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THE UNION-RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., NOVEMBER 16, 1933
®lir Ruinn-Errnrilrr
Southern Recorder Folk. ••!§
Published Weekly on Theredey j
• t Milledieeille, Ge.
program and seen it through. There
is never any need fo: but one drive.
Give now for the whole ye-.- and
there will never be occasion for an-
o.her drive thi» year, if you do your
part now.
If you arc not on the honor roll,
place you- name there today. Do not
be a buck passer.
AS
L'ertising Rata* on Applies
G. M. C. is past one of i's most
critical dangerous trnmes and victory
by a >'core of 12 to 0 was the final
result of the battle last Friday af
ternoon when a strong Cochran team
gave the red and black warriors all
they could manage to handle.
The battle is over. It was a bitter
struggle, but as fine an exhibit’on
of real fight and bull dog tenacity,
it has been th : s writers pleasure to
witness. The officials played too
I much of the game in the firtlt half
nd kept the cadetn in hot water
| most of the time. But from all we
can learn most of the penalties were
Chitterlings time here again. Oh! ,, ,
* t correct and should have been called.
y ' j We are glad they were called on G.
. . . . . ... M. C. and not the visitors, for it gave
7h, b«t way I'd*, loyally lo , he „„ cha «,
The cadets got all of the bad
brenks. They had two plays called
~ ! . ~ I back in rucror»\>n that were touch-
The » TUn.ll a~l.tr.,, , fh.-y ^ „„
will be a big factor in solving Geor- .. , , :
I awe« for four downs.
ir-son problem n.
your home town is to adopt the
policy of buying at home f'rrt.”
More muleu are being sold here i
than in a long lime. It ndicates that!
the fanner has high hopes and his
rpirits arc better and he is looking,
forward to a year of hard work. i
President Roosevelt will receive
a cordial welcome Saturday, when
he visits Savannah. He will go from
there to his home at Warm Springs,
where he will spend two weekly or
:'me« for four downs, only to he
| penalized on the punt piny, which
! gave their opponents firft down.
Young men of le» •> sterner rtuff
would hBve cracked under the crush
ing blows that were deal* by the
officials. When the bnll was placed
inside the ten yard line by penal
ties for three times, the average
team would have crumpled and given
up, but the cadets held on with that
tenacity of the b illdog, and never
gnvo an inch, die] lajrRg as fine de-
fcns ! ve play as ceu’d be w'"hed for.
Thlr- game In ov*r. Another dang
erous foe comes here Friday and
anot.ier Ttywksgivinjc. The ca.dets
cannot let up. They are on the
Every year hundreds of dollars go
from th 1 * city to mail order houses jui , vii
for Christmas purchases. There I* j !£„t „nd thev^ust ^ive their best
no reason srtiy the-e purchases | xhe flns in o, is gection Bro
should not be made from home mer- j f cc di„ e M on fine games. Another
chants, for there is always a large I capaci ,y crow d should see the game
variety of these goods on display
here and they are of just aa much
value ar those purchased from mail
order house-*. Do your Christmas
shopping at hc'mc this year.
Friday, for if anytVhg it will be
better than the last.
Thr legalizing of liquor agn ; n in |
the United States demands that the |
W. C. T. U., that great temperance
organization, double its efforts to
educate the people especially the
young the evil effects of alcohol 1
indulgence and intemperance, fo
within the past few years the idea
reems to have grown that drinking
liquor can be indulged in without
ev : l efccts. All during the ages the
victims it has wrecked have been
strown all along the pathway of
life. That it "stingeth like a -erpent
and bideth like an adder” is as
today as it was when written.
One of the most important ques
tions that could come up for
sideration at the approaching ses
sion of the North Georgia Confer
ence would be ways and meann to
maintain and support the rural
churches in its jurisd'lction. It will
be a sad day for Mcthodinm and the
advancement of God's Kingdom when
these churches are abandoned, and it
is reported that in sections of the
Conference this is being done. From
the rural churches have come
great number of ministers who have
had sn important part in the past
h'ftory of the Methodist church.
These churches have had a most
wholesome influence ih building
Christian citizenship. They have
stood as a mighty bulwark aganist
ev'l. At their altars a true and liv
ing Gcd has been worshiped and the
fatherhood of God, and the brother
hood of man has been taught. Again noxt t ' 0 B c ] nP i, oaT< j roof
> say it will be a sad day wiafi
rural ehurches arc_..abandoned,’
"the UNITED CHARITY DRIVE
The time is short. Only four days
are left for you to give to the Red
Cross and United Charity fund that
■will provide for Baldwin county’s
ne-dy this winter.
The drive has been under the able
leadership of Father McNamar- and
the spirit of co-operation and de
termination that has been manifest
by the workers has been encourag
ing. The float In the Armistice pa
rade Friday bad the following In-
r-crpUon on the front. "There are
no Ruck Passers in MHledgeville,
Mr. President”. This message to the
President came in answer to hia ap
peal that there be no buck parsers
♦his winter, but that ever* citizen do
WHAT ARE RICHES WORTH?
