Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER,
GEORGIA, NOVEMBER 10, 1938.
MEWS SUMMARY OF
THE WEEK IN GEORGIA
Judge Henry L. McLendon celebrat- j Twelve deeds on property transac-
ed his 89th birthday at Fitzgerald lions involving $1,000 or more, total-
TJie Richmond county grand jury
lfonday suggested that superior
•ourt judges in Georgia be rotated as
In South Carolina.
Sunday. Former clerk of the Web
ster Superior court, he at one time
served as county clerk, county treas
urer and school commissioner. He has
been justice of the peace in his dis
trict for the past 13 years.
The exhibit of the Shellman high
, school at the Peanut Festival held
State and federal revenue officers j pnst wee k was awarded second
destroyed 83 moonshine stills during ( p r ; ze $75.00, which has been added
WPA Education Radio
Program To Be Given
Over WSB Saturday
October, according to a report made
fcy the State Revenue Department
Tuesday.
Thomas Ponsell, of Waycross, Ga.,
was killed and four other persons
were injured in an automobile-truck
collision near Little Mountain, S. C.,
Saturday.
J>r. J. E. Sammons, pastor of
Vineville Baptist church, Macon, was
to the senior class fund to provide
their graduation trip, next June, to
the New York World’s fair.
Secretary Wallace hue announced
ids acceptance of an invitation to
speak to a farmers’ meeting ct Ma
con Nov. 17. The United Georgia
Farmers and the Georgia Co-opera
tive Council issued the invitation
jointly. P. J. Brown, of Albany, is
of the -Rehobeth president of the latter organization.
Baptist Association at a meeting
Macon Monday.
The first cat show in Atlanta sanc
tioned by the National Cat Fanciers
Association will lie held Dec. 2-3 by
Hie Atlanta Cotton States Cat Club
a the Atlantan Hotel.
Joint indictment charging murder
in connection with the slaying on
Oct. 25 of Police Chief C. T. Thorn
ton was returned Tuesday by the
Butts county grand jury against five
negroes.
Atlanta post office receipts for
October were up over September,
tut allowed a decline from the cor
responding month last year, Post
master Lon F. Livingston announced
Tuesday.
A hundred delegates attending the
fall convention of Number One (Ga)
District of Pilot International con
cluded their meeting in Elberton
Sunday after a breakfast and busi
ness session.
Marcus McWhorter, director of the
motor vehicle division of the State
Revenue Department, is being trans
ferred to one of the tax collecting
divisions, and his post abolished in
an economy move.
Chase Osborn %nd his daughter,
Miss Stellanova Osborn, of Poulan,
entertained relatives of Harry Still
well Edwards at an appreciation and
memory dinner at a Macon hotel
Sunday night.
Rev. W. W. Whatley, pastor of the
Oglethorpe-Ideal Methodist churches,
is reported doing nicely at the Ma
con County clinic, where he under
went an emergency appendicitis ope
ration ten days ago.
Governor Graves, of Alabama, said
Monday he would leave for Atlanta
Tuesday to confer with counsel for
the southeastern governors’ freight
rate conference, after voting “the
straight Democratic ticket.”
Postmasters and supervisors of the
Eighth District will hold a banquet
meeting in Waycross Saturday night
Nov. 12, at the Ware hotel, presid
ed over bv C. U. Young, postmaster
at Valdosta, district president.
Fulton Superior Court Judge Jno.
D. Humphries, in deciding whether a
liquor store is too near a church, said
the prescribed minimum distance of
100 yards is to be measured, not “as
the crow flies,” but by the nearest
traveled route.
S. P. Hewlett, a native of South
Carolina, has been appointed operator
of the new Burton’s Ferry bridge.
The bridge is located over the Sa
vannah' river at a point about half
way between Allendale, S. C., and
Sylvania, Ga.
Genevieve Elam of the Furlow
■ grammar school, Americus, and Har
vey Jennings of the Leslie school
-won the forestry essay contest for
Sumter county and will participate
in the state contest, sponsored for the
the Georgia Forestry Association.
A stockroom blaze discopered
shortly before noon Saturday caused
heavy damage on the Mulberry Mar
ket at Macon. Chief J. E. Dellinger
and other fire department officials
estimated the loss caused by smoke,
fire and water at more than $12,000.
