The Barrow times. (Winder, Barrow County, Ga.) 19??-1921, August 21, 1919, Image 7
LEGAL NOTICES
Administrators. Sale.
Georgia Barrow County.
By virtue of an order of the court of
ordinary of Barrow Countv, granted
upon the application of W. 6. I’eerv as
administrator of the estate of s’ E
Kharpton, deceased, late of said County
to sell the property of the said S. e’
Kharpton, deceased, for the purpose of
paying debts and distribution, there will
be sold before the court house door, at
public outcry, to the highest bidder' in
the city of Winder, between the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
Wept. 1919, as the property of the said
deceased, the following described pro
perty :
AIJ that tract or parcel of land lyihg
and being in the city of Winder, Coun
ty of Barrow, state of Georgia. Begin
ning at the Southeastern, corner of
Broad Street and Laura Street running
thence East along the South side of
Broad street one hundred (100) feet,
thence South parallel with Laiira street
one hundred (100) feet, thence West
parallel with Broad street one hundred
(100) feet to Laura street, ihence North
along Laura street one hummed (100)
feet to Broad street, the point of be
ginning. Being lots seven (7) and eight
(8) in block seventeen (17) of the old
Jug Tavern, survey and being the same
property conveyed by John S. Smith,
and others to S. K. Sharpton and L. O.
Sharpton on Jan. Sth 1907 and record
ed in Book “1” page 156 of the re
cords of Walton County Georgia. Said
property now known as the old opera
f liouse building now occupied by Barrow
County for a court house.
Terms one fourth cash, SSOOO Nov.
KHh, 1919 and remainder Jan. Ist, 1920
with 8 per cent interest on deferred
payments.
A.so at the same time and place, the
following described property will be
sold. One six room house and lot in the
city of Winder, County of Barrow,
jitate of Georgia, and fully described as
follows:
Fronting on Bush Avenue, 90 feet
more or less him! running back a uni
t'd i dth to • v street a distance of
150 feet more or less. On said lot is a
two story, six room residence now oc
c.ip id by Mance A. NPbrns. Terms one
fourth cash and balance Nov. 15th, 1919.
W. O. Ferry, Administrator.
Georg ; . Barrow County.
Mrs. Susan K. Thompson and Elisha
B. Odum, executors of the ivm of Janies
41. Thompson, deceased, having made ap
plication to me for leave to sell the
lands of the said Janies G. Thompson,
deceased, this is therefore to cite all
parties at interest to show cause before
me on the first Monday in Septenrfier,
1919, why the application should not be
granted. This the 4th day of August,
,1019.
H. G. Hill, Ordinary.
<l. A. Johns, Winder, Ga., Attorney for
executors.
1
Georgia. Barrow County.
Mr. D. P. Lord having applied to me
for permanent letters of Administration
upon the estate of Mrs. Maggie Lord,
late of said county, deceased, this is to
cite all parties, creditors and kin. that 1
will pass upon this application the first
Monday in September, 1919. Witness
my official hand and signature on this
the 4th, day of Auguust. 1919.
H. G. Hill, Ordinary.
Georgia. Barrow County.
O W. Smith as the administrator of
the estate of Mrs. M. K. Smith, late of
•mid county, deceased, having applied
to me for leave to sell lands belonging
to the estate of Mrs. M. K. Smith, in
Oglethorpe County. This is to cite all
parties at interest to show cause on the
first Monday in September, 1919. why
the application should not be granted.
This August 4th, 1919.
H. G. Hill, Ordinary.
Barrow Gounty .
G. W. McDonald and Ben Hall Atl
ministraters of estate of T. N. Wall,
deceased, late of the said county of
Harrow, having made application to me
for leave to sell the lards ot the said
T N Wall, deceased, this is therefore
to cite all parties at interest to show
cau-< before me on the first Monday m
September. 1919, why the appbwiturn
should not be granted. This the 4th,
day of August, 1919.
H. G. Hill, Ordinary.
44. A. Johns, Winder, Ga., Attorney lor
administrators.
Georgia, Barrow County.
,1otu: V. Thomas hating applied to
the Ordinary by petition asking that
Mrs u A. Wall, as administrator ot
th estate ef J. B. Wall deceased, lata
of raid County, be required to make a
deed to a tract of land described i
oe.ite.in bond for title attached to
pel *ion and marked exhibit A. 'he
same being situated in Barrow County,
Georgia, in permianee ol a [ M ‘ ml
title made by said J. B. Wall, mb*
lift time to If Batat and transit
ed t v said I’atat tosaid John V. Hu m
as, alleging that he has fully m.t his
obligations in said bond.
This i. to notify Mrs. M. A. Wall,
Desna Wall. Hortese Wall and John
Wall heirs at law of said J. £>. Wall,
dtWised. to be and appear at the sept
an her Term, lUH> of the (-onrt ot Or
dim rv of Barrow County, and show
▼ they
said Tuinist rarer should not be re
, ~ to make said deed a- proved tor
t v -s: and John V. Thomas, petitioner.
K. C. Hill. Ordinary of Barrow < oun
f.y/ ~
Card of Thanks.
We wish to thank our many
friends and neighbors for each
1i- 1 :.<-t rendered iis dining Hie
sickness and death <>t our deat
wre and mother.
And also for the beautiful floral
offering.—C. 1/ an,i chil '
dren.
The Coat.
everything Is worth what 1t pan-
Itos*i wllPp*y Urr It to. wi
‘ KILLED FOUR TIMES.
Invalided Yank Officially Report
ed Dead by Government.
Soldier's Grave Described in Let
ter, While Chaplain Wrote
Note of Sympathy to Mother.
Since he was invalided home
from France, the family of Alfred
McGuire, of Wilmington, Del., has
been notified four times by the
War department that he was dead,
either killed in battle, died from
wounds, or deceased as a result of
disease or accident.
McQuire fought during the St.
Mihiel drive and was hit by a
piece of shrapnel and invalided
home.
Notification has been sent to the
authorities that McQuire is living,
but the Government still insists on
killing him with clocklike regu
larity. The notices of his demise
also are liable to contain the in
formation ihat lie was a cook, a
wagon driver, a sergeant of any
other rank, while McQuire says he
was nothing more than a n buck”
'private.
In addition to the official letters,
a note was received from the chap
lain of the regiment telling the
mother of the heart-rending cir
cumstances of his death. A com
plete description of the grave ac
companied one of these letters.
LANDLORDS WHO GOUGED
SOLDIERS FACE TROUBLE
Profiteering landlords who have
been harassing families of soldiers
all over Ihe United States, and, in
some cases, evicting tlmm while
the breadwinner was in camp or in
France will be Git subject of a
conference in A\ ..siiii gton by of;i
--* ‘als of the Department of -Justice,
a< cording to a statement by Assis
t a United "t'lt is Alt wiey Mat
t iws.
Worth While Quotation.
‘‘lt is not the work, but the worry,
?r>nl*p flip pvnu*
ATTENTION BUYERS
I have the following real estate bargains for you :
7-room home on coiner lot with water, lights and
hath, plastered and ceiled throughout—and selling for
$2,750.00.
6- home nicely finished with all conveniences,
$2,250.00.
7- house and large 3 acre lot with pasture and run
ning water and with 4 room tenant house, all selling for
$4,000.00.
5-room house on good corner lot. will, barn for $1,800.00
Several Hue vacant lots for sale at low prices.
Nice 5-room house on Broad street, close in, in fttatham
$2,000.00.
<Jood 6-room dwelling, barn, pasture with running wa
ter and 20 acres of good land in town of Statham going at
$6,250.00.
FARM LANDS
Line farm of til acres adjoining city of Winder, public
road running through it;two good homes and outbuild
ings; One pasture, good bottoms, and offered for quick
sale at $140.00 per acre.
151 acres with two settlements, tine timber aid good
land on Bankhead Highway between Winder and Athens
going at $175.00 per aere.
330 acres in Hancock county, 4 miles of a Railroad
town, with 3 tenant houses, 6-horse farm 0pen,250000 teet
of saw timber and rjuanity of hue hard wood timber. sO
acres of bottom land, loam soil with fine red day subsoil,
at $30.00 per acre.
173 acres of strong red land, well timbered, two tenant
bouses, on good highway. One grade of la‘ and. SIO,OOO.
785 acres in Hancock county, 1 1-2 miles o! Linton. 10
horse farm open strong black land, very fertile, some >.f
it growing a bale to Ihe acre this year, 6 room home, <
tenant bouses of 3 and 4 rooms, large 11 stall barn of or
iginal forest timber, gin house, gin. corn mill. 30 h. p. en*
gine and holer, 3 miles of bog wire fencing, over a mil
lon feet of saw tinber, a targe part original inrest, 75
acres of tine button land, an excellent combination stock
and agriculture farm and selling for the low pree of $30.00
per acre.
