asphalt w o u in
V enezuela is a bone op contention .
I .a l»«»»
M ä k ln « llu llr r on Ih r
There art* two prime rancntliilid I »
making butter on the fum i a prollU W »
luminerai II I the llrst place. our UlUSt
have plenty of pure, l'olii water, and
then a »rood enough Krade luuat taf
turned out to make und hold ruatoin-
era. The trouble with nine nut o f every
ten farm home» la they are not equipped
to take care o f milk and oroani. When
one g-ras Into this work
to
make
money, better pat up a milk risun.
when) »aire water may lie had from
pumpliiK or from a spring
t'olierete
floor and waIN may now tie bullt M
H'hmply as with liiinher. and It la a
great deal hotter Ilian lumber
Don't
stop her«*, A barivi nliuru and a butter
maker will la* neivHaary In turnlug out
s uniform produet.
It baiks «>aay -
simply ae|iaratlliK til«' f r e n i l i . ehurtllliK
till tin* butter i'om«*a, and salting. and
tlie trlok Is done. That la where s o
many fall. The otvnm must la* ehurneii
at the right temperatura ; It must tie
neither too swis't nor tisi sour
Work
h i( und suiting butter to sofuro uni
form eolor and flavor Is a very libs* art
Don't try to learn to do It Infallibly
hi two or tlini- wts'ks, hut by all means
don't practice on your euatomera That
iu«*aiis b>ss It ta totter to wait two or
thr«s* mouths before you s«vk «uistom-
era.
And. ls*fore you ship, flint out
I !
. . _ _
P H S D IC T
t aara a rla n
W AR
W IT H
O S e ln ln
O n le o m e
of
A M E R IC A
See
O n ly
A sp h alt
Row.
One
W ar with the I'n lted States over
fifty miles of awarup land Is predicted
by leading Venezuelan officials
The
strip was under control o f the asphalt
trust until the beginning o f the iocg
series o f difficulties that now may end
in a contest with America.
All the turmoil, bloodshed, revolution
and Internationa) controversies have
their origin In this speck o f territory.
I ’ pon Its proper development depends
the wealth o f the nation; for It Is the
natural outlet fo r ail the resources of a
goutitry so rich in the earth's treasures
that the dreams o f a Plzarro might be
realized.
It was granted to the as
phalt trust with the agreement that It
would be developed. Canola were to be
dug so th«*t the hosts oopld sail up th«*
river to the gold mines, the stiver
mines, the oil walls and the rich coffee
plantations.
Railroads were to have
been built. One o f the Venezuelan gov
ernment’s principal complaints against
the American asphalt trust Is that It
never fulfilled any o f these promises.
All the trust did was to push its own
boats Into the pitch lakes, load them
and take away the valuable natural
product.
The dlatrlet has remained Impover
Isbed because undeveloped. Ita 3,uou,-
000 people were poor because they could
not get their wealth sold
The rail
roads and the canal» promised never
materialized Into anything better than
mule caravans and canoes
The <-us
toms which rauip«»s«d the chief Income
to the national treasury fell off, for the
asphalt was free o f duty.
Then the temper o f this mixed rai-e
of Spanish, negroes, and natives reach
ed the boiling point They hated these
4.000 white men and their trust greed.
They made life dangerous for the for
eigners. Suits were tiled In the shaky
court* o f the country to try to get back
the asphalt wealth given away, Castro
found he was fighting the most exj>ert
trust lawyers, men who knew other
trleks besides those o f the courts. Revo
lutionary leaders took advantage of the
turmoil to start Internal troubles. Ev
erybody In Venezuela believes that the
Matas rebellion was flnaneed by the
trust- -and all Venezuelans Insist that
It was Castro’s duty to the people to
dispossess the trust.
