Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, November 07, 1935, Image 14

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THE (JNION-IKCOIOEK, NILUDf^VILU, GA~ NCM 7, INS u;l|f Untatt-fiernrhfr So., hr, EnUb. Itlt Entered at Pnl OfHc« t Mi villa, as oecoed-cUss sail i R. B. MOORE—EDITOR JERE N. MOORE—Basiaess M SUBSCRIPTION RATES Sl-M Si» M.-tha - *7S On. Year MvartU^ Rata, an Applkalioi OFFICIAL ORGAN OF COUNTY THURSDAY. NOV. 7. 1935 Mere birds die from being wound- i habitual againster gets to where he j I ed by the hunter using automatic and pump guns every year than are bagged by all the hunters com bined. declares the commissioner. A second suggestion is to form conservation or portsmen's clubs, each of which would get a small local .'ish hatchery project to work upon or promote some other con servation activity, such as produc-] ing a number of young quail by use of the bantam hen. There are now eight or ten such organizations in the state, and it is asserted there should be a conservation league or game protective association in every support or work for any proposal. “You can check that for yourself] any time." “Go over in yc-ur mind the people j who have the habit of standing on AN INESCAPABLE Bv Rev. Hfl'ice S. Smith The Master stated a fact of life .'hen he said, "Ye have the poor .'ith you always, and whensoever ye Geci ell fitted by Ko be -••at jld be a roal misfortune and • k disregard of the gifts of Pro- cnee if we should permit oui ic to dwindle away and dis car. Let us study closely the re- imendatiens ol Commisssionei vcy and give him the strong- possible support in the program •envert Georgia into “a hunter's idise" and thus avail of its own bestowed birthright — Columbu- I’ilger. Wednesday. October 23. 1935. With the : If you know what you want the Pechaii salesman will be less likely to sell you something you don't want. TODAY •ttinj! sun. your hope-, •rday die l out. All right, as yesterday. Things didn't ze the way you dreamed -uld. All right again. Now— cut hour is Today. Yestcr- rs no relation to It except the relation that a night jars to the morning after. Forget all about vesterday....it is dead and buried in the cemetery of Did it ever occur to you that the , best method of climbing higher on life’s ladder of success is to remain ON THE LEVEL” The book “Why We Behave Like Human Beings” had a big sale spite of the fact that most of Today is alive. Are you? Well hen. pet busy' Fling from you.* shoulders the depressing weight cf j three hopes that naven’t come true ,,! Stand erect. Man. the world is Ycu have just as much claim good thirds—on the things • longed for and prayer for jorked fur—as the other fel- Men have a lot of characteristics i * mv * ,as - that we mav dislike, but we can This hour has been handed to you overlook mrst of them in a man ® a « ift frcm the overflowing store- who shows gratitude. i * lou#e t>f Eternity. What are you t doing with it? Answer that. Mop- Advertising is what draws away j >ng? Growling? Despairing? For the trade from the small village, shame! God has favored you with an other chance to make good. He has given you Today. Prove your ap preciation by making it a stepping stone to happier worthier tomor rows! —Exchange. ciring movements and .proposals.” I will may do them good.” Some of “Ask yourself if you ever knew! are more fortunate than others, we one of them to be actively in sup- have health and jobs and the com port rf any movement, actively at forts of life and even some of the luxuries. In our midst are these who are broken on the wheel of life. ■Hiere are the afflicted and those suffering under the ills of old age. Around us are helpless widows with little children to he fed and clothed and given a chance in life. All such and others unable to work responsibility. The government right ly shifts this load upon the dom- munitics where these people live. Wi cannot call ourselves even civilized much less a Christian people if alow those unable to work to suf fer for the bare necessities of life. JEFFERSON'S TEN Rl’LfcS From Bindery Talk: 1. Never nut off till tomorrow what ycu can do today. 2. Never trouble another frr what you can do yourself. 