The Dahlonega nugget. (Dahlonega, Ga.) 1890-current, December 07, 1928, Image 1

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i Gcod Advertising Medium. Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information. $1.50. Per Annum Vol. 40, No. 44. DAM LON EGA, GA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1928. W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Pro . Tinrn _ WASHINGTON TO LOSE i TIRED, DIZZY i its historic mart ;2 “All Gone” Feeling Left After Taking Black-Draught. AUCTION. Federal Office Building to , Take Its Place. *5 Mrs. I. Brakefield, of Cal* noun, S. C., says: , ‘T would feel tired and have a bad taste in my mouth 1 . I would be dizzy, and eVery little while I felt like I must sit down. “Someone recommended Black-Dratlght to me and said it might help me. I took a few doses and it did help hie wonderfully. ‘'I now use It when I have that tired ‘all gone’ feel ing, and it is simply fine. “I can recommend Black- Draught, and do so all tho time.” Get a package of Black- Draught, today, and try It. ThedfortPs For Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness C-47a« hi JUSR IN. Sweaters, Lumber Jumpers and shoos. Special prices for cash. Call and sec me. B. F. Anderson. MULES AND WAGON. Two “plug” mules and wagon for sale by D. A. SUMMKROUR, Auraria. Go. Wilknit Hosiery Co GREENFIELD, OHIO Sole Distributors WILKNIT Guaran teed Hosiery. Representative T. V. GREENWAY. V\ nslilngton.—Washington is soon to’ lose what is believed to ha the only market owned and operated by a na tional government. It is known ns Center market mul occupies two city blocks at Seventh street and Pennsyl-j vania avenue, a stone’s throw from' tho National museum and tho Smith*! sonian Institution. Center market dais' established a century nnd a quarter ngo, and It has occupied one site con- 1, tinuously. Within two years It wilii he replaced with a building to house the Department of Justice. j Notley Young gave the site to the city when his farm ran from Giesboro Point on tho Maryland bank of the Potomac to Pennsylvania avenue. In his will he directed that If it Should be used at any time for any other than market purposes the property should revert to his heirs. This provlslori' led (o a' controversy as the land passed to the Washington Market Cdra- parfy and fVoni' the Market company f<5 the United States government, £s*ale Concluded l?y Johnson Realty Auction Co. Inc. ATLANTA, GEORGIA December 12th at 3 R. M. TAY ME. All who are indebted to mo by note or account will please come in and make prompt settlement. I need money and must collect ,n order to meet my demands. B. F. Anderson. G. H. McGUIRE DAHLONEGA. GA. Repairs watch?..., clocks, pianos, or- ans, sewing machines. Jewelry, Ac.,. Next to Burns’ Barber Shop. NOTICE. Georgia, Lumpkin County. All creditors of the estate of John H Summerour late of said county, de ceased, are hereby notified to render in their demands to the undersigned according to law, and all persons in debted to said estate are required to make immediate payment. This 3rd day of Dec. 1928. D. A. Summeroor, Admr. REUSING CLUB. Wo have enstalled a Dry Jlc-aning Machine and arc 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. A BEE <fc .JOHNSON. Gives Taxi Driver $12 for Returning $38,500 Berlin.—aA American tourist be stowed a $12 tip on an honest Berlin taxi-driver who had restored $38,500 in cash which the American had left in the taxicab. The American nnd his wife arrived in Berlin by rnil nnd were drived* to their hotel. The drlv- r put Ids car away for tho night and n the morning found an open satchel . the rear seat, filled with United ■ i:11es currency in stneks of $1,000. lie returned the money and the urist, after ( counting it over, handed lie driver 50 marks. Milton Shrine London.—The kitchen of the historic >ld cottage at Chalfont St. Giles, not nr from London, where John Milton, !ie 'poet, lived In 10G5, at the time of io great plague, lias been restored a! Is. one of the favorite pllgrlm- ,es of American tourists. 