The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, June 08, 1928, Image 1

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• -wv.v l-.'yutiuv■■'V. <s>l k—•< 'tV $i| ;1 i| ui III li 111| |[ "T m Gccd Advertising Medium, Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information, Vol .p—Mo. lS DAIILONEGA, GA., FRIDAY jUNE 8. 1928. W. B, TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro iCdEiSSi fflr m U »• v; 1.-5 m m ra u m :«[/ ms -ii.i 1 u SU VV Gci Siron f{ h'iUi Siie Had G« rain. y B gJ B2 i rj m m m "For some time, t ’tad been havlnc ; -‘ l cuvlul tiaio with pains in my back r.nd Robert Creasy, cl’ Qulin, Mo. ‘‘This awful hurtles would coma 0:1 mo, and I could find nothin;* to uiso the pain. “I was very weak and nervous. It looked like tho least I.„,>.o Vv^u*d up** set me. “I trl: 1 many remedies, but nothing did me any good until I started taking Cardui. “Cardiff proved to be all that was said of it. I took it for several months, regu larly. At the end of that time,,I was hr good health, and 'have been so ever since.” Try it. For sale at your druggist’s. y OBJECT OF » Used By Women Fcr Over 50 Years B EJ y 13 y n B] B M : LI m\ is B U ii Beast Like Rhino Seen in Rhodesia Lures Ala baman to Jungle. Si B| R] m m n s m ei a zi m m m u m FOR SALE : Tn Dalilonoga, on main residential street, three acres with frontage of 210 feet on Park Street and about GOO feet on side street. Will sell in one piece or divide into lots. O.lPT. W. A. 1! ICY DEN, Box K, Dahloriega. G. H. McGUIRE DAIILONEGA. GA. Repairs watch - .,, clocks, pianos, or- ans, sewing machines, Jewelry, Ac.,. Next to Earns’ Harbor Shop. TREsSlNG CLUB. \\’(; lmve cnstaUod a Dry "Jlenising Machine ami are able to give you first class work. For Dry Cleaning Hoc. Scrubbed and Pressed (30c. Hats blocked and cleaned 65 (touts. Mail orders given special atten tion . A11 EE A .JOHNSON. fi o-xx^aJajUiAM^ The man who has for many years suc cessfully treated Pellagra by mail. No genuine Rountree Pellagra Treatment with" t label ' out label bears picture end signature—Cautiot) your friends. Have You Found w Have yof^nny of the following symptoms? sneskR Nervousneski^torrmOn Trouble, Brown, Rough'or Irritated Skin.Lossof Weight, Weakness, Peculiar Swimming ol the Head, Burning Sensations, Constipa tion, Diarrhoea, Mucous in the Throat, Crazy Feelings or Aching Bones, Don’t Waste your money anJ risk delay by trying substitutes. Put your case in the hands of a Physician who has been a proven success for many years as a Pellagra Specialist. READ WHAT OTHERS SAY: Mrs. R. R. Robinson, Stifiler, Okln., wrltrsi “I am slad to tell you what your wonderful Pellagra treatment lias done for me. I feel like a new woman." Mrs. W. S. Hays, Eagleton, Ark. writes: “! took Dr. Rountree's treatment for Pellagra In 1926. I feci better than I have for IS years." WRITE TODAY! Rountree Laboratories. Austin, Texas. For FREE Diagnosis, Ques tionnaire anJ Blue Book, “The Story of Pellagra", also for hundreds of additional Testimonials. Birmingham, Ain.—An unclassified animal, resembling somewhat iho rhinoceros, will he the object of u limiting expedition into Rhodesia by Dr. Dan W. UcMHlan of .Birmingham, a contributor to the Field museum of Chicago. The animal was sighted In northern Rhodesia by a fellow naturalist while Doctor McMillan was In Africa last spring, ami upon his return to this country tho latter Immediately began preparations for nuothe*' trip In un at tempt to bag the unknown type. Mixes business and Hunting. A.s chairman of tho board of u steel corporation, Doctor McMillan mixes business with the thrilling experiences of an explorer, naturalist and big game hunter. A primitive urge, lie says, calls him back year after year to fever-ridden jungles arid trackless deserts and to frozen wastes of the Northland. “This primitive urge lies dormant be neath the veneer of civilization inmost of us,” be says. Four of the steel magnate’s expedi tions have been In Africa. On his last trip there be covered approxi mately 0,000 miles in a specially built automobile, over routes never before traversed by a ear. Ills party built roads, cut paths through the jungles and pushed across the deserts. Forty inner tubes and 18 tires were used on the triii, and while crossing the des ert of southwest Africa the automobile broke down, stranding the party for several days without water. The men finally made their wfiy afoot to u na tive settlement. Attacked by Bushmen. On another" occasion, Doctor McMil lan’s safari was attacked by bushmen who used poisoned arrows to kill n number of the native bearers. The ex pedition was rewarded, however, with