Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 9, 11 January 1922 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 11, 1923.
PAGE THREE
NEW TOWN BOARD 1 OF FARMLAND TAKES
OVER DUTIES OF 1922
The New Veterans' School By FREDERICK J. HASKIN
WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. 11. The opening of the U. S. Veterans' Bureau Vocational Schools at Chillicothe, Ohio, formerly Camp Sherman, marks the
WINCHESTER, Ind.. Jan. 11. The new town board of Farmland has tak
en charge. The members are Carl ' inauguration of a new policy in rehaTainter, clerk; Hovey Thornbur, bilitating the disabled veterans, treasurer; Will Greene, trustee of the j Formerly the trainees were fanned first ward; Ira Rust, trustee of the i out to various institutions. The vetsecond ward; Willard Tursley, trus- erans will now be takeu out of these fee of the third ward; Shad Davisson, i schools and placed in the government
town marshal: P. E. Everhart, msht institution at Chillicothe. The govern
marshal; Isaac Smith, justice of the peace. Elect Cemetery Officers. The following directors of the Woodlawn cemetery, at Maxville, six miles west of this city, have been elected. Michael lahey. Albert McGuire, Wert
ment will not take students out of accredited universities and colleges where Veterans' bureau trainees are
taking professional courses
The school
rapidly equipped
atories and shops for classes In electrical work, printing, steam-fitting, en-
ing the World war he constructed the largest supply depot in France. Plans are made for the accommodation of 5,000 or more students at the Chillicothe school. Some disabled vet
erans have the impression that strict enc. militoru ficrtn!ina will nrora!) Qt this. Ial69
pftvfrnmpnt fifhrml nnrl havn nhipctedl Ie8islltion.
to the plan on that ground. This objection is unfounded. Only ordinary discipline, such as is necessary in all well regulated schools, will prevail. Advantages of the School The National Vocational Schools will take the place of many inferior types of schools formerly giving instructions to veterans. The period of training
T June 30. 1920, of which 10,000 were in
placement training. On August 9, 1921, that division of the Federal Board for Vocational Education, which prior to that date had charge of the rehabilitation of disabled soldiers, was consolidated with the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, as a result of the passage of the Sweet bill. Col. Charles R. Forbes became director of the consolidated soldier relief
agency of the government, the United
military discipline will prevail, at this! fles eterans Bureau, under tnis
lie uiscuvereu mai me
rehabilitation program as administered prior to this legislation was not giving the best results. The men in
time as a result of wounds received in the World war. Mr. Dace is described as 38 years old : five feet, four and a half inches tall; weighs 153 pounds; has black hair and grey eyes.
The majority of the women engineer-
rienced advisors. Col. Forbes called a rehabilitation conference, composed ot leading educators and vocational instructors, to meet with him in Washington on December 23, 30. 31, 1921. This conference has contributed valu
able data on this rehabilitation pro-j
fin, , "?luwl ',..: 'tag students in the Kansas university tinue as a part of the rehabilitat.on , program but this training will be given are taking the course in architectural in long-established industrial plants j engineering. and well known business arganiza-l' tions. Students will not be taken outj
or accredited colleges nor out oi place- j ment training where they are making ; satisfactory progress, even though:
they would like to go to the schools i
. PUPILS TO ATTEND FAIR. . (By Associated Press) '.-; SANDUSKY, Ohio, Jan. 11. County schools are to be asked to open one week later next fall, in order to make suitable arrangements for pupils attending the Erie county fair, Sept. 5. 6, 7 and 8, members of the fair board decided at a meeting here.
training changed from trade to trade, I at Chillicothe. The enrollment at thisj
at Chillicothe is being!511 be sufficiently long to enable the ied with modern labor-! trainee to completely master his yoca-
MrAllUtcr Norman Wood. Clarence i graving, carpentry, architecture, book-
Williams. Van Williams was elected I binding, as well as courses along agritemporary chairman and Guy Mcln-; cultural lines, such as horticulture, tire was elected temporary secretary. i animal husbandry, dairying, cheese
Jerry Mills, who has been the sexton
lor 25 years, has conducted over a thousand burials. Strengthen Police Force. On account of the number of robberies!, the past week, in this city, the city council has appointed Volney Garrett, to assist Ivan E. Ross, night policeman. Appoint Health Physicians. The following physicians have been Appointed on the city board of health: .1. S. Robison, F. T. Chenoweth and J. H. Moroney.
Probate Will. j The will of Melcenia Wilson has been admitted for probate. After the payment of all debts, she wills the residue of her estate to Adda M. Thornburg. The will was written Dec. 12, 1901. and was witnessed by C. C. 1'avey and John McPhee.
