Newspaper Page Text
Chest sore ?
Relieve the
congestion this way
You can break up that conges
tion without tiresome rubbing
with messy greases. Use Sloan’s.
Its stimulating effect on the cir
culation does the work. Relief is
immediate and positive. It will
not stain. All druggists—3s cents.
Sloan’s Liniment— kills pain!
Dried yak meat, often 100 years
old, forms the staple of the Tibetan
diet.
THE KIMBALL HOUSE
ATLANTA
The Home of Georgia People
400 Rooms of Solid Comfort
The House of Courtesy
Ed Jacobs & Lige Maynard,
Prop’s.
Free Garage Service
Also Terminal Hotel, Macon.
“What we need is better distribu
tion,” said the bald man, as he pre
pared to shave.—Birmingham News.
Hartwell Railway
SCHEDULE
Eastern Time Nov. 1, 1924
No. 1 Lv. Hartwell 10:40 a. m.
No. 1 Ar. Bowersville 11:20 a. m.
No. 2 Lv. Bowersville ...11:50 a. m.
No. 2 Ar. Hartwell 12:30 p. m.
No. 3 Lv. Hartwell 2:45 p. m.
No. 3 Ar. Bowersville .... 3:25 p. m.
No. 4 Lv. Bowersville .... 8:40 p. m.
No. 4 Ar. Hartwell 9:15 p. m.
Trains connect at Bowersville with
Elberton Air Line which connects at
Toccoa with main line Southern
Railway System; and at Elberton
with Seaboard Railroad.
J. B. JONES, Supt.
It’s surprising, the number of
things in the world about which
something ought to be done.—Ne
wark Star Eagle.
BUIBb ■ liBIIIIBHIIBIIIIBIIIIBIIIiBIIIIBIIiIBiIIIBIIIIBIII
! (S f Call 1
36 i
| —FOR- |
: QUALITY:
| —AND— ■
: SERVICE :
: Adams :
—and— |
Karlton :
t GROCERS 2
Most failures are simply people
who start before they are ready.—
M iami Daily News.
• I. ■
Hall’s Catarrh Medicine
Tlio- o are In a "run down’ condi
tion notice that Catarrh bothers
them r more than when they are in
■ood heal'.i. This fa<t proves that while
Catarrh >r a local disease, it is greatly
tnfluei ced by constitutional conditions.
HAI.D’3 CATARRH MEDICINE con
sists <f an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local application, and the
Inter: ?.! Medicine, a Tonic, which assists
in improving the General Health.
Sold bv druggists for over 40 Years.
F, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
* —— -I
An n- ’ instinct isn’t so impressive
when you know the men some dogs
assoc with—Vancouver Sun.
H. L. Kenmore R. F. Harris
J NMORE’S
rber Shop
Pr< Service Sanitary Shop
S; Attention Ladies’ and
'Children’s Work
LEGAL NOTICES
To Perfect Titles
Georgia—Hart County.
The Hartwell Bank having filed a
petition to the Ordinary of Hart
County asking that J. H. McLeskey,
surviving executor of the will of W.
H. McLeskey, deceased, late of said
county be required to make to them
a deed to the following described
tract of land to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
situate lying and being in the 1112th
district G. M., Hart County, Georgia,
and in the city of Hartwell and hav
ing the following boundary: situated
on the North side of the City of Hart
well and bordering on Carolina Street
and running south along Carolina
Street to corner of the Mrs. Thomas
Fisher lot on said street, then along
an Easternly direction to a pine
stake, thence South a distance of 113
feet to a stake thence in an Easternly
direction 140 feet to Elbert Street,
thence along Elbert Street in a
Northern direction to a corner of
the Will Adams Lot on said Street,
thence along the Southern border of
the Will Adams tract in a Western
direction to a corner thence in a
Northern direction 155 feet to a cor
ner, thence in an Eastern direction
to a corner at barn, thence a North
ern course to a Rock on Alley Street
thence along Alley Street in a West
ern direction to Corner of Alley and
Carolina Street about 132 feet to
beginning corner, in pursuance of a
bond for title made by W. H. Mc-
Leskey to W. P. Rice and said bond
for title transferred by the said W.
