Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 254, 5 September 1921 — Page 9
OFFICIAL PERSONNEL OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS ANNOUNCED MONDAY
The official list of officers, assistmts, supervisors, and teachers for the public schools was submitted with corrections for publication Saturday from the office of the superintendent of schools. Appointments to fill vacancies with the exception of four as yet not filled bave been approved by the board of education. One hundred and ninety people are included In the school personnel for the coming year. Following is the list as Issued for publication: W. G. Bate, superintendent; Alice K. Griffiln, clerk of board; Clara Myrick, secretary; Ralph P. Whisler, su pervisor of buildings; Harriett Williams, clerk; N. F. Fultz, vocational director; Bertha E. Larsh, assistant vocational education. Supervisors Ethelind M. Fhelps, penmanship; Lilla E. Payne, elementary work; J. E. Maddy, music: Florence M. Williams, fine and industrial arts. School physicians Dr. J. E. King, Dr. L. M. Gentle. School nurses Virginia Jones, Katharine Daub. Special teachers H. Little, physical education; Grant Stenger, coach; Jeannette Murphy, cooking and sewing: Josephine Buhl, manual training; Nellie C.Mawhood, art; Marie Kauffman, physical education. High school E. C. Cline, acting principal; J. F. Thompson, vice-president; Dorothy Korves, secretary. Science R. L. Donaker, F. J. Thompson, T. O. Cantwell, Ella Hildebrandt, Bunice Brokaw. Fine arts Blanche E. Wait, art; J. E. Maddy, music; Juliet Nusbaum, music. Physical education Harold Little, Marie C. Kaufman, Grant Stenger. Library Florence Ratliff. librarian; Helen Bentlage, assistant to librarian. English Herman Makey, Anna L. Finfrock, Inez I. Trueblood, Flora Broaddus, Mary Morrow, Helen Rust, Marion E. Maines. Social Science S. D. Neff, Blanche . Doran, Don I. Frace. Mathematics Martha A. Whitacre, . Wilma I. Craft, Ora J. Nicely, Harriet Thompson, Grace Coblentz. ''Foreign Languages Elizabeth Smelser, Marie Thorpe, Elma L. Nolte, Anna Bradbury, Julia Stevenson. Commercial G. H. Clevenger, J. N. Griffith, Mrs. W. R. Teaford, Tressa G. Sharpe, Helena Sutton. Practical Arts Emma Bond, Myrtle Holmstrom, H. Heaton, Elbert Vickrey, Woodard Auble, Daniel P. Van Etten, Leroy Gibbons, George F. Thomas. Science Emile Nelson, Floy Carrol. Household Arts Ruth Boyd, Helen Buckley. Industrial Arts G. F. Thomas, F. S. Schlauch, W. B. Miller. Elmer Patten. Garfield Junior High. H. C. Heironimus, principal; Clara B. Graves, assistant principal and dean of girls; Lyman H. Lyboult, dean of boys; Ruth McPherson, clerk. English Elizabeth Williams, J. Warren Beck, Verna Harris, Herbert Emery. Social science E. Annie Wilson, E. E. Rice, Margaret Kiff. Mathematics Ruth Hleger, Magdalena Schulz, J. W. Cox. Foreign languages Donna I. Parke, Latin: Hettie Elliott, French. Music and art Lela Longman, music; F. F. Brown, boys' drawing; Nellie C. Mawhood, girls' drawing. Physical education Clara Graves, Lyman H. Lyboult, boys; Marie Kauffman, girls. Hibberd. Anna Schultz, principal; Martha Boyd, 6a; Caroline Heitbrink, 5a, 6b; Hazel Hinshaw, 4ab; Eleanor Ely, 4ab; Ruth Cross, 3a, 4b; Edna Cooper, 3b, 2a; Evangeline Gentle. 2b, la; Alvina Steen, lb; Margaret Thornburgh, kindergarten. Vaile. Ada Woodward, principal; Mrs. G. A. Steely, 6ab; Sarah Sanderson, 5ab; Eva Mawhood, 4a, 5b; Mary Leitch, 4b, 3a; Zona Grace, 3ab; Minnie Hale, 2ab; Margaret Mooney, lab; Bertha Kelsey, kindergarten. Baxter. Eva A. Johnston, principal: Mabel E. Ball, 6ab; Annette Edmunds, 5ab; Ruth Henderson, 4ab; Alice Philips, Sab; Katie Paige, 2ab; Ruth Finfrock, lab; Margaret Yenny, kindergarten; Myrtle Shallenberg, ungraded room. Sevastopol. Anna H. Kienker, principal; Mabel E. Ball, 6ab; Blanche Brumbaugh, Sab; Lola Parry, 4ab; Mary E. Davis, Sab; Martha Dickinson, 2a; Daisy Petty, la. 2b; Alice E. Unthank, lab; Grace Shora, kindergarten. Joseph Moore. Jane Dunlop, principal: Mildred Dickinson, kindergarten; Edith McMahan, 2ab, 3b; Mabel Stafford, 3a, 4ab; Chloe Sellers, 5ab; Ruth G. Nice, ban. Finley. A. M. Tschaen. principal; Martha P. Boyd, 6AB; Emma Leeson, BAB; Mode L. Brown, 4AB; R. Louise Neff, "AB; Elizabeth Foulke, 2AB; Anna B, Dille, 1A; Ethel L. Peterson, B; Alice Zollman, kintergarten. Warner. Mary Lemon, principal; Carolina Salter, 6AB; Nora Murphy, 5AB; Ethel Wessell, 4AB; Leota Stott, 4B 3A; Stella Kelsey, 3AB; Ruth Carney, 2AB; Mary Lemon, 1AB; Sarah J Williams, kindergarten. Starr. G. A. Steeley, principal; Emma Newman, 6AB; 8. Eva Phelps, SAB; Anna K. Iredell, 4AB; Grace Simpson 3AB; Jane Neuman, 2A; Sarah J. Har ned, 2B; Lula Gans, 1A; Anna Lupton; IB; Otella Kincheu. writing, nature; Emily Walker, literature: Dorothy McAlpine, music, art; Cordya Simpson Huddleson, kindergarten; Naomi Hull, physical education. Whitewater. James W. Morgan, principal; Mrs Pavey, 6AB; Edna Toney. 