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The address added to the minutes says, in part: "If children are to grow up well-bred and be reared to the honor of God, then the teachers in the churches, the schoolteachers in the school-houses, and the parents in their dwellings must perform their various duties toward the young plants in the vineyard of the Lord."

"I fancied you might be up to something of this kind," Sommers went on, unheeding his sneer. "I had enough of that job of faking up text-books and jollying schoolteachers. So I chucked it." "Why did you chuck me, too?" "I thought you might be sick of having me hang about, and especially now that I am in with the other crowd." "That's rot," Sommers laughed.

Oh, yes, an' bless dear mamma an' the sweet little sister baby. How's that, Aunt Alice?" Mrs. There! Amen!" It was with a sneaking sense of relief that Mrs. Burton awoke on the following morning, and realized that the day was Sunday. Even schoolteachers have two days of rest in every seven, thought Mrs. Burton to herself, and no one doubts that they deserve them.

They are the schoolteachers, through whose hands each successive American generation has to pass; they are those wives of public men who share their husbands' labor, and help mould their work; they are those women who, through their personal eloquence or through the press, are distinctly influencing the American people in its growth.

In the background several army wagons were filled with officers in uniform and with white-clad American women. We schoolteachers lost no time when the boat was once tied up at the dock, for it was given out that some trifling repairs were to be made to the boat's engines and that we should sail the next day.

Complaints against the pastor which the vestry failed to settle should be reported to the President immediately. 9. The brethren in Europe should be petitioned to provide the congregations with preachers and schoolteachers.

The New England type," murmured the mother. "They all have the same look, a good deal," said the girl, glancing over the room where the waitresses stood ranged against the wall with their hands folded at their waists. "They have better faces than figures, but she is beautiful every way. Do you suppose they are all schoolteachers? They look intellectual. Or is it their glasses?"

It may be highly satisfactory to schoolteachers to succeed in making their class read aloud passages from Shakespeare and Milton without dropping more than fifty per cent. of the aspirates, or mispronouncing more than half a dozen multi-syllabic words.

"But a printer ought to know a good many things," said Mr. Bliss. "Have you been to school much?" "No," said Horace. "I have not had much chance at school. But I have read some." "What have you read?" asked Mr. Bliss. "Well, I have read some his-to-ry, and some travels, and a little of everything." Mr. Bliss had ex-am-ined a great many schoolteachers.

The junior lieutenants, and the civil engineers and schoolteachers, who made up her civilian list, took their last look at San Francisco. We swung past Alcatraz Island and heard the army bugles blowing there. The irregular outline of the city with its sky-scrapers printed itself against a background of dazzling blue, with here and there a tufty cloud.