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SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 25, 19IV HAVE DARK HAIR AND' LOOK YOUNG Nobody cbTI1 when you Darken Gray Faded Hair ( . with Sare Tea. , Grandmot&er kept her hair beautiful ly darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Bsge Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that doll, faded r streaked appearance, thia aimpl mlztura was applied with wond erful affect. By asking at any drug tor for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," yon will get a largo bottle of ' thu old-tune recipe, improved, by the addition . of ' other ingredient, all ready to m, for about fiO cents. Thia ahnple mlsture can be depended opon to reatora natural cplor and beauty to the hair. . - A well-known downtown druggist aaye ererybody naee Wyeth'i Sage and Sul phur Componad now because it darkena aa aaturally and evenly that nobody eaa tell it has been applied it'a eo easy to use, too. .Jfou simply dampen a comb or soft brunh and draw it through your hair, taking oae strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, it la restored to its natural color and. looks glossy, toft, and beautiful. This preparation is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not Intended for the cure, mitigation or pre vention of disease. Adv. THE NEWS ANI QftbbKVER 17 jCLAaXON ON VOCATIONAL TRAINING Commissioner JDf- Education Thoroughly In Sym pathy WitrTThe Practipca 0 Swiss School master Whom Napoleon Scorned rtlladelphla B. Marrow ta , Record. The great Kapoleom blundered. Swa Uan as he would oxoa and Jeal Ugta countries as if they were plan tatlona, he told Pestaloaxi that aa had a time to trifle away ever the alphabet Paataloui. thought Napoleon, was no ore Una a 8wias .chool teacher He old not know thai e friendly little mL frwe the shoreof the Laj f Jfomfeaatol was the wiliest and moat bril liant drills aster in Europe the mar aaall Indeed, of embryonto battalions ui brigades aad of armies marching award to conquest. - "What," Peetalotat would ask, "is that boyw aptitude!" To be a tailor t LI- Ta tta nhllnannhv xnea aaaas nun v r- - it was mors honorable as well as pa triotic to ba the father of a bravo and capable soldier than of aa Inept laweyr, though tha soldier died from a bullet la his youth aad the lawyer lived to bn'taiea score aad ten. Vocational training" is now the ehrase by which Pestalontd ta Interpret ed. It ia old bi Central Europe, but new in the United BUtea Bedneed to a single word, its definition is prepar daeas preparedaese for the individual the family, the community and the na tion. Why should a dull aad discouraged tlargymaa' preach to a slumbering eharea when he eaa ploy aad narrow, reap aad husk eathuaiaatleally and ex cellently aad bay shoes and clothing for his wife aad children! Thus Pesta leixi taught aad hia idea has been aught up by Americans of the twen tieth eeatury. Pestaloral would have baited the clergyman ere he began the atndy of theology and turned him face ward toward the waiting country. The United Rates Chamber of Oom meros a host of 800000 driving men, anergtking cities aad States, from coast t aeaat and from the frontier of Can ada to ws eagv - wiui through the veil that separates the pres ent from the hereafter, has accepted and proekUmsd Peatalozsi's doetrins, knowing little, possibly, of PestsJoixl, "" Trade War Coming. A terrible war Is coming, soma proph et are saying, a war with commodities In plaoe of eannoa. Nation la a bat tle with nation, weaponed not with rinse, flying machines and bombs, but with plows, reapers, lathes, retorts, cru cible aad furnaces. Therefore, prepe ratloa aaast begin with farms, milla and hop Instead of at armories aad gun fart erica. ltea are to do tha fighting, as of yoss, and they must be trained, aa In the past. Pestalonl would take them while they wore children, discover them and then develop them Into a cohesive aad highly capable prod active host. This he did for Germany, through the In strumentality of disciples, who under stood aad adopted hi educational pol icy. Aad Praaea I suffering today bs-eaaaa- Napoleon turned his . back and walked away. No one, perhaps, en this side of the Atlantic, traaalate Pestalosai with greater ideuity af purpose aad feeling than does Philander Priestly Clazton, tha brilliant United States Commissioa er of Education.' "Do yon belters that a aatlonl effi ciency .begins with it children ha was . v.. j r ? "TV " ? 4 i i X PHILANDER P. CLAXTON alvi 4 by tha writer of this article. "Your question, he replied, "seems to answer itself automatically. All things begin with the children of a na tion Intelligence, eolf -control, virtue, common sense, industry, and capability, Nature teaches that lesson. 