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Page 132 text:
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l l lv V fN I IlQIIE!!5355!iillliiilHlwliliii-ElElllgliigliiiil I KJ His cMark DOROTHY MILLER, '25 William Cartter was an ambitious boy who was determined to make life worth while to him. As he looked over his list, for his coming year in high school, he de- termined to take subjects that might help him in his future business work. He looked over the list. Some subjects looked interesting, while others did not take his eye. English, bookkeeping, general business, shorthand and typing. He looked at these subjects, placed his check mark after them and determined to make the best of them all. School started and he made good in all his subjects. Bookkeeping was especially interesting to him and as months went by it became more interesting. At the time of next year's enrollment he enrolled again in bookkeeping. Two weeks after his school Work was finished, found William in an office of a large business concern. His future was before him and with the start given him by his conscientious study in school, he felt certain that success was to be his reward. But success did not come at once, but only after it had been earned, for success is a reward, and not a gift. Weeks went by and it was after the weeks had turned to months and the months to years that he was one day called to the office of the president. William was not afraid of what was going to be said to him, because he had always done his work with the greatest care and earnestness. However, he was not certain as to the purpose of this call for him. You have been a very dependable employee, William, began the President, and we, the oflicers of the company, wish to call your attention to the fact that your good work and honest effort is not going by unnoticed. As a reward for your faithful service to the company and to help you attain a higher place in this business, we are appointing you chief auditor at the head of our bookkeeping department. Of course, you realize the responsibilities that th-is new position will put upon you but we are certain that with your hard work and honest effort, you will prove to be capable. You may expect an increase in your next month's salary. The position of William Cartter in the bookkeeping department was a confidential trust, for he shared his intimate knowledge of the business with only the executive heads and this trust must be safe guarded with the most careful consideration. He learned he could not remember fhard as he would tryj everything that he, the book- keeper, was expected to know at all times. So he must always rely on the system whereby the facts and truths of the business were prepared and preserved. One evening sitting before the fire alone, his thoughts wandered back to his high school days, remembering the day he had placed his small check mark after the word, bookkeeping . He also recalled that when he had placed this check mark, he had had doubts about this subject, not realizing this was to be the making of his future. When he had placed the check beside the solid bookkeeping, it was to him then only a word, but it was now his profession. i IIEE!HTHEZISHESZI353212325IMEFi!!I3512211323EERE!IE!I!EEEIIHiililllimi!!lEZiES!IEE2iIIH!EIEii!5IiiiilEEilliiliiiiillliliigllil Page Ona Hundred Eight
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Page 131 text:
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fX llEIIii!!Kilim!!liiiiiilQliililillwlllgliillim- KJ In machines of the present time, the type-bars are arranged horizontally about an are of a circle making possible what is known as visible writing. On the old style machines the operator was unable to see his work. The first machines had two sets of type. One set was the capital letters and the other, the small ones. The modern typewriter has a single set of type-bars. These type-bars have two letters, capital and small. The capitals are made through the action of pushing a shift key. The keyboard also carries punctuation marks, figures and various characters. Although there are many makes of typewriters, there are really only two types, the basket and cylinder. The basket typewriter has each key on the end of a long bar hung on a pivot joined to its respective key by a lever attachment. When the key is depressed, the key rises and strikes the inking against the paper. In the cylinder type, the depression of a key causes the cylinder to revolve to a point where the char- acter desired is impressed by a hammer. There is a special advantage to each kind, but the basket machines far outnumber the cylinder machines. The typewriter has played an important part in bringing women into the indus- trial world. Stenography and typewriting have opened the way to business to many A Life of Thrift GUS AGRON, '27 My story starts in Novgrood, Russia, forty years ago. At the age of ten my mother died and I was left alone in the world. The big problem then was, what will I do to make a living? I had very little education. I was left with only two dollars. A boy today would say, Well, I will go sell papers . But I couldn't sell papers for there were no papers to sell. At the end of two weeks, I had spent all my money. I finally got a little job in a tailor shop. I had to shine the tailor's shoes, run errands, serve the meals, and get the pressing irons ready for use. We did not have electric irons nor even gas with which to heat them. I didn't get any salary, but board and room. My room was under one of the tables in the shop. By the fourth year I had saved about twenty dollars. At this time, I heard that many tailors were wanted in a city called Odessa, so I went there. I got a job at five dollars a month, with board and room. A week later, I met a friend who oH'ered me seven dollars a month so I accepted, but I soon found working for a friend is not always the best thing. I left and got a job in a factory for six dollars and fifty cents a month with board and room. After I had saved about one hundred dollars, I was taken into the army where I got practically no salary. When I was about eighteen years old, I heard of the free and wonderful country, America. A man told me that if I would push a button in the wall, I would have light that was almost as bright as the sun, and if I would turn a thing in the wall, I would have water and not have to go to the well to get it. At the age of twenty, my time in the army was up, and I left for America. I arrived in New York and went to St. Joseph, Mo., where a few of my relatives were living. Here I get a job in a tailor shop for twenty dollars a week, which seemed to me a very good salary. About every four years I was given an increase. At the end of thirteen years, I was making thirty-five dollars a week. I saved all I could and by this time, had enough money to buy a small dry goods store where my income has been very good and my work agreeable. As success and enjoyment of life go, I believe I have my share and that I am a useful citizen. It seems to be this success and enjoyment can be traced directly to my habit of saving money and the practice of thrift. XVOITIQII. ufe:nema:is:ezaa:IsalesmanwenIsm5al:me:Icanrs:I2:I:zaassI1:seii::nl:s4ei:arezzHrises::arenaire:ia:e:a:s::5ss::sssn:sr: w Page OncIIunr1rc1ISei1'n
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