Newspaper Page Text
\AijL. 03, !9J3
TIMES-—COURIER
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF GILMEB COUNTY.
C. F. OWEN
Editor and PuMi«b,-r
Entered at me post otto- <u fcllijay
Ga., as second-class mail ran te *
Published Every Friday
BOARDTOWN
Mr. Harley Allen visittd Santa
Luca school Friday and reported
a nice time.
Messrs Lafayette and Frank
Worley was visitors at Santa Luca
Friday.
Mang Fain is gone to Copper
bill on a visit.
Frank Worley and Claud Mil¬
ler visited Chester Young bunday
Mrs- John Waid and children,
visited her mother Sunday.
Gladys Young visitpd Lydia
Watkins Sunday.
Singing at Harper school house
was well attended Sunday after¬
noon. ,
May buits visited Masey Chap
man Sunday
Mattie Thurman visited Geoige
Holloway Sunday.
Charley Newton visited Bill
Johnson Sunday.
Flora and Bessie Ash visited
Ai, Sunday,
Wesley Ash is'the coon hunter
of Ai.
Frank Worley and Walter Frady
is the coon hunters of Boardtown
they took a hunt the other night
and caught two stick tails.
Will Cornet spent Sunday at
Henry Tuckers, also Taft Worley
visited Henry Tucker Sunday.
Martin Key and wife visited
Charley Key at Cherrylog Sat
urday aod Sunday.
Services at New balem was well
attended Suuday'. Rev. N. R
Hogan prtacaed an excellent set
moo.
Latayette and Frank Worley
visited Walter frady Sun a>
night.
J. M. Frady visited John Wat
kins bunday afainom,
Walter i iady has purchaser
a new phonograph Jeff
Brave
MT. ZION
We are having some very fin.
weather at this writing Hopei
will continue.
We are sorry to say that Mr.
and Mrs. I N. Walker are real sick
with ‘’Flu” we hope for their ear
ly recovery.
School, at Oak Hill will oper
again next Monday, It has beer
closed three weeks on account of
“Flu”.
The death angel visited tbt
home of Mr. Jim Parks and fam
ily and carried away their belov¬
ed wife and mother. The bereav¬
ed have our deepest sympathy.
Mr. Emory Henson and family
is rehl si*k with •'Flu”. We hope
for their earliest recovery.
Misses Minnie bmith and Bon¬
nie Farist spentSunday alternoon
with Miss Laura Burrell and re¬
ports a nice time.
Mr. Homer Henson, of Jasper,
Ga., and Mr. Ben Ellington spent
Saturday night with Mr. E. J.
Tull.
Wonder what has become of
Mr. Clifford Burrell, as we have
quit seeing him in this pari.
Guess he is singing.
The second Sunday is our regu¬
lar meeting day at Mount Zion.
Everybody come and bi ing a song
book for we are anxious to hear
some good singing.
Mr- and Mrs. Ariuur Reece
spent Saturday night e^th Mr,
and Mrs. Heiuy Evans, of Ot&r
Creek.
Mrs. S. A. Burrell spent Sun¬
day afternoon with her parents,
jMt, and Mrs- J. B. Smith
*'
A
GATES ’CHAPEL.
Wp arp * aving somr coo? wr ath
er at Ms 1 x 'mg
T ' -• i 'ol a» Gates Chapel is
s- itJ rdcelv under the man
g . i of VI Us Etta Withrow.
Miss Stella Corner, of Blaine,
Ga , is visiting her cousin. Miss
Alice Hill. - '
Mr- Jamps Darnell’s baby boy
got badly scalded a lew days ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parks are
the proud parents of a ! ig hoy we
understand its name is James
Miller. t
Mr. Clarence Sluder spent Wed¬
nesday night with Gordon and
Glenn Souther.
We are glad to say that we have
some new scholars in school this
week.
Miss Hattie Souther is teach¬
ing school.at. Northcutt.
Mr. and Mrs Herschel Park’s
baby is very ill at this writing.
Rev./ A. J, Reece and Mr. J . W.
Souther spent Saturday night
vith Mr John Heinmons and
family.
Miss Alice Hill told a good
itory last Friday at school
With much love to the Times
.
