Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 24, 1910, Page 7

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forests, coal mines, iron mines,nat- » belmtn‘ &i:spha.w ls.nds—a.lt i3 wn upon at a ter- e. From time immemorial it’ _the custom to let him that = T vhat he will with his own; . it, exploit it, wreck it, obliterate it.| @t this point. i as . as ’ - _LIPPITT, May R e e s e ok INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION. Kinds of Industrial Schools. Ali This Week Al This Week e n 4% - etz g 2 nee ) b o ke v for the wnsa::tllgnn e or | Magnetic Address by Prof. J. C. Mona- f :ufim::?fimlwru . -c‘l::fll e | e et REFORMS, READY-MADE Sources; theé passage of laws govern- ghan of New York, Who Inspired ‘and | schools for boys who are to be black- . o B L water powers, and the establish- His Hearers. smiths, butchers. bakers and candie- ; AND REAL. | ment of an international propaganda| - —_ wtio L anally stick mhakers. ‘There are schools for o, e ... | against waste. » S:'atlng rxm ;in ;:. n!m&‘g hu‘s: b every Hndhat work. m“;tm Sl .- “Con iver g courtesy o ts o mbus one who learns to live | never touches a hoot ¢ MR T i | W "Gt Mewre | ST "R Sanea Bt et iares, hicnald e | T e hae seen e g o revaie | Clearamee Sale 9 ; Preblem of statesmamabip is o con- | [ on £ the next T, o lift up gthers while it | that hoo?. -For the boy whe is | » — gave his great pleasure to present e livers of it happy. jorseshoer there .the whic! —NOW IN PROGRESS HERE, IS Hon. George B. Chandler was pre- | SSIVe and regulate; not to hamper| pror J . Monaghan, princ of sentad at this point and was recerved | and destroy. The art of legislation is the Stuyvesant Trade senool of New | . Cost A iy 7, ] ONE OF THE GREAT EVENTS OF with much a use, President Trac . ‘ork city, who so electrified his hear- e spent $400,000,000 last year on 3 . P e oo g gt % e histee hobble and flay. We continuously hear | ers and thoroughly inspired them with | education, more than the wonderful THE SEASON. DURING THIS SALE man. - ) @ word ‘“conservative” falling from| his enthusiasm and command of the | German empire spent on her army. WE MAKE REMARKABLE LITTLE was ..,n..."udn" from Rocky Hill to | Solemn lips with grave pomposit situation regard the subject, that|navy and schools combined. Besides the history of t! PRICES ON ALL CLASSES OF WIN- the Inst state legislature, congratulat. | OB OF the best-abused and most Sig- | they listened to his magnificent ad- [that huge sum, our rich men added | the time it was a five toed animal down ed the en his Fobust optim. | Pifcant words in the language. YOUr| gress for an hour and a quarter, and | $152,000,000 more, most of it for edu- |to our day. Before the boy enters a| TER MERCHANDISE — PRICES ism spoke In favor of the Nor- | [TU€ conservator has a sense of DET-|at his suggestion of stopping there | cational purposes; for even the hospi- | shoeing shop he is trained, and well | oy ar MEAN SURE AND SUBSTAN- wich-Hartfosd electric line, In his | SPective and the historical imagina- | were cries for more. It was a great |tals fgr rescarch work are in reality | trained. What is true of tis lne of | LWVR Ll (R0 = 0 Bl R D eddress he spoke as follows: tion. &e has a reverence for estab-| treat and he received the enthusias- |schools. I have heard it said that we | life is true of all other lines. The [ ‘After acknowledging his good fortune | LiShed institutions, a glory in the past. | tic and long-continued appiause of the | pay $158 a year apiece for boys and | plumber has his school, as has the| ADVANTAGE OF THIS SALE. a knowledge of the present, and a| entire body. everyone remaining | girls in college, $57 for high school | carder, spinner and weaver. The re- vision of the future. What he