Newspaper Page Text
SEEN AH) HEARD
MPAST WEEK
ka tf Ucd !■««»* BcW |JP
Htn ut TWre By fcw» Cilfc-
cm of Tke Ucioo-Recorder.
September 1st ts moving day and
a number of our citizens will move
into new homes. The past several
weeks. however. have alrcariv
brought about several changes of
residences.
The farmers of Baldwin county
should not neshset (o harvest as
large hay crop as possible. Feed
stuff is a valuable assett to have
stu ed in the bames.
The merrtiants of Milledgeville
are receiving new goods for the fall
and winter season.
Politic was the principal topic
for discussion on the streets Sat
urday.
ledgeville to acquaint the trading
public with the line of goods they
arc offering for sale, and the bar
gains they are giving.
Work in remodeling the third flooi
of the G. M. C. barracks is being j
rushed to eompletin. The three
floors of the barracks will be filled
to their capacity when the college
opens September 12th.
MAUGHAM'S SPEECH
HIGHLIGHT OF BIG
WEEK » CAMPAIGN
Governor Taimadge Remains Strong
With lndorsemeots By Railroad
Group and Veterans' Organisation.
By BERT COLLIER
' (Special Writer. G. N. A.)
Today (Thursday) ends the after- Atlanta. Ga.—More excited than
noon closing of the stores on that j n maRV years of campaigning. Gcor-
I gia voters saw the most heated gov
ernor's race in years enter the home
•••trctch with candidates striving
A number of Milledgeville people
have visited the Century of Progrcrs
Exposition at Chicago this year.
The "King of the Hoboes", who
s AI Kaufman and whose home is
ivhercver he hangs his hat. is making
; Atlanta his headquarters until com
pletion of his third book. Tin cans
; in the quantity of ten million have
i been ordered by the EFRA for
ning beef. The most recent capture
1 if federal agents in Columbia
The adult population o( Baldwin i»' ls => «.WX> Eallon still, one of the
count. - are lookins forws-d to the 'arsest ever found. The) ...
primary, and the children to the 't with dynamite. Atlanta policemen hr «eteure__of the department by
npenine of school on the 12th of *" ’ 1 L ” "
September.
Next Monday will be labor day.
A holiday will be observed by the
banks and postoffice.
In several sections of Baldwin
county the com and other crops with
the execeDtion of cotton, are practi
cally a failure.
Mr. Peyton Bames. of South Bald
win. was in the city Saturday. He
said his cotton croD was fairly good,
but that on account of more than
two months of dry weather his other
crops were a failure.
The work of installing a gas heat
ing plant in the academic building
at G. M. C. (The old Capitol) is pro
gressing rapidly. It will be com
pleted by the opening of the college
on the 12th of September.
Milledgeville continues tn be one
of the most progressive cities in
Georgia. The sound of the hammer
«nd saw is being heard in every sec
tion of the city.
The season for gnats and mosqui
toes is on, and the pestiferous in
sects arc proving a nuisance.
The advertising columns of The
Union-R reorder provide an effective
medium for the merchants of Mil
seeking to economize by using
heir summer uniforms during the
.•oming winter. More than a quarter
■'f million dollars worth of pro
duce was sold by southeast Georgia
farmers through the newly organiz
ed farmers’ wholesale market dur
ing its first year's operation. A mar
ried woman can commit no wrong
for which her husband is not liable.
Judge Thomas F. Green told the
graduating class at the University
of Cm.
'espcrn*elv for that spurt that bring 1
hem und~r the wire a winner twe
Earilv *he most dramtic develop
ment cf The w»ek was the radio ad-
ir*wc 0 f j. j. Mangham. former close
friend of Governor Taimadge and
chairman of tne highwav board, who
now is one of the chief backers of
T:*d"e Claude Pittman.
Mr. Manghani spoke for an hour. |
living the reason tor his break with
Taimadge. Boiled down, his state-
men was that he got out of the high
way department because he could
not stay in and see the mounting
tide of graft and corruption, and
Ladjr Went Back
To Taking CARDUI
and Waa Helped
Vbr men periodic palm, crmmpM
or nervousness, try Cardul which
m> many women have praised, lor
over fifty year*. Mrs. Dora Dna-
gan. of 8dence Hill, Ky, writes:
“Several year* ago. when I wag
taarhlng school, I got run-down
and Buffered intensely during men
struation periods. I took Cardui
and was aU right again. After I
was married, when I felt all run
down and was Irregular. I always
resorted to Cardui and was helped."
... It may be Just what you need.
Thousands of women testily Car
dui benefited their. If it does not
benefit YOU, consult a phytifinn,
Bell’s
Special Sale Brassieres
‘YQUmfOW
The purpose of a brassiere is twofold; first*
shield the breast from view; second, accentip
ate woman's most captivating physical charm.
Virtually any brassiere
will snswet the first require
ment. Only Youthform com*
plctdy fulfills the second.
Youthiurm, unlike other
ts designed to
and support the
aature intended-
plump and outstanding, as
the perfect bosom ought t*
be, Youthform pockets wtl
form them that way.