U)urier
A Little School Girl
ZION HILL NEWS
There is a lot of sickness in
this section at this writing.
Zion Hill school had to stop on
account of the flu, the teacher,
M;ss Missouri Pickett is very ill
vith it now and many of the
students.
Mr and Mrs. M. M. Deal, ol
near Zion Hill, has been called to
che sickness and death of their
grandson little Floyd Parks near
Nine Mile.
Sunday was meeting day ai
Zion Hill but there was uot many
present or. accountof the ‘‘Flu”
Best wishes to the Tlmts-Cour
ler
China-Aster
CHERRY LOG ITEMS
bctiool is processing nicely a
Rock Creek under the matiagt
meniof Mr Truman Dcweeae ano
Miss Donzie Weaver.
Several are absent from schooi
chis week on account of "liu’
aope they will soou.be well so
they can come to school again.
Church services was well at¬
tended Sunday, ar Rock Creek.
Miss Myrtle Smith spent
night with Miss Elaine Alsobrook.
Miss Gertrude Miller has had
the flu but is well enough to conn
to school. We are all glad to set
her bhek.
Mr. Kiser Whitener and Miss
May Davis were married a tew
days ago. We wish them a long
and happy life.
Mr. and Mrs. A L. Stewarts’
little daughter is very ill, hopt
she w ill soon recover.
Mrs. Hice visited Mrs. Dovit
Smith last Monday afternoon
and also Mr. Edward Alsoorook.
Best wishes to the Times-Cour
ier and its many readers.
Two Chums
REM Opt E\O y F }, f f
FOR THE RELIEF OF
Coughs, Colds. Croup
WHOOPING COUGH, HOARSENESS
BRONCHITIS I
-SOLO EVERYWHERE
Messrs. Clement Chadwick and
Stephen Cloninger made a flying
trip to Mr. W. P. Chadwicks Sun.
Messrs Clifford Rtece and Wal
ter McArthur passed through ~ our
burg Sunday. .
Wonder where Mr Jiobert
Reece has been keeping himself
here o£ late.
Come on writers with the news
We like to hear from you all.
Bert and Bill
tfOUTE FOUR
We 1-arn there is a i y , k
ness over the surrounding coun
try, such as Flu, colds and la
giippe.
Mr Bill Smith and daughter,
Edison, were visiting his i.-ifiis
at Oakhill Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. J C. Wright visited his
lather, Monday, on Owltown, who
is very seik.
School is progressim; »icely at
Snider under i hmanage men; of
Sufford Evans.
The recent wind storwvltL^one
a lot of damage ;o i‘>e timber
this. section.
J. B. Williams and others, are
calking of getting a saw mill io
jome in the settlement and cut
jp the limber that is going to
waste, thousands ol feet of tim¬
ber is blown down in this section.
We were sorry to’learu of the
death ol Mrs- Bud Forrester,wno
ited last Saturday, at her home
jn Cartecay.
Mrs Era Keunemur, sp<nt th
rtte'rnoon with Mrs. j. B, Wil¬
liams Saturday. -
Sunday school at Ch ar Creek is
still nourishing, ihe aveiage.at
tendanc lor one y ar b.-i< g 40 1-3
only 3 Sundays during the year
there was no Sunday school held,
>n account oi rain and Decoration.
This speaks well of th young
people ot the community., who
las been so attentive in Sunday
school, and the study of ihe table.
Now let us hear from b her bun
day scnools over the country,
would be glad to know that every
church was carrying ou a good
Sunday school.
Best wishes to the Times-Cour
ier and all ib readers
Peach bloom
i-uNE MILL
Rev. j. G. Lupo iilieo hisregu
.ar appointment here Sunday ,uuu
delivereu a very rut ruling ser
•non.
Alias, lia Parks speof Saturday
-»irb mu-ory Hilts spent
Suuoay ana Sunday nigut with
jlr. and . 1 . 0 . vv, Ai. Rufus.
Aa,s. La ra riujp-» ,,ptut bun
Jay vun Mrs, supma Vli,iuow.
Vvc ait very gtari to na\t Ail*
jim l arks aiid Faiuiiy, oi Lioali,
['em.., to uiovt to our county
Mr Ruel Stansberry, ot Akron,
Ohio, is visiting his sister. Airs
J.. L. Parks.
Aunt Mira Parks, who has Been
suffering with a cancer for some
time, we are sorry to say is no
better. * «
Miss Leila Sluder, of Zionhill,
spem Sunday night at the home
of W. L. Phrks.
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Daniel spent
last Sunuay afternoon with M .
and Mrs. Fate Parks.
Misses Edna and Oilie Parks
spent Sunday afternoon with Miss
Vera i lae Rodgos.
Miss Edith Parks is oat o!
school on account of sickness.
Mrs. Aladgie Sale^aad chilore.
Friday with Mrs. Liilu
p af j
Aluit
Free Flower Seeds
You will be glad to know that Has
tings’, “The South’s Seedsman,” will
give away about 2,000,000 packets of
seed of the South’s most popular flow
ers this spring.
There ie nothing in the home that
can compare with rich colored flowers.
They brighten us all up and make any
house attractive. You can’ plant too
many flowers and this apjartunity to
get Shirley Poppies, Everlasting Flow¬
ers, Zinnias. Cosmos and Mexican Burn¬
ing Bush absolutely free, is certainly .0
be welcomed by all readers of thi.
paper. ,
You can get th in! Just write, to
Hastings’ for the new 1923 Catalog, it
tells you how to gel flower .seeds fre
n 100 pages of bsautitul photo¬
graphic pictures and corre-t descrip¬
tions of garden flower and field seeds.
bulbs and plants, and also is full of
helpful information that is needed
almost daily in every Southern home.
It's the most valuable seen book ever
published and you will be migihy glad
you’ve got it. Just write and ask lor
the new Catalog
H. G. HASTINGS CO,
Atlanta, Ga.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER’S
p AS TORI A
GOOD
CIGARETTES
io c
GENUINE
“BUlT
DURHAM
TOBACCO
GftEAT VICTORY FOR SCIENCE
Cure of Insanity One of the Most Su¬
preme Blessings Bestowed cn
Human Race.
Insanity is no longer considered
hopeless in most cases. The hospitals
are curing great numbers of patients
through scientific treatment. Physical
Infection-' have been found to be the
cause O; many mental eases; and even
where toe cause is purely mental,
specialists are making rapid progress
in restoring the diseased minds.
The reclaiming of a lost mind is
perhaps the greatest blessing science
can bestow. An tye. a lung, a !>’' or
an arm way be taken away, yet’there
always remains that handful of giuy
substance which emu comprehend and
direct the world. l’>ut when the riiud
Is gone, everything is gone, as fur us
the unfortunate individual is con¬
cerned.
The attitude toward lunatics of sav¬
age or semi-savage peoples is rather
odd, when one considers that an im¬
becile is always more or less of a
nuisance and that savages, by natural
inclination, make siiort shrift of all
obstacles in the way of their comfort
and happiness. Almost invariably sav¬
age tribes believe that their demented
members are possessed of a super¬
natural presence, and treat them kind¬
ly and well.
The treatment of those mentally de¬
ficient b • modern civilized people lias
been sometimes cruel and, until lately
nearly always unwise.—Jacksonville
Journal.
BUTTONS ONCE HAD PURPOSE
In Old rimes There VVas Good Rea¬
son for the Present Merely "Or
namenta |» Appanage#.
A well known speaker recently en
ties of fashion particularly as con¬
cerned women's dress. He was get¬
ting considerable fan out of It until
one of tile ladles interrupted him and
asked what the buttons on the back
nr his coat were for. They are clearly
siiperflin-us find just as much out of
oince ns some of the feminine foibles
:ie was criticizing. He was unable to
ms. or the question, whereupon the
angli vas on him. The useless and
• impose:’!?' ornamental extra buttons
on a man's dress coat are relics oi
horseback-riding days, when it was
customary to button up the sk'rts of
fie coat to prefenf sitting upon them
or cot tit:.: the lin!m;s soiled from the
or.ee. The slit up the back of'the coat
original!.’.' served the same good pur
{a.se. The buttons on the slot ves are
nheritee from t!ie days when a really
lashing blade had frequent necessity
for turning up the sleeves of his coat
to gifo his sword-arm play. Then the
buttons erred a real need. Finally
the turn: d-up sleeve and its linin'- be¬
came a "’fif that could no longer be
turned ■’ -m and the buttons became
merely ! !it'o:.::l.