5AB; Agnes Stillinger, 4AB; Ella Wuenker. 3AB Nellie Feasel, 2AB; Kate Morgan. IB; Mary L. Jay. kindergarten; Lula Clem ents, 1A and IB grades. Public is Invited to Spartanburg Socia SPARTANSBURG. Ind.. Sept. 5. A social is planned by 'the ladles cf the Spartansburg Christian church for Tuesdav, Sept. 6. Dinner and suppe will be served, and there will be ample opportunity to obtain good, old-fashioned cooking at reasonable prices. A general invitation is extended to the public through the president. Mrs Ida Nuss, and secretary, Mrs. Russell Shaw.
LITTLE BANDS OF VELVET MAKE THIS FROCK DISTINCTIVE
-"C . ;
IP 11 I ft " ft 1 ' ; It-jib m ; . sir A ti
The little bands of gray velvet mean much to this light georgette frock. Shrimp colored peorgette combined with pray is the color combination. The bands of velvet trim the loose sleeves and the side panels of the frock, both of which are made of the gray. Note the uneven bottom, which is a fad of the moment. KILLED AT SWITCHBOARD JONESBORO, Ind.. Sept. 5 Clarence Wyatt, 25 years old, superintendent of the Jonesboro Water and Light company, was electricuted Saturday night when seated at the switchboard in the company offices during an electrical storm. Efforts to revive him were futile. After Every Meal
pJlL'i
Mil
lit m lit
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
Russian Nobles Earn Their Living Ey FREDERIC J. HASKIN
NEW YORK CITY, Sept. 5. New York is filled with members of the late Russian nobility nowadays. Apparently all who could manage it came here when -the Czar was killed, and since then a steady procession of counts. countesses, archdukes and princes, temporarily halted in Europe, has been filing hopefully into Manhattan. They are always turning up in the most unexpected places. The new barber in the hotel barber shop on the ! corner, the man who collects your laundry, the ticket taker in the subway, the taxi chauffeur, the clerk in the florist shop and the young lady behind the cigar counter are all apt to belong to this distinguished but now impecunious class. - New York has seen nothing like them since the days of the French Revolution when the ex-court of Marie Antoinnette settled down to unfamiliar labor in the stables and barrooms of New York and Philadelphia. The French, it is said, having brought with them their fine clothes, relieved the gloom of their exile by gay minuets at night. Well, perhaps our Russian nobility toddles, but it does not appear very gay. Not far from where the reporter is stopping there is a tiny, relapidated wooden shelter .which houses a news stand and, during the day, a silverhaired, bright-eyed old lady, who i3 the proprietress. She is also a Russian countess, who used to be handed her own newspaper on a carved bronze tray. Two years ago she came here from Switzerland with sufficient income to live upon had she not invested it in a moving picture enterprise started by a Russian ex-admiral and his son. When it failed she had only a pittance, but she gamely took a chance and bought her newsstand. "This way, you see," she explained in perfect English, "I am always privileged to follow the news of Russia 1 1 read all the daily newspapers '.,cw York. When the old rer- . regains its power, I shall immediately know it." This speech is characteristic of the majority of the refugees. Each carries with him the memory of hideous happenings before he made his escape, but of these things he never talks. Instead he will begin to tell you that the present Bolshevist regime cannot last, that it is but a clumsy experiment which will fail of its own inanition, and that in another 10 years he and his noble sisters and cousins will be back in possession of their Russian land. "Ours is a sacred trust," solemnly declared a bewhiskered old Captain of the Royal Guard, who was discovered making lamp shades in a downtown art shop. "We must keep alive the brains and the education of Russia for the hour of rehabilitation." With neat precision he cut a piece of gilt braid
It appeals to everybody because of the pleasure and benefit if affords. .The longest-lasting refreshment possible to obtain. Sealed tight kept right in its wax-wrapped impurity-proof package.
