h ithe a school 1preblems the district dlrnar ilea glrllrs...

1
w p y- A ITHE SCHOOL 1 of the District School 1Preblems IX School Oovernment liT Prot Dlrnar r f If tho suggestions othU book up to the presort pont were followed there would be little need to dis ¬ cuss government Teacher and pupils rwould bo kept so busy carrying on + the work of tho school there would j bo no time for mScchlef But after all there Is soiao reason for separate consideration of the subject In the a best laid plane there are breaks and interruptions that cannot bo fore ¬ seen Besides the government of a considerable body of people Is an im ¬ portant matter and difficult under any circumstances at least until the x art is learned By a vast number It is considered the one disagreeable feature teachlnc and Is particular ¬ beginnersf JIt Is sate to say that the most es- sential ¬ I part of school management h tho self government of the teacher Practically it all depends upon tho teachers ability to live up to his own ideals If he can do this If ho can make plans and carry them out with such changes only as are necessary to the good of tho school ho will have no trouble But hero Is where the difficulty lies It Is easier to I make plans than to follow them I for one to say or think he will do n w thing Ulan do it The one person In tho school hardest to control will 1e the teacher himself First then a few words directly to tho teacher It Is necessary in the beginning and at all times to cultivate 11will power Set yourself some dally task that you have not been accus ¬ tomed to and compel yourself to per ¬ form It It It In disagreeable so much the better providing It Is not Injurious When you have triumphed r ovor it appoint yourself another and f so keep on until you have gained such a mastery over self that you can perform any duty no matter how disagreeable Tho first task may be reading the Bible thru In course taking so many chapters or minutes a day and doing It at exactly the time appointed Or It may be you will choose tho history of England ortrescotts Ills ¬ tory of Mexico or Stanleys Travels in Africa or some other work These I ought not to be an unpleasant task THE HOSE Doughs and Shortcakes BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS Make a shortcake dough and roll till onehalf Inch thick Cut into rounds large enough to contain a small apple Place apple pared and cored In center of round fill center with sugar and press edges well together Place dumplings In a buttered pan far enough apart to allow for the swelKng of tho dough Sprinkle the tops thickly with flour sugar cinnamon and bits of butter Pour boiling water on the whole un ¬ til water reaches half way up tho dumplings flake until the apples are soft and the tops well browned Serve with the sauce in the pan and thick cream- STEAMED APPLE DUMPLINGS Prepare dumplings as for baking place In steamer vlthout sugar or spices Place coveted steamer over rapidly boiling water keep water boiling and steamer covered ton about fortyfive minutes fr the crust will be heavy Serve with dip made of sweetened cream flavored with putmog3JERRY DUMPLINGS Dumplings may be made of berries t currants or goosebtiries Use fresh berries sweeten and sprinkle with flour before wrapping in dough Moisten the edges of the enlist and pinch well together with floured fin CORRESPONDENCE Coatiuutd from Letaac Interest of the organization of a new Odd Fellows lodge Mr James B Hall ot Lexington was hero last week on stave business He reports times j dulLMrs Martha Parrot has been time It Is said 1a Avery sick for soma Vshe has consumption and will prob ¬ ably not recoverMr W A Cope mYJackson Countys representative Prof Charlie and Lizzie Isaacs i wcr guests ct A B Holcombs Sat ¬ urday night and Sunday The stave mill ot James B Hall now on the Creech farm will resume work about the 15th under tho management of C C Eaton ot Clay CityB H Hol ¬ comb will attend the normal at Egypt Ky beginning Monday April 6 OLIN Olin April 6 Workings seem to I finis < t r- J f but to do It regularly and unfailingly requires the oxerclsa of will power An additional task may be going thru a set of physical exercises al regular times say upon rising in tho morning This followed by a sponge bath will bo conductive to health and vigor It was suggested In a previous chap ter that the teacher should have a set of rules relating to his own cat duct keep them in a place where ho can see them every day and mako strenous efforts to live up to tham It may be well Just hero toformulato such a set Everyone must mako hh own but the following are general enough to apply to all 1 I will arrange r dally progrun for mysulf from tho time of rising until retiring 2 I will make a strong effort to live by this program 3 I will bo neat and clean In mf Person and In my personal appear ¬ ance 4 I will see that my school house Is neat clean and tastefully adorn- ed 5 I will greet my pupils pleasantly la the morning and be cheerful thr out tho day v 6 I will treat all my pupils vlth unvarying respect and kindness 7 If some do not now seem worthy I will think of what thgy may te come under proper training and treat them accordingly 8 I will perform every duty with the spfrll and energy I would use If I were on trial 9 In word and deed I will try to be a fit example for my pupils Every one has his standard of life and makes a greater or less effort to live up to It why not have It ex ¬ pressed In writing like the above and pace It whero It can bo seen frequently In arranging our dally program we must have a time for self examination Wo must review the work of tho day and see If OH actions measure up to the standard The government ot the school may be considered under five heads as follows Order rules punishment management training We will dis ¬ cus them In tho order named t I I Quick = t gars so the Juice jvlll not escape Sprinkle the tops ot berry dumplings with sugar and flout but no spices APPLE ROLl Roll a rich biscuit dough to one fourth of an Inch