'Milch took possession about ten years ngo. Finally the issue renched the attorney general of the United States, ftho held that under the right of emi nent domain the government could use the property for a public building just as readily as It could for a market. In accordance with this decision stall owners were notified a few weeks ago that in the course of two years they must vacate. The market has been a good investment for the government, which paid about a million dollars for the properly nnd has derived a revenue of more than $100,000 yearly from the rentals ever since. Show Place of City, Under the administration of the De partment of Agriculture, Center mar ket has been conducted in an efficient manner. Ko market hereafter estab lished can take its place In the minds and hearts of Washingtonians. In fact, they have regarded it ns one of the show places of the city nnd a center of local color as distinctive ns the old French market in New Orleans. It was always a home of democracy, for diplomats and statesmen, society matrons and persons of lowly life met there. Senator Cockrell, of Missouri, would walk down, basket on his arm, nnd return afoot to his home supplied with the choicest ihe market could af ford. Judge Wylie, living in Thomas circle, did the same, and was a famil iar sight ns he walked down Four teenth street every morning on his way with his basket. It is doubtful whether any market tlie world over ever offered n greater variety of things to eat. Chesapeake bay and its tributaries supply three- fourths of the people of the United States with crabs, oysters and fish of every variety. All are found in Cen ter market. Potomnc roe herring nrc found in no other market of the coun try. Farmer Uses Submarine. More colorful even than the buyers ate the producers who bring in their truck, fish, fowl nnd meats from adja cent states. Recently a Virginia farm er bought a submarine, at a sale of condemned government property, but decided to stay above the water and take no risks beneath the surface. Persons on the municipal wharf were astounded to see him appear in the river one day aboard his formidable war craft. Hatches were opened cau tiously, but the hold was tilled with juicy melons nnd fresh vegetables from his farm, instead of torpedoes. Presence of the war-painted subma rine in a place so unusual drew a crowd and the farmer saw Ills oppor tunity. He mounted the wharf, and standing on a box began to ask bids for “submarine melons,” “submarine cabbages,” “submarine this” and “sub marine that.” lie soon had sold his entire stock, lie announced with a chuckle ns he started home that lie intended to make regular trips to tho city nnd expressed the hope Hint some of the things he would bring With him would reach the Center market. 200 Acres belonging to Mr. A. C. Stringer, located on Gainesville & Dahlonega Highway, 6 miles from Dahlonega, Ga. Each tract has a good house, barns and outbuild ings, with running water on each tract. Some very fine bot tom lands, plenty of timber, nnd it’s just what you would call areal nice little tract of land well located. This property is owned by Captain A. C. Stringer. He says ho has fully made up bis mind to sell, nird that’s what wo uro going to do for the high dollars on very reasonable terms. Be with us on the aboye data, at3 o’clock Wednesday after* noon, December the i2th, on the property. There will be some attroctioin,' GOLD money. BEN JOHNSON, Pres RUALTOR. ATLANTA, ASK NHOSE WE SELL FOR. ASSERTS CHIPMUNK DARNED MAN’S SOCK r Forest Official Tells of Ani mal’s Gratitude. KIPLING FINDS PAL IN ROAD LABORER -TvWeV- • , Famous Poet Hobnobs With Octogenarian. A.uto Clubs of Europe Issue New Road Maps Washington. — The first complete automobile touring maps of Europe have been issued at Paris’ by the In ternational Association of Recognized Automobile clubs, U. O. Kelly, United States trade commissioner there, in formed the Department of Commerce. The new maps are expected 1 t'o give an impetus to touring in Europe, where heretofore there have not been available detailed charts of the prin cipal international highways'. The niatis were compiled with the assist ance of experienced motorists, govern ment authorities and skilled carlo grnphers in all countries of Europe. It is planned to keep these maps up to date by annual revision. Burwnsh, England.