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Appreciation SALE
1 At the beginning of the Fall Season and at a time when you need new things in the home, kitchen and to wear, we I L I
1 want to show you how much we appreciate your business by giving you both quality and price in this Appreciation J, Aid
_ __ Sale which you will remember a long time. AU new goods—no old stock. Store filled with bargains. Such T
If I ifi I values, such savings. You can’t go wrong. We’ll be happy when you come and we’ll make you happy, too. If ■ Bl
I k/U Don’t miss it. • " IVU
“ft McClure’s
We Will Appreciate You Telling Your Friends About This Sale
MIIIIII H I t « »♦
REMOVAL
NOTICE
• 111
We wish to announce the
removal of our Millinery store
to the room between the
Hartwell F"rniture Co., and
Haily’s Drug Store No. 1, and
extend ala most cordial invi
tation to cal and see the new
Fall Hats.
Our shop is conveniently
located, and you are invited
to drop in any time to see the
latest millinery creations.
We are now showing the
latest creations in the soft
'Off-Face, “Pirate,” and Poke
effects, trimmed with ribbons
or ornaments, in Black,
Wood, Purple, Pencil Blue,
Black Prince, etc.
; We invite your patronage.
LAMOTTE
MILLINERY SHOP
HARTWELL, GA.
hiihh 111 nun iiiiiiiii
ill 111111 ii 1111 ii i m
Small grain, stacked immediately
after cutting, without the labor of
shocking, and cured by electricity,
was successfully tried at Ripon, Wis
consin, last year.
I PENCIL ]
xJ the RED BAND \\ ngLAitrn f ACTWT //
pencil co.
Friendly Hotel
Invites you to
eAtlanta
RATES- -«■ Circulating ice
xaie-o. water and ceil-
One Person ing tans * ver Y
$2 SO. $3.00 ( Ifflr room -
$3.50, $4.00
85 00 A BHSPjjO S»Atlanta’s newest
Er sf p 1 Sajli - H > and finest hotel.
Two Persons f R ! lEh !■ \
„2 ' .ar a 6 jtf g, * n n t A
$4.50. $5.00 ;L« I
S6OO, $7.00 Eebbs ''■fe Magnificent ap-
'kSaS' w ‘ O- (ointments.
The best place in CSKtyt-V A-••
Atlanta to eat. Spec.al arrange-
5 dining rooms StWEfeticffiA VWfxViSxSI ntents for hand
and al fresco ter- lln 8 automobile
rl£e . '.JmSCs parties. Garage.
The HENRY GRADY Hotel
550 Rooms—sso Baths
Corner Peachtree and Cain Streets
JAMES F. deJARNETTE. V.-P. & 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
Homer Watkins Is
Commander Legion
For State of Georgia
Rome, Ga.—Colonel Homer Wat
kins, Cedartown, commander of the
Three Hundred and Twenty-sixth in
fantry in the World war, was selected
commander of the Georgia depart
ment, American Legion, at the clos
ing session Friday. He was unop
posed.
Captain James Carr, of Rome, was
named department adjutant, with
headquarters here.
In a spirited contest between Ter
rill Hill, of Columbus; Earl Cox, of
Dawson, and Asa Candler, of At
lanta, Hill was elected national com
mitteeman on the fourth ballot. Can
dler threw his strength to the Colum
bus man. ,
Landii Praiaea Legion.
“I am a friend of American Legion
and would be the happiest man on
earth if I were a member of it,”
former Judge Kennesaw Moutain
Landis, said Thursday in an address
here before the convention of the
legion and legion auxiliary of Geor
gia.
The baseball commissioner de
scribed the work of the American
Legion as a demonstration of integ
rity and virtuf and expressed the
hope that Georgia would be success
ful in raising its endowment fund
without the difficulties that other
states have had.
“You have to help the man that
is broken and do the things the
government will not do for him,” he
said. “It should be the place of the
business men, men who did not fight,
to raise this fund, but the legion is
doing it, and 1 hope it will be a suc
cess.”
“I have in my mind a picture of
a fallen soldier in France, when in
a flash of consciousness, he thinks
of his own flesh and blood, and has
faith in America and thinks his
orphan will be cared for. Some day
I hope we will be able to look that
soldier in the eye—that child should
have a home, or as near one as pos
sible.”
