Newspaper Page Text
The
BULL’S EYE
Editor and General JAanaqer
WILL ROGERS 7
wHy
r>' -
Br r /
t y _✓></'
\zLl-iXa- y
f' Will Rogers, Ziegfeld
I &■' Follies and screen star,
1 sf- , and leading American
I Fjr humorist, announces a
Kfa series of‘Bull’Durham
laM advertisements. They
:■4g J are worth watching for.
I *
If you want
the real truth about why I
signed up to write a lot of
pieces for these people, it’s
because I love animals.
Have you ever studied that
» picture of the ‘Bull’ care
fully? . . . have you ever
seen such a kind-looking
animal? I thought this:—
certainly no one who cares
as much about dumb crea
tures as they do would put
out anything but the best
smoking tobacco possible—
so I said all right, I’ll write
your stuff. Honestly, the
money part of it didn’t have
much to do with it. That
is, not very much.
Seriously, though, out
where I come from, unless
a male member of the
> population has got that
‘Bull’ Durham tag hanging
from the shirt pocket, he’s
liable to be arrested for in
decent exposure. And, you
believe me, you can’t sell
those western hard-boiled
eggs much and keep on sell
ing them unless it’s got class.
P. S. I’m going to write some more pieces
that wii l appear in this paper. Keep look
ing for them.
MORE OF EVERYTHING
for a lot less money.
That’s the net of this
‘Bull’ Durham propo
sition. More flavor —
more enjoyment —and
a lot more money left in
the bankroll at the end
of a week’s smoking.
TWO BAGS for 15 cents
100 cigarettes for 15 cents
iSSF «
‘Bull
Durham
Guaranteed by
iwcoaroaaT«P.
Appearance counts for little. You
1 1 think to look at a muskrat
| - a - he will be seal some day.—Nash-
I Vllle Tennessean.
I I
F ///iX I
'zWliiß ■
I
Z- x,) ’
r w -Jeritijs
/ Vr-Dza f/ PENCIL CCMIKNY I
Methodist Church
inol ie J' rst Q uart erly Conference for
T w as held at the church last
Friday night, Presiding Elder Horace
t>. bmith in charge.
Reports were good from every de
partment, and the financial report
was the best ever made at a first
Quarterly Conference, everything
being paid in full to date. Credit
for this is due almost entirely to
Miss Emma Kay, who was recently
elected Financial Secretary for the
church.
At the session Friday night Miss
Kay was named as a member of the
Board of Stewards of the Hartwell
Methodist church.
Presiding Elder Smith spoke en
couragingly of the outlook for the
year along various lines of work in
church and thanked the pastor, Rev.
J. H. Barton, and officials here for
their splendid work last year and the
showing they have already made in
1925.
Rev. J. H. Nichols, pastor of Hart
Circuit, and a number of members
of the Hartwell church were in at
tendance.
The first Quarterly Conference for
Hart Circuit was held Saturday at
Mt. Zion.
u—
CANDLER’S CHAPEL
“The proof of the pudding is the
eating thereof.” Seeing is believing.
Come to Candler’s Chapel and watch
the Prayermeeting grow. We have
increased 109 per cent in three
weeks. You are always welcome.
Come and be with us.
o—— .
People waste a lot of time trying
to obtain things they have no earth
ly use for.
- ■
Self-preservation is the first law of
nature, but, like so many laws, it
isn’t enforced.—Glendale Evening
News.
o
SEW IIP THE HOLES
IN FARM POCKETS
NO FARMER CAN REGULARLY
BUY FOOD AND GRAIN
AND PROSPER
Atlanta, Ga. —(Special.)—“For fifty
years or more the generality of our
cotton-growing fanners have been
regularly going around with holes in
their pockets, so to speak, through
which dropped any an<J all profits that
could and should have come from
their farm operations.” "If the South
la to ever reach any reasonable degree
of farm prosperity, those holes must
be sewed up," said H. O. Hastings,
leading agricultural authority and
chairman of the Farm and Marketing
Bureau of the Atlanta Chamber of
Commerce.
“I have been in practically every state
In our own country, as well as many
foreign countries. I have yet to see
any state or section where food and
grain buying by farmers was the regu
lar practice that did not show rela
tive poverty on the part of those
farmers. On the other hand, I have
never been in any state or section
where food and grain was grown suf
ficient at least for home needs where
farm prosperity did not show.