P. Rice to The Hartwell Bank. The
Hartwell Bank stating in their peti
tion that they have fully met the ob
ligations of the bond for title made
by W. H. McLeskey in his life time.
This is to notify J. H. McLeskey,
Mrs. Luke Baker, J. J. McLeskey,
W. B. McLeskey, Mrs. Sallie Mc-
Leskey and Jack, Walker and Pauline
McLeskey, and Mrs. Sallie McLeskey,
Guardian for Jack Walker and Pau
line McLeskey, and J. H. McLeskey,
Guardian for Jim McLeskey they
being the heirs at law of W. H. Mc-
Leskey, deceased, to be and appear
at the April term, 1925, of the Court
of Ordinary of Hart County, Geor
gia, and show cause if any they have
or can, why the prayers of the peti
tion of The Hartwell Bank should
not be granted and said Executor be
required to made deed in accordance
with the terms of said bond for title.
This the 2nd day of March, 1925.
J. W. SCOTT,
Ordinary of Hart County.
Sheriff’s Sale
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold at the Court House
door in said County on the first
Tuesday in April, 1925, within the
legal hours of sale, to-wit: all that
tract or parcel of land lying and
being in the County of Hart and
State of Georgia, 1115th District, G.
M., said State and County, bounded
on the North by W. B. McMullan; on
the East by Marion Allen; on the
South by E. Macjewski and contain
ing fifty and three-tenths acres, more
or less, and is fully described in a
plat made by J. H. Warren, October
13th, 1919, with improvements there
on, said land levied on as the proper
ty of C. C. Hembree, to satisfy an
execution issued on the 10th day of
March, 1925, from the Superior
Court of Hart County in said County,
in favor of Mrs. E. B. Hembree
against C. C. Hembree.
This the 7th day of March, 1925.
A. B. BROWN, Sheriff.
Sheriff’s Sale
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold at the Court House
door in said County on the first
Tuesday in April, 1925, within the
legal hours of sale, to-wit: All
that certain house and lot lying and
being in Hartwell, Ga., and on the
Benson St., bounded by said Street,
Mrs. J. W. Williams, W. Y. Buffing
ton, et al and being the house and
lot set aside to plantiff as a year’s
support and being the property de
scribed in a bond for title executed
by Sidney A. '□prnton to G. H.
Norris. The note sued on being given
of the date of said bond for title and
are the notes referred to in said bond
for title as purchase money for said
lot of land. The title to said house
and lot being in Sidney Thornton
and the defendant holds a bond for
title, this house is known as the
Thornton house and is the place
where G. H. Norris now lives, with
improvements thereon, said lot levied
on as the property of G. H. Norris,
to satisfy an execution issued on the
10th day of March, 1925, from the
Superior Court of Hart County in
said County, in favor of Sidney A.
Thornton against G. H. Norris.’
This the 7th day of March, 1925.
A. B. BROWN, Sheriff.
To Perfect Titles
Georgia—Hart County.
Mrs. A. N. Page having applied to
the Ordinary by petition asking that
Inez Bradbury, as executor of the
will of J. P. Bradbury, deceased, late
of said County, be required to make
her a deed to the following described
tract of land to-wit: That said tract
or parcel of land situate lying and
being in the city of Hartwell, Ga., and
known in the plans of said town as
lot No. 129 bounded as follows; on
the North by town lot No. 126, for
merly owned by C. L. Scott, on the
East by Hodges St., on the South by
Johnson St., on the West by Richard
son St., and containing one and seven
eighth acres more or less. This lot
is known as C. D. Turner’s property,
in pursuance of a bond for title made
by J. P. Bradbury in his lifetime to
the said Mrs. A. N. Page, she alleging
that she has fully met her obligations
I in said bond.
This is to notify Inez Bradbury,
I James Bradbury, Fred Bradbury and
St. Clair Bradbury, heirs at law of
said J. P. Bradbury deceased to be
and appear at the April Term, 1925,
of the Court of Ordinary of Hart
County, and show cause if any they
have or can why said executor should
not be required to make said deed
as is prayed for by said Mrs. A N.
