Newspaper Page Text
'-’V-T"',
SUNDAY. AUGUST, 2<. 1923
IF ATHENS HIGH GRADUATES
KNOW ALL THIS THEY ARE
READY FOR COLLEGE LIFE
TH BANNER-HERALD, Athene geohgtx
ADAM A^D EVA
S'
! state School. Superintend
ent Outlines What a
High School Graduate
Should Know Before
College.
What should an Athens high
school graduate knew?
The state school department has
answered the question with the
following questionnaire to each boy
and girl planning to enter college
this fall:
•1. Are ybu healthy In body and
j did you leave school with a gen
eral knowledge ot simple rules of
public and personal health?
'2. Are you haalthy in mind and
I character? Are yau optimistic and
[ cheerful In spirit, straightforward
and slncerer In thinking, honest in
purpose, upright In conduct, pleas-
I ing In manners, refined In tastes,
I unhampered by snobbishness, ui-
I fettered 'by prejudice, unselfish In
i vice, grateful to parents, and
I jnval to friends?
I "3. Have you learned to find
I pleasure in work? Do you respect
I and dignify bonent labor?
•‘4. Have yotf*a ,, qulred habits of
to you in making a living after
leaving school and that will be
helpful In causing you to be useful
In the work of the world?
CAN YOU
TALK WtLL?
“G: Can you write well? Can you
talk well? can yon listen well? j
“7. Have you successfully ac
quired the proper habits of study,
with skill In the use of the diction
ary, the encyclopedia and general
•reference books? Have you
qulred a love of book3 and of read--
lug so that you are likely to con
tinue the pursuit of knowledge af
ire leaving school? Do you read
magazines and the newspaper*?
“8. Hava you learned to appre
ciate music and art and have yuo
leartj^d to study and really enjoy
some of the best things to he found
it. 1‘terature and history, Includ
ing:
“Biblical literature and history;
Grecian literature and history;
Roman literature and history;
English literature .. and histofy;
American literature and history;
and Georgia literature and history?
“9. Have you learned to observe
nature and nature's laws closely
PAGE SEVEN
An Introduction
—By Cap Higgins
-o pis
0(oY)*
THEY ARE LIVING IN
A SMALL. FLAT BUT
ARE GOING TO MOVE.
| thrift anti temperance nnd self anti appreciatively and to study
Itastery. rather than hahits ot ex- I nature fa a scientific manner?
nvagance and iitemperance and Have you acquired an lutroduct-
cit-indiilgoftoel i dry knowledge of general science
'5. Have ‘top received, during.' iron, the physical to the biological
..... high school course, some erne- | with the useful Info, .nation :ang-
I tlcal training that will be helpful Ing from electricity to germs"
■#”
VETERINARY DIVISION
Georgia State College of Agriculture
will Respond to Calls for
•W VETERINARY /SERVICE
A moderate enhrge will be made,
• Phone 225-R> Athens, Ga.
MONEY TO LOAN ON ATHENS REAL ESTATE
Interest Rato from fi to 0'4'7r.
Payable Monthly or Semi-Annually.
• See S. W. USSEUY or JAY H. EPTING with
H. O. EPTING & COMPANY
Ground Floor Holman Building
WHY NOT DIVIDE MY
INSURANCE WITH
JESTER
Complete Insurance Protection
<17 Holman Bldg.'
TAXI SERVICE
Day and Night
GEORGIAN BAGGAGE-
Phone TRANSFER CO. Phone
Office Georgian Hotel 66
66
— GEORGIA
NOW OPEN
tybee island — — —
HOTEL TYBEE
. South Atlantic'! Majestic Hotel
FIraproof—American Plan—Bathing, Dancing, Fishing
^ Soa Food a Specialty ,
WONDERFUL JAZZ ORCHE8TRA
. Rossignol-Kemp A Perry, Prop’s.
Have you acquired the Inductive'or
scientific meRod of thinking so
that you cares *lly get facts before
forming your final opinion?
“10. Have you learned to love
your state and your country with
Its history and Institutions? Do you
know* the constllutlop of the
United States, ‘The Supreme Law
of the Land’? Have you learned to
respect tho laws ot God and man
and to uphold the best ideals of
Americanism?’’
Thq. department officials stated
“it would bo Interesting for such
graduate to g*ade himself and see
if he can m'.ko a naverage of 75
per cQnt." The test 4s called one
of culture and the kind of educa
tion qvery good citizen ought te
be able to acquire at a high school.
FARMERS,
ATTENTION!
This* Is the Time to Pre-t
pare Pastures.
J. Hart Sibley in Greene county
co-operation with the Georgia
Railroad has prepared a perman
ent, practical pasture. He has
emonstrated that a middle Geor
gia pasture can be made bettet
even than the pastures of Iowa.
Here are some other things that
Mr. Sibley’s Greene county pas
ture has demonstrated.
1— Pasture op<*n for from seven
to nine months in the year.
2— It saves yearly per cow from
420 to 4G0 pounds of grain and
from 2.100 to 3,150 pounds of hay:
3— -'Less than one acre of 'good
pasture will supply a dairy cow
through tho season.
THIS IS THE TIME—
To prepare your own permaru
ent,’ practical pasture and here is
the way to do it:
Use lowlands wherever possible,
land where crops would not grow
ordinarily, unless the weather is
ry dry, but not land that stands
der water all the time.
Laddie Boy’s Rival
Scouts Open
Patrol School
COLUMBUS. Gu.—A training
school fof patrol lenders will tw
operated by the Columbus counci'
of the Iloy Scouts of America at
Camp McKenzie, Ga., Heptembei
7 to 9. Scouts attending the school
will be given a thorough training
in patrol leadership. Patrol lead
ers, assistant patrol loaders nnd
senior ’oidprn who wish to do s<
will be admitted to the school anf.
the training received is exepeett
dto stimulate even a greater In*
terost In scouting in Columbus
than already exists.
READ ~
BANNER-HERALD
WANT ADS
You Need Coal
In your business—why not get the best coal nml at
the beat prices? All that j|'s necessary to do is
call the Florence Coal Company.
The reason we sell more coal is that we apply
the Golden Rule to every transaction; if it
doesn’t measure up, we arrange it So it
>>1341 will. It paysl , . f
‘Florence Coal company
I— ATHENS, GA.** - I
° t , Slb S rian . husk >' has i ust "rived in Washington. The late
^ c *^*" t ,. Har , d ‘ ;1 g b ee*me attached to the dog while in Alaska and
intended that ho should bo a playmate for Laddie Boy. Hardy may be
kept at the White Hopse, thus becoming Laddie Boy's successor. *
E
FOB TECH MAY BE
BEGM THIS FILL
$10,000 Appropriation and
$10,000 Gift Leaves Only
$10,000 Needed! Good
Year Is Forecast.
ATLANTA.—With an appropria
tion of $10,000 for a now engineer-
_ log department of ceramics at the
If the land ligs trees and brush (Georgia School of Technology au-
remove thest, and bum the brush, jthorised by tho 1923 General As-
Do not break'up the land. SowJsembly, more than $10,000 has been
seed on top of the ground: A pledged from outside sources and
by October 1. the full $?0,000 nec
essary. to establish the first unit
of the course for one yra ris ex
pected to be received, according
to an announcement by Dr. M. L.
Brittain, president of the institu
tion.
. "Establishment A>f this. course,"
said the president, "will help our
owners of clays and non-metalllc
the ...—,
soft seed bed will mean joss of the
seed..
Sow the following mixture of
ed per acre: Dali is grass, 2 to
pounds; carpet grass, 5. to 7
pounds; lespedexa, 10 to 15 pounds.
The grass will not stand culti
vation, and the first* crop planted
on the field will mean they will
not grow there again.
shoukT start* ju»t g M*M«n G M 1 ‘the! ™i" V B , 1 J I l^ ,ld 4y 0 o{ n t 0 hT» , Md'
COVER YOUR LOSSES j'tllllng, pc.ttery and china. In place
With Dairy Cattle and Ship the n ? the present wheel-barrou plan
Cream. j ot aendlng it off to the north.”
Smile while you work with the! Applications for entranco at the
attraction of , having a check institution are swamping tho reg-
A1I Together, Now!
Let’s get together for a big
ger, better, more prosperous
Athens!
That means let’s build more
homes in Athens!
l
A city of homes is always a
/ • >
city that does things!
CARTER-MOSS LUMBER COMPART
9
BUILDING
MATERIALS
cycry two week* for your cream,
Flant feed crops so you will have
(plenty of feed 'and watch them
pay the way of the farm. Knock
the old mortgage off the farmt
with a record milk production.
