Newspaper Page Text
MRS. LEON MORRIS MRS. LOUIE L. MORRIS
THE NEW RABUN
MOUNTAIN CITY, GA.
ON MAIN STATE HIGHWAY AND THE TALULLAH FALLS
RAILWAY FROM CORNELIA, GA., TO FRANKLIN, N. C.
NOW OPEN
FISHING - HUNTING - SWIMMING - HIKING
MOUNTAIN CLIMBING - AUTOING - GOOD ROADS
BEAUTIFUL SCENERY - PURE WATER - HOMELIKE
—ALTITUDE HIGHER THAN ASHEVILLE—
I ■■■■ m w ■
I 1
: WE SELL :
I I
I r ‘ . *1
> 1
i - 1
■ I
i GENUINE REPAIRS =
I * I
' BSfeSF® I
i • ;
ORDER WHAT YOU NEED-NOW !
I
I
I
We have genuine IHC repairs in stock, ■
which means better service to you ,
than if we merely took orders for them ’
and had to send to distant points to get ;
them. But your assurance of safety- i
first service is not to wait too long be- ]
fore ordering repairs. * i
i
No machine can be in need of repair- ]
ing and be in good running order at i
the same time. Some day you may j
need that machine and if it is not rea- ■
dy, there is a big scramble for repairs. J
Keep your McCormick - Deering ma- »
chines up to their maximum efficiency J
by using only genuine IHC repairs.
W. E. HOLLAND i
I
i Satterfield Building Hartwell, Georgia i
i
KUB -B B B B' B B ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I' —*'
Choose one of these tires
according to your needs
HERE are two tires that give the USCO Cord the high-value
car owner a chance to choose medium price tire. A full money's
intelligently, according to his re* worth of dependable service and
quirements. cash value.
U.S. Royal Cord—the extra ser- Both made by the U. S. Rubber
vice tire. Built of Latex-Treated Company and carrying the trade-
Web Cord and the standard of mark of their makers as a warranty
tire value today. of quality.
United States Tires
are Good Tires
USCO S ‘ Royal
Cord Cord
1 St y Sr"*- Xituwjy&k In all sizes
Ind>rit.d»r. R„y»| CorJ
MWjflr low pressure
nJ fjMF / IW «y Balloons for
‘ 20, 21 and 22
ke ci io ißwll/flj r_jl \ W eRw. W inch rims, and
straight side. , .»* 7* fg_ ff \B 1 Royal Cord
W J il?SI Balloon-Type
’'Ll! Im
tffcy 111
‘ Buy U. . Tires from
““ PAGE FILLING STATION
H. H. PAGE, Propr. Phone 236 HARTWELL, GA.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., MAY 15,1925
MT. OLIVET
• »**♦*•*»»
Mr. Amos Holcomb is on the sick
| list .
Effie G. Crump spent Saturday
! with Velma Sanders.
Miss Dollie Sanders, of Martha
Berry, is spending the vacation with
i homefolks.
Misses Grace and Rubye Cleveland
| spent Saturday night with their sis
i ter, Mrs. Susie Holcomb.
Asben Herring continues very ill
at this writing.
Mr. Edgar Sanders, of Anderson,
S. C., is visiting relatives and friends
in this community.
Miss Addie Mae Motes visited Miss
Lucile Chitwood Sunday.
J. C. Cleveland is improving, we
1 are glad to learn.
Mr. Epp Vickery and children and
Mr. J. N. Vickery and daughter,
Grace, visited in the home of Mr. J.
1 L. Bright Sunday.
Miss Cleo Sanders, of Flat Shoals,
| was the attractive guest of Misses
Dollie and Lovice Sanders Sunday.
Mesdames Lee Sanders and chil
;dren and Cleo Sanders spent Thurs
day afternoon with Mrs. J. L. Bright.
An interesting ball game was play-
I ed here Saturday afternoon between
Mt. Olivet and Hartwell Mill boys,
the score being 10 to 1 in favor of
Mt. Olivet.
Misses Eunice and Lois Bright
spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs.
Lessie Sanders.
