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NAMES OF PUPILS ATTENDING HARTWELL SCHOOLS DURING 1924-25
ELEVENTH GRADE—Blant Ad
ams, Pelham Ayers, Robert Lee
Ayers, James Bradley, Asa Brown,
Sara Buffington, Julian Burns, Maude
Cason, George Clark, Pauline Cle
land, Denver Cordell, Vera Cordell,
Laura Cr&wford, Luannah Gaines, R.
L. Gaines, Sallie Hailey, Armand Hai
ley, Mary ’ Harrison, Parker Heaton,
Rufus Heaton, Maxine Herring, Hoke
Hill, Everette Hilliard, Clarence Hol
land, Evelyn Johnson, Frances Lin
der, Fretwell Madden, Chandler
Mann, Arnold Maret, Drucie Mar
tin, Warren Martin, Kyle Massey,
John Mayes, Myra McCurry, Alice
McGukin, Ethel .Meredith. Anna Mil
ford, Frank Moorhead, Hugh Moor
head, Lizzie Kate Morris, Pauline
Nelms, Hoke Nixon, Idelle Phillips,
Jesse Pierce, Sara Pierce, Marie
Pursley, Dennis Reynolds, Henry
Richardson, Fay Sanders, Houston
Sanders, Wylannie Shiflet, Carey
Skelton, Clarence Stephens, Alice
Teasley, Roy Teasley, Eloise Tem
ples, Frances Thornton, Mary Thorn
ton, Susan Thornton, Evelyn Vassar,
Margaret Vickery, Sara Vickery,
Lucile Warren, Elton Williams, Frank
Wilson.
TENTH GRADE —Linder Alford,
Linda Avery, Arnold Bailey, Edgar
Bailey, Sara Bailey, Ruby Banister,
Louise Baskin, Grace Blalock, Asa
Martin Brown, Mac Brown, Jr., Sara
C. Brown, Sara Nan Brown, Vinnie
Mae Campbell, Esse Sue Carlton,
Denver Cleveland, Paul Cunningham,
Randolph Dendy, Ruby Dickerson,
Martha Dodd, Joel Estes, Reba Ha
ley, Leland Hayes, Paul Heaton, Bur
chell Jordan, Mason Jordan, Julia
Kay, Horton Leard, Olin Leard, Wil
fred Leard, Mary Mayes, Malcolm
Meredith, Howard Moorhead, Bernice
Moore, Gladys Morris, William Mor
ris, Jacob Mouchet, Mildred Myers,
Mary Neese, William Ray, Pauline
Rice, Tom Van Richardson, Clifford
L. Shiflet, Maddra Skelton, Tom
Mitch Thornton, Rudolph Turner,
Grady Vickery, Hugh White, Ulysses
White, Lamar Wilcox.'
NINTH GRADE—CIara Avery,
Catherine Brown, Ralph Brewer,
Copeland Carter, Alberta Cash, Wal
ter Cash, Cleo Cleveland, Condor
Cleveland, Myrtle Crawford, L. M.
Cunningham, Amy Elrod, Mary Tom
Gaines, Elizabeth Greene, Hugh Hai
ley, Lili Hailey, Edith Herndon, Lois
Herndon, Ruth Jones, George Leard,
Jack Magill, Flora Maret, Lois Mad
den, Helen Meredith, Jesse Mouchet,
Mattie Mouchet, Warnell McDuff,
Mary Elizabeth Norman, Leila Par
ham, Mildred Ray, Frank Skelton,
James Skelton, Grace Teasley, Sara
Claire Thornton, Irona Vickery.
