The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, December 01, 1922, Image 1

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THE MILLEDGEVILLE NEWS VOL. 22, No. 52. Eatabllghed October 12, 1901. MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., FRIDAY, DEC. 1, 1922. WERE HERE THURSDAY Large Number of Friends Of College Students And Others Spend Thanks giving in Milledgeville. Thursday^ Thanksgiving day, many visitors came to Milledge- vilk to spend the holidays here with students of the Georgia State College for W'owen and the Geor gia Military College. For the day practically every business house in the city was closed and proprietors and employ ees joined in in celebration of the annual occasion. In a number of respects this Thanksgiving was marked with unusual pleasure and throughout the day it appeared that ail Milledgeville had unanimously declared to observe the day as one set aside for pleasure and theh dis playing of a spirit of appreciation. At 10:30 o’clock a large congre gation witnessed a union Thanks giving service at the Methodist church. This service was presid ed <i\er by Rev. T. G. Watts, pas tor of the Presbyterian church. The principal entertainment here for Thanksgiving day was a football game between the Georgia .Military College and Piedmont College. Tiie attendance at this game was unusually large and the game was well played by the two teams appearing upon the gridiron, resulting in a score of 26 to 12 in favor of the local team. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE ft, FOR TWO TRAINS STORE OPEN HERE There was a change of sched-1 ule of two trains on the Macon Branch of the Georgia Railroad Atlanta and on last Sunday morning. The two trains affected were the two morning trains and the change of schedule was as fol lows : Compe 9^'} ledgevimi and Grocery Store iLiun i jhuvv i aLL P HERE LAST SUNDAY) For the firsGiTTm ,„ M e „J PIEDMONT COLLEGE TEAM Ire of years snow fell in Mil- lVu\. «—f-vW IvLlNCt, GKLbN io CALLED by DEATH Opens Mr. Lawrence Green, for many years a highly esteemed citizen irille in November this year, Locals Win Out By Score Of <)f the Meriwethcr community,pas- e date being Sunday the 29th. oa 10 n.. ed away Monday. Tile frozen flakes commenced ? To 12 Over Strong \i r . Q reen j ia( j been failing in South Carolina Team health for seve ral months, due to Another up-to-date grocery store The first train which reached h as been opened in Milledgeville in to fall about the middle of morn ing Sunday and for a time it ap peared that the ground would be-, ln wlv lllu3i acaanuimi come clothed with the white par- football games witnessed in Mil- Confederate army throughout prac- Milledgeville at 7:12 has' 'been the "tore fornTrU-'ocrupTed"^'^^ tic,es ’ How f ve * the temperature ledgeville in several years was that ^nTthe"S, *" changed to arrive here at 6:55 nis Pharmacv. corner of Hancock * as M u ' te low eno «g h t0 P r ^ P ,a >’ td ' ert ', rh anksgivmg day be- ^ ‘ ' , , seventeen minutes earlier +han and Wayne streets. vent snow from melting and as a tween the Georgia Military College 1 ne aeceasea 1S urvnt " "> the old schedule. The next This store train which arrived here at lantic and Pacific 10:47 has changed its schedule a syndicate operating a number of to tire ground, and will arrive here at 10:30 grocery stores throughout the' In Hard Fought Game, old age. He was a veteran of the , / ,] " .• 1 Civil war having served in the In one ot the most sensational ^ " ,, . .. », consequence the flakes disappear- and Piedmont College. The score number of near relatives. Pacific° P Te e a Comnanv ed a,most rapidly as they fell was 20 to 12 in favor of G. M. C. / Ihe . funeral and interment took i „ to the crrnnnH The game was witnessed by a place in Milledgeville Wednesday which is fifteen minutes earlier country. Monday the doors of the MR. W, the change of schedule will stfjre will probably be thrown open make it possible to spend fif- to servin S thc public. teen minutes longer in Macon to transact business as may re quire your presence there. With the opening of this store by the Atlantic and Pac : lic Tea PATH HR DR. /UM ON HAS TASS HD AWAY Mr. O. I,, iUnion, of Sparta, fa- her of Dr. Richard Pinion, of this cil\, passed away at a sanitorium n Macon Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Pinion had been in failing Health lor several weeks. The funeral and interment took place in Sparta Friday morning at 11 o’clock. APPLES RETAIL 1ST DIED (\v 1 ork C ity Takes Ten T-hous- end Barrels A Day, Or Sixty 'Thousand Barrels A Week Dur- The Season. Atlanta, Ga. Nov. 30—It lias been a marvelous transformation Pom near bankruptcy in 1920-21 n comparative prosperity in 1922 •—from 10 cent cotton and despair to 25 cent cotton and good cheer in the face of Europe’s scanty pur- according to Atlanta busi ness