Newspaper Page Text
Richmond Hill
Soldier Graduates
At Great Lakes
GREAT LAKES, 111. (FHT
NC) — Electronics Technician
Third Class Janies F. Heilman,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
F. Heilman of Richmond Hill,
Ga., was graduated from the
basic Electronics Technician
School at the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, 111.
The 38-week course provided
a sound background in the
maintenance and repair of all
shipboard and shore-station
electronic equipment and other
types of communication, detec
tion and ranging equipment
employing electronic circuits.
He learned how to use preci
sion test equipment such as
cathode-ray scopes, frequency
meters, and vacuum-tube test
ers.
Nearly two thirds of
current G. I. Bill beneficiaries
take college level courses
compared to 30 per cent after
World War 11.
LUGGAGE
TRANSISTOR RADIOS
ELECTRIC RAZORS
WATCHES AND CLOCKS
DIAMOND WEDDING SETS
NECKLACE
BILL FOLDS
BRACELETS
TIE TACKS
And Many Other Items To Select From
Anderson Jewelry
On Main Street
At The Traffic Light
PEMBROKE, GEORGIA
IT’S CHRISTMAS!
M “Christmas is for children,” I heard a wise man say,
z And how I yearned to be a child again on Christinas Day!
f
g A child with laughter in his heart and wonder in his eyes,
JHdEp* And faith that secs a radiant Star in cold December skies;
Who listens for enchanted sleigh bells in the frosty night,
3 011 ^ IC S '^’ ^ lr * s ^ Childs wa y t° light!
Y es > Christmas is for children! May this one special be,
Jr And bring its joy and magic to the child in you and me!
Maureen Murdoch
"Contact J. W. O'Berry in Springfield"
SSEIC SAVANNAH
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Why is there usually a sea
breeze on the beach by day and
often a land breeze at night’’
The delightful sea breeze
enjoyed by so many at beaches
is caused by the fact that land
heats up faster than water.
Thus, the sun heats the land •
along the seashore during day
light and heat radiation rises.
As the warm air over the land
area rises, cooler air from
above the water moves in hori- <
zontally to replace it. This
sets up a breeze from the I
ocean and it usually continues I
throughout the day. At night, •
the land area cools quickly and (
becomes cooler than the ocean.
As a result, the flow of air
reverses itself, and a land
breeze is often observed. The
calm that so often accompanies
dawn or late night at the beach
in summer is explained by the
fact that the land loses its great ]
heat many hours after sunset,
thereby reaching an equal
temperature with the nearby ।
water just before, or even at, i
dawn.
Savannah Area Vocational
Technical School Divided
Into Three Branches
—
c
BILLY STEWART
A Bryan Boy Has Big Part In Operation of the Schools
Pembroke Editor shown through the school on Wheat
hill, and was amazed to learn of the job that was being done
for our young people, and some older ones too prepare them
for better paying jobs. Courses are available at night which
make them where anyone can take them. Read the fol
lowing story which will give you a better understanding of
these great schools.
Schools—The Savannah Area
Vocational Technical School is
divided into three branches,
Wheathill, Cynthia, and Bay.
The schol is one of twenty
three such institutions located
throughout Georgia in an ef
fort to place opportunity of oc
cupational education at the
post-secondary and adult level
within the reach of every Geor
gian. At present, over 500 stu
dents from the coastal empire
are enrolled in Savannah Tech’s
day program.
Curriculum — The schools
curriculum is designed to meet
the demands of industry in the
Savannah area as well as in
the State and Nations in light
of population trends, industrial
growth, job potentials and
present and future needs. The
curriculum for the school is di
vided into four main areas,
Technical, Skilled trade, Busi
ness Education, and Health Oc
cupations.
In the Technical field, courses
are offered in such areas as
Electronics, Chemical Technol
ogy, Drafting, Instrumentation,
Forest Harvesting Technology,
Civil Technology, to mention
just a few.
In the skilled trade area, the
school offers courses in Barber
ing, Brick Masonry, Cosmetol-
ogy, Air Conditioning, Mechan
ics, Auto Body Repair, Elec
trical Appliance repair, and
others.
In Business Education three
areas of training are offered;
Secretarial Science, Accounting
Bookkeeping, and Clerk Typ
ing.
