Newspaper Page Text
'The
BULLS EYE
"Editor and General JAanaqer
WILL ROGERS
Sr IL,
/
____\
jl' Another’Bull’Durham
( advertisement by Will
I rT, Rogers, Ziegfeld Follie®
I If and screen star, and
Aff’ leading American hu
f Umtff morist. More coming.
f .* fpj Watch for them.
THE fourth of March is
a Politician’s uncertain
day. He is either coming in
or going out. Ifhe is staying
in it’s because they haven’t
got wise to him yet. I have
always said Office holders
should be elected for life
(subject, of course, to im
peachment for neglect or
dishonesty). Then they
could give their work all of
their time, instead of worry
ing about how to stay in,
and that would do away en
tirely with the biggest so
cial problem we have to face
in this country. And that is
the thousands of Individuals
who go through life just try
ing to get in office. If we
could get their mind off of
fices, and get ’em to working
at something useful. But
what’s the use talking about
a.Heaven on earth. We got
to die to get rid of the Office
seeker, and then I bet you
we will find them, either
wanting to have Saint Peter
impeached, or to get a job as
Superintendent of the Fur
nace. Oh Yes, I like to for
got ‘Bull’ Durham. It will
be on sale in both places, no
advance in prices.
P. S. I’m going to write tome more pieces
that will 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
‘Bull
- Durham
Guaranteed by
INCOnPO»>YBD
111 Fifth Aveauc, New York City
Nearly everybody knows some so
called refined people who should be
pulverized.—New Orleans Times
Picayune.
L \r "n a/ J
► A Jwy ’W
MR.> /&f
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I
L ./>Z. /Z PENCILCOMKNY I
MRS. CARNES PASSES
(Anderson Independent)
Mrs. Cecil Carnes, 18 years old,
died at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. J. S. Jordan 26 D street
Anderson Mill Sunday afternoon
March 1, 1925, at 5:45 o’clock. Mrs.
Carnes had been ill for a period of
over four months, having been first
taken with influenza which developed
into pneumonia.
The deceased is survived by her
husband and a four months old child,
she is also survived by her parents,
and two brothers and five sisters,
Miss F. A. Jordan, of this city, who
is now seriously ill with pneumonia;
Mrs. R. E. Jordan, of Franklin coun
tl, Ga.; Mrs. 0. Z. Jordan, of Frank
lin county; Miss Idel Jordan, Miss
Ruth Jordan, Josie and Francis Jor
dan all of Franklin county.
Funeral services were held at the
Cross Roads church, in Hart county
Monday afternoon, March 2nd, at 2
o’clock. Rev. T. A. Thornton in
charge of the services. Interment
took place in the church cemetery.
Carter & Ellis, funeral directors, in
charge.
MR. JOHN RUMSEY DIES
Mr. John Rumsey, age 73, died at
the home in Reed Creek section
Thursday, March 5, 1925, after being
ill for two months with influenza.
The funeral was held on last Fri
day, interment being at Reed Creek
cemetery. Rev. J. J. Hiott was in
charge of the services.
The deceased was born in Hart
county, living here all his life.
He is survived by his wife and the
following children: Messrs. John,
George and Wofford Rumsey, Mrs.
Mary Dunn, Mrs. Lexie Baker, Mrs.
Annie Nixon and Mrs. Willie Weldon.
Also three sisters, Eliza Ann, Adeline
and Nellie, and two brothers, Budge
Rumsey, of Lavonia, and Asbury
Rumsey, of South Carolina.
Funeral director W. C. Page, of
Hartwell, was in charge of the
funeral arrangements.
o
The well-dresesd young man of
the Dinka tribe on the Upper Nile
wears copper wrist bracelets so tight
that his hands grow numb and use
less.
o— ———
On the face of statistics, the pro
portion of male convicts in prisons to
females is 10 to 1, and the propor
tion of hardened criminals is 62 per
cent to 17 per cent.
Policemen at the White House
must be six feet tall.
> After Every Meal'
< / tight’]
L \ KEPT 1
\’ ?,ch t4
Pass it around
after every meal.
Give the family
the benefit of its
aid to digestion.
Oeans teeth too.
Keep it always
in the house rn .
j * Costs little-helps much"
whklets
The constricted waist in the wasp
and other bee-like insects is the dam
that holds the blood in the thorax
while the heart steadily pumps it for
ward through the waist into the ex
panding wings.
