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t ...„, < DAY. JUNE .4, 14.
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AUTHORIZED SOUTHEASTERN FORD DEALERS FORD 717*™'
J. FOSTER ECKLES
AGENT
FIRE AND TORNADO INSURANCE
JEFFERSON, GEORGIA.
SALE UNDER POWER
Georgia, Jackson County. Because
of default in the payment of a loan
secured by a deed to secure debt
executed by W. J. Herrin to the un
dersigned, The Peoples Bank, Win
der, Georgia, dated March 8, 1929,
and recorded in the Office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Jack
son County, Georgia, in Book “YY”,
page 38-9, the undersigned has de
clared the full amount of the loan
with interest and advances made by
the undersigned due and payable,
and will, on the 3rd day of July,
1934, acting under the power of
sale contained in said deed, during
the legal hours of sale, at the court
house in said county, sell at auction
to the highest bidder for cash, the
lands described in said deed, to-wit:
All that track or parcel of land ly
ing and being in the 245th Land Dis
trict, Jackson County, Georgia, and
being a part of the W. J. Whitehead
farm in the forks of the Mulberry
and the Middle Oconee Rivers on the
River road, and being Lot No. 13
therein according to plat made of
said farm by C. O. Pittman and re
corded in Book “MM”, page 383, in
the Office of the Clerk of the Super
'or Court of Jackson County, Geor
gia. Said lot contains 75.52 acres,
more or less. The undersigned will
execute a deed to the purchaser as
authorized by the deed aforesaid,
fhis the first day of June, 1934.
THE PEOPLES BANK,
Winder, Ga.
By: C. 0. Maddox, Cashier.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
Georgia, Jackson County. Where
as. Green Braselton, administrator
Urs. M. C. Baird, represents to
the court in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has
-ally administered Mrs. M. C.
.aird’s estate; This is, therefore, to
Cl te all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause, if any
they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his
administration, and receive letters
' f dismission on the first Monday in
Jul Y. 1934. This June 4th, 1934.
W. W. DICKSON, Ordinary.
NOTICE
E. H. Parrott vs. J. H. Fleming,
Mrs. Hunter Galloway, Miss Lucy
Fleming, W. T. Brightwell, J. P.
Brightwell, Guy W. Brightwell, Mrs.
W. H. Cabaniss, Mrs. Cora Bright*
well, Chas. Brightwell, Jane Bright
well, Louise Lacy, Geo. C. Lacy,
Leon Callaway, Mrs, Sallie F. Dav
enport; Heirs at Law of Thos. Flem
ing.
No February Term, 1934,
Jackson Superior Court; Equitable
Petition.
Notice is hereby given to the do*
fendants, J. H. Fleming, Mrs. Hun
ter Galloway, Miss Lucy Fleming,
and Guy W. Brightwell, that the pe
tition of E. H. Parrott praying the
cancellation of certain security
deeds executed by Mrs. Cornelia M.
Parrott to Thos. Fleming, same con
stituting a cloud upon the plaintiff s
title, will be heard before me at
Jefferson, Georgia, on the 6th day
of August, 1934, and defendants are
then and there required to show
cause before me, if any they have,
why the prayers of plaintiff’s pe
tition should not be granted.
This 3rd day of May, 1934.
W. W. STARK,
Judge of Superior Court, Jackson
County, Georgia.
C. T. Storey, Jr.,
Clerk of Superior Court, Jackson
County, Georgia.
YEAR’S SUPPORT
Georgia, Jackson County. To All
Support to“C 3 c. Sett*
nnte irood *nd sufficient cause i.
/ court of Ordi
”,rl'WTlW.Jd”cKSo’N, Ordinary.
THE JACKSON HERALD. JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
,f£ THE CORN
‘ jriFERTigZER
/ffV Aero OwnutaA.
ffl CYANAMID
THERE IS NO BETTER
NITROGEN FERTILIZER
Put under the crop, Aero Cvana
mid gives the corn a quick start and
stays with it throughout the season.
Used as a side-dressei, Afro
Cyanamid gives the corn an extra
kick and puts on the ears.
Casa*
Actual farm tests show [I 1
i that a 100-pound bag
\ of 'Aero’ Cyanamid will j
. make 10 bushels of corn |i
•
FOR SALE BY
H. I. MOBLEY
Jefferson, Georgia.
AERO CYANAMID IS
NITROGEN plus LIME
The bristles of hair brushes that
have become old and limp may
stiffened from time to time by dip
ping them in a strong solution <d
alum and water.
NOTICE
Mrs. Bernice Wood Goodwin Vs.
Roy G. Goodwin.
