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■W? mf. St^Liicw -4 k * ft » LEARN TO THINK. . Tfcp man who has learned to think Is an educated man whether or not he has ever seen the Inside of u col lege or even of a high school. The child who has learned to think will he an educated adult Once a person has learned to think, all else Is easy. The one final, right Judgment of all school methods is bound up iu this. ■ It. 4a- not -how. aBefc.-loforroatlon the child galus; all schools give too much of this commodity, nor Is it the facil ity to think It thinks, but It Is to think deeply and reason accurately that is the one primal essential. Nor can this be acquired quickly, says Duluth "N e^Tribuner“lLs"'7ofln‘“7a‘y v_ Ch a p- man In The Schoolmaster in the cur rent Atlantic says: “You must find some well-developed intellect, set It In contact with your child and allow them both time to do good work.” These Two conditions are the essence of the contract of education. Our school system grants neither. Yet as Mr. Chapman also says: “Depth can be imparted through the teaching of anything. It can be imparted through Latin grammar, through handwriting, through carpenter work, through arith metic or history." In other words, it Is not the subject but the quality of the teacher, '^'^'iflibbls C^cKtiig quality la positively discouraged. U. S. BANKERS IN WORLD. America Is now called upon to play a role undreamed otf In former yeari’ In International comtneitct *bd finuncq. This country has become the oue great source of long-time capital in the world. Bitropeair Countries which have previously been the. chief lending na tions are, for the present at all events, no longer In a position to lend by buy- lag foreign sectritlt IE PEACE v It strikes some students of aspects, of the world unrest as rather Strange that such a large proportion of the red agitators who have been brought to book recently have been Spaniards or of other European races which had little to do with the recent war. It Is not so strange, however. A great many radical Socialists found sanctu ary in Spain during the war, thereby saving their precious skins* and while their brothers were fighting at home, they were posonlng the minds of susceptible Spaniards with their In sidious doctrines of bolshevism, says Buffalo Commercial. While the rest of the world, or that part of It which has ideals of right and Justice, fought and suffered these men were prepar ing for what they could reap of trou ble and profit in the after-the-war period. Among the unobtrusive disappear ances which the end of the war brought about is that of Karl Rosner, the Boswell of the former Emperor William, and the author of that mon arch’s violet-picking feat on the field of battle. As an imperial press agent he would have stood out as one jof the colossal failures of Hun strategy had lie not faded away so completely as not even to leave a blot on con temporary history. * General Candldo Augllar saya the differences between Mexico and the United States would be settled amic ably If the American people would ‘Trust In the good faith of the Mexi can government." All the Mexican government needs to do Is to show that It deserves trust In its good faith. Then every difficulty will disappear. Chairs of aeronautics are now be ing established in prominent English colleges. It may be that fn the near future only the conservative and old- fashioned will use automobiles or move freight by such slow methods ns excess railroad trains. Advanced humanity will be literally up In the TO CONTINUE HEARINGS. fact,' for years to effine themselves be heavy borrowers. Not. only Is America the chief source of long-time money, but also fcfr a time is likely to be the . r: tl! rrirrlw Wis iespohsibiutt New York will permanently merce. occupy a relatively touch more com manding place than before the ifrar In international transactions,* says Leslie’s, Dollar exchange may not dls* place sterling exchange In the markets of the world, but dollar exchange has come to stay. We may w6H expect It to rank permanently above any ex change except sterling, and probably on an equal footing With sterling ex change. Pittntan Compromise Proposal la Net Sponsored by the President, But Follows up Hii'Gefteral Ideas. Woman now takes the lead In ag* gresslveness; husbands actually have been severely beaten, and the husband beaters the wfitpplnga. bat' .1- lege they were, deserved. The world la npside down, and all things have changed. In the olden days the wife stayed at home and cooked the meals aud looked Sfter the children, If there were any. Now they roam and ram ble; now their children go to scien tific kindergartens and are cared for; and wives, some of them, anyway, work in the subway or perform as conductors on surface trams. The man no longer Is boss, not even of himself, and In the family domicile he takes a back seat. We tell wives that a spirit of unrest prevails, says New York Telegraph. Husbands may do longer endure woe and redness of eyes and wounds without cause. A noted cartoonist Is engaged at this minute in organizing a League of Hus bands for self-protection. It may have a crowded membership. Washington.*—A white house an nouncement and an executive session of the foreign relations committee brought to the surface again two other liiuer of ffiTtreafy fighC President Wilson, replying to a aug gestion that hfe might put the coun try on a peace basis by declaring the war at an encT, announced Chat nfc not only considered himself powerless to take such a step hut considered a peace declaration either by himself or congress prior to ratification of the treaty would “put a stain upon our national honor” by evading responsi bility in the world peace settlement The foreign relations conjmitee got ln£o another argument over prompt committee action on the treaty which •Baaed pya' dwaBloir,-Without a-recerd vote,to continue its hearings to re ceive the cases of the Irish, Greek, Egyptian, Ukranian, Bathonian and Liettish races. In every democratic quarter. Includ ing the white house, ft waa indicated that the compromise proposal as pre sented In a resolution by Senator Pitt man of l«evada, Democrat, waa not specifically sponsored by the dent, though It followed generall! lines of his ingestion to tfig cos^ mittee Tuesday regarding tlona. ed befween The department of justice and the food administration that li censes will be revoked by the latter when it te shown dealers have been profiteering. > Sugar should reach the consumer at approximately 11 cents a pound, it was announced, based on the owner- snip of the entire domestic and Cuban crop by the United States sugar eqnal- Isatlon board, which is selling to f- pound - The next time you buy ^alomel ask for A Map and the Woritf. The world owes you nothing, unlen by your own achievements you have made It your debtor. The man who imagines that the world owes him a living has taken the first step toward tbb second step is takes ■ .fn ~ - whenJbe tries to collect the debt which c0I ®yi ti not due Mm. The greater his sue- r ®** rT * i cess in this, the greater thief he la. If he takes out of the world more than ha has put Into It.