Simple Way To
End Night Coughing
No matter how long you have been
troubled with exasperating coughing at
night, robbing you of valuable sleep and
thereby weakening your system and
laying you open to dangerous infec
tions, it can usually be stopped at once
by a very simple treatment. Most people
have found that they can sleep the
whole night through undisturbed often
the first time they try it.
The treatment is based on a remarkable
prescription known as Dr. King’s New Dis
covery forCoughs. You simply takea teaspoon
ful at night before retiring and hold it in your
throat for 15 or 20 seconds before swallowing,
without following with water. The prescrip
tion has a double action. It not only soothes
soreness and irritation, but it quickly loosens
and removes the phlegm and congestion which
are the direct cause of the coughing. The re
sult is you usually sleep soundly the very first
night, and the entire cough condition goes in
a very short time.
The prescription is for coughs, chest colds,
hoarseness, bronchitis, spasmodic croup and
almost every throat irritation. It contains no
opiates or other harmful drugs. Economical,
too, as the dose is only one teaspoonful. On
sale at all good druggists. Ask for
I bTTOI? frvi
ry
Rembrandt used his father’s mill
as a studio, and the light came down
from a little high window in the mill
falling on the easel in just such a
golden shaft as is often seen in his
pictures.
[Tutt’s Pills
The first dose astonishes the invalid,
giving immediate relief, regulating
bowels and digestive organs, inducing
GOOD DIGESTION
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA, MARCH 13, 1925
Why
There Are More
Than A Million
The
Sealed
Chassis
The Buick "Sealed Chas
sis”! From front to rear,
a continuous wall of iron
and steel housings behind
which the Buick driving
units operate. Dirt and
wear kept out. Lubrication
kept in! Only Buick has all
of this protection. Another
big reason why the Buick
name is a synonym for re
liability— and why there
are more than a million
Buick owners.
Hartwell Buick Co.
A. C. SKELTON, Propr.
Cottonseed which clogged the
waterways near the cotton gins was
a problem not many years ago. To
day the production of cottonseed oil
in the South is valued at $275,000,-
000 annually.
Hartings' Seeds
<
This is the greatest and most accu
rate Seed Book ever published for the
South. 112
graphic pictures, 4 handsome cover
pages in full colors, accurate descrip
tions, 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 seeds
grown. Garden, field and flower
seeds, plants and bulbs that do well
in the South are all fully described
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 today.
H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN,
ATLANTA, GA.
The shortest name in the world is
possessed by Mr. I, native of Hang
chow, China, who is a medical stu
dent in Johns Hopkins Medical
School.
SICK WOMEN
ATTENTION!
Read this Remarkable Testi
mony Regarding Results from
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Norfolk, Virginia. —“ If you only
knew how many women and girls have
taken your medicine
by hearing my testi
mony, it would seem
wonderful to you.
Every day and every
chance I have I ad
vise some one to try
it It was in June,
1904, when I had
given up to never get
well, that I wrote
to you. My husband
went to the drug
rirtzv krz.tirrl .♦
**
lE*
or £
» store anbrought
the Vegetable Compound home to me. ,
In a few days I began to improve and I
have often taken it since. lam now
passing through the Change of Life and
still stick by it and am enjoying won
derful health. When I first started with
your medicines I was a mere shadow.
My health seemed to be gone. The
last doctor I had said he would give me
no more local treatments unless I went
to the Hospital and was operated on.
That was when I gave the doctors up.
Now lam a healthy robust woman. I
wish I could tell the world what a won
derful medicine Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound is. I will be only
too glad to answer letters from any
where. I wish all sick worr.e' would
take it’’-Mrs. J. A Jones, 317 Colley
Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia.
MR. POOLE ORGANIZES
BAND AT HARTWELL
Mr. H. Poole, the leader of the
local band, has succeeded in organ
izing an enthusiastic band of 23
members at Hartwell. They are al
ready producing good music and
practicing regularly. There are a
number of good musicians at Bow
man, Royston and Franklin Springs
who will probably join this band and
make it the biggest and best in this
Section with the exception of Elber
ton, of course. —Elberton Star.
o
WOOD-WEAVER
A marriage of much interest to
the many friends of the bride here
was that of Miss Ethel Wood to Mr.
