Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, July 18, 1929, Image 2

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UNION RECORDER. MILLEDCEVILLE, CA-, JULY IS. 1§2» GUIDE POST HEALTH AND HAPPINESS NFLLE WOMACK HINES of thise days I am K«inj; ' pap folk. ivhat they Eat nil the pastry and candy you it." the reducing pill manufactur- advises. “Let our Sure-Thin Pills | do the work.” For -evern! y,„ rs now tho country 1 Th <->- d ° ,htir wo ' k ’ *» ri B ht - only to. boon swept by » rodu-imr crozc. ■' f " rm ° f * ork ttat of ' I.i-tcn to tiny frroup of women talk- «“'« nprvou * trenkdown,, nr- inir, and invariably tho conversation! Umholi-t end .permanently rutna the tarn, to reducin'?. They are. of dip-etivc powers and ueimiletion. . nr-i. referring to tho reduction of The vital onra.i. ifive way next-and weijtht, hut in met instance, reduced «• " t,u ' «ytphmte form la health or reduced atrcnRth or reduc I-™-' « •» ,he “““•»• in “ wo«l- ed brain power-,,„d «.metime, death < ■> Hath P““der S in which the . vvompanicc reduced weight. ‘ told «» «■** «« " ! tbe Thst i because women are so ' powders into a steaming hot hath i ml Offer to be in fashion that they be- Hr there anywhere from half at. hour come indifforent and recklesa to-, to hour are equally dangerous. ■ ■' rything except what the' vaime heart aUmenU and leave i:ilt*» -how. |the flabby and unsightly. This is not exaggeration and I am ilarmist; I am citing truths, well known to veery physician. Th*- only safe, permanent and satisfactory way to achieve a beautiful figure is through hard work—regular exercise . : an intelligent diet, rigidly ad it red to, that provides sufficient TH-urishment to the bony structure of r.'?:e body. No other method cat adopted, without serious dange health and to life. No women has any right to at- mpt to reduce her weight until she « learned from experts whether not a reduction of weight is de- •nble or safe in her particular ca-e. r arc not all alike: some of us re- , ... ,.ira less food and more exercisr rc only two thing. ,, up par uruy—lack of tnv „ hyr ically or wrl] formed unl-,» h- and lock of the carrying around the amount of again—and if yo i fie h that his bony structure requires, e you can “figge-r All women were not intended to have i .... tUo boyish f° rm s or sylphlike grace and • is folly for ail women to try and : ’tain them. Often the women who decided of her own accord that | is too “fat” actually needs a few **.trg pounds to give her body tho proper contours. I have seen women who were hut little mnr<‘ than hu- m?n hairpins tnlk about reducing! But the lazy woman who desire • due,- her weight is in th;- grtv- '••ft danger of all—for she is the one vh i wants to get something for nothing. She wants to get rid if » •’•jili- flesh and have a beautifu';- rounded form and the accompanyin • vitality without exertion or self-de nial. It is won.en like her who have encouraged men to put on the market expen ive. powerful and destructive j>!11 . which guarantee the desired re duction in a phenomenally -short time. She might better save her money and buy a mild form of slow poison. Any woman will lo.-e weight quickly if she begin*- to put into her system drugs designed to fight the health-giving proprietors, of good wholesome food. difference in the craning of the two. I do not well B*.e what 1 could do to g«- the first—that willowy lender- nr S mat all the pretty ladies in the fashion magazines have must ki p you might hungry, and while I would do a great deal to “get in trim”—it might mean giving up more than I poubl afford. I once h<?ard a story about a man who went away from North Jef fer i umbrella. Ini iokcd handle. longer »-ach time. One of his nti b- hor asked how it was he could leave ' * long wit! food a 1 hi., reply was he wanted ta see how long -ht could live without some thing to rat. Later—he told the rame neighbor thr.t just about the time h» got his old cow where she could live without anything at all— she up and died. So I am afraid that the time I got where I had that willowy “figger” it would be time for me to “peg out”—and I’d better go slow. So much for the flrit “cor rupt fiv :er”—but the second is some thing more again—for the "corrert figger” you have to have in order to pall one of those “creations” your own—i, another thing that is hard acquire—for the less material then is in a dreus now-n-day.—- gu.-.mntecd.S 25.00 SAM McCOMBS Phone 302 OUR SERVICE IS SUDDEN Our prices are the lowest—What more do you wont? High class Shoe Repairing, Cleaning and Pressing ulAiii'S SHOE PLANT AND PRESSING CLUB Phone 373 SfEK l! Users Of it < pretty clothes—you it—but I do. And e all these girls their lovely colorful things—I feel greatly tempted to go on and pawn the Nash and get me one too. Staying in u hospital fifteen weeks ha- its drawbacks as far as one’s pocketbook is concerned, and I have tried to keep that little desire for a Paris creation in the back-' ground. Banquo’s ghost is not the only thing that will not down—and if you see somebody else driving that Nash—you may know what has hap pened—and don’t blame me. Oh. of cour-e, I have had a few little frocks that I got for SI.29—but— The next thing would be some thing else—and it is. How is a bod to know what length to buy them now-n-day*? 