The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, June 29, 1928, Image 1

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■"V ' ■ ™ —— ■ M | M w'y? rtf a lj k g 11 ^ V Jr U ii a $ .jjs- ! ra ) U LKV Good Advertisi j Mcdiur.% Devoted to Local, Milling and General Information. Vol 40—No. 2 DAM LON KG A, GA., FRIDAY j UN E 2*). 1928. G< K, . ■ .G 7i ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft HC2 ft ■ft ft ft ft ft : ft 1 ft . ft ft I ft fft , ft' ft EtfOAin Run-down rifid Nervous .Woman Picked Ui Git IK;::.:-. “I can heartily recommend Cardui, because I have found it so helpful,” declare; Mm. Norton Smith, oi 'Warn.ntcm, Georgia. ”1 was very much run down, and was hardly able to got about. “I could not sleep at night, and was fn a hi- hly nervous condition. Nothing seemed to help me, and I was almost in despair. I decided to try Cardui and sent for a bottle. “I soon began to improve. I got so. X could eat. My ap petite was good. My nerves got stronger, and 1 was 'able to sleep well at night. I picked up in weight and my color was much better.” Cardui is sold by all drug gists. Try it. omm\ £> & P & \p & P 5^4 ■Ajt ft <A)* p p UCf 5$ P P P P P P P P \P Used By Women Fcr Cm- 00 Years £--ie f !• FQlt SALE: In Dahlonega, on main • residential street, three acres with .frontage of 210 IVet on Park Street and about 000 feet on side street. Will sell in one piece, or divide into dots. , CAPT. W. A. 11 JOY DEN, Box K, Dahlouega. G. H. McG.UIRE] p DAHLONEGA, GA. f Repairs watch ... Heel..-, pianos, or- ans, sewing machines, Jewelry, A-e.,. Next to Barns' Barber Shop. [pressing club 19 We luivo enstailed a Dry p Cleaning Machine and aro able to give you first da work. I For Dry Cleaning 85c. | Scrubbed and Pressed (50c. !' Hats blocked and cleaned I 65 cents, r Mail orders given special atten tion. ABEE <fc JOHNSON. i Fish Long Used as Feed From the misty past wo can sec: an example of how much fish was relied on for food for the toilers of time. Ia Egypt, before 1-108 B. the con-iimp- ,’tion of tisli ns a r-. gnlar article «.f food iwas confined to the workers on the .land and the foreign captives who had ’been made the imhi.-: rial slave? of the Grooves in Boulders Formed by Glaciers? Throughout the northern United States, from the Atlantic ocean to the far northern states, and as far south ns Kentucky, huge boulders are found scattered at haphazard. The rocks ami ledges aro smoothed and marked with scratches varying from faint lines to broad grooves two feet deep, dome of these boulders, weighing many tons, arc so balanced on a ledge ihat n slight touch will rock them. The Indians used them as “alarm bolls,” The grooves, or scratches, on these rooks arc, ns a rule, parallel and ox- toad north and south. South of the above-mentioned area neither boulders nor scratched rocks can he found. How crime the boulders in their pn- sHlon. What scratched the rocks? Ono authority, familiar with the glaciers of the Alps, probably gave the true answer. Me showed that a similar state of things Is produced to day by the glaciers of Switzerland. Those streams of ice creep slowly down from the lofty summits of the Alps through the valleys to the plains. They bear on their surface huge rocks fallen from surrounding cliffs. The stones frozen In the bottom of the glaciers, pressed down by the enor mous weight of ice above them, scratch and groove the rocks beneath, ns the tool of a carpenter gouges out a piece of wood. What was the condition of America when similar effects were produced? Instead of local glaciers scattered in (he valleys, the whole surface now covered with boulders must have been hidden by an immense sheet of ice. Judging from the marks on the rocks, the sheet moved from the north to ward the south, carrying with it masses of rocks. i OYSTERS nsi dit:i 6 it.; f SUPER WHEAT GROWN NOV/ WITHOUT SOIL .•nation. The workmen who constricted ’the Pyramids—those gigantic nwaori- !als of the past—were N nlmm-t ex- j elusive!y on fish, ami it was not till J200 years later that 1; became a food i of luxury for the rich. I In “L’AlimemaUon Anlmale,” hj Monsieur Hasson, an accepted author ity In France, tt is ; tated that .Mon sieur Mouchardnt, who was entrusted with the drawing up of a report on hygienic prog re.