—Rudyard Kip ling eludes publicity but he can’t elude Air. Lavender, Perhaps it is because Mr. Lavender Is eighty-one years old and deaf nnd not at ail fond of con versation that Air. Kipling doesn't try to. For Air. Lavender is the poet’s new confidant and “pal,” nnd folks around here say he “hears” all the great man’s secrets. Air. Lavender—William Is his first name—is by profession a road men der. lie has been mending roads around this district for a very long time, and somehow tlie job never seems to get finished. Air. Kipling lives about a mile down Hie road and takes a stroll in Air. Lavender’s direction every morning. There Is a convenient stile near Air. Lavender’s bit of road, upon which Air. Kipling perches nnd quietly watches his old friend work until the “cricks” In Air. Lavender's back call a halt. Then Air. Kipling opens the conversation in a loud voice. Let Air. Lavender, unabashed by the society of the great, tell the rest of the story: Knows Mrs. Kipling Twenty Years. “Oh yes, I have known Mr. Kipling r.nd Caroline for twenty years now,” he drawls casually. “Caroline,” by the way, is the only name the qld mau will use for Airs. Kipling. f “They usually come along just when I'm in tho middle of my work. Then they sit on the stile and Air. Kipling hollers, ‘Come and sit down along of me, Lavender.’ “Often I do and often I dqp’t, but when I do I Just says ‘yes’ nnd ’no’ nnd ‘That’s right.’ For, between our selves, for the last five years I have hardly heard a word he has said. We talks a lot about catile, or leastways I think we do, and he says all he’s got to say and I listens. Then I gets up nnd says, ‘Well, sir, I’ve got to go on with me work,’ and Mr. Kipling tries to get me back on th'6' StH’e, but I says, ‘No, sir, no. Work’s work, and I’ve got no time for chattering.’ “But he’s a nice gentleman with ff lot of education nnd I only wish f could bear what he is saying.” Asked in thunderous tones whether lie was not flattered at the attention’ of the famous poet, he replied, shout ing, “I don’t know that I exactly enjoy it, but I don’t inlnd it.” Lavender Has Rival. Air. Lavender lias a fellow rond mender, one Mr. Stonestreet, to whom Air. Kipling also talks. But Air. Stone- street lias quick ears nndf so' he isn’t told any secrets. The conversation is usually about local topics nnd It I often terminates in n discussion eon- I corning tlie notion of the local district council. In ordering ft small trench to he cut on the bordef of Atr. Kipling’s land to carry 6IY the water from tlie roadway. The poet feels very strong ly about thisf, according to Lavender & Co., ns the water thereby floods his land. "Sobietmies he says to me,” supple ments Stonestreet,' not to he outdone by Air. Lavender, “Why can’t you leave my land alone?” But when he Is not talking about his land lie goes on for hours about Sussex, nnd 9,attic nnd crops’ He seems to know a lot about cattle, too, and he’s a regular history book about Sussex. “But if lie were to see an Ameri can,” concluded Air. Stonestreet, with a warning look, “he would run a mile. He only talks to Air. Lavender attd me.” $6,400,000,000 in Cash Now Circulating in U. S. Washington.—The stock of money in the United States September 30 ivas reported by tlie treasury today .at $8,213,01.1,127, or $40.S2 per capita for tlie estimated 118,720,000 popula lion en that daly. Of Hie total money stock, $0,415,- 083,402 was in circulation outside of ihe treasury. The actual per capita stock of money showed a decline from the $32.19 figure reported one year ago. of the $G,415.0S3,402, tlie treasury added, federal reserve hanks nnd fed eral ngents held $1,008,420,005. In consequence, (lie circulating money outside of tho treasury nnd the fed eral reserve system amounted to $4,- S40,003,307. rainier Lake, Colo.