Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, November 21, 1935, Image 3

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    THE UMON-KECOtDM. M11XXDOEVU4X, GA., NOV
Ginii
Jdworth,
»e here.
* land
'* office
r Court
d Book
V given
fust 28.
** iti
to the
to, and
•Iso to
®te and
*1 that
lake or
Blood,
•unt of L
Towed
Iworth
? same
s note
iNNL’Al* SALE PLANNED
m 0F CHRISTMAS STAMPS
. . : a custom now almost
American life, Christ-
.... ;i appear again through-
Tnanksgiving day.
t .j Christmas day they
• ;i . • i silent plea for aid
tuber* ulcsis fund.
orc , n a quarter of
. Xat:> nal Tuberculosis As-
,nnd its 2.000 affiliated units
throughout thf country have been
waging W J
DISPELLING THE FpG
By Charles Michelson
W raMlclty. Democratic
Malleoal Committee
..gainst the dread dis-
JUVENILE MUSIC CLUB
The MilledgeviUe Juvenile Music
Club met Saturday afternoon at the
home of Miss Thelma Harrison. The
President, Miss Mary Jewell Teresi,
Governor London of Kansas be ' P ,? SldCd at 11,0 Justness meeting,
tag the person boomed at the'pres- m “ playlc1 ' Mozart " nd
ent moment as the probable Roput B,vc "' A bricf
lican candidate to oppose Franklin m ' 0t . hlS llte wa! rcad by Miss
a Ro^eveit nexi year.it might pet, S' nere SS ”” C ° mP “ 1 -
avail'abim>' n Fi”.' n “ft. ,0 h e !U rbei h „gLr' C ‘T™* ^ P "‘ >P "’ ,00k
T iS j George 81^“,a
° aad iywrs
refreshments were served.
Althougli progress has been made
. fight, tuberculosis is still the
greatest cause of death in this
>ng p< r.sons between the ages
of 15 and 45. The annual toll is
jbout 70.000 men, women and chil-
r about twice as many per-
are killed each year in Bu
tt accidents.
One and < ne-half
many young
between the
c ( 15 nd 24 are viclhns, while
auses an annual cco-
thc nation of nearly
Tht v.-f.rk financed by the Christ-
n,.. 'O.il funds is varied but is aTI.
directed toward the discovery of
unknown ca«es of tuberculosis. Edu
cation of the public is the funda*
cental purpose of the organization
and i> brought about through dis
tribution of literature and posters,
lecture', radio broadcasting, thp
showing < f motion pictures
I ides, exhibits and other de-
Clinlcs Contacted
rsing service is frequently the
major activity. Many associations
conduct clinics at which tuberculin
tests for children and chest examin
ations for adults are given. Re
habilitation work—assisting the tub-
wis patient to discover his most
• productive activity and to obtain
adequate training in his field—is be
ing given greater emphasis as a
suit of recent studies.
All services are provided free. The
varied program of work and the
number of persons assisted by the
tuberculosis associations during the
•car are a remarkable demonstration
re the power of the penny paid for
each stamp.
The Christmas seals will be mail-
d nit by the Parent-Teachers As
sociation of G. M. C. In cooperation
ith the Baldwin County Tubercu-
kei-c Association. The money de
rived from the sale of these seals
ill be used to provide a milk fund
r u r :1 or nourished children in the
and county, and to do other
rk among the people suffering
'mm the great white plague.
The people ate asked to mail the
•lorry back to the committee for
he seals in the self addressed en-
•e!t no which are enclosed.
State House there, it is a subject for
much political comment, so the fact
that Mr. Landon won that job is
hardly enough.
Next there is the widely herald
ed tidings that he has balanced the
State’s budget. Kansas folks tell us
that their constitution makes it im
possible for any Governor to unbal-
thc budget. There has been
such a provision for years, and a
Democratic Governor—Woodring —
rivetted the restraint on the State’s
executive. However, any budget
balancing Governor, is an attractive
object to a party that does not know
chat ort of a candidate it wants or
vhat sort of a platform he must
Of course, the main political asset
of Governor Landon is the G. O. P.
belief that State pride might take
Kansas out of the Democratic col
umn. if its Governor were in the
race, and the hope of the confused
and dilemma-ridden Republican or
ganization is that, representing a
farm State, he might have a gen
eral influence in the corn-hog and
grain belt.
“Imi»o**iM* M If He Favor* AAA
That brings him square up against
TO THE MAN WITH THE GUN—
Every thing on my lands Is pro*
tected. from Deer to Graaheppen
—Dull-but* to butterflies, Tbm-
tlts to Turkeys, and I have asked
our very active came warden to
aee that the law is respected. J. L
FOR SALE—Strawberry plants 5*c
hundred. $3.00 thousand. J. L.