Mrs. Mary Sanders and daughter,
Dollie, spent Friday evening with
Mrs. J. L. Herring.
Mothers Day was observed here
Sunday. It was sad, indeed, to see
so many white roses.
Due to the singing convention at
Cross Roads Sunday there wil be no
Sunday school, but Sunday, 24th, is
the regular preaching day. The pub
lic is cordially invited.
BROWN EYES.
o
CROSS ROADS CHURCH
Cross Roads W. M. U., Ayers Cir
cle No. 1, met with Mrs. D. M. Shiflet
May 10th and carried out the follow
ing program:
Song—Crown Him Lord of All.
Prayer.
Bible Reading—by the President.
The School of Jesus—Mrs. D. M.
Shiflet.
The Shadow of Things to Come —
Miss Mollie Williams.
Shall the Seminary Live or Die—
L. E. Shiflet.
We Sow What the Men of the Fu
ture Shall Gather—Mrs. J. F. Wil
liams.
What the Seminary Stands For—
Mrs. Alphus Rice.
Prayer in union, Psalm 119:33-40.
o
**********
NEW HARMONY
• ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦
Health of this community is very
I good at present.
Everybody looking forward to the
| singing convention at Cross Roads
1 Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John White, of
Townville, S. C., spent last week
end with the former’s bother, Mrs.
Bytha White.
Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Fleming and
I Mrs. M. J. Isom visited relatives in
Anderson, S. C., Saturday.
Mrs. Sam Walters and baby, of
| Hickory, N. C., are visiting her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Boleman.
Mrs. M. J. Isom and children spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
R. T. Mofris, of Cross Roads.
Those visiting Mrs. W. C. Cox
Thursday afternoon were Mrs. S. H.
I Fleming, Mrs. J. S. Boleman and
Mrs. Boyd Boleman.
' Mrs. Curtis Bailey and son, R. L.,
I spent Sunday with Mrs. W. C. Cox.
. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bailey visited
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fleming Sun-
I day.
i o
It takes from 300 to 600 pounds
I of water passing through plants to
I produce a single pound of dry mat-
**********
VIOLA
On account of the singing conven
tion next Saturday, Sunday school
will be at 4 o’clock instead of 2:30.
Mrs. Milford Shirley and little
son, Hugh, are visiting relatives in
Charlotte, N .C., at this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Thomas visited
relatives near Shoal Creek recently.
Those to spend the week-end with
Misses Lillie and Leona Copeland
were Mildred and Mary Adams and
Nellie Lankford. i
Mrs. Tommie Franks is visitnig at
the home of Mr. J. B. Tyler and
Henry Mitchell for several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haygood were
week-end • guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Hewin and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Mauldin
spent Saturday night with Mrs. Su
sie Black.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Owens and
children spent Saturday night and
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ham Bart
lett.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitt Foster and
daughter spent the week-end with
relatives near Bowersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fambrough
and daughter, of Elberton, Mrs. Joe
Nixon, of Atlanta, and Mrs. Philip
Sanders, of Bowman, were guests of
Mr». S. T. Crawford recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Reece Holmes spent
the week-end with the latter’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Holden Gurley vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Black one
day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ben Shirley
dined Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. R. L. B. Shirley.
Raymond Lankford visited his
brother, Curtis Lankford, Sunday.
Mr. George Bailey died Friday at
the home of his daughter, Mrs. Bill
Jordan. He was buried Saturday at
Flat Shoals.
The singing at Mr. Hayden Smith’s
Sunday night was enjoyed by all
present.
Mr. Hubert Smith and mother
and baby visited Mr. and Mrs. Wal
lace Franks Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Eura King and Mrs.
Lev King were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Davis, near Pleasant Hill, Sun
day.
Misses Lillie Copeland and Clarice
Reed spent Thursday night with Mrs.
Charlie Mouchet.
CARD OF THANKS
W’e wish to thank all of our
friends and neighbors for their kind
ness and sympathy to us during the
illness of our beloved wife and moth
er. Also the doctors and nurse,
G. T. Harper, J. I. Jenkins and Miss
Ida Dickerson. May each and ev
ery one be rewarded is our prayer.
Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Lunsford
and Children.
o
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
All obituaries and memorial 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 publish the
account of the death of all persons in
this county and section, and ask our
correspondents to send them in as
soon as they occur, but all obituaries
and memorials and cards of thanks
must be paid for at the rate above
mentioned.
THE HARTWELL SUN.
■iMittiaiiiaiiiiaiiiißiiiißmiiiißiiiiaiiiißiiißiiiiHiii
i J Call:
36 I
! —FOR— *
: QUALITY ■
: -AHO- I
: SERVICE :
n f
■ ■
: Adams :
J -and— J
•Carlton :
* GROCE RSI
■■B■BS ■ B B B f
■■■■■■■MBBHBBBHHMHB
THE KIMBALL HOUSE
ATLANTA
The Home of Georgia People
400 Rboms of Solid Comfort
The House of Courtesy
Ed Jacobs & Lige Maynard,
Prop’s.
Free Garage Service
Also Terminal Hotel, Macon.
H. L. Kenmore R. F. Harris
KENMORE’S
Barber Shop
Prompt Service * Sanitary Shop
Special Attention Ladies’ and
Children's Work
»»»*•«•**’
• OAK BOWER
**********
Several from here attended the W.
M. S. rally at Milltown Sunday af
ternoon and reported a nice time.
Mr. and Mrs. Haskel Hembree are
j receiving congratulations upon the
arrival of a fine girl, born Thursday,
I May 7th. Name: Maryland Frances.
Miss Dollie Mae Elrod was the
guest Saturday night of Miss Louise
Partain.
Mrs. T. M. Bailey spent Saturday
afternoon with Mrs. Hembree.
Miss Carrie Dooley was the guest
of Miss Naomi Campbell Sunday.
Mrs. Frank Winn has been spend
ing a few days with her mother, Mrs.
Elrod. .
Several from here enjoyed the
two nights’ program at Sardis last
Mr. and Mrs. James McGill were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. K. H.
Campbell.
Mrs. Walter Ayers, of Atlanta, has
returned from a visit to her uncle,
Mr. C. H. Temples.
Litle Miss Opal Partain, of Mount
Dora, Fla., has returned home from
a visit to her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. A. Partain.
Let everybody come out to Sun
day school and have a good one. We
Jiad something over a hundred Sun
day. Sunday school at 3 o’clock.
o
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
’ ' VERNON
**********
Health of this community is very
good.
Misses Avis and Vera Cole spent
last Thursday night and Friday with
Miss Sallie Freeman.
Mrs. San Walters and baby, of
Hickory, N. C., are visiting her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Boleman.
Mr. and Mrs. John White and chil
dren spent Saturday night and Sun
day with Mrs. Bytha White.
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Isom and
son, Edgar, spent Saturday night and
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James
Massey.
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Osborne Sunday were Mrs. W. H.
Isom and children and Mr. John Isom
and Miss Sallie Isom.
Miss Clevie and Jessie Walters
visited Mrs. Julian Isom last Tues
day night.
Mrs. Bart Fleming and Mrs. Bob
Byrum visited Mrs. W. L. Osborne ]
last Wednesday evening.
Miss Effie Welborne visited Miss
Lillie Isom last Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Otto Shultz and Mrs. Wai-1
lace Fleming spent last Friday even
ing with Mrs. J. D. Byrum.
Miss Sallie Isom visited Mrs. By
tha White one evening last week.
Mrs. W. H. Isom and children and
Mrs. M. J. Isom and children visited
Mrs. P. J. Isom Monday afternoon.
MAY BEE.
o
In The Sun’s Mail
Bag
Something is badly wrong with
our system of taxation when one man
that owns less than two per cent of
the jewelry of the county is paying
thirty per cent of all the taxes that
are being t paid by the whole county
on jewelry.
Taxation should be discussed free
ly and fairly until our people will
demand something that is fair.
We were talking with a substan
tial financier just a few deys ago
about roads and schools. This fel
low owns two automobiles, a good
farm and has plenty of everything
that should make'a farmer feel his
importance.
