The leader-tribune. (Fort Valley, Peach County, Ga.) 192?-current, June 25, 1925, Image 9

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OFFICIAL (SCAN of the ✓ Fort Valley Kivvanis Club Vol. 1 Here’s the beverage that delights taste, satisfies thirst and refreshes. Every bottle is sterilized—insur ing absolute purity Fort Valley Bottling Co t W. G. HRISKNDINK, KIWANIAN J. W. Wool folk W. L. Snow Ralph Newton J. W. Wool folk & Co. Spray Material, Peas & Peaches Fort Valley, Georgia EVANS CLARK CO. Inc. Marketing and Dealer* in Asparagus and Peach Crates and Supplies, A. J. Evans E. G. Clark Eiwanian Kiwanian Your account, whether large or small, respectfully solicited on the basis of B sincere appreciation. PROMPT COURTEOUS EFFICIENT Lac SERVICE Q j Bank of Fort Valley Manufacturers of CHILDREN’S UNDERWEAR HI VALLEY MB HUS F. O. MILLER, Pres. A. J. EVANS, Treas. & Gen’I Mgr. T. F. FLOURNOY, Supt. KIWANIANS JL- land sale | Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed to secure debt dated the 15t,h day of April, 1925, from L. I-. Avera to Mrs. Lenorah F. Hartley, said deed to ae , M K recorded in the office of the p! r< County Clerk , of , the Supcrmr superior Court Court of Peach , ' n Will’be sold* before'the door of the Court ”ay ,, r Peach County Georgia, on the 22nd of July IMS. between the legal hours I f sale to the highest and best bidder for cash cash all of the following described tracts land . of to-wit j I. All that ® r ^ ^ pam Of land "• 1 y ng * n<i b e ; n K . , h stat0 Georgia, Cou n v o I>c a h in tlie of i h hun . . , . 10th DiBtnct therein, « i dred twenty (320) acres, more or )eg ^ being known the E. L. Avera Lakeview Place, as containing comprising all of lot No. 34 202 1-2 acres, more or less and 120 acres of lot No. 33 (Lakeview School House out land being bound lot excepted, said tract of by tanas ^ e of N0 ^U » b »nlr n LwanT^ by lands of Stalnaker ani^ Rfhardson, 1 and by lands of Mart,n “ n< ' ^ ' Hancock. II. All that certain tract. |ot or parcel land situate, lying and being in the of Crawford, State of Counties of Peach and Georgia, and in the Sixth District therein. lying almost wholly within Peach county. and distinguished upon the plat of known Number One said Sixth District as Land Lot Hundred Ninety-seven (No. 197) eontain ing two hundred two and one-half (202 1 2) less, known as the E. L. -a- res, more or Avera Old Home Place. „ parcel in All that certain tract, lot or of land in the Ninth District of Peach coun¬ Georgia, being a part of lot Number ty, (211) in said District two hundred eleven Hun and also part of Lot Number Two a contain dred twelve (212) in in said District, seventy (70, acres, more or lcss, being ing place residence prop the present Home or of the party of the first part; bounded erty lands of Mrs. A. M. La on the North by East by and W. H. Harris; on the mar and sub-division lands of Jno. R- Neil a E . U of the City of Fort Valley made by known West View; on the South Avera as Road the Fort Valley-Flint Itiver Public , bv lands of J. C. Hartley. and on the West by subject Sale of said lands will be made of the deeds to secure debt *■> the liens thereof covering said property or porttons held by the Mutual indebtedness Benefit in Life the Insurance pr.nc.pal Co. securing an ($6,000.00) Dollars. gum of Six Thousand No. deed secure debt convey.ng tract This I to of the herein above described; the liens debt in favor of Charles T. Heeds % to secure Fort Va rhardt and Citizens Bank o£ ey, indebtedness to the said Charles T. Eber the the principal sum of hardt amounting to Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars and the Five Bank of indebtedness to the Citizens Valley amounting to the principal sum THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT V ALLEY, GA., THURSDAY .JUNE 25, 1925. THE KIWANIS KALL Published Weekly on Thursday by the Kiwanis Club of Fort Valley, Ga. approximately Six Thousand ($0,000.00) Doi lars; :i id deeds to secure debt conveying tract No. 2 herein aboye described ; and subject to the liens of the deeds to secure debt held by the Georgia Loan & Trust Corn pany, securing an indebtedness in the prin cipal sum of Four Thousand ($4,000.00) Dol ^ ^ ^ <>f ^ dw() t „ 9ecure debt hel d by Mrs. Maggie Gordon securing on indebted ness in the principal sum of Twenty-five Hundred 1*2500.00) Dollars; and the deed to secure debt held by the C.t.zcns Bank of Fort Valley securing an indebtedness in the principal sum of approximately .Six Thous an( , ( cr,,000.00) Dollars. All three of said deeds to secure debt conveying the third tract herein above described. The indebtedness secured by the deed to secure debt from F.. L. Avera to Mrs. Le norah F. Hartley amounts to the principal sum of Thirty-four Hundred Fifty-five and 65-100 ($3455.65) Dollars; same having matured on May 15th, 1925, and default having been made by the said E. L. Avera Thereof. payment of the note at the maturity Proceeds of said sale will be applied first to the payment or the indebtedness due and owing by the said E. L. Avera to Mrs. “Kamak Is An Even Bet¬ my chest, stomach, and across my back around my kidneys. I got so ter Medicine Than Is tired lifting, out and I couldn’t