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ONION RECORDER, MILLEDCEVILLE. CA.. MARCH J. 1928
This We ek
FOUR PERSONS AFTER JUDGE- OG&QO&QGSO&G&Q&OffQOQ&OOQ
LABOR SAVING MACHINES.
EMPLOYMENT FOR ALL.
THOMAS EDISON A YOUNG MAN.
17.000 YEARS FROM STONE AGE
"If a drop of salt water could
talk it would tell the* whole story | j udp< .
of the Pacific.” j Ga > a: , d
One Santa Fe freight train iro- j #> \ n „. ncu ,
inir through the Kan-as City yards j ,
to Kansas. Oklahoma and Texas j f {
irrain fi Ids told the story <<f j ,j,. nt ,,
**■? ud ProN»rity in ,h- .'.untry L ^ ’
and promised a solution of j* labor |
prohli m. aggravated by =rru
Macon. Ga.. Feb. 27.—There are
at least four perrons actively cam*
paigning for the Federal court
judgeship of the Middle Georgia Fed
eral district and which appointment
expected to be made this week by
President Coolidge. Judge J. W. Til-
son, who is filling a recess appoint
ment as judge of the Middle district,
is to vacate the bench, a* he ha-*
been nominated judge of the Unit* !
States customs court of New York
The candidates for the judge.-h.
are Bascom S. Deaver. district attor
ney of the Middle district cour.
Judge Blanton Fortson of Athen-.
—D O C T O R—
FRANK CRANE SAYS
How To Leoro
A school-teacher ir. one of Dick
ens' stories has a pupil study th»
-pelling of botany and then go out
and work in the garden.
Thus the spelling is impressed up
on his mind.
He wasn't much of a school-teach
er, but his idea was sound.
The best way to learn is to learn
om doing.
All knowi-dge
i of Foi>yt
i C. R. Crisp
s connected with
learn a langung
outlay for a son la estimated at $1,-
500, while at Antioch the average
freshman needs only $400 besides
his earnings.
The Vocational aims of students in
clude agriculture, architecture, art,
business, engineering, medicine, eco
nomics, law, etc.
The average weekly wage while
pursuing these course* is $22 in the
freshman year and $35 in the senior
year. They complete the Antioch i
course in five years. I
Thus the student has already learn- j
ed the most important thing of all in
an education, that is, how to take
care of himself.
When a nan works his way through
college he appreciates what education
he gas, just a* a horse is healthy
becuu.-e he has to walk after every ,
mouthful he eats.
NL
' ^ Never a cat v
so Beautiful • „
andNever a car so Good
Busi
nty ,
oug •
dge-hip during i
Thei
, he'd ii
' ting the
da\
"-•rate with the schools
j in assisting boys and girls
! a practical education.
dim
COUNTY
of thir
^d by a thousand nrl-a*
e labor-saving machines,
grain, thresh it. pile up the
COURT IN
MONDAY
SESSION
enablin'
day. fudge E. It. IIin
and Solicitor Carlisle Gil
mg the State in the pr
students to earn
Representatives of
f -ty-two States of the Union and
or - from Canada were present. Nich-
' oh - Ricciardi, President «.f th ■ Na
tional A -r.ciation of Vocational Edu
cation, said:
| "Under the present system, stud-
, ents are taught various vocations,
from watchmaking to hair dr* s- ng.
during their high school terms. When
j they graduate front high school they
Employment condition.-; are not! are ready to hold a position. In
satisfactory in New York State and ! -Mr. W. J. Donnelley has had the junior college they are permitted tl
Governor Smith instructs public | care of the post office building ever ( work at remunerative employment,
officials to help “take up the slack” since it was first opened to the pub-; during the mornings and attend
by putting men to work «*n public i lie in IBIS. He has faithfully per- classes during the afternoon. They
enterprises. j formed his duties, a^ is well known I can continue their education on
That should be. automatically, part .by th.- public. He is one of Mil-(through college, and then their earn-
t>f National and State programmes. J ledgeville's good citizens, as he is ing power will be sufifeient to pay
of 40.(1
r they i
ed the
The Baptist Women's Missionary
Union will observe Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday of next week as days
of prayer for home missions.
