AfortlMra WW 7M On Olombs ■ Latch ley to ISM »f Martin County's Homes VOLUME 23—NUMBER 63 Pleased With Prices Paid For Tbbacco On Opening . . Sales At The Larger Maikets The opening sales at the largei markets today proved very .-.ati;fa« . tory to the farmers and warehouse men. At Greenville there was estimated to be 350,000 pounds, most estimate put the average at 20 cents, some go ing as high as 2f>, others a* low as 18 The lower grades were higher thai last year, while the better glade were about the same* At Rocyk Mount it was claimed the average was around 23 cents with ■ small break. AH the smaller markets in Eastern Carolina open tomorrow and it is e.r pected that the sales will run heaj during the early season. The Coop erative Association will begin receiv ing next week. A MEMORY OF UR. ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL Our single personal recollection of Dr. Bell is of a night many years ago at the Waldorf. There was a great meeting under the auspices of the New York Association for the Blind Joseph H. Choate and Mark Twain spoke. It was a memorable evening, and men of eminence and,distinction vied in helping on the work of that great association, whose creative and guiding impulse huve from the ning been largely the work of Mist Winifred Holt, who has done so much to lead the blind out of the horror o" darkness. But among all the speakers on that historic occasion the most interest was taken in Mis Helen Kellar. Bereft, ol all her senses except the 'Sense oi touch, Miss Kellar was an eloquent" representative of the* blind of ths? ' earth. Everyone knows how without the senses of normal persons Miss Kel lar ha become much better iiuormei than many people having all live senses. All were wondering how her speech would be delivered. All we knew was that there was to be an in terpreter. The interpreter Was Dr. Bell, an old friend of Miss Kellar, to whom she owed much* in the way of sympathetic training. Never have we forgotten the revelation of that night, Mist Kellar had learned a kind of muscu lar speaking. .That is, she actually uttered, in a peculiar husky wuy, the consonant skeletons of the words, more or less filled in with the shadows of the vowels. Dr. Bell stood by he on the platform, lightly holding hei hand, and repeated aloud the sen tences after her. So marvelous had been Miss Kellars training in this seemingly impossible art, of speaking without the aid oi seeiug, hearing or the capacity of nor mal speech, that sometimes one coul., almost catch the words before Dr. Bel had interpreted them. But what im pressed us all the most was the per fect accord between speaker and in terpreter. It seemed as though Di Bell Were taking the girl's words as much from her fingertips as from the struggling shadow of a voice. Grown woman that she was, she seemed more tike a trustful child aa she aLQfld, there with her hand in that of the great genial gray-bearded Scotchman at her side. Her words became hie almost as she uttered them. There seemed to be sympathetic vibrations between them, as though ha were uttering the thoughs simultaneously with their be ing formed in her brain. There was something wonderfully pathetic in this gentle leading on of the girl'* speech by her old life-long friend, and it gave one a lump in the throe to watch it and listen to it. "* Therefore we are not surprised on learning that Dr. Bell believed that if he had been an electrician he never would have invented the telephone. What he supremely understood was the science of vibrations —that and the human voice. He was born with a gift for the understanding of the hu man voice as an artist is born with a gift for color. He did not stumblf on the telephone. He dug it out, and was able to find what he was after be anivf \iß extraordinary foundation * of t intuitive gift and the structure he had bu/t thereon of unremitting study of vibrations and of the human voice. What we learn through our ears is apt to come nearer the elemental than our acquisitions by sight, although in the progressive complexity of human life as the arts and csiences advance this primitive preeminence of the ear ! jg lessens!. Dr. Bell was the most human of the world's great inventors. To the warm spoken word he gave 1 new lease of life when iU dominion was threatened by the inanimate med- THE ENTERPRISE NEWS LETTER FROM THE STATE CAWTAi. (By Maxwell Gorman.) Raleigh, August 16.