■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ -o
No trees grow in Iceland, except
a species of low willow.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., SEPTEMBER 4,192 S
Rush Southward Is
Helping Georgia
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 25.—The prom
ise now is, according to Atlanta rail
road men, that the rush to the South
this winter will be the greatest that
has ever been known to any section
of the country.
“The California rush probably will
appear small when compared with it,”
said A. D. Daniel, passenger traffic
manager of the A. B. and A. railway.
“Naturally the rush will be princi
pally to Florida, but it will be
through other Southern states and
Georgia will be seen by many thou
sands of people who never have
realized that this state is the equal
in every way of Florida both for
financial opportunities and Winter
playground purposes.
“Then, too, many people are in
Florida who are not getting rich as
they expected to do. Naturally they
will be wanting to get out of after
a while. They still wish to get rich
and they naturally will look around
for a more inviting field. Georgia
offers that field and here the oppor
tunities are unlimited, with good cli
mate thrown in.”
Mr. Daniel pointed to the fact that
there is something substantial back
of Georgia’s development. This
state, he said, has the climate and
some of the seashore and any num
ber of Winter playground places, and
it also has the cotton fields, the to
bacco fields, the truck gardens, the
mills, factories and the hydro-electric
power to operate them all.
“These things,” declared Mr. Dan
iel, “make for riches and they in
sure substantial prosperity.”
Like other railroad men interested
in Georgia's growth, Mr. Daniel as
serted that Georgia need not be jeal
ous of Florida or of any other state.
Florida’s growth will help Georgia.
“All that Georgia needs to do is to
‘talk about itself’ as Florida has
done,” Mr. Daniel said. “All that
any Southern state with the resources
and opportlnities they all have to do
is to boost itself and Georgia, I
might add, has more to make the
boosting effective than almost any
other Southern state.”
o
♦ »•»»»«*•♦
GAINES DISTRICT
There is some sickness in this com
munity at present.
We are having some of the dryest
weather we ever saw but hope we will
have some rain before long.
The cotton crop is not half as good
as usual, and the corn crop is a com
plete failure, we are sorry to state.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Hulme
a fine girl, on the 24th of August,
1925.
Prof .and Mrs. T. J. Cleveland
spent the week-end in Elberton.
Mr. Tom Neese, of Hickory, N. C.,
was in this community looking after
his crop recently.
Mr. J. F. Partain‘spent Friday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Lewis Partain, of Oak Bower, Hart
county.
Mrs. Sallie Teasley spent Thurs
day evening with Mrs. Fletcher Cor
dell.
Elbert county carried her bonds for
the Sanders Ferry bridge last Wed
nesday by a large majority and will
erect a bridge as soon as the plans
are carried out. We need a bridge
■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■'■
: Highest R. R. Station :
:In Georgia— :
: THE NEW RABUN I
■ MOUNTAIN CITY, GA. ■
: OPEN TO OCTOBER 1 !
ii ■
■ ON MAIN STATE HIGHWAY AND THE TALULLAH FALLS ■
• RAILWAY FROM CORNELIA, GA., TO FRANKLIN, N. C. •
1 MRS. LEON MORRIS MRS. LOUIE L. MORRIS
!■■■■■■■■■■■■■«■■■■■■■■■■<■■
Textile Industry In
South Now Ahead
of New England
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 25.—For the
first time in the history of the tex
tile industry, the South has a great
er number of spindles active than the
New England states have, it was
pointed out here today by cotton
manufacturers.
This information, the manufactur
ers show, is perhaps the most impor
tant industrial development of the
decade. It shows, they asssrt, that
the textile industry is definitely es
tablished in the South in preference
to the New England states and hence
forth the seat of the cotton manu
facturing indusrtry will be where the
raw supply is at hand, where labor
is dependable, where power is ample
and railway facilities adequate. It
has taken sixty-five years to bring
about the change.
Other industrial plants are also
rapidly coming South and some have
found after building factories that
it is only a question of short time
before they find' it necessary to dou
ble their capacity. A striking illus
tration of this situation is shown in
the case of the Logan-Long Roofing
company which recently completed a
half-million dollar plant in Atlanta.
W. G. Bickell, formerly of Pitts
burg, Pa., who has been recently
transferred to Atlanta as manager
of the local plant, said today that
his company will eventually have to
make additions to the plant.
“The South is making such strides
in an industrial way,” said Mr. Bick
ell, “that many concerns in the north
and east are already making plans
to establish factories in this sec
tion. These factories like our own
can sell goods cheaper and deliver
them more promptly by having their
plants within reach of their South
ern customers.”
- o
Though the naked eye can see on
ly three or four thousand stars, the
telescope and the photograph prove
that there are really 30 or 40 billion
of them, or 20 times as many as there
are living people on the earth.
at that point, and it will be a free
bridge.
Mr. Hugh Greenway, of High
Point, N. C., returned after spending
a few days with friends and relatives
there.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Howard and
Mrs. T. S. Gaines and son, Charles
Howard, visited Mr. and Mrs. David
Stamps, of near Cold Water, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Partain and
son, James, attended the singing at
Centerville Consolidated school last
Sunday.
Mrs. Hugh Greenway, of High
Point, N. C., is spending a few days
with her sister, Mrs. John 'Teasley,
of Montevideo.
Mr. Galphin Locke, of Anderson,
S. C., was in our community last
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Partain and
daughters, Misses Sabrie and Kath
leen, visited in Anderson, S. C., last
Sunday.
Mr. C. U. Gaines, Jr., is attending
school at Hartwell.
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. McCurley
and sister, Miss Fannie, left last
week to assist in a meeting in North
Carolina.
*♦*♦*♦•••*
MT. HEBRON
»*♦»♦♦♦♦**
Sunday school at this place is pro
gressing nicely. Hope it will contin
ue to grow.
Misses Stella and Nola Wilson at
tended preaching at Flat Shoals Wed
nesday and dined with Misses Cora
and Cecil Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Chastain
spent Thursday with the former’s
mother, Mrs. Ola Chastain, of New
Prospect.
Mr. Mathew Vickery and daughter,
Miss Theo, of Sanford, Fla., visited
Mr. and Mrsr. Glenn Cleveland Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Newland Baker
spent Sunday with the latter’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. John Powell attend
ed preaching at Flat Shoals Wednes
day and dined with Mr. and Mrs.
Malory Adams.
Misses Roselle Dickerson and Irene
Cleveland were the guests of Miss
Gertrude Powell Sunday.
Misses Ruth and Grace Blalock, of
Hartwell, visited Mrs. L. B. York
Sunday.
Several from here attended preach
ing at Flat Shoals last week.
Mr. Sanford Wilson spent Wednes
day with Messrs. Roy and Marlor
Adams.
Mibb Guynelle Cleveland visited
Miss Gladys Cleveland Sunday.
Misses Dollie and Lovice Sanders
were the welcome guests of Misses
Stella* Nola and Ethel Wilson Sat
urday afternoon.
Master Sidney Slater visited Mas
ter Don A Adams, of Flat Shoals, last
week.
Mrs. Fretwell O’Barr and two chil
dren left Thursday for Hickory, N.
C., to join her husband there. We
regret very much to lose this good
family but wish them much success
in their new home.
Misses Stella and Nola Wilson din
ed Sunday with Misses Florence and
Dessie Cole.
Several from this place attended
the singing at the Chapel Sunday af
ternoon.
Mr. Mathis Vickery and daughter,
Miss Theo, spent Sunday night witht
Mr. and Mrs. Pearson Bailey.
Miss Ethel Wilson was the guest
of Miss Lorene Cole Sunday.
Miss Nellie McLane spent Monday
night with her aunt, Mrs. J. B. Bai
ley.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Madden and
baby, of Sharon, visited Mr. and Mrs.
K. H. Cleveland Sunday.
Rev. Mauldin, of South Carolina,
will preach at this place Saturday
night at 8 o’clock.
Sunday school at the usual hour
Sunday. Everybody come out and
bring some one with you. Let ev
eryone work to keep our Sunday
school on a boom. Make it be the
best school we have ever had at this
place.
BLUE EYES.
o
VIOLA
Mr. and Mrs. K. O. Randall and
children spent Wednesday with Mr.
and Mrs. W. 0. Shirley.
Mr. and Mrs. Haygood, of Ath
ens, visited Mr. J. O. Hewin and
family Saturday night and Sunday.
Mrs. Tom Black visited relatives
at Pleasant Grove last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Andrews, of
Carnesville, spent a few days last
week with Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Mou
ehet.
