The Vienna news. (Vienna, Ga.) 1901-1975, August 08, 1918, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

-<9*» Prepare by Federal Food Admlnl.tV.tlon for Georgia i SAINT SURELY WOMAN HATER Colomba, It Mu<t Be Admitted, Can rled Hie Averelon to the Femi nine 8ex to an Extreme. Women hare been forbidden on sev- eral Islands ruled by tbe Catholic clergy. One of tbe-moit famous of these Is Iona of IcMmklll, called also Dealers And Brokers In Cotton Seed, Peanuts And Cotton Ginners, Etc. The following rulings are binding on all licensed dealers and broken In cot ton seed and peanuts, and cotton din ners, etc. "Rule 1. STORING FACILITIES MUST BE ADEQUATE. The licensee shall not receive any commodities specified In his license. In excess of his facilities to store same and shall not store on tbe ground. In any build ing, or other place In such manner that damage or waste will tend to re sult to such commodities from weath er conditions or other causes. "Rule 2. CCTTON SEED NOT TO BE SOLD FOR FEED OR FERTILIZ ER. The licensee shall not, without the written consent of the United States Food Administrator, sell or us6 cotton seed for feed or fertilisers. (NOTE.—This rule does not prohibit the sale of cotton seed meal for ter- tlllilng or feeding purposes.) "Rules. LICENSEE MUST NOT PAT HIGHER PRICES FOR COTTON SEED, OR PEANUTS, IN ONE MAR KET THAN IN ANOTHER. No Been- see shall pay or offer to pay higher prices for cotton send or peanuts in one market than he pays or offers to pay for cotton need or peanuts of the same quality In. any other market; llroTlded, however, that when sonee are established as mentioned In the note to Rule B-8, he may pay varying prices In the several sones, but must pay the same price, at all points In the same none on tbe same day for cotton seed or peanuts of the same .QUillty. “Rule 4. COTTON SEED OR PEA NUTS TO BE HELD ONLY SIXTY DAYS—EXCEPTION. The licensee shall not store, keep on band or have In his possession, or under control by contract or other arrangement, cot ton seed or peanuts for a longer pe riod than sixty days; provided, how ever, that he may store a quantity of less than twenty tons for such longer period as may be necessary for the re quirements of his business. "Rule B. COTTON SEED OR PEA NUTS TO BE SOLD AT NOT MORE THAN REASONABLE ADVANCE OVER COST. The licensee shall sell cotton seed and peanuts at not more than a reasonable advance over the actual cost ti> him.of the particular cotton seed qr peanuts sold, without regard to the market or replacement value at tbe time of sale. (NOTE.—Tbe United 'States Food Administration will determine and an nounce differentials, spreads or com pensation to represent the difference between the price paid for these com modities and tbe total amount any li censee engaged In the business of buying, selling or otherwise dealing In them, as principal or agent, shall be entitled to receive from the sale of negotiation thereof.) “Rule*. CARLOAD SHIPMENTS— MINIMUM WEIGHTS. All carload shipments of cotton seed or peanuts shall be mpde In cars loaded to their capacity, unless a different minimum Is authorised by special written per mission of the United States Food Ad ministration. "Rule 7. WASTEFUL PRACTICES FORBIDDEN. Every licensee owning, controlling or operating a ginnery, shall clean seed cotton and separate the seed from the lint In an efficient manner. He shall not add to or mix with any cotton seed, any matter which may or may not have been separated In thp process of ginning. "Rule 8. UNREASONABLE CHARGES BY - GINNERS PROHIB ITED. No licensee owning, controlling or operating a ginnery shall make any unreasonable charge for the service of cleaning seed cotton or separating the seed from the lint. (NOTE.