—Although State Highway construction liar be, • and is yet being seriously interfere with by the lack of transportation fa cilities, due to the railroad situation the plans for continuing the wyik at going ahead. Twenty-nine projects scheduled foi letting August 30, with an aggregate mileage of 186.02 miles, will bring the year's letting of roads by the State Highway oCnunission to 1,114.25 miles or more than a hundred miles beyond the "1,000 miles in 1922" program, and the total obligation for new con struction for the year to more than $22,0000,000. Three projects included on the list remove the last unbuilt sections of the Central highway from Smitlifield to Salisbury, a distance of 170 miles continuous paving. The Thomasville Lexington link, the Hillslioro-Mebanr link, and the bridge over the Yadkin river between Lexington and Sails bury are the most important projects With the award of contracts at tin end of the month, the commission will have achieved more than a hundred miles beyond the mark set in Feb ruary for twelve mouths, and wil, , have set up a record that is without i parallel in the records of road building I in America. Since January 1, con tracts will have been let for f> miles of hard-surfaced road and 645.94 miles of gravel. Take Advantage of Time The August letting will be the fina! big letting for the yenr, ami there after the commission will focus tion on construction now temporarily held up on account of strike condi tions. Chairman Page has pushed tht work of getting roads under contract in anticipation of more widespread tie-, mand for contractors when other states get their road programs under, way next spring. Altogether the road program out lined in 1919 is now approximately half done. Slightly more than 2,700 miles of new roads have I wen built, or are under construction, or under contract. In addition to this mileage the system includes many hundred of miles of good roads built by coun ties before the state took over the system. Somewhat of the tremendous under- j taking the 29 projects offered for Aug ust 30 presents may be gathered from the fact that the specifications call for the clearing of 163 acres of land excavation totaling 1,349,460 cubic yards of earth and rock, and the bridges on the projects will require 2,828,110 pounds of structural steel. Notorious Robbers in Raleigh Jail After a legal battle lasting over two years, two of the five men chat g ed with the largest postoffice robbery in the history of the United Strtes from the standpoint of money unre covered, hsve been lodged in Wake County jail to aw«it trial at the reg ular November term of the United tSates District Court in November. The robbery occurred at Oxford on March 9, 1920, when the postoffice safe was blown open and about $34,00*1 extracted in cash and government se curities, none of which has ever beer recovered. ' .. Never was a better illustration fur nished of the "long .".rm n of the law than In the battle with the yeggmen who were brought here, after having escaped jail in Brooklyn, N. Y., where they had successfully resisted remov al to New York for seventeen months. Owing to a change in the national ad ministration, the United States at torneys in New York snd North Car olina and the marshals and their dep uties in both states who originally handled the case are now out of of fice and the judge in New oYrk to whom the ease was first referred and the attorney for the prisoners are nov dead. However, the same postoffice inspectors who originally trailed the men to New York have remained on the job all the while. They effected their recapture in Memphis, Tenn,, a bout three weeks ago, after the pris oners had been at large since Octob ium of the printed page. We are glad to have such a pleas ing memory of this great man, stand ing holding a blind and mute girl'? hand and giving her thoughts the swift wings of language as they come vibrating fro her brain.—Fro an ar ticle by M'Cready Sykes. Williamston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, August 15th, 1922 iht aTAiE'S iiu.oi^i ftomviioiwu mujLti L.X .(i.111.-l l L. to- . u..| ..VI L.l , v g|t ..to il, uU\vll...' ...f, .Iwl.lllif. The mauut'acluiets 01 cue u..