Newspaper Page Text
Mr. O. Y. McLees was among the
bus ru.-s visitors to Atlanta last week.
Chicago Viiitor*.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Porter and
children, of Chicago, 111., arrived
Monday to join Mr. and Mrs. Thos.
H. Estes, also of that city, on a visit
to the family of Mr. Estes’ parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. A. Estes. Mr. and
Mrs. Porter motored through and
Will be accompanied home via auto
by Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Estes, the
party leaving this week. While here
the Porters met many of our people,
who have been delighted to have
them here, as well as Mr. and Mrs.
Estes, the latter couple living here
a while after their marriage several
years ago before going to Chicago.
Two "Sun Rays” pages this week.
HARTWELL LOSES FIRST
GAME TO ROYSTON
By GEO. S. CLARK, JR.
A seventh inning rally which
netted six runs resulted in Royston’s
victory over Hartwell here Tuesday
afternoon, the final count being 10-3
with the visitors on the long end.
Two pitchers were used by each
team. Hartwell made eight hits to |
Roy ton’s eleven. One three-bagger
and three two-baggers were on the
bill. Rogers made the three-base hit .
and Magill, Royston and Barnes the
two-base hits.
Score by inning*: R. H. E.
Royston 000 001 612 10 11 5
Hartwell 000 102 000 3 8 5
Please co-operate with us in having
all copy in the office by Monday
•night, when possible. THE SUN. i
This week’s bill at the Howard
Theatre, Atlanta, has in the cast two |
pretty girls who were born in Hart- '
well. Miss Emily Satterfield is a
classical dancer and Miss Valyne
Williams is a star model in the galaxy
of th" Howard Eashion Revue.
Mr. R. E. Cox spent first of the
week in Atlanta on business.
—o—
Entertain* At Dinner.
Miss Winnie Mae Adams enter- I
tained at a dinner party, Saturday
evening, April 4, at her home in .
Royston. The following guests were
present: Misses Ida McGukin, Olivia
Bolton,.Sallie Fannie Daniel, Mildred
Johnson, Mary Whitmire, Lou Reeta
Barton and Lil Johnson.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Denver I
Brown O’Barr, of Reed Creek, a boy, i
April 6, 1925. Name Denver Clar
ence O’Barr.
Meibodiat W. M. S. To Meet.
The regular quarterly business
meeting of the W. M. S. will be held
at the church next Tuesday afternoon *
April 14, at 3:30 o’clock.
Reports of work done in all de
partments during the first quarter
will be given and plans for the work
of the second quarter made.
An open discussion on the proposed
plan of unification will be held and ,
.•■very member is urged to be present. ;
—o—
Mr. D. C. Alford was a business .
visitor to Atlanta Wednesday.
Theatre Party.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. J. Cunningham
were 'hosts Tuesday evening at a
• theatre party at The Star compli
,meriting their guests Mr. and Mrs. j
Thos. H. Estes and Mr. and Mrs. L.
W. Porter, of Chicago.
About forty guests were invited,
and after an enjoyable movie pro
gram went to Herndon’s Drug Store
where tempting refreshments were
served.
Assisting Mr. and Mrs. Cunning
ham were Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Estes.
FOR SALE OR TRADE—One ■
second-hand TRACTOR in good con
dition. See W. E. HOLLAND, Sat- i
terfield Stable Bldg., Hartwell, Ga I
SCRATCH PADS—Good site, pad- ■
ded on end, 2 for sc, or 5 for 10c
at SUN OFFICE.
“HIGH YELLOW”
—AND
“JACK GRAVELY’’
TOBACCO
MADE OF
Henry County, Virginia
High-Grade Tobacco
Mild, Sweet and Ple»»ant. Buy a Plug From—
STANLY J. BROWN
HARTWELL. GA.
And Get A Free Sample
SUN RAYS
WOMAN’S CLUB
DOES FINE WORK
The Hartwell Woman’s Club is
completing what is probably the most
profitable year's work in the history
of the club up
A number of enthusiastic new
members have been added during
the year. Our club has all the re
quired standing committees, all of
which have been active along their
respective lines of duty.
We have met ail our pledge.- and
have contributed to other causes, al
so. Our most liberal donations have,
of course, been to Tallulah Falls
School, having sent during the year
the amount vs $135 to be applied
to the various calls there.
