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GEORGIA—Dooly County. | APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
Will be sold before the court house j GEORGIA—Dooly County.
CiKOSGIA—Dooly County.
"Whereas. Mrs. Mollie Murry and
Bn. Nettie Christmas, Administra-
tuiMi estate of C. G. Word, deceas
ed have In due form applied to the un-
dowaigned for leave to sell all the
beads of said deceased in Dooly coun
try, Ga., consisting of the south half
lot of land No. 69 in the 6th dis-
fcirict of Dooly County, Georgia, con-
tubing 101 1-4 acres more or less,
Cter the payment of debts and distri-
taotion among heirs of deceased. I
.will pass upon said application on
HaeA Monday in August next. This
JU)j 3rd, 1916.
J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary.
doofc in said county on the first Tues
day in August, 1016, within the legal
hours of sale the following describ
ed property to-wit:
All of the southeast quarter of lot
of land No. 166 in the 6th District of
Dooly County, Georgia, and contain
ing 50 acres more or less with im
provements thereon.
Said land levied on and sold as the
property of Mrs. Dollie Williams to
satisfy an execution issued on the 8th
day of May, 1916, from the Super
ior court of said county in favor of
Mrs. M. R. Hamilton and against Mrs.
Dollie Williams. This the 3rd Day of
July, 1916.
H, 0. DAVIS, Sheriff.
■{GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Whereas E. D. Brawn has in due
Una applied to the court to be ap-
.jaunted guardian of the penfbn and
:*pnaperty of Williams Brown, non
-caempua mentis, of said county and
:«aaar confined in the Georgia Sanl-’
’tssnem. .Notice is hereby given that
Ximeill (ass upon said application on
Mas* Monday.in August next. This
JSaly 3rd, 1916.
J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Will be sold before the court house
door in said county on the first Tues
day in August, 1916, within the legal
hours of sale the following describ
ed property to-wit:
' Alt of the north half of lot of lnnd
No. 126 in the 6th district of Dooly
County, Georgia, and coutabln ; 1C1
1-4 acres more or less with imp-ove-
mcnts thereon.
Said land levied on and sold as the
property of Learry Murphy and Co
lumbus Murphy to satisfy an execu
tion issued on the 8th day of May,
1916, from the Superior cnutt of said
i county in favor of Mrs M. R Hamit
‘GEORGIA—Dooly County. #
Whereas, L. L. Minor, administra- j >nd g gainst said Lott/ Murphy
>l»*r of J. P. Moreland represents to,, nd Columbus Murphy. Jbis the 3rd
Court in his petition duly filed | of Ju |y f 1#1#-
: nidi -entered on record, that he hai
Hally administered said estate. This
•sat, therefore, to cite all persona con-
omnned, kindred and creditors, to
mbuir cause, if any they can, why
amid administrator should not be die-
«1horgcd from his administration,
■ u«sd t receive letters of dismission on
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Under and by virtue of an order j j r the town of Lilly, in Dooly County,
W_ *v. t,— ur W n Georgia, but petitioners desire the
granted by the Hon. W. F. George,
Judge of the Superior Court of laid
county, I will sell on the first Tues
day in August, 1918, at the court
tike first Monday In August next. This -[, 0UM door j„ said county, between uid corporation may wish.
1 day of July, 1916.
J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary.
{(GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Ufa All Whom It May Concern:
J. It. Kelley having, in proper form
ojppllcd to me for permanent letters
«»f administration on the estate of
W. D. Wilder, lets of laid county,
ft^as is to cite all and singular the
» creditors and next of kin of W. D.
Wilder to bo and appear at my office
within thp time allowed by law, and
titumr cause, if any they can, why per-
iraanent administration should not be
(granted on first Monday in August
next, on W. D. Wilder’s estate.
Witness my hand and official slg-
i this 8rd day of July, 1916.
A D. HARGROVE, Ordinary.
the logal hours of sale to the highest
bidder for cash, tho following de
scribed property to-wit: All that
tiact or parcel of land situate, lying
and being in the county of Dooly de
scribed at follows: Lota 3, 4, and 6
in Block 26 North, as per map of
town of Byromville.
Said sale of said property to be
confirmed by the court before tho
execution of a deed thereto to the
purchaser and the liens to attach to
the proceeds of said property.