Services in charge of the different
circles will be held at the church
each afternoon at .1:30 o’clock. The
Y. W. A. will hold the services one
afternoon, all the ladies of the Bap
tist church are invited to be pres
ent at each of these services.
A farm, r finds something for hi- • known as an
farm hand* and his own hands to do man by all.
hon
. straight forward th<
Wii
good farmer keeps his
work, earning their keep
liauling wood or otherwise.
National and State governments,
all needing roads, canals, drainage,
all sorts of improvements, should
find work fo r everybody willing to
work, and at decent pay.
on say
K»2 years old, because he
days' work "very day
eighty-one
He did ten thi
when he changed man’s lighting
system from kerosene to electricity.
Hi* habit of working two days in
one accounts for the fact that
mentally he is forty, not eighty-one.
nind slays young in
old prematurely be
cause, badly organized civilization
rives them nothing to do cxe-pt talk
and dress when their children are
, within reach of civiliza
tion, sell their valuable furs to
white traders and w ar coats of
leather and cheap, ready-made suits.
They ran sympathize with some
farmer, that s.-!| cream and butter to
citips and (at oleomargarine.
"Flaming youth,” danring, drink
ing o- shooting worries other cou i-
tries also. Lawyers from
France and Britain are watching n
Berlin murder trial. Hans Krantz,
*ged nineteen, helped his young
frirnd, Scheller, and Scheller's sister,
Hildegard. to pass an evening pleas
antly with dancing, tobacco and much
drink. Hildegard. onlv sixteen.
to her bedroom, and Hnns, attached
to Hildegard, told the girl’s brother
he ought to kill Stephan. He did
it. then killed himself.
The question in. did Krantz com
mit murder when he told his friend,
“Aveng* your sister’s honor by kill-
r, : movi
ons is the fact that actual
pictures of human beings
were sent through the ether, with
out wires, across the Atlantic
Ocean.
Human beings actually saw each
other, separated by three thousand
miles of water.
If that is done by a race ti
17,000 years from the Stone fi
who can doubt that a million y«
hence our race will see pictures, c
ing through the ether, of life on oth
er plunets.
Mr. Bonfil.s, through his l)i
Post, tells the world he want*
family in the United States to
home, automobile and radio,” because
“this Mould tremendously increase
the* happiness and prosperity of all
our people.”
t would have seemed preposti
that anybody but
the Emperor and a few of the great
should own a bathtub. There was
'stalling the
first bathtub in the White House, on
the ground that it was not d< mo-
cratic. The Uonfil* trinity of com
fort—home, automobile and radio—
for every family will be realized,
plus freedom from worry
more important than the other three.
expenses and enable them ac
tually to save money.”
This plan is already actually carri-
out at Antioch, a small college
wn in Ohio, where the business
en cooperate with the college and
the student works part of the time
and studies part of the time. Thus
hile at Princeton the average yearly
Mr. L. M. Hall while climbing <
a fence at his home in the south
western part of the county, the past
Sunday fell and broke his colar bon
The injury was a painful one, an
had to be given attention by a phy
sician.
Mr. Hall is well known in Baldwii
County, and was nominated foi
County Surveyor in the recent pri-
Today’s Buick brings to its owners a
higher degree of beauty than any other
car in the Buick field has ever offered—
Accompanying this outward beaut)
and giving it real meaning—is the
superlative goodness and reliability of
Buick engineering.
See Buick—drive it—compare it with
others costing a great deal more—and
you’ll agree there was never a car so
beautiful and never a car so good!
SEDANS $1195 to >1995 * r COUPES #1193 to $1850
SPORT MODELS #1195 to #1325
AU pritrt Co.h. Flint. Mhh.. ttntmmmt tax to be tided. The GJLA.C. Internet
the tmo.ldrurahU. it ere,lehte.
RALPH S1MMERSON
MILLEDGEVILLE. GEORGIA.