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hereby certify that the foregoing
a true and correct copy of the
cation for charter, as the same
pears of file in this office.
This 11th day of February,
EMMETT HOUSER,
2-12-4t. Clerk, Superior
LAND SALE
GEORGIA, Peach County.
Under and by virtue of the
rity contained in a certain deed
power of sale to secure debt,
ed on the 18th day of
1919 by Green M. Jackson to
nie Turner Frederick, which deed
recorded in the ofifce of the
lior Court of Houston County,
gia, in Deed Book 24, folio 581,
which said deed is also recorded
the office of the Clerk of the
rior Court of Peach County,
gia, in Deed Book A, folio
undersigned will sell before the
bouse door of Peach County,
gia. on the 12th day of March,
between the legal hours of sale
to the highest bidder for cash,
following described land to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land,
ing and being in the northwest
er of Lot No. 114 in the Sixth Dis¬
trict of originally Houston, now
Peach County, Georgia, said tract
containing 52 acres, more or less,
iind being bounded as follows: On
the north by land of Holt; east by
clocuni; south and west by Charles
M. Hardison.
The deed above described, togeth¬
er with the note secured thereby,
were transferred by the said Fan
'.Ie Turner Frederick (now Fannie
Turner Frederick Drake) to the un¬
dersigned on the 4th day of Septem¬
ber, 1924, which transfer appears
on said deed and is recorded in the
Clerk’s office of the Superior Court
of Peach County, Georgia.
The deed to secure debt herein
described stipulated that upon de¬
fault in the payment of said note,
or any interest due thereon, the hold¬
er of the same was authorized to sell
the land therein described, at pub¬
lic outcry, before the court bouse of
the county in which said land is
■■ituated, to the highest bidder, aft¬
er advertising the time, place and
terms of sale once a week for four
weeks in any newspaper published in
the county in which said sale was to
be made; and default having been
made in the payment of the princi¬
pal debt secured by said deed, to-wit:
$1500.00, the undersigned, as the
holder of said deed, has declared op¬
erative the power of sale conferred
in said deed, and this sale will be
made in pursuance therof.
There is clue on the indebtedness
above described, said principal sum
of $1500.00, besides interest thereon
at the rate of eight per cent, per an¬
num since Sept. 18, 1924. The pro¬
ceeds of said sale will be applied,
first to the payment of the principal
and interest of said debt, and the ex
pense of this proceeding, and the
remainder, if any, will be paid to the
.-.aid Green M. Jackson, his legal
representatives or heirs.
This February 11th, 1925.
EMMETT! HOUSER.
Houser & Mathews, Attorneys.
2-12-4t.
stings’Free
Jj. V Flower/ Seeds/
Hastings’ Is giving away Absolutelj
Free, 5 Seed Packets of Beautifu
Flowers to each 1925 customer. Hast
Ings’ beautiful, new 112-pagq, 192:
Catalog shows these flowers in ful
natural colors. The front cover pic
urea the great Stone Mountain Confer!
crate Memorial
This Big Seed Book is the Standarr
Planting Guide, with valuable cultim
directions and accurate descriptions
of all kinds of seeds, plants anc
bulbs. It. has over 250 pictures fron
actual photographs and is bigger anc
better than ever. Brim-full of informa
tiori, it’s the most useful Seed Bool
ever published.
You need it for ready reference al
most daily. Be sure to w r rite for i’
today; a post-card will do. It come:
to you entirely free by return mail.
H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN,
ATLANTA, GA.
The Seal of
“EYESIGHT SAFETY”
fa *00®
9 V
^Chert^
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
MACON OPTICAL CO.
J. N. Kalish F. H. Johnson
Macon, Ga.
r—
s 3 THE KIWANIS KALI
s OFFICIAL ORGAN BUY HI HOI
3 s of the
.3 Fort Valley and Get Full Value
ffi Kiwanis Club Published Weekly Thursday by the Kiwanis Club of Fort Valley, Ga. for Your Money
3 on
Vol. 1
3 Here’s the beverage that delights
.3 16 taste, satisfies thirst and refreshes.
3 absolute Every bottle is sterilized—insur-
3 ing purity—
.3 3 Fort Valley (Bottling Co.
3 W. G. HR1SUND1NK. K1WAN1AN
s 3 W.
3 J. Wool folk W. L. Snow Ralph Newton
3 £ J. W. Woolfolk & Co.