At To Aid Russia. r J tha
Friends' Relief commission, the church of this city, is collecting donations to be sent to Russia. After the talk by James P. (loodrich, in the Friends' church, the Rev. Frank Cornell made an appeal to the people lor stricken Russia, and $300 was contributed. Now- they are collecting clothing to be sent, there. Big Evangelistic Meetings. Largo crowds are attending the Packard Saxton evangelistic services in the Main street church of Christ, each evening. A number of persons from out of the city attend. Held For Forgery. Orville Russell, who was arrested for forgery and failed to give bond is now in jail. Russell forged a note of $j00 on J. R. Arthur, a grocer, living live miles east of this city. Grant Divorce Judge A. I.. Hales has granted a divorce to Ella Collier from Albert Collier. Arraigned for Desertion r-rc.Kcfp Milla was arraienpd in COUit
Tuesday to answer a charge of wife!
and child desertion. He gave bond in the sum of $500. Suits Filed
Suit on account M. C. McMahon and1 Uit company vs. Carrie E. Retter. Suit on note, Michigan Sanitarium and Benevolent association vs. O. II Clough. ! Suit on note. Leonard Boling vs. Curtis Pash and Elnora Petro. Real Estate Transfers Frederick S. Caldwell to James M. Best, lot, Washington street, W. P., $3,000. James M. Best to Walter E. Best, lot. Washington street, W. D.. $1. Charles E. Simmons to Samuel J. Fisher, Jr.. lot 161, City of Union City, W. P.. $400. L. E. Bortner to Bert Deff inbach, lot in Lynn, W. P., $1,600. Catherine E. Meier to Charle3 E. Craft, lot, Mumma addition, W. P., $4,000. Theodore Shockney to Charles S. Pierce, lot, 51. 52. 333, 367, original Mat. Union City, W. P., $1.
tion and to overcome his vocational
handicap. A system of adequate tryouts will be established for the
from shod to shon. from institution to i
institution. A very small number of
men had been rehabilitated in the employment which they selected, or was selected for them, as tbeir vocational objective. He also found that there was no supervision over a large number of men in placement training. Those men who had entred institutional training in established universi
ties ana colleges were experiencing
and cream making, forestry, and similar lines. The school will be devoted principally to instruction in the trades and in agriculture. The closest attention will be paid to the health ef these disabled veterans. A modern hospital will be maintained on the campus, with an adequate medical and nursing staff. Dis-
J abled men in some instances are sub
ject to despondency as a result of their condition. Consequently a recre-
I ative program has been planned to bet
ter the morale. Every accommodation has been made for the married trainees to insure the comfort of the student and his family. Model cottages have been built and furnished by the government. The cottages will not be of uniform type or color in order to prevent a military appearance. The grounds will have the appearance of a typical college campus., rather than an army camp or military res
ervation. The finance officer of the school will make arrangements with the various banking establishments for the students to open saving accounts, so that when they are rehabilitated or graduated from the school, they will have enough money to start business for themselves or at least enough to tide them over the period of transition. The administrative head of the schols will be Colonel Symmonds who was chief of the Public Service commission of Cuba in 1898. He was chief quartermaster of the Expeditionary Forces during the Cuban campaign, and was later in charge of the public improvements at Port Principe. Dur-
trainees to determine if they have ap-j the least difficulty. These men who
uiuue ior particular lines oi worn. When the original soldier Rehabilitation Act was passed on June 27, 1918, the government had no reliable data, either in this country or in any foreign country on which to base a program. The vocational rehabilitation of disabled veterans was a new proposition.
are studying professions in well known
universities will continue in those institutions. The establishment of the Chillicothe school, and otners of a similar nature to be established in the future, will overcome many of the difficulties in
There had been an attempt on a small ,of h.e reen system of yo-
snalo In rehahililato thn0 mon ininrpH i.aiu.... msiriuui ndvius
act. The governmental agency charg-1 f0.P 'Jn.dn P1 hools they will be ed with this relief under the act was ! l,"e,?.J few CPnlliZed govern-
men scattered among several thousand
the Federal Board for Vocational Education, which had been organized under the act of July 21, 1917. Canada had already begun the establishment of a veteran rehabilitation program and generously loaned the Federal Board several men who had been occupied in this work. However, it had been found that the methods used in Canada and other countries were not applicable in the United States. The other countries worked on a smaller scale, with a limited class of eligible beneficiaries. Our program was planned on a more generous scale.
The men who urged this program for the United States, however, eontem-j plated that the maximum number of men eligible would be about 15,000.