—The United States Pood Administration may determine and an nounce the charge to be made by li censees for performing the service known as ginning.) "Rule 9. A licensee who buys cot ton seed in less than carload quanti ties for sale or shipment In carload quantities, shall buy at a gross mar gin below the carload market price at railroad points, not to exceed 83.00 per ton. The cost of hauling from distant points to the railroad may also be deducted." The United States Food Administra tion has not set any price on cotton seed and has not Intimated that any such action will be taken. iPROPHEC Today marks four year That have in wqy and bio passed, Four years that made us wonder, How long this war would last I do not claim to be a phophet, And tell the future with ease, '* But I think I know a year or so in ad- I or Hy, a small Island of the inner . Hebrides, nine miles southeast of _ “ . ’ , Staffs, and separated from tbe Island j So Il8ten U *° a P ,e “ e - of Mull by a channel one and a quar ter of a mile wide, called the sound of Just lately our boys took Soissons, ‘ ‘ And a hundred miles or so, So the Huns Cant last very long At this rate of loss, you know. Down below I’m telling, Just how I think things will be, In a year of time and maybe less When we’ve whipped old Germany. I think the flag of Germany Will be trampled in the dust. \ Ioe of Icolmktll; It la in Argyleshlre, and baa a population of about three hundred, whose only occupations are fishing and raising black cattle on the bleak moors. From earliest times tbe Island has been accounted holy and it la still known to the Highlanders aa Eilean nah Drained*—the Sacred Isle of the 2>raids, for whose rites It was the chief seat In 663 Conal Christian, king of the Northern Scots, granted It to St Co lombo. Brude, king Of Piets, con- 1 think thes word of Kaiser Bill, National Food Kitchens in England. There are now In existence in Great Britain 536 national food kitchens, and negotiations are being conducted with the local authorities for the establish* ment of an additional 500. These kitchens have contributed very consid* orably toward helping households where the wife has gone to munitions factories or is engaged in other man* uni labor because of war conditions. Some men ere born grouches, but en awful lot of others achieve e ebron lc grouch through having to crank en eutomoblle engine. IPs not nice to hevo e sweet dispo sition ruined by e “crenky” cer thet refuses to respond when crenked. .... We'll teko your old cer in ex- chenge toward e now CHEVROLET. A look et the now series "Four Ninety" wi|l convince you of the new benefits derived by the ownership of this model. It’s tbe only moderately priced high-grade cer in the world beving el- most everything thet the high-priced cere possess. . Does thet sound like nows too good to be true? Well, every CHEVRO LET "Four Ninety" hes electric stert- er end lights. They era comforteble end good looking, end heve demount- eblo rims, one-men top, tilted wind shield, spd meny other features ..of refinement. Wo went you to pass judgment on the CHEVROLET, both as e cer In it- self end as to cer value et the price. The feet thet more then 100,000 wore sold during 1017 should alone make you curious to know why so meny went this cer. Como in end look it over talk it over afterwards. end we’U Ford & Calhoun firmed the gift upon being converted. Colomba bnllt a chapel and a hospice of wicker and tnnd thatched with heather among the 860 gray Drnidical monoliths, on which rude crosses were sculptured by early converts. Colom- ba's aversion to everything feminine was inch that he forbade even the keeping of cows on the Island, for, he ■aid, "where there la a coto there must be a female, and where there Is a fe male there must be mischief.” Any married tradesman of Iona mast keep bis wife on the neighboring “Woman's Isle.” While the lords/of the isle were brought to Iona far bilrlal, their wiles were burled on the Isle of Flnlagab. WATER NECESSARY TO LIFE —I— Will be laid up then to rust. I think the folks of Berlin Will be proud that they are free. From the rule of Kaiser Bill, And the tyrants of Germany. I know there will be no Kaiser, For Old Bill will lie in Peace And the President of the U. S. A. Will rule instead of the beast. I only hope the German people Will survive this awful fray, So they will know how they were fooled, By their ruler of today. Then when this war is ovqr, And there is quiet at every door, May the German people join our song , of peace for evermore. —Jack Taggart. All Vitality Has Been Well Called an “Aquatlo Phenomenon,” aa French 8tudent (expressed It All Ufe Is llvfd In water. Where no water Is, no life can be. The necessary ; machinery may have been already HARRIS SEEMS TO BE FAVORITE made, aa In a completely dried seed, CANDIDATE FOR SENATOR bnt that seed cannot actually live un- til water reaches It again. To live la Atlanta, Ga.