New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 7, 1915, Page 5

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ommunity of Home Duitders Dems 0 eesriont | YOU CAN SAVE DOLLARS AND DOLTH FEducated at Prevocational School Four ']\undrcd girls in the Gram- school under the same principal.| the Vocational High school, :l!su’ to Rheumasalts Bnngs | BY WAI I ING FOR THE maAF ‘and Prevocational schaols of |These pupils are given an obportu- | be of service to boys who are to lea Quick Relief New Britain "are being taught how |nity of choosing one of four different|school for industrial life at the end | to reduce the high cost of living and Y L e, : Y At B R e Four Courses Offered The business and English course is | o on6 8% 0 (% oor aigestion Is over o s i CREE The general course is iuldvsmnell to prepare for a commercial | o Uiy ce who know Rheumasalts, the )-l\»:‘.l;“u'nixlw‘w:‘m‘nfi::i\r & hovs amd | prepare a pupil for any course in the | course in the Vocational High school | Gonderful effervescent drink. ‘ S ; . No more sour stomach, griping pains, ; : rumbling of bowels and trembling limbs — £ o . s - - : et ¢ nothing but a desire to eat what you | . want when you want it—without any “kick back.” Your health depends largely upon what you eat and how it is digested. Undi gested, fermenting, putrifying food is one 5 of the greatest handicaps your body has. / And it is all unnecessary, if you let Rheu- | masalts help you. If you are bothered with indigestion, o S ask your druggist for about five ounces of Rheumasalts; take two teaspoonfuls | n 14 glass of water before breakfast each ’ o morning and in a few days you will be | able to digest your food in a perfect man- arry x ner. . Rheumasalts is very inexpensive. It courses offered. of the seventh or eighth grade. Indigestion is beaten! The misery of does not cause nausea. It is delicious to take and is delightfully effervescent. L] LJ | Rheumasalts is prepared by the famous ' ] 11 ouse I'urnisning oto Minn. 2e, 50c and $1.00 Bottles. | showing the food values in different eatables are explained and the girls | THIS BIG SALE COMMENCES are taught how to arrange balancod | § The fifteen-cent-a-day menn | ;o ible to live on very littl ) Dietetics is presented, with the iden | St tea Ry Hielaid o e nalierson In Friday's Newspapers We Will Give You Full Particu really needs to sustain life rather than 2\ 3 e what he would relish. C This G Sal With Its Hund ds of Gen Tn the practical arts course for girls oncerning This Great Sale With Its Hundreds 0 courses in household arts, sewing and | . dressmaking, drawing and industrial Bargams. work are given in addition to the gen- | eral courses. In the specialty shop the girls are taught box making, clay | 371 and 3 modeling, and any other specialties that are thought advisable. Whenever simple articles are needed in the MA]N STR school, the faculty looks to the spe- clalty shop. s s s s : Out of the thirty hours a week Girl Housekeepers at Woix in Suite of Mode: Living Rooms at Prevocational School | pent by the boys in the practical arts | .| course, twenty-one are devoted to girls are being taught at the same [Classical and English High school or (and also intended for those Dupils| classes in general education and nine time the nabilit the value, and the |the Vaocational High school. \\.hu g0 lhre(‘tl}: fram thf‘ se\f\n!h anrl‘ are devoted to industrial work. Six greatest possible efficiency of labor.| The practical arts course for girls |eighth grades into positions in stores| teachers are provided for the indus- It is a community of home makers |is designed to prepare the girl for |and nmoes.i s . trial work, each an expert in his par- 1 . i s that I8 hel " ¢ i f ak E Teaching Methods anged. ticular branch_teaching the machin- and home builders that is being edu- | the duties of home making and hous e Rac ¢ W, C i als { he changes of methods of teach- | ist's trade, carpentry, jobbing, elec- 1 0 cated under the direction of W. C.lkeeping, also leading to the home]| T 3 : p v, | 3 it e : tricity, printing and dratting. Two €Eer nas be€n a ae of the teachers act as vocational ad- visers, a