Newspaper Page Text
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V
Till; UNION-RECORDER, MILLEDGEVILLE. GA.. DECEMBER 19, 1933
u>i(* Union-itrairtar
WmUjt « IWj
R. »• MOORE—EDITOR
JERE N. MOORE—Imumi Hfr.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
O-. Y«r $l-*>
Si* M-.tk.
Adrartiainf XaUi on Applicative
asss!EM»®
OFFICIAL ORGAN OT COUNTY
THURSDAY. DEC. 19. 1935
This will bring him much closer lo
this city than he is at present It
will put him in very intimate as
sociation with Savanrah again. Wc
shall all be glad to sec him once
more in the- south Georgia confer-
much time in trying to make people
lumpy. The greatest pci tonalities are
,'lfust- who give most to the needs of
society. Ifce parable of the "talents"
1 illustrate?, a fundamental principle
■ in life. "We use or we lose.” One's
ability to be happy depends uj»on his
ability to make others happy. Con
versely, one can make his life miser
able by making some one else mis- j 0 f him. However, he will not be
erable If one wishes to be loved. Ik- 1 transferred to the prison near Reids-
must learn to love others. Love j villo, but will continue his work at
breeds love just as hate breeds hate. the state prison farm near Mil-
job and a reasonable wage.
In his speech at Chicago the presi
dent stressed these points. It is diffi
cult to find any fault with them,
ive have already seen statements
to the effect that the return to the
old order of doing things, and get
ting somewhere, is preferable.
Maybe so. but wc really believe
that in order to progress we shall
be obliged to go forward.
LOST OR STRAYED—One Red
Polled Steer, weight about
pounds. Reward. Notify W. I. West,
R. V. D. *. MMIedgeville. Oa.
. forgivi
faults and social
ledgeville.)
r his enemies ai
• gave his life
on his lip
i his friends
mike
world I
and
Great care should be taken in
driving through the crowded busi
ness streets of Milledgcville during
the holiday season. The traffic offic
ers urge co-operation.
Our friends need
i and to encourage
niir very best efforts. There should
te no real Christmas without friends
nd love and devotion. Hate is an
nemy to Christmas and one of the
nost destructive agencies of perso-
ality known by society. The birth
CAN ME STAY OCT?
•re .ire thoughtful stude
opinions. Americans, they sa
an emotional people. Injustii
oppression, outrages by great | ^
ns against small natioi
| PEACE ON EARTH
Next Wednesday is Christmas day,
and throughout the world the day
will be observed as the birthday of
the Prince of Peace.
On that first Christmas day there
was great rejoicing and there came
down from Heaven that proclama
tion “Peace on Earth and Good Will
Toward Men.” And rince that first
Christmas day. each December 25th
world has paused in its battle to
forms ' celebratc tho atlvent of ,he dretrinc
' ■ I of Love.
Is 3 o ^ Th ' S c,,ristmas the world is again
Ion the brink of conflict, ready to go
e cco-l ,nto anolhcr war and Prind into the
There I rurt * 1 ,f,c 'deals and principal which
Trade j they mainfesi and prefess at this
Give a Phllco Radio—The gift su
preme—CLIFTON ADAM8 ELEC
TRIC CO.
CHRYSLER ■ PACKARD
PLYMOUTH
SALES AND SERVICE
W. £. Robinson, Jr.
Stil Coughing? 11
Kn ■n.HM Km. —I "
_ IJJJi
thlac tew than CreottJSkE wL
“ <*h«r remedlwlGrerallMi I
bottle.GctCreomulsIon right now. (Adv‘ 1
announcement
DR. A. W. CHAPLIN
Oiteopitluc Pkraiciia
Office «1 Mayfair Hotel Etery
Taeuiay and Friday Fro* 2 (a
6 P. M.
;cf Jesus w.
j world has
the greatest gift the
known. He taugh*
Gov. Talmadge recently stated J men how to live, how to serve, how
that the trade treat> between this to love, and how to die. Christmas
country and Canada would injure j should be a great day for all people
the paper making industry in C eor-! who appreciate the significance of
gia. It will be remembered tha*,the birth of Jesus the Savior of the
when a small appropropriation was world,
made by the legislature to assist
financing experiments which were
being made with Georgia pine for
paper making by Dr. Chas. H. Herty,
Governor Talmadge vetoed it. Wc
wonder why has so suddenly be
come so greatly concerned about the
industry.
