Newspaper Page Text
■I’RSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1949
I Progress-Argus
I Classified Ads
RAYED —From Whit Torbett’s
H ce south of Indian Springs long
Bred Jersey milk cow, wearing
Bn yoke and marked under bit in
Bh ear, one ear end cut off. Mrs.
B H. Torbett, Forsyth, Ga., Rt. 1.
12-8-ltc
■WANTED —Man with car wanted
Kr route work. sls to S2O in a day.
■n experience or capital required.
Beady. Write today. Mrs. Sharp, 120
Kst Clark Street, Freeport, 111.
12-8-ltp
I HOUSE FOR RENT—Watkins
■me place thi-ee miles west of Jack-
Bn. Apply Mrs. P. R. Kimbrough,
Bckson Trading Post or 508 Angier
Be.. Atlanta, Ga. 12-8-2tp
■ FOR RENT—Two unfurnished
Boms. Phone 5222, Jackson. 12-8-ltp
■ WANTED TO BUY—Small tracts
B timber land. Will rent or buy pas-
Bre land. May be interested in lar
■e timber tracts too. S. R. Brockin-
Bn, % F. C. Hearn. 12-l-3tp
I STRAYED —From my pasture
Bovember 17, one red white-faced
Bifer, weighs about 450 lbs. Has
■ort horns. Last seen going towards
■ovington street. SIO.OO reward for
B> return or information as to
■here I can get her. J. L. Bailey Sr.,
Bckson. 12-1-ltp
3 PIANO BARGAINS
■ We wish to dispose of before Xmas
■ a great savings. 2 Spinets and one
Biall upright. If you expect to buy
I piano within the next year you
Bnnot afford to pass up these bar
kins. Terms can be arranged. Write
kedit Dept., Baskette Piano Cos.,
B Pryor St. N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
12-l-2tc
LOOK!
I Two huge truckloads of Camellias
lid Azaleas just arrived. Very at-
Bactive prices. Also 2-year-old field
■ own roses, 59c each or 49c by the
■>zen.
■CECIL’S BLOOMING NURSERY
Meriwether Street
Griffin, Ga.
ksl below Pittman’s Funeral Home.
81-24-3tc
TOYS
I Firestone location. Jackson Hdwe.
11-3-Btc
I WE SELL and install all types of
Ball and floor tile, including plastic,
■sphalt, and rubber. Estimates will
■e gladly made without any obliga
tion. Jackson Hdwe., Phone 4191,
Bckson, Ga. 11-3-tfc
|j| WE SELL and install plumbing
fixtures and handle a complete stock
K plumbing supplies. Let us have the
privilege of estimating, free and
Bithout obligation, your next plumb-
Rng job. Jackson Hdwe., phone 4191,
■ackson, Ga. 11-3-tfc
I WANTED—3OO nens or more per
Beek. Phone or write Southern
Boultry Distributors, Griffin, Ga.
3-13-tfc
BEN D I X
HI The leading automatic washer in
Priced to meet your pocket-
Demonstration free. Jackson
Co. 11-10-tfc
■ wanted—one million people
are troubled with ATHLETE'S
jßoot. Guaranteed results or money
■fended. Try SAFEWAY LOTION
|B>day. Smith Drug Cos. 4-21-tfc
II MRS. HOUSEWIFE, have you
yourself longing for anew
Come see the Youngstown
We will be glad to give you
■ fee estimate. Jackson Hardware
■o. 11-10-tfc
■ SERVICES OFFERED GooU
and household and office furniture
prices. Long distance
movers. Large padded
available. For low rates phone
■aeon 6711, The Trading Post, 466
s- Macon, Ga. 3-13-tfc
FB Membership
In State Now
Totals 71,145
The Georgia Farm Bureau Feder
ation closed the 1949 fiscal year
November 30 with a membership of
71,145 farm’ families, it is reported
by H. L. Wingate, president. Win
gate said there is an active FB chap
ter in each of the state’s 159 coun
ties.
Bulloch county in the first district
again took the lead with a member
ship of 2,718 families, followed by
Laurens, sixth district, in second
place with 2,153.
Membership by congressional dis
tricts was reported as follows: First,
g§? LEGAL
lßiiirimiii
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
Georgia, Butts County.
Martha Lois Byrd vs. Willis Edgar
Byrd. Suit for divorce in Butts Su
perior Court, February term, 1950.
To Willis Edgar Byrd, defendant
in said matter.
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear at .the February term
1950 of Superior Court, Butts Coun
ty, Georgia, to answer the eamplaint
of plaintiff mentioned in the caption
in her suit against you for divorce.
Witness the Honorable Frank B.
Willingham, Judge of said Court.
This November 8, 1949.
PAUL MADDOX, Clerk
of Superior Court.
Alfred D. Fears, Attorney
for Plaintiff.
11-10-17; 12-1-8.
Hadacol Helps
Textile Workers
Stay On The Job
The great textile mills of the
CaroUnas are booming again with
shifts working day and night to
turn out the nation’s finest mate
rials, and HADACOL is doing its
part to keep folka on the job.
Many textile workers have re
ported the wonderful relief which
has been brought them by
HADACOL with its five B vita
mins and four important minerals.
Two of these workers, a young
father employed by the great
Cannon Mills at Kannapolis, N.C.,
and a mother,
working at
N. C. recently ||pL
them on the
is*3o years old Mr. Barnhardt
and the proud father of two chil
dren. His work in the Cannon
Mills calls for a great deal of
standing up.
“I had been ill for several
years,” said Mr. Barnhardt as he
explained how close he came to
having to give up his work. “I
suffered with a weak stomach.
It became worse and worse with
gastric disturbances. I just could
not hold food and no food agreed
with me. I could not sleep and
finally I became so sick that my
legs got weak as I worked in
the mill each day.”
Mr. Barnhardt, like so many
sufferers, had tried many prepa
rations without relief, when he
heard about HADACOL.
“After the second bottle of
HADACOL I began to feel better
and to regain the weight I had
lost,'* 3aid Mr. Barnhardt. “My
digestion became normal again
and today I am as well as ever.
My legs no longer bother me.
I eat. and enjoy my food. I sleep
well and have plenty of energy. ’
Mr. Barnhardt has taken sev
eral bottles of HADACOL and
now takes the famous vitamin;
and mineral preparation to help
stay well. He has had his wife
take it with wonderful results
aad. has recommended it to his
friends in the mill.
Mrs. Maggie H. Poole, 1502
Caroline Avenue, in Salisbury,
N. C., had become so ill that she
was forced to give up her work
but soon after hearing the won
derful news about HADACOL she
was back on the job and has been
doing swell ever since.
■*l was tired, weak and nerv
ous,” said Mrs. Poole. “I suffered
indigestion and food didn’t agree
with me. I also had headache*.
After taking five bottles of HAD
ACOL I felt good and was back
■on the job at the mill. I had tried
so many things that the HADA
COL news was a real blessing to
THE JACKSON PROGRESS- ARCUS, JACKSON. GEORGIA
‘Roseanna McCoy’
Is Dixie Feature
“South of Rio” is the fine western
on for Saturday. Monte Hale is the
star.
“Gallant Legions” with William
Elliott. Joseph Sehildkraut and Bruce
Cabot is the offering for Manday and
Tuesday. The lawless element carries
on an underhand fight to abolish the
Texas Rangers and make West Texas
a separate state.
“Forbidden Street,” on for Wed
nesday, is a Victorian romance about
a girl who marries beneath her but
regains caste through the aid of her
second husband.
All the drama and excitement of
America’s most famous feud —the
Hatfield and McCoys—is found in
“Roseanna McCoy” which will be
shown here Thursday and Friday.
While the families are divided by a
long-fostered hatred, a McCoy daugh
ter and a Hatfield son fall in love,
and members of both clans are killed
in the fighting that follows the girl’s
flight to the Hatfield side of the
river. The stars in this drama are
Joan Evans, Farley Granger, Ray
mond Massey and Charles Bickford.
WHEAT AND OATS
In the past 23 years, wheat acre
age in Georgia has increased from
81,000 acres to 221,000, and yields
are up from eight bushels per acre
to 13V* bushels. Ooats show a 226,-
000 acre gain and an 11-bushel per
I
acre increase in yields.
11,138; second, 10,149; third, 11,-
631; fourth, 4,311; fifth, 458; sixth,
8,020; seventh, 4,791; eighth, 11,-
807; ninth, 3,188; tenth, 5,678.
me. I have more appetite and
eat what I want to. I feel better
than I have in a long time."
Mr. Barnhardt and Mrs. Poole
were both suffering from a lack
of B vitamins and the minerals
which HADACOL contains.
HADACOL comes to you in liquid
form, easily assimilated in the
blood stream so that it can go
to work right away.
A lack of only a small amount
of B vitamins and certain min
erals will cause digestive disturb
not be able to
eat the things Mrs. Poole
you like for fear of being in mis
ery afterwards. Many people also
suffer from constipation. And
while these symptoms may be the
results of other causes, they are
surely and certainly the signs of
lack of B vitamins and minerals
which HADACOL contains. And
if you suffer from such a defi
ciency disorder, there is no
known cure except the admiius
tration of the vitamins and min
eral, which your system lacks.
It is easy to understand, there
fore, why countless thousands
have been benefited by this
amazing tonic, HADACOL.
So it matters not how old you
are or who you are ... it matters
not where you live or if you have
tried all the medicines under the
sun, give this wonderful prepara
tion HADACOL a trial. Don’t go
on suffering. Don’t continue to
lead a miserable life. Many per
sons who have suffered and
waited for 10 to 20 years or even
longer, are able now to live
happy, comfortable lives because
HADACOL supplied the vitamins
and minerals which their systems
needed. Be fair to yourself. Tem
porary relief is not enough for
you. Give HADACOL a trial!
