Newspaper Page Text
EXPERIENCE OF
NERVOUS WOMAN
Weak, Blue, Discouraged
Relieved by Taking Lydia
F„ Pinkham’s Medicine
Cincinnati, Ohio. “I was nervous
and could not sleep, had crying spells
and the blues, and
didn’t care if I lived
or died. My right
side was very bad
and I had backache
and a weakness. 1
read abou t you r med
icines in the papers
and wrote for fur
ther information. I
took Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound, Blood
Modirinc* «nd TJvpr
Ji
s— — ana l.iver
Pills, and used Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Sanitive Wash. I have had good re
sults in every way and am able to do my
work again and can eat anything that
comes along. My friends tell me how
well 1 am looking.’’—Mrs.F.K.CoßiELL,
129 Peete Street, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Willing to Answer Letters
Philadelphia, Pa,—“l have used your
medicines for nervousness and a run
down system with a severe weakness.
After taking Lydia E. Pinkhams Veg
etable Compound and using Lydia L.
I*inkham’s Sanitive Wash I feel like
a different woman and have gained in
<*very way. I am willing to answer letters
asking atxiut the medicines.”-Dora
Holt, 2649 S. 11 th St., Philadelphia,! a.
Sold by druggists everywhere.
“Bank lose $200,000,000 annually
through forgery and embezzlement,”
nays Edward E. Gore, eminent ac
countant. Bonding companies, he
said are more concerned with getting
back the money than jailing the of
fender.
Iftft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft
“ Frequent ’•
« Bilious Attacks |
jm “I Buffered with severe bill
ous attacks that came on two
or three times each month,"
says Mr. J. P. Nevins, of
fl Lawrenceburg, Ky. “I would W
get nauseated. I would have
o dizziness and couldn’t work.
jw I would take pills until I was
worn-out with them. I didn’t >um
J® seem to get relief.
Si "A neighbor told me of W
BLACK-DRAUGHT
• Liver Medicine ■
•« u»
and I began its use. I never
have found so much relief
““ niJ n gave ine. I would not ™
be without it for anything. It
seemed to cleanse my whole
system and made me feel like
new. I would take a few RaP
doses —get rid of the bile and
J" have my usual clear head,
fl feel full of pep, and could do few
ggn twice the work."
Bilious attacks are “sea
fl) sonaT* with many people.
jjgig Millions have taken Thed
-2? ford’s Black-Draught to ward -L
SW off such attacks, and the good nW
results they have reported
-g| should induce you to try it. gg|
All DrutUUsts* igta
VB E-ioomy
fISIIIISISIII
Now that they’re executing canni
bals in French Guinea, we may hear
protest from some of the wild tribe
leaders that a man has a right to eat
what he pleases to eat.—Dallas Jour
nal.
I J- A. White
I
& *
• &OHs&w Sa
wl Wr
EAT AND BE MERRY
Savannah, Ga.—"For about trwe
years I had been a sufferer from in
digestion, my food would sour and
gas would form, which at times
seemed like a hard lump and dis
tressed me terribly. I was getting
so bad that I was afraid to eat.
Tben I learned about Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery for sto
mach and liver disorders and after
1 took one bottle I felt like a differ
ent man. I took enough of it to rid
me entirely of every sign of indiges
tion and am able to eat my food with
enjoyment because it is digesting pro
perly. 1 would advise every person
who suffers as I did to give Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
a fair trial for it will help them just
as it did me.”—J. A. White, 308
Montgomery St, All dealers. Tab-
Jets or liquid
I Send 10c to Dr . Pierce's Invalids'
{Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg.
HART COUNTY TAKING LEAD
IN N. E. GEORGIA, SAYS GANTT
Col. T. Larry Gantt, veteran newspaper man, says in his Athens
Banner-Herald column:
“There is not a county in Georgia or the south where farmers
are advancing as they are in Hart. They adopt all improving methods
and crops and follow directions of scientific agriculturalists. Hart
is one county where its farmers are organized and are adopting co
operative associations to purchase supplies and market their crops,
they save one-third over farmers who are not organized and where
each man acts individually. Farmers in every community should
meet and organize for planting, cultivating and selling their crops,
and also for buying co-operatively.”
Proposed Legislation To Improve
Method For Selection of Judges
Atlanta, Ga., March 31.—Legisla
tion will again be proposed at the
session of the Georgia Legislature in
June to improve the method of se
lecting judges in this state. Amend
ments endorsed by the Georgia Bar
Association were favorably received
by the session of the Legislature last
year, being favorably reported by the
Constitutional Amendment Commit
tees of both the House and the Sen
ate, but the pressure of urgent busi
ness was so great in the last General
Assembly that the amendments did
not reach a vote in either house.
In Georgia, as well as over the rest
of the country, the lawyers, through
their bar associations, are trying to
get rid of personal politics in the
selection of judges. The Georgia
Bar Association, it was stated here
today, have worked out a plan by
which the voters retain the right to
disapprove an unsatisfactory judge,
but which will end the present
method of selecting judges by a free
for-all scramble in a popular election.
It is not a recall, lawyers here
stated, because under .it the term of
a judge can not be shortened. Under
the plan a good judge would not be
subjected to a fight for re-election
because some “good mixer” wished
his place. But also under it an un
satisfactory judge could not get a
new term against the wishes of the
people to be served by him.
At the 1923 meeting of the Geor
gia Bar Association a resolution was
passed expressing the opinion of the
Association that the present method
of selecting judges was unsatisfactory
and appointed a special committee
to study the matter and to report to
the next meeting of the Association
its recommendations for a different
plan. This committee consisted of
John I). Pope, of Albany; H. H.
Swift, of Columbus; Warren Grice,
of Macon; Millard Reese, of Bruns
wick, and Marion Smith, of Atlanta.
Its report was made to the meeting
of the Bar Association last year and
unanimously adopted by thf Associa
tion.
Proposed Amendment.
Briefly stated, the plan for select
ing judges submitted by the commit
tee, which is embodied in the pro
posed constitutional amendment be
fore the Legislature, is as follows:
The term of office of all judges
to be fixed at six years. Those in
office at the time of the constitu
tional amendment to automatically
become the first incumbents of these
positions, but with the provision that
the Supreme Court Justices and
Judges of the Court of Appeals shall
occupy terms to expire as fixed by
law for the terms held.
Upon the expiration of the term
of office of any justice or judge an
issue shall be voted on in the general
election next preceding such ending
of the term of office in the follow
ing form:
“Shall Judge (here naming judge)
have another term as Judge of (here
naming court).”
On sueh election no candidate shall
be allowed to declare his candidacy
for such position, but the sole issue
voted on shall be whether the incuni
bent shall have another term, and if
elected he shall continue in office an
other term.
Vacancies occurring from any
cause, which includes the failure of
a judge to be elected to another
term, shall be filled as follows:
Vacancies on the Supreme Court
shall be filled by appointment by
the Governor, with the advice and
consent of the Senate.
Vacancies on the Court of Appeals
shall be filled as follows: The Su
preme Court shall nominate to the
Governor, a list of not more than
four, nor less than two, lawyers who,
in the opinion of the Supreme Court,
would make satisfactory appointees to
; the vacancy, and who, it has been
ascertained by the Supreme Court,
would accept the position if tender
ed. The Governor shall appoint from
such list.
Vacancies on the Superior Court
are to be filled in the same manner
as vacancies on the Court of Appeals.
o— ——
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
All obituaries and memor al notices
and cards of thanks are charged at
the rate of one-half cent per word. In
sending in these notices please bear
this in mind. We want to nnb’ish the
account of the death of all persons in
this county and section. < our
correspondents to send them in as
soon as they occur, but all obituaries
and memorials and cards of thanks
must be naid for at the rate above
mentioned.
I’HE HARTWELL SUN.
BABY’S COLDS
! are soon "nipped in the bud"
without "dosing" by use of—
VICKS
▼ VA F»C" = ’E3
Obwp 17 Million ly
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., APRIL 3, 1925
NUBERG SCHOOL HONOR
ROLL FOR MARCH
6th grade—Thornton Brown, Jim
Dickerson, N. J. White and Ralph
Rucker.
7th grade—Martha Warren, Joel
Thornton and Elsie Jenkins.
o -
Beggars’ Trade Union
In China one of the most formidable
trade unions is that of the beggars.
Begging in that country is a recognised
profession, and there is a properly or
ganized guild of beggars In moat dis
tricts.
Each guild has Its own president
and officers, and the members pay an
annual subscription equaling about
$4 00 in our money. The officials of
the guilds wield such power that they
enjoy the protection of the magistracy.
So far there has been no strike on
the part of the members of this union,
which is undoubtedly the quaintest or
ganization of its kind in the world.