Meanwhile this land o f wonderful
wealth lira like a shining diamond In a
hill o f sand,
its lin izil wood, coral
trees, indigo, rubtor. bananas remain
In the forest. Its gold and silver and
copp-r and marble and granite are still
In the earth, valueless to Venezuela and
the commercial world.
that be bud abort spaces of rest. I bad
been wandering around, and at last
found myself close to the main en
trance
Soon I saw a common soldier
come up to the hall. He was an ex
.'eedlnglr rough looking specimen
Hla
clothes were worn and soiled, hla boots
outside hit trousers, dirty beyond de
gree. You could hardly conceive a n o r*
I
unfit person to enter that great crowd.
He evidently bad a great desire to see
the President, hut knew hla unfitness to
enter. But it was not long before be
mustered courage to push hla way un
der tbe cover o f others well Into the
hall.
Noting the anxious yearning look on
hla face. I became Interested to watch
hla movement» and note tbe result, it
w a» to t very long before I observed
that Mr. Lincoln had i a eye on him,
as be chanced to come near the door o f
the reception room
Once and again I
saw bis eye search out this soiled and
tmspattered auldler with the most ten
der look. Then came a more vacant
apace between the two
At length Mr.
Lincoln, with an eic-r,u«7us stride and
a long outreachlng arm, advanced,
ttrasped this soldier by the hand, with a
greeting that must have been seen and
heard to be fully understood : ’’Come
forward, my frie n d ; we are all equal
here.”
With thla hand grasp and welcome
Mr. Lincoln’s attention was turned else
where but I can remember no other In
cident that thrilled me as did that lit
tle scene
And tbe effect o f It upon
that soldier —It seemed to transform
him In a moment. What a new manli
ness It put Into bis face and attitude.
In a few momenta he waa gone, but tt
was plsln that from that hour Mr Lin
coln had at least one man In bis army
who was ready to give hla life to help
Mr i.lii-oln save the rauae for which
both o f them were tolling and sacri
ficing
And It seemed at the moment
that I could easily do the same
A
H a rrln g .
F tetfloa.
The polite fiction obtains that mar
rlagra are made In heaven. Thla ro-
mantle viewpoint Is particularly [sqm
lar In America, where It Is held to to
highly Improper for parent* to make
any move toward securing g<»sl hus
bands fo r their daughters ami Immod
est for glrla to manifest any Interest
In the subject themselves.
The conventional theory Is that the
matter la on the knees o f the gods and
that In due senaon husbands will lie
provided like manna In the wllderrn*»*
for Kiistenance of the faithful, L’ nfor-
tunately this miracle d<*es not always
come off for every woman. The suiply
o f manna gives out. There are not
enough huuhanils to go around, and
these are unevenly divided. Some worn
S E E IN G LIN C O LN IN 1863.
en get three or four, while others get
H ot » n
l*rfv «i(e S o ld ie r
A tlrn d e d
■
none. But neither the old maids nor
W h ite
H our «
R e c e p tio n .
their parents realize that the reason
It was In the spring o f 18(13, wlM*n I
that they did not share In the dispen
was stopping for a while In Washing
sation was their own fault, because
ton. says s contributor to the Boston
they did not put themselves, as old
Transcript
I attended, one day. a re
fashioned Methodists used to say. In an
ception
at the W hite House.
The
attitude to reralve the blessing
lk>r
rooms were, of course, crowded with
otby l>lx. In Alnslee's
officers o f the srmy, legislators ami rep
M a p l e S >-r a p .
resentatives o f foreign courts in great
Maple syrup which has fermented
abundance.
Mr. Lincoln held his re
ceptions In the blue room, opimslte the and become sour can lie freshened by
main entrance.
For a long time the heating to the boiling p«>lnt and adding
Stir thoroughly, then
pnasage to him waa crowded, hut later a little soda.
tba crowd thinned out about him, so skim.
, „,
.
• o S ail In ten ded Is a .
, h" * Y,,llr «SUIIIIllsslon mall or private
The Zun I Indians make great use o f « ‘•'»m era prefer to have their butter
buskers, esjavlnll v In «s.nneetlon with p,lt u*»- Cornell use the pnekage means
grinding flour They commonly employ *
l* • '* " ur *br»’*' * '« » • 3
for tills purpose folltnl baskets which ^ ,u,m1
they obtain hy trade from tb«* Apache
ta
»(tra c tiv e
lia le n a i.
and I'lute. and value highly
They.
