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Professional
Directory
LOUIS L. BROWN
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Brawn Building Phone 9
Fort Valley, Ga.
practlef In all the Slate and Federal Court*
Loan* on Realty Negotiated
GEO. B. CULPEPPER, JR.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Practice in State and Federal Courts
ats»»tr Building Telephone 374
Fort Valley, Ga.
B. M. Mathews H. A. Mathews
MATHEWS & MATHEWS
Attorneys at Law
Practice in all the Stctc and Federal Court*
Fort Valley, Ga.
Phone 107
A. C. RILEY
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Caviar Building Phone 156
Fort Valley, Ga.
C. L. SHEPARD
Attorney at Law
Causer Building Phone 31
Fort Valley, Ga.
Fractlc* in »lt the State »nd Federal Courte
Loan* Made on Really
BRASWELL REALTY
COMPANY'
Real Estate, Rents, Collections and
Loans
Phone 12
817 West Main St. Fort Valley, Ga.
BARGAINS
IN ALL KINDS OF NEW AND
USED HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Cheapest Place in Macon to Buy Good
Furniture
Get Our Prices Before You Buy
WASHBURN STORAGE COMPANY
103 POPLAR STREET MACON, GA.
GEORGIA, PEACH COUNTY.
Will be sold before the court house door i«
Peach County to the highest bidder for cash,
between the legal hours of sale on the first
Tuesday in September, 1939, the following
described property:
All that tract or parcel of land lying and
being in the 10th District of Peach County,
Ga., comprising 48.1 acres, lying in a body
and bounded north by lands of Smith; east
by lands of Tabor; south by lands of Giles;
weat by lands of Smith; being in the form
of a rectangle in the northeast portion of Lot
No. 64 in said 19th District, more particularly
described as follows: Beginning at the north
cast corner of Lot No. H4 and running south
along the east line of said lot a distance of
1440 feet; thence at right angles to the east
line of said lot, due west a distance of 1456
feet ; thence ninety degrees due north a dis¬
tance of 1440 feet to the north line of said
lot; thence along said north line due east a
distance of 1456 feet to point of beginning.
Said property will be hold pursuant to and
in accordance with the power of sale contained
in deed to secure debt from Grady M. Tucker
to Mrs, W. R. Giles, recorded in Deed Book
J, page 378, Clerk's office, Peach Superior
Court, which deed was transferred to Mrs.
Robbie Lee Howard Tucker by transfer record¬
ed in said Clerk's office in Book J, page 378,
and will be sold subject to that deed to secure
debt from Grady M. Tucker to Land Bank
Commissioner recorded in said Clerk's Office
In Book J, page 427, securing a principal in¬
debtedness of one thousand dollars. Said
Grady M. Tucker having defaulted in the pay¬
ment of the two notes described in and se¬
cured by the security deed to Mrs. W. R.
Giles, all of his right, title and equity to and
in said property, subject to said Land Bank
Commissioner deed, will be sold for the pur¬
pose of paying the principal and interest due
on said notes and the costs of this proceed¬
ing. The total amount due on said two notes
at date of sale will be $540.78. Deed will be
made to the purchaser by the undersigned,
and the proceeds of said sale will be applied
as provided in said security deed.
This August 8th, 1939.
Mrs. Bobby Lee Howard Tucker,
Transferee.
W. V. Aultman. Attorney, 8-10-4L
AMERICAN BOY MAGAZINE
COMPANION TO THOUSANDS
Hundreds of thousands of boys and
young men read THE AMERICAN
BOY Magazine every month and con¬
sider it more as a living companion
than as a magazine.
It’s as much a buddy to me as my
neighborhood chum,” writes one high
school senior. “The American Boy
seems to understand a boy’s problems
and considers them in such a sympa¬
thetic and helpful way. It gives ad¬
vice and entertaining reading on every
subject in which a young fellow is in¬
terested. It is particularly helpful in
sports. I made our school basketball
learn because of playing tips 1 read
jn The American Boy."