—With the election s&’xks 'ir.’Sii:, <» ™«—•—— phenomenon.” idsys distant, the candidates opposed When the supply of water Is with- to William J. Harris are redoubling held from living things, they may far-' h . effortl t0 make some headway vive, bnt their Ufe is slowed down, i' ■ - , . as It were. In the completely dried j against the tide of opinion that is seed, Ufe is arrested altogether, yet the se tting so strongly in the direction creature is not dead. The French call! f H ia intensity of that a case of vie suspcnduc?—or, in , , our language, suspended animation, their efforts is the best indication of After astonishingly long periods, such the acknowledged lead of Mr. Har- secds will germinate If they ore wa-' r i St according to the constantly in- * crcl *- _ I “JJPm ! creasing number of his friends. The astronomer tells us that oar , Harris and his headquarters planet is only one of many belonging I . „ , . . to innumerable suns, and he wonder* j management are so confiden ^ Whether this little “lukewarm bnUet” ,election of the administrations can- of ours is really unique in bearing a didate that they are continuing the burden of life. There Is one path thgit even tenor Of quiet campaigning that leads to the answer of bis query, f If has attracted the attention of the he finds no evidence of water oh state to Mr. Harris. In a series of other worlds, he cannot expect to find ; we jj delivered speeches during the life there. pas t wee fc f Mr. Harris has presented * His record and his claims for the vote Getting On In Life. 0 f the people; and they have respond- Someono whose hair was growing ed ; n i arge numbers and with much iron-gray said: “I am gsttlng on In t . nt husiasm to his addresses. U,C ” “■“■S 1 ’ , Wh ” kne „ w W ” i At campaign headquarters the feat- very well, had h a doubts Ho mis- » election of Mr. Harris took getting on in years for getting ln ® , on in life. Ho was morally and spir- 13 now o" 1 / 8 Question of counting the Dually Just about where he had been bullets, Howard having lost ground 30 years before. Nobody gets on In ,ti» such an extent that the race is life except those that achieve spirit- 1 clearly between Harris and Hardwick unlly. When boyhood's bad temper j without a doubt as to the state’s at- persists into manhood, when one Is lr-' titude in the matter, rltable, disobliging, selfish, haughty,' proud, self-sufficient, Immoral, godless, one should not talk about getting an In life, even It one is as rich as Croe sus. To get on in life Is :o rise in moral stature. It Is to have a soul big enough to love and admire without envy, to be content with treasures of the mind, to set character first of all. The man who Is “rich In faith” gets on. The others drift down the years, or nccunflilate great posses sions, but in the essential things, the things of eternity, they are water logged and stationary. His Wonderful Memory. i Horace Annesley Vachell, playwright and novelist, had an extraordinuy memory, which stood him In very good stead when he wrote his play, “Search lights." He composed the play very rapidly— straight off on his typewriter, in fact— and did not trouble to take a copy. In these circumstance* be refused to In trust tbe precious manuscript to any one less careful than himself. Hail ing a motorcar, he brought It up to town, and promptly left it behind him on the seat of the cab! He set himself to retype the play from memory, and just as he had fin ished Scotland Yard recovered the missing copy. Mr. Vachell found, on comparing the two scripts, that he had rewritten the play almost word for word I NOTICE TO THRESHERS AND ^ OTHERS Every thresher of his own or for public is required by the government to report all wheat threshed in 1918. Blanks for thisr sport are to be had of the County agent. See or