thickness Spread thickly with cooked dried apples mashed sweetened and seasoned with ground cinnamon to taste Begin at front and make a roll moisten and pinch ends and side well together Place in buttered baking pan sprinkle thickly with flour su ¬ gar cinnamon and bits ot butter Covet half way with bol1pg water and bake Serve with sauce In pan and with thick cream BCRRY ROLL- Preparo as for apple rolls but use no cinnamon The berries should bd Well rolled In flour before spread- ing on the dough- GRANDMOTHERS COBBLER Line the sides ot a bakingpan with rich biscuit dough rolled to one fourth of an inch In thickness Fill the bakingpan with thinly sliced apples or peaches Sprinkle with flour sugar and butter Add enough water to set the fruit to cook ¬ ing and cover with a crust cut to fit the pan first cutting a gash In the center to allow the steam to es- cape Bake until the fruit Is done and the crust brown Serve hot with butter or with cream I be all the go in this community Farmers are getting behind with their ploughing owing to the rainy weather Wheat crops are looking fine Nearly everybody is done sow ¬ ing oatsJohn Stewart has moved to Owaley County Married on March 25 Miss Jennie Hurley of this place to Robert Murray ot Welchburg Bgrn to Dire Lige Combs on the 2d a fine boy Hardln Shepherd pur- chased ¬ a farm from R P Welch for 1200We still have some whoop Ing cough Miss Etta Medlock was the guest of Mrs Belfo Morris last Sunday Old Bro George Johnston filled his regular appointment nth Blooming Grove Saturday and Sun ¬ day He Is about 75 years old Henry Holcomb has rented the John Barret property for this year Miss Mattle Murray of Welchburg was visiting In this part Saturday and S H Sunday Mount stewart hal a work ins the first day cf April and gave a nice birthday dinner In honor of his wife Ilea LET Hurley April 9 Mre Lizzie Mc Collum IB Very olck Born to Mrs Wiley Hurley a fine glrllrs L J Colo visited Mm Eliza Cole near Mlddlefork Monday Eatunay and Sunday will bo the regular church meeting day nt this place Wo are glad to say that cur Sunday school Is progressing nicely Wo1 Were pleas ¬ ed to see iv plcco from PIttsburg In in Tho Citizen Mr Jako Morris and Dennlo Johnson wont to working at Johnny Laket on Horse Lick Wed ¬ nesday Mr Jake Gabbard Jr to on tho sick list MlllMLKrOUK Mlddlefork April 10Mr and Sirs Levi Gabbard and daughter of Par- rot ¬ visited at J W Angels Sunday Mr D D Colo and little son Jessu who have been Ob tho sick list for several days are convalescing Born to Mrs J P Wilson a fine boy Apr GHarry Tussoy of Indian Greek via ¬ ited At his grandmas Mrs Lctha Tus soy This week Mr A Parrot of Par ¬ rot Ky was In this community Fri- day ¬ fishing and hunting J W Angel made two trips to Livingston this week hauling toads for Amyx and Eagle of McKeo Onay Tusscy who bai been sick so long Is up again Jake Tus cy oJ Dango visited friends and relatives at this place Saturday and Sunday master Parrot April 11oeo Gabbard and J H Hundley moved their saw mill to Black Lick Branch last Sat ¬ urday to tho old Gabbard Btandj Win Cunaglm has secured a traveling pos- ition ¬ with tha Tloasa and Ratlltt Chemical Co ot Cincinnati J Hoi lard Is buPdlng an addition to nU dwelling house David Hcllard brought Jerome Hcllard a load ot boards last IondnJ II Hundley has been doing come hustling this week Corn is getting scarce here now The mcrchanto hero are giving ten cents for eggs now Morgan Rimes and Delbert Colo ot Middle fore were hire on business Wednes ¬ day Grant Tlnchcr says the moire ¬ les have made him feel ton years old ¬ erIsaac Morris and Ellhu Hurley passed thru hero thin week wlt1two loads ot goods Tom Fllnchum Is trying to get his pension Increased Arter McDanlcl of Caries was In our midst Thursday MEMOIR Died at her home Onedla Clay Co March 2 > 1905 Mrs Lucinda Hacker daughter of Mr and Mrs Da Id Haz Elwad ot Bcnge Ky She leaves n loving husband six children a father mother five sisters three brothers a host of reltlvea and friends to mourn her death but weep not dear ones Your loss Is her eternal gain Sturgesn April 3 Whereas it his pleased Gcd in Ha divine will to remove from hlo labors here on earth Mr HurrUpn Ncely who 110 parted this lit April 2 We extend to his wife and fair children our heartfelt sympathy in this their hour of sorrow and bereave mint And wo would commend him to cvr kind heavenly Father who knoweth and dcctii all things wolf Blessed are tho dead who die In the Lord for they rest from their labors and their works follow them His remains will bo laid to rest In the Brewer cfimetery this afternoon Lucian Brewer NOTICE The Citizen Is sorry to have to announce anew rule There have been a good many people recently who have w hed to have us print memoirs of doStr ones who have gone away We sympathize deeply In any sorrow of the kind but there are so many thlngat that our readers want to know w do not feel that we can give more than so much space to such articles ffp hereafter we will have to Insist that such piece be not over onoNjiundred words long THE IDOL BUSINESS How many young beings are sacri ¬ ficed to the Idol Business Parents send their boys and girls unseasoned undeveloped from the school room to tho desk the counter tie type mach- Ine ¬ to work all day often by artlflcal lighttheir recreation and occasional owning Ina closed theater Instead of an afternoon under the skies and green trees All to make money And when tho money Is made too often the man Is unmade as God created him Health In gone or else the soul Is shriveled the Imagination crippled the zest o lifer has vanished Often it la necessity that goada the young to the pcnnaturo slavery but often again It Is ambition or greed on the part of parents or the Idea that their chief duty to the boy is fo Inur him early to the yoke and fr orr k 11 JCo NEGROES AND TAFT From Now York Are Negro Match 18 1908 It Is gratStylng to noto that tho colored people ct the country are beginning to ctudy tho present polit- Ical ¬ situation from a sauo and con ¬ servative standpoint Quo finds in reading tho lettcra to tho prow both white and colored that the thoughtful colored nen In tho States are doing all in their power to neg ¬ ative tho Ideas advanced by n hand ¬ ful of radicals that colored men should voto the Democratic ticket nexffall If Secretary Taft should be- come the nominee of the Chicago con ¬ vention Under tho present conditions In this country there la absolutely nothing to fear as to the altitude of tho Negro veto next November Ninetynine per cent of It will bo cast for the Republican nominee for President wnoevcr It may be There Is no refuge for the colored voter In this country but tho Republican party the party that has done all that hire ever been done for the Ne groLast month threo or four colored preachers one bishop and a few Don ocmtie Ngro politicians at icm pl ¬ ed to make It appear that tho bish- ops ¬ of tho three branches of tho col ¬ ored Methodist church assembled in Wuihlngton were bitterly opposed to President Roosevelt and tho Secre ¬ tary of War William II Taft The sensational headlines In the proa were calculated to give one this impression But when the articles themselves wore carefully read It was seen that tho bishops as a whole had nothing whatever to do with the sentiment expressed In them Tho socalled Resolutions of Blah ops was a most flagrant attempt to deceive the country Not a single bishop signed them and perh spa none but Bl > hop Alexander Walters of tho Zion A JI K Church knew of tljelr existence They were vylt ten adopted and given to the coun- try ¬ by three or four preachers with- out ¬ the sanction of the church or tho blshbpS council It was purely a cheap political trick that has fail ¬ ed utterly The trhole scheme of these men teas discredited when many of tho bishops wrote1 denials of their participation In any meet ¬ ing whatever that had for IU pur ¬ pose antagonism to the President or to Secretary Taft Tho resolutions themselves bore tho headlines Res ¬ olutlons of Blohopa and began We tha colored ministers of tho A M K churches of the United States etc There could not have been a plainer or morn palpable attempt to mislead and deceive tho colored vot- ers of tho country Behind this scheme there was a halt dozen col ¬ ored men who havo been affiliating with tho Democratic party for years They met with those recalcitrant preachers constantly while they were hero and posing as great and unsel ¬ fish lovers of tho race used Browns ¬ ville as a Shibboleth to arouse the Negro against tho Republican party end Its loaders It is pleasing to note that there to a very strong sentiment growing up among colored people in all parts of the country la behalf of the candi ¬ dacy of Secretary Taft for the nom ¬ ination at Chicago In June Thought- ful ¬ mon havo begun to study tho man and his splendid career as they touch thojlfb and place In tho body politic of the dark races recently brought under the protecting wing of the United States government What he bIlK done for the Filipino and the Cuban ho will do for the Negro American when tho opportun ¬ ity comes to him William H Taft is the son of Alphonzo Taft states- man ¬ and abolitionist He is the seton of tho stock that has always stood for equai rights for all men and ho- le tho only cabinet officer tho coun ¬ try has had who has ever held up the order of a President for any period however brief for any cause what cver Colored men are beginning to appreciate the full significance of tho act of the Secretary of War when he held back tho Presidents order relative to the dismissal of the black battalion for twentyfour hours In order to stay tho execution oflt finally It possible Thru an inadvertence The Citizen last weak forgot to mention Prln Kirk Smith of the Runkel High school at Lebanon as among those present at the conference or Colored Grad- uates ¬ of Boron Mr Smith wishes the oversight corrected so that there will be no wrong Impression as to his attitude In the matter of the new school keep him under It steadily that he may become a man of business When he falls In harneaj It la piously con ¬ sidered to be the doing of a myste ¬ rious Providence to whose will one must be resigned Mary K Bryan In Uncle RemuaB Magazine for April 1 REPORT ON PIKES Somo weeks ago It will bo remember- ed tho Grand Jury made a report which was published In thcso columns charging mismanagement In the mat- ter ¬ of the appropriations for tho Im ¬ provement of tha county roads Tho Fiscal Court took cognizance of this report and appointed n committee consisting of Magistrate Coy end Jones and Mr II W Coylcr to lures tlgato the matter This committee took tbt matter in hand and made a tboro study of tho question tatting depositions and Inquiring carefully Into the management of each road up ¬ on which money had been spent Yesterday morning tho record of their findings was flied before tho court and deposited with tho County Clerk Tho document Is far loo bulky foi publication and we regret that wo have not tho space for Its complete reproduction but It would fill govern shrill tho size of this paper It com pletuly upholds time findings of tho Grand Jury and states that the roads have been badly managed and that much moro money has been paid for their maintenance than shows up In the way of Improvements it deals with each road separately and Ink Itg them collectively states that thorn Is sucplcloue appearance of graft about tho mrttcr but that It knows lot where to put tho blamo limy cltUtm who may desire to Inquire In ho mutter more particularly raft find tho records oc the with Clerk Cobb Wo quote an extract from the re ¬ port as samples of IU contents Wo lId that on a number of pikes Investigated by Limit committee that there hM been moru or less graftitho word negligence wna later substituted the exact amount of which wo are unable to determine but vrc4o know that there have been overcharge and that tho county has paid for work that has never been performed on tho following