Page, petitioner.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., APRIL 3, 1925
Citation For Years Support.
Georgia—Hart County.
To whom it may concern:
Alpha Maret a minor child of Mrs.
Carrie Pet Maret late of said county,
having made application for a years
support for herself, a minor child,
and the appraisers appointed to set
apart the same out of the estate of
Mrs. Carrie Pet Maret having filed
their report in this office; Notice
is hereby given to the creditors and
next of kin of the said deceased to
show cause, if any they can, at the
next regular term of the Court of
Ordinary in and for said county, why
said report should not be the judg
ment of the Court. This 2nd day of
March 1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Citation. Dismission from Admini
stration.
Georgia—Hart County.
Whereas, E. F. McLane and Sam
Morris, Administrator of E. W.
Phillips, represents to the Court in
their petition, duly filed and entered
on record, that they have fully ad
ministered E. W. Phillips estate:
This is, therefore, to cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and credi
tors, to show cause, if any they can,
why said Administrators should not
be discharged from their Administra
tions, and receive Letters of Dismis
sion on the first Monday in April
1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Citation. Dismission from Admini
stration.
Georgia—Hart County.
Whereas, J. Ben Thornton, Ad
ministrator of Mrs. N. B. Bothwell,
represents to the Court in his peti
tion, duly filed and entered on re
cord, thm he has fully administered
Mrs. N. B. Bothwell estate:
This is, therefore, to cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and credi
tors, to show cause, if any they can,
why said Administrator should not
be discharged from his Administra
tion, and receive Letters of Dismis
sion on the first Monday in April,
1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Sheriff Sale.
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold before court house
door in Hart county, Georgia, on
first Tuesday in April, within legal
hours of sale, following described
property:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in 1117th dist., G.
M., Hart County, Georgia, contain
ing 24 11-100 acres, known as lot
No. 3 in division of lands of J. F.
Burton, as made by survey, same
made by B. Bowers, Surveyor, dated
July 25th, 1920, bounded by lands
of Elizabeth Stroup; lot 2 of said di
vision, property of J. T. Beasley; lot
1 of said division; and lot No. 4,
property of Wilbank, Brooks & White
and Richardson Bros.
Said property levied upon and to
be sold as property of J. B. & Eliza
beth Stroup to satisfy fi. fa. issued
from Franklin Superior Court in
favor of J. F. Burton and against
said J. B. & Elizabeth Stroup.
Also, at same time and place, all
that tract or parcel of land lying and
being in 1117th dist., G. M., Hart
County, Georgia, containing 20 44-
100 acres, known as lot 2 of division
of lands of J. F. Burton, as made by
survey by B. Bowers, Surveyor, dated
July 25th, 1920, bounded by lot 3, the
J. B. & Elizabeth Stroup lands; other
property of the estate of J. F. Bur
ton, being lot 1 of said division; John
Mitchell and S. C. Watson; same to
be sold to satisfy fi. fa. issued from
Franklin Superior Court in favor of
J. F. Burton and against J. T. Beas
ley, and as the property of J. T.
Beasley.
Also at same time and place, one
Ford Touring car, motor number
10379071, with large lock steering
wheel; same to be sold to satisfy fi.
fa. issued from Hart Superior Court
in favor of The First National Bank
of Hartwell and against H. M. Law
rence and H. E. Stephens, as princi
pal, L. L. Mouchet, security; and to
be sold as the property of H. M.
Lawrence.
March 10th, 1925.
A. B. BROWN, Sheriff.
Sheriff Sale
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold before the Court
House door in Hartwell, Georgia,
on the first Tuesday in April, 1925,
within the legal hours of sale, all of
the following tract of land, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing and being in the 1112th dist., G.
M., Hart County, Georgia, contain
ing 42 acres, more or less, and being
fully described in deed from J. P.
Skelton to Lester Cleveland, said
deed recorded in deed book X, page
27, office of the Clerk of Hart Su
perior Court, same to be sold to sat
isfy a judgment issued from Hart
Superior Court in favor of W. L.
Hodges and against Lester Cleveland;
and sold as the property of Lester
Cleveland.