men. Forrest Adair, Sr., says it is not a miracle. Mr. Adair keeps in close touch with the investment world, the real estate market and business generally throughout the entire country through the exten sive connections of the Adair Real ty and 'Trust Company of Atlanta, of which he is the head. It has the distinction of being the oldest com pany of its kind in the world. It isn’t marvelous, this transfor mation, Mr. Adair points out, when one comes to think of it- when one anal-sizes it and understands it. There has been no miracle. Noth ing has been created by flat of gov ernment. The South itself has dene it. Thc people have lifted themselves by their bootstraps, as it were. That is. being thrown back upon their own resources, the Southern folk were compelled to depend upon themselves, to bring into play their own ingenuity and they have suc ceeded in : 1. Adjusting supply to demand. 2. Financing and marketing in telligently; and 3- Improvising new methods of credit to take thc place of default ed methods of pre-war days. It was all the joint acomplish- tnent of farmers, merchants and bankers of the South, who in their necessity discovered and put in to n>e talents and facilities not be fore realized. It has been a costly but valuable experience. That is, ;t will prove of inestimable value d the South takes the lesson to heart, if it maintains the practices •uni instrumentalities of the achieve ntent and perseveres in self-reli- •utec. business men here sav. large number of fans, probably one afternoon. DIED composed of many vis- HERE WEDNESDAY ‘<&HW SEOOPII BffSS IS ! >f football and the game was one Mi. \\ . S. Brooks, well known .| ia ^ afforded great excitement and , >y a large number cif residents in interest from start to finish. Company Milledgeville has two,this city, passed away at an early 1 At the conclusion of the first syndicate owned grocery stores, hofir Wednesday night after hav-' piarter of the game the two teams which is evidence ot the recogni- , n g suffered a stroke of apoplexy, bad scored an even number of tion of Milledgeville as a trade cen-1 At t] le tune of his death Mr. points. In tiie third quarter G. ter. 1 lie other synd cate grocery Firo 0 k s was at the home of his sis- M. C. succeeded in making a score is that of L. \\ . Rogers Company k . rs . m ] aWi t he misses Moore. He 1 '* thirteen, while the visiting team another of the largest syndicates of; was strjck)ened with apopk . xv at ■ Filed to add another point to the ,his home in Miami, Fla., the'first , alread y T‘ ared to its credit. |of last week and was brought to’ .*>' broktn f fidd runn , in K of Nlc ' I Milledgeville by Mrs. Brocks and ,V1 ’! an ,^? s » feature of the game, daughter. Miss’Mary Brooks. Fri- ' V " ^ I. . J ’ I reclitcd with having done some- pay morning. 1 BACKING MEMBER . , . . . . ... was strick/ened with apoplexy the kind oi>erating stores m the , , . 1 H South. OPEN LETTER BT DR. PAIS SORT. SCHOOLS SENATOR FELTON State School Superintendent Ad dresses Georgia Parents. Urg- I'isit to Schools. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 30.—Senator , ,11 open let- , ; Rebecca Latimer Felton has reach- pectaular work in the tackling jvunt. -One the whole, G. M. C. naturally outplayed the visiting team, though the hundreds of fans ' .vitnessing the game came off the r I "•eld declaring that every man on] iL i.ith ot thc . ams had plaved their 1 iart well and to a finish. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 30.- Evi dence that the Georgia press is ac tively behind the candidacy of Miss Emily -Woodward of V ienna, Ga.- editor of the Vienna News ind sponsored in the Atlanta Jour- ial’s “Good Will” election by the Sloan Paper Company of Atlanta, s seen in the complimentary edi torials the Georgia dailies and weeklies are writing in her behalf. Members of the Georgia Press ar actively behind her with their moral support as well as financial support. ] The following is the ulting from thc game e menibeis ot p( j Atlanta from thc national capi-, q \ j (_* — it I cache 1 s A>- f a ], v , ] K . n . s ) ie was formally sworn ! Heidmout , THE WEATHER leather outlook for the period n ember 27 to December 2, 1022 inclusive, bur the South Atlantic and East ';nb Stoates: Generally fair and ""I weather, with frosts, is intii- during the first part of the "> ik. There is probability of utt ittlcd weather, with showers and ' •nu-uhat higher temperatures, the “"tvr part of the week. Bowie. 1 he retail price of apples in the oral market remains at forty cents dozen and some of the choicest arieties occasionally retail at six- y cents a dozen which is high con- idering the prices that prevail in the northern markets. The crop his year is larger than usual and he wholesale price has been lower- d considerably in the east, but this s not having much effect on the . <; uth, as the transportation charges keep the prices about as high as hey were last year. The New V ork Times states that prices in that city ha\e been cut in half. It •ays: “Wholesale prices in the New York market are half what they vere la>t year. Consumers can my the best fancy Baldwins, one of the best all-round apples in the market, at S3.50 to $4.50 a barrel. Last year at this time the price v as S7.25 to S7.10 a barrel. Fancy Greenings, the favorite cooking ap- )le in New York, is quoted a lit- le higher at $5.25 to S5.50 a bar- el- but Ben Davis is only So.50 to S3 a* barrel. “Northern Spys. one of the ipples that comes to the New York market for table or cooking use, ire Sq to S () a barrel; the famous snow apples, one of the most de- icious fruits that man ever tasted .ire only S4 to $5.50 a barrel and Winter Banana apples, common on the peddlers’ stands all over the city are selling at wholesale at $5 '.o $6.50 a barrel. “Extra fancy Jonathans arc sell ing bv the box at $2.25 to $2.50, and the celebrated Delicious ap ples, which one sees selling yn the apple stands are only $3 to S3-—5 1h;x. These prices are about lalf what they were last year. ‘Receipts of apples in New V ork narkets are about twice the quan- itv of last season, and have been running tip to 400 carloads a week. What a tremendous volumite this is can only he realized by trans forming tbjse figures into barrels at the rate of 150 barrels to the carload—a total of fio.ooo barrels week, 10,000 barrels a day.’’ Atlanta- Nov. 23 ter addressed to the :he Georgia Parent sociation, and to the parents of as a p nited States Senator,! school children, has been prepared Senator George having withheld m flTIlirnP IfitTil/ I B 01 IT by Marvin M. Parks, State School i,; s own commission that Mrs. Fel- (j| [j | flIFH.1 FlfiK I IflHT Superintendent. Following is tne ton might | )C the first i ady Senator * *”l\ LIUlIl lclter ■ To occupy a seat in that august Dear Fathers and Mothers of the body. School Children of Georgia. j Senator Felton, as she is now Probably you know that Wed-: iUng her friends, was the reciji- ir score rc- Thursday: 13 7-W-26 o 0— -12 nesday. JJeiiembcr (>. has been sc! lent of many courtesies while in apart in the United States as School and Teacher Day in the imerican Education Week. Thru aiul f ornu . r Senator he courtesy of the editor of this Ql luncheon, paper, 1 am writing to inform you : that the if 1,000 teachers of Georgia invite you and urge you to visit the schools on that day and Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 30. -Clothing 'manufacturers have sek-cte' light _ Colored fabri s for spring suits in 1 Tien’s wear and this is considered the natural response to demand ror weaves of that kind, according _ , r, . 'to reports received here. It ispre- Eater Senator Hoke ^ mi 1 en 11 d j C f ed ] ie re, however, that manu- tained at a dinner part> at t u f ac (- urers w jn be in the market for Shoreham. Senatoi ic on, » en . darker shades later, as retailers | Washington. Senator Harris tertained her and Senator George 1 Hoke Smith] lie schools on that day and sec t . , c„ n ,t n r mb " our children at work in school. I'-'xV’ . \,' r( . ''The* iruests of j^ 1 ' 1 re<|U,re ’ :c darktT shadcs be past, many parents have neg-" ‘a,? \. it \ {] J ) icn rabrics t0 ba,ance their stwks ‘ ■ctecl to visit the school whicR ^t t ^’holesaler, in the men’s clo the le means so much to the childs wel fare. Every parent ought to try to visit the school on December f>. ( - 0 i 51e k) attend the ceremonies of Let it be known as Teacher’s, Day. ' ( j ie Senate. Miss Marie Craw ford Let the members of the P. T. A.| aild \) a j or 0. H. B. Blood worth, -nd all fathers and mothers endca-|[ r>i assisted Senator Smith in en- vor to make that a great day for ji-i-taining his guests at the Shore- the school. Let the parents v isit | ia \ V dinner party, tiie classes during the day but, at | Con g ress m a n Gordon Lee gave nbliHgP plants and wheat at onflin set-s, ncei Kniniett L. Barn 12 l.-Je. llwni'! 1 per pound at Emmett I some convement hour, let the pub-| N]rs Fc]ton R luncIieon in the _,c exercises he held in the school , 1()Use restaurant before her de- ,-or the children and lor the visi-1 parture Unit ed States Senators t turs - ° n ,1|IS occasion, let a l ,ari 1 v\ alter E George and William ]. ,1 the program he arranged by tbej Harris and Former Senator Hoke ..rents m which talks will be made Smitll were present. o the children, emphasizing tne J necessity for loyal obedience, and' imtmB Airm for hearty co-operation with the B,G LIQUOR ALIO teacher. Honor the teacher on this CAPTURED AFTER CHASE day. Co-operate generously and genuinely with the teacher of your children. Let flowers and encou- agement be given on this occasion. i_et the teacher, who is often dis- ouraged, know today—as never cfore—of the support and