OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY, REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH , Educational Preparation A Requirement For Success' In J . Business i t thing added to the American Bankers Association other good things of life - old-fashion- ed cut-and-t- ry successful business or in- dustrial organization in the United States today but what the dominating leadership is schooled in the scientific principles of its specific field, whether manufacturing, merchandising or finance. The rapidly advancing standards of business in this country, with their relentless demands for efficiency as the only hope for survival in the competitive struggle for economic existence, has sounded the death-knefor guesswork and ll slipshod methods. 11 Just another good " of Experience is still holding classes in THE great school but the scientific spirit of the age has so generally invaded the workshops of industry and trade that they have largely become technical research and training laboratories in themselves and are no longer run on the methods of former generations when Experience was eonsidered the only teacher. It would be hard to find a working force in pre-eminen- tly I. 4 , By HAROLD STONIER any , I Growing ' . CIGARETTES . As a result, educational preparation in the techniques of commerce, industry and finance are virtually essential to outstanding success in these fields, as it is already an absolute prerequisite in the various recognized professions. This - is not to depreciate the value of native ability and experience in business, but education after all is merely a means for helping the individual to apply the net good of the accumulated experience of many to his own days work a means for helping special native ability to come into its own more rapidly and surely and for enabling all classes of ability to gain the maximum of success to which they are entitled. These facts are plainly recognized business in by practical, every line.. Every progressive business organization in America is emphasizing the importance of education as never before. Education has come to be looked upon as the answer to many of the problems within the organization as well as to problems affecting industry as a whole. Business Organ. zing Institutes , Institutes for developing specifically qualified workers are being operated or organized in many fieldg of commercial and industrial activity. These Institutes are trying various types of educational work with a distinct trend toward more and more emphasis upon education for the rank and file of business employees of all grades. We have been having business failures in this country at the rate of about 2,000 a month This score speaks for itself It is glaring evidence of incompetence on the part of thousands prob-- ' of business men in handling-th- e 1ms inherent in their fields of endeavor The detailed records show that practically 75 of business failure in this country is due to lack of , training and competence on the part of those who failed. This is conclusive evidence that no one can afford 'to undertake executive business re. sponsibilities without adequate educa-lion and training. It is for that reason that every enlightened business organization is today insisting as never before that its employees taxe advantage of some type of technical trainwork-a-da- v 1 ing. . ' American banking is fortunate and has Just cause for pride In that it has a record of twenty-eigh- t years of defi- nitely organized educational activity among its workers to its credit for developing trained bankers. People in banks in large numbers are taking advantage of the educational opportunity given by the great "college of the banking business, the American Institute of Banking They see on every hand evidences of the value of the training it gives. Of the 10.000 graduates of this Institute. 70 how occupy official positions in Amerare still ican banks. The other 30 too young to have attained such heights. Here is an example and an encouragement to the people of all : lines of business. The American Institute of Banking has a membership of 64.320. Of these 33,851 are class enrolments, comprising youngeT bank people, both men and women, who are learning the scientific technique of their chosen business at the same time they are engaged in the practical work of earning their livings at it. The difference between the 33.85J enrolled in classes and the 64,320 total membership comprises older bankers who have taken the Institute courses in the past or are at the present time sponsoring some type of educational work in the organization. Banking Educates Its People , It has been estimated that there are irobably 375,000 bank officers and employees in the United States at the ' iresent time. These figures would ,nean that about onqr banker in every ix is either enrolled in Institute j lasses in banking or is actively supporting some educational function of N he organization. No statement could possibly give more emphasis to the mportance placed on education by the banking interests of America than these facts. This American Institute of Banking WHY CAMELS ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE is the educational section of the American Bankers Association. It was formed twenty-eigh- t years ago by bank employees and officers and has been carried on ever since as a voluntary organization. Many students who have graduated continue their membership in order to give active support to some type of educational work other than the actual class program. The greater part of the educational work is carried on in 200 cities and towns in the United States. Here the local chapter of the American Institute" of Banking has its regularly organized courses of study under supervision of the national body with local instructors and directors to fulfil the standard requirements regarding text material, classwork and examinations. Instructors are recruited from the staffs of leading universities, from members of the legal profession and from among accountants and bank men who have