- s, divid 'd 1 i Ti Into different categorh a, according to their ji nutritive qualities. Cultivate a Smile The serious things of life are some times inclined to give us a set, for bidding expression. It may he possible to have too much (lctormlnaliqp, too j much power of concentration. And j (hen there are people who cling to the memories of unhappy experiences, j They live over and over again the tragedies of tlielr lives. Their thoughts I are stamped on their features; every body cun road their troubles. Such i a countenance is repelling and dis- ■ tasteful. Therefore, whatever you do, try to cultivate the smiling habit. No pue can estimate, the value of a smile. There are times when it is worth as much as life llsMf. It 1ms even saved life in serious emergen cies.—Dream World Magazine, Wild Animals Take Toll In spite of constant warfare waged against the predatory animals by fed eral and slate officials, hunters and trappers, predatory animals w. . t the farmers and stock raisers of the United States more than $10,000.000 every year. These animals are cny- otes, wolves, wildcats, mountain lions and a few bear, together with smaller animals commonly termed “vermin,” which include foxes, wea sels, mink and skunks. Of t! ,;e Tosses, the perm! tecs grazing live Stock on the national for: . ts in r lost more than 1 n::,(!(:■) head oi she:-;;' and cattle, valued at more than $2,- 000,000 Cooling Color Tests made b,y engineers with in struments that measured heat flowing through a sunlit roof showed that a white roof for a house is as cooling ns the white clothes you wear In hot weather. Shiny aluminum [taint is even bet ter, as it reflects away the sun’s hot rays. A roof coated with it transmits US per cent less heat inward. * This probably works both ways, ns in winter some heat escaping front the hot -'o may he reflected back again, resulting in a fuel saving. The Salesmen Typ; 1 Two men wore sluing opposite each other in a Tube train. Presently one • Of them produced a no I chock and pro- icr. If Taste for Reading were to pray for a taste that Attached to Roots of Man groves in Swamps. Critmnah Unable to Disguise Their Ears What cars are really for is at last being relized, thanks to the French Police. Criminals may disguise themselves witli false eyebrows, gold tooth, derby hats and distorted facial expressions. They may even desperately burn away those famous clews to identify, their fingerprints. But the astute French detective tiptoes around for a side- I wise look, and there are the same j old ears, boldly displaying character- j istic curves, angles, sizes and propor tions. | An individual's ears, says the Wash- ; ington Star, may not lie the only pair i of that particular model in existence, j But their value as a clew In estab- j Bslilng identity is being stressed by detectives, because of the complexity of car formations, (lie readiness with which they can be observed and photographed -ami studied, and the difficulty of the individual concealing or disguising them. Washington.—An aid to the lumber man, to the horticulturist, to the cas ual visitor whose curiosity Is aroused by the strnngo plimts of tropical Americn and to the botanist has Just been published by the Smithsonian Institution in tlie shape of a descrip tive account of the flowering plants of the Panama Canal Zone. It is the work of Paul C. Standley of the na tional herbarium and Is the result of a plan made seven years ago in which the Smithsonian, tlie Department of Agriculture and t he Canal Zone au thorities joined forces. Its value to the layman makes this publication a rare typo of scientific paper. Since many of the. plants of tho Canal Zone are common to all Central America and the West Indies, the usefulness of Mr. Standiey’s work i as a handbook is correspondingly in creased. Besides a brief description of each plant, the author discusses its history, gives oil the vernacular names obtainable so that the plant: can ho readily identified locally, and lists Its uses. Bark Used for Canoen. The uses are varied and interesting. Of the bark of the coubnrll (senna 1 family) the author says that “re moved in a single large pi; eo it is sometimes utilized by the Indians for mailing canoes, and it is reported that : canoes with a capacity of twenty- ! five men are sometimes fashioned • thus. A pale yellow or reddish gum, known in trad? as South American copal, j0Ktides from the trunk:. This : gum often becomes burled in the soil j about the roots, to be dug up by col- j lectors sometimes long after the tree 1 Is decayed. It Is employed in the 1 manufacture of varnish, for medicinal i purposes and for incense in churches.” J From the pulp of the anatto seeds, j Writes Mr. Standley, is obtained an : orange dye, much exported to tills | country for coloring butter and cheese j as well as oils afTfl varnk h. The bark ! of the (roe contains a rough fiber j from which twine is made, and a gum j similar to gum arabic is obtained from tlie brandies, 1 