X....L- THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, it t." THB NEWS AND OBSERVER, ." I'i' University" Instrument .'of. De mocracy For Realizing High Aspirations of State (CoaUnued from Page On.) wh m implicit in that new lnsti tutlen for iu realisation. Jefferson nought to create In tha university of tha state aa limitation that would aot only through traditional oultur valuee Bira to tha atata "loglslatora, and Judges . and ax pound tha prin ciple and structure or government." hat would also, "harmonise and pro mota tha tntaraata of agricalture, manufacture, and eommeroe, and by wall formod riawa of political economy give free ooaraa to public industry." To tha traditional models then exist -" ent he advocated an Institution that would meet all tha neada af all of the tales, and to this and planned courses In manual training, engineering, agri cultara, horticulture, military train ing", veterinary surgary, and for school of eommorea, manufacturing, and diplomacy, and In the detalla ef ' Us administration ho planned to keep it flexible and responsive to the peo ple's need. Mlerwa Idea. Had To Watt. "But In spita of this splendid pro gramme tha atato university could not coma Into Its own In the South, nor for a hundred years be realised anywhere. Tha great American Idea that Jefferson conceived had to wait I until America Itself could come Into being, and tha mission of interpreta tive leadership passed to other hands, . as tha section which gave It birth lost I contact with tha spirit of national I Ufa. I "Tha evolution of ths American I atata university during; tha past bun i dred years la tha record of tha gre- dual fulfilling of Jefferson's splendid vision. It represents tha vital history of tha contribution of lthN century America to tha progress of mankind. The diffusion of wealth and know ledge, geographical and scientific dls- . corery, now Inventions and naw Ideals not only put a power and a passion into material making- and construc tion, trat they fashioned institutions of training in whatever vocation the sll-oonqucring hand of materialism demanded, and these aa they develop ed were added to those that other ' clvilisationa had created. To the in ; stitutiona that seek to express man's 'inner Ufa and his relations to ths past and tha fixity of thosa relations, it added institutions that Interpret his outer Ufa, his relation to the preeent aad his Infinite capacity for progress, i It seeks to ressssrt for preeent clvUi . ration what past civilisations any to America, together with what America has to aay for itself. Through Its 1 colleges of liberal arts, pure and ep . plied science, professional and tech i ntcal schools it repeats the culture ' messages of the prophets of the. ltth 'century: Arnold's message of sweet ' nssa aad light; Huxley's message of I tha spirit of Inquiry aad Carlyle'a meesage of tha spirit of work. Grouping of Colleges. "Is this grouping, ttn. of the col lege of culture, the college of re I March, tha college of vocation into a f compartmental organisation of effl I clent and specialised parts, supple : mented by the idea of centering Itl energy and Ingenuity In putting all of its recourses directly at the service of , all the people Is this ths ultimate thought of this greatest institution of ths modern state, and is its future to be concerned merely with perfecting these parte and further extending their utility. "Culture as learning, and science as Investigation, and work as utility, each has an eternal life of its own, and to perfect each of thsm for the pci fuiutancc of -He-speoial week will "always be an aim of the university. But this conception of Its function as a, university is necessarily partial and transitional Tyndail, in his great Belfast Address made In 1174. points cut that It la not through science, nor Through literature that human nature is made whole, but through a fusion of both. Through Its attempt to matt a new fusion of both with work during the great constructive years of the past half-century, our civilisa tion ha caught the impulse of a new culture center. It Is this that the state university aeaks to express, It is more than an aggregate of parts. As a university it la a living unity, an organism at the heart of the living democratic state, interpreting Its lifs. not by parts, or by a summary of parte, but wholly, fusing the functions t brain- -aad heart -and hand - under