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Copyrighted 1938 by Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.) )
Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.)
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Qopyrighted 1938 Ui Sinclair ficfining Company (Ire.}
Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.)
A 4 ”~ N
M. C. Hartley Agent, Alamo.
i i e S
Q-x
sprentice Trainirg Has Appeal
2 % Q 3
Apprentice Trainirg Has Appeal
[ W in the South
By ~ cOTQ {
For Young Workers in the So
Rl e iel s
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& Drickmason Apprentice Receiving Instruction &
3
APPRENTI(_‘E training hasg De
ecome an important feature of
many large industrial plants in the
United States. One of the Jatest
programs of this nature which aime
at providing an adequate supply of
gkilled workerz, has been launched
by the Tennessee Coal, Iron and |
Railroad Company in Birmingham,
Ala. The program consists of a
four-year course and is designed to
train young men as all-arcund,
skilled journeymen in their respec
tive crafts. At present a_::pz/oxi-i
mately sixty zpprentices are en
-rolled, a
@ The instruction =zchedules cover
fourteen trades. The time of the
-apprentice ic divided between the
:shop where he obtains practical ex- |
Becotland Yard Draws Line
Officials of Scotland Yard wiil not
take up the investigation of erime out
slde of London unless and unfil a
#pecial request has been made by a
focal police force to the British home
«ffice.
Many Wise Kiddier
@Sensitive and Imsxinative, children
aave a facnlty of ignoring mingy things
they don't understand.
| perience, and the class room where
'{ he studies a course related to his
craft, supplied by the International
Correspondence ‘3eheols, - Study
courses cover such trades as me
chanical drawing, matheniatics,
blue print reading and construction
design. Shop work and the related
study work are coordinated go each
will supplenient the other.
Apprentices must be between 17
and 24 years when enrolied. They
must be graduates eof a high school
or vocationzl school, or mist pos
sess an equivalent educational
background.
Apprentice applicants are re
aquired o stand aptitude tests and
to measure up to a high standard
of physical and mental fitness be
fore being selected for training. <
s e it e eet ettt Bt et et et |
Spade Struck Silver
A hoard of silver money, dated be
tween 1400 and 1600, was found in &
carden at Eiland, England, by Allen
Wilson when his spading fork siruck
an urn containing 1.176 eninz
Washington New York Flights
A daily fiight between Waghinet o
ind New York was fhnogurated by
the federal sutliorities in 1019,
Whee'er County Bagle, Alamo, Georeia December 23 1988
i By GENE ¢
’JUST HUMAS © American Newa Emfufi!},?&
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“Teacher Says He’s 8 Brighiest Bird in School!”
“That's Becaom OV Sea Shines Through His Bean™
gari ey L -
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TW i eLTR A
WIS 5,
THESRS . B
I'T’S TIME...
TO THINK OF DISTINCTIVE
GIFTS FOR THOSE CLOSE
TO YOU. THERE IS NOTH
ING SO PERSONAL AS YOUR
PHOTOGRAPRH.
Come in now, before the rush of Christmas
shopping.
SAPP'S STUDIO
Nesxt to Smith’s Bakery
Vidalia, Ga.
Priced as Low as Six for $1.50
-A—"—-——'——-mu————m*‘-‘—-———-——-————-———l
s |
Radio Death-Wave VMay Soon .
® T k i ;
Aid War On Insect Hordes
J. F. Witkowski
Principal, School of Radio, International Correspondence Schools
Associate Member, Instituse of Radio Engineers
FOR centuries man has kaitled
against the insects for suprem- |
acy. To date the battle is still not
won. Man has called science t.ul
bis aid to develop methods whichl
enable him to slay his insect ene
mles by the millions, but other mil- |
Mons are horn to threaten his ex
fatence by spreading @jscage or
@estroying bis food cupply.
Radio’s short-wavcs, whéee tm
portance in - longdistanee radio
transmission i 3 familiar to all radio |
enthusiasts, are the lateat scientific |
‘wéapon ‘which gives promise us |
bringing nearer man’s victory, at |
least on the food-supply front. As |
experiments continue the possgibil-|
ity increases that we may he able |
to develop what would be in effect |
& radio death-wave for marauding |
insects, and one that would operate |
on a wholesale gcale. |
At the present stage of develop- |
ment, an adjustable short-wave |
. transmitter is connected to twot
i condenser test plates. Plants bear- |
ing the insects which are to be|
killed are placed between the two |
plates. The radio waves induce |
currents in the insects’ bodies |
which make them hot to the touch g
and kill them within ten to thirty |
seconds. Since the margin I.<z—|
tween the frequencies which Kkill|
insects and plants is wide, the|
plants are not damaged by the cur-|
rent, ’
So far the death-wave for insects |
bas been used only on a laboratory |
e e
' Graveyard for Horses
i jroomstick, Whisk Broom 11, Pe
te. Pan and many other great
horses are buried in an atiraciive
horse graveyard on the Whitney
farm in Kentucky. Each grave is
marked with a large tombsione.
Engravings Bring SII,OOO
One hundred engravings by Albert
Durer, Sixtenth century German etch
er and engraver, were sold In Londoen
for §II,OOO.
R Y
R YT R "']
| bacs -55':237%/?;“%1‘4’?:?”«'3?%4‘:?3’
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J J. F. Witkowski
zcale, The ultimate objective, of
" course, is to develop it to the point
where the condenser plates can be
placed one at each end of a long
row of pldnts, with the deadly
waves transmitted the entire
length of the row.
Germany Third
Germany ranks third, afier the Unit.
ed States and Bngland, In the produc
ton and consnmption of gun
May Need Giant Siippers
Among the odd things in the Tem:
ple of the Sleeping Buddha in Peip
ing, China, is a pair of giant cloth
tlippers which lie at the sect of the
large reclining figure of Buddha.
They will come in handy, it is said,
in case he ever walks in his sleep,=
Collier's Weekly,
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| largest bla lades! Made by t! insist on {1 e \@
yest blade makers y the world* JE \©A gy
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| double-cdge be e 52 AV
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Hints so Gardeners
by Cilbert Dentley :
Flower Expert =. .
wl Ferry Sced Institute
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A let b Einy -cefvkindon sWK O
E Soils Flowers Prefer
; GARDENE'RS will have better suc
‘| cess with their flowers if care |
fi is taken to plant them in the most |
‘ suitable soil available, for certain |
I flowers have rather peculiar prefer- |
: ences, {
Even though you may have beds |
or plots of good, rich soil, there are |
some flowers that will not do as |
‘| well in it as they might in poorer |
soil. j |
! The most satisfactory flowers for |
'| soil that is generally poor are nas '
’ turtium, love-lies-bleeding, Joseph’s
coat, celosia, alyssum, California
poppy, calendula, love-in-a-mist and
hollyhock, ¢
Zinnia, petunia, portulaca, snap
dragon, stock, heliotrope, marigold
l and galvie do best in a rich soil.
Soil that is heavy and which con
taing clay is good for sweet peas, .
pansies, stocks, carnations, scabi
osas, snapdragons and most of the
popular perennials. In general, a
heavy goil retains more moisture
and is cooler than a light soil. !
t Plants that like a heavy goil also
] like cool, moist weather, |
1 ¥lowers that prefer a light soil !
| include petunia, portulaca, celosia,
| hollyhock, love-in-a-mist, annual |
phlox, calliopsis, nicotiana and all
the climbers, Thig type es soil i 3
| good for the varieties that Ilike
| warmth and do not require m‘}it’h
| water. s
{ ¥or flower gardens that arc par- {
| tially shaded, calendula, balgdm, |
| mignoneite, pansy, vinca and many |
| of the perennials are advised. |
| The following, which require com- |
paratively little moisture, can be |
; grown well in gardens which dry !
out quickly: Carpet of Snow alys- 1
sum, African daisy, cosmos, petunia,
| portulaca, kochia, sunfiower, ver- |
i bena and wvinca. They will often
| thrive during drouths. ®
] : il sTt |
| Origin of Word “Bunk”
I The mzember for the Bunicombe dis-
Mlrict in the congressional discussion
of the Missouri Compromise (1820)
| persisted in long speeches despite
| the boredom and impatience of his
I:f-:]?cw members. The incident is
reputed to be the origin of the name
as well as the words bunkum and
bunk. ;
|
Rz Coral Always Prizcd
{ It is red coral that is and abways |
| has been prized, not golely for gew- E
| elry and Luttons, but as a charm to I
i bring safety, health and secrets not !
| revealed to the ordinary person. As
| ancient Gauls rushed headlong In
| to battle, they trusted their safety to
| their swords, strength and the
| “magic” coral imbedded in their
i shields or helmets, Many Italians
| and Indians regard coral as protec
tion against the ‘‘evil eye.”” The
world’s rad coral comes from the
reefs off the Mediterranean coast of
Africa, says the Washington Post,
| and Is obtained chiefly by Italians
Hints for Homemakers
{ By Jane Rogers ¢
e T
3;\‘( /k ; _ * \i ./
by b e e eAI AN
BOL e A N
G DR
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¥E/E'VE been delving seriously
YW inito ke decorating and mem
chandising ficld, and in our quest
for news of homefurnishing trends
we've discovered color isß going to
play an extremely important part
this fall and winter in the decora
tion of your home and mine. Ot’
all the colors, yellow with its tona.l|
range is to be outstanding. This
means it will be featured in uphol
stery fabries, in wallpaper, in paint
and in draperies. A logical choice,
yves, for it is cheery, warm and
grand to live with during the dull
winter months. ¢ &
Even your new fall window
gshades will be in color. A tone
called chrysanthemum yellow is the
newest one on the horizon. When
hung at your windows it gives your
roomg a rich warm glow that is
extremely pleasing; then too, it
geems to bring the sunshine in
doors even on grey days with the
result that your home is a more
pleasing, hospitable place to live in,
We've had another tip from the
decorators—hang two shades at
your windows they say-—one for
inside color harmony, the second
for outside street uniformity—and
thereby save as much as 43 per cent
heat. This last is a substantial
iten to consider when the winter
snow and cold set in in earnest. m
Iy sure your cloth shades are
unz oon new rollers—of well sea
i2d wood-—only then can you be
vour shades will hang straight
irue, and will work smoothly
silently. @
Pretty Close Line Drawn
By government decree, Cuban drug
stores are limited to merchandise nat
ural to the profession. Candies, toys
and other miscellaneous. goods are
harred
No Tone in Early Piano
Speaking of strange pianos, an
American popped up with a really
curious one back in 1872. It was a
practice imstrument to enable play~
ers to perfect finger movements
without -bothering about tone.
Fly Most Filthy
The common housefly has been
recognized as one of mankind's
worst enemies among the many live
ing creatures. Os all the verminm,
they are ‘the most filthy; of all
spreaders of . disease, they are
among the most deadly.
Many Childless Marriages
Os all marriages in England and
Wales, 88 per cent are chflxu. 3