This March 9th, 1925.
A. B. BROWN, Sheriff.
Auto Condemnation Notice
The State of Georgia vs. One Ford
Automobile Motor No. 10869203
Owner Unknown.
Condemnation Hart Superior Court
At Chambers.
On the 6th day March, 1925, the
above named petition was filed, the
same being a petition filed to con
demn the property above described,
and all parties interests are hereby
required to show cause, if any they
can, within 30 days from the date of
the filing of the same, why said auto
mobile should not be condemned for
transporting intoxicating liquor upon
the highways of said county; in de
fault the court will proceed as justice
shall appeartain.
Witness the Honorable Walter L.
Hodges, Judge.
This March 6th, 1925.
JNO. G. RICHARDSON,
Sheriff Sale
Georgia—Hart County.
Will be sold on the premises at
Vanna, Ga., on the first Tuesday in
April, 1925, within the legal hour
of sale, to-wit: One grist mill and on«-
Fairbanks-Morse 10 horse power en-
EAGLE GROVE
(Last Week's Letter)
The school children are all making
good and are practicing for the
field day on 24th of April.
Rev. O. M. Seigler who is pastor
of one of the prominent Baptist
churches of Augusta had a good write
up in the Christian Index several
weeks ago. He has a number of
friends here who will be interested
to learn of his success. This com
munity was his home community be
fore he went away to college. We
wish for this young minister a long
and useful life.
Mr. and Mrs. S. O. McConnell, of
Columbia, spent the week-end with
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. McConnell.
Mrs. J. C. Barton spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sey
mour of Holly Springs.
The teachers held their monthly
meeting Saturday and we enjoyed
good talks from Prof. Morris and
Allman. The county meet day was
also discussed by the teachers.
Mrs. Clyde Charping, of Ander
son, S. C., is spending the week with
her mother, Mrs. Sallie Brown.
What My Neighbor Says
Is of Interest to Hartwell Folks.
When one has had the misfortune
to suffer from backache, headaches,
dizziness, urinary disorders and other
kidney ills—and has found relief
from all this sickness and suffering,
that person’s advice is of untold value
to friends and neighbors. The fol
lowing case is only one of many
thousands, but it is that of a Hart
well resident. Who could ask for a
better example?
Mrs. W. C. Banister, Jackson St.,
says: ‘‘My kidneys acted irregularly
and my back was painful, especially
when I got up in the morning. I
felt tired and worn out from loss of
sleep. I wasn’t long in getting over
the trouble after I began using
Doan’s .Pills.” (Statement given
April 19, 1918).
On March 12, 1923, Mrs. Banister
said: “I use Doan’s whenever my back
hurts or when my kidneys don’t act
right and they never fail to relieve
me.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy-—get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mrs.
Banister had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
/ I'A VSnwrf■ / - X
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wlenciw I
/Z PENCIL CXJMTANY ■
Statement of the Ownership, Man
agement, Circulation, Etc., Required
By the Act of Congress of August
24, 1912
Os The Hartwell Sun published
weekly at Hartwell for April 1, 1925.
State of Georgia, County of Hart.
Before me, a Notary Public in and
for the State and county aforesaid,
personally appeared Louie L. Morris,
who, having been duly sworn accord
ing to law, deposes and says that he
is the Assoc. Editor-Manager of the
Hartwell Sun and that the following
is, to the best of his knowledge and
belief, a true statement of the owner
ship, management (and if a daily
paper, the circulation), etc., of the
aforesaid publication for the date
shown in the above caption, required
by the Act of August 24, 1912, em
bodied in section 411, Postal Laws
and Regulations, printed on the re
verse of this form, to wit:
1. That the names and addresses
of the publisher, editor, managing
editor, and business managers are:
Publishers Leon and Louie L.
Morris, Hartwell, Ga.
Editors Leon and Louie L. Morris,
Hartwell, Ga.
