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VISIT THE HART COUNTY
HARVEST
FESTIVAL
OCTOBER 16-17-18
A wonderful showing of the agricultural re
sources of this section of Georgia and three big
days of High Class Educational Entertainment.
There will be Farm Products, Livestock, Poul
try, Women’s Work, Exhibits by the Boys’ and
Girls’ Clubs.
EVERY DAY A GALA DAY—
EVERY NIGHT A FEATURE
The Fair Grounds are located in the large
Hartwell School Park only three minutes’ walk
from public Square. Every day a good day. 9
o’clock morning to 12 at night.
BIGGER AND BETTER THAN
EVER BEFORE
The Midway Attrac- Riding Devices, Ani
tions were secnred mal Shows,Free Acts,
and guaranteed to be Fire Works andjmany
clean and amusing. other attractions.
Join the Happy Crowds in
HARTWELL
These Three Big Days
OCTOBER 16-17-18
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., OCTOBER 17, 1924
FOR OLD
:: SAKE’SSAKE I;
5J By DOUGLAS MALLOOH ][
*##»####♦##****»*****♦****
■pOR old sake’s sake, when far asun
der,
A thought shall leap from heart to
heart.
We suddenly shall stop and wonder,
For old sake's sake, when years
apart,
Shall wonder how the other’s faring,
What world we live in, path we take,
And find ourselves a little caring,
A little yet, for old sake’s sakfe.
* ** jj. !
For old sake’s sake In some December
We still recall the skies of May;
Minds may forget £ut heartg remeyber
£ach lovely hour, each golden day.
iv e 'thought It EH forgot forever,
New worlds we find, new paths we
make,
And then, some day, we find we never
Can quite forget, for old sake’s
sake.
New lands, new loves, new plans, new
places,
New roads to travel, work to do,
New hopes, new dreams, new friends,
new faces,
New griefs that come to me and
you. *
Then comes a memory beguiling,
Then comes perhaps a little ache —
Some tender thought that starts us
smiling,
Yet brings a sigh, for old sake’s
sake.
(©, McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
Dock
Blest be the tongue that speaks no ill.
Whose words are always true,
That keeps the law of kindness still
Whatever others do.
Blest be. the hands that toll to aid
The great world's ceaseless need—
The hands that never are afraid
, To do a kindly deed.
SEASONABLE GOOD
THINGS
DO NOT fall to put up for the fam
ily some of the choice cherry
recipes. Cherry olives is one which
will be enjoyed in the winter and is
very simple to prepare.
Cherry Olives.
Take fresh well-washed, unbruised
cherries with the stems left on —the
finest and largest cherries are kept
for this. Fill jars with them and then
cover with good, strong cider vinegar
and water In equal parts; add a table
spoonful of salt to each quart jar,
seal and set away for winter.
Uncooked Conserve.
Take any amount of pitted cherries
and cover them with good vinegar over
night. In the morning drain off the
vinegar and add as much sugar as
cherries by measure. Stir until well
dissolved, place In a stone crock, cover
with a cloth and plate and they are
ready to serve In a few weeks. They
will keep all the year and are a de
licious zest for meats. The richest,
best-flavored cherries are, of course,
the kind to put up in this way. The
sour cherry is fine canned as usual
for pies.
Light Rolls.
To two cupfuls of bread flour add
one-quarter of a cupful of yeast, one
and one-half cupfuls of milk and water
mixed, one teaspoonful of salt, two
tablespoonfuls each of sugar and but
ter; beat well and let stand until light
and full of bubbles. Knead, adding a
well-beaten egg and flour enough to
make a dough stiff enough to handle.
Let rise again until double its bulk,
form into rolls, brush with butter and
when light bake in a hot oven.
(©, 1924. 'Western Newspaper Union.)
o
Z?he Young Ladyl
Across the Way I
y
• j
The young lady acrove the way nays
some people don't seem to realize that
there’a any difference between an out
and-out atheist and a mere acrostic.
McClure Newepaper Syndicate.)
SOUTHERN RAILWAY BUYS NEW
EQUIPMENT FOR ITS BIG LINE
Atlanta, Ga., October 14. New
locomotives, freight and passenger
cars, costing approximately nine mil
lion dollars, have just been purchas
ed by the Southern Railway Com
pany for delivery duringi November
and December of this year and the
early months of 1925.
Included in the purchase are 3,000
box cars, 250 flat cars, 250 stock
cars, 25 passenger coaches, 10 bag
gage-express cars, 6 dining cars, 25
heavy Mikado type freight locomo
tives, 15 heavy Pacific type passenger
locomotives, and 10 eight-wheel
switching engines.
All of this equipment will be of the
latest type, the passenger and flat
cars of all steel construction, the
box and stock cars with tseel under
frames, and the locomotives being
similar in design to locomotives re
cently built for the Southern.
■■ o
Brigadier General Charles G.
Dawes was born in Marietta, Ohio,
in 1865.
An eighteen-year-old speeder in
Los Angeles was sentenced by the
judge to read every newspaper in
the city each day for six months and
rewrite in his own handwriting the
traffic-accident stories in them.
yMW-OM-KiaaEl )l
i /T co©'
Buick has more than
twenty Body Styles
1 to choose from*
i No such variety
is offered elsewhere,
regardless of price.
‘Buick leads in Body Styles
HARTWELL BUICK COMPANY
A. C. SKELTON, Proprietor
When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them
Permanent
« roads are a
>| good investment I
1 —not an expense
I The High Cost I
I of Postponing I
I Permanent I
I Highway Building I
Poor motor roads stifle industry and
1 agriculture, waste huge sums annually
in high maintenance costs, and greatly
J increase gasoline, tire and repair bills.
There is not a state, not a county, not
a community, that isn’t paying a heavy 1
price for having too few permanent
roads. ||
There are still many sections of the
country even whole states that are
trying to operate twentieth century
traffic over nineteenth century roads.
This is costing millions of dollars every
year, and will keep on costing millions
until we have well developed permanent
highway systems everywhere.
Even what we often call the more
progressive communities are far behind
I the demands of modern highway traffic
with its 16,000,000 motor vehicles.
From the Atlantic to the Pacific, and
from Canada to Mexico, we need more
Concrete roads—the roads for twentieth
century traffic.
Your highway officials want to be of
f the greatest possible service to you. Get
behind them with ways and means that
will provide more Concrete roads and
streets. Such an investment will pay you
big dividends year after year.
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
Hurt Building
ATLANTA, GA.
A National Organization to Improve and
‘ Extend the Uses of Concrete
OFFICES IN 2? CITIES
ALL OUT OF SORTS?
So Wai Thii Hartwell Woman Who
Tell* Her Experience.
All too often women accept their
pains and aches as natural to their
sex. They fail to realize that weak
kidneys are often to blame for that
backache, those headaches, dizzy
spells and that tired, depressed feel
ing. Thousands have found new
health and strength by helping the
weakened kidneys with Doan’s Pills
—a stimulant diuretic. This Hart
well case is one of many:
Mrs. C. B. Graham, Jackson St.,
says: “My back was so weak I
could hardly stoop or straighten, and
I had a great deal of pain in the
small of it. My kidneys acted irreg
ularly, and my feet and ankles swell
ed, I had headaches and became
nervous, R about all I could
do to get around the house to do my
work. I bought Doan’s Pills at Hern
don’s Drug Store and in a short
time I was relieved.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mrs.
Graham had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
Elephants are fond of the water
and swim with ease and skill.