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UNION RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., AUGUST 30, 1020
I
Baptist Pastor
Scores Republi
can Rascality
§ FRINKGRANESVfS
,^.i£n»C-l»D£K>ODvS X-iC-X'rC'OO
Widespread favorable comment ia
bring beard in regard to the card
t [)r j. J. Bennett, which appeared
In Sunday’s Atlanta Journal.
Deprecating the stand taken by
ministers and other dr >’ leaders in
, national campaign, Dr Bennett,
among other things, declared:
••The facts in the case go to show
that if prohibition is hurt, the hur:
wi U he largely ours. Both parties
h!l ,. spoken officially. The demo-
r;iT . .(opted the driest plank evei
,,-,. lCv .i :n a-platform of a major
party, boldly declaring it
t - r ,. .nf -rceroent of the eighteenth
.... •:) m*nt, the laws eminating
therefrom and committed the nomi-
to the carrying out of ot
in case of election. We hav
Piem made absolute master of the
<i(uation in so far as party pledges
or promises are concerned.
Danger to Came
“Don’t we know that if we try to
raise an issue and fnil that we
"oing to be hurt and our cause
be hurt? And don’t we know that
if we tie up the question of prohi
bition where other issues are involv
ed. thn: prohibition will be handi
capped and the test will not be .a fair
te..t? Don’t we know that evaiy in
telligent southern democrat know?
that the democratic party and the
democratic party north, at that, has
been the south’s constant friend and
ftav and that he is not going to turn
from his party and its principles
which he cherishes as we do our re-
Jiiri..iis tenets, just because we shout
wolf, that prohibition is bulwarked
v constitutional enactment and tha - .
r.. ..no man can undo it? To get pro
hibition we had to carry thirty-six
«:atos; ‘to keep it we have to control
only thirteen. And with prohibition
freed from ‘all entangling alliance’
ippin
When my two girls were getting
ready to enter Wellesley they sud
denly discovered about two weeks
before their entrance examinations
that they were to be quizzed upon the
subject of trigonometry and knew
nothing about it. But they had to
pass an examination on it.
So I got them a tutor at $20.00
toot and he prepared them so that
they passed and entered the college.
While engaged in .his study they
name to me one day and asked !
what a sine and a co-sine were,
told them to look in the dictionary
I had to. The truth was I didn’t
know what those things were myself.
They looked in the dictionary and
then brought the book to me saying
they didn’t understand the definition.
Reading the definition, I replied that
they had nothing on me, that I didn’t
understand it myself.
Some days afterward I was talking
to a very distinguished mathematician
and told him this story, and a*ked
him why it way that 1 who flattered
myself on being an intelligent man
could not understand what kind of a
thing a sine was.
“Why,’’ he replied, "that »s very
simple. A sine isn’t .anything at all.”
“I know,” I answered. “But why
put it in the dictionary?" He said:
“A sine is not a thing. It is a rela
tion between two things.”
The greatest thing anybody car
learn ay regards their personal hap
piness is that it is not a thing, but
relation between two things.
We never realize what a blessing
od roads are until we come
detour and have to travel o'
mile or so of bumpy dirt road.
know a woman who is grieving
herself to death over a wayward child
I Prison Farm); on the South by lot of
| Geneva Jackson and lot of Mollie
U Brace; und on the West by lot of
^ j Charley Bonner and lot of Mollie
, Bruce.
Since the execution of said security
deed, Fannie Howard, the grantor
therein, died, and the land above de
scribed will be sold as the property of
the estate of the said Funnie Howard.
Said sale will be made for the pur
pose of raising funds to pay a cer
tain prtomisaory note executed by
Fannie Howard to the Milledgeville
Banking Company, dated February
1st, 1928, due August lnt, 1928, for
$163.48 principal, bearing interest
front maturity at the mte of eight
per cent pet ai.num, to pay acciued
interest thereon and the cost of this
proceeding. There is now due on
said note the sum of $163.48 princi
pal, with interest at the rate of eight
per cent per annum from August 1st,
1928.
