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ffi-vIEBAI
SHERIFF’S SALE
STATE OF GEORGIA.
COUNTY OF BUTTS.
I have this day levied the within
execution upon the following' prop
erty:
That tract or parcel of land lying
and being in the 552nd District G.
M. Butts County, Ga., containg One
Hundred Thirty-Four and Ono Half
acres, more or less, being
a part of land lot One Hundred
Ninety-One (191) in the Ist district
of originally Henry now Butts Coun
ty, Georgia, and described as fol
lows: North by lands of R. W. Mays
estate; east by lands of Central
Georgia Power Company (formerly
J. W. Benson); on south by lands
of estate of J. B. Hoard and Frank
Duke and west by lands of Mrs. Em
ma Mays estate.
Said property being levied upon
as the property of J. C. Jones, de
ceased, and will be sold as provided
by law on the 7th day of April,
1942. Tenant in possession and
heirs at law of J. C. Jones notified.
This 11 day of February, 1942.
J. I). POPE, Sheriff
Butts County, Georgia.
FOR ADMINISTRATION
State of Georgia. Butts County.
To All to Whom it May Concern:
Hugh C. Woodward having, in
proper form, applied to me for per
manent letters of administration on
the estate of Charlie Woodward,
late of said county, this is to cite
all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of Charlie Woodward to
be and appear at my office within
the time allowed by law, and show
cause, if any they can, why perma
nent administration should not be
granted to Hugh C. Woodward on
Charlie Woodward’s estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature, this 4th day of March, 1942.
G. D. HEAD, Orninary.
TAX ORDINANCE
Hotels and Boarding Houses, etc
SECTION 59. Par. A. Each
Hotel, Boarding house or private
home taking transient roomers shall
pay SI.OO per room for transients
per year.
Par. B. Each Hotel Boarding
house or home, other than cafes or
restaurants, serving meals to the
general public shall pay the sum of
$5.00 per year.
Par. C. Each Hotel, Boarding
house or private home taking board
ers and no transients shall pay the
sum of $2.50 per year.
Par. I). Total amount of license
for any hotel or boarding house un
der paragraphs A, B, and C, of this
section of ordinance shall not ex
ceed sum of $20.00.
All ordinances in conflict with
this ordinance are hereby repealed.
By Mayor and Council,
This January 26, 1942.
W. M. Redman, Mayor,
Mrs. W. H. Mallet, Clerk.
2-2G-4tc
Four-11 elub members and others
on Georgia farms are urged by the
Extension Service to control forest
and field fires.
-
Ei> EXAMINED GLASSES
•TTED—LENSES DUPLICATED
In Covicgton Tuesdays and Fridays
r. Joseph E. Edwards, O.D.
Jackson, Georgia
You Get
BETTER COAL
WHEN YOU CALL 3751
Dealers for Montevallo—Dixie Gem
Southland Egg
Wood Ready for the Stove
QUICK DELIVERY
ROBISON, SETTLE & ROBISON, INC.
Miss Maud Penn
Passes Sunday
In Monticello
Friends in Jackson and Butts
county of Messrs. Tom and Fitzhugh
Penn, Editors of the Monticello
i News, and of Miss Martha Penn,
J will be sorry to know of the death
lof their sister, Miss Maud Penn,
which occurred Sunday morning at
her home in Monticello.
In August, 1938, she received se
vere injuries as a result of an auto
mobile accident in Alberta, Canada,
while on a vacation trip. In March,
1939, she was seriously injured in a
second automobile accident near this
city. Since the latter accident she
had been an invalid.
She was the daughter of the late
Ammie McNair Penn and Thomas
Robert Penn, for a long number of
years editors and owners of the Mon
ticello News.
She was for 50 years the mana
ger here of the Western Union Tele
graph Company and was prominent
and active in civic circles. She was,
the founder of the two local chap
ters of the DAR.
She was a member of the Monti
cello Presbyterian church, where
funeral services were held Monday
at 4 p. m., the Rev. Boyce Nelson,
pastor, officiating, assisted by the
Rev. Augustus Ernest.
