The News-herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1898-1965, April 21, 1924, Page Page Two, Image 2

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Page Two The News-Herald Lawrenceville, Georgia Published Monday and Thursday $1.50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE D. M BYRD. Editor V. L. HAGOOD News Editor and General Manager J. L. COMFORT, Supt. Official Organ Gwinnett County, City of Lawrenceville, U. S. Court, Northern District of Georgia- Entered at the Post Office at Law renceville, Georgia, as Second Class Mail Matter, under the act of Con gress of March 3rd, 1879. One cow giving 7 1-4 gallons of milk per day, three cows standing side by side that give 19 1-4 gallons of milk in one day, and five cows that give 29 gallons in one day, and all of these Georgia raised cows, is a new high record of milk produc tion, and one that every person in terested in this industry should be concerned in. These cows belong to a dairy herd in Washington county, and are Guersneys, and were raised on the dairyi farm. A cow on the same farm with her first calf pro duced 63Q pounds of butter in 12 months. Whenever Georgia farmers improve their cattle until they pro duce the maximum amount of butter and milk, thtWe will be money in the dairy business. THE CHILDREN S ROLL. The Children’? Founders Roll was inaugurated by the Stone Mountain Confederate, Memorial Association in order that the children of the south might have a share in the carving of the greatest monument that the world has ever known. For each $1 contributed a child can enroll any confederate soldier that he wishes to remember —his grandfath er,, great-graiidfother, cousin, uncle or friend. One child may enroll a 3 many names as he.lik.es, provided he sends $1 for each name, enrolled. For this he will receive one line for himself and the person he wishes to memor ialize. He may memorialize as many as he wishes with an additional $1 for each one, and he vyill have a line for hirr.3elf and each of the others in the bock of memory, which will occu py a place of honor in memorial hall at Stone Mountain. Any white child under the age of eighteen is eligible, and each child making a contribution will receive a small bronze medal designed by Gut zon Borglum, showing that he is one of the founders of the memorial. The local Woman’s club is sponsor ing this great movement, with the fol lowing committee in charge: Mrs. C. O. Stubbs, Mrs. W. L. Brown, Miss Minnie Peeples. HOW INDUSTRY LOOKS AT IMMIGRATION Washington, D. C., April 14.—Con gress must pass some sort of an im migration law prior to June 30 or see the gates thrown wide open to any and every immigrant who desires to come to this country. The present law expires on that date. To aid congress to come to a de cision as to the new law which will be of most aid to the country, many groups of people have made recom mendations and written petitions to congress as to just what it should do. Among the more important of these groups is the National Association of Manufacturers, which two years ago put a committee at work to investi gate the situation and make recom mendations as to what the new law should be. This committee is composed of C. S. Ching, United States Rubber Com pany, New York; W. R. Carnegie, Berry Brothers, Inc., Detroit; Wil liam D. Disson, Henry Disston & Sons, Philadelphia; Charles L. Eck man, Eckman Furniture Company, Jamestown, New York; John C. Hus well, Dayton Malleable Iron Com pany, Dayton; S. D. Weil, Arco Com pany, Cleveland, and James A. Em ery, general counsel, National Asso ciation of Manufacturers, Washing ton. It has just reportea, recommending the continuance of 3 per cent quota, at present in force, with certain al terations in procedure. Among these are improved administration with a certain new investigatory machinery, ■which will hqt only prevent the un desirable alien from emigrating, but wall also approximate the inflow, as to times and seasons, to the demand for unskilled labor in this country. ""he state board of entomology an nounces that a peddler car of calcium aisenate will be in LawrencevKle all day Thursday, Jlay Bth, for the pur pose of selling boil weevil poison to the farmers. It can be had in hun dred pound lots and upward at 1 1 cents per pound. Demonstrations will be given and experts make tail s. Revival services will begin at the Methodist church Sunday evening of the 27th. Rev, Pierce Karris, of Bu ford, will assist the pastor, Rev. Mar vin A. PranWin. The former is a young msu who is making himself felt wherever lie goes, both as pastor and revivalist, and Lawrenceville is anticipating this meeting with an un usual degree of interest, SEND U 5 YOUR JO t> WORK \ dUEsTTuL HAVE r \ LET’S SEE j ("V'i *TO WEAR THIS J \ 'E tA X NOCK JJ 9 OH E ALL y • \IT OFF/ 'y / An EASTER. BONNET - ~ rvM! FOR MOTHER. ANP ' VWN / X I> Jta.lr.iJ SSS4JTT FAIL Somebody must be “It” in every walk of life. James Logan, mil lionaire General Manager of the U. S. Envelope Co., of Worcester, Mass., says: “The day always comes for those who hang on tight. You’ve got to find the WAY to hang on, that's all.” Logan started life 72 ycaij ago in a poverty stricken hut in a tiny village in Scotland. Out of work and with a wife and four children to sup port, Logan’s father brought his family to America when Jim was three months old. The father paid for passage over by working as a coal beaver. Settling in Worcester, the family lived in a hut three Hides from town for which they paid S'2 a month rent. When Jim v-as ten. ftis father was a night *-■ m, fi*ktra% v beaded photographer was sitting on bin front porch at Weakan. Kansas, the other day when the picture*©/ tbe a fwis?er Cb SW ° Pt miJale Jvei<L *-‘ ru 'cached his town. He pressed the hull—and I rr~~Y) —<vSJ HOME SWEET HOME o»c*r Hiti the Nail On the Finger Every Time by Terry Gilkison AUTOCASTER don't TELL ME t P Oti ,r s KNOW HOW TO HANDLE y - y Mou lieod Mot Jail This is the brief life story of a wealthy traveling man, son of an extremely poor journeyman potter, who was born in a stable in Prairie, Ohio, in 1838, without a “ghost of a chance” to be anything in life but a clay potter. His name is "Jug” (John W.) McChesney and his home is now in Kansas City, Mo. Back in 1853 when “Jug” was s little boy. his father was driven from Ohio because of hla inability to find clays suitable for making jugs, erocks, churns and the like and also because he was an “Ab solutionlft.” There wasn’t much monjy In the family then, there wasfft any rqal home, and as for Not That Kind of Aa Auntie Margie (who is a movie fan) “Did you ever see Oliver Twist, auntie?” Old-fashioned Aunt i— “Hush child. You know that I never attend any of these modern dances.” 1924 EASTER BONNETS watchman. ThCn the elder Logan lost his job and the landlord took the cow and horse for rent and ousted them. Jim went to work in a woolen mill at $8.50 per month. When he was eleven, his right arm was crushed in a machine and he was crippled for life. But he STUCK to his job. After 14 hours’ work in the mill he studied book keeping. Then the Civil War broke out: his age and his crippled body prevented his enlisting. Working holidays, Sundays and until mid night his pay jumped to s3l a month, and the whole family lived on it. At 16 he was a finished bookkeeper and got a job at $l5O a year in a dry goods store. A firm, crippled by the war, heard of Jim and hired him as A Kansas Cyclcn.c Caught in the Act IT'S ONLY ONCE /N a 6CEAT WHILE l HURT MYSELF. 1 m POIN6^ schooling, it was an unknown lux ury. And so the family moved from Ohio to Doniphan County, Kansas, where they became squat ters. A drought drove them into Missouri at the time when Abra ham Lincoln was the storm centre of the country and the issue of slavery wms at white hot heat. Thrown into jail because in boy ish glee he shouted, “Hurrah for Abe Lincoln,” he escaped and en listed in the 64th Ohio Infantry as a private. Four yeara later he came back a first lieutenant having fought in thirty-six battles. Re turning to the pottery moulding es hi* ancestors, he failed., , He failed also in Seven other kinds of wovfc Pure bred Rhode Island Red Eggs for sale. SI.OO for setting of fifteen MRS. W L. NIX. ts Lawrenceville, Ga. SEND US YOUR Juß WORK. THE NEWS HERALD, Lvt.«c.t!ll», G*w|tl f wl?st j |HAPLEYj bookkeeper, salesman and manager at S7OO a year. Three years later he formed an envelope company of his own. His reputa tion for honesty became a by word. The banks loaned li.a money. His business became the largest in the United States. la 1898 the U. S. Envelope Co. merg.