the power of the immortal spirit of democracy as it moves In preeent American life to the complete realisa tion of what men really want. The real measure of Its power will be whether, discarding the lrrelevanclea uf the past and present, it can focus, I use. and interpret thsfr eternal verities and radiate them from a new rganic center of culture. This, let ii tentatively define as achievement Uigrain3or Sick Headache Dr. J. J. Caldwell says that Ml exceedingly diet renin dleeaae aoee no shertea 111, nut doe not appear te be ssrehle. BuBer ers frees Wile nflHerioa are condemned to nederso the pertoalee. attacks every two weekt until they are forty years ef as, art r -watcn the attacks are lees freeaeot, aad naily disappear entirely. Palliative sseee ure duria tee attack are all that M M peesinlc to agseet, while care la the diet Is tke beet preveatlve is sere. An attMk mar one be prevented by takla two AaU-kamsla Tablets when re crme toeae Senear, aad one AnM-tuuaaJa i Table rerv two soars sarin the attack shortens i, ease the pate ead brtnss rest sad cole. AnU-kannle Tablets assy be ettataed e sll droicltt. Ask for A-t Tablets. They quickly nil ere aU Pais. BRINGING UP FATHER THCet.CXEAO vm-t OC LET rttcriT 1 THE. FROrfT TO TO i CHIKK H'STIC?. touched by vns feeling as truth alive and at work In the world of men and thing. Vital bourne uf ('IvIHantton. "Buch new center are the vital source of civilization, and the pro pulsive power of progress. Every now and then in human hislory man make a synthesis of their ideal, giv ing redirection and increased projec tion to their energies on new and higher level of achievement. Truly great creative period thus result from the liberation of men through new revelation of deeper and richer values in their new relation. Clas sical learning gave Kurnpe such s period In the RenaUmance; science gave the modern world such a period each expressing itself throush s (treat educational Institution, typifying the union of past ideal Into a new center of reality. The American state uni versity of the twentieth century I sn organism of the productive mute, striving to etpms tn mnRtble realities the aspiration of present democracy, as It adjusts itHelf to the liberations of a nsw humanism. Kvolutlon of Democratic Male "Ths evolution of the democratic state In the past hundred year a un attempt to actualize in human society the principles of liberty, equality, and Vrotherhood is parallel to that of the state university. Traditional Ideals and Institution it, too, Inherited that It could not wilfully discard: new ideal it, too, aspired to that it could not Immediately achieve. Its con tinental task of "construction and making" made the production of ma terial values its necessary concern. Ths Incarnation of the exeat anti feudal power of commerce wa in evitable, not oirly to break the bonds of the "ancient obsession." hut to open through Its material might rail ways, steamship lines, canals, tele graph snd telephone systems. kooI road, school houses and libraries, us avenues to liberation. In its develop ment It created Its own abnormal standards and tyrannies, and became so obsessed with material freedom that equality seemed s contradiction snd ro-operatlon the vision of a dreamer. Its life was individualistic, compartmental. and fiercely compe titive. Its Idesl was efficiency: lis criterion. - dtvldendy; Pat ' present democracy, If it has not yet focused the light of the new center toward which It moves, la steadily illumined by It. Democracy ha come to mean more than an aggregate of vocation, grouped for the purpose 'of material exploitation. The whole effort of the productive state is to unify its life, not by casting out material good, but hy Interpreting snd using it iu its tym metrical upbuilding. Isr-prrodcnor on Knowledge. "Qreat progress toward making the Htate a co-operative organism in the equal distribution of all the element of ltfe to all according to their capac ity, has been made In the evolution of business Itself. 