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S ■ ■ B B ■ B ■ BUB B ■ B-B ■.,>.■ B B ■
: Spend Your Vacation-
IN THE
BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS ;
and ■
Nantahalla National Forest ■
Double Daily Train Service
Via #
TALLULAH FALLS RAILWAY •
j EFFECTIVE JUNE 15, 1925 ■
I K I
gj For Further Information, Apply to Ticket Agent or Address — ■
| . I
■ PASSENGER DEPARTMENT
: Tallulah Falls Railway:
MOUNTAIN CITY, GA.
I 1
b:b b;bib B*a
Friendly Hotel
Invites you to
eAtlanta
datvq. - Circulating ice
! water and ceil-
One Person s— T ing fans in every
$2.50, $3.00 \ room.
$3.50. $4.00 (
* SO ° A. g! Atlanta’s newest
X. ! IBs *■ i and finest hotel.
Two Persons ® 1 HSS'H \
$4.50, $5.00 <!;Ljjygg§sjßß;Bx
$6.00, $7.00 ■&' Magnificent ap-
fcrg f ‘ pointments.
The best place in
Atlanta to eat. » Special arrange-
5 dining rooms ments for hand-
and al fresco ter- | 'MVP |i.. Mfr lin 8 automobile
race. parties. Garage.
The HENRY GRADY Hotel
550 Rooms—sso Baths
• _ ?
Corner Peachtree and Cain Streets
JAMES F. deJARNETTE. V.-P. 4 Mgr. THOS. J. KELLEY. Asso. Mgr.
The Following Hotels Are Also Cannon Operated:
GEORGIAN HOTEL JOHN C. CALHOUN HOTEL
Athens, Ga. Anderson. S. C.
| W. H. CANNON, Manager D. T. CANNON, Manager
Blttßito.B l IB!l"B!l' ! !ll.!! 11 8l 11 l* |! ' t *i~* 1 ! BllilBi ! B' 1 'BIIIB“'Bb ! B ; WIMWIIBIIIIU
- The Best Vacation ■
I ■
■ . . . a trip by ship :
I ■
H voyage with the comforts of a first-class hotel. B
■ "
■ The restful and healthful way to travel.
I
■ Large modern ships affording every travel comfort and !
® convenience. Broad promenade decks. Spacious and rest-
I ful lounge and music rooms. -Meals, that appeal, invitingly ■
■ served in attractive, well ventilated dining-rooms. ■
I -. I
■ Stateroom choice ranges fro mthe two-berth type (in- I
| cludd in icket) to those with twin beds and private bath at |
reasonably increased cost. |
I REDUCED ROUND TRIP ■
Z Summer Tourist Fares ■
■ SAVANNAH, GA., to .
■ NEW YORK $49.28 BOSTON $62.28 ■
i Combines the many pleasures and benefits of an ocean j
I I
* Correspondingly attaractive fares from other points in |
I the Southeast to New York, Boston and interior Eastern |
= and New England teritory. g
I All fares include meals and stateroom accommodation j
■ aboard ship while at sea. ||
j Round trip tickets to Boston give purchaser teh option |
of return via Long Island Sound steamers (transportation I
I only), Boston to New York, thence this company’s direct |
B service to Savannah. b
For sailings, descriptive literature or reservations ap- j
• ply to your local ticket agent or ■
Z OCEAN STEAM SHIP COMPANY OF SAVANNAH J
j 37 Bull Street Savannah ’ Gcorl!ia |
I . . " .--"-----J
■ W
water, but
FJapper Fj-gjj "bites
K? tod. s '”-
Flowers grow as far north as land
> goes and more than 700 different
} kinds have been collected in arctic
regions.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., AUGUST 7, 1925
8 THE BRIDE OF 1
THE SEA
By DOUGLAS MALLOC H
'C'ROM the embracing land you leap
To meet the sea —
The land has given you ta the deep.
Its bride to be-»
Glittering spray your bridal veil,
Your gem the sun —
.Now In the calm of life, the gale
You two are one.
Far shall your husband bear you, far
From harbor home.
By southern cross, or eastward star,
Or icy foam,
But you will go with him content,
Content to be
All that the hands that shaped you
meant —
Bride of the sea 1
Even as ships to seas, is given
Woman to man —
Go with him seeking heaven
As best you can:
your bridal veil.
Or hid the sun—
Now in the calm of life, the gale.
You two are one.
(© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
o
SOMETHING TO
THINK ABOUT
By F. A. WALKER
( LACK OF COURTESY
BEING in a reminiscent mood, the
courtly old gentleman smiled
pleasantly, gazed meditatively through
his Oxford glasses upon his friends,
and spoke to them in a sorrowful man
ner upon the general lack of courtesy.
•‘Lt appears to me,” he said, “that
the tine, considerate deportment of
other days Is gradually disappearing,
particularly among the rising genera
tlon. Whether this is due to our pres
ent mode of living, our feverish chase
of the golden eagle, our disregard of
the feelings of others, or a voluntary
willingness to forego those niceties of
manners which mark the difference be
tween the wellbred and the boer, I do
not know. However, be that as it may,
if you will look around you, you will
observe that we are becoming vastly
more selfish and absorbed Ip our own
comforts and affairs than we were,
even ten or fifteen years ago.
“As we move along the streets, or
pass through the aisles of crowded
places of amusement and bump into
others, few of ua, indeed, take the
trouble to make apology, or even no
tice the deplorable breach of common
etiquette.
“We go about with sternly-set Junes
as If we were carrying a chip on our
shoulders, ready to fight at the drop
of a hat,, struggling all the while to
crowd others out of line at the ticket
offices or to get a seat In the public
conveyances, irrespective of mothers
with children, or elderly persons who
stir slowly because of the natural in
firmities of age.
“The tired workman, the worn-out
shop girls, the lame and the half-blind,
are all pushed aside ruthlessly in our
habitual haste and forgetfulness of the
Golden Rule, as we scurry pell-mell in
pursuit of our own temporary comfort,
or the attainment of our selfish pur
poses.
“We rise no more to the hoary head,
but continue to enjoy our book or pa
per, while he or she of the hoary
locks Is frequently scowled upon, as
though we wished to make It plain that
he or she should stay at home.
"Perhaps all these gross discour
tesies are the aftermath of the
World war, or perchance we are chang
ing and reverting to the brute type,”
skid the old gentleman, as he discon
tinued his talk and drummed dream
ily with bls slim fingers on the li
brary table.
(© by McClur. Newspaper Syndicate.)
o
CT HE YOUNG LADY
1 ACROSS THE WAY
I.ft
w
Jr
/Lkw. .
i r —.—
I j The young lady across the way says
i' she may not know much about orthog
> raphy but ahe certainly loveg what
1 birds she does know.
(8 by MeCllrt Newspaper »yn4loata)
o
A new gyatem for lending eecret
wtreieM manages baa been develop®!
tn Germany,
SHIRT SALE
Never will you have a better opportunity to
buy the season’s newest and the market’s best at
these prices. v
All are full cut, all are fast colors and guaranteed
so by Manhattan and R. & M. manufacturers.
All SI.OO Qualities S .79
All 51.50 Qualities 1.10
All 51.75 Qualities 1.30
All 52.00 Qualities*. 1.50
All $2.50 Qualities .Ul. .. 190
All $2.75 Qualities * • 2.05
All $3.00 Qualities 2.25
All $3.50 Qualities . 2.60
All $4.00 Qualities 2.95
*. All $5.00 Qualities 3.75
ALL STRAW HATS AT HALF PRICE
-1- ■ ■ '
None Charged at These Prices.
BROWN & COBB
Hartwell, Ga.
i < *X3M k»
ctyw gKjU-
ESw
~*
Away From The Crowds
America is still undiscovered, still into the delights of the unknown,
waiting to be discovered—by you! Leave the beaten path toothers. Go
. <_ ... _. ,r~ - where you will—whether the road
Away from the paved highways, deep . J not
in the hidden solitudes-are shady 18 P flved or not ’
groves fragrant with the scent of j t j s the ca r o f the true adventurer;
owers—sun-drenched valleys -lazy the car that no going—be it sand,
streams—or hurrying brooks as befit dirt or rocky road—can halt; the car
your mood. Walting to please you that will take you safely, certainly
with their untouched charms. and happily to where nature hides
Take your Ford and venture forth her true loveliness.
Runabout • - $260 Tudor Sedan • fSSO
Touring Car - 290 Fordor Sedan • 660
On open cart demountable rims and starter are |M extra
Full al m balloon tires |25 extra. All Pricra f. O. b. Detroit
SEE ANY AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER OR MAILJTHIS COUPON
CoUpe : pleMe t> || me bow i can secure a Ford Car on easy payments:
S£Z9A i
g ! CU,_ Snu. I
8 N-U |
HART MOTOR COMPANY
R. E. COX, Manager
Lincoln Fordson
CARS TRUCKS TRACTORS ~
Hartwell, Ga. Phone No. 48