The News-herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1898-1965, May 05, 1924, Page Page Three, Image 3

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MONDAY, MAY S, 1924. MRS. LILLIE F.XUM If its bargains you arc hunting, go to the General Implement Co. Mr. Fred Sales, of Atlanta, was a week end visitor to the city. Misses Louise and Mamie Brand spent Saturday in Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Sikes were in Atlanta a few days last week. Mr. W. 0. Cooper was in Macon on business last week. Mr Dilmus Williams, of Atlanta, visited his parents last week. Mrs. Lyaa Williams has been quite ill for several days. Mr. M. D. Jacobs and Miss Ruth Jacobs, of Atlanta, were in Law renceville Sunday. Messrs Jack and Thomas Carroll, of Atlanta, spent Sunday in Law renceville. Mr. A. H. Davis, of Buford, R. 2, was a visitor to Lawrenceville to day. Miss Louise Brand attended the Georgia-Oglethorpe game in Athens Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Phillips hnd family worshipped at Ebenezer church Sun day. Mrs. Hinton Tarlv Steward; of Winder, visited-relatives and friends in Lawrenceville Thursday. Mr. Hosea Camp spent the week end with his mother, and little daughter. . Mrs. Mary Wallace, of Stone Mountain, visited Mrs. Charles Wil liams at her country home last week. Dr. William Wright, wife and lit tle son, spent Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Lillie Camp. Miss Flora Franklin, of Buford, spent Sunday in Lawrenceville with Rev. and Mrs. Franklin. ? - ’ The General Implement Co., i» of fering bargains in farm tools. Try them Mr. Richard Martin, of Ogle thorpe University, spent the week end' at home. Mr Will Davis, of Buford, wor shipped at the Baptist church Sun day evening. Mr. Clyde Power and family,' of Buford, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. R' Martin Sunday. ;• .’v ’■ * A*' ’ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tapp, of Bu ford, were Sunday guests of the lat ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Garner. Mrs. Hyman Saul, and son, Don ald, are visiting the former’s parents in Atlanta. She has recently under gone a tonsil operation. Rev. and Mrs. Richard Broyles, of Loganville, have been among the out of town people attending the ser vices at the Merthodist church. Mrs. Hovey Pharr and small daughter, who have been staying in Atlanta for some time, are in Law renceville for the summer. For high grade Fertilizers, Ni trate of Soda, Sulphate of Ammo nia and Calcium Arsenate, also Hill’s Mixture we can fill the order. Use nothing but the best, ‘for there is ro time now for experimenting. Call, write or Phone us. Prices right. mßc C. R. WARE— C. U. BORN. The T. E. L. Class will have charge of the opening exercises at th? Bap tist church next Sunday morning, it being “Mother’s Day.” H. P. Stiff Motor Co. C«*h or crcJ** When You See Us Don't Think of Insurance; When You Think of Insurance, See Us, . in Regrets Won’t Rebuild—Resti tution Means Restoration YOU can suffer no financial fire loss if you insure new. If 'you put it off you may. 'DO you think you had better post pone taking out rnsurarice? We can fortell your- possible losfe if yoU do hesitate'' and guarantee you' against loss if you act now. PPaCTICfILLYAU INSURANCE NSW I RtiaH^IAWREMCEVIUt.GfI. Who of you wouldn’* walk half a block to iave 25 to 50%. You can do that by walking down to the Gen eral Implement Co. The regular meeting of the Law renceville Junior Club will be held on Tuesday next, May 7th, at the ciub bouse. Miss Florence Sammon, of State Normal, Athens, spent the week end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Q. Sammon. Miss Ellise Craig Wilson, of At lanta, is the charming guest of Mrs. L. M Bradford and the Misses Brand. Mrs. Eula Hamilton and daugh ters, Mildred and Kathleer, of Gainesville, and Mr. Tyler Peeples motored down Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Bennett have returned from Florida and will spend the summer at their home here. Rev. and Mrs. Tillman Eakes and