The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 April 1925 — Page 2

Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements I p AUTOMOBILES Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Goshen Auto Exchange DRS. EBY & EBY Easy Tern,, on «• W ' Eby. M. D. Id. U Eby, M. D Used Cars. Tires and Acces- ; Surgery and diseases of , - Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat sones for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE Glasses Fitted SEE JAKE AND SAFE GOSHEN, INDIANA | AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto Anßaints and Varnishes band flowed Which assures you full for your money. SMITH BH.OS. CO. I GOSHEN 81® 8. Fifth Street Phone 374 . AUTO TOPS | FURNITURE Rex Winter Inclosures, Auto Williamson & Snook lops, Slip Covers, Body Lp- furniture, rugs and stoves bolstering, Tmck Tops, Seat Cushions, Tire Covers, Radia- Jf r e Furnish the Home tor Covers,- Hood Covers. for Dess Money. Goshen Auto Top and Trimming Co. goshen, ind. BATTER Y SERVICE LEATHER GOODS 1 1 # , Agency for Perm.lif. Batteries | THE LEATHER GOODS Phon. 934 j STORE 0-K Battery Service harness and robes B. C. Dougherty, Prop. | Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladles' Hand Bags .nd Small Leather Goods BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED Phone 88 1 All Work Guaranteed. 118 W. Lincoln ns East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. £ / A * BEAUTY PARLORS PHOTOGRAPHS ALLIECE SHOPPE Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph Phone 933 for Appointment, The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store Spohn Building Goshen phone Bicycles and Motorcycles PIANOS WE WANT YOUR ROGERS & WILSON PATRONAGE Our prices snd the quality of Headquarters our workmanship justify you f /WM y In coming to us for your Bl- for (xTF J cycles and Bicycle Repair WbMbf work. Victrolas Buy • Harl.y • Davidson Motorcycle. vleto , Recorda> Pianoa and Player C. C. AMSLER Pianos. 212 N. MAIN ST. GOSHEN ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES fecial “KUH YM< FOOT NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. t GOSHEN WggMßgaßßfegSgMEff' { . ! | N CLOTHING TYPEWRITERS SHOUP & KOHLER WrH J£“ s “ pp,i " The HARRISONS TYPEWRITER SHOP Clothiers and Tailors Al , M , k „ 6 SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED 188 N. MAIM ST. Room 38 Hswks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 188 Goshen, Indiana Drugless Physician UNDERTAKERS Massage and Electrical Treatments. f'F/vr tv r> £> C/tXTC? Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, . Hi. VULF & bONb H “’" Funeral Directors Minnie L. Priepke inexcelled Suit. M H.wk.G.rtn.r Bid. Ambulance Service PHONE t« ' GOSHEN. IND. DENTIST WALL PAPER, PAINTS " y .-.a— DR. H. B. BURR I Paint Your House Dentist ' with Our Guaranteed Colored General Practice „ C— bXM.WIte t JhsnTUl whc rRRti to m. | |