'Business Is business' is no longer Its ultimate thought. In perfecting Its parts for efficiency it discovered, not merely the value of co operation In the Individual business, but In the Isrger aggregates of ma terial expansion thst the co-operation j of manufactures, commerce, ami agri culture I necessary to prosperity, and thst the weakness of one is the weak- neea or all, Jt has come to see in ad dition to this extensive unity, an In-" tensive unity in its dependence on knowledge, science, snd ethics; and more deeply still that the organic cen ter of all of Its actions and Inter action for liberating Its efficiency and Its life to a higher level of produc YoorX,rA.THe-'i, bad! A THP DOS - I TOLO I HfMruTrTQiiTuc. . ' CB LOOK WALTER CLARK tivity is in raising the productivity of all of the men engaged in It by liber ating ll of their wholesome faculties. Scientific .management, which will In the present century mark as great pro gress in production aa the Introduc tion of machinery did In the past cen tury, shifts the main emphasis of pro duction from the machine to the worker. The new freedom in what ever form in business, politics, reli gion, and philosophy is a manifesta tion of the effort of democracy to es tablish the supremacy of human values, and so to make of Itself the creative, "spiritual organism it must Krom thl new center of con structive co-operation, if 1 already in it effort to abolish Ignorance, poverty, disease, and crime, sending forth con fident premonition of fuller life and new and brave reconstructions. The I roductive democratic Htate would make of itself sn organism, by mak. lug Its compartmental life a union of ill of Its tart. n the nation made of the State a territorial union. It would perfect the part through the stronger, fuller life of the whole; it would lose none of the good of Indi vidual initiative and material suc cess, but would translate it all into the whole terms of higher human values. It cries with the creative Joy of spent life renewed : 'All good thing are ours. Nor soul helps flesh snore' -Than -nVeh hepe cowl.' i Instrument of DcrtHMTscy. "The State I'ni versify is the instru nent of democracy for realizing all PATCHES ON FACE BUR NEDANDJTCHED Small, Red and Shiny. White Scales Formed. Very Disfiguring. Could Not SleeprJuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Healed. Carpenter. Miss. "For years I had been troubled with tough plares ""'! on my face In email patches, then gradually cover, lag It. They would itch and almost make me scream with pain. Then my fare would become covered with small whits srsles or hits of dead akin which would feel vary bed. When they began they were small, nd aad tuny. Then aa they enlarged white Scales formed and they were very disfiguring. They burned and itched ao that I could aot kerp from arratchiag and I could aot sleep. Tbe skin scaled aad peeled off, . "I tried various rasBedlea but was nearly n-azy when come months ago I derided to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I bathed any fare with warm water aad CuUoura hoap, then applied the Cutieura Ointment with my nngen several times a day. The first treatment helped tbe burning aad BVhiag and wtthn a week there was ao alga of the trouble. Now my face is a -wrtrlJi sad white as anybody .' I am sealed. (Signed) V Colacsea. Oct. &, 1014, Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. skis Book ea request. AaV dranj post-card "Catnnwa, Dept. T. Be. ten." sold throughout the world. o ;raciou! twwfs A COAL OVER. Vf Tup rA4 of tha high and healthful aspirations of tha State. Creatine aad pro-created by tha atata it has no immediate part, however, In a specific social program. It aarvloe la deeper and more perva sive. It seas its problem a positive, not negative; as one of fundamental health, aot of superficial disease. 11 look on tha Wat as a producer: not ssr a policeman. It la not so much oonoarnad with doing a certain set of things, as infusing the way of doing all things wtth a certain IndsaL Not by spasmodic reform, nor by senti ment, nor by the ezpiatloncof philan thropy; but by understanding, criti cism, research and appUed knowledge it would reveal the unity of the chan nel through which life flows, aad minister to tha purification of It currents- It would conceive ths preeent atata and all of Its practical problems aa tha Held of Its serplce. but It would tree tha term aarvloe from the narrow ing oonatruotlons of Immediate prac tice. Tb whole function of education la to mak stroght and clear the way for the liberation of the spirit of men from the tyranny of place and time, not by running away from the world, but by mastering it. The university would hold to ths truth of practical education that no knowledge is worth while that la not related to the pres ent Mfe of