the constant do any hammer¬ heavy Claimed For It,” De¬ ing on cars would get me. Nights clares L. F. Parker. I came home and flopped down and then in a chair, too tired to move, Day by day the amazing health¬ my arms and legs would would go to sleep building powers of Kamak, the sen¬ and ache so that I have to sational new medicine on sale here, keep working them slowly before is more evident. I could move again. gospel truth, As an instance of what Kamak u Well, sir, it’s the will do, the experience of L. F. the very first dose of Kamak made Parker, 324 Grant St., Atlanta, a me feel better. Now, I haven’t a member of the N., C. & St. L. Ry. touch of stomach trouble, have felt shops, is given just as he tells it. gained 7 pounds, and never “It may be hard to believe, but better in my life. I don’t have the I began to feel better almost from slightest ache or pain, my kidneys the first dose of Kamak, and now are working fine, and my circula¬ stomach troubles that kept me in tion, that caused my arms and legs misery for ten years are complete!v to go to sleep, is in perfect order.” overcome,” declares Mr. Parker. Valley exclusive “Before I got Kamak it just Karnack is sold in Fort seemed like all food was poison to y by the Anderson Drug Co.; and by me. I would have terrific pains in eading druggists in every town. THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1925. MASTER NATIONAL GRANGE SPEAKS TO KIWANIANS ON AGRICULTURE St. Paul, Minn., June 23.—The problem of the present and of the future is to maintain in America a type of agricul¬ ture that will not impoverish the soil and that will not permit itself to be impoverished in character or leadership, Louis J. Taber, of Columbus, Ohio, master of the National Grange, told Kiwanians today in his address, “The Farmers’ Pathway Ahead” at the 9th Kiwanis International convention being held in this city. “What we want is an agriculture that will maintain American standards for the American farmer and produce an abundant food supply for the multiplying population of our national life,” lie said. Pathway Is Economic The farmers’ pathway ahead is along sound economic lines, believes Mr. Taber, who is a member of President Cool idge’s agricultural conferences. legislative “The privileges farmer asks assistance, no special favors, no government or opportunity but wants but a square deal and the equality of with industry, finance and labor.” What the farmer most needs today is team-work organization and co-operation. Though the farmer in this country today produces more than any other on the face of the earth, the efficiency has not prevented agriculture from passing through a period of great economic deflation. And this deflation is so serious that today it affects the fabric of our industrial life.” Problems To Be Solved With the problems of the farmer being economic and not political, seven principles were pointed to toward making a more prosperous future. The marketing system, with agri¬ culture making use of the machinery that industry has found essential, that of organization, standardization and also ad¬ vertising, was urged. Co-operative production, or production guided by intelligent information, was given as another vital need. “We should all understand that it benefits no one and injures agriculture to produce that which the market does not need and will absorb.” said Mr. Taber. A reduction in the cost of government. “Heavy taxes are eating into rural prosperity everywhere,” he remarked. A recent survey shows that it takes nearly four times as much produce from our farms to pay our taxes, direct or indi¬ rect, as was required in 1914. The farmer favors progress, but economy and efficiency in government are needed for our very lives.” Eighteenth Amendment IF The American farmer is standing like the rock of Gibralter for the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment because his prosperity, his welfare and his future are de¬ pendent upon maintaining in our land ‘Orderly Liberty under Law’.” Better rural organization was given as another mile¬ stone towards the farmers’ progress, “The Grange is 58 years old and has a membership of more than 800,000, and the Farm Bureau, Farmers’ Union and others have a big membership and rendering service, but until agriculture is thoroughly organized, with agencies to develop community in¬ terests, rural life will not prosper as it should.” Develop Waterway built, That the St. Lawrence water way should be so as to bring our inland empires to the sea, was urged by the speaker. “It will broaden our markets, it will move westward our industrial expansion and add to a greater growth.” The development of a better understanding between the country and the town, one of the major objects of Kiwanis International itself, must also he realized to make both pros¬ per, according to Mr. Taber. norah F. Hartley, including the cost of this proceeding; and the surplus, if any, will be paid over to the said K. L. Avera, his heirs or assigns. Deed v. ill be made to the purchaser or purchasers of said property at said sale by the unders' f .v *d, as authorized in the said deed to Be. . debt. This June 23rd, 1925. | Mrs. Lenorah F. Hartley By C. L. SHEPARD, 