an excellent specimen of Inynla, the rarest of all species of African ante lope. This specimen now is on dis play in the Field museum. Iiictmment Warns of Niagara Ice Forming Niagara Falls, N. Y — An intricate machine combining wind-velocity and water-level gauges with a wind-direc- ti’on finder warns tho Niagara Falls Power company when Ice may lie ex pected to form in the upper Niagara river. The contrivance, invented by Peter Bailer of Niagara Falls, is sheltered on Crass island near the company's pow er houses above the falls. Impressions made by the three devices are syn chronized on n sheet of paper which pas-res through the machine. The wind-velocity gauge is so con structed that it operates a recording device which prints a red dot on the paper when Hie wind cups overhead have traversed a mile. A pen, operated by the water-level gauge, records the height of tho water above mean tide at Albany, and the wind-direction tind er, a weather vane, propels a stamping device with a rubber arrow which al ways points In the same direction as the vane. Passage of time is indicated on the pupevso that the machine com piles an hourly record of the three in struments. Seiler’s invention supplants three separate recording devices and elimi nates a tedious job of comparison. Angry I’uztnmor (tossing a pack age on the counter) - Makes washing a pleasure, lines it? Does tho wash ing while you wait, does H* It’s the little Makes > I soap Unit - Grocer—Madam, one moment please. This is not soap. Angry Customer—Not soap? Not soap? “No, Your daughter asked for a half-pound of grated cheese and a half-pound of soap Makes. This is the cheese.” “My stars! And last night I made a pudding.”—Progi essive Grocer. Speed in Locomotive to Capture 4 Youths Montreal,"Quebec.—A regular moyii* thriller was enacted by the Canadian Pacific railway police when they pur sued in a locomotive and captured four youths who had stolen a motor- driven railroad work car. Warned by a telegraph operator that four men on a motor car were speed ing toward an oncoming train, disre garding all signals and semaphores, four officers requisitioned a locomotive and started in pursuit. Twelve miles from Montreal the youths abandoned tlie car and Med to the fields, where the oflicers followed with drawn pistols. The car was re move.1 from tho tracks ten minutes before a freight train was due. Electricity in Coat Bobby, ago live, had been left in the care of ids aunt while Ids mother was doing some shopping. “Why,” sold Bobbie, “does mother want a coat with electricity in it?” “A coat with electricity in it,” said the aunt, “surely you must be mis taken.” “No, 1 am not," said Bobbie. “She said that .dip was going to buy a coat and haw it charged.’’ Tides of Fusel Sound Enormous in Voh-ma I’uget sound, the many branch. I in let of Hu 1 Pacific ocean, is one of Hi" most picturesque bodies of water In this country. Its shore::, once demviy wooded, have In -n denuded for the most part by the lumberman's nx, but Hie neighboring mountains offset this loss and afford a wonderful hack- ground to the scene. Although the natural beauties are many, the treach erous waters of the Narrow*, a con tracted part of the found which o ns farther south into quiet bays and the ports of plyi in and . feared by all who arc acquainted with Hint locality. ' The tides are extrem - and their ebb and flow causes n rash of water through the Narrows. Twenty-five or thirty miles above the Narrows, in the upper reaches of the sound, the tides attain a height of twenty feet or more. Viewed from tho shore, which is generally pre cipitous, the surging of the water as the tide sets in is magnificent, but lids Is the scene of many tragedies which occur cat'll year. Tremendous whirl pools are formed in Hie slender pas sage niul rarely have rowboats and such smalt craft escaped when gripped in the swirling water. Even large steamboats creak and groan under the strain of breasting these twisting cur rents. The roar of the tides when run ning at full resembles the distant boom of the surf. Chai I -rd <’• of Lord .' 1 fo /Is?, on the with the Hon of the Asquith family and “1 could • . : yt.'i l, .: v caainp •J ■J L .gv-J-U h t.DW lit Y< flailed I! lions Mr. .(' ol plying fu.fi at Lard <: n hardly i Liar (ii(l : 3 Of riore the newspapers neral knowledge ques- ny Aa ftith Invented a da fa I sol- with Strange queries, mid yet so 's erudition for him fau lt- question. 1 once beard Asquith persuade Ids fa- a iv. kv/arda tho Derby Hie last 22 years, which ly ; to de a rihe I ho (fu- v rial ( the college of lieralfh; ml script ion of a mss i- character in Mu.; Roerlmhm’s ’’Rul.