Made in a variety «|
styles suitable far day, nr
ning and sports wear, there
i Youthform foe woata
Of 4
The garment illustrated U Style I—Tart
Youthform. to he uom with evening
gowns. Pnce. $2 00. Other stylet at
3»c to 2.50
Sold EXCLUSIVELY Here
E. E. BELL
racketeers."
This speech was like a peep into
*ho intimate history of Georgia af-
glimpse people of the state
seldom obtain.
Undoubtedly this speech was
heard by many thousands, for the
response was immediate and wide
spread.
But Govemcr Taimadge. who has
been or the receiving end of one of
the most vigorous assaults ever
aimed at a candidate for re-election,
kept right on speaking to tremend-
crowds, to all appearance as
strong as ever in the estimation of j
his followers. •
Indorsed for re-election by the
leaders of the “Big 4" railroad
brotherhoods and praised by a
mittee of veterans who investigated
all three candidates, his campaign
showed an astonishing vitality.
Judge Pittman continued to speak
an average of three times daily, fol
lowing a man-killing schedule that
carried him into every section of the
state.
Highly significant in the race for
commissioner of agriculture was the
statement of Governor Taimadge.
vho has been supporting Tom Lin
der. that “there are two good men
In the race.” His followers paused
to think, as the governor did not
explain.
Campaigns for this post gained
dded heat. Dr. J. M. Sutton turned
his heavy guns on Columbus Rob
for Roberts’ assertion that norw
of his opponents had made construc
ts contributions to the welfare of
the farmers. Dr. Sutton denied this
and cited his record.
Mr. Roberts closed a short but
igornus : speaking campaign dur
ing which he explained his plans
for better marketing facilities and
the removal of the agricultural de
partment from politics.
James A. Perry, candidate for pub
lic service commissioner, stepped up
his campaign by issuing sweeping
itatements attacking the record of
his opponent. Jud P. Wilhoit, attain
ing claims of the commission to dras
tic reductions in rates, and battling
militantly against the wording of
the ballot which shows Wilhoit
the incumbent instead of merely the
temporary appointee of the gover-
, The proposed exchange of western
! drouth cattle for native southern
i cattle will be carried out. according
I to the farm administration ^nd th«
i FERA. Work on the new Union Point
i waterworks plant will begin about
1 September 1, the water supply t*
come from a rcce»tly completes ar
tesian well. Mrs. Franklin D. Roso-
! veil has promised to visit the Elear.-
I or Roosevelt Democratic Women'
Club of BuHoch county when the
president comes to Warm Springs
this fall. A tentative site for
federal vacation park where poot
persons may obtain recreation
denied them has been selected in
Morgan county near Rutledge. Two
DcKalb county youths arc sueing
Emory University for $25,000 each,
claiming they were peppered with
bird shot by the watchman of the
university's lake where they ’
swimming without benefit of bath
ing suits. Eugene Phillips, who lives
in Royston. has a kitten that preters
watermelon to catnip. Sculptors all
' over the country have been invited
by radio station WGST to submit
designs for the proposed Uncle Re
mus memorial to be erected in Pied
mont park in Atlanta. PWA money
In the amount of $29,425,210 has
been loaned on federal and non-
federal projects In Georgia, accord
ing to an announcement by Secre
tary of Interior Ickes. It was his owt
telephone crtl that brought the police
to arrest S. W. Kimmon for drunken
ness but Recorder John L. Cone of
the Atlanta police court didn't think
that excused him for the offense and
sentenced him to ten days in jail. Re
ceivership for Oglethorpe county has
been asked in a petition filed in
Washington by A. S. Richardson.
Wilkes county, who represented
himself as the holder of Oglethorpe
county school bonds on which inter
est has been defaulted. President
Roosevelt's mother brought a piece
of tweed to be made into a suit for
her son when she returned the other
*- a two-month trip to Eu-
• Come in and see the greatest of all work-savers
wonderful stain-
proof porca/iron
work -top! They
say it will never
lane:
Ocarious! This big. roomy bread-box drawer
slides so quietly you'd never know it wu
metal. See, Betty—the cutting board right
Jane:
Betty
Jane:
der it’s so smooth i
Betty: °* > * S** how ***** ***** extends
J * when I open the base door—brings pots and
pans to your fingertips. Think how tfw? will
save stoopingl
Jane* Dld you ever *** *"y*bing Slide n
* smoothly than t* *
Betty: “*7 “V
Betty Loot " ,h “ ** ”»•> tw u>-koi
J ' I—llftrt, -J Ihm arfu, to rirUMj c
Jane:
Betty:
Jane:
Betty:
Jane:
This hardw—c is all heavily nickel plated.
See how substantial it is. too.
Have you netted how fine the cabinetwork
W Just Hite the finest furniture ... and they
say there is not a stick of soft wood in it.
Look at thia beck. Betty—entirely closed.
No mice can ever get in it.
Try this roll curtain . . . it extends clear
across the front and yet it moves at a touch.
Oh, I like jhat . . . Look, Betty, it has a
Xhsr/iofit—m swinging doors over the
work-table. \
That big glaaa sugar jar la certainly handy,
bat it?
Yea. and bat this plash-feed •Over tray
devsrt They thought of everything-
Puicha