The school physiology journal . previ-ously arranged program,Mr. Pokagon presentedto Mayor Harrison, whowas curiously enoughhimself a descendant ofPocahontas, a duplicateof the treaty by whichhis father, a Pottawat-tamie chief, in 1833 con-veyed Chicago to theUnited States for aboutthree cents an acre. The Carlisle, Pa., In-dian school, where rep-resentatives of morethan sixty differenttribes are gathered,and many other insti-tutions of similar char-acter, are doing won-ders, though as yet theyare inadequate to meetthe need. What did for the <^-^ «. * *«* «**» »»»?? Indians, t


The school physiology journal . previ-ously arranged program,Mr. Pokagon presentedto Mayor Harrison, whowas curiously enoughhimself a descendant ofPocahontas, a duplicateof the treaty by whichhis father, a Pottawat-tamie chief, in 1833 con-veyed Chicago to theUnited States for aboutthree cents an acre. The Carlisle, Pa., In-dian school, where rep-resentatives of morethan sixty differenttribes are gathered,and many other insti-tutions of similar char-acter, are doing won-ders, though as yet theyare inadequate to meetthe need. What did for the <^-^ «. * *«* «**» »»»?? Indians, that wise, great Indian boy after working and1 , 1 1 1 r 1 ? studying at Hampton.* hearted leader of his own race, Booker T. Washington is now doingfor the Negroes. Hampton and Tuskegee manytimes repeated will set these peoples on their feet,and by giving them education of mind, Chris-tian character, ideas of thrift, economy andpush, and a spirit of independence, will makethem respected by their white neighbors and. * Courtesy of D. C. Heath & Co. 132 SCHOOL PHYSIOLOGY JOURNAL entirely able to take care of themselves. Ifa Negro holds a mortgage on a white manshouse, which may be foreclosed at any time,there is little danger of the white mans tryingto suppress his vote when election day spite of the evils of slavery the Negro gotfrom it the habit of work. It has been givenMr. Washington preeminently to see that inorder to uplift the colored race labor itselfmust be dignified, beautified, robbed of itsdrudgery. In this he sees the salvation of thewhole South. He recognizes the moral valuein a well-painted house. He realizes that thefriction between the two races will pass awayjust as soon as the black man, by reason of hisskill, intelligence and character, can producesome thing that the white man wants or re-spects in the commercial world ; in short, whenall the dependence ceases to be on one aim of these industrial schools might wellbe expressed in the wo


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookd, booksubjecthygiene, booksubjectphysiology