3. Never spend your money be fore you have earned it. 4. Never buy what you don’t want because it is cheap. 5. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst and cold. ,JL WC S<;ld0m rCPen ' ° f “ tinS ,0 ° I We eenn7hB^ f'The 7. ' Nothing la |troublcs«ne that ,riend <*' “>« P°° r if " e d( > n0 ‘ **« we do willingly. ; lhe hungry and clothe the naked in 8. How much pain and evils have those cases vvhert * they are unable cost us that have never happened' 11° help themselves. Take things always by the ( The Red Cross roll call and the smooth handle. i Community Chest campaign give us 10. When angry, count ten be- j a chance to be -cal neighbors to the 'TuiXd ; Ver} ' ' mSry count unfortunate ones. Apply the Golden Rule in this matter and we will not R. E. Gcrmlcy, State Superintend ent of banks, has stated that Georgia state, banks are in the best financial condition they have been since 1921. (Tune: “The Old Oaken Bucket”) How dear to our heart is the steady subscriber. Who pays in advance of the birth of each year. Who lays down the money. and dees it quite gladly. And rasts round the office a halo of cheer, never says. “Stop it: I cannot afford it! getting more oapers now than I read:” He always says. “Send it: our people all like it— In fact, we all think it a help and n need ” How welcome his check when it reaches our sanctum: Hew it makes cur pulse throb. how it make our heart dance! We outwardly thank him: We inwardly bless him— That steady subscriber • who pays in advance! —from Pittsfield (Ill.) Repub lican. fail to meet the need. It should be the deep concern of every citizen to promote those ideals and influences which tend to make the community in which he lives, one where God is worshipped, and the laws as found in His Holy Word arc revered and obeyed. The modem newspaper, large or small, is “contact man” for its com munity outside Its field of publica tion. Every worthwhile citizen should be as anxious as the publisher him self to make each newspaper truly representative.—Western Publisher. Consistent advertising is. the mer chant’s pledge cf quality: it is visible proof that ho has faith enough in his goods to bacV; them with his name.—Stolen. The other evening we heard n woman ask what in the world would become of the younger generation. That’s an easy one. They’ll fall in love, get married, have children and trouble and all that sort of thing, and as they get rider they will worry about what’* to become of younger generation. LETS CONSERVE OUR GAME Game and Fish Cl mmissione- Zack D. Cravcy, who spoke to Kiwanis club Tuesday, is due the real appreciation Pfyi commenda tion of the people of Georgia for his urgently needed campaign of fish and game conservation in this state. It bchoov>?s cur citizens t|o back him up. Destruction activities have gotten a start cT several hundred years on us, as Commissioner vcy pointed out, but an excellent beginning for a conservation pro gram has now been made, and earnest intelligent procedure. Geor gia can be converted into on the nation’s greatest game states. We have all the natural assets here for it Among the things outlined by the stale official that are essential in making the progress to which w< entitled are as follows: First and most important of all. he says, is go the federal government “c better” in the regulation of the fire arms. The government has made it unlawful to use a gun that carries over three shells on migratory birds. His suggestion is to adopt a state law making it unlawful to use a gun that carries an excess of two shells, on every type of game. This he be lieves to be “the principal recipe to make Georgia a hunter’s paradise.” A GRUESOME WARNING With automobiles killing nearly 40,000 persons a year, there arc many sugestions as to what is the remedy—the cure—for such a mons trous slaughter of humanity. The suggestion most appropriate is the use of ihe head, or rather the brain in iL We hardly believe that the reduction of the speed of the cars by the manufacturers solution, though if cars we r e reduced in speed to where they could not do in excess of forty miles an hour, it might do some good, but a fool at the wh cl could at this speed