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THE UNION-RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILLE. CA., JULY 27, 1933
®hr Ilittim-Errnrlirr
Southern Recorder Estk. 1111
Published Weekly » Tkuredey
•t Milledgeeille, Go.
R. B. MOORE—EDITOR
JERE N. MOORE—Bskssu Mp.
SUBSCRIPTION RATEj
Oue Year — IIJ<
Advertising Rates eet A*»IUati*a
OFFICIAL OMAN OF COUNTY
THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1933
Society
Sirs. Howard Bert Ennis spent
Tuesday in Macon.
iMiss Sue Cheok spent Monday and . ,, ....
Tuesday to Attouto - *"• »• W «-«*". »'
, , , 1 spent tne past week with her mother,
Mrs. J. F. Bell. Mr. Heidecker came
| The Newell house, one of Mil-
| ledgeville's anti-bellum homefv .is be-
| ing renainted.
Capt. J. H. Ennis has shipped
th : rty-five car loads of watermelons
from this city this season.
Mr. J. T Terry spent the week
end with friends in reensboro.
The prospects are that the two j
colleges located here will be well ■
attended neat falL All indications;
point that way now.
The sentiment that the court house
and jail should be disposed of to the
G. S. C. W. authorities is strong in
Baldwin county.
Anything done to advance the
interest of G. S. C. W. and G. M. |
C. means that . Milledgeville and
Baldwin county will be benefited.;
Milledgeville has passed through:
the depression well. It has been
largely due to the stability and
policy of the four banks located
here.
The first bale cotton for 1933
has been ginned and sold in Geor
gia. In another month a bale will
^rbbably reach the Milledgeville
market. •'*' " ’
Our citizens and inerchanta are’
now looking forward to the opening
of the two colleges again next Sep-'
tember, and. the time when cotton!
will be ginned and marketed.
President .Roosevelt mid in his
speech Monday night that he believed
the American poopli could pull them
selves out of the depression if they
wanted to. Words' wisely spoken.
The merchants and all employers
will read and carefully study the
message of _ President Roosevelt,
when they" receive' it from the post
office carriers today.
Mr. Paul M. Smith was a week-end
visitor to relative* in Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Trawvck. of
Linton, were iti Ifilledgevi'.le Tues
day.
Mr. W. I. Johnson has been con
fined to his hoihe this week by li
ne*.
Mr. and Mr*. Herman Levine and
little daughter spent Sunday in At
lanta.
Mr. Seaborn Lawrence is attend
ing summer school at Emory Uni
versity.
Mr. J. W. Ivey, of Charlotte, N.
C., spent the week-end with his par-
ents. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ivey.
Mrs. Emmett Hines and children,
will arrive early in August from
their home in Washington, to spend
August at Grcenacre with Judge and
Mrs. E. R. Hines.
-Miss CaUierinne Cline, who has
been here with her aunts, the Misses
Cline while attending G. S. C. W.,
has gone to her home at Shreveport,
La.
Mrs. Marion Allen and son, Mr.
Marion Allen, Jr., have gone to the
Century of Progrem Exposition in
1 Chicago. They made the trip by
automobile.
Mr. and Mr*. Ed King, of Gaff-
ney, S. C., have returned to their
home after visiting Mrs. Douglas
Gilstrap. Mrs. King, who was former
ly Miss Blanche Gilstrap, attended
G. S. C. W's summer session and
Mr. King joined her here for a short
visit last week.
In !
primary next Wednesday
a Mayor and-three Aldermen will he
named who' will have a part in the
city government for the next two
years. May they be guided with wis
dom.
The people are watching with
interest the increase of the prices
of all commodities 'and anxiously
awaiting the time when the volume
of money will be increased and be
gin to circulate.
President Roosevelt struck a re
sponsive chord when he spoke to the
American people over the radio
Monday night, and appealed for
their co-operation in carrying out his
program of aecon.-itnudtion.
There are numerous evidences
that things are on the mend and
that we have already made substan
tial gains! There is a basis for real
optimism in a press dispatch which
says that destitution born of unem
ployment has been removed from
1,600 families in Athens and Clarke
County by expanding textile opera
tions and increasing business gen
erally. A few months ago 1,680
families were dependent on public
relief. A survey , by the Red Cross
showed the number had been reduc
ed to eighty families last month, a
drop of approximately 90 per cent.
The entry of the United States
into the World Court is described
as "the logical, the safe, the correct
next step in ouf contribution to the
problem of finding a judicial way to
settle our international deputes,"
by Dr. Robert A. Millikan, world
famous American 'physicist, addres
sing the New ngland Institute of
International Relation* on “Science
and InterhatiOhAsm’*, ’he said, "I
regard scisneft.as.the most effective
and deadtjTfc* «B%kR*And I think
It is raipdly rendering war obsolete.
Science and its T>j|&cation have
changed the nature of war. They
kave rendered^ jt..raore destructive
and enormously more costly, so that
as the last war showed, the advant-
agesAfhich th* victfr-fopnerly hoped
to w.» from wahkhave disappeared.
War may have survived thus far be
cause it had survival value, but it
rannot survive long after science
has so changed conditions that it
no longer has survival value."
to the city, and accompanied her
j back to Atlanta Sunday.