—Lyman Abbott alo ELEVEN CENT* CONSIDERED A FAIR PRICE FOR SUGAR Washington. — Active control of sugar prices was resumed by the gov ernment, through, an agreement reach- Colds Cans# Grip and Inftoeaza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. Thors U oaljr oae “Bromo Quiaias.” E.W. GROVE'S tianature on the box. Me. The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nausealess, safe and sore. Medicinai virtues retain ed and unproved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35c. A good deal has been written of crime In Germany under war condi tions. Evidently there baa been a growing moral laxity there, says Prov idence Journal. Now we are told that a band of scientific burglars has been arrested at Berlin—they Intended to rob the city “by sections, dealing with profession after profession, and be ginning with kinema stars, the most likely to have money In modern Ber lin.” This la German efficiency in a new phase, though, of course, the world was made familiar with Its criminal possibilities In the systematic looting of towns in the invaded dla- tricts of France. The yeomanette Is to go. She was <Aie of the most picturesque features of the war and she did her work well, and many will lament her pass ing. But the emergency to which she pwed her official being Is over, and private life will soon absorb the fem inine auxiliary to the anny and navy. Two women were killed and a man badly Injured when an airplane at tempted a landing. Every new inven tion thus adds a dahger te civilization, the prospect of being run down from the air being a particularly appalling one, as the pedestrian has every right to claim the right of way on the sur face of the earth. A congressional leader likens the cost of living to a pendulum, a fine figure of speech except for the gen erally accepted fact that In reality It Is an upward-bounci skyrocket with an unlimited supply of fuel and ap parently n determination—to- prove that what goes up may keep on go- ing up. H ^ V.. —-I-—— The German military leaders who •re trying to assume responsibility for the ex-kaiser’s acts need not be anxious to overburden themselves. They will have plenty on their hands In respect to their own responsibili ties. The steel and copper plate printers declare that the nation’s paper cui^ rency is old and soiled and germ laden, and menaces the public health. The more some people’s health Is menaced the better they like it. Army camera chief says Pershing was disgusted because they took la all 15,000 feet In films of him. Seems that in 15,000 feet of films they could have gotten a few good enough to sat isfy him. V. * ' ^our hundred alien enemies on their way to be deported.” 'If we are to have a nation, only American ways, and American doings and American talk should be tolerated la this coun try. . Almost every notable document has Its pet word; the peace treaty’s Is ,’*%genda,” but nobody yet has tried to ' AarfVe it from propaganda or traca It : to Innocuous desuetude. err Money is a good thing, but It baa its points. It rains many more chU- than It Now that slaughter has been stopped overseas, it Is time, In the opinion of many thoughtful students of present conditions, that attention should be turned to abolishing the automobile killings on tills side, as their rate is steadily increasing. The Huns may have no sense of humor, but their solemn description of Gennany “at the head of the op pressed peoples of the earth,” la cer tainly a huge Joke on the champion nation oppressor of the world. Thousands of foreigners are sailing dally from American ports to the old country. For many of them, although they may not know It, It Is a one-way trip. Uncle Sam Is going to be more particular henceforth. France is suffering from drought, which will be accepted by some as further evidence that those rains of which our soldiers complaiped were caused by the firing of the heavy artil- lagy.'j - — American aviators crossed the At lantic firs*. Then British aviators went them one better by.making It a nonstop flight It’s up to the Yankees to fly across the Pacific. Bolshevism Is becoming daily more unpopular in .Russia since It baa re sorted to the simple but too primitive method of killing all those opposed to It \ . The British empire owei the (Jolted States four billion dollars. But Unde Bam knows It’s good. • \ 1 • ' . • ' /' In 01d e "Virginia IE * Along toward tarty autumn, attar tha to- baooo crop had baan cured, and packed away ia tha hern*, the plantar* from up and down the rivar would foregather, uaualljf at the "Strobridge place, thence to eat out on tha first fox hunt of ths 3903011.” —Early Virginia, page 343. Virginia-Carolina tobacco I i r still holds the world’s favor t N, in J.587, the tobacco that we know as Virginia-Carolina tobacco - N >- - ‘the rage”. Since then it has steadily in popularity all over the world. , In 1918, in the United States alone, five times more Virginia-Carolina tobacco was smoked in cigarettes than all the foreign-grown tobaccos combined. That’s because a cigarette of this sun-ripened home-grown tobaqco has a crisp, lively relish that no cigarette of foreign or mixed tobaccos can match. # Piedmonts—made entirely of choicest ; Virginia-Carolina—will prove this to you. fi'st ; The Virginia - Carolina Cigarette NOTE—Virginia-Carolina tobacco 1* grown bar* in tbs i U. S. A. Unlike foreign-grown tobaccos, it carries no ^Import doty. Import duty doesn’t make a cigarette any better—it merely adds to its cost. Piedmonts give yom better valos hscaose aif your money buys tobacco quality. • 1 mam “tV ■ \ i±3