The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, August 08, 1929, Image 5

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ETdifferent man HIM IN TWO WEEKS THK BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, AUGUST 8, 1929. PAGE FIVE •I (ton 1 • t believe ■ S» 1 feel so tad • n't I over would have if it hadn't done so When it made her well and strong, I figured it would be good for me too. And I figured ngia. II gave me splendid heul‘h and a ten-pound gain in weight. “For about two years I suffered with stomach trouble Nothing I a te seemed to di gest right. 1 be came very nerv- sleep and lost rapidly- Headaches came on .everyday, my tongue was j |rli '[ was always bilious and ^'^weehs after I started the n treateiimt I felt like a differ ed. N°"' 1 11111 hungry ttl1 the ' fat hearty meals, sleep good, *' bit of nervousness and „ h t pi Ale is over. I never felt my life. [.(v constipation and biliousness eendeil. M>' liver is in good shape ,the first time in two years. My EMANCIPATION of CHINESE WOMEN TOLD IN LETTER FROM CHINA C. P. 0. Box No. 1234, Shanghai, China, June 27, 192ft Dear Editor: Here comes a letter from this land of intrigue, graft, warfare, famine, suffering, chuos to tell you and the readers of your excellent paper about China’s new woman who has a share in the “goings-on.” If a woman in China, 20 years ago had been given a Rip Van Winkle sleep, she would be more surprised than he was, should she awake today Then women had to stay indoors and work something like domestic ani mals. Or, if a better family, be coop ed up at home and stay there. She was allowed to be seen only by her husband or brothers. Now what a change! The modern Chinese young women skip around the streets with a spring, grace and freedom that’s quite refreshing when one remembers the women formerly hobbling along on bound feet supported by amahs. Now girls bob, shingle, or permanent wave their hair. That’s a sign of freedom, they ride bicycle,play tennis, basket ball and engage in other athletics. Formerly the parents arranged their marriage. Now one often sees the young ladies walking very affection- AUTO CRASH NEAR FATAL I STORY WELL TOLD OF DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FOR IDEAL WOMAN. NEAB g*. Am.rtcu., C~-. 1.—Mr#, A,- <>*•, A«,. ».-* *■ nie S. Trussed, of Ideal, well known I gantlc experiment in home building, B the credit. The Sargon treatment' anything I ever saw.”—E. Li, 504 5th Ave., Girard, Ala. ■ Sargon represents the dawn of a era j„ the field of modern medi- n h turning old-fashioned, -.Ljrown health theories upside ami is restoring countless jjmjj by methods undreamed of I a few years ago. |U Porter’s Drug Store, Agent. UK TOLL OF RECKLESS driving I lort.. s Journal: prediction last January by a t insurance company that thousand persons would be in motor vehicle accidents in United States before the ringing of the year, seems grimly on the iy to fulfillment. The death toll on is account in 1928 was twenty-sev- thousand, five hundred; and or, basis oi figures recently aompil- hy the federal Department of iommerce the rate of increase in ich casualties, if maintained for the xt five months, will not fall far iort of carrying the total to thirty utuand. From seventy-eight cities having aggregate population of thirty- million, where enforcement of laws is probably at its best, to the Department of Com te show that during the fifty- "eeks ended July 13 last there an increase of seven hundred thirty -four fatal accidents over Parallel period of 1927_1928.This ihe record for little more than Wh of the country’s entire *i° n , Ute probabilities for the •toRty-seven millions are not H "f comment the New York quotes from a current i>5 the motor commissioner J tlcut ott hazardous driving. 'ays that official, “needs a rhance or force other peo- °,' llJ sg al corners or intersec- “rthe sake of saving a few ''° °ne can be a good driv- ” 1*6 thinks about his driving moment while he is out. He n?ard every one he meets on “ ai ‘ a, a potential trouble mak- 1 l IOl >r driving to make speed a dreet lined with parked Wt0 'lodge in and out of if one were accident-proof, in driving is of more im- l , ^ an ‘perfect ability’ to , . e "I'oel. To be safe a driver g,. carry on in the -spirit Wess to five and let live.” L fcnf o CO these ••• . T 1 • j ***•••■£ naiiuni; >CIV ell dailies arc over, ant am giving j ate | y arm in arm wilh their <. best f 0 " an< *. S8 ^" n , 4.„_4. 