Garline Weaver wish occurred Sun
day, February 22, 1925, Rev. E. M.
Shirley officiating.
The brid£ is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Wood of Air Line
a highly accomplished young lady
with many loveable traits of charac
ter.
The groom comes from a splendid
family and has a large number of
friends in and around Bowersville.
We wish for this happy couple a
long and successful life.
o
HUSBAND OF DR. T. W. AYER S
DAUGHTER DIES IN CHINA
Anniston, Ala., March 6.—Pro
fessor Norman H. Pittman, author
and educator, is dead in Tien Tsin,
China, relatives here were notified
by cable today. Mr. Pittman was pro
fessor of English in Pei Yang uni
versity at Tien Tsin at the time of
his death, having gone to China in
1909.
Professor Pittman was a native
of Michigan, but was educated in the
South. He married Miss Lucy Ayers,
of Anniston. He was 49 years of age.
Mrs. Lula A. Cadle
“1
0. i ' illil
cX
Augusta, Ga.—‘*l have no hesita
tion in highly recommending Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription as a
wonderful tonic and nervine, through
the trying period of motherhood. My
mother who had used the ‘Favorite
Prescription’ years ago, recommend
ed it to me for she had great faith in
it. In taking the ‘Prescription’ I
found it so helpful that I was able
to continue my work right up to the
last in comfort, and I am quite sure
it was a great help to Nature as I
had comparatively no suffering. I
could eat and sleep in a natural way
and never had a sick dav. To know
its worth, I would recommend a
trial.”—Mrs. Lula A. Cadle, 1473
l**stcs St
AH druggists. Tablets or liquid.
Write Dr. Pierce. Pres. Invalids’ Ho
tel in Buffalo, N. Y„ for free medical
advice or send 10c for trial pkg.
What people don’t know won’t
hurt them unless they tell it.—Ne
wark Star Eagle.
A Good Tiling - DON'T MINS IT.
Send your name and address plainly
written together with 5 cents (and this
slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co., Det
Moines, lowa, and receive in return a
trial parkage containing Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup,
bronchial, “flu” and whooping cougbe.
and tickling throat: Chamberlain's Stom
ach and Liver Tablets for stomach trou
bles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd
the heart, bilioiisneaa and constipation;
Chamberlain's Salve, needed in every I
family for burns, scalds, wounds, piles,
and skin affections; these valued family
medicines for ornc 6 cents. Don’t miss it
Eight hundred languages and dia
lects are spoken among the natives
of Africa.
“COLD IN THE HEAD’'
is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh
Those subject to frequent “colds" are
generally in a "run down” condition.
HALL ; B CATARRH MEDICINE is a
Treatment consisting of an Ointment, to '
be used locally, and a Tonic, which acts |
Quickly through the Blood on the Mu- j
cous Surfaces, building up the System,
and making you less liable to "colds."
Sold bv druggists for over 40 Years.
F. J. Cheney 4 Co.. Toledo, O.
It is almost impossible to buy a
glass of fresh milk in New Zealand
where tea is the universal drink.
NERVOUS HACKING
Can not De cured by a glass of
water, but will disappear under
the healing and soothing effect of
CHAMBERLAIN’S
COUGH REMEDY
Every user is a friend
The copper-toed shoes of sixty
years ago were invented by a Maine
farmer who found they lasted longer
than three ordinary pairs.
Croup ~
Spasmodic Creep in frequently
relieved by one application of—
VICKS
▼ Varoßwb
Over 17Millutn Jar 9 UreJ Yearly
N. P.BROWN
DEALER IN
FLOUR - HAY - GRAIN
SUGAR - LARD - SYRUP
We Buy In Solid Carload Lots
TOBACCOS COFFEE MEAT
N. P. BROWN
A .
DEPOT ST. LOOK FOR SIGN HARTWELL, GA.
MRS. J. P. VICKERY IS
BURIED AT MT. HEBRON
(Anderson Daily Mail)
The death Wednesday morning,
March 4, 1925, of Mrs. Lillie Viola
Vickery, wife of Motorcycle Officer
J. P. Vickery of the Anderson Police
department, is deplored by a wide
circle of friends. Mrs. Vickery’s
passage occurred at the residence,
1338 South Main street, following
an illness of some six months. She
was in her 44th year at the time of
her death.
