The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 06, 1908, Page 39, Image 39

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THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, -PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 6. 1908.
WILL
Ed
TEAGH
CfflLDR;;-fGROW
..... . i
LIKE
FLO WE
13 a
win Collins, the EnglisK Instructor Who Has Juat Won His Long Fight Against the London County Council Over His Methods of Teaching His Children; Will Ectahlish Instituti
ONDON, A(. SI. There la a up m planta and flower crow, he be-
man Ja London who has beaten eame Impatient and refuaed to listen to ,
the London county council edu mora. Collins Inalatad, however, and ba .
Cation .committee after a "fla-ht ha tuat aueeai1et In fnrnlne- tha un.
. 1 lasting several yeara. Ha baa willing- admission, .from tha magistrate
compelled tha oourta to admit that that hla children ware far tn advance
Ml afetem of education, which the edu-' of tha publlo achool chlldran of tha eeme
cation lauthorltlaa aay la all wrong, la, age. Tha sequel to thia decision la tha
Jl right, and In a few week ha la (ooa: opealn of Collins school, wbara La
to open a. high, claaa achool within 10 wUl. teach -other children on tha same
tnllea of London where hla theories will lines that ha haa, taught his own.
ba put into praotloe. Tha man. Is Ed- Colllne la a graduate of tho University
win Collins, a university man. a writer of London, of tha Sorbonnetn Farla ami
and a teacher who does not believe In &&!iKWAlt&Ji!Z?E--tuihin
-, , , .. .. He haa been a tutor In hign-eiaaa eou-
teaohlng at allthat, l JUa ordinary t ctlonl Institutions for years, and h
acceptation of tha term "teaching." Hla has preparsd studonte for university
motto ta-tbat "children ahould ba taught ftff Wg" JTr? ,t,l,ij,,.il riaint'ihe
little .-.a ..,,j , ,, that ha has no-prejuslc against me
little and Should . learn much,", Hla ordinary learning. AH that he eontenda
theory and practice are that no child la that tha average child Is etuntod and ,
ahould ba- asked to undertake formal weakened by being- compelled to ta hi
.nn. i. " , . brain and body bv beginning Its formal
lessons until It la or 10 years old. and Education too early.
that until It rearhea that in it ahmiM . "I rto not bulleva In berlnnln t learn
be allowed to run. praotlcalTy wild and the formal things too early." said Mr;
assimilate knowledge aa a flower gath
ers Us sweetness from the sunshine.
Mr. Collins baa been at war with the)
education authorltlea over the educa
tion of hla own eight children. The law
Collins to me today,
be encouraged to aak
"Children ahdulJ.'
rather than to b Uught. My eldest '
boy could not read a Una until ha waat
s years ota. rnen oe learnea tn npnr
f A'.
..fa.. JV -
of Ens-land save .That avtrr ehlld mnat bet In a wm and he learned It with
go to school. - It a child doee hot attend out any difficulty He Juat asked hla
the publlo schools the achool attendance mother er me what th letter were
officer oalla to find out why, and If the and in at week he waa reading for hla .
Jiarent can satisfy him that the child own pleasure. Before that, of course, :
s being efflolently educated eleewhere we had read to him poetry, Shake
all la. well. If not the parent la sum- speare's- plays and many other things
moned to appear before the magistrate which were suitable 4o hla understand-'
and I ha can not aailafy the magistral ' Ing. Since then ha has read all of
- ha la fined, and If the offense continues SUakeapeare, several of the English ,
he la fined again as often aa the attend- poets and a great. deal Of tha finest Eng- '
anc officer tinda time to summon; him. Man literature." - . :;
Colltna has been fined many times Thle boy, Ivan Julius Collins' ; waa e
for not sending hla four elder children a mined bv the- magistral j It was
to achool. Tha British magistrate la hla proficiency that forced' the London
Impatient of new Ideaa and when ho magistrate to decide In favor of Collin'
.learned that Mr. Collins' Idea of educa- aystem. He la now 14 yeara old, and
tlon waa to allow hla children to grow hla upbringing la evident both lit this
y :; (
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INDIAN POSSESSES A RARE VOICE
diaries Gutter, Alaska Brave, Is Born Musician
-i , l ' . : . : - - : -: ' '.- " -
NATURE in oaprlcloua let lavlah having made ud hla mind to go to Che- He ahowa hla royal blood In his feat-
' mood snmetlmaa beatowea her mawa he Bet about enconaf aeslnr the. urea and hla actfona are- graceful in
mood aotnetlmea oesiowes ner m to atten1 tnd. He did thia the extreme. . At present he la entirely
choicest gtfta moat unexpectedly. b wrjlriJr in tha Alaska fish cannerlea unspoiled, yerX can well Imagine ln
We are told that It la tha ones- until ha had aecured tha' requisite the fullness of time when ha baa aeen
.v.. -iw... k,.M,. hut amount r - ' more of the world that he will ba most
pected that. always happena, but amount. he entered the ahool waa ttraotlv to women, and I believe too.