—Assistant Super visor II. D. Pethernm of the Tile Na tional forest lias been accused of spreading a Rudyard Kipling nature story among his friends. Despite reiteration that his story of a mother chipmunk’s gratitude is true, rethoram lias met skepticism wherever his tale hns been told. The supervisor found a baby chip munk, abandoned nnd starving, on one of his Jaunts through the forest. He brought It back to camp and protect ed it against the cold by wrapping it in an old woolen sock with a large hole in tlie toe. A week of fensting on honey made the baby chipmunk fnt nnd lively. It slept warmly each night in the old sock, its nose protruding from the Hole in the toe. The mother chipmunk found her baby two weeks after Pethernm had brought it to' his quarters, and the two departed for the forests together. Pethernm watched them go rather sadly. lie picked np the old sock that had been the chipmunk’s home to throw it away nnd found that the hole 1ft the toe had been crudely darned with pine needles and moss. The patcli was constructed bird’s nest fashion and wouldn’t have been ser viceable, but Petherum believes it “the best a poor grateful chipmunk mother could do.” kkk; x % X X X X X X X X t X TIRED, BLUE Took Cardui And Im proved Greatly, Says Okla. Lady. Mrs. John Shipp, 2314 Maple Street, Oklahoma City, Okla., says: “Two years ago, I was In very bad health. I was so weak and run-down, I could scarcely keep goings “My mother thought I ought to try Cardui, and told me to get some and take it. I could cat noth ing, »as I had no appetite. “I found great relief af ter I began caking Cardui. I was able to eat and I could sleep. Before that, I had been so nervous thsit the least little thing upset me. I was low-spirited and blue. I got thinner and thinner, and I was always tired.” For sale by all druggists. CARDUI Used By Women For Over 50 Years KB28K . Eleven in Japan Taxed Over Million Yen a Year Tokyo.—Japan has 11 multimillion aires who pay more than 1,000,000 yen ■a year in income tax, and eight of these belong to the two great fam ilies of merchant princes, the Aliisuis and the Iwusakis. Returns for the fiscal year ended Alnrcli 31 show six Mitsuis, brothers and cousins, in this charmed circle. The Mitsuis also supplied the larg est individual taxpayer for 1027-28, taking that honor away from the hvasukis. In 1920-27 Baron Kyuyn Iwasaki topped the list with 4,000,000 yen to Baron Uachiroemon Aiitsui's 8.- 000,000. Now it Is the head of the house of Aiitsui’s turn, since he leads with 2,700,000 yen to tils Iwasaki ri val’s 2,000,000. Belgian Hens Do Part ' Toward Stabilization Brussels.—Statisticians reveal that 24,000,000 hens cackle in Belgium to day, ns compared with only 12,000,000 in 1014. No 'illier Belgian industry having doubled, since prewar days, credit must be given to Belgium’s hens for being unusually active nnd prolific. Belgian hens, it is averred, have done their share In stabilizing the franc nnd improving the kingdom's trade balance since Belgium now exports 000,000,000 eggs n year, Instead of importing 80,- 000,000 ns before tlie World war. Belgian hens lay eggs scientifically these days. Their greater output ts put on tho account of rnfional feed ing, fights against epidemics, and se lection of the best poultry races. Tlie very weight of the eggs has Increased that way; a prewar egg weigiied no more than 50 grams; the modern, sci entific egg in Belgium weighs front GO to 70 grams. Egg preservation by cold storage or chemical means has made great progress, too, particularly in the Flanders country around Cour- trai, where a single plant kept 15,000,- 000 eggs Inst winter. Alost of the eggs go t)o England. Dahlonega and Gainesville Bus' Line. Leave Dnhlonega 7:45 A. M. Leave Gainesville 8 :45 P. M. Princeton Hotel. Phone 5J. Dahlonega. J. F. Sutton. . TAX NOTIOE—LAST ROUND. Uncover Masterpiece New Haven, Conn.—For 5G years a Titian, “Presentation in the Temple ” painted between 1505 nnd 15 ;,, •*• I posed unidentified in the Vale Art gal | lory. Removed of repaint disclosed I who the artist was. Killarney Is Favored Spot of Irish Gnomes Killarney, Ireland.