Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 10, 23 November 1916 — Page 13
I - Everybody
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, NOV. 23, 1916 PAGE THIRTEEN Goes to Night School, From Councilman to A
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS DO NOT MARRY; HELM SAYS THEY ENJOY WORKING
1 E. R. Helman, head of the business department at the high school, is not running a marriage bureau or a school for the preparation of girls for brides. He has been in the high school almost six years and can count on his fingers the number of his girl graduates who have been married. Despite the number of boys and girls he has turned out of school equipped with knowledge which has placed them ahead of others in business, he has lost trace at very few of his former pupils. . Gets Quick Promotions. One whom he mentioned graduated recently and took a position. He has been promoted three times. " told him he was not equipped for it," Mr. Helman said. "1 said, 'Now get down and dig. If you want to hold that job down and he did. He has gone pest sereral others. "Pupils do not seem to realize the importance of their work until their last year, but they do work hard the final two terms in school. At first they can not understand why why this is done and why that is done. They begin to realize after the third year and they all make good when they go out to fill positions, except those who have been rank failures in school." Girls Stick to Jobs. Referring to the fact that most of the girls are still sticking to offices rather than becoming brides, Mr. HelNIGHT NURSERY I Continued From Page One. at the bank where he has a sayings i account. One of the Greeks had to be absent to take care of the pre-bollday demand ifor candies, but he continues his studies in every available moment. ; One pupil was absent last night, working overtime in a factory. Stick Close to Jobs "Hello, Skeezicks," is a common form of greeting in the woodworking class. There are two messenger boys there, one of whom kept a truant officer busy trying to make him devote more time to books. He is becoming a skilled workman, although Just passing through the elementary stages. One of the pupils is making a set of six beautiful chairs. Pupils pay for their lumber and consequently are careful with their work. There are classes in history, art, shorthand and typewriting, but one of the most interesting on the surface is the big class of the business department, the bookkeeping class taught by E. R. Helman, head of the high school business department City Councilman Studies A city councilman Is enrolled. He is one of the best pupils. He has been out of school 30 years, time enough, according to his Instructor, to get rusty on school methods. . He has not, however. Prospective promotions cause some of the diligence on the part of the pupils. There Is one Quaker enrolled and she is really a demure one. She Is an English girl whose entire education was received in England. It Is her first appearance in American schools. Here's a School Teacher A school teacher is enrolled in the typewriting class. Most of the girls are young in the typewriting class and most of them in the shorthand class. There is more real motive behind attendance at the elementary classes by girls than there Is In any other department of the city educational sytem. These are the factory girls. Some are learning to cook and others to sew, so they can economize on meals and clothing. All work in the sewing classes is practical and the' pupils do work outside of school. No Grade System Used There Is no grade system in such classes. The work is "satisfactory" or "unsatisfactory." according to the , instructor's Judgment. If the work is not satisfactory, it Is taken apart and done over. Apparently there is no age limit In the nizht school. Aftes of pupils range from 15 to 60 years and social stand ings have an equally wide range. HOW THIN PEOPLE CAN PUT ON FLESH Thin men and women tnat big, hearty, filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fat producing nourishment it contained? You haven't gained in weight one ounce, mat rood passea rrom your body like unburned coal through an open grate. The material was there, but your food doesn't work and stick, and the plain truth is you hardly get enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This la true of thin folks the world over. Your nutritive organs, your functions of assimilation, are probably sadly out of gear and need reconstruction. Cut out the foolish foods and funny sawdust diets. Cut out everything but the meals you are eating and eat with every one of those a single Sargol tablet. In two weeks note the difference. Let the scales be the Judge Five to eight good solid pounds of healthy, "stay-there fat may. be the net result. Sargol alms to charge weak, stagnant blood with millions of fresh new red blood corpuscles to give the blood the carrying power to deliver every ounce of fat-making material in your food to every part of your body. Sargol, too, mixes with your food, to prepare It for the blood In an easily assimilated form. Thin people tell how they have gained all the way from 10 to 25 pounds a month while taking Sargol and say that the new flesh stays put. Sargol tablets are a careful combination of six of the best assimilative elements known to chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a package, are pleasant, harmless and Inexpensive, and Clem Thlstlethwaites 4 stores and all other good druggists In this vicinity sell them subject to an absolute guarantee of weight in crease or money u&ck as xouna in ry large pacicage. aqv.
