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R. WASHINGTON, D. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, " KRAMER DEFENDS FLAMING YOUTH School Official, Addressing Virginia Association, Sees Romance in Actions. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va, November 26— “Flaming youth” last night found a de fender in Dr. Stephen E. Kramer, first assistant superintendent of public schools, Washington, D, C., who ad- the opening session of th twenty-sixth annual meeting of Co-operative Education Assoclation of Virginia in Broad Street Methodist Church on “Co-operative Endeavor of Home and School in the Guidance of Young People.” “‘Flaming youth' is a phrase which we often hear.” said the speaker. must this picturesque phrase mean the excesses, the recklessness, the extrava- Services gances, the lawlessness and the sen-} sual? Might it not better come to mean in press and public mind the courage and the dauntlessness of the | darkness | 1ad who slipped alone into the of sky and sea to achieve the conquest of air and ocean or the spirit of the boy who dared venture out “between Heaven and sea upon the guiding plane of the Graf Zeppelin to repair damage which father's craft? Was it not, indeed, ‘flaming youth' that went forth from | the Virginia Military Academy with the step and courage of veterans to lay down their young lives upon the field of battle?” Public Opinion Real Force. Public opinfon is a real force in shap- ing the thinking of youth, said Dr. Kramer, who declared that a grave re- sponsibility rests upon public opinion to place the seal of social premium and public_attention upon work well done, upon honest labor and upon noble, if not spectacular, achievement. Romance and thrill, he added, are not lacking in | ths desirable walks of life. What is| needed, he said, is the determination of the public mfnd to find it and to exploit it before youth as an antidote | for the too frequent exploitation of the undesirable and destructive activities of misguided youth. Mrs. Katherine Cook, rural depart- ment director of the United States Bureau of Education, Washington, was another speaker at. last night's ope ing session of the Co-Operative Educa- tlon Association. She took as her gb]ect “Should We Know Our Neigh- r8? “What are the responsibilities of pub- lic opinion in the guidance of youth?" said Dr. Kramer. “There are few forces 80 potent in the ghaping of the minds and inspirations of our children as that of social approval expressed by public opinion. When the public attention and ! interest is centered upon the undesira- ble outbreaks of lawless youth and pected from public opinion as a con- structive guiding force for the youth of our land?” Must Restore Parental Guidance. Parental authority and guldance must be restored in the dominance of the lives of children on a basis of mutual respect between. the parent and the child, declared the speaker. The: fundamental characteristics of ® real home are as applicable to a home today as at any time through all the change in social conditions of the generations of the past, he de- elared. “What responsibility shall we allocate to the school?” said the speaker. “First, the responsibility to set about making the school system a place of happy liv- fot the boys and girls who come within its sphere of influence.” T‘fl school mus ize that a pupil gothe ADVERTISEMEN On Street Cars For Forty Years In Washington Mr. M. J. Donovan, Who Has| Lived in City Sixty Years, Praises Millers’ Herb Extract.’ Forty years ago Mr. Donovan be- | gan driving horse cars in Washing- | ton, when they were replaced with cable cars, he continued as a motor- man; he saw the cables replaced with | the present up-to-date gystem and he was retired from active duty about four years ago. MR. M. J. DONOVAN. | Mr. Donovan now fesides at 30 N | | street southwest, he is known to peo- | | ple fgom all walks of life throughout | | the city and his statement regarding | this medicine should be of special | | Interest. to his many friends. He said | | my sister-in-law told my wife and I a medicine could do all she said this dne would do, still T had noticed lots |of other statements in the papers, 50 I sald to my wife, well, I will try | one bottle at least and see if it has any effect on my old ailments. I| | had & great deal of trouble with my | stomach, food would not digest prop- | | erly, bowels were out of order, I felt | | tired, sluggish and seemed to be in | a rundown condition; of late I had | | also been troubled with rheumatic | | pains in the shoulders, This medi- | cine seemed to just fit my case, and |as a general system cleanser and bullder it beats anything I have ever | used—regulates the bowels, wakes up | |a sluggish liver, eliminates the body | | poison and makes a person feel bet- | ter in every way; also relieved the pains in my shoulde me feel beiter in every way wife also uses Millers Herb Extrac and in her case it has also proven to be satisfactory in every way. I | never expected to give a statement | of this kind, but this is one medicine | worthy of any one’s praise and I | think it is only fair to it, to say to | others who may want to give it & trial that it is one medicine that has proven in every way to be just as recommended. | This great medicine is an herbal | preparation (formerly called Herb Juice) and is the largest selling medicine on the market—where it is known.. Owing to the great demand for Millers' Herb Extract in Wash- ington it was necessary to place two representatives here. These men are located at Store Neo. 2, 505 7th St. N.W., and Store No. 9, 31st and M Sts. (Georgetown), of Peoples Drug Stores; where fhey are explaining | | this medicine to the hundreds that call. the | {body will be cremated. ] out into life is confronted with a prob- | lem of making a choice, said the speaker “In order that the pupil may select wisely, the school must assume the re- sponsibllity of the making of an analysis of the capacities, the interests and the needs of the individual,” declared Dr. Kramer. “It must also assume the re- sponsibility of the direction of the pup!l to the thoughtful consideration of the opportunities open in the fiekd of human | endeavor.” | The best gift that can come td the school, said the speaker, Is a sympathetic and understanding pliblic. The under- taking of a guidance program by the school, he said, is well nigh an impos- sibility without the support of the peo- ple whom it serves. The co-operation of the home, sald Dr. Kramer, has even a deeper signifi--| cance than that of furnishing a support i for the program of the school. The home, he said, is the source of the at- titudes that belp or hinder the work of | the school. The standards of the child, | he said, are, in nearly all cases, thc standards of the home | 'RAYMOND HITCHCOCK | FUNERAL TOMORROW - v ! Why | | for Veteran Actor at Hollywood Chapéel—Widow's Father to Officiate. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, November 26— Funeral services for Raymond Hitch- | it was announced "today by the| Masquers’ Club, of which the actor was a member. Services will be under the direction of Sam, Hardy, president of | the actors’ organization. | Hitchcock, star-"of “Hitchy Koo," | “King Dodo,” “The Old Soak” and | other plays, died Sunday night after an_automobile drive with his wife. | The services will be read at 11 oclock at the Hollywood Cemetery | chapel by Dr. M. M. Mangarian, father of Hitchcock’s widow, after which the Mrs. Hiteh- cock, who is suffering a severe shock at her husband’s sudden death, will take the ashes to New York for burlal as soon as she has recovered suf- | ficiently. Active pallbearers will be Hardy, Richard Carle, Wallace Beery, Taylor Holmes, Robert Edeson, Ray Hubbel, Jacques Plerre and Jed Proudy—some of them friends of Hitchcock since he | made his debut on Broadway in the | gay nineties, and all of them members | of the film colony in Hollywood, which | ll:e jfii{nnd during the declining years of is life. A\_/ Name A reputation must be maintained by quality andmerit. Fortyyea: of success have m-c‘l’ew Grove’s Laxative ININE L largest selli; cold remedy: Try it tions are of Seventh St. cock, veteran comedian, will be held (& threatened_the success of his| tomorrow at the Hollywood Cemetery. | at an estimated cost of $10,000,000 b; the Maine Seaboard Paper Co. The company will be headed by Walter 8. Wyman, president of the Central Maine Power Co. and the New England Public Service Co.. and will be financed by interests affiliated with those companies. Four hundred thousand acres of tim- berland to aupJ:]y pulpwood for the plant are already purchased or under option in Eastern Maine. Construction on tidewater will per- mit the company to draw upon vessel shipments from sources all over the BIG NEWSPRINT PLANT CONSTRUCTION STARTS Mill in Maine to Have Capacity of 270 Tons a Day—$10,000,000 Is Cox By the Associated Press. BUCKSPORT, Me., November 26— Ground was broken here yesterday for a newsprint paper mill with a daily capacity of 270 tons, to be constructed Let Us Demonstrate Our radio department is managed by one of the best known radio experts in this city. Perfect radio Nervice guaranteed our customers. PIANO AND DE MOL FURNITURE CO. l 12th and G Sts. urface with warm water, using ¢ other cleanser. 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