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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1925)
10 Cities Continue Visiting Teachers Demonstration Aids in Wip ing Out Delinquency. New York.—Ten cities In which three-year demonstrations of visiting teacher work have been completed un der the auspices of the commonwealth fund program for the prevention of de linquency have determined to continue the use of visiting teachers as a regular feature of their public school ayateina. According to Howard W. Nudd, di rector of the Public Educational asso ciation of New York city and chairman of the national committee on visiting teachers which has administered these demonstrations, th» communities thus convinced of the value of the visiting teacher and planning to continue her Services Include Burlington, Vt., Lin coin, Neb.; Itichmond, Va.; ¡ted Bank, N. J.; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Rioux City, Iowa; Bluetield, W. Va.; Sioux Fulls, 8. D.; Warren, Ohio, and Hutchinson, Kan. Meanwhile, demonstrations are being continued by the national committee on visiting teachers In the following com munities: Berkeley, Cal.; Birming ham, Ala.; Boone county, Missouri; Butte, Mont.; charlotte, N. C.; Chis holm, Minn.; Coatesville, Pa.; Colum bus, Ha.; Detroit, Mich.; Durham, N. O.; Eugene. Ore.; Huron county, Ohio; Omaha. Neb.; Pocatello, Idaho; Ha- cine, Wla.; Hocbester, Pn : lb« k Springs, Wyo.; ban Diego, CaL; Tuc son, Aris.; Tulsa, Okla. Appointed by Committee. When the work Is finished In these cities the thirty visiting teacher dem »nitrations under the commonwealth । fund program will have been com 1 pletvd. Under the arrangements made for these demonstrations the visiting teachers were appointed by the na tional committee on visiting teachers subject to the approval of the local authorities; In each case the national Committee pays two thirds of the sal ary for a three-year period and pro vides funds for certain additional ex penses, while the remainder of the sal ary Is paid by the lo<fl school board. Several hundred cities have made ap | plication for demonstrations under this 5 plan, but the thirty communities pro vlded for In the original grafit from | the commonwealth fund having been chosen, no further applications are now being considered. Including tho visiting teachers ap pointed by the national committee for these demonstrations there are now al together 1*1 visiting teachers In the United States working In (M cities and 6 counties scattered through 31 statist. These figures are given by Mr Nudd In a chapter on the history, purpose and scope of the visiting teacher move ment, which he contributes to “The Problem Child In School,” a volume of visiting teacher case narratives by Mary B. Sayles, just published by the Joint Committee on Methods of Pre venting Delinquency, Ine., of 50 East Forty second street. New York city. Describing the visiting teacher as a specialist In the schools who devotes herself to the problems of unadjusted children, Mr. Nudd, In the article above referred to, points that "every teacher, every social worker, mid many a parent Is familiar with the problem child the boy or girl whose school progress or whose reactions to normal requirements point toward Inter Ineffi ciency, delinquency, or some other fail ure In personal or social adjustment. What Is the trouble with such children, an<I what enn be done for them? How can the school obtain und utilize a knowledge of the forces that are affect ing their success, and give them In fullest measure the benefits of their educational experience? Puzzles or pests at home, In school, or elsewhere, their personal welfare anil the welfare of society require painstaking effort 1« their behalf They present nt once the most baffling. the most urgent and th« most Interesting problems In the field of education." Finds Needs of Children. Describing the methods of the visit ing teacher In ny-etlng the«« problems, which are both educational and social In nature, Mr. Nudd points out that this relatively new specialist, trained both us 11 teacher and social worker, "la specifically equipped not only to find out why things nre not going right In the Ilves of these children bnt also to take buck to the class teacher, the parent or the social agency which may help, the essential Information needed to meet their individual limitations. As u result of the new facts sho discovers the school Is enabled to see what the actual situation la and to become aware of the real need of the child. It can often modify requirements to meet the newly seen limitations by changing the class, transferring the child to a apo dal school, shifting emphasis from one phase of school work to another, adopt ing a new approach to the child or con necting bls school work more closely with hla outside Interests.’ The American Bed Crus*, which plays Santa Claus to American oobUera, sailor» and marines wherever they may be stationed In odd corners of the world each Christmas, has to get on the job early In order to reach every man on Christmas day. Some of the Christmas “stocking»" have to be sent thousands of miles Photograph showj, from left to right. Misses Edna May Howell, Violet Jacarine an 1 Elsie Drury, making up gift stocking« In RedCr^B headquarters In Washington under the direction of Mrs. William 8. Spencer, chief of the hostesses and recreatjon Mrs. Joyce Bushel, thirty-two years . old, of New York city, has been elected | division. Tammruny woman leader of the Twen ty-first Assembly district. She Is the "Code of Honor” Again youngest person, mnn or woman,, ever Rules in Italian Town chosen for a Tammany leadership. Via Reggio, Italy.—The shades of Mrs. Bushel is the wife of Hylnn D'Artagnan and his duel-loving mus Bushel, a lawyer. She Is a graduate of keteer companions seemingly are Hunter college and the New York uni beckoning to the field of honor per versity law school, and also studied sons of this ordinarily peaceful town. chemistry at Columbia university. So strong has been the revlyat.here of the tradition of the duel that recently, within a single day. one combat waw brick are the only other types of successfully carried out and three Federal-Aid Highway* Be paved roads completed. other challenges exchanged. Count Visconti dl Modrone and ing Completed Rapidly. Graded Earth in West. Baron dl Collalto crossed sabers to Graded earth stood third in the settle a personal difference, the na Washington.—Predicting that the entire 177,000-mlle system of federal- classification of types with 2,064 miles. ture of which is shrouded in mystery. aid highway» would be completed In Forty-seven miles of bridges were con Titled personages seconded both men. Aldo Nadi, fencing master of Italy, five umrs. the United States bureau structed. ♦---------------------------------------- -------------- Most of the graded and drained was master of ceremonies. In the first of public roads here has announced the compliment of snylng ‘the re the completion of a record-breaking earth roads were built in the West, assault Visconti’s blade slashed Col- production was perfect.’ fiscal year In which 11,329 miles of where funds are low and good-roads lato's right forearm. The surgeons "I made no public announcement j federal-aid roads were built. The progress Is just starting to make Itself agreed the wound was not serious and of the test, because I don’t claim j total of completed federal-aid roads felt. The construction of graded earth the duel proceeded. In another assault much credit for It." the Inventor con built since 1917 now amounts to «5.485 roads as a foundation for a future Collalto again felt the saber of his tinued. "Doctor Stille was apparently j miles, representing a cost of $845,000,- highway system that can be Improved opponent, which opened his right el as money becomes available and bow. This demon-trated to the judges behind me by three or four weeks, i 000. but both of us were 25 years behind This year’s record-breaking progress traffic Increases, Is a fundamental Coilalto’s Inferiority and the bout was Poulsen, the Swedish Inventor." marks the completion of more than principle Initiated by Thomas G. Mc stopped. Sabers were put away; the Poulsen, according to Westman, half of the great system of Interstate Donald, chief of the bureau of public duellists embraced; animated conver perfected the electro-magnetic metfi- roads that reach every town of 5,000 roads, when he was chief engineer of sation broke the previous dignified od of voice reproduction a quarter of I people or more and put 90 per cent highway forces In Iowa. silence. Honor had been satisfied. The stage construction principle, as a century ago, and devices using his of the population of the United States The three other challenges which prlncl;4e were used In dictaphone ; within ten miles of an Improved high Mr. McDonald’s plan is called, con followed upon the Vlscontl-Collalto af sists first in making initial Improve work in Europe. The sounds were way. fair did not get beyond the stage of clear but faint. Much of the federal-aid system had ments such as grading and draining argument by the various seconds, who Aided by Radio. been built when the huge program of and Installing permanent culverts and amicably arranged the disputes. adequate bridges. The road Is thus “The trouble was." be said, “that highway development was laid out. the amplifier or 'loud speaker,' had A billion dollars’ worth of highways Improved at low cost to serve the im Dog Cemetery not been developed then as It has a year Is the rate at which road build mediate necessities of light traffic. Spokane, Wash.