In health occupation the
school has an excellent program
in Practical Nursing which can
lead to licensing by the State
as an L.P.N.
In addition to the full time
day program, the school offers
extensive programs in the eve
ning. This program is broken
down into two main areas, the
pre-employment and the exten
sion courses.
The programs arc designed to
prepare students to enter new
occupations or to assist employ
ed workers either to increase or
up date knowledge and skills
used in present employment or
to learn a new skill for better
employment. Some of the
courses offered in the evening
school are Air Conditioning,
Drafting, Brick Masonry, FCC
examination review, Welding,
Instr umentation, Electronics,
Diesel and Auto Mechanics,
Radio-TV repair,. Typing,
Shorthand, and others too
numerous to name.
The school is under the direc
tion of C. W. Coons, School Di
rector with Art Pollock and
Robert Young branch coordi
nators.
The Evening School is under
the direction of Billy F. Stew
art, Coordinator of Adult Edu
cation. Stewart is a graduate of
The University of Georgia and
The Bryan County High
School. He lives in Pembroke
with his wife Rachel and four
children. He is a former Voca
tional Agriculture instructor,
industrial Arts instructor, and
was employed by the United
States Dept, of Agriculture
several years before returning
to the field of Education.
Gloves Feel The
Midi Influence 39
Gauntlet gloves are “in.”
To complement the mid-calf
length coat, you’ll see gloves
with buckles and lasso at the
wrist.
Color is Neutral ... in beige,
brown and white leather or tex
tured nylon.
Ribbon Stripes ... of brown
grosgrain run diagonally on the
white nylon gauntlet, which is
textured to look like leather
and is belted at the wrist.
Russet Leather gauntlet is
buckled at the wrist and out
lined in heavy cream stitching
to match the beige leather lin
ing at the cuff.
Lasso Tie . . . gathers in the
wrist of the brown leather
gauntlet.
Bold Stitching ... in black
outlines the cream leather
gauntlet that is gusseted and
buckled in silver at the wrist.
ABOUT ' \
YOUR lIHOME
Not many home gardners know
that humus or organic matter
made from leaves, weeds grass
clippings and different forms of
manure and chemical fertilizers
do two entirely different things
for a garden.
Both types of fertilizers are
important because they comple
ment each other. Humus mainly
promotes the proper texture of
the soil, thus allowing air to
come into it, making the soil
easier to cultivate. Humus al
so increases the water-holding
capacity of soil and prevents
the washing and blowing away
of topsoil.
Family Project:
Ornanienl-Making
in Old Countries
That twinkling bauble in
glowing colors hanging
front your tree was no
doubt mass-produced by
American wonder-makers,
but up till fairly recently
these little beauties were
part of an industry which
involved whole families.
Just as in medieval Eur
ope families spent life
times weaving tapestries
to hang on the manoral
walls, so did Eastern Euro
pean and Japanese fami
lies devote family skills to
creating joy for your
Christmas in the form of
beautiful ornaments.
©ICW.INC. /
Many of our readers
will recollect how in their
childhood they were en
thralled with the many
colors, intricate shapes
and sizes of these orna
ments. Frequently they
were heavy, and bowed the
tree limbs, but they lasted
from one Christmas to an
other, and from one gen
eration to another.
The fragile bubbles of
glass, which are so much a
part of the decorations of
the Christmas tree, were
once largely a cottage in
dustry in Europe and
Japan.
In the tiny villages that
cling to steep mountain
sides in eastern Europe
whole families shared in
the manufacturing pro
cess.
Special shapes and de
signs are the exclusive
property of certain fami
lies, the patterns frequent
ly dating back for cen
turies unchanged.
Using a Bunsen burner,
the father carefully blew
the thin glass tubing to
the desired shape, with the
aid of an iron mold. His
son removed the hot orna
ment. to a cooling table.
Next the mother silvered
the inside, and the (laugh
ters applied painted de
signs.
- © ICW, INC.
Mechanical methods, de
veloped in recent years by
American glass manufac
turers, have brought this
picturesque little industry
to an eclipse, except for
rare instances where the
handcraftsman art is still
cherished.
0
JOB-TRAINING PROJECTS
The Labor Department and
the Department of Health.
