The Danielsville monitor. (Danielsville, Madison County, Ga.) 1882-2005, March 06, 1925, Image 3

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’ meadow • * I * —— — Her* we come again after being gbsent for a l*g time. Tbe sinelne ? isfn b ’ ® r - and Mrs - Bud Carithers Sunday m*ht was en joyed by a" present. Mr and Mrs. Juliui Epps, Mr. J Af r Will Christian were guests Tilr *nd Mrs. Fred C. Cledfelter ° ear Gholston Stand Sunday. ! m r and Mrs. Mack Clodfelter , ere the *•. of Mr. and Mr,. T. j Fields a while Sunday afternoen. Mr and Mrs. T. J. Fields an nolme the arrival of a big girl March Ist. Dos't forget about Sunday School. at this place every Sunday. Every body come and join us. Miss Frances Carithers was tire pest of Miss Lillian Carithers Satui day night. Mr. and Mrs Julius Epps were the pests of Mr. and Reece Perterfield Friday night. Last Week Locals The Ringing given by Miss Frances Carithers last Sunday night was en joyed by all present. The dance given by Mr. and Mrs. Jos Esco was enjoyei by a large num her. Miss Leoniie Nelms was the guest,, of Mrs. Jessie Mae Carithers last week. Miss Faiith Clodfelter spent Satur day night and Sunday with Miss Lju cile Turrer. -w-’ —a . ,Mr. Juluis Epps and Miss Susie Et ta Porterfield were happily married the 21st of February. We wish for them a long and happy life. 41 MT. AIRY * Mr. and Mrs M. F. Webb of Nichol souwere guests last Wednesday of Mr and Mrs Roy Sheridan. . Mr. and Mrs W W Barnett, Mr and Mrs Weber Barnett and Miss Sana Frances Hiy of Colbbertwere dinner guests of Mr and Mrs J. C. Barnett Suuday. j Mr. and Mrs. G W King are the proud parents of a son boru on the 27th who is being called George Washington, Jr. Mrs Claude Porterfield and chil dren were Sunday night mother, Mrs Herrin of Colbert. Several from here attended the singing at Shilo Sunday and report a nice time. „ Messers L R and R A Sheridan made a business trip to Jefferson on last Thursday. We are sorry to state Master Lin ton Roland is quite sick. • Mr and Mrs Clifford Barnett and Mrs H G King motered to Comer Sunday. „ Mr Samm Patten of Colbert was visiting in our burg Sunday. Mrs. Bill Martin and Mrs. C. V. Borders visited Mrs. King Monday. There is a great deal of work being c “ rr ied on in our community toward Naming while the weather is pretty. Mi*, and Mrs. Lonnie Hardman wer e Saturday night guests of the otter’s parents, Mr. and Mi's. Lu ther Cromer of Moons Grove. M'sg Nellie Borders spent last week with relatives at Bowman. are sorry to state there is sev eral cases of sickness in our midst. Mr. Dpck Hardman was visiting at Moons Grove Suaday. Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Sheridan were Saturday night guests of the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M Escoe of Mt Zion community. Twenty Million ** mmx George C. Carson, miner, roust about and general workingman of Butte Mont., nineteen years ago fiatented a device which big copper nterests. have since adopted—but failed to pay him. A court verdict in his favor last week awards royalties and damages estimated at $20,000,000. ************ * DIAMOND HILL ************ All seem to be enjoying the spring like weather and farmers are busy getting ready for farming-. Miss Lucile Higginbotham spent Wednesday night with Mrs. W. S. Branyon and family. Friends of Mr. Albert Sorrow ! were grieved to hear of his death last Thursday at his home in Patter son community. He was laid to rest ( in the Murray grave yard near his home. The family have our deep est sympathy. Miss Thelma Benton was the guest of Miss Lucile Whitworth Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Ben Epps and little son, Hollis, were guests of Mr. Bpps mother in Colbert Sunday. Miss Lottie Ma Murray spent Sunday with Miss Oneita Benton. Mr. Cleo Mathews, who is at work in Banks county, spent last week with his parents, Mi?, and Mrs. J. H. Mathews. ' % Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Bridges were guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Whitworth Sunday. Misses Montez and Annie Lee Her ring of Colbert spent Thursday night with Miss .Lurline Mathews. Mrs. Dav e Meadow was visiting Misses Gussie and Annie Gordon Sunday. Miss Thelma Benton was in Ath ens Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Flanigan and Miss Katie Sartain of Athens were guests of Miss Lurline Mathews Sunday afternoon. MONEY LOANED by The Federal Land Bank at 5 1-2 per cent is now available. As it takes some €0 days to close ja loan, please seeß me at once if you need money on your 'land. This is net only the cheapest money available on farm lands, but the farmer practi cally fixes his own terms of payment, and can never be called upon to pay the principal sum, except at the rate of $l.OO per $lOO annually. CLARENCE E. ADAMS tTHE DANI ELSVtLLg HOfHTOR, DANIELSYILLE. GA>- BLACK-DRAU6HT Hastings’Free Flower/ Seeds/ Hastings’ is giving away Absolutely Free, S Seed Packets of Beautiful Flowers to each 1925 customer. Hast ings’ beautiful, new 112-page, 1925 Catalog shows these flowers in full natural colors. The front cover pic ures the great Stone Mountain Confed erate Memorial This Big Seed Book is the Standard Planting Guide, with valuable culture directions and accurate descriptions of all kinds of seeds, plants and bulbs. It has over 250 pictures from actual photographs and is bigger and better than ever. Brim-full of informa tion, it’s the most useful Seed Book ever published. You need it for ready reference al most daily. Be sure to write for It today; a post-card will do. It comes to you entirely free by return mail. K. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. * FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric add conditions. correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sixes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Mejdal. 1 ♦To Cal’* Hobby . | W ‘ Bl Hr ’.+ * %N v*■ __ Congressman Fred M. Vinson of Kentucky, wrote a poem to Presi dent Cooiidge’s electric hobby horse on which he exorcises—and despite criticism read it in the House. Old Folks’ Ailments “I began taking Black- Draught over fifty years ago and my experience with it stretches over a good long time,” says Mr. Joe A. Blake more, a Civil War veteran and former Virginian, who is now a prominent citizen of Floyd, Texas. “It is the best laxative I know of for old people... A good many years ago, in Virginia. I used to get bilious and I found that Thedford’s was the best and quickest re lief I could get. Since I came to Texas I have these bilious attacks every now and then— a man will get bilious any where, you know—and I find that a little Black-Draught soon straightens me out. After a few doses, in little or no time I’m all right again.” Thedford’s Black-Draught is a purely vegetable liveT medicine, used in America for over eighty years. It acts on the stomach, liver and bowels in a gentle, natural way, as sisting digestion and reliev ing constipation. Sold every where. E-102 This Week By Arthur Brisbane OUR GIFTS TO JUSTICE. DEFECTIVE TEETH AND HANDS. OUR FEEBLE IMAGINATION. NEIGHBORLY NATIONS. A man in the Sing Sing death house, sentenced to die next month, hangs himself. Doctors work over him for hours, trying to bring him back to life. The interesting feature of this death in the death house is the violent effort to resuscitate the man after he had strangled himself. The law said he must die, why not let him die? What do the higher powers above think of the corpses that we send up from our gallows, elec tric chairs and lethal chambers? How much better does our civiliz ation seem up there than that of the ancient Mexicans that ripped out the heart of a living human sacrifice, offering that as a wel come gift to their gods? How do our gifts to the god dess of Justice impress real jus tice? The French army has tested and approved anew stabilizing device for airplanes, without the use of a gyroscope. That means one step nearer to absolutely safe flying, safer than any mode of travel on land. Ten to twenty years should see the end of long distance rail tra vel and of ocean surface travel. Wise real estate investors will make their plana with the flying machine in mind. The British worry because the national eyesight grows weaker. One hundred and fifty in every 1,000 lack good sight at the age of twenty and ten at the age of four. The human eye, like the teeth that nature gave us, is defective, Jf The unseen hand of the burglar and thelthief reach es for your purse, which you imagine is securely hidden under your pillow, when you are not aware and may snatch away in an instant the hard earned savings of years. You cannot in justice to yourself and those de pendent upon you afford take such a risk. Do not allow cash to lie around your home or carry it about your per son, The one safe place for it is in a good, strong, well managed bank, We invite your account. The Peoples Bank Comer Gra. Renew Your Subsciption a poorly made Instrument. Ooif teeth cause suffering and death. Teeth better planned would not do that. Evan our flve-flngered hands, would have been much im proved by adding one Anger. With that extra finger we should use in arithmetic the superior duodecimal system, instead of the inferior decimal system, and we could play stringed instruments of a higner, more complicated kind. t Floyd Collin’s suffering is over. This man’s death illustrates the power and the weakness of human imagination. A hundred men risk ed their lives to save his. Doctors went to his rescue by flying machine, but could do nothing. The entire nation followed closely the tragic story. Imagination showed the man ly ing in the low cave, his leg crushed by the 14,000-pound rock, existing day after day for nearly two weeks in horrible aguny and discomfort. , • ) It was possible to imagine clear ly that dreadful situation. And the nation sympathized. Any legis lature would gladly have voted SIOO,OOO to save Collins. The same nation, through its legislatures, refuses to pass the Child Labor amendment that would free tens of thousands of children from years of slow torment. The feeble public imagination cannot see clearly those children in the mills. The Prince of Wales, whom Americans recently made very welcome, is interested in a plan to send British students to this country. That is common sense, as well as a pleasant compliment. The Rhodes scholarship system, that now sends American boys to British universities, will be re versed In the new plan. The way to establish peace Is to increase intelligence. When nations know each other, they will compete In stead of fighting. There is disappointment because i the British Church can’t find a way to make a saint of Florence Nightingale, and supply her with ft halo. The answer to that is that Florence Nightingale is a saint already, and needs no halo. When she went to Scutari, with her group of devoted nurses, to save from needless death the wounded men in the Crimea, stick ing at her work, although pros trated with fever, she made her jelf a saint. Nothing that the Archbishop of Canterbury might do would make her saintliness more genuine than it is.