The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, May 11, 1928, Image 1

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Good Advertising Medium. Vol 4 >—No. 14 reveled to Local, Mining and General Information. IXA'IILONRGA, G \ , FRIDAY MAY 1 r. 192! W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro UUH ime ■ WW L.Hn.f UV- "J Get Stronger After S!.o Had Taken Cardi;?. ID n n a B m E B B B B B Ed n B B B S! B B “For some time, I had bora having an awful time with pains in my bock and sides," says Mrs. Robert Creasy, ci' Qulin, Uo. “This awful hurting wo - ’cl como on me, and I :ould find nothing to case tiro pain. “I w' 3 very weak a: J nervous. It looked like the least little thins would un set ms. "I tried many 1 but nothing did me any good until I started taking Cardui. “Cardul proved to be r.ll that was said at it. I took it fer set era! months, regu larly. At the end of that time, I was fh got and have been co ever since.” Try it. For calc at druggist’s. ■> ci 53 :.]! b: u mm wm \ ::: -:1 Yoalh Takes H; c-n actor Wao F *-* ~ 4 - Ci* Vc of enionihering tl^e old e for an eye,” ph.v- t J ycur UllJiiLA si eh IP; - — t mrl icttlarly surgeon. ; — are won rill" if their patient:. 5 Of today are i:n t tilt ;c!n g ti too liter:* 1 in terpro* tuth ?n on i ancient teaching; They ahd { obit to the tt:;e-o!d talc i from (.'hi; i:t that if n patient dies, then the ph.V: lie Ian i huh l die, too. T O Jj{ ana of then 1 f t up [>c:i ro the custom is i ;prott(l- In;: (0 Am eric a. T! 10 late: t (! oetor to die at tlie liamls of r i man \vJ lose life lie had saved V ! )p. ( Id A. Kelly of . Teseu'p, Pa. i I is i Lath cam:; wliih » tlj o case of I ink Car uso, tlie mild l-mn nncred i tni: fat her who shot t< ) (R *ath a youn;* Nov .• Y ork physician nft ier ids first i) orn hail 1 died, was s till ii Hie . : i N 5 E8 Uced By Women For Over S9 Years S3 c-'id [R= El S! Hi Ei □! :M L": □ • "T: ;: i FOR SALE: In Dahlonega, on main residential street, throe acres with frontage of 210 feet on Park Stive!, and about 000 feet on side street. Will sell in one piece or divide into lots. OAPT. W. A. HEYDEN, Box K, Dahlonega. G. H. McGUIRE DAHLONEGA. GA. Repairs watch'.., clocks, pianos, or- ans, sewing macliines, .'leweiry, oio.,. N(>xt to Hums’ Harbor Shop. ■LOOK HERE. A nootl lino of low ctil Shoos and a lot of nice Dress Goods Al so Ladies Hats. lust, received at J. H. McKICES Burlshoio. G;l. wanted next week TO BUY 500 FRYING CHICK ENS WEIGHING FROM ONE TO ONE AND A HALF POUNDS EACH. WILL PAY 80 CENTS PER POUND CASH. ZIMMEIl MOUNTAIN LODGE. PRESSING OIVIII Wo have costal led a Dry -Meaning Machine and arc able to give you first class wor For Dry Cleaning 85c. Scrubbed and Pressed 00c. Hats blocked and c! eaned 65 cents. Mai! orders given special ntt**i tion. A BEE & JOHNSON. courts. Just l: fore (lie Car* so ease a young Missourian killed a physician who wav tardy in arriving at Ida. dy ing mother's bedside. There have been .other, move ntmieroit::, cases ot physicians la. Jug beaten and disfig ured by patients or their relatives. C'.ayzr in Jcil. Joseph Knmeniskl, the twenty-year- old slayer of Doctor Kelly, is in the county jail at Scranton, l>a. Ik- do- elares that bis on’.v motive for killing the physician was hie belief that am putation of ids leg under Doctor Kelly's supervision was unnecessary. Inuiicniski sits alone in his ceil and broodu Ilia thoughts are tiiose of a once rugged youth who now must go through life maimed. Lie does not remember that he might have died— surely would have died—physicians b Move—if liis leg had not been taken oh'. lie remember:; only liny} he oilce was strong a d that now lie is a crip ple and that Doctor Kelly made him a cripple, , Kune of those who knew the doctor well and have known Knmenisk; for yews, ascribe the killing to other mo- tiies. Y:..: opinion was expressed by several that Kamcniski harbored a grudge again: i Doctor Kelly because of tlie (ran fer of Kameniski’s com pensation money to his mother’s mime. Doctor Kelly was employed by the coal colnpuny at whose workings the hoy’s leg was injured. Mother in Need. Kasieniski was raid (o have been squandering Hits compensation money "'bile Ills mot 11 r was in heed of aid. I r:ei:d.’ told tales of the hoy's many trips to New York and