\ k ovecieU a t, i;-u i.uiiilii.g u where they nunc the ex titbits ul every uruile nuiuuibcUuix in- the State.' So far as tlie eastern part ot' the state it> concerned, we have too litue to show, in fact we have so little we an; unknown in the manufacturing world. Our principal manufacturing plants have been our lumber mills, ami the raw materials have been slain so long that the industry is practically a thing of the past. When we reach the Piedmont sec tion, w efind things quite different. The manufacturing industries art teaming everywhere. In Gaston county alone we find 76 cotton mills and in Cabarrus County we find some of the worlds greatest cotton mills. The Cannons at Kannapolis have mills in that section value tlat around thirty millions of dollars. In Guilford county the Cones have the largest donim mills in the world. Besides the great cotton milling in dustries in which North Carolina tanks first of all the Southern states. It ranks first in the Union in the manufacture of tobacco and pays mon revenue tax than any other two stater, Winston? Salem lewis all the «>ther towns, but Durham, lieidsville and some others have large manuftwting plants. In furniture High Point leads, with more than one hundred factories, in which practically every thing of wood is inade. At this great exposition will be shown more than 3,000 different ur tides manufactured in Carolina. !Sume counties through their Board of (Com missioners, and others through their Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs are putting on exhibits and Charlotte will teem with visitors during the Exposition. eV ill of last year. Foreign Railroad "Guards" Arrested Following accusations by strikers that .Seaboard guards were carrying concealed weapons off the promises of tlte railroad, the police made a number of arrests on this charge. Four men arrested in one day were M. C. Dean, J. E. Stephenson, It. 1.. other guards and strike-breakers wei Stephenson and W. W. Vincent. Many searched by the police after being ac cused by the strikers of carrying con cealed weapons. Only when weapons were found were the guards arrested. Dean and Stephenson were arrest ed near the Johnson Street yards when they stepped off the Seabonn: property. Strikers called the atten tion of Officer Arnold to the fact. Ar nold did his duty and arrested the men, who were later released under SSO bonds. It made the second arrest for these two men on the same charge in the past week. One of the guards, R. L. Stephen son, was arrested twice on tho same day on concealed weapon charge, one of the arrests being compounded with a charge of intoxication. He was observed near the Tucker Buildinp Pharmacy talking loudly to himselt' and a crowd of interested onlooker -. "That man has got a pistol," one of the audience whispered to Officer Seagroves. "I defy anybody to lay their hantln on me," the stewed guard told tho world. "You've defied the right party," re sponded Officer Seagroves. "Comp on and tell that story to Sergeant Champion." The guard went aiid .at the station gun number two was t r en from him. The fourth arrest took place that night, when W. W. Vincent, who claims he is a student at th» Univer sity of Virginia but talks with' a Ver mont brogue, was arrested In the Yn r ■ borough Hotel, when he laid a pistol beside hfm while he was writing a let ter. Vincent seemed a very well edu cated young fellow, very well dressed for a guard, and did not seem to be more than eighteen or nineteen years old. CORRECTION The three notices of sale of certain securities by J. G. Staton, Receiver, | which are published on an inside page of this issue should read Saturday, August 19, instead of Wednesday, Aug. 16. A 1 headers will please note the correction.—Publishers. Their Job To Keep Our Home Fires Burning j iiS^ns^M*ri»^^^^n«e^niiuupps^nsnwsTsssrTiwMro^w7coai' -"UEtnarfCMjr Commission, President Harding. TV»c m»n «ch h»w hrtutMXjtjja tty« district*. Froat tMlkit to right;, »how« Clyde B. ,Aitclo»oo,' Commis«ioa«n Bureau of Scnict; E. h7l>« Groot Director; tad f. C Smith, CMcTto»y«to«^Jycopd -Row! A B. TRAIN AND AUTO IN COLLISION SATURDAY Saturday afternoon when the pas senger train left. for Plymouth it struck the car it Mr, W. O, Hill on the Washington road crossing at this Standard Oil Tanks. The car was be ing driven by Mr. Hill's son, a sev enteen year-old boy and was ap proaching fron; the Washington side of the tracks when suddenly the train came from behind the Standard 011 Tank. The driver of the car was so near that he could not stop the car, cotise quently the engine hit the front I wheels knocking the. car down the | track several feet. The car as a whole | was smashed up badly. Fortunately the train slowed up. If it had been running at its usual rate of speed, very likely the whole, party would have been killed. Mrs. Hill was wounded and bruised up very badly. Her condition is pain ful, although she is tint sorioulsy in jured. The fault has not been fixed or plac ed upon anyone at this time ,leaving us unable to say who is to be blamed. They both could be right while on the othre hand, both can be accused of not using proper precautions. It is «t very dungei ouu pluce as the train euiir.o the seen until travelers are neat ly on the track, an dthe Cross (board marked "Railroad Crossing" is op a post that has rotted off several times being buried each time without being fixed. This post is extremely low, in fact it is so low it Is hardly discern able. Mr. II ill lives in Wtuhingtmi anil works with the Southern Wililte Co., running n hoisting machine. His fam ily was coming over to take him home when the accident occurred The car was a praeticdlly new. CRIMINALS PROTECTKD Heavy guards, detachments from two companies of soldiers, one from Durham and one front Raleigh went to Carthage with three negroes, John Lee, Angus Murphy ami oJseph Fran cis, who on August the fourth shot Mr. A. E. Ketchen through the breust with a pistol, then assaulted his wife and stripped her of her jewel ery, at a camping station near South ern Pines. The citizenship of Moore county was so aroused that a large numbe rof people began to assemble when sheriff Blue slipped the pris oners off to" Raleigh. Mr. Bluff wbk chased 75 miles by tho determined parties who, no doubt, would have a venged the honor of Mra. Ketchen and saved her much embarassment if they had been a little sooner. The law has got to be speedily enforced and a good many technicalities! cut out of the court procedures before the blood of a Southern man keeps cottl under such trying conditions. Bill Arp once said he was much opposed to lynching but could not help frtwn rejoicing when he heard of u black brute being lynched for committing the nameless crime. Mr. and Mrs. Ketchen with baby, were on their way from Florida to their home in Vermont when the crime was committed. DONT FORGET THE FAIR Mr. Joseph Holliday, when as)ted yesterday aliout the County Fair to be held October 3,t0 6 inclusive, said that it would be,a much better Fait than we have had in previous years. He further Stated that he authorized the statement that enthusiasm as fine as he ever saw prevails practically everywhere. More farm exhibits are expected, as well as live, stock, poul try and fancy canned goods. Those who win must begin early. The midway will be full of attrac tions, the fireworks each night will be on a bigger scale than heretofore. To those that like excitement the running races will All the bill. i SUBSCRIBE TO THE ENTERPRISE Williamston Market To Open Tomorrow; Local Banks Are Better Prepared lhan Ever It is reported thut tobacco dealers from other markets are saying thut if you sell your tobacco in Williamston you will not be able to get your checks cahsed. It is some times hard to find the source of a lie but it would seem possible, aa big a lie as this might be located The fact of the matter is that every pound of tobacco that comes to this market will be paid for ami no one will need fear any inconvenience. Williamston will pay for all tobacco that comes here ami expects to pay as high priet'B as any of the ( neighbor ing markets. We will have two auc tion sale houses; the lioanoke ami BAPTIST SINDAY SCHOOL IN STITUTE The Haraca l'hilathea room; of the liuptist Church have been transform ed into a school room, and the teach e,rs and other Sunday school workers are going to school. Their purpose is to get a deeper knowledge of the Itible, to learn new methods of teach ing and to gain a mere sympathetic understanding of the pupil. The class meets dail> at and 8;0i> I'. M The enrollment. on - the upet U tig day J was about fifteen. The