School Notes 
Puncture Proof Tires 
mine isolation Hospital , Milwaukee Board of Health, comes the following: “We have 
l Lee Puncture-proof tires for the past four years—used the first Puncture-proof Cords 1 
bm la,i •* «• ««•« •/ w* *«* w LEE 
t 
E XCEPTIONAL mileage and no punctures.” What a world of saving, in 
time, money and annoyance, Lee Puncture-proof Tires represent on 
the farm. 
Equipped with Lee Puncture-proofs, your automotive equipment gives the 
maximum of non-stop service. 
Nails, spikes, broken glass or metal have no menace for Lee Puncture-proof 
tires because into them are built three permanent layers of case-hardened 
steel discs that no metal can penetrate. Yet, Lee Puncture-proofs are as 
resilient—as easy ridine —as ordinarv rmpumat-i^c 
An Imported Citizen on Schools 
I am living in a district where there is 
consolidation. I think that the consolida¬ 
tion is good for the majority of the dis¬ 
tricts. but not for me and a few others 
who are living in the farther end. 
M.v children would have to meet the 
bus one mile from home at eight oelock. 
ami to get there, they would have to go 
through a road very often impassable in 
Winter, and from there ride one hour. 
There is no place for them to wait for 
the bus. and in had weather they would 
he all wet or frozen, and the doctor needed 
afterward. So I am sending them to a 
school iu another district, but only one 
mile from home. I have to pay $40 and 
$4.1 each child a year. It is more than I 
can afford, so, considering my case and 
many are like me, I certainly would he 
glad if those districts were changed, so 
that one would not have to send children 
five miles when there is a school within 
one mile. 
With all their faults, in most of the 
principal countries of Europe, you can 
send your children to the nearest scho 1- ' 1 
without any questions being a 
is true that those schools over tnere are 
under the control of the State, hut that 
way the poorer dist ricts have just as much 
chance as the richest. 
LEE TIRE & RUBBER CO. 
ecutive Offices 2 45 West 55'* Str. 
NEW YORK CITY 
coNsuonootfa 
Samples & 
In my case it is not that tho district 
where I am living is a poor one. On the 
contrary, it is composed of richer country 
places, and I am employed in one; but 
the school taxes are less than half of the 
one where I am sending my children. ( 
A. F. 
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PACKERS 
Resolutions on Rural Schools 
The following were passed by Pulaski 
Orange No. 730 at their regular meeting, 
March 7,1922: 
Whereas, The question of rural edu¬ 
cation is coming to occupy a more and 
more prominent place in the minds of the 
rural people of the State of New York: 
II HF.REA8, The study of the question 
has reached a stage where our rural peo¬ 
ple should formulate certain definite pol¬ 
icies, Therefore, he it 
Resolved, That we. the members of Pu¬ 
laski Grange No. 730. believe that prog¬ 
ress- iu this matter, as in all matters af¬ 
fecting human progress in a democratic 
state must start with, and emanate from, 
conditions existing nt this time, that such 
progress must conform to the wishes of 
the rural people affected thereby and be 
Inaugurated gradually by the people 
themselves along wholesome evolutionary 
lines, and not by revolutionary methods; 
and he it further 
Resolved. That we believe there are 
two cornerstones upon which ideal edu¬ 
cational conditions must rest : namely, 
better physical conditions in and around 
our schools and a larger supply of well- 
trained rural teachers. That to meet the 
former, the rural people must study the 
question of buildings and equipment, and 
to meet the latter the State should he 
called upon to organize in all of the comi¬ 
ties of the State in rural nr village high 
schools, training classes for teachers tin¬ 
der the direction of competent instruc¬ 
tors, and with adequate equipment. We 
believe that the conditions surrounding 
students in the State normal schools to 
(Continued on page (So) 
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