The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 26, 1885, Page 1

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STAKES IN TEACHING. wo ! ' yself j MIST ee ae AES: Summit. } r bh % 2 3 \ ro g-orrous rain. last ; yehvered Bef Me: i to-day, Saturday, which insures | 2 = cises. Bu is ‘ the gitate in Butler, Aug. 19, by eae i ee a good crop all round. ! Frankie Miller. of : Duriog last week we took a trp i act t rx Vs ar \i 7.) ite = through Henry count nd found the ; « i_ sth en yunt B four th Sedalia ae oe j § c y and found the } : Beas s ao : comm crop not near so good as ' 4 fs Bates county. i 2 over t tt t 1 Oo H ; : . ° place n our return tro ry count ' es or the surface of a subject se! he short. te the p es ways | our ptothem. Then draw (1s Dd eSassta are ral i - wet Comet? PS ; far : : : z and Austin are talking ot having a) we met Squire Wright and Seth 5 bdtensive as the one now before us, ! be sure there is a} tx ace jt e point they do tel = ieee c ies thai i ext 3 a Aveilawee - a A . oon. Mucy going on a trip to Saline and ‘ ;e can not fail to notice at a glance! around. As far as poss the and it may be very | selves of a Th New oii > pe i . He H ene : uae d ew Era Pettis counties. The squire said he j ts vast comprehens.veness and the urt It o be juli pupil wilt far out- | or two, or < Ana Eka hae is j 2 ea ateenice may. he er i x t! inv friends in thts com Was going down to attend a protract- Hy j s manners in ch it me Yel a little talk on morats or strip the x 1e 2 pee > ' eC ce ee ae ' y ; ga s cribers fus Don’t see | ed meeting and would be gone “f aan A subjec ha 1as_) been } fet who > he year. Seles i ss : i 2 2 ; aig 2 ‘ to) ho eal : S ox Ve t along without it. jtwo weeks. Seth never said what ‘a gritten upon so protusely yy Ede: cowardiy, 10 br. i ot teac ou i Mr. Walker, of Butler, was in| his business was but we suppose that may say sators, talked upon so tre and | partin the act they w abundantly by scholars, argued and | play, é re «school-room and town fast week prospecting for Swan who lives up on the river had escaped co And that brings us round | the only error I serve you. And it will serve drag business: also Mr. Jones, from yroper kind, in a! py ‘ r . prog is . Plattsburg, on the same busmess We noticed in passing throug e Bot in Come on gentlemen, tiusis the place | Clinton a massive &tructure opinions, ideas, | tor wide t : - : 1.) something to do with his trip. Jebated so extensively by pedagogues | to another mistake in teachin «. Some ing a,pet or model fallranks and positions, there 1s/ofus are apt to teach too much k l f nearing yet remaining enough to be said to! book knowledge. We become so filla very large volume and require | interested and so eager to see awake men, such as we completion and upon inquiry learned ; : take you to be. that it was the Baird college. It con- protessors who have g i t A. ]. Satterlee and Dr. Gilmore, | tains about one hundred and _ thirty ot Adrian,was on our streets last Fri- | rooms. many ot us a very long time to learn pupils push on fast in their studi and believe it. However, with so | that we lose sight of oth r education equ branch almost to ; : Besides this we noticed con- short a time for the disposition of so} of th e day evening. siderable other improvements large a subject (it having been We forget t those lret ticles i “en minutes Tem . oe ues < large a subj € 4 ee Me e get ae lren ow icie Z Be minutes. We may Some of the boys are complaining | on which indicate that life and enters signed me but last evening), I shall) be gentlemen and Jacics soon, and | ac arn all the latest publications o of indisposition and lassitude; the | prise is not lacking in that thrifty city. eftect of base ball, last Saturday. | Miss Sallie Tye, sister of Mrs. Rey. Newcomb preached in the |} George Graham, with Mr. Wm. and Congregational church last Sunday. | May Crawtord, ot West Point town- He will occupy Rev, Bewley’s pul-| ship, have been visiting at Mr. pitin Butler next Sunday and the | Grahams the past week. latter gentleman will preach here. Hound men should consult’ Mr. The Baptists commenced a pro- Nn i not attempt to discuss it, but will heap ec n our heads | model, new and v only note in a general way some of | tor not teaching them: those many hted to the n that 1s trans my own mistakes in the school-room | |ittle acts of courtes f . the lack of | It only excites envy and | of the land. Anot ate, but the! to store asthe head and leader ot the school, | which will cause them many a hard ] model pup eat means of assistance feeling quite positive that the same thump. We have been in schools, uind with useful knowl- natural for errors have been made, are being perhaps, where should we mention | te: is a cyclopedia, masmuch as made and are likely to continue tobe | the names pohteness, nice manners, | ve }so tew pupils have access to atiy- hing ot the kind. It is su tubblefield immediately as he has made so long as the world star courtesy, &c., it would be met by |i a con- tracted meeting last Sunday ane will | struck on a plan to prevent hounds ! we cannot say so long as the army} gneers from a cert class of halt | te to >teacher and such a continue through this week. They | trom sucking eggs. —for is reintorced by inexperienc gy s who consider themselves talking, laughing and | benefit to his s to be able : 3 reinto y I grown boys who ¢ le 1e elve i re fhms Gy bereht to his pupils to be able to} have also got the subscription papers | It