Newspaper Page Text
HWTOBDAY. SrOVBMBgR . 1022
. UNION LOCALS
< Mr. Prank Foster from Atlanta spent
TBuixlny night and Monday with their
brother, Mr. J. H. Foster,
t Miss,Fannie Healan spent part of
week with Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
ißealan near Harmony drove.
* Mr. Clifford Foster from Stone Mt.
iqpent Sunday night and Monday with
cousin, Mr. Floyd Foster,
j Mrs. W. A. Maddox spent Sunday af
<te noon with Mrs T J. Harbin.
, Miss Ruby Fay O’Shields was the
guest of Miss Norma MeDougai Satur
day afternoon.
/ Mr. and Mrs Albert Hill and daugh
ter, Sarah Helen, were the guests of
jUr and Mrs. J. H. Foster a while on
Tuesday night.
Miss Angie Healan spent Monday
night with Misses Lucile and Nannie
Mae I>nnahoo.
■ Mr. Ed Healan^ spent Sunday after
‘ noon with his parents Mr. and Mrs.
■w. v. Healan.
! Misses Willie and Jewell Page spent
(Sunday afternoon with Misses Mary
•Sue and Johnnie Lou Magness.
M. and Mrs. G. W. Foster spent part
f last week with Mr. and Mrs.. C. A.
Foster.
Mr. Dewey Chapman spent Saturday
night with Mr. and Mrs. Olin Spence.
Misses Vera and Velina Jackson
npent Saturday night with Misses Izzle
and Ruth Harbin.
Miss Fannie laiu Foster was the
dinner guest of Miss T.avadn Stewart
jßundny.
Miss Desma Page was the dinner
guest of Miss Ruth Foster Sunday.
The singing at Miss Corine Mcßlhan
non Sunday night was enjoyed by n
large crowd.
Toys Mott Profitable Invention.
Toys, ss a‘whole, have yielded larger
xrotlts than any other class of tnven
* loro
Don’t Be Penny Wise
and Pound Foolish
Don’t think because you can get a
big can of Baking Powder for little
money that you are saving anything.
There’s Only One Way to
Save on Bake-Day, Use
CALUMET
The Economy BJ&KING POWDER
(I MAOC BY A TRUtf
pLOMt
jJV COKiTBNTSUA X |
KgpO^
Mh INo
BEST BT TEST
THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER
"Listen in” on the world
It makes no difference
where you live, whether in
city, town or on your farm
you can "listen in” on the
world.
You and your friends can
•it comfortably at home
and enjoy concerts or
"jazz” by famous orches
tras. The voices of noted
singers and public speak
ers are at your command.
The farmer and his family
need no longer be isolated. The
Tremendous Opportunity for
Dealers and Agents
It takes only a demonstration to sell
our complete radio sets. Wide awake
dealers and agents are doubling and
trebling their income by representing
us. Write today for our dealer and
agent proposition.
PARISH LOCALS
Miss Alberta McDongal from Walnut
visited her uncle and family, Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Healan, last week.
Misses Aurora Attaway and Willie
Mae Groeson were guests of Miss Car
jnen Elder Sunday.
Miss Itunette Wright of Lawrence
viile spent the week-end with relatives
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Wright and family.
Misses Nellie and Ruth Allen were
guests'of Mrs A. N. Elliott and daugh-
ter, Jewell, Friday night.
Miss Eunice MeDougai of Walnut is
visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Healan this
week.
Mrs. Edna Allen Is on the sick list;
we hope she will soon recover.
Mr. Ross Wright of Lawrenoeville
was the guest of Messrs. Ernest and
Lefus Wright Sunday.
Misses Bessie and Flora Simpson
were the guests of Misses Ruth and
Thelma Allen Sunday afternoon.
Some from here attended the party
at Miss Gladys Evans’ Saturday night
near Vintron.
Mistake Too Often Made.
It is true that out of the crosses
ind vexations of life. Its petty cares
tnd troubled as well as its great
p-iefs, is to come the discipline that
Hakes souls fine and strong. But we
mistake oar province when we allow
jur owe 111 temper and selfishness to
iiipply such material to our neighbors
|'|ie\ will find all necessary hardships
vi nfi> mi i,Mina f o >he number.—
m Nose stopped up?