—Dogs, whose deeds since radio. The loud speaker Is ers are now working, according to the When traffic becomes heavier and It Is the one thing Doctor Stille and I have , bureau's estimate. This rate is ex deemed advisable to Improve with ami loyalty have been immortalized in song and story, have been given a that Poulsen didn’t." pected to remain nearly constant at gravel or a more durable surface, such Westman said he wanted to give i least for several years, representing as concrete, the original Improvement fitting tribute in the establishment of full credit to Poulsen nnd some credit 1 as It does the capacity of road-butld- has provided a subgrade on which the a dog cemetery In a shady nook near to himself for being ahead of Doctor | Ing forces tn the country. That a high type surface can be laid at less here. It Is said to be the second in Stille with the application of the am greater volume of work could be un additional expense and with far better the United States. A score of ani results thnn If the original work had mals already have been placed In plifier to the old process. dertaken Is regarded as Improbable, graves in fenced plots with markers. To substantiate the claim he ex due to the fact that expansion of the been left undone until necessity de There Is provision for many others. hibited n number of photographs made program would have to be made at the manded final Improvement. by the International Newsreel com expense of other activities. pany of New York during the test with $243,000.000 Expended. Mme. Patterson. These photographs, Cost of the federal-aid system com taken July 0, show the device in op pleted during the fiscal year ending eration. The principle of the "wire method” June 30 Is $243,000,000, of which the .......... — ---- ♦ of sound regulation as explained by federal government's share amounts to $111,000.000. Under construction at the young Inventor Is this: Returns After 16 Year* of The wire Is unreeled from the spool the present time are 12,462 mll^s of U. S. Produce* Paper 5 Globe Trotting. ns the sonnd enters the microphone. federal-aid roads, most of which will — The sound waves, magnified by the be finished during 1926. From African Grass Gravel road led In the type of high Huntington, Ind.—Hayden Webber, microphone, cause the wire tor vibrate. Washington. — Paper made While vibrating the wire Is magnet way completed this year with 4.203 a modern Enoch Arden, who dlsap- . from esparto, an African wild ized. the degree of magnetization de mllea Concrete was next, with 2,806 penred from his home at Fairfield, Ill., | grass, has been produced by the pending upon the length of vibration. miles, constituting the largest paved sixteen years ago, has succeeded after bureau of standards on a com When the magnetized wire runs mileage. It Is significant that only 129 many months In locating three of his ' mercial basis and samples have sons, Harley Webber, Huntington ; J miles of water bound macadam, through the reproducing end of the been made available to Amerf- formerly the standard type, was con Earl Webber, Fort Wayne, and Hay- । apparatus, bits of steel attract the can Industry ^as a government magnetized wire, causing It to vi structed, and that 912 miles of bitu ward Webber, Trinity Springs. test. None of Webber’s relatives had seen brate exactly ns In the first process. minous macadam, with 341 miles of It has been only recently that bituminous concrete and 107 miles of him since he walked from his home This vibration reproduces the sound esparto could be Imported into at Fairfield. Ill., in 1009, after dis waves that first entered the micro this country at a cost permitting agreeing with his wife. Webber lost phone, nnd they are Increased to its commercial use. PRIZE CORNSTALKS track of his family during his adven audibility In the loud speaker. The bureau', report shows tures and only through a chance con- I The advantages of this process are that the Imported grass pulp, versatlon did he learn of the where- 1 several, according to Westman. after cleaning, gave a 60 per abouts of his sons. That brought him S cent yield of paper-making fiber to the home of his sister, Mrs. E. B. | which produced paper stronger Stresetnan, Huntington. Webber’s j than the soda pulp product of ; father and mother reside near An- j this country. drews, Ind. The wanderer’s wife divorced him and remarried several years after his unceremonious departure. Inflamed with anger Webber left While conversing with a Jackson his Fairfield home, bound for the far (Tenn.) barber Webber was told that West. A tramp steamer set him down the man knew a man of the same on a small Island of the Hawaiian name at Huntington. This man turned group. Once every six months a trans out to be Harley Webber, son of Hey- pacific liner stopped at Webber’s is den Webber. The father went to land. This was the only connection Huntington and the sons Joined him. । with the outside world. In two years he had developed an attractive sugar , plantation, literally hacking It out of Will Shoot Prehistoric the Island wilderness. A syndicate Monster as His Proof ! bought It for more than Webber Victoria, B. C.