Number 1737. Petition for a Di
vorce. In Jackson Superior Court,
August Term, 1934.
To the Defendant, Roy G. Good
win. The plaintiff, Mrs. Bernice
Wood Goodwin, having brought her
petition for divorce and against Roy
G. Goodwin, in this court, return
able to this term of said court, and
it being made to appear that Roy G.
Goodwin’s residence is unknown,
and no way to locate same, and an
order haying been taken for service
on him by publication, this is, there
fore, to notify you, Roy G. Goodwin,
to be and appear at the next term of
Jackson .Superior Court to be held
on the first Monday in August
1934, then and there to answer said
complaint.
Witness, the Honorable W. W.
Stark, Judge of the Superior Court.
This the 29th day of May, 1934.
C. T. Storey, Jr., Clerk.
Children's Coughs
Need Creomulsion
Always set the best, fastest and surest
treatment for your child’s cough or cold.
Prudent mothers more and more are turn
ing to Creomulsion for any cough or cold
that starts.
Creomulsion emulsifies creosote with six
other important medicinal elements which
soothe and heal the inflamed membranes.
It is not a cheap remedy, hut contains no
narcotics and is certain relief. Get a bottle
from your druggist right now and have it
ready for instant use. (adv.)
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION
Georgia, Jackson County. To All
Whom It May Concern t J. M. Rich
ardson having, in proper form, ap
plied to me for permanent letters of
administration on the estate of J.
W. Richardson, late of said county,
this is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next of kin of J. W.
Richardson 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 J. M. Rich
ardson on J. W. Richardson’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture, this 4th dav of June, 1934.
W. W. DICKSON, Ordinary.
Never throw away sour milk.
Keep it covered with a piece of
muslin until required and use for
making scones. It will make them
beautifully light.
Five Babies Owe Lives To
Skill Of Country Doctor
North Bay, Ont.—l have talked to
Dr. A. R. Dafoe, the kindly country
physician who is fighting to save the
lives of the Dionne quintuplets.
He has tod me about their birth,
the illness of their mother, their diet
and their chances to survive their
strange and premature birth.
I have talked to Mrs. Alex Lee
gros, the neighbor woman who got
up at 4 a. m. May 28 to help Mrs.
Olivia Dionne through a childbirth
—and found she had walked in on
a phenomenon.
I flew here from Cleveland to
reach the spot on which the world’s
attention is focused—the tiny four
roomed log cabin where a medical
miracle is occurring.
Kindly, But Blunt
It is taking place under the di
rection of a short, stocky country
doctor who never expected that he
was stepping into the path of fame
when he chose to set up his practice
among the simple people of the
north woods.
He is kindly, but he has the un
ruffled bluffness which comes to a
country doctor who has to deal with
people who are stubborn about medi
cine and medical care.
He was not called in on the Dion
ne confinement until a week before
the five little girls were born. He
found Mrs. Dionne suffering from a
kidney ailment.
“Ernest Dionne, the husband of
the sick woman and the father of
her six children, didn’t want a
doctor,” Dr. Dafoe says.
Didn’t Want Doct or
“He reasoned that the other six
were born with only the help of a
neighbor woman, and the one that
was coming—as far as he knew it
was only one—could manage on the
same basis.
“I told him that he could either
get a hired girl or plan to get anew
wife,” the bluff practitioner said.
There will be another brush be
tween the father and the doctor
when the father comes back from
conferring with a representative of
the Chicago World’s Fair.
Bars Trip For Babies
The doctor isn’t at all enthusiastic
about the idea of taking the five fra
gile bits of feminine life on a trip.
“As long as I’m boss,” he said,
“there will be no trip anywhere for
these babies. The father can go
if he wants to, but not the children.”
Dr. Dafoe isn’t getting much sleep
these days. The quintuplets take
most of his time and he has the rest
of his practice to attend to, besides.
He had been up all night at an
other cabin. That was a. confine
ment case too. But it was just a
single baby.
In spite of his sleeplessness, he
was still pleasant and unruffled.
“I’m used to this,” he said. “Used
to losing sleep and used to bringing
babies. I have one every day. I
guess I’ve had 1,500 in the 26 years
I’ve practiced here, but these are
my first quintuplets.”
Flooded With Queries
The pockets of Dr. Dafoe are
jammed with letters from medical
men far and wide. They ask ques
tions about the triplets. Are their
organs normal? Yes, says Dr. Da
foe.
Are they fraternal quintuplets,
born from five separate germs, or
identical quintuplets, all from one
germ? Identical, says Dr. Dafoe.
Mrs. Leegros isn’t taking the mat
ter so calmly.
She is still trembling.
