Evening Star Newspaper, March 9, 1925, Page 10

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MoCormick Meaical Oollege Graduats Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist [EADERSHP HELD COLLEGE ESSENTIAL Hibben Says Book Learning No Longer Is Main Re- quirement at Princeton. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. “Capacity to attain,” rather than the “book learning” of tradition, is the new American university ldeal proclaimed by Dr. John Grier Hibben, president of Princeton. Addressing the. annual dinner of the Princeton | Club of Washingten during the week end, Dr. Hibben laid down what is practically a new set of standards for udmission to the higher American institutions of education e said Thuc are two ways to get GOOD candy...you can either spend the pile of 10 little coins for a pound box. ..or you can spend ;";[: ;lne u‘?%(‘,fim for a bar of enry! er way you get the same qualityl That qu: is why people eat nearly a mil- lion bars a day of Oh Henry! Makes a dime taste like a dollar univerzity, | thing else nowadays demands some- It demands a © e to )nulha who have shown, \-l‘~ e arriving at university age, t for leadership among their fellows through the exercise of the right kind of influence. Delineating his id of the selective draft the modern Am unfversity should enforce, Dr | said e | “Princeton, of cours xdht!t‘\ to TASTE ALL GONE lation. But we are inquiring Turther World's finest Physic now into a boy's eligibility than his pro- Pleasant as Lemonade can ibben ficlency in mathematics, languages or the classics. We want to know what | kind of schoolboy he was. We want preparatory school, before aspiring to Princeton, he revealed tralits of char | acter that, as far as is humanly p sible, indicate not only the type undergraduate is likely to be. f we find & boy who is deficien In this or that particular , bui who has in h of leadersk rades, an outlook on guished him morally—that kind of boy pite academic shortcom s the kind of boy who is welcon Princeton coming, in fact, It fs the kind of which we want and | mean to have more.” | Dr. Hibben gave a graphic illustra- | tion of the | the system that governs at Prince- |ton. “On the eve of the war,” he said, “a lad from ldaho applied fo admlission to the university. He was deficient In some of the usual cred Under the strict interpretation of university rules, he was not eligible to enter. He came to see me about iis plight. In the course of the visit the boy explained that he had worked across the tinent from s a feeder of on the By that means, he had na to reach Princeton. I sent for the director of admissions, |1 told him thw any American boy | anxious enough to enter Princeton, who had got there as that Idaho lad did, ought not to have the door shut |in his face. We took that boy in. | The World War came on. He wanted to fight. He reported in Washingtor The military authorities found he wa color blind. He never knew before that he was so afflic 1 asked that distin- Pure Egsom Salts has no equll in medicine for constipation, biliousness, sick headache. Doctors and nurses depend upon it because no other laxa- tive acts so perfectly, so harmlessly om the bowels. It mever gripes or overacts. “Epsonade Salts” is pure Epsom Salts made pleasant with fruit de- rivative, salts—nothing else. It tastes like sparkling lemonade and costs only few cents a package at any drug store. Try it! “Epsonade Salts” is guaranteed by the American Epsom Association. One of these may be your pattern. An opportunity to replenish or add to your china SERVICE at remarkable savings. Closing Out three Minton decorations in Fine English China —pattern B “898” $42.00 10-inch Plate, now $37.00 8-inch Plate, now.. $29.00 7-inch Plate, now. $17.50 5-inch Plate, now ."»41 00 8-inch Rim 'oups now. . Oat Meals, now. Fruit Saucers, now Teacups, Saucers, now. . Bouillons, now After-dinner Coftee, now I 2-inch Meat Dish, now. ... Cake Plate, now Teapot, Sugar and Cream, now . —pattern B “838” $37.00 8-inch Plate. now. $41.00 8-inch Rim Soup, now . $42.00 Bouillons, now $31.50 After-dinner Coffee, now. : $18.00 Teapot, Sugar and Cream, now —pattern B “930” $42.00 10-inch Plate, now.. $37.00 8-inch Plate, now. .. $29.00 7-inch plate, now.... $17.50 5-inch Plate, now ) 8-inch Rim Soup, \J‘UO Teacups and Saucers, now $42.00 Bouillons, now $31.50 After-dinner Coffees, now. .. $15.50 Teapot. Sugar and Cream, now. —Second Floor China Department DULIN& MARTIN