Newspaper Page Text
UNION RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILLE. GA., JANUARY 3, 1M9
RECORDER
Federal Union*' E.lebli.hed 1829
Southern Recorder E»tb. 1819
R. B. JV!OORE—EDITOR
JERE N. MOORE—Bu*in £ ., Mr*.
| LOCAL !
the
■father
THURSDAY. JANUARY 3. 1920
SAM TERRY
7h death of San Tern- ha- f A
r. -n the lift* of Baldwin county on -
. it. most beloved r.rd rc*««ct~l
)■ r.. It h«« saddened the heart* of
iaay and t nded the caieir of a man
Sam Tern,- was a public rervan
Officer for nearly a
L’ rter a century as Sheriff of
fiunty. ant! filled th? jol» with
bility and courage. He was de-
Hi- duty tytd lived up to the
icipla.s of honesty and fair play to
hes; decree. Although in a po-
°n that met th? scrutiny and
e inspection of the people, not
- have we heard criticism of con-
i or manner in which he did his
the con.-truclion of an international
I society which . hall rnitiga e the an-
i archy of wilful, private and unbridled
| national sovereignties. Of that new
international order Wilson i- the pro-
! phet, and thought it will take gene-
1 ration:-' *<> establish the institutions,
j the habits and the traditions under
( which natiiios will accept it whole-) lowed by
I h ertedly, its ultimate trimph is now —
I assured. When Woodrow Wilson said! •There
to mar kind that a breach of the .Saturday
peace was tfie concern of all, and that! —
peace was to be hod only by the' jj,,. c
mobilization of the consciences and The
force of all the nations, he uttered cr i-p,
a truth so plain and uo inescapable
hat every government finds itself «; c
compelled to recognize it. Grov
f the last year are striking p astr
to the irresistible logic of
the truth that Woodrow Wihon jj,
spoke. The Senate o' the United
States with the ablest of the irrecon
cilable senators leading it, ii> about to
ratify a world-wide trea
an embarrassed, halting
what pathetic attempt t
edge that even -he government which
most sullenly rejected the new order] Thl . ,tockholden
would like -.0 be counted among itw | bnnfcw will .eon be
people in the city
restiinoi
ices will be held at Pleasant
church next Sunduy by th?
chools throughout Baldwin
jpened Wednseday January
l three broken ribs, and a broken arm. I FREE—Extra pair of Trouser -
| The other occupants of the two cars free with every Sait. Material and
' -’!>?ancd with only a few bruises. | workmanship guaranteed. Sniu
I 1 $-5.00 .nd up.
1 he County Commissioners met; SAM McCOMB
1 u.'sday. Dr. O. F. Moran, being the W. Hancock St. Phone 302
la. Commissioner elected, assumed —
tiic Chairmanship. Judge E. P.. Htne.; some REAL VALUES IN USED
Clerk of the Board. The
Road Superintendent had been ehet-
■ting in December.
LTN. JORDAN
1 "'ST'—Milch cow, light red Jersey,
with small horns and was in milk.
Strayed aight of November If.
Finder return to J. N. Underwood,
Poplar St., and get reward.
R RENT—Three nice rooms
iter, lights and phone. See M. M.
anlley, North Jafferaon St.
Pho:
173.
•*' The City Council will hold their
id some-; f j n , l meeting of the new year
acknowl-1 Monday nigh*..
of the four
• • .
Duty
fearlessness
Flu riff T
Sheriff Terry was most
He._never shirked and
he task might have been
it with that courage and
that'
char
istic
t min that made
Sheriff Terry
friends.’ The
formula of pious words whi-h de
pends for ity vitality upon the inetitu
.ions and the traditions which Wood
row Wilson proclaimed. Isolate that
treaty from the gr?at fact that it
cemea into force in. a world where an
international society already exis.s,
and it would he .is futile and per
haps as insincere as the noble profes
sion of countless other forgotten
treaties and resolutions It is be
cause the Pac*. of Paris is fortified
by the covenants and practices at Ge-
nevu that the world at large has any
faith in its promises.
For the truth which Wilson ex
pressed for the world is that peace
lies not in promises^ but in habits of
co-operation. That is the vita! truth
for which helived. That is the deep
wisdom distilled out of the .rials and
errors of his moral career. The proof
of that wisdom is being discovered
and rediscovered, not by urgument
and propaganda, but by experience.
A war has been averted only this
month by the extemporized applicu-
ideul which Wilson taught.
