The Hartwell sun. (Hartwell, GA.) 1879-current, May 29, 1925, Image 9

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Six Months Ago | I J.H. GASSETT Macon. Ga.—“l feel like an en tirely different man from what I did six months ago, and the credit be longs to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery. I felt sick and mean i all over, every bone in me ached. I had a constant sharp pain in my right side, my food soured on my stomach and caused an unpleasant coating on my tongue, a sick-head ache and occasional giddy spells. I had tried my best to get right but failed, so felt quite discouraged when I first began to take the ‘Discovery’ six months ago. I feel so confident that nothing could have changed a man in my sickly condition to a com paratively well man, but the ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ I am still tak ing it —more as a tonic now and to cleanse mv system of every particle of poison.”—J. H. Gassett, 749 Haw thorne St. Tablets or liquid. Send 10c. for trial pkg. to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. A single ray of sun shining through a rent in the cover—or through an aperture in the roof of a hut—in the Niger River country of Africa, will, in certain seasons, kill the man on whose head it strikes or make him delirious in a few minutes. MRS. FULLER MADE STRONG Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound Helped where Other Medicines Failed Walpole, N. H. —“I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and 1 find it has improved my health wonder fully. For months and months I was not regular and had terrible pains. They & |s|| use( j to affect my ’w s *de 80 I could not work. I read of others being helped by the Vegetable / i WBwPi Compound, so I - \ 1 thought it might ' ——J help me. lam very much better now,strong enough to do , my own housework, and have two dear babies to care for besides. I tried other 1 medicines before taking the Vegetable j Compound, but I was never treated for my troubles. I speak highly of the ( Vegetable Compound to my friends and recommend it to any woman for run down and nervous condition.”—Mrs. T. H. Fuller, Walpole, New Hampshire. Over 200,000 women have so far replied to our question, ‘‘Have you received benefit from taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound?” 98 out of every 100of the replies say, “Yes” and because the Vegetable Com pound has been helping other women it should help you. For sale by druggists everywhere. Gypsies now deal in automobiles, tffis business having replaced horse trading. einußßfi&fiasg ■ Frequent g j Bilious Attacks | "I suffered with severe bill- ous attacks that came on two gp ” or three times each month." gj. ® says Mr. J. P. Nevins, of g Ci Lawrenceburg, Ky. "I would W get nauseated. I would have dizziness and couldn’t work, ggg gg I would take pills until I was gj worn-out with them. I didn’t ga ® seem to get relief. s “A neighbor told me of BLACK-DRAUGHT • Liver Medicine g M and I began Its use. I never g| X* have found so much relief ga WS as It gave me. I would not Mg be without It for anything. It gap seemed to cleanse my whole ga y* svstem and made me feel like Qj new. I would take a few je doses —get rid of the bile and gg have my usual clear head. Ci feel full of pep, and could do S? ip twice the work.” 2= Bilious attacks are “sea- g- O sonal” with many people. Millions have taken Thed- Xr ford's Black-Draught to ward wi off such attacks, and the good H? results they have reported gP 3n should Induce you to try It. gg An p WITH COUNTY AGENT BINGHAM Testing Cows. The farmers of Hart county will ha,ve an opportunity to have their cows tested for tuberculosis the first week in June. Notice will be sent out through the mails, giving the places where cows may be assembled, and the approximate hour and day, so far as such a thing is possible. Every farmer should have his cows tested, and if they have tuber culosis, of course they will be killed. If they do not have tuberculosis, then you will have great satisfaction in knowing that the users of the milk are not subject to chances of having this disease. Cows will be tested wherever 5 are assembled, and there must be five or more, not four or three. See your neighbors, and be sure you have the proper number at your place. The cows will have to be assembled on TWO occasions, one to make the injections, and 72 hours later for taking of temperatures, etc., to de termine if the animal has tubercu losis. The test cannot be made at one assembly. You do not have to have your cows tested, but you do have to agree to have the cow killed if she is infected with tuberculosis. If the infection is slight, then she