Newspaper Page Text
■tm
Good Advertising Medium,
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information.
$150, Per Annum
V61. 39—No. .|9
" TIGHT FEELING H
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Mississippi Merchant Recom-
inends Dbck-Draught For
This Symptom Of Indigestion.
Mr. D. W. Huff, a retired
morenant of Centerville, Miss.,
and very well known in his ES
part of tho state, makes the erts
following statement, in re- ““
gard to Ills experience vrith EU 1
Thedford’s Black-Draught:
“About thirty years ago, I
found myself in need of a
medicine and I began using
Black-Draught, as il: had been
Highly recommended to me.
I found it good.
“I used to have n tight fuel
ing In my chest, after meals,
suffered from indigestion, and
was very uncomfortable. I
would feel tired, not like
w’orking. I would take a few
doses of Black-Draught, and
feel like work. I call it ‘my
medicine’. ’’
Let Thedford’s Black-
Draught. bo your medicine,
too. Sold everywhere. One
cent a done.
D
b
Thedford’s
BLACK-SMUG!
Purely Vegetable
C-33.1
■■BBSS E a 13 E3 „ 3 2S til
FOR SAI.lt,
Four brood sows, or will swap
for a cow. .Toe Davis.
G. H. McGUIRE
DAHLONEGA. GA.
Repairs watche^j clocks, pianos, or-
ans, sewing macliines, Jewelry, &c.,.
Next to Barns’ Barber Shop.
FOR SALE.
My two story, 4 room house and
near a two acre lot on Pea Ridge,
where I now live. Also 2 thor-
thorough bred Berkshir hogs and
one horse. JJeshv Ju.iton.
TREsSING CLUB.
We have enstallod a Dry
Cleaning Machine and aro
able to give you first class work.
For Dry Cleaning S5c.
Scrubbed and Pressed 0>0c.
Hatsblocked and eleaned
65 cents.
Mail orders given special atten
tion.
F. M. A BEE.
■DaMonegsa & Atlanta Bus Line.
Leave Dahlonega 7 :g,0 A. M.
Leave Dahlonega 4 P. M.
UIOTUUN.
Loavo Atlanta 7 :3O A. M.
Leave Atlanta 8 P. M.
Best cars. Careful Drivers
PRINCETON HOTEL
Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St.
See
F R E D J O NjE.
Dahlonega.
TO PHONE DEAD BEATS.
Dahlonega telephone rates are
nade low with tho understanding
hat the phones in residences are
or the use only of the people liv-
ng therein, and others using them
ire simply deadheating the com-
iany for service which belongs to
,hose who pay. it is just asdis-
louesr as covering childsn from
,he railroad conductor to save
mur fare. If you have to save
lie price of a telephone he honest
mough to carry your messages ro
nail them at 1 cent each. Howev-
ir you will have to pay for the
tamp. If you aro a pauper and
vili show that you n. , (1 a phono
n your business we will oonlrib-
rtc one to save our regular snb-
inbscribers being bothered. Bor
rowing] phone service is some
what similar to a bur'w- 1 news-
sapor. Both after dug loaned
nay need laundrying. But it
jan’t be done. Pay for your
:a]k or walk.
OATTT.OXOA TeMJPM )XK C nrrANV.
DAHLONEGA, GA., FRIDAY JANUARY 13. 1928.
W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro
9
s motors demand
on
Clean gasoline.
f
N EVER before has your choice
of fuel and lubricating oil been
so important* More explosions per
mile, more wear on moving parts,
in modern high speed motors, put
new demands on oil and gasoline*
But here is an oil that protects
your motor effectively—a gasoline
that keeps your motor much cleaner*
Fill up today at the first Pan-Am
pump you see. You can be sure of
honest service from any Pan-Am
dealer. And you know that the prod
ucts he sells are produced and dis
tributed by one reliable organization*
SAFE oil
Pan-Am motor oil was developed to give
modern motors the extra protection they
need because of higher speeds, increased
engine heat. It is refined from .paraffin base
crudes that produce a tougher oil.
That is why Pan-Am holds its body under
punishment that soon breaks down less
hardy oils. It keeps the hottest friction spots
in any motor safe from destructive wear.
CLEAN gasoline
This gasoline is cleanl Next time you nee a
Pan-Am pump, look at the gasoline in the
visible bowl. Note its crystal-clear color . . .
:the absence of any dirt or foreign matter.
That means a motor clean as a whistle, for
tip-top performance! It means less carbon
trouble and knocking — a wealth of extra
power—and mileage economy such as you
‘have never known before.
< r > an e/fmerican ‘■’Petroleum Corporation
EGSBBBnK3SiIE2a39@5
Keep Departments Efficient
There is in the government a bu-
I'eau of efficiency, the ilnty of which,
among others, is to investigate the
needs of tlie several executive depart
ments and independent establishments
with respect to personnel and to in
vestigate duplications of statistical
and other work and methods of busi
ness In the varlcus branches of the
government service. There is also a
bureau of co-ordination, which investi
gates cases in which it is possible to
avoid the overlapping of departments.
Busy Man at Heme
Mrs. Fletcher—Did you have a hard
day at the office, dear?
Fletcher—In re your question as to
my day at the office, will say that
business matters were pressing and
that 1 am very tired.
Mrs. Fletcher—Well, dear, dinner is
ready.
Fletcher—Your statement in re din
ner duly noted, nnd your suggestion
will he acted upon as soon as possible.
—Vancouver Province.
BRING THIS AD TO
Clarice Mat Shop
Mr*. C. -W. McDonald
AND GET CREDIT FOR $LO0 ON ANY HAT
IN OUR STOCK AT $5.00 OR OVER
GAINESVILLE, GA.
A Typical Woman
“Boy, tell me the truth!” thundered
King Arthur of Round Table fame.