The Central Methodist church at
Fitzgerald having discharged in full
an indebtedness of $15,000 for which
a mortgage was given 12 years ago
trained the cancelled mortgage at a
special service recently. Rev. B. A.
Ptafford, pastor, preached a special
Five negroes lost their lives in the
Savannah river near Augusta late
Saturday when a ferry, playing be
tween the South Crolina and Geor-
gia banks of the stream, capsized.
The only survivor was W. T. Amer-
son, white operator of the ferry, who
•awaim to safety.
Lives of fourteen persons were
snuffed out over the week-end in
Georgia in a series of highway crash
es, shootings, gun accidents and a
jail fire, a survey Monday showed.
Victims included four negroes suffo
cated when the interior of the city
stockade at Giennville, burned.
G. W. Schramm, 82, a long-time
citizen, familiar figure about the
streets of Shellman, died Thursday
last. He had operated a shoe repair
shop in the town of Shellman for
more than 50 years, and continued
actively in charge of his business un
til within two weeks of his death.
Workmen have begun clearing a
site in Blakely where the new city
hall will be located. The building will
be erected at an estimated cost of
$27,000, 45 per cent of which will be
supplied by a federal grant, already
approved. The remaining 55 per cent
will be paid by Blakely through a
bond issue.
Abbeville, Wilcox county, and state
officials gathered in Abbeville Tues
day for a meeting of the Savannah-
McRae-Americus-Columibus Highway
Association, at which matters per
taining to the unfinished portion of
the Crisp Military Highway will be
discussed, W. H. Wilkinson, president
said Monday.
A Fulton county divorce court
made history recently when for the
first time on record n the courthouse
a husband was granted all that he
asked for in a contested divorce ac
tion. G. H. Overton, the husband,
was granted a total divorce, custody
of three minor children and was
granted the right to remarry.
President Roosevelt is a busy man,
but he will not forget his adopted
state on Thanksgiving. The President
told reporters in Washington that al
though he will be busy until Nov. 22
on new budget estimates for the gov
ernment departments, he plans to
leave on that date for his annual
Thanksgiving visit to Warm Springs.
W. T. Burckhalter piloted his
Southern Railroad switch engine into
the Hamburg yards the other day,
climbed down and decided to call it a
day. He had served the road 48 years.
Officials accepted his request for re
tirement and noiw the gray-haired
veteran s “taking life easy at his
home in North Augusta.” He is 70.
Approximately 300 members of tho
Georgia Association of School Super
intendents will assemble in Atlanta
Nov 18-19 for their annual session,
President D. D. Still of Buena Vista
announced Saturday. Among the
princpal speakers will be Gov. E. D.
Rivers and Paul A. Saxon, president
of the American Association of
school administrators.
The annual Georgia Baptist Con
vention will be held in Atlanta Nov.
15 and 16 and will be followed by a
state-iwide conference for Sunday
school workers in Auyusta, Nov. 24
and 25. Dr. T. L. Holcomb, editorial
director for ' publications of the
Southern Baptist Sunday school
board, will be one of the principal
speakers for the convention.
ing $46,000, were no record Monday
in the office of County Clerk J. L.
Jolly, indicating a substantial in
crease in real estate deals in Rome
during the past week. About $28,000
of the total involved purchases by the
city of Rome where work of clearing
a site for a new girls’ high school is
under way.
The estate of the late Eugene
Thompson, of Florence, was sold at
Lumpkin this week to the highest
bidder. Included in this sale were
fertile river plantations along the
Chattahoochee River in Stewart coun
ty and fine timber lands. They were
bought by Willis Thompson, of Ala
bama, brother of Eugene Thompson.
The timber sold for $23,000 and the
farm lands for $10,000.
Dr. W. A. Shelton, one of Atlanta’s
best-known ministers, has been
transferred to North Alabama Meth-| one of which will be chosen and an-
November 12 at 9:15 a. m. central
time, begins a series of WPA educa
tion radio programs over WSB, At
lanta.
The series, of broadcasts will be
based on the fact finding committee's
reports on Georgia and will be pre
sented as a part of the continued fea
ture depicting a W'PA adult class
meeting in a small community of
Georgia.