Sibley.
winning the Farm Belt back to the
Republican column.”
But there again the senator’s fame
as a prephet is dimmed. A fortnight
ago he announced that while Kan
sas was “almost unanimous for the
wheat program." it was not enthusi
astic about the corn-hog program,
and right after that the Kansas
farmers voted 42,000 for the com-
hog system to less than 7.000 against
it. Nor was the sentiment confined
to those fanners who had signed
up on the Government’s program,
for the non-signers recorded them
selves two to one for the continu-
uai U-.T--C- •••*•• -m— r- once °* th e measure.
first hurdle. The old guard Re-| Mr. Sullivan's explanation of why
publican machine in the East is ( Kansas was so blind to the iniquity
bound to look askance at a candidate |°f toe AAA is that it docs not rea-
from Kansas. They probably would.Ike the enormity of the law regard-
not consider one unless they were, >ng potatoes. It happens that the De-
whooly convinced that he could got | Partment of Agriculture vehemently,
nowhere. They might be willing to .if ineffectually, protested against the
offer him as a sacrifice on two | amendment that put potatoes in the
counts: First, that as they have to same category as wheat and corn,
have a candidate it might as well J They were willing to help the op-
bc Landon as another, and second. j pressed tuber, but insisted that it did
they have been plagued by the Pro- not fit in that frame. Incidentally
gressive element in their party so) more Democrats than Republicans
long that they see a possible value in, voted against including potatoes
the demonstration that a Westerner when the House ballotted on the
being given the chance only proved j subject and put it in the law.
that there was no salvation in DheaNiw Imi
a choice. But there is anoth er equally diffi-
Concretely the situation was put jcult hurdle for Governor Landon.
by Mark Sullivan, perhaps the lead-1 " e campaigned for and won tht
ing minstrel in the reactionary camp 1
PEABODY HIGH HAS DANCE
members of the Junior and
classes of Peabody High
‘whorl iutertained at a dance in the
^nnis Recreation Hall Friday night
November the eighth.
The entire recreation hall was
"orated with flowers and autumn
ves. Punch was served through-
! the evening.
The guest list encluded Dr. and
Mrs. Wells. Col. and Mrs. Jenkins,
• and Mrs. Carpenter. Dr. and
Mrs. Little. Mr. and Mrs. L. S.
Fowler. P. H. S. Faculty and the
M. C. Battalion.
REBEG AH SMITH
Senior Class Reporter
in this language: “Against Governor
Landon there is one potential im
pediment which, if it becomes actual,
will make it impossible either to
nominate him or to elect him.'
Then this devoted stand-pat Re
publican apologist points out that
the AAA is almost a sacred creed in
Kansas. He insists, of course, that
Kansas is infatuated: that the farm
relief now being extended is not
good for them out there. And most
impressively Mr. Sullivan advises
that “the friends of Governor Lan
don, who include the best men in
the State, are seriously lacking in
duty and foresight if they fail to tell
Kansas what AAA means and fail
to tell both Kansas and Governor
Landon that no one favoring AAA
in its present form can either get
the Republican nomination or be
elected against Mr. Roosevelt.”
Even a Democratic publicity man
van be neutral *s among the aspir-
ants for the nomination, for with the j raised up to at .
present content of harmony in thej
Republican party it makes no diff
erence who is pul up for the honor
of taking a beating.
Capper’s Decidedly Contrary V’ew j
We have heard the view of thej
Old Guard. Now a few words from j
of j the representative of the ether siri ‘ ■
ia. does Senator Capper, perhaps the rr.o?t
normal influential individual backing the I
LEADEBSHIP
T
*«■ MAM
S,-
; v
On October 31 ©I last y*ar. Henry Ford within reach of tho people. Producing il
announced Us inton Bon to build a million
Ford V-8r in 1935. Wo are pUasod to re
port that this goal was reachod in exactly
ton months instead of a full yoar.
Ono million cars and trades is an im-
pressivo total. But figures by thomsolvos
moan nothing. It is what they represent
that counts. Soiling a V-8 at a low pries
has brought a now kind of automobile
has provided steady work for hundreds
of thousands of men in tho Ford pknh kk
associated industries and on the farm.