Flow of Language.
A colored preacher, one of the men
who are never at a loss for words, was
commending to his congregation one
of the organs of the church, nnd this
is how lie did it:
“The missionary bulletin of this
church needs subscribers.’ It is young
and in finiun'Uii, but through the in
Wumeniulity of backbone and grit it
will become an Ideal. It was ushered
into existence out of purely innocent
contemplation f! i moral and religious
good, which would, ill all probability!
result from cart-r-tHy agitated prin¬
ciple; or righteousness. The bulletin
will be observed mingling in social
conventions to furnish with si.eaves of
harvfst those reasonable products com¬
mon to social contingencies. The tone
of the whole will ho missionary work.”
—Kansas City Journal.
One of the Fr.mily.
Tfllip had been laced by her aunt
in a situation as maid of ail work in i
family of three. At the end , • a week
the aunt dropped in to sec she was •
getting on. •- *
“Do you like your work?” she asked.
“It’s fair," said the laconic Tiliie.
“And are they making you feel at
home?” •
“Sometimes they do, aud sometimes
they don’t."
“Now what do you mean by that?”
.demanded the aunt.
"Well,” said Tiliie, “they haven’t
asked me to go to riiurch with them
yet; but last night They went on with
a grand quarrel they were having, ali
the three of them, with me taking the
dishes oft the table, just as if I had
been one of the family.”— Harper's
Magazioa,
Wh v» - s ia^ar
tec Cl a Cent
The car b e largest yon. can held
fiie :;R so cL ;e ycnr eye that you’ll
Ice 3 £ H ; of Tie a r:. Don’t let a Cheap
price or a bij c..:; L cf'ag powder make
you 1c >e sight of quality.
IMET
Ziii PS5WBEM
[j* I; tae c'jality ieav
{< c ~r fc rreal econ- '
| 9 9 I ! cmy in the kitchen, *° T 1
- alwnyGiioeCalume^ trial will }j 'd
one coil' llWff C5NTENISU*
■.y **■*$%& 7 voice you.
* The sale of C: la*
raet is over 159$>
greater Than that of
any other baking
powder. BEST BY TESY
8 S.--...--------------- --------- - ......... “
t wckldz greatest r. mmo powder
1»*t IIWM ■** *’ ■»v - —------------- J "TTngwrW----- ‘TT’’—"Tt
"*1 ’ X*CR«3VER’3
*.< vTKrt M.UA
tl *4 ) .0u
BUct *%..
4 •14
ATLANTA Oi
\
£
TOURING CAR i ^
"Y\ iNew '*■ ■ Price <|
'
4 / •• r IN 5 j|s
i T'T kf
JV'' l-T :
v «|l -v. 8 i;
# ;
1
F. C. & l
. 'v IT DETROIT v.
IWr
M,. ; A, ’
■ ’
#4.^' - '.AkXh'i
Si t'H
; ■he-' ’!\r ; F ;
- , .
This is the lowest price at
wh. : ihe Ford Tei ; .Fr>g
. .
Car has ever sold, and with
the many r, -’mprove
menc, inclad'rig the one I
man tep, *t is a bigger value
than ever before
Buy now, Terms desired.
.Vic Han Motor Co, ll
EUijay, Ga.
Jl
mmm w p wru-o—
.
Fruit Trees,
I have ooucSodiff re-t finds
I of apple trees, all of which v re
;grained j Nv. i I' uc i.rat)
Teediing. w e il grown, true to ia
l bel, Oi tiio most • uitabie varieties
; that )ui k experience , in the o.
! chard and nursery business has
shown to be the best tor his tdi»
| mate- I also have Peachr
! | Pea*s, Cherries, Quince, ('rape
Vines, Raspberries, Himalaya
Berries. All of whice are sold at
a very low price Your ordea
“re appreciated and have my ov>. ;
personal c.ire.
H, I- Dover Nurseries,
Haute 2. Box 75, Eliijav, G-,