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FIGOUS ETHES NINDUSTRY UREED Y REEN INTALK | |. F. of L. Leader Speaks at {Labor Sunday Services at Washington Cathedral. bISHOP FREEMAN SENDS ‘»'GREETING TO UNION MEN Thousands Attend Rites at Peace| i Cross—Program Broadcast on Country-Wide Network. ‘Wider application of religious princi- ples to human relations in industry Avas urged by William Green, president bt the American Federation of Labor, In an address yesterday afternoon at W/ashington Cathedral. Several thousand persons, including presentatives of national labor organi- tions, members of about 75 local nions and other residents of the Capi- al heard Mr. Green deliver the prin- ipal address at National Labor Sunday ervices held at the peace cross on the athedral grounds. The services took n a Nation-wide aspect through the proadcast by the Columbiz~Broadcast- ng Co. from Station WMAL. “This meeting,” sald Mr. Green, 'sponsored by Bishop Freeman and held ithin the shadow of this beautiful, his- bric cathedral, will be interpreted by boring men and women throughout e United States as mcre than a riendly and sympathetic gesture. It i1l be accepted as a definite expression the deep. and genuine interest which e Bishop of Washington and the embers if this great church organi- tion have in the moral, material and Dugtunl welfare of the masses of m ind.” Bishop Sends Welcome. JRight Rev. James E. Preeman, Bishop ‘Washington, absent from the Capi- but he welcomed Mr. Green and the resentatives of labor in a printed word distributed to -iliose in at- ndance, expressing the belief that “the hurch must more and more relate it- If intelligently and sympathetically to he large concerns of industry.” ‘The service was conducted by Rev. Pr. G. Freeland Peter, canon and cha: llor of Washington Cathedral. He as assisted by other members of the hedral staff. Special prayers for abor day were read and the choir of en and boys from several 'Episcopal urches rendered & variety of patriotic lymns, augmented by a brass octet. lembers of the diocesan clergy in their stments took part in a processional eceding the service. Urging that confidence, frankness, stico and fair dealing prevail in the jations which capital and Jabor hold, Green said that “if capital and r are to carry on a relentless in- strial class warfare then religion and pics have failed, the rule of righteous- in human relations has to rate and a sense of lnalv!du;l moral Jogen destroyed. Federation of Labor dfastly refuses to embrace such a osophy or to mccept such a pessi- tic theory,” he asserted. A balanced tionship must be established between forces of industry if equilibrium is be maintained and the cause of in- trial peace advanced, he said. Inequality Leads to Exploitation. "If the forces of industry are unequal strenth,” he explained, “exploitation the weaker force by the stronger one jmade possible. Balance and approxi- te equality of strength and influence jil serve to prevent wrongdoing.and imposition of injustice. Working bple must be able to speak collectively. ey must be able to deal efficlently jd" constructively with national, civic d industrial affairs affecting them, d, too, they must possess a medium ough which they may voice their ptests against oppression and in- tice.” “The American Federation of Labor ves this double purpose, and in this pect renders a great service to so- y. If we consider the question of man relations in industry from a frely materialistic point of view, the fiuence of religion and religious ethics pon the conduct and actions of those ociated with indvstrial enterprises ay be overlooked and ignored. ‘We_cannot, therefore, do justice to subject unless we adequately ap- aise the e of the influence of gious pflnd?les in the joint relation ip of employers and employes. In arching for definite evidence of the | fluence of religious principles and re- gious teachings in the conduct of ployers managers and workers in heir association together in industry e must consider achievement through onference and discussion rather than | e losses and gains which follow con- Pict and strife. Religion Found in Relations. “The essence of religion is found in very rule, regulation and standard dopted and applied through mutual {ment in the effectiveness of automo- | Traffic Bureau. | | Winners in the doll contest at the contest. Left to right: and Prout streets southeast, are shown above. ridge, Lahoma Twilley and Lois Twilley. Grace Prather, prettiest baby, 2 years old; Edward Downs, The Foening Star ' WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, TRADE COMMISSION, Orr School playground, Twenty-second Left to right: Mildred Brecken- Below are the winners in the baby P healthiest baby, 16 months old. MOTONIZED POLICE: START TOMORRO | 77 Changes in Personnel Or-| dered to Put-New System in Effect at No. 2. Complete motorization of the second precinct, the first step of an experi- | bile patrols for police work, will take | place tomorrow morning as the result lof months of careful planning by Police Commissioner Herbert B. Crosby, | Maj. Henry G. Pratt and Capt. Ogden | T. Davis, commanding officer of the | second precinct.. | Seventy-seven changes in the per- | sonnel of the force were ordered by Maj. Pratt today to further the plan for patrolling the streets of the sec- ond precinct by machines and to cen- tralize the motor cycle men of the de- partment into one unit under Inspec- tor Ernest W. Brown, commanding the Twenty-five motor cycle men, working in’ the precincts at present, will be transferred to the Traffic Bureau to- morrow morning, while 14 foot patrol- | men il be removed from the second | precinct and shifted to other commands to make room for the men assigned | to that station for duty in automobiles. | Plan May Be Extended. The idea of automobile patrols with | light roadsters was hit upon recently | by Commissioner Crosby and Maj. Pratt and will be spread to other parts of greement to human conduct and hu- man relations in industry. It is the in- kpiring influence which causes human eings to recognize and respect the com- on elemental rights of all, substituting eason for brute force and the confer- bnce room for the industrial battlefield. fihe policy of collective bargaining and age agreements, with the resultant uabilization of industry and the arbi- ation of industrial disputes, through he creation of arbitration tribunals by putual understanding, rests upon the asis of a high ethical standard and khe doctrine, teachings and precepts of eligion. “Because the men and women of la- por have gained much knowledge hrough years of bitter and cruel ex- erience they know that the interests f all connected with industry will be rved best through co-operation and nderstanding predicated upon a mu- ual respect of individual and collec- ive rights. For this reason labor con- tantly appeals to owners and manage- bnent to accept union management, co- peration, collective bargaining and ar- pitration as a substitute for autocracy, @paternalism and dictatorships. “The most prolific cause of industrial rife arises out of the distribution of e earnings of industry. Justice’ would equire that there be an equitable and lair distribution of the earnings of in- Hustry. Justice, frankness, truth and ir dealing should govern employers d employes in the establishment of age standards and in the d itlon i industrial earnings. The attitude of he individual worker toward the church d rel is influenced very largely by the personal and official conduct of ose who own and manage industry. “The average worker thinks little ut theology and religious dogma. He cannot draw the fine line of distinc- on between theological requirements nd abstract religious principles. He sks for practical, workable Christianity pon earth. If the church is to win the asses of the people, if an effective ap- 2al is to be made to their spiritual 2. we must seek and secure a wider plication of religious principles and of lékinn itself to human relations in ustry.” the city if the experiment proves suc- cessful in the second precinct. Eighteen new automobiles were pur- | chased for the department recently to| replace old cars and to provide the| force with a sufficient number of ma- chines for the new patrol work. i Fewer men will be used under the| new plan than have been assigned to| foot patrol duty in the second precinct, | but the drivers will be able to cover a great deal more territory than the| footmen. All foot beats will be abolished tomor- row and merged into much larger routes under the new method. No attempt to conceal the identity or purpose of the automobile men will be made. Maj. Pratt has ordered the machines painted a distinctive blue and the patrolmen will be attired in the regulation uniform of the department. Two Officers Shifted. ‘The order issued today by Maj. Pratt affects only two officers, Sergt. J. T. Langley of the harbor precinct and J. B. Holmes of the fifth precinct. Lang- ley has been ordered to the second pre- cinct, while Holmes will serve at the harbor precinct under his new assign- me.t. Among the motor cycle men to _be carried on the rolls of the Traffic Bu- reau in the future are Sergt. George M. Little, head of the police liquor squad; members of his unit, Pvts. T. O. Mont- gomery, George C. Deyoe and Arthur T. Joiner, who are now carried on the department roster as motor cycle men in the eleventh, fifth, tenth and eighth precincts, respectively. Their transfer to the Traffic Bureau will not affect their work, for they will continue to serve as a prohibition enforcement group, working in plain