“If he would, the Southern farmer
could be the richest farmer In the
United States instead of the poorest,
which he Is. The reason he Isn’t
prosperous Is because he persists In
following a farm system that has
proved a failure the world over re
gardless of the particular crop grown.
“The South's dependence on cotton
and the regular purchase of food and
grain from other sections is the real
cause of the Southern farmer’s lack
of prosperity. And things are not go
ing to get right with our farmers until
they quit having their smoke houses
In Chicago or Omaha and their corn
cHbe in lowa or Kansas.
“The 1925 cotton crop is going to
be one of the most expensive to make
we have ever seen. Food, grain, labor
and fertilizer are all high. Every
pound of food or grain needed by
farm family or working live stock
should be produced on home acres,
and that production started in gar
den and in field just as early as sea
son conditions wUI permit. Home pro
duction of every pound of food, grain
and forage needed for home consump
tion on the farm 1925 will stop up
the holes In the South’s farm pocket,
and it’s the only way to stop them up
For $6
You can subscribe, either new or
renewal, for all the Newspapers and
Magazines at THE SLN Os H
A special offer received ednes
day—The Daily & Sunday Constitu
tion or Georgian-American to rural
route patrons ONE YEAR for only
d»/»
We take subscriptions for all Farm
papers, trade journals, etc.
P THE HARTWELL SLN
Hartwell, Ga.
• A Good Tbing - DON’T MISS IT.
Send your name and address P lal “'7
written together with' »
alio) to Chamberlain Medicine Co.,
lowa, and return .
trial package containing Chamberlain a
Cough Remedy for coughs,
bronchial “flu” and whooping cough-.
and tickling throat; Chamberlain is Stom
ach and Liver Tablets for stomach trou
bles, indigestion, g»«y P a ’ M^JT^ otl
the heart, biliousness and comup.non
Chamberlain’s Salve need* d*
family for bums, sea ds, wounds. p«>=
and skin affections; these valued fam.
medicines for only 5 cenU. Don t mu» it
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., JANUARY 30, 1925
These Features
Make Winter
Driving a Pleas
ure for Buick
Owners. - - -
W / Mechanical
Four-Wheel
Brakes
Safety Tube
To Insure
Continuous
Oil Flow
ff £ ]|| O
-Sdr Automatic
Carburetor
Heat
' FlO-26-A Control J
Hartwell Buick Co.
A. C. SKELTON, Propr.
Sometimes a society bud develops
into a wall flower.
Rheumatism
Mr/
All the old aches
given quick, genuine relief
Pat a little Sloan’s lightly over
the aching place. Instantly it
sends freshly-purified blood tin
gling through the infected joints
and muscles. You feel a gentle,
glowing warmth, then almost
suddenly—release from pain. All
druggists—3sc.
Sloan's Liniment— kills pain!
Has the passing of stays made
women more staid?
AN OPERATION
RECOMMENDED
Avoided by Taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound
Los Angeles, Cal. “I cannot give too
much praise to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
■" etable Compopnd for
twhat it has done for
me. My mother gave
it to me when I was
a girl 14 years old,
and since then I have
taken it when I feel
run down or tired.
I took it for three
months before my
two babies were
bom for I suffered
with my back and
J had spells as if my
heart was affected, and it helped me a
lot The doctors told me at one time
that I would have to have an operation.
I thought I would try ‘Pinkham’s,’ as
I call it, first. In two months I was all
right and had no operation. I firmly
believe ‘Pinkham’s’ cured me. Every
one who saw me after that remarked
that I looked so well. I only have to
take medicine occasionally, not but I
always keep a couple of bottles by me.
I recommend it to women who speak to
me about their health. I have also used
your Sanative Wash and like it very
much.” - Mrs. E. Gould, 4000 East
Side Boulevard; Los Angeles, Cal.
Many letters have been received from
who have been- restored to
ealth by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
te Compound after operations have
oeen advised.
WITH COUNTY AGENT BINGHAM
Below are rules and regulations
of The Nitrate of Soda Scholarship
which is to be offered for the year
of 1925. This scholarship is worth
S4OO in cash, and is sufficient to
pay the entire expenses for a boy
attending the College of Agricul
ture for one year.
Any boys in Hart county who are
able to meet the requirements as set
forth below, please enroll your name
with the County Agent immediate
ly.