“Who or what made all these nicks In
my broadsword?”
“Sire,” replied the tremulous page,
“I should not squeal on a woman, but
the queen’s been sharpening pencils."
Sad Reminder
Wife—Every time you see a pretty
girl, you forget you’re married.
Hubby—You’re wrong m’ dear.
Nothing brings home the fact more
forcibly.—Air Station News.
Fair Defense
Bobby—I do wish aunty wouldn’t
smoke.
Mother—Why, dear?
Bobby—When she kisses me It’s so
much like being kissed by a man.
Triumph Over Handicap
Although lie lost ids hands through
burns when lie was only two years old.
M. Wilson, an engineer's derk, has
j reared a family, and writes, sketches,
! paints, swims and plays cricket und
billiards. lie 1ms been pushed into a
I burning rubbish pile, twice saved from
j drowning, smashed up in buggy and
bicycle accidents, injured by kicking
horses, Ims chopped off a toe with an
ax and has sustained Injuries to his
head, lie has a wife and six children.
He lives at Woolloomooloo, Australia,
und can write the name himself.
East Indians Happy
Under Feminist Rule
Among the Khasls, a hill' tribe in
Assam, northeastern India, the ma-
triarchini system is still In force.
Property belongs to the women; any
thing a man earns before marriage be
longs to his mother, nnd after mar
riage to his wife.
The men are extremely jolly, says
Basil Allen, late of the Indian civil
service; the women, despite their
privileged position, have lost none of
their charm, and nre no more logical
or masculine than their sisters in less
feminist countries. They wear a mul
titude of clothes, unlike their neigh
bors, (lie Gnros, who wear extraor
dinarily little. A woman’s dress ts
nbout twelve Inches long, a man’s
is oven less. Mr. Allen says that per
sons who are shocked at the scanti
ness of modern female dress should
note that In the Assam hills “the more
clothes you wear the naughtier you
are.”
Several thousands of Assam hillmen
went to Franco in labor corps, and
those who returned told their fellows
comet liing of the war—“and what a
curious war it was! Ilow men would
j lie gathered together and a hox would
arrive, and when the box was opened
men died." That was the Mikir’s
description of u bursting shell.
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RUNDOWN
Cardui Starts Missouri
Lady On Road To
Health Again.
Mrs. T. G. Harris, of
Clarksburg, Mo., writes:
“For two years, I was
In very poor health, almost
past going, so weak and
run-down. I tried to make
the most of what little
strength I had left, but
I could find nothing to
start me on tho road to
health again until, one day,
I decided to try Cardul.
“I took Cardul for sev
eral months and was very
much gratified with tho
results. I began to do my
own work again. My color,
which had been pale and
eallow, became natural.
My complexion cleared up.
Cardul was just tho tonic,
I needed."
Take Cardul If you are
run-down. It should do
you good. At all druggists.
CARDUI
In Use 45 Years
C-38
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1
NOTICE.
"Whereas, Robert P. Parrish, Ad-
minittrator of the estate of
Hubert Parrish, deceased,
represents to the Court in his pe-
tion duly liled that he has ful
ly administered the estate of the said
deceased. This is therefore, to cite
all persons concerned kindred, and
creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said Administrator should
not be dismissed from his adminis
tration and receive letters of dis
mission, on the iirst Monday in Feb
ruary, 1028.
This January 2,’ 1028.
W. 13. Towssknii,
Ordinary.
Make Nightly Climb
to Rocky Stronghold
What is believed to be the oldest
town in America is Acoma, situated
on top- of a great rock that stands
J50 feet above the surrounding coun
try in New Mexico. It was in exist
ence 300 years ago when 1 the first
■■Spanish missionaries came into the
country, Acoma is the most pic
turesque of the three pueblos of the
Laguna Indians visited by the party
of Jesse L. Nusbaum, archeologist,
to-Hd described by Deric Nusbaum, the
scientist’s son, in St. Nicholas Maga- j
zinc. Clinging to their ancestors’ dis
trust of nit strangers, the Indians re-1
fuse to give up the ancestrnl defense I
afforded by the barely accessible rock. |
In the valley below, at the foot of the J
rock,' they stable the horses vtlth
which they work their farms, but
every human habitation is reached by
the 350-foot climb up steep steps cut
into tiie rock. The village- itself Is
made up of two streets of stone ahd
clay houses two and 1 three stories
high, the upper' doors' being reached
by ladders from (lie lower. All of I
the building materials, even tho great!
wooden beams of the church, one of!
the oldest of the Spanish missions,]
have been carried up on human paekj
trains after having been transported;
across the country for •distunces-ns'i
great as 20 miles. i
u Father of Medicine ,> A >
Was Well Grounded 1 .
Hippocrates gets his name carved;
on the 1 friezes of libraries as the fa-j
ther of medicine, but probably few
who see it there realize the great ex
tent of his knowledge of that science ’
or tho cycle that the practice of med-!
icinc lias traveled in the 2,302 years'
since the famous Greek died. j
Ills general ideas are those held by
tho most advanced medical men to-!
day. He placed a strong reliance oh'
the recuperative powers of the body
to eliminate or overcome disorders!
even of the serious kind if aided by;
proper regimen and improved environ
ment. With this was coupled an
equally strong disinclination to inter-!
fere with the normal functions of 1
the organism by the administration of'
drugs.
Thus, his prescriptions often or
dered merely a change of climate, or
an altered or limited diet, or t he se
curing of conditions that would pro
vide absolute quiet and long hours of
sleep. Frequent bathing of the entire
body, sometimes In cold, and at others
in warm or hot water, was also a
favorite method adopted. It is held;
probable that this sensible system
brought him the high reputation ac
corded him by contemporaries.—Kan
sas City Star. -i