son, Tillman, Jr., of Jefferson, were the guests of Miss Minnie Peeples last Wednesday. Mr. Dick McGee, and friend, Sam Datidson, were guests of the for mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. McGee, for the week end. Throughbred Barred Rqtk Eggs, $3.00 for fifteen. (Mrs.) rl. L. EYUM, ts Lawrenceville, Ga. * Miss Gladys Oakes, of Stnt* Nor mal, Athens, has been spending a few days at home with her father, Mr. C. D Oakes arid i\l : es Daisy Oakes, her sister. Messrs Vines and Dink Martin, of Athens, came over Sunday to view the wreckage caused by the cyclone and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Martin while here. Mr. F. B. Maddox and family re united with the First Baptist church here Sunday, having taken their let ters with them when they moved to the country. Rev Marvin Franklin preached to a.large congregation in Buford'Sun day, exchanging pulpits with Rev. Pierce Harris, who is conducting the revival at the Methodist church. Mr. J. H. Teague, aged 77, who lives on Lawrenceville Route 1, near Suwanee, suffered a stroke of pa ralysis last week and is in critical condition. Hundreds of people from every Section flocked here during the last few days to view the wreckage in the path of the recent terriffic cy clone. Mrs. C. T. McConnell and child pen, Charles and Mary Beth, left to day for Conyers, where they will be the guests of Mbs. John LCe, Sister of Mrs_ McConnell, for several days. Mrs. W J. Blake and children, who have been the guests/of Mr. J. P. Byrd and Miss Cora Byrd, re turned to their home in Calhoun Falls, S. C., Thursday. For high grade Fertilizers, Ni trate of Soda, Sulphate of Ammo nia and Calcium Arsenate, also Hill’s Mixture we can fill the ordfrr. Use nothing t.ut the best, for there is no time now for experimenting. Call, write or Phone us. Prices right. mßc C. R. WARE,—C. U. BORN. Porto Rico potato and Sweet Pep per plants ready GUARANTEE DE LIVERY THREE DAYS AFTER ORDER RECEIVED $2.75 thousand. 5.000 plants $12.50. Leading varie ties tomato plants SI.OO thousand. Mail or express. Satisfaction guaran. teed. Carlisle Seed & Plant Farms., rr.sp Valdosta, Ga. New and Second Head Ford*. Sick Headache “I have used Black-Draught when needed for the past 26 years,” says Mrs. Emma Grimes, of Forbes, Mo. “I began taking it for a bad case •of constipation. I would get constipated and feel just mis erable —sluggish, tired, a bad taste in my mouth, . . . and soon my head would begin hurting and I would have a severe sick headache. I don’t know just who started me to taking Thedford’s BUCK-DRAUGHT but it did the work. It just seemed to cleanse the liver. Very soon I felt like new. When I found Black-Draught go easy to take and easy acting, I began to use it in time, and would not have sick headaches'.” Constipation causes the system to re-absorb poisons that may cause great pain and much danger to your hea 11 h. Take Thedford’s Black-Draught. It will stipu late the liver and help to drive out the poisons. Sold by all dealers. Costs only one oent a dose. Mr. John Simpson and family have moved into the R. L. Robinson home on South Perry street and Mr. Emmett Gunter and family are occupying the Mrs. Sammon home cn West Grogan street. Mr. A. A. White, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Power, of New York City; Mrs. Jameis Stringer and daughters, Lil lian and Lorraine, of Atlanta, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Am brose Sunday. Mr. F. Q. Sammon happened to a rather painful accident Friday, when the cable to his elevator broke, caus. ing him to get a very hard fall, though no bones are broken, he is bruised up considerably and has been confined to his room since. Revival services continue at the Methodist church, Rev. Harris, of Buford, preaching twice each day. Large congregations attended both morning and evening services Sun day and on Sunday afternoon anoth er men’s evangelistic meeting was held. Mrs. T. K. Mitchell, who was se verely hurt by a fall some weeks ago, returned home from Davis-Fis cher sanatorium Sunday