Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1922.
Legal Advertisements
Admini>trator’s Sale.
GEORGIA —Barrow county.
By virtue of an order of the Cour
of Ordinary of Barrow county, grant
ed u/km the application of IV. IV
Hosch, /as administrator of the estate
of Mrs Callie Hosch, deceased, late
of said county, to sell the lands of the
said Mrs. Callie Ilosch, deceased, for
the purpose of paying debts and dis
tribution, there will be sold before the
court house door, at public outcry, to
the highest bidder, in the City of Win
der, Ga., between the legal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in November,
1922, as the property of the said de
ceased, the following described lands,
to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land lying
and being in 249th district, G. M., Har
row county, Georgia, formerly Wal
ton county, and known as the Walton
Sims old home place. Beginning on a
roclf on Appalachee river, running
down said river north of branch up
said branch 28.25 chs. to oak, thence
N. 17'IV. 14.73 chs. to rock corner at
road, jlience up said road S. 92 W.
11.55 chs. to rock corner on road, thence
8 25% E. GO chs. to beginning corner,
containing sixty-one (61) acres, more
or less, bounded as follows: On the
north and west by C. L. Sims, east by
Harrison lands, south by Appalachee
river.
Terms of sale cash.
■ This October 9th, 1922.
W. W. HOSCH,
Administrator of Mrs. Callie Hosch,
Deceased.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
GEORGIA —Barrow county.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
November next, at public outcry, at
the court house in said county, within
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash, certain property of
which the following is a full and com
plete description:
“All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing and being in Barrow county, Geor
gia, fully described in deed from G. S.
Bowman to Walter E. Elder, dated
January 9. 3920, and recorded in the
office of the Clerk of Barrow Superior
Court on January 9. 1920, in Book
“C” page 555, and particularly de
scribed as follows: All that tract or
parcel of land lying and being in said
state and Barrow . county, 246th Dis
trict, G. M., formerly in Jackson, be
ing tract No. 3 of five subdivision of
the land of Green S. Bowman, deceas
ed, fully described in plat thereof made
by Surveyor W. T. Appleby and a.-
tached to the deed to said tract made
by W. G. Bowman as the administrator
of G. S. Bowman, deceased, containing
thirty-four and thirty-one-hundredths.
(34.301 acres, more or less, and (in
scribed as follows: Commencing at a
rock corner of sub-division 2 of the
said Bowman lands; thence N. 1 E
32.71 chains to a rock at corner of sub
division 2: thence S. 41% E. 12.38
chains to a rock corner of sub-divis
ion 4; thence S. 30% W. 24.38 chains
to rock: thence S. 24% W. 5.0;> chains
to rock on road at the corner of sub
division 4: thence N. 58 W. 11.02 ehs.
to rock at the beginning corner.”
Said property levied on as the prop
erty of ,0. S. Bowman to satisfy an
execution issued from the Superior
Court of Barrow county in favor of W.
E. Eider and against G. S. Bowman,
said property being in the possession
of G. S. Bowman.
Written notice given to defendant
and tenant in possession as required
by law. Property pointed out in quit
claim deed re-conveying the property
to G. S. Bowman for the purpose of
levy and sale.
This the 11th day of October. 1922.
H. O. CAMP, Sheriff.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
GEORGIA —Barrow county.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
November before the court house of
said county, to the highest bidder for
cash, within the legal hours of sale,
the following described property, to
wit:
One gnuley headed red milch cow and
calf, also one heifer about one year
old, one male hog and one female hog.
weight about. 80 pounds each.
Said property levied upon by virtue
of an execution issued from the Muni
cipal Court of Atlanta against George
W. Swords and H. G. Young in favor
of Morris & Company and levied upon
as the property of H. G. Young to sat
isfy the said execution.
This the 12th day of October, 1022.
11. O. CAMP, Sheriff.
WANTED
I Will pay you the highest price for
your remnant seed cotton. See me at
my office, or Will Fuller at Camp Ware
house. W. G. GRAHAM. 4t
3.%\4 LEE FAB. TIRES $16.00
34x4 LEE FAB. TIRES $17.00
I THOMAS & OLIVER tf
More people ride on
GOODYEAR tires than
any other kind, . tf
Millions Point Way
to Health and
Happiness
Bring Cheerful, Inspir
ing And Hopeful Mes
sages To Those Who
Are Sick In Body And
Spirit.
Every human being is entitled to
health, happiness and success. It is
positively wrong to he satisfied with
Jess. Do not fold your hands and ac
cept ill health as something you can
not avoid or overcome.
Tens of thousands of men and women
from all parts of the country have tes
tified that life has been made worth
living to them after they had almost
given up hope. These are the fortu
nate ones who have been restored to
health and strength by the use of Tan
lac, by far the world’s most celebrated
tonic medicines.
They all agree that Tanlac brings a
feeling of new life and energy to ev-j
Tax Notice First Round
I will be at the following places for
the purpose of collecting state and
county taxes for the year 1922:
Bethlehem, October 17, from 9 o'clock
A. M. to 11 A. M.
Jones Store From ll:3p A. M. to 1
I\ M.
