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Good Advertising Mediuir..
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Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information,
$1.50, Per Annua
Vol. 39—No. 19
DAI I LON KG A, GA., FRIDAY JUNE 3,1927.
W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro
And Attendant Ills Relieved
By Taking Black-Draught.
The Rev. Granville Ed
wards, who lives at School-
field, near Danville, Va., was
troubled for a long time with
constipation and its attend
ant ills, which kept him from
feeling fit. He writes:
"Luckily I then, which was
about twenty years ago, heard
about Black-Draught ahd be
gan to take it. After tak
ing Black-Draught for a little
while I noticed that my trou
ble began to disappear. The
poisons, which had accumu
lated in the body, as a result
of constipation, were elimi
nated, and I felt a hundred
per cent, better. The dizzy
feeling, which I had felt al
most every morning before
breakfast, was gone.
"Black-Draught is a house
hold article with us. We al
ways keep it on hand.”
Try Thedford’s Black-
Draught f 0 r constipation.
Sold everywhere. 25c.
TJ-.tfcd’s
(Ail
.V WMB
Purely Vegetable
G. H. McGUIRE
DAHLONEGA. GA.
Repairs watch clocks, pianos, or-
ans, sewing machines, Jewelry, &c.,.
Next to Burns 1 Barber Shop.
Tiny Electric Current
Almost beyond J3cl:.cf
An electric current so small 1 hat
| at the pressure and price of the or-
I diiiary house lighting current it
would cost loss than a lour-hundrod-
I billionth of a cent, can ho measured
I with the aid of a now instrument
J developed in the standardizing lab-
| oratory of the General Electric com-
| pany at Lynn, Mass. It is known
as a thermionic microammeter, and
; a current of a ten-millionth of an
j ampere is sufficient to carry the
[ pointer completely across the dial,
j while a single division on the scale
! represents one-five-hundredth of
this amount. The instrument will
I he useful in measuring the minute
j currents in insulators and radio
tubes, hut it is stated that the chief
application foreseen at present will
be in combination with a photo-elec
tric Cell for accurate measurements
of illumination. At present, the in
tensity of electric lights, for ex
ample, is measured by visually com
paring them with another light of
standard brightness. The electrical
eye, the photo-electric cell, may now
replace the human eye in this work,
for the cell converts- light energy
into tiny electric currents. Which
may be easily measured with the
new instrument.
pp v __ , United States Leads
Itiodern Home Reacting . n , ~
, _ .. . in Production or tur
to Changed Conditions Although America buys fura
h ith the changing economic from „n over the world, this country
status of women, the old-fashioned still leads any other in total produe-
101110 ls rnpidly becoming altered, tion of finished fuV products, ac-
aml there is a possibility of its van- cording to an article in Liberty by
ishing altogether, according to Lucile Leech. “More than 55 coun-
11arper Leech in an article in Lib- tries contribute pelts to the Ameri-
erty. ‘‘Wo aro just now beginning Pn n woman’s coat,” she says, “hut
to realize, lie writes, “a few of the United States still produces
the changes that are inevitable be- twice the value of furs harvested in
cause modern industry has created Russia and nearly five times as
leisure for women and in so doing many as Canada—the two nearest
has altered the economic signili- competitors.
canco of the home and family unit. | “The influence of the war,” the j
Now that the home is no longer a writer continues, “is dearly distin-
business partnership between a guishable in the statistics' of the
man and a woman for the mutual dressed-fur and fur-goods indus- :
provision of shelter, food, laundry tries, which show increases in the
and other such goods and services, value of output since 1914 of 800
it must rest almost entirely upon : per cent and 500 per cent, respee-
the ties of love and child-bearing, j tively. Without substitution and ■
“Among nomad peoples,” Leech the improvement of dyes and chemi- !
explains, “where the home lias had oal tanning methods, such gains
comparatively little economic im- would have been impossible.”
portance, the family institution'
and the relations of the sexe3 are
seldom similar to the family unit
Washington's Billfold
Curtis Van Meter of Wooster,
New Directory.
Please use the new direc
tory when calling over
your phone and help cen
tral give prompt and ac-
urato service.
Dahj.onga Tklh(Jompany-
NOTICE.
Georgia, Lumpkin County.
All creditors of the estate of J. E.
Satterfield, late of said county dec.,
are hereby notified to render their
demands to the undersigned accord
ing to law, and all persons indebted
to said estate are required to make
immediate payment to us.