afternoon very much improved. She was ac companied by her son, Mr. Thomas W. Mitchell and daughter, Miss Pearl. BIRTHDAY PARTY. Little Miss Emily LaMerle Chris tian celebrated her fifth birthday last Saturday afternoon, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs P. M. Christian. About forty little friends were present, and a most enjoyable occa sion it was for the little future belles and beaux. W. L. TftX, Attorney at Law, Office in New Tanner Building LAWRENCEVILLE, GA. Utggj Uncle JdtaV My good friend Henry Tun kett is a many-sided man. . . . He’ll take a hand in any game, an’ play the best he can. . . . So fur as eddication goes, ho aint a shinin’ light,—but he wouldn’t fool with nothin’ that he didn’t think was right. Fva heard him ’prattle half a day, about the war iri Greece, and, he’d slam thp dad-burn tar iff like a jestice of the peace,— ITe’d farm' it fer a season if the idea hit him square—then, swap it fer a barber shop, an’ go to cuttin’ hairl If you search among the clergy, you will hardly find a man; that can preach a better sermonette than Henry Tunkett can. . . . And, while the woods aint set afire by anything he’s done, I reckon he.’s a genius, if ever there was one! i i <jsdrclvr SEDAN THE NEWS-HERALD. Lawreacavfli*, Georgia KNIGHT WANTS FAMILY HIS. TORIES, ETC., FOR RECORDS Dr. L L. Knight. State Historian of Georgia, is actively campaigning for genealogical material of all kinds for preservation in the Department of Archives and History. Familyhisto ries, charts, trees, etc., are particu larly desired. In the course of the year hundreds of inquiries reach him for assistance these lines alone, and it is with the hope of rendering great er assistance in this connection that he appeals to the families of Georgia to place in the Capitol copies of their personal records. To date his depart ment has been able to do little more than serve as a clearing house for inpuiries, to put into touch with each other the various eprsons interested in a particular family or line. But as * State is no greatr than its individual citizens, the other, and the State Capitol should be the depository of the personal, as well as of the offi cial records of its citizens, in Dr. Knight’s opinion. No partcular form is required for Hangman Retire* —Lincoln’s Poem —Strong Women —Natures Wonder* John Ellis, England’s hangman, retires from business, giving no reason. He hanged Roger Case ment and Edith Thompson, the last woman hanged in Great Britain. Ellis was paid fifty shillings, about $12.50, each time he hanged a human being. That was for the hanging. They paid him fifty shillings more “for good conduct.” “Good conduct” meant that he must stay out of drinking saloons at the place of execution before and after the hanging. This made him lose money; in the old days .public houses would pay the hang man to stand at their bar. The more he drank the more the hangman talked, the more he talked, the more terrible became his stories of the groaning, beg ging, pleading or “game indiffer ence" of the men around whose necks he fastened the rope. If you think hanging or other capital punishment necessary “to frighten criminals,” devote a mo ment’s thought to Ellis, the British hangman. If a crowd rushed to see him, buy him free drinks, and listened to his tales of horror, do you think hanging really prevents crime? It does not, on the contrary, it stimulates crime, by stimulating admiration for the criminal. The J. Pierpont Morgan collec tion of valuable mss. exhibited to the public Include a poem, “The Bear Hunt,” by Abraham Lincoln, and this'is how it begins: A wild bear chase didst never see? Then hast thou lived in vain— Thy richest bump of glorious glee, Lies desert in thy brain. * Here you learn that it is possible to be a great man and a very bad poet. Thia is a prosperous country, worth defending. Last week 1,600,- 000 stockholders received little envelopes containing dividends amounting to more than $250,000,- 000. If you didn’t get any of the dividend envelopes don’t waste tone envying or hating