The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, July 13, 1928, Image 1

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Gr ood Advertising Medium* Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information. $1.50. pgr Annum Vo] 40 X(>. 2] DAIILONKGA, GA., FRIDAY jULY 14. 1928. W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro \ ST AT MU I ENT OF HE mi': conditio: El' r m E3 m m n m in ES S3 ummnq p m H m pi m \u H a p n B 63 NEHYOU Got Stronger After ol 2 Had Taken Ca::$o. "For norm time, 5 had boon bavins an awful tlmo with pain3 i:i my back ancl sides,” says Mrs. Robert^ Creasy, of Qullu, Mo. “This* awful hurting would corno on me, and I could f'ud nothing to easo the pain. *T war, very weak and nervous. It locked like tho leasy little thing would up set me. T tried rnany remedies, but nothing did mo any good until 1 started taking Cardiff. "Cardui proved to bo all that was said of it. I took it for several months, regu larly. At the end of that time,’I was in good health, and have been so ever since." Try it. For sale at your druggist's. Used By Women For Over 50 Years j iW kink of Dahlonegra, DAHLONEGA, GA„ of business June 'use At th 1928. As called for by the Superitu of Banks. KKSoriu i:s Loans and discounts *7' Bunking House and lot Furniture and fixtures . 1 Cash in vault and amounts due from reserved Agents Checks for Clearing and due. . . from other Banks Overdrafts indent 1,802 t I 2.09 JAM. 12 ,751 .06 no i.2o 03. SO Total. .. I.tA 111 r.lTIES .*LO0,(;BS 0. BBBBBBK263PI3 mm LI FOR SA I.L My house and lot, store and filling station in Dahlonega. If interested come and sen me. I. A. Bradford. g. h. Mcguire DAHLONEGA, GA. Repairs watch:..,, clocks, pianos, t r ails, sewing machines. Jewelry, Aa,,. 'Next to Burns’ Barber Shop. Capital stock paid in tjtl5,0(X . K) •Surplus fund 2,200.00 Undivided profits 259,38 Dividends unpaid 32; 00 Sa§ j Cashier’s cheeks 101.58 IH Certified checks 5.50 ! Demand deposits 17,850.30 &K 'Time certificate of Deposit. -13,317.91 5$ i Total *109,008:07 „ **dl , Georgia, l umpkin County, j j Personally appeared before the un- 5 o-H dersigned, an officer authorized to tui- j I minister oaths in said county, T. F. J §ncj 1 Christian, who on oath says that lie is the Cashier of the Bank of Dahlono ga bank, and that the above and fore going report of the condition of said bank is true and correct. T. F. Christian’, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me this tho 9th day of July, 1928. . gjg&U N. P. State^at Large. We the undersign 1 directors of said bank, do certify that wo have carefully read said report, and that tin* same is true and correct, accord ing the best of our information, knowl edge and belief, and tli.it the signa ture of tho Cashier of said bank is the true and genuine signature of that of ficer. ThisOth day of July, 102... J. M. Brooks hi tus, W. P>. Townsend, ■ Directors of said Bank. T SENSING CLUB. We have cnstftllod a Dry Gleaning Machine and are able to give you first class work. For Dry Cleaning 85c. Scrubbed and Pressed GOc. Hats blocked and cleaned 65 cents. Mailorders given special atten tion. ARISE «fc JOHNSON. STATE?.!I'! THE CONDITION Not ice to Creditors of Dows er Bios. Inc. Georgia, Lumpkin County. i ou are hereby notified to file with T. F- Christian, Tiustee of Bowser Bros. Inc., any billsor obligations due by them on any notes, accounts, etc., that, you might have. It is the inten tion of said Company to ... .1 t i C. Leodger & Co., Clet ■. i; i. i i<. notice is given to r. . 'any liability of Bowser Bros Jne.nli r thirty days, This in no wise alleels tin- bond issue of sa'd Company. 'i'h is July 2,1923. T. F. Christian, Trustee liow.-ci- liios. i>.c. Bank of Lumpkin County T.OCATKD AT D AH LON E G A, C IS OR GI A. At tho close of business June 30, 1928. As called for by the Superintendent i of Banks. rksocrcks. 1 ' Loans and Discounts *105.503 01 Furniture and Fixtures ... .2,400.00 Cash, in vault and amount in Banks due fromapprov- Kcep Plants Healthy ly Frequent Bathing ".Many women do not realise that their indoor plants need baths almost as often as do their children, If they are to thrive,” cb el ares Prof. O. A. Johntmsen af the entomology depart ment af tho Cornell university. ‘‘Plants as well ns persons need reg ular cleansing to- keep them healthy. Some sort of sprny must he used at fairly regular Intervals to kill the In sect parasites which constantly Infest them. "Plant lice are especially common and threaten all varieties of growth. They attach their little white eggs to the under veins of the leave?, and the parasites suck out the Juices from tho stems and stalks. The plants, thus robbed of their nourishment, soon turn a pale yellow and die. ‘‘One of the host home treatments for plants, not only because It ie cheap and accessible, hut also because It is effective, is soap solution, which tan be made at homo In live minutes.’