Mrs. Sam Terry has been in the
city hospital this week undergoing
treatment for an infected ear from
which she suffered great pain. Her
condition is showing much improve
ment
Mrs. R. L. Wall is visiting her
daughter. Mrs. R. D. Pyron in Bry-
ron City, N. C. She is accompanied
by her daughter, Mrs. J. E. Sapp
and sons, Robert Wall Sapp and
Clarence Sapp.
. . .
j Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Harrington,
j Mrs. W. C. Ressau. Mrs. Watt Evans
! and son. Edwin, Mr. and Mrs. Earn
est Crooms and children, and Dar
win Brake, Jr., and W. J. Brake left j
Saturday night, for an'automobile
trip to the Century of Progress Ex-1
position in Chicago. |
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McFarline and
children, who are visiting Mrs. Mc-
Farline’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. 1
C. Wilkinson at Brown’s Crossing,:
will return to their home in Hcnder-!
son, N. C.. Sunday. Mr. Wilkinson
will accompany them for a short
visit, and will also make a trip to
West Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Proffitt,
and daughter, of Tulsa, Oklahoma,
are visiting Capt. and Mrs J. H.
Ennis. - Mr. Profitt lived in this city
the latter part of 1893 and in 1894,
and was employed by Capt Ennis.
After leaving here he went to Tulsa,
and this is the first time he and
Capt. Ennis have met since.
OUR CUSTOMERS SAY
That Wocoprp (uoliM is "Ds-
p ram iso* Cos" it -os. farther sod
does what ordinary can not do.
If you are using it yon will
to agree, if not, one trial will ha all
that is nocossary.
L. N. JORDAN
The local W. C. T. U- will have
“Citizenship Program” at its August
meeting and special plans are being
made to prepare an interesting and
enjoyable program for that occasion.
Mr*. C. B. McCulIar, Milledgeville
attorney, will be in charge of the
program, and Judge Bertie Stem-
bridge, county ordinary, will assist
at the program.
Practical methods in citizenship
training will be discussed.
SIX HUNDRED
Natural Gas
RADIANT HEATERS
Now In Use In Milledgeville
This Many Poople Can’t Be Wrong
BUY YOURS NOW
At Summer Discount Prices
6a. Natural Gas Com
Phone 71 *
del monte
Tlay Peas
NO 2
CAN
I5c
DEL MONTE SLICED
Peaches No.
21-2 can 15c
SMOKING TOBACCO
Prince Albert
can
10c
Wesson Oil Pint 19c
Octogon
Soap gm small -m aa.
or Powder 9 size AV6
CHILI SAUCE Quaker Maid 12 oz. BoL 15c
STUFFED OLIVES Encore 3 oz. Jar 10c
GRITS Aunt Jemitiima 2 Pkgs. 13c
SWANS DOWN Cake Flour Ctn. 23c
GRAPENUTS Pkg 17c
GRAPENUT FLAKES Ctn' 10c
OLD DUTCH CLEANSER 2 Cans 15c
OUR OWN TEA 1-2 lb. Box 10c
GRAPEJUICE A&P .... 2 Pts. 25c
GRAPEJUICE A&P . . (H. 23c
SALAD DRESSING Rajah .. 2 Pts. 25c
PALMOLIVE SOAP C ake 6c
LUX TOILET SOAP 3 Cakes 19c
GRITS Jim Dandy 5 lbs. 12c
EVAP. MILK White House 3 Tall Cans 17c
COFFEE Eight O'clock . lb, 19c
TEA Nectar Orange Pekoe 1-4 lb. 10c
Tw. Layer, Read CHOCOLATE ICED
CAKES each 17c
Build Roads!
THAT GIVE MEN WORK • THAT GIVE
YOU DRIVING SAFETY, CONVENIENCE
COMFORT AND LOW DRIVING COST
The United States Government has sounded the call,
by giving a direct grant to the States, of at least four
hundred million dollars for highway improvement.
This is part of a vast program of public works to
spread national employment and to stimulate business.
This work will be done through your own State
Highway Department. The Federal Government asks
no return except that the money be expended wisely—
thut the improvements be permanent, substan
tially built and of a type that gives men work.
COMCRiiL roads meet every specification. They
are permanent. Maintenance coot is much less than
that of any other type. They give you the greatest
driving safety, convenience and comfort. They cost
less to drive over-saving you gas. tires, repairs and
; -v depreciation. They will give work to men now on
i * doles in your community. Money will flow across the
counters of home stores.
Insist on CONCKT1 for your roads—get the
most and the best road for the money—and
the maximum employment for labor!
PORTLAND CEMENT]
Has pul/e J America I
out of the mu J!
Remember the roads of 1910?
Narrow strips of dirt — ankle-
deep dust—quagmires of mud—
The cost of moving goods was
terrific!
The engineers have built, with
cement, a network of tasmii
highways throughout the
nation that is nearly one hun
dred thousand miles in length.
Cement spanned great rivers
and broad valleys with concrete.
Cement made the modern motor
vehicle practical; made motor
ing a part of our daily life.
PORTLAND CEMENT
ASSOCIATION
Mart BwIMIns
ATLANTA, OA.
• D of the money Spent on Concrete
Construction Goes to Labor'