—Persons who think Unit elves, gnomes and fairies do not exist should come to tlie lakes of Killarney. Here tlie inhabitants of the unknown world caper at will. They arc known ns Leprerbnuns and they are very busy. Their work lasts iliree nnd n half hours, from midnight until 3:30 in tlie mornlqg, and only on nights when tlie moon is full. They are four indies high nnd dressed In dark green swallow-tailed coals, knee breeches, patent leal hoi Irish shoes, an Irish hat, a pipe in 1 lieir mouths and usually slilllalah in one hand. They are kind hearted and obliging. Many housewives report having awakened in the morning to find the milking done, the buttci made and the bread baked. Expedition Finds 167 Kinds of Sugar Cane Washington.—How an American ex pedition traversed over 10,000 miles in search of different varieties of sugar cane was revealed by Dr. E. W. Bramles in a report to the Department of Agriculture. lie said his explorations have yield ed over 1G7 different varieties. They will be used for interbreeding. Doctor Brandes’ party* was limited to four so that airplane transportation could be used. Aiany of the sections of New Guinea are inhabited by sav age Indian tribes. Cuttings of each variety are to be shipped to the United States in re frigerated rooms of steamers. As soon ns they arrive in San Francisco they will be shipped to Washington by ex press for growth under observation In the. department’s sugar-cane detention greenhouse at Arlington farm. Poor Bandits At one time when traveling In Tur key with Cornelius Vanderbilt, tho lale Chnuncey AI. Depew thought it a great joke that the train ahead of theirs was held up by bandits and a well-to-do farmer captured for $5,000 ransom, while Vanderbilt’s train was not interrupted. “Brigandage in Turkey needs reor ganization,” lie wrote home. “It ought to be put in the hands of a New York syndicate and put on a businesslike basis.” Dec. 3, Auraria, 9 to 11. “ 3, Mill Creek 2 to4. “ 4, Nimblewill, 3 to 5. “ 4, Alark Kendalls, 3 to 5. “ 5, Hightower, 10 to 11. “ 5, Davis, 3 to 5. “ 0, Cane Creek, 10 to 11. “ G, Yahoola, 1 to 3. “ 6, Porter Springs, 4 to 5. “ 7 Chestatee, 9. to 11. 7. Frog Town, 2 to 4. “ 8. Crumby, 10 to 12. “ 10, Shoal Creek, 10 to 12. “ 10, Wahoo, 2 to 4. “■ 10, Parks' Store, afternoon. “ 11, Martin's Ford, 10 to 12. “ 15, 17, 18, 19,20. Dahlonega. C, C. Porter, T. C. Mlonera & Atlanta Bus Line. Leave Dahlonega [7 :t,0 A. M. Leave Dahlonega 4 1’, M. RETURN. Leave Atlanta 7:30 A. M. Leave Atlanta 8 P. M. Best cars. Careful Drivers PRINCETON HOTEL Bus Station 17 North Forsyth St. See F R E D .TONE S, Dahlonega. Talk In Yo The telephone user some limes wonders why he does not hear the person at the distant tehphoi e. clearly. The chances art that ’It distant party is directing hi*. 1 < - versation away from rathei in tho telephone. The mouthpiece on 11 < phono transmi ter is oesi ; ■ .>, concentrate tlies mid w. ves u I 1 you speak directly into i'. If v. u merely talk at your telephone holding the transmitter to one side or several inches away from your lips, tlie mouthpiece cannot delp you. Daiilonhga Telephone Co. .—— - That Was Italy Vurious are the ways by means of which European countries made Im pressions on the minds of Americans traveling therein. After returning home from a trip to Europe, a Brook line woman was asked by a friend, “Did you go to Italy?” “Let me think.” Then turning to her daughter she said, “Did we go to Italy, dear?” “Why, yes, mamma. It was Id. Italy that wo bought those lovely silk stock ings.” Chinese Girl Students Invade U. S. Col!”jp3 Tacoma, Wash.—Chinese girls ar* arriving here on every liner to en; universities in various parts of United States. Most of them ure |..f vate students, coming at their owu ex pense, preparing themselves to help in building a stronger nation at home. Although several hundred readied here nnd Seattle before the uni versities opened, all are members of a club, pledged to keep in touch with each other despite temporary separa tions. Fewer young men have arrived tliis year than heretofore for college work. New Engine Record London.—An English locomotive, the Flying Scotsman, recently made a world’s record nonstop run of almost 400 miles, by carrying two engine crews and shifting-crews without stop ping the train.