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as any graduaates of any Freedmen's Normal School.
It seems to us a pity that they should be discouraged by want of success in finding situations, and so turn, as they must soon, to some manual employment.
Not with any sense of degradation surely, if they have the right [[?]] of labor but yet with a keend disappointment in not doing what they are specially prepared for.
They ought to have good places with sure and sufficient pay, more that they may encourage other pupils "to do likewise" than for their own benefit. Well prepared colored teachers will e the necessity of the future, and