It startlea, navertheleaa. Qna would a.imot aa happy aa he waa when-ha that ahould he ever forget hla art In
not look for tha gift of eong tn an In- mastered the Intricacies of the cornet -the interest of the little god of love
Alan hut rowriaa Cutter a full blooded That day marked tha turning pointln that he would make an Ideal lover,
dlan, but Charlea Cutter, IU carair. He bcarae a member W ..But It Is not.ol these things that
1 la Aim na. Tfiyllaa ervMasaWaaenanalaW O VAlAa Clr . . a ft . a a Mta t aS.. iA Ai.a4H.kl 1 WVnnb W .eih
AiOOtVaU Ju-uaatAJlf gyvsMivavawvaw e wvw
auch rare ' power and sweetness his
white brothers may well envy him his
wonderful gift of aong.
Charles Cutter's Indian name ta
TJochh-hoh-hharchh" (no, 1 will not at
tamDt ita nronunciatton. Tve already ac
the Chemawa Indian achool band and Charlea Cutter, erstwhile Dochh-hoh-alao
the ainglng society. It was Just hharchh, tha Raven i concerned. Muslo
about this time WMit Mra. N. 4- lamp- a o mm me very orroin pi um. .
bell of Chemawa heard htm sing and represents everything fla every lonc
recognlalngr the latent possibilities of ing of his jwul. - Hlg taate in music
hla vole taught him aoloi work. " 'ar from I Catholic. a He haa no iiie
HIS Initial bow waa made dn the sum- for the popular music of the day. but
mer of '-3. at Chauauauav Where bo prefers the etandard openes, his three
Jv .1- h.ir. vamamhortn tha an fnr tha flrat tltn. In mihliA. It ta favorite keina ' Faust. La Bohelm
apelllng alone), and meana Raven, hla customary to think of an Indian being and Carmen." Of the modern love gongs
g-rand father la tha Eaglet and ha cornea atolid and unafraid at all timee and in he confesses to a predlllctlon for
of a mighty tribe of warriors who have all places, but Mr. Cutter deecribea Brahm a and Plnauttl a.
been chiefs and head men of their peo- most graphically his bad case of stage Mr. Cutter speaka English with just
pie for generatlona. , fright in which hla knees quaked and enough accent to make hla speech In-
Vf r r-nttPir wu hom ST veara aro tn hla heart nounded to suffocation. Mr. 'trHno- and attmrtlvs a.nl afnira with
Shaken, a little village In aoutheastern William. Bayer of Portland heard hiAi equal facility in English or German. He
AiaaKa, ana DSlonga 0 Uie . imuutei. on iui wnumn ana who prupueiic
tribes. Until he waa 1 he waa aa other mind be looked Into the future and saw
boys of hla age anr race, and It waa aucceea written large above the head
taken for granted that he, tn the full- of the poor, unknown, obscure Indian
ness of time, would alao become a great boy from Alaska. The upshot of the
in hi trth ajt nrulita ofor coun- matter waa that he forever drouDed
ell fires, become ft mighty hunter, make hla Indian patronymic and became the
told me that unlesa a child of the
Thiinket tribe la taught English by the
time he ia g-or Tt it is1 impossible for
him tn- learn the tongue afterwards, as
that particular Indian dialect ta so full
of gutterals and consonants.
At present Mr. Cutter ia preparing for
, vaai . - j- J
ion
physical and mental equipment He la the natural duvelopmeot af leas. rr
aa tall and sturdy aa an ordinary Eng. Instance, if, we are having a history
Hah lad of 17 and he can converae In- lesaon, and aouiaoae auggvaia a gvo
telllgently on most subjects In a way graphical question growing naturally
that would do credit to many grown out of the history, there la no reason
men. He has written ar'tlolea on tha why we ahould drop tha history and
current political and educational prob- follow that line at thought Oaogrer-hy
Ima which have been accepted on their may lead na Into mathematics and ao
merits by leading English newspapers on. The reason for this la that tha
and magaatnes. and he haa also written children should realise tha eani'al re
veries which display conaldorabler merit
Collins' explained to me that he hud
been asked to open a achool In the coun
try by a number of persona who wthd
him to undertake the uducation of thir
children and he will atart with enough
pupils to insure the financial sacersa
of the undertaking.
"We will have children from 5 to 15
yeara old," ha said; "and practically all
our teaching will be done out of door
and by . the perlpatellu method. No
elaaa will have more than . 10 rhltdrnn.
for no teacher can Kive Individual intui
tion to more. We will have our c-laax'a
In the garuna -and fields which sur
round the fine old country house that
M hav taken and, wa will adopt tho
kindergarten method aa much aa porhI
bli. I do not mnan by this the formal
kindergarten method which would vhnck
Froebel almoat aa-mnch as tho old syn
tenk did, but we will adapt his princi
ples to our. surroundings. Our clats
gnrdens and flnlda will be well supplied
with large blackboards at which tha
teacher can stop In hla walk and Illu
strate his talk.
The children will ba encouraged to
lation of all branches of knowledge - to
real life. In tha old-fashioned echol
earb subject Is taught, by r H and tha
children . seldom - riUie that one hm
any relation to anothnr. ,
"For tha aame reason I have always
taught my children both artthmotle and
geography by means ef match" or JltiM
sticks. They learu by laying te sticks
beside two other stick that two and
two make four, and that lujlaw addi
tion and multiplication have some ref
erence to rval things. - The ge'ometrii-at
forms and their rulallon to realities mr
be taught In the same way. After thrr
have mastured the principles iu ' this
way th formal larning cornea ensilr
to tlicin. It Is ftlmplv teaching them td
express In words what they alroady
fulTv undrtrstand.
"P U - H . . I . I ... . -.V. -..1
, 11 "ll,lir. IMLIII'IM 111 1,1 y N. II.,. ,
will be very broad. I bellnve In giving
cHrh ,-h.l ! the essentials of religion and
letrlnir the nn.rentm themnelvaM rill In.
the details of whatever creed they be
lieve In. My principal assistant wilt b
uliMvmnn I. hnlv nr.L p Hufr T vrll-
not object to Nonconformist or Rom in
lainonc eiorgymen visiting tne cnu-
ask questlona. I want to' encourage dren of their faith under my charge.'
YOUR FACE FASHIONED
BY YOUR THOUGHTS
0'
revolutionized the face anil character'
of the man to the end that,. 32 yeara
after the second picture had been taken,
his face at 60 abowed real - nobiltty,
strength, purpose, and determination of
character?
By John A. Jayna.
N the walla of a beautiful home in
the East End there hang three
remarkable pictures.
TV. a-at la tha, nlotnre nf a
. . - , . .v Then you are told that auddenly, al-
younr lad of 15 or 1. with weak. og, wlthout . mmn,r, ..Alnr.
sad, watery eyee, character-lacking chtn there was thrust In upon him tremen-
and general expression of do-nothrng- u resnonaibUltiea for one so poorly
, " , ,, , . . " prepared from a physical and character
ness that Is ao frequently found in tha point of view: that at Juat the tlma
face or boya who have not yet given these came to him, love's-young' dream
.., 'nuvt t their hiri n, imapjn.f inn came to his life and that these two,
any flight to their birds or Imagination worklng. harmoniously hand in hand!
and fancy, love and work, transformed, uplifted.
Tha second nlcture Is the cloture of punned nis are. you are told that
- r r . 1 , 11 nn l.( I d H.n.m htln.a
from an idle, thoughtless, ' Indifferent
young man, under the transforming-
power or tne two greatest regents In
the world, hla life waa changed; thnt
he had a new outlook, on life; that In
him wps born a' new purpose;' that In
hlin wan lni.arn.ti.rl a-raar n.l.a .
be of service and use to the world.
