Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 30, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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DESHMUPM VP 27MH1? I,' iii (, I I 1 L HAVE XT THA i 11 THKT6 1 j VELL? 1 j 1' liORA.-THE COOK I A QJ-1 I ' L ' r mmmm-1 Six S H or CRED I Ml Buy NOW Your Christmas Clothes and MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS Owing to the lateness of the season, we have marked down our entire stock of wearing apparel for quick selling. :: :: Ladies9 Suits Ladies'Coats Fur trimmed -and other stylish models. $20.00 SUITS NOW. $25.00 SUITS NOW $27.50 SUITS NOW $30.00 SUITS NOW . $15.00 .. $18.48 $20.48 $22.48 Prices reduced notwithstanding the raise in cost of plush and other fabrics. Coats in corduroy, imita tion Persian Lamb, etc. $ 9.50 to 35. Men's SUITS Just Arrived Latest mixtures, serges etc Suits sell ing elsewhere at 18 to $2(H-otir prices '15.1017.50 FURS Men's Balmaroons Just received a big lot. The very latest in . tyie and tabne. $20.00 and $25.00 values " 1 . ., . j $ic . Jtseautitul sets and separ- , 10 CO t9U ate scarfs. Extra values. fcPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT at the air 116 MARKET ST. tin (I- Big Jnfoff rams For Wilmington i Six good programs have been plan ned by Mrs. Kate B. Vaughn, the celebrated Better Foods, Better Homes lecturer, who will conduct a Home Economics school here under the aus pices of the Dispatch . Every after noon next week at 3 o'clock, Mrs; Vaughn will deliver a lecture that will appeal to both the hearts and minds of women interested in efficiently caring for their homes and families. This lecture will' be followed by a cookery lesson in which she will teach every known cookery process. Her method of cookery is not merely to say, do this, or do that, and hold up to the admiring and envious glances of her guests a beautiful dish which she may or may not have prepared by these directions. Instead she gets out her pans, kettles, knives, spoons and spa tulas, flour, sugar and other ingred ients, lights her gas stove or prepares her fireless cooker and with sleeves I rolled up she actually cooks. She mixes cakes from the very initial pro cess, the creaming of 'the shortening and sugar, and telh why certain short enings are best for cake . making and why she prefers certain kinds of sugar, and shows to just what degree of creaminess they lnust be worked In order to have light fine grained cake. Then she tells all about over tempera tures, what is meant by Quick ovens and slow ovens and which kinds of foods must be baked with each. Baking is ; not the only cookery process that is taught in detail. Sew ing, boiling, frying, all come in for their share of instruction and women that watch Mrs. Vaughn prepare foods, listen to her different rules for success and taste the foods thus pre pared may go home and adopt her clearly explained methods in their own kitchens, and cook just as well as she does. Her lessons in the Boys' Brigade Auditorium will be free and every woman in the city is invited to avail herself of this opportunity afforded by The Dispatch to learn easy cookery, methods from which all drudgery haa ' been eliminated, from one of the most noted cookery experts in the country dren and youth for a service which assumed the continuance of the very thing which we are trying to exterm inate in our schools; but I have ar dently advocated as serious discipline in our schools as we expect of those who are to serve their cuntry as soldiers." attention was given to this important need. In fact the greater part of the states neglected their schools. The Constitutionalist government is con templating the organization of a gener al office in the City of Mexico which may correspond to the Commissioner of Education in the United States, and a certain amount of money is to be distributed from the federal revenues for the betterment of public schools." I and to the nation, and we feel that tin summer camps are agencies for goml which the universities should do then utmost to encourage." Hideous Golfing. Boston "Competent observers are agreed that one oi the reasons for Mexico's revolution is the lack of pop ular education, says Dr. Andrus Os una, the new Superintendent of Schools of Mexico City, who has brought 150 school-teachers to Boston and other American cities to observe the educational methods in practical use . "There is another Mexican revo lution of which little is-known. It is the bloodless battle for a new and bet ter method of popular education . Con stant revolutions have always been in the way of education in Mexico. Dur ing the Diaz administration, education was left to local initiative, and it was only in a very few "cities that propor Detroit, Mich. The new engineering is now completed, and the alumni association is giving a dinner tonight to signalize the dedication of th3 new structure. Dr. James J. Walsh, dean of the College of Medicine of Fordhara University, New York, will be the prin cipal speaker. New York The official sanction of college presidents has been placed on the students' camps for military train ing. At a recent meeting here of col lege heads, presided over by Dr. John Grier Hibben of Princeton, it. was de cided not only to endorse the student camps but to recommend them to their students.