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[[first clipping, upside down]]
Vegetables
Sown Early

Especially, Should Be
art, a Veteran
says,

[[handwritten]] 1927 [[handwritten]]

[[second clipping]]
[[underlined]] School Heads [[underlined]] Back Move to Get Aviation Principles in Study

(Special to The Herald)
NEW YORK, Jan. 27. -Eighty-five school heads in cities having a population of 100,000 or more are backing a movement started by the Daniel Guggenheim fund for promotion of aeronautics to teach the principles of aviation to school children of the country.
A statement issued on behalf of the trustees says that "certain sensational achievements in aviation in the past year, and in a particular the transatlantic flight of Charles A. Lindbergh, have "effectively dramatized the use of the airplane for the American boy and girl," and continues that "there is a need to establish this interest upon a basis of accurate this information." 
H. Alan Sullivan, of the Guggenheil fund, said the plan for teaching would be formulated in the nest few weeks and be submitted to the annual conference of school superintendents at Boston on February 24. About 15,000 school superintendents [[next column]] to attend the Boston meeting.
Trustees of the fund are Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, F. Trubee Davison, Assistant Secretary of War in Charge of Aeronautic W. F. Durant, A. A. Michaelson, Robert A. Milikan, Dwight W. Morrow, American ambassador to Mexico, Elihu Root, Jr., John D. Ryan and Orville Wright.
Among the 80 or more cities, in addition to New York, whose school superintendents have given approval to the plan are Chicago, Boston, Albany, Syracuse, San Francisco, Hartford, Washington, Philadelphia, Jersey City, Paterson, N.J., and Montclair, N.J.

[[third clipping]]
[?]AL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER
[?]World's Fin
[?]ed With Da

[?]MY L

[?]DRAULIC

[?]ABSO[?]

Transcription Notes:
Three clippings on left on previous page