Feed the skiih milk to the pigs and
chickens and ship the cresm. R$*
suits will be encouraging.
If there isn’t a sour cream ship
ping station at your depot, get
busy with your neighbors and yout
county agent add take up the
matter with your noureet cream
ery. They .will help ydu start a
.hipping station to your town.
Pretentious Rural
Bridge in Near-By
State Nears Finish
COLUMBIA, 8. C.—The 8ante<
River bridge, the main span o
which has been pronounced by th.
state highway department engln
eers os the most pretentious rura*
'structure of its kind in the south
is nearing completion, according
to an announcement by officials
The bridge is regarded as an im
portant link In the Atlantic Coastal
e ghway .which connects the flv«
uth Atfantic ports. Jacksonville
Brunswick, Chari* iton and Wlf
mington, with Washington nnd
Baltimore. A celebration Is being
planned the opening.
School For Master
Masons Opened
MACON. Ga.—Under the 1 auspice:
of Macon Lodge No. 5, a school ol
Instructions for all Master Mason
was opened here Monday. Augus
20. and continued throughout th»
week. Three sessions were hell
daily. The purpose of the schoo
was to help all Master Masons
Vho desired to take advantage o;
the opportunity to become mon
proficient in the ritualistic worl
of the order. The classes were Ii
charge of Guy Thurman, chalrmar
•d tbs Board of Custodians of th»
rivr«*t work ’ nnd Grand Lecture j
Jstrar, according tp Dr. riitaln, who
Is of tho opinion d numbor of tho
applicants will have to be turned
away.
“This Institution,” ho continued,
“enrolled in tho regular four class
es of tho college department Jnst
year, 1821 students—as many as
any other throe colleges In Geor
gia combined.
"In addition, there were 440 In
the High School of Commerce,
which Is an extension division of
the school in the heart of Atlanta;
there were also 145 studer'a In the
Night School of Applied Scelnco,
and? finally, there waa ansonroll-
ment of 599 In the rehabilitation
course arranged by the government
fr* tho •training of wounded sold
(era. or those whose education had
been Interrupted tbsough the war,
making a total of 3005.
V“Ono of the distinctive d opart-
merts of Georgia Tech Is that for
the co-operative students. In this
department, the students through
wak are enabled bf pay their en
tire expenses through college. Twc
young meg, for Instance, will se-
cu*e a position with an Industrial
pis at. One of them will work dur
ing September and the other will
he In school during that month.
In October, this situation will be
--eversed. This will continue and
by working eleven months In tho
year for five years, thev can com
plete, the regular college work
done by the ordln^r* student In
four years ot nine months each.
LIMITED NUMBER
TO Bjr ADMITTED
"The maintenance given by the
legislature to the school will per
mit places for only 150 new stu
dents In the co-opera tire depart
ment for this term. By August 1.
five hundred and forty high school
graduates had made application for
these 150 places.
"Georgia Tech has nine depart -
fessors In charge of these depart
ments. have business experience of
the moat practical kind In connec
tion with their work. The profee-I
pors of the department of arcbl
tecture, for Instance, have been In
New York doln, work with archi
tectural firms during the summer,”
he said.
Among the changes In the facul- :
ty announced by Dr. Brittain are :
the following: Professor Diinkin, ■
of the University of Idaho, will do
much of tho work formerly done
by Itr, Coon, resigned. Professor It >
3. King has been made head of
the department of mechanical en
gineering, the jlggltlon formerly
held by Dr. Coon.- Professor Ralph
Peters Black will take the place 1
made vacant by the death of Pro-I
feasor T. P. Branch, In civil en
gineering. •
Kate Douglas Wig-gin,
Well Known Author,
.Dead in England'
HARROW, England.—Mato Doug
las Glggln, famous American au
thor, died Thunday night.
PREPARE FOR FINANCIAL
REQUIREMENTS
Do not wait to begin thinking about a fund for future necds-
Begin now by buying one of our
GOLD SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
Guaranty Trust Corporation
'Capital $500,000.00 Surplus $500,000.00
f. r ghe Grand Lodge of Georgia, i incuts. Most of the heads, or pro-
Banner-Herald
WANT ADS
Are growing every day nr size and power, be
cause they bring results. You will find what you
want and save money by reading these ads.
' / f
Advice concerning
Classified Advertising
Cheerfully given at the Business Office of the
Banner-Herald
Phone 75