made a record in some field of activity in banking that marks them as experts. All instructors must be approved by the national organization. They are compensated by the local units. The students pay tuition, in which they are frequently aided by their employing banks, and this, together with contributions made by the banks for general classroom overhead, finances the educational program. Education a Pathway to Advancement Leading banks in various parts of the country are insisting that their employees take work in-- the Institute. This is frequently a part of their contract of employment at the time they enter the bank. It is also now quite generally understood in the field of American banking that study in the American Ipstitute of Banking is considered one of the basic factors in the promotion of the individual to a place of importance in a bank. The Standard Certificate of the American Institute of Banking is annually gaining a greater and wider recognition among practical bankers throughout the United States. , These certificates are coming to have the same importance in the banking world that certificates of education have in the field of the general professions. This is a practical example and one thoroughly well demonstrated by seasoned experience of the new spirit of American business. ONE COW VS. ONE DOZEN "Why milk twelve poor cows when one good cow will do the work of the twelve?" asks the bulletin of the American Bankers Association Agricultural Commission. It declares that analysis of more' than 100,000 individual yearly records from cows on test in dairy herd improvement associations indicate that on the average: Cows that produced 100 lbs. butterfat a year returned $14 each over feed cost; Cows that produced 200 lbs. butjerfat a year returned $54 each over feed ' cost; 300 lbs. butterfat Cows that produced a year returned $96 each over feed , P ' cost; Cows that produced 400 lbs. butterfat a year returned $138 each over feed cost; Cows that produced 500 lbs. butterfat a year returned $178 each over feed . cost: In other words, one producer will return $10 more over feed cost than twelve 100 lb.: jiroducers. This does not take into account, either, the added labor of milking and caring for the larger herd, or the much greater expense of providing stable room for a dozen Instead of a single animal. The figures are based on farm prices from all parts of the country. - 500-poun- d Camels contain such tobaccos and such blending as have never been offered in any other cigarette. 'They are made of the choicest Turkish and -- . American tobaccos grown. Camels are always smooth and mild. Camel quality is jealously Maintained . . , by the world s largest organization ,of it never varies. expert tobacco men t ... Smoke Camels as liberally as you choose . they will never tire your taste. . . Nor do they ever leave an unpleasant after-tast-e. 1929, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winstoh-SaleN. C. " Praise Not for Artist 1 - . "Compared with the original it is very poor stuff indeed. "It was the original I referred to, said the young woman quietly. Boston Transcript ners Magazine. Longest Aqueduct The aqueduct carrying water from Owens river in Sierra Madre mountains to Los Angelos. 233 miles in length, is said to be the longest In the , Bermuda grass Is the most important pasture grass of the South, where it shows marked preference for clayey soils. In Virginia and Maryland, where It Is more troublesome as a weed than valuable as a forage, it is commonly called wire grass. Bermuda grass Is the plant most used for pastures and lawns In the South. It has been a lifelong regret to me was not born on New Years that day; I should have been had not my father been a clergyman.- In 1865 the first of January came on Sunday which In our house was strictly ob served. secular was al Nothing lowed to happen. Accordingly 1 ar rived before dawn on Monday, Janu ary 2. It is really too bad. Serib ly. world. Valuable Pasture Grass Phelps Birthday He had set up bis easel and was working away when suddenly he realized that a young woman had come to a stop behind him. A charmAh. ing landscape," she remarked. you flatter me, said the artist modest ' . pipe organ which has served three Trinity churches In as many cities, and Is believed to be the oldest of its kind in this country, is now In use at SL Johns Episcopal church V Telephone Takes Message 4 A that answers telephone itself when its owner is oat has recently been Invented in Sweden. In prin ciple, the instrument is said to oper at Clyde, NY ate like a phonograph attached to an ordinary telephone in' such a way that it can be left In contact with the central telephone office. The message is recorded on a sensitive roller, and when the owner returns, he turns a switch and the machine repeats precisely what has been said. fl Victims of Materialism In trying to get well heeled a lot of people hecome poorly souied. Boston Transcript LICENSED ABSTRACTOR Of Rich County, Utah Spores Resistance Bacteriologists have shown that A specialty of making Deeds and Titles tetanus spores may resist the temperature of boiling water for ninety min LEWIS LONGHURST utes, botulinus In vegetable Juices for Randolph, Utah five and hours, and a closely related, harmless species eight and to the music of . , , Smuins Night Hawks 5? at o, j one-ha- one-ha- lf hours. lf Dont Forget the ' ' , ) t Saturday June 1st.; Automotive ,! $ 4 r j, 9 to 12 p. m. 4 t P' t , ; i ...i : , itt f ? p , i t 3 M J r J! Central Barber Shop j . t - , . i v I I ' Best in the tpwn and county i i k 4 i , '. A v & SOL CONLEY, Manager 4 a V- f Childrens Hair Cuts, 25c ti R. J. Matthews Prop. , t jf Hall When In Evanston On the north side of the threestoried bridge connecting the two buildings of Liberty & Co., on Regent street. London, is a weather vane of gilded copper as faithful a represents tion as gan be made of the Mayflower. Although it appears, small from the ground the vane is four feet high and weights over a hundredweight. J tli , Mayflower Reproduced , A v Famous Pipe Organ A |