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THE UNION-RECOIDBI, MILLEDG E VILLE, GA^ APIIL ZS, IMS
: ON COHON ONLY
CO OPERATING GROWER
i of Tenant* and Crop-
;j vrn Particular Atten-
BREVITIES IN THE NEWS
r g. n. 8.) Local Comment
Crv.-M’tncr
loans on the 1935 cot-
hc made only to pro-
" l, ‘. ,io co-operate in the cot-
; tment pmsram, according
unccmcn. by Secndnry of
;-irc Henry A. Walace. No
. :i be made on cotton in ex-
f the allotment under the
n'.hcad act.
,,n the 1P34 cotton crop
• 'confined to co-op* rating pro
's but there was no restriction
0 n cotton produced by co-
tiir* grower- in excess of the
tment under the Bankhead act.
nr„t,.cti..n '‘be .nterests of ton-
. jnf > share croppers as provided
the cotton r 'duction adjustment
. .. be given particular at-
. „ checking producers’ com-
, vvith 1935 contracts, it is an-
(< j compliance will **e chcck-
the second rental payment
•is .ire sent out.
6EOROIA BEEF CATTLE
IMPROVED IN QUALITY
QUANTITY AND PRICE
(By G. N. S.)
<r. Ga.—Georgia beef cattle
: .!! Mfig prices two to three
high as they brought
> and the price of this c
orgia
50 <
grade of beef
•ago. according to Dr. M. P.
"f the University of Geor-
l«-ce of Agriculture,
ugh this state is still an area
'-• per cent of the beef con-
the proportion of top grade
:.wn in the South has shown
<rs. he said. Likewise, a mark-
ha s 1
show
•att? the
verage production
ised during this
to 3.000 pounds
h-member! when sick see your
lor—When in trouble s»e your
ver—When you buy an electric
iterator set it from your electric
ler— Westinrhousc — CLIFTON
\MS ELECTRIC CO.
(By G. N. 8.)
Four-minute-kisses are too long
when they are bestowed on one's wife
in front of another man’s house. Re-
| border Callaway of Atlanta decided,
when confronted with this problem.
The other man appeared upset by
this display of affection and said
alleged uncomplimentary things to
the husband. Important conventions
scheduled for May ar.d June in
clude a meeting of Georgia Rotarians
in Macon, May 5. 6 and 7: a gather
ing of rural mail carriers of the
eighth congressional district in Val
dosta on May 30. and the convention
of the Georgia Vegetable Growers’
Asociation in Savannah on June 5
and 6. Georgia was second in the list
of states with a high percentage of
| farms worked by tenants, having
68.2 percent of all her farms rented.
Mississippi was first with 72.2 per
cent operated by tenants. One of the
first projects likely to be underta'
en by President Roosevelt in spend
ing the S4.880.000.000 work fund is
the taking of a census of the unem
ployed.. Two Atlanta policemen made
a trip to New Orleans for prisoners
and found force of habit very sti
Standing on the curb in the Loui:
city, they saw' a man come oi
a building with a bottle of whiskey
in his hand. Mindful of their “duty"
they stepped forward and started to
arrest him. but he reminded them
“vru’ro among civilized people now'”.
One out of 100 people is injured
every year in an automobile acci
dent. and one out of 3,500 killed,
figures of the national safety coun
cil reveal. Despite the fact that the
tax on cigars and cigarettes was cut.
in half in 1934. total receipts from
this sourer were greater than in
19:53, according to State Auditor
Tom Wisdom. Another summary*
fmm the state auditing department
shows that the department of law
cr=t taxpayers $22,729.80 in 1934.
Of this $29,170 was for personal ser
vices and the remainder for travel
ing expenses, supplies, equipment.
TOMATO PLANTS—Baltimore va
riety tomato plants for sale by the
hundred nr by the thousand. J. L.
Sign nothing--Promise nothing un
til you have seen the new Westing-
house refrigerator. Easy terms—
CLIFTON ADAMS ELECTRIC CO.
CAMPUS THEATRE
i On the Stage Wed., May 7
For a number of years past with
one or two exceptions. Mr. Darden
Asbury. of Atlanta comes to Mil-
ledgeville to spend Memorial Day
and bo present at the meeting of
Camp Doles, and takes part in the
exercises of the day. His visits ar
always a source o! great pleasure t
his large number of friends in Bald-
in county, who hold him in
highest regards, and appreciate him
for his worth as a high tone Chris
tian gentlemen. The writer has
learned whether Mr. Asbury will fol
low his custom and spend tomorrow
here, but if he does not he will b
greatly missed.
The members of the Robert E. Lee
Chapter of the U. D. C. Mrs. J.
Sheffield Lee. President, have per
fected arrangements for the obser
vance of Memorial Day. A barbecue
dinner will be served the Veterans
and the sons of veterans v.’ith the
members of the Chapter as hostess.
After which the procession will be
formed under command of Capt.