Statham from 1:30 P. M. to 3 P. M.
Chandlers Court Ground from 3:30
P. M. to 4:30 I’. M.
October 18th.
Pentecost District—
County Line from 9 o’clock A. M to
10:30 A. M.
Thompson Store, Cain’s District from
11 o’clock A. M. to 1 P. M.
Cain’s Court Ground from 1.30 P. M.
to 3 P. M.
Oc t. 19, Auburn from 9 o'clock A. M.
to 12 P. M.
Oct. 19. Carl, Ben Smith's district,
from 12:30 P. M. to 3 :00 P. M.
M. 11. OWE. T. C. B. C.
Protection for Antarctic Fauna.
it likely that me .vusmiliar
oniKionw.-iiltli will, at the Instigation
it Sir Douglas Mavvson, the antare
le explorer, preserve Maetjuarte island
uni the neighboring islets as a sulit
iiii r> for the subHidurctio fauna. Ihe
stand which lias an area of nearly 400
legreos S., 900 miles from Tasmania
uni nearly the same distance from
tuthictlca. It Is the home and Dreed
ng ground of many millions of pen
guins of different species. Including the
low rare king penguin*, and of vast
losts of sea-elenhant* and seals.
FARM LOANS
Quick Action
Low interest
Lowest Commissions
Murphy Buk. Cos. Talmo, Ga. or A. M. Benton, Winder.
ATLANTA TRUST CO.
Atlanta, Georgia
More GOOD Roofing
For Each Dollar
H RE Af*Y
ROOFINGS
"A Roof for Every Building”
The New Winder Lumber Cos.
ery portion of the body and seals the
blood tingling through the veins. The
body becomes ruddy with the glow of
health, the mind casts off its drowsi
ness and becomes once more alert and
active; there comes new life, new en
ergy and anew feeling of ability to do
things never thought of before.
Join, today, the vast army of those
who have been made healthy and
strong by Tanlac. Throw off the poi
sons that are ruining your digestion,
weakening your strength, wreching
your nerves, making your liver torpid,
causing headaches, backaches and crip
pling you with rheumatism and other
destructive diseases.
Bring the color to your cheeks and
the sparkle of health to your eyes. Be
robust, strong and sturdy. You can do
this and you owe it to yourself, your
future, your family, to act now.
Get Tanlac from your nearest drug
gist today and watch how quickly you
begin to eat better, sleep better, feel
better and work better. Advt.
S. A. L. Schedule
In Effect April 16, 1922.
South Bound.
No. 11 arrives 6:18 A.M.
No. 17 arrives 8:42 a. m
No. 5 arrives 4:43 p.m.
No. 29 arrives 7 :00 P. M.
North Bound
No. 30 arrives 9:15 a.m
No. 6 arrives 1:53 p.m.
No. 18 arrives 7:00 p.m.
No. 12 arrives 10:43 P. M.
Gainesville Midland
Schedule
Southbound
Train No. 3 arrives at 11:30 A. M.
Train No. 13 arrives at 2:30 P. M.
Northbound
Train No. 14 arrives at 7:30 A. M.
Train No. 4 arrives at 1:33 P. M.
Living Sea Mlcropron*.
The orifice on the whale’s ear is
scarcely perceptible, yet It Is said that
the whale's hearing Is so acure that a
ship crossing Its track half a mile
listani will cause It to dive Instantly
racking
gw nervous headache ?
I MENTHOLATUM J
’h chases it away. Jf
YOUR dollar will buy more roofing
service, more genuine satisfaction
when invested in Carey Roofing. And
you can make it buy exactly the roofing
you should have, correct in weight, cor
rect in price, but always of the highest
quality. Let us show you Carey samples.
THE WINDER NEWS
BAPTISTS REPORT
135,000,000 GASH
CAMPAIGN HAS MADE POSSIBLE
VAST ENLARGEMENT OF EVERY
' PHASE OF GENERAL WORK
GAIN 500.000 NEW MEMBERS
Effort Will Be Made to Enlist These
and All Other Baptists in Share
In Forward Movement Dur
ing November
Total cash collections on the Bap
tist 75 Million Campaign up to May
1, 1922, had reached the sum of $35,-
152,211.69, according to the general
Campaign headquarters. This repre
sents an advance of nearly $20,000,000
over what Southern Baptists did for
their general missionary, educational
DR. L. R. SCARBOROUGH
General Director Baptist 75 Million
Campaign.
and benevolent work for the threa
years preceding the Campaign.
The contribution of larger gifts to
religious work has been accompanied
by larger spiritual results in the local
churches, it is pointed out. For in
stance, Southern Baptists baptised
150,000 more converts during the first
three years of the Campaign than
they did in the throe years before,
gained 3,000 new Sunday schools and
400,000 new pupils, enhanced the
value of their local church property
by $33/ , ')0,000, enlarged their contri
butions to local causes by $22,390,000,
and increased the'r contributions to
all causes by $43,480,490.