of Ids osen- 1 tides ;n Jessup, one of these friends mei him in a New York hotel a few -weeks before he killed the doctor. At that time, a. . ording to the friend Kara nisi;! was muddy and depre^*’* 1 Piano “Solo” Thai Had to Ea P/lad.c Info Duel Years ago, Busoni, master pianist, wss giving a recital In a provincial city. During the performance it be came obvious that something was wrong, and at last Busoni stopped playing', wheeled round on Ids seat, and threw tip Ids arms with a gesture of despair. There was a consultation on the plat form, and the* Impresario under .whose management Busoni was appearing then made a little speech. “There is one note that sticks,” lie told the audience, “it will not come up.” He added that it had been arranged tor some one to sit by (lie piano and lift the note each lima it stuck. As may he imagined, Hie result was hardly satisfactory but very comical. Busoni’s hands running rapidly over ithe keyboard and the assistant’s fin- pel's pecking wildly among them, till the two performers broke down with laughter amidst the unrestrained mer riment of the audience.—Kansas City Star. Felt Called Upon io Voice One Criticism Mgr: of Genius Knew Value of Advertising The Parisian poet who is seeking to attract human readers by first ad dressing Ids verses to the lions in a circus is not tho first of ills land to Bit on a zoological advertisement. Gerard do Nerval sought publicity by appearing on the boulevards with a live crawfish on a lead of ribbon and found that lie had judged rightly in thinking people would be curious to cample the writings of a man capable of such an eccentric and novel idea in pets. Ilossetti, too, hit on a similar device and once told a friend lie was looking around for a young elephant. “I mean him,” explained the poet-pninter, ‘‘to clean the windows. Then when pass- ers-by see the elephant cleaning the windows they will ask, ‘Whose house is .that?’ and, being told ‘Rossetti, ilia painter, lives there,’ they will say, ‘I think I should like to buy some of that man’s pictures.’ So they will ring and come in and buy.”—Manchester Guardian. Federal examiners who sit with dis trict judges examining candidates for naturalization have an eagle eye on those desiring citizenship, to see that none with londeiiol -s subversive of our country's institutions are admitted. In a Kansas town some years ago a group cl farmers were discussing the warm, dry weather, *the preva lence of gi'tiuslmp;and their dam age to tire newly sprouting wheat. Judge Williams was passing the group, and was laughingly ashed to issue an order for tile w atlitr man to be a lit tle more generous with moisture and cold. The judge sniJvd and tlren told tills Incident : "Over at La Crosse the other day we had several candidates for natural ization, among others an old German farmer who has reside i here many years. The examiner asked him if no liked tills country. “ ‘Oii, yuli, yah, 1 like der country all right.’ “Tlie examiner was hardly satisfied and countered: “‘Are you satisfied with it?’ “‘Yell, 1 bin satisfied all right,’ the former replied slowly, evidently re membering that lie was under oath to tell tlie exact truth, ‘but I vould like it better if it vould rain a lectio more.’”—Kansas City Times. IMF. 11 KEEPS iiittSiassst'Mi ssi&i Ie TUB No Waste in Franca Almost every land has its d ;nlei*3 in second-hand goods, but in France, where strict economies have been re quired because of the war’s expense, salvage “specialists” are nourishing In large numbers. Among them are men who travel from door to door, mending old china and other articles. Even tlm coarsest cooking utensils are saved instead of being thrown away, to await tbo ar rival of the expert mender. Numbers _ of women are adept at weaving- new bottoms in cane chairs. Even nails “lire hammered straight again and old pins made serviceable for further use. —Popular Mechanics Magazine. 1 \ Purely Ycrc (Able • ; Remedy for ccMOTflm^nc^: [i, BILIOUS?:®**? ® ftflgs t kuiciim. “i have hut 81!) loft,” lie told hi:: fri nd, “and when that is gone I will ho gone, for what can a one- legged man do when all lie knows is to work in a mine?” Police told how Kameni.