1J boys” and the young people often do the arranging. The dress used to be the most modest of any nationality. Now women are often seen with short sleeves and very low necked frocks even at midday. Sometimes they are seen with the most up_to_ date up _ bey ond _ the _ knee short frocks and flismy silk hose and very high-heeled shoes. Indeed the Chin ese girls are quite amusing flappers sometimes—shocking sometimes much so that the officials have felt it necessary to issue proclamations commanding them to dress modestly. The girls have even learned to flirt in the most up to date way. That’s freedom! They dance in the latest style. They ride horses, astride, with boots and riding breeches. “That’s English, you know." Once the ideal for girls was that they be able to do beautiful needle work at home. Now they are doing other things. They are clerks ii stores. Some are typists and steno graphers. Some are bankers. They play the organ or piano or other mu sical instruments. Some are becom ing movie artists or actresses. Some are lawyers and judges and doctors, are teachers and kindergartners. They even become soldiers and some times they become generals’ secre taries. Women also become street- corner politicians and scream the Revolutionary platitudes such as ' Down with imperialism,” Give the people freedom” to beat the most zealous men Revolutionaries. Rarely do you see meetings for propaganda or riots without seeing girls or wom en taking active part in them, urg ing on the riots. I am glad to say that some few of them are taking part in the Red Cross work in re lieving the suffering of those wound ed in battle. Women, too, occupy places of influence in the govern ment in Nanking. Once women’s fac es lacked all hope and ambition of women who are the same drudges at home or—worse—in great factories. But among the younger generation they have ambition—ambition that carries them to extremes. I’m glad to say that there are many modest, motherly women who have gone through our mission schools who are making nice, clean, beautiful Christian homes where the children are brought up well and taught to be good useful members of society, children of whom they and missions can be proud and thankful. One cannot expect great things from a nation in which the people have been brought up for ages ini filth, physically and morally; but a new generation is coming on, born anew in the church of Christ and in these clean Christian homes. We are ex pecting much for China from such. Things are out of joint in China; but we hope and pray that the com- in ' j inon sense of better Chinese ami the " K ' rhe ma J° nty o£ I deeply planted power of the Gospel in Americus, is in a sanitarium in I’luins with some chance of recovery following an automobile accident Thursday morning last, which result ed in injuries of sufficient serious ness to warrant the amputation of her right arm, doctors said. The operation was performed. The accident occurred on the El'a- ville road when R. S. English, also of Ideal, driver of the wrecked car, attempted to pass another car and lost control of the car he was driv ing. Mrs. Trussell thiew her arm out the window of the car on her side and it was mangled when the auto crashed aaginst a bank, witness s said. Two other occupants of the car, Mrs. J. M. Brooks and Roy Terrer, one of them sitting on the rear seat with the injured woman, were un injured doctors said. Displaying an iron nerve, Mrs. Trussell was picked up by W. L. Du pree, a farmer living near the scene of the accident, which was at a point about five miles from Americus, and brought to a local doctor who ren- dere first aid and then rushed to the Plains hospital. Despite fears that Mrs. Trusssl! had suffered internal and other in juries doctors declared that no seri ous consequences except the loss of blood from her mangled arm would result. « g|jm Evidently failing to see the acci dent, the car which was passed by the wrecked auto, continued on to ward Ellaville, occupants of the smashed automobile said. DIVORCE SOUGHT AFTER 47 INSANE MAN RUNS YEARS OF SEPARATION | AMUCK; TWO KILLED Columbus, Gu., Aug. 6.—Forty-1 Spartanburg, S. C., Aug. t.