'First the blade,' we were told years ago, 'then the car and then the full rorn in the ear.' Frobel, the great teacher, said that the gardner bestows the greatest care oa his young plants. STOMACH AGONIES DUE TO POISON On Dose of Remedy Sweepe Psla Away Haadreda of Thousands Restored Bfarr! Wonderful Remedy is unit, any ether. It sweep the Bile and Poisonous Ca tarrhal Accretions from the Byvtem. Soothes aad allar inflammation la the Intestinal Tract the aauee of serioss aad fatal ail. anaata. toek as ' Gall Stones. Append id Ue, A rata Indication Cancer and Ulcers of UN BtosnaA and intestines. Yellow Jamaica, Coastlpation, Gastritis, Anto. Intoxication, eta., eta. la every locality there are rratefol aaa- pis wba awe their complete leuiiaij to MarT'a Weaderfol' ; Ranadr. Thoosaada 'say tt k saved them from the knlfa. The moat thor ough iiyitaoMlmncar known. Contain no alaoaol r kahitformins dru. FRK book. lea Stosaath Ailmanta. Addraa Geo. H. Btayr,' Mf. Oiamlat, Chlcss. Batter yat. aotaln s sottl f Mayr Wondarfol Kamedy from F, W. Parker Drag Co Galloway Dm Ca or aay reliable d rural t, who will rafuad your maaey if It fail. (Adv.) MOTHER! LOOK AT TOllG sana Give "Califocnia Syrtip of Figs" If Cross, Feverish, Sick, Bilious, Constipated They love it Watch Children Now! Guard Against Colds, Grippe; Sore Throat and SicknessKeeping ' Uver and Bowels Free from Poisons i A laxativs today saves a sick child tomorrow. Children' simply will not take the time from play to empty their bows la, which become clogged up with wast, liver get tluggish; stomach sour. Look at 4he ; tongue, mother I If coated, -a yos child is liatleaa. cross, fevorish, breath bad, rsstban, doesn't eataeartily fall of cold or has sore throat or any ether children ailment, giv a teaspooaful of "California Syrup of Tigs," then doat worry, because it la perfectly harmless, and in a few hoor all this eoastipatioa poison, lour ThUo aai fermsating wast will gently move out of the bowels, aad yon have a well, playful child again. A thorough "inside cleansing' is oftime all that is necessary. It should be the ftrrt treat ment givon in any sickness. Beware of eounterfleit fig syrups. Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bottle of "California 8yrup"of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages aad for grown-up : plainly printed on. the bottle. See that Is 1 mads by th "California Fig Syrup Com', pany." Doat merTAy ask .for Syrup of Figs, but ask for "California Syrup of Fig, era ember, "Calif ornia." Adr.l "A scrub sapliug will never make a nobis oak. This country was dedicated to liberty, righteousness and education. When the bell at Philadelphia rang out its defiance to England and its king, thcrs were schools and churches 'every where. A nation cannot be efficient without education and education starts with the young. Afterwards, it is the sum of ons's experiences. "If I had the regulation of the peo ple I would have them go to school for 70 years; there or four hours a day for 40 years and thereafter two or three times a week until they died. Then there would be actual efliciency to tlie full measure of ability, j An increaxe of knowledge means an increase of prosperity. The wealth-producing pow er of the people is In the exact propor tion to their education. "An educated people living on a rock in the middlo of an ocean would lay their . hands on the . raw materials of other people and make them into the finished product and become rich. Wealth and civilisation are inseparable. I am almost willing to say that wealth and happiness, not for tho individual, but for a nation, are also inseparable. A Bane Plea for Wealth. "I shall not condemn wealth until every frugal and industrioua family in the United States has a home of its own, with a garden in which there are flower and trees. I want to see ever) hovel torn down. There should be wealth enough so thet no woman or child is hungry or in rags, "Much needs to be donu in this coun try. Roads, liberating millions of our people from the tyranny of mud and Its isolation, should be built and our cities and villages should be made beau tiful. Wealth alone can do this work and wealth must come through educa tion. The educated man puts a huriuss oa a river and it turns wheels and gives thousands of other men employ ment. "Educated men drive tunnels throuirh mountains and gathsr np waste products snd make the desert blossom and hear fruit. Jwo-thirds of ths wealth cre ated fn the United States during the last 40 years can be directly traced to the work done in our public schools. I do not hesitate to aay that no institu tion at any time in the history of the world has achieved so much for human ity as have ths public schools of the United States within the