Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT)

 - Class of 1937

Page 66 of 206

 

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 66 of 206
Page 66 of 206



Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 65
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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 67
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Page 66 text:

Page I2 THE. SCOTTY, GL re2:2:::::::::f::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-: ll ll ll :: I: I , 0 4: 5: Corrie s Confectionery 5: ll ll ig Home Made Ice Cream if if and Candies IE ll II JOHNSTON 'S MAGAZINES 1: CHOCOLATES NEWSPAPERS gg ll ll b:::::::::::::::: A---::: :::::::::::::::::::A :l'c::::::: 3: ::::::::::::::x::::u:::ii lb ll If fl : Roach Dress Shop 5: tl 1: :: 'i : ' 3: gg HATS - coATS - SUITS 5 gg DRESSES - BLOUSES gg POPULAR PRICES ll I: EE --T EE II Sutter Bldg., Next Door to Blanche's Beauty Shop :: :: ll -:::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::B ll :: a :: 1: TE S S MAN N S :: ll ll II ll E: This Little GOSSARD ll l II 4 J 'jx Makes you a Smoothy, l RQ And all the lads f' . ll l 7 Will rush to woo thee. 1: : fr is : :: f 7 Atubable, lovable onefprece that :: ii if will make you queen of your set. ii ,' . It's boneless and seamless, of :' C ' . f k 't l t'c,withalaceup- :: Q i . iiihdrlbvf' lnsacik. The slide clo' 1: 2222225 X sureisatcenterback.bAodel1879.H g if ' ' ' A il X 1 A II ii! :: Il ll 4: ll 1: ll f was MRD. ASGOW, MONTANA the school. This year color mimeographing has been tried with a great deal of success. A simple card index filing set gives the fundamentals of filing, so that the student should be able to meet these requirements in the office into which he will go. The typing department is perhaps the most popular. There are about one hundred students taking typing, learning how to write business letters, rough drafts, legal work, manuscripts, business forms, and of course, speed tests! ln the advanced class all the stencils are cut, the newspaper work, tests, bulletins, etc., are done. The be- ginning students in typing, those who started at the mid- year, are now listening for Ready, begin! A tinkle of a bell and their speed test is over! ln this class are the girls who work downtown as part- time students, competently holding down jobs as well as doing school work and extra-curricular activities. Re- cently this class attended the court session and experi- enced actual court reporting. During the winter months the shorthand students worked hard on the annual O. G. A. contest. For the cover of the work submitted they used a picture of the Fort Peck dam. This contest is held each year by the Gregg company and competitors from Canada, Hawaii, Alaska, Cuba, the Philippines, England and the United States take part. The results of this con- test will be announced some time during May. Many students are working on the expert speeds of 120 and l40 words per minute. By the end of the term we hope to have someone working on the l6O-word test. Sixty days after date I promise to pay. How does he know he'll get his money? That is one of the intrica- cies of bookkeeping that students are in the process of unravelling. Bookkeeping not only consists of learning how to keep records, it also gives the students informa- tion how present day business is transacted. They learn that, according to business standards, credit is a favor granted to those who do not abuse the privilege and the firms who continue in business are the solid ones who have the respect and confidence of their business asso- ciates. ln this age of highly trained workmen and keen com- petition it is harder than ever to make the grade of being a success. The General Business Training students are learning the importance of developing good character qualities and thus are forming pleasing personalities, one of the essential aids to success. Training and efficiency are necessary, but will not stand the test alone. A bird's- eye view of how modern business, in all its aspects, is conducted, is presented in this course. The Commercial Department, proud to be one of the vocational departments of Glasgow High School, is al- ways at the service of the school! PART-TIME C0-OPERATIVE REVIEWED Glasgow boasts of one of the best part-time co-opera- tive groups in the state, with a total of 30 students placed in distributive education. They are in retail houses, print shops, offices, confectionaries, garages and banks. The course of study followed is perhaps the most ad- vanced of any in the state, with a greater number of students enrolled. This is possible through the efforts and able supervision of Mack Monaco, head of this vocation- al training department. The course consists of two major topics, retail selling and retail relations. The former deals with the different types of retail concerns, nature of sel- ling, knowledge of goods, psychology of selling, selling fContinued on Page l4.J

Page 65 text:

THE SCOTTY, GLASGOW, MONTANA Page ll Steno Class Learns Modern Methods . . If s X- W . - . t -4. Some of the charter members of the Order of the Dirty Hands and Faces, left to right. Nadine Peter- son, Eileen Kaul, Kathleen Gallagher, Esther Dascher. V VOCATIONAL EDUCATION GROWS fContinued from Page S., equipment. So thoroughly has its reputation spread throughout the community and state that industrial work- ers from Glasgow and Fort Peck commercial houses fill the High School shop to capacity at the night school courses offered. The Part-Time Cooperative course under Mr. Monaco has grown in the past few years to-proportions that rival this type of work throughout the state. Thirty students in this course are getting training this year in offices, stores and garages that will possibly mean permanent positions for many of them. Mr. Monaco also connects his work with the community through a night school course in show card printing and a course in community resources. These courses promote a better acquaintance of Glasgow and its possibilities among men and women already employed in permanent positions in the town. The Home Economics department under the supervi- sion of Miss Edith Foss is also modernly equipped and is organized with a practicality that is a direct benefit to the entire school. ' The Commercial department under Miss Adena Schu- macher and Miss Margaret Crest is also outstanding in its service to the school and in qualifying a large number of students for commercial positions through practical and thorough training in high school. The Agricultural department under Warren Hanna flows the other departments in the qualification of prac- ticality. It is organized so that the future farmer boys carry out under supervision on their own farms the the- orys that they have learned in their school courses. The Industrial Education department under Archie Riikola represents the junior 'high school foundation and training in fundamentals which will prepare the boys for advanced shop work. It is carried out in direct con- nection with the advanced shop work and gives the boys a distinct advantage in entering advanced courses. In this age of overcrowded industrial fields it is hard to estimate the value to these high school pupils of this training in vocational education. In the pages that follow, descriptions of courses and department pictures illustrate in part the outstanding work done in Glasgow's vocational training of which it is justly proud. COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT May I have five 'hundred copies of this program by Friday? I need these tests for tomorrow morning, ninety copies, please. That publicity work for The Courier, could we have it at four? When can we get this play typed? Could we have a Shop Bulletin next week? Those posters for the play, will they be ready? Could you spare a couple of girls to work in the office t'his morning? Indeed, yesl Many and varied are the jobs which the Commercial Department meets each dayg interesting and practical problems that might be required of the student when he actually does go out on his first job. The Com- mercial Department is much better equipped this year to meet the needs of those leaving school and about to face a critical business world. This year a new adding machine has been added to the bookkeeping equipment. With the ever increasing demand for typing, the typing depart- ment can meet the needs of our school with its 32 Under- wood and I... C. Smith typewriters. The new mimeoscope and the mimeograph have made it possible to do all the posters, pictures, tests, bulletins, plays and programs for



Page 67 text:

TRADE TRAINING IN GLASGOW HIGH Page , , ,,,, Y 'W W I , WN...,q.,.mt-wQ,,.9y:: ---- as , we if lk I X -I I ff ,. , .. . .. ,xslt , . t V Q Q Top, left to right: Oxygen-acetylene welding: in line at the tool room. Center, left to right: The art of metal turning: arc welding. Bottom, left to right: Trade training shop group: auto mechanics at work.

Suggestions in the Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) collection:

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 104

1937, pg 104

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 33

1937, pg 33


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