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Page 32 text:
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Normal Penmanship Department, Gem City Business College, Quincy, Illinois This department is presided over by Professor H. P. Behrensmeyer, who has no superior in this country as an artist penman, and who devotes his entire time and talents to this department. All graduates secure paying positions as teachers of the art of penmanship, or as policy writers in large insurance offices
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Page 31 text:
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ETHEL P. GRIFFITH Centerville, Iowa Dear Professor Musselman : I know you take a great interest in all your old students, and am writing to you in regard to my success. Since leaving old G. C. B. C. I have had no difficulty whatever in securing employment, and am now stenographer for the Southern Iowa Coal Company, of this city. From a financial standpoint, the time I spent in your school has been very profitable to me. It has at least doubled my earning capacity. I find no difficulty either in taking dictation or in transcribing my notes. This is due to the excellent instruction received while a student at your school. I shall always gladly recommend your institution to any one contemplating a business or shorthand course. Wishing you continued success, I remain Yours very truly, ETHEL P. GRIFFITH. Mr. R. J. Grover is vice-pi esident of the Union State Bank of Arkansas City, Kansas, and Mr. H. M. Pickler is assistant in the same institution. Mr. William V. Stewart is employed at the United States Indian Agency, at Muskogee, Okla. ' -). Our Shorthand Teachers WE PRIDE ourselves on the excellence of our shorthand teachers. We pre- sent on this page a cut of the solid gold medal won by Professor Paul G. Duncan, principal of our introductory shorthand department, last year at the Gregg Teachers ' Convention, at Chicago. The medal was awarded for the best presentation of a shorthand lesson, and was in competition with a number of the best shorthand teachers of this country. This is a great honor, both to Professor Duncan and to the Gem City Busi- ness College. Professor W. W. Lewis, prin- cipal of the advanced shorthand department, is an expert reporter and is also one of the finest shorthand teachers in America. GABRIEL CARDENAS La Ciudad De Leon Saltillo, Coah, Mexico, Feb. 6, 1911. Mr. V. G. Musselman, Secretary, G. C. B. C. Dear Mr. Musselman : It certainly affords me great pleasure to speak a good word for your school, and for the many advan- tages it affords. I can truly and conscientiously say that your school is all that it represents itself to be. After having spent several months some two years ago under your bookkeeping instructors, I found the course in your school to be very thorough and prac- tical, and I shall always advise any one desirnig a thorough business education to go to the Gem City Business College. Wishing for you the success which your great .institution merits, and with kind regards to yourself and faculty, I remain Very respectfully yours, liAI ' .KIKL I lil K AS. Miss Hazel D. Crabb has «n excellent position as stenographer for Shaw, Ross Dyke, at El Centro, Calif. Miss Ina Poland is teaching shorthand and the com- mercial branches in the Massey Business College, at Montgomery, Alabama,
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Page 33 text:
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— v. — Normal Penmanship Department as All Graduates Hold Good Situations ON THE opposite page we present a picture of the Normal Pen manship department in session. This department is maintained in order to furnish high class facilities to those who desire to qualify themselves for teaching the art of penmanship in all its branches. The room is elegantly furnished with a commodious desk for each student. The walls are tastily decorated with many hne specimens of penmanship and a large blackboard space is provided for students ' practice. Professor Behrensmeyer, who is acknowledged as one of the best penmen in the world, devotes his whole time and talenfs to the Normal Penmanship department. The pen- manship students make rapid progress from the first. All the graduates of this department are sought out by commercial schools, as teachers of this beautiful art, and by the large insur- ance companies of the coun- try, to serve as policy writers and engrossers. We have more calls for graduates of the penmanship course than we can fill. The Gem City Business College is the only school in the west that has a Normal Penmanship department that is in charge of a noted and skilled penman, who has a national reputation, and who gives his whole time to teaching penmanship, lettering, engrossing, etc., and whose grad- uates are employed as soon as they are through their course of instruction. Highest Awards. The penmen of the Gem City Business College ' have been awarded the first premiums, diplomas, and medals on their display of penmanship wherever exhibited. A group picture of some of these medals is shown herewith. No accomplishment is so useful to a young person as penmanship. The students of this department are taught to write the plain rapid hand for business, and the beautiful copy hand for teaching. Those desiring to learn ornamental penmanship find the facilities unsurpassed for acquiring all branches of the beautiful art, such as flourishing, pen drawing, engrossing, lettering, card writing, specimen work for exhibition, blackboard writing, and best methods of teaching. 29 Graduates of the penmanship department make first class teachers who are a success from the beginning. The country is full of ordinary teachers of penmanship, but what young men and young women need is to get above the ordinary and their success is established. All graduates of this department hold good situations at from $85 to $150 a month. There are hundreds of graduates of our Normal Penman- ship department teaching in business colleges and normal schools all over the United States. You can scarcely name a college in Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Texas, or the entire western half of the United States, that does not have one or more of our students as teachers. There are also many of our gradu- ates located in the eastern and southern states. It is not too much, then, to say that we claim for this department and its students the greatest success ever achieved in this country by any similar institution. EMPLOYMENT Below we give a list of a few of the former students of the Normal Penmanship department who have taken high rank as teachers and as penmen and who have made great successes on account of their superior penmanship and abilities. H. W. Darr is principal of the commercial department of the High School at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Charlton V. Howe is a professional script writer and artist. He is policy writer for the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Philadelphia. George F. Bennett is policy writer for the Aetna Life Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn. E. A. Cepek does engrossing and is policy writer for an insurance com- pany in Chicago. C. W. Edmondson is supervisor of penmanship in the public schools at Chattanooga, Tenn. Claude Eyster is penman in the Yeatman High School, St. Lanis, Missouri. B. O. McAdams is proprietor of the Glenwood Business College, Glenwood, Iowa. H. E. Welbourne is teacher of penmanship in the public schools, Milwaukee, Wise. Geo. H. Walks is teacher of penmanship and bookkeeping in the Lockyear Business College, Evansville, Ind. Geo. Lauterbach is teacher of penmanship in the High School at St. Louis. Arthur Gill is teaching penmanship in Temple College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. John W. Kohlnng is penman in the Nebraska Business College, Lincoln, Nebr. A. R. Punke is located in the Cream City Business College at Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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