Many famous athletes in all sports
credit much of their success to help¬
ful suggestions received from sport
articles carried in The American Boy
Magazine. Virtually every issue offers
advice from a famous coach or player.
Football, basketball, track, tennis, in
fact every major sport is covered in
fiction and fact articles.
Teachers, librarians, parents and
leaders of boys’ clubs also recom
mend The American Boy enthusiasti¬
cally. They have found that a gen
eral rule regular readers of The
American Boy advance more rapidly
and develop more worthwhile charac-
CASH KATE: I rent per word. No adver¬
tisement taken for le»» th»n 25c for each
inwerlion.
(a* H mini aernmpany order* from Ihooe
who do not have regular monthly account*
with ua.
Black-face or rapltal lettera, douHe rate.
POSITIVELY mlnimom rharge ol 50c if
advertlaement la not paid in advance and
muat be billed.
When repliea are to be received care tlna
paper, double rate.
While we do not arrept advertioeinenta
which we have reaaon lo believe are of a
queationahle nature, we have no mean*, of
aarertaining the responsibility of all adver
tiaera.
Try
MIRACLE LOTION
Sea Ip Massage
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE
For Scalp and Skin Diseases
SERVICE BARBER SHOP
CELESTIAL BEAUTY SHOP
Phone 9111
FOR RENT—One second floor apart
ment, furnished or unfurnished.
(Miss) Pearl Brown 311 Church St.
8-24-ltp.
FURNISHED rooms for light
housekeeping, connecting bath, ga
Mrs. W. G. Keen, 411 Persons
st. 8-24-ltp.
FRESH MILK COWS for sale. Reg¬
istered and high grade Jersey stock,
my farm 9 miles east of Fort Val¬
John W. Howard. 8-24-3tp.
FOR SALE Medium large combina
tion safe, cheap. Railway Express
8-24-ltp
and APARTMENTS for rent,
furnished or unfurnished. DuPree
Tourist Home, phone 187-J.
8-24-lt.
teristics than do boys who do not
it.
Trained writers arid artists, famous
and athletes, explorers, scien¬
and men successful in business
industry join with an experienced
to produce in The American Boy,
sort of reading matter boys like
The American Boy sells on most
at 15e a copy. Subscrip¬
tion prices are $1.50 for one year or
for three years. Foreign rates
a year extra. To subscribe simply
your name, address and remit¬
direct to THE AMERICAN
7430 Second Blvd., Detroit,
(Adv.)
Breath Offends?
Bad breath is sometimes due to bad
teeth; often caused by sluggish
bowels. To neglect it may invite
a host of constipation’s other dis¬
comforts; headaches, biliousness,
loss of energy or appetite. Take
spicy, all - vegetable B LACK
DRAUGHT tonight. This intesti¬
nal tonic-laxative tones lazy bowel
muscles; cleanses gently,promptly,
thoroughly by simple directions.
Try -BLACK-DRAUGHT, the
time-tested laxative.
D
>■ ?
fa
DR. B. J. W. GRAHAM,
Atlanta, Georgia
Dr. Graham is looking over his
new book, “A Ministry of Fifty
Years,” which is a story of his life,
including his observations in Eu¬
rope and the Holy Land. This is
his fifth book. It is having a wide
sale. Orders have conie from 25
states and three foreign countries.
Among the hundreds of expres¬
sions of appreciation, one says,
“It is a thrilling story”; another
says, “It should be read by every
student, and especially by every*
young preacher”; still another
says, “It is a valuable contribu¬
tion to Baptist History.”
Every one of its 360 pages is
full of interest. It should have a
large sale in this county in which
Dr. Graham has a wide circle of
friends. The .price is only $2.75
post paid. We will take pleasure
in forwarding orders for our read
ere.
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, PORT PALLET, GA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1939
CHURCHES
TORT VALLEY BAPTIST
M, I), Reed, Pastor
9:45, Sunday School, R. P. Swan,
superintendent.
11:00 a. m., Morning Worship.
7:00 p. m„ B. T. U.
7:45 p. m., Evening Worship.
