Newspaper Page Text
|t*l ILjil 'j .4
Hw r - - ■ -
every meal
It stimulates
appetite and
aids digestion.
It makes your
food do you more
good. Note how
It relieves that stulty feeling
•Iter hearty eating.
teeth,
i. V IvAlk sweetens
breath and
jaLit’?, the goody
MhHi I a ■ I OSroa Utat
*.’L- "jlL. l * - f Ta
Women make better swimmers
than men because they get their
training during bargain counter
rushes. —Dayton Daily News.
AN OPEN LETTER
JOWOMEN
Tells of Mrs. Vogel’s Terrible Suf
fering and How She Was Restored
to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Detroit, Michigan. “My troubles
were severe pains in my back and ter
irible bearing-down
pains in my right
side, also headaches
and sleepless nights.
I first began having
troubles when I was
15, and they have in
creased as I grew
older. A little book
let was left at my
door, and I read
what Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound has done
I !|»IM
Ki *1
|x 5
. vuuipuunu nab none
for women and decided to try it. After
the first week I could go to sleep every
night and I stopped having that nervous
feeling and got a better appetite. The
doctor had always said that an operation
was the only thing that would help me,
but I never had any faith in an opera
tion. Since the Vegetable Compound
has started helping me I do not suffer
the severe pains, feel stronger, and am
able to do my own work. I am more
than glad to tell my friends that it helps
where other medicines have failed. ”
Mrs. Gus Vogel, 6608 Pelouze Street,
Detroit, Michigan.
A record of fifty years service must
convince women of the merit of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
The burial grounds of China have
always been held secret, not to be
disturbed under any circumstances.
The result is that one-twentieth of
the country is now occupied by
graves. The problem is assuming
serious proportions.
STOP!
81
r "T VO
GO!
It is dangerous to Go, when the
signal says Stop! To heed warnings is
to save life.
The Stop! signals for health are such
warnings as backache, shooting pains,
recurring headaches, chilliness, dizzi
ness, drowsiness, irritability, morose
ness, rheumatic twinges, swollen joints,
gout
These signals warn you that there is
a “traffic jam” in the kidneys, and the
“Go” signal can’t be utilized until the
clogging poisons (uric acid, mostly)
are flushed out
Drinking a glass of hot water each
morning is effective and before each
meal take an An-uric tablet (anti-uric
acid). . 1
Step into any drug store and obtain
An-uric tablets, discovered by Dr.
Pierce, Pres, and made at the famous
Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. Or,
send Dr, Pierce 10c for a trial package.
At any rate the old-fashioned bath
ing suits looked a lot wetter than the
modern ones.—The Lexington Lead
er.
A Good Tiling-DON'T MISS IT.
Send your name and address plainly
written together with 5 cents (and this
**ip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co., De*
‘1 ines, lowa, and receive in return a
trial package containing Chamberlain *
Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup,
bronchial, ‘•flu” and whooping coughr.
»od tickling throat; Chamberlain’s Stom
ach and Liver Tablets for stomach trou
mes, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd
•--e heart, biliousness and constipation;
Gtamberlain’s Salve, needed in every
family for burns, scalds, wounds, piles,
*o- skin affections; these valued family
to *<hcines for only 5 cents. Don’t hubs it
Our Weekly Smile
(By CJ.T.,Phila,Pa.)
There is one organization in this
country that has done, and is do
ing, a work that merits much praise.
This organization is the Gideons. The
i Gideons are a society of religious
: traveling men, 3510 strong. They
I have placed over 700,000 Bibles in
I hotels during the past twenty years.
There are 600,000 traveling men on
the road and each one of them can
have a Bible to read each day. Read |
i Romans the first chapter and six
teenth and seventeenth verses and
you will see what the Gideons be-
I lieve. There is an index inside of
| the front cover of the Gideon Bible
j which tells you what chapters to read
I when lonesome, blue, business bad,
and so forth.
—o—
There are 400 Protestant denomi-
I nations and 158 creeds in the world.
| The believers of each creed think
j that the other 157 creeds are wrong.
. Dr. John J. Abel, of John Hop
: kins University has invented an ar-
I tificial kidney which will function
the same as a real one. Maybe
i they’ll be using them in animals, al
so. If so, I am going to watch out
for all kidney stew served in hotels
; from now on.
—o —
And Yet The Grocer Keeps Smiling.
| 6:00 A. M.—Alarm goes off.
6:15 A. M.—Grocer eats break
fast.
6:30 A. M.—Opens store.
6:35 A. M. —Drinks bottle of Coca
I Cola.
6:40 A. M.—Starts to sweep out.
6:41 A. M.—“ Br-r-r.” “Hello!
Yes maam. Yes maam. I think so.
I Yes maam. 35 cents a pound. Yes
j maam. Yes maam, it just came in
| yesterday. All right, just as soon
I as the boy comes I’ll send him right
j over.”
6:45 A. M. —Starts sweeping again.
6:46 A. M.—Customer enters.
Wants a pound of link sausage in
oil. Grocer weighs up sausage and
starts off using a fork to handle them
with but finally resorts to fingers
even though sausage is greasy.