1 went to a bigjy reception not long ago—and I’ll give 11 you my word, it was surely “the long J L and thi short” of it—for the hems * that did not touch the knee, touch- ® ed th gmund—so what you going to . r do? It is a puzzle that might bother jg a wiser head than mine—-especially - when th» re is a doubt if my “style — of beauty” would call for either on “Ay:—there’s the rub”—:o after a it may he that I will get a few mo; for $1.29 before I pawn the Na: But my—how I would like to ha . .* one—made of layer after kyer cf the .u.i that loo** like mounbean* and cobwebs, with every color of the rainbow, inch one laid on top of the other—you know new they nrc. paper, among other things that I didn’t believe—that the day would) come when clothe, would he made' out of something like asbestos—that' * tuff taat can neither he dertroyedj by fire or water. In a way it might ICE Should Always Insist On Ycu should demand quality in li Quality Service Economy foreign substance. Our hue* fleet of sragons and trucks covers the entire city. CRYSTAL ICE is obtainable ANYWHERE in M Uedgeville. Users of CRYSTAL ICE have found it economical to use. Because it’s »• :xcn hard, it lasts longer. It has v.?I: -cp—.never gets out of order. Wc offer platform prices at a aav- ing—J# you call for your ice. Ph* TODAY—and ask us to have our Atlantic Ic? & Coal Co. Phone 485 nr •?* n dress—just take a damn r::g av.d run off the soiled place -and th r you are—just like the mm u-"l to clean their cclulnid colter-. ’’ : I just ran't see myself in cn a: hesto robe—I’d feci just like it «: time to be buried, and that’s no w; - • * id when you get on you- ’hat jKvnbflity—and I don’t h-liev*? you’d get any c f the women to van • for it. What on earth would w» talk about? And so—I nm right where I start ed—longing like everything to hav ■ a sure-enough “robe-de-style”—what ever that is, and just about knowing that I will be apt to take it out in lenging. However—you never c«n tell and—you may be iurprised— rente day. The New Ford Tudor Sedan £525 A SMART, good-looking car, yet more titan merely smart and good-looking. An economical car to drive because of its low first cost and low cost of up-keep. Built to give you thousands of miles of faithful, unintet xupted ser vice under all conditions and in all kinds of weather. In other words, you are buying more than beauty, speed, comfort and safety when you buy the new Ford. You are making an INVESTMENT IN RELIABILITY that will save yon many dollars a year in repair bills. MCKIkOii LOTOS] 00 "A Great Performer” the Marquette is being heiled, the nation over. Never before in a cor of modercte price have there been such acceleration, speed, control, handling ca^e, road- cbiiity,flexibility, balance! Only Buick could offer such performance. In Marquette you get on engine of remarkably Icrgo displacement. You get speed that holds cn honest 68 or 70 miles cn hour with unequaled ease, steadiness and security. You get acceleration of from 10 to 60 miles an hour in high gear in 31 seconds. And th.s grsat new car introduces many more unusual features: Beauti ful fisher bodies. Exclusive new up holstery proofed against v.ater, dust and wear. Dustproof til* ray head lights. An exclusive new sloping non- glare windshield. Four Lovcjoy hydraulic shock absorbers. Easy-act ing, completely enclosed brakes. The Marquette is eosy to own on the liberal G.M. A. C. terms. Come in and see this complete car. Take the wheel and learn the thrill of Marquette performance. Ralph Simmerson Milledgeviile, Ga. From the foreword of a manual 1 f instructions distributed to em- j. loyes of the Georgia Power Co. “This Company will not wrong anyone intentionally, and if by chance it commit a wrong, it will right it voluntarily.” a "V TO employe is ever justified in assuming that the size of the Company entitles him to impose on others. X nj Nr matter how humble the individual may he, his rights and his feelings should be scrupulously respected. The Company is big because it mast be in order to do a big work of service, but it will never be big enough to disregard the rights of others. The very fact that the Company is large makes it all the more important that it should, in every dealing, be careful to give proper consideration to the people with whom and with whose properties and whose rights it comes in contact. Consideration should be shown regardless of the condition or position life of the party with whom we arc dealing. This applies to men, women and children, white and black. Indeed, the more humble a person is the greater the obligation of a gentleman to practice consideration. If a person is weaker than wc are, their very weakners is an additional reason why wc should not take unfair advantage. “Remember that one of the Company's publicly announced policies is that Tins Company will not wrong anyone intentionally, and if by chance it commit a wrong, it wili right it voluntarily. ‘This does not mean that we will submit to being unjustly imposed upon nor that every injury suffered by others is the result of a wrong on our part. But it does mean exactly what it says and should be lived up to in all of our dealings.” P. S. ARKWRIGHT, President. Georgia IOWS& nsH COMPANY A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE