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11 Adr
;i Legal rrfispfHPMfs
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
Georgia, Poach t'ounty.
All creditor of the estate of M
A, Edwards, late of said county,
deceased, are hi p-by notified to
render in their demands to the ui
dersigned according to law, and all
persons indebted to said estate will
( ake payment to me.
The March 24th, It".'5.
A. C. RILEY,
Executor of the Will of M. A. Ed¬
wards. 3-26-tit.
SALE OF LAND
Georgia, Peach County.
By virtue of an order from the
court of ordinary of Peach County,
will be sold, at public outcry, on the
■first Tuesday in May, 1925, at the
court-house door in -aid county, In
tween the legal hours of sale, to the
highest bidder fur cash, the follow¬
ing tract of tsnd:
“All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the town of.Fort
Valley, County of Peach, State of
Goergia, described a. follows:
ning at the Northeast corner of orig¬
inal school hous, lot of Pine Street,
and running thence in a southerly
direction along the west margin of Pine
St. a distance of fifty-two (52) feet,
more or less; thence in a westerly
direction parallel with and along the
North margin of the John H. Hollin¬
shed lot a distance of one hundred
and forty-five (145) feet; thence in
a northerly direction parallel with the
the west margin of Pine Street a
distance fifty-two (52) feet; thence
in and easterly direction parallel with
the south line of this (lot a distance
■ f one hundred and forty-five (145)
Now In Effect.
Sweet Milk in pint bottle* ...................... ....... 10c each
Sweet Milk in quart bottle* ...................... ....... 15c each
Buttermilk ......................................... ....... 5c quart
Butter at market price.
Cream................................................. 40c pint
Term*: Ca«h in advance or *trictly weekly.
W. J. Braswell's Sanitary Dairy
Dairy Phone 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Res. Phone 131
Why Not Rent A
Ford
DRIVE IT YOURSELF
Rates Reasonable
For Snappy Tire Service *
Call 64
* b THE 64 TIRE COMPANY < i
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< • Watch for Next Week’s Ad
LUMBER g
£ £
! £
!
ROUGH and DRESSED £ $ s
Si £
£ ALL KINDS BUILDING MATERIALS AND BUILDERS’ HARDWARE £
WINDOWS AND DOORS £ £
CEDAR AND PINE SHINGLES £
GALVANIZED AND COMPOSITION ROOFING £
i i £ £
% Georgia Basket & Lumber Co. £ £
£ £
C. E. MARTIN, President T. M. ANTHOINE, Vice President &
PHONE 38 J. E. BLEDSOE, Sec’y-Treas.
feet to the starting point on Pine
Street. The above described land be
ing bounded as follows: On the North
by lands of John Raines; on the East
by the West margin of Pine Street;
on the South by the North line of
John If. Hollinshed lot; on the West
by lands of Ed Dorsey and others,
The above described tract faces
on Pine Street a distance of fifty
| two (52) feet.
JOHN H HOLLINSHKAI),
Vdmitiistrator estate of
> laude Walker.
Houser & Mathews, Attys.
4 !t-4t.
Georgia, Peach County.
All creditors of the estate of Will
nun Allison Wooddall, late of Peach
county, deceased, are hereby noti¬
fied to render in their demands to
the undersigned according to law, and
all persons indebted to said estate
are required to make immediate pay
i*ent to me.
April 0th, 1925.
MRS. LOULA WOODDALL,
Executrix, Will of William Allison
Wuoddall
Geo B. Culpepper, Jr.,
Attorney at Law ’
Fort Valley. Ga. 4-9-6t.
DISSOLUTION NOTICE
U, S. Braswell, Jr., has purchased
the mercantile pusimss oi R. S. Bras¬
well & Son. He assumes all indebted¬
ness of the firm and all accounts
due firm are payable to him.
<L. S.) R. S. Braswell,
(L. S.) It. S. Braswell, Jr.
4-9-4t.
CITATION
Georgia, Peach County.
To All Whom It May Concern
H. C. Jackson, having in proper
form, applied to me for Permanent
fHE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VA LLEY, GA., THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1925.
Letters of Administration on the
estate of C. H. Jackson, late of said
county, this is to cite all and singu
Jar the creditors and next of kin of
C. H. Jackson, to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by
Jaw, and show cause, if any they can,
why permanent administration should
riot be granted to H. C. Jackson on
C. If. Jackson’s estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature, this the (ith day of April,
1925.
M. C. MOSLEY, Ordinary.
4-9-4t.
NOTICE OF BUSINESS LICENSE
Pay your business license at once.
Ordinance will be enforced.
N. W. JORDAN, Clerk & Treas.
4-16-4t.
CITY TAX RETURNS NOTICE | ,
Notice is hereby given that the
books will be open from the 15th of |
April to the 15th of June next, for
the purpose of receiving returns of
cit -V taxe8 -
AU Property, both real and person
al, that has not been returned on or
bcfope 15th nt ' xt ’ sha11 be fiub i ect
to »n additional taxation of ten per
ce,lt 88 u I M;rlalt . v for such failure of
the tax payer to return property by
date. !
N. W. JORDAN, Clerk & Treas.
4-16-41.
AUTOMOBILE BRIGHT LIGHT .
ORDINANCE
Ordinance passed by Mayor and
City Council Feb. 19th, That it shall
be unlawful for any person to drive
uutomobile or other propelled vehicle
on the paved street area with bright
head lights but must use dimmers.
N. W. JORDAN, Clerk & Treas.
4-16-4t.
THINGS THAT MAKE A ’OWN
CRF.AT
“A little more praise and a little less
blame,
A little more virtue and a little less
shame,
A little more thought for the other
man’s rights
A little less self in our chase for de
lights,
A little more loving, a little
hate—
Are all that is needed to make tii
town great.
A little more boosting, a little less
peering;
A little more trusting, a little
fearing,
A little more patience in trouble
and pain,
A little more kindness worked into
strife,
Are all that are needed to glorify
life.
“A little more kindness, a little less
creed;
A little more giving, a little l ess
greed;
A little more smile, a little less
frown;
A little less kicking a man when he’s
down.
A little more we, a little less I,
A little more laugh, and a little less
cry,
A little more flowers on the pathway
of life
And fewer on graves at the end of
strife.
“A little more honor, little less
greed;
A little more service, a little less
creed—
A little more courage when the path¬
ways are rough,
A little more action, a little less
bluff;
A little more kindness by you and by
me.
And oh what a "onderful town it
would be."
-HARTWELL SUN.
Fort Valley, Georgia,
April 10th, 1025.
Mr. John H. Jones, Editor,
The Leader-Tribune,
Fort Valley, Georgia.
Dear Mr. Jones:
If space will permit and you think
well of this letter, I believe I have
some valuable suggestions to offer in
reference to affairs pertaining to the
Peach , H,OHSOr " Festival ... and our sec¬
tion in general.
The Peach Blossom Festival has
been held for four years and Fort
Valley has received very wide pub¬
licity, both at home and abroad. Mr.
E. T. Murray last year put this thing
on the map, articles and pictures ap¬
pearing in The London Times, The
New York Times and the Paris Edi¬
tion of The New Y'ork Herald. Mov¬
ing pictures of the Festival and Pag
were shown all over the world. I
read a column editorial in theSt. Louis
Globe—Democrat, which was a pane¬
gyric in which this little city was
loudly praised for her wonderful ef¬
forts in staging such a magnificent
spectacle. Numerous people from the
cities highly commend us for
being able to work so cohesively to
K ,. t her with no apparent jealousy on
the part of anybody. Old men and la¬
dies, middle aged folks and children
are perfectly willing to paint their
faces and adorn themselves in cos
tumes of rainbow brilliance, all for
the glory of Fort Valley. People from
other towns larger than Fort Valley
have asked me how we did it, saying
that they did not have a man thy age
of Judge Riley who would be willing
to make a Chinaman out of himself
■
for the benefit of their towns or for
any other reason. Fort Valley may
have her rows and fracases at times,
but when the people here once decide
to pull together and see a thing
through they are worse than “an im¬
movable object being hit by an irre¬
sistible force.”
Now, to resume and go on, as well
as proceed: this year we have secured
finest piece of publicity that, we
have ever gottten or will ever get.
iWe have been fortunate in having Mr.
Jacob Gayer, of the National Geo
' graphic Magazine to take pictures in
[color Gayer of has the Festival traveled and the Pageant. world Mr.
having spent seven years abroad for
the Geographic. He was to hnve been
the official photographer with the
Shenandoah on its flight to the North
Pole last year; the trip, however, was
Called off. Mr. Gayer says that in all
his travels he has never seen
to compare with our Festival. The
National Geographical Magazine has
over a million circulation, its circula¬
tion being among the highest type cit¬
izens of this and foreign countries.
Mr. Gayer told me that several
months back they published an issue
devoted to Honolulu and the Hawa
ian Islands. After this issue was
distributed the National Geographic
received hundreds of letters from
Chambers of Commerce and other
sources in those Islands saying that
their tourist traffic had doubled.
Mr. Gayer also told me that when
IflOOSwiiiiiiiimihiii'llD CS-'h 1 ' u - l! '‘ : ^ Q i!TrTT'?J'. , . , .iii!i!'i!!ii nri
q O ensajmga n n nr n n
So Weak
Couldn’t Stand
"My wife’s health broke
down and for years she was
just a physical wreck,” says
Mr. Thomas Glynn, of Gib¬
son, La. “We did everything
we knew, yet she seemed to
get worse and worse. She
was so weak till she couldn’t
stand, and hacTto be carried
like a baby. It looked like
nothing would save her that
had been done.
□□ □□
□□ □a
For Female Troubles
■ I knew that Cardui was
for women. 1 decided to
try it for her as all else had
faded. She couldn’t eat, she
couldn’t sleep, and I was
desperate.
“After taking a few doses
of Cardui, we were so glad
to note that she wanted
something each to eat, and with
bit of nourishment, and
each day’s doses of Cardui,
she grew stronger and got
up out of bed. She is now
able to cook, and stronger
than in a longtime.”
Take Cardui.
All Druggists’ ^^■EX-IOS
on IOC 3QCS2222ZZE3BH
an nr S3
kind to attend to this matter ^
some
and get out some good literature so
that it can be broadcasted throughout
the earth, if necessary to wander so
far from 'home. The I/eader-Trib
une is working hard to place Fort Val¬
ley on the map; it is a corking good
newspaper and will cooperate in ev
ery way.
Many' tourists stop over in Fort
Valley going to ami from Florida. Mr.
Coppedge at the Winona Hotel is an
enthusiastii booster for Fort Valley
and Peach County. He could do us
much good if he had information of
various kinds to place in the hands
of these people. Florida is advertising
herself “to beat Sister Mitchell” and
she is getting results. Florida is a
good state, but she is not as good as
Georgia—-nowhere else is, for that
matter. «
I*et us see to it that we begin at
once, immediately and right away to
send out the good news about “Fort
Valley, the Fairest Favored Fairy¬
land, whose Flag is never Furled.”
(The foregoing poetic gem is entirely
original with me.)
Now. let all the KNOCKERS file
OLD TANTRYBOGUS
the Peach Blossom Festival issue of
his magazine appears in the lnt< si.m
mer we will begin to hear from all
l parts of the world. Letters will,
doubtless, pour in here wanting to
know something of our resources, eli
mate, and advantages of all kinds.
Are we ready to give any replies to
these communications? Have
any printed matter, well gotten up
and containing information to send t ,
these inquirers—Chambers of Com¬
merce, home seekers or industries’
In other words—ARE WE IN ANY
POSITION TO CASH IN ON OCR
PUBLICITY? To the best of my
knowledge and belief NARY” A
CASH IN CAN WE MAKE.