The.early Spanish explorers mistook j the fruit of the mnnehineel for crab apples, according to Mr. Standley, , and ate it, in some cases with fatal | results. “They Immediately gave It a fearful reputation, affirming that a j person who rested beneath the tree I would become blind or even die. ! There is no doubt (hat the milky nap ! ts highly irritant, causing severe In- i fhimmation. ... It is said that the sup was employed by the Cnribs ! for poisoning their arrows.” Oysters Do Grow on Trees. Mr. Standley mentions an Interest ing fact about the mangroves, which grow in the coastal swamps with their roots under water. “Oysters are often attached to the roots, hence a com mon and literally true statement (hut in the tropics oysters grow upon trees.” In ills introduction Mr. Standley gives a short history of the I T hum., of I'anainn, mentioning that i; wan the site of the first European s >ttie- men t on the American continent. Tim Spaniards settled there some years before the first colonization of Mexico, which took place in 1,1 lb. reduced in Water by Menus of Artificial Light. Sen Funnel wo.—Growth of n super- wheat that reached maturity in 38 v. 1 a with i :;h«r soil nor sunlight was an noun ml hero by the University of 'a!;ferula. Wheat, under field con ditions, often requires five months to mature. Tlie announcement follows comple tion of lengthy research In a Juboni- ini-y on iho university campus by Prof. A. K. Davis of I ho division of agriculture chemistry and Prof, D. It. Itoagiand of the division of plant nutrition. Tlie experiment is recognized by the ■? scientists’ ns of I lie widest pos sible import: Tlie wheat was grown, It was re vealed, in a greenhouse laboratory, where artificial light was furnished by means of 12 argon-filled lamps of VM) oandlepower each and where Jars of water containing the chemical ele ments necessary for plant growth re- pin; ed tho soil which ordinarily con tains thorn. The quality of tlie wheat at ma turity, t ho professors declare, was much higher than that raised under field conditions and could lie classi fied ns being of a upcznnturr." The fact that the wheat was grown to maturity in 18 weeks, a previously unheard-of achievement, demons!rates, according to the Investigators, that Hie length of tlie light period is in1- porlant to growing plants. The lights applied to the wheat -Plants were turned on for 1(1 hours a day, and (hi: kept them growing vapidly. With the doubling of the light exposure tlie plant development vans multiplied by four, the professors revealed, hud when (lie light was ap plied for a full 21 hour day tlie growth was “astounding.” Previous experimenters in these pioneer field were troubled by tire in frared, or heat, rays from thy lamps and used n water :.croon to solve the prwbh m. But this was an unsuccess ful eolation, and Professor Davis found the correct one. Me circulated air through the glass chamber by means of an electric fan. It was established Ihot Hie sun rays which contribute to plant growth were present In the eleelric light rays, even to the longer ultra-violet rays. Trace Art of Weaving to Prehistoric Times Spinning was Hie Invention of Minerva, tho goddess of wisdom, In the loro of the ancients, npd Arens, king of Arcadia, developed Hie art about 1500 1!. ('. Tlie wife of Tnrquin was credited with being an expert spinner, and a garment that she wove was worn by Fervlus Tullius and afterward pro- eet'vcd in the Roman Temple of For tune.’ According to Pliny, tlie honor of in venting weaving belongs to the Egyp tians, hut ils origin Is prehistoric, re lates Dr. Frank II. Vizetolly, manag ing editor of tlie New Standard dic tionary. There are many Biblical ref erences that Indicate Hint tlie Isra elites were extant at this intertwining of threads to form cloth, but so also wore the Persians and Babylonians, as well ns other ancient nations, all of which earned fame through tlielr prod ucts. Even jlio ancient Britons seem always to have Imd some knowledge of clothinnking, probably derived from the Gauls, who once peopled England. According to tin? Homan historians, Caesar’s legions, when they landed in Kent, found the natives well advanced in the arts. The Inhabitants of south ern Britain were familiar with tlie dressing, spinning and weaving of flax and wool before the arrival of tlie Roman?, hut tlielr neighbors, Hie Gauls, Imd practiced them even longer. —Detroit News. "I am certainly a strong believer In Black-Draught, as I have used it off and on now for about twenty- five years,” says Mr. G. W. Blagg, of Cleveland, Tex. “I take it for indiges tion, sour stomach, a tight bloated feeling after meals, and It has always been a help to me and gives mo relief. I take it when I feel bad—when I need a laxative. “It i3 easy to take, acts quickly and regulates. the bowel3.” Purely vegetable. Costs only 1 cent a dose. Photo-Electric Ce!! Holds Record for Size Urbnna, III.