“The commissioners are not giving
me a square deal, I ,have to ride
through the mud and up steep hills
and it sure is tough on my new
car.”
This particular fellow that com
plains so much about the commis
sioners not doing their duty has got
a lot of property that has never been
taxed. He allows his neighbors to
conscientously return their little bits
of property at a fair valuation and
become burdened with a high rate
and travel over bad roads while he
prefers to put his part of a just tax
in his pocket and grow richer at the
expense of roads and good schools.
If Hart county could go back just
ten years and get a square deal from
every property owner and charge the
same rate that so many of us have
1 had to pay, there would be a better
school in every community, a graded
and top-soiled road in every section
and at least a little paving done up
on the muddy streets of Hartwell,
i One objection to a square deal in
| taxation, “Oh, the state will get a
| part of it.” The tax dodger has a
complete horror for the state and
| our records show that he has a com
! plete horror for the welfare of Hart
i county. A conscientious tax payer
, has never complained about the state
getting a square deal from Hart
county.
To tax all the property of Hart
county or none of it is a righteous
act. To tax half of it at high rate
and leave thirty-two per cent of it
not taxed at all is cruelty to ani
mals and hard on schools and roads.
The most progressive thing in Hart
county is to begin now to tax all the
property and relieve those that have
been unduly burdened.
CITIZEN.
t o
If a good forty-acre farm in Amer
ica were as highly populated as some
farms of China, it would support 240
j persons, 24 donkeys, and 24 pigs,
according to the late Dr. F. H. King.
o
The sale of patent medicines fit
the United States last vear exceeded
$160,000,000.
o
The most distant object known to
science is the Great Nebula of An
dromeda, which is some 6.000,000,-
000,000,000,000 miles away.
o
Nearly 32.000.000 copies of daily
papers are printed for every week
| day in the year.
The best stories *
are never
written
HOW many times have you
said, “This would make a
wonderful short story”? But you
didn’t write it, and the inspira
tion was soon forgotten.
“Many a story banged off hot on
my Corona in a front-line dugout
would never have been written if
I had waited to reach a spot of
greater convenience.” Louis R.
Freeman, War Correspondent, Explorer,
Traveler*
♦ * * *
The advantage of owning a Portable
Corona is that you can write your best
thoughts hs they come to you. any
where, any time —and that’s the secret of
successful writing I The newest Corona
Model Four) has the standard keyboard
used in offices everywhere.
Corona Four costs only S6O. Easy
terms if deswed. Call or phone for
demonstration.
The McGregor Co.
Office Outfitters
§ Athens, Ga.
CoroNA.
TWICE IN THIS ,
WOMAN’S LIFE
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound Helped Her
from Sickness to Health
Ellensburg, Washington.
was first coming into womanhood I suf-
' "■■[ sered terribly every
month. My mother
fdid everything she
k could think of, so she
Ifefe. took me to several
HI doctorsand they only
■r helped me a little.
F Mother was talking
*, to another lady about
my condition and she
told mother of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s
table Compound.’
” x I Mother got me six
bottles and at the end of the first month
I was much better, so I kept on taking
it until I had no more pains. When I
got married and had my first child I was
in terrible pain so that it was impossi
ble for me to do my housework. I
thought of how the Vegetable Compound
had been of so much benefit to me when
I was a girl, so I went to Perier’s Drug-
Store and got six bottles. It sure did
help me and I still take it. lam a w>*£k
woman today and I can’t say too much
about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I will answer any letter that
comes to me to answer about what your
medicine has done for me. ’ ’ Mrs.
William Carver, R. F.D. No. 2, Ellens
burg, Washington.
J. A. White
&
IjU
EAT AND BE MERRY
Savannah, Ga.—“For about two
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.
Then I learned about Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery for st
mach and liver disorders and attff-
I 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 mv food with
enjoyment because it is digesting pro
perly. I would advise every person
who suffers as I did tog; Dr
Pierce’s Golden Medical DiowveFi
a fair trial for it will help .hem just
as it did me.”—J. A. White, 308
Montgomery St. All dealers. Tab
lets or liauid.
Send 10c to Dr . Pierce’s Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial