Newspaper Page Text
The
BULL’S EYE
"Editor and General Manager
WILL ROGERS
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Historical Fact
DID you know that
George Washington,
The adopted Father of our
Country, just before he got
on the Ferry to cross the
Delaware for the Photo
graphing of that now fa
mous Picture, Did you know
that he smoked two sacks
of ‘Bull’ Durham while he
was waiting for the Ferry?
(things were just as late in
his War, as they were in our
last one). Now I have never
heard of this ‘Bull’ Durham
episode before, neither have
I ever heard it denied. So if
it’s never either been affirm
ed or denied, there is no rea
son to disbelieve that it’s
not true. ‘Bull’ Durham
originated in Virginia, and
Washington lived in Vir
ginia, and he was a great
man to patronize home in
dustries. And as Washing
ton was the best man of his
day, and Durham the best
tobacco of its day, there is
no plausible reason to doubt
that these two most excel
lent Institutionsdidn’t read
ily recognize the good in
each other and get together.
SIXTY-FIVE YEARS AGO!
In 1860 a blend of to
bacco was born - Bull’
Durham. On quality
alone it has won recog
nition wherever tobac
co is known. It still
offers the public this —
more flavor, more en
joyment and a lot more
money left at the end
of a week’s smoking.
TWO BAGS for 15 cents
100 cigarettes for 15 cents
‘Bulil
Durham
Guaranteed by
111 Fifth Avenue, New York City
The New York Public Library is
consulted by more than eight thou
sand persons daily.
CORETHROAT
Gargle with warm salt water
then apply over throat; —
VICKS
▼ V apoßub
Qcxr 17 Million Jara U—d Yearly
Benjamin Franklin laid the foun
dation of the present postal system
of the United States.
t
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
Purifies the Blood and
makes the cheeks rosy.eoc
VERNON
«»»»»»»»•»
Health of this community is very
good.
Mrs. W. L. Osborne and son, Way
mon, spent last Tuesday night and
Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Isom, near Air Line.
Mrs. Fred Isom and baby spent
last Thursday evening with her grand
mother.
Mrs. W. L. Osborne spent last Fri
day evening with Mrs. W. H. Isom.
Miss Avis Isom visited Misses Bur
tie and Onell Carnes last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Contrell and
children and Mrs. W. H. Isom and
son, J. V., visited Mr. and Mrs. J.
H. Nation, in White county, Satur
day.
Miss Julia Isom spent last Tuesday
night and Friday with Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Cantrell.
Mrs. Sam Watkins spent last Fri
day with Mrs. Claud Boleman.
Mr. and Mrs. Walt Freeman and
daughter, Sallie, spent last Tuesday
night with Mr. and Mrs. Cullen Free
man, near Vernon.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fleming and
children spent last Wednesday after
noon with Mr. and Mrs. Julian Isom.
A large crowd attended the singing
lat Cross Roads Saturday and Sun
day.
i Miss Jurlee Isom spent Sunday
with Miss Sallie Isom.
Miss Daisy Lee Fleming and Mr.
Oliver Cole married Sunday.
Mrs. Fled Isom and baby spent
Sunday with Mrs. J. Reed.
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Isom and son,
Edgar, spent Saturday night with
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Osborne.
Mr. Waymon Osborne spent Sun
day night with Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Isom.
Mrs. Sam Fleming and mother
spent Saturday evening with Mrs. W.
L. Osborne.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete White spent
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Julian
Isom.
MAY BEE.
o
»»♦»»»»»••
DUNCAN
Several of the farmers around here
are having to plant over.
Mrs. Fred White and Mrs. Grady
Duncan were in Canon Friday after
noon shopping.
Little Master Ervin Johnson had
the misfortune of getting his arm
broken Thursday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Hymer Cheek and
children spent Saturday and Sunday
in Easley, S. C., with relatives.
Mrs. J. R. Johnson and Mrs. Lu
ther Johnson spent Friday afternoon
with Mrs. Tommie Hunnicutt.
Mrs. Clayton Floyd and children
are spending a few days with Mrs.
Fred Ray, near Dewy Rose, who is
very sick.
Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Floyd and chil
dren spent Thursday with Mr. and
Mrs. Hymer Cheek.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Allen spent
Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Johnson.
Rev. O. E. Smith and son, of El
berton, took dinner with Mr. and
Mrs. Kinzy Johnson recently.
Several from around here attend
ed the singing convention at Cross
Roads Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Blackwell and
children and Miss Zelma Watkins, of
Anderson, S. C., spent Sunday with
Mrs. Luther and Mrs. Kinzy John
son.
Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Floyd and chil
dren, Mrs. Tom Allen spent Sunday
afternoon with Mrs. Fred Ray.
Miss Ruby Floyd is spending sev
eral days with her sister, Mrs. Fred
Ray, near Dewy Rose.
Mrs. Fred Ray has a big girl at
her house.
o
OAK BOWER CHURCH
Our W. M. U. will meet at the
church Saturday afternoon, May 23,
at 3 o’clock, and carry out the fol
lowing program:
Subject: Southern Baptist Theo
logical Seminary.
Hymn.
Devotional —Mrs. C. H. Temples.
The School of Jesus—Ola Dyar.
Shall the Seminary Live or Die? —
Mrs. Will Ashworth.
The Removal of the Seminary to
Louisville —Mrs. Johnnie Myers.
Dr. John A. Broadus—Mollie
Eaves.
Hymn.
We Sow What the Men of the Fu
ture Shall Gather—Mrs. J. S. Camp
bell.
What the Seminary Stands For—
Mrs. J. W. McGill.
The Dream City—Naomi Campbell.
Personal Service period.
Close with The Lord’s Prayer.
Let every member be present and
bring some one with you and try to
make our meetings more interesting
each month. Visitors always wel
come.
NAOMI CAMPBELL.
o
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
AIR LINE
~«*»•»»»»
The Hart County Singing Conven
tion at Cross Roads last Sunday was
well attended and enjoyed by all.
The Air Line Thrift Club and
their families enjoyed a picnic last
Tuesday afternoon in Mr. A. D.
Moorhead’s pasture. All reported a
delightful time.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Heaton, of
Augusta, are visiting relatives in this
community.
Mrs. J. W. Fowler, of near Hart
well, visited her sister, Mrs. J. B.
Bray, for several days last week.
Miss Dollie Adams spent Saturday
night with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bray.
. Mrs. J. H. Clark visited Mrs. Waco
Bowers, of Bethany, last Wednesday
afternoon.
Dorothy Sue, little daughter of Mr.
and Mrs.’ Ross Whitworth, is quite
sick. All hope she will soon recover.
Miss Nannie Clarke and little sis
ters, Margaret and Doris, spent Tues
day with relatives in Bowersville.
o
Air plane travel at a cent a mile
is the accomplishment of a French
flier.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., MAY 22, 1925
&
Vfc.ik i**';
Boys and girls, lathers and moth
ers, music lovers, in fact the whole
town, will give a rousing royal wel
come to Shadwell’s Scout Band on
the day they come to play at our
Chautauqua. Twenty-two snappy
Scouts will be our guests for the day.
These boys are the more experienced
I
Business Directory
GARLAND C. HAYES
Attorney-At-Law
HARTWELL, GA.
M. M. PARKS
DENTAL SURGEON
HARTWELL, GA.
Office Over First National Bank
J. H. & EMMETT SKELTON
ATTORNEYS
Skelton Building
Hartwell, Georgia
T. S. MASON
ATTORNEY
First National Bank Building
Hartwell, Georgia
Even busy men are never too
busy to stop and look at a dog
fight.
H
I
1
!
A man could earn several dollars
with the energy he generates in try
ing to borrow one.
HOW’S THIS?
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE will I
do what we claim for it—rid your system
of Catarrh or Deafness caused by
Catarrh. _
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con
sists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves the catarrhal inflammation, and 1
the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which ,
acts through the Blood on the Mucous
Surfaces, thus assisting to restore nor- .
mal conditions.
Sold by druggists for over 40 Years.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Tolcdoi O.
In the past 3,000 years fifteen na
tions have held Sicily. j
NO FEAR OF EVIL resulting from
change of diet, water or climate,
concerns those tvho take on the short
trip, summer vacation or long journey,
CHAMBERLAIN’S
COLIC and DIARRHOEA
REMEDY
Ready for emergency - night or day.
The word “sheik” in Arabic means
“an old man.” _
WEB
after every meal ‘
Parents - encourage the
children to cart for their teeth/
Give them Wrigley’®.
It removes food particles
from the teeth. Strengthens
the gums Combats acid
mouth.
Refreshing and beneficial!
STALED f k
TIGHT / A
RIGHT 11 .4 j||l
rtaooß
SHADWELL’S SCOUT BAND
members of one of the finest Boy
Seout band s in the country. On a
concert trip into Washington they
substituted in a program for the
celebrated Washington Marine Band.
Years of study bus given them fine
individual musicianship, and en
thusiastic regular rehearsals has
BM BBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBBaBBBBB g
i'GREETINGSi
■ tt
■ ■
■ EIGHTH DISTRICT FEDERATION ■
■ OF WOMEN’S CLUBS "
i ■
•
■ ■
P The Convenience, Courtesy and Facil- ■
ities of These Modern Filling
Stations Are Yours to
■ Command. *
■ ■
: Brown's Filling Stations ;
NO. I—ATHENS & HOWELL STS. NO. 2—FRANKLIN ST. J
■ TEXACO PRODUCTS "
1 ■
■ HARTWELL, GA. ACCESSORIES P
■ "
tl
■ ■ ■■■■■■■ -■■■■■■■ BBBBBBBBBB
■ BMMM ■ ■
■ HIGH UP IN THE •
: SOUTHERN =
: APPALACHIAN =
: MOUNTAINS:
I ’ "
; -or- ;
■ ■
■ WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
* EASTERN TENNESSEE and
Land of the Sky B
* Are Many Good Places to *
® SPEND YOUR SUMMER VACATION »
I S
■ ■
B Reduced Summer Fares to All B
■ Summer Tourist Resorts ■
I I
a Tiepets on Sale Daily B
■ Beginning May 15th ■
■ Good Until October 31st, 1925 ®
: :
B WRITE FOR SI MMER VACATION FOLDER ■
■ ■
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■ B
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B Consult Ticget Agent ■
I SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM. I
a B B ■ ■ ■ ■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ Km 'ia'ia-M.a- B B B B
VANNA ;
Miss Ruby Oglesby spent the night
with Miss Jewell Ginn.