It seems to me that we should
have a quantity of booklets and other
advertising matter, illustrated and
containing full information in regard
to Fort Valley and Peach County. It
will be a crying shame for this town
to receive requests from various
sources and not be in position to fur
nish any information. We should be
able to furnish facts and figures on
all of our resources—not just stress
ing the peach industry alone. Do not
allow the people away from here to
think that because we put on the
Peach Blossom Festival that peaches
are all we have. There is not a sec
tion anywhere that is more richly
blessed than we have here. There
are nine climatic conditions and Gcor
gia is the only place on earth that has
EIGHT of them. The Festival is a
most beautiful and aesthetic thing
and is wonderful in every way, but it
should not be considered ars in artis,
i hut made a medium of setting forth
I the advantages that we possess, as
well as showing that Fort Valley, a
small town, can stage a spectacle that
so far, no other town has ever been
able to do.
Mr. Editor, when I am against a
thing, I am eternally, everlastingly,
forever, world without end against it
Unification, for instance, but I am
all of these things FOR Fort Valley
and Peach County and the Peach
Blossom Festival. There are towns
in Florida that would be glad to pay
$25,000 for the publicity that we will
get in the National Geographic Mag
azine. We could not buy it at any
price. Mr. Gayer is going into Wash
ington within the next ten days and
told me that he expected to come
back here during peach season. Com
peezle it all, can’t we see what an op
portunity we have? This advertising
is not costing us one PENNY, but it
is costing the National Geographic
Magazine many DOLLARS—it costs
them $1.00 every time Mr. Gayer
snaps his camera, to say nothing of
his expenses and salary.
I am in no sense setting myself up
as an adviser to the populace of the
regions hereunton appertaining, but
this thing is so plain that a “sea
faring” man, though a fool, need not
err therein. I had the good fortune
to be associated with Mr. Gayer for
three days during the Festival and
know from what he says that this
is a wonderful opportunity for this
section to derive untold benefit.
I would suggest that some of the
prominent men get together AT
ONCE and form an association of
Fort Valley Crate &Lumber Co.
Manufacturers of
F ruit Packages
Exclusive Manufacturers in the South
of the E. Z, Pak Bushel Shipping Basket for
Peaches, Apples Oranges and all kinds of
Fruits and Vegetables.
This package conceded to be the best and
safest package on the market 4
past, while Old Tantrybogus adminia -
ters a good, heavy plank amidships,
after which they may retire to their
dark caverns of gloom, there
j 0 a j n k j n to innocuous desuetude,
Yours very sincerely,
ARVA O. BREWTON.
I CREAM FOR CATARRH
OPENS UP NOSTRILS
Tells How To Get quick Relief ;
from Head-Cold-*. lt’> Splendid!
In one minute yonr ckjqgfd nnatnhi
will open, the air panH.igc >4 vour iiead
will dear and you can breathe trealy
No more hawking. -nulUmg, (lowing,
headache, dryness No struggling for
breath at night; your coki or * a unfit
will be gone.
■Get a small bottle of Ely’s Oraara
Balm from tills your druggist now Apply heal
a little of fragrant, antiseptic, It
ing (ream in your nostrils. paste
tratm through every air passage of the
head, soothed the inflamed or swollen
mucous nittubraflc and relief cornua in
stantly. fine. Don’t stay stuffed
It’s just catarrh—Relied up
with a cold or naaty
comes so quickly
F-H-H-4-f- r< ■+4 ' *++* HIM I 4 t V* *** * **
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’j Now is the Time
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J | I ■ Winter’s fury is spent—Spring’s
• •
., i ■showers I are here—ony to be fol- “
J \ [ lowed by Summer’s blistering heat.
J ‘ * ^ Every storm takes its toll—weath¬
• ■
1! er spares no one’s home. There i3
*| only one thorough way to prepare
• ■ it for the most strenuous sort of
\ ., \ weather—that is with good paint.
' j Here are the paints that with¬
• • stand any weather—brushes that
\ j facilitate one’s work and other ne¬
a ►
., cessities which protect your home
| | and keep it in first class shape.
‘'
< ■ Special discounts on quantity
I ! purchases.
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| \ Green-Miller Co.
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