Mrs. Milford Shirley has return
ed home after spending several days
in Toccoa.
Miss Lillie Copeland was the guest
of Miss Magwillie Shirley Sunday.
Mr. Boyd Shirley and Nolan Mit
chell left Monday for Toccoa where
they have accepted positions.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Mouchet
spent Sunday with Mr. John x ßeed
and family.
Miss Ella Mitchell and Mrs. Tom
mie Franks are visiting relatives here
for several days.
o
An ordinance passed April 19,
1800, by the city of Schenectady,
. New York, fixed a limit of six hours
I as the time during which a carriage
|of any kind might stand on any
' street or alley, “after sunset or in
' the daytime.” Delinquents paid 50
I cents for each offense against this
law.
STAR THEATRE
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
September 3 and 4.
“A Man Must Live,” featuring
Richard Dix. Broke, starving, des
perate:—was jungle law —kill or be
killed—justified? You see few pic
tures with the mighty heart-punch
of this one.
SATURDAY
September 5.
Lefity Flynn in “O. U. West.” A
Sunshine Comedy, and 9th episode of
“Riders of the Plains.”
MONDAY
September 7.
“Garden of Weeds.” Betty Comp
son in a startling drama of a Broad
way girl-digger’s garden of gold-dig
gers. Real entertainment!
TUESDAY ANDWEDNESDAY
September 8 and 9.
“Adventure,” with Tom Moore,
Pauline Starks, Wallace Beery. Jack
London’s masterpiece of love and
adventure on a South Sea Isle. If
you like ’em thrilling, we urge you
to see “Adventure.”
—O—
COMING!
MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WED
NESDAY
September 14, 15, 16.
“The Ten Commandments.” It
ran 62 weeks in New York, 31 weeks
in Los Angeles,, 30 weeks in Sydney,
Aus., 20 weeks in Chicago, 20 weeks
in Philadelphia, 16 weeks in Mel
bourne, 16 weeks in London, 14
weeks in Paris, 14 weeks in Boston,
10 weeks in Auckland, N. Z., 8 weeks
in San Francisco, 8 weeks in Cleve
land, 5 weeks in Detroit, 5 weeks in
Cincinnati, 5 weeks in Washington,
4 weeks in Brooklyn, 4 weeks in Kan
sas City, 4 weeks in St. Louis, 4
weeks in Berlin, long runs every
where.
o
»»»»»»♦»»»
• NEW HARMONY
Everybody is busy picking cotton
and pulling fodder. Crops are very
short this year.
Health of this community is very
good at present.
Mrs. J. B. Lee, of Atlanta, visited
relatives in this community last
week-end.
Mrs. C. H. Boleman visited Mrs. J.
S. Boleman Friday afternoon.
Mr. and’ Mrs. S. H. Fleming vis
ited near Canon Sunday.
Mrs. M. J. Isom has returned from
Anderson County Hospital and is do
ing nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fleming
spent last week-end in South Caro
lina and attended revival services at
Double Springs church.
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. J.
Isom Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. DroVer Isom,,
of Cross Roads, and Mr. Carl Dun
can and son.
The singing given by the Misses
Freeman Saturday night was enjoyed
by all present.
Mrs. W. L. Osborne spent last
Monday afternoon with Mrs. W. E.
Fleming.
Those visiting Mrs. M. J. Isom
Monday afternoon were Mrs. Mary
Osborne, Mrs. Cullen Wright and
daughter, Louise, Mrs. Howard Ba
ker and Mrs. S. Mackey.
People from here are still going
to Hickory, N. C. Misses Dollye
and Lallie Isom and Mr. Bunyan
Fleming left last week. We wish
them succes in their new home.
Mrs. Pete White visited, her moth
er, Mrs. J. E. Welborn, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Robertson spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. S.
Boleman.
Mr. Clarence Duncan, of Hickory,
N. C., has returned home after a
two weeks’ stay with his mother, Mrs.
M. J. Isom.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Morris, of Cross
Roads, visited Mr. and Mrs. Edd
Freeman Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Fleming visited
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Isom Sunday
night.
Remember Sunday school and
preaching at this place Sunday morn
ing. Everybody come. And Sunday
school at Vernon Sunday afternoon.
Don’t forget. New Harmony Sunday
morning and Vernon Sunday after-*
noon.