Can the Two Factions in Education, the Cultural and Practical, Be Harmonized? RICHARD BURTON, University of Minnesota. ISEE three things operating against the welfare of a rightly conceived organic science of popular education. The three are: the fevered chase of the “practical” in education, resulting in no less than a revolution within the generation between 1885 and the present time; the abuse of the so-called democratic ideal; and, as a direct consequence of these two in union, the failure honestly and clearly to see and say that-two distinct types of training, the scholarly and the practical, are being commonly lamped together. It is high time to ask if a college is a machine from which any and every kind of information should be handed out as you turn the crank, or has it for its object intellectual attainment and the pursuit of learning for its own sake? To make the inquiry is not to say that both aims are not legitimate, nor is it to forfeit-a claim to sound Americanism. It is simply to ask that we clarify our muddy thinking, and substitute a dear perception of what we are about for a mush of vague conceptions. Logic demands that we acknowledge that hordes of people in a country like this need all sorts of practical training, and that institutions providing it, and so Mbeled, should be furnished them, leaving to real colleges (thus clarified by the proper drainage), the business of taking care of those who want truly collegiate work, and are capable of doing it In the perfervid desire to give everybody anything he wants, or thinks he wants, in pseudo-education, we have fallen into the danger of giving least to the few intellectual aristocrats who refuse to be standardized and find most difficulty in fitting into the scheme. Here, subtly pervading the whole conception of education, is the asinine assumption—equally egregious in education snd in politics—that all are equal in brains, if only they are given equal chances. The truth is that in education, politics, life at large, brains are exceptional. Making education universal, and all but coercing people to go to college, does not in the least alter that primary fact It is the business of democracies to remove all artificial and unnecessary bars to personal welfare and progress, but not the bar of nature. “What a blessing if our colleges had the backbone to say to inquiring youth, ‘Almost anybody can go to college, hut this doesn’t mean that everybody should.’ How wonderful if some college, by inheritance the beneficiary and guardian of the sound academic ideal, should speak right out and say that its aim was aristocratic; to prepare the saving remnant to rule the rest of us! But what courage it would take in what we call democratic America!” High School Geography Course Is Declared Vital in Modern Education DR. GILBERT GROSVENOR, National Geographic Society. The failure to teach geography in high schools is one of the anomalies of American public school education. Geography ia a basic subject. It enters into history, science, literature, and even the languages. It is a cultural subject of abiding interest and lifelong intellectual fascination, ft is a vocational adjunct to many kinds of business and the professions. A knowledge of geography is essential to understanding the news, and better teaching of geography would stimulate intelligent reading of newspapers. A direct service to schools the National Geographic society now renders is the issuance of weekly sets of bulletins to some 20,000 school teachers for use among about 750,000 pupils. These bulletins, which constitute a gift to American education, supplement geography texts with up-to-date, interesting, informative, illustrated bulletins on geography. They add to the zest of the study; they enliven it by making contact between the day's news and geographic facts; they take the subject out of the laboratory and make it a part of life. The National Geographic society, with its membership of nearly one million, has broader facilities for popularizing the use of maps than any other single agency in the world. In the last several years the society has distributed a total of nearly 11,000,000 large maps, printed in six colors, and sent to members along with their National Geographic Magazine. Our student roster —that is, our membership—reaches to every community of the United States of 50 or more white persons, and to 152 nations, colonies and mandatories; to every country, in fact, which has a postal system. Some of our members have to be reached by reindeer sleds, mule-back and camel caravans, in coolies’ packets and by queer water craft. The National Geographic society, Mr. Grosvenor said, is a university of geography in a large sense. It is conducting an elective course—a great class in geography. Its course is patronized by millions of pupils of all ages. — ’ q Predicts the Rebuilding of Cities to Meet the Newer and Speedier Life WALTER P. CHRYSLER, Automobile Manager. The city of tomorrow will be as different as the care you see on the street today are different from those of 25 years ago. Three influences are at work in America to make our transportation facilities just as different Those influences include electricity, motor vehicle use, and radioThe year l£>so wiU regard 1925 as one marked by a great wave of city rebuilding and replanning, and the reconstruction is going to mean heavy taxation. •_ . * The family of tomorrow will live in a small house or apartment but that home will be absolutely fireproof, scientifically heated, illuminated by electricity, and thoroughly comfortable. ‘ln the city of tomorrow there will be no ice man. Befrigeration will be done in every home by electricity. Every home will be equipped with radio. Motion pictures will be broadcast, as well as much of the news of the day. Universities will broadcast instruction by radio, churches will broadcast their messages, and telephoning will be done by wireless. Pictures sent by electricity will be one of the fine arts. Great cities will be made up of small towns and business will be decentralized. Tomorrow streets will be 120 to 340 feet wide and capable of handling six to eight lines of traffic. The same will be true of county and terminal highways leading into centers of population, such as our Lincoln highway, Dixie highway, Shendan road, and like arteries. In addition there wil’ bp great, wide arteries of travel running directly to the city’s center. I believe that in most cities rail traffic will be underground. There will be no surface or elevated trains. Instead there will be overhead motorways for-all vehicular traffic. Tomorrow the pedestrian will reign supreme on the street level and need fear little other than the dropping of monkey wrenches and like impedimenta from passlog aixplanea. Dr. George S. Lackland, Denver Clergyman—-Freedom cannot be obtained by legislation or proclamation. Mental slavery is worse than physical bondage. Freedom consists in wanting to be free. Too many folks caress their mental and spiritual chains. All legislation can do is to give one an opportunity to be free. ■' 11 " ir * Bev. Hurry Emerson Foedick—Freedom of the individual must bo « —- 3 IxffKMPBW I ftnwrvrtA aalmb wKaF is 11 CIIS XO SlMßd* W sSKw BH* XBa* S the crying need of the world today, I always have a ready reply—education

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

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