This the 27th day of June, 1916.
A. P. GRACE,
Receiver of Farmers A Merchants
Bank, Byromville, Ga.
{GEORGIA/—Dooly County.
Will 'be told at the Court House
TOteor to said ceunty on the first
'Mtacsdny in August, 1916, within the
ttegnl hours of eale to-wit:
A one-fourth undivided Interest
ns and to tho following land situated
hi said county, to-wit:' The East
ttmlf of lot of land number ninety-
-Zoor (94) and the North half of lot
vat land number (100) one hundred,
«SU of eald land lying and being in the
I land district of Dooly County,
, containing in the aggregate
Salt land levied on as the property
writ Tmn Oliver to satisfy'an execu-
Siam issued on the 8th day of May,
M910, from the Superior Court of
raid county, in favor of Smlth-Mc-
IDonald Company, against Tom 01-
-Tfcls 3rd day of July, 1916.
H. 0. DAVIS, Sheriff.
H. 0. Davis, Shsriff.
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of T. P. Busbec, A. F.
Forehand and W, T. Riclu, all of
said county and State, respectfully
shows the court:
1st
They desire for themselves, their
associates, successors and assigns to
be incorporated and made a body po
litic and corporate under the name
and style of the “Planters Oil & Fer
tilizer Company” and by that name
to sue and be sued, transact all bus
iness as hereinafter prayed, have and
use a common seal, maka contracts,
borrow money, and create such evi
dence of debt as the corporation may
desire and secure the same by mort
gages and deed of trust or other se
curities upon the property and fran
chise or any part thereof, to buy,
lease or rent own and aell real es
tate and personal property of every
description and to have and axerclse
all such other powers os are apecifled
by tho laws of Georgia and aa may
be necessary to carry out the purpose
of this incorporation.
2nd.
The object of said corporation and
the particular business to be carried
on are to manufacture, buy and sell
at wholesale and retail from cotton
seed, oil, meal, lint, hulls, stock food
and fertilisers and in general to con
duct tho business of the cotton teed
oil mill and the manufacture and
tale of fertilizers and merchandise in
cident thereto.
3rd.
The principal office and place of
business of said corporation shall be
right to establish branch offices, fac
tories, place of business, seed houses,
and scales at such other places ns
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Will be sold at the 'court house
door in said county, on the first Tues
day in August, 1918, within the le
gal hours of sale, for cash, the fol
lowing described property to-wit
Forty (40) acres of land, more or
less, in the Southwest corner of lot
number seventy (70) in the 2nd
land District of Dooly County,
Georgia, except one acre reserved
for cemetery and chureh, bounded
on North by Warren McKenzie, East
by lands of Warren McKenzie, South
by lands of J. W. McKenzie and West
by lands of J. S. Sutton, ,
Said property levied on aa the
property of Tom Adams, to satisfy
an execution in favor of the British
& American Mortgage Company,
against said Tom Adams and espec
ially against said land, issued from
tho Superior Court of Dooly County,
Georgia, on the 8th day of May,
1918.
This tho 8rd day of July, 1916.
H. 0. DAVIS, Sheriff.
4th.
be
The capital stock of said corpora
tion actually paid in is T!< rty lr.oua-
nnd Dollars divided into shares of
One Hundred Dollars each, and pe
titioners ask the privilege of cross
ing the same at, any time to any
amount not exceeding Fifty Thousand
Dollars.
Petitioner ask that the subscrip
tion of the Capital Slick may bo paid
in any kind of property thut-thc- cor
poration is authorized to neol in, no
stock holder in sale c-impany shall
bo bound in his individual enpanty
for the contracts or debts of ths com
pany beyond the amount of bis un
paid subscription to its Capital Stock.
5th.
Petitioners pray that they
granted the right to make all proper
rules, constitution and by-laws, and
alternate same at pleasure, also that
they have the power to elect such di
rectors, officers and agents ns they
see fit., The period of said Incorpo
ration shall bo twenty years with the
privilege of rc-newal as provided by
law.
6th.
They pray authority to accept
amendments to their charter from
time to time, whether fundamental
otherwise by an affirmative vote
a majority of the entire stock then
outstanding and by like vote to sell
out the whole of their property for
cash or other valuable consideration
and wind up th(<r business at any
time.
7th.
Wherefore, petitioners pray that
this petition may be filed and recorded
as provided by law, and when the same
IN meMorium.
Death has again laid its hand upon
two of our tenderost buds.
Oq the morning of June 27th a
few minutes after 11 o’clock the pure
spirit of little Otis Daniels winged
its way from earth to Heaven Just
forty minutes after his dear brother
George followed him. There to rest
the blessed arms of the blessed
Savior until the resurrection morn. ‘
Their illness was very brief, only
few days of pain and suffering. All
that loving friends and kind physi-1
cians and nurses could do was to no
avail.
Truly the dispensation of cur
Heavenly Rather are past our un
derstanding, but we know that Hisj
judgments are most righteous and
we rejoice that when the vail is lift
ed from our eyes we shall then un
derstand all mystereies. Therefore
we bow in humble submission to His
will exclaim God doeth all things well
Attractive in mind and heart their
life absorbed many noble and tender
qualities. May we all meet our dear
darling boys in that bright Heavenly
home where there will be no moro
partings and no more tears.
Dear Otis and Georgs have left us
but we will not forget them. Time
will heal the wound that bleedi to
day. But we will always think of
the angola that are waiting on the gol
den shore. We look back over their
paet life we see much that waa beau
tiful and nothing to regret. They
bloomed In our hearts only a short
timt but the rich fragrance of their
character lingers around us still.
Dear little Otis was only aeven
years and eleven months old. George
was twelve years and four months
old, but those years are golden linke
in memory’! chart Our hearts are
filled with sorrow but we know if wo
are faithful we will meet Dear Otis
and George on that glad tomorrow
to sing praises through all eternity
and never to part again.
Little Otis and George
Thou hast left us
For a fairer and better land
Given by a loving havior
Taken by hit own hand.
.ARCHITECTURE and COMMERCE
Its L
it the school’s neatest asset. Students bavo won highest honors in -
various compel!"
1 ChrQ, Textile sad
oierce. New equipment* H . L .„ wl , b „ ....
I Engineering Laboratory for experimental and research work.
( Excellent cuinate. Complete library. High moral tone. Free tui-
I tion to fifteen etudents In each county in Georgia. • |
For catalogue address, K. G. MATHES08, Pres., Aflasts, 6s. (
(ieorgiaSchool ofTechnology
Dear, darling, Eva Mae, y) dear to us
Thy precious face pan never see,
You were so true, so good, so sweet,
It is bard are cannot meet.
Farewell dear darling.
Peaceful be thy rest,
God knew when to call
You home to rest
Taken from his father who held him
so dear,
Taken from his mother’s kind and
loving care,
Brothers and sisters mis3 them
play,
And wish for dear Otis and George
to come back every day.
One precious to our heart has good,
A voice we loved to stilled,
The place made vacant in our heart.
Can never more be filled.
Tie hard to breat the tender cord,
When love has bound the heart,'
Til hard to speak the' wotd, j
We must forever part
Heaven retalneth now ojr treasure,
Earth the lonely casket kcips,
And the sunbeams long to Unger
Where onr darling new steeps-
Tl.; hands are clasped upon thy
breast, ,
We have kissed thy marble brow,
And in our aching hearts we know
We have no darling now.
RUSSIA IS TURNING
TO COTTON GROWING
We miss you little darUng,
We miss you everywhere,
Our home is so dark without you
We must say our last farewell.
Till we meet beyond the river.,
Happy there with thee to dwell.
Mrs. G. S. Daniels.
FEW ACCIDENTS ON
THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Though their home is sadly broken.
And hearts are grieving still,
Help ue, Oh Savior all with a recon
ciling will.
In their coffins so sweet they lay;
That awful debt we all must pay.
Their loving mother,.
Mrs. G. S. Daniels.
of
IN MEMORIUM.
In memory of our darling baby,
little Eva Mae, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. G. S. Daniels.
God in hla wisdom has seen fit to
take the joy of our heart, and the
pride of our life to dwell with him
ii glory.
Little Eva was born April 19,1916
and died June 19th, 1916. She waa
sick only a few days when God re-
lieved her of her sufferings. All
that loving friends and kind physi
cians could do was to no avail. Oh,
it is so hard to realize that our dar
ling, our lweet, precious darling is
^THE.UNIVEBS AL CAB.
