Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, December 28, 1920, Image 8

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TUESDAY, DECEMBER J8, 1920 UNION-RECORDER MILLEDGEVILLE. q\ CHRISTMAS PASSED QUIETLY IN THIS CITY REV. THOS. G. WATTS IS CALLED AS PASTOR C!dl|Santa Claus V'isTted tine Chi!-' drtn and Happiness Pervaded the Heart* and Homes of Our j People. He Has Accepted Pastorate of the Presbyterian Church and Will Come to This City Early in January. The members of the Pre-hvterian * Christmas pas.ed quietly in this con l e( , ation at fl meetinv he l,l Sun immunity. cull to Rev. Thos. I day extended There was not an accident or any G / Watu , of Monticello. Fla., to rficorder tv mar the pleasure of the s . , . . awasort. The only noise was made fv the small boy with poppers and^ crackers. There wag a large cro «ity Christmas eye, thougl not as large ns has been see similar occasions. The pen in a rush making their final mas purchtres. and the n- and their clerks were kept t til late in the night. Old Santa Claus came on t me fill ing the stockings o* the i hiljren, who ’.vent to bed with happy attic pition and awoke .Christmas joyous realization. The day’ Orve as pastor of their church , Mr. Watts has accepted the call lorwa.i w ju come to Milledgeville early suary, and preach his first ser- ' i- .1 . "e second Sunday, believe tha* c JUDGE L. T. HALL IS FATALLY HURT c ndition. you will regret not buy- j way. K ow these this place some day. Two splendid lots on Wall street: dred pounds. weiftht from five pou” ** J* *« , 0Ur - Is to fiv, L 1 off e , e(i . nv * hot. Lloyd T. Hall, 30 years of age, iudge of the Juvenile court of Rich mond county and city editor of the Augusta Chronicle, died at an early hour Saturday afternoon as the re- P ail ’ the hou “ es on ‘ hct ,ot the y wiK rent, for twenty dollars a month. Mrs. Richards home on Liberty The old Cause place, next to Mc- Comb hotel, a closein place for some __ business man. This place offered at between Clark and Columbia streets, j choice of the pies fe 3 m,n hit a price that should make it sell. 1 “* * t “ u, “" Four houses and the lot known as old Georgia Sanford place. This property will sell soon. If you re- , v... of the Presbyterian ‘■sea, ard tr.9r« e ] that they are fortunate (with dkwn- «d clear and cold, and wa^ in (deal pood Christma; day. A feeling of cheer pervaded Hie atmosph(»e, and % Imam A' every one seemedjhap riven, and aside/f'1 Gifts the py with the Spirit of the day., and best wishes were car£* of life were laid >» There ware many family ipiiiions . hjlld around thy re-ides, as a large •ember of the young people who had keen away had returned to spend the Oirist/nas season at home. In the after' oon and evening the 1 picture shows were attended l(y large j crowds. Sunday morning brought about a change in the weather, but in spite I of the inclemency llie churches were * lo*'Bectk*2 the services of Mr. Watts, [as he comes kyhiy'.-eoomnitnded as a pastor and preacher. He has dur ing h ; s pastorate of the Monticello! church done splendid work, and the church has grown and prospered un der his ministry. Mr. Watts recently visited Mill-' >’dgt ville and spent several days as the gue t of Mr. a: ' Mrs. L. H. An drews. During his stay here he met a lumber of the members of the’ Presbyterian church and our citizens All of them were deeply impressed with his personality and ability. I[y. will be given a most cordial m tiers ation and thb people of Milledgeville gen erally. IV will lie given a most coi we’fljilr e to the city by the mem of uva Presbyterian congrega suit of injuries received when an automobile which he was driving crashed into a telegraph pole near Wrens, Ga. Mr. Hall was carried to Augusta a short time after the accident, and taken to a hospital, where death claimed him from a fractured skull. Mr. Hall, whose home is in Detp- stop. was on his way to visit bis narents for the holidays. Ho was .ccompanied by R. Horace Dozier, of th’s city and B. T. Be'.hune, Snorts automobile escaped injuries. It is understood that the automobile skid dtd in turning a shnrp curve. : id before Mr. Hall could regain control the machine had crashed into the; pole. M . Hell is prominently connected, in W. ihington county and is widely, known throughout this section of the 1 stalq. He attended the University | ' Geo , ; a and Mercer University. Following h : s college course he prac ticed law. He was an officer in the Eighty-second division during the war, having attended the fiyst officers reining school in Atlanta. Funeral arrangements will be an-i nour.ced later. street. A most desirable place. Two nice homes just across the Georgia railway, the Dismuke and the Bowden homes. Either of these places are all that you could ask. Nice large lots go with them. The Joseph home on Montgomery 1 and Clark streets; nice lot, and nice ", pair 1 am »ure th ^S> the pigs. I want to keen , P k and sell, say, eighty hogs ’ w" * 0 *» PXm. They are cheap a ’ t „ at! N sand dollars for the b» n T*> any man will take the e m ’ bu ‘ '* I will meet the cut prices goods and sell him the eighty fl dr > |hundred and eighiy-nine doll known as the Hines Ennjs property, till, you can hsv-_ as nice a home as y iu wish. All the.-c- lots will Come in as soon as folks begin to build. I heard a young man say that he had his home picked out in case he mnrried soon. That means he has the girl picked out also. If you are the girl, make him buy that nice lit tle place on Jefferson street next to j no exchange or refii "l U0H * r * **A, E. E. Bass and W. T. Garrard. You | This is not a sale where th #f ’"“"'h can’t beat that place any where on ing to hide, because th ere “ ,l0,1 ‘ | Jefferson street. ' See J. L. SIBLEY & SON. P. S.—Mr. Howard West, who has house; perhaps the nicest location in charge of niy farms, tells me that he nine hundred bushels of ,, - the city. counted my hogs and pigs the other corn at that price. " ‘ a ° UI ^ The Sam McComb place on Jack- day, and that ninety-two ran through Good bye hard times Th," otV Pr "o’Tir'Vnts "of the son street, a nice neat plnee, in good a crack in the gate, all going one I morning Happy New Yetr"' u* goes with the hide When corn sells a t entire 1 noth. Pg bushel.'^remembe'rL^ • ADER AS “LAUNA" AND THE HULA HULA GIRLS IN RICHARD WALTON TULI v ic Dl IV “TUF UlRn ftp P Ai? A “USF” AT THF C.R ANn T WF ATCD tui ir>o L ' S Ha. s W1\J P Vt WAIIAN LOVE play, “THE BIRD OF PARADISE” AT THE GRAND THEATER THURS. NIGHtTjan 64, nr •5. |fij ODD AND INTERESTING The Russian eats on an average once every two hours. well attended Flowers growing in the Polar re gions seldom have any perfume. FOR SALE—1X0 cords of dry pine stove wood; any length. Liberal terms on winter suuply. H. T. CLINE. If the earth is covered with snow, carrier pigeons will make only short flights. TOUR OF GEORGI A POSTPONED If * i -_X: Mayor Miller S. Bell has received a telerrnm from Dr. K. G. Matheson, tating that the Industrial Tour, which was to have been made in Georgia, during the month of Janu ary, lin been postponed until about the middle of March. ir f* “ "r s KIWANIS KOLUM. A Hagerstown, Md., man has a 1 piece of fruit cake baked by his wife, now dead, in 1872. Fr.p » * le- 204-J. -Bantam chickens. Phone ■■■ ' ,-r - . ■ > A ’ ■■ ' i' •> grows Good fellowship and what out of it makes a city worth living in. That Kiwanis spirit was mani fested at the Ladies' Nite. In the west of England it is con- idered very unlucky to bring birds’ ■jigs into the house. A real night of goiM laughs and •good fellowship is worth while. l,a- <Iies we thank you for both. According to one eminent scien- t'^t, the temperuture of the moon is below that of melting ice. We wish we could tell it those attendance prizes. We are not particularly interested in ^iK hose; From the seventh to the thirteenth I century the year in England was reckoned from Christmas. A specialty in Jamaica country but we would like to share that bottle I bouses is “pimento cordial, a liquor which Miss Allan or Mrs. E. E. Bell| lnillk frum the pimento berry. We