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THE UNION-RECORDER. MILLEDCEVILLE, GA., MARCH 20, 1930
®ijr Hnum-Srrnr&rr
Southern Recorder E.tb. lilt
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
bne Year $1.50
Six Months 75
Memben^S*jo3o
.a iff
Kahokal Editorial Association
THURSDAY. MARCH 20. 1930
the program each day and The Un-
l ion-Recorder feels sure the women
of Milledgeville have much in store
I for them. Not only will they receive
the first hund knowledge of an ex*
, pert imparted to them in a most at
tractive way but they will .also have
the pleasure of coming in contact
with a most attractive personality.
The Union-Recorder extends a
[ very cordial invitation to the women
of the city and county to attend the
school. The grocery merchants
the Georgia Power Company who
co-operating in the school join ii
extending this invitation.
Cooking
in their sendee in the World War.
The first of these two things was to j
get down to th<- fundamental princi- J
pie in any big undertaking. The
second thing was, team work, or
unity of purpose, in carrying out the
fundamental principle, and not be
swerved arlde by distract' ng .ami !
petty interruptions.
The habit of sticking to a funda- '
mental principle came when these j
Legionnaires surmounted the many
d | personal discouragements of train- j
ejing camps and in the field or on the •
n j sea. The habit of team work ctme I
' ;n attaining the fur flung objectives |
Virglnla-Carolina Chemical Corporation
quite the ;
It i-
prune Court bench. While I
adorn that high office. Geo
the United States need his n
demands thut you quit going away
from home to spend your money. Ni
city or town can make the progres
it should, when numbers of its peo
pie use every flimsy excuse to gi
elsewhere to make their purchases
The
vity of special officer Law
rence and Sheriff Haynie is resulting
in the capture of a number of stilli
and the arrest of violators of the
prohibition law. These officers an
making -i -trong and effective efforl
to enforce this law, and they should
received the co-operation of the
xens of the county. No law cn
enforced without its violation
ceives the condemnation of public
opinion.
rogre-sive science. I despite those personal discourage
no urt that has j merits. The lone hund in the army j
the woman of the. soon was doomed to permanent fail- I
•ntial that every lure. Only in hewing close to the I
woman keep herself posted on the | fundamcntail principle, together and j
new methods and recipes. We began ‘ unitedly, was success possible. j
i»ur favorite recipe column more j Those les-uns have kept the Legion •
roan a year ago to give the women, alive to one fundamental principle i
»f the city and county the opportun-, which it never will forget, nor relin-
ty of exchanging ideas of preparing | quish. That principle is found in the
'specially palatable dishes. We have I Legion's request that "equal
>ecn complimented more than once for all and special privilege or profit
nd we appreciate very much the co- to none in time of war" bt* enacted
peration that has been shown. ! into the basic law of our land. The
Now the school is exclusively for | Legion knows that principle is fair
romen. We hope they will come. We .and just. It know, it is not fair, nor
will
benefited
THE P. T. A. AND ITS WORK
for the past three of foi
11 just, for the youth oi our country j
I to hr compelled to do the work of j
| war, at menial pay and with all da-.
jeer, while others roll in the lap of
I luxury at home, and in no danger.
ilThe Legion believes the dollar, and;
j natural resources, should work as ;
juselfsihly as the soldier in time of'
The Lions Club of Spares at a
morting scored the highway board
for not including the road fn
city through Sparta, Warrent
Thomson and on to Augusta i
program for paving. This is
the used routes in the States, and i
by a number of miles the shortes
route from Macon to August/t. Th.
road is one of the oldest
m this
>no of
embers are untiring and unselfish | We will profit by the example of
their work for the children of the!the Legion in building unity in oi
immunity. city, our county and our natio
The Crude building .at the Georgia There is strength in unity. Togethi
and unitedly Milledgeville can mm
forward.
The council and the commissioners
should seek the advice and opinions
of their fellow citizens and in e
program work toward the develop
ment of a greater unity to the end
that we might attain greater things
for our city and county.