This rustic gateway, which was built
themselves, manufaeture wl.Sier bas-
,__,
...
.at a small rant. may la* wortli Imitating.
kets which are not much esteemed. T 1 »
of
tlt
nirr<nlnd
ItkluMtry is entirely ooiiflrusl to women
lugs. Tills one Is
They employ an aw l o f deer ta>ne. and|
between two radar
use some six kinds o f willow, which
tre***, and from It
th«*y make Into circular trays and
a
winding
path
bowls, tsl-lai. One kind, salt w illow, li
lead» to a pretty
used for baskets to hold paper bread In
rustle
cottage
the house, tbe w illow giving It a »all
Such a gate would
flavor, and another kind, "stnootb'
Is* entirely nut o f
willow, for baskets to hold bread at
pla<v at the en
meals; white and yellow w illow has
trance to a stately
ket* are ua«*l for corn m eal; those ol
or formal building.
red willow as colanders for washing
T b e cu*s give an
wheat and hominy, ami those o f -nak Idea as to how the gate la mads*. The
tsu-t/il as sieves for wheat and beans two uprights and the «*rosa-pl«*ee on the
W hite willow haaketa are palutad wttt top are o f locust. All the rest la o f
white clay, stained red. yellow or black „«la r
P a rti o f the smaller branch«*«
with native dyes or now dyed w ltt hsre been left on the ple«-ra that go to
aniline dyes, for use In dances. E lth et! flu ,,p the gute. A gateway Ilk«* this
white willow, or all tbe different kind» would not prove «*ffecttTe against pigs
o f w illow mixed together, are employee or chickens, but wouhl turn larg**r unl-
to r this purpose. Sacred baskets, tha ] mats. It Is not only -heap and dur-
1! nal, are used to hold plume «tick» able, but decidedly attractive. to« am*-
and masks.
The women have a dance In the fab.
called Ahyuna, iu which they use has
keta painted with different colors. II
Is said that the name is I'lma, and that
the dance, which Is to secure rain, wai
brought to Zunl not many years ago by
two old men who visited the Pima w ltl
Mr. t'ushlng
An Inverted [minted ha*
ket. corresponding with the box ot
gourd resonator o f the Hop!. Is put
under the notched stick, kl-wl-a nan
nal, which Is scraped with a stick a;
an accompaniment to dances
so perfectly in hsrmony with Its sur-
Tt»e Zunl also manufacture sms' ^ id lu ~ g «'’' E ' E _ M iller In'’ Farm and
globular
baskets o f salt willow 1 g |jOIue
which they collect locusts u*«*d as food
< o lo r o f K r |< an A aart.
Panniers to carry peach«-*, melons, cu
One « f the moat potent fnrfom. jmt
cumbers and other fruit are made ol
red w illow
T w illed baskets o f yucca, I h"P** ,bat •t1001'' *** 'iMialdered when
sim ilar to those seen at other pueblo*. »HecHug a
breed for producing «-gg»
are used to dip up salt from the Salt for «uarket
*■ tl,e demand o f the mar
lake.
The art o f making th.-«* Iras ,
wblrb *•>* •*««* are *°
<lla
keta, which are railed ho-tsl lal. w . i W
o f-
T b * ° u,ln*
Magazine,
learned from Aroma
The Zunl also Home markets, notably New York t'lty
make a rectangular twilled tray of the ani*
Immediately adjacent, pre-
sama material, with
an edge o f red*» fer white shelled eggs, and the best
or oak. which they
use to put pa[»-r ‘ rad*> ln ,b,>He marke,a w111 ac« ,Pt non*
bread on. or to lay
long plume «t ic k .! °*b« r Boat,,n P" ‘fPr* brown fKKn a," ,
or images upon at the yellow and blu* «"**■ a "ubstautlal premium for them;
corn dances
Swallowing stick, were a,,d' ,ak l,‘* th* ,'uu,,try ovrr• ,be f r p r
era nee Is for brown eggs by a large
form erly placed upon such trays at th«
majority. However. In ninny markets
stick-swallowing dance
no preference at all Is express«-<l; In
The Zunl form erly had a number of
old railed globular and Jar shaped has-1 faCt’ ‘ ,,J“ J,U“ roe" " ‘>M?