pikesDarnes Mill Maple Grove Carvers Kerry Tates Creek Big Hill Union pike from Union City 10 Kentucky Hirer Kentucky Register NEWS OF THE WEEK Continued crow Plat Mac away from school on April 1 as an April fool Joke MINERS TROUBLE There is ntgl no sign of an agreement between the mine owners and the 250000 miners who quit work on April 10 lOT ANY FLEAST Our big Undo Satn In Washington Is out after tiers Ii < wants a lot of them and ail kind The reason ia thllflelll carry diseases It has been proved a long time ago that mosquitoes carry and really cause yellow fever and malaria and that common flies carry certain other diseases and now It has been found that fleas are about the worst of tho lot There imp a horrible disease called the plague that once swept over Europe kill lag from a third to a matt of the people and still kills thousands every year In tho far East Last summer u few cases appeared In San Francisco There was dancor that It would spread all over tblr county and kill half the people and It probably would havo It the electors had not got onto tho fleas They found out that fleas carried the disease from one person to another and that only a certain kind of fleas the kind that lives on ratr did the If a flea didnt bto you you wouldt get the plague So instead of quaran ¬ tining tho tick people and making everybody unhappy they went to work to kill rats That was aU jut kill rats And eo Instead of having twenty million people die only seventyfour died and only 121 got tho dlBcasc You lien bow Im ¬ portant that It was to get those fleas Now tho governments health ox ¬ ports want to find out whether tho fleas carry any other kind of dls cares So they want to get all the fleas that the people will take the trouble to fend to them only the fleas mutt bo alive dead ones are no good to them IN OUR OWN STATE Cttaud frm Pint Pate the petition of Beech Hargls lawyers for ball and the boy must stay In JailSULLIVAN BRTTER Rep Jorre Sullivan who has been 111 with pneu- monia ¬ has been able to return to tits home In Richmond THURMAN CONFESSED Leo Thurman of West Point Ky who was hung In Norfolk Va for kill- Ing ¬ his room mate left a written con ¬ fessionFIGHT ON EDWARDSThe fight against Edwards In the Eleventh District Is getting hotter and his enemies are claiming that he is beat ¬ en already Bradley Is fighting him because he has refused toturn against Tatt the limiter mea are fighting his because ot their eld I t J 4w hMPP grudge and some one line started a story that ho sent a man to Willaon to argue against a pardon for Powers Ho has said that ho signed the Pow era petition and offered In writing to get others to sign U but this makes no difference to tho peoplo who are trying to beat him They are against Edwards not for Powers but they hope to make lowers friends turn against the Congressman h The Frankfort correspondent to tho Cincinnati Kquircr says It has lust leaked out that theca camo nearly Ic ¬ ing a serious break between GovWiy son and State Senator A R Burnam of Madison County during the session just closed The dlcagreomcnt came up over tho pauaga of tho bill making an appropriation fo the two State Noimal Schools and tho State Univer ¬ sity One of lire schools Js located at Richmond Senator A R Barnauls town This was tho first appropriation bill to pass and It Will rumored that tho Governor Intended to disapprove It on Recount ot the size of tho ap ¬ proprlatlon Tho Senator called at the Executive office and found that tho voto moss ago had already been written There wir a dented argument between tho Executivo null the Scnntorand fin ¬ ally Jutgo Burnam tod tho Governor If ho persisted In his determination to kill tho bill ho Illinium would roclgn his sent In the Eonato and f bftok borne null toll his people why ho dId so AJ Judge Buniam Is one of tho moat Influontla Republicans In the State tho Governor tore up lire veto mewage afflxluc iris approval Instead THE MARKET terea Prices Eggs per dozen lie flutter per Ib 1523a Potatoes helm per bar JlOO Apples per bs3 00 Maces per IliIDlie Ham per Ibl2cI- ard per IbIc Chickens oa foot per lb lite Chickens dressed per Ib Utf c Live Steck LouUvlllo April II 1909 Choice export steers G 00 G GO Light shipping steers G CO C fO Choice butcher steers G 23 a CO Medium butcher steers 4 76 1i6 Common butcher steers 4 23 C 76 Choice butcher heifers 4 75 C 15 Medium butcher heifer 4 00 4 15 Common butcher hollers 3 GO 4 00 Choice butchtr cows 4 00 4 0 Medium butcher COWL 3 GO 4 tO Common butcher cows Ji 7G 3 fo Canners 1 53 4 fO Choice fat oxen 4 GO C to Medium oxen 3 00 4 25 Choice bulls 3 CO I 23 Medium bulls 2 76 3 CO Common bull 2 25 2 75 Choice veal calves G CO C 00 Medium veal calves 4 69 6 00 Common calves 2 CO 3 CO Good feeders 4G0 G 00 Medium feeders 4 00 4 60 Common feeders 3 CO 4 0 Choice tock steers 4 00 4 M Medium stock steers 3 CO 4 00 Common stoat steers 3 00 3 CO Choice stock heifers 3 36 3 75 Medium stock boilers 2 75 3 96 Common mlxttl stockers 2 75 3G Choice milch cow 35 00 45 00 Medium milch cow 25 00 35 09 Common milch cows 10 00 20 0 BOOS Choice packers and butchers 200 to 300 IDS Gj5 Medium packers and butchers ICO to 200 lbs 626 Choice pigs 00120 Ibs C 00 515 Light pigs CiO 90 Ibs 4 00 4 25 Light shippers 1201CO lbs C 60 C 70 Roughs 1BOCOO lbs 2 GO C O- IRUP Choice fat sheep G 00 G CO Medium sheep 3 N 4 M Common sheep 2 M 1 09 Bucks 2 50 4 00 Choice lambs G 00 6 CO Good butcher lambs G CO 6 00 Culls and tallends 4 00 500 MESS PORK J9 CO rad LNluat 11 to llKeg- HOULDEWJ IKc prIb BACON Clear rib sides 8o reg- ular ¬ clear sides Sfcc breakfast bacon l4tte wer eared lavmlfer I3e k MB extra Io bellies llfkt 114 IaM lkLARDPt ttoasa la misuse 1 of pun lef la UMMl9e U tlIic DRIED BEEP llo EGGS Caso count 13c per doi candled Ha- DUTTEItiSe per lb I J POULTRY SpriBK cklektM Mall 15250 per lb largo 160 hen 12c ducks lie WHEAT No 2 95c No393e CORNNo 3 white C8o No3 miXed 68c- OATSNew No 3 white CBo No 3 mixed 63c- HYE No 2 Northern 91c No 3 Northern 91c f