For further information, please
consult County Agent.
Rules and Regulation..
1. This scholarship is known as the
Chilean Nitrate of Soda Scholarship
and is to be for the college year of
1925-26.
2. The amount of S4OO cash will
be awarded to that contestant ful
filling the following condition:
(a) Who can satisfy the entrance
requirements of the Georgia State
College of Agriculture, which re
quires a graduation from an accredit
ed high school, or that the student
be of twenty years of age or over
and able to satisfy the college in
structors of his capability of doing
college work. The latter students
are known as mature special stu
dents. This means that any student
in the graduating class of the high
school or anyone who has graduated
from an accredited high school, or
anyone who is twenty years old or
over and capable of carrying the
work as offered at the College of
Agriculture is eligible to enter this
contest.
(b) The award will be made on
the highest yield in bushels of legal
weight of early corn on the cob from
one acre of land with nitrate of soda
being used as the sole source of
nitrogen, the contestant doing all the
work except harvesting, with which
operation he may obtain assistance.
This does not prevent the use of acid
phosphate or potash salts.
(c) Accompanying the report on
the yield shall be a statement of costs
and work. The award will not be
made unless such statements ac
company the final report along with
a good, usable photograph of the
growing crop.
(d) The crop is to be gathered
and weighed in the presence of a
committee composed of any three of
the following four officials:
1. The local or nearest county
agent.
2. The local or nearest vocational
teacher of agriculture in an accredit
ed high school.
3. The principal of the local high
school.
4. The County School Commis
sioner.
(e) Each contestant shall present
his certified report to the local or
nearest county agent or the local or
nearest teacher es agriculture in a
Smith-Hughes high school, this re
port to be forwarded through the
agent or teacher to the Georgia State
College of Agriculture.
(f) No individual may conduct
more than one test, and this test must
be on one acre of not less than 4840
square yards.
(g) The contestant shall be enter
ed through the local or nearest coun
ty agent or the local or nearest
teacher of vocational agriculture in
a Smith-Hughes high school on or
before April 15, 1926.
(h) The report of the crops must
be in the hands of the Scholarship
Committee of the Chilean Nitrate
of Soda Committee of the Georgia
State College of Agriculture on or
before the first of September, 1925.
Reports received after that date can
not be considered.
(i) The corn is to be harvested
after it is matured and must be in a
dry condition with a moisture con
tent of not over 16 per cent. Should
the moisture run above this, the
yield will be reduced accordingly.
Each report must be accompanied by
a quart jar of shelled corn, selected
by the committee on the day of har
vest.
Hartings' Seeds
Catalog/
free !
This is the greatest and most accu
rate Seed Book ever published for the
South. 112 pages, 250 actual photo
graphic pictures, 4 handsome cover
pages in full colors, accurate descrip
tiona, valuable culture directions and
the most useful Seed Book there is.
It is absolutely free, and we want
you to have It In your home. Hast
ings’ Seeds, “The Standard of the
South,” are, as always, the best seed*
grown. Garden, field and flower
seeds, plants and bulbs that do well
in the South are all fully describee
with 1925 attractive prices, the lowest
we can possibly sell good seeds, plants
and bulbs. All our 1925 customers
will get 5 seed packets of beautiful
flowers absolutely free. The big new
1925 Seed Book tells all about it
Write for it tpday.
H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN,
ATLANTA, GA.
, ■ ——....-
The Great Pyramid of Cheops, at
Ghizeh, is the only one of the “Seven
Wonders of the World” that has sur
vived.
o
Many of the good deeds men for
get to do appear on tombstones.
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HALL’B CATARRH MEDICINE has
been used successfully in the treatment
of Catarrh.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con
sists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which a' ts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur
faces, thus reducing the Inflammation.
Sold by all druggists.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
—OUR—
WEEKLY SMILE
(C.J.T.—Phila.,Pa.)
i *
FROM MY SCRAP BOOK
According to a prominent pro
fessor in the Yale Medical School,
left ears are becoming far more ef
ficient than those on the opposite
side of the gray matter. He attri
butes this to the “left handed” tele
phones.
Despite the fact that both ears are
of equal length, breadth, and depth,
constant use of the left auditory
organ for hearing words expressed
at the other end of a telephone wire
has developed that ear, while the
right one has remained more or less
idle. The use of the telephone has
not injured the unused member but
has merely put its mate a bit above
par.
