The Barrow times. (Winder, Barrow County, Ga.) 19??-1921, February 27, 1919, Image 5
LEGAL NOTICES
APPLICATION* FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION.
GEORGIA—Barrow County:
G. W. McDonald and Ben Wall
having made application to me to be
appointed as permanent administra
tors of the estate of T. N. Wall late
of said county, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all conerned that
said application will be heard at the
regular term of the Court of Ordina
ry for Barrow County to be held on
the first Monday in March, 1919.
Witness my hand and official signa
utre on this the 3d day ol February,
1919.
H. G. HILL, Ordinary.
APPLICATION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION.
GEORGIA—Barrow County:
Mrs. Mattie Fite and C. B. Cham
bers having made aplicpation to me
to be appointed as permanent ad
ministrators of the estate of W. M.
Fite, late of said county, deceased,
notice is hereby given to all con
cerned that said application will be
heard at the regular term of the
Court of Ordinary for Barrow Coun
ty, to be held on the first Monday
in March, 1919. Witness my hand
and official signature on this the 3d
day of February, 1919'.
H. G. HILL, Ordinary.
PETITION FOR TITLES
ON BOND FOR TITLES.
GEORGIA—Barrow County:
Mrs. Ella Threatt having made ap
plication to me as the sole heir at
law of T. L. Threatt, late of said
county, deceased, to require title to
be executed to her to certain lands
described in a bond for titles from
I. M. Parham ,of Madison County,
Ga., to the said T. L. Threatt, the
said application alleging that the
said lands so described in the said
bond for titles made to TANARUS. L.
Threat by tue said Parham, all par
ties concerned are hereby notified
that the said application will bo
heard before the Court of Ordinary
for Barrow County on the first Mon
day in March, 1919. Witness my
hand and official signature on this
the 3rd day of February, 1919.
H. G. HILL, Ordinary.
APPLICATION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION.
GEORGIA —Barrow County:
Mrs. Annie W. Carpenter having
made application to me in due form
to be appointed permanent adminis
trator upon the estate of K. P. Car
penter, late of said county, deceased,
notice is hereby given that said ap
plication will be heard at the regu
lar term of the Court of Ordinary of
Barrow County, to be held on the
first Monday in March, 1919. Wit
ness my official signature, this the
3d day of February, 1919.
H. G. HILL, Ordinary.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
All parties holding claims against
the estate of Jas. T. Morgan, are re
quested to present same for settle
ment at cnee.
MRS. M. F. MORGAN,
Administratrix.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
All parties holding claims against
the estate of F. W. Bondurant,, are
requested to present same for settle
ment at once.
MRS. F. W. BONDURANT,
Administratrix.
Notice is hereby given in pur
suance of the laws of Georgia
under what is commonly called
the prohibition law that Cap
Flanigan, colored, living in
Winder, Georgia, is the holder
of a license from the United
States: to sell whiskeys. This
the 12th day of February, 1919.
H. O. CAMP,
2t Sheriff.
CONDEMNATIOX SAL E.
< '< EORGIA —Harrow County:
By virtue of an order of con
demnation passed by his Honor,
Judge Andrew J. Cobb, will be
sold before the court house door
of Barrow County, on February
25th, within the legal hours of
sale, to the highest bidder for
cash, one 5-passenger Ford Au
tomobile, motor number 41041,
license number 28202, condemn
ed as the property of Carl Cain
for use in conveyance of alco
holic liquors, and seized under
the provisions of the Laws of
Georgia for such violations.
This the 11th day of February,
1919.
11. (). CAMP,
Sheriff.
Australia’s Artesian Basin.
The artesian basin of Australia
measures 509,000 square miles in ex
tent, anti is said to lie the largest
known in the world, comprising 870,-
000 square miles in Queensland, 90,000
Jn South Australia, 88,000 in New South
Walts and 20,000 in the northern ter
ritory.
Deepest Lake in America.
A lake known as the Great Sunken
lake, is reported to be the deepest lake
In this country, nnd perhaps In the
whole world. Located In the valley
of the Cascade mountains, about 70
miles north of Jacksonville, Ore., this
lake, which is about 15 miles long and
four miles wide. Is so deep that Its
depth cannot be measured. It Is situ
ated so far below the crest of the
mountains that winds cannot reach it.
and its surface is like a sheet of glass.
It is sometimes called the "lake of mys
tery."
BEAUTY AND UTILITY IN
FIRST CLASS HIGH WAYS
No state should negeet the op
portunity to avail itself of the
offer of the United States gov
ernment to give direct aid in
building better public high
ways. The United States De
partinetn of Labor is co-operat
ing with national organizations
in every state for the develop
ment of public sentiment to
ward better roads in every part
of every state and not only bet
ter roads for all people but the
very best roads wherever they
can he constructed. The Amer
ican Automobile Association,
the Automobile Chamber of
Commerce and the National
Highway Industries Associa
tion have all been thoroughly in
formed of the plans for govern
mental and for roads which
have been give nout in accurate
form by the information and ed
ucational service of the United
States Department of Labor
and these organizations are
working with state officials to
get the road projects under
way.
The advantage of the combin
t*<f federal valid state plan in
road building are clearly evi
dent to any man with common
sense. Road building will pro
vide plenty of employment for
thousands of men returning
from the battle fields and war
work until they get gradually
absorbed into general industry.
Construction of high class
roads pays dividends immedi
ately in greatly increased land
values. No one will dispute this
fact. Good roads are a valu
able asset to every state while
bad roads give a community
and a state a very bad name.
First class roads add to their
temporary value in increasing
business and giving employ
ment to labor and when the
permanent value of the roads is
considered it is of incalculable
importance as a public improve
ment.
One mile of high class road
will do more good for a com
munity than ton miles of make
shift roads. Ten miles of con
crete road built heavily and on
a broad guage will last a hun
dred years without repair while
the same road of almost any
other material will have to be
renewed every few years and
give no end of trouble before it
gives way to a road of the best
material. A concrete bridge
across a river will last forever
without repair while an ordi
nary iron bridge will last about
one generation. A concrete
bridge on a river in place of
the old style wooden bridge at
once serves two purposes. It
adds beauty to the scenery and
its utility is of the greatest
value.
Hence it is the part of wis
dom to build right at the out-
Land For Sale
160 acres, 4 1-2 miles south of Dacula, Ga.,
4-room house, 3-horse farm, barn, good pasture.
25 acres of original forest, plenty of wood, pub
lic road divides it. Selling for only $35 per acre.
40 acres red land, good house and outbuild
ings, 4 miles east of Winder, at S9O per acre.
330 acres, Hancock county, Ga. 4-horse
farm open, 3 tenant houses. Thousands of feet
of second-growth pine and hardwood timber, 90
acres in bottoms, at $25 per acre. Easy terms.
785 acres in Hancock county, 6-room dwell
ing, 7 tenant houses, large barn. 3 miles hog
wire fence, on public road and mail route, phone
line. In 1 1-2 miles of schools, churches and
stores. Gin and corn mill with 30-horse-power
engine and boiler goes with this. 10-horse farm
open, and over a million feet of saw timber.
Sold together at $25 per acre, or will cut and
give choice at S3O.
Tenants wanted for 8-horse farm.
City property for sale and rent.
Loans made.
W. H. QUARTERMAN, Atty.
set at a heavy cost and do away
with repairing and worry over
wear and tear, Build roads and
bridges like those of the fam
ous European countries. They
were built only of stone but
they have lasted in some in
stances more than a thousand
years and the annual repairs
amount to very little. In the
present flay roads can be built
far superior to any ever built
at any other period of the
world’s history and the roads
that are built properly today of
concrete will be good roads a
thousand years hence.
It is better to build roads that
may hi* called extravagant now
than to build an inferior road
that will have to give way to
something better in a few years.
Too many roads are built too
narrow and with too light a
foundtion. Build roads for tin*
future just as the league of na
tions is being formed now to
take care of future develop
ments niong nations. Build
roads of the best internal; build
them deep and wide and as long
as the money will make them.
Then the future prosperity of
the whole country will be as
sured. —Athens Daily Herald.
Phrenological.
An odd reminder, says ’ho Independ
ent. of the days when phrenology was
popular as a means of “reading char
acter,” with a sly dig at the tendency
of Its professors to give complimentary
explanations of the “humps,” is fou.nl
in a letter from Elizabeth Barrett
Rrowning advertised for sale in a Lon
don bookseller’s catalogue. It reads in
part: “Do you believe in phrenol
ogy? Did you ever consult a phreno
logical oracle? and did It answer, ‘My
son, thou art invincible?’"
GEORGIA MAN
HAD QUITE A SIEGE
In Hospital, But Improved Greatly After
Taking Zircn Iron Tonic.
