Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 88, 28 February 1920 — Page 12

nan two

THE RICIIMONU PALLADIUM, SVI'UItDAV, MARCH IS, 19.'"

SS9

PART I .barked, as much as to say, "Oh, Bright and early the next mom- yeB."

Ting Jack and Jane and. Ladydear .And he Booh seemed to

and Captain Brave set out to see; n ln bout th count ce more Athens. They walked through he,The ,on 8t in N ,'es had been main business streets visit ng the, t00 much for hin) There were no stores and shops and then the his- other d about wh cared t0 , torical parts ot the city the parts with hln, hAr,11BA ho Wfla n B,Pn'

tiaf urnro KniU oantiiHoa tm ITlraf . " . " . .T. I

A II Th. ; 7hri!!r'.l.f.U8p?.cl- -. mayDe but one morning as I got up some

" " ' ; m..,7 - i not line mem. Anu, Decause me lis. This is a great hill or stone. -hiMrn Bu,av ,,Mnv

On its level top was built by the play with them Ijadydear and Cap.

AN

IMAGINARY TRIP

TO THE NORTHLAND One hot summer, some of my friends and I made up our minds to go to the North where the Eskimos lived. ' So one morning, July 7, 1919, we started for the North. The things we took with us were some frying pans but t lie best of all a lot of clothing. It took us about a month to go. We went on a fast passenger train all the way, so we could haul our clothes good in trunks. I

thought we never would get there

old Greeks the most beautiful uin Brave tred t0 amuse nim an(1 buildings they could design. There vpn niavtM, Qml oooV w,th hlm

the children saw acres and acres of a few times just ag Jack and Jane

remains of these buildings, broken statues, giant pillars that have stood up for centuries and other bits of the old Greeks' handiwork.

Some of these pillars held up the

usually did every day, but Booh would leave them breathless in a few minutes. But now he sat up on the seat in the airplane and let the wind blow

roof of the rarthenon. This was a thrni1lh hio ,, ckp

wonderful temple built to Athens, away at a t rate E once goddess of the dawn. The Greeks in a wftHe he(1 bark just out o built a statue of the goddess too. happine88. He certainly felt right It was as high as an ordinary house at home again But he wasnt bHe and was made of gold and ivory. had been out of the ,ane so , Jack and Jane saw many folk in- that he had ,te forgottea that lt epecting the noted ruins. Captain took sudden h e now and Srave explained that many of the tnen when u flew ,nto an ar people the children saw probably pocket as Captain Brave CAUeA

were eiuumus wuu uau luiue nuui all parts of the world to . study

it. So, early in the trip, when Booh fitartpfl rinwn iha narrnw ctaira

these structures and learn more leading lo the boat bel0W( he for.

The children spent most of the

thing surprised us almost to death

We were there in the cold country. We rode about 6 miles in that country and then got off. The next thing we did was to get something to eat and a place to

, sleep that night. When morning

came the next day we saw the Eskimos riding around on their sleds and we didn't know what to do. We had nothing to eat and couldn't find anything as everything was strange. We could not understand anything they said, but finally one day we met a man who came from down here and we soon made friends. He was the only one we could understand. We got sleds and spears and dogs and were real Eskimos. Then we went out to get some fish and seals. I took my spear and slipped up on a great big one and was going to stick him. I jabbed my spear into him and he did not move. I hit him a couple of times with a stick to get liira to move. He wouldn't move. I went

around in front of him and found

got to hug close to the side of the Stung and tha firof "knn" fha

morning among the marble pillars p,ane took threw Booh hee,g oyer

ou wans. iu lue ancruwu iue head tQ ,he boU()m Qf th gtairg

visuea one oi me great umversi- tr landed korntunk niralnet th' , , . , V , . tlM nf Athens, where the students J!td "p,unk againSt the,ihat he was already dead. Then I

hv had Keen in the moraine were ZrL uoll0in- , , , took my spear and went and got iney naa seen m ine morning were Tne ihump was so hard that'onft Ja, alive and then we attending school. Athens is noted i-ivdear inid thi iitti mnm nn tnat was anve ana men we for it- colleees One of them is a I a L 1 T . f 1 om. on.went back to the igloo. When I got ior us colleges, une oi mem is a the boat, heard it and half surmised har.k thpv wprfi reatlv surnrised girls' college. To this Jack and what lt h nnned S. , greauy surpnsea. - Jane went next and when Jane saw 7, nai. 11 wJrs wnen .fene openea That is the way we got along in jane weni next ana wnen jane saw lhe door Booh was sitt ng up n fhp rnA nnrth otip dav b we were the hundreds of girl students, in- fpnnt nf it hlInfcln ll!o j the cold north. One aay as we were

Cludmg almost every nationality The didn' t know Tulto whel W5?.a,?!L m?Z1"

iihnnt whirh shn hart wr hparrt. , . ". " " --(uvei me ice iiicnir mni auu

she decided that she would like to think he.g h.ying ,0 be an acrQ. go to school there. . bat aaid Jack when Ladydear "Perhaps, when I m grown up to,d the. children how Booh had . and have gone through all the tumbled down the stairs.