Regular characters will appear
every week discussing points of in
terest to all Georgians in simple
conversational form.
So far the programs have no name
—but all the WPA teachers in Geor
gia are to listen and submit names
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE
odist Conference .and will be assign
ed to the Birmingham district. The
nounced onthe third program reading
the letter of the teacher whose name
same announcement said that Dr. W. ; is selected as most appealing and ap-
G. Henry, of Anniston, former Emory i propriate, telling why that particular
Uniersity professor, had been trans- I name was suggested,
ferred from the Alabama Conference | These programs are written and
and assigned to the Atlanta district reproduced for Georgia as an educa-
of the North Georgia conference.
GA. DOCTOR ADMITS
INSURANCE FRAUD;
13 DENY CHARGES
Macon, Ga., Nov. 7.—Dr. Ernest 11.
Hutchings, of Sparta, Ga., one of
Hancock county’3 loading physicians,
official county doctor and member of
tlie school board, pleaded guilty in
Federal District Court Monday on
two indictments charging mail fraud.
Thirteen others including the coun
ty Democratic executive committee
man and another member of the
school board, pleaded not guilty on
five indictments, one of which charg
ed conspiracy to use the mails to
defraud, the other four of which cit
ed specific cases of alleged fraud.
BLACKFACE BANDITS
GET $10,000 PAY ROLL
tional feature and the WPA educa
tion division asks your cooperation
and that you as Georgians give them
a trial, turn on your radio, listen to
several programs and write WSB
what you think of them.
No. 1
Tampa, Fla., Nov. 5.—Officers
pressed a search Saturday for three
“blackface” bandits who robbed a
cigar factory paymaster of between
$8,000 and $10,000 and wounded a
spectator in their flight.
Paymaster Martin Gonzales said
two men, their faces blackened,
seized the Garcia & Vega plant pay
roll while more than 100 employes
stood in line before his office window.
The fled to an automobile in, which
a companion waited, Gonzales added,
and escaped. Maximo Alonzo tried to
halt one of the hold-up men but was
shot and wounded in the neck.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT WINS
PRAISE OF STATE AUDITOR
Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 6.—The State
Department of Health carried over a
surplus of $386,446 at the close of ita
fiscal year on July 1 and won the
praise of State Auditor Zack Arnold
in a report filed Saturday.
“With largely increased federal
and state funds made available foi
extension of public health work, the
State Board has planned the program
very wisely,” the auditor commented.
“The board has prudently measured
the prospects for future financing of
the program and proceeded in de
veloping gradually the health exten
sion organization and activities with
chances favorable for new' enterprises
not having to be abandoned for lack
of funds.
From
Page 1
thought of. It was called Traveler’s
Rest because it was near the center
of the trail from Florida, through
Georgia, to the coast settlements of
Savannah and Augusta. The town
had churches, stores, a hotel and
schools, but when the railroad' bridge
was built across the river a little
higher up, and the wagon bridge
still higher up on the road between
Lanier and Montezuma, the Travel
er’s Rest ferry gradually went* into
disuse, and the people at Traveler’s
Rest moved away.
Another ferry about eight miles
still farther up was called the La
nier Ferry. The old road from the
forgotten site of Lanier is still
traceable to the river. This ferry was
discarded after the war when the
people of Lanier began to move to
Reynolds and Butler and Oglethorpe
and Montezuma.
The Hollingshead Ferry, however,
a few miles north of Lanier Ferry,
was used until a few years ago, J.
W. Logging being the last ferryman.
He and his wife and children lived
01. the banks of the river. The Bryan
Perry, several miles north of the
Hollingshead, has not been in use
during the past quarter of a century
or longer. Traveler’s Rest and Lanier
are two most noted deserted villages
in IMacon county.
Deeds for the transfer of ,Miona
Springs to the government were
drawn at Montezuma recently; and
while the bridge project is in no
way 'connected with the negotiations
for the national park, it is known
that the people on both sides of the
river are anxious for the crossing to
be within easy access of the park.
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
By virtue of an order of the Court
of Ordinary of said Taylor County
granted upon the application of C.