The undersigned will execute a deed
to the purchaser, as authorized in
said security deed.
This 7th, day of August, 1928.
THE MILLEDGEVILLE BANKING
COMPANY, Grantee
HINES & CARPENTER,
Att’ys for Milledgevillc Banking Co.
Can’t
do this on a day’s notice. If! for whom she has done everything
psosible. She need* to get her mind
off of her child and think of what
she possesses, oi how many sources
of happiness still remain to her.
The homely advice, “Count your
blessings;’’ is a good one.
We can only be happy in what w
possess by contemplating those wh
have less and not those who hav
Commend G. O. P.
"For one I cannot commend, with
any conucience nt all, the Republican
party. Whatever else its nominee may
say at this time of political exped
iency one thing is certain, he is not
settled in his convictions on prohi
bition: otherwise, he would not still
flaunt into our face that it is an ex
periment. Whnt would you think of
a minister of the gospel who, every
time he refers to Christianity, calls
if an experiment? The cross an ex
periment? Deep spiritual touches an
experiment? Faith an experiment?
"You would regard him unsettled
in his convictions and not a fit per-j
s«n to be in a pulpit Every time
Mr. Hoover has referred to prohibi
tion lately he has called it an experi
ment and in doing so he discredits
and degrades our cautv and sets at
naught our final achievement in pro
hibition legislation.
"It is strange to me that this man
who was the choice of the wettest
of the wet, the favorite of the negro,
w* t« a..d the political mugwumps in
the South, a tamperer with social
equality among the races, n straddler
and time server of the 32nd degree,
•hould. all of a sudden, become our
Prohibition Moses and that we, a*
romi-ters, will turn nside from our
pulpits and hail him .as the savior
' ■ °ur cause, to the chagrin of loyal
‘outhern democracy.
Party He Represents
"Rut passing up the nominee and
'king at the party he represents,
w 'th what shame ha** it besmirched
‘ ,ur national honor! His party dur-
:ng the past eight years has violated
practically every thing held sacred
V ’he Bible. Does the Bible uphold
•'•? Does it uphold theft and rob-
'' 1 " Does it smile complacently
”'! lovingly upon dishonesty and the
? ' fusion of the poor by the rich
11 mighty?
"The truth is we nil know, andi
public, too, or they ought to
'"W. thnt one hundred time** as
""•"‘h space in the New Testament is
n over to the denunciation of the
' and crimes committed, pr/ictic-
: n «l winked at by the high officials
' lords of the republican party than
'••voted to the inculcation of the
r ' 'Pie* of temperance through
'.itive ennetments. Then add to
1st of evils the well-known fact
•he republican party has kept a
rower and liquor man in charge
department of enforcement, and
••'niruage fails to express my con-
’ nipt for such a regime.
n I swallow all this and then
into my pulpit Sunday and dis-
<u *‘ the moral issues of tnis cam-
,“ ,irn an <l inrisfon moral grounds
. '' people join, support and fel-
,ow * hi P such a party? Not
never!”
F ° R RENT-a .1, rM.
. Sl ~«- All Mta,
cn *«nce». £4 PdUbt
So look about you, and see how
many people are worse off than you
are, and be thankful things are no
ofered at an uni
L. N. JORDAN
NOTICE TO SCHOOL TRANSPOR
TATION PATRONS
All school patrons entitled to trans
portation for their children but now
living off the s-chool truck routes
should make claim to the county
School Superintendent .at on<?e. Truck
routes can not be changed after they
are fixed for the term.
P. N. BIVINS S. S.,
Baldwin County, Ga.
3t.
CITATION
GEORGIA, Baldwin County
Court of Ordinary.
E. J. Flemister having made appli
cation for permanent administration
upon the estate of Mary A. Thomas,
deceased, this is therefore to notify
all persons concerned that said appli
cation will be heard on the first
Monday in September at 10 o’clock
A. M., and if no valid objection is
filed thereto, letters will be granted
ay prayed for.
This the 6th, day of August 1928.
