Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, October 18, 1928, Image 6

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UNION RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILIE, GA-, OCTOBER IS, 1»2§ UNION RECORDER ' Published Week!] | M Milledge */ASCRIPTION RATES Veer $1.50 | of malice and hate, intended to revive •«.ir up and keep alive race trouble® in the South and to furth r dejrrade and humiHate the white people of This Dyer Bill merely puts evil notions into the heads of -"me poor irresponsible brutes who will feel that they have the license prun ed by t. federal government to commit awful crimes and would intensify the vl rather would have been spared. The acci dental chance that brought the other man to *.he hospital ahead of him has wrecked his life. A novelist could invent nothing more .t range, or more emphatic. EDUCATION BY ADVERTISING have r >raf» able though! nd Ijnched his fam- $10,000 collected F-ir end ewey the nn-utest force in modern life is advertising. Institu tions of higher learning touch a very small percentage of population. Newspapers report very properly urt only the facts of life as represented kn< told million^ of homes by advertising ! musical instruments and reproducers. I such proportion. He was fair j the slums of Europe shouU be d, The public results in culture have ex- enough ‘o say that he thinks the into our Hhores or thftt .. ceeded that accomplished by all con- Democrats and the Republicans stand 'try should become n haven *f C °”k" •atones and public concerts, in precisely alike on that proposition, | criminal anarchist element. Governor Smith on immigration i, le he is on all other subjects. Re is for laws that will improve OUr total of the beginning of cul- though their platform may express ! re. the matter a little differently. He like he is i Think of the freedom, the joy and sudd that 1 .* and Mr. Hoover had the 'ocial uplift made possible by auto- same views on the immigration ques- country and add "to the mobile advertising and propaganda, tion. He fav Today, by mean» of ndverii.-ing this which restrict immigration to certai social blessing has been introduced to types. millions of lives, widening the pleas- Under the present law the diffe and their social contacts, their ent countries in Europe ; pledge of their fellow human so many immigrants a ye good citizenship of the I thinks v,*e will be the lo-?r if bring in foreigners who do net good Americans, who do He u Rt y \,y federal by action and only such declarations beings and the great panorama of nor Smith expressed himself as be- dosta Times. allowed obey our laws and who do i the wealth of the community Val- authoi th? I r IA L ORGAN OF COUNTY THURSDAY. OCT. IS. 1928 SUPPORT THE CHURCHES No people ran afford to show a nigardly policy in support of the churches. Churches, and the preach ed word of God, are the most im portant and strongest influences in a community. A true preacher of the Gospel as he goes in and out among a people makes his influence felt for good. If the door- of the churches should be cloned every community where this was the like manner. People i , .nd the buying who co"ld , ^ ^ ^ .noma be restricted so that the cook, refrigerate, grind who come to this coun-1 their feed ami oyperatc thrir sew- tr >’ may be thoroughly assimilated j Yet the whole cas-- may be readily j n * machines an <« other machinery and taken into our system without j Fre* arrival of fUb~^d understood by the example of the P“ b,ic corporations doing violence to America and with- for Friday .„d Saturday. Chan, | difference between the theologian 1,ke thc Ct> orgia Power Co., have out lowering the standards of this J Broa. The dull hooks of sp * nt ™ one y in advertising and edu- 1 apidly should be paid a liberal 'alary, and given th? moral and .‘piritual support of the people. They should be paid promptly, so as not to be embarrassed in meeting their obligations. AH ■ churches have a progress. when people acrifice, bu •cm loth to moke spend freely in seekir.r after pleasure and those things that perish. When money be- coirn-s stringent support of the church lags, n-d its causes puffer. Let our people stand by the church es. and pay the preachers’ salaries in fall and meet every claim of their church. We would advise the care ful reading and studying of next Sun day’s Sunday School lesson. Hoover ip a vote for °f tJu> spo.iker of the subject. nnd country side. i quality of immigrants than anything j The Supreme Court has decided that of this pernicious Advertising on the other hand has It is not onl ya privilege for a vine. He bclievea ha, the greatest, the sale of gasoline on Sunday j, legislation and if Hoover is elected for its objective the