GARDEN CLUB OPTUS PRIZE
FOR CHRISTMAS DCCGRAHON.
The Millcdgeville Garden Club has
offered a prise of $5. for the most
attractive outdoor Christmas display
during the Christmas .season.
The rules specify that no Hcily
can be used in the decorations. The
club is helping to promote the con
servation of holly, the native Christ
mas tree and has prohibited its use
in the decorations.
The decorations must be arranged
not later than December 24th and
will be viewed by a committee of
judges both for day time and night
effects. This contest is open to every
one whether garden club members
not
The first prize of 35. is offered
for the most attractive decoration
and a second prize, an Arbor Vitate,
Ls being offered by Mr. Jordan, of
the Jordan Nurseries in this city.
WORK ON rHONEY PEACH
CONTROL DISCUSSED
Mr. William F. Turner, project
leader of Phoney Peach Control anJ
his assistant. Mi. J. M. Rump, had
a district conference of the super
visors of Middle Georgia on last
Saturday. The conference was at
tended by the state and district lead
ers and the supervisors.
Hie object of the meeting was to
better acquaint the supervisors with
the work which is to destroy all old
lotted orchards and escaped
trees, in order that commerci-1 or
chards and home orchards might
be successfully grown. Anyone hav
ing these trees in Baldwin. Hancock
Washington counties can have
them destroyed by reporting them
to Mr. Sidney D. Stembridgc.
CHRISTMAS AND FRIENDS
By ’Hios. B. Meadows
Christmas is a great time to
member our friends. The atmosphere
is thoroughly charged with a gen
erous, loving forgiving, and tolerat
ing spirit. Tliis is the psychological
•ith money to lend arc glad to get
out in the hepe of a rich return,
thy. they ask, should they be re-
ilired to forego the possibilities of
refit when they would be within
leir legal and moral rights in tak-
.*» advantage cf them?
Eventually, it is claimed these in-
jenccs. which play so heavily up-
i the sentimentality and the ac
quisitive natures of men. break
down the forces of common sense
and prepare the field for the super
patriot, the profiteer, the saber-rat
tler and the sincere idealist who be
lieves we owe a debt to humanity.
These dangerous possibilities are
actual, not fancied. But when they
we should keep our emotions
ur sympathies under rigid con
trol. One way of achieving this end
by keeping the past vividly in
mind. If we are ?ully aware of the
realities, we will not yield before the
pressure of the sentimentalists.
And the realities are not difficult
remember. They concern about
50,000 young men killed, 200,000
others more or less seriously wound-
debt of twenty-two billion dol
lars of our own and loans of eleven
billions to our allies.
If we remember these facts.. the
prospects of our remaining out of
war will be improved.—Spirit, Punx-
FUtawncy, Pa.
for i
: to forget ourselves and
to center our thoughts on others.
This method of objectifying life tends
to integrate our personalities. Frind-
ship is renewed and our obligations
to society overshadow our tendenc-J
es toward self-centered personalities.!
Christmas cards bring greetings fori
a merry Christmas. Children are
made happy with an increased faith
in Santa Claus who so generously
reminds them of the real spirit of
giving with tangible evidence. Yes.
all intelligent and wisely informed
people believe there is really a San
ta Claus. There will always be a
Santa Claus as long as love expresses
a merry Christmas. Santa Claus and
love arc 30 closely linked up togeth
er that no power on earth can sepa
rate one from the other. There
high relationship between inability
to love and a lack of faith in Santa
Claus. Santa Claus lov%s
nothing gives him more pleasure
than express his love through the
many gifts which he donates each
year. The more he loves
more he gives us. The more he gives
us the more he loves us. We love
neople more when we do something
for them. It is better to give than
to receive because in so doing
make someone else happy. We cannot
R*ve Rnnta Claus presents and toy
^nd *hings. for he does not need
'hem. But wc can he nice to people
and trind tc these who nr® poor and
•leelected. which will please Santa
Clau* highly.
The best way to bo nice to Santa
I is to be kind to all people.
One reason Santa Claus is so happy
and jolly is because he spends so
COMMUNITY ASSET
(By Clayton Randl
Ex-Governor Francis of Missouri
is quoted as having said:
“Each year the local paper gives
from $500 to $1,000 in free lines to
the community in which it is locat
ed. No other agent can or will do
this.
"The editor, in proportion to hi-
means, does more for his own town
than any other ten men, and in all
fairness he ought to be supported,
not because you like him or admire
his writings, but because the local
paper is the best investment a 1
munity can make.
“Today the editors of the local
papers do the most for the least
money of any people on earth."
Give your local paper your
operation and no other medium
travel as far to advance its interests
A BIG HEART AND SOUL
From the Savannah Press
The assignment nade by Bishop
Ainsworth at the North Georgia
Methodist conference which wi
tatewide interest than any of
the others was the announcemen'
that Rev. E. C. Atkins, D. D., is to
serve for another year as chaplain
of the state prison farm at Milledge-
ville.
Savannahians were directly inter
ested in this, as one of Dr. Atkins'
last active assignments as a Metho
dist minister in charge of a church
church in this city. Short
ly after the conclusion of his
nection with Ashbury Memorial
church he was given the prison as
signment and he has been retained
there since.
Dr. Atkins is a man of gentle dis
position and with a big heart and
soul. His ministrations to those who
are sent to Milledgeville to serve
their sentences, or to pay with their
lives in the electric chair for the
wrongs they have done, have learn
ed to love him very much. He is the,
only minister who has attended
those condemned by the state to die
nauguration of the plan
A BANKER’S INGRATITUDE
(By T. J. Cooper)
Orvil W. Adams, speaking at the
convention of the American Bank-
Association. said that the banks
should refuse to purchase any more
government bonks until assured tha*
there would be a sincere effort to
balance the budget. It is interest
ing to compare this attitude with
the attitude expressed two years
ago when they went as uninvited
guests to the White House implor
ing federal aid for banks, railroads
and insurance companies, with their
millions of stockholders. At that
time, they informed the President
that the government c »i»'d spend
fifty-five to seventy billion dollars
'ithout imparing government credit
and that he was warranted In going
that far if necessary. The govern
ment has spent since President
Roosevelt's inauguration about nine
and one-half billion, including
■-half billion still in
treasury, increasing the public debt
to only twenty-nine and one-half
billions. Of this amount five
■-half billions is in loans and self-
liquidating projects that will be used
later to reduce the national indebt
In other words, now that they an
made solvent through government
assistance, and butteressed against
future insolvency, they want to lock
the treasury against the needs of
any other groups. A like spirit is
behind most of the blatant criticism
of the administration being heard
nowadays. No class or group that
has had Its snout In the public
trough should be heard to complain
when another participates.
THE PRESIDENT IS WISE
difficult it is to under
men. Men who one minute bow j
and worship joining in the
halleluiahs and proclaiming alleg-
doctrine and a personalit.’
that was given to the wcrld at tht
greatest sacrifice any man could
make.
mc-n in their greed and lust
for power and wealth would destroy
the very things which provides for
their happiness and security in o-der
that they might satisfy their
desires and vaulted ambitions.
If the lesson of the Christmas
in could become deep rooted In the
hearts and souls of men. war, crime,
heartaches, hatreds, malice, lust and
the worship of mamon would disap-
ir from this world.