co-op- ration of thc parents in the iun- ] streets, portant work of the school. . , , . cloth- aml relatives ot Senator George l g trade are enjoying an active 1U Dr. FiUoii °t Carters, e- ic f aP scason .according to reports 5011 of Senator Felton, who had j from a „ the big centcrs of thc lothing 'manufacturers. The con sumer, as is Tie case in many stor es is buying novelties and this in iome measure is cutting the de mand for staples, but trading is iri.sk all all- 2 the line, reports eceived in Atlanta state. < >ne Cotton Seed Tor Sale GENUINE Cleveland otton seed. One year roni scientflc breeder, est for conditions tig Boll removed But by in Piedmont re ion. Demand next year will more ban equal supply of good seed. Buy early. Price $1.50 per ln-shel. 2-1 -: 1. C. W. SW A IN’. Norwood’ <in. Here arc twelve known cancer acts. They are gathered Gy Dr. . L. Campbell, chairman of the ’ancer Commission of the Medical \ssociation of Georgia, under ar- angement with the American So- iety for 'he Control of Cancer, .vitli headquarters in New York: 1. If an early cancer is complete- y removed, it will not return. 2. There is a time when every .ancer can be cured, for it exists 11 what is known to scientists men s “pre-cancer.” 3. Cancer is first a lump or sore hat “can be felt with the lingers cr seen with the eye,’’ or gives cer- ain definite warnings. If we knew ow to interpret these warnings ancer could he cured. 4. Nine cases out of ten do not ause pain in the early stages. This is unfortunate. 5. Cancer starts as the result of ong continued irritation. If irri- ation is removed, cancer will not develop. 7. Certain definite symptoms precede the rain storm. Thc time s coming when these symptoms A Cadillac automobile con taining 100 gallons of liquor was overhauled at eight o’clock Wednesday morning at the cor ner of Marietta and Foundry , after an eight mile It I chase by County Policeman Cal ..ill encourage the teacher wonder- j Cates in the Lincoln car belong- ully: it will enthuse the pupils to j ing to the county. The two ee their parents take an interest men piloting the whiskey cal' 11 their school. It will help chil-1 abandoned their ear and escap- dren in their school; it will help i ed _ Manufacturer m Atlanta has al- will hi? heeded ready reportt 1 that his road sales- j -3. One hundred thousand peo- *ven have I.-s-ked from 25 to 30'pie in the United States are anmi- ,ier cent of ’hi Spring trade and ally aff'icted with some form of .he tendency is toward higher cancer. This is on the authority prices in the Spring. 1 f the Public Health Service. 9. C )ne woman in every eight, vvho is over forty years of age, dies of cancer. Three times as many women as men die with can cer between 35 and 45 years of age. pay you to buy from us. Our prices Fiom that time on the ratio s more are reasonable nearly equal. SCOTT—PARKER CO. | ro. Every person over 35 years Royal and’.Corona Dealers, of age who is not sure alamt a Kjc Cherry St. Macon, (iu. | imip, sore or unnatural discharge | liould consult a competent physi- Lime and cement, plaster and fire ] ian and demand a thorough exam- brick at Emmett L Barnes’. nation. TYPEW RPTHRS W e keep in stock at all times n j built typewriters of all makes. If you need a typewriter it wi According to a telephone call | to the county police, the liquor 1 Cabbage plants, and fall seed Georgia Kye and Wheat at Emmett L. Barnes’. the whole school; it will help the hole community, bringing about a etterspirit of co-operation It carknQcked down and injured, vi uphold the hands of the tea- f 1 ■her who is helping ,0 shape the Sheriff A. W Smith of Milton | ives of your children and who is j county, when he attemp 1 iclping to determine the future of 1 halt the automobile, our country. j Officer Cates, responding to the telephonic appeal for help, j sighted the whiskey car on the | Howell Mill road and set out in pursuit, the chase ending within 1 the city limits. One of the passengers left his hat in the whiskey car when j he made the hasty exodus. The Linholn referred to in the above news item was not a “Baby Lincoln” but a "Daddy.” NOTICE Commencing the first of Decem ber the Ladies Exchange will be conducted for 011c month in the store of Mr. Emm e tt L. Barnes. Those wishing to join the Exchange will please telephone 304. 11-3-41 Midfi Genie Claire Barn c s PlJBLlfc KTEXOttltAPHEB—Let ters written from dictation, careful c ipics made of important papers’,— in,v tiling that may he typewritten. Miss Marion Whitaker, at tiie “ Bet tor Shop” tin the Singer’Sewing Ma- rilin' Offii-e) Charges reasonable, 11 H ft. Cranberries, the big O.pecod her ry and bulk Cocoa in barrels at 12 l-2c. per potind. Just think $5*00 In Gold Won by Harper My rick for Raising 4 Largest Turnips from C &. K’s Prize Turnip Seed Culver & Kidd Drug Company ••OF COURSE” Phones 224 and 240