Education and Welfare have
announced 144 new classroom
type projects designed to train
7,503 persons in needed skills.
The projects will be conducted
in 31 states.
Mr. and Mrs. Red Anderson
and daughter Julie of Savannah
were Sunday dinner guests of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.
M. Anderson this week-end.
U.S. confirms call for all-out
effort in Vietnam.
Chemical fertilizers, on the
other hand, provide the elements
for plant growth that are lack
ing in the soil. Just which ones
are needed can easily be dis
covered by asking the State
Agricultural Stations of almost
every state.
Every time a flower is picked
or a radish used from a garden
a certain amount of phosphorous
potassium, calcium or nitrogen
is being removed also. Since
these are essential for normal
growth in a garden, it is easy
to see how necessary it is to
replace the reservior in the soil
poorei.
THE PEMBROKE JOURNAL Thursday. December 19J1968-
“Christ Is Born”
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67- MAT PAGE 27
FAITHFUL TO THE SPIRIT OF HIE FIRST CHRISTMAS is “The Nativity,” by the Florentine
painter Mariotlo Albyrtinelli (1474-1515). The simple scene presents the Christ Child, with Mary
and Joseph, in a realistic setting, and background detail suggests a hillside manger, typical of the
rocky eaves which were used for stables in Bethlehem. Painting is in the Uffizi Gallery, in Florence,
Italy.
■A Jr rk 4' I
Bailly v
-■ > i TaMrui-—--
Ladies’ Defender, Civil War cannon cast from cooking utensils
donated by Columbus housewives. (PRN)
(Ga. Dept, of Industry & Trade)
TOUR
GEORGIA
(PRN) EDITOR’S NOTE: and
X * / - V.. . . .
This is the fourth in a series of
Georgia History quizzes. The
test has been compiled by the
Tourist Division, Georgia
Department of Industry and
Trade.
1. The Civil War began and
ended in the month
of
2. The bloodiest battle
ever fought on Georgia soil
occurred at
. . September 19-20,1863.
3. They are two National
Forest. They are
and
the
4. “Okefenokee” is a
Seminole Indian word
meaning
5. Georgia’s present flag
was adopted in
(year).
6. Three words from
PJato’s Republic appear on the
Great Seal of the State of
Georgia. They are
and
7. The Indians named a
North Georgia waterfall
Amicalola. Translated, it
means
8. A resort was built
around natural springs that
produce 70,000 gallons of
water a minute. Located near
Albany, the area is known
as
9. The “Marshes of Glen”
was written by
10. In 1936, 200 people
were killed when a tornado
struck , Ga.
11. “Strange Fruit” and
Killers of the Dream” were
written by the late
of Clayton, Georgia.
12. The Abbey and
Monastary of Our Lady of the
Holy Ghost is located
at .Georgia.
13. Factors Walk is located
in ,Georgia.
14. The Mackay House
stands in ,
Georgia, one of the “colonial
frontier towns”.
15. The
.. is the oldest chartered
State University in America.
16. The
is a circular painting depicting
the Battle of Atlanta on July
22,1864.
17. The group of Indians
known as the “Five civilized
tribes” consisted of
the ,
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Gardner’s Grocery
BUTCHTON, GEORGIA
Wh^ro 80- and 280 Join
Regular Size
FAB 29c
End Cut Pound
Pork Chops 39c
3 Lbs.
CRISCO 79c
Mrs. Pickfords Pound
OLEO 19c
Hunts 14 Oz.
CATSUP 19c
Tall Can
Mackerel 19c
"FINEST FOODS AT LOWEST PRICES**
If You Can Find It Anywhere, Wo Haro It
Page 7
LONGTERM
FARM CREDIT
~ i- ^^~
The door to long-term
credit solutions for your
financial problems is the
door to your local Land
Bank Association. It is
there to help you with a
Land Bank loan on land
— to consolidate debts,
buy land, make improve
ments in your operation.
Land Bank loans a'e
available for long terms
at reasonable interest
rates to keep payments
low . . . and you can .pay
in advance without pen
alty. There are many ad
vantages. Stop in . . . talk
it over with your Land
Bank Association man
ager today.
FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION
OF
STATESBORO
Northside Drive W.
Statesboro, Ga.