may be sold for beef. If the infection is too far advanced, then the meat is unfit for food, and the animal will be de stroyed. Poultry Sales. The next regular poultry sale will be Friday. The car will leave Hart well at 10:40, load at Bowersville until 3:00 P. M., and then go on to Toccoa. No stop will be made at Lavonia, because of opposition or lack of support on the part of citi zens there. Prices will be announced in some manner as far as possible, either Wednesday or Thursday. You may phone for prices Thursday night. On deposit of 25c per person, we will mail you a card each time giving any necessary information regarding sales from time to time. This mon ey will pay for addressing, mimeo graphing, postage, etc., so long as it lasts. We believe that the best way for a farmer to receive better prices for his products is through cooperative marketing. This applies to poultry. It is not a theory, but a fact of many years standing. It is no longer an experiment on most commodities. The cooperative sale of poultry is handled different from that of cot ton, or grain, or peaches. The co operative sales being staged now are just a starter on what can be accom plished when the people begin to recognize cooperative marketing as a sound principle. Cooperative mar keting of poultry handles the pro ducts with the least labor expense, time, and the greatest efficiency. If it does this, then it should receive the support of all concerned. It will be years before it receives this support, even from farmers. Many farmers are wafted from place to place by the enticement of a few extra cents occasionally offered by those inter ested personally in buying and selling the product, and in most cases ene mies of the principle of cooperative marketing because it cuts them out of the pw>fits on a volume of business done. Until the farmer learns that his product is always going to sell for LEAST it will bring, instead of the most it will bring, under the old system of selling, he is not going to be permanently prosperous. Burr Clover Seed. We have the names of a few peo ple who are willing to have you gath er burr clover seed on halves. This is a good chance for some to get started with burr clover. Ask for further information. Chautauqua. Hartwell has a chautauqua the coming week. This is fine. It will be a great benefit for the town. Ru ral communities need something on I the order of a chautauqua each year. They need something which will bring several communities together, in order that the people may know each other all over the county. The i county fair has been the institution ■ which has heretofore done this. So far it is the nearest solution that | has ever been devised. Sometimes j fairs do not fill the need, but if prop i erly worked out, and supported by I community leaders, it can meet the I need. New ideas need to be incor- I porated, however, from time to time. Peaches. Mr. Ralph Brown sent us a fine j bunch of peaches last Sunday. You bet they looked good! And tasted i better. These peaches have been sprayed. The extreme coloring of , the fruit would indicate that arsenic j had been on them. There were no I worms. While we have not been in j the orchard, yet we are satisfied that | there are very few worms in the ■ whole orchard. That cannot be said lof an orchard that is not sprayed. So many people buy fruit trees from I year to year, and never spend an i other cent on caring for them. They soon die. Peaches should be sprayed I now for the control of brown rot ' canker, even though you care nothing I for the fruit this year. If you have I been spraying for two years, then ’ your trees are all dark and brown • about body and limbs, with bark | about dead. Take a chance to see what your neighbor has done in j spraying this year. Then make up i your mind to do the job right an other year. Bean Beetles. Bean beetles can be controlled by I mixing one yound of calcium arsen ate with nine pounds of lime, and dusting the underside of the leaves. Repeat in ten days to two weeks, ev en though you do net see the beetles. Get it in your head that the poison will do more good PREVENTING the appearance of beetles than it will killing them afte. b.