those that got them. Save your money, in vest it, and you can got dividends also. Except for the very unfor tunate there is no need to stay really poor in this country. Mr. Albee, who collects strnnge things and shows them, brings from Italy the strongest, woman in n*9w TOO -TAKg THAT ' TAB! V? k i.i. Xiia, Every Convenience for Year Round Use The owner of a Fordor Sedan enjoys complete driving comfort at all times of the yev? end in all kinds of weather In summer with cowl ventilator open wide and the six large side-windows lowered, the Fcrdcr Sedan is as cool and airy as an open car. And for travel in rainy weather or over dusty roads, it em bodies every essential provision for the comfort of passengers. At its present low prire, the Fordor Sedan offers remarkable value as a sensible car for year round use. Detroit, Michigan " See the Nearest Authorized Ford Dealer CARS “TRUCKS * TRACTORS This Week FOB. DETRO,T the records being sent in. As rapid ly as possible all wil be catalogued, indexed, and made readily useable. Communications should be addressed to Dr. Knight, care the State Captiol, Atlanta. CHILD IS KILLED WHEN AUTO RUNS INTO COW ON ROAD NEAR TIFTON Tifton, Ga.—Edna Opal Barr, 5 year old daughter of O. S. Barr, was killed and two negroes were injured slightly when the Parr automobile, in which the child, her father and the two negroes were riding, struck a cow near here ca- d Wednesday. The fnce of t’>r inipt t threw the little girl from the car, her head striking a crosstie. Barr was not injured. DONT TRY TO RAISE your family without it. For stomach aches and pains; sudden cramps, severe intestinal colic and indiscretions ol eating and drinking, changes in water, diet or climate, take CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY Never fail to have it ou hand. Bv ARTHUR BRISBANE the world. She can sustain the weight of a two-ton elephant, and allow men on horseback to ride over a bridge of which the weight rests upon her. In old days, such a lady would have been courted by many. She might have been that Ama zon queen, who told Alexander the iGreat that she would like to be the mother of his children, a mes sage followed by an interesting meeting.—Alexander having sent the only reply that a polite man could send—being a bachelor at the time. What became of the result of that meeting? Who knows but that this powerful Italian woman may be the descendant of Alexander the Great? Now, however, a child moving an electric switch could raise a thousand times the weight of that two-ton elephant. Mere muscle doesn’t count any more. But strong women, not able to lift elephants, but with good strong bodies free from nicotine, alcohol, late honrs and general foolishness, are as im portant as ever they were. Upon them depends the brain of the next generation and future civ ilization. Nature is “wonderful.” There are birds like animals, animals like birds. The strangeness of creation is inexhaustible. The University of Pennsylvania sends an expedition to catch a hoazin, bird that breaks stones with its beak, swims like a duck, flies like a bat. The same expedition will look also for a “Bellbird." Instead of singing il tinkjes like a bell. There are snakes that swallow their young to' protect them, then let them out again. There is a lady toad that lays her eggs on the back of her husband, who hope around cheerfully in the sunlight, hatching the load. Nature really is wonderful. What we actually SEES we FISIa One State in March reports 124 killed by automobiles. Everybody says “That is TERRIBLE, we must do something about it.” In a year 200,000 mothers die ir, childbirth, because they are neg lected. Nobody gets much excited about that. Cancer and tuberculosis k’ 11 theii tens of thoi; sands. All that we take for granted AN IDEAL FARM. The New Jersey college of Agriculture has issued a bulletin describing an ideal farm. Amrfftg other things it says: “In the final analysis, the ideal farm—the truly successful farm—» the one which yields to the farmer and his. family a living—full, ade