Washes hands.
6:50 A. M.—Boy arrives and de
parts with goods to be delivered.
6:51 A. M. —Starts sweeping
again.
6:52 A. M.—“ Br-r-r-r.” “Why,
that boy hasn’t come yet and I want
ed those things for breakfast.” “He’s
on his way now. He’ll be there any
minute unless the wheel breaks
I down.”
6:55 A. M.—Finishes sweeping.
6:56 A. M.—Customer enters,
j Wants two pounds of prunes. Gro
l cer weighs up prunes, mumbling to
’ himself, if he had his way not an
other prune would ever enter this
store. Prunes are awful sticky.
Washes hands.
7:00 A. M.—“ Br-r-r-r.” “The
boy brought the things all right but
this bread is as hard as a brick.”
“Why, it just came in yesterday.
I I’ll send the boy over with another
' loaf when he comes back.”
j 7:10 A. M. —Customer enters.
Wants 10 cents worth of cheese.
' Grocer remembers that he sold the
last of the cake last night. Plague
take it. “Just a minute —I’ll open
;up a new cake.”. Skinning a cake
of cheese is a sweet job. Washes
hands.
7:15 A. M.—Dray arrives with 5
barrels of flour. Grocer trucks it in
store and stacks it. Then, spends
twenty minutes brushing off clothes.
Other interesting work around a
grocery store is opening a box of
plug tobacco, drawing a gallon of
“lamp oil” and drawing a gallon of
syrup from a barrel, especially in
the winter time when syrup is thick.
More syrup runs on outside of jug
than on inside. Grocer must again
wash hands. Weighing lard from a
tub, cutting a piece of meat and
working on broken bicycle are also
interesting jobs which also neces
sitate more washing of the hands.
After finishing all other jobs, he can
always sweep out.
The above dedicated to the mem
bers of the old school, including Paul
E. Mewborn, Stanly J. Brown, W. D.
& R. B. Teasley and L. B. Carlton.
The National Cash Register Co.,
says that:
76 per cent of grocery stores fail.
80 per cent of hardware stores
I fail.
66 2-3 per cent of dry goods
I stores fail.
81 per cent of drug stores fail.
Ten per cent of grocers are worth
over $10,000.00. Twenty per cent
worth less than $10,000.00 and more
than $5,000.00. Seventy per cent
worth less than $5,000.00.
—o —
When the Grocery Bill Comei.
Monday—“l’ll look it over and
bring you a check tomorrow.”
“All right, thank you.”
[Lays bill on table.]
Tuesday—[Meets collector on
, street. Didn’t see him until he was
right at him.] “Oh, I haven’t had
i time to look over that bill yet. I’ve
been so busy. I’ll attend to that
right away.”
Take
@*S
for the liver
Beware of imitations. Demand
the genuine ia 10c and 35c pack
ages bearing above trade mark.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., OCTOBER 3, 1924
"All right, thank you.”
Wednesday—[No check is forth
coming.]
Thursday—“ Mr. , let me have
a word with you.”
“Well, I'll declare! I forgot all
about that bill. Come go with me to
the office and I’ll write you a check.”
[Goes to office.] “Confound it—l
wish people would let my things
alone. I left that check book right
here.” [Finds check book under
newspaper.] “This darned old pen
is no good.” [Slams it on floor.]
“Lend me your fountain pen.”
[Writes check. Collector departs.
Everybody is lovely again.]
The “Yankees” never ask a grocer
or druggist to wrap anything which
they buy. The reason is that paper,
trash and garbage must be packed
away in barrels and lugged out to
the street each week for the wagons
which call for it. No one wants to
lug any more trash than is necessary.
The first time I went to hear Billy
Sunday preach, I expected to see a
circus. Instead, I heard a most won
derful sermon. At Elmira, N. J.,
a short time ago, Sunday preached a
sermon on love. Below, are listed
ten of his remarks which I have cull
ed from his sermon:
1. “Love is something you cannot
quarantine.”
2. “You cannot reason with it
any more than you can with a bull
dog with a bone.”
3. “Try praising your wife. May
be it will overcome her at first.
Maybe the poor soul will faint when
you try it.”
4. “If some of you go a whole
day without cussing your wife, you
think you are going to die.”
5. “If you want your wife to be
SALE OF CITY PROPERTY
Here is a sale worth attending—a good investment and real values in all.
The sale is one of great merit —no clap trap schemes, no brass band, flying ma
chine or barbecue, nor solicitors begging you to buy—come and use your own
judgment.
This tract of 45 1-2 acres has been divided into lots as shown by plot below.
The land is all inside the corporate limits of Hartwell, Georgia, and close in—
near the public school.
LOTS NUMBERS ONE AND TWO are beautifully located, fronting East Franklin street on the National Highway,
in a splendid community and convenient to the public school.
LOTS 9, 10 and 11 front East on East Avenue and are ideal building lots.
LOT NUMBER 12 is large, 3.74 acres, and fronts on Powell road 678 feet.
All the above lots are wooded and lie well. ■ ’ <
All the other lots except number 8 front the 30-foot Powell road on the North as shown and could be used as farms
until it may be desirable to sub-divide into building lots.