► the front. The _ ^
* K1S e * OM ^ “ n< J ‘he record- The schoolmaster and visionary
ir- ..f deeds are now busy compiling forseen and delineated the kind of
. igs that -t >od out ns feats of action which twenty nation- were
m.c accomplishment in sport, modi- compelled to adopt in order to pre-
crm. science, education and cithei
fields of endeavor.
rerve the peace. The processes
which the Pan-American conference
Wi.at ever the mistakes of the past adopted to preserve the peace of
u might have been, they are twist South America are identically those
-tcry. they are behind Us and three procewes for which Woodrow Wilson
• I: ii and six y-three brand new staked all that be was. That victory
- :!v out to the front. Whether | over violence in the jungles of South
v would like to say “turn hack- America is a monument to which ihe
ur :urn backward” or wnether we friends of Woodrow'Wilson can poin;
e mighty glad it i* «li over and we and ray: That is what he lived for.
ivc a new day dawning it maker. —Mew York World,
itc difference, The fact still re-1
ifficei
for the i
January 1st, was a !
and was observed as si
banks and post office.
The
of the Union Recorder
has been partially hit by the flue
this sweek. Short comings in thi
is-ue will have to be overlooked.
The merrhunts nf Milledgeville
have been busy for the past several
days taking inventorier of their
stocks.
The roof of the residence of Mr.
D. Smith cuught fire Saturday
about noon. Its timciy discovery,
and the prompt response of the fire
company resulted in its being ex
tinguished before any great dam-
m. Steele a well-known color:d
ami carpenter, wan painfully
injured in an automobile accident
Saturday .afternoon. The automobile
hich he was riding was struck by
driven by a colored womun and
ied over. Steel suffered two or
FREE—Extra pair of Trousen
free with every Suit. .Material anc
workmanship guaranteed. Suita
$25.00 and up.
SAM McCOMB
107 W. Hancock St. Phone 302
DIZZY, NUPPETITE
Since Taking Blaek-Driigkt
Thii Man la Eager For
Hii Mealt and Feel*
Much Better.
Harrisburg, N. C.—Mr. M. p.
Fink, of this place, says: “ It must
have been fully twenty-five years
ago that I began taking Black-
Draught regularly. It wasn't so long
SPECIAL TAX NOTICE
All special or occupational
arc due January '.he first, or on
day you begin to do business, if
arc liable for any special tax pfcV*
govern yourself accordingly, .and nt*
make it necessary for me to have -j
invoke the penalty that the law ►.
quiies.
L. D. SMITH, Tax Collect^
SOME SERVICE
We order your licenee tog, fill yc„
Radiators wl*h Alcohol, * B d 4^
your old oil and refill ymr end.
*•*• »* ‘ he ***** »*«•- Can , 0>
beat that.
L. N. JORDAN
Notice.
niter I married.
‘I was in
while talking to a friend I stooped
one day. and
spoke ta him about this and how
I 1-ad rcu felt like eating.
-‘Sy friend told me to take some
Llzck-Draught. I knew my mother
had t:;cd it, and so I bought a
iv.cks.:.r When I got home. I took
a pc oi. big dose, and the next night,
anoMicr. In a few days Licit much
O.-Y -.r. I was hungry and the tiizzi-
r.c» tens gr:ae.
• A good many times I have baa
tills dizziness and a bad taste in
:r.y mouth, or headaches, and then.
I L.-.c Slack-Draught and get bet
ter. I do not have to take it very
citen. We buy from five to seven
; ' -’ir.ges a year.'’
ThedTorri's Slack-Draught !• a 3
been found to relieve sick bender:. ;
'ii thousands of cases that vrt -c* n ■
r*.n .-ipation. Containing n-
p.T.r.r'Jj-.'* 'Try it. ‘
Effective with last trains leaving Tennille. Pcrterdale and
Covington Januarv 2. 1929, trains 21 and 22 now operating
between Macon and Tennille. trains 19 and 20 between Gor
don and Covington and train 23 leaving Covington 8:15 A.
M. for Porterdale will be discontinued.
On the same date new daily trains will be inaugurated be
tween Macon and Eatonton on the following schedule, first
train from Eatonton on new schedule will be January 3
1929:
Nos. 22-19
5:20P.M.Lv.
6:05P.M.Ar.
6:50 P.M. Ar.
7:35 P.M. Ar.
Macon
Gordon
Milledgeville
Eatonton
Nos. 20-21
Ar. 11:35 A.M.
Lv. IO:55A.M.
Lv. 10:05 A.M.
Lv. 9:15 A.M.
No change in schedules of trains 18-15 leaving Macon 7:00
A. M. daily, arriving Porterdale 11:25 A. M. and Nos. 16-17
l"3ving Porterdale 5:00 P. M. daily, arriving Macon 9.40
P. M.
Central of Georgia Railway
leoeeeeeeeeoooooM
1
u
cA HdppyNew^ear 'If ~ SlV!
^ "Vou -and Yours. vSiJ|