Newspaper Page Text
UNION RECORDER, MILLEDCEVILLE, CA, DECEMRER 1», IMT
! 1
1*
By Arthur Bri»b»a» '
BY ARTHUR BRISBANE T»e
LINBERCH NEEDED.
THINKING COMES FIRST.
BACK 5.000 YEARS
ABOUT FLOOD RELIEF.
Li dbergh, world’s champion fly
er. In d< d in Mexico City, notify
th \:or j that young men in thU
countr; now how to f’v. in spite
of tie act tha*. their Government
does sna yet realize the importance
«f f
of Lind-
m fliers
isihle f«-
BANK FORECASTS GOOD
BUSINESS DURING If21
Chicago In.titatioa Sees No Evidowco
Of Trod* ptpreuioB Next Year
PREDICTS STABLE PROSPERITY
Say* Business of First Six Months
I Should Equal the Average During
Entire Year of 1927. Ease in the
Money Market Noted
NEW YORK.—Depression, boom
or a continuation of mere prosperity
—which of these will be recorded by
the first six months of 1928?
This I* a question to which authori
ties from every section of the
try now are casting up answers. But
perhaps the most inter sting com
ment from the west to reach New
York to date—and Wall street is
vitally interested in the views form
the west—is tha: given out by the
Continental National Bank and Trust
Company, at Chicago, of which
George M. Reynolds iw chairman of
the board of directors. The answer
th ; s big Chicago bank gives to the
above question follows:
No Evidence of Denrex.Ion
ly
prospect is for maintenance of in
dustrial employment and the sustain
ed income of industrial workers will
help to surtain business.
"Moderate inventories point to
this conclusion. Easy money is ojr
best guess and this condition always
sustains business. Ease in the money
market and moderate inventories
mabe a sharp down in commo
dity priceK But convinced conser
vation in buying will prever an ov. r-
rapid increase in price:. Adequate
credit for any business need is as
sured. Easing off in the volume of
new building is likely and desirable.
d px
•pro fill*
No p
f, n:
a* d ha
f ift<
1
.::t d S.at-: Gypsum f
ith offices in twenty c
l.ty-two mine>. and mill
States, has thi* good idea;
11 he.id quarters manager** devote
fror
11
« f generally n: . per-
?‘s. Ar.J wo don’t m an
prosperity,’ either."
j.ect of u boom looms in
>n of that i ank, and it
.acd over the outlook for
n of stabilized proa-
i y. Not the least significant of
new figures submitted by the
k’s economists is one of the 1927
uey income of farmers. Its own
mat? of $12,150,00.000 tomput-
in August now is revis. d upward
$12,.')25,000.000. That is truly
eau iful backlog ->f purchairng
continua
"concentration.” They allow n>
interruption vxcept in cmtrgar.ciej
From. 11 to 5 they are subordinate!
and business visitors generally. J power.
Each manager has a least two i The guess of this bank is that
hour.-, a day for real thinking. business during the fir*t six months
Jo? 1928 should at least equal the
crage for the entire year of 1027
d that it may ev: n be up to the
v’ of the first ha*{ of 1927. Here
brief i what the bank forecasti:
John D. Kockfellt r had that >
idea many years ago. One of his
local manager:;, pointing proudly to
a desk loaded down with pap. r«. j
said to him. "A lot of detail, but 1 *
snail get through it oil by nigh:.’’ Mr. j "For the first half of 1923
Hockfeier, quoting that, said
directors. "I want all importa:
their feet upon clear de*4s, thinking
how they can make more money for
Standard Oil.” They made it, with
Rockfeller’s direction, .and now he
spends it UM?fully, fighting disease
and ignorance. To get ahead, re
member that thinking comes first.
The rest is secondary.
Learned professors in the Uni
versity of Southern California say
that -lang, within reason, is good.
It makes students selec: their ex
pressions instead of uxirtg them
i-ntomatically. To call your friend
a "dim bulb" is better htan saying
to your brother “Thou fool," and
i. means the same. Use of slang
"makes a dent in the brain” ami
cans.* thought, says one professor
I also takes the place of thought,
! that s too long an argument.
B
•diet prosperity,
ne of .he farmei
backlog of pure ha si
day. HILL'S
Cascara -Bromide -Qui
nine tablets knock a
cold. Leave you feeling
fine. Look for red baa.
3Sc. All drugg:r*t.
FOR CONSTIPATION
Mississippi Mss Says He Has
Found Black-Draught So
Satisfactory, He Hu Na
Need Is Qaage.