-’V come. Do not wait until t! ‘nve appeared, because they w ou up quick. With boil wee" is differ- THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., MAY 29, 1925 ent. You can wait longer, but be careful. The Boy* Agricultural Club. The Boys’ Agricultural Club of Al fords school and Cokesbury have iield a charge entertainment at each place and made some money for local use of the clubs. They propose.to use this money for picnics, prizes, etc. It is a good idea, and every boy should have the encouragement of his par ent to join a club. Nothing in Hart county should oppose this, or attempt to nullify it. Bond Issues. Congress, through the Bureau of Roads, United States Department of Agriculture, appropriates . large amounts of money each year toward the building of better roads and highways. In addition quite a sum of money is spent in educational road work, through the county agents, road specialists, publications, demon stration trains, etc. Roads are pri marily an agricultural problem. Good roads should be the consideration of every thoughtful farmer. The question is before the farm ers of Georgia today. It concerns the whole state, but the attitude of the farmers will largely govern what will be done. Therefore the farm leaders should think seriously here. And the leaders are the influential farmers of the communities. Other states are building good roads. It is less an agricultural problem than heretofore, because the life of busi ness in many small towns depends on good roads. And yet since the outcome of a road building program in Georgia depends largely on what its farmers do', it is possible that we may have a road building system that will overlook many of our agricul tural communities. In fact the ten dency has already started that way. It has been generally considered that the farmers of Georgia are opposed to a bond issue for roads, on one ground or another. The business of the state which depends on good roads are going to do all they can to get for themselves good roads, even though the farmer cares not a hang, nor puts out any effort to get them. The road question is a cooperative one. It is not an individual propo sition at all. Even though a man never rides on a road, yet it is his business to hety build roads. The prosperity of Georgia largely depends on our transportation system, and the user or nonuser of roads is equally concerned. The road system of Georgia should be built on a statewide plan. The interests of ev ery section should be considered in the program. Yet, because of op position from the farmers in many places, there is coming about a grouping of districts in Georgia, in which systems of roads will be built, without relation to other sections. These districts are being formed around business centers, not agricul tural centers, because agricultural centers are opposed to road build ing programs. The result is going to be that the more thickly populated sections of the state will issue bonds and build roads, and outlying counties will be left. These outlying counties will be unable to issue enough bonds later to build roads, and they can never get the support from those places which have already built roads. It appears that farmers of Georgia should support a well planned bond issue for a road building program. Unless it is done, many of our rural counties will be left outside, with never any chance to get inside. Some counties will be like school districts which refuse to consolidate. Con solidation will take place all around them, and later they will be left where they can get in as they would like. We may find our road situa tion in the same shape. The farmers of Georgia, .who will benefit mostly, should give this road building pro gram serious considerafion. Dry Weather and Roughage. It may rain some day. If it does rain enough to make a good corn crop this summer, we may have a bad cotton year. The ground is depleted of moisture, and much rain is neces sary to make a crop from now on. Every farmer should see that he has plenty of acreage planted to corn, beans, peas, sorghum, etc. A good cotton crop is worth little by itself. It just helps us out of a hole which we voluntarily got into this spring, and year in our lives have simply been wasted. What we need is more supplies. Cotton will do well to car ry itself, without making it carry the corn and hay crop on the farm. John D. Rockefeller. Mr. Rockefeller, in a recent maga zine article, states that people profit little from having things done for them. He says that it is what people do for hemselves that profits them. Refering to agricultural leadership, he states that too often farmers want to have things done for them, and are not disposed to take hold and do for themselves. There is danger in that. A com munity which gets to where it does not want to do for itself, but wants to sit by which ceitain individuals do all the planning and scheming will not profit in the end. It may for the moment boost the standing of the individuals who assume the entire responsibility, but jt is not community development. It may look like such for a while, but it is political tactics in analysis, and the people follow because of political