! This solution Is made by shaving a pm ’ ter of a pound of soap or putting a Quarter of a pound of soap chips in- l to a gallon of boiling water. Allow it ; to simmer slowly until the soap Is dissolved, then remove It to cool. This | will keep for a long time, and can be [ used ut regular Intervals. A whisk broom will serve as a sprayer. Dip J it into (he solution and giro the plant j n good bath, shaking the soapy water under and over the leaves. Tho soap cleans (he leaves, but a flint remains over the breathing apparatus of the bugs. eel Res ■rve Agents. Total 27.020.70 $131,989.72 * 15,000.00 3,000.00 1,355,21 072.01 51,450 37 01,072.40 2.133.03 I.VA BUHTIItS. Capital Stock paid in * Surplus fund Undivided Profits Cashier’s checks Demand deposits Time certificates of deposits Savings deposits Total *134,989.73 State of Georgia, Lumpkin County. Personally appeared before bi for. the underigned, an officer authorized to administer oaths in saitl county, J. S Speer, who on oath, says he Cashier .of tho Bank of Lumpkin County, and that the above and fore going report of the condition of said ■ itid cori ct. J. S. Surer, Cashier. 6Lli day of July, Many Old Cloisters in City of London Ancient cloisters, or parts of them, are : till to bo found In many parts of Loidon; they ate reminders of the days when tho, city boasted spacious monastic establishments. In St. Bartholomew-the-Great at Smitlifleld—relic of a wealthy priory —are some bays of the old cloister. A Zeppelin bomb in 1915 helped to reveal a further portion of this, buried under tho present ground level. Cloisters in miniature, with wooden archings, may be seen at Ely place, adjoining the chapel—all that remains of the palace of the bishops of Ely. The cloister-garth Is planted with fig trees. St. Paul’s has only a few fragments c£ its* old cloisters. They were de stroyed with tho fabric of old St. Paul’s In 1GC0. It Is at Westminster abbey that you may see tho finest cloisters in London. Besides the Great cloisters there are the Little cloisters, where the monks’ infirmary once stood, and the Dark cloister that lead? to the Norman undercroft a..Cs2QO 5EL..5 l 2 ....Gncy Forwarded by Wire Money orders to tho number of ?!,- 798,548 and calling for the payment of more than $250,000,000 were handled last year by the Western Union Telegraph company In Its money (runnier service, according to Dots and Dashes, a monthly publica tion of the company. The largest single sum handled was $250,000, while the smallest was 1 cent. The : .'50,- 000 order was In connection with a motion picture contract. Tito 1 cent transaction grew out ol a difference arising when a person In Now York sent an acquaintance In Chicago a postcard hearing a 1-cent stamp. The latter, in a sarcastic mood, complained that the commu nication lmd been received with post age due. Upon receipt of (his letter, tho man in New York went to tho tele graph olllce, sent the cent with a caustic message and went off less $1, the cost of transmission. Instances of 2-eent money orders are said to ho quite frequent, involving in practical ly every case valuable mull held for postage due. The throe greatest sources of money order business are listed by the com pany publication as workmen em ployed on jobs away from their home town, /out-of-town visitors and tour ists caught short of funds on their travels, and traveling sidesmen. Many firms encourage their representatives to ask for expenso money by wire. They regard that as more economical than to have salesmen waiting for money while hotel hills accrue. FAMOUS SMITH BABY % STILL IS UNNAMED Parents Unconvinced Child Is Theirs That to this j*. KtilUitS.