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UNION RECORDER. MILLEDCEVILLE. CA.. AUGUST •, lill
‘
.1 to Southern Democrats
PP In Behalf of National Ticket
minion, the situation which
:hc people of the South
tin,. >■ if " 0t
that over which the
our fathers triumphed
days of Reconstruction.
* ,nU were then taught by
J ? ouls that it were better
. t o the fanatical hatred of
r Republioan party, than
y their unholy
jerieus
Smith promises to obey that demand
to the full Limit of his power. He
certainly cannot fail in that promise
any more disgracefully than the Re-
publican party has done. Thut he is
an honest, courageous and able ex
ecutive, his record as Governor of
New York abundantly testifies. And
now merely because he like the hon-
j ert and honarble man that he is, ex-
., ntr> i*.,-— n P art >** th “Vt } Presses the opinion that the law in
v their unholy demands. Bu the interest 0 f j u9 tice, in the inter-
^, t i <TV won. and under the e si Q f personal and official integrity
:ti*n’ won. and under tne twptru eg * pcrs0 nal and official integrity,
; r-hit' of the immortal Hill, the and j n t j, c i n t eres t 0 f the law itseif,
** oU « >• uft.* 1 of the infamous neet j 8 modification, we are asked to
*‘u and his cohorst fell Ivaim iUa n□ ,t,, nt n„v /.»i.
the body of
J , - ap3> I,st tbc bot ^ °* ° Ur the party of the South's salvation,
lization. The Republican party an{ j t j, e g ou th* 8 hope, to the party
• ruled equality. It e- 8ec tional hate, to the party of
,na . It Moueh with j i .... ...
•inded equality, it - 8ec tional hate, to the party
n ded ci r >! rights. It **>ugh rsitn p| un( j r e, nnd of graft, to the party of
h ;.. a l energy to “put black fnc j a | e q ua lity, to the party under
p„ white necks.” Its supreme whosc kindly auspices the Southern
' wif to mongreltze the white f armer has become impnnfcrished,
an d bring htc southern whites and hjg jjf e embittered, to the party
.,n and to shame
fell purposes it failed
iand it»i failure was at- p eop j e an d callous in<!
to the sublime courage of material interests.
,.ph‘, aided by th‘
.North. To any student of hi;
. apparent that but f<
the
mm ing so seems to me apparent.
. -lfish help of the Demo- MILLEDCEVILLE AL SMITH CLUB
New York, led by Tammany
iw so much decried, the dark
•- Reconstruction would have
cud into years of suffering.
and of woe.
outhorn memories so poor
have forgotten our debt of
•de to the New York and Tam-
peniorary,— a debt which we
ever !*»>'•
. Republican party was orjraniz-
• ,,f the South. It was at
running, is now. and has ever
■ . only purely sectional; poli-
v ; n this Republic. Its
'j n fmde is and Ms been the
eri.hment of the South by its
ial tariff system, and the
•tion of the South by its at-
.,1 legislation for, and its social
■lineal treatment of the negro.
• illified the South because it
d • . submit to the degradation
nth. and 15th. amendments;
„.,1 nnd cajoled the southern
by giving him control of south-
lit ical appointments; it h:f’
ed him by yielding as far as
his demand for equality of
relations among the white and
1 employees in Washington; it,
• Mr. Hoover, has compelled
employment
.f Commerce
nut mere idle words. His-
the past, and facts of the
demonstrate their truth,
yet we are now told by
y p rear hers, and by women
• and ilaughters and grand-
'• i grand-daughters of the
l.liers of the sixties should
< I allot for the High Priests
Republican party,
by i- this great renunciation
i? For what reasons are we
• urn our backs on the glori-
ril of more than a half cen-
mit that no reaion is suffici-
■' '^-preservation and self-rc-
"th forbid.
-<• reasons given are two-
• •■•t. that the Democratic
a member of the Catholic
•wind, that he is personally
■ some reasonable modifi-
■ 'he Volstead law.
to the full limit the sin-
• arnestness of those who
■hi. position, I submit that
• wholly insufficient to justi-
rreat sacrifice.