,‘ ,ra,'t 'r
kets. the origin o f which Is no« dell
* * ° n' 7 m“ rk‘!,"
Wh'r.b ' h*
nitely known. Tbe pltrtwoverad w . , I* , ¡ Cülor o f
^
V
bottles, which the, noe come from th« 1 ,he M “ *nt ° f U'tñ" fn c ' u* " T' r ' \ Where
W hite Mountain Apache or the N.vsJu I th' re '* 8 P á r e m e , and whichever
J i the preference Is, one shoulii k«*ep a va-
t i m o ld M aster«.
riety of fow ls that lay egg* o f the pro-
” 1 make more money In a day than ferrod color.
Michael Angelo made In a month.” said
W r o ir la i
l.a n d lir
W e lc h ».
a popular illustrator. ” I've ls-en study
The area o f any p lw e o f lam), no
ing Up the wages those ohi chaps got
matter how irregular the boundary
It Is amazing.
lines, may be accurately ascertain«-«! hy
"M ichael Angelo was paid
$40 a
means o f a ilellcate balance as follow s:
month while doing rh- cartoons o f the
, ,
,
.
, Make a drawing o f the plat o f ground
battle o f Fisa, and Leonardo who heln-1
. ,
. . _
..
•
p < on pasteboard to a given scale, sav 4
ed him, got th«- same rate. They were
, , .
,
.
i wiunre rod* to I Inch, ( lit from some
both .braked for lateness and off days,
t o f tbe , hect o f „.«teb o n rd a piece
hut there was n., overtime allow an ce' M Ct,
, iacb w.u.re, which repr,.
,;" r !
?
. ? rr* T "
only brough the painter «6.M. Albert
I.urer for hi. ,ra„ and ink portrait*.
was not paid In rash A hag o f fl.mr, a
hundred oysters, a pair of Is «,to - L u r e ,
would gladly do your [«-rtralt on such a
a t 'a l « i i v i « i f e o m u n o r a t in n
system o f remuneration.
••Itemhramlt'a trip not, h price wa,
$47S.
He got that for his ’Night
Watch.
I
“ Velas«itiez worked chiefly for th,
Spanish government. He was paid at
the average rate o f $31 a picture. Think
o f It! T h irty five dollars for the 'Hoke*
hy V e n u s !'” — Mlnne«|ra»ll, Journal.
*e„ts one acre, or 4 a«,.,are rods. Also
out oat tha plat a . drawn. Weigh the
„ and the plat. The number of
flmpH fhe wel({ht
thl. .qnsre Is eon-
u|nrt| ,n thp we,ght o f the plat IndJ-
tt)p nr„ a o f tho ,and. K.,r exam
, ,f , he
whu.h rPpre ^ n ts one
acre weighs 20 grains, nnd the plat
b„ 24() Kraltia. thpn
p,H,
taln(( , w e,v, screa.-B clentlflc Amerl-
• (
ih .
Ils r ««.
tHC WEEKLY
»TORIAH
Some oue ha» tlgunsl «»ut tliat It rosta
oli thè iivcrug«« ouly «un* h slf sa luueli
to f«*«>«l a luirM- a » It «l«a*s lo fissi «
innn ; and timi Ih«« borse wlll «lo leu
tlm<-a III»* niuotml of work Ihnt II 1*
l»>Mdhlc for thè inali lo do.