W. Foy, as administrator of tlie es
tate of A. F. Davis, deceased, lute of
said County, to sell the lands of the
said A. F. Davis, deceased, for the
purpose of paying debts and distri
bution, there will be sold before the
court house door at public outcry, to
the highest and best bidder ini the
City of Butler, Ga., said County, be
tween the legal hours of sale on the
First Tuesday in December, 1938,
the same being the sixth day of De
cember, 1938, as the property of the
said deceased, the following described
lands, to-wit:
One-half acre of land in the Town
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGIA—Taylor County
Under and by virtue of the lew
a mortgage execution issuing / .J
Taylor Superior Court in- favo^nf i'l
Quite tt Gin Co., against \v°in 1
Payne on the first Tuesday in rl
cember, 193*8, same (being the fitp ,iJ
of December 1938, before the Coll
House door of said Taylor
within the legal hours of sale 1
public outcry, to the highest and’ M.
bidder for cash, I will sell the fol
lowing personal property, to-wit- I
Three 8(LSaw M-88 Roll diimrml
direct Conn Ainblast Gins NnmLJ
26363-26347-26344, with counuZF
12x3 C. 1. Pulleys, HE 180-18
Brackets and arch bars TV
80-Saw M-88 Stell Conv. Distr hor
pers . . . Three 80-Saw steel "raise
type short gin flues . . . Three 80
saw M88 Universal .bull extracts
Numbers 1120-1126-,1128 with 7*J
pulleys . . . Three 80-saw !M88 hull
extr. feeder spouts ... 24 feet of sii
inch RiH conveyor in 3-8-’ length)
of Butler, said County, same .being
the place where Mrs. A. F. Davis and ‘ al l in steel box "with Reg/ drive
her children now live, and known as j shaft, pulleys, outboard bearing
the Ben Carter Place. | etc. . . . UM-88 LH 3-80 Conv dh
Also a five-acre tract of land in j tributor with 6 ft. of 1-15-16-iJ
the Town of Butler, said County, and shafting, 12x4 C. I. pulley driv
known as the Jinks property, lying ' separator
and being on the east side of State
Three 80-Saw Jigl
steel conv. distr. hoppers . . One M8i
Highway Number Three, leading | Conv. distr. overflow spout
. Lots Numbers ; shield . . . One 50-inr-h mtan
south out of Butler.
, „ „ . „ 1 - One 50-inch rotary clean
one, two, three, four, five, six and 3o | e r separator with 22x4 C. I. pull/
in Block piiriit. Also lota Nnmhers I OAT
111 Block eight. Also lota Numbers
five, six, seven, eight, thirty-three
and thirty-four in Block seven. All
tiie above lots are shown in , the
Smith Sub-Division, according to a
plat made by C. It. Hughes, and re
corded in tho office of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of said T&ylor
County.
Also ninety (90) acres of land,
more or less, off of land lot No. | AlB
Seventy-two (72), in the Fourteenth
District of said Taylor County, and
known as the A. F. Davis Home
Place.
Also lots Numbers 36, 37, 38 and
39, and shown by plat of the estate
of Mrs. Jennie McCants, recorded in
Deed Book “R”, Page 47, in the
Clerk’s Office of said Taylor County.
Terms of sale cash.
This 8th day of November, 1938.
C. W. FOY,
Administrator of Estate of the Late
A. F. Davis, Deceased.
FOR LETTERS OF DISMISSION
and RAL dust discli. . . . One 4<jl
inch steel down discli. type batter!
* condenser with 28x3 C. I. pulley *
I doffer roller. . . . One set steel sup!
ports. . . . One 48-inch steel lin|
! slide. . . . One 1'5-inch 1-5-8
vertical screw elevator with Hl|
I vertical conv. and with pulleys
One Gullett size “D” Bbrg. countel
clockwise bottom lioriz, disch. fan fol
One Gullett size “D” BbrgT
clockwise up blast disch. fan fol
elev. suction (C-C) ... 23 feet of RB
nuked conv. . . . One CS box end fol
customers 9-inch wood box com!
. . . One RH up-paeking steel bourn)
double box swing door all steel
press. . . . One 8 3-8-inch hyd. upl
pack. Ram & cylinder . . . One Rif
Gullett double duty tramper. . . . One]
sign “W. A. Payne” . . . One
gauge & tubing . . . One grease gun.l
One set pipe and fittings pump tol
ram . . . One steel support for ball!
.bearing out board Brg. . . . 6-ft 6-in,I
of No. 62 chain . . . Twenty-four I-2I
inch iby 22-inch strt. foundation bolts!
threaded each end with nuts andl
namjrr a w T—n p I washers - . . . Four 5-8-inch hangerl
GDORGIA-Taylor County; I rods One base tank for beltedl
Whereas M. T. Gaultney, admJnis- Hyd. pump. ... One D Disch dustl
estate 0 | Mrs. j £ _ On e screened intake fori
represents to the Gullett Fan. . . . One out let Comt.[
One out-l
trator of the
Crook, deceased, __ vllc
Court in his petition duly filed' and , “D”7aV 21-inches Tong. . . UJ1B
entered ori record, that he has fully j ) e t Conn 50-inch rot. cl'nr. seDr
executed the etate of Mrs. J. E. 1 nv,.- o r 1 a ;„„v, ™ ,
Crook, deceased. This is therefore, to
cite all persons concerned, kindred
Four 2-7-16-inch iBbrg. reach floorl
stands complete. . . . One 3-80 EHI
raised ling flue. Ond spout from vert.I
and creditors, to show cause, if any | screw elevator'. . . include necessary
they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his
executorship and receive Letters of
Dismission on the first Monday in
December, 1938.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature this November 7th, 1938.
L. T. PEED, Ordinary.
FOR LETTERS OF DISMISSION
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
Whereas C. B. Marshall as Ad
ministrator of estate of Mrs. Alice
M. Byrd, deceased, represents to the
piping, set collars, shafting, elbows,I
pulleys, gate valves, reach hangers,!
wagon telescopes, and conder FS|
belting all to make up about com
plete outfit. . . . One Phelps No. 401
stale D unloarder Fa.
•Said property levied on is the|
complete ginning outfit located
the gin house in Butler, Ga., operat-l
ed by Will A. Payne and is difficult)
and expensive to transport and will
not be carried to nor exposed at the
courthouse door on the day of sale
but the right of inspection will be
given at any time. Said property will
be sold as the property of Will A.
SHERIFF’S SALE
No. 2
Funeral services for Mrs. Cornelia
Pilcher, 80, were held at the Ellavilte
Baptist church Friday. Interment was
in the Pilcher family cemetery. Mrs
Pilcher was bom in Sumter county.
After her marriage she moved to
Schley county, later moving to Ella-
vilte to reside. Eight years ago, she
moved with her son, Grady Pilcher
Sr., to Griffin, where she has since
resided.
James Buchanan, Americus hard
ware dealer, was recently elected
president of the Americus Kiwanis
club for the year 1939 this week.
Other officers are: Frank Butler,
vice president; Henry Everett, treas
urer; and the following directors: T.
O. Marhall, W. T. Anderson, H. P.
Anderson, Charlie Hogg, H. G.
Dasher, Oscar Coleman and W. T.
Feagiii.
From
Page One
tion receive conservation and parity
price adjustment payments for com
pliance with the conservation phase.
Non-cooperators, the term used by
the A'AA for farmers who knowingly
overplanted, are permitted to sell the
cotton grown on their allotted acre
age, or the amount of cotton equal
to the normaPJfroduction on the acre
age. All ther cotton, however, is
taxed two cents a pound and next
year will be taxed three cents. In
addition, the growers lose conserva
tion and parity price payments.
Flue-cured tobacco restrictions
vary, in (hat individuals are assigned
poundage quotas specifying the
quantity that may be sold tax free.
Excess sales carry a penalty of 50
per cent tax, and a minimum tax of
3 cents a pound.'Most of the 1938
crop has been sold.
Bath Georgia and Florida growers
expressed some dissatisfaction over
the tobacco situation. In neither
state was the required two-thirds
vote of approval given quotas, fa
vorable ballots in other tobacco states
raising the belt-wide average.
Grups of growers in both states at
tacked tobacco penalties in the court,
transferring the cases to federal
courts and losing when a three-judge
tribunal at Macon held the tax valid
GEORGIA—Taylor County;
Will be sold on the First Tuesday
in December, 1988, same being the
sixth day of December, 1938, before
the court house door af Taylor Coun
ty, Georgia between the legal hours
of sale to the highest and best bid
der for cash the following described
property, to-wit:
Lot of land Nnumber 250 except
twelve (12) acres, in the north-east
corner, containing one husdred ninety
(190) acres mare or less; and the
east half of lot of land Number 259,
containing one hundred fifteen (115)
acres, more or less, all lying and be
ing in the Eleventh Land District of
Taylor County, Georgia.
Said land has been levied upon
as the property of P. C Watson un
der an execution issued out of the
Superior of said Taylor County in
favor of the International Shoe Com
pany vs. J. H. Turner and P. C. Wat
son, and said land will be sold as
the property of the said P. C. Wat
son to satisfy said execution.
This 7th day of November, 1938.
J. M. BONE, Sheriff,
Taylor County, Ga.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any part of equipment, feed, or
livestock purchased from the R. C.
Childres Estate is subject to reclaim
if done without approval of the
undersigned.
This November 7th, 1938.
J. W. CHTLDRE, Admr.
PIANO FOR SALE
2£d ta 0 “! A Uly - flled , a " d Payne to satisfy the above desert
entered on record, that ho has fully j execution.
This ninth day of November, 1938.
J. M. BONE, Sheriff.
executed estate of Mrs. Alice M. Byrd!
deceased. This is therefore, to cite ail
persons concerned, kindred ar.d credi
J'UiLiE FELTON,
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
Thelmon Jarrell of said State
County aforesaid, having in
proper form applied to me for
permanent letters of administra
tion on the estate of W. M. Goodwin,
late of said Taylor County, Georgia,
this is to cite all and singular, the
creditors and next of kin of the
said deceased to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by
law and show cause, if any they can,
why permanent admSM&iracion
should not be granted to the said
TheLmon Jarrell on the said de
ceased’s estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature this October 29, 193g.
L. T. PEED, Ordinary.
FAIRBURN YOUTH
KILLED IN CRASH
tors, to show cause, if any they can.' Plaintiff’s Attorney,
why said administrator should not be!
discharged from his administratorship
and receive Letters of Dismission on
the first Monday in December, 1938.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature this November 1st, 1938.
L. T. PEED, Ordinary.
PETITION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION
Fairburn, Nov. 6. — Ronald E,
Jones, 15-year-old high school stu
dent, was killed instantly todaf
when an automobile struck him as ht
was riding a bicycle out of the drive
way of his home two miles south of
Fairburn.
Sergeant A. L. Bagley of the state
patrol reported the driver of the car
was blameless, and said the youth
came out of the “blind” driveway
directly into the path of the automo
bile.
.Ronald, who was on his way to
Sunday school, was thrown more
than 50 feet by the impact, witnesses
said.
The youth was a member of the
first year class at the Campbell High
school and was a member of the Fu
ture Farmers of America.
Upright Piano in this vicinity will
sell for bargain rather than ship to
Atlanta. Write Durden Piano Co.,
Station C, Box 154, Atlanta, Georgia.
(ll’3'8t)
FARMS FOR SALE
The following farms are being offered for sate by
the Federal Land Bank at a bargain and on very easy
terms of 10, 15 or 20 / years, with five per cent interest
on the balance remaining unpaid from time to time, after
a small cash payment has been made with your offer.
The S. T. CARSON Farm, located six miles south
west from Reynolds, containing 325 acres, with approxi
mately 176 acres cleared, and the following improve
ments: One 3-room dwelling, three tenant houses, and
feed bam. (This fann is adjoining Hicks Mill Pond and
has fishing privilege).
The MRS. LUOY L. SAMS Farm, located 11 miles
;n|0trth-west of Butler, containing 50 acres, with approxi
mately 25 acres cleared; one Snail tenant house and bam.
This farm will be sold very cheap.
The J. A. FRANKS Farm, located two miles north
east of Rupert, containing 202 acres, with approximately
75 acres cleared. One 4-room dwelling; bam and smoke
house.
Now is the time to purchase a farm, while prices are
low, therfore, look these places over and then write to
C. A. Wilson, Salesman for the Bank, Hotel Lanier,
Macon, G'a., for prices and terms.