I THE COURIER , at which time lie mj tired from active orncd" who have, and who have not, life, lie was a student of Shakspero given their consent to authority, and a reader of English poetry. It dvrelt in his memory and lingered Tlie number of candidates for the upon his lips and his gaze was that of mayoralty in the city council is said a dreamer and a mystic, lie said to Include it. There aro several men once as he pointed to the typewriter: "It's an ugly little tiling hull have pounded out on it the education of my live children and I am content. " of his longings for literary In the council whose good judgment lias been repeatedly demonstrated. They have also had considerable expe rience In city affairs and their services in an executive position would be of In spite life and labors and the scenes of bin immense advantage to the city both native land he was not an exile and in financially and morally. moments when he contemplated the real results of his life he was cheered It would have been tin; same had he remained in England. He was esseu tially a mystic and would have been The Grand Island Republican in a recent number deliius the class and character of the' men who stand near est Mr. Thompson in Lincoln. Whoth- as Isolate in the valley of the Thames er one agrees with the editor or not as in the valley of the Mississippi, the article is very interesting. Under the name of Idyla Mr. Million In this connection it may be noted was a contributor to iiik Count ku mat tuo spring candidates are coming for several veins. This noem of The '!. .(,"l.' the snow Weaver is selected for its form and pathos and the orientalism which characterized most of his poems. THE WEAVER. Sits in the cottage the weaver, And quickly his shuttle flies, Weaving his piece that the children's food May come from the tas! that he plies. In a cottage on a moorland, Built in a fern-clad dell, Whose sunlight silvers the heather, He doeth his life-task well. Scarce looking out on the sunshine, Half-hearing the lark's brave song, Pausing not in the throw of the shuttle; 11 is toil, it is dreary and long. Ave. hard is the lot ol the craftsman, When the children have hunger for bread, Seldom his labor hath ending Till he sleeps with his fellow dead. Tay, life can never have ending, But pain has its end with the just; Who sows true seed, if in sorrow, Sees the food grow up from the dust. And the weaver in the cottage -Where the sun is shadowed in gloom There waits the call of the master; Waits till the Lord gives doom. When, another web he is weaving Before the Judge shall be spread A web that an Angel's lingers Is guiding its every thread. At the ether-built loom I see him, Plying the shuttle and beam; The warp and the woof are the weaver's thoughts, And the weaver's work, I ween. And bright is the web there woven To earth's eyes mazy and quaint Fair-shaping a holy garment, For the soul of the weaver saint. The 1)111 to erect a monument to the Nebiaska volunteers who were killed in the Spanish war encourages those who are still expatriated to believe that their country appreciates the sacrifice they have all made for it. rIMwii-ii le ..vm-t t-nnumi iv-liv t. linen linvc I IIV.lv; in;.v. .v,iti-w.i ....j u..w -;' kucrociitHes and with the same apparent premature ness. As far as hea'-d from they are de claring themselves as anti-Thompson men, which gives a name to a new line of demarcation in city politics. Al though antithompson means nothing to one unfamiliar with the language of Lincoln, to a resident It means a combination of the manly, self-respecting, public-spirited citizen of Lincoln against the corruption of ready-made politics. The Thompson men, on the other hand, have their places all picked out and it is understood that the places have been promised them for "being good." For instance, Slier ill' Trompen is said to have been pon derously treading up and down the halls of the Lindell a short time ago announcing that there was not a man in his district who wanted to see Mr. Thompson sent to the United States senate. Tlie next day, which, by the way, was Sunday, when the sheriff 'is not supposed to work, he rode over his district and the next time he appeared at the hotel he said that there were several men he had found who were not opposed to Mr. Thompson, and since thun, like Hre'r Fox, he has not been saying anything at all. His conversion is laid to his desire for a third term mid the representations which arc supposed to have been made to him us to tlie power of tlie Thomp son influence to secure his ronoiulna- t ion. Of course the members of the Thompson delegation arc liable to spells of discouragement when they retlect upon how fatal the Thompson influence was to George Woods and how it has blighted the political pros pects of several councilmen, but the redaction, that at any rate they have burnt the bridges behind them and suutt'cd the boats, keeps them steadily in the course they entered upon with so much docility. Aguliiiildo, according to tlie Review of lie views, is an educated man and not a sanguinary savage. He is com pared to Napoleon for his ability to make extensive plans, his establishing and maintaining communication be tween all parts of his forces in a coun try without railroads, uis power to who willingly accepted the probability )1'K Kffi, .." , "!?" JIM of death and of burial in heaps, should accomi)Ushmeiil' of his plans. It is have some other memorial than their worth our while after defeating such unidentitled graves. Whatever the a man to make a friend of him. That present legislature does, or does not accomplished, Aguinaldo. more than j ... . .