man admitted that most of them have been "eligible" and many of them greatly to be desired for life "1 don't know why it is," he said, "but I know they are all making good and are making good salaries." WILLIAMSON FAMILY MOVES TO GOSHEN
Chester, Ind., Nov. 23. Rev. Ulmer and family, and Mr. Martin, Indianapolis, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crawford..... Bert Carman and family spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Amos Henning and Mrs. Mary Henning and family, South Seventh street, Richmond..... Eugene Williamson and family moved near Qoshen last week.... Mrs. Ida Barker moved Into her new house last Wednesday. Practices Law , . Mr. Martin, a lawyer, Indianapolis, and an Anti-Saloon League worker, gave a very Interesting temperance lecture at the M. E. church here Sunday morning.; Misses Marjorie Pickett, Bonnie and Blanche Carman attended the wedding of Miss Helen Hall and Mr. Ralph Kittle Thursday evening at the home of the bride's parents in Richmond. Aid Society Meets The Ladies' Aid society met last Wednesday afternoon. Several members were present. ...Ed. Morrow and George Joy, Parker City,-were dinner and supper guests of William Morrow and family last Thursday The revival meeting at the M. E. church here closed last Wednesday evening. ....Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin and Mrs. James Webster visited friends in Richmond Sunday. DENIES ANNOUNCING SCORE FROM PULPIT LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 23. Rev. W. F. Hole, of Pine Village, which boasts of a famous professional football team, denies that he ever announced a football score from the pulpit. His denial was prompted by a 6tory appearing in a Chicago paper.
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After Thirty Years' Women If you have tried most everything else, come to me. Where others fall is where I have my greatest success. Send attached coupon today and 1 will send you free my illustrated book on Rupture, showing my appliance and giving you prices and names of many people who have used it with great success. It Is instant relief when all others fail. Remember, I use no salves, no harness, no lies. I send on trial to prove what I say is true. You are the judge and once having seen my Illustrated -book and read it you will be as enthusiastic as my hundreds of patients whose letters you can also read. Fill out fre.e coupon below and mall today. It's well worth your time whether you try my Appliance or not. Pennsylvania Man Thankful Mr. C. E. Brooks, Marshall, Mich., Dear Sir: Perhaps it will Interest you to know that I have been ruptured six years and have always had troublo with it till I got you Appliance. It is very easy to wear, fits neat and snug, and is not in the, way at any time, day or night. In fact, at times I did not know I had it on; It just adapted itself to, the shape of the body, as it clung to the spot, no matter what position-1 was in. It would be a veritable God-send to the unfortunate sufferer from rupture if all could procure the Brooks Rupture Appliance and wear it. They would certainly never regret it. My rupture is now all healed upl ailtl CCl UIU it VUb J J!UA XI pliance. Whenever the opportunity presents Itself I will say a good word for your Appliance, and also the honor able way in which you deal with rup tured people. It is a pleasure to recommend a good thing among your friends or strangers, I am, Yours very sincerely, JAMES A. BRfTTON. 80 Spring St., Bethlehem, Pa. Confederate Veteran Now Well Commerce, Ga., R. F. D. No. 11. Mr. C. E. Brooks, Marshall, Mich. Dear Sir: I am glad to tell you that I am now Bound and well and can plow or do any heavy work. I can say your Appliance has effected a permanent cure. Before getting your Appliance I was in a terrible condition and had given up all hope of , ever being .any better If it hadn't been
HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS MAKE HONOR ROLLS WITH GOOD GRADES
Effeciency of the high school faculty together with the rise of scholastic standafrds is attested by the, fact that the student honor rolls are showing consistent growth in, numbers of students making above-average grades in their studies. Students honored must make a . grade of 90 percent or more in two subjects and must not fall below 85 percent in any. The lists are published each six weeks. The honor roll at present includes the names of the following students: Kathryn Bartel, Marjorie Batchelor, Mary Louise Bates, Lavon Beam, Ruth Bellman, Elenor Bluy, Paul Brower. Jane Carpenter, Catherine Carr, Orlando Coryell, Katherine Cox, Teresa Crabb. Gertrude Dietrick, Juanita Duke. Nina Edmunson, Marjorie Edwards, Helen Eggemeyer, George Eversman. Julius Falk, Burel Fasick, Walton Flnley. " Alice Gennett, Mabel Gilmore, Alice Goodwin, Nina Guthrie. William Haberkern, Henry Hackman, Miriam Hadley, Cora Harris, Robert Hawekotte. ; Murel Kirkman, Catherine Klute. ' '' Ada Lammott, Dorothy Lebo, Helen Ligon, Beatrice Lohse, Mary Luring. Richard Mansfield, Louise Mather. Mark Heitbrink, Newell Hill, Robert Hodgin, Pauline Hoffman, Isabelle Hunt Lois Johanning, Katherine Kamp, Adelaide Kemp, Lowell Patti. Francis Mayhew, Agnes Meerhoff, Ruth Misner, Behita Monarch, Ruby Moore, Helen Neft Ruth Nolder, Mary Louise Norris, Mildred Nusbaum. Clara Peirce, Gertrude Petering, Robert Price, Paul Quigg. James Sackman, Janet Seeker, Herman Shaffer, Catherine Smith, Pauline Smith, Malvern Soper, Mildred Stevens. Gurney Stidham, Edmund Sudhoff, Verna Swisher. Irene Utter Margaret Van Sant, Juanita Wickett, Esther Wilson, Byron Wilson, Doris Wogaman, Helen Young. FIRE CAUSES $50 LOSS EATON, O., Nov. 23 A small, blaze early Tuesday morning in the home of Mr. Andrew Wysong, . caused a loss estimated at $40 to $50. Paper over a flue hole caught fire and dropped upon a shelf where clothing had been stored. The blaze was extinguished by chemicals.
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Experience I Have Produced a Rupture and Children That Does Away With Truss
Sent oil Trial to Prove It
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The above is C. E. Brooks, Inventor of the Appliance, who has treated rupture over 30 years and who is now giving others the benefit of his experience. If ruptured, write him today at Marshall, Mich. -
for your Appliance I would never have been cured. I am sixty-eight years old and served three years in Eckle's Artillery, Oglethorpe Co. I hope God will reward you for the, good you are doing for suffering humanity. Yours sincerely, H. D. BANKS.
Others Failed But the Appliance Saves Mr. C. E. Brooks, Marshall, Mich. Dear Sir: Your Appliance did all you claim for the little boy and more, for It cured him sound and well. We let him wear it for about a year in all, although it cured him three months after he had begun to wear it. We had tried several other remedies and got no relief and I shall certainly recommend it to friends, for we surely owe it to you. Yours respectfully, WM. PATTERSON, No. 717 S. Main St., Akron, O.
Night School at Work
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Flexible System of Administration Permits Schoolmen to Adapt New Principles to Suit Varying Conditions that Arise from Large Attendance and Different Subjects Studied by Men and Wornec.
A school for he pupils. This tersly epitomizes the working plan upon which the success of the Richmond high school is founded. Satisfied pupils and satisfied instructors with more pt the "personal touch" apparent daily than older graduates probably ever saw, are elements. What is most impressive about the highest public educational institution of Richmond, with the greatest per capita attendance high school has ever had in Richmond, is the good natured way education is handed out, under the direction of the principal, Frank G. Pickell. How the Machine Work. To one who passed through school, in the regime of a "school master," with an emphasis on the master that brings a vision of a grim, tight-mouthed ogre-like " tyrant wearing small highly-magnifying spectacles, the ultra modern method of school teaching and managing is an impressive revelation. The principal who is putting across this plan of running a school for Its pupils, was sitting at his desk last night with every ' detail of his night school under his thumb. He proceeded to unfold In part what appeared to be a big honor system. For one thing, he does not believe whispering, to use his words, is a heinous crime. Geta Boy's Confidence. "I put it up to a boy this way," he explained, "that the whispering may not hurt him particularly and it may not harm anyone else, but, if it continues, it will annoy his neighbors and prevent them from doing work they want to do." '. To summarize the whole system, the pupils are "boss" and he is their leader. A republican school plan is in operation. "I hav,e some of the finest boys here I ever saw," he said. The boy problem is a big one, he said, and added -that much of it still is to be solved. There are so many almost uncontrollable elements which enter into the problem personality of Instructors, environment of pupils and the character of the material he has to work with that a hard and fast rule cannot be a success. Method of School System. - The whole school is run in a flexible manner, best illustrated in the night school.. Precedent has its effect but
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Remember: - I send my Appliance on trial to prove what I say is true. You are to be the judge. Fill out free coupon below " and mail today.
Free Information Coupon Mr. C. E. BROOKS, 643 A State St., Marshall, Mich. Please send me by mail in plain wrapper your illustrated book and full information about your. Appliance for rupture. Name, .1 Address ................. .......... . ,r .' . . . . . RTF. D. ......... City ..... ................State
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AAA AAA the effect is slight and every problem is solved as it arises. The school is a big interesting shifting problem in itself that has to be solved like an enigma. Prof. Pickell thoroughly believes in school spirit and in the past three years the school has undergone a change without knowing it. He Is strong for the "human" side of the pupils. He and his instructors, who are uniformly in perfect . sympathy with the system, do not think of the school as a machine into which children are pushed in ram form, to be turned out educated and solemn, four years later. "What I need now," he told one of his instructors, "Is a suite of seven offices, stretching to the other side of the building, with a girl In every office to hold up people who come to Bee me while I am working.!' WIRELESS OPERATOR SENDS LONG' REPORT ; EATON, O., Nov. 23. Post cards from operators at Somerset, Ky., and Salem, N. C, were received Wednesday by George D. Howsare, a local wireless operator, in response to a request that all who heard him Sunday night forward advices. The boy has been working for some time to develop BRONCHITIS .When a severe cold settles on the lungs it is called bronchitis. There is danger of its leading to broncho pneumonia, and for this reason is is always best to go to bed and take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as directed until well along towards recovery. Mrs. j Charles E. Woodard, Sandy Creek, N. Y., writes: "Chamberlain s Cough Remedy cured me of bronchitis last fall. When I began using it I was so hoarse at times that it was difficult for me to speak above a whisper. I resorted to the use of this valuable medicine and found it very soothing and healing. In a week's time I was well." Obtainable everywhere. Adv. Appliance for Men, Torture. Ten Reasons Why You Should Send for Brooks Rupture Appliance 1. It is absolutely the only Appliance of the kind on the market today, and in it are embodied the principles that Inventors have sought after for years. 2. The Appliance for retaining the rupture cannot be thrown out of position. 3. Being an air cushion of soft rubber it clings closely to the body, yet never blisters or causes irritation. 4. Unlike the ordinary so-called pads, used in other trusses, It is not cumbersome or ungainly. 5. It is small, soft and pliable, and positively cannot be detected through the clothing. 6. The soft, pliable bands holding the Appliance do not give one the unpleasant sensation of wearing a harness. 7. There ia nothing about it to get foul,, and when it becomes soiled it can be washed without injuring it in the least. 8. There are no metal springs In the appliance, to torture one by cutting and bruising the flesh. 9. AH the material of which the Appliance is made is of the very best that money can buy, making it a dur able and safe Appliance to wear. 10. My reputation for honesty and fair dealing is so thoroughly established by an experience of over thirty years of dealing with the public, and my prices are so reasonable, my terms so fair, that there certainly should be no hesitancy in sending free coupon today. Rupture Healed in Four Months 21 Jansen St., Dubuque, Iowa. Mr C. E. Brooks, Marshall, Mich. Dear Sir: The baby's rupture is altogether cured, thanks to your Appliance, and we are so thankful to you. If we could only have known of it sooner, our little boy would not have had to suffer near as-much as he did. He wore your brace a little over four months. Yours very truly, ANDREW EGGENBERGER.
his station's efficiency, as regards its ability to flash 'messages great distances, and the receipt of cards from these operators attest as to his success. He is a son of Rev. McD. Howsare, pastor of First Christian church.
"WHEN BY BABY VAS JBfi One Minute Interviews with Mothers Whose Children are Now Well and Strong
"My baby had a bad cold, but Father John's Medicine cured her." (Signed) Mrs. Ida M. Butter, 37 King- St, Waterville, Me.
'TJcona Rose, my baby girl, has been rreatly benefited by Father John's Medi cine. She takes it whenever she has a cold or cough." (Signed) Mrs. Chas. M. Chadima, So. 4tH i)t.,., Cedar Rapids, Ohioj Itiad
L - .m?XM:S L LjBrunswick. Me. .... .
Father John's Medicine is a saTO B cold or cough or are run down, dangerous drugs
Ordinance No. 4641916. AN ORDINANCE Requiring-Privy Vaults and Cess Pools to be Connected with Sewers, where practical to do so, providing penalties for the violation of its provisions. SECTION 3 OF THE ORDINANCE: Any person or persons who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinance shall, upon conviction, be fined any sum not less than one ($1.00) dollar and not more than twentyfive ($25.00) dollars for each offense, and each day that any such vault or cess pool is used or maintained in violation of the provisions of this ordinance shall constitute a separate and distinct offense.
Cement and Sewer Work Mather
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Go to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco keep your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect yourself against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco, 304 Walnut St, Cincinnati, Ohio, for liberal-sized trial package.
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o "PREPAREDNESS" See your dentiat twice yearly Use Senreco twice daily
Th tooth paste that REALLY CLEANS
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HAMMOND, . Ind., Nov. 23. John Turadick has filed suit in the Hammond superior court to recover $5,000 he asserts he lost in a gambling house. "My little baby, Melvln, was thin ana pale until I gave him Father John's Medicine, which built him tip ana made him strong:." (Signed), Mrs. Ernesl m ! . i o.:ii . if? aKl iuiwaicr, mum.
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"Mf little girl, four ears old, had bronchitis and got no relief until I gave her Father. John's Medicine." .(Signed) Mrs. W. N. Robertion, Elrama,.Pa,
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"My two 'children I whooointr cousrh
ind were pale and run flown ana rather John's Medicine made them well and strong:."
meaieme tot cnuaren, wnen iney nave because It dpenotcontalij alcohol or, t B. Kelsey, Phone 3807 STREET STREET
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