teachers of these training c'ass are Mr. N. (J. Teagtie, of the Louis ville Seminary and representative id' the State Sunday School Hoard and Miss Vinson, who is -pleasantly rt-J memheicd here as a teacher and » church worker of rare "ability and earnestness. The Normal Manual and plans and programs for the Sunday School are the text hooka u. ed. The institute continues . throughout the week anil regular students or ar ewclcomeil at every session. f THE NORFOLK FA llt Special primes will he given litis y«o r at the Norfolk' Fair— from Sep tember 4 to 9 for the best showing n.ade in .com. Aside from tlw best county and single fanm exhibits, theie w'll be fifteen special corn prii.es: Three for the best ten ear., o* white c rn, three for the best ten ears of yellow corn, three for the b st .-inrle ear of white corn, three for the I est I single ear of yellow cow and t! ree fe,i tl.e heft five stalks of coru. There w : ll be two dozen Jiri/'H t ! small tvairt ex hi bits ,inclu • l.:;c wheat , v. t-.iie tels, dark oats, rye niickwlie.it, UII.I'V cow peas seed and SAY IM:II, teed 'I litre will be twenty ,» ..• s f.r leu dilfinnl exhibits in fora.;; ■ eo;» I 'ncluding alfalfa hay, 4U.'. > clover crimson clover, cow peas OM vine. >r duircl ','ru,*e, red or sapling clover, si.v be-atia i n vine, timothy hay. millet ainl vetch. Six c ulle prizes are oil'fivl t'»r potatoes, irif h, sweet, Jersey a > I o ban ;-,ifi.». Nea.ly eighty prizes are nr.no;.noed U r heuns, kale, beets, cabbage, -"nrta .oupe, (lirrcts, cauliflower, iel"ry, . >i cuniber egg plant, kohlriti, ler.ut okra, unri.t parsley, parsni-u, »er, JUMP kins, radishes, rhunarh, •Hl ,;ify, f pmach, squash, sweet *. nn, te nia toe*, rl f. il, turnips an I ivaie .eel Feer | r.tt. are offered for the r.e-1 eott n on i talk, for the best show - ing in E'larlsh and Virginia minute «»(itl two j'iifes for the best slnwinp in leaf tofci «co. . _ CAMPBELL FOUND GUILTY J William W. Campbell found guilty of first degree muMer by a jury in Superior court at Asheville last week for the slaying of Mrs. Annie Smath «n, on May 6, 1922, was nenten- Judge Lane,to he executed In the elec trie ehair at the State Prison, Raleigh 1 on October 11th. CAR LOAD A No. 1 heai-t cypress shingles Just arrived. » . t J. W. WATTS Dixie anil the Fanners. The Coopeia tive Association will run the lunk warehouse. The banks of the tn\.n will, see that all tho tobacco intt*ivM are properly financed. While we regret that all the fai _ niers everywhere are not im mhers u! the Association, wo are frank in sa> ing that tlie Dixie aiuj Farm i s w. . e houses Wi.y tie depended upon to n. their best for all their customer*. The \\ illiamslon market invit all the tobacco farmers to look over i averages of the Fas Carolina to: kets for several years and mm- f..t themselves. 1.1»r..,it0 Ki I'oUT I' . «*> iv sunn Washing* n, I). A>i . boat ! I*l >«t>t>n I holt fac l ■ . ma o ' alette.-. were unsullied i i ti e i -t States last 1 - a rami t«. .1 a b ill billion more *re expo. •a «i In to a consu* I i lletin issu •. I j too .• > ineivu den • 'int toila\ im the > ti.>c co iiaile. The pindu.tiou of im. .' a. Hie Ami; au f«i ins in 111..'' «■ i 1 i . t'l 2,00'J |l , . glutt ll i-J ->S ..LdJU ai fes, ci l i ieil with jo ■ 'o i• i. .( I.f.sii.U '. ft), i omuls in l.i'C \ i ue of I inpn: i There wute importeil o i-,, ila ye,4: r»«{ I.»' itcco and t>v i j f> ■ uetn i etlw - ii-lue of 1.1.... I Hi, v- ..... the evpoi'ts ol leat tolm i »i o .il t ued a! •rt'. tnately sl!ii ■ il' '• no - of t ilia.io |i.aiets at ?' • ."nd.ooii j li e roiiil ,'t! ' pioducti HI ii. u i i n gisteieil t/• to-ritsfl 'an ■ m bum I-. manufacturing warelmu: ;es \va H,/«N I 095,000; of cigarettes, 64,2*7,000,00(1 and of chewing and .smoking toha.. ■ ami snuff, 414,(KM),000 pounds. Then were' 8,544,000,000 cigarettes exporto.: during the year, leaving 4i>,7 12,00(1. 000 factory made cigarettes foi con sumption in the United Slate,.. I.r, epuos polleeted during the year- ; mounted to s264,ofii.'i,OOd. (, l tin • tal, North Carolina contributed $79." 567,000; New York, 4 I,l'.MMiimi, |Vin sylvania $22,260,0(11); New Jet. ov if'.'o. 11l I), 000; Virginila $ 18,f,M),hlM); •!, $14,255,000. Of the total number of "largo" n ars, 7,!168,0QQ,000,- sold by inaiiufact urers dul'ing the. year ending Jinn !