G 1215~1217 F Street - and 1214 101218 G Street Hours—8:45 to 5:30 Princeton, | while demanding academic | merit in a4 young man entering the| | to know whether at high school Ahlil but the type of man he It is the kind we are wel- | from year to year. | practical application of | THE Gen. Barnett of the Marine Corps to give the fellow a change. His color blindness was walved. That boy fought s0 gallantly as a captain at Chateau Thierry that both France and Great Britain afterwards decorated him for distinguished service. That boy had the capacity to attain. We want at Princeton, above all else, young men with the capacity to attain.” The. Princeton: ch1OF. iexecutive b solved himself from the suspicion of | espousing a “driving” system of uni- versity education. He declared he did not believe in a scheme of all work | [2nd mno -play for undergraduates. “They are cntitled to have, and at| | Princeton do have,” Dr. Hibben said, | “all the time and opportunity neces- [sary for the cultivation of campus { lite, athletics, comradeships and the {other immemorial things of the col- |lege career. All we are requiring is | that a boy shall do & full day's col- lege work. That means o full share of all those things that go to make up well-rounded university life, men- | tally, morally and physically.” | Dr. Hibben mentioned one quaint | | circumstance that rather astonished {his audience of Princeton “old boys.” { It was the fact, as he narruted, that | when a university student “gets into troubie,” with regard to his class standing or for any other reasons, it is almost invariably his mother, not his father. who comes to plead on his behalf. “In nine cases out of ten,” suld lresident Hibben, “wy visitors on such missions bent are the moth- ! ers of undergraduates. Upon them, ‘ho\\ndu\s her than upon preoccu- fathers, seems to rest straightening out the JRE th | for any 5 | D, Alfred p, 9 1 President Coolidg: newly-oppointed | Democratic member of the United | States Tariff Commission, sald that d the world need- ars of intellectual eer at Princeton | inculea American boy. He| Im!d of American business man who came to Rome in the midst of the World War and berated the Ital- | ians for not “modernizing” their rail- oads und running 3-hour instead of trains between Rome and | | ed | curiosity’ ation of | a art k. | the intellectual curiosity that is bred lin the bone of Princeto (Copyright | i EGGS ally fine quality. guar Doz., 32s; 3 Doz., 95¢ BREAKFAST BACON CORN Monocacy Valley..can, 15¢ Conqueror Shoe-Peg 1 can,19¢ Sugar Corn, No. 1 can, 11c CLICQUOT CLUB GI We allow a refund of 1Ic or 80c on each case of bottl, Tuna Fish. . Y5-Ib.can, 27¢ Dunbar Shrimp. . Fresh Mackerel. . Argo Salmon . .. Pink Salmon Chum Salmon. .. .can, 15¢ Log Cabin Syrup. .lb., 25¢ Butternut Wafers, pkg., 25¢ Olivilo Soap, 9c; 3 for 25¢ Sunbrite Cleanser, can, S5c Octagon Soap...3 for20c Star Soap......cake, 5c Morton Salt pkg, 10c 9¢; 3 pkgs., 25¢ .can, 20c .can, 23¢ .can, 27¢c can, 16¢c Fresh Tomatoes. . . Ib., 30c Iceberg Lettuce. . head, 12¢ Spring Carrots, bunch, 7c Oyster Plant. . .bunch, 12¢ Spring Onions. . bunch, 4c New Cabbage. ... .lb., 5c Old Cabbage Ib.,. 3c FRESH F The very best shipped by Fresh Rock . . Fresh Herring . . .. Fresh Sea Bass .. Fillet of Haddock. Halibut Steak . Salmon Steak Smelts Sea Trout .. Fresh Cod Roe Shad . | One Plfi@h / There is always the fullest of Real Satisfaction for those who trade at Eresh eggs are plentiful and of exception- tee that the fresh egges in our cartons will please you. Your choice of Pale Dry or Regular— "Bottle 14s; Case (2 Doz.) $3.25 FAT SHORE MACKEREL EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, AMBITIOUS NEW L, ART PROGRAM NEEDS $6,000,000 UNDERWRITING Fund Will Finance Great Exhibition Here Next Autumn and in Other Cities, Enlarge School and Send Students to Europe. The gpecial exhibition of the Na- tional Academy of Design which will open next Autumn in the Corcoran Gallery of Art in this city is Intended first, as « celebration of the centenary of the oldest and best known art or- ganization in America, and, second, as a demonstration to the American public of the value of & new exhibi- tion program which is to be under- taken with the beginning of the sec- ond century of the ucademy's exlst- enve This information is given in a state- ment made by Edwin H. Blashfield, president of the academy, authorized at a special meeting of the council of that