6-25-4t. Her Attorney at Law, LAND SALE Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed to secure debt from M. F. Brinson to John F. Turner dated May 1st, 1M*. and recorded in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Houston County, Georgia, in Book 21), Folio 258—the under signed will sell to the highest and best bid der for cash between the legal hours of sale on the 22nd day of July, 1925, before the door of the Court House of Peach County the following described property to wit: “All that certain tract, lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the State 0 f Georgia, County of Houston, (lands in Houston County at the time of the making the deed to secure debt but now in Peach The Fort Valley Oil Co. Manufacturers of COTTON SEED PRODUCTS FORT VALLEY, GA. I). C. STROTIIKR & E. M. WHITING. KIWANIANS GREEN-MILLER COMPANY Peach Growers'’ Supplies GREEN-MILLER COMPANY GLKNMORK GREEN, KIWANIAN Georgia Agricultural Works QUALITY SERVICE HARDWARE & FURNITURE IF We’ve Got It , y F. 0. MILLER, Eiwanian . For SPRAY MATERIALS SPRAY MACHINES CRATE MATERIALS Call on SOUTHERN BROKERAGE COMPANY F. W. WIthoft, Mgr. Kiwanian HALL KIWANIAN THE TIRE MAN County) and in Ganoville, suburb of the City of Fort Valley, therein, containing three-quarters of an acre, more or less and known as lot No. 33 in the plat of survey made by O. L. Greene for F. W. Gano, the same being in the shape of a triangle, and said tract being bounded on the North by the one acre lot this day (May 1, 1922) con veyed by M • F. Brinson to W. E. Clarke; on the South-east side by lands of Fort Valley High & Industrial School; and on the West by the Marshallville-Fort Valley Pub lie. Road ; the tract, hereby conveyed being fully described iri warranty deed from Ro , uncl A jfiley to M. F. Brinson, dated Feb ruary 7th, 1906, and recorded in the office 49 Pains m « m m Very Severe l» m ► > i 1 suilered from womanly m 4 troubles which grew worse 4 b and worse as the months “ « went by,” Mrs. L. H. ►> ■fa says m m Cantrell, of R. F. D. 9, to Gainesville, Georgia. 1 - “1 frequently had very s> m severe pains. These were inh so bad that 1 was forced to m ' “ J5 go to bed and stay there. It seemed to me my back m B would come in two. 5L m m m m Si m *5 For Female Mies m to -M J ‘‘I taught school for a .while, but my health was so W. bad 1 would have to stay out BP <i sometimes. This went on ►> 4jg| till 1 got so bad 1 didn’t know gp m what to do. to “One day I read about the ml. m merits of Cardui, and as I to ^ had some friends M ho had J* been helped by it, 1 thought ^ » I would try it. J began to get 49 better after I had taken half BP m a bottle. 1 decided to keep » <§fl on and give T it 1 a took thorough in all pp m trial and did. n> m about 12 bottles and now 1 ^5 am suffer perfectly pain well. and I do can not do ^ ” any housework.” w J! all my W At All Druggists’ Ex-tum _ of the Clerk of Houston Superior Court, Book 6, Page 250, reference to the said deed and the record thereof being here had and | made for all purposes.” The indebtedness secured by the said deed to secure debt is a note in the principal sum of $575.00 dated May 1, 1922, and maturing May 1, 1923. On the 6th day of June, 1925, the said deed to secure debt and the indebtedness thereby secured, together with the title to the property therein described and all rights, , ■ powers, privileges and options contained in the said deed to secure debt was set-over, transferred, and assigned to the undersigned by John F. Turner. The proceeds of 1 said sale shall be applied first to the payment of the indebtedness se¬ cured by the deed to secure debt together with the cost of this proceeding; and the surplus, if any, will be paid over to the le¬ gal representative of M. F. Brinson, the said M. F. Brinson having departed this life since •i ATLANTA AND WEST POINT RAILROAD COMPANY * * THE WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA GEORGIA RAILROAD The West Point Route operates thru Pullman cars 3 between New York, Washington, Montgomery and New j Orleans. 4 Tourist car all the way from Washington to San Francisco. Also dining car ,parlor car and observation car ac¬ commodations on certain trains. * Close connections at New Orleans for the West. i f The Georgia Railroad offers the most direct service * j to South and North Carolina points via Augusta, includ¬ I ing thru Pullman sleepers. . V Use the “OLD RELIABLE.” ! : 4* * ... Ask any Ticket Agent for information as to rates, , .j. routes, etc., or write to the undersigned. We will be glad * | to assist you in every way possible. t J. P. BILLUPS General Passenger Agent Atlanta, Ga. BIIV IT HOME and Get Full Value for Your Money Number 42. the making of the deed to secure debt. i Deed will ho made to the purchaser at thet Bale as authorized by the deed to secure debt. This June 22nd, 1925. Ambrosia B. Brinson By C. L. SHEPARD, 6-25-41. Her Attorney at Law. | Georgia’s state college property i» 1 j valued at $1.02 per capita; South j Carolina’s at $4.94. About 2,000 children in Georgia go i to school four months of the year of less. If Georgia’s expenditure every year on her colleges was divided equally among her white people, each i Would 28c pay per year.