Frank Manjt'icld—and led by the
G. M. C. Hand and march to the
city cemetery. The address will be
delivered by Col. Marion Ennis,
of Millodgeville’s prominent yc
attorneys, During the exercises
business in the city will be suspend
ed and the people of the citv
county will join in paying tril
to the her* os of the Con.'ederac
Last year an epidemic of dcngi
fever held Milledecville in its -ri
for several months and brought ur
told suffering to hundreds of oi
people. This fever is caused, it
authoritatively stated by
breed of mosquitoes. Spring
here again and already mosquitoes j
are here again, and it is time 1
commence active steps to prevent a ’
rccurrrnre of the epidemic. The city j
council should seleri well qualified ,
board of health authorized to'en
force ordinances to protect the health i
of rur citizens. There are hundreds j
a! mosquito breeding places in •
city, which should be abolished, ar- j
cumulation of al Ireceptaeles which
will hold water should be destroyed,
and all trash and tilth should be kept
removed and accumulation prevent-
There should be no standing
r tolerated at any time. An a**- |
campaign should be made and 1
kept up at all times to destroy all \
mosquito breeding places, and every
thing possible done to protect the
health of our people. The members
if the city council are the guardians
if the city, and it is their duty t"
take every precaution to promote a
healthy condition and protect our
city from another scourge. They
have a right to expect and de:m--
the co-opcration of all our citizens
in the observance and enforcement
of all health laws.
Scd&t Stop/unif
THAN POLICE ASK OF ANV BRAKES
Irt/nuyia than 401°
Rotary-Equalized Brakes on new Hudsons and
Terraplanes Amaze Traffic Experts
T^FwifAT HAPPENED IN PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION
SOPF.RViSED BY DETROIT POLICE DEPARTMENT
'tssssaa
’Mr
."oj
i ...
m i
i tr-
BEFORE YOU BUY ftNV 1335 U.
SEE IF IT CAN STOP LIKE T
20m.p.h. 18 feet
43 it. p. h. 71 feet
5£m.p.h. Ill feet
Brake requirements are severe in Detroit
Yet this Hudson-built Terraplanc, a stock
model carrying five adults, beat by more than
40% the stopping distances Detroit police cull
bcrfict! Did it again and again—at 20, 40 and
50 miles an hour! Stopped smoothly—all four
wheels tracking straight ahead!
Before you buy any new car, see if it can
match this safe stopping record. Test them
all. Compare other features, too, with what
Hudson and Terraplane offer—then decide.
The ELECTRIC HAND fllujl
Greatest tnerhuniral advancement of \ 1—4 /
1935. Simplified, easier, safer driving wBw
... faster, smoother shifting, with both hands
always on the wheel. An exclusive feature. AH
Hudsons and Terraplanes are equipped with
standard gearshift. Electric Hand optional on all
1935 models at slight extra cost, except on Hudson
Custom models, on which it is standard.
AND LOOK AT THE PRICES!
f POP and »p for Hudson-built Terra■
plane (88 or 100 horsepower) . ..
****** Hudson Sis 8695 and up (93 or
J00 horsepower) . . . Hudson Eitkt 8760 and up (113
or 124 horsepower). All prices f.o.6. Detroit
for closed models.
Overs tre
milinriy called by his :
prescription clerk a
Kidd Drug Cc.. am
field rf endeavor,
has since making hi
of
the Culver A j
H. ENNIS
Milledgeville, Ga.
25 BRAND NEW TERRAPLANFS FREE — In the greater
ind Tcrraplnne show
if all lime. Simple —easy —
Vi»e
nnde
rial.
enter a new 6,000 FORD V-8S OFF ASSEMBLY' < f the world. But nc
lr. Overstreet I PLANT EACH DAY was permitted to go
home in Mil- I the certainty of its su
many friends won . More than 6,000 new Ford V-8s it. Dependability and service—satis-
mal nature and his i are now' rolling off the assembly faction to the owner—was always
and faithful per- line every working da>. according the first consideration. On this
chitic*. The writer, to McKinnon Meter Co., local Ford principle the F >rd organization has
e of h* • good friends dealer. January production was ap- been built.
;er m^n of Milledpe- j proximately 101.000 units, he says,
always treated him j in February Ford's output was 135.-
nd kindness. May i f,06. and the March schedule has GREAT-GRANDSON OF
MT. PLEASANT NEWS
. one of them i
forth without '
attending | Miss Allene Moorman spent the
•eek-end with homefolks here.
erity a!way:
i his new field ' been set at 169.000.
“It has been a long time since the
automotive industry has recorded
j such impressive tales and »voduc-
Mi.ss Janie Arnold, Miss Ruth Mar
lin. Miss Mary Jewell Martin, Mr. M.
A. and Walter Hodges, Mr. Lewis
Smith u’ere among the visitors here
Sunda night and attended church
THE EDITOR’S BEATITUDE.
figures as tho:
••Blessed are the merchants who j >' car Mr. McKinnon says,
idvprtise because thev believe in it. has been a long time, too. :
ind in ihcir business: for their pros- the Public has taken to a new
arritv hall increase many fold. like it has to the 1935 Ford V-l
“Ble ( d arc ihe country corre-1 “Mere impoitant than sales
;pcnri( "N who end in their well 'ords and production Increases, i
ivrittrr items every week; for fame
of Gen-
•f their
abroad i
“Blci
; the ’
j a wri’len account of a party
■eddtng. for she shall see the de-
tils of the function and the names
f guests correctly reported.
“Blessed are those who do not ex
ert the editor to know everything,
ut who call up and tell him when-
,*er an interesting event occurs to
lem for they shall have a m
paper in their town.
Blessed are they who get their
copy in early: for they shall occupy
varm place in the editor’s heart.
'Blessed are all those who cc
operate with the editor in his efofrts
in behalf of the community; for their
shall be known far and wide
good place in which to live.”—
Cherryvale (Kan ) Republican.
DUKGGI8T
AND
IT CULVER
KIDD
Mr. J. S. Hargrove, of McDonough,
is come to Milledgeville to take
the position Of druggist at Culver A
Kidd Drug Co., to succeed
Johnny Overstreet, who has resigned
effective May 1st.
Mr. Hargrove is an experienced
drugist and comes to Milledgeville
highly recommended. Mr. Overstreet
has not announced his future inten-
Get any model Weathurhonse re
frigerator on TV A government fi
nancing plan—Pay with your light
bill—Get a Westinghonae with 5
rear guarantee—CLUTON ADAMS
ELECTRIC CO.
Mr.
McKinnon continued. “It’s how the
car performs on the highw.\v that
counts. Actual service is the true
test. T contend that Ford’s, present
remarkable production and sales j
figures are merely an expression of J
satisfaction on the part of Ford V-8 j
“Like the story of the Ford or
ganization. 'ne story of the Ford V-8 j
is a saga of industrial progress. Be
fore Henry Ford introduced his V-8
to the public, the V-8 engine was al
ways associated with high price and
considered beyond the reach of the
average motorist. But Henry Ford
believed the V-8 engine was 'the
coming car for the majority of driv
ers.’ So, he set to work to build it
at low cost.
“It is interesting to note that more
than 1,700,000 Ford V-8s have been
built and sold in the last three years.
Each year has seen a great increase.
With ’a million and more’ as our
1935 foal, we are almost certain to
pass the 400,000 mark before the
end of the first quarter.
“I always have been impressed by
the fact that when the first Ford
car left the little brick shed on
Bagley Avenue, Detroit, where it
was built in 1893, Henry Ford had
no doubt about its success. Hist it
would run was not questioned. There
reason for this. That first
Ford was not the product of a day.
the result of planning and
experimenting—the work of years.
“Since that first Ford chugged
along Bagley Avenue that day in
1893 more than 22,000,000 Fords have
the highways
One of the portra
ented the Unlvcuity
Alumni Day. will b(
oral Robert Toombs and this por
trait will be given the University by
Pleasant A. Stovall of Savannah.
It is a coincidence that one o'
General Toombs’ great-grandsons, ? ,SI
Marion Allen, Jr., of Milledgeville, I
is in the graduating class at thi
University this year, and that he wil
unveil the portrait.
and Mrs. Tom Qu:
i spent Sunday i!
est of relatives.
Black-Draught brings
Refreshing Relief of
Constipation Trouble*
Constipation produces many dis
agreeable sensations, several of
which are menUoned by Mr. T. E.
Stlth, of Boonviile, Ind., who
writes: T have used Thedford'a
Black-Draught many years when
needed for biliousness and other
minor Ills when a laxative waa
needed. I have a tight feeling tn
my chest when I get bilious. I get
dizzy and feel very tired. Just don't
feel like doing my work. After
taking Black-Draught, I feel much
better. This la why i continue to
use It when needed.” . . . Thed-
fbrd*s Black-Draught Is a good,
purely vegetable laxative, obtato-
■Me far If# a package.
Church sci vices were well attend
'd here Sunday The Sunday School
ilso included an egg hunt for the
boys ar.d girls. The prize for
e finding the most eggs was
n by Miss Thelma Brennan..
I.FGION AUXILIARY PARTY'
ATTRACTS BIG CROWD
THURSDAY EVENING.
Lcgionaires and members of the
auxiliary of the Morris-Little Post
enjoyed one of the most delightful
serial affairs in many months at the
home of Mrs. T. Treanor on last
Thursday evening. The legion enter
tained the members of the auxiliary
at a barbecue supper.
Stanley Jones, state adjudant *
the Legion, was the prir" : —’ —>?r’*-
er. He congratulated the lev. - ,
on breaking a membership record
this year and predicted t|»at the
Legion would have the largest mem
bership in history before the. end of
the year.
The party was informal aiyl a
most happy occasion. Plans for a
club house were discussed.
We are Prepared lo Take Care of Your Dairy Products
Cream. Sweet Milk. Butter Milk and Butter
Also Y«ir Fresh Meats
PHONE 83 AM) SAVE MONEY