£ Spray Material, Peas & Peaches
Sh
“J
LC Fort Valley, Georgia
Sfi Sfi EVANS CLARK CO. Inc.
Marketing and Dealers in Asparagus
and Peach Crates and Supplies.
A. J. Evans E. G. Clark
Kiwanian Kiwanian
GALLAHER-HALE GROCERY CO.
Distributors Purina Feeds
it Feed from the Checkerboard Bag 99
WHOLESALE GROCERS
R. D. HALE, KIWANIAN
Manufacturers of
CHILDREN’S UNDERWEAR
FORT VALLEY KNITTING MILLS
F. O. MILLER, Pre». A. J. EVANS, Treas. & Gen’l Mgr.
T. F. FLOURNOY, Supt.
KIWANIANS
UTILITIES’ DOLLARS
DIRECTLY AID FARMER
Create Markets, Employ Men, In¬
crease Land Value, Build Trade,
Tend to Lower Taxes
It is the intangible, the invisible,
that affects our lives most. You can
neither feel an emotion with
hands nor see a thought with your
eyes, yet emotion and thought are
the two primary forces of life, caus
ing ami governing every action of
every living individual. .
The life of every farmer in Geor¬
gia is profoundly and favorably af¬
fected by the public utility compan¬
ies of the State, but the farmer rare¬
ly sees a power or gas plant, has little
use as yet for their product and so is
virtually without any realization of
his business partnership with the
utilities companies.
Yet the dollars which these com¬
panies bring into Georgia as invest¬
ments—the milliqns of dollars annu¬
ally—create wealth in which the
farmer shares at every turn.
This money purchases material,
employs men, pays taxes, increases
property valuations, attracts new
citizens and new dollars’, establishes
new markets, builds trade, earns and
creates and distributes wealth, for
the benefit of all.
The public utility companies are
NEW PRICES ON DAIRY PR0D0C1S!
Now In Effect.
Sweet Milk in pint bottles ........................ ...... 10c each
Sweet Milk in quart bottles .......................... ....... 15c each
5c i
Buttermilk ............................—...................... ...... quart
Butter at market price.
Cream .......................................-...................- 40c pint I
Terms: Cash in advance or strictly weekly.
W. J. Braswell’s Sanitary Dairy
Dairy Phor.e 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Res. Phone 131
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY, FEBRUA RY 19, 1925.
today the biggest single developers
in the State of Georgia.
The companies bring the money in¬
to Georgia. Here it stays, constant¬
ly at work, benefiting every single
person whose livelihood is drawn
from Georgia.
The companies bring the money,
every person in the State benefits
j from it.
| It is estimated that the public
utilities of the State have today
vested two hundred million dollars, it
is beyond the ability of any econom¬
ist to estimate in dollars the actual
value of this sum to every person do
ing business or operating a farm in
the State. This $200,000,000 might
well be the nucleus, the center, of an
actual value of billions.
Any blow at the prosperity of the
utility companies proves a tremen¬
dously multiplied blow at the gener¬
al prosperity of the State. Enlighten¬
ed law-makers in particular are com¬
ing to realize this.
UTILITIES INFORMATION COM¬
MITTEE OF GEORGIA.
No. 2 of a series of informative
discussions.
12-19-lt.
666
is a prescription for
Colds, Grippe, Dengue, Headaches,
Constipation, Biliousness.
It is the most speedy remedy we
know.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1925.
s
I
*
FRIDAY Feb. 20
12 O’clock Sharp
G. W. Mathews, T. A. McCord and Judge A. C.
Riley form the committee to stage this week’s pro¬
gram.
REV. CHARLES LANE, of Macon, inimitable
Southern humorist, will be the headliner. You know
you can’t afford to miss the flood of fun he will
bring.
Get a good running start for the National At¬
tendance Contest. Make your record—
100 PER CENT!
STATE SENATOR WOULD
PLACE BAN ON GOSSIP
Atlanta, Feb. 9 .—“l have decided
that Georgia negds some legal re¬
straint upon gossip similar to that
enacted by the,Kentucky Legislature
some time ago, and I am going to
draw a bill, patterned somewhat on
the Kentucky antigossip law and
fer it for passage in the Senate this
summer,” said Senator Carl Guess,
of DeKalb County, today.