- "We regard this movement as in no way militaristic," declared one of the college heads . "Its object is to train the students of our colleges and therefore serve a useful purpose to the country. The education which the students receive under officers Of the army is of the greatest value to them As Grantland Rice talis ihe story. certain English actor, whom we may safely , call Jones-Brown, plays a per sistent, but horrible, game of golf. During a recent visit to this count rv the actor in question occasionally vi -ited the links of a well-known coun try club in Westchester county, nea; New York. After an especially miserable show ing of inaptness one morning he flun down his driver in disgust. "Caddie," he said, addressing tho silent youth who stood alongside, "that was awful bad, wasn't it?" "Purty bad, sir," stated the body. "I freely confess that I am the worst golfer in the world," continued tlm actor. "Oh, I wouldn't say that, sir," saiu the. caddie, scothingly. "Did you ever , see a worse player than I am?" "No, sir, I never did," confessed th boy, truthfully, "but some of the oilier boys was tellin me yestiddy about worse player than you are. They said his name was Jones-Brown." Satur day Evening Post . ' FROM EDUCATOR'S NOTEBOOK. Manchester, England The Manches ter Municipal School of Technology, which has as its principal J. C. Max well Garnett, late fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, has a most com plete schedule of technical courses this year, covering engineering of various kinds, textile industries fo; Which the institution has one of the most complete sets of practical ap pliances to be found, printing, photo graphy, mining and other technological subjects. The library of this mun icipal school has eight thousand volumes and two thousand pamphlets relating solely to applied science and technology . Cambridge, Mass . The report from i state of Baroda, in India, that there are now 3,088 educational institutions! there, including one arts college, four Irigli schools and fifteen special insti tutions, recalls the fact that Baroda is the; only State in India with a Com- j pulspry "education.' law. It is also re-1 called here that the ruler, the Gaek-, war of Baroda, ' sent his 1 son to Har- r vard. The young -"Gike," as he was ' called here, was one of the most popu lar men " who :ever came from , out ' of j the far East to Harvard. He took a deep ' interest in education, and went deeply into American methods . That , ihis influence has been felt in the! growth of education amongr his people Is shown by the report from Baroda. I West Point, N. Y. In a recent ad-' dress before the New York State His- r torical Society at West Point, Commis-. sioner of Educatidn John H. Firiley ex pressed the opinion of many educators relative ! to ttfiiitary training In the schools . ' T have 6b jec'ted to ihtroduc ing military training into our public schools as a mean of conscripting chil- RED RIDING HOOD : -RED RIDING HOOD RED RIDING HOOD 1 1 f Givem Away Gmd On December the 22nd we are going to give away $ 1 2.00 in Gold to the Six Children that write the best compositions on the fable of RED RIDING HOOD. This money, will come in handy for Christmas. This contest to be divided into two classes -Class A and Class B. Class A in cludes all children under 9 years of age, and Class B includes all children from 9 to 12 years of age, each Class to Receive Separate Prizes. : To the child in both Classes A and B writing the best composition on RED RID ING HOOD we will give $3.00; next best, $2.00, and third best, $1.00. SPECIAl INSTRUCTIONS 1 that Must Be Followed Composition not to be over 200 Words. Must be written in own hand Writing . Sign name, address, age, school and grade. '.' Composition must be original, and not quoted from a book. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS All compositions must be handed in at our store not later than 6 P. M., Wednesday, December- 1 5th. The cash prizes wil be award ed on Wednesday, December 2nd. . Any child boy or girl in Mew Hanover rCounty under 1 3 years of age, an compete for the prizes. WRITING TABLET FREE WITH EACH PAIR. During the month of December we will Give Absolutely Free with each pair of RED RIDING HOOD PLA-SHUS purchased one large-size Red Riding Hood Tablet- ; . ,. These tablets are made of a good-grade writing paper and j suitable for school use. ; , Remember they cost you nothing, and all you have to do is to purchase a pair our famous RED RIDING HOOD PLA-SHUS. s-.,,mjtf.;jsa- iiii 2(fe Nortn firft gfieef : 'Buy it in Wilminlori in (Q)o W. WESSELL, Mgr. 4 RED RJDING HOOD-:RED RIDING HOOD RED RIDING HOOD Pi a a 2 O X o o a 70 7 o o o o a pi o 73 D o X o o a P3 to 2 P X o o o i A."
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 30, 1915, edition 1
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