam a trial shipment of a new fibre for tex tile purposes. The rough outer cover ing of the pineapple is the raw material from which the new fibre is made. A sample of it was recently submitted to the Imperial Institute authorities , who advised an Assam planter to make a trial shipment of several tons. The new material will have important commer cial uses. It is very like flax , and may supplant other materials in the manu facture of twine , while it can bo soft ened so as to be available for fabrics. Its estimated value is from 20 to 25 a ton , so that a paying industry will prob ably bo developed in connection with it. Westminster Gazette , November 10.