The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 20, 1919, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
PAGE TWO
DECLARES SCHOOL
SESSIONS TOO SHORT
Says Elementary Studies Are
Crowded Into Seven Years.
*
Other States Take Eight.
j ?
Columbia.?The South Carolina
public schools are crowding- the same
elementary studies into seven years
which the. majority of State take
eight years to complete, and in addition,
run the schools from 9 o'clock
in the morning until 2 in the afternoon,
while the States in question
ran heir daily sessions over seven
hours, or two hours more of recitations
daily, Lueco Gunter, State supervisor
of rural schools, will say in
his annual report to John E. Swearingen,
State superintendent of education,
to be transmitted to the General
A 11
AsseniDiy.
The South Carolina system, Mr.
Gunter will state, requires a large
amount of home study preparation,
many times a "hone of contention,"
and the teacher must make the daily
session one of classroom instruction,
and little time is given the pupil for
preparation. This system, he will
contend, has in many casos caused
the "parents frequently to claim that
they do the teaching and that the
teachers merely hear the pupils recite."
<G miter's Report.
Continuing, the report will say:
Under our ppresent system there
seems no escape from some home
work. It ought not, however, in any
case to be necessary for the parent
at home to do the teaching. Unfortunately,
in too many of our homes
the parents arc not qualified to do
this teaching.
"The assignment of home work on
the part of the teacher imposes three
definite considerations for the teacher.
The first is how much time
ninrlq f.lir? niinil fr?
--O"- ?" r 1'" ?? "r""" "" ?,v,,,v ' '
the preparation of his next day's
lessons or exercises, In the second
place, the teacher needs to estimate
carefully the amount of time that any
assigT'Ml exercise will require in its
preparation. Finally, the teacher
should ev-rrcise care that the pupil
knows how to do the assigned work
without unv outside assistance."
The logical result of the South
Carolina "> uiry-up" system, Mr. Gun
ter will aver, is lack of mastery of
the pupil's studies and his immaUuity
when he reaches, high school and collego.
This, lie contends, from an educational
standpoint is a defect. Ho
v ill say:
fare subject to bow $
trouble: rnoher<< mus: ');t
be careful about this, -"-ij
v half ; ettiuury mothers*- i
ve b. oo using ) \
Dr.Tfcacher'3 M
Diarrhoer. hi,i::bh: S
safeguard vho health ov'^t
>lr 1 1 11 it hnhift v civ.- . 1
<3 pie unci i ariV km remedy '.'or a'
ciillritvn :.ivl adult t All nr? A '
Jgsto ok, r:i,v. MONEY I:- '..v y:
M f r.o : e1i,v.
?yj ATTACHER M EniCT MT3 CO. h J
B&sro <-.u.uucogr., Tea..., U..A. * ?,
"'Jvsr-yxMtr r*i. : -v* r/r; :~v"v v? <. .,
fe r?;.. ..t :t>; , . J>
TO UETIKK AS HEAD
OF BODY IN STATE
J. Skottcwe Wannamakcr will retire
as kca< I of the South Carolina
Cotton. a oeiafion at the big mooting,
t< be hob' <n Deo; ruber 2, to p-'.o fret
peimaiie.it organization. This ;;nnounceivn
. ? I rontained in a letter
which Mo. Yvunnamaker is s nding
this \vc. 1o 0.< county clink nor*
t ailing ?'.4 ti .iti >11 to the !ji* ; run iing
to bo hebh il l. (! 4i r p? evident of
the A me* :c:\V. C t;?oi ;< oni ti n
make it in . : alive for him to retire
as head of he slate org\ni:at" n.
"they're just hckh^^j^
Kg Something else is the matter $$
PS with thcra. , Probably it's
I "worms".
DR. THACHER'S E
WORM SYRUP i
has been taking the "cross" &SJ
out of "kiddies" for half a Km
century. They LIKE it-? sftj
because it tastes good. Can't p$,
hurt thera! Get it at your
drug etorc. |&j
Tfcadtar Medicine Co. ||
Chat*zaoQzi, 'itun. U. S. A. fflr
HAPPY CF
; Childhood days are h<
child; they are intende
scorn i
brings to a child that is nc
strength?substance that d
is concentrated tonic-nouris
flated and transmuted
Give Scott's Emuls
^Thc exclusive grade of cod-lu
*'S. Sl B. Process." made in
Laboratories. It i9 a guars
Scott & B<
"One of the first educational rc
: suits of our system or crowding Lh
; elementary grades into seven years i
j the elementary pupil's lack of r.ias
tery of the subject matter of his grad
I This is nerhans more noticeable i
! city schools than in the countr,
schools. City schools have cndeavoi
ed in recent years to keep abreast o
the times with the introduction of th
new subjects of instruction. Countr
schools for the most part have adl'ci
ed to the traditional subjects. On ac
count of the lack of teaching time i
has been necessary for teachers ii
country schools to reduce the numbc
of subjects of instruction in eacl
school to a minimum. In most o
our graded schools, however, pu])i ;
arc rushed from one subject to anoth
cr before becoming conscious of :
thorough mastery of any subject.
Crowded Condition.
"The same crowded conditions cxis'
in our high schools. I have had ar
opportunity to observe high schoo
work in five States, where the firs!
year of the high school is the nintl
school year. These five States arc
Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana
and Minnesota. A visitor froir
South Carolina in a high school of one
of these States is at once impressed
with the greater maturity of the higli
school pupils, their greater resourcefulness
in classroom recitation and in
FOR SALI
i 1 co-acre tr;
cultivation.
| 750 pounds
per acre. l(
mile from
known as
baker place
farm in hc
W. BOYO
justic
1013 0! 10?4t
i )
\___v (
i s|
ifil
I jtLnjoy
I JH
!! !l ' T sasBUsaESsaa::j>
| | "?J Why not
WUUUll enjoyable by
I 1W1 easy-we''mi
I 111 something th.
I W Has styie?
1 ?il Look ov<
things for po
(/vivNi mats? cushio
y?ur I
yj living room.
5 \ ^ Everythinj
fe^SUTHERLAI
tlousehold and Kitchen Furnis!
THE HORRY HERALD, OONWi
ilLDHOOD i
ippy days to the robust I
d to be days of growth. g
>t thriving, power that sustains I
etermines growth. Scott'a g
ihment which is readily assimi?
I into strength.
ion to growing children often. '
>*cr oil used in Scott's Emulsion is the famous
Norway and refined in our own American
mice of purity and palatabilty unsurpassed. I
>wne, Blooinfleld, N. J. 19-68 !
|
i- conversation, their greater ability to !
e prosecute independently a piece of
s school work. This difference is due , E
i- first of aH to the fact that they are jg
e normally a year older than our high |
n school pupils. It is due in the second :
y place to the fact that they have taken j
- eight years to prepare for high school
f work, while ouv pupils have taken
e only seven. This same condition like
y ly obtains in our colleges. In spite of j
- the fact that our colleges, so many of I
- them, claim strenuously fourteen ; I
t standard units as requirements for j I
n admission, the lack of maturity on , E
r the part of our college students must ' I
:i | inevitably lower the grade of our col- j
f lege wor IV. S
s "Some may claim that this condition
~ is our advantage; that we are send- ^
1 ing our pupils through school a year
or two earlier and that we are there- j
fore giving them the advantage of an
t earlier start in business asd profosi
sional life. But we need to consider 0
1 that after all education is not a mere j J
t memorizing of facts or an accumu- ! B
t lation of information.. Education is
i scntially a training process. In tak-jfl
ing more time to do the teaching the j I
i people of other sections of our coun- ! B
J try are giving the pupils a larger 11
I amount of necessary training. With 11
i the better training and greater ma- ; B
turity they are likely to go out of fl
i school with greater working ability." I
*?mmnwMjt nw Q8|
) Farm |
? -w*' .v. Nr >
ict, 25 under 'f j*
produces
li nt gottoi'-j ;
jcated about !
DEPOT and j
;U' CLE enoch j
fjo better
!
irry county.
I JONES,
:e, s. c.
I BUI MiH I I JtTffJBt ll?IW HUM I nm r-TMTMll I ! ? L 4
mmnmmumm ? ? mmum IIW ? H i ^ m-r^wwr^vrt% J
^ O :
mw \ \ / ?
)t .. is? ?
iM - J WMnMr '
( - "V V Af '
ir^ KV? '7 m !0
&?^ ' Uw i.
| | a
t / r ? !i?