V . IMIVV . 11V IIUC fVIJ IKJLAfr to whisk the children across Greece to Mount Olympus. Before Jack and Jane hardly realized that they had traveled far, Captain Brave said, "We are over Thesaly. the

part of Greece in which Mount

my

production of the type. When molten tin and lead have been poured on this film and hardened, the result i; a copper-plated reproduction of the original type. "Electrotypes, or 'electros' are sent by many advertisers to newspapers and magazines as a cheap way to have all their advertisements look alike. Electrotypes are also used in book and magazine offices because they are light and easy to store and because, in a

magazine of large circulation type would wear out before all of the edition was printed." Copyright, 1920, by J. II. Millar

What Shall I Be?

Answered Cot Girls

What Shall I Be?

Answered for Boys

I

PRODUCTION ENGINEER Uy J. II. Miliar Who is he anyway? A new man with a new job. When your father was a boy, he was told that he wrould not need to study to be a business man. If a boy decided to go into business, his aunts all drew long faces, "Why, William is going to be a business man; isn't that too bad? Just think of what he might be!" But now a business man's work is often so important that it is hard to find men big enough for it. Think of a corporation with 3,000 employees. Engineers design its machines; foremen and employment managers hire its workmen; bankers advance it money. But somewhere there must be a man wise enough to take all these machines, men. and money and work them together successfully. A production engineer is a man who can make men, machines, and money work together more effi

ciently and harmoniously. He is

THE TELEGRAPH OPERATOR Uy Elizabeth Mateer Janet and Edith decided in their junior year in high school that they would like to become tele-, graph operators. By saving their allowance, they were able to buy a fivo dollar apparatus. Edith's father, who was an electrician, fitted up their battery and made the connection between the two neighboring houses. It didn't take them long to learn Morse's dot and dash code and they were soon sending messages back and forth. Visits to the local telegraph office acquainted their ears with the customary intervals. After graduation, they passed the tests required by the Tostal Union Company and started the service as check girls. At the end of a

ntirtlJf hit iff

.3 dqetigsUT

i i

bone sled gave away and I went on, tne man calied m to say what is

the ground pretty hard but that I the matter with -a sick business, didn't hurt. The people in the Muph Learn.

can come back here again to study," ' she aaid to Ladydear as they rode away from the college. - The next day Captain Brave took ; Ladydear and. the children over the country near Athens in . the air-

i i - . mi i . .v... " " v

v , J7 Z a a 7 I T -Olympus is. In a few minutes seemed like hundreds of islands .,, be then A d , Captain Brave showed the children a minute or two iater Jack and audlliSl?fr",Se---00,? iy'-W-:,ane couId see ahead and below showed that .Greece does contain thom ,. .

many islands. The children noticed mU8t be Mount 01vTnpus fr tne

that most of the land oa the main

land and of the islands was mountainous and that the farmers could use only a small part of the land. "How do the Greeks live in such a hilly country?" asked Jack. "Much of their food is brought in from other countries," answered Ladydear. 'They don't raise even enough wheat to supply them with flour. Their chief crop is currants. .Greece is noted for its luscious cur-

clouds which the gods and goddess-

es were said to have used for doors

were hovering about it. (Copyright, 1919)

Personals. Claire Evans who has been very ill with diphtheria, is steadily improving at his home at 1225 East Main street. He had just entered

North live in called igloos, instead of oil.

little ice houses They burn seal oil

Every Day Science

for Boy Mechanics

Junior High School.

rants and many acres are turned Mark Malsby who underwent a Into vineyards. In the cities, cot- serious operation on his ear is getton, silk and leather goods are j ting along splendidly. Ho is at the made." I Reid Memorial Hospital. The children spent most of the1,. Roland Erbse who was in the

aay sailing aooui-over uie cuuu- sa Class ot Junior High School last ; mak a nnrfect imnression. Elee

try stopping at one or two of the semester and passed to High ' trotypes are better because they islands and at two or three places j School last semester has been at iaVe a copper surface which wears

ou me luauiiauu wueto mc iwiu-nii9 iiorae, oid sown inm lor sev- longer and prints better

ELECTROTYPES Hv Grant" M. Hyde .."Why is it. Daddy, that all these advertisements of this automobile are alike in all the newsDaoers

exactly the same . pictures and . study.

printing as if they were all printed at the same time?" "Because they are -printed from 'electrotypes' supplied to the newspapers by the advertisers. I told you about stereotyping the repro

ducing of type matter by means off

a wet papier-mache mat, later baked hard to form a mold for casting a lead plate. Electrotyping is a finer and more costly process for doing the same thing. Although very useful for some purposes, stereotypes are soft, soon wear out, and do not

Boys do not become production engineers immediately; there is a great deal to learn; it must be learned by two methods: (1) study

the best books on "industrial management," "scientific management," "efficiency," "system," and "factory administration." Get all the education you can, preferably in a good advanced school of business and commeree. Then (2) get an overall job in a factory. Get right out into the smoke and dirt; you can never learn it from an office stool.