-r was consummated. lie was made vice-president and general man ager, at SIOO,OOO a year. That was 26 years ago. Today he is worm millions. And he still li/es in Wor cester. /these, I KNEW XXI YOU DON'T ) \ KNOW HOW TO HANDLE A/ V_WMMAER. AT ALL/^ — - * iS ,/ ° )/ 50 “\ x 'y'-'/x I By WHIT HAPLEYi erfe .AT* -,5 j a J/ i and then started as an office boy for the Redwing Union Stonewave Company of Redwing, Minn. His sufferings and hardships beggar description, but he stuck to the job, working his way slowly upward until he became a salesman for the firm. For forty years he traveled from Canada to Mexico. Today at 86. he is still silling goods, al though he practicallyßowns ths company and has amassed a huge fortune. “I stuck to one thing,” ne says, “and worked it to a stand* •tbl ” FOR RENT OR SALE. Good six-room house, with bath and all conveniences, on nice Perry street east front lot for rent or for sale on easy terms. See R. SMITH, a 2 lc Lawrenceville, Ga. '1 llFllkn Krt Ijy p jly-tA (K America Is Doomed and That’s That When ;Teat tra'seOiei append, ethics—even newspaper t.aics—mast be swept ar !e. The editorial columns of this /Üblication always have been confined to the expression ol pinion, leaving to our news columns the recital of events that have occurred and tne .'■■•nouncement of events to come A continuation of this accepted policy is now rendered im possible, for we must record without delay the impending disintegration of the land we love before we are too late. The United States is doomed, and when the grand crash comes, perhaps some time next week, th.ere won’t be any body to write the story. There won’t be any newspapers to record the fact, and if there were, of course, there will not be any people to read about it. For once, therefore, we must beat our news editor to his own game. The nation has gone. Disaster is at the door. The gaunt skeleton cf ruin is abroad in the land. This is not an opin ion, not an expression of our fearfulness; it is the definite announcement of the distinguished Hebraic authority who settles all questions—Mr. Israel Zangwill. What more can be said ? When Mr. Zangwill opes his lips, let no dog bark. Worst of all, Mr. Zangwill has left us to our fate, gone home, thanking God he has departed without having had to see our prominent men. Oh, woe is us, for we are in the depths! Mr. Zangwill tells us we have no kick, not even in our bootleg cocktail, that our immigration and reparations policies are all wrong, that our hotels have too many towels in the bedrooms, that we are being attacked, undermined and sapped by a score of ignorant prejudices which will surely ruin us if suitable steps are not taken. Our type writer shivers under our touch as we record this humiliat ing arraignment. Our nerves were shattered when we read that the coffin trust of his time had put one over on old King Tut by slipping him into a cracked sarcophagus, but this latest exposure of our great incompetence just puts us entirely out of commission. We feel as the puppy dog bark ing against thunder when we realize the humiliating fact that after all our work we are headed for obliteration. There is only one ray of hope. Mr. Zangwill announces in passing that at one time he had considered becoming a citizen of the United States. He found, of course, that he could not become our President. Whether this influenced his decision not to save us, no man can tell, but it might be well for us to change the law while there is yet time and roll up a mighty petition insisting that Mr. Zangwill head the nation and lead us into the promised land. We must forget partisanship. Coolidge, McAdoo, Watson, Under wood, Reed, Walsh—yes, even William Jennings Bryan— must walk the plank. Self-preservation demands it- Zang will, the master mind, must rule—and that’s that. Not even yet has a sensible income tax schedule been arranged What the people want is a tax arrangement that will make the other fellow pay double and leave us free to enjoy ourselves without burden The new woman member of the British House of Commons startles the parliamentarians. “Let us see,” she says, “if we cannot arrange to have every child in England oat the same food as the children, of our Princess.” Vaulting ambitionl Where will it end? TAX RECEIVER’S NOTICE. I wil be in my office at the court house every day except Saturday and Monday, April 26th and 28th, on which days I will be at Buford Saturday April 26th, and will be at Cheek’s store at 8 o’clock, April 28, Bennett’s store, 9 o’clock, April 28, R. L. Johnson’s store, 10 o’clock April 28, Rosebud 11 o’clock, April 28th, Caleb 11 o’clock, April 28th. This will be eastern time. MARSHALL 11. TEAGUE. 