Newspaper Page Text
«■
Professional
Directory
LOUIS L. BROWN
Attorney and Counsellor at l.aw
Brown Building Phene |
Fort Valley, Ga.
PXMticc In all the State and federal Coarte
Lean, on Kealty Ne*otIated
GEO. B. CULPEPPER, JR.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Practice in Stale and Federal Courts
leutf Bulldin* Telephone 374
Fort Valley, Ga.
8. M. Mathews H. A. Mathews
MATHEWS & MATHEWS
Attorneys at Law
Practice in all the Stale and Federal Court.
Fort Valley, Ga.
Phone 107
A. C. RILEY
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Taylor Building Phone 156
Fort. Valley, Ga.
C. L. SHEPARD
Attorney at Law
Beater Building Phone 31
Fort Valley, Ga.
Practic. in all th. State and Federal Court.
Loans Made on Realty
BRASWELL REALTY
COMPANY
Real Estate, Rents, Collections and
Loans
Rhone 12
117 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
IN POPLAR STREET MACON, GA.
GEORGIA, PEACH COUNTY.
Will be sold before the court houH«? door in
Fateh County to the highest bidder for cash,
between the legal hours of sale on the first
Tuesday in September, 1939, the following
deacribed property:
All that tract or parcel of land lying and
being in the 10th District of Peach County,
G*.. comprising 48.1 acres, lying in a body
•n<l bounded north by lands of Smith; east
by lands of Tabor; south by lands of Giles;
west by lands of Smith; being in the form
of a rectangle in the northeast portion of Lot
No. 64 in said 10th District, more particularly
described as follows ; Beginning at the north¬
east corner of Lot No. 04 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 1466
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 1466 feet to point of beginning.
Said property will be sold pursuant to and
in accordance with the power of sale contained
in deed to secure debt frym Grady M. Tucker
to Mrs. W. K. Giles, recorded in Deed Book
J, page 878, Clerk's office. Peach Superior
Court, which deed was transferred to Mrs.
Bobbie Lee Howard Tucker by transfer record¬
ed in «aid Clerk's office in Book J, page 878,
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
Sn 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. YV. K.
Giles, all of his right, title and equity to and
la laid property, subject to said Land Bank
CoirftnisRioner deed, will be sold for the pur
post of paying the principal and interest due
©n said notes and the costs of this proceed¬
ing The total amount due on said two notes
«t 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
a* provided in said security deed.
This August 8th, 1989.
Mrs. Bobby Lee Howard Tucker.
Transferee.
D. Aultman, Attorney. 8-10-41.
HAY FEVER
Test This Quick Relief
Try ene dose “Dr. Platt’s RINEX Preacrip
Relief usually begins in a few min
Ut«*. A physician's internal medicine in con*
etnifnt capsules, tasteless—a boon for suf
trim from Hay Fever, Rose Fever, Head
Catarrh, Asthma. Not habit-forming.
£>*te»ing, ^ wheeting, itching eyes, running
pees Quickly relieved. Satisfaction within a
S tir hour* guaranteed or money back. Your
ruffist recommends RINEX, I 11.00.
COACH FARES
fyusMiesi
HeJUvcect
ONE WAY I l /z c PER MILE
ROUND TRIP 10"., LESS
than double the one-eray
Coach Fares
mSURC &AFETY, Avoid High -
Way Hazards. Travel by Train.
Air-Conditioned Coachoo on
Through Tram*.
> SOUTHERN
RAILWAY SYSTEM
t
CASH KATE: J r*nt ptr word. No
ti»rmrnt token for !e»» thon 25c for
insertion.
Cash muni •crompuny orders from
mho do not huve regular monthly
with uu.
POSITIVELY minimum charge of 50c
advertisement i* not paid in advance
muat be billed.
When replie* are to be received care
paper, double rate.
While we do not accept
which we have reason to believe are of
questionable nature, we have no mean*
ascertaining the re*pon*ibility of ail
liner*.
FOR RENT —One second floor
ment, furnished or
(Miss) Pearl Brown, 311 Church
FRESH MILK COWS for sale.
istered and high grade Jersey
on my farm 9 miles east of Fort
ley. John W. Howard.
FULLER BRUSH CO. has
for dealer in Peach County.
education and car necessary.
$18-25 per week. Write 701
Life Building, Columbia, S.
COTTON MILLS IN
AND SOUTH RUN ON
ORDERS SURVEY
Cotton mills of the East and South
are spinning encouragingly to the
tune of big orders for fine dress
goods, a survey by the National Cot¬
ton Council reveals.