7:30 p. m. Wednesday, Prayer Meet
mg.
FORT VALLEY METHODIST
CHURCH
J. E. Sampley, Pastor
Church school, 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11 o’clock.
Young People meet at 7:15 p. m.
Evening Worship, 7:30 o’clock.
Mid-week prayer service, Wednes¬
day, 7:30 p. m.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Wm, C, Sistar, Minister
Church Bible school, 9:45 a. m., C.
B. Aimon, superintendent.
Visitors invited to all services.
ST. ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Rev. Walter Clem, Rector
Church School, 9:45 a. m.,
Harrison, superintendent.
San it a ry Measures
As Disease Control
Diseases such as typhoid fever,
entary, diarrhea, colitis, and many
others are carried from sick or from
chronic carriers of the disease to well
persons by milk, food and water from
unsafe sources or are due to
methods of sewage disposal, The
large number of children and adults
who are infected with hookworm can
be directly attributed to the disposal
of human body wastes on the surface
of the ground as is practised at many
homes in this county through the use
of open surface privies. Malaria is
carried from person to person by the
anopheles mosquito which breeds in
swampy areas, ponds and suggish
streams.
These diseases occur most often in
Georgia in families in rural areas
where homes are supplied with
from unsafe and unprotected sources,
that is, usually open dug wells with
rope and bucket, and where human
body wastes are disposed of in an un¬
safe manner — usnaally Kipen surface
privies that are open to flies, insects
and small animals, and where homes
are not provided with adequate screens
to shut out flies, mosquitoes, etc.
Where schools are not provided with
water from a properly protected
source and where a safe means of
sewage disposal is not provided, the
children are in constant danger
contracting communicable diseases
such as those mentioned above.
Mrs. Margaret Mow,„„v 4 - ii Hardman, n i county *
’ *
health i nurse states . that ,, , Al the State . Do
partment , . . of .. Health . . has , recently * set
up fomAnoi regional i, health ui offices 4 -T- from c which . . .
iL the fl assistance of , trained . - , sanitary
en
gineers may be , obtained , . . i in solving . . 'Z
problems related . . , to . the prevention
diseases t- M through v the ,, protection . .. of .
home and * school . * water . supplies, .. the .
J
’
construction . . ■ of , sate of
means home
and i school sewage „ disposal .. , systems, ,
and 0 „j the proper screening of houses ,
against + flies, mosquitoes .. and i other -
m
^
Mrs. Hardman will be in her office
m the Peach county court house
urday mornings of each week between
the hours of 9 and 11 o’clock and will
be glad to give available information
to any who call and will transmit re
quests whenever particuar assi ance
is required of die legional sanitary
engineer.
-
HAY FEVER
Test This Quick Relief
Try one dose "Dr. Platt's RINEX Prescrip¬
tion." Relief usually begins in a few min¬
utes. A physician's internal medicine in con¬
venient capsules, tasteless—a boon for suf¬
ferers from Hay Fever, Rose Fever, Head
Colds, Catarrh, Asthma. Not habit-forming.
Sneezing, wheezing, itching eyes, running
nose quickly relieved. Satisfaction within a
few hours guaranteed or money back. Your
druggist recommends RINEX, $1.00.
-
COACH FARES
fyuntke/i
deduced
ONE-WAY l'/z« PER MILE
ROUND TRIP 10 % LESS
than double the one-way
Coach Fares
INSURE SAFETY, Avoid High¬
way Hazards. Travel by Train,
Air-Conditioned Coaehorn on
Through Traina,
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY SYSTEM
i
Exemptions Under
Fair Labor Law for
Agriculture '-5 Stated
Rules Are Rigid, McNulty Warns; No
“Stretching” Will Be Allowed.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. —No
stretching of iron-bound definitions
will be allowed in the exemptions gov¬
erning growers, ginners and compres¬
sors of cotton under the fair labor
standards law, the Wage-Hour Divi¬
sion has ruled.
This was made known in a 32-page
bulletin on the application of the act
to agriculture and allied operations re¬
leased Sunday.