See me for Lauds. Lots and Loans::
W. H. QUARTERMAN, Ally.
Winder, Georgia
Health
About
Gone
Many thousands of
women Buttering from
womanly trouble, have
been benefited by the use
ct Cardui, the woman’*
tonic, according tc letters
we receive, simitet to this
oneticm Mr*. 2. V. Spell,
olHayne, N.C. "1 could
not Bland on my teet, and
jufct suffered terribly,”
she say*. “A* my suf
fering was so great, and
he had tried other leme
dies, Dr. had us
get Cardui. . . I began
improving, and if cured
me. J know, and my
doctor knows, what Car
dui did tor me, lor my
nerves and health were
about gone.”
TAKE
CMDUI
Tfce Woman’s Tome
She writes further: 4r l
am in splendid health . . .
can dc my work. 1 kel I
ewe it tc Cardui, fo> 1 was
In dreadful condition.”
11 you are nervous, run
down and weak, or suffei
from headache, backache,
etc., every month, try
Cardui. Thousands of
women piaise thie medi
cine lor the good it has
done them, and many
physicians whe have used
Cardui successfully with
fheir women patients, for
years, endorse this medi
cine. Think what it mean*
to be in splendid health,
like Mrs. Spell. Give
Cardui a trial.
AO Druggists
jn
ALL HAVE A HAND IN GIVING
As soon as the restriction were
taken off of sugar one Gainesville
merchant bought two or three
loads Q sugar, fixed the price so
high that retail merchants could
not afford to buy it. The block
aders got it, and the merchants
have set down on this hard heart
ed wholesale dealer. We judge this
merchant has contributed to some
of the many million dollar church
drivers. Such persons as this get
credit for the contributions but all
their customers help.— Dahlonega
Nuggett.
We Vouch for Them
Of all the tires, that are made,
—why do you suppose we
prefer to seß V united States
Tires?
Because they are made by
the biggest rubber company
in the world. And they know
bow to build good tires.
They bave choice of ma
terials,—they have immense
N United States Tires
\ sue Good Tires
We know United States Tires are Good Tires.
That’s Why We Sell Them,.
SMITH HARDWARE COMPANY
MONROE MAKES CHANGES IN
OFFICIALS.
Mr. Merck goes to Jackson,
where be will look after the erec
tion oi an ice plant and steam
laundry. He was for some time
superintendent of the plant at
Jackson and therefore his assump
tion of work there will lie in the
nature of returning home. Mr.
Merck is a splendid gentleman and
he and bis estimable family have
made many friends during their
stay in Monroe. All these will join
success and happiness in their new
The Tribune in wishing them much
home.— Walton Tribune.
''y/u' uf/~tit tfnitnf *<>ft trink ’■
Ytrr Ku.ft:iit m e n, prcfos<i®ndl rop n, ‘ !
rtwn 'f *frv<ur!A - - 4<iA i <
i'pif*.pldi c\ ry h<u <iy\<*v<‘ry
v* . t h<t“ rouitd- Bc*v*
r<<• t re•li m e nt i<br s> iiole <o arc, <p *Rir f-t - -**
£ii
the .athlete cr ifu- man in physical cr
mentdi (r*inir..h— cofcd to tra ih cyyi.cS
irt o n. He zll h t u l and <d p pe tizhr h.
ANHEUSEP- BUECM ST LOUIE
21
Hiidiß ’ . 1 Jenson Bros. & J"u • t
RDKC. Dititrilmtois V'ii swjMfIKKpHEE
MONEY TO LOAN ON FARM
LANDS.
At 6 Per Cent Interest
1 make farm loans for five
years’ time in amounts from
$500.00 to SIOO,OOO.
1 have an office on the third
floor of the Winder National Bank
Building, and am in my Wilder
office on Friday of each week.
S. G. BROWN, Attorney.
LawrencevUle, p^-g-ia.
HULLS AND MEAL FOR SALE.
Hulls and Cotton Seed Meal for
sale. Hulls $lO per ton. 7 per cent
meal. See G. S. Millsaps, Winder.
facilities,— they employ many
exclusive methods.
They can go to greater
lengths in testing, improving
and perfecting the things that
make good tires.
We find it good business to
tell United States Tires.
And —you \\ ill find it good
business to buy them. They
are here-a tire lor every need.