Insist on the genuine HADA
COL. Don’t be misled. Accept no
substitute.
Sold at all leading drug stores.
Trial size only $1.25, but save
money; buy the large family and
hospital size, only $3.50. If your
druggist does not handle HADA
COL, order direct from The Le-
Blanc Corporation, Lafayette, La.,
and when the postman brings
your package just pay the amount
plus the c. o. and. and postage.
If you remit with the order we
wiu pay the postage.
Then, if you don’t feel perfectly
satisfied after using HADACOL
as directed, just return the empty
carton and your money will be
cheerfully re funded. Nothing
could be fairer.
Ready Response
Made By Kimbell
Baptist Churches
Churches in the Kimbell Associa
tion donated produce valued at $488.-
76 and cash to the amount 0f5166.-
10, for a total of $654.86, to the
Georgia Baptist Children’s Home at
Hapeville, it is revealed by T. A.
Nutt chairman. The drive was carried
out in November, with depots at
Blount, Jackson and Jenkinsburg.
Mr. Nutt’s report shows that the
following churches in Butts, Monroe
and Henry counties donated to the
children’s home either with cash,
produce or both:
Flovilla, Indian Springs, Jackson,
Jackson WMU, Jenkinsburg, Macedo
nia, Mt. Vernon, Paran, Pepperton
Sunday school, Philippi, Sardis, Tow
aliga, Worthville.
The 1949 showing is larger than
for last year, Mr. Nutt said. He de
sires to thank all committees and to
all who donated to this cause.
Tuberculosis kills more people than
any other infectious or communica
ble disease.
Fire Insurance
City & Rural
J. Avon Gaston
Phones, 2511-2841
Beware Coughs
From Common Colds
That HANG ON
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes. Tell your druggist
to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion
with the understanding you must like
the way it quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
December 20
IS THE DEADLINE
For Paying 1949 State, County
and School Taxes
After December 20
Fi Fas Will Be Issued
PAY NOW AND AVOID EXTRA
TROUBLE AND EXPENSE
Your interest and cooperation in
settling tax claims will be heart
ily appreciated
t
H. Wayne Barnes
Tax Collector, Butts County, Georgia
CARD OF THANKS
1 would like to take this opportu
nity to acknowledge with grateful
appreciation the many acts of kind
ness and sympathy shown me by my
neighbors and friends during my
stay in the hospital and while at
home. I shall ever remember and
treasure your letters, cards, flowers,
gifts and other expressions of love.
May God richly bless each of you.—
J. O. Minter.
BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS
The regular communication of In
dian Springs Lodge No. 307 F. & A.
M. will be held in its lodge hall at
Flovilla, (Saturday) night, Nov. 12,
beginning at 7:30 o’clock. All duly
qualified brethren are cordially and
fraternally invited to meet with us.
By order of
DAN B. HOARD, W. M.
EMORY M. DUKE. Sec.
Flovilla, (Saturday) night, Dec. 10,
EYES EXAMINED CLASSES
FITTED LENSES DUPLICATED
In Covington Tuesday and Saturday
Dr. Joseph E. Edwards. O.D.
Jackson, Georgia
Advtrtinmemt
from where I sit... 6y Joe Marsh /
Don't Fence Yourself In
Every spring, llandy Peterson
and Easy Roberts patch up the
atone wall that separates their
farms. They walk along talking—
Easy on one side, Handy on the
other—picking up the fallen stones
and putting them back.
Afterwards, over a friendly
gIaFS of beer, Easy says, “You
know, wall-mending is a nice neigh
borly custom, but we really don’t
need that wall. We keep it up just
because it happens to be there.”
“Yes,” says Handy, “a lot of
walls and fences and boundaries
keep on separating people for no
666]
LIQUID OR 4
TABLETS ;
GIVES
FAST
RELIEF
when COLD
MISERIES STRIKE
FOR FLOWERS ON ALL
OCCASIONS
Sa Th
GRIFFIN FLOWER SHOP
599 South 6th Street, Criffia, Ga.
Tel. 4443—Night 4233
Jackson Agent Tel. 2986
Weddings, Corsages, Arrange
ments, Fnneral Designs—Patted
Pleats.
“When It Is Flowers . . . Say h
With Ours.”
Haisten Funeral
Home
24 Hour Ambulance
Service
Agent for Family Fund
Life Insurance
Dial 6111
Jackson Ga.
good reason. Maybe we’d all be
better off if some of them were torn
down, instead of kept standing.”
From where I sit. Handy said a
mouthful. Take the “walls of in
tolerance” that people build up
against each other. 1 like a tem
perate glass of beer now and then,
you may prefer buttermilk—but
that’s no reason for me to criticize
you, or you, me. Let’s live and let
live together— making more frieuda
t and fewer “walls.”