Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY. JULY 28, 1949
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
SHERIFF'S SALE
GEORGIA, JACKSON COUNTY.
Will be sold at the Court House
door in said county on the first
Tuesday in August. 1949, within the
legal hours of sale, to-wit:
One 1934 2-door Ford Automobile,
License No. 28999, Motor No. 18-34-
49663.
One Piano.
One Electric Radio.
Said property levied on as the
property of J W Shubert to satisfy
an execution issued on the 10th day
of June, 1949, from the Justice Court
of the 245th District, G. M., of Jack
son County, Ga., in favor of O. L.
Singletary against J. W. Shubert.
This July 18th, 1949.
JOHN B. BROOKS, Sheriff.
SHERIFF'S SALE
GEORGIA, JACKSON COUNTY.
Will be sold before the Court
House door in said county on the
first Tuesday in August, 1949, with
in legal hours of sale, to-wit:
One 1948 Crosley Sedan Auto
mobile, Motor No. 60762.
Said property levied on as the
property of Homer Bone to satisfy
an execution issued on the 9th day
of June, 1949, from the Superior
Court of said county, in favor of
People’s Loan & Finance Corpora
tion against Homer Bone.
This 18th day of July, 1949.
JOHN B. BROOKS, Sheriff.
CITATION
APPLICATION TO SELL
GEORGIA, JACKSON COUNTY.
Grace Smallwood McClure as Ad
ministratrix of Mrs. E. L. Small
wood, deceased, has in due form
applied to the undersigned for
leave to sell the lands belonging to
said estate, and the same will be
heard at my office on the first Mon
day in August, next.
This, 4th day of July, 1949.
L. B. MOON, Ordinary.
DIVORCE NOTICE
MRS. BULAH LYNN MITCHEM,
vs.
LESLIE MITCHEM.
USE T-4-L FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT
BECAUSE—
It has greater PENETRATING
Power. With 90% undiluted alcohol
base, it carries the active medication
DEEPLY, to kill the germ on con
tact. Get happy relief IN ONE HOUR
or your 40c back at any drug store.
Today hi Moore & Ellington's.
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE HERALD ADVERTISERS TRY ITI
IT’S PLAY-TIME
at ;
THE BEACHES!
Travel in Comfortable Air-Conditioned Coaches or Pullmans
AT LOW ROUND-TRIP FARES.
NANCY HANKS II
LUXURY COACH STREAMLINER
Between Atlanta and Savannah
ALSO OTHER FINE TRAINS <~d
To South Georgia and Florida.
, —Ask—
ANY AGENT OR REPRESENTATIVE
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
INSURANCE —ALL KINDS!
Fire, Windstorm and Hail, Crop Insurance—
Hail Only, Life, Accident, and Hospitalization.
Prompt and courteous adjustments on all losses.
Careful attention to all business intrusted to us.
H. T. MOBLEY, General Insurance
Randolph Bldg.
Office Phone 211 Home Phone 228
Jefferson, Georgia
Suit for Divorce in Jackson Su
perior Court, August Term, 1949.
To Leslie Mitchem, Defendant in
said matter:
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear at the next term of the
Superior Court of Jackson County,
Georgia, to answer the complaint of
the plaintiff, mentioned in the cap
tion in her suit against yoxf for
divorce.
Witness the Honorable Clifford
Pratt, Judge of said court.
This the 28th day of May, 1949.
C. T. STOREY,
Clerk of Superior Court
(6-2, 23, 7-7, 28)
DIVORCE NOTICE
CHARLES WADE KESLER
v*.
MRS. DELENVA KESLER.
Suit for Divorce—Jackson Super
ior Court, August Term, 1949.
To Mrs. Delenva Kesler:
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear at the next term of the
Superior Court of Jackson County,
Georgia, to answer the complaint
of the plaintiff, mentioned in the
caption in his suit against you for
a divorce.
Witness the Honorable Clifford
Pratt, Judge of said court.
This the 28th day of May, 1949.
C. T. STOREY,
Clerk of Superior Court.
(6-2, 23, 7-7, 28)
PETITION FOR ADOPTION
PETITION TO ADOPT
ALVIN YATES VEAL
In the Superior Court of
Jackson County, Georgia.
To: MABEL RUTH PUGH,
Respondent:
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear to make objections, if
any you have, why the adoption
should not be made final at hearing
at the courthouse in Winder, Geor
gia, at 10 o’clock, A. M., on the 12th
day of November, 1949.
Witness the Honorable Clifford
Pratt, Judge of said Court, this the
4th day of June, ’949.
C. T. STOREY,
Clerk, Superior Court,
Jackson County, Georgia.