By the end of the club year we
shall have completed payment on the
Joel McMullan Scholarship Fund and
shall thereby be able to send a Hart
county boy to the ('allege of Agri
culture in the Fall,
A committee from the club, assist
ed personally and financially, in
putting on a clinic for the free ex
amination of babies during the coun
ty fair. The doctors and dentists
of the town and county gave their
services to this work.
The county demonstrator. Miss
Anna McLanahan, is an honorary
member of the club and we con
tributed toward the expenses of a
trip to Chicago in the interest of
her work.
The Iwmt economics committee
was instrumental in having a two
week's cooking class for the women
and girls of our mil) village. The
class was under the supervision of
Miss McLanahan and Miss Ina Gaines.
The club sent a generous Christ
mas check to the Near East Relief
Fund, has made a donation to the
public school library and has answer
■ ed various calls during the year.
Our monthly literary programs
have followed the attractive year
! books which were arranged by the
program committee at the first of the
year.
We are looking forward to the
coming of the Eighth District Fed
i eration meeting in May, the Hart
well Woman’s Club and the Brenau
I Club being joint hostesses to this
i gathering of brilliant and capable
i women.
It gives us great pleasure to claim
as our own members the president
of the Eighth District Federation,
Mrs. W. L. Hodges; corresponding
secretary of the district, Mrs. A. C.
Skelton; Mrs. J. Lloyd Teasley, dis
trict chairman of Child Welfare, and
Mrs. R. E. Matheson, district chair
man of Education.
Mrs. J. H. Barton is visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. T.
Pursley, in Griffin.
o
There are few divorces in homes
I where there is jelly on the piano
keys and a cookie jar on the side-
I board.— Baltimore Evening Sun.
—= miu . C
Enough soap is made by the Near
I East Relief Orphanage of Alexand
' raapl in Armenia to bathe their 12,-
i 006 orphans and still have some for
; sale.
A good place to get your spring
outfit-will be the Brenau Rummage
Sale. Meet me there!
■ |i i. ii in*
FOR SALE OR TRADE—One
I seebnd-hSnd TRACTOR in good con
dition. See W. E. HOLLAND, Sat
terfield Sfable Bldg., Hartwell, Ga.
Just received another large ship
ment Typewriter Ribbons, Carbon
Paper and special Tracing Carbon
for embroidery work at THE SUN
OFFICE.
FOR SALE—ONE REMING
TON NO. 10 TYPEWRITER.
GOOD CONDITION.
... ;
J. A W BROWN
THE HARTWELL SUH, HARTWELL, GA., APRIL 10, 1925
Here’s Occasion When
It Really Was Cold
A Connecticut correspondent write:-
us: Reading in the Companion recent
ly of a Vermonter who invented a fly
ing machine with which he flew from
the top of a high mountain and landed
on a rock with such force that he
drove his feet into the ledge clear up
to his hips and again a little later of
a Westerner who sawed a sleeping
gray squirrel in two one winter's day
without waking him reminds me of a
story told by my grandfather. He
lived In a very bleak corner of Con
necticut in the early days when fire
places were the only means of heat
ing. it seemed impossible for him to
warm the house. At last he became
desperate, and, going Into the cellar
where there was a large fireplace, he
packed it full with several cords of
good hard wood, set it all afire and
ihen went upstairs to bed.
The next morning he got up early,
hoplug to find the house warm, but
the rooms were as cold as ever; so he
went out of doors to see If smoke were
coming out of the chimney. To his
amazement he saw the flames standing
up out of the chimney four or five feet
high, frozen solid!—Youth’s Com
panion.
Twain Had Weakness
for Southern Cooking
Mark Twain, io his Autobiography,
pays tribute to Southern dishes, such
as, for instance, corn bread, hot bis
cuits, wheat bread and fried chicken.
“These things," he says, “have never
been properly cooked in the North—
in fact, no one there Is able to Team
the art, so far as my experience goes.
The North thinks it knows how to
make corn bread, but this is mere
superstition. Perhaps no bread in the
world Is quite so good as Southern
corn bread and perhaps no bread in
the world is quite so Itad as the North
ern Imitation of ft. The North seldom
tries to fry chicken, and this is well;
the art cannot be learned north of the
line of Mason and Dixon, nor any
where In Europe. This is not hearsay;
It is experience that Is speaking. lu
Europe is It imagined that the custom
of serving various kinds of bread blaz
ing hot is ‘American,’ but that Is too
hroad a spread; It Is custom in the
South, but la much less than that in
the North.”
Wet Shoes
If you are caught in a rain and get
your shoes wet do something to coun
teract the possible effects If you can
not get home to change your footwear. |
Business people who are caught this
way know bow uncomfortable it is to
go around In damp shoes and many of
them know something about the evil
effects that often result.
It Is a simple matter to lay a few
blotters on top of each other and
stand on them a few minutes. You
will be surprised how much dampness
the blotters will absorb. Even If you
are on a shopping tour you can pur
chase blotters and take this precau
tion.
If the shoes have become very wet
or thoroughly soaked, place a blotter
between the stocking and shoe for a
few minutes. This Is a safety-first
suggestion that may avert a cold or
more serious illness,
*Association Test”
It was resolved In the Continental
congress, March 4, 1776, and the re
solve approved by the committee of
safety at Exeter, April 12, that al!
males above twenty-one years of age
(lunatics, Idiots and negroes excepted)
should be asked to sign the Associa
tion test, whose text was as follows:
“We, the subscribers, do solemnly en
gage and promise that we will, to the
utmost of our power, at the risk of
our lives and fortunes, with arms, op
pose the hostile proceedings of the
British fleets and armies against the
United States colonies.’’
The Eye Appeal
One of the chief differences between
such an art as Homer’s and such an
art as Dante's or Milton’s is that Ho
i mer never thinks of any appeal but
■through the ear; whereas Dante and
Milton both know their verses will
meet with eyes as well as ears Their
art Is certainly not greater than Ho
mer's, but it has finer modulations o’
I significance. The thing Is. that Dante
i and Milton, like every other printed or
| written poet, take advantage of the
I eye-appeal without losing the ear-ap
' peal.—Lascelles Abercrombie.
Use for Old Newspapers
Merchants In the countries of the
Far East depend wholly on the supply
of discarded American newspapers as
wrappers for purchases in their shops.
Hundreds of tons of whole and clean
newspapers are being shipped monthly
to the Far East from Atlantic coast
ports. This business formerly fell al
most exclusively to Pacific coast deal
ers, but with the outbreak of the World
war the Eastern firms began purchas
ing the newspapers from Junkmen for
foreign shipment.
Strength of Beetles
Scientific observations of the beetle
show It has tremendous power. So far
this power has been set at 112 times
its own weight. A captive beetle was
placed under a large milk bottle made
from heavy glass. In a short time ti:e
beetle w as pushing the bottle ahead of
It at a steady and good pace. Another
beetle was made to climb an incline of
6 degrees dragging a weight equal to
125 grains. The weight was attached
to Its leg by a silk thread.
THE HOME
DEPARTMENT
MISS FRANCIS A M’LANAHAN
V - .J
Meetings for Nutrition and Club
Girls Program i= in full sway.
Hart county will do her part to
make the campaign a success.
Let’s go! Hart county with 100
per cent Girls Clubs.
The Sun Honor Roll
W. H. Mason, Floydada, Tex.
C. W. Mason. Waldron, Ark.
H. A. Mason, Decatur, Tex.
Hon. T. S. Mason, City.
J. S. McCurley. Hartwell 3.
M. W. Kav, Hartwell 4.
J. T. Baker, Hartwell 4.
Rev. J. D. Matheson, Coeburn, Va.
Mrs. F. L. Reed, Lincolnton.
B. L. Reed, Hartwell.
Henry Crow. Hartwell 2.
Floyd Banks, Hartwell 1.
Mrs. Mary Teasley, Elberton.
L. W. Stovall, Hartwell 4.
J. M. Carlton, City.
Jim Sherard, City.
M. E. Adams, Greenville, S. C.
Martin Anthony, Lavonia.
J. H. Crittendon, Hartwell 2.
W. H. Isom, Hartwell 5.
Asa Brown, Lavonia.
D. P. Johnson, Atlanta.
Jim Reed, Bowersville.
J. B. Weaver, Hartwell 1.
Cromer McCurley, Hartwell 2.
Miss Kate Blalock. Atlanta.
J. B. Boleman, Hartwell 5.
G. G. Skelton, Hartwell 3.
Geo. J. Page, City.
Mrs. Ida Tate, City.