Mrs. Vickery was beloved by those
who knew her intimately and her loss
will be felt in the community where
she lived for many years. .She was a
devoted member of the Mt. Hebron
church several miles northwest of
Hartwell, Ga.
Besides her husband, Mrs. Vickery
is survived by her mother, and the
following children: B. C. Vickery of
Tarboro, N. C.; Miss Lois Vickery;
Miss Laura J. Vickery; J. P., Jr.;
Havell, Miss Reba and Miss Ruby
Vickery of Anderson; and the follow
ing sisters and one brother: Mrs.
Fannie Stovall and Mrs. Edna Baker
of Hodges, Ala.; Mrs. W. A. Ray of
Haldburg, Ala.; H. W. Vickery of
Birmingham, Ala.; Mrs. John Reese
Anderson of Anderson; Mrs. Ger
trude Cleveland, Mrs. Florence Adams
and Mrs. Myrtice Dickerson all of
Hart county, Ga.
Funeral services for Mrs. Vickery
occurred on Thursday afternoon at
Mt. Hebron church.
Members of the Anderson police
department acted as pall bearers,
both active and honorary.
Carter and Ellis, funeral directors
in charge.
Pyorrhea
often in a few hours If
OlvppvU you B ufn-r from Pyor
rhea, sore and spongy gumi, loose teeth
or other mouth Irritations, 1 want to
send you my simple homo treatment un
der plain wrapper. Thousands say It
stopped Pyorrhea after everytlrtSg else
failed. Merely send name for generous
10 day free trial offer of my secret treat
ment and rid yotireelf of your trouble for
good. RING lIBMJCDIGH CO., 603 Gate
way Station, Kansas City. Missouri.
The earliest kind of soap known
was made of goat’s tallow and beech
ash.
I Cramped i
and Suffered f
"My back and head would UM
ache, and I had to go to bed,”
says Mrs. W. L. Ennis, of Vtn
Worthville, Ky. "I just could Kfl
not stay up, for I would cramp ggi
and suffer so. I was very K”
nervous. My children would jga
‘get on my nerves.' It wasn’t Wk
a pleasure forme to try to go Wk
anywhere, I felt so bad.
"My mother had taken
CARDUII
For Female Troubles |
at one time, so she insisted ggJ
that I try It. I took four bot- Kg!
ties of Cardui, and if one BKj
should see me now they
wouldn’t think I had ever
been sick. ’
"I have gained twenty Z 0
pounds, and my cheeks are Em
rosy. I feel just fine. lam Wk
regular and haven’t the pain. Wk
"Life Is a pleasure. I can Wk
do my work with ease. IWk
give Cardui the praise.”
IZ3 Cardui has relieved many
02 thousands of cases of pain and c®
Wk female trouble, and should fXk
m help you, too. Jzl
42 Take Cardui. Kj
Neuralgia
W., j
Immediate
positive relief
Acute pain that you can hardly
bear—that’s the time to uso
Sloan’s. You don’t have to rub
it in. Just the liniment itself does
the work by sending fresh new
blood to the painful spot. All drug
gists, 35 cents. It will not stain.
Sloan’s Liniment— Mbpaint
A mistrial was declared by a judge
in an East St. Louis court recently
when a jury that did not know the
difference between the legal terms
“defendant” and “plaintiff” brought
in a verdict for the defendant. “We
wanted to give the verdict to the little
light-haired fellow,” said the jury.
He was the plaintiff.
o
The Mardi Gras has been cele
brated in New Orleans with revelry
and elaborate display since 1827.
Whats wrong
with this °
-w 0i picture
young lady is writing her
' social correspondence on
Corona. Is this good etiquette f
Lillian Eichler, author of the
"Book of Etiquette,” after telling
how she wrote this famous book
entirely with Corona, sayst
"My ‘Book of Etiquette’ encour
ages the use of the typewriter for
social correspondence.”
• • • •
It is a breach of etiquette to allow letters
to go unanswered for weeks, hut a busy
man or woman finds plenty of excuses
for postponing the tiresome task. With
Corona at your elbow, letter-writing
acquires a new interest, and that u why
many people of social prominence use
Corona for all their correspondence.
Coronaryping is easier, faster and more
legible than handwriting.
Corona Four costs only S6O. Easy
term, if desired. Call or phone for
demonstratioa.
The McGregor Co.
Office Outfitters
Athens, Ga.
Corona