writ, him. Sugar Bowls have been banished from public eating places in Georgia —traveler is served hit portion of sugar and no more. WATCH YOUR HEART! Work-shop Strains result in HeartTrouble when you least expect it. is a Tome and Regulator for the Weakened Heart SOLD BY ALL DRUOdlSTS MILES MEDICAL CO, Elkhart, Ind. Dooly Super- Term, 1918. ,ura Black: Olin Black, having for divorce against lie Court, returnable to this term oficourt, and it being made to appear (that Laura Black is not a resident of said county, and al so tliat she-does no reside within the State, and an order having been made for service on her by publication: ■ This therefore, is to notify you, Laura Black, to be and appear on the First Monday in November, 1918, then and there to answer this com plaint. Witness the Hon. D. A. R. Crum, Judge of the Superior Court of the Cordele Judicial Circuit.- This July 3rd, 1918. C. A. POWELL, Deputy Clerk, Dooly Superior Court. 2 a m f t m. CITY MARSHAL’S SALE GEORGIA—Dooly County. Will be sold before the court house door in the city of Vienna on the first Tuesday in September, 1918, within the legal hours of sale the following described property to-wit: One va cant lot consisting of one acre more or less, said lot located near the A. B. & A. depot and levied on as the prop erty of Mrs. C. E. watson under city tax fi fa in favor of the city of Vion- nn for city taxes for the year 1917. GEORGIA—Dooly County. Will be sold before the court house door in said county on the first Tues day in September, 1918, the same be ing the 3rd day of September between the hours of lO.a. m. and 4 p. m, to the highest and best bidder for cosh, the following described property to- wit: Lot No. 6 in Block 4, fronting Main Street, located in Dooling, Dooly County, Ga. Said property levied on ns the property of E. J. Folds, the defend ant, by virtue of an execution issued from Dooly Superior Court, in favor of G. W. Fullington against E. J. Folds, defendant. Tenant in posses sion notified in terms of the law. This June 5,1918. H. O. DAVIS, Sheriff GEORGIA—Dooly County. Whereas, the appraisers appointed to set apart and assign a twelve months’ support out of estate of Jno. D. Spradley, deceased, for his widow, Mrs. Emma Spradley and minor chil dren, having made and filed their re port in office as required by law, I- will pass upon said report on first Monday in September, next. This August 3rd, 1918. J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Dooly County. Whereas, E. A. Morgan, having applied to me for permanent letters of Administration on estate of Jere miah Hayslip of said county, deceas ed; this is to cite all and singular, the creditors and next of kin of Jeremiah Hayslip to be and appear at my of fice on first Monday in September, next, and show cause if any, why per manent letters of administration should not be granted on said estate. Given under my hand and seal this August 6th, 1918. J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary. COLLIE PUPS FOR SALE High grade Collie pups' for . sale, two males and two female* Price $7.59 and $19.00. pd-7-18-2t D. E. THOMPSON. . GEORGIA—Dooly County. Whereas E. C. Webb administrator estate of Mrs. Laura A. Webb, deceas ed has in due form applied to me for leave to sell all of the lands belong ing to the estate of Mrs. Laura A. Webb, deceased, for purpose of pay ing the debts and for distribution among the heirs of said deceased. No tice is hereby given that I will pass upon said application on first Wednes day in September, next, Given under my hand and seal, this August 6th, 1918. J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Dooly County. To Whom It May Concern: All persons are hereby notified that Mrs. Sarah J. Bright, widow of J. C. Bright, late of said County, deceased, has filed hpplication in this office for a year’s support out of the estate of her deceased husband, the said J. C. Bright, and Whereas, the appraisers appointed to appraise and set aside so much of the estate of the said J. C. Bright, de ceased, for a twelve month’s support for said widow, have made their re turn of such appraisement, and Whereas, the same is now