*-ki commit ted Hie murder. At two o’clock in the morning he suddenly appeared in the doorway oi a rooming house in Scran ton. tie .held a pistol in each hand as Jie Kicked open the door with his pop-leg. He then held up the propri etress, robbing her of 850. Apparent ly lie had hut one purpose in getting the money for lie lied down the street to a taxi stand and ordered a driver to take him to Doctor Kelly's in Jessup. 'Arriving at the home of the Jessup physician lie obtained entrance. No one saw Hie murder, hut tlie two were heard in angry conversation for sev eral minutes before the sound of tlie shot brought other occupants of the home running to the hallway. The doctor died soon afterwards. Got Pigeons “Soused” The problem of catching pigeons in order to thin them out was solved rather ingeniously about 20 years ago by a London vicar—a well-known tem perance worker—who employed an old poacher’s dodge. Ills trouble was to get rid of the pigeons that nested in and overcrowded the exterior recesses of his church. So lie sprinkled in the churchyard a quantity cf corn which had been well soaked in rum for 24 hours. The pigeons ate it greedily and their cap ture was rendered easy. It was said (lint one intoxicated pigeon was found staggering up the middle aisle of (lie church with a pro nounced hiccough. — London Daily News. V/cather Changes The weather bureau says that change In the weather—one day cold, next warm, then, perhaps, cold again—is mainly due to change? in tho direction of the wind, and that in turn to changes in the distribution of air over Hie sur face of the earth. The causes oper ating and their effects are rather com plicated, but go back mainly to circu lation between the equatorial and po lar regions (caused by Hiq heating of tlie tropical regions and I bo cooling of the polar regions) as modified by tlie effects of tlie daily lotaLiou of tlie earth. mp to «))! y Holland With M Tunnel Equipped 1‘velouo Mechan ical “Nerves.** The Last Place lie came home tired. All men come homo tired. It is a requirement of the Association of Husbands in Business that a man come home tired. “Isn't it grand that we are going out tonight?” was the greeting as lie hung up Ids coat. “The Gralmni:; have in vited us over—tlie place I've always wanted to go!” “Oil!” lie replied. “After that we’re all going to meet at Donahue's downtown for a quiet supper." “Uh—anywhere else?” “Well, home, I suppose," she said despairingly. lie wondered for a week iiow she happened to think of that.—Kansas City Times. Strang Wind Little Frank's mother was In the habit of sending him out on the back yard to ploy so lit* would get fresh air and exercise. One morning a strong wind was blowing and Frank objected very much to going out, but ills moth er insisted. While out in tlie yard bis dog came along and in their romp ing Frank pulled a button off his waist. When lie came in his mother noticed ho had lost a button and asked him how it happened. He said: “You made me go out in the wind and it blew Hint button off.” Ccu-.e of Spring Fever If people lived as II .*;. should live in winter there would ho no spring time laziness and loss of energy. In Winter time people usually eat us if 'they were in Greenland or ceb.8 rating 'Christinas every day, often consuming double iheir requirement and Hr r >abilit.v to di.-pore ol properly. Not; .only that, but tit y i :.;u;:;e I ■* quantities of meats ni.tl ccr a I pr > 1 tin ts, not neglectii s “ho! c; ' •” til ling majestically in sms of sirup -to intake heat to keep them warm - when already they have net enough elm him; to keep theta warm In tlie Ian 1 of Hi midnight sen, to say nothing of living in noiivontilated limit t lie: d to (tropical temperature!- -Physical Cul ture Magazine. Sergeant’s Idea Given Approved of Captain Tlie effort is still being made to de vise methods for carrying on war in a “humane” fashion. The notion still prevails, however, that Sherman was right. The story is told by an old preacher who was captain of a com pany during tlie Civil war. With Ills pa; ring was revived the story of how this servant of tlie Lord, while cap- lain, was about to* enter what prom ised io ho a serious engagement, when he asked Ids sergeant, who was more freely spoken than he, to address the soldiers, which he did, as follows: “Byes, it looks like it’s goin' to be a d—a big tight. Yonder's the enemy ! ; Go for ’em an’ give ’em h—I !” Whereupon lire pious captain, wish ing to do bis part toward rousing Hie ! inon-'f! courage, added : * “Yes, boys, that's right. Go foi them and give them what the sergeant j has sag;;, sio;l.”—Boston Globe. Centers cff„ Business There are American chambers of commerce in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Brussels, Belgium; Rio de Janeiro and Sao I'uulo, Brazil; Valparaiso, Chile; Shanghai, Harbin, Mukden, Peking, Tientsin and Tsingtnu, China; Ha vana, Cuba; Santo Domingo, Domini can Republic; Alexandria, Egypt; Lon don, England; Paris, France; Berlin and Frankfort, Germany; Milan, Ge noa, Rome, Naples, Turin and Flor ence, Italy; Mexico City, Mexico; Warsaw, Poland; San Juan, Porto Rico; Lisbon, Portugal; Johannes burg. South Africa; Barcelona, Spall, and (_'onr.!:;t:',!r.op!(*. Turkey. Changes in Territory Staten island was properly a part of New Jersey until 1008, at which time the duke of York decreed that all islands which could he circumnavi gated within 24 hours should belong to Now York. Cupt. Christopher Bil- lopp made the trip around Staten is land in tlie required time and re ceived a reward of 1,400 acres at the I south end of the island, and Staten [ ; island was thereafter considered a . part of New York territory, which I j later became New York state. New York'. A tr.sk Hint oven Argus with his hundred eyes would have found Impossible lias been made easy for one man, thunks to Hie science of modern electrical engineering. The Job is that of supervising tlie operation of tlie Holland tunnel, the new double tube that conducts vehic ular traffic under the Hudson between New York and Now Jersey. Tlie man is the control supervisor who, seated in a little room atop the administra tion building on tlie New York side, reads on three ingenious switchboards the slory of what is happening in tlie white-tiled tunnel. Behind Hie v,'tills of this underwater thoroughfare are 8(1 miles of electric circuits connected with carbon mon oxide recorders, traffic signals, lire alarms, tlie ventilating system and ether protective devices. These cir cuits, Hie nerves of the tunnel, carry their messages to Hie switchboards which translate Into terms intelligible to the supervisor tin/ tales borne by the busy wires. Many New Devices. Bo intricate is this Invisible messen ger service that tlie NYestlngliouse Electric and Manufacturing company, which built the boards, bad to invent several new devices that serve ns elec trical watchmen safeguarding tlie mo torist who drives through the tube. Ventilation was perhaps tlie biggest problem that faced tlie engineers. The carbon monoxide released by the Stream of ears that could be accom modated in the tubes was the chief bogey, but they overcame this hazard b.v installing a device that automatical ly records the amount of tills .deadly gas present in any of the 14 sections of Hie tunnel at any lime. A—aoilcn of dr I mete meters sot on one of tlie three control boards records a continuous graph of the purity of Hie air in each of tlie ventilation di visions. Chemical analyses of samples of the atmosphere constantly are lin ing made in tlie big tube and the re sults are traced cm the meters. When the concentration reaches a prede termined maximum, a buzzer on the hoard rings and the operator known that n certain section of Hie tunnel needs more air. lie then turns a key on Hie supervisory hoard, thus speed ing up ti ventilating fan or putting additional fans to work. Lamps Toll Qtory. Hundreds of miniature lamps dis tributed over Hie 24-foot panel of Hie supervisory control hoard tell how each motor and fan in the distant tulies is functioning. Some are keep ing watch on the power cables that feed Hie electrical equipment of the tunnel. Others reveal whether the ventilating system Is working prop erly, whether the water pumps are do ing lheir assigned tasks and whether ti far-away switch Is open or closed. Traffic control also is recorded by! lights. Each little red, green or white hull) on tlie third hoard in the control room is a counterpart of a “Stop,” “Go” or “Single File to tlie Right” sig nal in the tube, and the supervisor at ids desk can tell at a glance whether the line of automobiles below tlie river is moving smoothly, or whether n tie- tip has