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DISEASES OF MEN and WOMEN
_ Our large and growing practice !as been built np •’ n I’**'
tit ion of successes, doing the right thing in the right way
hundreds of times with uniform success. It will pay you in
JHHR? \ both time and money to consult us free and learn the trutn
about your condition before placing your case wit 1 anyone.
Our treatment is no experiment, it has proven c^[ cc *' vc *”
A# hundreds of cases. Write for testimonials trom patients wc (
T have treated.
A THE FOLLOWING DISEASES ARE AMONG
those we treat successfully
Blood Poison Nervoua Debility Walcn* £9** i
You may arrant* Bladder Trouble Stomach Trouble RheumetUm £•'>
weekly or monthly Kidney Diieiiei Burning Diechergee Lo* pi Vigor Rupture
payment!. Ulcer, Special Di.eaae, Obetniction. Drain.
Call Stonea Varicoae Vein, Skin Dneaae, Catarrh
We tine the new vaccines and ir.imal serums with wonderful success in weak
ness, catarrh and bronchial troubles and all chronic and special disease, ol men
and women. Everything strictly private and confidential.
I>TT I?C Fistula and Rectal Diarases treated by painless methods—no cut-
I ting and no detention from business . In treating t. esr troubles j
we will make no charge if we fail to accomplish satisfactory results.
I)R. HUGHES and Associated Specialists
MC% COTTON AVE. MACON, GA.
Long established and trustworthy, permanently located, our reliable remedies
for men Hours daily 10 to 7; Sundays 10 to 1 only.
THROUGH OUR
MEMBERSHIP
in the Federal Reserve Banking System
we are placed in a stronger position
than ever before to take care of the
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Why not open an account with us
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your money deposited with us?
RESERVE'S*
BARNESVILLE BANK
STATE DEPOSITORY
H. 6. JORDAN & SON.
t
Market St. Barnesville, Ga.
DRY GOODS AND
GROCERIES
Get our Prices Before Buying
Every size CHAMPION
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Lamps—lo to 200 Watts.
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BARNESVILLE HD’W. CO.
BARNESVILLE, Phone 5-W. GEORGIA
A PROCLAMATION
Submitting a proposed Amend
ment to the Constitution of Georgia
to be voted on at the general elec
tion to be held on Tuesday, Novem
ber 7th, 1922, said amendment to
Article 6, Section 13, Paragraph 1,
of the Constitution of the State of
Georgia, in reference to supplement
ing the salary of the Judge.
By His Excellency, Thomas W. Hard
wick, Governor, State of Georgia,
Executive Department, August 28,
1922.
WHEREAS, the General Assembly i
at its session of 1922 proposed an j
Amendment to the Constitution of
this State as set forth in an Act ap-1
proved August 19, 1922, to-wit:
Chattahoochee Circuit; Judge’, Sal
ary; Additional Payment by
Muscogee County.
No. 501.
An Act to amend paragraph 1, sec
tion 13 of article 6 of the Consti
| tution of Georgia, regulating the
salaries of the judges of the Su
perior Courts, by providing for the
payment from the county treasurer
of Muscogee County to the judge
of the circuit of which said coun
ty is a part, an additional com
pensation; and for other purposes.
Section 1. The General Assembly
of the State of Georgia hereby pro
poses to the people of Georgia an
amendment to paragraph 1 of section
13 of article 6 of the Constitu
tion of this State, as follows: By
adding to paragraph 1 of section 13
of article 6 of the Constitution of
the State of Georgia as it now is the
following: “Provided, that the
County of Muscogee, from and after
January 1, 1925, shall pay from its
treasury to the Superior Court
judges of the circuit of which it is
a part such sums as will with the
salary paid each judge from the
State Treasury', make a salary of six
thousand dollars per annum to each
judge, and said payments are de
clared to be a part of the court ex
pense of such county.