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Page 1: H ITHE A SCHOOL 1Preblems the District Dlrnar Ilea glrllrs ...nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7v154dpq76/data/1414.pdf · p w y-ITHE A SCHOOL 1 1Preblemsof the District School IX School Oovernment

wp

y-

A

ITHE SCHOOL 1

of the District School

1Preblems IX School Oovernment

liT Prot Dlrnarr

f If tho suggestions othU book up

to the presort pont were followedthere would be little need to dis ¬

cuss government Teacher and pupils

rwould bo kept so busy carrying on+

the work of tho school there wouldj bo no time for mScchlef But after

all there Is soiao reason for separateconsideration of the subject In the

a

best laid plane there are breaks andinterruptions that cannot bo fore¬

seen Besides the government of aconsiderable body of people Is an im ¬

portant matter and difficult underany circumstances at least until the

x art is learned By a vast numberIt is considered the one disagreeablefeature teachlnc and Is particular¬beginnersfJIt Is sate to say that the most es-

sential¬

I part of school management htho self government of the teacherPractically it all depends upon thoteachers ability to live up to his ownideals If he can do this If ho canmake plans and carry them out withsuch changes only as are necessaryto the good of tho school ho willhave no trouble But hero Is wherethe difficulty lies It Is easier to

I make plans than to follow themI for one to say or think he will do n

w thing Ulan do it The one person Intho school hardest to control will 1ethe teacher himself

First then a few words directly totho teacher It Is necessary in thebeginning and at all times to cultivate11will power Set yourself some dallytask that you have not been accus ¬

tomed to and compel yourself to per ¬

form It It It In disagreeable so muchthe better providing It Is notInjurious When you have triumphed

r ovor it appoint yourself another andf so keep on until you have gained

such a mastery over self that youcan perform any duty no matter howdisagreeable

Tho first task may be reading theBible thru In course taking so manychapters or minutes a day and doingIt at exactly the time appointedOr It may be you will choose thohistory of England ortrescotts Ills ¬

tory of Mexico or Stanleys Travelsin Africa or some other work These Iought not to be an unpleasant task

THE HOSEDoughs and Shortcakes

BAKED APPLE DUMPLINGS

Make a shortcake dough and rolltill onehalf Inch thick Cut intorounds large enough to contain asmall apple Place apple pared andcored In center of round fill centerwith sugar and press edges welltogether Place dumplings In abuttered pan far enough apart toallow for the swelKng of tho doughSprinkle the tops thickly with floursugar cinnamon and bits of butterPour boiling water on the whole un¬

til water reaches half way up thodumplings flake until the applesare soft and the tops well brownedServe with the sauce in the pan andthick cream-

STEAMED APPLE DUMPLINGSPrepare dumplings as for baking

place In steamer vlthout sugar orspices Place coveted steamer overrapidly boiling water keep waterboiling and steamer covered ton aboutfortyfive minutes fr the crust willbe heavy Serve with dip madeof sweetened cream flavored with

putmog3JERRY

DUMPLINGSDumplings may be made of berries

t currants or goosebtiries Use freshberries sweeten and sprinkle withflour before wrapping in doughMoisten the edges of the enlist andpinch well together with floured fin

CORRESPONDENCE

Coatiuutd from LetaacInterest of the organization of a new

Odd Fellows lodge Mr James B

Hall ot Lexington was hero last week

on stave business He reports times

j dulLMrs Martha Parrot has beentime It Is said1a Avery sick for soma

Vshe has consumption and will prob ¬

ably not recoverMr W A Cope

mYJackson Countys representative ProfCharlie and Lizzie Isaacs

i wcr guests ct A B Holcombs Sat ¬

urday night and Sunday The stavemill ot James B Hall now on theCreech farm will resume work about

the 15th under tho management ofC C Eaton ot Clay CityB H Hol ¬

comb will attend the normal at EgyptKy beginning Monday April 6

OLINOlin April 6 Workings seem to

I finis < t

r-

Jf

but to do It regularly and unfailinglyrequires the oxerclsa of will power

An additional task may be goingthru a set of physical exercises alregular times say upon rising intho morning This followed by asponge bath will bo conductive tohealth and vigor

It was suggested In a previous chapter that the teacher should have aset of rules relating to his own catduct keep them in a place whereho can see them every day and makostrenous efforts to live up to thamIt may be well Just hero toformulatosuch a set Everyone must mako hhown but the following are generalenough to apply to all

1 I will arrange r dally progrunfor mysulf from tho time of rising

until retiring2 I will make a strong effort to

live by this program3 I will bo neat and clean In mf

Person and In my personal appear ¬

ance4 I will see that my school house

Is neat clean and tastefully adorn-

ed5 I will greet my pupils pleasantly

la the morning and be cheerful throut tho day v

6 I will treat all my pupils vlthunvarying respect and kindness

7 If some do not now seem worthyI will think of what thgy may tecome under proper training and treatthem accordingly

8 I will perform every duty withthe spfrll and energy I would useIf I were on trial

9 In word and deed I will try tobe a fit example for my pupils

Every one has his standard of lifeand makes a greater or less effortto live up to It why not have It ex ¬

pressed In writing like the aboveand pace It whero It can bo seenfrequently In arranging our dallyprogram we must have a time forself examination Wo must reviewthe work of tho day and see If OH

actions measure up to the standardThe government ot the school may

be considered under five heads asfollows Order rules punishmentmanagement training We will dis¬

cus them In tho order named

tI I

Quick

=

t

gars so the Juice jvlll not escapeSprinkle the tops ot berry dumplingswith sugar and flout but no spicesAPPLE ROLl

Roll a rich biscuit dough to onefourth of an Inch thickness Spreadthickly with cooked dried applesmashed sweetened and seasoned withground cinnamon to taste

Begin at front and make a rollmoisten and pinch ends and side welltogether Place in buttered bakingpan sprinkle thickly with flour su¬

gar cinnamon and bits ot butterCovet half way with bol1pg waterand bake Serve with sauce In panand with thick creamBCRRY ROLL-

Preparo as for apple rolls but useno cinnamon The berries shouldbd Well rolled In flour before spread-ing on the dough-

GRANDMOTHERS COBBLERLine the sides ot a bakingpan

with rich biscuit dough rolled toone fourth of an inch In thickness

Fill the bakingpan with thinlysliced apples or peaches Sprinklewith flour sugar and butter Addenough water to set the fruit to cook¬

ing and cover with a crust cut tofit the pan first cutting a gash In

the center to allow the steam to es-cape Bake until the fruit Is doneand the crust brown Serve hot withbutter or with cream