—What probably is the largest practical photo-electric ceil — an instrument that Is perhaps tlie most sensitive to light of any of man’s creations—ever to have been con structed has been built in one of the physics laboratories at the University of Illinois by L. T. Garner, graduate research assistant, and will be one of a battery of four similar cells as the essential part of a television machine to he displayed at the coining univer sity electrical engineering show, it was announced lieie ree ntly. Garner, an expert in glass blowing and a student of Hie building of such delicate mechanisms, describe? the cell as “the largest cell of its typo built for practice! work.” Tin; inside l cceded to main After lie bad In ed tin ; his pocket. ! The man oppi lestcd and gratifi sketch of Hie oi conmietdd tlie dr and put It in as both inter tills’ attention, said. “I pre d liy 1 anil. leaning forward ! Etinie you are an artist, sir?” “No,” replied tlie other, “I’m not exactly an artist, I’m u dosigne-f of ; floor knackers.”—i’ear: on’s Monthly. should stand me in stead under every variety of circumstances, and he a source of happiness and cheerfulness to me through life, and a shield against it-- li’s, however tilings might j go itniisn and Hie world frown upon I me, it would lie a taste for reading. ; Give a man thin taste, and tlie means of gratifying It, and you can hardly j fall of making a happy man, unless, inch ed, you nut into his hands a most I perverse selection of books.— Sir John ! ITersehel. ~ ' diameter of the globe compared to 7, the .experimental -work c:s General Electric i-onii . common glob: a of this 8 inches in diameter. Several new dep.'rti mon const ruction are Gils' giant tulle. The is ; lie fu Ton 4if I wo - tn one side of th - -.Ini opened and an air pa order to l.icrea-e the the globe should ii go • ieusou. Heretofore it aary to puncture the si ut tlie risk ol lo-dng all if unyiiiiiig happened. (I ill Hu; I Rods Aid in pFoiec'i .r* Neighbors I’lftslield, Man;.—Tall buildings and I’ .htnin;; rod.: mounted on high tow ers protect neighboring structures from lightning, provided they are not so high as to extend out of the cone of protection. This protected aren extends around Hie base of tlie high building for a distance of between two and four limes ils height. Imag inary lines drawn from the top of the building to Hie edge of the protected area define the protected cone, says F. \V. Peek, Jr., In charge of tlie General Electric company’s high volt age investigations at its laboratory boro. Mr. Peek's It:■• Hi; nHo.ns have boon made with artificial lightning at pres sure:: of as high as 8,500,000 volts. These man-mode flashes have been used on small models of buildings. However, confirmation of his discov eries was obtained by studying a nat ural c led ideal storm that occurred In New York last summer, and during which the New York World building ■was struck. Though this building Is close to the Woo!worth tower, and is In tlie 1,100-foot circle around Its base that in protected, Hie dome of the World building extends for about 100 feet outside Hie cone, and that is the reason that it was struck, explains Mr, P. ok. If it had boon 200 feet clos or to tlie Woo!worlh building, it would have been protected. Practical application of these ex periments, says Mr. Peek, lias already been made in California, in safe guarding oil storage tanks from light nlag. Several tall rods, place out side tiie big reservoirs, provide over lapping (ones of protection and re duce the danger to ii minimum. it?.::Ics3 Farad?:® Stockholm, Sweden.— \ taxless par adise is Orsa pari.-.h. Itevcnnes from forests more than pay parish ex penses. This year the townsfolk are geting free seed from the profits. Bet ‘ .G> Angora, Turkey.— Wolvea, descend lag worn the Mountains upon the can Pal of Turkey, devoured the pet lamb of the minister of iinanee. Cue:- SyttoV-hi New lloiTiclIe, N. V.— In her one hundred oi dith year .Mrs. ida Gnlii !