Number 8 is reached by Cunningham Street which runs from Franklin Street South.
The following plot shows sizes, shapes and location of each lot.
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XA y & ?/
U Ax?\ J J RR zfeß
r/ "X X- / v X v Z
/ XVv/R / fl- ■ H y
X X- . Vx X. /v X cv ZA> •
x. v’ a Z . X 4
XX VX/ e /s “bl <
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■3 o o 'Z) x/ > / « 0
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X_— —
The property will be sold before the Court House door Saleday in October—Tuesday, October 7, 1924, on the following
terms: One-third cash day of sale, one-third November 1, 1925, one-third November 1. 1926, with interest from date of
sale at eight per cent per annum, payable annually, waiver notes will be taken for deferred payments with 10 per cent at
torney fees if collected by law and stipulating that if any note given by purchaser is not paid at maturity payee, at his op
tion, may declare all unpaid notes due and collectible.
All rents from crops this year (1924) are due and payable to me and are hereby reserved in this sale.
MARY E. BENSON,
By E. B. Benson, Attorney In Fact.
an angel, don't treat her like the
devil. Show her that you love her.”
6. “She will become young again
and the crows feet around her eyes
will be ironed out and that old body
that is bent over, manicuring finger
nails over a washboard will straight
en up on the installment plan and she
will be like she was when she was
a blushing maiden, wandering
through the groves, and you fed her
on gumdrops and candy hearts with
reading on them.”
7. “If I had never been loved, I
would want an undertaker to pump
me full of embalming fluid.”
8. “What's the use of taking up
room in this world if you are incap
able of love?” t
9. “Marriage may not always re
sult in the heaven you hoped for—it
may be your fault or her fault or
fifty-fifty.”
10. “Love is uncertain; you d«n’t
know when or where or whom it will
hit.”
N. O
DON’T BUY A PIG IN A POKE
Two important items of modern
equipment for the farm Home are
the electric plant and the electric
water system, and there are two
important things to consider in
selecting this equipment. Perhaps
there are more than two, but these
ought to be among the first.
One is: Will they do the work, as
well as any other like equipment on
the market —or better.
The other is: Who makes the
equipment? Is it a substantial, re
liable concern that will be in the
business next week, or next year or
at some more distant time in the fu
ture? This is important, for ma
chines will invariably wear out, if
you give them time. They may need
extra parts, to replace breakages, for
no machine is immune from acci
dent.
The reliable, well-established con
cern has a carefully developed policy
that enables the user of its products
to secure repairs and replacements
quickly and easily. If you are buy
ing for the years ahead, check care
fully over all the points which in
any way affect the life of the pro
duct you are considering.
Gef At The Cause
Many Hartwell Folks Are Showing
How to Avoid Needless Suffering.
There’s nothing more annoying
than kidney weakness or inability to
properly control the kidney secre
tions. Night and day alike, the suf
ferer is tormented and what with
the burning and scalding, the at
tendant backache, headacre and diz
ziness, life is indeed a burden. Doan’s
Pills—a stimulant diuretic to the
kidneys- have brought peace ".nd
comfort to many Hartwell people.
Profit by this resident’s experience:
J. B. Linder says: “I had a dull,
tired feeling in the small of my back
and the kidney secretions didn’t pass
freely enough. Doan’s Pills were
recommended to me and I purchased
a box at Herndon’s Drug Store. Af
ter taking them, the backache left
and my kidneys acted regularly. I
haven’t had any return of the trou
ble and I think Doan’s are wonder
ful.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan's Pills—the same that Mr. Lin
der had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
Mrs. J. M. McCurley
Passed Sept. 24th
Mrs. Martha Emma McCurley, wife
of Mr. James M. McCurley, died at
their home in Cokesbury community
Wednesday, September 24, 1924, af
ter being ill for two months.
The deceased was 75 years of age F
having been born in Wilkes county
May 7, 1849, a daughter of the late
LaFayette and Mary Norman
Adams.
On February 2, 1865, she was mar
ried to Mr. James M. McCurley. who
survives, with the following children:
Messrs. J. L. F. and G. A. McCur
ley, Mrs. Mary Blackwell, Mrs. Rich
ard D. Harper, Mrs. Fannie Bradley,
Mrs. Mamie Chapman and Mrs. Fred
G. Vickery.
One sister, Mrs. Sallie P. Cunning
ham, survives.
Many years ago Mrs. McCurley
joined the Methodist church at Cokes
bury, where she remained a faithful
member until death. Funeral ser
vices were heft! on Thursday, with
interment in the cemetery at Cokes
bury. Rev. J. D. Turner, for many
years pastor of Cokesbury, assisted
by the present pastor, Rev. J. A.
Sprayberry, conducted the services,
attended by a large concourse of
friends and relatives.
The passing of Mrs. McCurley
takes one of Hart county’s best
known and most highly respected
citizens.
The sympathy of many friends is
extended the bereaved husband, sons,
daughters and sister.
Funeral director W. C. Page, of
Hartwell, was in charge of arrange
ments.