Military College speak- well for the
work of this organization. About
$200.00 worth of shrubbery has been
planted there umlet* the direction of
one of its members, Mrs. N. P. Wal
ker, who has given largely many of
plans and superintended the planting.
Capt. J. H. Ennis very generously
donated fertilizers, .and Judge Dt
way furnished hands to prevent the
washing around the Grade building.
The beautiful plants recently rut
down around the college building
•re largely donated by Mrs. Waikei
d the planting superintended by
r. Mrs. George Roach has been an
le assistant as she is deeply inter-
:ed in beautifying the grounds,
e P. T. A. put on the Red Cross
mbership drive and the sale of
B. seals. Both of which i
i-ful.
'stj They hove finished
payn
historic in the State being the old I Auditorium floor over $900.00. In
coach road from Augusta when Mil-1 fact in the past four years about $2,-
1 000.00 has been made and spent on
the college and Grade building to
make the buildings more comfortable
ledgevilie 1
subscrip-1 for the children of Milledgeville.
A number of subscrib
Union-Recorder paid the
tions the part week, and
ion to speak words of praise and! KENTUCKY OPENS THE WAY
commendation for the “splendid J
paper" we are publishing. Both the
dollars and commendation were
appreciated.
Public sentiment should
strong in Baldwin county that the
law will he enforced by the juries
when the guilt of the violator is
,established by the officers .and other
witnesses.
| The Kentucky 1.
I repassed the city manager enabling
| act for cities of the second cla*s,
both houses casting u unanimous
vote for the measure.
•Another state thus swings into
line, permitting its cities some meas
ure of home rule.
An act passed earlier had been de-
1 dared unconstitutional by ihe state
supreme court, and three cities—
think of j Covinjttollt Owensboro and Lexing-
ices that ton, which had adopted the plan,—
Railroad:
In the
it may seem a little
tc haul freight to ar
by trucks, the railrcs
forced to return to the old sys-
f govei nment.
ic of Covington, however,
i not for long. So determined
citizens to have the manager
nthusiasm fanned by the
Very few people top
the real value of the s
the Central and Gcorgi
have rendered Milledgeville and Bald
win county. These roads were built
when highways could not be traveled,*!
and have been a great factor in de-1 were
•eloping this great country. Because j p i nn ^
nore convenient success of this form of government
.1 f- thi. city with their neighbor acroM the river
‘ *- ,u ■ incinnuti. that councilmcn were
chosen to office at the ,’ununry elec-
'.ins, pledged to devote the major
Congressman Vinson will probab- portion of their salaries to hiring a
ly have opposition f«.r re-el. ction manager. Thi, was done and now
this year, not because the people of all is well in Covington,
the Tenth Congr. sional District are | Whether one favors the city man-
dissati-fied with his services, but be-fager form of government or ’ not,
cause so mo of the politicians of the there is little to say for the failure
district are ambitious to occupy the of state legislatures to permit cities
position which he has filled so ar- to adopt this plan if they so desire,
ceptably. There is no good mason: Most itates permit their cities
why Mr. Vin on should be side-trad- s -me say as to how they shall be gov-
ed just to appease the appetites of rr.cd. This Is as it should be. The
hungry politicians, as he is con- peculiar individual problems of cities
sidered one of the most valuable have seldom been fettled satisfactori-
members of Congress, and his train- ly at long range by legislatures, and
ing in the discharge of the duties more often has led t.. grave abuses,
that devolve upon him should be a In the majority of our stat.s. cities
strong factor *.r> be considered by the arc finding that they can operate
voters of the district., and he should more efficiently .and more economi-
be re-elected a, long as he is render- .-ally under the manager plan uf gov.
t and satisfactory eminent. Universities throughout the
"ill® Progress. country teach the theory of the plan
i—the short ballot and centralization
THE UNION-RECORDER COOKING of responsibility—as
SCHOOL • eratic doctrine. Why
J legislature deny to thi
April 2, 3, J, The Union-Recorder state it represents thi
will open its first cooking school and cide whether they wi>l
has the great expectation of greet- thing that apparently has p
Milledgeville and possibilities?
ted in ..