-dm Dobson." Else where Lord (V a:,-;-a ; > wrote: “It i; true that Asquith was making a name for Idm-oif t •; a r: holm- in Ids youth but unfortunately lie wan earning no money. One day Lord Portsmouth wrote the famous master, Reverend Doctor Jewett, ami said: ‘Have you got n suitable undergraduate to read with my son, Lord I.yndiigton, during the long vacation?’’’ Doctor Jowett -T That Celts W of the R oil.—Tha 1 i: turical dictum Hint. Wtm II |: i'( historic Celtic city Ft 1 'll l’ .; ;-,ved here by Dr. or Whoak k. ;::T of the I.Otl- usetim. wi ■> lias expressed the th : 1. a :< 11 was the creation Roman im Idornh! > interest lias boon ! by Hi is I'm lin;;, particularly of Hie fa et that the liislorlcal a! - com: fission is shortly to a report si Roman London, in con sidcr:;! ilo new evidence I11 Standard of English Speech Plot Possible A recognized authority on English words and speech recently said: “Not long ago a conference was hold in London for (lie purpose of arriving at a universal standard for English speech. At one timo 1 believed that it was Impossible. “Later, the subject was brought to my attention by prominent educators. Under the stress of arguments pre sented to mo I weakened in iny judg ment, and was willing to go on record as saying Hint it might be possible to standardize English speech, but after two years of close study of Hie whole subject I feel that my first judgment was right. “It is as impossible to standardize tlie sounds in American and English speecli with the hope of having the standardization accepted throughout Hie English-speaking world as it Is to stem the tide of the sea.” i-eplioc 1 Mint lie 1 had exactly the article 1 equir rd, in the shape of Mr. Asquith. As a tutor Mr. Asquith was a groat succor: s, but the re wass a drawback in bavin,'. ; this handsome, penniless, (lover you nr ; nn in in a household, for every .s; n;;? 0 yoi ting lady , in the coun- try:-: Idi ‘ foil he ad-over-hecls in love with 1 ilm to the : consternation of tlie natch! inn kin. 1 Z to others. At last Doe- till- Jowett war j communicated with again, mul r te ke d if he could not sub- slltuto a lo sa < rlever, 1 >ss attractive and li »ss nmusii ug tutor.—Pierre Van $1.50* Ter Annum Ik... on, In the Atlanta Goi.siituiion. Claim to V e.7 i2:on fr Successful Only in West The English walnut originated in southwestern Asia and lias been under important cultivation in the United States since 1S0O. It is successful only in tlie far western states, mainly in California, Oregon and southwestern Washington. The principal center is around Los Angeles in southern Cali fornia. Planting is constantly being Increased In central California, north western Oregon and contiguous ter ritory north of Portland. It should be grown under 2,000 fed of altitude. The climate requirements are moder ate but uniform temperatures, consid erable moisture, and freedom from rad ical drops in temperature. Yculhful Diagnostician Helen Jeanne, tlie lwo-ycnr-o!d daughter of a physician, deemed her self nn eilicient authority on medi cine. One afternoon she: sat in her rocking clinir, crooning to her curly, blond-bended baby doll. Finally a. disgusted look clouded her face. Sim exclaimed, “My baby doesn’t give me any patience ‘a tall,’” and rocked more furiously than ever. After a minute or two, Helen Jeanne placed her soft, baby hand on her doll’s forehead and, after a mo ment of reflection, shouted: “Muv- vor! Baby has ossiful temp’ture.” Not CcrJerred by Ago young will be ready to learn lie old in proportion ns their touching is not thrust upon them. We all have to lie learner", till the day of our death, and we learn moot from one another. If (he young see that the old are as anxious to learn a-: they are to teach, they will be ready to listen to them. Inn tHero is no room now for the attitude of superior wisdom which tries to impose ex perience and knowledge. It is fool- | ish to claim attention and vonera- i lion on the ground of years only. The weak’::of old age should be treat ed tc-nderl.v, just as all other weak ness is treated, but to claim attention simply because of years which may have been cp: at in !az> acquiescence to existing standards and conditions is unjustifiable. Tho wisdom which life lias given to those who have al ways been learning will make itself felt and will In: recognized, it need not b ’ arTortcd.