—British Columbia Is I dreamed of receiving. The far places called and Webber Interested in a discussion whether i next appeared tn Africa, where he sold creatures which lived In prehistoric i supplies, worked for mining com times still exist In the southern Inte panies and speculated In various en rior of the province. II. Lackle Ewing. an angler of the terprises. His efforts Increased his finances. Two years later he went to Okanagan lake region, has reported Brazil. Growing rubber proved profit to John P. Babcock, deputy commis sioner of fisheries, that loqg necked, able to him. Finally his native land beckoned and rough-skinned creatures, which he be he returned to the United States as lieves waddled across the surface of the country went to war with Ger- the earth long before mnn was heard ' many. For some time he worked of, are living In the depths of rise lake. aboard transports plying between Ho Mr. Leckie Ewing says he is preparing boken, N. J., and France. After the to go forth and give battle to the war he settled in Jackson, Tenn., be- monsters. Armed with a rifle, it Is his intention to shoot one of the crea 1 coming a building contractor. Here nre some of the articles found He made several trips to Fairfield. tures and tow It ashore as proof of his In the apartment of Col. W. G. Beach, assertion. former chief narcotic ngent In Chi 3.' 11. Hodges, u I urrulUou (ill.) Ill., In search of the members of his Mr. Babcock's theory Is that large family, but his wife and sons were cago, who Is under arrest for alleged banker, offered a prize for the tallest sturgeon and not sea serpents are graft. The Jeweled opium pipe one cornstalks of the new 1925 crop, and gone artd there was no one there who causing nl) the discussion. His Idea, girl Is holding Is valued nt $7,500, nnd D. A. Bushnell of Green county, Illi knew where they were located. The however, Is treated with contempt by the Jnde vase In the hnnds of the other nois, won. He is shown above with the boys were put in an orphanage after other men than Mr. Ewing, who sny girl Is worth $5,000. prize-winning stalks, which measured Webber departed and a few years they have seen the terrifying monsters. later his wife remarried. 18 feet 9 Inches. 177,OOOMilesofU.S. Road in Five Years Preserve Voice for Future Generations Youthful Inventor Claims Remarkable Discovery. New York.—A small spool of steel wire will preserve for future genera tions the epochal events of history. This Is the way Harold Westman, twenty-three year-old student and In ventor of Mamaroneck, N. Y„ views a device he has perfected to reproduce voice afid other sounds by means of a vibrating wire. “If this Idea had been worked out soones." he said, "we could now hear the Sermon on the Mount, Patrick Henry's speech for liberty or death, I.Incoin's address nt Gettysburg—every ballot In the 1921 Democratic national convention. With those opportunities gone, how ever, every Important event of the fu ture can be preserved. Westman de clares. Better Than Phonograph. The steel wire method reproduces sound more clearly than the phono graph. he claims, and can be pre served indefinitely, whereas phono graph records are comparatively short lived. "If a great speech is made It can be recorded on n siaxd of this wire and l>e reproduced perfectly a thou sand years from now," the young In ventor said. Westman was shown the claim of Dr. Curt Stille, German Inventor, that he had perfected a similar device. The Stille announcement was carried In an exclusive International News Service dispatch of August 8. “I perfected my Invention several months ago. and gave It a final trial July 9," Westman said. “Idelle Pat terson. well known New York singer, will verify this. "In the finni test I nsked her to sing n number of arias that nre most difficult to reproduce clearly by nny method. She snug for forty minutes mid then listened to the results—the reproduction of her own voice. “She paid me and my Invention Deposed Dope Agent’s Collection of Curios MODERN ENOCH ARDEN LOCATES HIS THREE SONS « 8