will let you in on a sectet— Ha rris Hall got the thing up so that he could move some “dead stock." He did. The egg- of the albatross averag about a pound in weight, and arc much esteemed by sailors when they can get them. , Somebody said Dr. Allen had been around here so long that he knew thi ages of every one of the ladies and either end he should have been barred from the contest. The curvature of the earth is such that a straight line a mile long would be 2.04 inches from the surface at Oysters feed only at about the turn | of high tide, and the habit of open- Just! i: g periodically persists even when Quotation from Col. Sibley: ^it on the lid and laugh," but Boling j are 0U 1 of water. Moore sat on our lid and we just can’t laugh. Hats cost too much these days. With an imagination like Uncle Henry Wootten’s we certainly would not be in such an unimaginative bus iness ns framing pictures, “we would draw them.” Wives won’t you let your husband •come to Kiwanis now; and we have reduced the price of the luncheons to 75 cents too. Kiwnnians don’t forget—Chairman Alford’s request. Tuesday at eleven o’clock at the courthouse; be there No half way stuff. Now turn up. In China all the land belongs to the state, and a ihrifling sum per am scarcely altered through long centuries, is paid as rent. it said that some of the Vene tians. hose who have never been to the manland, have never seen a horse in ail their lives. The R. mans gloved the hands and veiled, the faces of their bakers, lest by arty chince plebeian taint should spoil the “upper k'rust." Bill Myrick as president passed 75 per cent. He took the other 25 per cent off himself. He reduced overy- iVmi in anticipation of leaving. The leaf if the tobacco grown in Turkey is v >ry much smaller than that of the American varieties, and is of a hcauti ul golden color. BLACI SPRINGS DOTS There will be preaching at Black Springs church the first Saturday and k-A-..<g? B.rd This time Miss Ann of Paradise,” Richard 1 leading role. Sunday at ll o’clock sun" time/ Lets i Walton Tu "y’ 8 super-melodrama of : Reader will appear in the part of fair Hawaii, is announced to appear Luana; Miss Reader is one of Tully’s everybody go. at the Grand Theater on Thursday latest “finds” for stardom, having Mrs. Geo. Knowles and fami i y ; "'Kht. January 6th spent Christmas day with Mrs. Paul handler, of Union Point. Despite it is now in its tenth year, been a successful lead’ng woman fijc r past five years. Her remarkable there is no sign o#^anir.g interest personality and noil.tv make her a with the theatergoing public. Each valuable acquisition to this famous Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair Gilmore ! sl ' n!,on brin ^ us a new face in th «-! P^y. spent Sunday with Mrs. Ida Dunn,: Another \vv’.! known name addcJ to the cast is Mr. William Macatilsj, who has been spoc ially engaged f»r the part, of the American physic' “The Bird of Paradise” has proves be one of the greatest drawing it- tractions in years. It is sure to re peat its wonderful pastronage of In season. near Dcvereux. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jackson, of. Milledgeville, spent last Saturday and ”unday with Mr. L. B. Babb and fam- Mr. and Mrs. Emory Cook, of Mansliold, arc visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Moran. Mr. and Mrs. Preston Babb arc the oroud parents of another fine boy, born December 26th. ft* \ Mrs., Mervin Arnold and children, of Macon, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Collins. NOTHING STOPS OLD SANTA CLAUS (Continued from First Page.) I almost forgot that letter and it cor- all tho way from Ockmulgee, Okla. The three d shes which are invar iably to be found on King George’s ■ iii‘board on Ciristmas day are the royal baron of teef, the boar’s head, and woodcock-ph. Be the n meeting this week. But we fe-iret the Kiwanis Club by ixt week. ■ause his wife burned his trous- e v was the reasoi given for deser- t on by one hu bai I recently. The woman pleaded that he had told her a falsehood and that was his punish ment. If vou gave silk hose for an attend-1 a- r I'rire. iust forget it. Don’t trvlFOR SALE to see whether the winner thought poourh of the prep to wear them. They nil fit; Bill Myrick says they al ways do and he sells them. Harris I’ 11 will have a stock of silk hose I ‘>'e ’itne the Kiwanis Club has an- «ther Ladies’ Nite. MFETING OF STOCKHOLDERS ’’’he stockholders of the Merchants l Vernier* Bank will hold their reg- ti’ar annual meeting at the office of the hank Monday, January 10th, at 4 n m. Every stockholder requested to iie represented in person or by proxy. 100 cores of dry pine -*ove wood; any leigth. Liberal terms on winter supply. H. T. CLINE WOOD FOR SALE. Cord Wood at $5.00 per cord cas) delivered anywhere in the city. Tele (■hone 318-1,. 11 30 tf J. F. MILLER. It takes co-operation to bring re- ults. If the business men of Mill edgeville and farmers of Baldwin county would co-operate during the coming year the agricultural inter- e .ts of the county would be in better condition at the end of 1921 than ‘ they are now. one is fireworks and the other is this black molasses. L may he necessary to make an explosive noise for some people to enjoy Christmas, liut those same peo ple have a mighty good time all the rest of the year without the smell of powder, apd it is surely the msot wasteful thing in the world nnd ns to the black molasses, now don’t ask :ne too many questions about that black molasses, for 1 never took a drink of it in my life. Everybody had so much more money for Christmas than any one thought they had. that 1 am satisfied there is more behind and soon things will lie moving along better. I know they will if you keep punching up our representatives at Washington. Its that Federal Reserve barking system that is hurting us for it is not being run for the people’s inter est. Monday, after Christmas, a friend came in and paid me one hundred dollars. It ts the first money that has been paid me since Sentemb n r, nd rrv good neighbor, Georce Hol- linshcad. brought me almost a quar ter of beef, and now if these ware houses will iu«t put the storage of cotton hark down to the old rate, 25c, instead of keeping it at seventy- five cents a month per hale (which might hn'-e hpon alright when it was worth $202), I think J can go into ’he New Year with head up and heels over the dash board. Be that •is it may, I am having some in quiries as to that store that is now occupied hv John Sinton and also In quiries as to other places, and I may announce a sale the first week of the new year. How about these home*, you will never get them cheeper than right Try these - The music lovers fav&r$$ef&€%MTtO$ C OME in and let us play these for you. They number some of the world’s best-loved pieces of music. Take this opportunity to visit our Re Creation Department. See how our various services to owners help you get the greater, finer joy out of your New Edison. 50174 50623 J Rosary (Nrvin) Comet j A Drcar.i (3ort\ctt) Comet f Marche Lorraine Couturier Couturier J Gloria-12th Mass (Mozart)Gregonan C hoir j i lulleluj. h Chorus-Messiah C ( 1 Oratono t non* Imperial Marimba Band l Hawaiian Breezes VVaikiki Knwniian Orch (Wiih Loaise & Ferera) /Wailann Waltz—Irstl. Duct 50670 < Toots Bale Vi Hawaiian* (Hawaiian Smiles—Waikiki Hawaiian Orchestra ! Semper FklelisMarrh N.Y.Military Band Trumpeter’» Carnival-Match I ’ilitnire N.Y. Military Band j V.’itli-vm Tell Overture (Pt. 1) Sodem'sHand ) WilliamTellOverture(Pt.2) Sodero'sBand Ave Mar: Violin Carl Fleach 82536 Ave Maria (Bach-Gounod) m U “? M .; ne Marie Rappold and Albert 82077 Drpui* le jour—Louise Anna ^ J Silent Night (Gruber) * — /l jO Holy Night (Adam) 80128 82063 82032 Frieda HetnP* 1 O That We Two Were Maying . E lizabeth Spencer and Thomas t n • In the Evening by the Moonlirht. . * IT ..wlarnwrf Ufld V Dear Loui.se Hindermyer 1 Sweet Spirit, Hear My * >r9 .' rrr I 1 )\ nu»r. Venetian Inst- Kathleen Mavoumeen (Crouch) Vcucu^u In 5 *’ Williams & Witchie <m* NEW EDISON “'Tfc PhonogroA (With a t> oU * J L. C. HALL, Cashier.