In charming broken English, she
told about the experience she en
countered that eventful morning.
She Still Tremble*
“One baby is nothing,” she said.
“I know what to do in such cases.
But when three had come, I did not
know what to do. I was so nervous
that I shook. Then, thank the good
Lord, the doctor came.
“The worry was off my mind
then, but I still had plenty of work
to do. I had to light the stove. I
had to tend the other children. I
should say I was busy. I am not
over that night, yet. See, I still
tremble.”
At first the babies were fed cow’s
milk, mixed with corn syrup. They
were fed with eye-droppers. But
now Dr. Dafoe has ordered natural
human milk.
The babies have a good chance of
surviving, Dr. Dofae says. If they
can pull through the three weeks
which should still have been part of
a normal pregnancy, they have the
normal child’s chance of living.
Pat* One Great Danger
They have already passed one
great danger—the danger of death
which threatens every child born of
a multiple pregnancy.
The first official weight of the
PAGE THREE
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Last Week’s Locals.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Simmons and
little daughter, Bobbie, and Misa
Vera White were week-end guests of
relatives and friends at Talmo.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Elliott and
family of Commerce were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. White and fami
ly Saturday night.
Miss Bert Bailey was guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Laster Porter Sunday.
Miss Hilda Blackstock spent Sun
day at the home of Mrs. R. L. Bail
ey.
Miss Geraldine Elliott is guest of
Miss Rachel Jackson this week.
Mr. Fred Jackson spent Saturday
night with his mother at Commerce.
Miss Janelle Elliott of Commerce
is guest of Miss Vera White this
week.
Mr. Edd Wright’s many friends
are glad he is able to be out again.
Miss Martha Jo Blackstock was
guest of Miss Hazel Turner Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Rastus Harbin were
week-end guests of relatives at Dry
Pond.
Mrs. R. L. Bailey was the guest
of her daughter, Mrs. Clarence
Blackstock, Tuesday night.
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o BROCKTON o
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Last Week’s Locals.
Mr. Nay Duke of Jefferson spent
Saturday night with Mr. Geo. H.
Webb.
Miss Charlotte Cash of Pender
grass spent Saturday night with
Mrs. Ernest Kesler.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred McGinnis of
Black’s Creek, and Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Hutcheson of Kite, were in
our community Saturday p. m.
Mr. Bill W6bb of this place, and
Miss Holland of near Jefferson,
were happiiy marred Saturday p. m.
We wish lht ( m a long and happy life.
Miss Clifford Kesler has accepted
a position in Jefferson with Mr. W.
H. Hosch.
Misses Oris Massey and Kathleen
Venable spent Sunday and Sunday
night in Commerce with Mr. and
Mrs. J. N. Thurman.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Dickson of
Jefferson were visiting relatives here
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kesler spent
Sunday in Nicholson with Mrs.
Daisy Smith.
Misses Geneva Wilbanks and
Mary Sue Harmon of Nicholson are
visiting in the home of Mr. Oscar
Nabors.
The Woman’s Club met with Mrs.
Boyd Kesler Monday p. m. An in
teresting meeting was held.
Mr. Cordis Thurman of Athens
was visiting relatives here Sunday.
Mr. Stanley Kesler of Jefferson
passed through our burg Sunday a.
m.
babies was exactly 12 pounds—all
together, with their clothes on.
Take off four ounces for the clothes.
All expenses for food and sup
plies are being taken care of by the
Toronto Red Cross. The Ontario
Relief commission has promised to
see that nothing is lacking.
Road Is Difficult One
I found the road to the Dionne
cabin a difficult one. Two cars can
not pass. Sharp rocks stick up every
few feet. Roller-coaster dips and
curves abound. It took us 30 minu
tes to travel two and a half miles
from Callander, the nearest town.
When we got there, we found the
house placarded with signs in French
and English telling visitors to stay
away.
Besides the signs, there were
guards recruited from among the
neighbor men. Armed with clubs,
they protect the privacy of the Dion
ne cabin.
Such protection is needed, be
cause hundreds of curious persons
are congregating here. They come
in automobiles of all sorts over the
narrow, bumpy road and they come
afoot through the woods and the
clearings.
Thought It Wasn’t Newt
They are telling a story about the
naivete of the world’s most famous
father.
When Ernest Dionne had recover
ed from his dismay at learning that
his family of children had sudden
ly leaped from six to eleven,
what with the mortgage and all, he
bethought himself that people might
be interested to learn that five ba
bies were bom at once to his wife.
So he had his brother call up the
local newspaper.
“How much,” the brother asked
the newspaper’s city editor, “would
it cost to have an item put in the
paper about five babies being born?’*