has in- | through, though it was 1.15 when he | pudils and $27 for the grade children. | sults of all this have been written into COME TODAY herited, he would transmit. But he | cjosed his addréss. His was a rapid- | This huge sum, if properly laid thée empire’s record in, years so recent would transmit a living organism, not | fire gelivery which he maintained with | should lead to the.largest possible re- | that the monthg of the last are with @ squeaking automaton. His idea of | seemingly no effort and showed his |suits. Bismarck was wont to say: |us at this moment. 4 conservation is growth; the Drogres-| geep and sincere interest in his sub- | “Wer die Schule hat die Zukunft"— | As I go up and down the country sive adjustment of laws to changing| ject, to which he has given years of | “The nation that has the schools has |listen to men lauding the wonderful uluINERY conditions; the creation of new ad- | study and work, as was manifested by | the futurc.” 1 take exception to that| work of the republic. “Look,” say they, ministrative devices for new needs.|his words. - claim. I say that the nation that has | “at the work of our e.”” The Ger- He is not subject to th In his speech, Prof. J. C. Monaghan | the Is, pius the raw materials of | mans can't show anything to compate words. The phrase 2 began by saving, “I always tell an old | in should—1 do not say shall— | with it. This is silly, senseless,thought- ANOTHER DEEP PRICE CUT Beginning today ‘'we offer gressive,” “Bqurbon, A story whenever I get hold of a new 5 | less. Not what we are without the a cholce of our entire & andience, and this one is appropriate. schools should be the question, but stock of Women's High I look about me,” said the speaker, "I The teacher of the arithmetic class what we would be with thém; not Wmt Grade Dress Hats, imelud- & keen syn:pathy with the said to Johnny, ‘Now, Johnny, .nvrou Germany 'is or is not with them, bu ing Paris Hats, Gage Hats t of view of the minister’s son who o tnth:r owed one hundred ol lul-l ;vhat :hf- \\"0111.6IL thmz ‘;’:’e‘ ';:2,,‘,‘"‘&“,; and_our own Model ‘Hats an romise: - - ¥ venture to 4 wag something of @ judge of the values : pro d to pay twenty-fige do SACIA WOTRa o Curs Th e far Jarger: [ ;I'“?‘ “uu "?'.'"s'o.r b rproid of hands in draw poker. He had hid- : lars every three months, ho uch den a deck of cards in his father’s Sun- .| would he still owe at the en % ~the ‘la.lur sense than it nppnred“t'? Edfi alone #re worth several year? = ‘One hundred dollars’ said | ;rarg. Daates in Monts GO o times what we ask for the Jobnny. ‘Sit down, sald the teacher. | that 3 have urgsd here in betalf of the Hats all trimmed. ‘You are a -stupid boy and don't know ;;;rse:l}ml-r( eu: blacksmith hol ‘or al v " \d . | € S0 3 }?}?":‘ny’ o“I". d{)”‘l'(:';w xg;l' la{:n;‘:l‘: ! And that it all pays is proven by the trowble is"you don't know pa.’ ? lines: “Boys who o to work as com- ® “Don’t worry. moth- “If anybody has been making any h mon laborers advance from 310 a week | B fhhoNS Ribbons er. It the governor can’t win with thac : promises about a lecture, let me teil ; | when 22 to $10.10 when 31 = Boys who hand, he'd better get out of the game.” you that I am not going to lecture at sérve. ai ~'l‘§2"-'m “;’“0 w‘;‘“g;‘,,, Bovs | All This Week—we offer a Manufac- Mr. Chandler had an idea Norwich held all, but 1 am going to talk on Indus- :L-’::‘;‘;\{M“l B g s Bcan | turer's ‘Btook. of Ribbene at Drisithird a ‘hand in its board of trade. > trial Education, Industrial Art, and, let Lo E s 4 “ Yn‘%lohfilub}ac&, Mr. Chand me also add, Technicai Kducation I $17 to 325, while boys trained In the | Less than usual prices. This offering - > technical schools go up from $13 to| JJ 0 oo Plain and Moire Ribbons as 3 hope to differentiate in the very be- y 4 an who is en d _in th inning. 