Newspaper Page Text
THE DNIOy-ltCOIOti, MILLEDGEVILLE. GA.. JANVAIT 2. INC
9UBSCMPTION RATES
OFFICIAL ORGAN OP COUNTY
THURSDAY. JAN 2. INC
The Union-Recorder wishes for
each and every one a year filled with
success, happiness and contentmc.it.
Remember life's most valuable
lessons arc learned by experience
a.id pro. . Ly both the successes ar.d
failures that came to you during
the past year.
SEEN AND HEARD
THE PAST WEEK
b«H of Local lot treat PkM Ur
Hero ud Tier. By Naan GatS
crer of Tie Uaioo-Rocorltr.
Let the Golden Rule be your guid
ing star during the year 1936.
The great majority of the mer
chants of Milledgeville found that
the volum; of their Christmas trade
was larger than it had been in sev
eral years.
i great political
It is stated that there
cral new cadets ai G.
it opens January 7th.
' The financial institutions have
| closed a most successful year,
start 1936 in a most prosperous
idition. Milledgeville's banks an
rected and controlled by safe and
conservative business men. who an
interested in the progress and ad-
van cement of this community.
AFTER ROOSEVELT. THE DELUGF
According to the poll being con
ducted by the Literary Digest. th«
popularity of the New Deal is be
ginning to ebb under the strong pull
of the money powers. If the poll
Rain fell incessantly
will be sev- f night, and Sunday was a
M. C. when mal day.
The schools of Baldwin county
will open for their spring session
icxt Tuesday. January 7th.
Here’s hoping all the good resolu
tions you make with the opening of
new year will be unbroken
when the year comes to an en
go. means anything, it means that if
go' the election were held today. Prcsi-
dent Roosevelt would be defeated.
* assuming that the Republican party
If those people who , hrmv bricks j had not nominated Hoover. Many
would not start laying them, look j things could happen between now
prosperous community wc iand *>ext November to turn the tide;
but it will be strategy of the op
position to see that nothing dees hap-
disglisting P en favorable to Roosevelt. This be-
•ithout any in S the case, we may look for a
howling. general decline in business after
you hear the first of January. It will be a
sad thing for the millions who have
struggled valiantly for the last five
to keep their heads above the
Cars may come r.nd oars
>ut the time payments" see
>n forever.
Is there anything mot<
to hear than the fellow \
real complaint ctemall.,
But how refreshing, whi s
the person you think hid every i
to be downhearted j.lways pre
senting the brigest of life.
Which do you think gets the most
out of life? .'*
An exchange has this to say about
i dollar; “A dollar is something the
iveiage business man enjoys more
n anticipation than in realization.
It is the price of a day’s work »or
men and the price of a drink
for others. It is what the good wife
frequently needs, but seldom has.
It is the power that makes or un
makes men. It is the hardest thing j policies, he had better soy
' get and the easiest thing to get I his voice and vote. The moguls of
rid of known to mankind| It is a j business and banking are determin-
blcssing in a small measure and a | ed to run this country in their own
in many instances. No man
had more than he w.Anted and
in ever will. A dollar is a de-
1 lusion and all of us are chasing the
I delusion.”
There were but few people who
braved the weather and attended
church services Sundav
Milledgeville and Baldwin county
barely escaped the sleet and ice Sat
urday night and Sunday. Both
in Abundance at Grey and Eatonton.
The friends here of Mr. Jesse
Champion will regret to learn of his
sudden death, which occurred
Eatonton Sunday. In his boyhood
days he was a cadet
j Wednesday. January 1st.
served as a legal holiday by the
banks and post office.
The- regularly monthly meeting of
the board of Stewards of the Mil-
ledgeville Methodist church will be
held next Tuesday night. January
7th. A full attendance of the mem
bers is requested by the chairman
Mr. E. F. Bell.
ip new year finds nil of Europe
condition where war may brcali
out at *ny moment.
Records for December weather in
th's section were broken the past
week when the temperature
manned below freezing several days.