As applied to cotton, the bulletin
set out that a worker was entitled to
full exemption only when his services
were incident to or in conjunction
with the farming operations of a
farmer.
Partial exemption is granted the
general operations of ginning and
compressing.
Distinctive Lines Drawn
By these terms, George A. McNulty,
the division’s general counsel, wrote
only cotton ginning and compressing
are meant, and in the ease of the lat¬
ter, not the extraction of oil, juice, or
syrup from cottonseed, flaxseed, tung
nuts, soybeans, sugar cane, sugar
beets, and such.
McNulty also asserted that all op
erations performed in a gin are not
necessarily ginning, defined as involv
ing only the operation of removing
the seed from the lint.
Aside from the actual growing of ,
agricultural commodities, the law
grants full exemption to “any prac
tices performed by a farmer or on a
farm as incident to or in conjunction
with such farming operations, includ -1
ing preparation for market . . .”
| For cotton, the term “preparation
f° r market” was construed as mean
ing weighing, ginning, and storing:
cotton, and hulling, delinting, clean-1
> n K> sacking, and storing cottonseed. |
Ruling on Tobacco
Complete exemptions granted to¬
bacco under the law were announced
*°. ‘employers engag'd ,n
ra ' s * n 8 tobacco and for “certain
l >lat ‘t' cea * n connection with its pro
dut tion Performed by a farmer.”
H otal exemptions also were granted .
for such operations as handling,!
storin K. pat kinR and drying, as long (
aa th f tobacco was in its “.natural
state and the work was done in “the
area of production.”
This area has been defined as “open
country” or the territory within a 10
mile radius of a community of not
more than 2,500 population.
Operations listed under partial ex
em Pti°ns were stemming, re-drying
and fermenting tobacco.
Turpentine Definition
Turpentine may or may not be a
product , , of agriculture,
a *
McNulty . this ruling;
gave
if T ~ turpentine . , or rosin comes from
the ,, oleoresm , of living tree, the
a
worker , is agricultural , and , . there
' is,
tore, ,, exempt from the .. entire , law.
On the other f, , hand, , it ... the turpentine
or rosin is derived m any other , wav
,, as by , digging ,. . up . stumps and
' pine
grinding . them by . distilling ...... the
or ‘
turpentine with . , steam from . the , oleo- ,
: within extracted from wood,
resin or
as distinguished .... . . . from L . the living ... tree
—the worker is not within the scope
of the agl . ic ultural exemption,
xhe Wage-Hour Administration
Monday opened a schoo | foi . the first
of some 300 new inspectors whom Ma
jor Arthur L . Fletcher said he expect
ed to bc “hard-boiled diplomats.”
j n advance of the classes the ad
ministration clarified agricultural ex¬
emptions from the Fair Labor Stan
dards act with its bulletin defining
such terms as “slaughtering,” dairy¬
ing” and “processing of fruits.”
The exemption for workers in the
slaughtering category, the adminis¬
tration ruled, will extend to those in
all operations generally performed in
connection with that work, but not to
workers who feed livestock or poul¬
try in the yards.
Moreover, it will not extend to
workers in livestock and poultry
products, so that the manufacturing,
curing, smoking, grading, refrigerat¬
ing and packing of meat products are
not exempted activities.
Where the act exempts the raising
JNAGGING backache
■
L W a rn of Q'-sordered Kidney Action. Don't Neglect It'. f
- -
Modern life with Its hurry and cut headache, dizziness, getting np
worry, lng and irregular drinking, habits, improper eat- nights, swelling, puffincss under the
whatnot, exposure, keeps contagion, doctors eyes — a feeling of nervous anxiety
and loss of strength and energy. Other
busy, hospitals signs of kidney
Wmc. crowded. The after or bladder dis- THE REASON DOAfTS
effects are disturbing turbance may ARE FAMOUS
oftentimes people to the kidneys and bc b u r n i n g, All over th. «sutry
suffer without know- scanty or too gr*iefnl people tell
lng that disordered kidney action may frequent urina- others *‘Doan’t have
cause the trouble. tlon. helped me; l recom
After colds, fever and aimilar Ills l P »»»4 «*•« to yon."