influencing of family t oown an automobile; it is; problem with our foreign population i necessity, therefore it is legal The president and a Republican congress the general public to take advantage a social doty and ail this was done at the present time is to see that' Supreme Court also held thnt all is elected, the hill i. sure to pa* as of the practical result of science and by advertising and propaganda. they are properly brought into sym- j molted or fermented liquors and eight follows day. unless enough fair- industry that may enlarge- beautify The institution of cioctricn] de- pathy with American laws and that beverages in which, maltose is a sub. minded Republicans should bolt their and qualify life. vehement for the lifting of eoimnu- j they ore not allowed to become an- stantial ingredient, whether alchnlic party platform r.nd vote with the The invidious word "propaganda” nity and domestic burdens is being archists and criminal . or not come under provision of the Democrats to kill It. has been applied to much advertising achieved in a like manner. People | Ho believes that the immigration ! Act approved November 17th, 1915. President Herbert Hoover would because It has for its end the buying *. h0 could not tell an ampere from a , aw jhou j d restripU . i| s(> Malt liquors otherwise would be used use the power of his office to pass of a product and varied interests bde bug fenrlendy light their houses immigranst who on ,h as a screcn ftlr alcholic drinks, the the bill. cither in commerce or polities apply J™. grind ^, 5^ '.1.1“, * “""I! briber pointed out. Many of our former Democratic the epithet to rival interest®, friends have been misled becau: n Gospel of Hate nnd shameful representations to cloud real i* No man ran deny the above. A ' an( j pr^» K „- ei . uu .. , . vote for Hoover is a vote for the 1 theology and philosophy would have cn lona P ro P a R an a ' Dyer bill. j no wide acceptance by the public. The Covington News has derived Are you standing true to the Their findings and conclusions must practically no revenue from this or- South, an.! against those who would \ \, v translated into everyday language ganixattyn «o that this* paragraph is humiliate it? ; by the preacher who is both a propa- f ree advertising. It in merely in ap- i gandist and an advertiser of religion, praisement of a great institution and A TRAGEDY OF REAL LIFE Let dental scientists discuss in Hs splendid program of enlight?n- technical phrase the danppr of inat- r?cnt that will sooner or later over- ,,1 tention to the teeth and the peril to c°me popular ignorance of the bless- ,|: healt harising from thsi inattention, in** of electrical power and light. r The whole subject would be dead to Who else would spend the money to ; the public were i not for wide publi- educate the public to shift its bur- si «*»ty giving the fact® in common den." to that "tireless servant” the < phrase by makers of tooth brushes, electric current? f tooth pastes and mouth washes. No True the public service companies one can calculate the life and health make good money in exchange for „ -• aved by this advertising and propa- rea l economic service and it is too da alone. late ‘ n the day for small politii onally produces Rial lif. me situations more strange ortuitous than anything fiction ever William C. Greatrex of Detroit is uing the Evangelical Deaconess !• pital tor $200,000 for the loss of i- child. And here iy the story: Five years ago Greatrex’s wife ave birth to a boy at the hospital. Itic died shortly thereafter, but the ii»y survived. Greatrex took her ody to Toronto, for burial, leaving is infant son at the hospital until e returned. At the time the Greatrex child was ora another woman, an unmarried nmigrnn: girl, also gave birth to a aby at that hospital. On the day Musical cultu ?&oc-oooooo'aoov •> agpgceo809ceaoe» legin Now to Figure on Your WINTER LAWNS and yellow papers to cloud .he pub lic mind on the main issue of the ad vantage of public knowledge of a great liberating nnd time and labor saving institution. —Editorial from THE COVING TON NEWS of September 21. * due i To- ritlv M*\ ‘rank i that it hud not been com- overed in more than ixtv- and that the man who did was Mr. Hancock's father, nobody that can fullv an- ’o worth of his grand old Mrs F.f that *hei has ion < n snd Geo AN ISSUE TO BE CONSIDERED The effort to make' prohibition the leading i*?»ae in this campnign has caused be d «nt nuertion to be given too much the right-of-way. The truth of the the future by the ' *^ a ^ ** v will be more the Smith ould be un hill hite Dcmocn b, judg: part, the prohibition In' rigidly enforced undci administration than it dcr Hoover. The one thing in this can that honest Democrats rbould seriouriv consider is the Dye to which the Republican plntfi pldeg.-d and Herbert Hoover 01 puh’ic eccasions has indorsed . Do you know what the Dy is? It is a hill to appeal to the negro cn hardships on the of the South. It i" a bill to force each county where a lynching ocurs to pay the widow of the lynched or his family $10,000 in each case. If n negro should rape some white infuriated friends of the victim l ' - ill. or lynch the negro, hen $’0. r f00 goes to the ranist’s wife or family and must be paid by th- coun ty where the lynching occur®. Do you favor this? If you do you should vote for Mr. Hoover. He support}! the infamous and damnable measure. The National Republican platform is committed to the Dyer Bill which reeks to have the federal government take over the police pow. era reserved to the state, and assume the enforcement of the state laws. Tbc infamous bill is the outgrowth ronto, this girl and her fathef wont to th* hospital to get the child. The hospital authorities through some mixup, gave Greatrex’s baby to them. Half an hour later, when Greatrex arrived to get his son, the mistake was discovered. Search was begun for thc* immi grant girl nnd her father. Eventu ally they were found, hut they did thi baby. Unable ‘o support it. they had de cided to give it away. A Pennsylva nia family, touring in Detroit by ; r uto, happened to encounter them and was given the baby. Their names had not been taken; there was no way of .tracing them. For five years Greatrex has been trying to ge trace of hi® son. He hns failed. Somewhere, presumably in Pennsylvania, the child is growing up v.- : th his foster parents; but Greatrex han been unable to learn where. "Suflering like mine can’t be meas- rir;d in money,”* says Greatrex. "It "sn’t th?t I want it measured thnt way; I just want n square deal. Any one in my place would feel '.he sumo way. Thi® has taken away all in centive from me. Why, even th? firm I work for is just keeping me out of kindness. I know it, and I try to work hard—but there’s just some thing lacking!" On what slight po*> do big trage dies hang! If Greatrex had reached the hospital thirty minutes earlier t ago, he would SMITH ON IMMIGRATION In his address a St. Paul, Minn., or. Thursday night. Governor A1 Smith took time to tell his audience where he stood on the qu-stion of immigration. He stated that it wan one of the subject.® upon which a good deal of whispering had been f'onu in different parts of the coun try, nnd that Republican influence.- had been trying to create the impres. sion that he was in favor of opening the flood gates and allowing a horde without restriction. I .he FLOkSHEIM Shoes Florsheim Oxfords ate made with an eye to the important part thnt comfort and appcafancc play in business. They’re comfort able. They’re stylish. And they’re economical . . . three reasons why business men prefer them. $10 Some Styles $11 and $12 ohn riolioway The Man’s Store BUsed Cars New car performance at used car prices. These cars have H j our 0. K. and are offered at baigain prices. M One brand new Chevrolet Coupe $50.00 off list price. u One 1927 Model Buick Sedan formerly owned by Miss Clara ^ Brantley. A good buy for somebody. ^ Cne 1927 Ford Touring car, new tires, new Duco paint. One 1928 Sport Model Buick Touring. THESE CARS ARE SOLD ON THE RIDE .AS YOU PAY PLAN I Ralph ^ Simmerson j » ■ BUICK DEALER ^ L -XXXXIXXTTXXUXTTTTTtyytt t r July •••• 2916 than best previous July in Nash history AUGUST • • 449S more cart than best previous August in Nash history September* 6176 more cart than best previous September in Nash his tun The Country has gone Nash ! the year, the peppiest car, the easiest steering car, thc easiest riding car they’ve ever driven. America has gone Nash — and no wonder! The Nash price never bought so fine a motor car before. ALL sales records for all time x"Y have been broken by the New Nash "400". People everywhere are telling other people that thc "400" is the finest car of the year, the smartest looking car of rn Srda— from S«U la 1/fH, f. b. farlort S CoiiprM, Cabriolet*, ISrlarj'a, frame MSS to fflfl, f.o.b. fartorm NASH "400" lee ad t the IlltrW <m .Hmtor Car I’alHC ■Id PORT A SI FEATI KFI-.VO OTHER (.IK H.« A THEM ME Twin.Ignition motor Aluminum alio, pi non, Bijur centnlized I —9 1—ti 12 Aircr*fi-type ipaxk IWtow" chuii, lubricdon On,-ni K . Salon New double droptam. clock , fcqder. Cl**r vision front pillar poaca S£**£*-**•• 7-b.erio. cr.nk.brfl ' ^ Seloo Bodice tblbi oalumi plug* High compression Torsional vibration Houdailie and Lot*joy dam P« r ExWrior matalware shock absorbers World'searieststMring chrome platad ov«r Short turning radius front and roar Hines & Callaway, - Milledgeville, Ga. - -