organlzation held in New York yesterday. The statement an- nounces that the academy needs $6,000,000 for an educational expan- sion program to make possible the fulflitment of its responsibility as a national institutlon to the public, the artists and art students of the Nation. Plan to Develop School. The principal object to be attained through the raising of this six-mil- on-dollar- fund is the extensive de- es, | velopment of the academy’s art school, located at Amsterdam avenue and Hundred and Ninth street, New York City. The plan necessitates an outlay f $2,500,000 for adequate buildin and the establishment of an endowment of $1,800,000, the income of which is to b2 devoted to faculty expense and college upkeep. A fund of $700,000, the income from which shall annually enable 25 stu pervision for the study pieces and ohservation of European instruction and exhibition methods, is | also not ntemplated. The academy does| to rhim, these funds by They will be to persons derced their in- pment in this ps of people in ifferent cities who wish Piggly Wiggly Stores. to give their young fsllow-citizens opportunity to study and travel One Million Dollars for Exkibits. Of the entire sum an endowment of $1,000,000 1s desired to enable the presentation of semi-annual exhibi- tions of American painting, sculpture, architecture and engraving. these ex- Libits not to be confined to New York, tut to meet half-way the art organ- izations of other cities throughout the United States which wish such dlsplays to visit them % “Plans are being worked out,” says President Blashfield, “whereby, through the contrbiution of a certain emy's program, each city will have the right to place before its citizens an academy exhibition each year and also to send a certain number of stu- dents to its college of art” The exhibition to be States will present the best work of members of the academy in painting, sculpture, architecture and engraving for the past 100 years, and will be an — dents to go abroad under expert su-| of master- | e & ZAN | Stop Her Sore Throat Don’t experiment. For over | thirty years wise mothers bhave been getting quick, welcome relief by using TONSILINE s. 3t Rimess o C BEST MERCHANDISE---LOWEST PRICES---CLEAN STORES BUTTER Our creamery butter convince you. TOMATOES Faney Virgina Pack No. 1 canm, 9¢c; 3 for 25c No. 2 can, 12¢; 3 for 35¢ No. 3 can, 17¢; 3 for 50¢ NGER ALE Large size, 30 on each bettle les returned. Del Monte Dri good housekeepin, a large variety and you will find your favorite brand in Piggly Wiggly Steres. Wilkins Breakfast..lb., 44c Orienta, bag .1b., 50¢ Orienta, can. . ...lb.,55¢ Your Luck .......Ib., 53¢ Maxwell House .. .Ib.,57¢ Lord Calvert Ib., 55¢ Wilkins Perfect. . .Ib., 60c Astor ...Ib.,55¢ Sunbeam . . .Ib., 50¢ POSTUM .12¢and 20¢c ..23cand 38c Cereal Instant . “Sealsweat,” thin shkin, sweet, juicy Celery ....... stalk, 14c Kale . ..Ib., 10c Beeu. .bunch, 12¢ New Potatoes. .Ib., 1214c Sweet Potatoes... .Ib., 8c Turnips .° 5¢ B POTATOES Fancy Michigans ISH express direct ....lb.,, 38¢c .Ib., 15¢ .1b., 30¢ Ib., 28¢ ..1b., 38¢ ..Ib., 38¢c ..Ib., 35¢ .Ib., 28¢ Ib., 23¢ .1b., 30¢ Cut from Fancy, large fish one-pound each Porterhouse Steak. . . . ... Sirloin Steak. . Round Steak. . Hamburg Steak . Pork Loin Roast. . . . “Sunset Gold” brand is the best fancy on the market. A trial will Lb., 53c Our “Sunset Gold” Brand. by machine, the rind is off licad Lb., 40¢ PEAS Early June, No. 1 can, 1lc Extra Sifted, No.1 can, 15¢ Early June, No. 2 can,17c Petit Pois, No. 2 can,27¢c CALIFORNIA PRUNES ~—fFfrom the famous Sante Clara Vailey. Medium size, 50 to 60 to 40 Sunsweets, in 2-lb. carton. Pack BREAKFAST FOODS Ali the nationally advertised brands are in our st .10c Corn Flakes. . . .. Grape Nuts .. .. ... .16¢c Kellogg Krumbles. .. .11c Post Toasties Puffed Wheat Puffed Rice Shredded Wheat Post Bran Flakes. ... .12¢ Kellogg’s Bran . 12 Ralston Wheat Food..23¢ Quaker Grits Pettijohn ‘Cream of Wheat Wheatena . Rolled Oats 12¢ FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES We have the most complete assortment in all our stores at right prices GRAPEFRUIT Each, 5¢ ..Ib., 10c .. .doz., 38¢ .3 Ibs., 25¢ .doz., 25¢ .Ib., 60c Spinach Oranges Apples ..... Lemons Mushrooms Parsley .. Onions . ... 