The Hartwell sun. (Hartwell, GA.) 1879-current, February 06, 1925, Image 8

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• ffl Four-Wheel Brakes That Heat and Cold Do Not Affect Buick mechan ical 4-Wheel Brakes function properly and safely. They are designed for winter driving as well as summer. Their operation is not altered by extremes of heat and cold. Buick is engineered to be immune to temperature changes! Hartwell Buick Co. A. C. SKELTON, Propr. STOP! L> ■prya** ' W p ’ **■ Si rwki wg| J 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 dogging 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). , 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. Wild cabbage still survives as a weed on chalky soils near the North Sea. Arches ache? y’’/io i Ayi Allays inflammation — eases pain Just a little Sloan’s lightly patted on before going to bed gives the most amazing relief to tired, ach- L ing foot-arches. You’ll be aston ished to see how it takes out the | «oreness and pain. Try it to -1 night All druggists—3s cents. Bsioan’s Liniment— nils pain! Likes and Dislikes for Various Kinds of Food Many races, many foods, many fads. The luxury of one people is the bane of another. An attempt is being made to Introduce snails as an article of food in certain London restaurants. The French, of course, regard snails as a delicacy, while Britishers almost shud der at the thought of eating them I Yet English folks eat mussels, whelks and winkles, which in some countries are regarded as being unfit for human con sumption. In England the eel is rel ished by many people, but in Scotland it is detested by nearly everybody. Rabbits are looked upon as vermin in some parts of America and Australia and are seldom served at table. In Britain rabbit pie is a favorite dish. Swede turnips are often eaten In Scot land and Canada with other vegeta bles, whereas in some parts of England they are cordially disliked and given only to cattle. Turnip-tops in Scotland again, are not considered worth cook ing. But in Covent Garden they sell by the ton. —London Mall. Growth of Jellyfish The manner in which a jellyfish pro duces its “children” is really wonder ful. In most cases the beginning is an egg, which, lying on the bottom, pro-1 duces a beautiful tree-like growth. The “tree” fastens Itself to the bottom and brings forth buds which, when ripe, drop off and develop into jellyfish. The latter, in turn, lay eggs and the process is repeated, as told in London Tit-Bits Most of the very large species have a different way of reproducing them selves. The egg is set free lit tlie watei . and develops into a pear-shaped larvae, [ which for a while swims about rapidly, being provided with hair-like append ages that serve the purpose of ears. Then the larvae settles down, anchors itself to the bottom, Increases in size rapidly and finally splits up into thin, flat discs which swim off and grow up Into large jellyfishes. Enamel woodwork can be kept clean very easily in the kitchen by having a damp cloth handy and after dishwashing each day wipe all the j small spots around drawers, cup boards and doors. If you have wood- , en handles which soil easily, replace them with glass ones. TIME TO QUIT TRADING DOLLARS HG'TtNG® DECLARES THAT PRES ENT SOUTHERN FARM SYSTEM GETS US NOWHERE , . I Atlanta, Ga—(Special.)—-’’lt's time for ever}' Southern farmer who clings to the all, or nearly all, cotton idea to do a lot of straight thinking before he pitches his 1025 crop. Most of our cotton farmers are trading dollars and losing at that three years out of four," said H. G. Hastings, leading agricultural authority and Chairman of the Farm and Marketing Bureau of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. "For the past two years Providence has stepped in and saved us from the results of our own folly. In 1923 we planted thirty-nine million acres of cotton; in 1924 forty million acres. In each of these years there was acre age enough to have made, with even fair season conditions, sixteen to eigh teen million bales and a ten-cent price or less with the inevitable farm smash that such price would bring.” Provi dence cannot be depended on indefi nitely to bring unfavorable seasons and cut down yield per acre. We stepped up a couple of million bales in 1924, and, by so doing, the South has lost about three hundred million dollars that have come right out of the farm pocket. "In spite of these danger signals flying in every cotton state, plans are being made everywhere to in crease cotton acreage in 1925. This can only be done at the expense of cutting down food and grain acres at a time when food and grain is high and going higher every week. “I am no alarmist, but the present i tendency, the intent to plant the whole face of the earth in cotton this spring i that is so evident gives me grave con cern. If the boll weevil or drought don’t cut the 1925 crop, starvation low prices will get the cotton grower. The situation looks just as hazardous to me as in 1920. unless the craze for in j creased cotton acreage can be headed I off somehow. Growing cotton and buying bread, meat and grain is simply trading dol lars. or worse. It never is profitable. Most years it’s a losing game. There j is only one way to safeguard 1925. I Plan for and plant enough food, grain ' and forage acres to insure your family i and live stock full food supply with -1 out buving from store or feed dealer. In this don’t forget that a good big home garden is a wonderful food source. With food and live stock amply provided for, a good living is insured, regardless of cotton prices. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS is often caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing. Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be de stroyed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for it—rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. HALL S CATARRH MEDICINE has been successful in the treatment of Catarrh for over Forty Years. i Sold by all druggists. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O. THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., FEBRUARY 6, 1925 Hastings’Free Flower/ Seeds/ Hastings’ is giving away Absolutely Free, 5 Seed Packets of Beautiful Flowers to each 1925 customer. Hast ings’ beautiful, new 112-page, 1925 Catalog shows these flowers in full natural colors. The front cover plc ures the great Stone Mountain Confed erate Memorial This Big Seed Book is the Standard Planting Guide, with valuable culture directions and accurate descriptions of all kinds of seeds, plants aai bulbs. It has over 250 pictures from actual photographs &nd is bigger and better than ever. Brim full of informa tion, it’s the most useful Seed Book ever published. You need it for ready reference al most daily. Be sure to write for it today; a post-card will do. It comes to you entirely free by return mail. H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. Nothing else is so calculated to jar a man as the efforts of a bald headed barber to sell him a bottle of hair tonic. Tells How to End Night Coughing To quickly stop hacking, irritat-< sng coughing at night, a very sim ple treatment may be had that often enables you to sleep the whole night through undisturbed almost at once. The treatment is based on a re markable prescription known aa Dr. King’s New Discovery for Coughs. You simply take a tea spoonful at night before retiring, and hold it in your throat for 15 or 20 seconds before swallowing it, without following with water. The prescription has a double action. It not only soothes and relieves ir ritation and soreness, but it quick ly loosens and removes the phlegm and congestion which are the direct cause of the coughing. So no mat ter whether your cough is dry and tight, or loose with much mucus, the coughing soon stops, you can usually sleep your accustomed time without a break, and the whole cough condition goes in a very short time. The prescription contains absolutely no narcotics or other harmful drugs. Instead of merely benumbing the nerves, it actually helps the system to throw oft the trouble in a perfectly natural way. Furthermore. It is very economical, the dose being only one teaspoonful. It is highly recom mended for coughs, chest colds, tick ling, hoarseness and bronchitis, and ia wonderful for children’s coughs and spasmodic croup. On salo at all good druggists. Ask for France is now menaced by the American potato bug. America should send over some Paris green. —Tacoma News Tribune. WEAK,RUN-DOWN NERVOUS, DIZZY Mrs. Lee Suffered From All These Troubles, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound Made Her Well Terre Haute, Indiana. — “I was weak and run-down and in such a nervous con ■ ■ dition that I could d—‘ ■ hardly do my work. . 1 was tired all the ■ time and dizzy, had WL noappetite and could not sleep. 1 tried ■tRH - JP* different medicines f° r a year but they did not help me. WThen my husband ’■Sh saw the ad. for Lydia 1- I‘mkham’s Vege table < .or.’H.und in the newspapers and had me take it I regained my strength and never felt better in my life. ’lt com pletely restored me to health. I had C radically no suffering when, my baby oy was born and he is very strong and healthy. I know that the Vegetable Compound is the best medicine a woman can take before and after childbirth for health and strength. I would be willing to answer letters from women asking about the Vegetable Compound.” Mrs. Wm. J. Lee, Route E, Box 648, Terre Haute, Indiana. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound is a dependable medicine for all these troubles. For sale by druggists everywhere. V 'jA jp wW • c \WVn| AO? > AJr?' •/ ,< I ■>CZ/CTZCJ WVZZ PHILADELPHIA U-iX | Early Georgia Settler Picked Location Wisely In 1835 Pickens county, Georgia, was peopled by the Cherokee Indians. In that year, one Sam Tate moved In and settled eight miles from any oth er white neighbor. He was first on the ground when the government moved the Cherokees out to Indian territory in 1837. He staked off his pick of the lands left by the Indians, and his claim embraced, among other things, the finest marble deposit in the United States and one of the most valuable in the world. It still belongs to the Tate family. There is only one vein of Georgia marble, and the old man got it all—a solid block three eigiiths of a mile wide, four miles long and two hundred feet to a lialf mile deep, the estimated worth of which today, according to experts, runs up to $165,000,000,000, and is still run ning. It has been worked now for more than fifty years and in all that time they have only scratched the sur face of about three acres of it. They have dug out of it such buildings as the Corcoran Art gallery and the Pan- American building 'n Washington, tlie Rhode Island state capitol, the New York Stock exchange, the Federal Re serve banks of Cleveland and Atlanta, the Field museum in Chicago, the Statue of Civic Virtue in New York city, and thousands of lesser monu ments, but you would hardly know it. —W. O. Saunders in Collier's. Much Care and Taste Put Into Panama Hat Counting the number of rings of strands in the crown reveals the qual ity of panama hats. The more of these there are the better the grade. Color, texture and shape are impor tant factors, too, and if any broken straws are revealed the value Is de creased, says the New Haven Regis ter. Furthermore, a good panama hat is never bleached after being woven. Those of superior grade are the original color of the little strips of leaves from a dwarf palm-tree plant that grows in Ecuador and other South and Central American coun tries where the natives weave the best hats. It takes three months or mor? to finish those of the highest quality. All the work is done by hand and only the best and longest filter Is used. Reports that the most expensive hats are woven only by candle light or under water are said to be erro neous. However, the straw is kept damp and at night the unfinished hats are hung where they will be exposed to the dew so that they can be worked on without danger of breaking the strands the following day. Lottery Once Harvard Aid In interesting bit of information re garding the early history of Harvard college is derived from gn edition of the Columbian Sentinel, a weekly news paper, printed In Boston, September 14, 1796. It states that when George Wash ington was President of the United States Harvard college was supporting Itself partly by grand lotteries, with a capital prize of $20,000. Tickets were sold for 25 cents, says tlie Boston Globe. The four-page papers of that day, with advertisments confined largely to auction sales, contained much material in brief. There were no large head lines and news from Europe, brought by ship, was often many months old. The Issue of September 14, 1796, as an example, carried a news item stating that "on. the 25th of June (the latest date) General Bonaparte was at Bologna.” Thieves Cart Away House The daring and the Ingenuity of modern thieves occasion frequent sur prises for the police of various cities. Articles picked up and carted away range from things whose apparent value to any other than the rightful owner would seem nil, to things so huge that it would appear almost Im possible to conceal them. A complaint recently filed with the Paris police by a Mme. Cabert said that her whole house had been stolen, says the New York Times. Mme. Cabert stated that she had built a house of wood in the Rue de la Caltpetriere. She was called away to visit a dying aunt and when she returned the house had dis appeared. Not Guilty Child naivete is always delicious. Take, for example, the little girl who forgot that her mother had said she did not wish to be disturbed during siesta hour. The child forgot and went and tapped on the door, only to be sharply reminded when her mother woke up and demanded to know who was knocking. “It was me. mother.” cried the little one quickly, “but It ain’t now.” Charming Thought It was after dinner and the talk had turned to psychology. This disturb ing question had just been put: “When does old age really begin?” To establish a formula was proving rather difficult, when one lady, who did not look her years, found the fol lowing: "To me, old age is always fifteen years older than I am.” —Cyrano. Paris. Like All the Rest "The very thought of marriage alarms me. Fancy having a husband about the place day in day out” “Don’t you worry, dear. If you marry Jack it will soon be day in night out, with him."—London Mail. —OUR— WEEKLY SMILE (C.J.T.—Phila.,Pa.) - This is one week that I don’t feel like smiling or trying to make any one else smile for the dearest little boy I have ever known—James Teasley—has died and left many of us sad. James was, every inch of him, a real boy and he will be missed not only by his “daddy” and “mother,” sisters, and other relatives but by many Hartwell merchants who used to tell me about his daily visits to their stores. Always, when I visited home I carried some kind of present to James. He always expected some thing for he knew it was coming. Once when I visited home, James was at my mother’s when I arrived. We all sat on the front porch while I told of my trip home. James listened patiently for quite a while but no mention was made of any present for him and his little heart was bubbling over with anxiety— wondering if I had forgotten him that