Business Managers Leon and Louie
L. Morris, Hartwell, Ga.
2. That the owner is: (If the publi
cation is owned by an individual his
name and address, or if owned by
an individual his name and address,
or if owned by more than one indi
vidual the name and address of each,
should be given below; if the publi
cation is owned by a corporation the
name of the corporation and the
names and Addresses of the stock
holders owning or holding one per
cent or more of the total amount of
stock should be given.) Leon and
mortgagees, and other security hold-
Louie L. Morris.
3. That the known bondholders,
ers owning or holding 1 per cent or
more of total amount of bonds, mort
gages, or other securities are: None.
LOUIE L. MORRIS.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me this 27th day of March 1925.
D. V. THORNTON, N. P.
(My commission expires July 1925.)
gine, one tire shrinker, one emory
rock, one belt about 20 feet long, one
meal box, one pair of scales, and
other shop tools, all said property
levied on under and by virtue of a
mortgage foreclosure, issued from
ihe Superior Court of Hart County,
a., on the 21st of Feb. 1925, in
f, rof the Bank of Bowman, and
'ainst T. G. Dickerson, and the
l.ove described property levied tn
under and by virtue of the said
mortgage fi. fa. <
Terms of sale: cash.
March 9th, 1925.
A. B. BROWN, Sheriff.
BIGGEST FIGHT ON WEEVIL FACES
FARMERS OF GEORGIA THIS YEAR
By JAMES A. HOLLOMON
From The Atlanta Constitution
Georgia today is sitting on the top
of a threatening volcano.
Unless the situation is taken Vigor
ously in hand immediately, and also
kept rigidly in mind at the beginning
of the next planting season, an
economic cataclysm will sweep this
state, and the entire Southland, such
as has not swept it in recent years.
In The Constitution office we are
in close touch with the agricultural
situation in the Southeast, and especi
ally in Georgia.
It is our business to be, and right
now we know what the average man
who is not connected with farm in
terests does not know—-
And that is that no state in the
cotton belt, from New Mexico to
North Carolina, has ever approached
the winter season with as heavy hib
ernation of carry-over boll weevils as
Georgia; and indeed, all other south
eastern states are preparing today
to carry over into next year’s cotton
growing operations.
And, the even more alarming sit
uation is that an overwhelming num
ber of farmers themselves do not
know this is true, and on the con
trary are planning and preparing f'r
the heaviest cotton acreage in 1925
of any year since the old pre-weevil,
one-crop conditions prevailed.
Planning Their Own Destruction!
Even more alarming yet is the
fact that thousands of farmers have*
been misled by newspapers that ought
to have known better into believing
that the boll weevil is a “pest of the
past”—a dark page in agricultural
history that has now been turned,
in the passage of time.
In the face of stubborn, unmis
takable, inescapable conditions that
face Georgia today it will be little
short of crime if the alarm is not
sounded from every newspaper of
fice in the South, and broadcast by
every agency that can reach the
farmer, and snatch him away from
the inevitable ruin that threatens
him—-and through him every busi
ness interest and every hearthstone
in this great section of the country.
I am anything but an extremist or
an alarmist. I know what lam talk
ing about when I tell the people of
Georgia today that the cotton nro
duction situation in 1925 threatens
the most serious economic menace
to the state that has threatened in a
generation.
It is a plain, cold-blooded fact.
Liaten to Reason—
Around cotton production revolves
the material welfare of the state.
There is no dodging that fact, and
whether we want to believe it or not,
facts and figures make us believe it.
The day of Georgia’s emancipa
tion from the one-crop system of
agricultural slavery began a new
epoch in Georgia; and from that day
has not only developed a number of
other profitable merchantable crops,
but also a better understanding of
balanced agriculture, a keener ap
preciation of the absolute necessity
of growing feed and food for homo
consumption, and a spirit of coopera
tion that has revolutionized the mar
keting systems.
But in the face of all of this is
the stubborn fact that cotton produc
tion remains, and will always remain,
the backbone of agricultural prosperi
ty in Georgia.
It should remain so, not in the
sense of quantity but value produc
tion; and it can be if the farmers
themselves will handle the situation
at all times with understanding.
The cotton production in 1924 was
good, comparatively speaking, and
was influenced by a remarkably
favorable growing season, and by an
equally remarkable absence of the
boll weevil.