Sec. 2. Be it further enacted by
the authority aforesaid, That when
ever the above proposed amendment
to the Constitution of this State shall
be agreed to by two-thirds of the
members elected to each of the
Houses of the Genei*al Assembly, and
the same has been entered upon their
journals, with the y r eas and nay T s
taken thereon, the Governor shall,
and he is hereby authorized and in
structed to cause the above proposed
amendment to be published in one or
more newspapers in each congression
al district in this State for the period
of two months next preceding the
time of holding the next general
election; ami the Governor is hereby
authorized and directed to provide
for the submission of the amendment
proposed for ratification or rejection
to the electors of this State at the
next general election to be held after
said publication, at which election
every person shall be qualified to
vote who is entitled to vote for mem
bers of the General Assembly. All
persons voting at such election in fa
vor of adopting the proposed amend
ment shall have written or printed
on their ballots the words, “For
amendment to paragraph 1 of sec
tion 13 of article of the Constitu
tion, providing for additional com
pensation to be paid by Muscogee
County, to the judges of the circuit
of which it is a part.” All persons
opposed to the adoption of said
amendment shall have written or
printed on their ballots the words,
“Against amendment to paragraph 1
of section 13 of article R of the Con
stitution, providing for additional
compensation to be paid by Musco
gee County to the judges of the cir
cuit of which it is a part.” If a ma
jority of the electors qualilied to
vote for members of the General As
sembly voting thereon, shall vote for
ratification, the Governor shall, when
he ascertains the same from the Sec
retary of State, to whom the returns
from said election shall be referred
in the same manner as in cases of
election for members of the General
Assembly to count and ascertain the
result, issue his proclamation for one
insertion in one daily paper of the
State, announcing such result and
declaring the amendment ratified.
Section 3. Be it further enacted,
That all laws or parts of laws in con
flict herewith are repealed.
Approved August 19, 1922.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Thomas
W. Hardwick, „ Governor of said
State, do issue this my proclamation
hereby declaring that the fox-egoing
proposed amendment to the Consti
tution is submitted for ratification or
rejection to the voters of the state
qualified to vote for members of the
General Assembly at the general
election to be held on Tuesday, No
vember 7, 1922.
THOMAS W. HARDWICK,
Governor.
By the Governor:
S. G. McLendon,
Secretary of State.
African sponge divers make four
trips a day to the ocean bottom.
GUARDIAN SALE
GEORGIA—Lamar County.
After four weeks notice, as re
quired by law, a petition, of which a
true copy is attached and made part
of this notice, will be presented to
Honorable Win. E. H. Searcy, Jr.,
Judge of the Superior Court, at the
court house in the county of Spald
ing, in the City of Griffin, Georgia,
on the 14th day of October, 1922.
J. FARRIS HALL,
Natural Guardian.
GEORGIA —Lamar County.
To the Honorable Wm. E. H.
i Searcy, Jr., Judge of the Superior
Court of said County:
The petition of J. Farris Hall,
father and natural guardian of Ray
mond Hall, seven years of age, and
Joseph Hall, five years of age, who
reside with petitioner in said county,
shows as follows:
Ist. That he desires to sell for
reinvestment at private sale the fol
lowing property in which said minor
children are interested, to-wit: One
house and lot in City of Barnesville,
Lamar county, Georgia, located on
Brown avenue, and being the same
property conveyed in deed from C.
S. Ham to W. J. Hencely, dated July
24th, 1920, and same as mentioned in
the last clause of the third item of
the last will and testament of Wil
liam J. llencely, of record in the
Court of Ordinary of Lamar county,
Georgia.
2nd. Said house and lot is in need
of repairs, and the rents therefrom
are not sufficient to keep same in re
pair and pay insurance and taxes,
and is, therefore, not good invest
ment for the owners, the life tenant
and said minors who are remainder
men, and said property can be sold
at private sale for sum of seven hun
dred and fifty dollars which is a fair
mai’ket price therefor.
3rd. The life tenant, Mrs. Lucile
Hencely Hall, the mother of said
minors, is desirous of having said
sale made for re-investment, and will
convey her life estate therein to the
purchaser at such sale.
4th. Petitioner desires lo invest the
process of such sale as follows, to
wit: Five hundred dollars in good,
solvent bonds, and two hundred and
fifty dollars in repairs to be made on
house and lot on Forsyth street in
the City of Barnesville, Lamar coun
ty, Georgia, the title to which is
vested in said Mrs. Lucile Hencely
Hall, as life tenant, and said minors
as remaindermen, and is held under
the said third item of the last will
and testament of William J. Hencely.
sth. Petitioner shows that notice
of his intention to make this appli
cation has been published once a
week for four weeks in the Barnes
ville News-Gazette, the newspaper in
which county advertisements are
published, as required by law.
J. FARRIS HALL.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me, this September 13th, 1922.
B. H. HARDY, Ordinary.
Lamar County, Ga.
Application for Charter
State of Georgia, Lamar County.
To the Superior Court of said
county:
The petition of T. G. Bell, P. W.
Ethridge, G. P. Wheeless and J. C.
Martin shows to the court as fol
lows :
1. Petitioners are all residents of
said county, and desire for them
selves, their associates and successors
to be incorporated under the name
and style of
THE MILNER GIN COMPANY.
2. The term for which petitioners
desire to be incorporated is twenty
years, with privilege of renewal at
the end of that time.
3. The capital stock of said cor
poration is to be Five Thousand Dol
lars ($5000.00), divided into shares
of the par value of one hundred dol
lars each. Petitioners desire the
right, however, of increasing said
capital stock from time to time not
exceeding in the aggregate ten
thousand dollars.
4. More than ten per cent of the
capital stock of said proposed cor
poration has actually been paid in.
5. The object of the proposed cor
poration is pecuniary gain and profit
to its stockholders. Petitioner's pro
pose that said corporation shall carry
on the business of operating a pub
lic ginnery, and more particularly of
buying gin property, and machinery
and installing the same, operating
the same in the ginning of cotton for
the public, charging and collecting
therefor toll, buying and selling seed
cotton or cotton seed, either for cash
or credit, and also buying and selling
for cash or credit cotton seed hulls
and meal or exchanging seed for the
same, and generally to do and trans
act all business legitimately connected
with any of the above enumerated
acts.
0. Petitioners further ask the
right to have and use a common cor
porate seal, to sue and be sued in
their corporate name and implead
and be impleaded in the various
courts of the state or of the United
States. |
7. The principal office and place
of business of said proposed corpora
tion will be in Milner, Georgia, said
county.
Wherefore petitioners pray to be
made a body corporate under the
name and style aforesaid, entiltes to
the rights, privileges and immunities
and subject to the liabilities fixed by
law.
DOBBS & BARRETT,
Petitioners’ Attorney.
Georgia, Lamar County.
I, S. J. Childers, Clerk of the Su
perior Court of said county, do here
by certify that the above and fore
going is a true and correct copy of
the petition for charter, of file in my
office in the matter of T. G. Bell, P.
W. Ethridge, G. P. Wheeless and J.
C. Martin, desiring to be incorporated
under the name and style of The
Milner Gin Company.
This, Sept. 19th, 1922.
S. J. CHILDERS, C. S. C.
TAX LEVY FOR 1922
State of Georgia, Lamar County.
By authority vested in me as Or
dinary of said county, under section
513 of the Code, it is ordered that
the following taxes be and the same
are hereby assessed on all taxable
property within said county, for
county purposes for the year 1922,
to be levied and collected by the Tax
Collector of said county, in said year
1922, to-wit:
1. To pay the legal indebtedness
of the county, due, or to become due
during the year 1922, or past due,
one (1) mill on each dollar.
2. To build or repair court house
and jail, bridges and other public im
provements according to contract,
two and one-half (2%) mills on each
dollar.
3. To pay sheriff, jailors and oth
er officers fees that they may be
legally entitled to out of the county,
one-half (%) mill on each dollar.
4. To pay Coroner’s all fees that
may be due them out of the county
for holding inquests, one-eighth (1-8)
mill on each dollar.
5. To pay the expenses of the
county for bailiffs at courts, non
resident witness fees in criminal
cases, fuel, servant hire, stationery
and the like, one-half (%) mill on
each dollar.
6. To pay jurors a per diem com
pensation for attendance and service
at courts, one (1) mill on each dol
lar.
7. To pay expenses incurred in
supporting the poor of the county,
and as otherwise prescribed in the
Code, one-fourth (1-4) mill on each
dollar.
8. To pay charges for education
al purposes, as provided by law, one
fourth (1-4) mill on each dollar.
9. To pay expenses of mainten
ance of roads, and road work, under
the alternative road law of force in
the county, three and three-eighth
(3 3-8) mills on each dollar.
10. To pay all other lawful
charges against the county, one and
one-half (1 % ) mills on each dollar.
A total tax to be levied and col
lected as above ordered of Eleven
(11) Mills on all property in the
county of Lamar, State of Georgia,
whether it be real, personal or mixed,
provided only it is not exempted
from taxation by the laws of Geor
gia.
It is Ordered Further, That there
be levied and collected in the same
manner for Educational purposes, as
recommended by the Board of Educa
tion of Lamar County, on all prop
erty in said Lamar County, whether
it be real, personal or mixed, except
ing all property of every kind located
in the City of Barnesville, Five (5)
Mills, which, when collected, shall be
turned over to the Treasurer of said
Board of Education.
It is Further Ordered, That this
Order and Assessment be placed on
the Minutes of the Ordinary in his
office and published as required by
law.
This 18th day of September, 1922.
B. H.HARDY, Ordinary,
10-12 Lamar County. Ga.
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take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
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A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE
SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Croup is enclosed with every bottle of
HAYES’ HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be nibbed on the chest and throat
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The healing effect of Hayes' Heating Honey in
side the throat ocrobiDed with the healing effect of
Grove's O-Pen-Tratc Salve through the pores of
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Both remedies are packed in one carton and the
cost of the combined treatment is 35c.
Just ask your druggist for HAYES'
HEALING HONEY.
o
A TEXAS WONDER
For kidney and bladder troubles,
gravel, weak and lame back, rheu
matism and irregularities of the kid
neys and bladder. At your drug
gist’s or by mail, $1.25. Small bot
tle often cures. Send for sworn
testimonials.—£. W. Hall, 2926
Olive St., St Louis, Mo. —Adv.
MOTHERS AND
DfIIiSHTERS
Read This Letter from Mr*.
W. S. Hughes
Greenville, Del. —“I was under the
impression that my eldest daughter hari
111111111111111111 l 301110 ' nttrn al trouble
as ever since the first
irm-mr, time her sicknessap
peared she had to go
Par ar, b even had
Wr to quit school once
grjgfe for a week. I always
sjfn take Lydia E. Pink
■nJSr* mil ham’s Vegetable
j Compound myself so
lliitiiiiiir 1 gave 11 to her and
II " ollilF s * ie as received
great benefit from it.
’ ii ,J i n.lYou can use this let
ter for a testimonial if you wish, as I
cannot say too much about what your
medicine has done for me and for my
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Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers
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pound. So they recommend the medi
cine to others.
The best test of any medicine is what
it has done for others. For nearly fifty
years we have published letters from
mothers, daughters, and women, young
and old, recommending the Vegetable
Compound. They know what it did for
them and are glad to tell others. In
vour own neighborhood are women who'
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Mothers—daughters, wby not try it ?
CALOMEL MAY TURN
ON YOU NEXT TIME
NEXT DOSE YOU TAKE MAY
SALIVATE AND START WORLD
OF TROUBLE.
Calomel is mercury, quicksilver.
It crashes into sour bile like dyna
mite, cramping and sickening 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 yon.
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.
WORN NERVES
Nervous troubles, with backache,,
dizey spells, queer pains and irregu
lar kidneys, give reason to suspect
kidney weakness and to try the
remedy that has helped your neigh
bors. Ask your neighbor!
Mrs. S. J. Lavender, 222 Zebulon
St., Barnesville, says: ‘‘l was
troubled with smart pains through
the small of my back. I had head
aches and was nervous at times.
Dizzy spells came on and my kid
neys did not act as they should. A
member of the family who had used
Doan’s Kidney Pills recommended
them and I procured some. Doan’s
greatly relieved me.” (Statement
given March 23, 1918).
On November 19, 1921, Mrs.
Lavender said: “I can highly
recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills as
they cured me of kidney trouble. I
am glad to confirm my former state
ment.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same
that Mrs. Lavender had. Foster-
Milburn Cos., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
THIS COUPON
and
25 CENTS
ENTITLES YOU TO
A 50 CENTS BOX OF
KANT-LEAK PATCHING
WHICH IS GUARAN
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REPAIR
BARNESVILLE AUTO
COMPANY
Cadillac, Studebaker,
Chevrolet
Barnesville, Georgia
FOR SALE OR RENT—One house
and lot on Atlanta street, or would"
trade for farm land. Apply at
American Shoe Store, Barnesville,
Ga. tf