k-#»p up the list of fatalities. Here in Georgia we tur ver to all who can reacn the pedals nd tell them “to go to it.” and the> do. and too frequently to the grav We have no examinations for fitness to run a car. The only thing in Georgin is to give them a $3.00 license plate, and even imbeciles can buy them and run cars. We do nol, mean to say that all who have seri-' ous. and too often fatal, accidents' are imebciles. but we do say that nine times out of ten they are act ing like imbeciles when accidents occur. Too much speed, too much lead—and load may be used in two ways, for there arc two kinds of load that mav prove disastrous in auto mobile ('.riving. But here is the warning suggested by one who is a seer and a philo sopher: Secure a cast iron coffin, and at every noint where a fatal neiedent occurs erect this cdffin up right. and place blinking lights in it, so that motorists and others passing may see. And then in letters of light, place the number killed, and to make the warning more effective, place the names of the victims on the coffins. Too gruesome, perhaps to be taken seriously, but n*' /ertheless. there is little doubt that it would be effec tive.—Dalton Citizen. GIVE IT WINGS (By Clayton Rand) Anything that is worth selling is worth advertising, and anything that is worth advertising is worth giving wings in your local paper. The home-town-paper has fireside appeal—it snuggles mighty close to the heart and hearthstone of the SEED OATS FOR SALE—Pore 1«0 bushels oats, heavy, bright, clean and sound, at Me per bnshel. See Roger Stembrldge. Rt. 3. FARM LAND FOR SALE—72 acre farm on lower Maron road, 60 acres under cultivation, rest in tore. Three room house on i If interested call 445-L or write H. K. Brown, 315 North Avense. Ma con. Ga. 10-24-35 4t. STORE FOR RENT Modern Buildinsr on Wayne St., accross street from Baotist church now occupied by Ideal Food Market. Building and Market Fix’ tures for rent. Possession giver immediately. See L. N. JORDAN pecr!e. Personal, almost intimate, there is nothing clco in print as warmly ceived or as thoroughly read. Advertisers frequently bite at schemes that give promise of pulling power and rich returns, and taken in. If your local paper cannot help you there’s something wrong with you or your product. We Drivers A Series of Briof Ditmnimt am Drtolmg. Dodi- cated to the Sofoty, Comfort mod Ploomro of fJbe Motoring Public. Prepared by General Meiers No. 1—CURVES AND TURNS N o matter how expert we may be as drivers, we are all apt to fall into habits of driving that don’t quite measure up to what we really know is right. For instance, we all know that we t. .at to be careful about passing l, especially when another car is approaching from the opposite direction. And yet there possibly isn't one of us who hasn’t, at one time or another, moved over in the road to pass a car, and then wondered If we would get around In time. Now here’s an interesting thing about that. When we try to pass a car that’s going forty miles an hour, it's just the same as if we tried to pass a standing •-bumper in the road. If we try to pass re going sixty, it’s like trying to pass a n* of more than sixteen cars standing in will ^rcach half a block. This is probably cr; no oncoming cars for a good long itu. UMvb <DAY FOR THE LORD’S WORK How does it happen that no cue thought of how thrifty, and easy, it would be to use ‘he Lord’s Day for the Lord’s work until here recently. Charity must be the Lord’s work for it is rated as greater than faith or hope, all three most essential in religious life. Ttocre are many unnecessary businesses c .erated on Sunday but the picture shows are the first ones to offer to do more for charity than the folks in any other line. Are they leading the way forward of back- Hcw would it do to rent out the Sunday privileges to all those who are greedy enough, or good enough, to pay a set sum for the right of using that day for business and charity. We could raise enough mone> to church debts. and pay coY all our preachers salaried “1^ foreign missions, and care for our charities. all Ot course it wouid aoon mean tha' Ule people who now get a j,,. ; real would be down to hard work seven days in a week, and that Sun' day as the world has known it t ur years will pass and religion would get a staggering blow. Do we want to do that 0 ? Have we enough sense of fair ness and justice to decide what ar<> essential acts (when the “Ox is in 1 “!„ d i tCh '' ) ° r when “ I s Persona! agreed that is prompting the ac tions of men??. So far. for the mos* part, thi, matter has been left to individual discretion, but soon it is going to be Community act. What is Milledgeville going to do •bout it? COMMUNICATED ® F »ne Little Shoes FINE LITTLE FEET A world mt damage can be dawe to tender little feet by Just one *alr poorly made and improperly fitted Shoes. WE FIT THEM Skinners Shoe Store, Inc. ALL LEATHER SHOES * FOR ALL THE FAMILY FRALEY’S DRUG Specials We Carry a Complete Line Of ioc Drag Store Items Rabtaf Alcohol (Repd.r Price ZSc) j fc Prephylaetie Tooth Bnuh (Rifdar Price 5tc) jjg Foutaa Syriafe (Repdar Price 75c) ._ 4 Sc “K0TEX” (Refmlor Price 25c) j Jc 100 Good Grade Aspirm ToUetg (Regular Price 50c) 3Se Vicks Solve (Regvlgr Price 35c) 25c Hioes Hooey and Akoood Cream (Refolar Price 50c) 30c Ipuo Tooth Paste (Regolv Price 50c) 3 9c | FRESH SHIPMENT OF CRAZY WATER CRYSTALS 80c ud $1 | W * *«“*“« "1 Prescriptions—Twe Registered droggistl * dot, at oO dates to serve yea. ! F R A LE Y ’ S PHONE 118 unless we were sure that there distance ahead. But turning aside to pass is no*, are interested in discussing here. \V concerned with is taking hs particular kind of turning that time to time in these discussions we will find thai the same old laws of Nature will b j involved. Fore most among them will be the laws of momentum, and momentum plays the major pa:t in g-iing around t only wants to keep curves. Because momentu us going, but going in the sarm trying to make us go straight i direrli When rifugal THE “GINITS" The Waycross Journal - Herald has coined a new word, but It is meaningful. In any community and institution there are those who are “agin” everything that is proposed. In rruny instances it is personal. Thty are "agin" party who is “fer" it. and no matter how valuable thr proposition, how meritorious in many ways, they are still “acin” it. and there telling how many well-thought- Now of course v is. We feel it when we ; and railroads are banked at curves ti gal, force. Aviators bank their planes at turns by tip ping them with the controls. But even though we all know about c force, few of us realize how powerful 1: is, ar.d how much greater faster we go. A 3000-pound car making a turn of 500-foot radius, has to overcome a centrifugal force of only about 156 pounds at 20 miles an hour. But at 30 miles an hour, that force has grown to 360 pounds, and at f£ ®° ,t . to ?* ne tln ? es as me** as at 20 ... o’. r fourteen =.Yv hundred pounds trying its best to push us off the S=L-'J »*.. • z . r °ad! The only thing that keeps us on the rood in the Ssisv*... . first place Is the friction between our tires and the . .-i road. The minute the Centrifugal force gets stronger than the force of that friction, off the road we go. The trouble is that we often don't realize how fast have dri' going. On road trips, for Instance, after we 4-. . certaJn spccd for a , Qng tjme Jt tter to increase our speed a few . ~ r - ion after a while we may do the V-h-5 “ mc ’hing n jr.in. In other words, wc keep putting I/.? a , rd ° ur ba:i \ of comparison till by-and-by we l0,t our un,tl w ‘ nsc of how last we ore aoine Then. TOie Waycross paper says j push us off the roar*. • do? We clamp down the brakes. too fast. But just l first thing Force trying So what do can do when w Uiat corner tco fast has kept ,, om „ For If conditions permit, it is often deurable around e curve. As long as our rear wheels are not heir,* , ; . r e unde’ “ * r ‘ , “" d ,h ' nirv '- “ ur “ •"M.vjirt Jbe iong and short of it Is that we can’t I It’s the only thing we st the sumo, approaching we should have liked to. Somethinq NEW in men's shoes Dlu FREEMAN • Regular full weight soles with smooth, solid bottoms, new “Tailored” smartness —a Freeman Shoe from heel to toe plus ■—T ing flexibility and case. A “Try-on” costs you nothing, John Holloway THE MAN’S STORE