Newspaper Page Text
SEPTEMBER SHERIFF SALE
GEORGIA— Lamar County.
Will be sold at the City Hall, the
place where public sales are held, in
the City of Barncsville, on the first
Tuesday in September, 1922, between
the hours of 10 o’clock A. M. anil 4
o’clock P. M., to the highest bidder
for cash, the following property, to
wit:
Ten and one-quarter acres of land
situated on the right hand side of the
road leading from Barnesville toward
Zebulon, in the Seventh Land Dis
trict of Lamar County, about one
mile from Barnesville, and bounded
north by J. L. Kennedy; west by J.
L. Kennedy; south by Dan Smith;
and east by Washington Park.
Said land levied on and to be sold
as the property of Helena B. Cobb to
satisfy a fifa issued from the Justice
Court of the 533rd District, G. M., in
favor of G. W. Me Broom.
This, August 2, 1922.
Z. T. ELLIOTT, Sheriff,
Lamar County, Ga.
CITATION
GEORGIA —Lamar County.
Mrs. J. A. Brock, having made ap
plication for twelve months support
out of the estate of J. A. Brock, and
appraisers duly appointed to set
apart the same having filed their re
turn, all persons concerned are here
by required to show cause before the
Court of Ordinary of said county on
the first Monday in September, 1922,
why said application should not be
granted.
This, the 7th day of August, 1922.
B. H. HARDY, Ordinary
CITATION
Court of Ordinary, of Lamar County,
Georgia. Petition for Probate of
Will in Solemn Form.
To Sam Gardner, Will Gardner and
Mrs. Fannie Pate, heirs at law:
James Ibert Taylor having applied,
as executor, for probate in solemn
form the last will and testament of
James F. Gardner of said county,
you, and each of you, as heirs at
law of said James F. Gardner, being
a non-resident of this State, are
hereby required to be and appear at
the Court of Ordinary for said coun
ty on the first Monday in September,
1922, when said application for pro
bate will be heard, and show cause,
if any you can or have, why the
prayer of the petition should not be
had and allowed.
This, 7th day of August, 1922.
B. H. HARDY, Ordinary
Petition for Condemnation
Herman M. Johnson, Solicitor, vs.
F. R. Wetsel.
In the City Court of Barnesville,
Lamar County, Georgia, October
term, 1922. Petition for condemna
tion of Car used to illegally trans
port intoxicants.
To F. R. Wetsel, defendant.
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear at the next term of the
City Court of Barnesville, to be held
on the third Monday in October,
1922, and make your answer in the
above named stated case, as required
by the order of said court.
Witness the Honorable J. F. Red
ding, Judge of the City Court of
Barnesville, this the 4th day of Au
gust, 1922.
S < J. CHILDERS,
Clerk of the City Court of Barnes
ville.
appucationTor
CHARTER
GEORGIA—Lamar County.
To the Superior Court of said
county.
The petition of 11. J. Kennedy and
Mrs. Effie Baird, of the said county,
shows to the Court the following
facts:
lat. Petitioners, together with
their associates, desire to be incor
porated under the name of
KENNEDY & BAIRD TRADING
• COMPANY,
for the period of twenty years, with I
the right to renew said charter at the
expiration of said time. The object
•of said corporation is pecuniary gain
and to carry on and maintain a gen
eral trading business in the city of
Barneaville, and to buy and sell live
stock, to buy, hold and sell real estate
and personal property suitable to
purpose of corporation, to buy and
sell grain, produce, cotton, cotton
seed and hulls, coal, shingles and any
other article or articles that may be
dealt in by said corporation, and to
make contracts, borrow money, loan
money, to sue and be sued and do
any and all acts that may be neces
sary in the operation of said business.
2nd. The principal place of busi
ness will be in the city of Barnes
ville in the said county of Lamar.
3rd. The capital stock of said cor
poration shall be Three Thousand
Dollars ($3,000.00) with the option
and privilege of increasing this
amount to Thirty Thousand Dollars
($30,000.00) by a majority vote*of
the stockholders. The capital stock
shall be divided into shares of One
Hundred Dollars each, and they de
sire to begin in business when ten
per cent of the capital stock is paid
in. Petitioners desire the right to
| have the subscriptions to said capital
|.stock paid in money or property to be
| taken at a fair valuation.
4th. Petitioners desire that said
Corporation may have the right to
J elect a Board of Directors, a Presi-
I dent, Vice-President and Secretary
1 and Treasurer by a vote of its stock
holders, and to have and make all
proper and necessary by-laws, rules
and regulations that are necessary
and may be proper for the carrying
on of said business and also to have
and U3e a common seal.