Today there are over 101,000 men In training, 32,000 awaiting assignment, and 425,000 men who have registered for vocational training. The program adopted to carry out the rehabilitation of our disabled veterans was to Utilize the existing edu
cational institutions and also to place
the men in training on the 30b, wnicii was called "placement training." As a result, there were 3,213 men in train-
1 ing on June 30, 1919. and 40,193 on
ment schools.
school will be entirely voluntary onj
nit jja.rc 01 trainees, ana no iraiure will be transferred, unless he assents to the transfer.
ASKS LEGION POSTS TO HELP FIND VET
(By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 11. Han ford
MacNider, national commander of the; American Legion, today isued a bul-j letin to all Legion posts, asking their assistance in a search for Thomas;
Race, vice president of the Great War Veterans of Canada, who has been missing for some time. Mr. Pace, whose home is in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, was last heard of in Winnepeg on Pecember 23, and
1 was believed to have been on his way
For the purpose of obtaining expe- to Minnesota. He had been ill for some
iUlQ
r
"Pape's Cold Compound" is Quickest Relief Known
Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound' 'taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a cold and ends all grippe misery. The first dose opens clogged-up nostrils and air passages of head; stops
nose running; relieves neauacne, aullness, feverishness, sneezing. "Pape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. Insist upon Pape's. Ad vertisement.
DANDERINE"
Grows Thick, Heavy Hair
35-cent Bottle Ends all Dandruff, Stops Hair Coming Out
:, ....... ' SijJ'wf
r -a-. jov v.v-- v.
r ...... vv-.-. jrv.Tuoot.iv.-.-
SPECIAL SALE
on Ladies' Lace Boots
1
$2
95 $195
kJ $J95
Ten minutes alter using I);inderino , you can not find a single trace of dan-i druff or falling hair and your scalp I will not itch, but what will please you: most will be after a few weeks' use.!
''hen you see new hair, fine and downy at lirst yes but really new hair growing all over the scalp. Panderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, in r vigorates and strengthens them, help--f ing the hair to grow long, strong and luxuriant, tine application of Pander;ne makes thin, lifeless, colorless hair look youthfully bright, lustrous, and just twice as abundant. Advertisement.
This sale includes every pair of our highest grade Boots in Black, Brown and Gray Dorothy Dodd, Johansen Bros., and other well known and high grade lines, in styles like or very similar to the above cut. These are from our regular lines that formerly sold at $8.C0 to $12.00 a pair. We have practically all sizes and widths in one or the other of the several styles included in this sale. Sale Starts Thursday Morning Come at your very first opportunity as the best bargains and sizes always go out first.
Special Lot Ladies' Lace and Button Boots
Black and Gray Mostly small
sizes.
$1.45
Discount on All Rubbers. Arctics and All Felt and Rubber Goods
Neff & Nusbaum
'th and Main
9&
OAe cAmericcui Hirtiera.
?SVfL cery iatt.' by thousands vho ppreciete tlt, thtxrrM V inflmnte oi mild, juabl j climaie. abundant sunshint, blue styes, xofl twilight, marin-. t.'ia'i, the romance oi past centuiins. the sports and pastimes of the present, and .he charm of the southern seas which wash these par.oiami- slioree. Then why tha Zluropeai. 7i ij.-a wha. in only about 24 hours time from Cincinnati or Louisville, or little: lonjc.- from Chicago, th splendid through sie;' trains ir.t, Louisville & lizkv'Ah Eailroad land you in Pass Christian, 3iioxi, Ciulfport, Ocean Springs, Mississippi City. Bay St. Louis, Pascagoula, Pensacola. Mobile or New Orleans? And winter tourist fares are but a fraction of the cost of . trip abroad or to more distant American points. Our descriptive folders contain many scenes along the Gulf Coast, a splendid map and answer almost ryy question. Thy are yours for the asking.
This railroad alto operaira suprrb traina between the S'crth and Fhrida. The Southland, Dixie Flyer, etc. Information and illustrated literature cheerfully furnished. F. D. BUSH, Division Tanger Agent 615 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio
WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name ''Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" packaje which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Aspirin Is the trsde mark of Bajcr Manufacture of Monoaceticaclde3tor of Salicylicacid
HAVE YOU TRIED
skimo
Pie?
It is a real treat. You can't imagine what it's like; you have to try it. Order some today and remember that wo were
FIRST
in introducing this new delicacy to Richmond, if it's new you can get it first at Bender's.
As usual
Order ESKIMO PIE at your dealers' and specify
PURE
Ice Cream
MISMl JJIW.L.IMI
V1 j 'lAwwuMiwu-iw imainii roinjamiiyi'" 1 "' 1 1 uii..imaMyim.in .J i ""Sy 1 I ' " -f I ' 2 J foc.j -If yj I j yf'IXipff f MizlyLx-& ;-m ..aw 2$&, , ,