same 40 years. "You asked if a nation's efficiency RHEUMATISM AND INDIGESTION. Practically all physicians and medical writers are agreed that there if -a elose relationship botween Indigestion, and Rheumatism. This view i'4 substantia ted by the fact that Shivar Sfefiag Water, which is probably the best Ann-nn mineral water for Dyspepsia a4d Indi gestion, relieves Bheumatism and the Kheumatoid diseases, such as Oout, Sci atica, Neuralgia and Nervous Headache. All of these diseases ars probably re lated and all are probably due in whole or in part to imperfect digestion or to imperfect assimilation of food. Physicians- who have studied this water and who have observed its effects in their practice believe that it relieves these maladies by rendering the 'digestion complete and perfect and thereby pre vea'lnc the formation of those poisons which inflame the joints and irritate the nerves, and also by eliminating, through the kidneys, such poisons as havs al ready been formed. Th followins letter are Intmatina- In thia eoniwetioB. - Dr. Craaby, a south Carolina phy sician, writ : "1 . turn tartad your Kprinx Water In Mvaral af Rhruruatiam, Chronic Indtnatkm. Kidney and Bladder Uoubla and in Narvou and Sick Haadaehe and And that K ha atd niotly In aach ca. and 1 bltv t amA untlniiMul tar a n i ,i i I I tin, will produe a permanent euro. It will' purify th olooa, raiiaw ocDiuiy, umuiftt jn action of th Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, id- ins them In throwing" off all poisonous matter. Dr. A rant of Savannah write : "I nffmd for year with a meat assravatad fora af stomach disorder and consulted a. numbar of ur hast local physician warit to K-!Hirnr and consulted apacialiata tbrn and (till I was not benefited. t had about daspatrwd f totn when I becan to uaa Shivar Bprina Water and la a short tim wa eurad." Mr. Rhodes of Virainla writs "Plana nd sns ten salloaa of Shivar tpria Water quickly. I want It for Rhaumatuss. I kaew of Mvaral who war eurad at Rhoimattsm with this water. - Editor Connlnrham writes i TH water has don more tood than any SMdldna I ha ever taksn for Rheumatism. Ass ntiriy fraa from sain. Mr. sfcClam of Booth Carolina writs "My wtf baa bran a rufforar Cross Rhraaaathna and after driakins twenty sal Ion of your Minora! Water wa entirety sored af ths horrihls dia ." Mr. Carter lef Virginia write ( "Mr. Car tar baa bad n tarred iotnta a poo bar hands, eaoeed by Rhnmatiam. Shivar Sarltyr Water rsoMvwd wy trace of ttj. rlaraot. Th water to simply xeellont- If Ton suffer with Kheumatlsm, or with any chronic disease, mecept the tuaraate offer below by signing your same. Clip and mail to the ,. Shivar Spring, '" ; Box 91 b, Bheitoa, a ... Oentlemea: I aeeept your gnaraate offer aad. enclose herewith two dollar fnr ttm -allons (two flve-galloa demi johns) f Shivar Spring Water. I agree to giv the water, a fair trial la ac cordance with instruetion which yon will send, and tf I derive no benefit yon re to refund th prle la foil upon re ceipt of th two empty demijohns, watch I agro to- rotura. praBpuj,.,,, Nam Pes Of flee .... Kxprtm Offie V Adr. begin with iU children. I replied that your question, answered itself and then called to mind soma facts from our own history to prove th truth of my stato ment I mif-M have taken ' you to Switzerland and shown yen what haa beta accomplished in that country by a practical system of education for the young. .,."; Switzerland, with only 8,745,000 In habitants and in -area no larger tha a ur own State of Maryland, Ielawar. and Bhode Island, is on of tha richest countries in the world. It', is without natural resources. Jt has no harbors or shipping. Its winter ar ala months wing. Aa eighth of it surfs is per-, petually eovered with lew aad snow. Th Ststno la Geneva. "Why, man. for man, it I one of the wealthiest nations on earth The statue in Geneva of Johsnn Helnrich Prsta losii answers th question. On hand of the status is oa the bead of a little barefoot boy; the other hand is on the head of a little girl. At th base of the statue, ' cut in marble, are these words: "To our Father, Pestalostl All fer others; nothing for himself.' Do yon .attribula Germany effi ciency to PehUlosiif Dr. ClaJrton waa aakrd. , "I do," be answered, "although edu cation in Germany wa compulsory be fore anything was known there of Pe talozxi and his method. Saxony heard of him through his published story an.l sent sn expert to Switzerland to inves tigate his work. Pestalozzi's novel. Which he called Odenhnrdt and Gertr ein Buch fur das Voik or in EngliKb, Lienhardt and Gcrtrdde, a Book for the People, showed what a goodvwoman could accomplish. "The heroine of the story, by Ler in dustry, common sense, frugality and kindness, changed a family and then