Baptist Institutions Grow
Some olher phases of denomination
al progress made possible by the
Campaign include increasing the num
ber of Baptist hospitals in the South
from 12 to 19, with three others un
der construction and four more def
intely planned; strengthening of 11
Baptist orphanages and the establish
ment of two new ones, lifting $3,000,-
000 indebtedness on 119 Baptist
schools, colleges and seminaries, com
pletion and projection of permanenl
Improvements there in the sum ol
$4,000,000, and the addition of sub
stantial sums to the endowment funds.
Over 2,500 ministerial students are
enrolled at Southern Baptist schools,
Church Lean Fund Raised
Among the outstanding accomplish
ments in the work of the Home Mis
sion Board are the aiding of 1,000
churches in building now houses oi
worship, the completion of the mil
lion-dollar Church Building Loan
Fund, strengthening the work among
the foreigners and Indians and the 38
Mountain mission schools. The Board
has employed aa average of 1,496
workers during the Campaign and re
ports for that period 134,832 bap
tlsms, 218,371 additions to churches,
2,27(5 Sunday schools and 759 church
es organized, and 1,409 houses of wor
ship built or repaired.
On the foreign fields the equipment
for mission work has been practically
doubled, more than 250 new foreign
missionares have been sent out, more
than 400 new native workers have
been employed, and the Board hat
entered the new fields of Spain, Jugo
slavia, Hungary, Rouinania, Southern
Russia, Palestine and Siberia. The
Board reports for the period of the
Campaign 117 new churches on the
foreign fields, 21,723 baptisms, 211
new Sunday schools, gain of 17,570
pupils, native contributions of $1,003,-
310.68, and 520,642 treatments admin
istered by medical missionaries.
Another res-ult of the Campaign ii
that the Relief and Annuity Board
which is seeking to care for the aged
di pendent ministers and their fam
Hies, has been enabled to double the
number of such persons helped and
the amount that is given these bene
ficiaries. Last year the Board was
able to dispense $128,966 among
needy ministers. It has invested as
sets of $1,149,688.
Receive 600,000 New Members
More than 500,000 new memberi
have been received into the loeft)
Baptist chuiches of the South sines
the Campaign began, and in the hope
of enlisting all these in the Cam
paign, as well as reaching the older
members of the churches who have
not shared in the forward movement
heretofore, the month ef November 6
December 3 has been designated at
Re-enforcement Month by the Cam
paign Conservation Commission. Dur
ing this month it is planned that ev
ery Baptist church In the South will
call upon all its members who arc
not already participating in the Cam
paign and secure subscriptions from
them covering the two remaining
years of the movement, and e&sh of
ferlngs to the Campaign from all the
members. Dr. L. R. Scarborough, o!
Fort Worth, Texas, who was genera)
director of the original Campaign, hai
been elected to serve In that capac
ity for the Re-enforcement program
although the details are being work
ed out in the various states undex
the leadership of the secretaries of
the state mlsson boards. It is hops'!
to secure several million doilara in
additional subscriptions and severa
milllion in cash as well by Dnoem
her 1.
Easy to repair and
increase their wear.
Peters Diamond Brand Shoes
Are Solid Leather Throughout.
The heels, soles and counters —the hidden but
vital parts cf the shoe —are solid leather, strongly
put together.
There are good looks and good wear in every pair.
After becoming well worn a pair of “Diamond
Brand” shoes can be readily repaired and their
wear greatly increased.
Ask your repair man. He knows the advan
tages of solid leather shoes and can quickly explain
why it is to your advantage to buy them.
There is a “Diamond Brand’” shoe for
•very purpose; a price for every purse.
T. C. Flanigan & Cos. Auburn, Ga
.• > iVV '2*2 v ... . .. .* • • •
Solid Leaiher Throughout,
Which Is Larger
the Suit or a Cent
The sun is the largest but you can hold
the cent so close to your eye that you’ll
lose sight of the sun. Don’t let a cheap
price or a big can baking powder make
you lose sight of quality.
CALUMET
The Econosry BAKING POW&ER
THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER,
DEVOE
| Marble Floor Finish 1
L Wear! Wear! Wear! j|
p. but it never touches the n ood f*
L®,— v C7JOUNDING heels kicking toes,
! i A and banging furniture legs never
* in\ ij \ reach the fibres of a floor varnished M
l lly\ II . ,nJL_ with Devoe Marble Floor Finish, %
* deep rich glow adds beauty to | S3
/ V Ul the room. Its smoothness makes
M jfh x cleaning easy. Its toughness keens 41
n fcA dus ' and germs out tf ,he P° res °* jg
| F What Brca*8 r ca* help to good house- 2
I I . f keeping is a floor finished with Devoe §|
Ha * / Marble Floor Finish Varnish. ij£i
■_ C r VTOIQSK 3 ' Extremely durable Easy to apply.
J jJ IqEH Devoe Products are time tested and
HL(kij /mi concern in the U.S. Founded 1754, B
P •\ js f||g The New Winder ■
Subscription Price: $1.50 Per Year.
Is the quality leav
ener —for real econ
omy in the kitchen,
always use Calumet,
one trial will con
vince you.
The sale of Calu
met is over 150%
greater than that of
any other baking
powder.
"0T MADF BYATWiCT .
nwmi
BEST BY TEST