—Two seven years after George Gin and his men were backed to death and two PRESS ASSOCIATION COMING FOR BIGGEST MEET IN ITS HISTORY roifi ■ness j simple • pre- go far to reduce Ameri- loll 0 f careless and "l dri are I I .V 1*lly r from"-" *° st during the an lives as the United World "ouiuls and sickness com- of Paris lr\ ' PTHEII 5 JtAUTy BY USING LEMON CLEANSING w y CUCAM J %Ll’S dept. STORE, iar . Georgia From Toccoa Record: All Toccoa is planning daily for the coming of the members of the Georgia Press Association, and their wives, sons and daughters, and it hoped that the meeting will prove the biggest and finest in the history of the association. Committee meetings are held al most daily that every possible plan to make the convention of the editors most outstanding success, will not fall short in any manner. Since the last issue of the Record many arrangements have been com pleted, which will furnish a continu ous round of fun and frolic for the guests from the time they arrive un til the day of their departure, and any who are coming to “rest” should wait until they get back home to do that, because the fun-makers say that they are going to see that en tertainment is provided which will live long in the memory of those who would honor us with their presence on this occasion. * About five or six years ago, it was the pleasure of the citizens of Toccoa to assist in the entertainment of the Editors when they met in annual meeting in Lavonia, and it is pleas antly recalled that we showed our friends the sites in and around Toc coa, and then escorted them to the beautiful home of Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Davis (which has since been destroy ed by fire), where they were ten dered a most delightful banquet by this most gracious couple, after which Toccoans continued on with their guests to Lavonia, and turned that I them over to their official hosts. It j was the foregoing that Lavonia has never forgotten, and in a spirit of pleasant reciprocity Lavonia will en tertain our guests, the Editors, on Wednesday, August 28, at a barbecue and it is being anticipated with a great deal of pleasure by the new and the old members of the associa tion, as new acquaintances will be made and old friendships renewed. Our esteemed friend, Editor Rush Burton, is engineering the “cue” and from all reports, Lavonia will have something, too, for the Editors to re member with a bit of pleasure. Thursday, Aug. 29, at noon, the Georgia Power company will tender a picnic dinner to the Association at beautiful Toccoa Falls, and no pains will be spared to see that fhis is one of the nicest affairs ofthe entire ses sion. There will be no boresome from the necessary event is for each one who attends to bring along ia healthy appetite. At 3:00 o’clock, this same day, the press party will be taken over into Thut man is great who can ascribe our sister state, South Carolina, to his worst enemv the highest pos- j where the towns of Walhalla, West- sible motive for his act. | mlnister * Seneca - and Clemson Coi- Nikola Tesla, the wizard, declared , lege will be visited. The party will be that even-one should consider his guests of the Rotary Clubs of the body as he would a priceless gift-a respective towns, and will be tender- marvelous work of art, of indescrib- ed an informal banquet at Clemson able beauty and wealth and mastery ! ous institution of learning and here beyond human conception; and so 't is very probable that Governor delicate that a word, a breath, a look Richards or ^sorne other notable or a thought may injure it. I wl11 make a short addres8 ’ introducing u new and singular note in residential construction to the in dustrial world, is under way at Sll- vertown by the B. F. Goodrich Rub ber Company as a unique feature of the construction program for the modern Utopian city, the nucleus of which is the world's largest tire fab ric mill. , | . .i The undertaking is expected to sound the death knell t othe archi tectural layout of the mill villages of the immediate past, where beauty and cultural atmosphere have been lost in the stiff, straight rows of tiny houses, ugly in their monotonous regulairly. • . Residential sections of Silvertown will resemble in appearance the beauty, comfort, taste and distinc tiveness of an exclusive suburban home development. Seven hundred and fifty houses of varying architectural types are be ing built on winding roadways in the high rolling grounds surrounding the mamomth Goodrich tire cord mill that is rapidly nearing completion. The huge mill residential sections to house a population of 7,000 per sons, and industrial center of shops, stores and theatre represents an in vestment by the Goodrich Company of $8,500,000, one of the two projects in the southern construction pro gram of $10,000,000 this year. With its invocations, the com pleted Silvertown will be one of the most beautiful and unusual of all industrial cities in the South. Spacious lawns surround the four to sevc-n _ room bungalows that are being built for the 2,000 Silvertown workmen and their fumilies. An