a village. Festalozzi idea about teach ing spread all through Central Europe and had a profound influence in Ger- TO STOP BAD COUGH SOOTB DT. IBnlTATKD TH BOAT WITH FAKMINT TUr. CATS TBI OLD , FASHIONED COl'CB BEMEDY 18 THE BEST We are old that tho M ttaw rsiitls are beat and tnrariahty aoateia lea harmtal yat better awdkiiM than tha which ar ta M today. Thi bains ao. andoehSedly tho IoUw in old fashioned rseips which Is auick acV 1ns will be watooWMd by asany aa, than ssssn to ba a res-alar epidemic of coach at the vrreeot tim. Boca from yedr drear 1 ounce Parmint (dosblo atranatb. tak thi honw and add to it a quarter pint of hat water and ounce of granulated usr. sUr an til dissolved. Tak 1 taMcapnonful four timas a day. No mora rackioar your what body wKh a eourh. Cloavcd acatril should open, mtt passas-e of your head should clear and your breathin bvcam ay. i'ermint ayrap is pteaaant to tak. aaay ta prepare aad aaeht littta Kvery penoa whs baa a stubborn aouah. hard sold or catarrh in any form abovJd 4ee .hi prascriptioa a trials Adv. many, Holland. Denmark, aad Switzer land. Little was dons before his. day to test the developing theory of educa tion. He reduced ths theory to prac tice. ' TeMalorzi, a Swim of Italian blood," Pr. Claxlon went on to say, "showed, among other things, that to penaion a man at the expense of the governmaxtt war to make him more-. helpless than he would be were he to earn his own living. He taught solfrespeet, self-support and selfreliance. Frobel Was HI PapIL "For 20 years Pestaloizi taught and toiled on the shores of th Lake of Neufehatel. Hundreds of people visited hia School, among them Madame do Stuel anil Talleyrand. Friedrich Frobel, vhn estimated kindergartens, or play si-hnoN, for children between the age of 3 and 7,' learned Festaloszi' moth- Relieves Serious Case 1 of Chronic Constipation Dr. CaJdweWs Syrup Pepsin Corrects Condition That Seemed Hopeless. After suffering from ehronie consti pation until aba waa SO run down she was unable to do any kind of work. Miss H. A. Frees, 209 Adams St., Day ton, Ohio, obtained a bottle of Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepein and used it with such gratifying reaults that she con tinued the treatment and has written to Dr. Caldwell that.her condition is sgain normal, and that ahe wants to recism mend Syrup Pepsin to everyone' who suffers with constipation. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is-a com bination ot simple laxative herbs with pepsin, gentle in its action and free from griping or other pain or discom fort. It contain no opiate or narcotic drug, and, while acting readily on the most stubborn case of inactive bowels, is absolutely safe for the tiniest babe, so that it is the ideal family laxative aad should be kept on hand in every household for use when needed. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup, repsin costs only fifty cents a bottle and is sold 'in drug stores everywhere. To avoid im ttations and ineffective substitute be ! i V ivm;k I iMissHAFrcwlfflP' m - sure you get Dr. Caldwell's tvrup Pep sin. See that a fiu'sinjilo of Dr. Cahl well's signature and his portrait appear nu the yellow carton in which the bottio is packed. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. II, Caldwell, 453 Washington 8t Monti cello, Illinois. od from' tho master himself, as did Carl Bitter, th geographer. "Ths training sf th whole man was th first principle of Pestalozzi' sys temtraining going along with infor mation, skill and knowledge. In hia youth, largely through the influence of Rousseau, tha SwisxPreaeh philosopher, he came to think that the methods of popular education were wholly aad radi cally wrong. Society was not U be Composed in the future of professor, lawyers, doctor and preachers. No so ciety of that kind bad ever existed Most men, as always, since the dawn of civilization, were to be farmers? shep herds, rchardists and mechanics. ."Why not get them ready in child hood, Pestalozzi asked, for the lives they mean to follow! I told a young teacher once," Dr. Clayton continued,) "that it was well for her to remember that most of her pupils would follow in the foot steps of their fathers and mothers. "Oh, don't say that," ahe exclaimed la horror. 