Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1921 — Page 8

8

SCHOOLS GIVEN A LONG LIST OF REQUIREMENTS State Inspector Issues Bulletin on How They Will Be Rated. It is a long, long way from the little red ecboolhouse where readin’, writin' and 'rithmetic were taught to all the pupils together, regardless of age, previous training or ability, to the school which could J>e rated as first class under the qnalifi a* >ns adopted by the State board of education and being put into effect by E. B. Wetherow, State school inspector. Under the new system each school is scored according to its qualifications with a possible high score of 100. Schools with, a score of 90 or more will be rated first class, with a score between SO and 90 second class and below 80, third class. The ratings are based on the school grounds, the building, beating and ventilation equipment, the school term, the teacher and the school, supervision and Janitor service. Here are the things absolutely required of schools of the first and second classes: The interior walls and ceilings mnst be. clean and must be elthqr white, cream, light tan, buff, or very light shade of gray, and the basement rooms must be painted or whitewashed. There must be an Intake of fresh air through all boxes under radiators or under room heaters or furnaces, with ample provision for the removal of foul air through flues provided for tliat purpose. There must be a tested mercury thermometer in connection to automatic control of heat, or suspended to within four feet of the floor, half way between the Intake of heat and the opposite wall.

Last Chance Saturday to Get {< Wasl v m _ V ▼ CCU MmU V W* -fSr one-quart Aluminum m Stew Pan W""1 Y W VJP fell ikyi rated anywhere this paper m fl b I authorised to women many whom since kV Wvw v/ M have entirely equipped their kitch°f “Wear-Ever" utensils 1 ALUMINUM UTENSILS ARE NOT ALL THE SAME ALUMINUM “ W ear-Ever” utensils Eire made from hard, thick, cold-rolled, sheet aluminum. VVVICI|VV/ They give years and years of faithful, enduring service. \ Replace utensils that wear out TRADE MARK with utensils that u Wear-Ever” * made in tt i A Get your pan TODAY and see for yourself why so many women prefer “Wear-Ever.” (Av{jN °I ® v * r y genuine "WearThe Aluminum Cooking Utensil Cos., New Kensington, Pa. The stores named below, we KNOW\ have a supply of “Wear-Ever” Stew Pans: LLoah for thm storm with thm “Wear-Evor ” window display) S Indianapolis—Downtown Stores TEE WM. H. BLOCK CO. LILLY HARDWARE COMPANY L. S. 4YRES & CO. VONNEGUT HARDWARE CO. MILLER HARDWARE CO.

Outlying Districts ibrmatb/ Haniwar*, J. Q, 10th and Illinois Sta. Irlfbtwood Hardware Ca> 2(02 Roosevelt Aw Feutalr S<jaare Hardware Colli 6 Prospect St. C. W. Fryfcaretr, 2214 £. Washington St. lank Hardware C, 1604 S. Meridian St. Dae Koehrtag, 272 Virginia Are. Chaa. Haler, 2104 West Michigan St. Chaa Irflmjfrßbtr, 2039 East Tenth St. . £( Tenth St. Hdw. Ce,

If your store does not have “WEAR-EVER” Stew Pans send 40c to THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL CO., New Kensington, -Pa. f and ft pan wi*’ h? you post-paid. Cover will he included for 18c extra.

There must be a United States flag ot good quality not less than three feet by four feet In sire, on a flagpole whlcn extends to at least ten feet above the roof of the school building. The school must hare single, wellvamished desks that fit the pupil. It must have adjustable wtndow shades in eood repair. There must be an approved set of encyclopedia and an unabridged dictionary for each schoolroom above the fourth grade. There must be a library of at least three volumes for each pupil and at least one set of supplementary readers for eaeh of the first four grades, In a good bookcase, with an annual expenditure of at least 50 cents per pupil for new books. Each room above the fourth grade must have nine modern approved maps, one each of Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, the United States, South America. the eatsern hemisphere, the western hemisphere and a globe ten inches or more in diameter. There must be an adequate supply of good drinking water from fountains or from a well or closed receptiele with individual drinking cups and there must be adequate provisions for washing the face and hands. Each schoolroom must have a good teacher's desk and chnir and at least two other chairs. The primary department must have ample equipment, Including a good pencil sharpener. There must be two good framed pictures of an approved character In each schoolroom. The school must have at least three community meetings during the year. Each room must have posted In it a daily program approved by the superintendent of schools. Everything in the basement or In other parts of the building In direct charge of the Janitor must be clean and In good order. These things are the requirements of a first or second-class school, but a great many other things go to make up the score of a school. Here are samples, together with the number of points they score: Two or more acres of well-drained school ground, 3. Air space V>f 225 cubic feet for each pupil, 3. Gymnasium and community room combined, 4. At least eighty square feet of good blackboard In each room, 2.