“I am convinced it is in the best
of the ordinary pursuits
happiness and peace of the
nity, as well as in the best interest
of the State itself, that the individ
ua), the public office-holder, the can¬
didate running for office, and even
our families be protected from the
forked tongue of the gossip. J think
it time that the circulation of ‘gos
sip’ talk about men in public place,
->
% Why Not Rent A * *
* ♦
• • *
*
Ford *
♦ +
■i
V *
• • DRIVE IT YOURSELF
• • Reasonable
Rates
*
THE 64 TIRE COMPANY *
*
+ *
s s *
* • Formerly V •i*
* *
FORT VALLEY VULCANIZING CO. •5*
s» Phone 64 E. B. Adams, Prop t
•*»
Watch for Next Week’s Ad *
•• V
< >
Tlie Fort Volley Oil Co.
Manufacturer*. of
COTTON SEED PRODUCTS
FORT VALLEY, GA.
1). C. STROTHER & K. M. WHITING. KIWANIANS s
There's Music in the Air
Bring free entertainment into your home with
a Radio Receiving Set. See the Radiola line IF
we are showing.
GREEN-MILLER COMPANY
Gl.lv N M OR H GREEN. KIWAN1AN &
ifi
Georgia Agricultural Works 9i Sh
QUALITY SERVICE Sh
HARDWARE & FURNITURE
tt We’ve Cot It * 9 Sh
F. O. MILLER, Kiwanian
For
SPRAY MATERIALS
SPRAY MACHINES
u PARACIDE 99
/ Call
on
SOUTHERN BROKERAGE COMPANY
F. W. Withoft, Mgr.
Kiwanian
c HALL
KIWANIAN
THE TIRE MAN
—J
ib! li t
or about men or women running for
public office be bridled; that, when
a story or a piece of gossip is start¬
ed in circulation, the one whj puts
it in circulation be held as guilty of
a misdemeanor unless the story told
or gossip passed can be substantial
ea.
Kentucky Woman Fined
”1 recall that in one of the Ken
tucky towns one of the neighborhood
gossip vendors started a story that
1 the chief of police of the town was
with and in cahoots with an
I organized gang of bootleggers. The
scandal spread, but was final:/ trac¬
ed to this particular gossip-vendor
she was brught into police court,
was put on trial in the court on
charge of violation of the antigos
sip law and, being unable to sub
stantiate the gossip she had spread,
was fined $10 and stood convicted
0 f gossiping. That’s jsut an illustra
tion, which goes to illustrate the
point. We are up against just that
sort of thing every time there is a po
Htical campaign on; often we are up
against it through political differenc¬
es or jealousies when there is not a
campaign on. Maybe some of the vic¬
tims of ‘common gossip’ might fee!
even stronger, and would want the
antigossip law I am going to propose
to make it a felony, but I shall be
satisfied to pass the bill making it a
misdemeanor—and 1 think it will
pass, too, without any trouble.”
X *
That Good Old Country Style %
*
BARBECUE •3k »
• *
A
at V
POOL’S WEINER STAND v
* y
*
♦ Opposite Water Tower ■k
*“
Stop at The
ROBERT IV FULTON
Atlanta's Finest Hotel
300 ROOMS—300 BATHS
l
Circulating Ice Water
Sefvidore Service
- 4 In Each Room
S ‘'J
ill Equipped with Shur-Rest Inner
spring Mattresses—the most com
fort able beds in the world.
isiji SsjSsii sjilSa Rooms Convenient $2.00—$2.50 Downtown Location $3.00
ilia*® Bir
Other Hotels operated by
IB Baron & Wilson Interests:
T MECKLENBURG HOTEL Charlotte, N. C #
9S I?f- Birmingham, Ala.
HILLMAN HOTEL Ala.
EXCHANGE HOTEL Montgomery.
i Auguata. Ga. *
I * Luckie and Cone Sts. TERMINAL HOTEL
H ARRY F. ZOBEL Mgr.
■* r A
/
Number 25.
WANTED—For Peach Blossom Fes¬
tival 500 hogs for barbecue pur¬
poses. Will pay market price. Glen
more Green, Purchasing Agent.
Hall’s
Medicine will do what we
claim fr.r it —
rid your system of Catarrh cr Deafness,
caused by Catarrh,
Sold by druggists for over 40 ye-irs
E 7 . CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohia