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25-NO. 10.
VOL.
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, «
1920
© and Gimes
JANUARY 17,
r
i,
FIVE GENTS
PLAN SOLVES PROBLEM.
{OF CAPITAL AND LABOR
Lovvill Corporation, Sharing
Profits With Employes on Even
Bass Makes Workers Partners.
Colonel P, H. Callahan, of Loulavite,
yn} delivered an address upon
jal Question, a pee.
ctor the solution of the present
sr irial unrest, before an assemblage
of the udents of Notre Dame Univer-
sity Fe
in his Antrogaction of
colonel Callahan, said ¢ Sa ad-
adresses are being made and papers be-
sng Pel very ail over the
eountry On rehia subject, and that many
chalrman,
on. awn ite they may be all very
sues seldom we pro:
ing and a plan from one of actual
Biperience, who has already tried, not
ony. for & Drlet period, but for several
roporiton: he
nmen
existing to a much greater
ever jbe fore, dimeatistaction and unrest
_ among all classes. While the most op-
tim: ng Us
will avork out to
us
iirc principal cause lies sin
thatihe workers. not only inthe mines
and an the ratiroads, but. in I indus-
ial Jines, and even extending) to" farm
tanae, . WP. atriving. - better
ae. al
in a state of i pestaney as
iwerecand while wages have been
advanced and t) ork shi
sre nevertnlose ‘hele Gissatistaction
han diminished:
a well as his pleasures of We, from
tls» em
Wa
» Ree cognition Di
“Approwimatery, four mittion. of our
nen, very largely recruited from the
Workers—for clerical people are no
included and have east their Fortunes
with Tabor w
a
luenehip.” entitled to all the privileges,
lw:
nd o:
even ‘the uxurien,
rovide, ay
sam
and ter vlcee in Industry during peace
oa they received when soldiers or sail-
°rs during the wal
Seems that what labor every:
5, now seeking is _an improve:
its status, a clearly recognized
Of. a pay envelope.
anagement.
n admitted that
ta mente
ag sytem
bout guttved so urofulnies
nghtethecmore
we are not ite for w change,
mn —and a Protestant—
ACHIEVING GREAT SUCCESS
IN WOMAN'S COLLEGE DRIVE
ble. When remindea that 2 ‘single
scholar 4a: but 320 year, Mr.
Coyne replied, mind: ‘put the
extra annual bundeed to whatever use
you see fit in the work of the Catholic
students. God bless them!
privilege to sive to such a cause
List of Contributors.
jong other, contributions
fond received by
he. time of Koing. to pres
following: The Rey. Jo:
in, $100; the Rev. jose
eph L, J, Kir-
ph J. Kaulakis,
William Gra-
“Dr, Peter Weber. $100; Mrs.
embroke Harton, $200; Exeleen
curedoure. "$100; talph and’ Siw
Shoettle, $50 each and W inion shoet:
Willia|
i
am
$10;
ire Hoanen”
lizabeth Hu; hee $10.8
M
rs, Stephen
eCal
10: Walter McClatchey,
ir Dougherty, $10) stattnew
ick, $20; a Catholic ‘club, $30;
Cashin, $10; John
ied
eles may be malieg to De
jouredoure, 4107 Baltimore avenue, for
he Alliance of Catholic Women fund
Soihen's, Medical, College of
Pennayivanta scholarships. NM
9 the Alliance folnis two. otisations.
hat of contributing to the
seiablahe
Mraicel Coens. Bad aleo-o!
ig Scholarships for Catholic girls,
BOND CERTIFICATE ORWE
~~ TOBE LAUNCHED TUESDAY
«|All Lines ‘Are Laid for Progressive
Campaign in This State—Judge
Patterson to Speak.
ounty ch:
have been instructed in their duties,
and all of them have held meetings of
their lieutenants,
Jes to be
The mass-meeting to be etd inthe
Academy, of Music. Philadelphia, on
‘Tuesday evening next will be the open-
ing gun ¢ of the drive, Not only prom-
inent the Irish, movement,
Due celebrated veltlzens who, are
fdentified “with
liver adres
udge Jor
Ireland's fight will de-
Salvation Army last May and for years
he has filed positions of high public
trust in. Philadelphia,
Fr Walsh, who served with
ank P,
ex-President William H. Taft as joint
chairman of the ‘War Labor Bonrd,
also will, address the ting. He
has been touring the country in behalt
of the loan and was a delegate from
the Trish Race Convention to the Peac
‘onference.
Lindsey Crawford, whose activity in
behalf of fecognition hag nonplussed
the Unionists, will deliver his impres-
sions of the notorious Ulster’ Aflacion
Mr. Crawford. long.a resident of Ulster
will give his recol-
lection of sentiment in the North.
Anti's Invited.
‘The audience at the Acatemy of Mu-
Irish mass-meetings in this city. It i
Judge Bonniwell's bellef that persons
not associated | wi e movement
fuente favoring recognition.
idea in mind he has invited several
hundred public acquaintances, among
whom are judges of the courts, high
municipal officials, prominent bunkers,
manufacturers, merchants and profes
sional men who geldom hear the Irish
Issue discussed. Judge Ronniwell be-
lieves men like Boland, Walsh, Craw-
for
Inent speakers will conv
Ireland in entitled to recognition as a
ublic.
Repldge Fonniwell also has invited all
those who were interested in the visit
¢ the Pennsyl-
a party of ils
bromine
|
Five Thousand Girls in Catholic Club.
‘The cin ae Catholic airis In, Tirook-
whi
| public loan of $1,000,
| subscribed although “he aulotment
CONGREGATION DISCUSS!
QUESTIONS OF MARTERDOM
Rome, December
held tn’ the presen
Promote Americanization—Will
Continue Educational Work.
Plans for a widespread campaign to
promote Americanization, education
and patriotism and to fight Bolshevism.
© meetin}
the
ind Mexico.
legates we York Clon Chicako,
Denver “Arizona comprine the dele
hi
present time over 60,000 members’ The
Promoting of public. piri Js one of
Hea eblet ‘aims,
ing the council
Master Jon H. Reauin, of
tlon chi
prem
Benve
executive of
The entire degree in the three countries,
United States, Mexico and Cai
‘Other leaders and prominent ofcate
of the Knights of Columbus in al
Ww.
Pe
Chicago; Robert B. Mort
cott, Ariz.;, Willam J.
New Haven, supreme ‘secretary, ‘and
‘upreme Knight James “ae Piaierty of
Philadelphia.
he,
peome advocate,
Pelletier. of’ Boston, su-
had charge of the
IneeUngs of the’ suprem
mong
ed Ww
e
the prominent rettere dis.
the continuance of the edu.
ted” durii t
work in Russia was “debat ted. 8
SOCIALISTS IN ITALY \
aon WAR RNED-TO-GO- SLOWLY
By c. 7 Service
* na Catholic Stahaa rd al
Rom
to the effect that revolutions cannot be
hurried: the Teatlans have done well
but must now
“We could start to-day. isturbances, which in some places—
In those words did Judge E. C, Bon- Stantowse for instance—were momen-
niwell sum wu condition of the or- | tarily bad, there was not a vestige of | mi
ganization which will have charge of anti-clericalism. Thmes have changed
oflin.a few years. \The Popular Party
the Irish Republic bond certincate drive] in'Bartiament is ROME stronie and Con,
wh edrepaz, ig chin tor en | Sue Ot een a Seng
sylvania, Judge Bonniwell has built up ‘bulwark pene Bocial list subversive
gratory—any thing farther “being ouLof
the question, no country
In purope further removed from “Bol.
shevism” than Italy,
SAYS DIGNITY OF LABOR
IS RECOGNIZED BY FEW
Archbishop: Glennon of St, Louis in
a facent address sald: | “In’ all the
agitatior about labor we are
fast nosing Fatehe ‘oe the dignity of labor
wages and
very litle of the work itself, “Indeed,
there appears to be a growing antagon-
Jum between “the workman and” his
work, Jt is no longer sweet to labor—
It has no longer the sanction of cone
sclence. It has become to
curse, a plague, a forbidden thing.
“Now forgetting for the moment the
en
0
nity ‘of Inbor, the "value of labor—for
@ soul of the workman and t
tain reward that awatts the veut
workman, the one who urged by con-
selence works ee Joseph did, so as to
merit the Lord’s presence and His
benediction.”
IRISH REPUBLIC LOAN IS
OVERSUBSCRIBED IN ERIN
The Irish Re-
0 has been ove
Dublin, January 2
rer.
wit
not close until February 1, it was an-
nounced to-day.
‘The Sinn Fein ofclals labored un-
der (a disadvantage in getting sub-
geribers, 08 ‘British “Government
<td outlawed subseriptions and mews
fapers were forbidden. to publish, ad=
vertisements or details of the loan,
Irishmen were imprisoned for having
coples of the prospectus In thelr pos-
sessjon. some districts the loan
Sas/overwubscribed three tlm
w"; HOLY FATHER BLESSES
BOY SCOUT MOVEMENT
‘The apostolic blessin bests
upon the Boy Scout movement iy the
Catholle Church in a message received
from Pope Bene uarters:
of the National ‘Enthotie war Sounelh
The council, whi NE
Zorn Reout “unite tan
Feceived more than 600 hgules ‘from
all parts of the cou
Cathal Paper.
Mai Have
The Cutete Tubs
(Continued on Eighth Page)
iyn, N. ich is known as the Car-
ton Clu, hassa membership. of live
thousand.
{zing a capital of $109,000.
e
days
on
51en interesting point is that in the
PLAN TO RE-ESTABLISH
NEWMAN CLUB ATU. OF.)
rk of St.
Bede's Auxiliary was Giecused .
Catholic interests at the university
and the spiritual wdldsince of Catholic
students are under the care of the Rev.
john W. Keogh, chaplain, At St. Bede's
Chapel. 3739 Spruce: street, dally Mass
in celebrated at 7.18 o'clock, “on hol:
ea ays a second Mass at f, conteasione
the weval times, “Heenealetion on Sun- |
at M. mber
there been thres Sunday “aac,
30, at 11 o'clock a High Mas:
with students: choir,
A feature of the Sunday Masses, of
special interest toy students, are the
Chas
have
Sem:
t the
ry.
two eater Moses oe Bevel je giving
a cour: poldgetics, the general
mublect “Sete the grounds of alt
is topic last Sunddy was “Reagonadie
vice.” At the 11 aigck Mass Father
‘ourre 18 on
Tis Prowess, Throw
» hie (hema last. Sinday
fe. Dawn of gathalicism Amid
fs and Practhex of Pagani:
Very Revi Kd®ard A. Pace, D.
D. » Du Dean of the Schoot
of Pailosophy:. Catholic University,
Washini “will Rive a lecture
next "Biesny atternogn at 4 o'clock,
Houston Hall. Sprace et above
stres
Thirty- fourth, under ithe. auspices of
Studenjs’ Organization
‘The title of, the
Hum
ter
a Tnere
gelve announcement’ of all publi 3 tees
tures given. Addre:
versity ‘of Pennsylvania,
LAN CHURCH IN NEW YORK
ee arte
pantera
the most eventfub meetings in
ureh
slessed Sacrament and
hurch of St.
iste, "Lexington avenue: and
1 national Basilica
dean
ihe ‘committee that "will.
petition.
After the: resolution was Presented
to the meeting ‘there was a
Giscuasion of the subject by. the ‘oi
lowing vaheakers: Justice Daniel
Cohalan, Colonel Louis D. Con!
james J. Walsh,
George Gillespie and Bourke Cockran.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
IS TEN PER CENT. CATHOLIC
white
present the
it has been said that the
less ber cent., oF to be exact,
48 of the 440 members are of the Cathe
olle faith
j# Most ‘noticeable that there are
no Catholic. reprenentatives, from
jouthern Staten, except Rentucks:
Joulslana and Maryland, while the
‘West also makes a very poor showing.
‘Again of the forty-eight States, only
fifteen have members in the House
who are Catholics. New York has four-
teen Catholics: New Jersey is next
h five, and the Old Bay State with
ur
Tou
hava been no Catholice. in
ctther of President’ Wits eab-
inets, but the Supreme can claim
tworin award Douglass White. the
hief justice, and in Associate Justice
McKenna. Both of these were’ ap-
ointed to, the supre by Re-
pe he
publican Presiden’
NEW PRESIDENT IS CHOSEN.
FOR ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY)
Rev." William F. Robison, 8. J.
ive St. Louisan and for years in-
timately connected with civic activities,
ting, who
presidency for several
t Robison is widely known in
educational circles.” Ho ts recoputzed
As One of the leading pulpit orators of
the Middle West. H
ur book: ‘hrist’s
our:
“His Only,
lief" and
‘The Undying Tragedy.’
eee
in India,
New Dii
By C, P. A. Service to
‘rhe Catholic Standard and Tim
December 9.—By Apo: stole
Rriet 4 iis Holiness has created a new
diocese in India, that
cor
he sve
be in the care
the Jeautte ind Munabad loges ts
ota title
er “Gower,
Sdn ¢ Englis!
sh
anpainied ‘Archbishop
FOCH’S PERSONAL PIETY
CONVER' VERTS U UNBELIEVER |
the REV. JOHN DILIA! Dd.
f+ BORO te
THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL PLAN
. The ninth grade of the college prow
curriculum
Catholic University Courses An-
nounced by Very Rev. Dr. Pace.
A competitive examination for
graduate scholarships established by
the Kn! of Columbus in the Cath-
olic University: velll pe eld on Satur
day, April 10. be
filed on or betore March 10.
The examination is open to students
who have
gree in arts, scl
students w
year of thelr’ caliese courne, Students
who desire, as scholars, to on-
ter the, law School of the univers't
L have received both the bachelors
Gegree Un arts, aclence or letiers) and
the degree bachelor of law.
sof Examination,
candidates are required to take|d
examination in, English, history and
ch ts further required |
tn physics or
in
to
chemistry or biology ;and in Latin oi
examinatio?
‘The examination ‘will be held in the
1c
view to the candidates
‘The schol arehip entitles the holder
to board, lodging and tuition in the
University during the academic year.
beaining an advanced de-
ree. cn ioe (or ihe _mmastership in
on
Philosophy, th
‘orms of applications and further
{pformation may be obtained from the
“AS Pace DIRE
tor. vot ‘Stusiea, The acatholle: Univer-
sity ingto
0.1. A. UNION HOLDS
Maguire Urges Delegates to
ane Efforts for Temperance.
Praises Work Already Done.
Delegates from the local societies af-
fillated with .the. Catholic Total Ab-
stinence Union of the Archdiocese as:
mbled in the Cathedral T. A. Nall a
Sunday afternoon to elect
v office
the, year 1920, Josep!
was record
year: just clo:
pre:
.drichael ‘8,
t. Miss B. Hennessy, St.
Ellzabeth’ se ainitd vice-president, ‘Ars
Pe iy of Victory:
retary. William | ier
gerald, Our Mother of Sorro
fronding secretary, Jamea
St. Vincent's; financial secret
re
‘St. Francis, and itzabeth
mpbell, Eashedra iH
and ‘Thomas J. Freem
ee
Catholic Manchester May’
into
Details for Competitive Tests for) mn i
e
First his
0 | fas
. and Bassitevical motives
trod change, in
language in which he’ desires to take m
‘Sa
ne an available for the minimum period
op)
astership. i phil: |Y
sophie: two ye Sears for. the doctorate in mre
ELECTION OF OFFICERS -.
F Jity.
-|enths eighth and ninth grades
lum, Arts curriculum and Commercial
curriculum, “In the euseventh grade the
ol studies are for all four
famaty, waiters ure, civics,
Music, English, ‘geosraphy, American
history, arithmetic, physiology. and
hygiene and physical training, or the
¢ | boys, wood: anual’ training.
for ihe Cirle, domestic arts and ae:
mestic science, and for the boys and
girls, Jrawing, music and geography.
in the eighth grade the differentia-
tion begins. ‘The college _preparato:
‘atharine Gordon, a| course consists of Latin, English, geoz~
member of St. Vincent's Ladies Tém-| raphy. American | history. algebra,
physiology and hygiene and phywicai
7) Spanish or
the
Mra. Gordon, Jon ODonohie ®
2 better adjust
ment to our work.”
Four things in hie mind stand out
ninently worthy of consideration
ment of the present con
ion in our aystem of education with
his earnest demand for a logical re-
organization of all our studies; sec-
ond, the atatement of what he consid
and sufficient in eiemen-
tary education: third. bis plea for ait:
ferentiation ary
upon the probable direction
Of their lifework.
At the same co! n,
John Waldron, a competent authority
on sees education
eogical, prysholosieal
. “manner,
nature and Sas of. instruction
when the ‘enti enters the adolescent
stage is life.
“schole condition, Not Theo:
cory.
e'ses, tm 1818, In
tical turn to t
‘been held on the curriculum, T prese
f Junior iigh
the advan-
ve may weil press on to a fur~
her study of this movement and apply
it directly to our Catholic system of
cation.
The fact ‘that there are now in this
750
country nior High Schools in
Speration maker I clear that in’ the
same number of localities a condition,
not ry, confronts Catholic ed-
ueation, Practically, our curriculum
in th rane! ould not.
es
differ very widely from that in the
State schools. In the paper which was
read at the convention
cisco, T mated that it the curriculum
in the seventh and eighth grades of the
sro systems varies to any great extent
the children of our schools, attracted
bythe high school work,
ed to end of the
a
deave
sixth grade to enter the public Junior
Tigh Benoot ‘tn thelr ten mediate icin
This note of seems,
have been timely, for in a report Just
ued one of the
High Scl
‘a basis for our discussion, let
Santor hols.”
ark,
ihe’ past two. "years.
The ninth grade | has been introduced
into three large grammar schools in
different sections of the city. The sev
in these
Schools. constitute an ‘administration
unit, and a section in each building
peration during
ninth year
in viene schoo, if they prefer to at-
ter in the neighborhood
Father than take the jong journey to
reach the centre high schoots, The day
at the Junior High, School has been
th a, noon
Where Differentiatior
There are four courses, Cotlere Pre-
paratory ‘curriculum, General currieu-
ing. music, type-
curricutum the eizhth
e same as the eighth grade
irate ‘college preparatory: eurriclom,
Eith the excention of ‘a choles of Latin,
arts curriculum the eig
tame aa the college pre
bat eliminates Latin anc
place literature, civics
hth
dine
and
Manchenter, England, my have its
second Cathol in the person
or alderman. ‘Thoms Fox, quite re=
“a
Jesuits, has been.
of Bombay,
cently elected to the city’s chief ortice
on jor PE ticket.
ip.
the commercial
eighth grade ame
ighth grad curciouhtor
but eliminates algebra and inseris
cursieulum the
the
~ |Junior High
001
can,” he ‘write:
Others rush. With lange expectation to
th
nt the, curricuium of the ‘public
i Sontor igh School of the city of New=
een i
\ ; © van wl ABST ec anntimeariar| Remctede Bure Nene [rey wouteem, enue
i Athi F KK: cording to w = lence, algebra, phys-
Members of Catholic Alliance Op- to discuss “the ‘question ‘of the Meeting Held in Ky of C. Hall’ to) opie So's "Sitcioas corenouy ta Hon Conver onions weet fal trdining, ‘mechanical drawing oF
a . — question—for , ae Paris church, and Mars 2 efforts 7
timistic Over Ten-day Campaign deatifeation or raechratton ‘ot martyr-| Promote Catholic Activities. |tmonsat the conmreration A curtate now in var-| The nipth grade of the general cur-
. dom of the servants x a rerainent ‘bo was an tous States to > Feorganize the ia |riculum is the same as the ninth grad
to Endow Scholarships. Madeleine 2 Fonzaine ‘and three com Dr. Pace: to Lecture. unbellever, went into the church purely |of training and instruction for children |f the college pi tory, except that
long Daughters of Charity of : . with. the intention of “observing bow | ron Cele fo ourinen or fee years it eliminates Latin ‘and inserts in
‘ "vincent de Pau}, and also of Marie . SI this great soldter-general who had won| o¢ 4g, undoubtedly a most [ase music fundamentals o1
Great euccess “appears ‘to have |Clothtide Angele of St. Francie | ‘To raise the inltlal expense of $20,000 | the war would comport himself on such ee 2 wrieureas sneludes "Engishy ee eensral
fen _compantor ‘ ia.{28_ occasion. Seeing Foch iy porary
e|erowned the Alliance of | Cathotle Vatenctennes: "also and to plan rals-|\neeling, as if the least famous of the| movement in education. read- | Science, commercial metic. book~
men’s fen-daye! drive, ending to-) question of martyrdom and of signs or | ing future funds for the erection and|congregation, his rosary beads in bis\ justment, or modification, ls the | KeePine oF Tenography, physical tans
day, for the raising of a Catholic per-| miracles in the cause of the Venerable | maintenance of Newman club- |fingers, the ‘skeptic was amazed and ing, penmanship.
petual scholarship endowment fund for | Jerome, cammonty called “Della Rocca | nouge for Catholic students at the Uni | ¥aited, observing everything till the) form of differentiation in the seventh feats of 2h
woan'a Medica’ att of he XXIV. Hours,” done to death in F Catholic nts at the Unt | close. Later be said, ‘I say hinge inland eighth -gradea, We of fs the study period with supervision by
‘edical College of Penn- | hatred of the Faith in Algie raity of Penngylvat eoting of ht over them, and I| sy; Six Plan, the ‘Three and mpetent bo au dy.