in fluence. Character has not been de veloped in the people. Too often farmers want the coun ty agent to do for them, instead of giving assistance to the leaders of BABY’S COLDS are soon “nipped in the bur!” without “dosing” by use of — VICKS ▼ Varoßub Poor 17 MiUion Jar, UmJ Yearly “Blue Hole” in Ohio Has Odd Properties Castalia springs, or "the Blue Hole," is at the westerly edge of the village of Castalia, alrout nine miles south west of Sandusky, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reports. A good-sized subter ranean stream suddenly bobs up to the surface, through deep orifices in the limestone rock which underlies the re gion. As Cold creek it flows swiftly across three miles of Erie county and into Sandusky bay. The phenomenon Is said not to be an unusual one in limestone countries. The “Blue Hole,” the spring Itself, Is a beautiful, crystal-clear, very nearly circular pool, some thirty feet across and quite deep. Constituents of the water are lime, soda, magnesia and Iron, and though the pool is extreme ly cold It never freezes. The stream is not much affected by floods and droughts, and the first grist mill in northwestern Ohio was -operated by the creek, close to the spring, in 1810. Several small coins, dated in the fifties, and the remains of an old flintlock musket were all that remain ed with the bones of a pioneer found in a hollow tree on the Missouri Val ley River bottom near Hamburg, lowa. It is believed he hid in the crevice to escape Indians and was unable to climb up to the entrance hole from the inside of the tree. the community who will do the work. We have never minded work, and keep at work at all times, yet there is nothing permanently good for you if you try to shun responsibility and expect paid leadership to do for you. Regular Income*. Have you a regular income from cows, hogs, or hens, or some other source? If you have not then the chances are that you are in poor shape. You can never get anywhere by a one crop system. A few out standing fellows may do it but not every ball player can be a Ty Cobb or Babe Ruth. You may think you can, but you cannot just the same. Just because you have a neighbor who has done good on cotton alone, and just because he stands around and blows off all sorts of theories about how you ought to do, does not mean that you can do it. Sometimes the greatest drawbacks to a commu nity are the few fellows who have made good on a cotton alone pro gram. They cause their friends and neighbors to try the same schedule, and it fails. It has failed. It has failed here in Hart county on 2,000 farms out of 2,500. You can hard ly find a home now that has a nickel to spare, and this fall the same homes will have little to spare above the debts. Now this may sound harsh. It may not be the proper way to say it, and the way it is said may cut too much, but folks, it is the truth. If you are looking for facts, you are obliged to admit it. What Hart county needs is a regular in come. Men—Here You fAre — The newest materials for summer wear. Fashionably made by experienced tailors; representing the latest styles. The man who buys his clothes from Saul’s can be sure he is getting the latest in men’s clothes. $17.50 to $25.00 Straws The newest of the season. Straws of all kinds; some with the popular colored bands. A size for everybody. $2.65 Sauls Dept. Store Hartwell, Ga. JOY N,GHT FROLIC A" ’ A. St I si ■ ' ** It laughter be q gift of the gods, Vernon Stone and Electra Platt will play Santa Claus to a whole tent full of laughing people as the closing night attraction of our Chautauqua. During the winter season these laugh provokers are kept busy entertaining blase New Yorkers at banquet and T&e Friendly Hotel Invites you to eAtlanta RATES: -v Circulating ic« „ ~ | water and leil One Person ing every $2. SO, $3.00 ( FES room. $3.50, $4.00 \ js * SOO \ E h •Rw It a i T Atlant* » newest Two Persons fin«.t hotel. $4 50. $5.00 Kj!g>* L Siirt2s5 ‘ $6.00, $7.00 j® Magnificent .p- jlFti l Bal IBE pointment*. The beat place in i IS? 4 H Atlanta to cat. Special arrange- 5 dining rooms 1 ments for hantf- and al fresco ter- automobile parties. Garage. The HENRY GRADY Hotel 550 Rooms—sso Baths Corner Peachtree and Cain Streets JAMES F. drJARNETTE, V.-P. A Mgr. THOS. J. KELLEY, Aiao Mgr. The Following Hotels Are Also Cannon Operated: GEORGIAN HOTEL JOHN C. CALHOUN HOTEL Athena. Ga. Anderton, S. C, W. H. CANNON, Manager D. T. CANNON, club progrums. Busy fully flvg nights every week, too. Funny stories, character impersonations, variou* novelty Instruments including banjo, violin, saxophone, handsaws, on* string fiddles, toy balloons, all aid in making fun for their Joy Night Frolic.