EIGHTH GRADE —Arlie Adams,
Benjamin Alford, Frances Ayers, Er
nest Baker, Hazel Borrow, Ruth Bla
lock, Elizabeth Bradley, Helen
Brown, Leo Burden, Annie Jim Carl
ton, Lee Elmer Carter, Walker Ca
son, Mildred Cunningham, Champ
‘ Dendy, Carolyn Elrod, Carlos Elrod,
Julian Herndon, Frances Hodges,
Opal Howell, Albert Johnson, Leona
Locke, William McLanahan, Thelma
McCurley, Gilbert Meredith, Gerald
Moon, Rachael Norris, Elmer Rey
nolds, Herndon Risner, Lowell Ris
ner, Loyd Rogers, Charles Rogers,
Joe Satterfield, Carey Saylors, Gray
Skelton, Mary Stephens, Jack Tem
ples, Annie Ruth Thornton, Cleo
Vickery, Tom Vickery, Johnnie Wal
ters, Eugenia White, Charles Wil
cox, Emmett Wilson, Fred Wilson,
SEVENTH GRADE—Hoke Ad
ams, Inman Adams, Helen Ayers, Bes
sie Alewine, Frances Agnew, Joe
Brown, Charlie Brown, Daisy Brown,
Z. P. Barren, Leila Bates, St. Clair
Bradley, James Bowers, Sarah Bag
well, Joe Buffington, Son Campbell,
John Carlton, Ralph Cordell, Ira
Mae Crawford, James Crawford,
James D. Dickerson, Taiford Dunn,
-9 a ■ ■ ■'■■■■■ ■ ■ ■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■
: A.&M. SCHOOL:
■ I
■ Four Years High School in Literary, Art, Home Econ- j
k omics, Agriculture, and Mechanics. B
Cheapest Boarding School in the State. ■
B Fall Term begins ffrst Monday in September.
■ This is your opportunity. ■
Write for information. ■
j NINTH A. &M. SCHOOL |
Clarkesville, Georgia ■
■
B Oar Organization Has Been Protecting The Farmers j
■ of North Georgia For Over Twenty-three Years.
■
T. LUMPKIN ADDERHOLDT, General Manager. ■
■ ■
t ll II- . ■
I ~.L :
I 'as’sto
ii x ' Bi
GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA ■
■ ... ■
■ R. M. PURCELL, Division Agent, Lavonia, Georgia n
aua.a ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■>
Dorothy Estes, Charles Ethridge,
Clarence Gray, Raymond Griffin,
Paul Harrison, Jewell Heaton, Claud
Herndon, Joel Herring, Lorene Her-
I ring, Ruth Herring, W. C. Herring,
> Lambert Jones, James Kay. Howard
I Kay, Joel Leard, Lois McGukin,
I James McMullan, Evelyn Oglesby,
John O’Neal, Wilson Page, Willie
Pruitt, Newell Saylors, Joe Skelton,
j George Vickery, Grace Vickery, Na
i omi Vickery, Henry Williams, Louise
' Wilcox.
SIXTH GRADE—Virginia Bag
‘ well, Ralph Banister, Ralph Bowers,
, Mary Brewer, Eunice Brown, Emma
! Julia Cash, Eunice Chastain, Clara
Cleveland, Carl Cleveland, Shirley
I Craft, Ludian Crump, Manell Dooley,
j Sallie Ruth Eaves, Annie Lizzie
! Eaves, Sara Hall, Sidney Harris, Mel
ba Hayes, Docus Hiott, Taylor Jones,
i Nellie Jones, Mary Eula Kay, Myra
I Kay, Dan Nixon Lewis, Walter Ma
ret, Daisy McCurry, Jane McEwen,
Erskin Morris, Julian Moorhead,
Katherine Nelms, Arnold Nixon, Avis
O’Barr, Hubert Parham, Helen Pow
j ell, Edith Putnam, Jack Rice, Paul
l Sanders, Edwin Seawright. Oscar
j Skelton, Myrtice Skelton, Columbus
| Teasley, Billy Teasley, Will Tem
: pies, Callie Vickery, Nettie Vickery,
James Vickery, Cleve Wilson.
FIFTH GRADE—Martin Ale
wine, Monfred Adams, Eugene Buff
ington, Ida Mae Baker, Queenie Ba
ker, Hoke Baker, Frank Crump,
Louise Campbell, Ruth Cash, Cleo
Cash, Vernell Cash, Lattie Chastain,
Ruby Cordell, Ruth Cleveland, Lucy
Crawford, Lila Casey, Sara Dendy,
Emma Lee Dickerson, Willie Mae
Dickerson, Willie Claire Davidson,
James Dunn, T. J. Espy, Jr., Willie
Ethridge, Alice Griffin, Tom Gaines,
Burch Griffin, Willie Heaton. Robert
Howell, Letha Herndon, James Hern
don, Joseph Jenkins, Jesse Leard,
Van Locke, Benson Matheson, Caro
lyn Moorhead, Hugh Morris, Brown
Madden, Georgia Lee Moore, Frank
Norris, Howard O’Barr, Dan Ogles
by, Calloway Page, Jessie Bell Rey
nolds, Doris Richardson, Ruth Scott,
Barton Scott, Maggie Smith, Amos
Teasley, John Temples, Franklin
Thornton, Josephine Vickery, Frank
Vickery, Walter Vickery.