Jefferson Insurance Agency
General Insurance
Jefferson, Georgia
The Jackson Herald, Jefferson, Georgia
Forest Fire Damage Cut
By ‘Keep Green’ Program
Citizens of the state of Washing
ton are organized to prevent any
repetition of forest holocausts like
that which occurred in the state in
1902 causing millions of dollars
worth of damage.
In eight years this public spirited
group operating under the banner
“Keep Washington Green” has
worked wonders vn helping to re
duce the number of forest fires,
acreage burned, and resulting dol
lar loss to the state.
Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Wash
ington in a speech before the an
nual meeting of the Keep Green
group pointed out that in 1941 a
total of 1,446 man-caused forest
fires burned 46,600 acres. Last
year, he said, less than 500 fires,
including those caused by lightning,
burned a little more than 6,000
acres.
He gave credit to all the forest
protection forces in the state work
ing to prevent and suppress timber
fires, but particularly stressed the
splendid work the state and local
organizations of Keep Washington
Green has been doing in educating
the public on forest fire prevention.
The Keep Green program idea
was launched in 1941 in Washington
to enlist citizens’ support in reduc
ing the state’s forest fire damage.
Since then it has spread to 25 other
states under banners of Keep Flor
ida Green, Keep Maine Green, etc.
The program is sponsored nation
ally by American Forest Products
industries, an organization sup
ported by the lumber, pulp and
paper, and plywood industries.
Do not Blame the Shipper
For Poor Quality Potatoes
If potatoes found on the retail
market are of poor quality, the
fault is probably centered around
the conditions under which they
were grown and harvested. The
tubers suffer very little from the
handling they receive in transit
and merchandising, investigations
conducted by W. A. Lee and M. J.
Caraccia, agricultural economists
of the- Pennsylvania agricultural
experiment station, indicate.
Numerous inspections were made
last fall of potatoes originating in
nearby counties and destined for
the Philadelphia markets. Eighty
five lots inspected at shipping
points averaged 5 per cent grade
defects; 121 lots in wholesale ware
houses, 5.6 per cent; and 138 lots
in retail stores, 5.8 per cent. Ex
ternal defects of these potatoes
ranged from 93 to nearly 100 per
cent of total defects. Old 'cuts,
bruises and sunburn accounted for
almost- three-fourths of all defects.
In a midwinter investigation con
ducted in Philadelphia stores a
year ago 1,242 lots were inspected,
which averaged 14 per cent exter
nal defects. These potatoes origin
ated in various parts of the United
States and only 20 lots had no ex
ternal defects. Only 3 per cent of
the external defects consisted of
new cuts and bruises.
Our Weight on Moon
How much would a person who
weighs 200 pounds on the earth
weigh on the moon and other
planets? He would weigh about 33
pounds on the moon, 58 pounds on
Mercury, 172 pounds on Vends, 74
pounds on Mars, 528 pounds on
Jupiter and 234 pounds on Saturn,
while at the surface of the sun his
weight would be about 5580 pounds.
This depends both upon the mass
of the planet and its size. Jupiter,
for example, is about 318 times
as massive as the earth but the sur
face of Jupiter is about 11 times as
far from the center as we are
from the center of the Earth. This
reduces the net effect, so that the
force of gravity on Jupiter is only
about 2.64 times that which we ex
perience.
It’s No “Cow Town”
Long famous for its livestock and
meat packing industries, Fort
Worth, Tex., continues to be the
largest livestock market and pack
ing center in the South, and now is
the largest sheep market in the
nation. It also claims an industry
of the imminent present—the most
important military aircraft produc
*ion in the world. It has the world’s
largest aircraft factory, Consoli
dated-Vultee, and is also the head
quarters of Convair. Adjacent to
Convair is Maj. Gen. Roger M.
Ramey’s Eighth air force.’This air
force, employing the giant B-36
superbomber, is the only atomic
bombing military organization in
the world.
“Air-Conditioned Capital”
Phoenix calls itself the “air con
ditioned capital of the world”—and
with justification. All homes, res
taurants, office buildings, theaters,
hotels and motor courts are cooled
by refrigeration or air condition
ing, assuring complete comfort at
all times. Motorists traveling over
state highway 87 and those on U. S.
highway 80 and 89 certainly should
pause to visit the Casa Grande na
tional monument, located only a
few miles from the town of Cool
idge. Those funneling into the state
from the east on U. S. highway 60
pass through the very heart of the
Fort Apache Indian reservation, of
fering sights seen nowhere else.
—— 111
3} THE
TBSBH
L swu
PR. KENNETH I. FOREMAN
SCRIPTURE: Psalms 34; 37; 40; 91*;
1 .AL READING: Isaiah 26:1-10.
God Can Be Trusted
Lesson for July 31, 1949
EVEN if you do nothing else with
this lesson, it will be a good
thing to learn by heart some of the
Psalms of Trust which have been
selected for your study this week.
They are -far too rich to be treated
in one column.
* ♦ *
Who Can Trust in God?
(pSALM 34:16-22.) Not every one
* has a right to trust in God.
Those who do not believe in him,
do not love him, work against him,
try to break down
and corrupt those
who do believe in
him these need
expect nothing at
his hand. But there,
are three classes
of persons who are
encouraged to put
their trust in God.
One is the “con
trite,” the repen-
aft.'
Dr. Foreman
tant, those who
sincerely wish to be cut free from
their sins—these can surely trust
in God for forgiveness. One who
cannot trust God for forgiveness
has no right to trust him for any
thing else. Then the “righteous,”
as the Psalmist calls them, have a
right to trust in God.
If that word means only the
perfectly and altogether good
people, it would leave all of us
out But in the light of the
Bible as a whole, the righteous
are those whose dominant de
sire is to love and serve God.
Their service is imperfect, their
love is far from perfect, and no
man is without sin. But if you can
say with Peter, “Lord, thou know
est that I love thee,” then you
have a right to trust in God. Also
the broken-hearted can safely trust
in him.-" Whoever else may break
your heart, God will not. He is the
great Mender of hearts. For the lit
tle sorrows there may be lesser
comforters; but the real heart
breaks only God can cure.
• * •
Why Trust God?
pSALM 37 gives one answer: The
* opposite of tru3t is worry, and
worry never did any good at all.
Worry eats into the mind, casts no
light, gives no strength, solves no
problems, worry makes any trouble
worse. Then the writer of Psalm
30 gives another reason for trust :•
he had tried it. If trust in God were
simply a doctrine of theology or a
theory of preachers, not many peo
ple would take it seriously.
Trust is really passed on by
a kind of contagion from heart
to heart. If there are not more
people who know what trust
means, it is because those who
have known have kept it too
much to themselves.
It would be a wonderful stimulus
to most churches to have a little
“cell” of people who would really
agree to trust God every day.
* * •
W’hen to Trust in God
/"%Ne of Dicken’s famous charac
ters used to make a great
point of being cheerful under the
most un-cheerful circumstances.
Anybody can be jolly when every
thing is lovely, he said. There’s no
credit in not worrying when there’s
nothing to worry about. Although
the writers of the Bible, one and all,
trusted in God, not one had an easy
life. Read Psalm 46, for example;
it gives a picture of a world much
like ours of today, shaken to its
foundations, torn by wars, a deso
late, discouraged world. If it made
sense to trust only under bright
skies, religion would have perished
long ago.
• • •
For What Shall
We Trust God?
ONE PSALM puts the whole
truth in one nutshell. If you
read Psalm 91, for example, by it
self, it would seem to prove that if
you trust in God you will never die
a violent death, nor an early one;
but too many saints (and indeed our
Lord himself) had died early and
violent deaths, for us to take
Psalm 91 in that way. Trusting in
God does not mean he will give us
long life. It means he will give us
strength to match our days.
• It does mean he will give us
all we need. It does not medn
we shall be shielded from troub
les. It does mean he will save
us from troubles greater than
we can bear. It does not mean
that in this life we shall be
wholly free from burdens or
front pain; It does mean we
shall have strength in our
souls <Ps. 138:3).
Which is the greater thing—to be
a weakling wearied by h straw’s
weight, or to be one of God’s ath
letes, able to bear the worst the
world can pile on?
'Copyright bv the International Council
of Religious Education on behalf of 40
Protestant denominations. Released by
WNU Features>
Jury List
JACKSON SUPERIOR COURT
GRAND JURY
The following were drawn to serve
as Grand Jurors during the August
Term, 1949, Jackson Superior Court:
(Name) (District No.)
G. O. SHACKELFORD, 1747.
T. O. TURNER, 253. '
C. J. HARDMAN, 255.
E. L. WILK!j>, 245.
J. R. MOON, 248.
A. C. HILL, 1407.
R. M. DAVIDSIN, 255.
LAWRENCE L. WILLIAMSON.
L. P. HIX, 255.
J. C. WHEELER, 465.
COMER. D. FOWLER, 255.
H. D. DADISMAN, 245.
J. FOSTER ECKLES, 245.
ALVIN BENTON, 253.
R. H. GILBERT, 428.
R. H. McEVER, 1691.
DEAN S. LOTT, 1407.
BROADUS W. CASH.
R. P. COOPER, 242.
GARNETT A. SPRATLIN.
A. M. HEAD, 257.
GROVER H. COLEMAN, 253.
H. P. BARNETT, 245.
H. L. GARRISON, 245.
HOPE M. HARRIS, 257.
W. T. LANGFORD, 257.
L. G. HARDMAN, JR., 255.
C. H. BEARD, 255.
KING MURPHY, 1691.
J. H. KINNEY, 1691.
FIRST WEEK
The following were drawn to
serve as Traverse Jurors during the
August Term, 1949. Jackson Su
perior Court:
(Name) (District No.)
N. H. Perry, Jr., 255.
Edgar E. Jewell, 253.
J. D. Alexander, 1704.
W. D. Bolton, 255. ■
Richard M. Nix, 255.
J. Nelson Nix, 255.
D. S. Berryman, Sr., 245.
Leo G. Black, 255.
F. D. Vandiver, 257.
John W. Hardy, 245.
T. D. Storey, 245.
J. F. Thomas, 428.
H. C. Sims, 255.
R. H. Whitehead, 245.
Lewis Sailors, 245.
W. M. McDonald, 257.
Guy McGinnis, 257.
Homer L. Wilbanks, 255.
John L. Moore, Sr., 428.
C. L. Brooks, 1704.
Jesse T. Bell, 1765.
Lewis H. Vandiver, 257.
H. E. Davis, 245.
Harvey J. Dailey, 245.
G. N. Breazeale.
Hugh D. Maley, 257.
W. E. Farmer; 253.
J. Frank Palmer, 253.
Ford Mcßee, 257.
Hoke D. Arthur, 257.
Roy Lacey, 255.
R. J. Kelly, 245.
L. W. Eberhardt, 465.
Jack B. Dunson, 255.
W. H. Nunn, 257.
Birdie Seagraves, 253.
William H. Booth, 257. •
J. FOSTER ECKLES
INSURANCE
Jefferson,
JEFFERSON LOAN & INVESTMENT CO.
CONFIDENTIAL SHORT TIME LOANS—SS.OO TO $50.00
Opposite Court House, South Side Phone No. 30
WM. H. SPRATLIN. JR.. Mgr. JEFFERSON. GA.
RUPTURE
C " •■■• veiled N propeH r protected. See ut before Hli tee late.
THE DOBBS TRUSS IS DIFFERENT
Me Mto-Rt Mb-to Straps. HMs nptere ie m 4 * Mu the bmL
Ixeluslv Distributor*
MOORE & ELLINGTON DRUG CO.
Rufus W. O’Kelly, 255.
Elmer O. Minish, 255.
Luther N. Cole, 255.
Mose Gordon, 255.
J. Morgan Wilhite, 257.
R. V. Richey, Jr., 255.
Carl H. Legg, 245.
Otis B. Hawks, 253.
J. Hoke Gurley, 255.
T. A. Harber, 255.
Roy W. Robertson, 242.
J. E. Jarrell, 255.
T. J. Aderholdt, 255.
SECOND WEEK
The following were drawn lo serve
as Traverse Jurors during fhe Sec
ond W'eek of August Term, 1949,
Jackson Superior Court:
(Name) (District No.)
Thomas K. Miller, 465.
Gilmer Mauldin, 255.
Rufus F. Hooper, 245.
A. W. Brooks, 1704.
J. C. Alexander, 245.
C. Y. Tolbert, 253.
W. J. Massey, Sr., 257.
Burley M. Hemphill, 255.
L. M. Boone, 465.
W. A. Barnett, 1465.
Leonard M. Bolton, 255.
A. A. Frost, 245.
Luther Potts, 253.
Andrew J. Nash, 1747.
H. H. Turner, 428.
T. N. Mize, 255.
M. D. Freeman, 253.
Clarence Chandler, 255.
Walter W. Banks, 248.
Alvin E. Evans, 257.
Tom D. Reidling, 255.
Miles W. Matthews, 1704.
Terrell W. Benton, 245.
J. Lester Legg, 245.
W. L. Smith, 255.
Lester M. Cooper, 1765.
W. W. Foster, 255.
Hoyt E. Nunn, 257.
Guy Maley, 257.
I. L. Ethridge, 245.
P. L. Duncan, 1747.
M. L. Lowe, 1747.
Johnston McCorkle, 255.
R. T. Griffeth, 455.
Robert D. Mathews, 245.
R. D. Moore, 245.
H. O. Lyle, 245.
John T. Hale, 1747.
Fred H. Baird, 1765.
G. Hubert Martin, 245.
Harry C. Thurmond, 1747.
F. H. Adams, 255.
Coy Short, 255. j
Keff Short, 255.
Lam H. Kesler, 245.
Marvin A. Sikes, 242.
O. J. Dunson, 465.
John A. Thurmond, 253.
W. T. Cody, 245.
Claud G. Barnett, 257. ,
B. M. Reynolds, 255.
Ezra Hiland, 465.
Enoch Brown, 245.
Harold M. Jarrett, 1704.
H. O. Parks, 257.
Groves Murphy, 1691.
J. O. Wallace, 253.
Ralph D. Landrum, 255.
Herman E. Barnett, 257.
Virgil Brooks, 1407.