J. J. Locke, City.
McAlpin Thornton. City.
R. L. Ayers, City.
W. H. Neese, Hartwell 4.
L. B. Carlton, City.
“Sit on the Woolsack”
This expression signifies "To be lord l
chancellor of England.’’ The lord
chancellor, presiding officer of the
house of lords, occupies a seat on a
cushion stuffed with wool. It is a
large square bag of wool, without
back or arms, and covered with red
cloth. In Queen Elizabeth’s reign, an
act was passed to prevent the expor
tation of wool from England and en
courage woolen manufacture. In or
der that this source of the national
wealth should be kept constantly in
mind, wool sacks were placed in the
house of lords, where the judges sat.
Sheriff’* Sale
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold before the Court
house door in Hartwell, Georgia, on
the first Tuesday in May, 1925, with
in the legal hours of sale the follow
ing property, to-wit:
All that one half undivided interest
in and to a certain house and lot in
Hartwell, Georgia, in the section
known as Rome, said lot containing
one half acre more or less, and being
fully described ;r. Deed Book 31 in
office of Clerk of Superior Court.
Said property levied on as the
property of John Anderson to satis
fy an execution issued from the J. P.
Court of the 1112th Dist., G. 3L,
Hart County in favor of G. A. Hailey
and transferred to E. C. Moorhead.
This Bth day of April, 1925.
A. B. BROWN,
Sheriff Hart County, Ga.
BASEBALL GO L F T ENNIS
SKATING FISHING
Ji
Every boy should play Base Ball. There is no game so scientific and a greater
muscle and brain builder. It develops the mind as well as the eye; makes him quigk to
see the fine points of the business game.
We carry a full line of Ball Uniform?, Bats, Shoes. Stockings. Golf Sticks. Balls, Ten
nis Rackets. Balls. Skates, Gloves. Masks, Mits. Fishing Tackle. Hooks, Trout Line, Seines.
Sinkers, etc.
Everything for all Sports. y
V, TLX HARDWARE &
FURNITURE CO.
HARTAAELL, GA. DEPOT ST.
Announcement
The firm of C. L. JOHNSON & CO., having disposed of
their stock of groceries to Mr. L. A. FORTSON, we wish to
take this method of thanking each and everyone who has
traded with us at any time during our stay in this field.
We wish, also, to urge a continuance of your splendid
patronage under the new ownership, and bespeak for Mr.
Fortson the patronage of new customers over the town and
county.
C. L. JOHNSON & CO..
By C. LAFE JOHNSON.
We wish to extend the people of Hartwell and Hart
county a cordial invitation to call in and see us.
We are here to serve you with a complete line of both'
Fancy and Heavy Groceries at prices consistent with quality
products.
Your patronage is solicted.
Prompt delivery within the city limits.
Fortson Gro. Store
L. A. FORTSON, Propr.
TELEPHONE 154 Next to BAKERY
HARTWELL. GEORGIA
Notice
Notice is hereby given that the
Hartwell Railway Company has made
application to the Georgia Public
Service Commission for authority to
discontinue its train No. 4 from
Bowersville to Hartwell and to in
augurate new train service to leave
Hartwell 6:30 A. M., arrive Bowers
ville 7:05 A. M. Leave Bowersville
71:25 A. M., arrive Hartwell 8:00 A.
M. Leave Bowersville 3:45 P. M.,
arrive Hartwell 4:20 P. M.
The schedules of trains Nos. 1, 2
and 3 are to remain as at present.
This petition will be heard by the
Georgia Public Service Commission
at meeting beginning at 10 o’clock
A. M. April 14th, 1925 at the offices
of the Commission in the State
Capitol, Atlanta. All parties desir
ing to be heard in connection with
this mauer should communicate with
the Commission on or before the date
above named.
This notice is given in accordance
with the requirements of the Georgia
Public Service Commission.
HARTWELL RAILWAY CO.,
J. B. JONES, Superintendent.
Hailey A’ickery Alex Vickery
A MODERN CAFE
We have one of the most mod-<
ern Cases in this section of
Georgia,—everything is electri
cally equipped.
Your orders are filled with the
choicest of foods obtainable,
served promptly seasoned by
experts,—and our prices are
reasonable.
Eat with us when you want a
good meal.
HAILEY’S CAFE
On the Square Look for Sign
Hartwell, Ga.