Throughout the State ALEXANDRIA— W. H. May. ANDERSON— Nlchol Hardware On. F. H. Smith Hardware The Whltehouae BEDFORD— The Fair Stere BERNE-. The Fair Storo BIfKXELL Klxmlller A Son BLOOMINGTON— Bloomington Hardware Cos. BLUFFTON— The Progress Cole, Reed & Cos. COLUMBUS Sirtimen Hardware Ce. CONNERS VILLE— V. J. Barker

Nine months* school term, 8. ! Fifty per cent of teachers In school with seventy-two weeks’ training and all others with at least thirty-six weeks Os training, 12. Success grade of 93 per cent fir higher, 6. Between 97 and 100- per cent in attendance, 3. Provisions for weekly visits by superlrtendent or principal, 3. The qualifications listed are merely samples from a long list Indicating that the life of the average school pupil must be a highly systematized and sensitized thing. There is nothing In the entire list to recall tbfc little frame school house wher# the pupils piled In, two in a seat, after "recess” and those near the big cannon stove developed blisters (on their stove side) and those a little farther away developed cliillblains. ~ 1 FLY NUISANCE AT FAIR GROUND Board of Health Wants the Stables Cleaned. The State board of agriculture ajnd State board of health will be appealed'to by Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary of the city board of public henlrh, to have the stables at the State fair ground cleaned up so they will not be breeding places for files, the city official announced today. Residents of the fairgrounds neighborhood state that they have been pestered with swarms of flies, which the heallth department has traced to the stables, t>r. Morgan said. It Is a dangerous condition for the State School for the I>iaf, which is located Just north of the f:tlrgrond a* well as bad for the other residents, 1m said. "If file* are bad in a neighborhood It means that there are insanitary conditions present," the health officer staled. “Unprotected manure piles, open garbage, open vaults and other accumulations of decomposed materials are responsible. Files will not remain where they are not

CRAWFORDS VILLE— Wide-a-Wake Mercantile Cos. DECATUR— Shafer Hardware Cos. EDINBURG J. R. Broderick EL WOOD— R. L. Beeson A Sons Cos. EVANSVILLE— H. E. Bacon Cos. Blackman A Lunkenheimer Cos. The Paul & Ortmeyer Cos. The A. C. Koch Cos. FRANKLIN— Morrell Titson A Sons GREENCASTLE— John Cook and Son* Cos. GREENFIELD— Pickett Hardware Cos. GREENPItI RG_ Tlie Fair Store GREENWOOD—t>. <5. Hester

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1921.

well supplied with food. Citizens should report to the health department ady violation of the sanitary code which has a tendency to create the fly nuisance.” Sea and Air Craft Search for Bodies NORFOLK, Va„ June 24.—Sky and water were thick with craft of all types and sizes today searching for the bodies of Captain Howard Douglas and Lieut. M. J. Plumb, who perished when their airplanes crashed during yesterday's bombing tests. The search was concentrated In the vicinity of Tangiers, in Chesapeake Bay.

ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine - ■Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-one years and. proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer package, for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of Monoaeeticacid* ester of SallcylTcacid.—Advertisement.

HARTFORD CITY— Gable Hardware Cos. HUNTINGTON--Relchonbach & Wickenhiser Cos. Sam S. Nave KNIGHTSTOWN— Li. M. Culbertson & Son KOKOMO— Wm. H. Turner Cos. Armstrong-Landon Cos. LEBANON— Coulter & Smock Cos. LOOGOOTEE— John Huebner Hardware Cos. MARION Marlon Hardware Cos. M A HTINS VILLB— J. W. Anderson MITCHELL— H. H. Crawford MORRISTOWN— Pickett Hardware Cos. MT. VERNON— Sailer-Morehead Cos.

ALUMNI TO SEE U. OF M. MANSION Burtons to Revive Old Custom of Dr. Angell. ANN ARBOR, June 24.—Many years ago President and Mrs. James B. Angell oponed the “President's Mansion” on the evening of Alumni day during commencement week, to returning alumni. The annual "Senate Reception,” as It -was known, greew to be one of the functions

EXCURSIONS NIAGARA FALLS J And Points on the Great Lakes Every Sunday Beginning June 26th Special low Tourist rates to all Lake Resorts daily. Special Excursion via "Clover Leaf” to Toledo, Ohio, each Saturday, returning leave Toledo, Sunday at 5:00 p. m. Don’t decide on your trip until after taking it up with T. J. Gore, Joint Ticket Agent, Terminal Station. For your home outing visit Broad Ripple Park, the finest amusement grounds in the middle west, free. UNION TRACTION COMPANY OF INDIANA