The Union-Recorder has always
been proud of its record as n Bald
win county institution. In boasting
of this record we have not claimed all
the credit for its accomplishment but
rather gave our loyal friends much
of the praise and have always been
ready to serve them -us best we could
in return.
The Union-Recorder is a 100 per
nt Baldwin county institution.
Since there has been some agitation
ade-at-home, patronize the home
•hunt, we have watched with in-
it the attitude of the various
less houses here with much inter-
The
? is not an in-titution i
ity that has given the sen-
people that this newspape:
thii
48.000 Farmers Say-
The profit on fertilizing, the pro
raid by the increase that fertillzli
brlnzs, piles up to on averuce retuj
of S3.54 for every dollar spent «
fertilizers for ill crops In 25 state
So says the National Fertilize!
elation, after Interviewing
formers and studying their an
crops for market. Part
llzer—In deciding to use
returns—through earlier and blager
and better yields, throurk yields of
hlaber gross value—In the tlnal
figure that counts m ist —net profit!
hendlcd V-C. During this long
period our customers have been en
tirety :ut isfled." Me Ghee Cotton Co.,
"Like Father, Like Sons’'
customers of the old Georgia Client-
leui Works, buying his fertilizer
from what Is now the V-C sales
McElmurruy—all uro grown now.
and have families of tholr own. and
are respectod und successful mem
bers of their communities.
coming Into this office with our
futher." said E. W. McElmurray re
cently.” Maybe we Just formed the
huhlt they, but I think It was be-
used to lot nit buy them on his
credit, till I got to be21. My brothers
and I are carrying out the same pro-
Nothing But V-C for 16 Years
"We have handled V-O fertilizers
continuously and exclusively for 16
years. Sales have Increased each
year. Many satisfied growers have
been using V-C over since we started
handUng it." — Hector Supply Co.,
1000 Dealer, Miami. Fla.
Copyright 1930
Quality Product Needed
”We have deal: largely with
quantitative production of cotton
but we need qualitative production’
Wo must know the right plant food
■ •— proper application, the
the product."—Du. E.
President. North Curohaa (
of Agriculture.
sell V-O exclusively. Our
*.. Inc., Nooses, a. o.
Must Meet Quirk Changes
"Tho time lias come for farmers
to take stock of their agricultural
assets and liabilities. In order to
meet the rapidly changing condi
tions brought about by the now
me t hods and In ven t Ions of sc fence."
- Dr. H. G. Knight, U. 8. Dept, of
Agriculture.
r —But It*s Good
"Yussuh, hit do look like mighty
ittle—but lilt's sho pow'ful good!"
saying In this picture
) been selling fertilizer
years and have always gotten
results from V-C. My trade
Dealer. Ocilla. Ga.
"Change is inevitable in a progres
■ountry. Change is constant.”—Dis- j
iaeli, cf Edinburgh, 1807. I
VIHCIMA-C VHOI.IN A CHEMICAL CORPORATION ■
renting i
lower Whitewater. Ho has t>
hard for a living, but Mr. Froney
sees thut he gets along and lias
enough to cat. Uncle Mose grins
and pats the bag. "An’ hit’s ol*
V-O. Been farmin’ wid V-O since 1
work fo’ yo’ Grampaw. Rather have
one bag o’ V-O dan fo-flve bags o’
something else. Nevah take nothin’
else—no Suh! DIs heuh de gue-acna
ol’ Mose want. Git n little, git a lot,
of
the
In
have never fuiled to champion the 1
i»rht and give our thought ar
st to the thing- that will m
the forward movement and progress*
veness of this county. Wt* have
cf mined from being a part of any
lique or faction so that we could
e rve all the peopi : to the best of
>ur ability.
Every
who
this
paper i? a citizen of Baldwin coun
ty and Milledgeville. He pays taxes
•o, he contributes to some church
the city and we have in our em
ployment a member of every church
the city who contributes liberally
its support. We have been Vhe
staunch friend of the colleges, we
fought for the best interest of
tatc institutions and we have
always been in the forefront of the
fight for a greater city and county.
