Conservative. press the holidays of anoiout Eomo because - cause they wore irreligious. Did ho over hear of a country where their day of thanksgiving is always marked by the climax of a brutal foot-ball game ? A laud where a bicycle race is the grand emblem of our love for buried heroes and always held on decoration day ? Does he know of a country where their nation's birth is glorified by peanut stands by day and a bowery dance by night ? Has he over known an exhibition of millinery to show forth the faith of a nation in a risen Lord ? The legislature of Kansas , by its action upon King Edward's vote of thanks , intends to maintain the reputa tion of the state for carrying a higher pressure to the square inch of danifool- ism than any equal area between the poles. Mrs. Lease , Mrs. Nation , Jerry Simpson , St. John and such a legis'la- txire are true descendants of John Brown and his coterie of jawhawkers. The announcement that Towno is to assume management of the Liquid Air combine gives credence to the report that Jones of Arkansas has hopes of re viving the embers of Bryanism. T. M. S. INDIAN NEBRASKA. THE CONSERVATIVE is in receipt of a very obliging note from Mr. James P. Dunlap of Dwight , Nebraska , relative to Indian remains. Dwight is in the southeast corner of Butler county , about three miles from where a "very early map , published in Cincinnati , showed an "Oak Grove City , " which seems never to have existed. Mr. Dunlap says that two miles east of Dwight is the site of an old Indian village , where in the early days of set tlement , numerous relics were to be found on the prairie : broken pottery , arrow-heads and the lumps of flint from which arrow-heads were chipped off. They used to notice also , he says , piles of rock on the ridges , surrounded by mussel-shells and broken pottery : evi dently camping-places , where , as Mr Dunlap puts it , the Indians "had cooked mussels and broken dishes and bad a good view of the surrounding country while they were at it. " Relics are no longer plentiful , he says , but the circle of an old building is still visible , one there used to be the rotten remains of a centre-post. This was on a hill which commanded the country for some dis tance about and was near to water. Savannah. Mr. Dunlap speaks further of a spo in section 12 , township 16 , range 2 east "Old Savannah , "whore there were many remains of the circular lodges of the Ind ians , which have now been plowed over for many years : this would bo in the middle of the north border o Butler county , on the Platte river. Also of the remains of fortifications two miles south of Linwood ( in the northeast - east corner of the same county ) where Skull Creek leaves the hills , on the east ide. These are mentioned in Mr. George D. Brown's History of Butler county to 1870 , in Volume IV of the Historical Society's reports , where the antiquities of the region are briefly iouched upon. The Pawnee Fort. Mr. Dunlap gives some interesting mrticulars of these earthworks. He says that in the GO's they were still some ten feet high , ha ving a large openingand with many pits inside the inolosure. He jives also the Pawnee account of them : ; hat these pits were dug down to water , and answered the double purpose of fur nishing a water supply and sheltering ; ho women , children and-young ponies ; ; hat they were moreover covered , and provided with holes to shoot out at , and that they were to have been their last refuge in case the enemy gained the outer walls. He says the Pawnees used to speak of the Sioux as the ones against whom these provisions were made , and to say that they defeated them ; but the reference can hardly be to any particu lar fight , since the warfare between these two tribes was continuous. The evidence indicates that , as Mr. Dunlap understood , the Pawnees were always too much for their northern neighbors , at least in defending their own homes ; though surrounded as they were by hostile tribes , and especially as they were directly in the line of the white man's immigration , their destruction was more swif t and complete than that of any other large nation. It is said that there were a number of places in that same section of the state which were esteemed particularly big medicine by the Pawnees. One was a hill on the south side of the Platte op posite Fremont , where there was a "whirlpool , " whatever that may have been. Another was on an island in the Platte "near the Lone Tree. " There was a stage station known as Lone Tree , the present Columbus. The third was on the west side of the Loup , under a high cut bank at the mouth of Cedar river. All these spots were held in superstitious awe by the Pawnees. Can any of the THE CONSERVATIVE'S readers give any news of their present condi tion ? Or are there any high school boys who can be got to devote some Saturdays to this investigation ? A. T. R. ORIGIN AND MEANING OF THE WORD MISSOURI. State Superintendent W. T. Carring ton of Missouri , in the following letter to Mr. George H. Heafford , gives the origin of the word Missouri and corrects a popular misconception as to its meaning : "The word 'Missouri' is of Indian origin , being the name of a tribe of that laino inhabiting the country at its nouth. The original spelling was Missouria , ' which probably accounts for he popular pronunciation , 'Mizzourah. ' I quote from Rader's History of Mis souri. " 'In 1705 a prospecting party of Frenchmen ascended the Missouri river to where Kansas City is now located. Tin's was the first ascent of this noble river by white men. It was first called Pek-i-ta-nou-i , by Marquette , which is an Indian word meaning 'muddy water. ' About 1712 it was first called Missouri : rein the name of a tribe of Indians who inhabited the country at its mouth and along a considerable portion of its banks. There is no authority for the often re peated assertion that 'Missouri means muddy. ' This definition of the word was given it after the name of the river was changed from Pokitanoui to Mis souri. ' " A circle of 100 NORMAL SCHOOLS , miles radius , with the city of York as its centre , contains' a population of 826,481 or 77 84-100 per cent of the entire population of the state , as shown by the 1900 census. Outside of this circle the entire popu lation of the state is 242,108 or 22 66-100 per cent of the population as shown by the said census. Drawing a longitudinal line at a point crossing the state of Nebraska at Broken Bow or Arapahoe , and the entire popu lation west of that line is , as shown by the census , 110,809 , or about 10 per cent. The establishment of a normal school at a point where this longitudinal line would cross any of the railroads would accommodate less than 10 per cent of this number , or approximately less than 1 per cent of the state's population. Such location , owing to the lack of communi cation from the standpoint of transpor tation , would require travel to be so circuitous as to make it more expensive to students residing on any other than the road upon which the school was lo cated than the fare to the normal at Peru. The Board of Trustees of the Normal at Pern estimates that $60,140 will be required the next two years for current expenses alone , and the sum of $75,000 is asked for additional facilities. This would be the same if there were two other schools located in the western part of the state and they , too , would soon be making similar demands for money , all of which foreshadows the danger and penalty attending such propositions. The Governor should veto all the abnormal demands now being made for new and not needed normal schools. The primary object of the asked-for ap propriations is purely a selfish and not a public one.