Wc should pause, more than ever
before, this Christmas and relect
upon the blessings that have come
since the birth of Christ. If we
could think how hopeless life must
have been before He came. Life had
meaning from the advent of
Christ and the blessings and bene
fits have been too numerous to
enumerate since His coming.
enter more inlo the spirit
of Christmas in its true meaning
end conception and this will be a
better world.
WfilWWPJHJW
At this season of the year decora
tions suggestive Of the Christmas
season arc put in homes and Christ-
trees wrill soon be added, especi
ally where there are children. Holly
is the accepted evergreen for Christ-
Its bright red berries and thorn
tipped leaves lend the decorative
effect desired and seem to add just
the right festive note.
The holly is a slew-growing tree
*t some people will cut down a
whole tree for the purpose of ac
quiring choice branches. Sometimes
the tree is cut and the top taken to
be used as a small Christmas tree.
It is a great pity to see the beauti
ful evergreen wantonly sacrificed
person’s whim. Time and again
it has beer, urged that small pines
be used as Christmas trees, and only
the tips of holly branches cut for
decorations.
There arc so many kinds of
mercial decorations for Christman
trees that the foundation is all that
is really needed, and the small pine
is ideally suited to the purpose.
conserve our holly—enjo;
it, to be sure, but consider the tree
as well as our fancies.
THE WAR ON TUBERCULOSIS
Are you putting Christmas Seals
on all your Christmas packages this
year? Those gay little red-and-green
emblems, which cost only a penny
apiece, are the means by which
money is raised to carry
tion-wide fight against the most In
sidious cfc’ all the plagues that afflict
humankind, tuberculosis, the “great
white plague."
It is to saving children that the
work of the National Tuberculosis
Association and its state and county
branches is especially directed.
Medical science has made great
strides in its battle against disease,
and the control, if not the cure, of
tuberculosis is one of its triumphs.
Yet every year more children die
of this disease than, from any other
one cause. The cent you spend for
a gay Christmas Seal to stick
The thing that impresses people
with the wisdom of the president is
the way he says and does things.
We think many of them are practi
cal. and many of them may be not
so. He says himself that he makes
mistakes. That, in the opinion of|y° ur Christmas mail may help to
many, Is the measure of his great •! save a baby’s life,
ness. ! “Inasmuch as ye have done it un-
However, when he asserts that the 10 one ° r thc ,east °* these, my chil-
agricultural interests of the coun- dren. ye have done it unto me.’’
t keep step with the othei
interests, he is most practical and
sensible. It makes no difference how
of electrocution. ' MV ,h, <
'“TZ m “ '"|~f7 h rfo™e; n anateir!
this annointment bemuse rf the fart o, -j j ‘ *
* h ”> h, “ P"*cnt can't buy unlotthcnui o rea«m™io
'™ nr - A V““ win 'oI once for wbnt hr sell, and the
thc new prison form at Reidsvilic. I laborer ccb't buy unless he has a
c oTd s
FEVER
first day
lulqulr - Tablets HEADACHES
Salve - Now In 30 minute*
Drops
The Gift Always Appreciated
Nunnally’s
CANDY
In Gift Boxes—All Sizes
75c up
ORDER YOUR
CHRISTMAS fMINERS
NOW
Pot Pfcntt—Wreaths—Cut Flowers
Fraley’s Pharmacy
Phone 118
Golden Flash Gas
ADDS POWER AN) pep to YOUR CAR—AND SAVES YOU
MONEY, CAUSE IT TAKES LESS
Quaker State and Can O'Gold Motor Oil—a Combination dial
has no equal.
Phone 15—Here Comes Help—for Any Auto Trouble. We
Specialize in Quick Tire Service.
Power Oil Co. Station, J. B. Ma!pass,Agt
We have installed this week the latest type Aro Equipment for
lubricating your car—high pressure air guns that put the right
grease in your car, forcing the Iubicant to every moving part-
EVERY JOB GUARANTEED—WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
YOUR CAR
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