man; it would reject IU error that only knowledge of nearby thing has Such a relation: It would held to tha truth of classical educa tion I quote) that 'things high and far away-often bestow best control aver thing that are detailed and near.' and reject Its error ol concluding that because things are high and distant they must possess thst power. It would emphssHse the fact that re search and classical culture rightly In terpreted are as completely service as any vocational service; but it would consider their service too precious to be confined In cloisters and sufficiently robust to Inhabit ths ' walk of men. Ths whols value of university exten sion depends upon the validity of the purity and power of the spirit of the truth from which it Is derived. Kx tsnslon It- would Interrupt, not as thinly stretching out it resources to ths oUat boundaries for purposes of protective popularity, nor ss carrying Sown to those without the castle gates broken bits of learning; hut ss ths radiating power of a new passion, car rying In natural circulation the unified culture of tha race to all parts of ths body politic. It would interpret Its service, not as sacrifice: but as life, the normal functioning of life a fruit ful and fundamental as the relation between the vine snd the branches. Relation To Mat. "It is this organic relation to the democratic Stat that puts the South ern State university at tha vital cen ter of the (state's formstive material oroeperlty. "What are Southern uni versities doing." asks a great Indus trial leader, "to give economic Inde pendence to Southern Industry T" It is a fair challenge, and the Htate uni versity Joyfully acknowledgee lta obli gation fully to meet It. It Is a part of ths businees of laboratories lo unc tion In the productive stste by solv ing the problem of embarrassed In dustry, science has So faithfully per formed this obligation that ths main arch of modern industry rests on the laboratory. Applied science no less truly rests on pure science snd the li berating current of the spirit of in-' qulry and Investigation thst I ths vital spark of modem life. The first great stsp in ths indspendence of Southern industry will be the realization of Its dependence. Our whole electrical power liberation, significant now In achievement and thrilling In prophecy. Is ths . co-operation ' of a hundred force, the most Important of which Is, tha vital forea of unknown4 Investigators whose labor and splrlf opened tha v ui 1 ent to the- wheel -of productive industry. "If." says Wal ter Bagshot, "It had not been for quiet people who sat still and studied the sections of ths cons, if other quiet people had not sat still and worksd out the doctrines of chances ; if star -gazers had not watched Ion and carefully ths . motibns of the heavently bodies, our modern astron omy would have been impossible, and without our astronomy our ships, our colonic, our eesmsn, and all that makes modern life could not have ex isted." The aniline dye industry of tlermany la not ths product of the clever alchemy of a laboratory mere ly. It Is ths logical result or great state replacing through Its university "by Intellectual force the physical Torces lost by war. It is the result, too, of the fusion with this of Indus trial statesmanship; the result of a mastery of Industry's extensive and In tensive relations in economic Isw. for. sign commerce, science, and diplo macy. "Foreign trade." says the Sec retary of Commerce, "begins Inside a nan's head, In ths shad of knowledge uf the country to which he would sell, Its customs, finances, language, weights, measures, and business meth ods." The Htate University would msks clear the facf that in it rela tion to Southern Industry, whlls it re gard every practical need aa an op portunity of service, its still Isrger service Is In making clear the relations that radiate from Industry In concen tre tic fields of knowledge that either enslave It If they arc not understood, or liberate it in ever increasing life and power . if they are understood. And their chief liberation is the set ting free of the master of industry himself. All industry thst is worthy of absorbing a man's life Is In thP grasp .yt the world relatione and under the teet of world standards Any work that does evoke s man's full faculties in mas tering its relations Is worthy work. So it is the function of the university, not merely to bring its resources to bear In .solving the problems of in dustry and discovering through Iu In- ijMOausaajgt an re- rwa-A "TreW HOVTf,U AMD COrw3TTHR II -rSM.. I..