Those million Ford V-8 cars and tracks
have helped to make things bettor al
around. In tho first ten months of 1935 thn
Ford Motor Company paid out in ton
United States alone, $140.119.32L00 in
wages and $323,111,38940 far HWfarkifa,
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
THE MEW FORD V I FOR Itlft IS BOW OH DISPLAY. THE CAB THAT LED AIL (
Governorship on the Prohibition is
sue. His slogan was “Keep Kansas
Dry’’ and his supporters hailed him
as the leader of the new crusade for
the re-establishment of National
Prohibition. Now that would hardly
sil comfortably on the wanton wet
East. Fancy New York, Pennsly-
vania. Rhode Island, not to
ticn Illinois and Wisconsin, being
willing to change their cocktail
parlors back to speak-easies.
Well, the procession is passing
Senator Borah was relegated to the
limbo of impossibles by the Old
Guard after his exchange on plat
form views with Col. Teddy Roose
velt; Col. Frank Knox, after his
whirl, is now 0. only person talk
ing about Col. Frank Knox
Governor Land or.’s handicaps
the topic of Mark Sullivan’s musings.
It Is almost time for the next entry
—probably Senator Vandenberg. He
ought to suit all factions for he has
taken every side of every
SEND
Your Family Wash
-TO-
Snow’s
EcMuncal, Sift, CmtmoI
SNOW’S
UmAj uU fry Cltuiag
“NOTHNC BUT INSURANCE
fW 471
C. E. ANDREWS A SON
Cara Tmt MmI At
■LLEDGEVU1E MILLING CO.
Wayac St Grargia RafraaJ
Golden Flash Gas
ADDS POWER AND PEP TO TOUR CAR—AND SAVES YOU
MONET, CAUSE IT TAKES LESS
Quaker Stale and Can O’Gold Motor Oil—a Combination that
has no equal.
Phone 15—Here Comes Help—for Any Auto Trouble. We
Specialize in Quick Tire Service.
Power Oil Co. Station, J. B.Malpass,Agt
We have installed this week the latest type Atro Equipment for
lubricating your car—high pressure air guns that put the right
grease in your car, forcing the hibicant to every moving part.'
EVERT JOB GUARANTEED—WE CALL PM AN) DELIVER
TOUR CAR
Rudolf Endeimer. a w
1 r Kircl.cn. Upprr Bov
mount cf work of
• a spite of the fact that he has Landon boom—not only
l^pt one hour since July. 1933. Governor Landon's State, but
! h has failed to respond to any throughout the granger section. “If
the methods applied to produce the Republican platform makers put
• n. According to the his doctor j the party on record against the
■ has suffered from insomnia since AAA,” said the farm publisher-Sen-
• !a>\ 1933. ator, “there’ll be little chance of
Beware The Cough
From a common cold
That Hangs On
how many medicines ycu
crhrm,^ ? or your cough, chest cold
l cf [n-itation. you can B ct re-
i ion wlt , h Creomu&ion. Crcomul-
ilmumte on y contains tho soothing
c ,V? C n! s common to many remedies;
rnvp,d 'L^ ru e.° r White Pine Com-
jjrni w Tar, fluid extract of
for Root> fluid extract of Ipecac
.ij 15 . Powerful phlegm looscnli
i i fIulrt extract of Cascara for its
-■ m la , xtl HY e efTert and. most iinpor-
r erfwrtL ?P’ Beech wood Creosote i9
' e iif ct 'y blended w’th all of these to
JSfflL T “, e &our ce of tnc trouble from the
i^nu C . r ^ mu,5ion can be taken fre-
. 1 fini conl touously by adults and
Th^,u»rai. Ul r , CI ? arkabl ® results.
* Jgwft of doctors use Orocmul-
... tn their own families as well as
in thetr practice knowing how Crec-
jjamtd »£i«K Uluur ® to boothe the in-
amed membrane* and heal the irri-
mulsion top for coughs because veu
get a real dose of Creosote in Creo- 1
mulsion, emulsified co that It is polat- i
able, di ‘ ‘
to the i
t of the trouble.
Crcomulslon is r, aa rant red
fnctory in the treatment of •
Even if*otlier remedies have failed ;• aur
druggist is authorized to gum..? tee
Creomulsion and to n^md every
with reauita from the very‘first bottle.
Pont r’crrr thresh mother r!c?^lc£i
-
Keeps you on top
of your job;„
Tkore's ©no grand thing about Ico-cofd
Coca-Cola that make* if popular with
million* of workers- It makes any pause
(Ac peine that refreshts... sends you
back to work fit and reody for a fresh
Bait, h kelp* you get things done. Your
dealer can supply you.
Coca-Cola It a wholesome drink of natural prod*
— ' -*—* nets, containing no artificial coloring or flavor.
It complies with purs food laws the world over.
MILLEDGEVILLE COCA-COLA
BOTTLING COMPANY