'I hops many of them will go to india as mMsionarics.' ."The ideas of Pcntalozr.i were adopted slowly," Dr. Cbuton went on to say, hut at lat were accepted throughout Central Europe. They have crossed the Atlantic ni are making headway in many parts of this country. I believe in them and in what-1 call a democracy of education that will prepare each boy for what be can do the bent. "The time is coming, 1 feel certain, when nobody will look down on any body elnc and no one will eringe In the presence of another liecause of tho silly belief that occupations are graded as to their respectability. Who is tho most Important "Vnnn on a rnilway train, the conductor, the engineer or the fireman t It takes all three, as I know, fi carry me from Washington to New York. And unseen section men make the track ut'e. Attacks on the School. . ... .. - An eloquent minister ea t flu a church in ero weather if the sexton habitually lets the fire go out. ' Nor can a coin et. -lit Kcxtou tlo much business if the mr.ii in the pulpit is dull, narrow and l.alf asleep. I ailmirs a first-rate carpenter, but sympathize with a sec ond rate lawyer. The carpenter found his j ib. The lawyer didn't. Vocational training will prevent tho mistakes that are filling the trades and professions with workers who lo not fit into ths places they are vainly arriving to oc cupy. ' I don't, want less education but more of it. The material progress of a na tion, as I have pointed out, is in pro portion to the education of its citizens. It has been so in all history. Switzer land, nollaud lind Scotland are,, rela tively, more prosperous than Germany, which has been kept b:ick because of the burden put upon it by mi immense standing army. Armies and progress don't go together. The hjouey spent on the military and usval establishments of the United States would' feed and clothe 6,000,000 children. And send them to school." "You know, of course," the inter viewer rerriarked to Dr. (la it on, "that fault has been found with the public schools t" "And I reply," he answered, "by say ing that within" 40 years the puMie schools of the United State hnvs edu cated out of greater or less illiteracy 90,000,000 American citizens. At the same time the public schools have -ret dueed tho illiteracy of the white peo ple of the country from 12 per cent to 3 per cent; and within 60 .years nave reduced tho illiteracy among the lies-roe more, than P5 per cent to about 29 per cent! MAMMA! GIVE A CASCARET QUICK. LOOK AT TONGUE Don? you see your child is bilious, fevtiriah, aick, constipated? Relieve , little- stomach, liver and bowels with candy cathartic. Listless, neevish. feveriah 'lunl.. Little stomach aick, breath sour aad tongue coated. Mamma, you must act now or vour littln nna will K ...I .l.b soon. Gt't a 10-cent box of Cascaret at the drug store, give a whole Cascaret " sny tim. Casearrts are harmless aad ' children love this candy cathartic whieh ' stimulates the little liver, rhsni the ' thlriv fM git V.....-1. . , - - " - iw.cu sus awrwp i ens tho poor, sick stemnch in a few! hours.. Mothers know that Cascaret g act and ' act thoroughly and that they cure th '. little folka right up. tascarets is best ' laxative for men, women and children.1' They never gripe nor sicken. (Adr.) "It. has jdso been discovered," Df. ' Claxton said, "that our high school ' hare failed because pupils leaving them luive learned nior about Julius Caesar than of Jane Addams and Senator Bev-' ' eridge. Well, I am working tdward th day when everybody in our grammar schools shall receive a high,-school adu- . -cation. Our plan, for those who are compelled to work, is to have two bovs for the same job, whether the job is in a factory or a store. The boy, then, who works in the morning ran, go 'to school in the afternoon, and the oa who goe to school in the morning eaa work in the'afternoon. , '! "I agree with one of our earlier' Presidents when he told Congress In a message that a Democratic guveiwraent, in a Republic like our own, without in telligenee must be a farco or a tragedy, anil perhaps both." ', JAMES B. MORBOW. . You rant alwa- judge a woodchop! per by bis axe. . . ; - . giiratiQa inau President Woodrow Wilson Washington, D. C, Monday, March 5, 1917 $10.05 9-QUND-TRIP via - $10.05 Southern Railway System Special Pullman Sleeping Can will be operated from Raleigh and Durham on Sat urday, March3rd, also JSunday:MarcK 4th r vs. Leave Raleigh .7:00 p.m. Leave Durham fltOO-pan. Arrive Washington .... . . . .... . 7: 00 a.m. following morning Round trip tickets for this occasion will be on sale March 1-2-3-4, and for trains scheduled to arrive Washington by noon March 5th. Tickets will be limited re turning to reach original starting point by midnight of March I Oih, 1 9 1 7, or by de positing ticket in Washington and payin g a fee of $1 .00 final return limit will be extended to April 10th, 1917. '-7 '" " . ' - - ' .- - , ' ' ''' Make Your Sleeping Car Resenrations in Advance, For detailed information, sleeping car reservations,-etc., ask Southern Ry., agents or addreaa, J. O. JONES. . v " - Traveling Passenger Agent, Raleigh, N. C .. ' s
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1917, edition 1
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