Do Not Force Plants
If a plant has been growing thriftily
for some time and then begins to go
back it probably needs a rest, and no
amount of forcing will do any perma
nent good. During the resting period
a plant is better If left entirely alone
In a dry, cool cellar. It will of its own
accord and without any attention of
any kind begin to put out new green
shoots. When these new shoots show
themselves the plant should lie given a
thorough watering, a repotting if nec
essary, and brought up into its place
in the sun. After it is growing weir it
may be given fertilizer.
o
Certain African tribes paint their
bodies white as a symbol of mourn
ing.
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
Makes the Body Strong.
Makes the Blood Rich. 60c
The Lapps train their dogs to act
as living hotwater bottles, always
sleeping between the tent wall and
the human being, to protect him
from draft.
“Buckeye”
Means Bigger
Poultry Profits
"’as
Almost every county
agent, every agricultural
college authority, every
successful poultry raiser
will recommend Buck
eye Incubators and
Brooders as the first step
toward bigger poultry pro
fits for you.
Call at our store or write
for the new Buckeye
Catalog—a most com
plete and valuable book
on poultry raising.
YATESHDW.&FIiRN.CO.
HARTWELL, GA.
■BSQoft ■ >l-1 <
'WsMgF I * ‘
A LITTLE FUN—
Cash
Rowe: Money talks, I tell you.
Joe: Yes, but it never gives itself
away.—Cartoons Magazine.
100 Per Cent
Some quotations from Baltimore
school examination papers:
A blizzard is the inside of a hen.
A circle is a round, straight line
with a hole in the middle.
George Washington married Mary
Curtis and in due time became the
father of his country.
Sixty gallons makes one hedgehog.
A mountain range is a large cook
; stove.
Typhoid fever is prevented by
fascination.
Turned Tablet
A negro went fishing. He hooked
a big catfish which pulled him over
board. As he crawled back into the
boat, he said, philosophically: “What
I wanna know is dis: Is dis niggah
i fishin’ or is dis fish niggerin’?”
Making Her Mist Him
“Is your poor husband dead?”
asked the Vicar of an aged member
of his flock.
“Oh, no,” she replied.
“But you are in mourning,” the
Vicar continued.
“Well, you see,” was the reply,
“my old man annoyed me so this
afternoon that I went into mourning
for my first husband.”—London
Daily Telegraph.
Ready
Professor—“ln this vast, limitless
expanse of nature, my friend, man
is so infinitesimal that it makes me
feel like a little grub.”
Guide—“Wai, le’s go to camp
an’ git some, then.”
Mixed Conclusions
It was Robert’s first visit to the
Zoo.
“What do you think of the ani
mals?” inquired Uncle Ben.
After a critical inspection of the
exhibit the boy replied, “I think the
kangaroo and the elephant should
change tails.”
o
From 85 to 90 per cent of the total
population of Egypt are tillers of the
soil.
o
Forty of the forty-eight states con
stituting the Union have prohibited
prison whippings.
State of Georgia By His Excellency,
Clifford Walker, Governor
A PROCLAMATION
Atlanta, February 25, 1925.
Whereas, official information has
been received at this Department that
on February 21, 1925, in Hartwell,
Ga., unknown parties did make an
unlawful assault upon one Nick
Kalgakolis, and upon his place of
business, said unknown parties hav
ing escaped, and are now fugitives
from justice; and
Whereas, The malignity of the
crime and the promotion of justice
require that said Unknown parties be
brought to trial for the offense with
which they stand charged, it is there
fore
ORDERED, That the Secretary of
State record and issue a proclamation
offering a reward of Three Hundred
Dollars for the apprehension and de
livery of the said Unknown parties
to the Sheriff of Hart County, with
evidence sufficient to convict.
CLIFFORD WALKER, Governor.
By the Governor:
MYRTLE WHITE, Secretary Execu
tive Department. I
V—f
SWTg
fertilizers)
lITPAYSTU USE THEM* y
“IT PAYS TO USE THEM”
Bigger Yields Have Proved It
To produce large yields of high quality crops, the fertilizer must con
tain the right amount and kind of plantfood properly processed
and mixed.
SWIFT’S RED STEER FERTILIZERS are thoroughly and evenly
mixed to furnish each plant a balanced ration. Only the highest
grade and most productive sources of plantfood are used in their
manufacture.
Every operation from the careful selection of the raw materials to the
mixing, testing, and shipping, is closely supervised by experts—
experts in chemistry, agriculture, and manufacturing. Therefore
the farmer who buys SWIFT’S RED STEER FERTILIZERS is
assured of fertilizer that will return to him the most net profit.
Discuss your fertilizer problems with the A. S. A. (Authorized Swift
Agent). He keeps posted on the best farming practices, and he
will explain fully the profit you can make through a liberal use of
SWIFT’S RED STEER FERTILIZERS.
RED STEER FERTILIZERS
“It Pays To Use Them"
Swift & Company
(FERTILIZER WORKS)
Atlanta, Georgia
Albany, Ga., Savannah, Ga., LaGrange, GC,
Wilmington, N. C., Greensboro, N. C., Columbia, S. C.
New Orleans, La.
LITTLE NANCY EVANS DIES
On Tuesday morning, March 17,
1925, the death angel glided, unseen
and unheard into the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Worley Evans and took
from them their little nine years old
daughter, Nancy.
Little Nancy was a bright child
and a precious jewel in the home.
Her happy disposition and beautiful
face attracted all who knew her.
Nancy’s death has caused much sor
row. .
Oh! how we will miss her, but God
knoweth best, His will be done, not
ours. .
Her death was peculiarly sad being
so unexpected.
It is always hard to have our dear
est and best loved ones taken for
ever away from us, but if we could
only drive back the heart pangs and
with a firm faith in the wisdom of
God, exclaim in all sincerity, “The
Lord gave and the Lord hath taken
away, blessed be the name of the
Lord.”
It has not been the pleasure of
the writer to know little Nancy but
a short while, but learned to love
her, for her winning ways and kind
words seem to bring sunshine where
ever she went. She was so good that
God saw fit to take her home to
glory while in the tender age of life.
Yes, He has gathered this beautiful
flower that He might have it in His
presence in that mansion not made
with hands eternally in Heaven.
Surviving besides the parents are
two brothers, Bennie and Snow Evans
and two sisters, Rossie and Etta
Evans.
After impressive funeral services,
conducted by Rev. W. A. Duncan of
Hartwell, all that was mortal of
Nancy was placed in Mt. Hebron
cemetery the day following her death.
And now, to her dear father,
mother, brothers and sisters look to
Him who is ever ready to comfort
them that thrust Him. Our journey
through life may be rough and thorny
but if we will only trust our Savior
Her troubles are over.
Why should we mourn,
Or dare to wish her back again?
We know she’s free from death
alarms.
In a world that’s free from pain.
Let us not say farewell forever,
Let’s all meet her once again,
On the banks of the beautiful river,
Where cometh no death, no pain.
when our work here is ended, we
will meet our dear ones on the other
shore where sorrow and troubles
come no more.
Now, dear ones, dry your tears,
For Nancy do not weep,
Always remember what she said,
Before she fell asleep.
Written by her teacher—Jewel |
Estes.
CONSTIPATION
must be avoided, or torpid
JI ver, bl liousness, indigestion
and gassy pains result.
Easy to take, thoroughly cleansing
CHAMBERLAIN’S
TABLETS
Never disappoint or nauseate —25c
Sixty billion cigarets were smoked
in the United States in 1924.
PREVENTION
better than cure. Tutt’s Pills taken in
time, are not only a remedy for but prevent
SICK HEADACHE
biliousness, constipation and kindred diseases
Tutt's Pills
C. E. MATHESON, Authorized Swift Agent, Hartwell, Ga.
WHY THERE ARE MORE
THAN A MILLION
Si •
Buicks are
As Good As
They Look
By the distinctive ap
pearance of Buick
motor cars, you may
judge their inner
quality. The same
engineeringthought
that developed the
Valve-in-Head en
gine, Sealed Chassis,
automatic lubrica
tion, Buick mechani
cal 4-wheel brakes,
and like factors of
superior perform
ance is also respon
sible for the grace
and the symmetry
of Buick body lines.
F 10 M A
Hartwell Buick Co.
A. C. SKELTON, Propr.
An eighth of the deaths in the
registration areas of the United
States are caused by heart diseases,
this being the most common cause
of death.
A Good Thing - DON’T MISS IT.
Send your name and address plainly
written together with 5 cents (and this
slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co., Dee
Moines, lowa, and receive in return a
trial package containing Chamberlain’i
Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup,
bronchial, "flu” and whooping coughs,
and tickling throat; Chamberlain’s Stom
ach and Liver Tablets for stomach trou
bles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd
the heart, biliousness and constipation;
Chamberlain’s Salve, needed in every
family for burns, scalds, wounds, piles,
and skin affections; these valued family
medicines for on\- 5 cents. Don’t miss it