FOR SALE—Original Red Cypress
Shingles. Pescoek Lumber
Dublin. Ga.
i Several of our citizens
in-
and elsewhere by
Advice is cheap—experience is
•stly. By the same token experience
a better teacher than advice. Yet
ivice, gained from practical ex-
jrience, is worth consideAng. The
Uy trouble is that the experience
one man might not be the experi-
ice of another under exactly slmi-
r circumstances. So much depends
l the qualities of men. Don’t laugh
j*t advice—nor yet accept it uncon
ditionally. It may be good or bad
—and you alone are the one re-
:•<-risible for weighing its merits as
it .pplies to your particular case.
The small town merchnn* who suc
ceeds is the one who has what peo-
and lets them known
about It. People arc busy today. Thcj
| will net take time to shop where
‘erchants insist on keeping their
ares and prices a secret. *Phe busy
stores are those who send to* their
customers’ living rooms the home
wspaper containing the stores’ ad
vertisement of products and prices. | j^ved
only to be bludgeoned again convcnienced * during the freezing
at the caprice of money madness; jbursted water pipes.
but such is politics.
Now Is the time tor eve»- man to Thc syslcm in Milledgeville
toko stock of hi, own business J“ nU “ u « l uninterrupted the past
compared with weal it was in 1833! **“• m of , inconvenience
and try to figure o it for himself how j cai J. m
it would bo afefeted by a reversal | ca lne P'l 102 -
a! (he policies of the present ad-!
ministration. If ho thinks he is bet-! The freezing weather that has
ter off, or that the country, as a P"tva.Icd the past ten days or more
whole, is better off, under New Deal I has '"creased the gas and coal con-
sumption in Milledgeville.
The Union-Recorder wishes every
man, woman and child in Milledge
ville a happy and prosperous year,
COLDS
FEVER
first day
Lfqolr - Tablets HEADACHES
Salve - Noae in 30 miniates
Drops
TEACHERS' EXAMINATION
The regular examinations for state
certificates will be given in the
office of the State School Superin
tendent on Saturday. January 11,
1936 at nine o’clock.
For further information, call office
of County School Superintendent at
102 Sanford Building.
By order of M. D. Collins, State
School Superintendent this Decem
ber 11. 1935.
P. N. BIVINS. C. S. S.
Baldwin Co. Ga,
Gas 20c.
WE ARE STILL SELLING CAS AT 20c
Remember we put tbe price down first and finally brought 20c
#as to Milledgeville.
Save money on all your auto needs by trading with us. Our
shop has the best equipment and prices are right.
Car Washed and Lubricated
$1.25
r. H. ENNIS
HUDSON - TERRAPLANE CARS
interest, and let the little fellow pay .....
the bills, as they did through .111 at>end,d by *°° d hcal,h “ nd
the years of Republican ascendency.
They claim that the Roosevelt
government is competing with priv
ate enterprise, and at the same time
stifling it wish exorbitant taxes. The
only instance in which that charge
is true in any measure is the TVA
development, and that was neces
sary to salvage thc millions cf dol
lars of the peoples money invested
during the World War. That it
gives cheap nitrates to the farmers,
and protects thc patrons of utility
companies from such marauders as
the Insuls of Chicago, are the pot
ent reasons for damning that de
velopment. If they should succeed in
annihilating Roosevelt, and all he
stands for. this would soon be a
country of millionaires and paup
ers. To which group would thc aver
age voter belcng?
Under the protective tariff, father-
tentment.
The real joys and pleasures of life
come from within, from a heart
filled with love, good will and
sympathy.
This year. 1936, is a leap year.
The Sunny South has been a
land of cold, sleet, ice and snow for
thc past several weeks.
Vicks Cough Drop
WA NTED—Three or four room
apartment furnished or unfurnish-
ed with private bath and entrance
ed by thc large manufacturers andj win, ^ ^ OMk y>nL p. *
sponsored by the Republican party, j. q. Davis. \o 26 as 2<
the little fellow paid the cost of I '
government in the price of every
thing he bought, and rest assured
that if the Republicans are return-
power. some way will be con-
shift the burden back to
Get Rid of Poisons
Produced by Constipation
A cleansing laxative—purely refu
table Black-Draught—Is the first
thought of thousands of men and
women who have found that by re
storing the downward movement of
the bowels many disagreeable symp
toms of constipation promptly can
be relieved. . . Mr. J. P. Mahaffey,
of Clinton. 8. C„ writes: “I hare
found that Black-Draught ts vary
effective In the cleansing of the sys
tem. When affected by tto dull
headache, the drowsiness and laad-
tude caused by constipation, I taka
Black-Draught.”
, * BLACK
DRAUGHT
Natural,
CHRYSLER - PACKARD
PLYMOUTH
SALES AND SERVICE
Phone 361-L
W. E, Pobkson, Jr.
Advertising has become Ihe great- his Moulders. if then
or service in time-saver and money- Tr , llh jn then- contention that the
saver to the busy housewife. She > ovcrnmc nt is competing with priv-|
knows from the advertising wherel a , t . bus i ncss , it might be retorted
buy what she wants at tbej^ it is l0 have the gov-
price she wants to pay. She docs her
.••hopping on a third of her original
shopping time.—Journal-Transcript.
Fi.nklin, N. H.
THE WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS
Arthur Brisbane: “The readers of
the smaller newspapers, scattered all
over the United States, forms the
most important body df thinking
Americans in this country. Editors
of the smaller newspapers consti
tute a national intellectual )x>lice
force that keeps a great majority ji|c4o
Of the 130.000,000 Americans in- ^rtituttonalT what .
lonr.ed as to public happenings. If tbe Export Debenture proposed _
the great advertisers of the United a substitute by the High Command
States cou 11 ! be made to realize the ^ the Republican party? They are
extmordmary buying power and, al Bair examples of class legisla-
ndvcrtismg value of the local news- Uon and if mere is any class that is
papers, the publishers of such news
papers would be rewarded financial
ly as they deserve to be.”
emment in business for all than to
have government by business for
the few.
.The processing tax is also a thorn
in the flesh of the fat boys. They
claim that this tax for the benefit of
the producers of raw material is un-
coiiFtitutional. Now, if the constitu
tion can stand the strain of a high
tariff for the benefit of the manu
facturers. and a ship subsidy for the
benefit of ship owners, it surely can
stand the strain of this little sop to
the farmers. But if it is, indeed, un-
be said of
absolutely indispensible to the
country’s welfare it is the farmers,
and they should at least have equal
consideration.
Never before has any administra
tion had any solicitude for the farm
er between elections; but regularly
every four years he has been oxtoll-
the back-bone of the country
“GOOD ENOUGH” DOESEN’T IVIN
PRIZES
l>id you ever stop to think that
Spur ‘good enough” work never
wins prizes? .
fjf races, of prize awards, j n nd promsied relief from economic
lwh„T,” in , V nrr < hd inequalities, but just as seen as he
t d fir h . * ir ' * rom ‘-art l delivers his vole to the successful
£ll'£ concentrate on ex-| party hc is lcft at his hack-breek-
Thc world's worth-while a i inR triI with n ° ,urther « m ' id<!ra -
onlv go to those who do lljr i g’: 1 ' 0 " fr ° m ‘ h ° * ovemmcnL If th , cv
hotter ik.. . lhc,r love that kind of servitude the yoke _
Is waiting.—Sandersville Progress. tllllllllllllTll J JJY'
better than most people.
Happy New Year
Please Accept Our
Sincere Wish
That 1936 Holds in Store For You All the Good You Wish
Accept
Our Appreciation For Your Friendship And For the Business
You Are Giving Us.
Our Desire Is
To Always Merit This Friendririo And This Business
GEORGIA NATURAL GAS COUP
ELLIOTT SIMS, Manager
From the Tennessee Farms
CAR LOAD
YOUNG MULES
Will Arrive Next Week
All hand picked, young stock, harness broke, fal and strong.
Pick yours from this lot and get a good start with your farm
this year.
We give you liberal terms and trade for anything you have.
Simmerson & Robinson
RALPH SIMMERSON
ED ROBINSON
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
GREETINGS
From Bell’s Store
Not in the sense of custom only, but
with a genuine appreciation of our
pleasant associations during the past
year. We extend to you our best
wishes fora New Year of health,
happiness and prosperity.
E. £. Bell Co.