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THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL Vo.4. PICKENS, S. C., THURSDAY MAY 24, 1894. - No.21. DL. ROBERIT KICIKSEY Physician and Surgeon, Office it his residence Main street. March 8, 1804 H. 0. BowEN. L. E. CnILnIass. OWEN & CILILDRES, Attorneys at Law, Pickens, S. C. Oct. 5. 1898. D R. J. W. NORWOOD, Dentist. Dr. W. M. N.nIWOOD, Assistant. 0111c, 881 Main Street, Greenville, S. 0. Jan. 9,'92 y It. J. P. CARLISLE, Dentist Gre-i iylloe, S. C. Ofice over Addisol& McGee's Drug Store. J. S. COTHnAN, G. G. WELLs, Orecnville, 81 C. M. F. ANSEL,' T. PCi Awn, Pickens, S. O. 40- TL.- HoLLIWORTHI, Pceh, . Have associated thelnselves together fog the practice of law in its various branches, And will give careful attention to all busir ne4ss undertaken by them. Loana and dias.,ounts negotiated. May 1, 1894. The Exchange Hotel, GREENVILLE, S. C. C. W. HENDERSON, Proprietor. Meern Improvements. Large Rooms. Special attention to Commercial Travel an Tourists. Table Fare Unsurpassed. Fine Climate'the year round. Ap. 7, 9'2 J. E. HIAGOOD, J. L. THOUNLEY, Ju L. C. THORNLEY. HAGOOD & THORNLEY BROS., Livery, feel, sI &, hoIap ItaMbbi, Easley and Pickens, S. Co. (Opposite Hotel.) Carriages, Buggies, and 3addle Horses, at reasonable rates. gW- Your patronage sollcited. ABE CL ARK. GEO. E. COOPER. Clark & Cooper, Dealers in TOMBSTONES, of every descripti6n Also. MANTELS, BTA'TUARY,.VA8ES and Wrought Iron FENCING, Greenville, 8. C. Sept. 19, '91. If you vant the finest PICTURES Made in the State, go to Wheeler's Studio, 113 McBee Aveune Greenville, S. C Crayon Portralts a specialt y A i7-Y. Veterinary Surgeon. Having an expevience of fifteen years in treatng all disensies of cattle, and baving -.made the disea.se of Murrian, ill all of its forms, a specialty, I offer my services to t he public. Will treat cattle suffering with any ordinary diseaes. IB. P. GIllFFIN. Feb. 1-1y- Pickons, S. C. PRIZE WINNERS Furnished on 15 days test Trial when lie proper coltract is signed. If yol want an organ of Reputation Buy te Carpenter Organ. LJOWEST' PRICES F'Olt CAMII, WV. J. B. STILES. Nov 9, 93 D~ealer in Wtcbes, Glaonds & Ielry, GREENVILLE, S. C. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. .Oct. 19--3m New Store GOODS, NOTONS AND LATEST NOVELTIES ofasth rnatsnelected in person in the Misses Rogers, 45~ Coffee Street, Under the O iera House. Greenville, S. C., May 3, 183.. iJxsus~ MLUKAY Hias just openod all lattest styles of Spring and Summer Milnery At the lowest pOssiblo pricos. Main Sti'eot, Greenvillo, S. C. A pril 19, 1894. OU M-EL.ASTIC costs only:*2.00 per 100 square feet, Makes a good roof for yoars, and any one can put it on. GoUM-ErAsTrC PAINT cost only 60 cents per gal. in bl. lots, or $4.50 for 5 -gal. tubs. Color dark red. Will stop leaks in tin or iron roofs, and will last for years. TRy IT. Send stamps for samples, and full particulars. GUM ELASTIC ROOFING CO., 39 & 41 West Broadway, NEW YORK. LOCAL AGENTS WANTED. Feb. 8 1894.-Om. FoIC DYSPEWsIA Use Brewa'. Iron Bitters. Physicians recomniend it. -All dualera ,keep It. $1.00 per bottle. Genuine A. K. Park DRY GOODS AND SHOES, 16 PENDLETON STREET, GREENVILLE, S. o. We have been talking Wash Goods to you for the past two weeks. We now wish to say soinething of money savers in WVool Goods. Save the cents &c. Talk is cheap, but facts are what we want these days. Here they are. Six pieces 50 mih All Wool Drevs Goods, Summer Weight, worth 00 cents, offered you at 334 cents. Five pieces 46 inch All Wool Silk finish Henrietta, 75, for 50 cents. A nice selection of Evening Shades in this lot. Ten Pieces 3t; inch Suiting, worth 35, at 20 cents. Don't forget our All Wodl 40 inch Black Henrietta at 50 cents, the cheap. est things in town. By all means see our Black Goods before making your purchases. A WORD ABOUT SILKS. We have a full line of Dress Silks. Swivel Silks for Dresses and Waists, Wash Silks for Waist, Moires. Full line of Mitts, Gloves, Elbow Lengths in MAitt, evening shades for 50 cents. Parasols and Umbrellas at all prices. Fans, Handkerchiefs and Hosierv. This is one of our st,rong holds. Space will not allow us to give prices, comie and see. Anothcr lot New York Mills Bleach. ing and Night Gown Twills in short longfhs at 7 and 8 cents, worth 12 cents A visitto our store will convince you that we save you money. Sclid facts they are what gives you satisfac tion who you are' trying to sove Inoney. Don't forget we keep Shoes, Men's Ladies' and Children's Shoes. The cheapest slippersin town. May 10th, 1894. .aam.......................a.u.em,.., :Are, You out of employment, or in i a position that you do not! like? Possibly the soli - iting of Life Insurance is :your special forte. Many:i Speople have, after trial, i Ibeen surprised at their: !fitness for it. To all such i *it has proved a most con-i jgenial and profitable occu- i Spation. The Management i EquItable Life *in the Department of the Carolinas, desires to add to its force, some agents *of character and ability.. Write for information. W. J. Roddey, manager, j :Rock Hill, . C. and $1.00 per package. Samples free. HO NOTh Yavori"oEO~WR .1 god. ic 5aeta Sodby Druggciar. SHIL.OH S CURE. Scientific Amerloani Agency for - 9s r eSU&4IArN A PIONEER SKETCO. A TOUCHING TALE OF A BURIAL IN THE WILDERNESS. The Lonely Grave of Little Ruth, Which Was Cared For by Some Kindly Hand For Thirty-five Years-A Mother's Awful Otief Almost Alone In the Forest. In the year 1829 a steady stream of immigration was flowing into the terri tory of Michigan. The over restless peo ple of the east had heard wonderful sto. ries of the abundance of gamo and great P rtility of soil to be found in the now orritory, and the sturdy, adventure some farmers of rocky Now England were pushing their way westward, with the hope of finding the El Dorado of their dreams. Detroit, at this time, was a sight to behold. Its streets were thronged with the covered wagons of the imnigrants. Hunters and indians, half breeds and soldiers were mingled in a chaotic mass. Among the great throng of homo seek ers that left Detroit on the 2d day of May, 1829, were James Harris, his wife and year old baby. Young Harris had put all of his earthly possessions into a covered wagon, and bidding goodby to friends and relatives had joined that endless stream of home seekers that were pushing their way into the wilderness of Michigan, hoping by their energy and perseverance to build up a lioie for thomsolves and an inheritance for their children. The road westward from Detroit fol lowed an old Indian trail, and by con stant travel the mud ha.! becoio so deep that it was almost imiopassable. Many of the pioneers left the old road and struck off into the wilderness, mak ing roads for themselves. Among this number was James lar ris, and all went wcll for a few days. After camping one night the wind sud denly shifted to the northwest, and a cold rain set in. This was the eighth day after leaving Detroit. The company that they had begun their journey with had gradually dropped off, and for two day i they had traveled alone, alone in the r eat wilderness, unprotected save what rotection the canvas covered wagons gave theni. Was it any wonder that as they listened to the howl of the wolf and the hoot of the owl they became a little homesick? Harris had imado a great firo of dry brush, and while it. was burning brightly the family had gono to sleep. From this sleep the young mother was aroused by a sharp, hoarso cough from her baby. She innediately awoke her husband, fresh fuel was thrown on the fire, and as it blazed up the young mother peered anxiously into the face of baby Ruth. Ono glance at the little drawn face resting on her arm, and the mother knew that the baby had that dread disease, the croup. Every thing was done for the little sufferer that the distracted parents could do. They were young and inexperienced, and all night long tl)ey fought for the life of their little one, but all in vain. Just as the first glimmer of light ap peared in the east the spirit of haby Ruth took its flight. The young mother, wild with grief, pressed the form of her dArling to her breast, moaning