• f religious faith or creed
be required in these United
■b declares the Constitu-
ir fathers. One’s religion
'■ 'I and a holy thing, and the
bis mass, and the Protest-
-iyer-mceting are in God'a
' the sight of the funda-
f the land on an equal
igious bigotry in all
n the cause of untold
', unhappiness, and
place in our scheme
rr,rr,f ' r -t, or in our civilization.
' : opposed to the doctrine
I'rince of Peace” who di-
disciples to spread the
't ncs" among the Jew and
U:lf. alike.
hition of the manufac-
' u * of liquor is an accom-
art . m so far as the Constitu-
." ?Vp hw can make it so. Its
lal c hange is an impossibility
' a majority in Congress.
tkc 1>rp wdent alone or with
r ' f -. can in any way control
, peo l ,le of the country con-
ct congressmen favoring
regime, its change c*n-
m Plished.
^ ocratic Platform declares
enfrocement Got.
it has ,
ngid
BIG MEN FROM SMALt. TOWNS
Thoi
i A. Edison
Hard work! These two words sum
up the career of Thomas Alva Edi-
i, the world-famous inventor whose
name has penetrated every remote
quarter of the globe.
Edison is perhaps the greatest—
at least one among the two or three
greatest—of Americans born in
invented many telegraphic appliances
that brought him a reputation that
was a forerunnner of his present
universal recognition.
Hi» present workshop i 8 at West
Orange, New Jersey, where he and
a staff of experts constantly sur
prise the world with their scientific
findings; Edison is now eighty-une
but his quest for the secrets under
lying natural forces has not ceased.
turn from the party of our fathers,
whose unbroken record is a record
of animosity towards the Southern
people and callous indiffere
The right of every citizen to do so
i ; / admitted. The unwisdom of do-
seems to me apparent
pleting them.
small town, and his career is an inspi i He bas JU8t “ et oUt on experiments in
ration to every boy, whether he hails | r “ er-growing which he contem-
from a big city or a tiny hamlet For ,p ates wiH teke twent y years to com-
Edison i, the miracle man of the cen-1 plete —« nd he looks forward to
tury. His inventions and experiments
are known so widely that it is futile
to enumerate them here. We are in
contact every day of our lives with
instruments, devices and comforts
that owe their being to the genius of
Thomas A. Edison.
Milan, Ohio, was the town of his
birth—February 11, 1847 the date.
He received some instruction from
his mother, and at 12 years of age
began in the battle of life by selling
newspapers on the Grand Trunk
Railway. Already young Edison
was tinkering with machinery and
developing those interests that in
later life made him such a world-
He learned telegraphy and became
an operator at various places in the
United States and Canada, and soon
Edison is an inveterate worker, at
it all the time, and allows himself at
most tax hours sleep at night. He be
lieves that if we all worked more
and slept less we would be happier
and healthier. Most people find more
sleep than Edison necessary—but
his constitution is such that he needs
very little. Work absorbs him from
mom till night, and he thrives on
it
The small-town boy among other
things has given us the megaphone,
the phonograph, the incindescent
lamp and light system, and motion
pictures; he has received patents for
over 1,000 inventions, including many
war inventions for the United States
Government.
His career has been as dazzling as
the electric light he invented. Those
who deplore the lack of opportunity
in Amorican small towns should cast
a glance toward the distinguished
and esteemed genius known as
Thomas Alva Edison. He is an im
mortal.
YES SIR REE WE DUCO
Don't go any further what it tshna
o ploaao you wt happon to havo it.
L. N. JORDAN
Enjoy
ESSEX 5 ";
performance
For The Men Who Are
Fighting YOUR Campaign
of Courage!
Alfred E. Smith—“the man who has once
more put a premium on courage in American
public li.’e". Courage! Ability! Honesty!
A man whose word means achievement.
And with him a man of the same fibre
and equal courage, Joe T. Robinson.
Help us spread their words eyerywhere.
It is >jut campaign. Yes — everybody's.
YourDolIars Will HelpBroadcast the Honest>’, the
Splendid Ability and the Fearless Leadership
of the Most Talked-of Men in America
Alfred E. smith
Joe T. Robinson
Send Your Contributions NOW—Small or Large to
Your Slate Finance Director (w name
ami uJJrcfi brlou) or to the Treasurer
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE
1775 Broadway. New York City
Mace all .-fcarLi funiMr lo. Tht Tmuurer, OnrvxT.:.-^ Saiumal Committer
.ME OLD MACHINE-NEW LEADER-
OPPOSES GOVERNOR HARDMAN
Governor Hardman Re
veals Source of Opposi
tion and Clearly De
fines His Position.
Two years ago the people
of Georgia overwhelmingly
elected me Governor. I stood
for a’ business administration,
the elimination of wa. . the
reorganization of the High
way Department, the reor
ganization and reduction in
number of the innumerable
bureaus and departments in
Georgia. I was unalterably
opposed to machine politics
and the domination of Georgia continue
Governor L. G. Hardmmn
office. The ma-
by machine politicians and I jority of the members of the
selfish interests. Upon these| Senate who signed this ulti
matum belonged to the old
machine, the head of which
had been overwhelmingly de
feated.
Now the old machine has
issues I was elected.
The members of the general
assembly were elected at the
same time I was.
On July 8th, just a few
days after my inauguration, I
was served with written notice
by a majority <>f the members
of the Senate, of which E. D
Rivers was not only a signer
but an active leader, that they
wanted my defeated opponent
named to succeed himself ns
Chairman of the Highway
Department. Under the law
of the state the function of the
Senate is to* confirm oi reject
— not to dictate — appoint
ments. Keeping in mind my
promise to the people who had
elected me, I declined to make
the appointment.
Finding that I actually in
tended to keep my campaign
promises, my appointments
woe rejected, mnd, through
the effort* of thi* bloc, the old
chairman wa* permitted to
been reorganized. It has the
same old members and the
same old ideas that the affairs
of Georgia should be admin-j
istered in the way that will
benefit them most personally.
Hot—they have a new leader.
I have been in office only
thirteen months. During that
time I have been hampered at
every turn by this Senate bloc
formed at the very organiza
tion of the Senate. There can
be no relief from the control of
the state by machine politi
cians and selfish interests un
til both a GENERAL AS
SEMBLY and a GOVER
NOR are elected that will put
the WELFARE of GEOR-.
GIA AHEAD of the DE-1
SIRES and SCHEMES of
SELFISH INTERESTS.
and save
pay for a vacation
It is impressive to know that point for point the Essex Super-Six
equals or excels any car up to *300 or MOO greater cost. But cold
figures can’t express the drama of this Ohio business man, who writes:
“My Essex gives me every fine car quality and per
formance ability which our former costlier car
gave, and we saved enough to pay for the whole
family’s touring vacation.”
*735 and up
All prices f. o. b. Detroit
Batters can par tor cars oat of income at lorvest avxiOable charge foe Interest.
T. H. ENNIS, Milledgeville, Ga.
Just a few days more in which to take
advantage of this unusual offer on
any model Electric Range...
Terms: only $ 4 75 down,
balance in 24 months!
SATURDAY. August 18th, is your
last chance to buy a Hotpoint Elec
tric Range on these amazing terms.
You pay only $4.75 down—and if
the range you select is priced, say,
at $157.50 . . . then
your monthly install
ments would be just
$6.50. What could
be easier than that?
I With the automatic
time and temperature
controls of the Hotpoint Range you
may place an entire meal in the oven,
go away for an enjoyable afternoon
and return to find your dinner de
liciously and temptingly cooked . . .
ready to serve.
No longer need you be without
this electrical servant that says, every
day in the year, “Mother—Come Out
of the Kitchen!"
YOU'LL want a set of the
"VIKO" Aluminum-ware which
we are giving as a free premium
with the purchase of each elec
tric range during our special
sale. You’ll enjoy using the
"Vapo-Seal" Waterless Cooker
that goes with it. Particularly
adapted for use on an electric
range.