-,.. ,...i, I,,.. ..r ,i, ny other man, would be able to help do, this one act of recognition ot the 1m thepacillcation and setting In order youth that perished in the late war of the Philippines, should not bo forgotten. Anappropri- atlon for such an object would be like That Colonel Stotzenburg, of the a memorial glft-of more meaning sen- volunteers, has been made a captain tlmentally than materially. An tin- In the regular army, indicates how his recognized sacriilce has a tendency to soldierly qualities and services are weaken patriotism. Human nature appreciated by tlie department in has not yet risen to the height of be- Washington. There is little doubt lug willing to give anonymously for VMSV ,,u. is I1 fl'10 ,aml l)Ui1(-'tlio118 . , I i i i ii .i . dr lmaster, b t the boys who have the gilt's sake, and especially that had their little feelings punttured by last and supromest gilt ot a young lines and imprisonment in the guard life. The bitterest rellection of the house should retlect that drilling is mothers and fathers who cherish the tter than dying, and baths are better ?.. .. ti.ni ii,mUti.niii.r..r ii... lllil" ftJvlM'' Th0 magnificent order letters from their sons telling of the iU,( response of the Nebraska troops at discomforts of camp life, or the. sud- Manila under Colonel Stotzenburg is den sickness, and last of all the notili- evidence enough that he has boon u cation from an otllcer of the soldier's f'l1,t,,ful11u1,,d "to'KetcommaiiUaiit. i .1. ?..,.., t.niw.wi fnvn,-.. i.,.ii..h.i The well known question of Prescient death from typhoid feei oi malaila, AlKitu in regard to the kind of whis- or the cablegram of his death on the key which General Grant was drink- battlefield, is that his Bacrllico and ing, might be urged in the Stotzon- thelrs was for naught. Recognition bnr cubo. Only in the hitter's case it by the state at this time of those who StltXlXt died would be endorsed by the "gov- view of getting more of it. LA MORATORY WORK IN THE SOHOOLKOOM. Ei.i.kn M. Austin. Some ono aptly buh: "In tho teach or's profusion thero is nothing so much needed as boiibILIo teuchers." "Ah! there's tho rub.' Not thut I nm willing to admit thut teachers aro more lacking in senso than other people, but the work requires an unusual endowment. Surely, it iB i.ot un eiisy thing to bo a progressive toucher without being u fad chaser, to be conservative, without be ing a moss-back. I approcidto tho edu cated, thinking toucher who hue tho in dependence to wenr no tug of school or Buct. Tho teacher who can appropriuto tho good of tho child study cult, tho epoch period or any other teaching propngandu without getting into a con tracted rut where eho is vainly trjing to follow some loudor in this line. Agnin and again has it been repeated and still wo reitorato it with omphusiB, "Tho teacher who iB not moro than tho method will ruin nny mo'licd. Right hero lies tho danger. Child study is tho nigo. Tho teachor fools thut unless sho makes some uttompt in this lino sho iB not in tho Bwiin. Sho has no qualifica tions for tho work. Absolutely no in terest in it. Instoud of grasping tho great grand plans of tho sympathizers with thin movement she looks upon it us Bomothing sho must forco upon her self. A fud is based upon at least a partial truth. Tho fud thut ib nearest ttio exact truth is likely to bo most dan geroUB. Why is it thut wo teachers uro Boofton decoivod in theso things? Is it thut wo aro coDtinuully trying to lind Borne royal road to learning? Wo favor improvement, progrcBB and bettor meth ods. Tho dotrimentul process of contin ually experimenting at tho expense of tho pupils wo deprecate. Ono yoar the syntbotic method of reading overturns our whole structure; next, vorticul writ ing or Eomo special system of drawing will boIvo the knotty problemB of tho school room. How soon will wo seo that Buporceded by cluy modeling? At tho beginning of tho next your possibly tho whole touching profession tumbles over ono unother liko u tlock of Bheop in u rush to bo tho first to Bhout for tho Speor number work. Is it not time wo stopped and ueked ourselves tho ques tion, "Where uro wo at?" Ono after noon while visiting at a farm houso in tho interior of tho wolverine stato my attention was called to a largo Hock of Bheop, who woro circling around and around a large barn and straw stack. Upon looking closely I discovered that the bell sheep that all woro following was so nour the reur ono that he wan blindly following him. How much of that sort of thing iB being done. It is tho old play of Simon