- ’rztAf XThe man who has for many years sue- ‘cessfully treated Pellagra by mail. > 1 No genuine Rountree Pellagra Treatment until, cut label bears picture and signature—Caution Qour friends. Have You Found I Complete Relief? Haro you any of the fpilowlng symptoms? Nervousness, Stomach Trouble, Brown, Rough or Irritated Skin, Lossof Weight, Weakness, Peculiar Swimming of the Head, Burning Sensations, Constipa tion, Diarrhoea, Mucous in the Throat, , Crazy Feelings or Aching Bones. Don’t Waste your rr-oney and risk delay by trying substitutes. Put your case in the hands of . Physician who has been a proven ; f,., luai.y years as a Pellagra Spi . iolist. READ WHAT OTHERS SAY: Mrs. R. R. Rnliinson, : • icier, OI.I-i., writrsj "I am glad to tell you v.-lut your woui!<-i:ut Pellagra treatment lias do .. ter me. I: ,-e! liLu b new woman." Mrs. W. S. Hays, Each ten, Ark.' : ' took Dr. Rountree's ti 1926. I feel better than I tiave for IS j car ’ WRITE TODAY! Rountree Labor.-: - «, Austin, Texas, for 1 011'. I,i.. 4 ,o :,v)u<-.,- ttonnaire and Illue Hook, "The Story ot Pellagra", also for hundreds of adilitiuiu.1 Teetiuaoniald. W. F. Worry, N. P. State at Large. Wo. the undersigned directors of said hank, do certify that we have carefully read saitl report, ana that I tho Bame is true and correct accord in:; to the best of our information, knowl edge and belief, and that the above signature of the Cashier, of said bank i- the true and genuine signature of that officer. This 0th day of July, 1928. G. H. Moore, R. CL M re a units, Directors of said Bank. In the D.strict Gomt of the Uni ted States [ortho Northern Dis trict of Gee rgia, Gainesville Di vision. TN THE MATTER No. 117 OF :NBANKRUPTCY Ilousley Him::., a partnership, and W. M. llousl *y & it. B. Ilousley, Indi viduals. BANKRUPT. The creditors of the abovebanpru.pt, a resident of D UiL. g a , (p. , j,, .,,,. county of Lumpkin, tid District, arc hereby notili Ju v ids j ‘ upt.t ! cred,tors i i lie re fere 1 that a I) hi at th n 207. ■tin tk- 1 of iiis dice of ' u: n:- »y <>• July which tii ■ove 1 heir Duties of Marine Corps The : " nn independent branch of the military service, and though under, tho direc tion of the Navy department, may bo detailed by order of tho Pmeblorit for service with the army. The duties as signed to the marine corps are to gar rison the navy yards and naval sta tions and the defences erected te.rthelr protection; to furnish to nil battle ships and cruisers and other vessels when necessary n detachment for guard duty and also to assist In the handling of the ship’s guns. A mobile force is also always held In readiness at the marine barracks ns the first line for foreign service when the oc casion may arise. Tito corps Is or ganized ns prescribed for infantry and artillery (serving dismounted) in the army regulations. Officers and men wear the same designating rank as (he army, with some slight exceptions, and are armed with the service pistol and rifle. i OEsnitto ; ?.tIg Rooms and Makes Work Sweat Washington.—Secretary Work has called three expert advisers to assist the Department of Interior in solving tho problems of handling tourists in Yosemite National park in California. I ust year almost half a million tour ists visited the park, compared to v nbout 209,000 In 1920, und ihe prob lems of preventing congestion and pre serving the natural beauty of the park have been more than doubled. The men appointed are Duncan Mc Duffie of San Francisco, formerly ot the President's co-ordinating commis sion for national purls; Frederick Law Olmsfead, California landscap*- ardiitect. and John B. Buwahla, pro ■ • ■' l:r “I uC‘L y of the California Institute of Tech; nh.igv. Remodeled Barn Mc.dc Into Camp for Giils How nn old gray barn in the coun try near New York city was remodeled into a girls’ camp by the New Y rk Association for Improving tho Condi tion of the l’oor Is told by W. Li. Mat thews In llygola Magazine. It was an enormous barn, with nu- ; nn.-rous stalls, three floors, a silo, linc- J ness rooms ninl a magnificent view of the Cntsklll mountains. Extensive re modeling wn3 necessary, but It proved less expensive than (lie original plan to build a group of coltnges, und the result was a unique camp. Fifty-five girls were accommodated for live weeks at a time. The time was u radical departure from the usual plan of keeping children for two weeks. Congenial counselors, oppor tunity for wholesome outdoor play und substantial gains in health made (lie ti lt at ‘‘Greyharns" a strong Influ ence for good in the lives of girls who had never hud such an opportunity before. Ol’ Dobbin O horse, you tire a wonderful thing; no buttons to push, no horns to honk; you start yourself, no clutch to slip; no spark to miss, no gears to strip; no license-buying every year, with Plates to screw on front and rear; no gas bills climbing up each day, steal ing the joy of mnt’ring away; no speed cops chugging in your rear, yelling summons In your ear. Your inner tubes are nil O. K. and, bless your heart, they stay that way; your spark plugs never miss and fuss, the way they do in some old bus. Your frame is good for many a mile; your body never chumps style. Your wants are few and easy met; you’ve something on the unto yet—American Forests and Forest Life. Cleveland, Ohio.—Nine months ago. with faces clouded by uncertainty and eyes misled by tears, Mr. and Mrs. •8am Smith left a hospital here with a baby girl, though they had Insisted a boy had been horn to them. Recently they sUJl maintain the baby “prob ably" isn’t theirs. The Smith baby, less than a tear ngo tho most famous baby ia the world, was born August 22, 1927, at the FairvL'w hospital. After the birth of the child, when Mrs. Smith had re gained consciousness, the nurses con gratulated her on the 'time Ifig boy" that had been born, and the doctor asked her what she planned to name him. Name Is George. “Ills name is George,” she replied And so the name of George Smith was officially entered la tho records at the city hall. Nine days passed, when, the mot he/ said, she received a shock: She fount' it was n girl baby she held. There was shurp dispute, and Smith went fo see a lawyer. A few days later and the newspapers of the nation were filled with a new sensation. Two other Smith babies had been born at the hospital, and tho hospital books, which nt first showed tho Sam Smith bnby to be a boy, had boon changed, and now showed a girl. “it Isn t that 1 wanted a hoy so much,” Stun Smith explained, “but what 1 wanted to ho euro Is that tho baby In my homo is my own. If 1 had a million dollars I’d t.jh ml it to get at the bottom of the baby tangld. “The court told me, and the doctors told mo, that ns time went on and tho baby developed I'd bo able to bo sure she was mine. If it hadn’t been for that J’d never have brought hoi home. And now I know 1 can never bo sura this baby is ours, nor where the baby that really belongs to me actually I nor what became of him.” The Smiths haven't named Urn bahy "Wc named our baby, you’remem ber, 'George,'” Mrs. Smith e g’aliicd wearily. “Why should we name two babiesV Some day, of course, we'll have to have iter christened. “It’s not so much having a bab.\ wo don't know is our own," she went on “She’s a cute little thing. But It's not knowing what became of my boy. That’s what I’m worrying about 1 cun’t sleep nights for thinking about it. Can’t you see bow any mother would feel If she didn't know whether her baby was dead, or in tlm bands of another who might not take good care ol It, or wlmt laid happened to it?” Ijladc-Draisghi Brought Relief and Helped Iodigesfioa. “For several years I suf- fored with indigestion," says Mr. Y7. M. Barger, of Crystal, W. Va. “I had a pain In my right side, which rarely over left me. “At times, I would have headache so had, I would Lave to leavo my wo, k. “Black-Draught was rec ommended to me Ly r* friend and ko £ began tr.h- luff it. Before very long l was feeling much better. I kept up the medicine for some tlrno, and my im provement was so great, I felt better than I had felt In years. “The pain in my side lets me, and the 6our stomach Quit altogether." Sold everywhere; B5o. The (fiord's BLAC&-MMHT For Consiipatiea, ?adj3caIioD* Biiiotuness Sweet-Coaled Poison Palal to Cutworms Geneva, N. Y.—-Bran, sirup, lemons, water and purls green combined in the proper proportions and sprinkled about the base of plants troubled with cut worms makes a cheap and effective "bait” for the post, say entomologists at the experiment station here, where frequent complaints are received about the repredations of cutworms in cul tivnted plants. The following mixture will suffice for five acres: Bran, 20 pounds; purls green, 1 pound; cheap sirup, 2 quarts; three lemons and 3Vi gallons of water. The bran und pnris green are mixed dry. The Juice of the lemons L- squeezed Into the water and the peel und pulp chopped to fine hits and added to tho water. The sirup Is then dissolved la the water and fruit juice mixture and the liquid stirred Into the bran thoroughly in order to dampen it evenly. rl, ha null eleven water ! Refer, A. BAILEY, in Bankrupt, Thorough Job -New York.