As you study, work; as you work,

Try to see the factory as a

whole. Most men see so many

ers were raising currants.

"When you are home again and ; mother sends you to the store for a box of currants you can tel) the grocer that you have visited the plac where they probably were raised," said Captain Brave laughing" as they walked through one the vineyards. PART II. The next day, too, Jack and Jane and their friends spent in the huge airplane. Captain Brave told the children to study their lessons early so that they could leave Athens quite a while before noon. This, of course, aroused their curiosity, but,

try as they could, they couldn't get

Captain Brave or Ladydear, either.

;to tell where they were going. So, i it wasn't until everyone, including

'Booh, was seated in the plane that the captain said: "We're going now to Mount t Olympus, where all the gods and i goddesses lived, according to the old Greek stories." Captain Brave steered the big plane north and west from Athens jand showed the children on his ichart that they were bound .straight for the mountain. r You would have thought that .Boon knew everything that was go-

lng on, for he, too, climbed onto jthe seat beside Captain Brave and stack his nose up under the capKaln's arm so that he could see the I chart' When Jane pointed to lMount Olympus on the map, Boob

erai weeks on account of sickness. "Such nlates are made bv elec

Inez. Phillips has been absent! trolysis the process you learned from Baxter school for several hbout in school whereby an object weeks because of serious illness. is plated with a metal by means of Evelyn Phillips is recovering electric current passing through a nicely after suffering from a severe ( liquid containing salts of the metal. burn- j An electrotype is made by plating John Howard Harding is con- with wax. In the process, a sheet

unea 10 nis nome on south rwen- 0f wax is pressed over the type

ty-iirsi sireei wun ine measles

Clara Monroe of Vaile School is ill with the mumps. Richard Ilawekotte of Vaile School was sick at his home part of this week.

EXCHANGE COLUMN Open to All Boys and Girls. These Ads Cost You Nothing;

fiend In Your "Wan" tn Th. '

Palladium Junior.

FOR EXCHANGE I have a fine Paul Battenberg, 10 1 South 9th St. a fine three-quarter size one. Call

FOR SALE! Rabbit doe. Call Harold Walters, 914 North Eleventh Street.

FOR SALE I have a good, gentle pony, harness and saddle for sale. Inquire of Clarence Jones, R. F.

D No. 4, Lynn, Ind. I live one-half thin film of copper that is deposit-

mile south and one mile west of ed on its surface is later peeled off Crete. "Y'like a paper skin containing a re

form and thus receives an impres

sion which may be coated with graphite and chemicals to make it an electric conductor. Then the wax is suspended in a tank of copper salts and is copper-plated by means of electric "current. The

machines and so many workmen that they never see the factory at all. Try to figure out ways to do things better, to save time and money, to make work quicker, easier and more pleasant. If possible work for a while in each department of the plant; this will let you see the whole quicker. Some day, if you do this, perhaps your office door will say "Consulting Industrial Engineer," perhaps it will only say "President and General Manager" but you will be a production engineer just the same. Copyright, 1920. by J. II. Millar

'Twas our ancient old wise men who told it to us So surely it can be no sham If the first day of March, like a lion, roars in The last will be mild as a

IS yX sw

month they were given newspaper switchboards and in a year wcra

trained operators. Schools in many of the cities offer courses in telegraphy, but for the girl who cannot avail herself of these, the practical courses offered by the telegraph companies will prove sufficient if she is a high school graduate. A general education with an accurate knowledge of spelling, typewriting, and penmanship is necessary. The girl who passes the mental and physical tests required must have ability to concentrate, a patient disposition, strong nerves and excellent hearing. Young girli have an advantage because their ears can be more easily trained. For a number of years now, girls have been finding opportunities in this line of work. Promotions are usually won by accuracy, rapidity, and general reliability. Many girls lose their positions through careless capitalization or spelling. The pay and hours are much better than those of the telephone operator. One of the most coveted positions for a girl is operator of the private wire of a stock company or commercial house. A girl who wants to study up telegraphy herself can find plenty of books oa the subject in the library of her home town or can procure the names of such books by writing to one of the big telegraph companies. (VpyriKlit, "20, by J. H. Millar

Investigate First! Tlease, before you exclaim that you would like to pull out all the hair from your poor editor's head because your story is not in the Junior nor mentioned in the Honorable Mention column, take a peek in your school mail box. Some of the mail-boxes have a way of going to sleep for so long, you would think they believed they were little bears and were supposed to go to sleep for the winter. Give the mail-box a punch and wake it up and ask your principal to open it for you and then send or bring all that you find to the Palladium officeEditor.

The Art Gallery Tuesday, February 24, the girls of Garfield took turns going to High School. I went the second period. At that period I should have gone to drawing. In High School we met Mrs. Foulke. The girls took turns in spinning. There were many beautiful things. As I am in my first term in Garfield I must stop and get my lessons. Bertha Popp. '

"IT IS DELICIOUS!" So say the girls of the Vaile School cooking class in speaking about the cheese pudding they made at Hibberd. Wednesday.