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CoughßemedyMother
Gave Us Still Best
Pine Tar and Honey Beat
All Modem Drug*
Tn thousands of families it ha.V
been the custom for many years to
beep pine tar and honey always on
hand for coughs, chest colds, bron
chitis, spasmodic croup, and throat
irritations. Our mothers knew that
it was good, that it often broke up
the worst cough in 24 hours, and
that it could be given to young and
old alike, as it contains no nar
cotics or harmful drugs.
And now we are told that in spito
Os modern medical discoveries there
is still no better or quicker cough
remedy. Doctors say the pine tar
quickly loosens and removes the
jihlegm and congestion that cause the
coughing, also healing soreness,
while the honey not only gives a
pleasant taste, but helps soothe irri
tation.
The original compound, made up
many years ago and used by mil
lions of people, was Dr. Bell’s Pine-
Tar Honey. This is scientifically
composed of just the right propor
tions of pine tar, honey and other
quick-acting, healing ingredients
which the best doctors have found
to aid in quick relief. If you want
the original and the best, be sure
you get Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey
and no other. Only 30c. at any
good druggists.
Jk Dr. BELL'S
KA pine-tar-honey
FOR COUGHS
An Indian, who once wore the
blanket and received government
rations, is today guilding the Senate
of the United States. He is Charles
Curtis, of Kansas, who has taken the
place formerly filled by Henry Cabot
Lodge.
Ache?
RSffl
Here’s quick relief
Just a few drops of Sloan’s
patted cn gently—will soothe
sore, aching muscles at once.
No rubbing-it’s the liniment
itself that stimulates the circu
lation, brings grateful relief,
.-and stops the pain! It will
j retain. All druggists—3sc.
'Sign’s Liniment — kilb> pain!
The “hochdneckkondensations
dampilokomotive” has at last been
invented—in Germany, of course. It
is not merely a word of thirty-seven
letters, it is a “high-pressure-con
densing-steam locomotive.”
SICK WOMEN
OF MIDDLE ACE
Can Be Carried Comfortably Over
The Critical Period by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
—’Note Mrs. Headden’s Case
M aeon, Georgia. - * ’ During the Change
of Life I suffered with my whole rignt
■ ■ 1 side and could not lie
on my left side. 1
was ’ n bed about two
months and could not
ligk get up only as my i
£wS Bon wou ‘d lift me.
" W” Afterdoctoringwith-
IF out relief a man who
~ was rooming with us
toldmysontnatLydia
& Pinkham’s Vege
table(’omi>oiindcured
his mother at the
i iiiiii ( 'h Hri g e o f Life, so
1 began taking your medicine. After
taking it for two weeks I could get out
of my bed by myself. I am now 53
years old and in better health and
stronger than ever in my life. I have
recommended the Vegetable Comjxiund
to many suffering women, young and
old, and you may use my name any
where as long as you please. I will be
glad to answer any letters sent to me. ”
—Mrs. F. B. Hsadden, 5 Holt Avenue,
Macon Georgia.
In a recent country-wide canvass of
I.ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, over 260,000 replies were received
and 98 out of every 100 reported they
had been benefited oy its use. For sule
by druggists everywhere.
Mackay, a mountain town of Ida
ho, has two water supplies—a cold
spring for summer use and a piping
hot volcanic hot-water stream for
winter.
ZWr//
I / XV /&X
11/4/n
From Sun Readers
I
At the Fork* of the Road
Hartwell, Ga., Feb. 17, 1925.
Dear Editors: —The darkest hours
are just before daylight. At one
time I felt as if our backs were to
the wall, as the parsonage had a long
rest spell. Thank God for the faith
ful few who took new courage and
said “We are going to see it finish
ed.”
When I was a child, I was too
bashful to eat as much as I wanted
away from home; I soon got over
that.
I have always been too timid to
push my claim with the girls; I fear
I will never get over that.
I was afraid to preach what I
wanted to, for fear it would offend
someone; thank God, I soon got over
that.
And it was as hard for me to take
a collection as it would have been
to have an ingrowing toenail pulled
out with a pair of pliers; thank God,
I am over that.
My heart has rejoiced with the
great respond by the people as I
have brought the invitation of a
memorial window, a door, lumber or
brick, which will stand as a monu
ment to those who have contributed
to the new parsonage for Hart Cir
cuit.