15 lbs., 25¢ FRESH MEATS Of the highest quality in all our markets BEEF STEAKS fifest prime steer baef .Ib., 45¢ 40c 35¢ 25¢ Each, 25¢ MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1925.' art event of outstanding importance in the history of the National Capital. From Washington the exhibit will be sent en masse by special train to the metropolis where it will have its second showing. Later it will go on a coast-to-coast tour and for the first time in the history of this country a really great ‘art exhibition will be placed before the public on a national scale. C. Powell Minnigerode, director of the Corcoran Gallery, has already been in New York, arranging the details of the joint enterprise with the council of the National Academy, which consists besldes President Blas).feld of the following: Harry W. Watrous, vice president; Charles C. Curran, corresponding secretar. CHILD WELFARE SESSIO| Experts to Meet at Raleigh Hotel Late Today. Experts will disduss placement of de- pendent children in Washington and in other cities at a meeting of the Council of Social Agencles at the Raleigh Hotel at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The mees- ing will be held under the auspices of the children’s committee. Speakers will include Mies Grace Abbott, director of the Children's Bu- reau of the Labor Department; J. W. Sanford of the Javenile Court of the District and J. E. Stuart, an agent of PAPER PLANT DAMAGED. Sixth Floor of Atlanta Constitu. tion Building Gutted. ATLANTA, Ga., March 9.—The sixth floor of the Atlanta Constitution was sutted by fire yesterday and damage estimated at $100,000 resulted befors the blaze was brought under control Machinery in the composing room, oa the fifth floor, and presses, in the basement, suffered from the flood op water poured into the bullding ia the two-hour fight necesiary to em amount to the financing of the acad- | = staged here through the co-operation of the Cor-|*® coran Gallery and under the patron- |, age of the President of the United X the Board of Children's Guardians. tinguish the fire. What will your mirroranswer? 'Y this test now! Unless the color of your inner eyelid is a rich red, Anemia— of energy common among men, women and children is in 8 cases out of 10 caused by Anemia. Arse you one of the eight? Then go to your druggist and get Gude’s Pepto- Mangan in either liquid or tablet form. The iron and manganese content of Gude’s Pepto-Mangan has been rebuilding run-down bodies for thirty-two Gude’s - Pepto~Mangan ‘Tonic and “Blood &Enricher Douglas Volk, recording secretary; Francis O. Jones, treasurer; Herbert Adams, DeWitt M. Lockman, Adolph A. Weinman, Hobart Nichols, Gardner Symons, F. Ballard Willlams, and Charles T. Heaslip, business manager. N T O PRI~ R| It’ll Save —plasterer’s and paperhanger’s bills to have roof defects rem- edied at the start. f[For years Colbert, has handled Washing- ton’s “overhead” work with promptness, satisfaction and econ- omy. 1 Ready for your job, be it minor repairs or an entire TR SR R .‘-;x Pull dowa the lower eyelid a1 illustrated. Usless the inside of iid is & bright scavlet, Anemic mey ewist. roof replacement. ¢ Maurice J. Colbert Hefllm!—Plumbmg—Tlnntng ' 621 F tl‘eet Phone Main 3016-3017 physicians acribe it. it THE MEN'S *STORE OF WOODWARD & LOTHROP THE COURSES are opening— Spring’s in the air—some one will hear the first robin’s trill soon. Of course you'll play a better game this year! And wear golf clothes that are up to par, too. Choose your own links—but be sure to get the clothes and equip ment here. Soft - leather Golf Coats to slip into on chilly days; gray or tan. $15. English 4-piece Suits for golf and business are in colors as bright as Spring itself. Dis- tinctive fabrics, tailored in London. $50. Plus-4 Knickers in the new light colors that will brighten the courses this Spring. $10. The Haig, an Arnold Glove Grip Oxford, has soft, comfortable toes and crepe rubber soles. Tan. $I2. Very piiable Golf Gloves, the left one leather faced, $3. Without fingers, $1.50.. Purchase a dozen Golf Balls and we will stamp your full name on them. Imported Golf Irons with hand forged heads, stainless and rust- resisting ; hickory shafts. $4.50 Midiron Mashie Mashie Niblic Niblic Putter Heavy Iron Jigger Mongrel Iron Cleek A Golf Rain- coat isia handy thing in a shower. $6. No. 1 Iron No. 2 Iron No. 3 Iron Chipper Mashie Iron Deep Face Mashie Long M Baxpin Light Iron Success, 50c. Kroflite, Spalding Red, Pinehurst, 75c. Dunlop, Silver King, $1. The Men's Store, Second floor. aodmard X Lothrop “See Our Other Advertisements on Pages 11 and 31.

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