MENTHOLATUM
clears it^
—lt costs only a frac
tion of a cent for
each baking.
You use less be
cause it contains
more than the ordi
nary leavening
strength.
The sales of Calumet
are over 150% greater
than that of any other
baking powder.
radio keeps them abreast with
the times through educational
lectures, political speeches and
business talks.
Through the radio the farm
er receives last minute market
reports, weather reports and
valuable crop data.
How to Order
The radio is no longer an ex
periment, it is an accomplished
fact! Complete receiving sets,
manufactured and guaranteed
by the largest electrical houses
in the country, ran be pur
chased from us at reasonable
prices. Write today for the
name of your nearest dealer.
Wc will see that your order is
filled immediately.
CARTER
ELECTRIC COMPANY
ATLANTA, GA. ’Distributor
EXIDE BATTERIES
ARE NECESSARY TO
ARCTIC EXPLORERS
DONALD B MacMillan, the Arctic
explorer, has returned from Baffin
'Lund with mnch new evidence of tee
value of storage batteries on polar t x
peditions. The fact is now fully dem
onstrated, according to Smith Hard
ware Cos., of the local Exide Service
Station, that storage batteries are nec
essary equipment, not only in connec
tion with the scientific work of polar
exploration, hut because of their value
in adding to the comfort of the men an 1
the maintenance of their morale.
Storage batteries furnished current
for ignition in the oil engine of the
Bowdoin, MacMillan’s staunch vessel
There was, also, an electric light plant
equipped with the Exide type of stor
age batteries. With this plant Mac-
Millan's men enjoyed a freedom from
the horrors of the Arctic winter dark
ness that would make generations of
former polar adventurers green with
envy did they but know of it. These
same batteries furnished current for
th opration of a moving picture machine
and many otherwise weary hours of
enforced inac-itivity were passed away
with the help of moving pictures ac
companied by suitable selections from
a talking machine.
The Eskimos, themselves, were tre
mendously affected by these contrivan
ces of the white men. MacMillan tells
the story of the Eskimo employed by
the Hudson Bay Company in solitary
charge of a post some forty or fifty
miles from where the Bowdoin mnd< f
winter quarters. He heard rumors of
the wonderful battery operated electric
lights which rivaled the summer sun
for brilliance and surpossed the North
ern Lights for usefulness. No one
knows what doubts and hopes may
have filled his aboriginal mind.
Excited by the Arctic gossip he load
ed His sledge with provisions, placed his
two children on the load and. with his
wife helping him in the traces, he
trudged his way for two days over the
pathless distance to see for himself il
such a wonder might really be. He
made his goal the second night out
and is reported to have stood at a
short distance from the lighted vessel
for an hour or two gazing at the, to
hlin, most astonishing sight. Then, his
mind at rest, he turned.around for the
journey hack to his deserted post, for
the leaving of which he might he pun
ished.
MacMillain’s’ story “New Trails in
the Ice Wilderness”, copyrighted by
the Boston Globe, contains many ref
erences to the use of storage batteries
and the lighting plant and moving
picture machine, and tpe following ex
tracts are used with the permission of
the Globe. He. himself, said in a re-
(•(‘lit interview “itli the help of Kxide
Batteries the Bowdoin carried the elec
tric light to the previously unexplored
shores of Baffin Land.”
In his story he pictures the value of
these modern accessories to Arctic ex
ploration in maintaining the good spir
its of the men under discouraging con
ditious. lie says in one place “When
we aw ke in the morning (theßowdoin
was now in tlie heart of an ice pack ia
Box Channel, at the Arctic Circle), it
was blowing hard from a little east to
north, with a mixture of rain and
snow and fog Tin* whole pack was
drifting south and taking the Bow
doin involuntarily along with it.
“To take our thoughts for a few
hours away from such a discouraging
sight, wc unpacked our new motion
picture machine. Our Delco plant,
equipped with Exide batteries, with
which the Bowdoin was lighted, sup
plied us with power. We simply
snapped a button and wore off into the
busy world to the south. If the do-
nors of the machine only knew how we
enjoyed that hour or so up in Fox
Channel locked in the ice, and the many
tany happy hours we spent later In
vinter quarters, T know they would
’eel well repaid for their generosity."