In a recent statement, J. H. Martin
of Mount Vernon, Ga., says:
“I was In the hospital with stomach
trouble and had quite a siege. It
seemed I would never get my strength
back after I came out, I had been so
ill. I ached all over. I was nervous,
restless and yet did not feel like get
ting around. My skin was yellow. My
appetite poor. I was in pretty bad
shape and began to look around for a
tonic. I felt like part of the trouble
was lack of iron in my blood. I was
so easily worried, so easily upset. I
heard of Ziron and knew it would help
me. I began to take it and the im
provement was great It strength
ened me, renewed my nerves and
toned up my system.”
When you feel that you need
strength, remember that Ziron is a
perfected preparation of iron salts,
combined with other strength-giving
ingredients. Try Ziron.
ZNJ
.Your Blood Needs
ClliiH. MATES
163 MAKES toil SICK
Acts like dynamite on a sluggish
liver and you lose a
day’s work.
There's no reason why a person
should take sickening, salivating cal
omel when a few cents buys a large
lottle of Dodson's Liver Tone —a
perfect substitute for calomel.
It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid
which will start your liver just, as
surely as calomel, but it doesn’t
make you sick and can not salivate.
Children and grown folks can take
Dodson’s Liver Tone, because it is
.perfectly harmless.
Calomel is a dangerous drug. It
is mercury and attacks vour bones.
Take a dose of nasty calomel today
and you will feel weak, sick and
nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose n
day’s work. Take a spoonful of
Dodson’s Liver Tone instead and
you will wake up feeling great. No
more biliousness, constipation, slug
gishness, headache, coated tongue or
sour stomach. Your druggist says if
you don’t find Dodson’s T.iver Tone
acts better than horrible calomel
your money is waiting for you.
ACHES AND PAINS
QUICKLY RELIEVED
You’ll find Sloan’s Liniment
softens the severe
rheumatic ache
Put it on freely. Don’t rub it In.
Just let it penetrate naturally. What a.
sense of soothing relief soon follows!
External aches, stiffness, soreness,
cramped muscles, strained sinews,
back “cricks" —those ailments can’t
fight off the relieving qualities o£
Sloan’s Liniment. Clean, convenient,
economical. Ask any druggist for it-
Sloan’s
Liniment.
Kills PaiTTL
Lumber in New Zealand.
Most of tire bettor furniture and In
dustrial lumber used in New Zealand
is imported, such as oak, ash, hickory,
etc., and comes largely from the Unit-
Qtnf.c, T T ni*-.-d on rl Tiw*r>
jll' SmakiqfTa&BacGS
are Flavored Yg§g
Your Nose Knows M
Miami
The Encyclopaedia Britannica
says about the manufacture of f " zliEr\
smoking tobacco, “ ... on the
Continent and in America certain i
‘sauces* are employed . . . the
use of the ‘sauces’ i3 to improve
the flavour an:! burning qualities
of the leaves. 1 ’
Your smoke-enjoyment de- 1
pends as much upon the Quality
and kind of flavoring used as
i-pon the Quality and aging of
the tobacco.
Tuxedotobaccouscsthepurcct,
most v. heiesorne and deliciou ■> of f
Gil flavorings— chocolate! That
flavoring, added to the finest of
c:i *e£ully aged and blended
hurley tobacco, produces Tuxedo
—-tire perfect fob .cco —
“/bar JTose A/iuc-j. ’
TO SAT I ''N
W OR YOUB MONEY BACK J
® Try Th is Toct: Rub a little Tuxedo
briskly in the palm of your hand to
bring out its full aroma. Then smell
If iff ee P —* ts delicious, pure fragranco
jSjgggTfv* ■ 3 will convince you. Try this test with
*■ fj any other tobacco and we will let
I 's -71 AsStS Tuxedo stand or fall on your judg
; rnent— << * <W4r ose Knows.”
The Perfect YoLa.co for Fife and Cigarette
jcQl • A r.T<¥*
/'grtL: ■ ’ D A?v'Sv<|t />*•,. Yfc- S) Guaranteed be
/&***%■ rey w jp
You’re not very well—
That’s disagreeable.
You’re weak and nervous—
That’s bad
You’d like to feel better—
That’s so.
You need a tonic—
That’s a fact
Your blood needs iron—
That’s likely.
You’re pale and languid—
That proves it
You’ve heard about ZIRON —
That’s true.
Ziron will help you—
That’s probable.
If it doesn’t, your money back—
That’s fair.
Your Druggist sells it —
That’s convenient
Get a bottle today—
That’s wisdom.
z. L. T. T