Ibe all the go in this communityFarmers are getting behind withtheir ploughing owing to the rainyweather Wheat crops are lookingfine Nearly everybody is done sow ¬

ing oatsJohn Stewart has movedto Owaley County Married on March25 Miss Jennie Hurley of this placeto Robert Murray ot WelchburgBgrn to Dire Lige Combs on the 2da fine boy Hardln Shepherd pur-

chased¬

a farm from R P Welchfor 1200We still have some whoopIng cough Miss Etta Medlock wasthe guest of Mrs Belfo Morris lastSunday Old Bro George Johnstonfilled his regular appointment nth

Blooming Grove Saturday and Sun ¬

day He Is about 75 years oldHenry Holcomb has rented the JohnBarret property for this year MissMattle Murray of Welchburg wasvisiting In this part Saturday and

S

H

Sunday Mount stewart hal a workins the first day cf April and gavea nice birthday dinner In honor ofhis wife

IleaLETHurley April 9 Mre Lizzie Mc

Collum IB Very olck Born to MrsWiley Hurley a fine glrllrs L JColo visited Mm Eliza Cole nearMlddlefork Monday Eatunay andSunday will bo the regular churchmeeting day nt this place Wo areglad to say that cur Sunday schoolIs progressing nicely Wo1 Were pleas ¬

ed to see iv plcco from PIttsburg In

in Tho Citizen Mr Jako Morris andDennlo Johnson wont to working atJohnny Laket on Horse Lick Wed ¬

nesday Mr Jake Gabbard Jr toon tho sick list

MlllMLKrOUKMlddlefork April 10Mr and Sirs

Levi Gabbard and daughter of Par-

rot¬

visited at J W Angels SundayMr D D Colo and little son Jessuwho have been Ob tho sick list forseveral days are convalescing Bornto Mrs J P Wilson a fine boy AprGHarry Tussoy of Indian Greek via ¬

ited At his grandmas Mrs Lctha Tussoy This week Mr A Parrot of Par¬

rot Ky was In this community Fri-day

¬

fishing and hunting J W Angelmade two trips to Livingston thisweek hauling toads for Amyxand Eagle of McKeo Onay Tusscywho bai been sick so long Is upagain Jake Tus cy oJ Dango visitedfriends and relatives at this placeSaturday and Sunday

masterParrot April 11oeo Gabbard

and J H Hundley moved their sawmill to Black Lick Branch last Sat ¬

urday to tho old Gabbard Btandj WinCunaglm has secured a traveling pos-

ition¬

with tha Tloasa and RatllttChemical Co ot Cincinnati J Hoilard Is buPdlng an addition to nUdwelling house David Hcllardbrought Jerome Hcllard a load otboards last IondnJ II Hundleyhas been doing come hustling thisweek Corn is getting scarce herenow The mcrchanto hero are givingten cents for eggs now MorganRimes and Delbert Colo ot Middlefore were hire on business Wednes ¬

day Grant Tlnchcr says the moire ¬

les have made him feel ton years old ¬

erIsaac Morris and Ellhu Hurleypassed thru hero thin week wlt1twoloads ot goods Tom Fllnchum Is

trying to get his pension IncreasedArter McDanlcl of Caries was In

our midst Thursday

MEMOIR

Died at her home Onedla Clay Co

March 2> 1905 Mrs Lucinda Hackerdaughter of Mr and Mrs Da Id HazElwad ot Bcnge Ky She leaves nloving husband six children a fathermother five sisters three brothersa host of reltlvea and friends tomourn her death but weep not dearones Your loss Is her eternal gain

Sturgesn April 3 Whereas ithis pleased Gcd in Ha divine willto remove from hlo labors here on

earth Mr HurrUpn Ncely who 110

parted this lit April 2

We extend to his wife and fairchildren our heartfelt sympathy in

this their hour of sorrow and bereavemint

And wo would commend him to cvrkind heavenly Father who knowethand dcctii all things wolf

Blessed are tho dead who die In theLord for they rest from their laborsand their works follow them

His remains will bo laid to restIn the Brewer cfimetery this afternoon

Lucian Brewer

NOTICEThe Citizen Is sorry to have to

announce anew rule There havebeen a good many people recentlywho have w hed to have us printmemoirs of doStr ones who have goneaway We sympathize deeply In anysorrow of the kind but there areso many thlngat that our readerswant to know w do not feel thatwe can give more than so much spaceto such articles ffp hereafter wewill have to Insist that suchpiece be not over onoNjiundred wordslong

THE IDOL BUSINESSHow many young beings are sacri ¬

ficed to the Idol Business Parentssend their boys and girls unseasonedundeveloped from the school room totho desk the counter tie type mach-Ine

¬

to work all day often by artlflcallighttheir recreation and occasionalowning Ina closed theater Insteadof an afternoon under the skies andgreen trees All to make moneyAnd when tho money Is made toooften the man Is unmade as Godcreated him Health In gone or elsethe soul Is shriveled the Imaginationcrippled the zest o lifer has vanished

Often it la necessity that goada theyoung to the pcnnaturo slavery butoften again It Is ambition or greedon the part of parents or the Ideathat their chief duty to the boy is foInur him early to the yoke and

fr orr k 11

JCo

NEGROES AND TAFT

From Now York Are Negro Match18 1908

It Is gratStylng to noto that thocolored people ct the country arebeginning to ctudy tho present polit-