Be
Flavor Lasts
SUN - TELEGRAM. RICHMOND.
to be applied to the parchment "We have not the right to die," he continued. "Therefore we must work." "Yes, 10 years of making lamp shades and you will probably change your mind." interrupted a clerk in the shop; also a Russian, but a proletarian. The Russian noblewoman, who was formerly an heiress to millions, admits that she is beginning to sympathize with the revolutionists since having to earn her own living in New York. In Russia she had been accustomed to gratifying every whim. She owned a theater in which she acted; she possessed innumerable cars and horses and jewels and servants; her hospitality was famous, and so was her wine cellar. When encountered recently sue was nving on an income or lo a week, which she earned as saleswoman in a Fifth Avenue shop. "When I sell these timeless baubles to women in the store." she said, I begin to see why there was -a revolution in Russia. We were criminal. I never realized misery and suffering before." y Then,, not long ago. the head of n European exporting house was embarrassed to discover that his stenographer was a Russian princess who had once entertained a member of his family in Moscow. "See here," said the old man severely, handing the petite young woman a personal letter which had just arrived in the office mail, "this is ail very courageous, but you shouldn't do this sort of thing, you know. You were not cut out for it." "You mean I am incompetent?" inquired the princess. "No; I mean I know who you are. and what you have been accustomed to, and I don't think you should devote he rest of your life to a type- . .iter," the exporter declared. "Now I am going to get my wife to invite " "Ah, please, I must ask you not to. "interrupted the ex-pricess hastily. '"I do not like to be reminded of my past, because it was very unhappy, and this charming work makes me forget for very many hours of each day. Also, it is pleasant to earn one's own living, is it not? Always I dislike to be under! obligation to any one The Scorn of Work. The rayol refugees seem to fall quite naturally into the lower walks of American life. Having been brought up to consider all work beneath them, they are unable to discriminate between, different kinds of work. A Russian nobleman usually lives in New York several months before he is able to understand why the manager of a factory in this country is of more social importance than the average factorv pnmlove. In the pves of a. I Russian prince, a proletarian is a proJ letarian, whether he happens to be a
INK, MONDAY. SEIT. 5, 1921.
soap manufacturer or the soap manufacturer's chauffeur. The establishment of social relations with the American industrial aristocracy also is handicapped by the refugee's lack of fine raiment Most of them had to leave Russia with extremely light baggage, which later received hard wear in European capitals. Their appearance is not especially impressive, so that the soap manufacturer also has great difficulty in distinguishing between a Russian royal personage and a Russian tailor.- Indeed, under present conditions, they might well be one and the same. Anothe drawback is the Recent slump in the Russian title market, which has made a Russian title about as negotiable as a Russian bank note. Thus few of the refugees have been able to achieve convenient alliances, and it is yet to be recorded that one has succeeded in capturing an American heiress. But if the refugees miss their former cordial reception in America, they do not complain. Most of them have settled down to a proletarian exist ence without a murmur, and having so decided bravely to make the best cr it, they often go even further and make money. An ex-general and his aristocratic little wife for example, are once more waxing prosperous on the profits af a small lingerie shop on one of New York's most exclusive shopping thoroughfares. When they first started this enterprise two years ago, they lived in one tiny, dark room at the back of their store, and the general spent his evenings delivering packages to lingerie customers. Now a neatly uniformed delivery boy has taken over this end of the work, and the tiny, dark room has been abandoned for a charming studio apartment on the floor above the store. The Theatres RICHMOND An unreliable auto, a wife without a mother to go to, twins, and an un friendly traffic cop all combine to cause merriment in Charlie Chaplin's latest picture, entitled "A Day's Pleas ure," his fourth million dollar produc tion for First National Exhibitor's cir cuit and which is at the Richmond i theatre. The laughs start before the opera tor has time to adjust his machine. Chaplin emerges down the cottage steps, the father of a family, gloved! and coated, ready to set forth on a day's recreation. The first obstacle' Now Showing SPECIAL LABOR
esM LLaslry presents C'--
WALLACE REID 'LcCTao Much Soesd!'