The young folks gave Misses Ruby
and Fay McGarity a surprise party
Saturday night.
Several from here attended the
singing at Cross Roads Sunday and
reported good singing.
Mr. Worley Harris and Horace
made them a wonderful playing band
They play big heavy classics, with in
terestlng lighter numbers and song
as encores, and a whole lot of novel
ties and surprises. This Is tnori
than a fine band program. Much 0!
the program is spectacular appealing
to the eye. So go early.
i Johnson, of Atlanta, are spending
i the week with Mr. and Mrs. George
i Harris.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Prather and fam
ily visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim McCol
lum, near Goldmine, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Strickland’an
nounce the birth of a boy Monday,
May 18, 1925.
Mrs. Tom Strickland, of Royston,
I is visiting her son, Mr. Guy Strick
land, this week.
HELPED THROUGH
CHANGE OF LIFE
Took Lydia EPinkham’s Veg
etable Compound during
This Critical Time—
Benefited Greatly
Baltimore, Maryland. ”! took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comi>ound to
—* | help me through the
t Change of Life and
for a broken-down
system. I had been
complaining a long
time and dragging
along had tried other
medicines which did
not help me much. I
read in the news
papers of the Vege
table Compound and
11 * 1 I felt better. 1 did
not stop with one bottle, but took it
through the whole critical time and am
now practically a well woman. I have
two daughters whose health was very
bad before they married and I was wor
ried about them. I got the Vegetable
Compound for them and it helped them,
and after they married it also helped
them in bearing their babies. This ia
a great and good medicine for all com
plaints of women, and I recommend it to
all.”—Mrs. L. Gingrich, 1375 N. Gil
mor St, Baltimore, Maryland.
The Vegetable Compound is a depend
able medicine for women of middle age.
Let it relieve you oi nervousness, that
feeling of strain and those annoying hot
flashes so common at this time.
Most men would rather lose $lO
on a horse race than a nickel through
a hole in a pocket.
0
Rats fed on hothouse-grown toma
toes will develop scurvy while those
fed on tomatoes grown outside in
direct sunlight do not.
qn cd cE23nnE!n3 rfi ■"*' l* 1 . i r «c *
CJ QZ3 tZEECSED CZE3ECZ3 CDZZZSZaffIU EDS I* Cl
I So Weak I
Couldn’t Stand I
“My wife'll health broke ■■
down and for years she was Ml
just a physical wreck,” says M|
Mr. Thomas Glynn, of Gib- ■II
son. La. "We did everything MU
we knew, yet she seemed to flB
get worse and worse. She ||w
was so weak till she couldn’t njl
stand, and had to be carried IIM
like a baby. It looked like M
nothing would save her that DW
B had been done.
CARDUII
5 For Female Troubles !!
"I began looking around. I H
H knew that Cardul wkh for wo- 118
■ men. I decided to try It for Hh
U her as all else had failed. ■■
I She couldn’t eat, she couldn't Wfl
sleep, and I was desperate. | H
“After taking a few dosca 111
of Cardul, we were so glad Im
to note that she wanted some- RH
thing to eat, and with each H
bit of nourishment, and each L
day's doses of Cardul, she B
grew stronger and got up out ■
1 of bed. She is now able to ■
0 cook, and stronger than in a I
H long time." 11
1 H Cardul has been In success- [j
JQ ful use for nearly 60 yeara f
In the treatment of many com ■
RE mon female troubles. j
t All e t<*l
g Q nr-i hi iiwimmh qb a ■
® Li FT’l rTL',*''uni'll 31 CZZZmZmDZTS KXZsZQEZnBQ lUIHI 618
.... —.i..—. ~i ... i ii ■"■■■'■in
Some people spend half their time
seeking advice and the other in dodg
ing the consequences thereof.
______ -Q _____
When one woman tells another
about the troubles she has with her
dressmaker, the other woman always
has a tale twice as long to tell in
return.
•/
SIXTY YEARS AGO
a young man who practiced medicine
in I’eunsylvania became famous and
was called in consultation in many
towns and cities because of his success
in the treatment of disease. This was
Dr. Pierce, who finally made up his
mind to place some of bis medicines
before the public, and moving to Buf
falo, N. Y., put up what he called his
"Favorite Prescription” and placed it
with the druggists in every state.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has
long been recognized as a tonic for
diseases j>eculiar to womankind. After '
suffering pain, feeling nervous, dizzy,
weak and dragged-down by weak
nesses of her sex, a woman is quickly
restorer! to health by its use. Thou
sands of women testify that Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription has entirely
eradicated their distressing ailments.
Put up in both fluid and tablet form.
Send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.,
for trial package of tablets. Write for
free confidential medical advice.