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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
APPLICATION FOE TWELVE
MONTHS SUPPORT.
GEORGIA—Barrow County.
The appraiser* duly appointed to sot
apart a year ’ support for the widow
of W. T. Ha da way,late of said county,
deceased, having filed their returns set
ting apart, a said twolve months sup
port.
This is to cite the next of kin and
all creditors of the said W. T. Hadaway
that I will pass upon the said returns
at the regular February Term, 1021, of
the Court of Ordinary of Barrow Coun
ty, Ga. All parties concerned are re
quired to show cause at that term, if
any they have, why the said returns
shall not be made a judgement of this
court. This January sth, 1921.
C. W. Parker, Ordinary.
GUARDIAN’S DISMISSION.
GEORGIA—Barrow County.
E. C. Wilbanks, guardian of Lnc:l#
■Wilbanks, having applied to me for a
discharge from his guardianship ofbu
cile Wilbanks this is therefore to noti
fy all persone concerned to file their
objections, if any they have, on or be
fore the first Monday in February,
next, else E. C. Wilbanks will be dis
charged from his guardianship as ap
tlied for.
C. W. Parker, Ordinary.
CITATION.
GEORGIA— Barrow County.
To Whom It Mny Concern.
Jim liurson Jr. of said state and coun
ty having applied to me for letters of
administration on the estate of Sher
wood Wise, late of said county, this is
to cite all and singular, the creditors
and next of kin of the said Hherwood
Wise to bo and appear at the February
Term, 1921, of the Court of Ordinary
of said county, to be held on the first
Monday in February, and show cause,
if any they can, why letters of ad
ministration should not be granted to
the said Jim Burson Jr. on said estate.
Witness my official signature this
January 3rd, 1921.
C. W. Parker, Ordinary.
FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISTRA
TION.
GEORGIA Barrow County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
W. J. Smith, Jr. having in proper
form, applied to me for permanent let
ters of administration on the estate of
Airs. Josie Fowler, late of said County,
deceased, this is to cite all and singular
the creditors and next of kin of Airs.
Josie Fowler, deceased, to be and ap
pear at the court of ordinary of said
county at the February Term, 1921, and
show cause, if any they can, why per
manent letters of administration should
not be granted to said W. J. Smith Jr.
on said estate
Witness my official siguature this 3rd,
day of January, 1021.
C. W. Parker, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
GEORGIA— Barrow County.
A. C. Kelly, administrator of the os
tote of J. T. Perkins, into of said coun
tv, deceased represents to the court in
his petition, duly filed and entered on
record, that he has fully administered
J. T. Perkin’s estate.
This is therefore, to cite all persons
concerned, kindred and creditors, to
show cause, if any they can, why said
administrator should not be discharged
and receive letters of dismission on the
first Monday in February, 1921.
C. W. Parker, Ordinary.
PETITION TO MAKE TITLE.
GEORGIA —Barrow County.
H. D. Salter having applied to the
ordinary by petition asking that J. A.
Perry, as administrator of the ostnto
of C. E. Davis, deceased, late of said
county, be required to mako him a deed
to the following described land, situ
ate, lying and being in the town of
Pitts, Wilcox County, Georgia, lots num
ber three, fonr, seven and eight in block
one hundred two according to the origi
nal map and survey of Checves Bros.,
of the Town of Pitts, Wilcox County
Georgia, in pursuance of a bond for
title made by C. E. Davis to the said
H. D. Salter in his lifetime, the said
H. D. Salter alleging that he has fully
met his obligation in said bond.
This is to notify 11. N. Davis; Lilly
Davis; W. R. Davis; Fellie Dnvis Ho
gan; J. O. Davis; Carrie Davis Beaty;
R. G. Davis and Irene Davis Morgan,
heirs at law of the said C. E. Davis,
deceased, to bo and appear t the Feb
ruary Term, 11*21, of the court of or
dinarv of Barrow County Georgia, and
show cause, if any they have or can,
why the said administrator should not
he required to make said deed as pray
ed for by the .-aid.ll. D. Salter, petit
ioner.
C. W. Parker. Ordinary.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. W. L. MATTHEWS
Suite 410 Winder Nat. Bank Bldf?.
Office Hours 10 to 12 A. M. and
1 to 4 P. M.
Residence Phone No. 213.
Office Phone No. 13.
DE. E. E. HARRIS
Suite 301*2
Winder National Bank Building
Tel. Office 154—Res. 336.
DE. J. H. MOORE
Graduate Licensed Veterinarian
Office Over City Pharmacy.
Office Phone 62J. Res. Phone 69.
Winder, Ga.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
GAINESVILLE MIDLAND
\ T o. 14 Northbound due 9:00 AM.