Someone has said ‘‘Build the nest
and the bird will come.”
And the finer and bigger the nest,
the finer the bird. You help to fur
nish the sticks and straws, —and in
a short time there will be only one
thing lacking at the parsonage to
make it complete; that will be a boss
in it.
Thanking you for your hearty co
operation, I am,
Your brother in Christ,
J. H. NICHOLS,
Pastor Hart Circuit Churches.
o
Presbyterian
Sunday, February 22, is set as the
day of prayer for schools and col
leges throughout the Presbyterian
Church U. S. According to the last
annual report submitted by Dr. Henry
H. Sweets, secretary of Christian
education, this church has a total
of 13,973 students gathered in 95
educational institutions owned and
controlled by the denomination. In
addition to these, a large number
are also attending state institutions
of higher learning. The purpose of
the day of prayer is that the whole
church may together remember these
students, the faculties of the institu
tions, and the attempt to increase
endowment in all denominational in
stitutions. This church has 4 theo
logical seminaries, 2 schools for
colored men and women, 18 colleges,
10 junior colleges, 30 preparatory
schools, 13 orphans’ homes, and a
training school for lay workers, 1
affiliate college, and 1 affiliate pre
paratory school. These schools are
manned by a faculty of 922, and the
total endowment for all schools in
the church is $8,220,065.00. Intensive
campaigns are being carried forward
in many of the synods for increasing
both the current expenses and en
dowment funds. Notable among these
is the present campaign in the synod
of Florida and the campaign for re
building Southwestern Presbyterian
University at Memphis, Tennessee.
o
Canon Citizens Celebrate
Birthday Abraham Lincoln
Canon, Ga., February 12th, 1925.
The birthday of Abraham Lincoln
was appropriately observed here by
the people and the school at the
school building.
The services were opened with
prayer by Mr. Smith. Then “The
Star Spangled Banner” was sung by
the school and the congregation.
Responsive reading and pledge to
the flag were read by Mr. McCon
nell, Superintendent of the school..
The song “Battle Hymn of The
Republic” by the school and congre
gation.
Th/'n the oration of the day was
delivered by the Hon. Wm. M. Hair
ston of Atlanta, Ga., who paid a
glowing eulogy to the salient char
acteristics of Lincoln’s illustrious life.
Mr. Jep Cheek, one of the pro
foundest thinkers in this section of
Georgia also delivered an eloquent
speech touching upon many of the
interesting points in Mr. Lincoln's
life.
Poem, “Success or Failure” by
Miss Adams.
Song, Quartet, “Georgia Land” was
splendidly rendered.
Great enthusiasm characterized the
meeting. There was a large attend
ance.
The people are discussing the feas
ibility of having a general annual
memorial, so that anyone who wishes
to single out their ideal of a Georgian
or of the United States, man or wo
man, can write an essay, make a
speech, calling attention to the
achivements of any notable Georgian
or citizen of the United States that
appeals to them the most. For in
stance someone might wish to eulo
gise Alexander Stephens calling at
tention to the great things in his life.
Some one might want to write a
piece or make a speech refreshing our
memory about the things Nancy Hart
did or other notable Georgia woman.
We hope that the idea will materialize
and that next year such a memorial
service will he held say a long about
the fourth of July or during the
period of laying by time when the
oeople generally can turn out and
give their undivided and enthusiastic
attention to such a worthy and noble
purpose.
REPORTER.
PNEUMONIA
Call a physician. Then begin
“emergency” treatment with
VICKS
▼ Vapoßub
Offer 17 Million JaT9 Us*d > early
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., FEBRUARY 20, 1925
Hastings’Free
T-Z 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 pic
ures the great Stone Mountain Confed
erate Memorial
This Big Seed Book is the Standard
Planting Guide, with valuable culture
directions and accurate description?
of all kinds of seeds, plants ani
bulbs. It has over 260 pictures from
actual photographs and 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 cornea
to you entirely free by return mall.
H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN,
ATLANTA, GA.
Half of the foreign-born women
and one-third of the foreign-born
men in the United States are still
aliens.
wk
Z
I 1
(NOTE: Dr. Pierce is president of
the Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., to
which for 50 years past chronic suf
ferers have been coming for special
ized treatment from all over the U. S.