I f Ibis
«-»limate la corre*’«, tIteti a «lottar'*
worth of f<»»l glven thè borse wlll prò
«lu«s* twenty limisi «s in neh n-snlts a*
thè suine nuioiiut o f moui-y wlll If ex-
[H-udisl in fissi for a man. Therefore,
w ben inali domestica tisi thè horsr he
tniiiM-uscly lucreusisl bis own power o f
st-curliig results Wlien lunch furili Work
la tu he «Ione tbere should always l><>
et.ough lioraes lo do It
Formerà try
to «s-oliomlz* oli thè nuiilta-r o f liorscs
limi bove to lenve mueh work uiuhiiu*.
In thè eveiit o f lilrisl help t«*lng si-ans*,
It Is som«*tlm«-s |»>ssltilp to o(Ts«*t thl*
luck hy Im-reasliig thè number o f tior*«-*
k«*|it
In some |rarta «*f thè W«s«t ar.il
Northw«s«t, de«'In ras thè Fu m irre' Iti»-
vleiv, thè senrelljr o f lielp lui* reaulted
In more hors«>s tu-liig usisi
k'Ive are
tilt« lusl t«> n «loiitde plow, ami «aie d riv liuti M a I ioiiip I II. lieslrgrd I «mat ant I-
er la tini* enntile<l to turn two furroivs
uopi*.
ut n lime unii prn et len ii, doublé thè 157» William llarvey, disceverar af th*
«o ri» that otte muti lina to ilo T ilt, la
circuì» I Ion of the blood, l«*rn
thè resili! o f thè complete utltUatlon o f Itili Mnianimriiv* ilrfraled Ike | mn |U oi «
borse tirati
al the Pisi», il'Arniea. Montreal.
17H,"* Field Marshal Viscount Hardings,
« , u l « l r f«*r l l r s a
l i s i .
an early governor general of India
A very slmple metlssl hy whleh »n »
horn In England.
itimi « ali imitiIpuliits* a drug snw to cui
down tns-s bus las-n i I cv I ms ! hy u west- PSS1 JiMu-ph Ihuinparte umile King af
Ike Tw o Mlclllea.
. -rii tluitrar inali. In
iislng tliase snw« IHI I N‘a|»iteon Itonairarte seni la e ill*
lo island o f Elba.
(n o ni e n li n v e
heretoforv
h o e II IH.1,'1 Treasury buildings al Washington
deatroyed hy lire.
iiis-essnry. «ine ut
isp-h end o f (tu* IS43 Sir Charles Metcalfe appointed
governor of Canada.
sn»v
Aissnsllng to th<* IHI7 Covent tinnirli theater, l«u*V>n,
«i|M-m-d for Italian opera.
uew I n V e U t l o II.
t h e r e Is re->t«sl IHÓ4 Commercial treaty r»>iii-hide<! with
Japan hy Commodore Perry of the
ugni nst n tr.s- i
Pnlle.1 States navy.
r«»1 frolli whleh 1«
O M M A S SAW
suelM-mled u <*urd IM5Ó Planet Cir«-e discovered by M
Cha- orna-'
A l thè end o f tlie i-ord Is nn ndjust
IM
S
Treaty
of
l ’aria,
«riding
Iks
nhle clamp. to whleh «aie end o f th<*
Crimean war.
snw Is Mvurtsl
At tIra otber end of
(I h - snw Is n bandi«-
In ot»-rntlng 11»« IV A llritlah fune under Sir Hugh Knw
defeated (he Indian mutineer» and
•nvv to cui thè tris- Hit- <- im I op|s>sltr th-*
look the elty of Jhansl.
luiiidle Is sttp|««rtrd hy thè «s,rd In (he
1
**»'>
'.’
lien Allrart S Johnston af th«
suine |»isltloti us If i 4 »-rn(r«l hy linnd
Confmlerate army killed at Shiloh
W lih thè iSii|iloyui«-nl «>f Ibis guide Iti—
Isn.'l
iHs-essIty o f mi extra muti to tuunngc
IS«1 Confislerates evarosleil llii-hmnnd
one eii«l of tl*e saw In Hlnilnutrd
. Federal trisqis -M-cuple-l It1-*»
morid, Va. . . I ’ nlted States transport
I.«»»« o f F r r l l l H r
»* r l . r a r h l n « .
Ijriieral Lyon hurried with great tuia
I jiim I k«-pt constantly an n garilen
Of life.
loses iuu<h o f Its fe itlllty hy lenrhlng
I»IW First natiun«l em-ampment nf th«
A «-lon-r rotation Is the l<rat prer«-ntlve
• I. A. It. met at Indianapolis... .
Spanish fleet homtrarded Valparstan
of this. Th«-re should b«* ut least two
Chile.
or thr«s> garden «[»its on <*n«-h farm
kept rich enough so that one year’s e x IS07 Cuite-I State« I>ough! Alaska from
Rumia for $7.2UO,<JUO.
tra immuring wlll bring It Into the
flin-st possible condition for
gariten PSIH "Cnifortn postage rate of 3 w a n
per letter adopted throughout Can
truck. I f farm er» «»mid always plant
ada.
gurih-ns on twoy«*ar clover #<«1 they
would raise hotter crop* and with l«s«s ISSf, Itattlefurd. la Saskatchewan. I*e
alege-l by Indlaa«
stable limnure mid other
fertilisers I
IS
S
I-
Baton Fava, Italian mialatar Is
than they now require
T li* clover i
the I'nlteil Slat--«, rei-atled.
docs much more than furnish green '
leaned
Wei Hat W «!
W
manure to ferment In th* soil
Ita I HUH (b in a
lireat Britain.
r«s,ts reach «town Into the subsoil, thus
not only saving ami bringing to th* 11*12 l-arge sectlo'i of Atlaotir City de
stroyed hy flre
siirfm e plant fissl that would oth*r- |
wise la- waslf-d hut also hy imllvenltig lUUf, Eipliwinn In a cartridge factory al
Bridgeport, Conn., resulted in a
the sutraoll. allowing the risda o f crops |
number of deaths. . Simplon tannai
to go il«-e|«-r ( ’1 ov « t sod to ta*gln with.
formally o|irtir<l.
If well enrich«al. Is ta-st for such crops
IUU7 b red A Busse, Itepubllean. elorted
ns «-ucu ill her* and melons, that are al
Mayor c-f Chicago.
ways most likely to suffer from
drought It Is quite lln|»>ss!l>le to make
a g«a«J garden < rup unless the laml has
previously ls-en enriched hy a s«-rle* o f
h«*avy manurlnga. The fertility bait hy
leaching must ta* «»instantly renewed.
S c h o o ls
( olleor »
A
F ««4
< o n ib ln «.
Feeding sh«»*p and In mbs for the
market Is very much o f a lottery at
!a*st. It is the purpose o f the feisler
to buy thin stirak and. a fter feeding It
from sixty to ninety davs. return It to
market r.t a profit. This Is tile hope
that im|s-ls him to put In his time nml
InlMir, els«* he would not do It. There
nre tlir«s* important factors that «‘liter
into the operation. The <»mt o f the
slie«-p or lambs on the market, the price
o f the f«»»l tlinl Is to make them fat,
and the condition o f the market when
they nre returned for slaughter. The
first element Is n known ipiantlty, hut
the s«s»,nd mid third
are often
a
chairae They have proved to la* very
much o f a chan«»* this season.
The
original cost o f the feeilers waa the
grenteat on re«»>rd. f«s»l waa high ami
market conditions have not piinni»! out
as g(»xl ns generally expected. Drov
era' Journal.
M aho
M an
K in g s
A fw
X V h .a f,
A new variety o f wheat has been «11a-
covered hy a farmer living near Jnll-
eltu. Idaho. He •«*«•. he found n few
kertM-ls o f the wheat growing wild in
Alaska, mul tx-lng struck with their
plumpness, hardness and other appar
ent g «»«l qualities, he brought home a
few kernel» anil [limited them. From
thnae few kernels he harvested enough
the first year to plant several square
rials o f ground the second year, fhe
yield from this planting l>eing at the
rate of more than 100 liushels |«>r
acre, well tllli-il heads; the kernels are
lurge. plump and hard and millers say
It make* good flour.
To
Canvas
lla m a .
When hams are smoked, roll them In
stiff |>nj«-r. etif your brown muslin to
tit them nml w w It on with a large
needle nnd tw in e; then make a starch
oif flour ill'll yellow ochre, nnd with a
small whitewash brush raver ftw*m with
It- Hnng tlieth up to dry.
/«on
F o n llry
The
C ars«
of
W r»d «.
It Is for the conservation of moisture
that we k«*ep up the initiation o f the
crops In the summer, twit the e-aporn-
tlon which can be checked by this
W orse thnn Foolish.
mean* Is small when compared with
The man who forgets his
friends tba amount o f water taken up from tho
may he ungrateful
The one who for- aoR py an ordinary growth o f weeds,
gets his enernlra la foolish. Chicago \\> can hanlly i-stlmate tin* linport-
Rerard-llerald.
anra «*f killing tbe w eed*
Notes.
Clean the droppings from under the
roosts frequently.
Buckwheat Is excellent
young nnd old poultry.
for
both
A laying hen should have constant
access to lime or gravel.
(Jrlt la the hen’s teeth. Provide her
with plenty o f It, so that she may di
gest her food.
Hupt. M aiwell of the New York (Tltj
Boanl of Kihiration, in Ilia annusi report
urge« the formution of a department id
school hygiene. Soci, a depart meni, ht
thinks, should lie under the direction ol
a medical man. who would rank ss sn
asaocialr sii|M-rintetidenl, ami who should
have a auflifirnt mmilier of physicians 1 «
examine all (he children in the pulsila
s c h o o l s at least om-e a year, ami a saffi
dent numlM-r of mirrar* lo viali fhv
homes of sick children ami to care fn»
slight ailments in m Imo I Hr says that
New York is the noisiest city in tha
world and that children lack a prop*»
amount of »Irep
Owing to crowded
quarters in the lenr-iirnts ami in soiim
of the public schools ss well many rhil
dren are crippled hy lowered vitality, d*
fectlre sight, defective teeth and olhr»
evils, many of which muid lie ovenuma
The report says that there are I.Vt,4(M
' pupila in the schools over normal age ; it
other wonts, they are backward in Iheii
'canons beiause of physical defects
The National Civic Frih-ratinn haa
: made arrangements to send .Mm or morv
public achiHii teachers next fall to Eng
land. Hcollaml. Ireland and the conti
'
nent to i i i * | mm t the system of teaching sn,
school methods generally in foreign coim
tries. This idra wns suggested hy th»
success of s stmilnr axpeditiuti of En*
lish teacher» to the Cnlteil Htates ia
HKKM1.
The teachers who make ibi»
trip will have an opportunity to exam
ine at lirst hand wliut is Is-ing done fot
children abroad, both in the mmmoi
schools anil in the special schools. Presi
•lent Nicholas Murray Ituiler of Collin»
bin university Ini» been appointed chair
man of an advisory committee to carrj
the plan through
In this eonnectioa It
may he noted that Mr. Butler has a«-
cepted the invitation of the University
of Copenhagen to deliver three lecture»
there next Heptemher, the suhjed mallei
of the lectures to tie “ Borne Aspects ol
American Civilization."
He will leav»
i for Denmark In August, reluming ia
time for the opening of college next fall
Chancellor Dewitt C Huntington ot
the Nebraska Wesleyan university at
Lincoln haa tendered his resignation, an,
it was aceepted by the hoard of trustee»
with the understanding Hint Chancello»
Huntington shall remain until the en ! ol
the school year.
At Chippewa Falla, Win., Supt. Swnrtt
ordered th* members of the (Ireek lette»
fraternity Alpha Delta Omega to dishan,
j the organization or suffer expulsion fro»»
school. He declared that no aerret of*
ganlzatlon of pupils would he tolerated
The mem beri proiolzed to heed the warm
log.
I