The latter was the effect, first, of
an unusually low-temperatured win
ter, beginning with an early fall in
1923, thus freezing out, to a large
extent, the carry-over weevil from
which heavy weevil infestation
springs. Second, to a dry summer.
These two conditions, therefore,
excellent growing season and mini
mum infestation, added to the ad
vanced preparations for fighting the
Why we sell ’
Swift’s Red Steer Fertilizers
We believe in Swift & Company. Their
slogan, “Every product the best of its
kind,” has been maintained for more
than 50 years.
As the A. S. A. (Authorized Swift
Agent) we are in partnership with this
large company which has a nation-wide
reputation for reliable service and square
dealing.
The high analysis fertilizers which we
sell are those recommended by our
State Experiment Station.
We thoroughly believe that Swift’s
Red Steer Fertilizers are the best on the
market and we know “It Pays to Use
Them.”
Drop in and talk it over.
chas. ■ .latheson
D ST.
"swing
Authorized Swift Agent
weevil, made by most progressive
farmers, gave to Georgia an unusual
ly successful cotton-production year,
under present-day conditions.
This fact has led thousands of
farmers to the erroneous belief that
the weevil has almost if not entirely
disappeared from Georgia; or at
least is disappearing; and that next
year, 1925, the weevil will not be
a menacing factor.
Unfortunately this erroneous be
ief has been circulated by some news
papers, and the whole resources of
the cotton division of the agricul
tural college have recently been
called upon to combat the serious
and fatally threatening error as to
What Are the Facta Today?
This is the latest fall Georgia has
known in years.
The latter part of the growing sea
son, too late for any serious damage
to the 1924 production, was ex
tremely wet, mucky and warm.
Billions of weevils hatched out in
every cotton field in Georgia—and
never before have the last days of
November found so many carry-over
weevils encased for winter hiberna
tion as at this time.
This condition is not confined to
any one section of the stalo but to
every section in which cotton ia
grown.
The old bolls, the stalks, the i.n
derbush, the fence corners, the dead
grass and weeds, the nearby .vooded
areas are literally alive today with
weevils.
In many cases it is too late to de
stroy them; and in all cases too late
to entirely eradicate them.
Turning under stalks even now,
and the cleaning out of the cotton
fields and fences will help; but
nothing will now destroy even a good
ly percentage of the carry-over wee
vils except a season of intensely low
temperature during the approaching
winter.
What Does All This Mean?
That, in all reasonable probability,
there will be the heaviest infestation
of boll weevil in Georgia in 1925,
emerging early from hibernation, ever
witnessed in this or any other state
in the cotton belt.
Again, information reaching us in
that farmers are planning and pre
paring to put in 1925 the greatest
acreage of cotton planted in this
state since the old pre-weevil, single
crop days.
This can only be done at the
sacrifice of the food and feed crops,
which means that farmers will nec
essarily have to buy these supplies in
order to utilize their lands for cot
ton.
If this condition prevails Georgia
will be on the verge of economic
bankruptcy, and the farmers will fall
back to the lowest ebb of a receding
tide.
Thia Situation?
First, forget the false doctrine that
there will be no boll weevils in 1925,
and accept the fact that they will
be more serious than ever.
Second, work systematically and in
dustriously toward the destruction of
the haunts of hibernation.
Third, plan, instead of increased
cotton production, for increased food
and feed crop production, and make
other money crops as can be intelli
gently grown and marketed.
Fourth, prepare in advance for
adequate weevil control based upon
a restricted acreage and instensive
cultivation.
And then, help carry the warning
to every cotton farmer in Georgia
And if there is any doubt as to
the carry-over weevil, an examination
of the cotton fields and hibernating
haunts, will convince anyone of the
cause for the present alarm and
serious alarm.
Arsenic producers and calcium
arsenate manufacturers cannot pos
sibly produce to meet an emergency
demand after the weevil appears.
Six months is the minimum time al
lowance between arsenic in the ore
and calcium arsenate in the hands of
the cotton grower. The weevil is
“digging in,” preparatory to the
spring attack. Now is the time to
get the “ammunition dumps” ready
to meet the invasion.