time. Finally, he could wait no longer and he said, “Charlie, I remember that Indian suit that you gave me the last time you were here.” How glad I was that I had a present for him and I, immediately, got it out of my grippe and gave it to him. I will always remember those dear sweet words. When I was at home Christmas, James was planning to accept my invitation and come to Philadelphia for a visit. He didn’t succeed in carrying out his plan but some day I hope to visit him, in his mansion in that Great Beyond. As I write this it is below zero outside. The ground is covered with snow and Stroudsburg, Pa., reported 40 degrees below zero today. Phila delphia wasn’t quite that bad how ever. For that tired, sleepy feeling try going to bed at night. The eclipse was per cent total in Philadelphia so the local astrono mers claim. Chickens went to roost. Glad He’s Coming Back Julian McCurry stayed away from Hartwell longer than I figured. They all come back sooner or later. There is a mistaken idea in the minds of a number of Hartwell peo ple that Hartwell cannot vote any more bonds for paved streets or other improvements. It is true that the limit was reached when the bonds for the new school building were voted but more can be voted now so why not let’s get busy and pave the square and the streets over which the tourists travel? It will be a good investment. It will bring people to our town to live. Don’t be an old fogy and talk against the project. We must go forward. Yes, Louie, I agree with you—a man who can and will not pay his debts is about the lowest type of citizen I know of. It is simply a case of trying to live above your means and 60 per cent of the people of the United States are doing that very thing today. Some people make debts and fully intend to pay them ROOFING Just received another CARLOAD of the best 28 Guage 6-V Crimp - ROOFING - in all lengths from 6to 12 feet. Leave your Roofing troubles up to us, and get the best that money and skill can buy. See us quick for yours. McGEE & ROBERTSON Hartwell, Ga. - - Air Line, Ga. (At Parham & Ayer», Depot St.) 11 1 HHIIi II » f iI ♦ ♦■♦•+»« IHHIIIIIII 11111 I ! i I H II IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIt i I I I I M 11111 l HI i I I I I I I I i I » Our Organization has been protecting the Farmers of North Georgia for over twenty-two years. T. LUMPKIN ADDERHOLDT, General Manager Georgia Fanners’ Fire Insurance Company GAINESVILLE, GEORRGIA R. M. PURCELL, Division Agent, Lavonia, Ga. ELLOWPENCIL V / th& RED BAND /f “^^^^AGLEPENCIL CO. NEWYORK.USA. CHAPPED HANDS chilblains, frostbite—just rub on soothing, cooling, healing VICKS ▼ Varoßub Otwr 17 Million Jan Uoad Yoarly Before purchasing electric bulbs that are offered at exceptionally low prices, the housewife should ask whether or not they are “refilled,” as a new bulb is worth the differ ence in price, because it will last longer and gives a much better light. X - IF YOU HAVE ■ / Malaria, Piles, Sick Headache, Costive .■ Bowels, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach, and Belching; your food does not assimilate, you have no appetite, i Tutt’s Pills,* will remedy these trouble, jjX In Tibet, respect to a thing or person is shown by always keeping it on one’s right-hand side. In pass ing by any religious edifice it is proper always to pass round from left to right, “clockwise,” which is also the direction in which the prayer wheel should be turned. To violate this rule is considered an act of blasphemy. Biliousness sick headache, sour stomach, constipation, easily avoided. An active User without calomel. CHAMBERLAIN’S TABLETS Never sicken or gripe—only 25c Another Hartwell Case Time-tested by a Hartwell Resident. Just another report of sickness and suffering relieved by Doan’s Pills. Another Hartwell case that tells of lasting benefit. What can be more convincing? Thousands recommend Doan’s for backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness and distressing urinary disorders. Doan’s are a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. They have helped thosands and should help you. A Hartwell case: R. L. Ayers, Justice of Peace, Athens St., says: “I have used Doan’s Pills frequently and beneficial results have always followed. They have a strengthening effect on the kidneys and to all who seek a reli able kidney remedy, I can advise the use of Doan’s.” Mr. Ayers gave the above state ment June 7, 1917 and on March 12, 1923, he said: “Since Doan's Pills cured me, I haven’t had the least sign of kidney trouble.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s Pill—the same that Mr. Ayers had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. but meet with reverses and are forced to allow the debts to become past due. Others make debts when they know they can’t pay them and have no intention of paying them. If you are one of this latter type, you are a crook just as much as the man who passes worthless checks because you pass worthless promises. The man who owes his church and will not pay is of the lowest of all types. Have you paid your assess ment so far this year or are you leaving the job up to Bill as usual?