Wiegin., Miie—Mr. A. L. Cose, a
well known Wiggins resident, aaya:
*1 nave used Thedford’a Black-
Draught for constipation. I have
naver had to take a peat deal of
medicine, bat for folly 30 years I
J»w.. by using it, known Black-
Draught to be a great medicine, and
when I found it ao satisfactory, ]
haven't eeen any need to chaise.
"When I get constipated. I feel eQ
oat ai aorta and tired ana dugiih
and I taka a few doaaa of Black-
Draught It regulate# my bowel#
and fjmt all right My wife takes
more Black-Draught than I da She
• a peat believer in it too, ao wa,
keep it in the house. Itwffldeanae
the system and help you, if yoa use
at as we have." «
Constipation leads to a great deal
of eadmeea among those who do
not understand its dangers, and who
iwwiact to treat it without delay.
Black-Draught, with the natural,
Pfwopt action of its purely vegeta
ble ingredients, quickly relieves
constipation and helps to drive out
tha poisons ao aa to leave tha
organs in a state of healthy activity.
•Sold everywhere, 25c. AC-179
. " at helping India toward
jv rnment. The help should
gun 5,000 years back,
can you give self gov;in
to a people in whose litera-
he word liberty does no. ap-
n .'>.000 years, to millions who
o tha. little girls eight and
years old should be married to
? aged men and that when the
uxoand dies the young woman
: be burned :Jive with the hus-
r.ablc
Why i
:y fr<
orp-
Th:i‘
self government.
.*nt r> commends
or Mississippi \
ireven.ion involving
Altogether, $25,000,-
spent the first year
0 a year thereafter.
work rather than risk,
of ten years, anoth.
might cost in dei
he total appropriation? Secretary
Mellon could borrow the money for
three per cent, if he couldn’t take
out of the surplus. Haste is import
ant: floods don’t wait.
Lost August the stock market
broke when President Coolidge'
first “do not choose"’ came out, an.,
a few days ago that foolish market
broke again because the President
«id he meant it. What frightens
gentle stock brokers and specula
tors? Do they think Hoover, Low-
don or Dawes would declare war on
Patagonia, abandon the gold stand
ard, suspend the writ of habeas cor
pus, close factories, stop the rainfall
and destroy crops? Mr. Coolidge is
a good President, wisely allowing
those that know how to run the coun
try's business to run it Other good I
man are ready to do the suae. The
Rttxdster^D uS? |W? **• ® U,ck I "lebritie. to whom Buick ownership open, aven
acSe£ Mi« fa i r tion of out< * oor enjoyment In California. Thi. pFxxogra
actresR. Mias I revest is onl> one of many film | was taken on the IX- Mille lot.
xxxxzis zzzxxzu
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PHONE 485
In the Southeastern Essay Contest recently conducted by the Sears Roe
buck Agricultural Foundation at Atlanta, the Georgia winners, hi addition
to Miss Melba Sparks who won the grand championship of the entire South-
re Mary Todd of Wlntervllle. Ca„ and IUmi.le Cobh of Sale City. Ma.
The state winners, each of whom received ns an acknowledgement of
their efforts nn expense-puid trip to the Southeastern Fair and n gold Stone
Mountain Memorial Medal, submitted essays which were outstandingly the
best among the many Georgia entries, and which can be practically and
profitably applied to Georgia’s agricultural program.
Miss Todd, who Is president of the Clarke County Club Organization,
chose ns her .subject. “Curb Marketing of Farm Product*." and gave ns nn
example the remarkable success of this subject ns it Is employed nt Athens.
Ga. She outlines very clearly the manner of instituting a community curb
market and seta out in a very graphic manner the proven practices of suc
cessful curb and roadside selling. The growing demands #>f the city house
wife for fresh farm produce and the need of the farmer for a regular weekly
income to supplement the periodical revenue from his major crops makes
Miss Todd's essay extremely Interesting from the viewpoint of both buyer
and seller.
Bennie Cobb, Vocational Agricultural student of Sales City, selected os
his subject the "Marketing of Hogs In My Community." This essay Is In
Urn* with the practice of hog raising and marketing as it Is preached by
various agricultural agencies and Is of Intense interest to every Georgia
fanner. The essay, which Is thoroughly comprehensive, deals with profitable
hog raising, from the breeding period straight through to markeiing time,
touching on farrowing, feeding, sanitary precautions and co-operative mar
keting.
In the case of both winners, they have chosen subjects with practical
money-making Ideas which can be put Into immediate use with satisfactory
remits by practically every fanner.
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