This 2nd day of May, 1927.
T. 1<\ OlIKISTIAX,
W. R Joses,
Executors of said estate.
of the races in which the household i Ohio, has a billfold which was once
has been of such great economic] the property of General Washing-
value and importance to both bus-! ton. It is made of brown leather,
band and wife. and has two sections, each one con-
“Thc question is, how rapidly
will the people adapt themselves
taining a pocket. On the outside
the name G. Washington is imprint-
TOUGH
tics ?’
NOTICE.
Georgia, Lumpkin County.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned have applied to the Ordinary
of said county for leave to sell the re
alty Delonging to the estate of
J. E. .-Satterfield deceased,
for payment of debts and distribution
aiidwill be heard pertinent to their ap
plication on the first Monday in June.
1027,'during the regular term of
Court of Ordinary.
This 2nd day. of May, 1027,
T. F. CilHTRTIAN,
W. H. J ONE i,,
Shop Work.
I will be found at my shop six
days in the week to do
Blacksmithinj,,
Make and repair old Furniture
and do anything in wood
or iron.
Horseshoeing a spec;-’ Ity.
T. V. GREENWAY.
r REUSING CLUB.
We have enstaUed a Dry
Meaning Machine and aro
able to give you first class work.
For Dry Cleaning 85c.
Scrubbed and Pressed (50c.
Hats blocked and cleaned
65 cents.
Mail orders given special atten
tion.
F. M. A BEE
Ldl Pa-„
; J} b r
iy.-A—>- j (Lo/
“Jake there’s only one objection
I've got to this life.”
“Wozzat, Mose?”
“We don’t liave any vacation to
look forward to.”
to the groat industrial changes that j eil ln the leather, and below it aro
have stripped the home of so many j the imprints of several Continental
of its former functions and du- coins. Mr. Van Meter’s great-great
grandfather was a dispatch bearer
to Washington. It was while he was
Public Tree Planting j in this service that the general pre-
Gets Effective Start son ted him with this personal me-
Tree cultivation as an adornment merd0,
to an oceanside community that
was once bleak sand received new
impetus through a recent ceremony
of the Federation of States society
in Long Beach, Calif., the Chris-'
Seales About Even far
Loquacity and Silence
In New 5 ork a radio announcer
claims a record with ten hours’ vo
cal reporting of a convention, but
"'hat is that compared with the
woman who was admonished bv a
Yonkers judge for talking for' 33
yours? In the words of another
judge, who listened for 20 minutes
to a woman in Queens: “Madam,
it’s a terrible death to be talked to
death.”
Straws like this fly thick in every
mind, and to offset them the La- j
conimust search diligently. Yet
he is not unrewarded. 11 is heart
leaps to read of the foreman of a
jury who listened diligently to all
the evidence and speeches but could
not perform his duty because, as it
developed when the jury was locked
up, lie understood no English. The
Laconian sets that beside the youth
who was questioned all night by de
tectives, holding his silence un
broken, and in the morning scrib
bled: “1 am deaf and dumb.”
CJ JjJJnfflTJJjypWfl W' 1 «^prrrrrv *
ta insi jsfeaioj i
DIZZYSPELLS
lb :y Would Coma On
This Lady And Last
For Several Days.
"I have known Cardul
for a long timo,” writes
Mrs. Hattlo Bourlc, of Jack
sonville, Fia„
"Recently, I used Cardul
for bad spells which came
on mo .... I would get
very dizzy and would often
be out of my head for a
short space of time, from
sheer weakness.
“Having taken Cardul
before as a tonic, I began
to use it regularly. I im
proved at once. I kept on
taking It and do not know
how I should have got
through this time, without
It. I havo been feeling
normal now for somo
months.”
Cardul has helped thou
sands of others. It should
help you.
Buy it at your druggist’s.
OH!
Calf Lifted Glycerin
About two gallons of glycerin, in
tended for use as an anti-freeze ra
diator mixture, was loft in a Laid-
turn Science Monitor reports. The «» « test
society is composed of former resi- : f°f "M 1 " « Z, T’f
dents of all the states of the Union ! T‘ . ,° f
ami the territorial possessions. It | ™ ff e ,' b - v “ ™lf,
conducted a public tree planting at A'AL" 1 ' * , Th “ raI1 18 "•
Eecreation park, one of the large i„ A, ?T TcrJm,c T
playgronnds of the city, and set out 5„ f mght hut with no nnmedi-
85 trees along the driktvay trhich <J»°gtr of freesmg.
has been named for the society. Hawk Avc „ ged „ self
In Use 45 Years
C-42
FOR SALE-
A loti of nice bright tour hand
fodder for sale l>v
A. W. Anderson, Rt. 1.
TO RENT.
Some good rooms to rent in qui
et cool place If i. teronted see
Bessie Hightower.
“They tell me you and Jack
plunged yesterday.”
‘Aes, and we were both stripped
too!”
“Stripped ?”
“Yes, we -both bought 1,000
shares of Hookum Oil at par. The
bottom dropped out and we’re both
cleaned.”
One tree each was named after
A badly lacerated hand is the re-
some illustrious man or woman of ward of William Kni of C]aren .
each state or provincial group, and | don Sprin yt, for Ins futile at
President,, nf thn .TTni+o/i Qf.,i n c tempt t0 rescUG a Wlld pheasant
Largest Searchlight
A single beam of light from the
world’s largest searchlight near
Paris soon will guide night-travel
ing airplanes southward from the
coast of France, at the point where
they arrive from England. This
light, powerful enough to penetrate
heavy fogs, is at the top of Mount
Balerien, the highest point in the
immediate vicinity of Paris. Its
twin reflectors measure each about
six feet in diameter, and its arcs are
lighted by a hundred lior.se power
plant.—Popular Science Monthly.
Tool Secret
By heating tools to whiteness and
then plunging them rapidly into
sealing wax until they will no longer
pierce the latter, it is claimed that
a hard and lasting edge is put on
them.
In the process, the steel becomes
almost as hard as a diamond, and
when touched with a little oil or
turpentine is excellent for engraving
or drilling, and for cutting the
hardest metals for the longest time
without blunting.
Presidents of the dJnited States
Eucalyptus, pine, elm and pepper
trees were used, the society pledg
ing itself to nurture their growth
and later to mark them with metal
Saying ft With Flowers
There is a new theory of psy
chology being used by business men
in their waiting rooms, sales rooms
and reception rooms. Business men
used to spend quantities of money
on periodicals. Now they spend
that money on fresh flowers each
clay. Scores of stenographers in
small offices are directed to buy a
few flowers each morning for their
desks, for flowers about the office,
the business efficiency expert says,
put people in good humor.-—Detroit
News.
Dalilonega & Atlanta Bus Line.
Leave Dahlonega 7 :30 A. M.
Leave Dahlonega 4 P. M.
RETURN.
Leave Atlanta 7:30 A. M.
Leave Atlanta 55 P. M.
Best cars. Careful Drivers
PRINCETON HOTEL
Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St.
See
F R K I) JONE S,
Dahlonega.
Ancient Indian Jag
A priceless Indian jug, found in
the ancient cliff dwellings of Casa
C-rande in Arizona by an old pros
pector, has been presented to the
University of Santa Clara museum
bv a student.
The jug, characterized as an
“archeological treasure” by the
president of the university, was the
prospector’s gift when the student’s
mother befriended him.
Geese Extinguish Light
Saddleback light. Maine, was
dark one night recently for the first
time in the memory of the oldest
mariner. A bombardment by hun
dreds of wild geese bewildered in a
blow broke all the glass in the light
and put the apparatus out of com
mission. "When morning came thirty
geese were found dead at the base
of the light and a score more had
been rendered 'Unconscious.
from a goshawk. Discovering the
hawk struggling with a five-pound j
pheasant he shot the former too late 1
to save the latter. When lie tried to '
pick up the hawk, supposing it dead,
it sank its talons into his hand, rip
ping it. from wrist to finger tips.
Ancient Family Home
The Barnes homestead at Hills-
• boro, K. II., built in 1778, is now
'occupied by the great-grandson of
the original owner, having been the
home of five generations of the
Barnes family. The tall clock at
the head of the stairs was made in
Newton in 1754 and occupies the po
sition in which it was placed, never
having had to be repaired. It still
keeps accurate time.
Apples
The apple crop in 1P2G was ap
proximately 234,000,000 bushel*
In 1925 is was only 172.000,000.
—Progressive Grocer.
Might Depopulate World
Dr. Ernest Pribram, famous bac
teriologist of Vienna, Austria,
claims to have one of the largest
collections of living germs to be
found anywhere in the world. He
recently completed installing in a
special laboratory at Rush Medical
college of the University of Chicago
enough germs—billions and bil
lions of them—to start a half hun
dred epidemics.
Parents Got Busy
E. A. Pedcn, president of a Hous
ton (Texas) steel company, madel
good his promise to present $100 to j
each employee to whom a baby was
born in 1926. The promise was
made a year ago, but when he was
confronted with 24 babies, he re
duced the amount for the batch of
4927 babies to $25 each.
Skull Used as A.rgument
l sing a skull as an argument, J.
S. Clarke, a labor member of the
Glasgow corporation, induced the
other members to appropriate $14.-
000 for the purchase of a portrait
of Mary Queen of Scots. Clarke de
clared the skull was an authenti
cated one of a soldier killed in the
battle of Lnngside, now a residen
tial part of Glasgow, where the
army of (lie Scots’ queen wgs de
feated. He instanced this to em
phasize the advisability of buying
the portrait, which had been in the
possession of the earl of Morton’s
family for nearly 350 years and for
which there had been offers of from
$300,000 to $500,000. The paint-
ing is by a famous contemporary
French artist.—Philadelphia In
quirer.
DENTISTRY.
Dr. It. Ij. Hunter \>;l! he in Dr
Heart’s office, to do Dental work
on Wednesday following the first
and third Sunday.
WANTED.
I will pay a good price for a lot
live young squirrels. Will
fako as many as cut) delivered at
1 ho Mountain Lodge
Wii.i, V. Zimmer,
Renew" Your Health
By Purification
Any physician will tell you that
“Perfect Purification of the Sys
tem is Nature’s Foundation of
Perfect Health.” Why not rid
yourself of chronic ailments that
are undermining your vitality?
Purify your entire system by tak
ing a thorough course of Calotabs,
—once or twice a week for several
weeks—and see how Nature re
wards you with health.
Calotabs are the greatest of all
system purifiers. Get a family
package with full directions. On
ly 35 cts. at drugstores. (Adv).
Incident Not Culled
From Recent Sex Novel
“Please, now, honey, just one
more.”
“No.”
“Why not? Don’t hold off just
to be mean.”
“No.”
It means so much to me, dear-
Dellcate Surgical Feat
The bronchoscope, the invention
of Dr. Chevalier Jackson, who re
ceived the $10,000 Philadelphia
award for conspicuous service, re- est. Please, now, just one more, and
moves foreign bodies from the lungs then I’ll promise—”
of patients. The long instrument is ; “No.”
inserted through the mouth into the i “Most girls would be flattered to
lung, which is illuminated by a tiny death to have me urging them like
electric light. A forceps grasps the this—know that?”
Refusal
“Wisht you’d help me a little,
boss,” whined a mendicant. “I’m
trying to raise the price of a ticket
to Bumpover. I’ve got a couple of
cousins there, and—”
“Out of consideration for your
unfortunate relatives,” replied old
Festus Pester, “I’ll not give you a
cent.”—Kansas City Times.
Nev) Oil Source
An experimental plantation of
Chinese wood-oil trees is to be made
in Tasmania. It is said that an
acre will yield 250 tons of oil, which
has a present price of £60 a ton in
London.
swallowed article, which is with
drawal from the lung without in
jury.
Still she shakes her head.
“Don’t you want me to even like
you any more?”
“Ye-es.”
“Well, then, you might be a little
more agreeable about such a small
One Fox Came Back
While 51 r. and Mrs. Fred Tuscan
of Skowhegan, Maine, were at a matter, dear.”
grange meeting, tw r o foxes, a red “No!”
and a black one, which they had “Come on, now, be a good sport,
caged, escaped. The black fox has dear. Just shut your eyes and—”
not been found, but the red one was “No.”
on top of his cage house the next ! “Open those red lips just a tiny
morning and ready to enter it when bit ”
the owner opened the door to give
him a chance.
Rare Find Almost Lost
A hippopotamus’ skull has been
unearthed at Coventry, England.
Workmen excavating at Coundon
road found the skull 15 feet below
the surface. After extracting a few
teeth as souvenirs they threw it
aside. It was noticed by a local nat
uralist, and removed for examina
tion. It has been placed in the mu
seum of Coventry Cjty guild.
“No.”
Silly, isn’t it? But after all, he
was only trying to get that last
spoonful of cereal inside his little
daughter.—Wallace’s Farmer,
Truly International
Twenty-six nations were repre
sented in the recent lawn tennis
tournament at Cannes, a number
that even the Davis cup competition
has never equaled.