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Show EDUCATIONAL. "It is not a good policy to build small buildings. Thev should be large, yet they should not reach over two stories in height. The experience in Chicago fully demonstrates demon-strates that (he climbing of two or three stairways is exceeding injurious injur-ious to the health of the children and especially to the girls. The buildings should be large and roomy and should be located in the center of the city. There should be one high school and that I think should Le located ou the Bench. There is nothing else which will have such a tendency to bring many people here as the opportunities oppor-tunities of securing for their children chil-dren a good education. It thev find we have po"jr schools they will not remain here with their families no matter what may be the inducements induce-ments that cause them to stop here for a short while. There is no stronger index to poor schools than poor school buildings and pour facilities. Judge Palton in the Ogden Standard. A high h rue education fur women is one of the sterrest necs-sities necs-sities of the present day. This education neither school, academy nor university can bestow ; it must be obtained and cultivated iu the quiet precincts of home; it must find its inspiration in the play ground of the child, and its consummation con-summation in the . stillness of the chamber. To have great men we must have thoughtful, humanity-studying humanity-studying mothers. We must have leading and thinking women, and not those who read the cheap, trashy periodicala either; we have already too many of that class. Nor are those who devote their time to the study of fashion books the worsen who are needed to become the mothers of statesmen and leaders of men. M. A, Y. Greenhalgh in the Normal. |