elaborate program of horticultural beautification with shrubs, hedges flower gardens and grass plots is being carried out under the direc tion of A. W. Matthews, executive vice president in charge of the Sil vertown mill. Every Silvertown resi dence will be beautified, from the acres of nurseries that are to provide the thousands of decorative plants. Prizes will be awarded the Silver- town families periodically for the neatest and best kept lawns and most beautiful flower gardens. A large portion of the new houses are being built in extensive peach orchards that provide the site of Sil vertown, which is adjacent to Thom- aston, 67 miles from Atlanta. Hun dreds of these bearing trees will be utilized in the general plan of civic beautification. Beautiful parkways, paved streets, sidewalks and whiteway lights are to be provided throughout the city. The Silvertown residences will have every convenience and comfort of the modern city home, including hot and cold running water, electric lighting and provisions for electric refrigeration and cooking. The architectural beauty of the Goodrich Martha Mill, too, is of a de cided change from the average mill. This huge structure is located on the height of rising ground, visible for miles in every direction. The archi tectural scheme is of red brick and white limestone with massive en trance portals extending the full height of the building. The struc ture is 1,100 feet long, three stories in height, 150 feet wide and contains a half million square feet of floor space. . wife separated Gin Monday filed ap plication in Muscogee county court for a divorce. He was given a tem porary decree. Gin said in his peti tion that he was married in 1878 and separated five years later. He said the present address unknown to him. others seriously wounded when Earl Robinson, railway shipping clerk, apparently insane, ran amuck at the freight warehouse. The dead are R. H. Day, who died en route to a hospital in an ambu- fhis wife was tance, and J. L. Bussey, both railroad employes. i«tt ,',, e0 " Sci ® nt i° us and con "' will gradually overcome the criminal 1 speech-making to detract fi frtakc "" r>: . but the reckIess 1 influences an.l that China will find 'picnic, and all that will be r n U n,','„ r year ’ 3 f ° Urth peace, prosperity and a place among to make an enjoyable even “"•‘in 11 VPS a a Flm ... , , L ...1 I „ a. „ L_L the great nations of the world. Yours in Christ’s glad service, ’(Rev.) H. G. C. Hallock. Dr. D, W. Priichett Eye, Ear, Nose t nd Throat THOM ASTON, GA, Office Hours 1 to 6 P. M. I HItEE WOMEN LIKELY TO BUN FOR CONGRESS Atlanta, Aug. 5.—The u nprecc- dented situation of three women con testing with a larger number of men candidates for the Fifth Georgia Dis trict Congressional seat made vacant by L. J. Steele’s death loomed Mon day as a strong probability. Mrs. George Brown, wife of Dr. George Brown, Fulton county legis lator, is the first avowed woman can didate. Mrs. Norman Sharp, president of the Atlanta Federation of Women’s Clubs, a prominent Atlanta civic worker and widely known in state political circles declared she had the matter under “serious consideration” and will make a definite announce ment in a day or two. Miss Bessie Kempton, of Fulton County, the only woman member of the Georgia Legislature, has let her close friends know she will enter the race in all probability. Have Your Cars Properly Greased We are pleased to announce to our friends and customers that we have installed one of the best high pressure Grease Guns and guarantee to put grease to all bearings and cups in your automobile or truck with one hundred and fifty pounds air pressure and by well experienced white me chanics. Prompt and efficient service our motto. PAYNE’S GARAGE AND SERVICE STATION BUTLER, GA. Cash Grocery Co. We Sells for Less Butler, Ga 4 lbs Bucket Compound 65c 8 lbs Bucket Compound $1.30 16 lbs Bucket Compound $2.55 20 lbs Tub Compound $2.85 Plate Meat per lb 18c White Meat 00f* Best Grade per lb Cream Cheese per lb 30c 5 lbs Sack Sugar 35c 10 lbs Sack Sugar 65c 25 lbs Sack Sugar $1.60 Corn Flakes per package 10c Juliette Grits 10c 6 Bars Octagon Soap 25c Maxwell House Coffee 50c Baileys Coffee 50c Dairy Feed, Mule Feed, Meal and Hulls. Lettuce and Celery Friday and Saturday *?c%. an •Irmy of Jften 10,000 Strong a Stream of Truths 27 Miles Long —will soon be here with something/rea for you! Watch this paper for further details—also see announcement in the August 10th Saturday Evening Post. the NEW Estate HEATROLA Jarrell’s Department Store , Butler, Ga.