Beats the World.
The use of electricity in the United
States is almost exactly equal to the
consumption of all the remaining
countries of the world combined.
Prompt Payment.
The editor of a Kansas paper
states that he borrowed a Winchester
rifle recently, and started up the
street to deliver the weapon to its
owner. The delinquent subscribers
got it into their heads that he was
on the warpath and every one he
met insisted on paying what he owed
him. One man wiped out a debt of
ten years standing. On his return
to his office he found a load of hay,
fifteen bushels of corn, ten bushels
of apples, twenty-two bushels of
potatoes, a cord of wood and a
barrel of turnips that had been
brought in. All the country editors
in that section are now trying to
borrow Winchesters.
Jailing Smuggled Alien.
The United States, with its barriers
against immigration, finds that many
aliens just must come in. They slip
over the boundaries, smuggled across
at so much a head. Some estimate
that as many aliens come in illegally
as legally.
The usual policy with apprehended
aliens smuggled in, was to take them
to Ellis Island and deport them.
Some time ago 31 Italians were cap
tured after illegally entering the
country. They were surprised when
handcuffed together and lodged in
jail for trial, with an extreme penalty
of 20 years in jail waiting for them
if convicted.
When this news gets back to the
old country it will be a little harder
to make up smuggling parties.
The American Spirit.
The features of Quentin Roosevelt
as symbolizing the American spirit
during the war, have been selected
for perpetuation in the commemora
tive monument to the French and
Americans who fell during the fight
ing in the Champagne region.
No choice could be more in keep
ing with American traditions. Few
of the hundreds of thousands of the
flower of America’s youth had a
more brilliant career in the world
battle against German imperialism.
Lieutenant Roosevelt was a pilot
in the 95th Air Squadron and fell
battling in the air with the enemy
in 1918. He was his father’s own
son, and one of whom his illustrious
progenitor was justly proud.
Americans will applaud this choice
because Lieutenant Roosevelt was a
typical American, and combined in
his character were the traits that
made the former president famous.
He chose the most hazardous
branch of the service and he died a
hero as he would doubtless have lived
hail his life been spared.
He typified the same courage and
self sacrifice that every American
soldier had in his makeup and that
he should represent the thousands
from the United States, who gave
their lives, for the same cause as he,
is entirely appropriate.
Classified.
One of the college magazines
which pokes fun at anything and
everything gets off this one.
“How would you classify a tele
phone girl? Is hers a business or
a profession?”
“Neither. It’s a calling.”
&ed
Dr. BELL’S M
PINE TAR HONEY
FOR COUGHS
FOR quick, aura cough relief there is nothing like the pine-tar and
boney, which our parents and grandparents relied on. But be
■ure you get the genuine Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey, the original
f compound which has been used in thousands
families for years. It has had many imitatora,
but still remains the beet. Often stops a bad
Pdf ft I cough in 24 hours. Perfectly safe for children
-fl M “* grown-upa. Insist on Dr. Bell's and
no other. Only 3Oc at any good druggist's.
Bl I BA 17*
p D!a L j
11T RED BAND \
CO.
Our
Service
‘"ACTION/
Take a concrete
illustration
The other day a
well known citizen
drove up for oil. We
looked at his Dia
mond tires —one on
the rear, a regular
mileage eater, was
considerably worn.
In less than ten min
utes we switched it
to a front wheel,
plugged several little
tread cuts and sent
the owner on his way.
We render that
Bsrsonal service on
iamonds right up
to the last mile!
Does your dealer?
Hart Motor
Company
W/ I Sr
Diamond
©res
— —Jf
Coughing
Tires the old, lowers their vital
ity. The l>est etandard family
cough medicine for old and young
CHAMBERLAIN’S
COUGH REMEDY
Good for every member o( the family
■ —l «——rs
British scholar says the day of the
love letter is past. Indicates, per
haps, that folks are growing more
cautious.—Pittsburg Gazette Times.
Piles
CURED
in 6 to 14 Days
All Druggists are authorized to
refund money if PAZO OINT
MENT falls to cure any case of
ITCHING, BLIND. BLEEDING
or PROTRUDING PILES. Cures '
ordinary cases in 6 days, the
worst cases in 14 days.
PAZO OINTMENT instantly Re
lieves ITCHING PILES and you
can get restful sleep after the
first application. 60c.