Daily (Mixed) Except Sunday.
No. 5 Southbound due 11:00 AM.
Daily.
No. 8 Northbound due 1:33 PM.
Daily.
v T o. 13 Southbound due 4:05 PM.
Daily (Mixed) Except Sunday.
No. 6 Southbound due 8:02 PM.
Sunday Only
iNo. 7 Southbound due 4 r 23 PM.
S. A. L. Railway.
No. 29 will arrive 7.15 PM
No. 17 will arrive .8.42 AM
No. 11 will arrive 6:56 AM
No. 30 will arrive .9.15 AM
No. 6 will arrive 2.35 PM
No. 5 will arrive 3.00 PM
No. 18 will arrive 7.15 PM
No. 12 will arrive 11.07 PM
CLASSIFIED ADS
THERE IS MORE POWER IN THAT
GOOD GULP GASOLINE AND SU
PREME AUTO OIL.
TUB NEW BOOK—“Happy Ho
samas” No. 2. My best. 30 cents
per copy, $3.00 per dozen, ready
now—J. E. MOORE, BETHLE
HEM, GA.
FROST PROOF cabbage plants
all varieties now ready, 100 35c
300 if'l.oo, 500 $1.50, 1000 $2.00
postpaid. 1,000 $1.75.; 5.000 $7.50
10,000 and over SI.OO per 1,000
express collect. Plants shipped
day order received. WILLIS
PLANT CO.—TY TV, GA. 4T-4
FOR SALK —Cabbage plants
$1.25 per 1,000. Potato and to
mato plants $1.50 per 1,000.
Prompt shipment. DORRIS
PLANT GO., Valdosta, Ga. 4t-4
PLAN GAS BARRAGE
FOR BOLL WEEVIL
IN COTTON FIELDS
Washington, Jan. 28, —They are
going to “gas” the cotton boll
weevil. The chemical warfare
service of the army, in co-opera
tion with the department of agri
culture, is preparing to lay down
a barrage of poison gas in the rot
ton districts of the soutV, calcula
ted to exterminate the pest.
Brigadier General Amos Fries,
chief of he service, said today that
experiments already conducted
promised success. Military gas
lias alreday been used against rats
in seaport cities, ho added, a 15-
minute application along wharves
and under water front buildings,
killing every rat in the area. The
army is “gassing” locusts in the
Philippines, he said.
FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISTRA
TION.
GEORGIA. Barrow County
To All Whom It May Concern:
W. J. Smith, Jr. having, in proper
form, applied to me for permanent let
ters of administration on the estate of
Dr. T. A. Fowler, late of said county,
deceased, this is to cite all and singular
the creditors and next of kin of Dr.
T. A. Fowler, deceased, to be and ap
pear at the court of ordinary of said
county, at the February Term, 1921,
and shoav cause, if any they can, why
permanent tetters of administration
should not bo granted to said W. J.
Smith Jr. on said estate.
Witness my official siguature this 3rd,
day of January, 1921
C. \V. Parker, Ordinary.
THE BARROW TIATES, WINDER, GEORGIA
GENUINE
“BULL”
DURHAM
tobacco makes 50
flood ciflarettes for
*
MILITARISM AND BOLSHE
VISM SAME—BERNSTEIN
Berlin, Jan. 29—The joint re
sponsibility of Leon Totzky, Ni
kolai Lenine and German mili
tarists for prolonging the world
war could be proved if the Rus
sian leader could be haled into a
German court. Deputy Louis Bern,
stein declared in an interview to
night.
The reichstag member declared
he had definite proofs that Lenine
and Trotzky received 50,000,000
marks from the kaiser’s govern
ment to aid in fomenting the Rus
sian revolution.
“General Hoffman had those
two under his thumb at Brest Lito
vsk,” Bernstein asserted. “They
were compelled to sign the peace
wanted by the militarists, which
iermitted withdrawal of German
troops from the east to bolster up
he west front.”
“ I demand,” he exclaimed, “that
Trotzky and Lenine, through their
representatives, at least, he taken
into a German court to try dis
prove thl there was a solid link be
tween kaiserism and Bolshevism.
“1 know Lenine has denied there
was such a link. That makes no
difference; 1 want to prove to the
proletariat of the entire world
that those Russian leaders and the
Jerman militarists were respon
ible for prolonging the war and
musing all that nedless loss.
“The German government in
1917 not only facilated Lenine\s
and Trotzky’s passage through
Germany to Russia, but provided
over 50,000,000 gold marks. Len
ine could not have misunderstood
the source of that fund.
“It has been said the German
■evolution was intended to shorten
the war, hut the agreement signed
at Brest Litovsk only prolonged
t. It permitted the German mili
tary leaders to release forty divis
ions from the east front for ser
vice on the west. That ended
the reiehstag’s efforts at making
peace which would have ended
the war in 1917.
“1 claim the two Bolshevik lead
ers and the militarists are equally
guilty. 1 want chnce to show
that with German money they fo
mented riots in the Ruhr district
and in Munich. Those were
dimes against Germany, because
this country did not want Bolshe
vism.” .v • •
Caro of Tlopher<e
Tha telephone Is u fist receptacle
for germs of evory kind, and little at
tention is paid to sterilizing this mneb
asod machine. It should be washed
oat with alcohol as often as required,
and to keep the dust out of It make a
small round cover of soft leather or
heavy cloth and stitch a broad ribbon
uround the edge, through which can
be run a drawing string or elratic. Put
this over tho transmitter.
An 'Authoritative Opinion.
When does the honeymoon end? is a
question which has been discussed for
a good many generations. It would be
presumptuous, perhaps, notes the El
Paso Times, for us to try to settle ft,
hut just the same wo have a strong
suspicion that this little sentiment
could be prolonged If' she, when she
sears his footfall, would go to the door
and greet him, rather than skid into
the kitchen to hurry up a dinner which
Has languished while she gossiped with
ue neighbor or bathed the cut
"DALTON CniZEH” FLAYS
IMICjf LEA6IIE
Facts of Vital Interest to
Everybody in Georgia
Selfish Interests Exposed
in Timely Editorial
Tb* fight, naver-ecdnig tt seems,
be bag w*gd by certain Atlanta poH
ticiaoa and tobbymu ag-ninst the Geor
gia Railway and Company, ia
growing somewhaJt of a boomerang.
There are a few people in Atlanta
who live far no other purpose it
would seem, than to obstruct and con
demn every move the power company
makes.
They want it to deliver service
without any increase in rates for
light, power, and gas, regardless of
costs. They fought every advance
the company has asked for when ev
ery reasonable and sensible man
knows that pre-war price* mean bank
ruptcy for public service corpora
tions. . . ,
We are coming now to the kernel
of the nut There are numbers of
people in the state who are begin
ning to feel that certain selfish in
terests in Atlanta want rates far be
low cost. They want the Georgia
Railway and Power Company to give
them these cheap rates and then make
It up by levying very much higher
rates outside the city of Atlanta,
which is exactly what is not going
to be done, because the Atlanta fight
Is being watched.
In order to ascertain whether or
not the rates asked for by the power
company in Atlanta are too high, an
audit of the company’s books wa3
suggested. The power company
quickly agreed to it, and offered to
Say one-half the expense of the su
it. Did Atlanta agree to it? No,
she did not She refused to help pay
tor the audit, and is still doing it.
All of which goes to show there is
somewhere in this affair a lot of
hypocrisy, demagogy and insincerity.
If the rates the Georgia Railway and
Power Company are asking for are
too high for the service, why dees not
the city of Atlanta prove to the con
trary by an agreement to help pay
for an audit for the purpose of ascer
taining the true facts?
All of the buncombe put forth by
the so-called “Municipal League” of
the state ia a fight against the Geor
gia Railway and Power Company.
“The state should act,” say the bulle
tins. Certainly it should, but when
ever it does, it will not act just as
Marion Jackson, Jim Key and John
Eagan want it to act. And if it did
there is not a municipality in the
state of Georgia able to vote enough
bonds to build an electrical plant with
facilities enough to render the service
now supplied by the power company.
VVa are now speaking of those cities
using wholly the service supplied by
the Georgia Railway and Power Com
pany.
Dalton has had her experience with
a municipal power and light plant,
and at a time when there was very
little of the current used for anything
except lighting.
And Dalton and her industries pre
fer to deal with a power company
sufficiently capable of delivering the
goods.
Atlanta should quit nagging the
Georgia Railway and Power Company
for at least awhile, and give it an
opportunity to finish up some of the
power developments it started before
the war.
They are sorely needed in the state
as a means of improving service.
It is service the people want from
the power company, and if it develops
that it is charging too much for it,
it will then be time to show it up,
and let the Railroad Commission,
which has supervision of its rates,
say what is right and
Dalton Citueiit _. —
Duties of the Queen Bee.
It may be Interesting to some peo
ple to learn that all the work in a bee
hive Is done by female bees. The
drones, or males, live on the labors of
their more Industrious female com
panions. Moreover, there is no such
thing as a king bee. The ruler of the
hive Is the queen, hut she is a ruler
!ii name only, being guarded nnd pro
tected by the bees simply because tht
colony would become extinct If she did
aot lay ggs at a prodigious rate. It
Is not unusual for a good queen to pro
duce her own weight in eggs in a
single day, and she keeps this up for
■veeks at a time.
