Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, May 08, 1930, Image 2

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r THE UNION-RECORDER, ffMILLEDGEVILLE, CA-, MAY B, )«M BOOK REVIEWS By DR. ALICE HUNTER ofmor of Eafliih, Georgia Stale Colb Womei THE WEATHERHOUSE By Nan Shepherd E. P. Dalton A Co., Inc. ably i Drama and novf t-d, presented in a blurry Scotch dialect with eerie fijrures. both hu man und pure spirit, this book, per haps, indicates the approaching new form «»f literature f»*r which thi world of writers and publishers is now looking. |wonn Mi-s Shepherd has been a?clai.red line- by the press of Scotlar particular- the » ly for her handling of a dialect whim ' !I< wi is released from "its hitnerto half- her - f the Scottish countryside whence men went to the ranks of the Great Wat which was in full blow when the story opened Behind-uhe-lines stories *i death in th trenrhe.-, of men wh«me wits were blithered by horror* drifted to the land of the book, where scheming men got rich and many others lost their all. Here was situated Weatherhousem horn*- of three generations of Scotch mering prattle of : . Nan Shepherd in makes the Scottish all parts of the Thia hidden conventionaliMn enough to place her lan ruug.*, dia lect and dialog, above reproach. She has, besides, the ru«* gift of catching the meanu.g of youth and old age. and of mingling them in a story sn that they M-etn -•» belong. Her rhielest charm is the und.-r-iand- ing way with which she depirta the derintf mir.ds i phantom worlds in which certain The trampe types <>f women live. I^ouisc Morgan Irish literatur of the story, all her life, inhabited a knighthood art dream stage whereon she played a in a wanton role and sadly deluded her imply In them and i heart with creatures of her own mak- th story ther .Miss Shepherd has be to Yeats and Synge. She shares with them the Celtic Fancy, the fleet ing imagination that makes the un seen as real as the facts of flesh and earth. But her stories are woven out of both fact* of hard Scottish life and figments of the fevered brain. The book makes a challenge to the reader who finds it as difficult t< understand as life. Like and high emotion it weariei longs to lay the volutm of Sie Forb Renewed rigor in the Govern ment's co-operative baule with the farmer against injurious crop in sect-. was promised for this month with the delivery of a fleet of Chev rolet Sedan Deliveries to the Wes tern division of the department of Agriculture. This particular fleet is to be used in the campaign against the corn borer and is t«. concentrate its work in West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin. Similar fleets, enlisted in the war. of" 0 the '"''hard atfainst the fru ‘ t ***’• bo1 * weevil, Sinclair Jwis. none of * ^™ tion ' " ' ‘ '* nited States. Every car in the fleet recently de livered i> a standard Chevrolet six, ith sedan delivery body, in which iiuipment essential to a successful pursuit of the Government’s war is transported. As the cars left the Flint plant of the Chevrolet Motor Company, they were paraded through the streets of that city with the national banner fluttering from i either piue of each car, as though I mobilizing for the “war” in which they were soon to take part. Selection of Chevroleta for this I work was made by the Government because of their dependability and I i economy of operation in transferring ! activities from one "battle sector”! to another, it was explained. W. D. way of! flam- country u al and Appealing, house in whose every window ed a light the whole night long—the fields over which white Htin wa.- blown in a solid wall by the- bluster ing gale—the land where spring worked "a subtle fire in buds an-i boughs”—all these engage our won- of the includes! i the hero, kne’ how blackei n be yond death, und how koman happy. He h the ■ of the story—a Celtic ii gazed fre»m the fir?- m bers of the heiuse top gargoyle, who lost himself in . and learned to laugh at him- nd humanity all gath red up me accumulated creation. An h food engaging figure is Garrie Forbes that j AND sitAK DAILY * J live. The John Grey of I Barrie-like character. | BOSTON rtvr —WHERE EVERYBODY EATS—! “Frenli Eggs Served Daily” I FRESH NORFOLK OYSTERS calculating thought. Yet Lindsay, the girl whom Garrie mai • what one has read keeps returning retd, with her wholesomeness giver-j and the statements fit into fargment-- the tory a sane balance, for all its of life itself. The blur of the lang- twisted souls that P«*» before the uage seems like a forgotten dream, reader’s vision like the panorama «f Fetter-Rothnie lay in the mia-t of an old Greek fresco. Try Oar Ik BLUE PLATE DINNER One Thimbleful- A DAY'S FEED One Chick | _ * J.HINK OF IT! One tiny thimbleful. . - all the feed a chick can put in its little crop in one day. On this tiny bit it must live . .. grow . .. build bones ... build muscles .,. start feath ers. Think of the job feed has to do! They must depend on feed for so many things! They get them all in Purina Chick Startena (mash) or Purina All-Mash Startena Chow ... 