clothes. ) Quake Causes Panic in Lima. LIMA, Peru, September 1 (F)—A strong earth shock at 8:30 o'clock yes- terday morning added to the excitement caused by the recent change of govern- ment. ‘The tremor lasted sbout 15 seconds and many inhabitants fled to opea ELEVEN ARE HURT IN AUTO MISHAPS . T. J. Groom, Vice President of Mechanics’ Savings Bank, Injured as Car Hits Pole. Thomas J. Groom, 29 years old, vice president and cashier of the Washing- ton Mechanics Savings Bank, and a cousin, Charles Groom, 31, of Pitts- burgh, Pé., were injured early yester- day morning when their machine ran off the Rockville pike near Bethesda and crashed into a telephone pole. The bank official, who lives at 22 Girard street northeast, was removed to Georgetown University Hospital in a serious condition with a fractured skull and severe body bruises, while his cousin sustained lacerations of the legs and brush burns. He was treated at the Emergency Hospital. The accident occurred about 3 o'clock as the men were returning to Wash- ington after leaving two woman friends at their homes in Rockville, hospital officials were told. Nine other persons suffered injuries in a series of .traffic accidents which occurred in the District and nearby Maryland yesterday and last night. Minor cuts and bruises were received by Sylvester Cook, 10 years old, of 3605 Baker street, yesterday when an auto- mobile driven by Mellon O. Washburn, 22, of 1916 Sixteenth street felled him in’ the 1300 block of Belmont street. The boy was treated at Casualty Hos- pital and dismissed. Pedestrian Knocked Down. A charge of driving while drunk was lodged against Henry Tolson, colored, 19 years old, last night after an auto- mobile he was driving collided with two automobiles and knocked down a colored pedestrian on Four-and-a-half street southwest. Tolson told police he had no specific address. Two colored taxicab drivers overtook the youth and turned him over to Pa- trolman H.-H. Heflin of the fourth precinct after the car driven by Tolson sideswiped two other machines and bowled over Archie McKinney, colored, 47, of 209 Four-and-a-half street. Mc- Kinney was treated at the Emergency Hospital for a sprained ankle Maryland police were searching to- day for the driver of a hit-and-run ma- chine which struck the car of a Wash- ington woman and seriously ipjured a colored pedestrian before ending its mad dash down the Olney pike by overturning in a ditch last night. c The machine ran into the automobile of Miss Eva Morris of 705 Eighteenth street, backed off and continued on down the pik= at a rapid pace, striking Josh Selby, colored, about a mile from Olney Inn, and leaving the man lying in the roadway with a possible skull fracture and other serious injuries. Car Turns Over. The car turned over in a ditch a little farther down the road. Police ar- rested Emery Johnson, colored, who admitted being in the auto. Johnson, it is said, named James White; colored, . of Granite, Md., owner of the machine, as v?tlfi ‘::var. H. Reed, 6 years old, of Tuxedo, Md., and his 4-year-old broth- er, Clifton, suffered minor cuts last night when a car driven by their father, Howard C. Reed, 52, crashed headlong into another car operated by Thomas Washington, colored, of Landover, Md. The two children were given treatment at Casualty Hospital and discharged. ‘Two other children, Mildred Keller, 6, and Chester H. Keller, jr., 3, were injured under similar circumstances last night, & car operated by their father, Chester Keller, of 317 Aspen porary expedient. 10 GET NEW OFFICES INDOWNTOWN AREA Space in Washington Build- ing Provided—Bureaus Move to “Tempo.” MOST IMPORTANT FILES FOUND TO BE SAVED Firemen Injured in Saturday’s Blaze Are Recovering—Careless Smoker Believed to Blame. Plans for housing the Federal Trade | Commission in the Washington Butla- | ing, Fifteenth street and New York ave- | nue, went forward today as officials and | employes began salvaging files frnm‘ charred rooms and sidewalk storage plles following the fire Saturday after- noon in Temporary Building No. 4, at Twentieth and D streets. Meantime, the remaining furniture, | files and equipment of the Women's and Children’s Bureaus of the Department of Labor, which was sed also in the burned building, wefe being moved | across the street to Temporary Build- ing No. 5, on C street between Twen- tieth and Twenty-first, where they will be housed. These two units are even- tually to be located with the Depart- ment of Labor in a new home at the corner of Fourteenth and B streets, where, the plant of the Potomac Electric Power Co. now is located. Many Files Saved. Files and- furniture of the Fegeral Trade Commission wWere damaged by the fire to a large extent, but much of it was saved and piled on the sidewalk along Twenty-first street. The south- west corner