In another place he says “We invit
'd the Eskimos to come on board to
•heir first moving picture show. We
•bowed them kinograms of life in the
States and in various parts of the
vorld, and ended with a reel of the Es
kimos at Etah, North Greenland, and
'ti Hudson Bay. liat their feelings
were it is hard to imagine. Some were
io absorbed thnt they sat like stone
’mages, while others gave vent to their
feelings by a deep ‘Kc-pee’ (wonderful)
Even we who are accustomed to the
wanders of modern invention t”'
veil echo the Eskimos’ long drawn
nit and ninny times repeated ‘Ke-pee’’
at the instruments designed and built
for this expedition.
Of Exide batteries in general, let
Harold Whitohouse, of Roothbny Har
bor. Maine, engineer of the Bqwdoln
and in immediate charge of the batter
!cs, he quoted: "I can give nothing
hut the highest recommendation for
’he Exide Batteries eared for by me
on the MacMillan expedition.
t-tht wTvnrn vntr*
PENTECOST
Mr. and Mrs. Job Haynie and chil
dren spent Saturday night with Mr.
and Mrs. H. E. Haynie,
Miss Myrtle McDonald spent Satur
day night with Misses Lillie Belle and
Era Mincey.
Miss Nonna Hardigree was the guest
of Misses Julia and Alice Dunahoo on
Saturday night.
Misses Edna and Jewell Williamson.
Lillie Belle and Era Mincey, were the
guests of Miss Lucile Miller Sunday
nfteiinoon.
Misses Lois Couch, Addie B. Bowman
| Steady Heat
Always Under Perfect Control
I pOLE’C
HOT BLAST
Fuel Saving System
of combustion (see cut) is a pat
ented feature of Cole’s Original
Hot Blast Heaters. Prevents
the waste of combustible gases.
Start a fuel savings bank account
with Cole’s Hot Blast; it makes
;9°ur coal pile last.
see us for the orig
inal, guaranteed
Cole’s Hot Blast.
Woodruff Hdw.
Cos.
Exclusive Agents Winder, Ga.
Thanksgiving
THE good old custom of thanksgiving, which originated
1 in New England with the Pilgrim fathers, has become
a universal custom and now, each year the President of
our great country, as well as the Governors of the dif
ferent states, issues Proclamation declaring the day to
be set aside for prayer and thanksgiving.
When we look around us and begin to count our bless
ings, we have a great many things to be thankful for.
If you have opened an account at our bank and have
a snug little sum to your credit you have a great deal
to be thankful for, and if you haven’t done so you can
still be thankful that the opportunity is still open for you
to do so, and that a good safe bank is ready to receive
your deposits, and give you the very best service, coup
led with courtesy and attention to the minutest detail’
whether your account be large or small.
RESERVE^
|iiI s SYSTEfJ/^®
W inder National Bank
and Wllda Pentecost were guests of
noon.
Mr, Ray Prickett sp<jnt Saturday
night with Mr. Willie Dunahoo.
Mr. Marvin Couch spent Saturday
night with Messrs. Charles and Henry
Hardigree.
FARM LOANS
WE are prepared to handle an unlimited amount of farm loan businetk at
per cent per annum with a reasonable commission.
We can loan for 5, 7 or 10 years’ time, in amounts ranging from SI,OOO to
$40,000. on 50 acres and np.
If you are In the market for a loan on your farm, let us submit you our
proposition.
"QUICK SERVICE” Is our Motto. Call or write—
W. H. QUARTERMAN
Correspondent for STATE & CITY BANK & TRUST CO.
(Formerly Old Dominion Trust Cos.) Richmond. Virginia.
Recommends
“The Shingle
that Never Curls”
THE experienced builder advises Carey Asfaltslate Shingles.
They are weather-proof; spark-proof; durable and lasting;
attractive, with beautiful colors that never fade; they never curl;
and are easy to apply.
Carey Shingles roof many of the finest homes and buildings in
the country because of their beauty and quality. They are also
selected for modest residences because the investment is reason- v
able.
We are headquarters for Carey building product*.
The New Winder Lumber Cos.
Utadfta W; HA Mr Iwr.
The singing given at the home foMr.
and Mrs. H. E. Haynie Sunday night
was very much enjoyed by p large
crowd.
•
Powder a* Far Back Aa 200 B. C.
It la raid tbe Koreans made gun
rwwrjer as far back rv 200 R. C.