From The Barneavilla Gazette.
The past several years have
wrought havoc with property values
and the fortunes which were piled
up honestly and otherwise
vanished as f between nuns. The
pathetic story wai told shortly af
ter the close of the world war when
prices were sky high of the great
meat packer who saw his vast for
tune slip away from him at the rate
of a million dollars a day. and he
was absolutely powerless to do any
thing to stop it. And now corner) the
story that George M. Studobakor,
whose firm of which he was the
lead'ng .-pirit, made wagons and
automobiles, has filed bankruptcy
proceeding^, although they do not
involve the company wh’ch
Ktudebaker family founded and built
up. Thousands like him. having great
wealth and lost it during recent
years, have committed ruicide and
“gone the way of all the earth,
hut Mr. Studebaker seems wiser
thnn they ar.d has accepted the
rrilt philosophically, which unques-
t : onably is hard to do. He evidently
porse. seq the quality* of one of the
original Studebakors who is credit
ed with having made the following
address to h« workmen.
“Workmen, I know what it is to
be poor, I know what it is to work
for fifty cents a day and board my
self; I know what it is to wish for
the first white sort; I know what it
to live week in and wejfc out
mush and milk; rWriow'what it is
and have the snow blow in and cover
my head; I know what it is to stand
the outside of a circus tent and
hear the muric and the clown with
in, and wish I had a quarter to get
I know more—I know what it is
'e •• ! stfully in a showcase fill
ed with gingerbread, and w : sh I had
a penny to buy sshne. Know'hg these
things from hard experience, I ray
it makes my blood boil to hear any
man say one word that will tend to
encourage a man in a watte of time
and in idleness.”
With Thanksgiving and Christmas
rapidly appr*-nehingg, and the
caa'on for turkey dinners, the sup
ply of turkeys : n the county is none
her part and the needy will ( too plentiful. Farm Agent Langley,
he cared for. We hope this mes-age stated.
♦o the President is true and that
♦here will be no occasion to retract
h-tween now and the time the
drive closes.
Father McNamara has done n poo l
The number of turkeys rained for
market '-trpr this year li much
■mailer than of past years, it
was r'ated. There are a number of
fine flecks however that will soon
$2,100 WORTH OF BALDWIN
PRODUCE SOLD ON MARKET
Farmers Market Close* Sccosd Year
With Spleadid Yield ta Farmer*.
$2,100 has gone into the pockets
of Baldwin county farmers from
pi-oducc ijsld on the Farmers Market
during the pa-t year, Farm A gen,
Langley stated this week.
The •market has just closed it*
second year of operation and the
net returns have shown an increase.
A number of farmers have
bringing their produce to the market
and have found it an avenue to dis
pose of surplus products of the
farm. Agent Langley said the mar
ket had been a means to improve
marketing condition^ and ha* been
a big aid to the fanners. Several
farmers have turned their attention
more each year to the development
of gardens and poultry raising and
have used the market as a selling
medium.
i REV. T. V. SMITH TO BE
ORDAINED SUNDAY.
I Rev. T. V. Smith will be ordained
to the g-.spel ministry next Sunday
at Mt. Plea-ant church, at eleven
o’clock. Rev. C. M. Cloud, Mr. Joe.
A. Muore and Rev. P. M. Allen will
compose the presbytery. Rev. Mr.
Allen will conduct the examination
Rev. Mr. Cloud will preach the
ordnation seimon. Mr. Moore w !, l
deliver the charge to the candidate.
NEGROE PASTORS ATTENDING
METHODIST CONFERENCE
The C. M. E. Conference and the
A. M. E. Conference are both in
session in Macon this week. Rev.
W. M. Gladdin, partor of the C. M.
^ Church, and Rev. A. C. Danforth,
of the A. M. E. church, are attend
ing their Respective conliepence*.
Both of them have done good work
during the year, and have had a
w&oiesr'me influence among the
negroes of the cty.
SPECIAL
Your Old Mattress
Made Like Ne w
CLEANED, RENOVATED AND NEW TICK
$4.50 up
Pho, .e 440
WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
SNOW’S LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING GO.
JACK TUNNELL, Mgr.
ate af (ha trade •<»
Hadelr H*C OotaaR*
iittfUJAUKUS ar Iplsi Armani Dinesoer wka dafaadad
himself wHh the weirded backhene aver kaewu and pat- which Sinclair Opaline and
seated a brain in his Madqaarten as wai as hi his beod~aa Made. A campanlea predect Is Ibe
ha leaks la the 1,250,000 peeple whe visit the Sinclair Diae- -kiphnr ia anti-knack than Ibe
saw inhibit at Ibe Chkape Werid’s Fair every month. The Sin- 70- and new tefliap at Ibe pda
Th— in tUmdmy nsdui 40 NBC Sftinn—SWCIdlO MN3TULS
Agmtt Sinclair RaSnlng Company (Inc.) ^
J. B. MALPAS, Agent
C. E. Smith, Retail Aqt, Hancock St L L Beck, Retail Agt, West End