man for the boys and a wo- man for the girls. e mins B s ok ot wnon mankind for more than 2,000 of three hours, with no other school work to interfere. In the seventh grade, each boy gets six weeks of co W 1 d k o) tinuous experience in each of the six t lines. In the eighth grade the same | years- e are g a We ma e l round is repeated to give the boy a | § maturer view of the processes. Meet Practical Problems. e : . t Pract Tob Felgensp "In all the practical arts courses tha principle of training the boys to meet practical problems and make articles to fill present instead of future needs is carried out. IFor instance, in the machine shop, ich has an excellent equipment, the | s are this weck at work on a sen- | sitive drill for the Vocational High school to be erected this year. Every part of this drill will be made in the machine shop and every part is made from blue prints provided by the drafting department. In the woodworking department th:o boys are at work on a tool cabinet for the shop. he plans for all such | ms‘mlflu‘l’nfl ]87 work are made by the boys in the y AHGH ST. drafting department, and the boys in ’ »w Britai each department face every problem | Phone 482-2, New Britain confronting a skilled craftsman. 1In | the carpenter shop are also made the typewriting tables for the school, pic- ture frames, and many similar oh- | jects of practical use. Nothing ade merely for practice, but everything | made must have some practical valne. | school boys and girls from twelve In the electrical shop house wiring is | {0 fourteen years of age with whom being taught. First comes the simp'c | we are dealing and that their right wiring necessary to the installation of | to a general education must not be | an electric bell. Then the various |curtailed for the sake of pre-voca- under the. iaset il % problems of house wiring are taken | tional work.” at my office at 276 Mats 5 . e A “ " up. The purpose of all the vocational X . ¥ ) - f 2 Boys in Machine Shop at Work on Sensitive Drill for Vocational High School. courses heing to determine the special Lot LS Ty ) | 7 4 ot i fitness of any boy for a particular The business and English course is 4 Large, private and French, principal of the Grammar|making course or to trade courses in ing’ in the public schaols have come | work and not to train him for any | also conducted with the idea of giv- convenlent Factory onm school. the Vacational High school. o rapidly that cven .o one whose | particular vocation only the simplest | ing the pupils problems in actual life 1 : All the pupils of the seventh and The practical arts course for boys grammar school days are only ten or| problems in electricity are worked to work out instead of working on g - ] F L M eighth gr in this cily are gath-|is designed primarily to help boys to'a dozen vears past, the surprises are | out. | fictitious transactions, To furtner 1% yollpanec ¢ . ered at gle center consisting of | find themselves and to make an in-|varying and delightfully novel. Draw-| At the end of six weeks' work in | caire out this ldea in the nookkeen | % 7 OPTOMET two buildings E ngle | telligent > of trade courses in, ing, for instance, consisted largely of | the printing shop, the boy 7 (One making a likeness of a pretty pussy-| Iy able to do small jobs. The hope willaw, painting a woodland scenelot | of eourss, Is that some Horace Gracrs s Telephono 1616-2 for with a brooklet winding through the | will be developed here. middle and undulating fields of corn| ‘The mechanical drawing depart- | instead of stage money. It is his con. ® [ jover vonder, or instilling an appre- | ment is intensely practical and has | tention that the boys and girls will l o!n s ciation of the beautiful in the nude | proved so interesting to the boys that | get more benefit out of figuring up jin the minds of the adolescent Youth, | they refuse to take advantage of the | the mrocery account than in entering Whatever your eye and see we. Thorough re usual- | ing department, Principal French will T DO [} ‘A7 276 Main St next year install savings bank in the department, so that the girls and boys may have real money to handle [ | ete., etc. recess privilege and remain at work | in the books a transaction covering Rheumat At 10 o'clock Monday morning the | al] the time. The equipment was|(he purchase of carloads of flour. lsm s in the drawing class in the Pre-| made to fit the particular nceds of | The offices for the bank will be built vocational school were clipping in- | the school. by the hoys in the woodworking de- terior scenes from the model homes ; agazines arr Special Trips to Shops. "tment. Ore usc es ey b SElsamasasines and atans, S o Soons The boys and girls are separated in | them ing them according to definite pla In order to give the boys a broad | the class room Different mental of efliciency and the dictates of art.jang comprehensive idea of each voca- | processes are recognized in the two Oh! Such Pain! ;A suite of model living rooms 1S|4ion “the instructors fake tiiem on | sexes and the subjects are presented j maintained in the school so t special trips to the factories and in- ferent manner to each. Then, No need for you to endure the ! ;‘] may see for m,l-m:ohrl dustrial establishments in the city. | too, the faculty recognizes that at the D : vhat is necessary in a home, how in- inti : i . : LR q g . The printing class visits the newspaper of the boys and girls in the gram- AN, ag?n) another ?IOUI‘. Touch 'th-e 3 expensive furnishings can be pro- ,jants the machinists make trips to | mar school, the presence of the op- . painful spot with Sloan’s Lini- [§ vided, “]’"; ”"*; “’;”"”'IT"\ -\""”’“’: Pe | some of the machine shops in the | posite sex has a distracting influence 3 5 arranged for the hest effect. and how | i o R natclos takes il P ntal remben Gl (hatatns . ment and away flies the pain. : £ 8L . and NOW | ¢ity the drafting instructor takes his | on the mental processes of the s v P the rooms should be kept. The teach. | Pof 0° (he drafting departments in | dents. Opportunities for social gath- ry these brews just once, | ers in the school use the apartment| (" eactories, and woodworking and | erings are, however, provided out- for rest rooms when the classes are r electrical shops are visited by the | side of the class sessions so that the l p— OUR not in se: wm there. during the time spent in the of the p ease at req““L t boys children may not be deprived The art is m:‘unv.«l_ even to plan- | o pon qepartments real benefits of social intercourse. y 5 ning the colors In a dres, o that the Although the shop work the| One of the speclal features of the We believe you will find them so good wi match e ir anc e comp S i " g 3 » e g T s Qr " 3 B P 7 i the h 2 %= | most interesting feature of the prac- | grammar school is a cl of students v ; fon of the individual girl. The arith- i) apts course. Superintendent of | selected for their brightness who are that you will then prefer them—and ask for the girls does not cons '”_“”" L1 Schools Stanley . Holmes' state- | given an opportunity of finishing the for them. by name. : | or ,.,m‘q,;...,”m ,100m-m;»|mu]: |‘h" “"“ ment s ificant. “We do not,” | (wo year course in one, This is an | i covered by the pyramids but rather lustration of the effort to make the |'tape for the dresses to be made dur- | 1 Y | every pupil to fit a particular mold. HARTFORD, CONN. d ing the week | . l | ¥ven physical exercise is made | " Teaching Vood Values, | more pleasant in the grammar gchool KILLS PAIN (Guaranteed) o e D il For Infants and Children. [ by a symnasium in which the boys | : first instruction in food values tn:s | Th@ Kind You Have Always Bnugm and girls meet once a week. Kve 2 yoy gets a chg e a rt 1 e DR. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. Philadelphia, Pa. St. Lous, weck. There was considerable din- e Shanie Lo take vart Nt i | Bears the athletic contes o that the athletic | Fros P Sc and 31.90 gusslonicficartonydrstesunioteid iund ) B o fM—M cquipment benefits more than a On p at Charles ¥. Dehm, IHotel Beloln, Kcevers, fats, but only in their relation to | Signatare ol 2 A ¢ |actea (1e\w \Whoss phyaigues are. al2 T S . Schmarr, houschold economics. Colored charts ready well developed,

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