GRAZING FOR HOGS
Oats, rye, and rape are the best
suited crops for grazing hogs from
January 1 to May 15, says the Ag
ricultural Extension Service. For
summer grazing, cattail millet, early
sorghum, soybeans, cowpeas, and
velvet beans furnish the best graz
ing.
FOR SALE
300 bushels slipshucked corn,
$1.25 bushel; 10 tons baled peavine
hay mixed with sorghum, S2O per
ton, f. o. b. my barn 3 miles north
Jackson on route 42. G. D. Moss,
Jackson, Ga. 2-26-2tp
Two nice dwellings, one on East
Third street, one on North Oak
street. See O. E. Smith, the man
with bargains. 2-26-tfc
FOR SALE
Oats, Peas, Hay and Hay Rake.
J. H. Patrick, Route 3, Jackson, Ga.
2-19-4tc
FOR SALE
60 acres at Jenkinsburg, near
County Line church, known as Lewis
place. Joins lands of Mrs. Jack
Leverctte, T. O. Asbury and others.
Better known as the T. P. Kimbell
place. O. E. Smith. 2-5-tfc
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Complete stock Mimeograph Pa
per, Second Sheets, Ink, Typewriter
Ribbons for all makes machines,
Adding Machine Paper, Pencils,
Stencils, Tape, Gem Clips, Index
Cards, File Folders, Pencil Sharpen
ers—everything for the office. Jones
Officle Supply Cos., phone 4281.
When you need a Typewriter Rib
bon and want it quick call Jones Of
fice Supply Cos., phone 4281.
Monographer’s Note Book, Wire
Bound, .Mimeograph Paper, Pencil
Sharpeners, Skrip Ink in Quart Bot
tles, Adding Machine Paper, All
Widths, Mimeograph Ink, Pencils,
Gem Clips, Sales Books, Index
Cards. Jones Office Supply Cos.
Phone 4281.
THE JACK' 7 '’"' nDnrDrsQ.Aßr.uc JACKSON, GEORGIA
Sulfa Drugs
Save Hawaii
War Wounded
ARMY MEDICAL CORPS, AC
CORDING TO SCIENCE SER
VICE. SCORED SMASHING TRI
UMPH WITH NEW DRUG
Washington, D. C.—Pearl Harbor
saw a sweeping victory for the new
sulfa drugs, says Science Service.
The Army medical corps was
alert, ready, and it scored the
world’s greatest success in any
war in the fight against battle
wounds, infections and death.
The story can now be be told. It
is detailed in a report made to the
Army’s Surgeon General James C.
Magee, by Dr. Perrin Long, of
Johns Hopkins Medical School, who
was responsible for introducing the
sulfa drugs into America. Dr. Long
j was accompanied on a mission to
! Hawaii by Dr. I. S. Ravdin, pro
-1 fessor of surgery at the University
!of Pennsylvania.
Physicians “Amazed”
In the Army hospitals there the
doctors saw badly wounded men
who looked and felt well. They were
“amazed” at what they saw. Men
who by ail past standards should
have died were recovering. Sulfa
drugs splits good organization that
gave the wounded prompt attention
performed this wonder.
Even among men whose wounds
had been contaminated with the
fertilizer dirty soil of Hicham and
Wheeler Fields, and who had not
had their wounds cleaned out by
debridement for 24 hours, not a
single massive infection was found
10 days later.
Infection, which in World War I
killed 80 per dent of the men with
abdominal wounds alone, hardly
occurred in Hawaii. Compound
fractures of bones and injury of the
flesh, for instance, showed that less
than four per cent such injuries be
■ >
came infected.
No Amputations Necessary
Not a single loss of arm or leg
was necessary because of infection.
The only amputations reported
were those made by the shell splin
ter or other missile.
Credit for this remarkable record
is shared by the sulfa drugs and the
efficient preparations of far-sight
ed Col. Edgar L. King, surgeon-in
charge of the Army’s medical forces
in Hawaii.
In the spring of 1941, when most
people thought Hawaii safe and
such extensive preparations foolish,
Col. King organized all civilian, Na
vy and Army medical forces to meet
possible disaster.