The use of Ford heat-treated Vanadium
steel makes possible light weight with a
positive strength. Light weight makes for
■economy in operation and maintenance;
less strain on the car, less expense for tires.
The Ford motor gives the most power per
pound of car weight, which means gasoline
economy. Touring Car $440; Runabout
$390; Coupelet $590; Town Car $640; Sedan
. $740. All prices f. o. b. Detroit. On sale
I at Dr. J. M. Whitehead & Company.
us pr»,.u«u * on »- gon ® gone never to
has been published aa provided by retun ; a «* in - No one who has never
statute, that an order may be passed experienced It can realize the sad-
incorporatlng petitioners under the
name and style, and for the purpose
end with the-powers hereinbefore set
out.
busbee a McDonald,
Petitioner’s Attorneys.
Filed in office this June 27th, 1916.
C. A. Powell, Deputy Clerk, Super
lor Court, Dooly County.
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
I, C. A. Powell, Deputy Clerk of
the Superior Court of said county, do
hereby certify that the foregoing to
a true and correct copy of the appli
cation for charter of Planters Oil A
Fertiliser Company, su the same ap
pears on file in this office.
Witness my official signature, and
the seal of said court. This 27th
day of Jane, 1916.
C. A. POWELL,
Deputy Gtrk, Superior Court, Dooly
County, Georgia.
ness of it
When we look around and see all
of her little clothee and playthings,
and little pets, it nearly breaks onr
hearts to know she will never need
them again.
Oh, we miss our darling baby,
That we could not but prize.
But zhe to in a heavenly maneion
Ir. her home beyond the sides.
A light to papa and Mama,
You will be, and when life’s trials
Assail Sweet angel darUng will com
fort thee.
No pain, no grief, no anxious fear,
Can disturb thy peaceful deep.
Washington, D. C., July.—Fair
fax Harrison, President of the South
ern Railway Company, said today:
“During the fiscal year ended
June SO, 1916, Southern Railway
Company carried nearly seventeen
million passengers, among whom
there were four fatal injuries; two
in a rear end collision at Salisbury,
N. C., on November 24, 1915, due to
a human failure, the disgrace of
which the management feels keenly;
one at Jamestown, N. C., on March
19, 19J6, when a truck faited under
n freight car passing a passenger
train on double track causing dam
age to the passenger train; and one
at Citico, Tenn., on May 8, 1916,
when a passenger, in violation of the
rules made for his safety was lean
ing out from the steps of a passenger
car and was struck by the truss of a
bridge. -
“It may be reported also that, de
spite tho greatly increased volume
o' business done this past year -as
compared with the previous year,
there waa a decrease of fifteen fatal
injuries to employees. While this
record to far from perfection, the
management to encouraged to believe
that its earnest and organized effort
to promote the safety of railway
travel and to reduce the risk of cas
ualty in railroad employment is show
ing results.’’
Reports nldleate Empire Will Be la- ,
depeadeat of American Cotton.
Washington, July.—loss of Rus
sia as a market for American raw
cotton was a forecast in a report of
American Commercial Attache Hen
ry D. Baker at Petrograd, made pub
lic today by the department of com
merce.
A thorough investigation of the.
cotton situation in Russia, Mr. Baker
says, does not seem to warrant the
conclusion that Russia will increase -
its purchase of raw cotton from the
United Jjtates. Last year more than
500,000 bales of American cotton
were imported by Russia and in pre
vious years it reached approximate
ly 300,000 bales.
"Leading authorities in the cotton
trade in Russia,’’ says Mr. * Baker,
“estimates that within about ten
years Russia will not need to import
any American cotton at all. Amer
ican seed is being rapidiysnbstituted
for native seed and improved Ameri
can machinery for ginning, etc., has
been extensively introduced. Thera
is said, however, to exist a splendid
opportunity for American capital
ists familiar with the cotton industry
of the southern states to go Into
cotton growing, cotton seed pressing,
etc., by up to date methods. It to
believed that Russian Turkestan, to
gether with the Caucasus district,
could, if fully developed, easily pro
duce all the cotton that the Russian
empire would require for matfy
years’ to come. This cotton, how
ever, apparently could not compete
with American cotton in. Western
Europe, which has easy sea access to
American supplies.’’
There is a greatly increased pro
duction of cotton in Turkestan, in
districts north "of the Oxus river, Mr.
Baker reports.
GEORGIA SENATOR
INTRODUCES SOME BILLS'
STATE SANITARIUM MAY
GET SOME NEW BUILDINGS
Dear little Eva Mae, thou has left us
And thy loss we deeply feel, '
Yet tis God who has bereft us.
He ran ell our sorrow heal.
NOTICE OF LOCAL LEGISLATION
Take notice that a bill will be tn-
tredued at the present, 1916, session
of tho Legislature of Georgia for the
purpose indicated in the caption of
the said Bill, which is as follows:
“An act to amend an act of the
Legislature of Georgia, entitled, “An
act to amend, consolidate and super
sede the act incorporating the City of
Lilly, in the county of Dooly, stats
cf Georgia: tocreste a new charter
and municipal government for said
Corporation, and for other purposes,
approved August 21st, by striking
ing the word “one” where It occurs
between the words
mile” in line two of section two, of
said act. and inserting in lieu there
of the words "one-half,” so that the
corporate limits of the city of Lilly
will extend one-half mile in every di
rection from the present site of the
A. B. & A. freight end passenger de
pot of the city of Lilly, Dooly Coun
ty, Georgia, end by striking from
said act and repealing so much of
said act aa to embraced in sections
fifty-two to sixty-one inclusive.
Creating a school system for said
city of Lilly, providing for a board of
education for said system, the levy
and collection of taxes therefor, so
as to abolish said school system and
for ether purposes.
This July 6th, 1916.
Atlanta, Ga., July.—The general
impression among members of the
general assembly of Georgia to-that
if any appropriations of any conse
quence ere passed at this Session at
all,' one of them will be the appro
priation to erect and equip two new
bnlldinge at the date sanitarium
for the insane at Hilledgeville for
which the trustees of that institu
tion have asked 5300,000.
At the present time the sanitar
ium to treating upwards of 1,000
more patients than its capacity pro
vides for, and the urgent necessity
of the situation has been strongly
impressed upon members of the leg
islature.
The bnilding in which negro pa
tients are housed to so greatly over
crowded that the death rate among
them i( alarmingly high, while con
ditions in the bnilding for female
white patients are almost as bad.
In a recent statement issued over
his signature, Chairman John T.
Brantley, of the board of trustees,
declared the sanitarium will be
obliged to dose its doors to addi
tional patients except .to fill vacan
cies occurring by death and dis
charge.
Atlanta, Ga., July.—The agricul.'
tural appropriation bill now before
the United States .senate contains sev
eral items that will be helpful to
Georgia farmers, and members of '
the legislature now in session here
are watching the progress of the
bill with grat interest. One Is an
appropriation of $650,000 to fight
tho cotton boll weevil, and another
is an appropriation of $872,000 for.
the work of the office of markets and
rural organizations.
The work of this division in
cludes additional study of cotton
grading, and also the problem of
baling to aave the loss of tare. It
carries special, appropriation for co*
operation with the states to help
bring the prodqcer of food crops, in
cluding fruits, closer to consumers.
It will be remembered that the
creation of the markets division wss
the direct work of Georgians. It
was suggested to Senator Hoke
Smith by a committee of Georgians
headed by Hon. R. F. Duckworth, at
the time chairman of a committee of
the Farmer* Union. Senator Smith
prepared the bill creating the divis
ion of markets, and after'two yean
of persistent effort secured lt$ peak
sage. The bill also carries an appro
priation to continue the study of
naval stores problems, placed in the
bill by Senator Smith.
TRAINING CAMP FOR U. S.
MARINES TO OPEN SOON
Philadelphia, July.—The “cram”
course in preparedness offered at the
training camp for the United States
Marine Corps, which opens at Lans-
downe, Pa., on July 21, to attracting
hundreds-of young men eager for
the practical two-in-one, naval-mil-
Itary Instruction to be given the
embryo “sea soldiers.”
Infantry and artillery/drills, as
well as drills in boat handling aid
seamanship will make up the pro
gram arranged for the volunteers.
Recruiting officers for the Marine
Corps report that many of the citi
zens who offered themselves for en
rollment did not understand that U.
S. Marines dress like soldiers, al
though they are trained in some of
the duties of sailors.