- t -tATTUTatrSC . x ' " a . . El - J AflfJUlr I UAI7' VY , ' y r I Id.aL- TMrKT J I 7- II II IU OAT M 4-IV 55 I I 1 ' W w Resmol clears bad complexions Tte-rssUrwaVofsteainolSoas, with an u.i: iisial Ibjht apniata tiunoi Rssinol Omtmant, at ins late thaalib, perm ha rsrtural. hwalihy-actaoivasxl rids tha con- ptaaioo of ptmposx, blacsdtsmda. and rough rs rough rat, quack W, cjaally and -at littto cost. ner relstton the field of Southern in dustry ss a field of statesmanship, but In discovering thereby the further truth that in perfecting It relation It become a liberal vocation in saving the tnsn snd all of hi higher facul ties, not from business, but through business. Salvation will com there or nowhere. The question for South ern Industry 1 whether In the world opportunity that open ahead, it will attempt the futile experiment of be coming big through superficial and selfish efficiency, nr-whether through a mastery of all of its relations, while becoming big It will also become great. nr of rVlatel Visions. "ne of the belated vision of Southern business and educational statesmanship Is thst we can have here no full prosperity or civilisation unless agriculture I made truly pro ductive. In our Individualistic, po litical and economic life we have flat tered it. Ignored It. or exploited It. We have lately awakened to the fart that It la an almoat dead renter at the heart of Southern prorresa, and we have had the viaion that it is our function to co-operate with It fully and wholly. It la inevitable that so ciety's need will make farming effi cient aa a businees. In bringing this about one of two processes Is possi ble: that It be developed as othsr great businesses are, with routine killed labor under captains of Indus- A New Exposition Xrain rs On TsnasA Tests fnm St. Lent Jen 'eanrus A fast, new, all-steel daily train 'cenicfimifed Ths (oOowmf schedule has been airansed to include most ol tha point of greatest scenic interest in oVaght,- W.Stloui i0 M. U.luaCitr - 0 P M. Ar.rek. - - IIS f M. Ar.SsltLakeC.tr I M P M. Ar. Sen rennem S:4S P.M. MUsorjin Tcm-w. Duma Bio GeiAjroi wngTKKt TCctna-t Sussii Limited Serine stsen Issuriowe observation and slseelnf ear ecxnmmoeauon. ef eininfeer astern for year saiety. - One iImI St. tMiate Den ver two fusses Salt Lske City three nifkuSa Far eempfetfe evesessaen mf g. . (isais, . p. a . U Itmm ,. Cm llesia as eetac aa. Clstiiilll, Tew. --nrr upi An a i.aiwrpi t 1 in n ii rmitvrnkmmi limit, siaawsjasa. re " tre CLEAT, CLOTrwTS try; er that It be made a liberal hu sua vorsUlen, each farm ham the center of a whole and wnoreeome Hfa, and pertWting tfce development of a dwfatt - aad Complete civilization. Vthat will mak It realise Its higher destiny will not be a ltsalted view of it aa a ananaal vocation. It la a manual vocation, and aa such should bo trained te tha highest human ef ftoleaey aa a prodaoer of wealth. It must be more deeply interpreted, how ever. If It la to attract aad hold men of eaergy aad initiative. In lta rela tion ta nature, to tha applied nclenoss, ta economics, and the social science acricultwrsf ha relation that put it an tha full current of the forces that snake for Ira man culture through right relations to work, by evoking not only prosperity from tha aoll, bat the high er faculties of tha man himself mak ing of the) cropper, the farmer; and of the fanner, man-on -t he- fa rm. The raaltty of the state university's power to liberate the faculties and a pi rat tone of the workers la the pro ductive atata depend on the force of tha. power as generated within it s an association of teachers and stu dents, given wholly to tha pursuit of truth and free from tha distraction of making a living. Tha heart of this association, the coltegcef liberal arts and scienea. baa as lta mission, now aa always, the revelation of the full meaning of life In lta broad and gen eral realations, and to flx In tha heart of Its youth a point of outlook on the field of human endeavor from which to see it clearly and to see It whole. It fears no criticism based on an in terpretation of its mission aa "Im practical"; but It does regard aa fatal any failure of Its own to evoks the best power of Its student body. Pree tdent Wilson haa spoken of preeent undergraduate Ufa aa "a non-conducting medium" of Intellectual dis cipline, and President Prltchett sums up all possible condemnation when he says that It Is an organization where conditions within are such that suc cess In tbe things for which It stand no longer appeals to thoee within It. Failure to appeal may not be laid to the curriculum, nor to the spirit' of youth, nor to the spirit of tbe sgs. "Ths things for which It stands" In ths mastery of fact.' ths mastery - of msthod. end in spiritual tone will came not because they sre latent In Oreek or In physics: but because they are made luminoua there through a revelation of the broad and liberal re lation bf these studies to the life curiosities of the student. A course In Ureek may be aa narrowing and aa blighting to thirsty spirit as a dis sertation In mediaeval theology: a liberal arts curriculum at Its conclu sion may be in) the. mind of the young graduate not more Impressively uni fied and tangible than the wreckage of a onco paaaioncte contest between literature and science. The line of memory and repitlllon is ths line of least reelstance to student and teach er as It la In the dead routine of every field of effort; hut the liberal arts 00 urea la not a mechanical contrivance for standardising the crude material fed to it. It I the life history of the human spirit and Its wonderful ad ventures In ths world, unrolled to the eye of aaplring youth setting out on ts wonderful adventure. For this great business of touching ths Imagi nation snd stirring ths soul to rrrig inal activity, no formulas nor techni que, however conscientious will serve. For liberal training to make it con nections, eager, sympathetic Intarpre tation is neoeeeary, "with thought like an sdgs of steel and desire Ilk a flame." From tha center of every oubjert runs tha vital currant ef iu inner meaning, and from all subjects In the curriculum In converging lines to ths heart of our preeent civilisa tion aad lta culture message. Intel lectual discipline, cpeclal Insights, and "success In tbe thing for which it stand,"-will appeal --to thooc -within, not by moans of now -ubjects added with tha thought or gaining Interest nor by repeating the assertion that the old subjects ought to have cultural appeal; but by having "ths thing for which it stands" radiantly and con stantly clear In lta own thought and ths touchstone of all of Its activttlea It is ths Incarnation In tha Individual of the spirit ef tha Instltuton a It focuses and reflects ths inmost mee sage of tha age. This la the Bourse of the student's cpeclal insights, his scent for reality, and their fruitage is that productive thinking that la the supreme test of tha college. ansa Vaxfyt Point. "Ths association of teacher and student in ths profaealonal schools will have tb same unifying point of vlsw. Widely separated as tbe pro fessions! schools are In subject mat ter, they have not only a common acientlfic method and spirit In their pursuit, but common culturs cen ter In their larger human relations Arnold conceived of the professional training given at Cornell In the mak ing of engineers and architects a an Illustration of what culture Is not. The criterion ot the American stats uni versity is not a matter of the voca tion; but whether in' making the stu dent efficient In his vocation It haa focused through his studies its own Innsr light so as to lib rails him aa a member of democratic society. It Is not the function of ths university to maka a man merely clever in his profession. That is a comparatively easy and negligible university task. It is also to make vivid to him through his profession his deeper re lation not merely proflctdncy In making a good living, but productiv ity In living a whole life; The pro fessions of Isw. medecinet the minis try. Journalism, commerce, and the rest ars eoeentlal to the upbuilding of a democratic commonwealth: but they must be Interpreted, not as-mdventuree In saltish advancement ; but sa public enterprleee In constructive stateman ship, llberaui.g both the atata and the man. It I the function of tb uni mcuw.r By vrat s.bt MeviAlfe - FlOO VOX UNDER THAT LOAD OF COAL AK ! VVrt TrWtK" TO Clt HIM out: - vi i versity, not only to train man In the technique of law, but to lift them to , a higher level of achievamabt by mak Ing them living epistles of social Jusw tics; not only to maka man aleveet practitioners of medicine, but to lift; them Into