Wherefore, petitioners file this
their petition in the office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court, and
pray that after the same has been
advertised by law, that the Court by
proper order grant this petition.
H. J. KENNEDY,
Attorney for Petitioners.
Filed in office, this Bth day of Au
gust, 1922.
S. J. CHILDERS,
Clerk Superior Court.
Georgia, Lamar County.
Office of the Clerk of the Superior
Court of Lamar County.
I, S. .1, Childers, Clerk of the Su
perior Court of Lamar County, here
by certify that the foregoing is a true
and correct copy of the application
for a Charter, as the same appears of
file in this office.
This, Bth day of August, 1922.
S. J. CHILDERS,
8-31 Clerk Superior Court.
NOTICE OF SALE
Whereas, Comeile S. Marchman,
of Upson county, Georgia, by his war
ranty deed dated August 27, 1918,
and duly recorded in Book 12 at page
66 of the Land Records of Pike
County, Georgia, conveyed to the
Pearsons-Taft Land Credit Company,
a corporation, the following described
real estate, then in Pike County,
Georgia, now in Lamar County, Geor
gia, to-wit:
Beginning on the Northwest corner
of Lot Forty-seven (47); thence run
East along the North line of said lot,
91 rods; thence South 120 rods;
thence West 63 rods; thence South
63 rods; thence West along the South
lines of Lots Forty-seven (47) and
Fifty (50), 117 rods, thence North
183 rods to the North line of Lot
Fifty (50); thence East 89 rods to
place of beginning. In the Eighth
(Bth) Land District, containing 180.8
acres, more or less.
To secure the promissory note of
said Corneile S. Marchman for the
sum of One Hundred Ten ($110.00)
Dollars, payable in installments, and
in said deed provided that in event
of the default in the payment of any
installment of said note said Com
pany might declare the unpaid bal
ance thereof at once due and payable
and sell said land for the payment
thereof; and,
Whereas, the installment of said
note due March 1, 1922, was not paid
when due and is still unpaid and said
Company has declared the unpaid bal
ance of said note now due and pay
able;
Now, therefore, the Pearsons-Taft
Company, formerly the Pearsons-
Taft Land Credit Company, under
and by virtue of the power and au
thority in said Company vested by
said warranty deed, will proceed to
sell the above described real estate
and appurtenances thereunto belong
ing at public sale to the highest bid
der for cash at the door of the Court
House in the City of Barnesville,
State of Georgia, at the hour of 11
A. M., on the Bth day of September,
1922, for the purpose of paying said
indebtedness and the costs of said
•sale.
As provided in said deed, said sale
will be subject to the rights of the
holder of that certain principal note
for the sum of Two Thousand
($2000.00) Dollars and interest
thereon at six per cent from March
1, 1922, described in and secured by
that certain warranty deed recorded
in Book 12 at pages 64-5 of the Land
Records of Pike County, Georgia.
In W’itness Whereof, the said Pear
sons-Taft Company has caused these
presents to be executed by its Presi
dent and its corporate seal to be af
fixed this 4th day of August, 1922.
PEARSONS-TAFT COMPANY,
8-31 By Oren E. Taft, President.
Bulbs of the tiger lily are eaten
by the Chinese and Japanese.
o
A TONIC
•rove’s Tasteless chill Toole restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
strengthening, invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigor
ating Effect 60c.
GOULD NOT
TURN IN BED
Operation Avoided by Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’* Veg
etable Compound
Dayton, Ohio.—“l had such pains that
I had to be turned in bed every time I
iiimiini imilll'l w ' s^e<^lo move. They
: ! JnJJJJj I! said an operation was
immmill necessary. My
üBPJP%jriPJ mother would keep
ay in: ‘ Why don’t
3faay| you take Pinkham’s,
W"*'-' ** TeH Henrietta?’ and I’d
f* * HHI 8ay > mamma, it
S L*. won’t help me, I’ve
lift ~ fn|| tried too much. ’ One
llllV „ d| dayshesaid, ‘Let me
MP I K et y° u one bottle of
each kind. You won’t
/W' v . ——be out very much if
it don’t help you.’ I don’t know if you
will believe me or not, but I only took
two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound and one of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Blood Medicine when I began
to get relief and I am regular ever since
without a pain or a headache..
When I lie down I can get up without
help and without pain. I can’t begin to
tell you how I feel and look. I have be
fun to gain in weight and look more like
ought to. I think everyday of ways
I have been helped. Any one who does
not believe me can write to me and I
will tell them what shape I was in. I am
ready to do anything I can to help your
medicine.” —Mrs. Henrietta Miller,
137 Sprague St., Dayton, Ohio.
If you have any doubt write to Mrs.
Miller and get her story direct.
A small flock of chickens and ducks
was hatched out of the cook’s eight
cases of Australian eggs while the
ship Matzalan lay helpless in the dol
drums with the thermometer at 102
off the coast of Tacoma, Wash. The
flippers of a giant sea turtle were
cooked for food for the baby chicks,
and when the ducklings appeared a
tub of water was kept on deck for
the youngsters to bathe in.
CALOMEL GOOD BUT
AWFUL TREACHEROUS
NEXT DOSE MAY SALIVATE,
SHOCK LIVER OR ATTACK
YOUR BONES.
You know what calomel is. It’s
mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is
dangerous. It crashes into sour bile
like dynamite, cramping and sicker
ing you. Calomel attacks the bones
and should never be put into your
system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, con
stipated and all knocked out, just
go to your druggist and get a bot
tle of Dodson’s Liver Tone for a
few cents which is a harmless vege
table substitute for dangerous calo
mel. Take a spoonful and if it
doesn’t start your liver and straight
en you up better and quicker than
nasty calomel and without making
you sick, you just go back and get
your money.
Don’t take calomel! It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a
day’s work. Dodson’s Liver Tone
straightens you right up and you feel
great. No salts necessary. Give i*
to the children because it is perfect
ly harmless and can not salivate.
.— o
Mexican women have smaller and
more regularly shaped feet than
American or European women, says
a St. Louis man who has spent many
years as a shoe dealer in the City of
Mexico. The women of the Mexican
aristocracy, he says, almost invaria
bly wear size 1 shoes.
THIS COUPON
and
gg CENTS
ENTITLES YOU TO
A 50 CENTS BOX OF
KANT-LEAK PATCHING
WHICH IS GUARAN
TEED PERMANENT
REPAIR
BARNESVILLE AUTO
COMPANY
Cadillac, Studebaker,
Chevrolet
Barnesville, Georgia
o
Pennsylvania’s first woman bailiff
is Miss Ruth Van Valkenburg, of
Wellsboro, who has been appointed
to the office in the Tioga county
court.
STOVE AND FIRE WOOD—Sawed
to fit your stove and grate. $2.00
per half cord. Howard Lumber Cos.
Call Phone 74—2 Rings. tf.
o
Plans are under way for the de
velopment of a national park in
northern California, surrounding the
base of Mt. Lassen, the only live vol
cano in the United States.
. .i
VOTE FOR_PALMOUR
Hon. J. E. Palmour, of Gainesville,
Ga., whose announcement appears in
another column, is making the race
for the Railroad Commission to suc
ceed Hon. Murphy Candler who did
not offer for re-election.
Mr. Palmour is a business man,
having made a great success in
Gainesville. He knows the needs of
the business and farming interests,
and will make a valuable member of
the commission. Under the broad
ened powers, conferred on the com
mission by the last legislature, busi
ness men will be needed more than
ever on the commission.
For the past two years Mr. Palm
our has represented the 23rd sena
torial district in the senate and prior
to that time he served four terms as
a member of the legislature from
Hall County. He is a graduate of
Mercer University and has a wide ac
quaintance over the state. His head
quarters in Gainesville report most
encouraging news from every section
of Georgia and his friends predict
his election.
AGED CITIZEN DIES
.. .. ■ ■
Mr. James Willamson Parks, aged
74 years, passed away at his home
near Milner, Ga., Sunday morning,
August 27th, after a brief illness.
Mr. Parks was held in highest es
teem by all who knew him for his
honest, faithful and loving traits.
He was the son of the late Dr. James
Parks and Sarah Elizabeth Parks.
On January 27th, 1869, he was mar
ried to Miss Sara Frances Vaughn,
daughter of William and Frances
Vaughn. To this union eight chil
dren were born, seven of whom sur
vive. They are Dr. J. P., W. A., C.
W. and W. E. Parks, Mrs. M. M.
Helms, Griffin, Ga.; Mrs. D. S. Bar
rett, Zebulon, Ga., and Mrs. J. Bloom,
Atlanta, Ga* Also several grand
children and great-grand children
survive them.
Funeral services were held at 3
o’clock Monday afternoon from the
Milner Baptist church. Interment in
the Milner cemetery.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Sarah Parks, Dr. J. P. Parks,
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Helms, Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Barrett, Mrs. J. Bloom,
Mr. W. E. Parks and Mr. and Mrs.
G. C. Helmes extend their sincerest
thanks for the many tender kind
nesses during their recent bereave
ment.
