Proper Education
      
      
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        teachers or clerks, or will learn some trade which will confine them
      
      
        indoors to sedentary employment. The bloom of health fades from
      
      
        their cheeks, and disease fastens upon them, because they are robbed
      
      
        of physical exercise and their habits are perverted generally. All this
      
      
        because it is fashionable! They enjoy delicate life, which is feebleness
      
      
        and decay.
      
      
        True, there is some excuse for young women not choosing house-
      
      
        work for employment, because those who hire kitchen girls generally
      
      
        treat them as servants. Frequently their employers do not respect
      
      
        them and treat them as though they were unworthy to be members
      
      
        of their families. They do not give them the privileges they do the
      
      
        seamstress, the copyist, and the teacher of music. But there can be no
      
      
        employment more important than that of housework. To cook well, to
      
      
        present healthful food upon the table in an inviting manner, requires
      
      
        intelligence and experience. The one who prepares the food that is to
      
      
        be placed in our stomachs, to be converted into blood to nourish the
      
      
        system, occupies a most important and elevated position. The position
      
      
        of copyist, dressmaker, or music teacher cannot equal in importance
      
      
        that of the cook.
      
      
        The foregoing is a statement of what might have been done by a
      
      
        proper system of education. Time is too short now to accomplish that
      
      
        which might have been done in past generations; but we can do much,
      
      
        even in these last days, to correct the existing evils in the education of
      
      
        youth. And because time is short, we should be in earnest and work
      
      
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        zealously to give the young that education which is consistent with
      
      
        our faith. We are reformers. We desire that our children should study
      
      
        to the best advantage. In order to do this, employment should be given
      
      
        them which will call the muscles into exercise. Daily, systematic labor
      
      
        should constitute a part of the education of the youth, even at this late
      
      
        period. Much can now be gained by connecting labor with schools.
      
      
        In following this plan the students will realize elasticity of spirit and
      
      
        vigor of thought, and will be able to accomplish more mental labor in a
      
      
        given time than they could by study alone. And they can leave school
      
      
        with their constitutions unimpaired and with strength and courage to
      
      
        persevere in any position in which the providence of God may place
      
      
        them.
      
      
        Because time is short, we should work with diligence and double
      
      
        energy. Our children may never enter college, but they can obtain an