quate, complete—liberal irr its ma terial rewards, but not lacking in the social, esthetic and ethical val ues which make for character, con tentment and genuine happiness. The soil has the capacity to produce these returns if the hand which turns it but knows how to sow the seed The key which will unlock the wealth of the fields and bring forth the treasures, material and spirit ual, is the intelligence of the farm- BARGAINS IN FARM TOOLS 1 P. & 0. I. H. C. Combine Planter worth $25.00, at $12.50 1 Ledbetter Combination Planter worth $25.00 at $12.50 Cutaway Harrows at $25.00 to $35.00 I. H. C. Riding Cultivators worth $75.00 at $40.00 I. H. C. Walking P. & O. Cultivators worth $40.00 at $20.00 1 No. 1 Primrose Cream Separator worth SBO.OO at $50.00 Many Other Bargains GENERAL IMPLEMENT CO. Lawrenceville, Ga. LIFE’S RAINY DAYS ARE SURE TO COME You know how it is: if you carry your um brella, the sun is sure to shine; but go unprepared and you are just as sure to get a drenching. So it is with life; the man who makes pro vision for the morrow, never sems to.get.in dif ficulties. and YOU call him lucky. But this is not luck, for his forethought has made it impossible to be caught unawares, and what would be a mis fortune for you is but an incident to him. Begin Saving Now FIRST NATIONAL BANK Of Lawrencevilie We Fay 4 Per Cent on Savings , ?|k I IJ' J-.lj.ji j ' j'J' i fa Mk k : EH] hp ;;: i! i; v,y i. fil ,-L : r :.U ri! "Bill, You’vs Certainly Done ll eli!" MAN to man world-w is? gues* eager hejt putting hfc besi fc">t forward under his own rocf tree Nothing so emphatically car ries the conviction of success o» failure as the. appearance// ti.r home a man lives in Why not looUfycur o*.vr house hold surroundings in the face-' A candid examination will most likely disclose worn, dlsngured funun in o; woodwork that .lacxs no.trntf but the application of D-: ' r + T-lirro lac Enamel ro make it rad.ate prosperity and £ood taste Devoe Mirrolac Enamel is me. *e *:T -* DEVOE FAINT AND VARNISH PRODUCTS FARM LOANS AND INVESTMENTS. I am correspondent for The Georgia Loan & Trust Company and ne gotiate loans on farm lands in amount, from $500.00 to $100,000.00 for fire years’ time. 1 aUi‘ make one year loans for local clients. If you have money for investment, come to see me, and 1 can place * l \ jA ' ' ; . 4 your seoqoy pu Ifnds and you can get 8 per cent interest for it. I guaran tee the titles tp the *°’ J w .^ nt Government securities I can place it and get you 4 por cent interest. There are only two securities* in which -1 deal, namely, fniuw mortgage security and Government security. I will give you the benefit'’ of siieeen years’ experience. - S. G. BROWN, BANKER, u Private Bank, Not Incorporated, Lawrenceville, Ga. •< . • * J New Ambition For Nervous People The great nerve tonic that will put vigor, vim, and vitality into nervous, tired out, all in, despondent people in a few day* is the celebrated Prun itone. Anyone can buy a bottle, it is in expensive, and Jones Drug Co. buys Prunitone in such large quantities, that it proves that it is a remedy of unusual merit. Thousands praise it for general debility, nervous prostration, mentai depression and unstrung nerves, caused by oveindulgence in alcohol, tobacco, or overwork of any kind. As a brain food or for any afflic tion of the nervous system Pruni tone is unsurpassed, while for hys teria, trembling and neuralgia it is simply splendid. Mail orders filled for out of town customers. PRUNITONE LABORATORIES BOSTON, MASS. SEND US YOUR JOB WORK. in nineteen ©rustic colors which wiii retain their radiant beauty for an unusual of time. It dries t oickly, producing a tile-like sur face which is extremely durable sanitary and easily washed TMa C m is 'Vcrtb 40 Cents K.’i out gni present it toui wfthm j J da/h. ,;iw y->u Free a 4C-G*m cun inf 'hr* Pi'-r.t Vu'-nnh F*r-x!u«4 you >v,' i ore eductioi. . 40 edit* on • U.ge cun. W , H-tmr .. jJjrrv j 1_ MU ... • •, 4*30 o -r w • rv*Au. ** ju by c oniy JONES DRUG CO., Lawrenceville, Ga. t:jrrwr*Lv agent for Page Three