conservator of tho publlo) health; not merely to train teachers In the facta aad the method of edu cation, but ta fire them with tho eon vlctlon that they ar tha productive) creators of a new civilisation.. - Ko AsuesJ, Bat Ignoraare. It recognises no antagonist In this) , Immortal business but ignorance. Ig-, noranc it conceives a ths unoardon . able sin of a democracy and on It in every form It would wage rwtentlea warfare. To this end it would unify and co-ordinate It whole system of public education in a spiritual anion of elementary schools aad eneoadary schools of agricultural and mechani cal and normal colleges, of privets and denominational schools and col- . legea, all aa a means to ths end of tha. great commonwealth for which men have dreamed and died but scaresly dared to hope. Fully conscious ef ths confusions of prejudice and tha blind unreason of self-lntereet and greed. It is even more conscious ef tho -curative powers of the democratlo state and Its Indomltabls purpose to be wholly rree. Ho It would enlist all vocations and all professions in a comprehensive, - State-wide program : or achieving as a practical reality Hurke's conception of tbe State aa "a partnership In all science, a part nership in all art. a partnership In every virtue and in all perfection, and since such a partnership cannot ba attained In one generation, a partner ship between all those who are living, and those who are dead, and thosa who sre yet unborn." Alms at tho Higrsret Good. '"Thlc is the understanding of thw meaning of life which represents tha highest level to which men of our civ titration have attained the highest . good at which the State alma. Tha religious perception Of our ttm In It widest application Is the conscious ness that our well-being, both mate . rial and spiritual, lies In Intelligent co-operation. The State Vnlverslty in, its sympathetic study of relations that reconcile the divisions of society, while not concerned with difference In religious organization I Inevitably and profoundly concerned with re llglon Itself. All of its study of men, ' snd things leads through tb Co operating channels that connect them beyond the sources of Immediate Ufa to the one great unity that binds all -together. The human mind, what ever Its achievement. In whatever Held of endeavor, "with the yearning of a pilgrim for lta home, will still turn to the mystery from which It emerged, seeking to give unity to work and thought and faith." The Htate Unl. verslty In It passionate effort to fash Ion this unity Into a common wenltn of truly noble proportions of wove and worth and worship, reverently prsyea as it follows ths star of It faith: "Oh God. I think Thy thought after Thee." nutdi Is Covenant. Such la the covenant of our Immor tal mother "with those who are living1 and those who are dead and those who sre yet unborn." building herself "from Immemorial time as each gen eration kneels and fights and fades.' ' She will hold secure her priceless her Itage from her elder sons as tha pledge of the faith she keeps: sha will cherish the passionate loyalty of her tateet tssne with Its sacred -prtd that -only a mother knows; she will seek guidance - above Iho confusion of voice that cry out paths of duty about her. In the experience of tb great of her kind the world over; but she will not in self-contemplation aad imitation lose her own creative power and that original geniua that alone glvea her value In the world. A the alma mater of the living State and all the higher aaplratlona of Its people' she would draw from It the strength that Is a rhs strength of Its everlast ing hills, and givs answer In term of whole and wholesome life as frean aa the winds of the world that taae new tons from Its pine-clad plains. Eager, confident, sympathetic, and with understanding heart "she stand--eth on the top of the high places, by ths way In the places of the path; she cried out at the entry of the city; at the coming In at ths doors, unt.t you, O men, I call, and my vole la ta ths sons of men." Ontario haa an Indian population of Jl.Ott idect1feuik! AT rOMITMNa. MOTtL. ON ElOWKrttM I , Q0t , ' IJORLICK'G naORNUKAL MALTED niLIt Tha FMd-dTlo for tfifei. Defkwua, krfifvrsimg and Wiwsinin,. Keep it ea rota aJcxxfd horn Don't travel wxhout a" A flick luck prrTsUtal h sWHttH Omlmmm yam amy -HORLtOtTS may gmt m smamtltmtmm GEORGE McMANUS ICHOT- V- . WHT WONT r5tOV-TB L- 3 . t V! ! t