

IDAHO. 



'.rval Britain. In Un.k form, i 

 InjK- nii.i 



Worm*, with an lntr.lt:cti,.i, <m the 

 ,.f Itiimtinal Worms by Carl Thcodor von Sie- 



Ijeoture* on the Klnn. -r 

 CoOptmtP 

 ury Atlas of ComparatiTe OsUn>lo, 



: i .-,:, I- , . ,. ^ - .1SIJT,,: 



- I'nliiN.nioIogia I"' 1 - -brate Fossils" 



(1866): - An liur-ilui-iion to the Classifl 

 ..f AuimaN" tlNWM; "A Miinunl of the Anat- 

 omy <>f Vertabrated Animals" (1 S ?1 : 'A Man 

 unl of tin- Anatomy >f Invertebrated Aninuils" 

 (1877): " The Crayfish : An [atvodwtfon to the 



i an -Introduc- 

 tory * to the series of - Science Primers " (1880). 

 Concerning his more popular works it ha 

 vail wi<l that M for mere rhetoric. f..r polish of 

 eipresstan. for structural harmony, for Keen wit 

 n ma-ked under the most graceful 

 urlMiinty. for unsparing logic, ami for luminous 

 ftimpl. \vhrn dealing with tin- most ah- 



rtrunp ai'nl difficult subject*, the books which 

 y addressed to tin- un-ci, -ntihY world are 

 almost unfMiralMrd in Knglish literature." They 

 include: "<>n Hi- nal Value of tli 



ural I. *" (1854): M ProtopUwn : 



-hTBicAl Basis of Life " (1869): 

 moos, Addresses, and Review 

 sars: Selected from Lay Sermons" (1^71) : Cri- 

 Addr . -Hun,.'" in the 



>l, Mm ..f Letters" 



-American Addresses, with a Lecture on I'.iol- 



-raphy: An Introduction 



'1877); "Sci.-nc,. and 



Culture, and other Kssays M (1881); and " Inaug- 

 ural M i(*s Congress: An Ad- 

 dress "(188$. A complete edition of collected 

 esmrs, grouped in accordance with the p-m -ral 

 subject, was issued in 9 volumes, each with a 

 newintr<Nluction(N< Hcwas 

 asocial cd with Robert Kt la-ridge in the prepa- 



D of A Catalogue of the Collection 

 sils iii tin- MiiM-iim of Pra.-ti.-al Qeoli 

 ami with N.-well H. Martin in th. 

 al histrurtiun in Klnm-nta: 



h ua^ Huxley who coim-d the word " 

 and of it\ .iriirin he wn.te : " U 

 d intellectual maturity and I 

 f whether 1 \\a- an at fi< 

 pant heist, n materialist or an ideal)-' 

 or a fn-ethinker. I fouijd that the m- 

 and reflected the less ready was tin 

 til at last I came to the cnelu-i"ii thai 

 neither art nor part \\iih any of these d< 

 nations except the la-t. The one thin^ in wlK 

 most of these good peopl< ., 

 tiling on which I diMeivd fr..m them. T|,c\ 

 were quite *\m- they had attained a 

 Is, 1 had ii !"?. r less solved th- 



lice, while 1 was quite sun- 1 I, 

 ha-1 a pretty strong cuiiviciimi that the | 

 \\a^ insoluble. So 1 took thought, and it 

 what I conceived to be the appn-pi 



ic. It came into my head a- 

 antithetic to the ^no-tic .f Church I. 

 professed to know so much aliout th< 

 of which I was ignorant." 



Still, as he saw the end approach!: 

 ni'jin-st that the following words, writti-ti 

 wife, should stand on his tomb: 



And if there ! n<i f 



If all i> darkue-- - rent 



Be not afraid, ye waiting fieurtM tlint \\ 



ti liis l.el..\- 



And if an endlesa sleep lie will so best 



Concerning this. Michael Foster say 

 visitors to the burial place on ti 

 heights ,f London, seeing on his tombst< 

 above lines, will recognize that the a: 

 of science had much in common wit It \: 

 offai- 



I h \MO.a Northwestern State, admitted to 

 the Union July 3, 1890: area, 84,800 square 

 miles; pOfmktkML m-ronling to the census of 

 - -:',>-, i| ital, Bois^ City. 



*f eminent. The following were the State 

 ofBoen during the year: Ctovmior. William .!. 

 McConnell, RMmbllesa; Lieutenant Governor, 

 Frank \\. MilU (until A.. 

 8Ule. Isaac Oarr.tt ; Auditor. Frank Q 

 ey ; Treasurer, C. Bunting : Attorney-General, 

 George M. Parson* : Adjutant General, A. Case; 

 SttperinU-ndont of PuMic Instruction. Charles A. 

 FOWSHMMI; State Engineer. Frank B. Mills; 

 Chief Ju*tioe <.f Sui hn T. 



Mornn; Aociate Justices, J. W. Huston, I. N 

 Salhrao. 



LrsjUUtUe Hwwlon.- The legislature 

 Jan. i. and o.ntmuM in session until March 9. 

 In the House, 16H bills wert- introduced, and in 

 the Senate 97. W the 83 bills that were passed 

 by both Houses, the Goven ; . tl ,d ve- 



toed 6. two of which were pawed over the 



Among the measures enacted was the repeal 



of the law passed unanimously by the last 



lature. providing that all oltli. 



paid in gold or silver, all contra- i- to ti 



trary not withstand^. . 



beinp that the mea-ure had l..-en dctrim- 



the lni-ines> interests of the 



making a new legislative apporti< 



vides for a senator for every count \ 



resentation in the House i- on the basis 



representative for e 



over one half of 5M. cast at the last ! 



The new game-and-flsh law abolish 



of county game warden, specifies \\ 



clo-.-i and prohibits trai 



dealing in hides of wild anin 



inir with do-s. Three irrigation bill- 



passed the joint irrigation bill providing 



of accepting the gift of 1 .000.000 n. 



under the Carey act. from the I-Vdi-ral ' 



ment, and twonie.i^nre- providing f-.r the 



ixationof irrigation di>tricts. . 



measurements, and the fixing of water i 



certain emergencies by the district c 