says thumbs up; up go tho thumbs cr off comes the head. Aguin tho Bupeiintendent says wiggle wagglo and wigglo-wuggle it is, oven if it bo in imbecile, idiotic imitation. Some of us who aro still young in every thing but years have seen tho pendulum swing backward and forward so many times that wo uro ready to generalize. Education is still a growth, a develop ment. Better knowledge of psychic laws can but bo helpful. This knowl edge can hardly como from the hap hazard manner in which much of tho so-callod child study is curried on. Tho young teachor who has roud ono or two articles upon the subject buys a psy chology and pcEsibly reads a few chap ters and imagines sho is equipped to do Ecientitic work in tho child laboratory. She discovers that Johnny Smith has doublo toes on his right foot and that he is tho only ono among her forty pupils who has such a malformation of the pedal phalanges. Theroforo sho knows that such a multiplication of the phulungial attachmonti of tho right pedal extremity aro very rare, occurring not moro thun onco in forty childron, and further sho Iiub discovered that thero uro three colored childron in hor school and that thero is n peculiar odor about them which sho has not yet analyzed. Sho considers her investiga tion thus far of tho greatest importnnco and especially to her patrons, as sho can now ussuro thorn, taking her own school which Eho has carefully investigated, that ordinarily thero would not bo more than throo black childron in forty and thut under ordinnry circumstances par ents need have but littlo concorn as to tho color of their childron. This ono fact sho hiiH fully Bottled by her scien tific child Btudy would bo grateful news to parents. On hearing the result of her observations tho preeidnnt of tho county aseociation rocommondeo that tho association show its appreciation of hor original work by a voto of thanks. And all tho smaller lights suid, Anion. Tho bell sheep was evidently following tho roar ono. This iB not au overdrawn picture. Hundreds of pictures aro do ing just bucIi work based on no moro correct data or method, and they aro posing as scientific students of Child Study. Right hero I deBiro not to bo misunderstood. It is no wonder that tho sensible painstaking, sympathetic teachers, unskilled in all the scientific and abstract statements of psychological principles are driven to question whether there is such a thisg as child study, not knowing that all tin while eho hue been a trun student of child life. Dr. Muns torborg of Harvard, Bays: "Thero iB a great psychological field for us to inves tigate in the development of child work; but it iB not to bo mado known by uny such utterly unciontitic methods as uro now being pursued by thousands of teachers over tho country." To bo of valuo, tho data must bo collected by thoso trained in scientific methods. Then again it iB true in this field as in all others, there aro students of tho Bcienco of psychology who aro not, neither can they be, scientific students. Thoir work counts for naught in tho grout Held of child phieiology. I would not, I do not, diEcourugo child etudy. I would em phasize it by warning teachers to bo ware lest they lay to tha blame of the child tho Bins and tho weakness of tho toucher. I believe there iB nothing moro needed just now thun that led by tho Will of tho Wisps of Child Study, touchers do not forget or lose sight of the need of studying themselves. Wo have teachers of a stronger typo who know something of psychology, but they consider tho child hb a bundlo of physi cal elements rather than as a living be ing. A being that cun lovo und hate, think and act; ono that must bo hold by a chord of sympathy if wo hope to do him good. Thoro aro a few, very few, who can collec und compuro duta und draw tho correct conclusions therefrom. They can and do study scinntitlcally, and tho results ot thoir investigation aro of greut valuo. They are tho deep undercurrent in tho river that seoma all foam and froth. Tho foam will blow away and tho under How will give of its life giving properties to all who Book it. I remember onco standing by a cano presB whore tho juice as it ran into tho vat was so covered with a thick foam, that tho foam alone was visible. But us tho fire wub applied and the masB southed and boiled, tho froth wbb skim med ofr and that which wbb loft made, when proporly roducod, lino syrup. Pos sibly tho syrup could not bo without tho froth, but I do know that at first tho Bight of that groon, filthy scum, turned me against anything that might como from underneath. So it Booms to mo iB child stndy to day, a groat soath inu mass of froth. All of tho weak, in olllciont teachers havo entered into thia now stream of thought and by thoir holpleBB oirortB beaten it into a foam bo that tho real thought contributed by tho fow minds that aro roally doing or are able to do tho work, iB concealed from viow. The foro going is a mutilated copy of tho vory excellent paper road by Prin cipal Ellon M. Austin of Pondor, Nobr., beforo tho Stato Teachers Association which met hero a few weeks ago. N )r Y