Milner, Ga., August 28, 1922.
o
To Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE
SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Ctoud is enclosed with every bottle of
HAYES’ HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed on the chest and throat
of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey in
side the throat combined with the healing effect of
Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of
the skin soon stops a cough.
Both remedies are packed in one carton and the
cost of the combined treatment is 35c.
Just ask your druggist for HAYES’
HEALING HONEY.
EXAMINATION FOR
FIREMAN
An examination for fireman wdll be
held for the Barnesville post office,
September 27, 1922. Apply for ap
plication blank and information at
Barnesville post office.
TALK TO YOUR
LOVED ONES
Most of the protracted services
have almost come to a close in the
country churches at least. How
many have let these meetings go by
and say in “a more convenient sea
son I will come unto thee, or say I
expect to become a Christian some
day but not now.” Dear reader, if
you should be among these ones the
offer has been made to many of you.
You have no promise for tomorrow
or next year. We are told the spirit
will not always strive with man.
You may not always have a desire to
become a Christian.
A lady asked her pastor if he
would talk to her child about his
soul’s condition, said she could do
most anything better than she could
do this. A short time afterwards
this boy was taken very ill, and as
his mother stood by his bedside as he
was unconscious, she said, “Oh, how
I wish I had. How I wish I had
talked to this boy when he was in
his right mind.”
Now, husbands, wives, mothers,
fathers, brothers, sisters, the time
may come when we wish we had
talked to someone.
EVA HICKMAN.
o
The number of unemployed in
Sweden has increased to over 100,-
000
Magnolia
* mßalm
Mlif LIQUID
J \ \ V Face and Toilet
F/ POWDER
-A Brings instant, rial
?>=< ~~~ ~T ural beauty to face,
jf taA-G-AAr® I neck, arms, hands,
f ! tkrtHQUA Rj/li Simply wonderful!
T ‘ Removes eruptions,
freckles, sunburn,
. lQrwfj i tan. Entrancing,last
; *:! 'UiSk Wr ; ing fragrance. Try
; * <■ 4 colors:
j ; Brunette
tji: . whit. Pink
Hi Ro~-R.a
I I epcel'e** T*cm *o*4t' I
L™!?'?. 0 . 0 BEST for 72
■ years —a
\ marvelous
beauti-
Proprietors: balm.
LYON MFC. ii j i
rn all deal
-4 2 So. Fifth St. rectfrom
BROOKLYN, us, 7 5 ceats
N Y. postpaid.
The government of Brazil has con
sented to the laying of telegraph ca
bles from Rio de Janeiro to Rome
and to Montevideo in connection with
an Italian concession.
"'•’ha- 9
5% per cent 5Y 2 per cent
FEDERAL FARM
LOANS
We are authorized to
make loans in the Coun
ties of Lamar, Spald
ing, Pike, Butts and
Monroe.
S. B. WALLACE
Sec.-Treas.
GRIFFIN, GA.
Spalding N. F. L. A.
For carrying ice a Texas man has
invented a metal plate to be screwed
to automobile running boards which
is covered with rought perforations
to prevent ice slipping.
LABOR DAY EXCURSION
TO TYBEE, SEPTEMBER l
The Central of Georgia Railway
will run a special low rate excursion
to Tybee and return on Saturday,
September 2, from Athens, Atlanta,
Albany, Carrollton, Columbus, Eu
faula and intermediate points to and
including Macon; fare $7.00 for
round trip, except from Forsyth,
$6.25, Bolingbroke $6.50, Macon
$6.00.
Tickets will be sold for afternoon
trains of September 2, and limited to
leave Savannah on any train return
ing up to and including train leaving
Savannah 9 :00 P. M., Septmber 4.
This will be the last opportunity
of the season to spend two days at
the seashore at a nominal cost.
TYBRISA, on the Strand at Tybee,
“Where Ocean Breezes Blow,” the
largest and most attractive dancing,
bathing, picnic and amusement pa
vilion on the South Atlantic Coast,
will be the scene of mirth, music and
merriment on Labor Day, after which
date it will close for the season.
For schedules, sleeping car ac
commodations, etc., apply to nearest
Agent, or to W. H. Hogg, Division
Passenger Agent, Atlanta, W. W.
Hackett, Division Passenger Agent,
Macon, S. C. Harris, District Pas
senger Agent, Columbus, J. L. Ba
con, District Passenger Agent, Al
bany, J. Y. Bruct, Commercial Agent,
Athens, Ga. 8-31
o
The big Poughkeepsie bridge is
7,100 feet long.
o
Straw was used a century ago. in
i paper making.
o
Same Old Story But a Good One.
Mrs. Mahala Bums, Savanna, Mo., re
lates an experience, the like of which
; has happened in almost every neigh
borhood in this country, and has been
i told and related by thousands of oth
| ers, as follows: “I used a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Colic and Diarrhoea
Remedy about nine years ago and it
cured me of flux (dysentary). I had
another attack of the same complaint
j three or four years ago and a few
| doses of this remedy cured me. I
have recommended it to dozens of
people since I first used it and shall
continue to do so for I know it is a
i q'lick and positive cure for bowel
troubles.’
Pecan oil is used as a substitute for
olive oil.
o
Habitual Constipation Cored
• in 14 to 21 Days •
“LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
to induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take, a 60c
per bottle.
SPEAKING SATURDAY
Judge J. J. Flynt and Hon. J. A.
Dorsey will address the voters of La
mar county at Barnesville at 2
o’clock, Saturday, September 2, in
the interest of the candidacy of Hon.
J. J. Flynt, candidate for Congress
from the Sixth Congressional Dis
trict.
Everyone is given a cordial invi
tation to be present.
The citizens of Barnesville and La
mar county should largely attend this
speaking.
- o ■ - .
CIVIL LEAGUE MEETING
The Civic League will meet at the
Club House Wednesday, September
7th, at 4 o’clock. It is very much
desired that every member be pres
ent as we wish to discuss plans for
the Fair.
It has been decided to have a
“Kitchen Shower” for the Club
House and it is hoped that the mem
bers will bring their donations to this
meeting.
THE PARABLE
-. • OF THE SPIDER
I and Keturah we rode in a Canoe,
and we came upon Great Bushes of
Wild Honeysuckle. And the fra
grance thereof was upon the face of
the waters. And I paddled the
Canoe to where the Honeysuckle
grew, and Keturah plucked the
branches, so that the Canoe was
fragrant and even more beautiful
than when nothing was in it save me
and Keturah. But the Blossoms were
not more sweet than Keturah. And
when we came unto the House she
took the Blossoms and gathered them
in her arm, and the great bunch of
Honeysuckle walked up to the House
and took Keturah with it.
And she arranged a vast Bouquet
upon the Table under the Electric
Light. And in the evening I laid me
down upon a Divan that was in the
room, and Keturah read aloud unto
me out of a book.
Now a spider had been among the
Honeysuckle, and Keturah saw her
not. And the Spider found herself
unexpectedly in the house, away from
all her past associations and oppor
tunities of gaining a livelihood. For
I believe it is the Lady Spiders who
are most industrious. And as I lay
upon the Divan and looked at Ketu
rah I saw that the Spider had climbed
to the Electrick Light, and had got
ten a line from the shade thereof to
certain of the stalks of the Honey
suckle. And when I saw it first it
looked like an unpromising beginning,
for I saw not how the Spider might
there construct anything that would
look like a Web. Neither did I see
that it would do her any good, for
the House had Screens, and there is
not within it one Fly or Mosquito.
Now what I saw occurred so rapid
ly that I could not keep up with it;
for the Spider climbed to the shade
and dropped to the flowers, leaving a
Silken Cord behind it, and then
started again and did it some more.
And then, without stopping to Meas
ure she began at the Outside and ran
around the edge, and spun a Filma
ment there. And then she went
around again, and there was another.
And Keturah paused in her read
ing, and behold there was a Spider at
her shoulder. And she said, I did
not know that I carried in a Spider.
And I said, Let not the Spider
frighten Miss Muffet away; neither
do thou anything unto it. But come
hither and behold how wondrous is
the weaving of its Web.
And we beheld, both of us, and it
was more rapid and more wonderful
than we could have imagined.
And the Web was finished, and the
Spider sat down in the center of it.
And I said, Thou has set up Busi
ness in an Unpromising Location.
But even as I spake there came a
Gnat and was caught in the Web,
and the Spider hastened and fastened
him in. And then came a tiny Moth,
and he also was caught. For what
ever got through the screens and had
wings flew toward the light, and few
of them escaped.
And the Spider did good Business
all the evening, and before we turned
out the light the Web was ail Puck
ered and Knotted with the things that
the Spider had caught.
Now this I say unto the sons and
daughters of men who must live in
Unpromising Locations, and do Busi
ness in Unattractive Places, and to
those whose Life Plans are Dislocated
by Accident or Providence, Consider
the Spider. Adapt thyself to Cir
cumstances. Weave thou thy Web
and do thy work, and behold it may
be that the place where Providence
or Circumstance hath placed thee
shall be even like the Spider, whose
misfortune brought unto her the big
gest and best meal that she had ever
eaten.—Watchman-Examiner of New
York.