Ical

¬

situation from a sauo and con¬

servative standpoint Quo finds inreading tho lettcra to tho prowboth white and colored that thethoughtful colored nen In tho Statesare doing all in their power to neg¬

ative tho Ideas advanced by n hand ¬

ful of radicals that colored menshould voto the Democratic ticketnexffall If Secretary Taft should be-

come the nominee of the Chicago con ¬

vention Under tho present conditionsIn this country there la absolutelynothing to fear as to the altitudeof tho Negro veto next NovemberNinetynine per cent of It will bo

cast for the Republican nominee forPresident wnoevcr It may be ThereIs no refuge for the colored voterIn this country but tho Republicanparty the party that has done allthat hire ever been done for the Ne

groLastmonth threo or four colored

preachers one bishop and a fewDon ocmtie Ngro politicians at icm pl ¬

ed to make It appear that tho bish-

ops¬

of tho three branches of tho col ¬

ored Methodist church assembled inWuihlngton were bitterly opposed toPresident Roosevelt and tho Secre ¬

tary of War William II Taft Thesensational headlines In the proawere calculated to give one thisimpression But when the articlesthemselves wore carefully read Itwas seen that tho bishops as a wholehad nothing whatever to do with thesentiment expressed In them

Tho socalled Resolutions of Blahops was a most flagrant attemptto deceive the country Not a singlebishop signed them and perh spanone but Bl > hop Alexander Waltersof tho Zion A JI K Church knewof tljelr existence They were vyltten adopted and given to the coun-

try¬

by three or four preachers with-out

¬

the sanction of the church ortho blshbpS council It was purelya cheap political trick that has fail ¬

ed utterly The trhole scheme ofthese men teas discredited whenmany of tho bishops wrote1 denialsof their participation In any meet ¬

ing whatever that had for IU pur ¬

pose antagonism to the President orto Secretary Taft Tho resolutionsthemselves bore tho headlines Res ¬

olutlons of Blohopa and beganWe tha colored ministers of tho

A M K churches of the UnitedStates etc

There could not have been aplainer or morn palpable attempt tomislead and deceive tho colored vot-ers of tho country Behind thisscheme there was a halt dozen col ¬

ored men who havo been affiliatingwith tho Democratic party for yearsThey met with those recalcitrantpreachers constantly while they werehero and posing as great and unsel ¬

fish lovers of tho race used Browns ¬

ville as a Shibboleth to arouse theNegro against tho Republican partyend Its loaders

It is pleasing to note that there toa very strong sentiment growing upamong colored people in all parts ofthe country la behalf of the candi ¬

dacy of Secretary Taft for the nom ¬

ination at Chicago In June Thought-ful

¬

mon havo begun to study thoman and his splendid career as theytouch thojlfb and place In tho bodypolitic of the dark races recentlybrought under the protecting wingof the United States governmentWhat he bIlK done for the Filipinoand the Cuban ho will do for theNegro American when tho opportun ¬

ity comes to him William H Taftis the son of Alphonzo Taft states-man

¬

and abolitionist He is the setonof tho stock that has always stoodfor equai rights for all men and ho-

le tho only cabinet officer tho coun ¬

try has had who has ever held up theorder of a President for any periodhowever brief for any cause whatcver Colored men are beginning toappreciate the full significance oftho act of the Secretary of Warwhen he held back tho Presidentsorder relative to the dismissal of theblack battalion for twentyfour hoursIn order to stay tho execution ofltfinally It possible

Thru an inadvertence The Citizenlast weak forgot to mention PrlnKirk Smith of the Runkel High schoolat Lebanon as among those presentat the conference or Colored Grad-uates

¬

of Boron Mr Smith wishesthe oversight corrected so that therewill be no wrong Impression as tohis attitude In the matter of thenew school

keep him under It steadily that hemay become a man of business Whenhe falls In harneaj It la piously con ¬

sidered to be the doing of a myste ¬

rious Providence to whose will onemust be resigned Mary K Bryan InUncle RemuaB Magazine for April

1

REPORT ON PIKES

Somo weeks ago It will bo remember-

ed tho Grand Jury made a reportwhich was published In thcso columnscharging mismanagement In the mat-

ter

¬

of the appropriations for tho Im ¬

provement of tha county roads ThoFiscal Court took cognizance of thisreport and appointed n committeeconsisting of Magistrate Coy endJones and Mr II W Coylcr to lurestlgato the matter This committeetook tbt matter in hand and madea tboro study of tho question tattingdepositions and Inquiring carefully

Into the management of each road up ¬

on which money had been spentYesterday morning tho record of theirfindings was flied before tho courtand deposited with tho County ClerkTho document Is far loo bulky foipublication and we regret that wo

have not tho space for Its completereproduction but It would fill govern

shrill tho size of this paper It completuly upholds time findings of thoGrand Jury and states that the roadshave been badly managed and thatmuch moro money has been paidfor their maintenance than shows upIn the way of Improvements it dealswith each road separately and InkItg them collectively states thatthorn Is sucplcloue appearance ofgraft about tho mrttcr but that Itknows lot where to put tho blamolimy cltUtm who may desire to InquireIn ho mutter more particularly raftfind tho records oc the with ClerkCobb

Wo quote an extract from the re¬

port as samples of IU contentsWo lId that on a number of pikes

Investigated by Limit committee thatthere hM been moru or less graftithoword negligence wna later substitutedthe exact amount of which wo areunable to determine but vrc4o knowthat there have been overcharge andthat tho county has paid for workthat has never been performed ontho following pikesDarnes MillMaple Grove Carvers Kerry TatesCreek Big Hill Union pike fromUnion City 10 Kentucky HirerKentucky Register