Textile payrolls in the Fall River,
Mass., section are running $50,000 a
week ahead of last summer. Else¬
where throughout New England and
in southern spinning centers where
quality cotton cloth is being produced,
manufacturers and workers alike are
cashing in on an almost unprecedent¬
ed demand for cotton materials.
“This has been a great summer for
cotton,” explains Oscar Johnston, pres¬
ident of the National Cotton Council,
which has as its single purpose the
increase of cotton consumption. “The
style makers have 1 become cotton¬
conscious. They have learned again
the stylishness of long-wearing, color
fast, non-shrink fabrics, made up in
colorful and attractive patterns.
But neither Mr. Johnston nor the
style experts can explain the near¬
spontaneousness with which the wom¬
en of America, the men of America,
and the magazines which make them
aware of their appearances, have
turned to cotton goods.
From New Orleans to Maine, and
from New York to California, nation*
al magazines, newspapers, style peri¬
odicals, merchandising booklets and
all manner of publications have sung
since early spring the virtues of cot¬
ton. Magazines in the million circu¬
lation class have devoted pages to
cotton styles. Newspapers, in the
East as well as in a South where em¬
phasis on cotton is naturally to be
expected, have aided retailers in pro¬
moting scores of new and unusually
designed cotton garments. Dresses,
play suits, slacks for men, evening
wear, beach suits they are present
everywhere in a hundred brilliant de¬
signs.
And this swing to cotton is having
its beneficial effect upon the nation’s
economic life. Frank Dunham, secre¬
tary of the Fall River Chamber of
Commerce, announces that mills pro¬
ducing fine dress goods are running
two shifts a day. Other equally
strong indications of a rejuvenated
industry appear.
Another pleasing sign appears in
a recent statement of Russell T. Fish¬
er, president of the National Associa¬
tion of Cotton Manufacturers.
“A survey of the nation’s larger de¬
partment stores reveals depleted
stocks on the shelves,” he says. “This
means that the old bogey-man of over¬
production is absent, and this fact in
turn should point to continued high
levels of mill operations for some
months to come.”
INDIGESTION Relief
Sensational from indigestion
and One Dose Proves It
If the first dose of this plcft-sent-testIng and little
bltck tablet doesn't bring you the fastest most
complete relief you have experienced send bottle
back to us and gel DOUBLE MONEY BACK. This
Bell-ans tahlet helps the stomach digest food,
makea the excess stomach fluids harmless and lets
you eat the nourishing food* you need. For heart¬
burn, sick headarhe and upsets so often caused by
exress stomach fluids making you feet aour and
sick all over—JUST ONE DOSE of Bell-ant proves
speedy relief. 25c everywhere.
Women Answer Query
« I wish more women could hear
the praise of CARDUI that comes
to us every day,” said Reporters
after questioning women in twelve
Southern states. “Of 1279 users,
i*o6 soy they inert benefitted by
CARDUII” It helps to build up
physical resistance by improving
appetite and digestion, and thus
works to allay the misery caused
by functional dysmenorrhea due
to malnutrition. Try CARDUII
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, PORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1939
THE POCKETBOOK
of KNOWLEDGE
\
T
*vr
IN A RECENT
' PER survcy, C SHT 49 9P \ \
Tit l: THOSE- QUESTIONED I
SMALL! ST AND thought that to
A4/SWS PACKAGED IN LOWEST CHINA... APe SCUD PRICED FOOD IT TO W iS TINY 20 SOLO wi fill 0E INCREASE TAXES 2 LOWERED, pea SHOULD PROSPECT/ cent AOAlHST
fO*> V>2 or A CCNT WHO THOUGHT
PfR THEY should
a+lk§T be raised. I
BERNARDINO SAX V 1 I
I i
OSE COUNT/ IN TXt ->>
S1AT6 or CALIFORNIA 'S
is r/Mes lARoeR than |
THE STATS or
RHODE 161 AND—
SAN 8ERNABDINC COONty rtn
I
s y
=> \*
\A V ST "C* I yi »)
M /
\ it V
' *
© ■■ ^ *"
Poshing forward THgiR part Put uwd to end
IH THE 06HT 70 CONQUER DISEASE, THE 20,500.000,000
INDUSTRIAL LABORATORIES are now dollars paid by the u s.