When the attack started, the first
medical man on the line was a young
doctor who, as medical officer of
the day, had gone out on Hickam
Field at 7 o’clock on that fateful
Sunday morning. Armed with a flit
gun, and accompanied by the crash
ambulance, he was on routine duty
to meet and disinfect a flight of U.
S. bombers expected from the main
land. He noted a flight of planes
coming in, and then the bombs drop
ped. He and the rest of the medical
corps were ready. All Hickam
Field’s own ambulances were imme
diately “broken out.” From Scho
field barracks and from Tripler, the
Army’s big base hospital, came more
ambulances. From Honolulu came
the milk and laundry trucks which
had already been prepared for in
stant conversion into ambulances.
Load Up Materials
The sergeant in charge of medi
cal supplies, when the first bomb
fell, threw open the great ware
house and loaded materials at once
onto all his trucks.
At Hickam Field, Col. Frank Lane,
surgeon-in-charge, immediately set
up an efficient evacuation system
with 12 ambulances so that the bad
ly shocked among the wounded got
first attention and those with a
chance to live were not kept lying
in the field while the ambulances
were filled with men who would be
I dead before they reached the hos
pital. 4
FBI Conference
Called March 10
In City Macon
SABOTAGE, TREASON, SEDI
TION, FIFTH COLUMN ACTIV
ITIES WILL BE COVERED BY
EXPERTS IN CRIME FIELD
The law enforcement officers
from Hancock, Washington, Pulaski,
Putnam, Baldwin, Wilkinson, Jasper,
Jones, Twiggs, Bleckley, Houston,
Peach, Dooly, Macon, Crawford,
Bibb, Upson, Monroe, Lamar and
Butts counties will gather in the
United States District court room,
Macon, at 1:30 p. m., March 10,
1942 to attend the first quarterly
conference for the year 1942 to be
held under the FBI Law Enforce
ment Officers Mobilization Plan for
National Defense. This will be the
first quarterly conference of police
officers to be held by the FBI since
the entrance of the United States
into the war, and will be followed
by conferences at Athens, Gaines
ville, Rome, Valdosta, Thomasville,
Albany, Columbus, and Atlanta, on
March 11, 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20,
and 27 respectively.
Major Trammell Scott, prominent
Atlanta civic leader, sportsman, and
president of the Southern Associa
tion of Baseball Clubs, will be the
guest speaker at the Macon con
ference.
The war-time statutes, espionage,
sabotage, treason, and sedition will
be thoroughly discussed and the ele
ments of these offenses will be il
lustrated by slides.
Another very interesting subject
to be discussed and illustrated by
slides will be that of “Photography
in Crime Detection” which will be
presented by a special agent of the
FBI.
John Smith, identification officer
of the Macon police department,
will discuss the subject ‘Vpraiaing
of Auxiliary Police.”
These quarterly conferences of
law enforcement officer*- are being
held throughout the United States
under the direction of the special
agents in charge of the FBI field
offices for the purpose of coordinat
ing the efforts of all law enforce
ment agencies in combating espi
onage, sabotage, and fifth column
activities. Instruction in latest de
velopment and procedure in connec
tion with handling these matters is
furnished the assembled officers and
an open forum discussion is held,
giving the officers an opportunity to
discuss problems arising in connec
tion with these matters. Officers
representing every law enforcement
agency are urged to be present at:
the conference covering their re
spective communities and to take
an active part in the discussions.
80,000 COLLEGE MEN
BE ENLISTED IN THE
U. S. NAVAL RESERVES
The Navy department has au
thorized the immediat voluntary en
listment of 80,000 college men now
in freshman and sophomore years,
and who have not reached their 20th
birthdays, in class V-l of the U. S.
Naval Reserve as apprentice seamen.
These men will be placed on in
active duty and allowed to complete
their sophomore year before being
called to active duty. A require
ment is that their curricula include
certain courses in physical training,
mathematics and physics.
Up on completion of their sopho
more year, approximately 20,000 of
the above number who meet the re-
quirements for aviation cadets will
be selected for flight training and
eventual commissions as ensigns
(aviation.)