NEWS OF THE WEEKContinued crow Plat Mac

away from school on April 1 as anApril fool Joke

MINERS TROUBLE There is ntglno sign of an agreement between themine owners and the 250000 minerswho quit work on April 10

lOT ANY FLEAST Our big UndoSatn In Washington Is out aftertiers Ii < wants a lot of them andail kind The reason ia thllflelllcarry diseases It has been proveda long time ago that mosquitoescarry and really cause yellow feverand malaria and that commonflies carry certain other diseases andnow It has been found that fleas areabout the worst of tho lot There imp

a horrible disease called the plaguethat once swept over Europe killlag from a third to a matt of thepeople and still kills thousands everyyear In tho far East Last summer ufew cases appeared In San FranciscoThere was dancor that It would spreadall over tblr county and kill halfthe people and It probably wouldhavo It the electors had notgot onto tho fleas They found outthat fleas carried the disease fromone person to another and that onlya certain kind of fleas the kind thatlives on ratr did the If a fleadidnt bto you you wouldt getthe plague So instead of quaran ¬

tining tho tick people and makingeverybody unhappy they went towork to kill rats That was aUjut kill rats And eo Instead ofhaving twenty million people dieonly seventyfour died and only 121got tho dlBcasc You lien bow Im ¬

portant that It was to get those fleasNow tho governments health ox ¬

ports want to find out whethertho fleas carry any other kind of dlscares So they want to get all thefleas that the people will take thetrouble to fend to them only thefleas mutt bo alive dead ones are nogood to them

IN OUR OWN STATECttaud frm Pint Pate

the petition of Beech Hargls lawyersfor ball and the boy must stay In

JailSULLIVANBRTTER Rep Jorre

Sullivan who has been 111 with pneu-monia

¬

has been able to return to titshome In Richmond

THURMAN CONFESSED LeoThurman of West Point Ky whowas hung In Norfolk Va for kill-Ing

¬

his room mate left a written con ¬

fessionFIGHTON EDWARDSThe fight

against Edwards In the EleventhDistrict Is getting hotter and hisenemies are claiming that he is beat ¬

en already Bradley Is fighting himbecause he has refused toturnagainst Tatt the limiter mea arefighting his because ot their eld

I

t J 4w hMPP

grudge and some one line started astory that ho sent a man to Willaonto argue against a pardon for PowersHo has said that ho signed the Powera petition and offered In writingto get others to sign U but this makesno difference to tho peoplo who aretrying to beat him They are againstEdwards not for Powers but theyhope to make lowers friends turnagainst the Congressman

h

The Frankfort correspondent to thoCincinnati Kquircr says It has lustleaked out that theca camo nearly Ic¬

ing a serious break between GovWiyson and State Senator A R Burnamof Madison County during the sessionjust closed The dlcagreomcnt cameup over tho pauaga of tho bill makingan appropriation fo the two StateNoimal Schools and tho State Univer ¬

sity One of lire schools Js located atRichmond Senator A R Barnaulstown This was tho first appropriationbill to pass and It Will rumored thattho Governor Intended to disapproveIt on Recount ot the size of tho ap ¬

proprlatlonTho Senator called at the Executive

office and found that tho voto mossago had already been written Therewir a dented argument between thoExecutivo null the Scnntorand fin ¬

ally Jutgo Burnam tod tho GovernorIf ho persisted In his determinationto kill tho bill ho Illinium wouldroclgn his sent In the Eonato and fbftok borne null toll his people whyho dId so AJ Judge Buniam Is oneof tho moat Influontla Republicans Inthe State tho Governor tore up lireveto mewage afflxluc iris approvalInstead

THE MARKET

terea PricesEggs per dozen lieflutter per Ib 1523aPotatoes helm per bar JlOOApples per bs3 00Maces per IliIDlieHam per Ibl2cI-ard per IbIcChickens oa foot per lb liteChickens dressed per Ib Utfc

Live SteckLouUvlllo April II 1909

Choice export steers G 00 G GO

Light shipping steers G CO C fOChoice butcher steers G 23 a CO

Medium butcher steers 4 76 1i6Common butcher steers 4 23 C 76Choice butcher heifers 4 75 C 15Medium butcher heifer 4 00 4 15Common butcher hollers 3 GO 4 00Choice butchtr cows 4 00 4 0Medium butcher COWL 3 GO 4 tOCommon butcher cows Ji 7G 3 foCanners 1 53 4 fOChoice fat oxen 4 GO C toMedium oxen 3 00 4 25Choice bulls 3 CO I 23Medium bulls 2 76 3 CO

Common bull 2 25 2 75Choice veal calves G CO C 00Medium veal calves 4 69 6 00Common calves 2 CO 3 CO

Good feeders 4G0 G 00Medium feeders 4 00 4 60Common feeders 3 CO 4 0Choice tock steers 4 00 4 MMedium stock steers 3 CO 4 00Common stoat steers 3 00 3 CO

Choice stock heifers 3 36 3 75Medium stock boilers 2 75 3 96

Common mlxttl stockers 2 75 3GChoice milch cow 35 00 45 00Medium milch cow 25 00 35 09Common milch cows 10 00 20 0

BOOS

Choice packers and butchers200 to 300 IDS Gj5

Medium packers and butchersICO to 200 lbs 626

Choice pigs 00120 Ibs C 00 515Light pigs CiO 90 Ibs 4 00 4 25

Light shippers 1201CO lbs C 60 C 70Roughs 1BOCOO lbs 2 GO C O-

IRUPChoice fat sheep G 00 G CO

Medium sheep 3 N 4 MCommon sheep 2 M 1 09Bucks 2 50 4 00Choice lambs G 00 6 CO

Good butcher lambs G CO 6 00

Culls and tallends 4 00 500MESS PORK J9 COradLNluat 11 to llKeg-

HOULDEWJ IKc prIbBACON Clear rib sides 8o reg-

ular¬

clear sides Sfcc breakfast baconl4tte wer eared lavmlfer I3e kMB extra Io bellies llfkt 114 IaM

lkLARDPt ttoasa la misuse 1 of

pun lef la UMMl9e U tlIicDRIED BEEP lloEGGS Caso count 13c per doi

candled Ha-DUTTEItiSe per lb I J

POULTRY SpriBK cklektM Mall15250 per lb largo 160 hen 12cducks lie

WHEAT No 2 95c No393eCORNNo 3 white C8o No3

miXed 68c-OATSNew No 3 white CBo No

3 mixed 63c-

HYE No 2 Northern 91c No 3Northern 91c

f