of the building was but slightly damaged by the fire, and these files and furniture were being put back into the old building today as a tem- g i&}meh‘of them will mpora: BI;’llldlng‘NO, 5. o, o i lans for subdividing the Washington Bullding space were under way to'(ri?y. according to Otis Johnson, secretary of the Federal Trade Commission, who even found a workable telephone in his office. which was not disconnected by the fire. These plans will be turned over as soon as completed, and work will-start on subdividing the space in the Washington Building shortly, It will probably be two weeks, however, before the new quarters will be ready, Meantime all employes will report for duty tomorrow morning, and it is ex- pected, Mr. Johnson said, that the com- l’bn:::i?é'l I‘au}: {:ontlnue functioning as can emporary arrangements until it gets into its new plnc:.g Important Papers Saved: Only a few persons were on duty to- day salvaging the remains from the fire. The commission’s loss of files will not be as serious as was first expected, Mr, Johnson said, the most important files | being saved. Officials of all three of the burned-out Government, units were at the scene of the fire yesterday, the Department of %{;fi?:t;x;nxlleople m-:lngh good progress in up and checking uj materials, b e A big gang of workmen was busy today, moving the Department of Labor groups into their new location across the street. The cause of the fire, which broke out Saturday afternoon shortly after Government workers had left the build- ing at 1 o'clock for half holiday, has not been definitely fixed, but a cigarette or match carelessly tossed by seme de- parting employe is suspected. Rules strictly prohibited smoking in the tem- porary bulldings. Capt. Ray C. Montgomery, head of the Uniied States park police, chairman of the committee making an investiga- tion of the cause of the fire, said that facts so far uncovered had failed to point definitely to the cause. The elec- trical wiring had been carefully in- spected, however, he said, and he thought the blaze could not have start- ed from a short circuit in the electrical system. All of the injured firemen were im- proving and those taken to Emergency Hospital have left for their homes. It has been decided not to attempt 10 repair the old war-time building for reoccupancy, and it will be torn down ‘when all the Government records and equipment are removed. MRS. MAY N. BAKER, WIFE OF PASTOR, DIES Native of Wanyesboro Camg to Capital Year Ago—Leaves One Daughter. Mrs. May Newcomb Baker, 48 years old, wife of Rev. Harry P. Baker, pastor of Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church South, died Saturday at Georgetown Hospital after a week's illness. Mrs. Baker was & native of Waynes- boro, Va., and came to Washington last September when her husband was assigned to Calvary Church, residing at 3040 Q street. Besides her husband, Mrs. Baker is survived by a daughter, Miss Virginia Baker, who lives with her parents; her mother, Mrs. Virginia Newcomb of ‘Waynesboro, Va.: a brother, E. G. New- comb of Washington, and two sisters, Mrs. C. L. Harmon and Mrs, W. E. Newcomb. Funeral services will be held at Calvary Church Wednesday morning at 8:30 o'clock. Burial will be in Mount Jack: Va. street, striking a machine driven by John T. Fulcher of 1014 B street south- west near White Oak, Md. They were tre:'.ed by a private physician for slight cuts. Col. James S. Easby-Smith, prom- inent Washington lawyer and sports- man, and several occupants of his car narrowly escaped injury early yester- day when the machine ran off the Marlboro pike near, the Strawberry Hill curve, jumped a- 5-foot culvert and came to regt in a cornfleld. The car was wrecked. A punctured: tire caused the mishap. g Mrs. Winifred Blakeney, 47 years old, of the Maryland Courts, Ninth street and Maryland avenue northeast, suf- fered possible head injuries, bruises ana shock yesterday afternoon when felled by a hit-and-run taxicab, which drove past a red light at Florida avenue and hEcklnm‘n place northeast, and struck er. Police rushed the woman to Freed- man’s Hospital for treatmient, and then started a search for the driver, which resulted: in the arrest of Arthur W. Eagle, 30 years old, of No. 1 P street. Eagle, who. was booked at the second B b Tt e n om ngon.ly before. the aocident.-. The Evening Star’s float, representing the elaborate rural delivery thousands of residents of Virginia and Maryland on the sa me afternoon that it is printed. 1930. - SCORE OF EMPLOYES ARE RETIRED AT WAR DEPARTMENT Veterans in Service Are Re- lieved Under Provisions of Act of Congress. ALL EXCEED AGE LIMIT FIXED BY LEGISLATION Majority of Those in Dropped List ‘Were Taken From Among Field Workers, Despite the efforts of their official superiors, including Secretary Hurley, for their retention on active duty, in the interest of good administration, more than a score of veteran employes of sthe War Department, mostly in the field service outside of this city, have who came in from the farm at Blue Plains to “march” in the | been transferred to the Civil Service system which brings The Star to the homes of —Star Staff Photos. CAPITALNEW YORK AIRLINE LAUNCHED Curtis Sends First Plane Away to Open Hourly Schedule. At 10 o'clock this morning Vice Presi- dent Charles Curtis gave the signal which sent zooming into the air a big tri-motored transport plane bound for Philadelphia and New York. inaugurat- ing hourly plane service between the Capital and New York. The first regular plane of the line left at 8 o'clock this morning, carrying a group of 10 West Point cadets going back to school after a holiday. Planes Arrive Throughout Day. Throughout the day the big 10-pas- senger planes were arriving and depart- ing at Washington Alrport, the south- ern terminus of the new line, which will continue operation every day, with 10 departures from the Capital during each day. The “inauguration” plane, which left at 10 o'clock this morning and officially opened the service, carried aboard it Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet, chief of the Army Air Corps; Clarence M. Young, Assistant Secretary of Com- merce for Aviation; Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, former Assistant Attorney General: C. Francis Jenkins, inventor of television, and newspaper men. A second guest plane, carrying offi- cials of local trade bodies and more newspaper men, left at 11 o'clock. Both guest planes will return to the Capital this afternoon after the visitors on the line have been given luncheon at New York. New York notables and representatives of Gotham’s civic and business organi- zations came to Washington in two plarie loads, the first arriving here at 11:30 and the second at 12:30. Philadelphia guests arrived over the line at 12:30 and 1:30. Ambitious Attempt. ‘The departure of the first plane this morning st 8°o'clock started one of Edwin C. Bartlett Has Record of Unusual Service. Supervised Examination of 76,342 in Civil Service in Five Years. A veteran of 45 years of public serv- 'lcv, Edwin C. Bartlest, an employe of | the Washington City Post Office, has been placed upon the retired list. During his long career, Mr. Bartlett served in various capacities, including those of foreman, assistant superin- tendent and special clerk. Since May, 1925, he has been in charge of holding assembled civil service examinations in ‘Washington, for which work he was de- tailed to the force of the United States Civil Service Commission. During the past five years Mr. Bart- lett. has supervised the examination of 76,342 competitors in 3,788 local exami- nations. These examinations cover & wide range and include those held for the Census Bureau, in which thousands comgzem:d. and special competitions such as t for the foreign service and for the most ambitious aviation passenger lines in the history of aviation in this country, with the line, receiving the co- operation of the Pennsylvania Railroad, paralleling for considerable distance the tracks of that railroad and competing with it for passenger traffic on some- what similar schedule. The line brings the Capital within 1 hour and 50 minutes of Newark Afr- port, the northern terminus of the line It i the present plan of the airlinc officials to transfer passengers by bus to ::hle Pennsylvanfa Terminal in New York ty. . The line's planes connect, four times a day with the Colonial Air Transport Co.'s {lua going on to Boston from Newark Atrport. POSTAL EMPLOYE 45 YEARS IS PLACED ON RETIRED LIST EDWIN C. BARTLETT. entrance to the United States Military and Na Mr. 1 Academies. for Washington. rtlett’s first work with the civil Service Commission dates back to 1918, when he was designated a member of the board of civil service examiners DR. DILLARD SPEAKS 83 Graduates Receive Diplomas at Williamsburg 'Exercises. ‘WILLIAMSBURG, Va., September 1. —Dr. James Hardy Dillard, rector of visitors of William Mary College, was the speaker at the nineteenth Summer School finals, when 83 graduates received their diplomas the board of and retired list, in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress of July 3, 1926, and its amendments at the latest session of Congress. All of these employes are beyond the age of 74 years, and each has had at least two 2-year extensions, and, in several cases, more than that number. ‘Ware Oldest Man on List. Heading the list in the matter of hsge is James Ware, who has been su- perintendent of construction and repair work at Forts Monroe and Wool, at the entrance of Chesapeake Bay, for the past 57 years. Born in Philadelphia 91 years ago, he began his service for the Government in the Army Ordnance Department in 1861, and remained in {hat department until his transfer to his present post in 1873. So far as the records show, he is the oldest employe in the active service of the Government and, despite his great age, is reported to be in good physical and mental con- dition. In the War Department proper the list of veteran employes just transferred to the retired list includes Jacob Frech, former chief clerk of the adjutant gen- eral’s office, 87 years of age and a record of 69 years' continuous service in the War Department; William B. Blackiston, also of the adjutant general's office, aged 77; James H. Bessling, surgeon general's office, aged 75, with 57 years service; Edward M. Douglas, office of Chief of Engineers, aged 75; Samuel Bryant, Surgeon General's Office, aged 75, and William Haller and George S. Britt of the Adjutant General's Office, each in his 74th year. The associates of Mr. Frech bade him an official farewell Sat- urday and presented him with a gold watch and chain, in_ accepting which the old veteran remarked that it would be the first watch he ever had carried. Two Retired From State Department. The civil service retirement law af- fected cnly two employes of the State Department, Henry Lewis Bryan, editor of the Laws (a special office), and John Stephen Martin, - principal translator, each of whom has re; long and important service to the Government. Mr. Bryan is a native of this city and has served successively in the Army, in the War Department, in the Senate and in the State Department since. 1871, and has been vice president of the Assocla- tion of Oldest Inhabitants of the Dis- trict of Columbia for several years. His associates at the State Department gave him a farewell réception Saturday and presented him with an onyx desk foun- tain pen set and a large basket of flow- ers. Mr. Martin modestly declined any action on the part of his associates in the department and his wishes were respected with regret on their part. He was born in Philadelphia July 23, 1855, and was graduated at the University of France in 1873. He served as United States consul at Marseille for 11 years and began his special services at the State Department in August, 1891, and has been its principal translator for ENGRAVING EMPLOYE EXPIRES SUDDENLY Thomas Francis Roche, 69, Was Chief of Wetting Division of Bureau. Thomas Francis Roche, 69 years old, chief of the wetting division of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and a Washington resident for nearly half & century, died suddenly at his home, 628 Randolph street, yesterday afternoon. Death was attributed to a cerebral hemorrhage. I Although Mr. Roche had reached re- tirement age, he had been requested to remain in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and l;ssithlan Immm:ith .flo had ed a physical examination for his eg:esl!’lskm. At that time physicians commented on his fine physical con- dition. Mr. Roche returned Friday from an extended vacation tour through Canada and appeared in excellent health. Mr. Rocl 3 he was born in New York City and educated at Cooper Institute, where he took a leading part in ath- letics. He came to Washington 47 years ago and had been continuously employed at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. He was a past president of the National Union Assurance As- sociation and was an active worker in St. Gabriel's Catholic Church. Mr. Roche is survived by.his widow, Mrs. Catherine Regina Roche; two daughters, Mrs. Edward L. Miffiin and Mrs. Warren W. Rice of this city, a Raymond T. Roche of Clarks- burg, W. Va. Funeral services will be held at his residence Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. Burial will follow in Rock Creek Cemetery, VACCINATION REQUIRED OF MARSHALL CHILDREN Special Dispatch to The Star. MARSHALL, Va, September 1.— County School Supt. W. H. Thomas has announced that all school children who have never been vaccinated, whether beginners or otherwise, must ‘be vac- cinnated before enrolling for the com- ing school term, which begins on ‘Thursday, September 11. Teachers for from President J. A. C. Chandler.|the entire county are being instructed Speaking to the many school teachers |not to enroll any pupils who have not among the student body, Dr. Dillard | complied with this ruling. emphasized the need of accuracy in the work to be required of pupils. He de- necessary. fended examinations The Teachers’ Institute for the County will be held in the high school auditorium at Warrenton beginning at “There is something more important |10 o'clock Thursday morning, Septem- for pupils than the knowl E& in achool,” he sald, power and ‘habit of ledge they “and thaf thinking.” will * ber 11. b 18 At this time instructions for the year will supplies be