Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, October 25, 1928, Image 3

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■ UNION RECORDER MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., OCTOBER IS, IMS honey PRODUCTION GEORGIA Bj J. J. WILDER Back in the early nineties honey .^eduction in Georgia on a commer cial scale and in an up-to-date man ner began. Up until that time the honey produced in Georgia was not ,,f commercial value since it was pro duced in the crude hive, log gum*, boxes, etc., and was only suitable for the local market. Soon the prop er gliding and packing of honey came about whore-ever modern mov able framed hivew were being used and modern methods of handling bees had been developed. During this state of development ,.f up-to-date bee-keeping in Geor gia bees in crude hives were trans ferred into modern ones, and this The piano is easily the most im portant instrument in the world. It is the greatest common denomi nator of all mu-ical instruments. Most music that is written for an orchestra or a banjo, a saxophone or the human voice is reducible to a piano score, and usually is first com- * the beginning of real bee-keeping posed on the piano. n a large scale in Georgia. Certain | There is no doubt about music oe- people acquired knowledge of present ing the most cultural of studies, day methods of handling bees, such [ connotes rhythm and harmony, two making increase, controlling l things that are essential in all depart- swarming, etc. A grent number of ' ments of human activity. Rhythm is citizens began to specialize in necessary even in the motion pictures &0&03CK9C6X ' -'W * ’■"WflPOC.WOOA. Th® Pi, About it naturally grorpa all Dm enough to play the harp or the vio- family. A silent house is essentially i lin without a basic acquaintance with a deaoluto one. I the piano. The piano ia the life of every social I Of courss there la pleasure in at- gathering. | tending concerts, or listening to band music, or tinging, but no pleasure is so full and ao profitable, withal, If anyone can play the piano, even manage so-so with accompaniments, •t group gathers around him and the house is enlivened by the voiceo of mU8,c ' young, or partners are chosen If you were limited to one book you might want the dictionary. Some people would want the Bible. If you , . . were limited ,o one piece of furni.| f dancinJ - ture in the house your choice should . Almo!,t every child car. learn music be the piano. J ** ** taught young enough, Mod ern methods of instruction are so simple that even the dullest can un- keeping and the number has been the increase up until the present. Let us look at the production of honey in Georgia .ns we find it today. Bee-keeping in our State haR through out its history, been general among our farmers and at one time nearly every farm home in Georgia was the home of the honey bee, but it is diff erent now. Bee-keeping is in the hnnd.-i of enterprising people who, as stated above, are making a specialty of commercial honey production. It i old industry made new through season desire a hundred car loads of honey his order could be taken care of by the commercial honey producers of South Georgia. Bseides what is sold on the local inventions and the study of the bee. j market, there leaves annually from Scattered all over our state we find this section of the State to market and you must have a sense of har mony if you are going to be j tor, a painter or a sculptor. The piano is the best door knowledge of music. Almost every body enters into the field of music by that door The piano i.« the heart of the home. derstand. It is a deprivation tor any child not to know the piano. It is the bett form of self-expres sion. As Thomas Moore’s Anacreon tic runs: "Music! Oh how faint, how weak. Language fades before thy spell! Oh, why should passion ever speak. When thou canst breathe her soul so well?” B Our moments of greatest delight, perhaps, are our moments of self- expression. Nothing is better suited to fully set forth our phases of emo tion than the piano. No substitute will do. It is not the joy we get in making Again l aay that if you buy only one piece of furniture for your home, let it be a piano. A number of our people took in the Macon Fair the past week. Thirty- nine years ago they went to the fair on the trnin, this year they went in automobiles. In a few years it be expected that they will go *t aeroplane. people extensively engaged in bee keeping and they are making good. We don’t have to go to any one cor ner of the State to find up-to-date well-kept apiaries. Bees can be found from the Blue Ridge Mountains all down through the Piedmont Plateau and the Coast, al Plain sections. Everywhere you go you will see honey production car ried on a commercial scale. Of course, there arc certain