' Ltfe>' j ;l
6/1'0/t i !j |<
' 1 j;
jt'^w/jsBTisiaaaB j T
! ! 1
!c
make it more i
buying a nice, Jul1 UU111 i$
ade perch chair, |PJ|/|I i1
at will last and ||j||j|||| !.
if ;
our line of 1
rch life?chairs. ,-L-k
ns" and settees! T
porch a summer VrWxV
V
* m furniture. ^ - ?
js^Il j
NO FIM GO L? -2 I
lings ? Bicycles and Supplies.
\Yt S^^NOV. 20, 1919.
'! 1
\
WE HANDLE THE BEST
WORLD. WE FOLLOW TH
ICK & BACH, IVERS &
ART, HOWARD AND ALL
HOUSE, FLORENCE, S. C.
SOME OF OUR PIANOS 01
ol:
G. W. JOHfK
* . iw?> no?mum*
rwim iaiE* I
fot the &cid-di5fre3aed stomach, 8g
try two or three jS
ki-msiss i
after men? a, dissolved on the is j
tongue?keep yo-ir stomach j j
sweet?try Ki-Riol cJc?-the jae*?7 ? ;
aid to digestion. n
MADE BY SCOTT & BOW?,*E i*
MAIMERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION $ '
1CH7a M
NOTICE Of SALE.
Under and by virtue of the decree
nd judgment of the court made by
is Honor. T. J. Mauldin, Presiding
udgG, in the case of Marshal M.
[orne, et al., Plaintiffs vs. John H.
lorne. et al., Defendants, ar.d dated
he 20th day of October A. I). 101D, 1,
he undersigned J. A. Lewi.', Sheriff
f Horry County, will .sell at public
action 10 the highest bidder before
ho C'ouit House door at Conway, -a
lorry County, and State of South
Carolina, during legal hours of sale,
n salesday in December next, it brn;>;
the first day of said month, all
,nd singular those certain lands sitlato
in Horry County, and described
follows, to wit:
A 11 and singular that co; tain pFcc,
irrcel or trad of land, 'ying an(l beny;
in Floyd- Town, hip, containing
rui (10) acres, nigre or les bounded
i?: follows: North by lands cf S. V.1
Causey, East by W. P. Causey, West!
;y 1 anii! Causey, and South by W.
\ Causey, beginning at an iron c
irr, running near'y a Northern';*/
lourse to a stake, Hustcmly to anoth
n stake, South to an iron corner,
hence a We ternly dire-'tdon to bv
>;inning corner. For fuither dc.scripion
see plat ma le by J. I). Long unhsr
date Aug. 9th, 1911; being the
rune tract of 'and which was con1
' A ? % TT .1 ~ .1 u
' t */cis i a> *?i. w. it </i in.. ? < * < <. r.w
,\\ W. Roberts and If. II. Roberts,
>y their deed dated December 15th,
911, and recorded in Book VVV,
>a?e 235, records of Horry County.
TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser
o pay for papers.
Conway, S. C., November 7th, 1919.
f
No Worms in a Healthy Cliiiu
All children troubled with worms have nn unhealthy
color, which Indicates poor blood, and os a
ule, there Is more or less stomach disturbance.
".ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
.ir iwoor threo weeks will enrich the blood, im- |
>rovo tbc digestion, and act as a General Strength* i
nlng Tonic to the whole 3ystem. Nature v/i.l then I
lrcv off or dispel tho worrn.v and the Child will br
n jerfcct health. Pleasant *o take. 60operbott!o
#
READ 1
3UY YOUR PIANO FROM THE
ng Music H
WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY
MAKES, ENDORSED BY THE
IE ONE PRICE PLAN. WE SE
POND, SHONIGER, KURrZM,
SORTS OF HIGH GRADE PLA>
, OR G. W. JOHNSON, NICHOI
J THE FLOOR. THEY ARE t
MI/SIC
Established 1819
DEST MUSIC HOUSE IN AMI
JON, LOCAL -AGENT, NIC!
t. iwijwwmbmmmmb?mmmw???rm. "ft ? mm ururrem
J. A. LEWIS,
Sheriff of Horiy County.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
-o
FO REC LOS PRE S A LE.
Under and by virtue of a Decree
of Foi ccio.vure and Sale made by hi?
Tlon'or. S. W. G. Shipp, Presiding
i' : .;o, in the case of Burroughs ^
C-.'lins Co., a Corporation, Plaintifl
vs. Margaret Davis, ot al., Defendants,
and dated May 8 1, 1018, notice
is hcreoy given that I, J. A. Lewis
Sbetiff, will offer for sale before
tlie Court House door at Conway, S
C., within legal hours of sale or
Monday, December 1, 1910, that being
the legal sales day in said month
the following described property, towit:
MHnaKmw m IHMIWIII f \\i I P? W aaWMIMWMMWI
$!00 Reward, $100
Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ
encetl by constitutional conditions. I
therefore requires constitutional treat
mcnt. HALL'S CATAUIiH MEDICINI
Is taken Internally and acts through th
Blood on flie Mu-ous Surfaces of the Sya
tern. HALL'S CATARRH MKDICfNI
destroys the foundation of the disease
gives the patient strength by improvinj
tho general health .and assists nature li
doing ito work. $100.0y for any case o
Catarrh that HAT,CAS CATARRJ
MEDICINE fells to cure.
Druggirts 75c. Testimonials freo.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
m
I can install Sanitary
Pijnibinci m any homo.
Soo me while in town. W.
J. BENSON.
;'jva
/WT *1 o'f-V
m
: 'A
: i ^ ' : H /
</jt 4/V
: : ... v. MM'1 % ?
*adir7
-" vsr- . ..
SEPTIC TANK.
I can make you see better. I cai
make you feel better. I can mak<
you look better and you will do bet
tei by using the best Lens for th
least money.
J. E. DAWSEY, .
Optometrist.
ouse |
BEST ARTISTS OF THE 1
LL THE STEINWAY, KRAN I
AN, HUNTINGTON, STOD- I
fER PIANOS. WRITE THE
LS, S. C.?CALL AN SEE
3EAUTIES.
2 If?VSE
3RIOA
mi o O f* 3
IULwj &i Ui >f '1
^s^^sBgamv&sw&imwjaajBmBrt /
ALL AND SINGULAR that ceT- '
tain piece, or parcel of land in Dot- .?
wood Neck Township, containing |
three hundred roventeen (.*117) acres, I
and bounded as follows: On the 1
North by J. W. Vereeh, East by Jos- |
. sie Chestnut, Smart L ?wis, and Phil- I
; ip Willaid, South by Frank Keel, and
r West by Walter Willard and is the
r identical place on which the late
David Davis resided.
Terms of sale cash, purchaser to
> pay for papers and stamps.
J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff.
; K J. SHERWOOD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
\ Conway, S. C., Oct. .'JO, 1919.
.
V| f, jj j|| i'. . '
! El
1 WWW K
? ?S S. .
2 hir-hvL;,
# Pi'///'* ^
? W 'J\ 2: " '
/ w " Aii'ppy Vision.
v ?*. -i.:?/ J'/w '. \ . J'
t.SL> ^C-O- w w' -. - J J !, /. ,J
Jgxpect&ntJ
By making c!;r,l:.: ll ^ V , 'ting
the anxious months before rr.atcrnity, i
! Moihor'n Friend renders the ligaments
pliant for expansion o: r! e system is
preparing for the coming event. Mow
natural then that the new fi..wn
looked to in happy anticJbatlonA
JViotlier'e Friend is used externals i,
At all Druggists.
Special Rootlet on Motherhood and Baby Creel
Brad/ioldRotfututor Co. Dept. Iv6, Atlanta,GuJ^
S ^ iS i/i m wi s? Ri Si H HI H
1 HORRY COUNTY 5 j
1 TRUST COMPANY-C \
p L. D. Magrath )
f| WTananA*
Hj?| wwMwq VA W I
O Real Estate (
a Real Estate Loans i
1 b Bonds a
- a Insurance V
; i m m?a n ?* is n mri b &
P'tes Cured In 6 to 14 Days
truftitats r. fund money if PAZO OINTMF NT falls
u tiro ttchlnd, Pirnl. Pl'.odinft orProtTudljfl Pllea.
rcduvco hJi'. -.t Pilci, a.'. ' you on i not
atfd! flee*; si'tcr tho fir.t r.roitCf.tKo. Prirv?flOc.
i