1924 MODEL PERFECTION Cotton Duster Tested and Approved by the U. S. Department of Agriculture Through Dr. B. R. Goad, in charge " Delta Laboratory, Tallulah, Louisiana Highest Award at Georgia State Exposition Macon, Ga., October, 1923 Manufactured By PERFECTION DUSTER COMPANY Home Office: Winder, Georgia For Sale By W. L. BROWN Lawrenceville, Ga. USED CAR BARGAINS AT DULUTH, GA. On Display at all Times at BROWN’S GARAGE A supply of Fords of all types for sale or ' I " exchange at attractive prices. See “Vic” N. Hutchins or Allen Brown who will give full information on prices and terms. CLEMENT AUTO <?0. Norcross, Georgia WILLIAMS IMPROVED COT TON SEED FOR SALE I have a limited supply of my im proved cotton seed for sale at $1.50 per bushel f. o. b. Snellville. With these seed I made 1600 pounds per acre planting on the twenty-third of May last year, using poison twice and gathered the cotton October 23rd. SIDNEY C. WILLIAMS, a 24 Lawrenceville, Route 3.. MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1924. GRAND OPERA, ATLANTA, GA. April 21-26, 1924. SEABOARD announces for this occasion fare and one half for the round trip, open to the public. For selling dates and limit, see nearest SEABOARD Ticket Agent or write C. G. LaHatte, TP A, SAL, Atlanta, Ga. Fred Geissler, Asst. Pass r Tr. Mgr., SAL Ry., Atlanta, Ga. Throughbred Barred Rook Eggs, $3.00 for fifteen. (Mrs.) B. L. EXUM, ts Lawrenceville, Ga. SULPHUR IS BEST TO CLEAR UP UGLY. BROKEN OUT SKIN Any breaking out or skin irritation on face, neck or body is overcome quickest by applying Mentho- Sulphur, says a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroying properties, noth ing has ever been found to take the place of this sulphur preparation that instantly brings ease from the itching, burning and irritation, Mentho-Sulphur heals eczema right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth It seldom fails to relieve the torment or disfigurement. A little jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur may be ob tained at any drug store. It is used like cold cream. Ah! Backache Gone Rub Lumbago Away Rub Pain from back with small trial bottle of old “St. Jacobs Oil.” Ah! Pain is gone I Quickly?—Yes. Almost instant re lief from soreness, stiffness, lameness and pain follows a gentle rubbing with “St. Jacobs Oil.” Rub this soothing, penetrating oil right on your painful back, and like magic, relief coines. “St. Jacobs Oil” is a harmless backache, lumbago and sciatica remedy which never, disap points and doesn’t burn the skin. Straighten up! Quit complaining! Stop those torturous “stitches.” In a moment you will forget that you ever had a weak back, because it won’t hurt or be stiff or lame. Don’t suffer! Get a small trial botle of old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil” from your druggist now and get this lasting relief. COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAIR Darkens Beautifully and Restores Its Natural Color and Lustre At Once Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and lux. ariant. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul phur recipe at home, though, is trouble some. An easier way is to get the ready-to-use preparation improved by the addition of other ingredients a large bottle, at little cost, at drug stores, known as “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound,” thus avoiding a lot of muss. While gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful ap pearance and attractiveness. By dark ening your hair with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, be cause it does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared. After another application or two your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant and you appear years younger. | If Back Hurts 11 Flush Kidneys 7 Drink Plenty of Water and Take Glass of Salts Before Break- !i fast Occasionally II When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don’t get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which helps to remove the body’s urinous waste and stimulate them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of good water—yon ean’t drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morn ing for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; also ta ■neutraliae the acids m the system so they are no longer a source of irrita ' tion, thus often relieving bladder weak ness. Jad Salts in inexpensive; can not in jure; makes .a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now ant? then to help keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this; also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you Will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache By all meins have your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year.