MUNCIE By-Lo Hardware Cos. w. A. McNaughton Cos. Johnson A Aapy Hdw. Cos C. M. Kimbrough Cos. NEWCASTLE— Ice Hardware Ca NOBLES VILLE— Theo. Becker PERU— McCaffrey A Ca PORTLAND— Beebe Bros. PRINCETON— The Economy Variety Store RICHMOND— Hornaday Hardware Cos. Jones Hardware Cos. Seaney Hardware Cos. RU SEVILLE Jones 92-Cent Store SCOTTBBURG — W. %. Hubbard Cos. \

most looked forward to bs returning old grads and former students. But the alumni grew in numbers, and the time finally came when the little stuffy rooms of the president’s home were so unpleasuantly crowded that the event became one of dread. After that It was held In one of the gymnasiums until the erection of Alumni Memorial made potlble a splendid place for this function. But this year, realizing that the hundreds of alumni who will return would be delighted to see the remodeled president's home, with its spacious rooms

SEYMOUR— Kessler Hardware Cos VILLE— J. G. DePre* Cos. J. C. Pearson Cos. Index Notion Cos. TIPTON— The Bargain Store UNION CITY— Minnteh Hardware Ca Vincennes— The Liberty Hardware Ca The Salter-Morgan Cos. North Vincennes Hdw. Ca WABASH— McCaffrey A Cos. WASHINGTON— Eskrldge-AUen Cos. O’/Jonnell Hardware OA WINCHESTER — Garfield Hiatt

made possible by tearing out old partitions, and believing that these former students would like to see the president in his own ’home. President and Mrs. Burton have volunteered to open their home on the night of June 29, and hold the senate reception there. The senior claes In turn, has decided

- ’ • ' *r:* -tv < . - PEOPLES €^SSsm9SSSISEESm *k •>4.-436 W WASHINGTON 'ST

LOW RENT MEANB LOW PRICES

Aiming to Make tfie Peoples A Buy - Word in Eveiy Home

convenience. Come In tomorrow and open an account. “Pay a Lritle Each Pay Day”

Ladies’ Suits $22.50 up

Men’s Suits $22.50 up

Nineteen Years of Square Dealing in This Location

•v;i ' PEOPLES ii J J 36 V WASUINCTON ST . .. t 'won 'ijir. Av s

OPEN UNTIL 9:30 P. M. ON SATURDAYS

HAVE A LOOK 1 Square North of Market House

WALL PAPER IV- 1,000,000 ROLLS ’'uK PARLOR / tTZfmit l \ fLrf* I . A ron. p ro mf* per S *i#TpER Is. n :,. m v roll| PEB roll 16 Rolls,, m t .ROLL Paper a Room Yard*. Paper a Boom for $1.45, side JEf I f or gj.go, side ““ H|l: 1!X N. j ft** ATTENTION! We require patrons to purchase 8 yards of border at 5c per yard with every 5 rolls of side wall, priced from lc to 15c per roll. SPECIAL | JUNE SALE I For the Entire Month of June 9 You must bring this coupon to secure dis- ■; ;! count. i H OFF BILL /{J NO CHANGE IN PRICE “Anything in the House” Void after June 29, 1921. Martin Rosenberger, 210-212 N. Delaware. /VVVWWV^WV^W*v^VWW'^A^AAAA/>AAAAA^AAAA^^A^Ai FREE—SAMPLE BOOK MAILED—FREE r, order* dC: - 70 Designs and Colorings ' T T r I Martin I Sr J ROSENBERGER OTHER CITIES: “THE WALL PAPER KING” COVINGTON, Ky. INDIANAPOLIS HEADQUARTERS HAMILTON. O. - cinSSnatv, o. 210-212 N. Delaware St. LOUISVILLE, liY. *■ * W wviwfituv U CLOSE EVENINGS fi P. M. - ■' i—————

Tomorrow Alrf glit r*. v Get a 15/ Box

to hold Itz annual "senior prom” on that night, and the two functions will be combined. The portion of the campus to tha south of the president’s yard will be hung with Japanese lanterns, as will be the president’s yard, and It is through this section of the campus that the “prom” will bo held.

The more people become acquainted with this store, the more they come to know that this store has no rival in dressing the family well and conveniently at prices within their means. , Hundreds and hundreds of wage earners in this city look forward to the People’s for their season’s needs. They have learned by experience that this store, offers better merchandise, better styles and more liberal credit than can be found elsewhere. . All j ou need do Is pay a small amount (town and the balance will be divided In small weel ly or monthly terms to suit your own

Ladies' Dresses $17.50 up

IT’S EASY TO PAY OUR WAY

Boys' Suits $8.50 up

PAY A little EACH WEEK

HAVE A LOOK 210-212 NORTH DELAWARE

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