PRODUCING A S£RUM FOR EVERY FOB RELIEF Since 1932
TYP£ OF PNEUMONIA KNOWN TO WOULD REA£M PROM THE BARTH
medical SCIENCE TO THE MOOW T£H TIMES.
mmm ■
EXAMINATIONS FOR
GOVERNMENT
Junior Custodial Officer, $1,860
year, Bureau of Prisons.—This
ination offers young men and
en interested in social and penal
lems an opportunity to make
tional work a career in the
Service. Accordingly persons with
aptitude for this work and with
educational qualifications in
with the government’s
plan are desired. A mental test
be given to measure applicants’
ness and their aptitude for
work. Applicants must have
ed a four-year high-school course,
14 units of high-school study, but
cial credit will be given for
college study. The physical
ments are rigid. Applicants must
reached their twenty-fifth but
not have passed their
birthday. Applications for this
tion must be filed with the Civil
ice Commission at Washington, D.
not later than September 18, if
ceived from states east of Colorado.
Chief Budget Examiner, $6,500
year, and Principal Budget
$5,600, for employment in the Execu¬
tive Office of the President,
of the Budget.—These
are to secure high grade
for government budget work. Experi¬
ence of a highly responsible nature,
including progressively responsible
experience in the management or fi¬
nancial control of governmental or
large industrial, commercial, or other
non-public organizations, is required,
except for partial substitution of
specified college study. Applicants
must not have passed their fifty-fifth
birthday. The closing dates for re¬
ceipt of applications are September 12
for states east of Colorado.
Inspector of Hats, Inspector of Mis¬
cellaneous Supplies (hosiery and knit
underwear), Inspector of Textiles,
and Inspector of Clothing, all at a sal¬
ary of $2,000 a year; Junior Inspec¬
tor of Textiles, and Junior Inspector
of Clothing, $1,620 a year.—Examina¬
tions are announced for these posi¬
tions in the Quartermaster Corps of
the War Department, employment at
Quartermaster Depot, Philadelphia,
Pa. Applicants must not have passed
their fifty-fifth birthday. For the
junior inspector positions they must
have reached their twenty-first birth¬
day, and for the other positions they
must have reached their twenty-fifth
birthday. The closing dates for re¬
ceipt of applications are September
25 for states east of Colorado.
Full information may be obtained
from G. L. Thames, secretary of the
U. S. Civil Service Board of Examin¬
ers, at the post office.
331 PERSONS KILLED
IN TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
Pedestrians have had a tough time
of it in Georgia this year, figures at
the Department of Public Safety
show.
Out of 331 persons killed in all traf¬
fic accidents in the first half of the
year, 29 per cent or 96 cases were
pedestrians. Moreover, another 143
were struck and injured, many maimed
for life, as they walked on streets and
highways. Safety Commissioner Lon
E. Sullivan said. At that, however,
the rate is sharply reduced for from
January through June of 1938, 124
pedestrians were slaughtered.
Between the ages of 5 and 14 and
*
Indentieal Finger Prints
Are Not Likelv to Occur
Finger-print experts find identical
prints are rarer even than living quin¬
tuplets, Joseph Bray, supervisor of
the identification unit of the Depart¬
ment of Public Safety said.
The world boasts one set of quints,
the lusty Dionnes, but so far as scien¬
tists’ records show no two individuals’
prints are exactly the same, The
chances of finger sets being identical
have been estimated at about one out
of 64,000,000,000.
Supervisor Bray said the Georgia
bureau, established in May, 1938, has
36,000 prints but so far there has been
discovered no hint of close similarity.
He said 28,000 of the records belong
to criminals but the remaining 8,000
have been taken from citizens who
volunteered to be printed.
The latter, Mr. Bray explained, are
on file principally as a means of iden¬
tification in cases of abduction, disap¬
pearance through fire, drowning, am¬
nesia or severe injury. Georgia Junior
Chamber of Commerce members are
co-operating in the undertaking to
persuade all civilians to have their
finger-prints on record and already
have started expanding the work at a
temporary booth in an Atlanta the¬
ater.
To experts, a print is recognized by
certain characteristics just as a face
or figure is. There are nine separate
“patterns” in which fingers from ali
races all over the world fall but each
varies in its whorls, loops, arches and
tented arches—ali terms dear to the
heart of the identification student.
| Even before a person’s birth, nature
begins this all-conclusive method of
identification which, except in cases
of hand amputation or other serious
injury lasts a lifetime,
Seldom in even the worst fires are
all ten fingers burned beyond identifi
j j cation has been purposes. drowned Even comparison after a person prints
can be made, if the body is recovered,
by pumping paraffin into the hand to
swell the shrunken fingers to lifetime
proportion,
J set Mr. up Bray finger-print said state taking troopers bureaus will in
their booths at fairs this fall, just as
they did last year. Through that
means they hope to expand the civilian
file which Supervisor Bray said is of
inestimable value to Georgians.
same offense mean automatic 30-day
license suspension; three clips, 90-day
suspension and a fourth is revocation
of the license.
The swine sanitation plan is effect¬
ive in the control of kidney and stom¬
ach worms in hogs.
Sorrow is salutary. Through great
tribulation we enter the kingdom.—
Mary Baker Eddy.
For cereals or a mixture of cereals j
and legumes, 60 to 70 pounds of mo¬
lasses to the ton of green feed should
be used in making silage.
r Dai
* Anti
•I*. I n«*.
t Bvdbuff, ■Aphid,
Sr I Crab Lie*
b* MW ■ •*'r im 8* Mtx chaste B«nn Bwtks
ANDERSON DRUG COMPANY i
| 45 and 64 were the principal
(periods because a total of 41
j trians lost their lives in those
| brackets. Ten children up to 4
1 0 j t | W ere killed; 7 between 15 and 24;
14 between 25 and 44; 12 over
years and in 12 cases reports
to state the ages.
Urban centers proved a more dan
gerous place for walkers than
country for reports show 62 per
were hit in city traffic. Men
boys had worse luck for out of
fatalities, 73 were males.
Commissioner Sullivan said in
instances drivers were at fault but in
others, the pedestrians themselves
were to blame.
He advised persons walking in the
eountry to use the left hand side of
the highway or to go “against the
flow of traffic,” and at night to carry
a light or reflector and if possible to
wear white clothing. For city pedes¬
trians, he advised as a motto “look be¬
fore you step" and warned them to
cross at intersections with the traffic
signals, when the latter are available.
Throughout the nation the pedestri¬
an problem is a serious one and, ac¬
cording to the National Safety Coun¬
cil, 73.3 per cent of ali traffic fatali¬
ties in 18 of America’s largest cities
last year fell in that classification.
Georgia, as well as a number of indi¬
vidual cities in the state, has entered
the national contest to reduce the pe¬
destrian rate of deaths and injuries
this year, Commissioner Sullivan
stated.
He said a number of road-hogs and
speeders have had their drivers’ li¬
censes clipped by troopers since the
strict enforcement order went into
effect last week. Two clips for the
(1
T V
is**
i :r
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 come from 25
states and three foreign countries.
Among the hundreds of expres¬
sions of appreciation, one says,
U 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¬
ers. —- —.........-
SOME PEOPLE GO FISHING
’O
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v
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* i r r f ^ r
OTHERS CATCH FISH!
Some merchants are merely "open for business.” Others
go out and get the business—and keep the bell ringing on the
cash register by advertising in THE LEADER-TRIBUNE. For
they know that consistent advertising in THE LEADER-TRIB¬
UNE’S columns means consistent sales!
BIGGER-BETTER
Ba
fspsiiSifi
m Rich in
Unmatched quality.
in flavor
Delicious
»\ and pure.
\v0. 5
to
'4
A S
EpsJi m
a*
we/al au*
WORTH A DIME
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NAGG ING BACKACHE
May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action. Don’t Neglect It!
Modern life with ita hurry nnd ent headache, dizziness, getting up
ing worry. Irregular habits. Improper eat- nights, swelling, puffiness under the
and drinking, exposure, contagion, eyes — a feeling of nerrous anxiety
u ha tnot, keeps doctors and loss of strength and energy. Other
busy, hospitals signs of kidney
crowded. The after or bladder dis- THE REASON DOAfPS
effects are disturbing turbance may are FAMOUS
to the kidneys and be burning, All o.«r the touotr? i
oftentimes people suffer without know- scanty or too grateful people tell
Ing that disordered kidney action may frequent urina- other* "Doan', Lor#
cause the trouble. tion. helped mo; I rueom
After colds, fever and similar Ills In 8lieh Cases mend thorn to you.**
there is an increase of body impurities It is better to That la why wo aay,
the kidneys must filter from the blood. rely on a med- Aik your neighbor!
If the kidneys are overtaxed and fail Icine that haa
to remove excess acid and other harm¬ won world wide approval than on
ful waste, there is poisoning of the something Doan’t Pills. less They favorably have been known. Use
whole system. friends for winning
new more than forty years.
tlon Symptoms of disturbed kidney func- Be sure to get Doan's. Sold at all
may be nagging backache, persist- drug stores.
DOAN’S PILLS