—Lost, strayed, missing, hiding or seeking a square meal: Leo Fetter, age eighteen, weight 27,i (when last recorded), liis parents sent him to a hospital some time ago to red-tee. lie has vanished, l-cng Dry Spell i’ort Elizabeth, South A'frlc.i.—S,>t- th'i'S in the Little Karoo and ovnci dis tricts of Cape province have not .-,,-eii rain for four years. Sea Water Runs Dynamo in JBslgian Power Test Paris.—The dream of limitless pow er from the sea is taking form In a laboratory installation set up by Georges Claude, inventor of liquid air, ut Ougree-Mnrilmye, on the Mouse river, near Liege, Belgium. Claude recently reported to the Academy of Sei nee that a dynamo was being driven by utilizing the 40 degrees Fahrenheit difference of tern peraturc between the surface wat r and that at a consldrnble depth, a 50-kilowatt generator, he said, was producing 10 kilowatts of power, much more than enough to do the pumping necessnijy In the process. This surplus of power, produced by nature, Claude announced last year, could be obtained from the sen in vast quantities', particularly near the equator, where tho difference in tem perature at various depths Is very great. The first Installation, made to test Claude’s calculations, is expected to be followed by a more elaborate plant, and eventually by a commercial in stallation. Claude, in ids first predic tion, forecast that tho world might heat itself In winter and cool Itself In summer with the Incalculable power the pen could give. 1 ’ Historic Tablet A plate attached to a large rock on the road betwen Newcomb and Mi nerva, in Essex county, New York, states that this is tho place where Theodore Roosevelt became President, due to tho death of President McKin ley. The inscription reads: “Near this point, while driving hastily from Ta- hawus club to North Creek, at 2:15 a. m., September 14, 1901, Theodore Roosevelt became President of the United States as William McKinley expired in Buffalo. Relay drivers David Hunter, Tabawus club to Ta- ; havvus; On-in Kellog, Talitiwus to . Alden Lair; rib: l Cronin, At n Lair to North Or--- it. I i - to i v ■ j and presented to the town of New comb by 11. V. Radford." FOR THE LEGISLATURE. ? I hereby announce myself a oitndi- didate for the legislature from Lump kin county subject to tho action of the coining Demo, raiie Primary* and will be grateful for the support of every voter, both male and female. If elected 1 pledge a faithful, hpnest and energetic discharge of the du ties devolving upon me a id devo tion to the best interest of th** people. v F rat o J ox ka. Daiilowea and ilainesville h< Line. Leave Dahlom-gaS A. M. Leave Gainesville 8 P. M.; Prince! hi Hotel. Phono 5J. Dahlonogft. J. F. St tton. Dahlonega *1 Atlanta Bus Line, Leave Dali uepi 7 -.yj A. M. Leave Dahlonega 4 P. M. HKTURN. Leave Atlanta 7 :3O A. M. Leave Atlanta P. M. Best earn Careful Drivers PRINCETON HOTEL Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St. i R H D JO N E S made " king, PUBLIC SALE. B ill bo sold hot :rc the court house door in Dahlonega. Lumpkin County, .ivorgia, c.n the !m ) nesday in August 1. . 8, within tito legal hour..of sale tho jo Mowing 1 'IN'. •- ■ a 1 pro.-u-ty towit: Dim Blue Ribbon Corn Mil) No. 0575. JO inch Burr, and I Ottawa LYrnrone Engine No. 13730-7 horse power, t.o sat- e 4y,'a ii. fa. issued from Superior Court of Lumpkin County, Georg 1, upon ‘ In-foreclosure of a retained tit’- solo in favor of Moore A Early again-- J. Y . \) alker. This June 1st, 1928. W. M IIoUfli.RY, Sheriff Lumpkin (' : citationT " Georgia, Lumpkin Countv. 1 Mrs. FI. U. King having application for a years port out of tin estate of II. ti. deceased, and appraisers duly ap pointed to set apart the same having filed their return, all per mits concerned are hereby r-iquir- i d to show cause before the Court of Ordinary of i umpkin county on the first Monday .11 August, 1928, why the application should not be granted. This 2nd day ot July, 1928. W. B. Tow ns i:\o, Ordinary. NOTICE. Whereas, W. TL Jones and T. F. Christian, Executors of the estate of J. E Satterfield, deceased, represent to tho Court in Iris po- iun duly tiled that they have ful ly admin,, rar.*d tho estate of the said dcceasi-;! fids is the: tore, to cite all per. ;n,; concerned kindred, and eredjto .■•how if any they :»•' 1 . :-.i t,.i - diould hoc A 1 m us- : iheir £t>eutor» eh ip and • ceiye letters of dis- ui Au- - ... ® MStsgS lay