| FOURTH GRADE—Nardin Adams,
| Melba Adams, Cecil Adams, Frank
Adams, Cornelia Bagwell, Joe Bai
ley, Lavinia Burns. Jones Bowers,
I Alice Carter, Fannie Sue Cordell,
’ Dorothy Cleveland, Vincent Cornell,
Margaret Cornell, Oscar Chastain,
Sara Carlton, Eleanor Craft, Fay
■ Dickerson, Myra Dickerson, Joe Doo
; ley, W. C. Dunn, Joe Dunn, Calhoun
[ Elrod, William Eaves, Clem Hailey,
J Loyd Harris, Thomas Heaton, Grace
Hill, Paul Jones, Cleo Locke, Billy
Joe Maret, Lawrence McDuff, Den
ver McCurley, Clyde Mason, Sylvan
ius Morris, Elizabeth O’Barr, Dorris
I Rice, Leon Risner, Robert Reynolds,
Louise Reynolds, James Reynolds,
Mary Skelton, Blanche Skelton,
Charles Thornton, Talmadge Veal,
Woodrow Vickery, James Wilson,
Roscoe Walters.
THIRD GRADE—Lee Adams,
Azalee Aiewine, Harry Barron, Sara
i Lee Bond, Thurston Brown, Bill Ba
! ker, Carl Chastain, Mack Crawford,
Dorsey Cleveland, R. L. Cramer, Ave
-1 nell Griffin, Hugh Heaton, Carolyn
Herring, James Herring, Evelyn
Jones, Charles Kidd, Bessie May
Locke, Joel Massey, Hewin Morris,
Parke Nixon, Rufus Norris, James
; Page, Harold Reynolds, Fred Scott,
! James Slater, Roy Teat, Frank Tem
ples, Eleanor Thornton, Mary Carter
Thornton, Lillian Vickery, Nezzie
Vickery.
SECOND GRADE—Robbie Lee
Bailey, Margaret Bingham, William
Bowers, Merle Buffington, Dan Bur
den, Selma Brown, Theron Brown,
Ruth Cobb, Thomas Chapman, Guy
THE HARTWELL SUN. HARTWELL, GA., AUGUST 14, 1925
Crump, Tommie Cordell, Milo David- 1
son, Justus Dunn, Samuel Gaines, (
Parker Herring, Howard Herring,
Harold Hicks, Edwin Harrison, Fran
ces Jenkins, Eloise Maret, Sara Mad
den, Charles McEwen, Grady Ma- 1
son, Dorsey McCurry, Frank Morris,
Clyde Norman, Kendall O’Barr, Rosa
Ricks, Mamie Risner, Hugh Reynolds, j
Lillian Reynolds, Edward Skelton, i
Marion Skelton, Thornton, Em
mett Teat, Frances Vickery, Kenneth
Vickery, August Williams, George
Walters, Evelyn Wilson. Haskell
Bates, Amos Fountain, Hiram Moon, I
Thomas McCurley, Allen Turner.
FIRST GRADE—Clinton Adams,
Virginia Adams, Hazel Atkinson, Wil
liam Chas. Bright, Rufus Chastain,
Howard Cleveland, Jr., Robina
Cramer, Julian Dickerson, W. A.
Duncan, Jr., Ella Kate Eaves, Mary
Elrod, Shirley Elrod, Owen Harris,
Thomas Herndon, Lois Claire Her
ring, Evelyn Holland, Paul Emmett
Howell, Harold Jones, Sarah Janice
Kenmore, Edwin Leard, Coswell Ma
son, Emily Matheson, Hubert Mil
ford, Andrew Boyce Norris, Helen
Claire O’Barr. Mary Elizabeth Page,
Annie Clyde Reynolds, Eleanor Rich
ardson, Clemortine Skelton, James
Benson- Teasley, J. B. Teasley, King
Teasley, Ernest Eugene TeaJ, Albert
Veql, Clemrie Vickery, Eugenia Mar
garet Vickery, Geraldine Vickery,
Tommie Louise Vickery, Virginia
Vickery, Helen Wallace, Gussie Eve- ,
lyn Whitworth, Elizabeth Wilson, ’
Evelyn Wilson.
MILL SCHOOL
FIRST GRADE—John Addison,
Lee Chitwood, Joseph Lee, Mary .
Reynolds, Inman Reynolds, Edwin :
Yon, Hall Crawford, Ben Ward.
SECOND GRADE—B. C. Banister, !