MURRETTE Today, Tomorrow and Wednesday
can no more crow up than Peter Pan and that is why her latest production
THROUGH THE back door: Direction bq Jade Dickjord and Alfred EGrccn fcerario Marion feirax Photoaphy Charles Posher is just the tqpe of charming picture that you want to see her in the kind that. . made her -famous brimful of heart interesh.Jntenslq effective Also Fox News and Newsettes
COMING THURSDAY James Oliver Curwood's New Drama "THE GOLDEN SNARE"
USED CARS ) We are making special prices on Used Cars this veek. Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925
arises when the family auto refuses to respond to the kicks and cranking of the "famous comedian. Another impediment of the day's pleasure comes when an unfriendly and indifferent traffic cop refuses to allow for the idiosyncracies of the family's delapidated auto and becomes obstinate. It is , indeed unfortunate when street-repairers spill a bucket of tar before the machine, making it impossible to budge the car. MURRAY If the mountain will not come to Mo
hammed, it's up to Mohammed to hie himself to the mountain. That seems 1 to be the policy of Robert Thornby,! who directed Frank Mayo in "The Blazing Trail," the Universal photo-j drama playing at the Murray theatre. After comparing the California) of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Uni-j versal technical department discover-i ed that in general outline the Topango Canyon, in the Santa Monica Moun-. tains, was the nearest approach to, the Kentucky hills. That canyon was; unsettled, except fon a few campers,. so Director Thornby' ordered a village! to be constructed in it, against one of j the most impressive mountain backgrounds to be found in America. On this location Frank Mayo and the company- spent two weeKs, securing "shots" which, for sheer beauty and coloring, would be hard to duplicate. I MURRETTE The biggest interior set in the world, built on the biggest motion picture stage in the world, is one of the many features of "Through the Back Door," Mary Pickford's United Artists' release, showing at the Murrette. This movie set shows five great rooms and a large hallway with stairs that reach to a landing on the second floor. All told, 4,300 square feet ofj floor space are included in this set.) exclusive of the area required forj "shooting space." j Representing the entire lower floor j of a Long Island mansion, this gig-j antic replica i3 said to be the mosti sumptuously appointed set ever built i for pictures. The properties display-1 ed upon it were valued at $100,000. There is also an up-stairs set in-j eluding three large bed rooms and a hallway. This structure coders 2,000 i feet of floor space and is elegantly! PALACE TODAY BILL HART In "O'Malley of the Mountain" and Jimmy Aubrey in "The Riot" Now Showing DAY ATTRACTION LADIES' WAISTS Georgette, Canton Crepe, Crepe de Chlne S4.98 up UNION STORE, 830 Main
nil
PAGE NINE
furnished with genuine oriental rugs and real antiques.' The value placed on the furnishings was 50,000. Although the mansions of Southern California furnished most of the exteriors for this Pickford film, two very remarkable reproductions of Belgian farm buildings were put up one of them on the stage, the other in a field near the studio. SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK 9x12 Wool Fibre Rugs at $6.98 Guttman Furniture Co. 405-407 Main St MURRAY "BETTER Pipe Organ COME EARLY" -Concert Orchestra Keith Big Time; Vaudeville Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday The Spirit of Mardi Gras Ten People Four beautiful girls and a Clown Jazi Band of six men in "Vaudeville's most pretentious singing and dancing offering". Gorgeous scenery and costumes. Direct from the Keith and Orpheum circuits. The greatest act ever booked in Richmond. DUNLEVY & MERRILL. Two Clever Comedians in "Much Ado About Nothing" t BEAGGY and CLAUSE A Roller Skating Novelty FRANK MAYO In . "THE MAN MAGNIFICENT" Five Reels of Thrills
Coming Thursday Mack and Stanton; Fulton and Burt; The Nagfys; Rose, Ellis and Rose.
'Way Out in - LOS ANGELES Where The Big Pictures Are Produced They Said ttiat Rex Ingram's j Picturization of ' Ibanez's Great Book 5 The Horsemen of the Apocalypse Is the Biggest Thing Ever Done by an American. It Opened an T Engagement at the Mission Theatre in that City Last Feb. And it is There Yet. Watch the Future Announcements.