T* Pump Out Flaming OH.
A recent fire in which a balf-tvamd
tack of cil proved a Wambling block
to tho firemen and eventually led to
the dost ruction of a building suggested
to me, write* a correspondent, that
a wjetloa pump with a long uoante
coaid 1)8 mounted on a two-wheel track
and o*ml to draw such burning liquid
out of a building. On* operator could
hold the nozzle of the pump down In
the oil while the others pumped the
fluid out through a hose into the gut
ter.
U*e of Surnames.
TTe custom of using surname* for
Christian names, as exemplified in the
rases of IlnrrLson aud Air. Holden,
toes back at least three centuries, but
the people stuck pretty close to Johns,
! 'd wards and Thomases. In tills couu
ry we have seen a tendency to use, at
; iipt!sm, the mother’s family name as
1 mi Idle mime for the child. This, no
loubt, U hading to more free use of
'amity names as given names. For the
tost part, however, we are John Hen
y Smiths
Make Labels Stay On,
To fasten the name labels on cans
nnd bottles containing foodstuffs, use a
piece of adhesive plaster. This will
stick to nny surface and the annoy
ance caused by labels falling off will
be at an end.
Showing Value cf Fertilization.
The talue of fertilization Is shown
•>y somo results obtained by the Ohio
experiment station. There was se
cured from the fertilized soil an aver
age yield per acre of 61 bushels of
corn, 23*4 bushels of wheat /nd 3.020
pounds of clover hey. Unfertilized
land adjoining has yielded 46V& bash
ers of oorn. 11 bushels of wheat and
pound* of hay per acre.
Back To the
Old Price
John Deere slot moldboard plow turns where
others fail with less draft. Ask the man who has
tried one at the old price.
Also that famous Vulcan, known for its good ser
vice and cheap up-keep. Two points last longer
than three of others makes.
Woodruff Hardware Cos.
!!KS INSURANCE
Your neighbor’s home burned only a few days or months ago, and a
cyclone is likely to strike this section at any time, so INSURE with US
anl Re down at night with a clear conscience and a peaceful mind. Don’t
DELAY. It may mean the loss of your home. Any man can build a home
once. A WISE man insures his property in a reliable insurance company
so that when calamity cGmes he can build again. He owes the protection
that it gives, to ins peace of mind and the care of his loved ones.
Kilgore, Radford & Smith
PALE PEOPLE
Ziron is a tonic medicine for pale, weak, nervous people. Its suc
cess in'the treatment of conditions of simple anemia and general debility
has been shown in thousands of cases of men, women and children.
Ziron contains no dangerous, habit-forming drugs. l,t is a safe, mild
tonic, compounded in accordance with modern medical science, by
chemists of high pharmaceutical skill.
Hl''
The Scientific Iron Tonic
Many men and women, grateful for the benefits they have obtained,
write about Ziron, hoping their experiences may be helpful to others.
“I was very nervous; had bad headaches, loss of appetite and could not
sleep well at night,” writes Mrs. Laura F. Smith, of Route 1, Springfield,
Tenn. “My husband bought a bottle of Ziron, and 1 began taking it and
began to pick up. I think it is a very good tonic for run-down people.
My little boy was thin, and looked very pale and delicate. 1 gave him
Ziron, and he mended up and is looking fine.” Sold [by druggists on a
Money-Back Guarantee. zj. 4
EVER BILIOUS ?
Charleston, Miss. —Mrs. R. V. Heins, of this place,
says: “I have never had to use very much medicine,
because if I felt headache, dizziness, or colds, bad taste
in the mouth, which comes from torpid liver, 1 would
take a dose or more of Black-Draught, and it would
straighten me out and make me feel as good as new.
We have used in our family for years
THEDFORD’S
vcbxfgg
and it certainly is the best liver medicine 1 ever saw.
It has not only saved me money, it has helped keep my
system in shape, and has never weakened me as so
many physics do. I recommend it to my friends and am
glad to do so.” Black-Draught is the old, reliable liver
medicine which you have doubtless heard much about.
When you feel badly all over, stomach not right, bad
taste in your mouth, bilious, or have a headache, trv
Thedford’s Black-Draught. At all Druggists.
Always Insist on tlie Genuine!
THURSDAY, FEB. 3, 1921.
Fight Fcr Honor.
Think well about great things; ar.fl
know that thought is the only reality
In this world. Lift up nature to thin®
own stature; and let the whole uni
verse be far thee no more than the re
flection of thine own heroic vonl. Com
bat for honor's sake; that alone Is
worthy of a man. And If It sh<iLd fall
to tboo to receive wounds, thy
blood a* a beneficent dew, and smile.—
Cervantea