—Exchange. Liza:':'3 That “Fly” Natives of Boa and Bade, coastal islands of Australia, are reporting ex periences with flying lizards. They brought one in for n missionary to examine and lie found Hie creature hud a parclunent-llke skin stretched from body to forelegs. Experiments allowed the reptile actually could volplane front tree tops of considerable height with uncanny accuracy. Natives say It will not at tack the passerby if It is seen but If one talios one’s eyes from the crea ture before out of its range of ilight, one bears a faint lds-s and almost in stantly feels sharp claws in I lie back. The natives previously had brought to the missionary a snake which can run forward or backward with equal case. Hawk Farrner'a Friend Biological survey of the United States Department of Agriculture points out that some hawks are highly beneficial to the farmer, preying al most entirely upon small mammals, such ns mice, ground squirrels and rabbits. Food of other hawks consists chiefly of birds. The bird eaters should lie killed at every opportunity,* but it Is equally important that the others lie spared, for they de.-iroy many small animal pests of the farm er. The blrd-catlng hawks include the Coopev hawk, and the sharp shinned hawk. IVas She Dumb? A girl, Inspecting bargains in n dc- |(Urlmeiit store, picked up pair of golf gloves. Examining Hie left-hand glove, the girl said to her companion: “1 wonder why tills one is padded in ilit* palm?” “Don’t you know?” the other said “That is a golf glove.” “Oil, 1 was .the reply, “ami that’s tlie hand you catch the hail with.” Discordant Note The bureau of standards says that Helmholtz’ explanation of why a dis cordant musical note will offend the ear is as follows: The essence of dis sonance consists merely in very rapid beats or cliui.g: s in Intensity of the sound. Two consonant tones flow on quietly side by side In an undisturbed stream; dissonant tones cut each oilier up into separate pulses. These pulses may be too rapid for the ear to sepn rate, but tlieir existence may be demonstrated. The nerves of bearing feel these rapid beats as rough and unpleasant because every intermittent excitement of any nervous nppunitu- ulVecls us more powerfully limn one Hint la.-;ts unaltered. Sounded the Same "I’ve broken by favorite jazz record right in two," said the flapper mourn fully. "Guess I can fix it, though." Then she carefully glued the two parts together, putting the glue on the hack side, the side that she didn’t care for Then she played it—and found she had glued a back side and a front side to gether. "What shall I do?” she ex claimed. “Never mind,” said tlie cynical par ent, “it sounds just about tlie same ns if you had glued it right.”—Springfield Union. which ( support of tlie theory will he brought forth. Doctor Wheeler argues that there is t:o lib i-.a-ical evidence of a prehistoric London and that tlie fact that London !:• a (’cldc name carrlc;-, no particular :■■!:’.aificnin-e since Hie Itonmns, as tho modern colonizing British, often adopted tho tiativo names for their settlements. Pararito of London Bridge. The absence of an early settlement in such nil important position Is ex plained by the historian with the fact that (he population of England in the hunting stage of civilization was very small an-d about, live-tenths of Hie country was covered by densd oak for es;*, which were practically impene trable. There forest areas of the Thames valley would tliu.r be avoided, while tlie open gravel area in tho vi cinity r.uw London was undesirable, due to Hie great breadth and extreme turbulence of the river at that point. As for Hie city of London itself Doc tor Wheeler is of the opinion that it is a “parasite of London bridge.” This, lie explained, Is a logical deduction from the fact that tho original bridge came Into existence when overseas trade began to he a dominating factor in tho economic life of southeastern England, for which it constituted a • link In one of (he main arteries. These trade conditions, according to (lie historian, came into existence at the time of the Roman occupation, or about tho year X! A. D., Hie year of the Roman conquest. Roman London, in all likelihood, he declares, was u bridgehead settlement. C::k Mora Evidence. The Roman wall, according to Doc tor Wheeler, was built much earlier than tlie Third or Fourth century, as generally believed. Ho declares there Is reason lo believe that it was built jis early as the I-'irst century follow ing the destruction of the Roman, town by Bordicc-a. tie [mints out that there is much evidence that large and ambi tions works of that kind belong to the early period of success and ambition, while Hie small walled towns are more typical of the period during which the Roman cities were erecting defenses against the barbarian Invaders. Doctor Wheeler lias made a pica for the appointment of a trained official to watch tlie building excavations in tlie area of Roman London, declaring that invaluable discoveries were being lost a.s Hie result of modern Lou don driving ils foundations straight through Hie Roman level. Eiac’uDraught Brought Relief and Helped Itadhrestion. “For several years T suf fered , with indigestion,” says Mr. W. M. Barger, of Crystal, \V. Va. “1 had a pain In my right side, which rarely ever left mo. “At times, I would havo 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 tho medicine for some time, and my Im provement was so great, I felt better than I had felt in years. “The pain in my sldo left me, and the sour stomach quit altogether.” Bold everywhere; 25c. Thedford’s For Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness C-46a ‘POTATO SLIPS. We will have fresh potato slips at Gainesville every day on square. Green Mountain Farm. PUBLIC SALE. Will In' sold before the court house door in Dalilonega, Lumpkin County, Georgia, oil tlie first Tuesday in July, lb28, within the legal hours of sale tho following personal property towit: One Blue Ribbon Corn Mill, to satisfy a li. fa. issued from the Superior Court of Lumpkin County, Georgia, upon the foreclosure of a retained title note in favor of Moore A Early against J. W. \\ alker. This June 1st, 1028. W. M. Housmcy, Sheriff Lumpkin County. ( IMJoiipm ifc Atlanta Leave Dnhlonega ,7 130 A. M. Leave Dnhlonega 4 P. M. RETURN. Leave Atlanta 7:30 A. M. Leave Atlanta B P. M. I Best ears. Careful Drivers PHI NORTON HOTEL | I’uz. Station 17 North Forsyth St. j Sec jJ E R E D JO N E S, 1 Dnhlonega. SlierilFs Sales. Almost Got It At English court balls and recep tions, it is usual to have a major dome whose duty it is to announce the names and titles (if any) of tlie ar riving guests. Oil one occasion an announcer, engaged only for tlie eve ning, “oiled Ids throat” a little too often, chuckles Percy Array Inge iri his memoirs, “By the Clock of St, James.” Very late, Airs. Dawson-Datner, after ward Lady Portarllngton, arrived. Tho befuddled announcer struggled vainly to grasp her name and, giving it lip, startled and amused the com pany by shouting out at tlie top of Ills voice: “Mrs. Dawson—dam’ ’or!” Georgia, Lumpkin County. j! Will Is-sold before the court house door in -aid i-ounly, 011 tlie first Tues day in July, Hit's, within the legal j hours of sale, tho following property, towit: ' ! One Chevrolet Touring Car Motor number 27-11128, Model 1927. and al so at the same time and place, will be j sold one pair of mules, color blue ; 0110 j horse and one mare mule, weight : about 850 and 1100 pounds respective- I ly. Raid personal property levied on as tlie property of A Ibert Jarrard. E111- . ory Stance! and Edward Jarrard, un- j derand by virtue of a foreclosure of { a mortgage issued by the Clerk of tlie \ Superior Court of said county on the j 25th day of May, 1928, in favor of 1 Bank of Hahioncga, and against Al bert Jarrard. Dmory Stancil and Ed- , ward Jarrard. This 26th day of May, 1928. W. M. llousley, Sheriff. On Seeing This habitable world is a tangle of beauties, like Hie Interlacing of tlie sunshine and tlie shadows In a sum mcr wood when the sunlight rules the sky. A world full of loveliness, and we s*c it not! So many dusks and dawns nobody watches. I resent people running mad over carnivals and slighting tlie pageants of the morning and tho night, worth a pil grimage about our world to catch sight of‘oflfco. One sunset In 1 decade; how thronged the way would be that led to its mountain I One I11 a week; who watches?—William A. Quuyle, in “God’s Out-of-Doors." CARD OF THANKS. ( We wish to thank our good friends for the many kindnesses shown to us during the sickness and death of our husband and father, | Mi s. II*. G. King W Family, i **-x-v:--x--i(*-x--x--x--x--5{-->:--x-*-x-*-:-{--5f-x--x-*-x-*** Outlook cf Age la middle life one realizes Mini while there will be progress in posi Hon mid earning power, there nevei again will bo any great stroke of for tune.—American Magazine. | Sweden to Teach Children to Save * *1; g: Stockholm.—For tlie benefit S of Swedish school children witli- out mouoy in the bank, the pos tal savings authorities will open 25,000 now accounts, depositing two crowns in each. Permission Ims boon asked from the gov ernment to use $13,-100 of the postal savings Income for 1927 defray the expenses. Swe- private savings banks lmve similar distributions of money for several years in or der to teach the school children ;ji how to save. to den’ made -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- x- >:- -x- * -x- x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x~x- -x- -X- -x- -x- -x- x- -x-