T'irst then, from the editor down
the devil, we are citizens of the 1
I county, supporting every institution.
Second we are spending money in
our city. Th.* money paid our cm-l
ployees is spent here. Their homes]
are hi re and their interests are here. |
IVatfcally $10,000. annually goes
into The Union-Recorder's payroll. 1
Pratically $1,000 is paid in rents]
and taxes. Not a single person?
connected with this paper makes his
PROHIBITION ENFORCEMENT
Many people have questioned the !
editor regarding the Literary Digest]
Prohibition poll. It seems to be a !
dominant question in tho minds of
the people at this time.
Due to the fact that the Literary :
Digest polls during the last two
National elections, {have pratically ;
shown the exact result, much faith is
expressed in the outcome as relative
to the opinion of the American peo
ple. The first few weeks of ballot
ing have shown that the sentiment
is largely in favor of repeal or modi
fication.
Baldwin county people have been
slow in t 4 "* majority to give the mat
ter their Cention. We would esti
mate that there has not been one
hundred votes cast. The interest in
such matters fails to creat any groat
excitement here.
Baldwin county is dry, Georgia is
dry and regardless of the national
changed or repealed, we will
(main a dry state. And that is
should be State's rights is a
r stone of American Liberty
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
VARIETY MERCHANDISE
CTEMBR1DGE & COMPANY
HIONfg KC-J
• hope
. laws
Washington of a personal nature
that will meet with the approval of
every section yf tho country. Condi
tions prevail in the thickly populat
ed east that do not exist here. The
bootleg rings, the highjacke’., th.
rackteer, are unknown to us. We
mad about them in the papers and
all.
We
pee-
clsewhei
racy lei
and wt
has
Baldwin co
food and its prenarati
Wt are fortunate in having secur
ed the servic-e of Mias Olgi Koch, Th*
nationally known hotr.e economist, memb
who will direct the school. Mix* the t
teb will hare complete 'barge of organ.
spend it;
The editor, a native of the county,
s given his life work to the things
believed to be for the best inter-
t of this county. The purpo-e of
is paper is not to take all that it
n out of Jhe county, but rather to
.* how much they can give toward
ll , U(lliiilllllJn the happiness of its citizens, the im-
und demo-1 * >roVement it5 institution*, the ;
should aB y Pnww its business, a r.d the up-
cities of the | building of it citizenship, and
right to de-1 turn to receive the good will and
to try some-j patrona * re o{ its P*°Ple-
The editors of The Union-Recorder
ive no divided intern t, Baldwin
home and they pledge
believe that th.
pic of Georgia will become g „
stirred over the prohibition poll of
the Digest.
The sentiment is back of the law
in Georgia -and any great agitation
to repeal prohibition wlil have lit
tle effect here.
COAL
is an ancient discovery, but consumers of our
various grades are continually discovering its
stored-up wealth.
Rich in carbon, but poor in ash—sums up the
reasons for the general satisfaction rendered
Our service is a match for their quality, too—
Sv our coals,
it’s up to scratch.
fOWLEfi-FLE ..ISTER KIAL ;0.
STRENGTH IN UNITY
three-quarters cf a million
tr. of The American Legion.
eragj annual strength of thi*'
zaticn, learned two things w:!j
allej
id ideals.
the people,
FOR TALE—My hoi
health. Mrs. Blain
The Union-Recorder learns that it
> the habit of a number of children.
kho are attending school in town to
>* out to the road when they are dis-
ussed and ask passing automobilists •
going towards therr homes for rides.
This D n dangerous practice as they
ru*i the risk of being struck by the
automobile-'. Both the teachers and
parents should warn the children
against such n practice, and do all 1
in their power to prevent it.
WANTED—Middle aged white wo-1
552-L Mr.. Scovill.
WATCH THE RED—WHITE AND BLUE LIGHTS ITS THE SIGN
OF
Delicious Barbecue
We will sell a sandwich or a pound. Drive down to our Wayne
Street Store and get all kinds of sandwiches—We ners. Ice
Cream and Cold Drinks
We have Barbecue every Thursday—you can tell when you see
the colored lights burning.