SHERIFF SALE
GEORGIA, Baldwri County:
Wil! ba sold at public out-cry, to
the highest bidder for cash, between
the legal hours of gale, before the
Court Houze door in Baldwin County,
on the 4th day of September, 1928,
the following described parcel of
land, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel oi land
situate, lying and being in the City
of Milledgcville, Ga., and known and
distinguished in the plan of said
City, as part of Lot No. One, in
Square No. Sixty-six and bounded
the North by North Boundary Street,
or Wall Street; on the East by other
lot of Sophia Bailey; on the South
by lot of estate of A. K. Ellison;
and on the West by other lot of
Sophia Bailey. Said lot fronts on
North Boundary Street fifty-three
feet, and runs back South three hun
dred and ten feet. It being the same
house deeded to Sophin Bailey by C.
H. Bonner on July 7th, 1902, and
recorded in deed book “NN”, page
350.
The above described land is levied
on to satisfy a mortgage fi-fa. in
favor of The Milledgeville Banking
Company against George T. Bnilcy,
issued from the Superior Court of
Baldwin County, Georgia; said land
levied on as the property of the de
fendant in fifa., a notice of levy and
sale having been given to the defend-'
nnt in fifa., and to the tenant in
possession.
This 7th, day of AuguiA, 1928.
S. L. TERRY. Sheriff,
Baldwin County Georgia.
Here Is a Real Bargain
In a Piano
STANDARD MAKE—LATEST STYLE, MODERN, BUNGALOW
PIANO. LOCATED IN MILLEDGEVILE
[.WILL SELL FOR UNPAID BALANGE
Cable Piano Co.
169 COTTON AVE.
MACON, GA.
LAND SALE
GEORGIA, Baldwin County: I
Under and by virtue of a power |
of sale contained in a deed to secure j
a debt executed by Fannie Howard!
to The Milledgeville Banking Com-,
pany, dated February 1st, 1928, and
recorded in the office of the Clerk
of the Superior Court of said County
in Book of Deeds No. 12, page 316,
the undersigned will sell, at public
out-cry, before the Court House door
in said County, to the highest bidder
for cash, within the legal hours of
sale, on the 4th day of September.
1928, the following described parcel
of land, to-wit: All that tract or
parcel of land situate, lying and be
ing in the City of Milledgeville, Bald
win County, Georgia, and in the vil
lage of Sintonville, and known and
distinguished in the plan of said City
of Milledgeville, a« part of Square
No. 110, said Square being known as
a nine-acre block, and fronting East
on an unnamed Street, which lot con
tains one-eighth of an acre, more or
less, and is bounded as follows: On
the North by lot of Alice Young; on
the by an unnamed Street (it
being the street leading oat to the
During September—
any model General Electric
Refrigerator—
only a
«Rp RP down,
balance in 30 months!
THE General Electric Refrigerator sale
conducted by the Georgia Power Com
pany and affiliated companies during the
months of May and June this year estab
lished a national record for electric light
and power companies in the merchandis
ing of this most modern of electrical
servants.
1,833 electric refrigerators were sold by
us in 53 days!
In appreciation of this wide acceptance
on the part of our customers we will —
during the month of September only —
again extend the same liberal terms as
given in May and June . . . only $10
down on any model General Electric Re
frigerator . . . the balance in 30 easy
monthly payments.
Such Refrigeration as this Proteas Family Health
The constant, dry cold of the General Electric
Refrigerator prevents the growth and multi'
plication of food-bacteria. Meats, milk and
vegetables can be safely kept for many days
. . . with the assurance of perfect wholesome-
ness and healthfulncss.
And, too, you'll appreciate the quietness and
efficiency of the General Electric Refrigerator.
It has no fans. No belts. No drain - pipes.
No exposed moving parts. In fact, it never
even needs oiling.
Come to our store. Let us demonstrate the
health - guarding qualities of this “years ahead"
electrical servant!
GENERAL ® ELECTRIC
Refrigerator
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIXBM VRIRIVII «l HIVE