•; rv HireudS a ncedie wiilfout using glasses. Marriage Me!: Lengthening of jure Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn, head of the American Museum of Natural His tory, New York, Is all for tlie wedding hells and orange blossoms. Ho be lieves from a study of the facts and figures that a man has a much better chance married to survive Hie terrific strain of modern existence than If lie stays single. Doctor h'.w','” his theory on a study of the eni'cera of graduates of Hie class of 1877 of Princeton unl- ycrsiljs'. He had a record of those wiio married In the last 50 years and of those who remained single. Forty- two per cent of the married graduates survived their fiftieth anniversary’, while only 25 per cent of the bache lors are living today. The graduating class of 50 years | ago averages seventy-two years; with only 52 of the 172 men who matricu lated with tlie class siill living. Once married, the men of each profession not only lived 12 years longer on tlie nverug • than the bachelors, but ‘15 per cent of Hiotn still survive, ns opposed to 25 per cent of Hie single men. “Some credit for this record must bo given to the good housewives,’’ says Doctor Osborn, “and to their cease!- ; vigilance over overcoats and rubbers.” For Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness C-49af Wan l ie:—Man with ear to si'll com plete line quality Auto Tires and Tubes. Exclusive Territory. Expe rience not necessary. Salary $300,00 per month. M II.KSTONK ItcnBKR CoMPAXV East Liverpool, Ohio. Baiilonega and Gainesville Bus Line, Leave Dahlonega 8 A. M. Leave Gainesville 8P. M. Princeton Hotel. Phone 5J. Dahlonega. J. F. Sutton, Not the Right Kind Perhaps it was the fault of tlie cleric, who was new to the job. Or some q/ the blame may rest on the shoulders of the grlm-fnced old Indy. At any rate, ii happened n few days ago in a downtown book store. The old lady approached the clerk, who was standing behind Hie counter, and, evidently, preoccupied. “Have you got ‘A Pitiful Wife’?” she de manded sharply. “What?” exclaimed the surprised man. “I’ve got one, but she’s not pitiful.” Then another clerk whispered that the customer was asking for a book.— Indianapolis News. Fortune From a “String” From a lump of tallow and a piece of string a fortune was built in Cin cinnati, which outlasted two genera tions. It enabled Mrs. Mary Muhlen berg Emery to leave $10,000,000 to charity when she died. Years ago Mrs. Emery’s father-in- law, Thomas Emery, a poor Welshman, came to Cincinnati with his two sons and set up business as camllemakcrs. Tills was before Hie days of Illumi nating gas and electricity. Later they dealt in real estate. While they were becoming wealthy they became Cincin nati’s leading citizens. Sura Enough Foolish questions sometimes provoke foolisli replies. One Sunday forenoon the primary teacher was not present at Sunday school. A substitute, not trained to primary methods, agVecd reluctantly to touch tlie class. Many of Ida question.’-, ttf course, were too complex for his youthful audience. “What is life?” lie asked Hie one interested child in the class. “I don’t know what it Is,” replied Bobby, “hut when you haven't got no more of it you're dead.” Leave Dahlonega ' t 7 :30 A. JVT. Leavo Dahlonega 4 P. M. RETURN. Leavo 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) .! O N E S, Dnhlcurcgn. -MM And There You Have It “I hear your son has taken up a; profession, Mr. O'Casey,’ - remarked the 1 visitor to tlie house. “He has indnde,” rejoined tlie host/’ “He’s plnvat they cull a 'cross-ex^ 1 aminer.’ ” j Tills was too much for the stranger, “And phwat’s a ‘cross-examiner?’ 0 he asked. For a minute or two O’Casey waa’ at a loss, but eventually he pulled' himself together. j “Stjre. it’s a fellow who asks you questions, an’ you answer the ques tions an’ then ho questions the an- 1 ewere,” he returned easily. : Origin of “Candidate” 1 l Here is one aspect of the origin of; the word “candidate” as applied to! a person seeking office. During a political canvass in ancient Home Iti was customary for persons seeking the' higher elective offices to appear in tho' Forum, Campus Martlus and other pub lic places dressed in white togas, tha white of the natural wool being bright ened with chalk. The Latin word for white is “candldus,” and an office seek er so clud was called “candidntus,” whence our word “candidate." The White toga was Intended to signify the candidate’s purity of purpose in solicit ing the suffrage of the people. Family Suicide There is much less danger for the future of the race in overpopulation than In our present system of birth control for the lit and unlimited pro creation tor the unlit. There Is prac tically no danger of race suicide, hut there is great danger of family sui cide. The human race will go on for millions of year:?, but It is certain that some of our finestrat'd best fam ilies will leave no descendants and have no part in the future of America. —Anonymous Author in Harper’s Magazine.