Fred Banister, James Casey, Olin i
Deul Moncrief, Myrl Mon
crief, Sidney Reynolds, Julian Scott, I
Lorene Shaw, Georgia Thomas, Nez
ber Thomas, Doris Hart.
THIRD GRADE—OIIie Belle Ad
dison, Ida Mae Addison, Selma Addi
son, Mary Allen, Furman Banister,
Charles Bobo, Dessie Hart, Garnett
Hill, Ralph Sanders, Porter Shiflet,
McAlvin Shiflet, Annie Mae Whit
field, Harold Williams.
FOURTH GRADE—W. C. Banis
ter, R. M. Bobo, Edha Lovern, Staf
ford Scott, Bessie Shiflet, Payton
Smith.
o
wo said”!
Be rather bounti
ful than expensive.
THESE words are characteristic of
the religion of the man who ut
tered them. William Penn, for whom
Pennsylvania—Penn’s Woods is
named, was a Quaker.
Like many of these sterling pioneers
of that sect who came to the New
world, Penn was bountiful and gen
erous to the extreme. No one in want
ever suffered when Penn could allevi
ate their suffering, but at the same
time William Penn was a man of thrift
—a man who was not “expensive” in
his habits.
William Penn was born in London,
October 13, 1644. He became a Quaker
—the name of this sect originated In
derision of their statement that man
should “fear and quake before the
Lord” —and was sent to prison for ills
preaching. Through the intercession
of his father the young man was re
leased, only to be sent later to the
Tower for the publication of u book —
“No Cross, No Crown.”
This work was destined to show the
necessity for suffering in the world
and to show the benefit that carne
from it spiritually. Naturally such a
work was not popular with the pleas
ure-loving class of nobles. On Penn's
release he was again arrested for
preaching, but the jury repeatedly re
fused to find him and his co-defend
ants <ullty. It is a significant fact
that for this refusal the jury was fined
for acting contrary to the instructions
at the judge!
In 1681 Penn received a grant of
land in North America In lieu of some
irrears that were due his father from
the king, and September 5, 1682, with
i party of emigrants, Penn sailed from
Deal.
Penn and his party landed in what
is now Delaware and later at what is
now Chester, Pa. They began a colony
where religious freedom prevailed and
which is now the Keystone state.—
Wayne D. McMurray.
(© by George Matthew Adarna.)
o
Fur of the Otter
The skin of sea otters is very loose
upon the body, says Nature Magazine.
Tbe fur is generally of a deep liver
brown color, frosted with a scanty
growth of long, silver-tipped stiffer
hairs and underlain by a preponder
ance of beautiful soft woolly fur
which gives the pelt its value. The
animals feed on mussels, sea urchins,
crabs and perhaps the tender shoots of
kelp.
v
Complimentary ?
He —Your cousin refused to recog
nize me at the hop last night. Thinks
I'm not his equal, I suppose.
She —Ridiculous! Os course, you
are. Why, he is nothing but a con
ceited idiot. —Stanford Chaparral.
Budgets are all right, but the main
thing is a budget that won’t budge.—
Winona Republican Herald.
HEARD
—and—
SEEN
BY GEORGE CLARK
V— -
During the past five or six years
the Hartwell schools have made such
strides that it is almost impossible to
even concede of the greatness m
difference between the school now
and at some date in bygone days.
Since the Hartwell schools have been
placed on the accredited list of
schools it has been the aim of the
teachers and students to make it a
creditable school. In the short space
of four years the number of gradu
ates from Hartwell High increased
from a meager eight or ten to way
up in the fifties—thus showing that
education in Hart county has advanc
ed with rapidity.
And, too, the numerous Schools
throughout the county have taken on
new life and gone forward in a man
ner which has placed Hart county in
the forefront along educational lines
in Georgia. Communities hav«» vot<-’
bonds for consolidated schools and
not once have the bonds failed to be
put over. Education is a wonderful
thing—the world demands it. Bis
mark—one of’ the world’s greatest
leaders—has said, “The nation that
has the schools has the future.”
The present exodus to Florida has
carried numbers qnd numbers of peo
ple out of Georgia. Florida is a
wonderful place—its climate is en
joyable, its beauties attractive, and
more than anything else—its gold is
illuring. But, somehow or other, we
cannot believe that such profiteeering
will always last. Somebody has got
to lose. There are a lot of risks in
buying. Yet, people are flocking to
“the land of sunshine.”
Georgia will not always be a state
of destitute lands. In the Southern
part of Georgia there are, at pres
ent, many farms in idleness. It will
not be this way—why just the other
day some great financier bought a
large tract of South Georgia land.
Hb evidently thinks that there will be
a “boom” in Georgia the same as
there now is in Florida.
No matter what folks tell you
about Florida, this is a grand old
state—this Georgia, “The Empire
State of the South.”
Hartwell people who have been up
around Asheville and Hendersonville
and in the North Carolina mountains
will probably remember Chimney
Rock. Standing way up at the very
summit of a mountain Chimney holds
the attention of tourists all over the
United States. Announcement wa;
recently made that plans were under
way whereby there would be carved
on the face of this wonderful piece
of nature a memorial to the memory
of the late Woodrow Wilson.
The South has been unstinted in
its praise for great people and ac
complishments. The Stone Mountain
Memorial is a great piece of work
and the South has been lauded far
and near for its undying spirit of
patriotism. If the Woodrow Wil
son memorial is carried out it will
be the second memorial in the South
to Wilson. The Wilson Memorial
Highway is the other memorial to the
great leader. Hartwell is the start
ing point for the highway—and is a
wonderful town; it is the “Gateway
to Florida.”
o
Moiheri Cook Book
You don't begrudge the labor when th*
roauß start to bloom;
You don’t recall the dreary daye that
won you their perfume;
You don’t recall a single care
You spent upon the garden there;
And all the toil
Os tilling soil
In quite forgot the day the first
Pink rosebuds into beauty burst.
—Edgar A. Guest.
SEASONABLE FOODS
A DELICIOUS sauce to serve with
*"*• cold roast beef or lamb chops is:
Spanish Sauce.
I*ut Into a saucepan two tablespoon
fuls of butter, one of olive oil, a few
dashes of salt, one onion, a clove of
garlic, half a green pepper or red pep
per all finely chopped. When this Is
brown add a pint of tomatoes and sim
mer twenty minutes. Season with
paprika and salt and a few drops of
tabasco, with a tablespoonful of Wor
cestershire sauce.
Baked Bananas.
Take one banana for each person,
cut in half lengthwise, after removing
all the threads; melt a little butter
roll the bananas In it, lay In a baking
dish and baste while baking until soft
Serve with broiled beefsteak.
Mint Sauce for Lamb.
Wash a bunch of mint, shake off the
water, strip the leaves from the stems,
chop the leaves fine. Pour over one
fourth of a cupful of boiling water,
add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, cover
closely and let stand half an hour;
then add four tablespoonfuls of vine
gar or the juice of a large lemon.
(©. IKS, Western Newspaper Union.)
O
The bifocal lenses for spectacles
were invented by Benjamin Franklin
in 1784.
o
After all, the test of successful
exploration is getting back.—Chicago
Daily News.
THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH
A country can grow
no f aster than
its railroads
It is recognized that the South today
offers remarkable opportunities for the
profitable investment of capital.
But. if freight service is to be adequate
to care for the increased output of
factories, mines, farms and forests, a
very considerable part of this new
capital will have to be devoted to
railroad development.
Investors will naturally place their
funds in securities yielding attractive
and assured returns. The Southern
Railway Company, like any other
business, will have to bid for its funds
in the general investment markets.
The ability of the Southern to obtain
needed new capital will depend on its
earning power and the rate of return
it offers investors.
©>
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
*■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ B ■ ■ ■ ■ «l ■ S> K C ■ tt
: Highest R. R. Station :
:In Georgia— ■
: THE NEW RABUN ‘
■ MOUNTAIN CITY, GA. •
: Up Where It’s Cool :
■ ON MAIN STATE HIGHWAY AND THE TALULLAH FALLS ■
■ RAILWAY FROM CORNELIA, GA., TO FRANKLIN, N. C.
J MRS. LEON MORRIS MRS. LOUIE L. MORRIS
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i ■
for Economical Transportation
— wwh- rruimiimm ' '
yV g 'lf
J/tv kJv I
Wii ’■
■ Hi I®
ft
iwli jf
F y r ' * */'’■*
/*** !
a The Coupe - *675 ■
| The Coach - *695 Bl
S The Sedan - *775 ■I
All price* f. o. b. Flint, Michigan t
Increased demand has made it possible to
improve the quality and lower the price.
wS Come in and see these remarkable values.
|9 Hartwell Sales Co. 91
A. CSKEITOxN J. C. KIDD
HARWELL, GA.
1 *'• -Til— — wr rntn r- r—r-