sections of the state that are more adapted to bee-keeping on an extensive scale than others. Especially do we find this true in the southern portion or along the low er edge of the Coastal Plain section. In the section named are more com mercial bee-keepers operating more apiaries and producing e-r loads of honey than any where elae in all the Southern States. Should n buyer at any time during the honey-producing further North and West a larger p mount of honey than thiH This gives some idea of how the industry has developed in the Southern por. tion in particular. Indeed it is a bi1 wonderful how rapidly the growth has been for the last few years. In this heavy producing area we find some of the largest honey pro ducers in the United Slates and a few perhaps the largest in the world. Hundreds of our best and most pro gressive citizens are now engaged in bee-keeping and they are very grows bigger and brighter in Georgia thueiastic o\’er the game of mcrcial hony production. The future as the years come and go for this par- ticular business of honey production. These people are living in our cities and towns with a great number of apiaries scattered about ovei country. To the 5000 who daily become owners of the new Ford car THE service obligation of the Ford Motor Company and its dealer organization is now growing at the rate of 5000 cars a day. It is to these new ear owners that this message is addressed. The new Ford is a remark ably fine car for one that costs so little. Itis simple in design, constructed of the finest materials, and built to unusually close measure- included in the Free In spection Service is a check up of the battery, the generator charging rate, the distributor, the carburetor adjustment, lights, brakes, shock absorbers, tire infla tion and steering gear. The engine oil is also changed and chassis lubricated. No charge whatever is made for labor or materials incidental to this inspection service, except where ANYBODY INTERESTED In Mornmertal Y/ork See J. W. IVEY, Sex’.on. He Represents The McNeil Marble Co.. The Largest In The South, One of The Oldest and Largest in America. BRICK That Clink Like Steel Ar® Made by th. "McMILLAN" Proc.ss BURNT IN OUR CONTINUOUS KILNS There is No Waste in Our Bricks. w® Make Quick Shipments In Any Quantity. RICH Gl.0 FACE BRICK—FIRE BRICK—COMMON BRICK Milledgeville BrickWorksCo MILLEDCEVILLE, GA. Established IMS by J. W. McMillan. K. G. McMillan, Preaidaet Balls McMillan. Vice-Presid.at Holla ween masks and novelties at FOR SALE—QryMitbannnt I R. M. WOOTTEN3. baanjful Mao— See J. A. rides, 3OS N. Colombia St. Try Will Chandler Special Caffes, aot pleased. I Flower balb. at R. H. WOOTTEJU. Ote new Buick is the new Style 9L« .symmetrical, low to the ground, unique 8 unrivaled c~from an artistic standp oint — and the most comfortable, automobile motorists have ever known— Mot oaiy bra netful, not only , T ,,.,„ TT . MnDRnal.aal.iilr landau .priip nd Ignjq H^nlk -JUDMrdrDcwQlM AodiMm.ndnk -lWr», mw mod, of at Ugkou itttm ol tSiag tm*mr ihc doted ntoddt—full wide, rear state pradditi pic my c4 room for tarsa sdu 1 : mu—ptrs —deep, soft upholstery—the lounging spaciousness of tbs interiors—adt com bins with oaly Buick’s famous esatilevar s mods so mm and sound sod Sect r attaioed. c this oaw Baick-drive it— > yourself it's the Bekfti t body-design for of Bekks sed the car of carsl yean to c Tbs same oniony. t tsmssshin wtoch i £ lke Silver Anniveiuiy BUICK RALPH SIMMERSON, Buick Dealer of Kddait, negfact, or mfe- IV Ubor of rfangtng the engine oil and blvied. i rharif U ako Cm, k< the <± dtboogh i forth, new oU. VibdmtVtrtapa no the (ood «ff«*i of tU. i JOO will CMirinne It Cm ngolmty ■IlheSfeof jwm* rcr h.pomhM.W^MT vryWsf.lt.kr.pUS me MtitVf to Flwe 1^ » ■ m Serriee hy yaw *^*, r^L_. * . in mm «f mom m » * hmeta Strritm hy Ulr m SO®. HtO at 1500 mOm. lUrnlnh U you md we urge yon to means a great deal lo the life of your car. THIS SEAL SHOWS WHY IT’S AA A D E IOO% FROM PURE PARAFFIN BASE OIL Safe P AN-AM Motor Oil gives un failing lubrication to your car because it is refined from pure paraffin-base crudes. As you know, nature has endowed this type of petroleum with ex ceptional qualities. It produces the toughetL, sturdiest motor oil in the world. No other kinds can equal paraf fin-base oils in safety and long wear. Moreover,Pan-AmMo- tor Oil ia refined with unusual care. Its qualities are sim-' ilar in all respects to those set up by the leading automotive engi neers as the ideal lubricant for modern motors. Fill up, today, at the first Pan-Am station you see. Every dealer has a scientifically prepared chart showing just the right grade of this safe mo tor oil to protectynur car. *Pan <Lyfmej*ican 'Petroleum Corporation Also distributors of KIP insecticide, SEMDAC auto polish and SUPERLA candles