sxivanla, following as a sequel to the founders and frie Three Plan, the Intermediate School |curricutum ‘would. sect father
——+o
campaign to ‘increase the number of essing (Friday)! 1, and the Junior High School. formidable, and indeed might eamly
Catholic women doctors, health omicers ‘es
ats oem aoe mel oer ieyetgnih and Markt oreta e-iTO HOTT) KE SCHOLARSHIP [tain niece nan toon te cle conto |Se = Saupe of dincistsonnnt to hone
practitioners. sides Ne’ jal and th wman 1 Ue in os educational meetings ca sholie ieee analyze Sand it ‘afver er de coo.
is Grace the Most Reverend Arch. Cine, the vuokeep of the Cemelte abrine ular, of recent sideration. we as Catholic educators
mi tea ie Mont Reverend are wasnt cr cts} EXAMINATION ON APRIL 10\szhseBiactcsaPezcm ats teaeih, cpchcuiein er
made the first contribution to the Aly — \ real rriculum, how far could we meet the
ance fund, a generous offering. Mr.lK of C. Outli . came under sonia te on and the out- Das outlined?
William Coyne, connected with the|*+ 0 tlines Campaign to} iook for expandin, on If we eliminate wi
ork and |
ual training in the seventh grade, wo
meet with n0, diMicuity ia teach ng the
other branc! for this
grade,
In, the eighth grade electrical wiring
would give me concern.
"The ninth grade can Ue taught in ita
entirety.
Church Can Meet Situation.
a theoretical study of the out-
Hine Just given, therefore, there tt only
one ‘ifteulty’ Yor un namely:
branches coming under the head Oe
vocational education.
The Church is certainly not afraid
of difficulties.
nal
Gosling maintains that
Sane véltierentiation of
adi ope for the time to ‘coms
whe fe will not bem 10 give
vocational training so early in thefire
of the child.”
Ingliss, of Harvard. is the most pox~
itive ject
in the early grades of the
School”
ificulties of Plan, .._ -
“in theory, therefore, there is divided
‘opinion jucators concerning
elaborar
those who are
actually doing the oor in the schools,
namely,
forced t
ce it is the opinion of a vigorous.
minorits of educators that the
the Junior High School. and since ce thie
| the only element which
financial renders the plan
parish schools,
for us to arrange our
59 as to include eS Umor
fen,
dumeult te ‘adapt to our
the way is clear
programme
High School w
Bay by day ‘The opinion is gro
strom a readjustment vot our
curricaium in the seventh eighth
thorough Teilization that
thelr present taste is
fc
AtOFS are not,
bind’ to the fase tone after educating
Sur ghilaren for elght xears in| our
glementary schoo
and send ©
which in the most impresstonanie per~
tod of their tives.
fore, which in
remain with Us fora longer period of
time than they would otherwise do is
a vital consideration in constructing
an educational programme.
"Modifications Required,
gh schools would do well to
adopt uch a curr
Gutlined. It woud, however, need
modification. Instead. of four courses,
Collere Pre-
m # OFfcers. eee ot. a able te the Generai and. the Fe LE
officers wert tall arranged. he day for the cindividual os = ercial
Rew ‘John D. tein Deena pupil of the seventh and eight ‘des, /Would eliminate vocational education,
Micon who used Si Reeser rite | Therefore, 1s seven periods long, which, | which should. tomy. Min i. have no
new the temperance pledge. Following with an’ auditorium or tudy’ period, |PArt in the “Junior High School. and
the installation, Dr. Maguire addressed | Makes a day of six hours. The plan of |! Would substitute a strong vocational
the Junior High School provides for |#¥idance. Jonal preparation. a
the instruction of Si ants h,{Study of the branches which form a.
and bra in the eighth ;80lid foundation for trades and. pro.
grade, ions. The avocations of a city are
tat
rrever, are exceptional,
and do not breve that these same
or even
more ani
workmen facking a education at Teast
in essentials,
In the hope of bringing out a fruitful
discussion on the subject at this meeq-
ing. is me put the fonenee of nee
I have said in the following, proj
“The Junior High School. curricatim
as carried out by the Public, schools
should not be accepted by rs
sCith certain modifications, namely a
reduction in the number of
curriculuny,
be adopt
arithmetic and a modern language, if
desired.
could ved by ue with decide dy
gain