anyone wants a chance we would ot expressing himself. | look up subjects they are interested we all know to our sorrow that tre- |» en; but those s boys may have | going to build a new church, and} advise them to callon Mr. Cheatham doubtless will succeed, as men of en- | as he 1s ready to let them know what rey are taking hold of the matter. quently we find teachers—we mean a sense of honor, c id wrong, at we tremble almost when we jin and wish to know something: persons who “keep school’’—who | and kindness ofspirit, that would not) think how responsible we are tor are so fixed in their good opinion Of | cee the weak trampled upon by the | those children’s habits. To be ther work and so prejudiced against | strong; t all other teachers’ plans and meth-| without offering rehef. By drawing | teacher, one that children are safe in ods that to be told they are in error! about. ‘The Chamber’s Cyclopedia, | their chances are. | sufficiently reliable for all purposes We predict that there will be a Seth Macy dislocated his second hat could t see ffering , real conscientions, careful, thorou; 7 » r. > he 2 . hat could not see suffering ; real conscie caretul, thorou for a teacher, may be had from the |large acreage of wheat sown in this New York Tribune office, complete | chem out gradually from the deeper | imitating, one should be almost @/} in ten volumes, for the sum of $17. finger last week while engaged in a vicinity this tall, by the way the game of base ball. Dr. Winsett was tarmers are plowing and _ getting | called and succeeded inin setting the tne land ready. Already quite a| dislocated member and Seth went t f led mel teélan bi ea ! rete ee number of large fields have been j on his way rejoicing. acts ot courtesy, founded on the law | teel in his manners, anc he should | ality Chamber’s Cyclopedia. { ce g 2 - woes | ae sieaitiallaal saa Site . common among teachers and, than | of kindness; then tell them, ‘‘well, | not act a part ether. He must be | Pes ae gon ta Seti | oo and still the good oe We caa testify with Silabuster that which, nothing can be more ruinous | now, we understand these things | sincere and natural in all this. Chil- | provement to teachers 1s the privi-| toa school, 1s over much talking on }| exactly alike © Now this is nothing | dren are very quick to detect shams, | the part of the teacher. With pri-/ Jess than politeness. This is pre would be only oe . : . : . Pa grave msult to their’ acts of kindness, tounded on princi- | perfect man or woman. He can not} [t sometimes is called Library of experience of so many terms. ples ot right and wrong, to li Perhaps one of the mistakes most ter | be too caretul in his habits, too gen- Universal Knowledge, but is in re- | the dude reterred to from West Point {claiming himself as Brownie, the lege ot institutes and Normals. The | Shobe. and if they once find that the teacher | teacher will find no way of getting | Times are getting no better, fast. mary grades we expect to talk much | cisely what we mean when we speak | 1p assuming to be wt 1| better salary sooner than becoming The Gulf miners are gradually more than with older pup But) of politeness. Just do all you can! with him or that he is not sincere, | a better teacher; and to become bet- | moving off. We understand twenty- many of us can call to mind schools! to make iife ples Vinton correspondent is a counterfeit. 5 We are acquainted with the Vinton is not natu cerrespondent and know whereof | = sae : we speak. sant for all you | does not teel all the kindness and | ter teachers we must be eager to | five tamilies leave Saturday. The ; politeness that he assumes, their . : tle trade has been very we haye been in—as visitors of course | meet,’’ learn in every way possible by read-; Married, Jack Boe to Miss - , T remember very well one year of | confiden ing, studying new plans and then , on last Sunday, and a grand time) taking some boysthrough that orde al | et 1s gone and he can never restore | discussing them with other teachers ; ey had. The crowd consumed 12 and ot giving them many examples | himselt. They will always be sus- | exchanging ideas is certainly pieas- | kegs of beer. Fiddling,dancing and of how they should conduct them-|Picious of him. Besides berg 4 ant as well as beneficial. | fighting was the order of the day. selves at home, on the streets and ' model tor pupils in the way of morals | The Pettis Co. Commissioner re- | We received the sad_ intelligence play grounds, and in the school- and manners, it seems necessary tor} markeda few days since that he | this week of the death of Mr, Thos tecmers must have somethinetoeed room, making themselves useful and | the teacher to possess unlimited | began teaching eight years ago at) W oodrum, a brother of Haley it to. OBSERVER. pleasant, &c., one day upon step- | Tange ot intormation. He must be | $30 per month. To-day he receives Shobe’s first wife, who hyed near a, ping into the hall and finding one of familiar with the best, satest, and | $75 per month in country schools, , Lewisburg, Kansas, His death was those boys down on his knees pulling quickest methods. He must be «ble | and that he considered it due princi- caused from a stroke of paralysis, on a gitl’s rubbers. When the little | to simplify and condense—bring 4 | pally to his promptiy miss had thanked him and he rose. large subject into a very small space. | Institutes. He was single and about thirty years | es : rage number of years that Tt certainly seems, then, that the | of age and the only support of his Did you Sup- tused, as no pupil was expected to pupils attend school in the cities is | Bates county teachers aie making a/| paren f ill: but he was soon set 10 greater than S and in the country | mistake this summer by not coming} Monday night tour horses were lively the past two weeks. Every body is wanting stock to teed. Last —where the teacher seemed to have | and respect in that teach- Hated — | | spring calves are selling trom $12.50 to $18.00 per head. Yearlings are going at about $26.00. There will be an immense amount of feed and fer 6 pat? ti oa im. | never “run down”? till 4:30 p om. | There was one continual stream of | talk, sostiresome to the pupils that | they gave no attention whatever,and consequently knew nothing that had | been said, and so wearying to the! teacher that she is completely ex. | hausted when her 4:30 p. m. arrives. And no wonder she sensnpanieiaiiasiaiiceeicmarmamatiies thin and hag- tending Co. | from which he only lived three days. gard when the term is up, she has talked those pupils and herselt liter- ave : and saw me, he was somewhat con- , The ally away, instead of having the pupils to do the talking. When a : £ é _ Vere’ pose Mustang Liniment only good iolding a three or four | said to have been stolen in this vi- for horses? It is for inflamma- ne primary grades of public schools, | weeks’ normal. Their directors | cinity, allof which have been re- sis oball flesh. t »zed, Two of the horses, belong- school, and in? who wish to improve and will ap- pr _ Rae eon ee Se neh c . 5 : re 1 ; ttached to s n it point, let us this age, where so much 1s to be preciate their efforts to do so, as attached to a spring stop in the ! a comes before her to recite she, at ease by my putting an armaround ™uch less. Of the pupils wo enter | up here and very kindly, begins and recites the laining every pomt, his neck and saying truthtully: “My entire lesson, e achers dear bov, I’ 3; you e tvery small per cent | will soon see who are proud ot yo hot reserving even t simplest tor ave acted the pa » ) Z of a gentleman.’ he pupil to reason upon and explain for himself. When the recita closed she : Then to sum up A ae : Rescued from the Grave urth of here ana Detroit, Mict g the infé E t rel “spect then re tor their | the thie teach manners. Teach itever well as respect them more tor their; the th > day. | learned in that short space of ssizns the lesson tor the Not spasimodically, but steadily. We |? be hoe advance in their profession, and , about two miles the most ; : Aug. 21.—Tues- hext day at least three times, and pies when advance otf salary is de- | turned lose. T found the can get a lesson tor manners and the next day has the pleasure of as- ] a} next ¢ to the wagon. morals out of almost any thing. o such a!ne 1 to the People want their children it again to each individ member of the class as he comes ytermit. [he man remark not long ago—a_ pruif old farmer vou would perhaps think etig trotting up to her to ask. ‘what 1s the lesson for to-day? it becomes thoroughly fixed in nly ot a teacher’s business order in which to develop ideas in accordance with the development of Eee the child’s mind. Then the meth fee but Ittle importan oe ceed las must take the consequences. It ; a ._,. | of best presenting the ic apils nother very yattle to fight Pupils see that we mean what we = : savy and if we are careful wi “CORRESPONDENCE. [would say, then, yet I fear do hot always follow t It certat him—that if bis children were not g nearly every o taugbt more manners at school than Archie. e tather retamed his trom the the house. Ti} ever repeat a =o PEP he had time to teach them at home, Buggy mding was in o “s and took the Jer last! , ser c nealth than for some time, only once what we wish to say, and ut doing he would consider their education ot » better rdday. Miss Mattie Hutchison, of Adrian, . Mrs. Shaf if they are not giving attention they shots passing ea we wish s clothing. Bradford jumped off of his horse and emptied If we do this, efully, look- the pupil to gra patience dull pupils. —— een The Building & Loan Asscciation at we zit 5 his pistol at them and says he is con- Teachu 10ugh as long is almost a fixture $ Archie as nearly Say, and do not say it and keep say- ing tt, they will hear them. ing at our subjects through the mind e of them very seriously, as his t ; ied A Clear Skin i i rse and skipped out. S facts, basta only a part of beauty; but it isa part. Every lady i fident he wound as it all goes off to our own idea; but when we have a halt dozen r of shares are that we tell e children, putting ourselves in 9 companions Deneve that a teacher snould asking 1m on his ho cannot lez id we think ve the »>notg talk so seldom, and in such a quiet a different were told tot tone, that when ever she speaks the school, or to any member of e pleasures all seem lost : ae ‘Aston’ may have it; at least, what : School, or to any member ot e 2d onus week. a : : school outside the cl AY a Se eSyere sees looks like it. Magnolia 1 i outside the ae ma = BSCR . neanng, every ea cases. We must not se gree aid es Balm both freshens and j ng, in the roo eee ; tir. 7 i Would attend. it should he « Ses ss Violetin beautifies. Very extreme that should cal ee Pe a Say and w nust have eacher n and i recit Ue sympathy wit the dull ones. npeatness 2ua é “oe fice and ctur Sometimes they get discouraged. Times office an i enteed her an equal

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