there Is Increase of body impurities „ m etter ' wfc 7 *• **?,
an d,k noifhbort
the It kidneys must filter from the blood. l5‘“ e “* k ‘ f our
the kidneys are overtaxed and fail . than
to remove excess ackl and other harm- w ____ ©n
fnl waste, there ts polaontng of the ^™ Doa, f 'thlng less , * farorably known. Cse
whole system. \ * ! '' !, \ The T ha f e been winning
Symptoms _ • of ... disturbed ..... kidney new friends for more than forty years.
func- Be sure to get Doan’t. Sold at all
tion may be nagging backache, persist- drug stores.
L DOAN’S • PILLS
IN MEMORIAM
The Woman’s Missionary Society
p auses t0 » ,a v tribute t0 ° ur h, ' nor * d
-
ami beloved president, Mrs. r. W.
Withoft, whose going Home on July
30 removed her from this sphere of
activity into a higher and sweeter
service; thereby taking her from our
companionship and joy.
We bow to the Eternal Wisdom,
though there comes over us a feeling
of sorrow and a deep sense of loss,
there remains a realization of glory
in our loss and inspiration to a higher,
nobler exemplification in our own
lives of the principles by which she
lived and died.
Our standards will be loftier for
having registered her name.
Let. us find quiet of heart in paus¬
ing to recognize her passing, and in
contemplation upon her true great¬
ness.
„ when the high heart we magnify
And t f, e tnJe v j s j on we celebrate;
An(J worship greatne8s p aKsing by,
Ourselves are great.”
BAPTIST WOMAN’S MISSIONARY
SOCIETY
Mrs. C. N. Rountree,
Mrs. W. J. Braswell,
Mrs. J. R. Kinney,
8-24~lt. Memorial Committee.
of livestock, the bulletin aefined this
as the “breeding, fattening, feeding
,) (on the farm) and general care” of
cattle, sheep, horses, mules, jack¬
asses or goats.”
The bulletin listed among exempted
dairying activities the milking of
cows or goats, cooling and storing the
milk, separating the cream, bottling,
and making butter or cheese provided
those operations are performed on the
farm. Ice cream making is not ex¬
empt.
Processors of fresh fruits and vege¬
tables are exempt, but in the case Of
tomatoes, this covers only the grow¬
ers and handlers—not the canners.
“Although nuts may be fruit, they
are not fresh fruits even when newly
picked,” the bulletin said, so those who
handle them have no exemptions.
However, the hulling, shelling,
or grinding of whole grains,
including the milling of flour, and the
redrying and fermenting of
are exempted activities. Wine
making, leather manufacture, rope
ma | c j n _ at)( j cigar-making are not ex
ern pt
A farmer's secretary, bookkeeper
or night watchman is exempc, c.a are
of farms operated experi¬
mentally by factories.
The love of liberty with life is giv
en. Dryden. ,
BI 3®pCEBBuEia
WSi r MQk
1 f... .1 Rich in
- , ■ 4' iSA Unmatched quality.
ki ; * tv? a ums gg|\
J||\ in flavor.
# |\ Delicious
and pure.
5
; : i
*:°v /o
A 5PA /. trlO
6 P. A C 1 w 7 C V
B€v€ PAGt
EPS! tom
.•At** ** **» /
IZ OUXCtl
WORTH A PI m
Give me the liberty to know, to
think, to believe, and to utter freely
according’ to conscience, above all
other liberties.—Milton.
Sorrows are like thunder-clouds,—
in the distance they look black, over
our heads hardly gray.—Richter.
ONLY THE BEST
in Diamonds, Watches, China, Silverware, Glassware and a complete line
of Jewelry
See our complete line of Wedding Invitations, Announcements and
Visiting Cards. Watch, Clock and Jewery Repairing a Specialty.
WE GIVE VOTES IN POPULARITY CONTEST
KERNAGHAN-GOODMAN, INC.
