ak to the home in the evening light of
summers vine-clad porch or the glow of winters lamp.
"I help to make this evening hour; I record the great and
the small, the varied acts of the days and weeks that go to
make up life.
"I am for and of the home; I follow those who leave humble
beginnings; whether they go to greatness or to the gutter, I
take to them the thrill of old days, with wholesome
messages.
"I speak the language of the common man; my words are fitted
to his understanding. My congregation is larger than that of
any church in my town; my readers are more than those in the
school. Young and old alike find in me stimulation,
instruction, entertainment, inspiration, solace, comfort. I
am the chronicler of birth, and love and death--the three
great facts of man's existence.
"I bring together buyer and seller, to the benefit of both;
I am part of the market-place of the world. Into the home I
carry word of the goods which feed and clothe, and shelter,
and which minister to comfort, ease, health, and happiness.
"I am the word of the week, the history of the year, the
record of my community in the archives of state and nation.
"I am the exponent of the lives of my readers.
"I am the Country Weekly."
FOOTNOTES:
[40] Out of 185 neighborhood areas, 39 were chiefly due to the school
district, the next most important influence being the church parish
which determined the neighborhood in 33 cases. J. H. Kolb, "Rural
Primary Groups." Research Bull. 51, Agr. Exp. Sta. of the Univ. of
Wisconsin, p. 48.
[41] The relation of the consolidated school to township and community
lines is well shown in a study of the schools of Randolph County,
Indiana, and Marshall County, Iowa, by Dr. A. W. Hayes, in his "Rural
Community Organization" (Chap. VI, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1921). In
Randolph County more of the schools are located in the open country
while the more recent consolidations in Marshall County are located
mostly at the village centers. Dr. Hayes recognizes the differences but
he gives no facts which make possible a judgment as to the relative
efficiency of the two methods from a community standpoint.
[42] F. C. Howe, "Denmark a Cooperative Commonwealth." H. W. Foght,
"Rural Denmark and its Schools."
[43] "In Pease and Niles' 'Gazateer of Connecticut and Rhode Is
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