on file in this office. This is therefore to notify all per sona concerned that said application vrili be heard before the Ordinary’s Court of Dooly County, at the Sep tember Term, 1918, of said Court, to be held on the first Monday in Sep tember, next Witness my official signature, this 6th day of August, 1918. . J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary.. GEORGIA—Dooly County. Under and by virtue of an granted by the ordinary of D\ County, Georgia, on first Monday'! August, 1918,1 will sell at publje out, cry before the court house door in\ said county on the first Tuesday in ' September, 1918, all the lands be longing to estate of Ella Smith, late of said county, deceased, consisting of one house and lot in Vienna, Dooly County, Ga., and bounded as follows: On west by 5th St., on south by prop erty of F. J. Lewis, formerly knowti as Jno. Waters house and lot, on east by property of Mrs. Martha C. Pow ell, on north by property of F. J. Lewis, the north line of said lot con- mencing on north side of gate of Zack Gilbert’s yard and Tunning east over a stump to the north side of well on said lot. Sold for purpose of pay ing debts and for distribution among heirs of deceased. Terms of sale cash. This August 6th, 1918. T. F. BIVINS, Administrator Estate Ella Smith, De ceased. GEORGIA—Dooly CoCunty. To All Whom It May Concern: D. L. Henderson having in proper form, applied to me for permanent letters of administration on.the es tate of Ben Angelcy, late of said County, this is to cite all and singular the creditors and next of kin of Ben Angeley to be and appear at my of fice within the time allowed by law, to show cause if any they can, why permanent administration should not be granted D. L. Henderson on Ben Angeley’s estate. Witness my hand and official signa ture this 5th day of August, 1918. J. D. HARGROVE, Ordinary. Motion to Establish Stock Certificate; 1 Dooly Superior CouA. Mrs. M. E. Williams, Executrix of the Estate Of M. E. Williams, Deceased vs. Commercial Bank. To Whom It May Concern: Mrs. M. E. Williams, Executrix of the estate of M, E. Williams, deceas ed, having presented her petition in writing! in which she alleges that a certain stock certificate issued to M. E. Williams, deceased, by Commercial Bank, of Unadilla, Ga., said stock certificate representing fifteen (15) shares of. stock, and being described ns follows: “Certificate number sev enty-nine (79), issued 18th day of March, A. D., 1915, under seal of the ■ corporation, representing fifteen (15) shares of stock and signed by Chos. A. Horne, President, and W. T. Sprad- ley, Cashier,” is lost or destroyed, an nexing to her said petition a sworn copy thereof. All persons interested are, there fore called upon to show cause, if any they have, before me at Cordele, Georgia, on the 7th day of September, 1918, why said copy sworn to as afore said should not be established in lieu of said lost or destroyed original. At Chambers, Cordele, Georgia, this 3rd day of August, 1918. D. A. R. CRUM, Judge Superior Courts, Cordele Cir cuit. MADE HELPLESS BY RHEUMATISM ZIRON Did This Kentucky 6enlleman Hon 6ood Thao Any Other Medicine. “Eight years ago I was down 'with rheumatism," writes M. J. Hutcherson, of Tomklasville, Ky. ”1 was helpless lor three months, unable to even feed myeelf. Doctors doctored pie and I got up, but hare had bad health ever since, with soreness- and weakness across my back and In ray arms and legs. I final ly took Ziron, and it has done me more good than any medicine I hav*. ever taken, and I intend to take more of It, for It is the best medicine I ever used. I have found it just what It Is recommended to be, and I am ready to tell other suffering people that Ziron helped me, and anxious to speak a word of praise for It” Ziron acts on the blood and baa been found of great value la Rheumatism, Indigestion, Anemia and General Weakness. Ziron pats Iron Into the blood, and Iron Is needed by ybur sys tem to make you strong and healthy. Ask yonr druggist abont the guaran tee on the tlrat bottle. -ai Y>ur Blood Needs GOODTOTHE LAST DROP MAXWELL MOUSE CO FT EE ASK YOUR GROCER ,, Pay your subscription to the n