and Education, at the recent sernin- ar called by Dr. D. E. Llndstrom, ruralsociologist of the University of- Illinois, in presenting the vlew- point of the league. Trhe leàgue be- Hieves that good budgets and an au- dit of a» :school board accounts would be an aid- to. reorganization of school districts. Chief ln lnterest with the Education.- department, Mrs. L unde continued, is the State Board o f Education. The league' has worked for bis, which provide for: independentd< power of 'researchý for such aboard. The. league also believes that the elimination of the eighteen per pu- pli pegging provision ln the Ilinois state aid law would help in school reorganizatiôn. Vnder the present sehol id lw; nid la given on.ffh basis of elciven -dollars per pupil. but if a district has fewer than eighteen pupils, It may dlaim aid on the basis o! elghteen. ENDORSE CON VENTfION BILL The resoluti on providing for the calling o! a constitutional conven- tion, H. J. R. 3, introduced by Rep. Woodward is the fRrst bil h tis m ar Horace Holley of New ,York, editor'of Worid Order magazine, will be the speaker at the SuntiaV afternoon meeting at 3:30 o'clock, Februarj 12, in Foundation hall, Ba13a'i House of Worahip. Mr. Holley, editor, author, poet anid lectuLter, hqs apoken on bot1h plat- fw>, nd radio in, f~4 ifty citles of the United Stastes. Among his tvritlngs are both poetry and prose, lnclucling "Th~e Modern Social Religion,' "4The Inuer Gar- den," "The Strlckeu King," "iv ination andi Creatwmn" andi «Baha'l the Spirit of the Age." On Saturday noon, F'ebruary Ii, ini asking the aegisati for its endorsementi sure .stated that the p tution bas regulated g Illinois for 69 years, mnois has in that time an agricultural to an ir, and inany fundamet have taken place f and political relations if sUCf a e were ,calle from[ itate zmpDortanmatters, 1 Mg 1lamse Sea Stouts