{(), 1021, 1,890,000,000 or 25 per,rein, were intended to retail lor noi in' ■ than 5 cents; 2,186,000,000, :to cent, for more than 8 cents; 3,P7H,()i»'» j or 42 per cent for mora than 8 cents hut hot more than 15 cents and 21.'!, 000,000 or H per cent, for more th-n j 15 cents. The character of the cigau manufactured in the several distiht vary greatyl. About three-fourths >■ | the total production of cigars in Florr ida were in tended to retail for mini than 8 cents each. On the other hand about 95 per cent of tiie total produc tion in Virginia were intended to re tail for not more than 5 cents. Wes , Virginia and the Twenty-Third do , ! trict of Pennsylvania, tli ehonie of tli |f 'Vtogie" also \lniw a very large pin centage of the total pmdurt.ion Ui_i.— tail for 5 cents or less, A COTTON KHTIMA'I i: A cotton dealer who is rated as on. of the best posted and most eons, i vative in the South gives the follow ing as his idea of the final oiitconi' of the 1922 crop as 9, 265,000 ball's.. His estiatsfi by States by the thousand bales is as follows: 1922 1921 North Carolina ... 650 " 77t" South Carolina . 600 75f, Georgia 8.00 78' i Alabama «. 600 787 Mississippi 750 818 Louiaana u....... 300 271' Texas... i 3,500 2,H» Arkansas 1,000 797 Tennessee 400 302 Oklahoma 600 4S| California 50 34 9,265 7,035 —"*>•» mm . I I IP TOo *Ai(T QFICK RESULTS USE A WANT AO IN THE ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED ISO? U. S. FOREIGN IRAD' A bLUiNE Uy : : . .■, ■ ....... ! , J. -fi 1 : a! '■ . ' 1 L ■ , I C t . ",.a ! ■ . ' - » oil!, ..I. I'l .1 ' - ... i j .!• . , U'- r' 1 ,il,". t.. I:o:. j ~ . ■ ~ , V .-ilk wiuio Hl-o , a i ii v. 1 s ... - un ,1 at lull .. . tiy by;... . I ; 1a,,.,11 ,11 I'd Hln ■ ■ vaki; > 1 ' ii.. li.o ~ m,i im ■ i ; a '•> ll ijttf |I.|M'.U.I in' \,.. ill , • ■; ■ , • ■ • 1!1 lIHMI , .1 > I I) I I" 'I . ' _ * ■, alii,'. I*l I. .!'•• .1 l t '| cat i,l ' ' . i . n,.w ,i» ~!.J ■ • .. .(.■Uarr; ii, ... - halt' ii.i 11,..:, i ■ 5 ' i,i. . . 'i .- ' ...lit, . i . ■..ill' I :■ I i", ' 'i t> ■: I'll" • 4-"- . (M !•' >' ' I " , • J - -' ' pan in tin- v >•> •> ... ' ' ■ ■ 1 • »' -- j* l ° Villi. II ~i . i.t . 'hi' ' - ■ .yiaus .1.:..',,' > 11 '- 1 ' 11 li.V in i i ' ,i - •' ' I ' 000 M I i'i l a ... ,t. ■ *- - "ji ■ a., ii. ' ' ' "I H. , | I , !,.• I V .. u„ '. .■' L !• ■' ■" 1 ,/> __ ; -- |l an,l i »-l ml, Ra i'li.i , p•• • ' •. wi, r, lai . .ih ami i a i"' au iy ■ i - a ii'! I'a- li' it, 1 Sit'. . ."i U. m t.in.a ,• pi,i v i i'i !i, ■ i.dt :A a i t. 11 - • ji• 1.1« i !' • ■ | 1 . "i'*3 'L' t iu, ,1.1.1 1 CP 1 fI. AM. l':i* Hi th'l Willi. V, IN' ill '■ ' Willi 1111.11 I'l I»I ■ 1111 .•' )' >,O1 MI i,l I / ■ >7- 1...,!, 1 ~.. I ..it .1 ■ 1 : .1,1,1 ,1 iii.' ! , 1 "a , ' I ~■a' i. t 1 1 1. i , ' . ■ 1 " , ,i Ml i ;■at . tall i ~),■ '.ll ' 1 1 ''a ' ' I . t .'(-I'. . « . I l J; 1 | ,*■ lilt It. I'M IS (OM UI iHi i.1.1.t. l.ttlA A- I lu\ Ton 11 iliii IM., . t , : • ... L'j sum of I'.'Mit.y 1. >*••» uu »u.i.srsitj! ami yet it ta, .t a I a... . > u'.toinl tl.u clii.i'l. I, .' tiiii .t .• italiJ institution 1« 11 mo l if. mucti poi- room Uo IL ciibts In ictil i WMoli: ti.U , in tlio uvwugo town a id ii the ex p. nsa lonliniics tn grow, jiily tin' uliv Will Iw able to procure an t niso: ay inlu cation. It seems a* if -as linv in.-n.itut.vjns of IfUrttiiig i,i mV tin; u lni.s. COiitilltWiß to grow, in propi#tiOn. ll i.j stjjttil to tlw nppropiiat'H- 1..1 ey i.i nci'i'a.-ai) for tile purpm a i«f put ting i.lui'.aiiiu in ti-ii reach of every jiiunj;' man uml woman and when they try 11" out tlioj iitut iho cost'- runs Iks on.l their •reach. We .lo not care t.> kick agaiiust higlier educat i.,n n.or u niVersity appropriations but wlierf tho cost of uiteuiUng feets tlai reach of the fikizen we feel that soinethinK shotilcl bo done. It is, of course, expensive to nm a .•school. Everything costs, but tho I rja* of hoard pay; all thai cost ami ■penmpH leaves a profit. The question is, a~e big schools, liko everything else, eos in? too much? Rut how are we fo help eurselves? Must we stop patronizing t.'ie . efmols for higher education, Aro w.- going to be forced to drop back .a few steps in our educational ' -urogram? Out out a bit of thi idnal ami put in • a little more of the real.

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