Others will be qualified for event
ual commissions in general navy ser
vice. and others for engineering ser
vice and still others for navigation
duties.
Now is the last chance to get re
pair parts for farm machinery. Get
them before the supply is gone so
that surplus metal can go into ships
and tanks.
“KEEP US READING,” SAYS
MRS. W. F. HUDDLESTON
In sending check for renewal of
subscription, Mrs. W. F. Huddleston
of Griffin writes: “To practice ‘self
defense’ I find I must renew my
subscription to your valuable paper.
For we must ‘keep up with the
Joneses,’ for they certainly must be
keeping the home fires burning this
disagreeable weather. Ask Mr. Smith
to tell us when we ever had so much
cold weather in February. Always
enjoy your round up of the ‘misfit
politicians’ in editorial columns.
Keep us reading.”
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS.
ROGERS
1* SALE
Macaroni or Spaghetti
Holsum 3 Z. 10*‘ml*
Potted, Meat
Kingan ■ 4 18* rl*
Plain or lodized
O.K.Salt2 r 7 ( rl {
Hershey Chocolate
Syrup ■ ■ 2 z 10*Tl*
Whitehouse Apple
Juice - - ■ 6 ::: 25* nr 1*
Assorted Lovely
Jell -■ ■ 3 13* nr 1*
Florida Gold Assorted
Juices ■■ 6 25* nr 1 *
Argo Gloss
Starch ■2 z 9* nr 1 *
Red Diamond
Matches 3 z 12* ml*
• •;
Astor Black
Pepper •■ z B*m l*
Premier
Sulphur ■■ z 5* nr 1 *
Premier Salts
Epsom -- ■ z 5* nr 1 *
Rilz Crackers
NABISCO - - ■ -r; 21*
DeLuxe Sandwich
Bread . . 20-oz. u a i 10c
Vermont Maid
Syrup .... 12-02. Bot. 19c
Condensed Milk
Colonial . 2 14-Oz. Cans 27c
Southern Manor Shoe Peg
Corn .... 2 No. 2 cans 25c
Colonial or Standard Grapefruit
Juice .... 3 No. 2 Cans 25c
Southern Manor Sliced
Pineapple .. No. 2c an 20c
Home Brand
Margarine ilk cm. 17c
Argo
Asparagus .. pic. su. 17c
Evaporated
Peaches .. i-Lb.“(ferto 17c
Double-Fresh Silver
Coffee ... 2 i-lk Bags 39c
Double- Fresh Gold Label
Coffee ... 2 ilk Bags 47c
KINGAN’S Breakfast
BACON, lb. 29c
MIXED
Sausage, lb. 15c
PAN
FISH, lb. . . 15c
ALL CUTS OF SPRING LAMB
FRESH DRESSED FRYERS & HENS
Colontal Dtitorfroratcfr
Three Bees Comb
Honey .... 20-cu. j ar 27c
Three Bees Strained
Honey ..... ilk j ai 20c
Tissue
Waldorf 11a i1 1 Roll 5c
Bama
Grape Jam .. i-lk j a . 17c
Thinshell Toasted
Grahams .■. i-lk Pkg. 23c
Southern Manor
Catsup .... 14-Oz. Bot. 15c
Bulk Doming
Grits 3 Lbs 10c
Whitehouse Apple
Butter .... 12-oz. tar lOc
Evaporated
Apples .... 1-Lb. c*iio 20c
Soap or Powder
Octagon 5 Small Sizo 13c
Soap or Powder
Octagon 4 Large Size 19c
-MEAT SPECIALS
THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1942
TAKE NOTICE
Remnants of percale left over
from the comfort making program
in Georgia are to be used for sun
suits and allotted to families in the
same way as were mattresses and
comforters. Each child in the fam
ily six years of age or under will
be allotted on yard of material.
More information can be obtained
from the county mattress commit
tee, home or county agent.
To Relieve ffjl
Misery Of
SALVE*
c N o?g E h D D R^
Try"Riib-My*Tim" • a Wondarful Linamait l
SKINLESS
Wieners, lb 25c
LEAN PORK
CHOPS, lb. 32c
SPANISH
Mackeral, lb. 25c