RELIABLE GOODS ONLY
411 Cherry St. Macon, Ga.
INSION $1.15
i#
POCKET and WRIST WATCHES
I! *1.00 *3.95
to
9 3: «r
ff ALARM CLOCKS
<7 *1.00 to *2.95
LOOK FOR ON THE DIAt
I J t
«
'.'7 uat fata
SEPT.
NT/ -
on thi f A
fire$We
STANDARD TIRES •
THE THRIFT SENSATION
OF 1939
HOW YOU CAN GET ONE OF
THESE AMAZING TIRES *
J II
k ’
L3
* BUY ONE AT V
LIST PRICE AND GET
THE NEXT ONE AT
50% DISCOUNT... V
AS LOW AS
I I .
UNDE PI I ■
STANDARD 'Firestone champion
Price I Next Pric. YOU ' ! Price Next Price YOU
SIZE ; For The Tire 50 S For SIZE Fot Tire Tire 50% Tir'e, SAVE
_| t»f T ire ; Discount 9 Tire, -Af E 1 it Tire Discount *
4.40-21 t $ 7.20 $ 3.40 $ 10.80 $ 3.40 5.25-17
4.50- 21) $ 14.45 $ 7.33 $ 21.98 $ 7.32
4.75-19 I 7.45 3.73 11.18 3.72 5.50- 17
5.00- 19 i 1 5.9 5 7.97
4.50- 20 I 7.40 3.80 11.40 3.80 8.00- 16 7.98 : 23.93
5.00- 20 ( 17.95 8.97
5.25- 171 9.50 4.75 14.25 4.75 6.15-16 8.98 24.93
5.50- 17 I 6.50- 16 1 9.3 5 9.48 29.03 9.47
5.25- 181 8.45 4.33 12.98 4.32
5.50- 19) 7.00- 16 21.95 1 0.98 3 2.93 10.97
6.00- 16 10.35 5.18 15.53 5.17
Above Price* Include Your Old Tin ■Other Size* Proportionately Low
A 50% DISCOUNT ALSO APPLIES TO THE
PURCHASE OF 2nd TIRE ON THE FOLLOWING:
Ti rcstonc high speed T*r*$totte convoy
i Price Next j Price YOU Ptlc, Next Price YOU
SIZE i For The Tire 50%; For » SAVE SIZE For Th. Tire 50% For ttvc
: 1 it Tire Discount 2 Tirei 1«t Tir, I Discount - ? Tim 5ATE
* 10-30 $ 5.15 $ 15.45 $ 5.15 4.40-211 $ 8.35 $ 4.18 $ 12.53 $ 4.17
4.50- 21«
5.25- 17 j 13.20 6.60 19.80 6.60 4.75-191 8 40 ; 4.30 12.90 4.30
5.50- 17 j 5.00- 19) .
5.25- 18 12.00 6.00 18.00 6.00 5.25- 17 \ 11.00 5.50 16.50 5.50
5.50- 18 14.35 7.18 21.53 7.17 5.50- 17)
6.00-16 5.25- 18 ) 10.00 5.00 . 15.00 5.00
6.25- 161 17.40 8.70 26.10 8.70 5.50- 18)
6*50-16' 6.00- 16 11.95 5.98 17.93 5.97
Above_£riee*Jnclu^ 09her >> Sizes > £ro£or9iotiatetyL
FOR GREATEST SAFETY AND ECONOMY
PUT A NEW TUBE IN EVERY NEW TIRE
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Farr. Mso vast the Firestone Exhibit at the Golden Gate International Exposition at San Francisco
Listen to the Voice of Firestone with Richard Crooks, Margaret Speaks and the Firestone Symphony
Orchestra, sender dtreason of A 1/redV alien stem, Monday evenings, Nationwide N.B.C Red Setwoe i
HARRIS H. HAFER
North Macon Street Fort Valley, Ga.
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•l•] ritM
I flBi
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W I
W«* Bean BmlU» J
ANDERSON DRUG COMPANY