4 | $42 and become the great industrial 2 vruce-p:s :r le ‘sfflio{:“o(tel; e Manual Training. i capdains. These figures are from those | well as Fancy designs in every width + of Mr. Dodge, for many yeans presi- | and in every fashionable coloring. eels Lhat he would like to organize an- I wish you to differentiate between rty to reform the reformers. what constitutes Technital Education, fire both in the front and rear. , Industrial Education. or Industrial one hand are the reactionaries 5 Art, and what is known as manual training. Manual training has become such a part of our educational sys- | dent of the Society of American Engi- neers, a mun who has devoted a lot of SEE DISPLAY IN LARGE time to the careful study of this and EASTERLY WINDOW. other kinds of education | Our Resources. tem that we could hardly dispose of < B be- - ists, who want too much done. One; it better tha s - - 3 < | I said that the future ought to i g an we hawg already done. PROF. J, C. MONAGHAN, . the schools - Semapiays inio the bandl oc the| ON. GmoRGE 5. CHANDLER | 1t ANSLER 1 Guit e i o-chiied tone’te wne mation et har The whos| Women's Wear Thanstip 15 an expert application of the | ary,” meither fascinate nor dismay | CUltural studies, but the unfortunate |that will depend upog the people them- | Jgl ey, Except China, ours is the pp] e »” mei a | feature is that it is misunderstood. | selves—should have the future. Who o\ i 1nd on earth. It is or was our| $1.00 | Women's White Lawn Wi Whe o g e A e s oAn e fast | Manual training is an essential ele- |has the schools? Germany and Japan. | TEUEE 300 00 N4 5o “heeded by | vaiue | of sheer lawn and new -“Blue Print” of Millennium. served by change he changes; if by | €At of what we call our cultural|Who has the raw materials? This re- | ) "\orid, that made possible our phe- | $1.50 | signs in embroidery, m. The mam -with a blue print of the| apposition, he opposes. studfes. It is often confounded with | public and China, But it will be many |, 0\ cpna| wealth production. If, in | button front end back, with millennium Is always sure of an audis| L@ oo 1 OPPOses what we call industrial training. Ev-|a long day before China will be able | 0, hrigon with others, we lead in the long sleeves, all prettily ence, but the one who preaches the el- President Hadley’s Dictum. ery boy and girl going through gram- |to effectively use her resources. The | o5 tion of weallh it is because of tucked. emental of thrift, honesty and| Your true conservator is often called | Mar, or high or other schools, is ex- |kalser says: “A “woman's educatlon | .oy forests and farms. For ex- hard work often talks to empty bench- | a “radical” Ly those who fzil to unde pected to get more or less of it.|should concern itself with the church. | ., 1o “Bngland piling wealth for 2,000 Women's White Lawn Waista fs never going to be any | stand the machinery with which he is | Whether it is right or wrong. I am |the kitenen gnd the children’’ 1 am | yeqrs has only 55 billion, while we have made button front and back magical process for making men good| working. When men behold him fash- | BOt here to discuss. But, if you want X o o M il 130; France has only 50, Germany 45, with long sleeves, ail tucked o - o to. these spheres. hence have higher | g, ' i, 55 Austria, including Hungary —fronts are of fine hamburg You and I all know that de- | ionin, v rice, high 1 my opinion, I think it is good, I do 3 fellow -with a ready-made or coip:r::lgn dlex\vxvcecu:lrllfin S ‘p\;;tr iféf not look upon it as a fad, ‘but as one | opes and purposes in regard to her | .G pohemia, only 30; Italy 18 or 20, embroidery with tueking, for socializing humanity—for { on their lips the cries of “government | 9f those helpful parts of cultural "d"s'fr‘,“f';;mSfl" there is much in the | gpgin 15 Of the world’s products in backs are cluster tueks. > 19000 we produced 22 of wheat, 20 of 2 ? ?, .4, 32 rf coal, 83 of silver, 34 of man- Fhe He. o tha e podt the Mia- THb s B 0 o8 o ron 36 OF cakils, 38 of up,” as he calls it, He| b~ commission” and “individual lip- | Study that is good in every way. Time mnfo?mfor an even- | erty,” and urge upon them to beat the ;'z;::ro‘"}“:“go“:;;:::l 2 1{:‘“};‘; cn'-";““l‘f{ open grate with & mild Ha- | tom-to n o I the ancieni w raining and tha : s enthuslam Is & tonic and his | teampery of phiage-worshiy ordinarily | 18 One reason from the boy from the | T am still for the three Re. T hope | SASMERS, ™ S0 gioi, "5 o copper, 75 optimism altogether exhilarat- | invoked to exorcise political demons. | COURtry is the best worker in the |10 See them put back where they Used | of cotton and 84 per cent. of corn. This ehow or other I have al- | Happy is your bullder, if he possesses | World.” He has learned to work not |0 be. T Jong to seo the boys and £I1I8 | year (1910, uniess I am much mistaken, an even temper and a saving sense of | #lone with his head. but with his | WrIte and read and do writhmetic The census will show that we are turn- ter than they do them today. Of course | i, ;¢ half the world's ireon, half its cky ive any money to deposit,| humor, and doubly fortunate may he | hands. If he worked in the furrow, i search out some unimaginative old | be if at the timely moment there rings | things stuck, or did not go right, he | It I8 not easy to eliminate the three | iZ.I'and half of its coal. T wish I Iad belleves in established | out some strong voice of authority to | Bad to work and pull and haul until| = Bvery one must learn to read &id | fime to tell you how wantonly, almost stands for the existing| proclaim an elemental truth. Presi- | he could make it go right. Work on [ Write 2nd veckon. 5 would 8¢ savagely, we have wasted our minerals, gS. dent Hadley. in his notable address | the farm in the old days, the spinning | three > o Sairem, o2 | particularly coal, our woods, and worst o _seatemen, things are never go-| before the New Haven chamber of | 3nd weaving and househeld work of B, A A O e s | of all, because most valuable, our sofl. ing be up’” for us jn this | conmmerce, on the occasion of Presi- | the Women, the work in the barn and Bebalis St T Teoeld a0t What to Do. Women’s Flannelette Kim- onas and Dressing Sacquew in a full line of colors. Women's Outing Flannel | Night Gowns in pure white | and in cream grounds with pink and white stripes. ‘Women's Black Cotton Taf- feta Petticoats — four styles to choose from—plain tafl- ored, with shirring, with deep flounces—all /with dust world—nor in any other, for that mat- | dent Taft's latest visit th , { in _the orchard, developed the head 2 : ter—until we even ourselves up, Now | poimted out thet under modern conat, | and the hands side by side. s i iy e T ,.',’,': \To muke the most of these marvelous ruffies. legislative devices are a good | tions there are two classes of public | The United Btates an Industrial Na- | whole boy and he whole il T avould | B o e ons e e Lo B O e to e promoters’ schem problems. One of these classes com- i 4 o " cact chat | Hive: $0 intensive, from unacien - dividends are too prises those problems which can be ion. never forget or neglect the fact that | scjentific' methods of manipulation and Human mcm i» a slow growth. The | settied intelligently by public senti- | o “(:uliwe ‘!i)ecoma oo la.rsel&; an in- m:;l;:’:figlx:n‘; rg;r‘:l‘l‘.i:ogfi:;‘phmcsl. pmdaucbtlo:;e ’ Where ourt!a;m;t'fl:m 12 0 A l S l bu! slowly, t! ad % i s and commerc! people. We - to 13 bushels per ace of whe Y ex- 1y: like the myriads of | ment and large legislative bodies. As | SToHC R, Ao O P e Tne The Law of Lifp. tensive or unsclentfic farming, we ur Annua aie i i insects, on the accumulated | on example of this class he would cite could easily get 30, 40 or 50 bushels per the past. To reform i3 t t, T rHaths co | to the big cities. Many states are| Tife's law was uttered a long time readjust, mot to wrench | thouie o The Botiacine ameipes | now industrial and commercial that |ago. Tt funs: . oIn the sweat of thy | acre by intensive or scientific farming. of Kitchenware or tear down. Any iconoclast | ago: or, to come to state issues, we | [°F & 1ong time were agricultural. In- | hrow shalt thou earn thy bread.” In-| What is true of the farms is just as mlgixt include in this class the q'u”_ dustrial education, industrial art, or|gstead of being a curse, that law is, or | true of the mines and the forests. We | IT WILL CONTINUE ALL THIsS & ecraft. i i v: i - | w V' st make haste to learn emiding ‘the Somae arhily | tion, of whether or mot our Sunday | ISCHUGH! SREE FNS Sunct (oW | was a blemsing Last vear, as 1 s | he iargest and best lessons of lifys| WEEK: THIS I8 A GREAT.CHANCE in it class, he said, comprises those prob- | Make it plain, the largest part of what | hapd row Lincoin had to hoe, I laugh- | work. We want to manufacture the FOR HOUSEKEEPERS, HOTEL B R Sl s vy Jituse b Xfaf‘;hmg:p‘:fi;lm?mn:;l mdu:: :go 1 hed to. One man told 2.000 boys (Continued on page eight.) MEN, BOARDING HOUSES AND 2 s A Ll Sevy Bav ek hee sgented RESTAURANTS. NEVER BEFORE HAVE WE BEEN ABLE TO OFFER No reform is going to be of much | th» ~ase cannot be settled, if settled in That i £ . = value which does bas ari, except b atient investiga- | i08- s, you cannet give indus- | Lincoln's life—the largest life ever - Bot Siave its Dasis in | SrEht A > ¢ export | trial training or industrial art train- | lived in this land. Why, the thing that FR E E SUCH EXTRAORDINARY VALUES. THREE : come Christianized; after they had be- | clude such questions as the rate to | 3o, " Fo¥ Lo lre Seermar S eall Ge mas' - -| One of th ith which this e el Weud not | b e e e rornienos oy | werbo Schulen, ‘the Industriat wthool:| wonderful cowmrs. ods. countey, Is LY n tion and the application ‘of expert e SRGRNANE. A 4rmy is RO batter, Of this class he would wite | Ing without manual training. Hence, | made Lincoln was bard work. Hard Prohfbition aways ends in | and the equipment to be furnished by | 5 g nst Gewerbe, or the Industrial |theeatened ia the doctiine too often’ in. P l L E 29C 39C 49(: | nor no worse, than the units of which | knowledge. A I hope there will not be any confus- - the problems of national currency; or, work never hindered any man’'s prog » . ; O% lion in this comnection. I think our)ress. It is all wrong this crying down to come to state issues, we might in- | ¢ - e e i P X g this crying srespect blic. service tions. -d’-uuwmmwi-::l e:d:nmx: oulpu:; SR SR Art school. dulged In that to work at a trade is certain temperate ideals. International The Commission ldea. Vocational Schools. disgraceful. Our greatest and best erbitration can never be put into uni- Hence the growth of the institution The erying need of the kind of edu- |™en were workers. It has come to versal application until the units of the | KROWn as the commission—the inter- | .ation beinz advocated is as old as |Pass that merchants and manufactur- nations heve been educated into a cor- | State commerce commission. the rail- | pigtory. It was concreted in the cry | €S prefer boys from the grades to GLOVES GLOVES responding sense of brotherhood. The | road commissions and the innumerable | o¢ Dr. Eliot of Harvard in a now cel- T boys—from the high|Sent to Demonstrate the Merits of ‘supreme achievement of the mo-called | Other boards and bodies created for| eprated but often misunderstood and k.~ Why, the high school .boy P Pile Ci 79c | Women's Gloves — compris “Rooeevelt jolicies” has not been the | the purpose of affording efficiency and { misquoted address. All saw what he |Wauts what is called a white shirt job. yramid Pile Cure. valus | prising 2-clasp Kid - Gloves epecific measure enacted or statutes en- | Permanency of administration. This | saw but no one as high up as he was | He 18 unwilling to do any work that $1.00 | in black and all the wanted forced, but a quickening of the moral | device has been a growth, not a cre- | naq’ the courage to call out. Peter | Will dirty his fingers. He is unwilling colorings — 1-clasp Chamois sense of the mass of American citizens | ation. It has developed from the ne- | cooper saw the need in his day, hence |t pull off coat, collar and cuffs. Why ? What it Has Done For Others, It Can | Gloves In & broken assort- —ich poor alike. The final | cessity. The old methods of direct| the Cooper institute. Charles Pratt |Decause society is silly enough to look Do For You. ment of eizes—regular $1.00 Gloves at 79c a palr, sources of all reforms are to be found | Supervision Dy legislative bodies | gaw how helpful such education might | @0Wn on boys and girls who earn their | . yave testimonials by the hun- in the chureh, the home and the school, | breaks down under the complicated | po made. Hence the Pratt institute. 2 g dreds showing all stages xihds and de. The “Obverse Side of Shield.” conditions of modern industry. The | Others equally interested and interest- nousemaid, familiar with the | oo g or [iles which have been cured : ’ - - = state has been compelled to do what family seorets, who is nearly nurse to i Mr. Chandler then turned to what h. - ing, thought not so well known, lent by Pyramid Pile Cure. / p 2 o e | the great industrial corporations have | their namies and gave thelr money to | tthe children, who is almost as a child | > "YERM C TAle LQFS o n onicicea L S AR of ghe shield” | done—establish permanent boards of | ihq great cause. Robert Fulton Cut- | Of the family, is treated with contempt | 1oty you would no doubt go to the HoleRY flnleRY e it g experts, exercising certain delegated | ting is busily engaged in building In- | Y mistresses who should have been | "020% YO8 FFOUT M2 COUT €D 0 o -4 = powers. and making reports at stated | t5 jarger proportions the Manhattan | S€TVants, and who, but for a fortunate | po,omig pile Cure at once, price fifty But the great trouble with the kind | periods. A great railroad system does | trade school for boys. In Philadelphia | (tUrn of the wheel of Fate in _their | (J0¥ a » w n’s Sample Hosiery Ifz‘vfl: v .fi{“ ts e":l‘v;:":d:n:‘“ga not call a biennial mass meeting of | Theodore C. Search, for many years | ‘ather's lot. would have been servants | "'y’ g5 not ask you to do this. Send ome| “and often 'TOW“’«{ !t'“leadl i ’tths !tocl;};t;ld;xrs am} turn ‘;‘?:’ to them | prasident of the manufacturers’ asso- or—sh?pgxrls. & us your name and address and we will THREE LOTS AS FOLLOWS : reassertion of the old, exploded doc- | tien o oAl PE Dl O e neP®ia” | clation of the state, started what is Will Industrial Education Pay. send you a sample by mail free. ¥ ' trind -of Intsdbr Baira=ine’ Gootene of tont an b ;t t??fghhs = d;- now the greatest textile school in the ‘Will the kind of education I com- We know what the trial package(yos g At 17a ir, 3 lor 50¢ economics that belleves in letting | Donimoniey 1o motninstiution of the | United States .aided by Mr. Miller | mend pay? It has pald in all parts of | will do. In many cases it has cured pair, things alone. If we do, they Will £0 | than an imitation by the state of the | 27d Mr. Lernt. In a few years they | the world. It is behind the phenom- |piles without further treatment. If it|women's Black Hoslery, full fashioned wrong. m:t";m%: ;‘"“ ing ‘“"‘m; 515}“3 of the | were doing so well that they found |enal success of Germany and Japan. I|proves its value to you order more | _Embroidered and plain color Hosiery Age of Industrial Reveluti o C(;?l y ’.l?erqv o_\hm by Pri- | the wealth and brains of Philadelphia | am ready to put down 75 if not 85 per | from your druggist, at 50¢c a box. This |, great variety—regular Zic Hoslery utton., vate C‘I,‘;:Wa ons. is, then, is the | yehing them ready to respond to ev- | cent. of Germany’s success financially, | is fair, is it not ? Simply fill out free| .t s D 3 fi,,“,—,(“,‘, The western world is nogr passing | descending monster of “government| cny appeal. And yet, when Search | industrially and commercially to her |coupon below and mail today. No knife temsugh what is destined to be known | bY imn}mrl!sion h—t;\e mm;em Grendel | ,)ached the subject he was told to | industrial, industrial-art and technical] |and its torture; no doctor and his bills. Lot 2-—At 29c a paix historically as the “great industrial gh ch infests tt% g S ;}eprfe"tfl- zet $50,000, before opening the doors.|schools.. Had I time I believe I could ‘i Tevolafion. The miind is bewi]dered | tive 80";3"“:':“ -l‘", Stur Slt e vir- | He got $35,000, which the committee | prove that her masterly movements FREE PACKAGE COUPON Women's Fine Imported Hogieny In \ and the imagination daszzled by the |tuous slum oo ox innumerable “w refused to accept. He then went at | and successes in war were based upon black and a splendid showing of Bm :n:‘es in methode of production and | OWs and orphans. it in his own way without any money | her marvelous educationair system. -In (§ Fill out the blank lines below with §| projdered Hosiery — regular 56¢c Hos neportation which have come about S in ‘Conclusion. to accept. His success in the north | 1876 she (Germany) came to at Phila- |} your name and address, cut out lliery at 29c a pair. within the lifetime of some of the men Tn conclusion, Mr. Chandler pleaded | 18 second only to Booker T. Washing- | delphia. When the fair was over her |} coupon and mail to the PYRAMID gitting about the tables. Great com-| IR conefusion B, Brandier vieaded | ton's success in the south. Born in | representaiive, Roulsaux, upon his re- || DRUG COMPANY, 241 Pyramid || Lot 3—At 69¢ a pair binations of capital, great combina- atic aetmeinle Cof oraagnd malvidu- | siavery, his breakfast cornmeal mush | turn to Berlin reported as the result of || Bldg., Marshall, Micn. A sam- . x tions of llgor mammoth railroad sys- | 2listic_principle of private ownership | 05500 00 nenls of molasses, Wash- { the empire's efforts, “Exhibits cheap || ple of the great Pyramid Pile || This lot comprises the finest kinds of tems, tra whole groups of B -m};’e Shrllz(nk'tlrlom lnsldlnu‘! initon had a hard road to hoe. After | and nast Instead or getting angry, Cure will then be sent you at once Imported Hoslery — including sem« etates, unprecedented congestion of :ga;‘mfg‘-""'“ Bose Ithaate ":’x‘j dinif‘f“‘; the war, he worked in West Virginia | Germany sent out experts to find out || by mail, FREE, in plain wrapper. || very fine quality Sflk idered population in great cities, the pasding to undermine the soeia] and industrial | 0%l mines till his black Mammy. by ) the secret of the English, French and goods—regular $1.00 ¢nd $1.50 Hosteps of the Indljvuu-.l-mdueer and the ap- Sysism Bpon A Gur English-speak washing and ironing, was able to help | other success. The result was the mag- Name ........ sessescerrennriran ... }] at 69¢c a pair. e I e Stead of the group | o ilization has been built up. Fie| Berself. He then went to Hampton, | nificent movement from one end of the rog:cer—a these are the phenomena abhorred paternalistic devices that | Sraduated, taught till he built up Tus- | empire to the other in favor of the AR I S of age through which you and I are 14 Tull Tkind into the delusion | Keee, one of the world’s educational | schools under discussion here, indus- ’ now E laws and adminis- | would lull mankind into the delusion | JO7°R trial. industriel-art and technical City and State ........--.cc.-: Women’s Neckwear {?fifl n which were adapted Here Professor Monaghan went in- | schools. The record reads like ro- conditions of half a ‘century ago to the story of Booker Washington's break down in the presence of the com- work. He told of his phenomenal suc- ALL AT HALF PRICES leated conditions of modgrn indus- cess, of his method, and ended by say- K ., , y say. 12/¢ | Women's Embroidered Linen value | Collars in a large variety of ing, “What was possible te the poor, Laissez Faire Breaks Down. o e stracised negro ought to be possible - " s g One spinning jenny, operated by one to the advantaged white.”. : i B g i B e nu‘. does the work formerly done by Our educational system is calling out ot iy eract Bods 200,000 Itallan women with their dis- against us. It looks like a pyramid i 1% to 14 pe L taffs. The man that owns the ma- upside down, or as some would say, can be done without pain by Dentists who KNOW HOW. We pride sizes o Ye. <chine directs the. potentiality of the standing on its apex. It is all wrong. ourselves on KNOWING HOW. Good Dental work nowgdays is only 12040 | Women's Fanoy Stock Col g 2}0.:.000 ‘women, and the other man runs It is co-ordinated, co-related and reg- possible by Déntists of experience. We have been 20 years gaining \'ulzc tars and Jabots i & wh_"’dm the machine. We have found that we ulated as if the child in the grammar that. . i Bl BB Rl e grades intended to go through the col- We have made PAINLESS DENTISTRY a speclalty, and whether 4 { lar 26c Neckwear at 12%c lege. As a matter of fact ,only one in you need filling, crowning, extraction or bridgework, we can do It 9 120 ever go through college; one in for you positively without , and at from_ one-third to one-half 25¢ | Women’'s Fancy Stock Col thirty go through high school; less the priees preval at other offices for the same guality of werk. value | lars and Jabots in all the e than 25 per c.ent. pass through the IT WILL PAY you to investigate and conshit us bhefore going 50c | rtyles of the season—regular wragan, Bosb: Bk 85 (il PN A pikth elsewhere. We make no charge whatever for examination and edvice 50c Neckwear at 2ic, and u‘!ven‘h grades. This is all wrong. PAINLESS EXTRACTION FREE when sets are ordered. All work At Baby Irish and Venise Laee £ It is educating men to be clergymen, guaranteed. A 50c | Dutch Collars,’ Chemisettes lawyers, doctors, teachers. engineers and Coat Sets — charming Neckwear in dainty effects— regular : 10 $2.00 Lace Col. lars at 50c each. 4 The Porleous & Mitchell Co. febzedaw Are on the menu, and afid nurses who could, would and 3 : should pay for their own education. It M_ . e Memory Lingers” | iois b st il KING DENTAL PARLORS, help themselves, while it neglects those DR. ¥. C. JACKSON, Manager. Popular pkg. 10e. nnorfiel-ty \ln.b:: It;“h:b '.hcmnlvela. o % . 10c. And yet, out ,000.000 persons in 3 ranklin m Norwich Large Family Size 15c. our :uch schools, less. than ©20,000 F S - N Sold by Grocers. 48 getng & tralning for their own Hours: 9 a-m. to 8 p. m.; Supdays 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. ° Telephone, ‘What.i education? Dr. Butler says = 2 :

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