Tou are told that he gaver himself .
entirely to the consideration , of his;
new DUHingH ana uie maKinst or a
OVT PRODIGY
a young man aged about 28. The face
Is not particularly a strong one, but
In It there are promises of possibilities
that may yet be turned into accom
plishments. Looking into tho face you
say to yourself, if you are Interested in
character study, "Here la the face of a
youne- man who may make of hlnuself
a worthrul worKer tn tne woraoiiop or home: that undoubtedly, tiilnklnir rela
the world, or who if his thought la tlve to hjs home and his working and
turned, into other directions,, may be- llvlna; for each and giving -to each hla
com criminal." Looking at the pic- growing and developing strength, there
ture you are unable to aay Just what wai effected the transformation,
the owner of the face may beoflme. The pictures and tha'tru story well
The third picture Is the picture of a illustrate the line that heads this, col-
t man 60 yeara of age. It Is the face of umn, "Four face la fashioned, by your
a afwmfv-haartevl i-ljir- hralnert. hone.it. thought"
upright man. There are no llnea of Perhaps now, while our rcadera are
weakness, no indications of Impurity, following the atory, some arc rernm-
Experiences of
er he haa ever been told that he la bird, the only one of his kind in the en- h American who
the pipe of peace with the pale facea protege of Mr. Borer. the greatest . undertaking he. has yet
who came to his country, ana m otner air. t,uiier as yei naa m sue qui jew roaue. a concert tour ot six -months un-.
ways deport himself aa great chief public appearances. Durlnar. the Lewis 'der the direction of the Lyceum Bureau
ahould. But Doohh-hoh-hharcnH, the and Clark fair ha sang with the Cam I- of Chicago. He will start out next fall.
Raven, and other plana for himself. Hid- val of Venice company and again at tha going as far west aa Chicago; nd aa
den deep. In the Innermost recess of hla unveiling of the atatue of gacajawea. far east and New York. , "
oui waa the longing for muste, not tha Since then hla work has been confined Mr. Cutter has'rcla!md Portland as
weird barbaric tribal ehant of the principally to Choir ainglng. hla home for a vnumber of years, and
Thllnketa, but something different Ha It ia th personality of the man that Portland Will yet avecanse to be prond
had listened to and taken part In the first attracts one. I don't know wheth- to claim as her own this Indian aong
arospei Hymns' oi tne mission scnooi
which he attended since hla seventh
yafir, and it waa this muslo that ap
pealed to him. With the very first
money he ever earned, 3, he Invested in
av cornet That there waa no one at
the mission capable of teaching him to
play the instrument did not for a mo
ment daunt the spirit of this scion of
royalty. For two yeara he practiced,
and at tha end of that time was able to
Slay the mlsaion hymns, and was lnci
en tally the happiest boy in Alaska, but
this achievement only whetted his ap
petite for more. Somehow there had
penetrated to the wilds of thaj llttl
andw bound settlement the naws of the
Chemawa Indian achool. Straightway
tne Kaven maae up nis mina tnat ne
wanted
there
lea
thel
there
berlna- that beautiful illustration that
Hawthorne gives, of the face trans
formed by the secret and continual
study of the old Profile RocJc tn the
handsome, but" It is undoubtedly a fact tire northwest
HOW TO IMPROVE SO-
CIETY-By Mr. John A. Logan
no marks of dissipation. You ask con
cerning tha picture, and you are told
that it la tha face ot a man who, up
knowA'ln certain ifnes "oTtrVd. In the g2 H2".f A' Yront and New
purposely. I lost my temper and ad- .1, gj" rem'emlncef ,
dressed a hot remark to him. at which comparatively hort space of 20 years h, OId rtena. the Old Man of the
, he exclaimed: 'pardon, monsieur,' ha bum up a targe- Ditsiness, uiac ne Mountains, so called, grew to look Ilka
TlV.ttj.i-ne- With dropped his umbrella at my feet, and In was husband of a splendid woman thttt about which he was thinking:
Mearenicr mi ltn0Bliir to nt It ihumM In anme wav and the father of five healthy, sturdy Hence, it comes that ther Is truth
Hiaropean juignt ringt-ra. to ger my letter of credit, although it n wnn no u. iic Pumui.i ln tno ola statement, we become line
Prom the Baltimore American was n an Inside pocket. It caused me a modest competence and was honored things about which we think.
. , . , n. kj t. li uu i) ic, ins Benains ui many . j ...... ....... xv ta uu n . . . j . . . i umi um u.i.cj-
lrttvcl" " cablegrams and some money, but I man- You aek relative to the first or these
THEY LIKED HIM
i
r was very refreshing to read an In- posed to govern, young men aa devoted
tervlew with Frederick Townsend to society as he haa been." Hla sensible
and doe not ieep the closest watch-on aged to have the payment stopped and three- picturea and the second, and you
hla valuable ta almost sure to be re- the thief profited nothing. are told that each of them represents
. . ... . hv "In 'Borne, list Christmas day I went this man at tne age aDove mentioned;
lieved of hla personal belongings Dy ont for a ln tne .uburba to gee .oma that at 16 he was callow, unformed,
pickpockets," ' said W. E. Mlghell. vice- rare paintings ln an old church. Wish- half made up, lacking in potentiality
Brealgfmt of the San' Francisco chamber ng to aee the country I took a street- ana power, ion are ioia, too, tnat ac
. kQ. ,t nn.hB(. . car that waa densely packed. The air 28. after having dawdled his way
of commerce, who haa Just finished a. wa prett, er)sp an(1 wor an OV0r. tr0tigh college, having been dangled
two years' tour of the world. coat closely buttoned. How on earth and petted aa a babe, he was of no more
"Th. iiht.Hnirero' rentrv are active the rascal manae-ed to eet bit watch and account than the smallest bump on the
m l to Cairo, but .P?? t igge,t lor of the forest " ' sthOTne1 K? h
Z y r , . i "y s una, out noia me inca, aa i wnavt men, as-, you. au tumpieimy character and In the face. And hack
of all. back of the chisel, the mallet and
the ideal is the will of the individual.
nal gives us our faces ln childhood; at
60 they are what we ourselves have
made them.
It is a true statement, as guide boarda
on .the highway Indicate to the traveler
his past and onward Journey, so a man's
face tells the story of the rood over :
way which he h.ia come and points out tha
w ti " ill WIIIUU JIQ ma,r '. Fv. -
Thoughts are chisels, habits are
mallets. Ideals are the plans along'
which the sharp chisels propelled by the
I will give the palm for boldness and found on getting- off the car.
dexterfty to the professionals of Italy, "The manager of the hotel whom
EDISON ABANDONS EXPERIMENTS
Marun. wno nar-.io.or. na. n -n4yaja or tha situation and tha ra- -"tB plinder il ck haa been consulted advised me against reportlni po.lt tha $100 reward I was willing to o' what his characfer and hla
supposed to be purely and aimply a ttonal way In which he eliminates non- eZrV to a fine art. I am a careful the theft He said that the real pick pay. I saw no advantage ln this and JhLn be cnaractr ana nis
society man, but In thia article he entitles, ignorant, pretentious men and man and do not need to read the con- pockets operated in gangs, and that told him Id think "over. a mans character, adman's facer fa"
iiai ...iiuij iu uvra u.ai..a lum determined oy mi will. What ne is
T' d 1 when his worlt la completed he la be
ll. 000 and WhO had nut ranu ha hn wtlle tn. hn what ha waa
advance with the police and What kind of character, what ; kind
till waiting for the recovery 0f face are vou establishing an. form-
sptcuous and to aatoniah nni. -baa k, tha Axv heina- Siinrtav. He cava ma nreclselv the same advice of hia money. He had made up his Ine? It Is a Dertlnont auestion. but one i,
been all too often gratified The Ws and I was lostled two or three times by a tho hotel man. Still nnpersuaded I mind that he'd like to get back his 1200. that needs to be carefully considered
slpations, extravagances and shocking L,, fellow with a black mustache, called on tha wilef of police The off!-" but the Roman police refused, saying and answered, for on lis answer awing;
dleregard of public opinion by men and jTinalfv seeing that he was doing It cial waa pollta; but ha wanted me to de- they must have time." the gates of destiny. Think about itl
women who have inherited wealth 'has - 1 1 ." 1
to bto there, but how to act snows nimaeii 10 oe an eaucaieu, am- .nj. &iiixjing. iiiai ciaas svani wrwu. v "v. r- - -r, - --
wa, tha vexatious problem. Alas- hltlous. thouehtful arenUeman sWho haa ?..uw".tu? .Hcn OI puono at- yet u .tne gre,t pi o --t"" v""""' rS"."""" "'''t Zm. ."
i m awi . i-i - Kr ii a.suBi . . iivir snm in Bra oniti era a,Mh ha i aa atv an m m a w ni rri v i en i k m ill i 11 1 n l i aaaj a. au t. iia ncii i m inn. nu a. i,u lit a vsls ua.
r own w&v Rut to tha Raven wh era lueas u5"" uj uivu.uub, cuvhsoih, au nn nmvm naa too much apace fn to credit far 110,009. Tnere was an onor- uuntwt up mj un.usq saiatoa resiaenc up m
-.i"ii u i. -l- - ...aafinariU mMtinn tKasf m iitW DuDtio oress. ThAtr rwtr. tn k fV. rioH tupriAti rii t to h&r conaul and narTatea mv Htorv to mm. wno was i
f-x V
V
4.
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f -
A
' ' ' ' ' 4
i - - , - .
Tbomfts A. Edison, whoa) Ufe'g oeenpatio naa Wf th livrutici of
clertricnl dcrtev, bu derided to abaadoa ttat fieM ot atody and n
pr!ment and derota tha rrt of hia lite to catmlttrT. Ha la alao
going to ladalfa la kla 10E(-axpeaed iealra for travel. "
Keen appalling, and it ia a healthful
aljrn If a resolution has been formed t-j
Ignore the existence of nennla wh. km.
done nothing to benefit society, advance
civilisation, , or for the betterment of
the world.
He la probably correct In considering
London society a good model, though it
is more ordess af.itcted with the pres
ence of the neauveaurtche who imaglni
that their money will make amende for
their vulgarities and ignorance of the
H0?" ot Wo "0 Klai to know
thai "The very fact that society in New
Tork Is unsatisfied. Is tha most satis
factory thing about the transitorial
stage through which we are new going.
When we get genius, success, cleverness,
tact, self-control, assembled in one great
social body, then we ahall have real so
ciety." It la to be hoped that It will ba re
quired of all who have recognition ln
polite society that they shall have done
something In some line for the. benefit
and advancement of civilization and the
development of the best that la in hu
man nature. There will be no longer
any necessity for persons to resort to
outre antics and the employment of
vaudeville performers to entertain one s
friends, because each friend will then
contribute something to the entertain
ment of an evening. There will be no
occasion for patronizing queetionable
people to furnish diversions.
In all vocations an professions of
life there are Intellectual giants who -If
encourared, would contribute much
toward the enjoyment and edification
of aociety, who now. feeling that they
are uninteresting to thoughtlesa reck-,
leas people, are loathe to take any part '
ln ao-lal entertainmenta.
Another side of this higher' ambition
of New York aoelety would ba the good
that would be done, aa Mr. Martin
truthfully eaya. People mingling with
others who are cheerful and encourag
ing are not so- much depressed by mis
fortunes which may overtake them and
if they are made to feel that they are
entertained because of their intellectual
power a and asreeableness of manner
they quite foraet that there la auch a
thln aa unhapptneaa. Ofter in the ex
change of opinions and contact with
men of different callings In Ufa one
geta Ideaa that are Invaluable,
Nw Tork will be the gainer If the
frivolous, vulgar people who only rep
reaent money decide to take up their
abode aa the ether aide of tha Atlantic
-A salon such as waa once, In vogue la
Paris la assuredly mora edifying than
monkey dinners and vaudeville per
formance la a private house after one
has been dicing a iarae company.
If age haa brought about thia change
wa aro glad we are rapidly reaching
our majority and trust that the aiddl
neaa ef youth may sooa he a thing of
tho paat. There la no country on the
glob whera there aro so many brilliant
ren and women aa taera are tn the
sited '!-. and ear-ec tally In the city
of New Tork, and there ts bo roaaoa
why w ahould n"t bars th snoot re
ftneal and- dishful society In Ameri
ca cities of aay placo on tbo glob.
Mr. Martta. being a gearlereaD ef
leioar, a I understand tt. cannot make
better aa ef his time than to persist
In -tb ernsatk of such a aociety
aa ho doocrla.
i trvsbonar' -V
Vmmrr frr Iran er XVwtt ye
always stiver who a ywa UUa com.
etery T
CoBttctrjcat asa; X aa going ba
UNCLE SAltf PRESENTS HIS STAR PERFORMERS
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