A., Canada and foreign lands.)
Will Undo Much Evil
By Dr. V. M. Pierce
Knowing the vast amount of harm
wrought by diseases of the kidneys,
and having had opportunity to ob
serve the analyses and the successful
methods of treatment in thousands of
cases of kidney trouble at the Inval
ids’ Hotel, I have recently given to
the public the latest and perhaps
most important of the Dr. Pierce
home remedies, “An-uric” (anti-uric
acid) Tablets, which I now recom
mend to those who suffer with kidney
backache, irregularity of urination
and the pains and disturbances that
come from excess of uric acid in the
blood.
“An-uric” can be obtained at all
the drug stores. The mere drinking
of a cup of not water each morning
and a little “An-uric" before every
meal should bring remarkably quick
improvement. You may have kidney
trouble and not know it. The danger
signals to be quickly heeded are back
ache, depression, aches, pains, heavi
ness, drowsiness, dizziness, irrita
bility, headaches, chilliness, rheuma
tic twinges, swollen, joints, gout.
If you desire a trial package, send
10c to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic in Buffalo,
N. Y.» and write for free advice.
The earliest wooden coffin in
England was that of King Arthur
who was buried in a hollow log.
Mrs. E. B. Hartman
Ik
Have You a Cough?
Read What This Woman Says
Atlanta, Ga. —“I had the ‘flu’ and
it left me with a terrible cough. I
heard of a case of bronchial cough
which had been cured by Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. The doc
tor's medicine was doing me no good,
so I decided to try the Discovery’
1 myself. The result was marvelous.
My cough was entirely gone before
I had finished taking the second
bottle and I have had no cough since.”
—Mrs. E. B. Hartman, 199 Dalvigay
I Street.
When run-down you can quickly
pick up and regain vim. vigor, vitality
by obtaining this Medical Discovery
of Dr. Pierce’s at your nearest drug
; store in tablets or liquid, or send 10c
to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel in
Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. or write
for free medical advice.
Statistics prove: that the number
of deaths from tuberculosis is de
creasing; that the number of deaths
from cancer is increasing.
I PREVENTION
I better than care. Tutt’s Pills taken in
I time, are not only a remedy for but prevent
SICK HEADACHE
J bibousaess, constipALon and kindred
Tutt’s Pills
TRADE AT HOME
Some Excerpf* From F. P. Linder »
Speech Before Hartwell Kiwani*
Club in a Trade at Home
Campaign.
Members of Hartwell Kiwanis
Club:
When you get down to the funda
mentals of a city or a community,
the closer we are welded together
in a business way, the more complete
ly harmonized we are, the more suc
cessful our city will be as a unit.
First of all we should learn to
swallow some of our dislikes for
other people. I have been in busi
ness fifty years and am on speaking
terms with everybody in Hart county.
We should all be so intensely inter
ested in our home town that we can
make up our minds to do our trading
at home, even sometimes when it
don’t exactly suit us, then we have
accomplished something worth talk
ing about. You men buy your
clothes here; tell your ladies the same
thing.
I do not think the merchants and
business people have any cause to be
pessimistic in the slightest on the
trade at home proposition. I recently
traveled some twenty to thirty cities
of this size; I critically examined the
stores and stocks I found our stocks
of clothing and fancy goods superior
to any of them and equaled cities
five and six times our size and there
does not seem to be any excuse of
people not buying principally every
thing needed right here in Hartwell.
So far as I can observe, Hartwell
holds a greater volume of business
than any small city I know anything
about. As a proof of this they come
here from afar to buy fancy goods
which shows for itself.
We have lots of things here to be
thankful for that you are losing sight
of. I know of town after town some
much larger we are that are as dead
as a doornail. I have been in them
they seem most lifeless and hopeless,
failure after failure stares them in
the face and we here practically have
no failures.
One of the faults we could point
out in the operation of business in
a small city is that we all want to
get in the same kind of business.
Develop some business of your own
along original lines instead of spend
ing your time in fighting some other
business that is already built up. You
become a menace to society and to
any real progress in your community,
like the jitney bus boring into the
Street Car Co’s side in Atlanta.
The advent of the automobile and
the improved roads go hand in hand
with shopping away from home.