and say ing over an4 nvor again, "Baby is dead1" She refused to let her husband take the little one from her. She would never give it up; no, never I All that day they romained in camp. Toward evening the wife became calmer, and standing near the wagon with the babe in her arms she saw her husband dig the little grave, anld when it was finishled a rudlo box was mnade, and she tenderly laid her baby to rest, wvith her own hands plae ing it In the grave, and as' the dirt r'at tied down on the lid she0 fell senseless Into her husband's arms. After filling the grave the young fa ther took two little sprouts of Lombardy poplar that he4 had in tho wagon, set tIng one at each end of the grave, and( cuttinlg the words "'Baby Ruth'' on a pico of board he placed it at tile head of the little moWmd, and then they re sumedl their journey. Years passed, andmc a road wvas laid necar the spot. The pop lars grew and became a living monu mont. The pice of board that had told the little one's name wvas annually re placed by some kind hand. TimIo passed quickly, and May 10 had comeI and gone '35 times since baby Ruth was laid to rest in the wilder ness; the poplars liad grown to be trees and stood in a cleared field near the roadsidq; the sur-rouniding forest had long Since disappeared. A board was nailed to the trees with the words 'Ba by Ruth'' painted onl it. A carriage was passing by when the driver, an elderly manm, glanced toward the trees and saw the inscription. Ho looked at. the trees and at tile sign, hitched his horse, made inquir~y of a farmer near by as to the melanling of the sign aind w~as told that wh~on 1h0 came to tihe countr i-h11 found the little grave mar-ked withl a ruo board, and that lhe had spared the triees and nailed up a new board. His1 inform ant wondered at the emotion of the stranger, who staid with himl overniighit, but his wvondelr ceased whenOl ho was told the story of baby Ruth as I have written it. The wife and mother had1( died sonme twvo years before. Other chiildironi had1 Colme to bless 1101, but she nlever for-got her firstborn and the little grave in tho wvilderniess. A beauti ful mionlumient now marks the spot whiereo sleeps baby Ruth. -Vanl Buren County Rlepuibl ican. A Year's Work of thei P'asttear Institucte. The annals of the Pasteur institute for thi y-ear 18B93 have just been pub11 lished. They show that last year 1,1 i18 persons were treattedl for hyd rophia , and that only six of them died of that disease. Of the numbier muentioel-d, t)aeroe were 1,470 French people and 1 78 for eigners. Among tihe foreigners were 43 Spaniards, 85 Greeks, 23 English, 22 Belgians, 18 Egyptians, 14 British sub jeots from India, 9 Swiss, 0 Dutch and o Portuguese. Since M. Pasteur com menced to practice his Inoculations against hydrophobia 14, 480 person~s have been bt-eated by his method, and 72 have died of the diseafe.-Londonl Standard. Many poems of Gray were lost after his death. They fell into the hlands of earoless persons who know nothing of theih. uen MENTAL IMAGES. ifaterial IVictures Conteniioraneous WitA Thiought Impressed Uion the Bralu. "A man conversing in earnest, " says Emerson in his essay on "Naturo, " '"if h watch his intellectual processes, will find that a material image, moro or less luminous, arises in his mund contempo raneous with every thought, which fur nishes the vestment of the thought. " This power of forming mental images appears to vary in strength among indi viduals to a considerable degree. Natu rally wo should expeot to find it power ful in poets and artists. Charles Dick ons has himself told us that ho actually "saw" his creations as he wrote, and M. Taine mentions a palliiter who only look ed at an object while ho sketched its outline and was able to fill in the colors from the image of it in his mind. On the other hand, there aro people of equal intelligenco who, being unable to sco such mental images thomselves, have doubted their existence, and Mr. Fran cis Galton has shown that habits of ab stract thought., such as mion of scienceo and philosophers indulgo inl, arte apt to weaken the -capacity of forming mental pictures. Mr. Kirkpatrick of Winona, Min., an experimental psychologist, ias mado a series of observations on this phenom enon with the help of his classes. The scholars were asked to wvrite dowi just what came into their minds whena eeir tain familiar words, such as "hook, " "tree, " "church, " were called out, and the answers were carefully invest igaht d. He found that the majority of the stu dents formed distinct images of the ob jects corresponding to the words, and the rest formed indistinct images, with a few exceptions, who seeiu to have inl dulged in philosophical abstract ions. The word "book," for example, (alled lp visions of a Bible, a dictionary, a no\'-el, in all but a few schlais, who thought of "food for tho mind" or "the thoughts of some person. " Tli word "tree" lwas represen(t( by soine kind of tree, more especially the illust rius i hlr ry tree wvhich (Geori'ge Washingtoni eut. ilown. The wordi ' 'hurichi" t-itilly evoked a picture of soine church inl tIho vicinity, but soie of t lie hiearers I houghit of a "religious organlizat ion. " It. is ev ident fr-om his results hat. lost people are "'visualizers" in thinking, while a fow are "nonvisualizors. " Tle tenden cy to form dist intl. immages was very conspicuious ilmoig the female studeits, alnl inl both( I sext's it r'eac1i's an inor ml1 developmIllent. aboult the ages of 14 and 15, or during ilihe period of adoles coice, which, it hans been otherwise i'. served, is also oit of exceptionlal good heal(th and rapid growth. The tendeney is further checked or fostered by the oc eupations ill life.-Casell's Magazine. -rhe cnkwnngsae In Persia there is a kind of snake wvhich is kiown Io the natives as the clock winding snake. It derives its name from a peculiar buzzing noiso which it makes that resembles the wind ing of a clock. These snakes ar per fectly harmless mnd frequently glide in and out of the houses, no attention bo ing paid to them by tio natives, Dur ing a visit there several years ago I was attracted one morning by an unu sual twittering of birds, and on looking pill saw jhioumt 40 sparrow~s on the top of a wall, all jumping about in an ex cited mianne,r At first I was at a loss to understand the cause of such a cominiotion, hut pr'esenmtly I huoar-d thme peculiar' buzzing of the clock winding snake and in a tminute p~erceivedl the reptile ciawling ilng thmo wall, nmaking dirctlhy for the b~irds, which appeared to bie fascinated and1( mado noe attempt to fly away. Thme snake glided ini aumonig the birds, and choosing one to his liking deibiherately seized it in his month and swallowed it. I picked up a stick, and aifter kill ing the snake cut hinm open and ext rat ed the sparrow. After about 10 min utes' exposure to the sun the bir-d got up, and in a few iminutes mocre flew away apparently unhurt.. -- St. Louis Globe-Domiocrat, IRosebery's 9oreslgght, Trho foresight Lord Rosebery dimsplay ed in arraniging his imatrimioial planis is Illustrated inm the following anecdote: Shortly after lie had returned froxm his continent al tour lie w~as io of a house party at Menmore(, a lordly pleaLsuro house which Baroni Miyer Rothischiild hjad built for hmimmse'lf in Buckinghmnm shire. One evening, at dinner-, the con versationi turnen on thle exquisito deco rations (if the rotmii. Lord~ Rioseber'v's oubser'vat ion to his neixI. neighbor, by way oif epii lou to~ the i'onverisat ion, was, "'Yes, this place wouiild suit mei ex eel lent ly."' When, seven years bateri, he had married tine daughtr o'(f thi' houiso and~ was the ownerl of M'ntmore, his friiend, happ' inug to imei't himi, rein id edi hium of this obiservat ion. Lord Rose bery replied withi assiutid gravity, but with a telltale twinkln ini his eye, "Well, of course you know that the un e'xpteted always hiappn's. '"--San Friaui cisco Argonaut. "Wha~m~ t is Ihe salhject of y'ouir leit ure" iituir'ed the editor. "'Theio Causo of I Lard TJimaes and Ihow to C.urt TIhiemi, ' " rplied thle giftedi iii ato', "andit ias the ib.ject oif thie leet iir is ini its ver'y nureu4 plurily hiilamn thriopic I will ask you to he gener'mous inm the matter of free inot ices. ity the wVay, "' he added hurriedly, "'I forgot to fill a blank ini this ad~vertisemenut. I will at tend to it now."' Anid lie took thme copy and filled thme blank aftei- the words, "'Price of admnis Hlin, "' by inserting the simple chmarae. t ers, "$1. "--Chicago Tribune. Increase of SuIcides JIn Austria. The increase in thme number of suicides in Austria, which is statedl to have been very marked in the sixties and seventies, fell off in the 10 years 1880-90. Since the latter date', ho~vever-, It hias again becomo noticeable. in 1891 the number of suicides wvas 872, in the following year it was 903, andt last year it reached 1, 005.-London Times. Tricycles may be had for hire, hike cabs, in Milan. An attendant goes with the machine to propel it. The fare do naends on the distance traveled-'nojt theo More florse Talk. DRENCHING.-It is more necessa ry to watch closely and carefully, rld render all aid, even to the mi nutost detail,to an ill animal than is generally appreciated. It is al. so necessary for the intelligent stock owner to have at least a su perficial idoa of the general care required as well as the various methods employed in administer ing to ailents of dumb animals. In health a horso may be wild and unsociable, or evon vicious, but he certainly appreciates ki d atten tion whon ho is ill. A grum mule will hocomo docile and even seek youir aid, anld by dronching is mouit tho administration of medi Liies in a fluid from a bottle or horn-ini using the glass bottle you niust ho caroful not to got it be t woon the horso's tooth, as ho might b)roak it inl his mouth and swallow sol() of the piCo, which might ot, up a fatal inflammation. Al wilyH se0 that the hot.tle is clear, that is, see that thoro is nothng p)(isoni in it.. Unless vou want to ivo poison modicino novor give mie(licino in the horso's loso; when tho iinial is dreiclhod ill the mouth there is at possibility of some af tho medicine getting into the winidpipo and tho to the lungs, but this dainigor is increasod a thou n1111d timos wheni tho medicino is poured in the noHo. Thoro ire other dangers still in drenching in thi n(ise. Tho nidicino will pon 'trato the Ilchrymal dlets iiflam. ing them, 1111d soo) you may think 5your horso has a gocd case of glan drs or distompor. I know thoro ar) nmany nmen who will say hoy have dono this, dronched in the 1180, but tho vory ignoranco that prompts thoim to do it,, prevoiits tlheml froil kIm nwiing tho con1seu(jIOnl COs. PrepairE the drench of what over kind may o desired, put it in the bottle, thon get a stick about four foot long, aplit one end with an axo until a rope can be inserted, tio a loop at the end of the rope a plowmon 0do for hand-hold, inserl o0ne strand of tile rope in the stick wrap the rope around the stick tk provoit its cominig off, place one stran( in tho horse's mouth as you woild~ji bridle-bit, and have an assistant tako hold of the stick an(l gently olovato his head until it is high enough, then turn the dronch down his throat. Often the medicinos they pour through the sonsitivo nasal chambers are so irritant that they cause a vio lent inflamation of tihe parts with which they como in contact. When you hogin the drenching (do not pour alil the medicine in his mouth lit once, but pour just a little at a ti me, and1( if hoe swalhlowvs it pour som11 miore0 iln the mouth, anid so on, until lbe hams got what you want himi to have. But if ho refuses to swallow what he has in his month, there is no use( to pour11 more in until ho0 (dos so, as it will only be wa'td, press firmly between the lower jaw-bonies. This may make him swallow, if so, pour11 mloroL mod icino andl( repeat the pressure, if he oblstinatoly refuses to swallow tihe medicine that is in his mouth, put abi out oneo talel-spoon-fullI of clear cold water into one of his nostrsls, and1 I aissuroi' you he will swallow, put. mioreo moiinl ill his mloulth, and1( watebr in t he nosltril,:and( so on, unit il 1h accepts his (dos0. Should hi( cough or try to cough at alny timon dlurinig thme dIrenching, lot his head down at once, if all the modi.. ei no escapos-boetter lo~se the modli e'ino than straniglo tihe horse, and do(n't raise his heoad until he i, (lone coughing, h)o particular about thuis mattor, espoeisily in lung andl throait trouhh-es. D~o niot drench the horse whilo ho is lying down, if lie is able to stand11(. If y'ou iaro compol)01led to give mod icinoe while he is dlown bo very careful ab)out it., stand111)1 1( be id his head, hold the bottle ini right hand1(, puIt your left foot on his nxeck to prevent him from attomp)ting to rise. and to keop his neck to the ground, catch hold of the halter, run firmly with lef t hand, and lift his nose up, now pour in) tihe drench little at a time until ho has taken it. If the horse is lying on his loft side the instruc tions as regards your hands and feet, will have to be reversed-de nothing to excite the animal, mak( as little noise as possible, and dc not be in a hurry, take your time use jndgment, and have na~tience and you will succeed whoro many who profess to know more than you do, will fail. W. A. DLwoRTr, V. S. Wstminster, S. C. GOVERNOR TILLMAN'8 ADDRE88. Ladies and Gentlomon: This is a great and glorious day for South Carolina. It is a day of promiso and &bright hope for York County but the mon and vomoin whose breasts should swell and throb with doopoet omotions of gratu lation and prido aro tho mon and w0nmon of Rock Hill-thoso wlioso pluck self-reliance, far-sighted business instincts and patriotism made thom ontor tho raco for tho prize and como out winners. I f, as is already clearly a pparont, th( prize is greator, moro valuable one than they thomsolves over drei ed, t h e n I know ovoryone of you who comes to e olo br a to the public installation of this grand institutioni will join me in congratulations to people of thi ambitious, progressive lit tle ci y, and your heart symp)athy is shown by ,this outpourig otf people to witless her triutiphi. Wo find, wheln vo cmne, to reca. pitulato, that the Soith C a rolina College, hoary with 11g" and r-''n dered illustrious by tIe l alinois men it, has dedu iated, stands st rung and sturdy among its clustering elms, in our capital city. 'lhe Ci adiel, equally honord bv its alonii ni, is doing its spieial work inl Charleston. (leimsoi, whicb is spanned by such a bright. raiibo w of promise, is inned by tbh imitun tain broozos of Ocmwlle. A\l for boys. What. h vo wo done for ii \ \41 mon? Wlro does the State cdiu ito its futuro un it hers? Thl, a in swor to the ono quest bi, is "nith ing ;" tho answer to the otlir is alias too oftoln,. "nowhore." But, thank God, this groat w rong will soon be righted. This reproacl on our jnistice and our statesnan. ship will no longer causo us to blush. WO havo waitod long--tIo( long-but tardy justico will be dono to the sistors of t(e boys for whose education the St ato has spont hundreds of thousands of dollars, while the girls havo recoived not i ing. Grander in dosign than any or all of them, larger and more elab orate in architecture, imoro beau ti ful and~ ornamented, as is litt ing, the W~inthurop Normal and Indus trial College of South ;Caroliina will ore long pierce the sky withI its stately spire, and the sky ofI York will be spannedl by aniothier biright. rainbow of promiso, that will a I tract theogaze of the people, ntof only of this Stato, but of uiny States. T1he buildling, whose cor.. nor-stone we lay to-dlay, is one of the largest single school odi fici s in the South, and wh'len the0 two dor.. mitories, which aro requi red t~o complete the plan, a113lo oreced, it will be the largest femna l collIgo of its kind in the r:nionu. lBe it said to the credit oft thei men of the Stato that, whethber from shame at their long nuigi'et, or from a sturdy realizaition of ih necessity and imnportanteo of I lu system of training whtich we pro'.. pose to inaugurate boe, tha11t I here has been (on1( dissenltitig voice thuii far raised against, the butildinig andi equipmnt of th is cil legui, sincei theI idea first took shtapo1 I ii thre yor ago. ['his school is tn o ekniowni as Ihbe WVinthrop Nortmal antd Indubi-triatl Col loge. TIihso two womrds -Nor lode stars whieb miust gtid~e ''uri peopl)o( out, (of the( wilderne(Ss (of p~overty, ignorani~ic( andii stagniation, which surround~s us. Wit bin iir meaning lies our only hop-the, one says educato;. the other mieans5 work. I would not be uniderstood as claiming or intend ing th at the women of our State (d0 not now work, or that they are all ignorant. In fact some years ago in discuss ing the causes of our depressed fi. nancial condition. I made the as. ser tion-and I stick to it yet-thaw only two classes of our populatiot (lid their due share of work.,N observant or fair-minded persoi will deny that our wives and daugli Stors have met te changed. condi tions wrought by tho'omanoipation of the slavos with much greater Suceoss and fortitude than the men, und tha t they do a much lar gor portion of vork than wo do. On tho other hand, it is oqually pa tont that (li) bu1lk of tho labor 11mong tiil colored poplo is por forIle(d by the meni. But, to retirn to the scopo and pulrpos'i of the two lines of toach. ing wlich VIo expect, to pursue horC. W1 desire to say that we fully rnalizo aid uiderstand the great inod If Lotr teachers teachers trained spelically for tlilt t voca tifon . ThIor->, ro t14 1111 ireds anld I holsailds of fairly W0l1 dutldl wlni'I inl our. Sltt, mall ny of whoil Ire following the no llt) avocatCion of teachiig. But the lne possession of knowledge loes not (arra withi it the )Owoer of inptiing it, (f exciting oniula tolt, ol milaking study ilitorosting, fniirining chiiIdien how to thinlk andi( exrew her sonling pow i 1. I litilv ofleri tjougjilt tihift -Itelro r horn?, not. ondo. lind we ovensima111lly n i(tgj thilos who lhive I 0enis for iipairting k iw l- dg(14. I'l t ho i Iproved sys 11lh4 wIt i(l I aoII1 beo n a(l lopt il. le Winthrop Achiol, and facility withI which all the griadiates of t halt sle obtainl pos.itLionls at lilor rliileatv walgos [1han oblh ers 4f f-ju l dii tiori, Who havo lo. hadl(1 its advantages, is proof (lit 1 'iinu I trainllilug is aln a 0bso hilto ncsiyand invalualblo. W itlit rollectig in tle slightost un 11 t' wrk whih lols 11 hitherto b olen dt1 - ini i ill this linol it. is1our pur puost ( nl airge id improvo nit, tha"t work.:nid it, will bo our1 aml I it ion t i I tltuch profissol's and i urae su h a iril r icll l astl1 w r ill notoWnly fulinish facilities 'for \ i l rn already vducltod to got 'tu n ra l i nin bu1Alt t1po 'tk1 I hi e oung IglirLSI fresh frof ho 5(1o0. u-r hertin-odyug a o geeasi le upto whe bi lso proicio leing deigrkoede isfr h vayig degrees Si prdithny h kewill never hilt anly res-t r ifIns Its tothe num11. her. of. normwllal stuldnit,htill wo will takev I all w>apy sr ithxis specifica ut alon with Ohe norm .. al, co ordites a :l o41 etl i m ltI i' portanl oo' , will b)e! tie in.itrial feature of toe school. uSmebod y oig aIgo said KlI"ollejdge was pow."T I hos tR IdIaYs w1t le Lo also m0111 to (ar' thatc' intowltIg is alliost on Ve-indeIpelt'nce. An li nowledge, couplled with siik Ii g ' ilba e by indlu. try, will always Iui Iny womaln from want and oerty Every fa therwhtoi thins 1(l arih,~l woulld havo pot.~ t~~i Th etst ofx slvy h ponat ly v~isile, hiowleve r.W ares~ld is-wl 11tInied asW ai plelil'(.~ to b tou lwo \onseluenlit is~ tIhail wtll13 the e ofeuinwhich h wa as ith et pre adornth < o siyhawi eoo ad shin in society,~ our wome hav coen fato low. man thous~tads ofv~ o ome tendrly nurturedV, enrluly traloein havie foun l.tIIl''Sthemslve by11) thedah f faher s,u~i brothe orChusband, trOown oni thili'Lr i own resonriee s lef toc batl w ieit t conl ard1 wart b the . o hIl(Tty of the pr lledrs veryl aoy wCOmope aerth tome ofic these and, must lpoitiets o aeyas scek in or the vallst army~ hephadn nof work s col.eisi or intton to rieach ovnthingator ang hav th sthaoits theranufctu vryn industrial ar heeat~ fais,1( thneirelaborcha Musin vir:) rtmughrti, a n it i s on insu s thel dern-ilr resior meaors witelligce ariny ovdnt hm isiin theSoth pl Wie anil in stuonpcl ticd ov r n idustrial art hat ill oad o inoponenc1