12 different ingredients in every thimbleful. Cod-liver oil . . . dried buttermilk . . . alfalfa flour ... granulated meat... these and eight others are there! These 12 ingredients... think how carefully they mast be mixed to make every thimbleful alike. Pnrina Startena and All-Mash Startena Chow are mixed over and over again... 960 times just to be thorough! You will find the same care taken with Baby Chick Chow (scratch)... to be fed with Startena until your chicks are six weeks old ... and with Purina Growcna (mash) and Purina Intermediate Hen Chow (scratch)... to be fed from then on until the pullets are laying at 16 wceki. How little feed n chick cats .. . just one thimbleful a day... yet how important it is .. . how much depends on it... the chick's very life . .. its grow th ... w hat the pullets will do for you next fall and winter when eggs are sure to be worth good money. You can afford to feed only the best... Purina Poultry Chows. L. D. SMITH South Wayne Grocer FRICIDAIRE INTRODUCES NEW MILLEDGEVILLE MASON IN ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR UNE OF PROMOTION Dayton, Ohio. May 1.—A de luxe electric refrigerator, with five com- pa^ments, f*>tsr temperatures and two humidity ranges was announced today by Frigidaire Corporation. It ^eeinl storage apace for bottled goods, frozen foods and ice cubes, according to the announcement. The interior of the right side of the cabinet is designed in the con ventional manner for shelf storage. The interior of the left side j* reach ed through two extra doors which shut in the lower temperatures pro vided in this half of the cabinet. Two moist air compartments afford space for more than n pick of leafy veget able*. larger ice tray- are included a* regular equipment. The new refrigerator, now on dis play, is built in nine and twelve cu bic font model* only. It is finish ed in porcelain-on-nteri and in its exterior appearance do* not differ from regular househ d model*. It i* designed to furnish the maximum service which can be render d by »r. electric refrigerutor the furi. -y an nouncement *ay*. At the session of the Grand Lodge of Mason held in Mucnn the past | week Mr. Jos A. Moore was elected Grand Scribe. Mr. Moore is in Of promotion and vill M the 1»S3 'jesMon be given the highest office ii the Grand Lodge Grand liigh Priest Mr. Moore is one of the loading and most prominent Masons in State. For several years he has been a Trustee of the Masonic phan Home in Macon. BELIEVE IT OK NOT a total of 193 tribes of r"c, '»C C fe l A. J. C \rr Company TN 'addition to the services we render electric light and power and other utility services — everything we have is back of building up this sute. And all of these communities, these towns and rural places, get the benefit of It That is why we advertise them; that is why we maintain a department to help locate inUustiiss here in Georgia; that «a why we take pail in every thing that has as its object help ing to build up the places where this Co pany rencl.-rs services That is v. hy I say ih;» Company [jAeS, K* " ' rft Or.^2 k 1 Var,!**** c, Ceo£** or ms£2» ^5? ^rd/, & £?*****' *)er* , il" ^ 1 . T* 3nnrr>, cai is A Citirt-i W r We **- '»- ^ T! - » »• • ri "- ^5: C £ Ol >PM Our Job— more Profitable Farming as well as more INDUSTRIES S INCK the recent announcement of the Georgia Power Company Profitable Fanning Award, some folks have asked—Why is the Georgia Power Com- pany interested in farming? What has a public utility to do with agriculture? Community development is a part of our job. Above is reproduced one of the adver tisements we publish <n magazines of national circulation in an effort to induce new industnes to locate in Georgia. New kl- dustnes in Georgia mean new customers to buy our power, greater wealth for Georgia, greater opportunities for us to hB our prod, ucl So we promote Georgia's ndustnal growth in any way wa can. Promoting Geor gia's agriculture likewise our job, and for the same reasons. Our business succew depends so greatly r GEO]L< j on Georgia’s prosperity, and so much of Georgia's wealth comes from the soil, it would be strange if we did not wish to do everything we can to help make Georgia farms more prosperous—now more so than ever, since the expansion of our service into new sections recently has so greatly in creased the number of our customers de pendent entirely or almost entirety on wealth that comas from the farms. It's a simple business proposition with us. AH of our business is done in Georgia, ■nd almost Iks only way wa can hope to promote our business it by promoting the welfare and prosperity of our cutwmtw in Georgia. We with to hatp make Geor gia farms more pros perous, not for any charitable raaaan. GIA it's good but for ua to do k. CITIZEN WHENEVER WB III VI