occurred, making possible one- man control of whatever situation may arise. Black-Draught Brought Relief and Helped Indigestion. ^W'For several years I suf- . with indigestion,” l says Mr. W. M. Barger, of Crystal, W. Va. “I lmcl a pain in my right side, which rarely ever left me. “At times, I would have headache so bad, I would have to leave my work. “Black-Draught was rec ommended to me by a friend and so I began tak ing it. Before very long I was feeling much better. I kept up the medicine for seme time, and my im provement was so great, I felt better than I had felt in years. “The pain in my side left me, and the sour stomach quit altogether.” Sold everywhere; 25c. Thetiforcfs For Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness C-4fia ! PORTA RICAN Potato plants $2.25 per thousand delivered by Parcel Pose. N. 1), Jackson, Alma, Ga, FOR SALE: T W O M U L E S PI ED DON T COR POR ATIOfl CHE STATE E, GA. WANTED. Aiij.biliotis, industrious white por- son to, introduce and supply the J<lq- ii,land for Rawieigli Household Pro ducts. Good openings for you. Make salcsof $150 to $000 n month or more Rawieigli Methodsget busines every where. Noselling experiecene need ed. We supply Sales and Ailvertised- Li tern litre and Service Methods,ving erytiling you need. Profits increase every month. Low prices; good val ues ; complete service, \V. T.JIaw- leigh Co., Dept. G. A ?8(i3, Memphis, Ten n. Jaliloncga & Atlanta Bus Line. Leave Dahlonega J :30 A. AT. Leave Dahlonega 4 P. M. ltimmx. Leave Atlanta 7 130 A. M. Leave Atlanta 8 P. M. Best cars. Careful Drivers PRINCETON HOTEL Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St. See F R E I) JON E S, DuMonega. Livery Stables Blues Sung by Kentucky Man Who xeed a tonic Should take Pzz\: D.'2:r.ie! in Cell * : " L V.- A beau hnminiel AmariHo to Get Rid of Useless Old Laws Amarillo, Texas.—Tlie city commis sion is drafting an ordinance for re peal of about -')■') eld laws which no longer are enforced. Among Hu* ordinances to he dis carded is on*.* v.diii 1 requires a motor- i t to held; a horn blow a whistle or I'lr::; 11 bell at every street intersection. Thin ordinance limits tlie speed of mo tor \ !tk! * (o six miles an hour, and rays a drivei of an automobile must stop 1:ml let a person with horses pass tf Hie latter rigim's ;for him to do so. Anotli r law to ho repealed provides ail children less than sixteen old muni he* off tlie streets at I'ciuek at night. that :v;: a J''”'- ! at Sing Ming ! >'‘1' yn'.v.t or ro. Rohr rt Whitman, mi m :'d I!;*:: tvriirook.” convicted of r.'. ixdiing women, brought with him <:*'.! bind;*,; ilolliing, including :8k tiiah'i wear an.I pataniaa. Female Joiner -Dr. Rosalie Slaughtei the city’s leading clubwom- belongs to forty. Lexington, Ivy.—As an illustration of the way Hie automobile has “killed” Hu* livery business in Kentucky, ,7. B. Hamm, an old-time liveryman of Car lisle, Ky., forty miles east of hero, re lated bis experience and also called attention to the fact that Carlisle, a town of nearly 3,000 population, now lias not a single horse' and buggy for hire. Mr. Iianmi, who lias just completed Ids twenty-fifth year in the livery business, stated that when lie opened Ills livery stable In Carlisle in March, 1003, there were live livery stables in tin* town and all were doing a good business, with about forty horses and buggies, hacks ami “fancy turnouts" for hire. “Today there in not a horse nor buggy for hire in Carlisle," he de clared. Wliile Mr. Hamm is still in the livery business, he operates only a hitching and feeding rack for an oc- I countryman who comes to to*,v;i with hi:? team to haul something l.act: to tin* farm, ami Hu* once pms- cnjn.ved from hiring s In ? 1 v luted Into it he say.?. Purely Vegetable ingredients—contains no dangerous drugsrj h Use Over 50 Years ■OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO- Ancient City Discovered in Peruvian Mountains IJma, Peru.—A city said to date back thousands of years and containing frame houses which from a distance give the appearance of glittering gold lias been discovered at a local ity named lluayabntaba, in tlie midst of a Peruvian mountain, El Tiempo says it has been in- forirnd by a prominent member of the British museum of I on- don. Explorations will lie in- 8