BAKER AND FOOTBALL, we first end get a Way With him yes terday. fe spok of the boys who left Baker as educating their heels in stead of their heads. Everybody who knows any of the boys knows that they are already better educated than Grady ever ws orever will be. Lis worry over the students is all very thankfully received undoubtedly, and they will send for him to run the school., ‘The faculty are not chagrined over the action of the students and Brady ought to come down and make them ashamed of themselves. Nearly every fellow who writes and talks against athletics at Baker is “personally in favor of ath letics” and they are always afraid of some unknown: somebody. Lawrence is a poor place for advice for Baker to eminate from.—Baldwin Ledger. See here, little boy, you are making a fool of yourself and if you do not know it you are the only fellow in Baldwin so blissfully ignorant. If your heed had Hert Taore systematically trained your paper would be more popular with the good people of Baldwin. But to the point, The Worxip regretted the action of the football bors loth oz Gaker’s s account and on that own. They are making the mistake of their lives and some day will realize it. The editor of the WORLD must confess that he has not been able to set the prairie grass afire to any considerable extent in an educational way, but there has never been an hour since leaving school , that he has not regretted it deeply and for this reason we feel a keener interest in young men strug gling for an education. They will need all the learning they can get, and will live to regret the wasted opportunities. Education comes high and only a small percent of boys can get one. It is, therefore a calamity and a crime to fritter away opportunities. Every boy who leaves as good a school as Baker because he is not allowed to play. foot ball shows plately. hei is there for other purposes than intellectual. The WORLD =. “confesses that it is chagrined to see the Leager, a paper we have always had a fatherly interest in, ‘deliberately: stab. thé. school in its town simply because the editor’s ideas extend downward rather than. upward. Baker and Baldwin deserve. better. Brady, of the ieawrence World let