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LEGAL NOTICES
Citation Administration.
Georgia —»Hart County.
To all whom it may concern:
L.H. Ridgway having in proper form
applied to me for Permanent Letters
of Administration on the estate of
Mrs. Jennie Weaver, late of said
county, this is to cite all and singular
the creditors and next of kin of Mrs.
Jennie Weaver to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by
law, and show cause, if any they can,
why permanent administration should
not be granted to L. H. Ridgway on
Mrs. Jennie Weaver estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature, this 4th day of May, 1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Citation Administration.
Georgia—Hart County.
To all whom it may concern:
Mrs. J. T. Sanders having in prop
er form applied to me for Perma
nent Letters of Administration on
the estate of James L. Bailey, late
of said county, this is to cite all and
singular the creditors and next of
kin of James L. Bailey to be and
appear at my office within the time
allowed by law, and show cause, if
any they can, why permanent admin
istration should not be granted to
Mrs. J. T. Sanders on James L. Bai
ley estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature, this 4th day of May, 1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Citation Administration.
Georgia Hart County.
To all whom it may concern:
G. C. Craft having in proper form
applied to me for Permanent Letters
of Administration on the estate of
Mrs. Carrah D. Cordell, late of said
county, this is to cite all and singular
the creditors and next of kin of Mrs.
Carrah D. Cordell to be and appear
at my’ office within the time allowed
by law, and show cause, if any they
■can, why permanent administration
should not be granted to G. C. Craft
on Mrs. Carrah D. Cordell estate.
Witness my hand and official sig
nature, this 4th day of May, 1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
State of Georgia—Hart County.
In pursuance of an order from the
Court of Ordinary of Hart county,
Georgia, granted at May term, 1925,
will be sold at public outcry before
the court house door in Hartwell, Ga.,
within the legal hours of sale on
the first Tuesday in June, 1925, for
the purpose of paying debts of es
tate of Edna I. McCurley and dis
tribution among the heirs at law, the
following property belonging to said
estate: All that tract or parcel of
land lying and being in the 1114th
District, G. M., Hart County, Geor
gia, containing one hundred and four
teen acres, more or less, adjoining
lands of Mrs. Hettie Richardson on
the north, Mrs. Hettie Richardson
and A. S. and F. H. Richardson on
the east, J. G. Richardson ofi the
south, and Mrs. Amanda McMullan,
estate of P. S. McMullan and E. 11.
Norman on the west, and more fully
described by plat recorded in Deed
Hovk “E,” page 58, in office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court, Hart
County, Georgia.
Terms of sale: Cash.
J. G. RICHARDSON,
Adur. of Est. of Edna I. McCurley,
deceased.
Petition For Deed
Geittgia— Haft County.
George S. Clark having applied to
the Ordinary by petition asking that
<C. W. Cash and J. C. Cash, as admin
-istrators of the estate of J. P. Cash,
deceased, late of said county, be re
quired to make him a deed to the fol
lowing described tract of land to
wit:
All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing and being in the county of Hart
and the State of Georgia and con
taining 75 acres, more or less, as is
fully aercribed by a plat and survey
of J. H. Warren, Surveyor. This
tract of land is bounded on the
North by the lands of Fannie Barnes,
on the East by lands of L. 0. Reid,
on the South by the lands of H. F.
Hailey estate and J. W. Harper, and
on the West by the lands of Geo. S.
Clark and W. Y. Buffington, and is
located in the 1118th District, G. M.,
of said State and County, and is a
part of the P. C. Cash homeplace.
In pursuance of a bond for title
made by the said P. C. Cash to
George S. Clark in the lifetime of P.
C. Cash, deceased, the said George
fi. Clark alleging that he has met his
obligations in said bond.
This is to notify P. C. Cash, J. C.
Cash, C. W. Cash, J. P. Cash, H. A.
Cash, Judson M. Shiflet, Mrs. J. R,
Vassar, Mrs. Fleet Holland, H. H.
Shiflet, Mrs. G, E. Holbrooks, Mrs.
S. A. Heaton, Mrs. M. M. Cleveland,
hr irs at law of the said P. C. Cash,
deceased, to be and appear at the
June Term, 1925, of the Court of
Ordinary of Hart county to show
cause, if any they have or can. why
the said administrators should not
he required to make to the said
George S. Clark a deed as prayed for
in his petition.
This May 4th, 1925.
J. W. SCOTT, Ordinary.
Reputation
It would be well if character and
reputation were used distinctively. In
truth, character is what a person is;
reputation Is what he is supposed to I
be. Character is in himsef. reputation
U in the minds of others. Character
u injured by temptations, and by
wrongdoing; reputation, by slanders
and libels. Character endures through
out defamation in every form, but per
isiies when there is a voluntary trans
gression ; reputation may last through
■■merous transgressions, but be de
stroyed by a single, nnd even an un- t
founded, accusation or aspersion.—Ab
bott.
Armed with long poles, two men
sure periodically engaged to dislodge
p'ijreon eggs from St. Paul s Cathe
dral in London. The eggs, when left
to roll off to the street below, often ■
jprove a nuisance.
The Sun Honor Roll
Robt. T. Wright, Hartwell 4.
Mrs. J. M. Crawford, City.
T. C. Neese, Hartwell 3.
C. S. Boles, Elberton 6.
J. C. Clark, Hartwell 2.
B. T. Brown, Hartwell 1.
J. W. Hinton, Canon 1.
A. B. Thompson, Hartwell 4.
B. T. Locke, Hartwell 1.
Will Senkbeil, Hartwell 2.
T. J. Pritchard, Canon 1.
J. L. Feltman, Hartwell 4.
J. A. Ayers, Hartwell 2.
W. B. Chastain, Hartwell 4.
Lee Bradley, Bowersville 1.
G. E. Rumsey, Hartwell 4.
W. J. Maret, Lavonia 2.
Chief W. H. Locke, City.
Mrs. V. G. Hawkins, Athens.
J. T. Banister, City.
L. B. York, Hartwell 2.
Mrs.- Mattie P. Webb, Akron, 0.
A. C. Duncan, Bowman.
G. S. Mize, Bowman 3.
W. H. Nixon, Hartwell 2.
John P. Tyler, Lavonia 2.
W. H. Gaines, Lake City, Fla.
Geo. T. Cason, Coco Solo, Canal
Zone.
H. M. Goodwin, Hartwell 2.
J. B. Hays, Hartwell 1.
L. L. Greenway, Hartwell 3.
Mrs. A. IL Williams, City.
Mrs. J. K. Harris, Avenger, Texas.
E. A. Parham, City.
J. W. Brock, Hartwell 4.
D. B. Evans, Hartwell 2.
T. A. Booth, Hartwell 4.
J. C. Kidd, City.
L. R. Cordell, Elberton 6.
Hugh Jones, Hartwell 5.
J. M. Purdy, Hartwell 4.
C .B. Jones, Hartwell 3.
J. M. Addison, City.
K .H. Cleveland, Hartwell 2.
E. T. Madden, Hartwell 4.
o
Franklin and His Kite
Os timely interest, in view of recent
doubt cast upon Benjamin Franklin’s
kite experiment, is the recent discov
ery of a letter written by Franklin on
the subject In a book published In
London In 1774, now in the library of
the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia,
says Popular Science Monthly. After
describing how to make the kite with
a pointed wire on the upright stick.
Franklin says:
“As soon as any of the thunder
clouds come over the kite, the pointed
wire will draw the electric fire from
them, and the kite, with all the twine,
will be electrified, and the loose fila
ments of the twine will stand out
every way and be attracted by an ap
proaching finger.”
] QhcWhij |
of
| Superstitions |
| By H IRPINQ KING |
SEWING ON THE BUTTON
IF A GIRL sewn a button on the
clothing of a single num of mar
riageable age it In a sign that she will
marry him within the year. Almost
anybody In the rural, districts of New
England can tell you that, and per
haps the superstition Is found In other
sections. At least superstitions of a
kindred nature are found In many
parts both of this country nnd Europe.
The superstition is based upon that
phase of sympathetic magic known as
the doctrine of knots. The making
of a physical knot of binding force
produces, on the theory of like caus
ing like, a spiritual effect of the same
nature.
As has been said before, to the an
cients what was associated In thought
was associated In fact. Knitting and
sewing were placed In this philosophy
In the same category as knots. AU
three conveyed the Idea of uniting
When a maiden, therefore, sews a but
ton on the coat of a bachelor the union
of the button and the coat by means
of the thread suggests the union of
herself and the young man upon whose
garment she Is operating. This sets
up the sympathetic magic of like pro
ducing like and the two young per
sons are by its operation bound to
gether, even as the button is bound to
the coat. The setting of the time
within which they will be married at
•within a year," is merely the sugges
tion of a reasonable time for the magic
to take effect and is frequently omit
ted. The point of the superstition Is
that they will be married before long
(© by McClure N»w»p«p«r Syndicate.)
o
ai
o
The actual voices of Florence
Nightingale, Lord Tennyson, Queen
Victoria and Gladstone are preserved
by means of phonograph records now
in the British Museum.
o
The longest fillibuster speech ever
delivered in Congress was made by
Senator Robert M. LaFollette, of
Wisconsin, in 1909 when he kept the
floor for nearly nineteen consecutive
hours, including one entire night He
was blocking a currency bill.
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., MAY 8,1925
Allan Dwan
v
A.
Not a ‘‘movie’ star, but a director
who la famous in the production end
of the game, is Allan Dwan. He was
born In Toronto, Canada. He was
educated in the public schools of Chi
cago and at Notre Dame university.
He had brief experience as an actor
in college plays and failed at play
writing. Later he produced scena
rios, and following a brief career in
writing picture plays he was given an
opportunity to direct, In which he has
proved highly successful.
l]our Last !
Rarne |
IS IT BEAN?
ONE of the earliest of Bean fami
lies In this country has the dis
tinction of having been of Jersey or
igin. That Is, the progenitor of the
family was a native of the Isle of
Jersey in the English channel. He
settled In Boston, Maae., in 1670.
There he died, leaving a widow and
three sons, Lewis, Ebenezer and Jo
seph. The widow Bean removed from
Boston to Maine, settling in York.
Ebenezer was killed by the tpdlans
and Joseph was captured and kept
captive for six years. Lewis became
the progenitor of all of his family in
the New world. One of his descend
ants was Eli Bean, a general in the
Civil war.
One branch of the Bean family In
this country was founded by John
Bean, a native of Scotland, who
settled In Exeter, N. IL, in 1060. His
descendants lived in Maine. Among
them Is to be found the name Joshua,
which seemingly does not appear in
the other Bean ftunily.
William Bean, a companion of Dan
iel Boone, was the first white settler
west of the Alleghenies. He explored
with Boone, returning to Kentucky
with his family In 1788 to make his
permanent home In the wilderness.
There are several suggestions as to
the origin of this name. The prob
ability is that with this name, as
with many others, there were several
independent origins in different local
ities where families of the name
sprang up. It is said that tn most
eases Bean is derived from the
Scottish “ban.” meaning white. It
has been thought that in certain sec
tions the bean is and was to an even
greater extent a crop of immense im
portance. When the name Is found
to have originated In Cornwall, Eng
land, It Is undoubtedly derived from
the worn “bean,” meaning In Cornla
small. Then it is an adjectival nick
name.
Waters.—Quite clearly this is a sur
name derived from Walter and not
from water in the present sense. It
has been pointed out that two or
three hundred years ago Walter was
always pronounced as If spelled
water, and the dropping of the silent
"I” in the surname would have been
n natural development.
(© by McClure Newepaper Syndicate.)
o
**************** **********
A LINE O’CHEER
By John Kendrick Bangs.
n 2
u, u, Ui »*■ »*» >1
if APOLOGY FOR FEBRUARY 2
11 TXT HEN February comes along 3
C W And hums her melancholy J
jJ song 3
H A little voice within me sings, J
it "Be patient with her mummar- 3
11 Ings 1
j • 'Tis not her fault that she draws a
near J
H This sad and solemn time of year ]
1I And there be places on this earth 3
11 Where she's a time of joy and 3
'' mirth, *
And gladness brings, with flow- 3
1 f ers gay 3
it To decorate the cheery way: 3
11 And if she seems to you to be J
A thing of winter, blustery.
'Tls but because with your own 3
j > eyes 3
11 You chance to view her in that 3
1 i guise. • *
if And do not seek her otherwhere *
■, In dimes more genial and fair.” 3
H£> b > McClure Newspaper Syndicate ) 2
it j
The less wife finds out about het
husband the more suspicious she is o>
his actions
STAR THEATRE
HARTWELL, GEORGIA
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, May 13,14,15
GREATEST OF ALL AMERICAN SPECTACLES
18,000 5,000 «’
PEOPLE SCENES
xLiiny
\ooc 1 ■ 3 BIG
HORSES BATTLES
D. W. GRIFFITH’S STIRRING EPIC
WITH ALL STAR CAST:
LILLIAN GISH MAE MARSH
H. B. WALTHAL MIRIAM COOPER
RALPH LEWIS MARY ALDEN
GEORGE SIEGMANN DONALD CROP
“Every real American should see
‘THE BIRTH OF A NATION’
At least once a year”
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■'■■■■ ■
■ Beginning next ;
i MONDAY, MAY 11 I
■ 7 I
: Michael’s Greatest Annual :
i May White Sale i
Z More than $40,000 worth of fine, Z
I new, perfect and wanted merchan- |
Z dise at savings of one fourth to one Z
Z half. Z
Included in this Great Sale arez
■ Sheets Dress Linens Corsets
Pillow Cases Art Linens Brassieres
Sheetings Linen Crash Silk Underwear
■ Muslins Table Linen Muslin Underwear ■
■ Cambrics Bath Towels Kimonas !
Percales Huck Towels Negligees J
■ Long Cloths Diaper Cloth Princess Slips ■
I Voiles Bath Mats Petticoats J
Madras Fancy Linens Nurses’ Dresses ■
Organdy Luncheon Sets Girls’ Dresses Z
■ Batiste Linen Cloths Wash Suits ■
" Nainsook Linen Napkins Infants’ Wear Z
■ Sans Soie Cotton Napkins Bed Spreads ■
Z Crepes Linen Lawns Laces |
Z BE SURE TO COME AND SAVE Z
: Athens Athens z
i MICHAEL’S I
■
■