Every marvelous invention has some
corresponding trouble. I suspect that
quite a few of us have so much car
we haven’t anything left to devote
to necessaries. Personally speaking,
by the time I run my two cars and
pay the bills I haven’t much left to
buy some things I really need and
pay my honest debts.
The “high cost” of slivering is
spending all my cash in some other
town, buying goods on credit in my
home town and never paying for
them.
I am more interested in keeping
Detroit running than I am my busi
ness folks at home.
In short, a nation can be drunk
on something else besides liquor and
worship something else besides the
Lord.
The Southern States have experi
enced three outstanding epochs or
eras in the past six years and before
the thunder of one had died away we
were right into the other one, as
follows: The German war, the boll
weevil and the lastly the automobile
drunk on which we are still dangling,
which cuts our buying power, de
moralizes our debt paying qualities,
makes inroads into our common
honesty, and plays general havoc
with our religion.
But I am an optimist in the worst
of it. With all the wonderful re
sources of the United States we will
go sailing through it all if the Lord
will stay with us; what few little
fortunes are swept away is largely
immaterial, but oh, my, what about
our morals.
Os course there is a marked dis
tinction between automobiling and
“flivvering” and we could not be so
silly as to overlook the fact that the
iron mines of Alabama and the cot
ton fields of Georgia furnish the raw
products to go into the finished state
which in turn draws on the surplus
cash of the wealthy and is redistri
buted to the workers of the whole
country, which is a real benefit to
society and industry.
For instance —A man drives to
church, sits on the front row listens
to the preacher, that’s automobiling.
He drives to church, sits on the back
seat; just looks at other peoples
clothes, that’s “flivvering.” A man
goes out, takes his wife to ride,
that’s automobiling. Then goes out
takes some other man’s wife, that
“flivvering.” When a man rides in
something he is able to own that’s
automobiling; when he rides in
something he is not able to own nor
never aims to pay for that’s “fliv
verring.”
Or vice versa: a man can go auto
mobiling in a “flivver” or go “fliv
vering” in an automobile. Too many
of us are living in a one-room house
and driving a seven room car. The
so-called high cost of living is just
this: A little bit of work and a whole
darn lot of “slivering,” when, if we
could just reverse the situation and
make it a whole lot of work, we
would be skating on Prosperity Hill.
If congress could only pass a bill
to stop the sale of “slivering” gas
oline for one year only, believe me
old Jno. D. would be so “riled” that
the first golf ball he hit, he would
knock it clear across the lake.
CONSTIPATION
goes, and energy, pep and
vim return when taking
CHAMBERLAIN’S
TABLETS
Keep »tomach sweet—liver active—
bowels regular—only 25c.
I BIGpROPI
Ferti/izers |
Do you buy tons or
plant-food?
It isn’t a question of how many pounds you
are using to the acre, but how much plant food.
If you have been a user of High Analysis goods
in the past, then you know what it means to
your crop and your pocketbook. If you have not
used High Analysis Fertilizers heretofore, then
fall in line and make your crops show a bigger
profit.
For 1925, buy units of plant food instead of
tons of fertilizer.
Use 15-5-5 or 12-4-4
and
Make every acre do its best.
<»>
A Remedy for Piles
Ask your Druggist (whom you know) what
he knows about PAZO OINTMENT as a
Remedy for Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Pro
truding Piles. 60c.
L J
■ ■■■■■' a ■ n ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ H ■ ■■■■■■ ■:■ ■
1111111 I* I I II I I I 11 ** l * *
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 &. Ayers, Depot St.)
I I I I I Hilf Ml I I I I I I I I I H I Hl* I I I I I I I * i * 11*4
II 111 * I »Tl 111 I H 111 IIH* ** I IHH4H Illi IIH 11 I 11111 I *
Tax Receiver’s
NOTICE
I WILL BE AT THE FOLLOWING PLACES ON
DATE NAMED FOR THE PURPOSE OF RECEIVING
TAX RETURNS FOR THE YEAR 1925:
Smiths—lll4th Friday, February 27th
McCurrys—lllßth Friday March 6th
Towns—lll2th All other days except dates
mentioned above.
F.E.O’BARR
TAX RECEIVER. HART COUNTY. GA.