The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, November 23, 1922, Image 2

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DECEMBER SHERIFF SALES GEORGIA —Lamar County. Will be sold at the City Hall, the place where public gales are held, in the City of Barnesville, on the first Tuesday in December next, between the hours of 10 o’clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. M., to the highest bidder for cash, the following property, to wit: Twelve lots in the city of Milner, Georgia, the whole body bounded as follows: North by store of L. T. Graham, east by property of Mrs. Ella Tyus, south by alley between L. T. Graham and H. A. Shockley, west by Main street. Blacksmith on the property and contains seven-eighths (7-8) of an acre. Said property levied on and to be sold to satisfy a fifa issued by the Superior court of Lamar county against L. T. Graham in favor of I). Kothchilds & Cos. This, November 6, 1922. Z. T. ELLIOTT, Sheriff, Lamar County, Georgia. Also at the same time and place will be sold the following described property, to-wit: 600 pounds seed cotton, more or less, in cotton house, 176 bushels com, more or less, in corn crib. Suid property levied on anil to be sold to satisfy a mortgage fifa issued from the City Court of Barnesville against Homer L. Keadle in favor of Mrs. M. L. Myrick. This, November 6, 1922. Z. T. ELLIOTT, Sheriff, Lamar County, Georgia. Administrator’s Sale GEORGIA —Lamar County^ By virtue of an order issued by the Court of Ordinary of Lamar county there will be sold at the City Hall, the place where public sales are held, in the City of Barnesville, Ga., on the first Tuesday in Decem ber next, between the hours of 10 o’clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. M., to the highest bidder for cash, the fol lowing property, belonging to the estate of F. M. Foster, deceased, to wit: 86 acres of land, more or less, lo cated in Redbone district, of said county .bounded on the north by lands of J. S. Keadle, east by W. R. Sykes and G. W. Taylor, south by the Penn place and west by lands of the Foster girls and F. M. Foster estate. Also one-third interest in 0(5 acres, more or less, bounded on the north by the Haygood place, east by the estate of F. M. Foster, south by J. S. Keadle and west by J. S. Keadle and A. J. Keadle. Said property to be sold for the purpose of paying the debts of the estate and distribution to the heirs. This, November 7, 1922. A. J. KEADLE, Admr., Estate of F. M. Foster. Petition to Probate Will In Re: Petition Executors of Last Will and Testament of J. M. Akin, deceased, for probate of said will in solemn form, Court of Ordinary of Lamnr coun ty, Georgia, November Term, 1922. To Mrs. L. L. Hines: You are notified and required to be and ap pear at the Court of Ordinary of La mar County, Georgia, to be held on the first Monday in December, 1922, at 10 o’clock A. M., and show cause why the last will and testament of J. M. Akin, deceased, should not be probated in solemn form as prayed for by petitioners in the above stated cause. This, November <5, 1922. B. H. HARDY, Ordinary TO THE PUBLIC State of Georgia, Lamar County. Petitions having been filed with us by citizens of the 504th District to ] change the place of holding Justice Court in said District from Johnston ville, in said district, to Goggansville, it being asserted that Goggansivlle is more conveniently situated for a majority of the citizens of the said District, and having considered the petition and no objection having been filed with us to said change of loca tion. It is Ordered, That the place of holding Justice Court in the said 504th District be and the same is hereby changed from Johnstonville to Goggansville, in said district, effec tive the First Friday in the month of January, 1923. This, November 8, 1922. W. J. GOGGANS, J. P. G. W. LANGFORD. N. P. and Ex-off. J. P., of 504th District. Tax Levy Amendment GEORGIA—Lamar County. By authority vested in me as Ordi nary of said county, it is now or dered that the tax levy for said county, as made by me on September 18th, 1922, be and the same is here by amended as follows: 1. By striking the words and figures “Two and one-half (2%)” as ■hey appear in the second item of rsaid tax levy and inserting in lieu thereof the words and figures “Three and one-half (3%).” 2. By striking from the sixth item of said levy the words and figures, “One (1)” as they appear in said item and inserting in lieu thereof the words and figures, “Three-fourths <%)•" 3. By striking from the seventh item of said levy the words and figures, “One-fourth ( V* )” and in serting in lieu thereof the words and figures, “One-half (%)•” 4. By striking from the 10th item of said levy the words and figures, “One and one-half (114) ” as they appear in said item and inserting in lieu thereof the words and figures, “One-half (14).” This amendment does not change the total amount of said levy. Let this also be recorded and published. This, Oct. 31st, 1922. B. H. HARDY, Ordinary, Lamar County. SALE UNDER POWER Under and by virtue of a certain deed to secure debt, executed and delivered by Homer L. Keadle to Mrs. M. L. Myrick, dated December 11th, 1918, which deed is recorded in Deed Book 38, folio 672, December 27th 1918, in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Monroe coun ty, Georgia, given to secure four principal notes for the sum of $600.00 each, one due December 11, 1920, 1921, 1922 and 1923, respect ively, and one for the sum of $2,000 due December 11th, 1924. All bear ing interest from maturity at the rate of 8 per cent per annum. Also, certain interest notes, representing interest on said principal notes at rate of 8 per cent per annum, all bearing interest from maturity at rate of 8 per cent per annum. The undersigned will sell at pub lic outcry, during the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder for cash, in the City of Barnesville, Georgia, where legal sales are held and made, on the first Tuesday in December, 1922, the following lands described in said security deeds, to-wit: All that tract of land, situate, ly ing and in the 11th land district and Redbone Militia district of originally Monroe county, but now Lamar coun ty, Georgia, containing 210 acres, more or less, known as east half of the Bryant lot and west half of the McGough lot, and bounded (in 1918) on the north by land of Ellen Bush und Stafford Smith; east by land of Mrs. Annie A. Means; south by land of Bettie Allen and estate of J. T. Taylor, and west by land of Grady Dumas, this being land deeded to Homer L. Keadle by W. H. and M. S. Driskell, the same land as con veyed by deed from A. L. Stephens to W. H. and M. S. Driskell. Said Homer L. Keadle having de faulted in the payment of $235.00 balance on interest note due ber 11, 1921, and two principal notes for the sum of $500.00 each, due on December 11th, 1920, and December 11th, 1921, the undersigned acting under powers and authority vested in her by security deed given, has declared all of said debt due and payable. The amount of principal that will he due on December sth, 1922, is $4000.00. The amount of interest that will 5 be due is $580.70, and cost of this ! sale. Title in fee simple will be made : to purchaser in reasonable time after | said sale. Proceeds of said sale will be ap plied first to payment of principal, interest and cost of sale; balance, if any, to said Homer L. Keadle. October 30th, 1922. 11-23 MRS. M. 1.. MY RICK. CALOMEL GOOD BUT AWFUL TREACHEROUS NEXT DOSE mJIy 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 ■ tng sou. 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 m 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 *n 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 <ick the next day; it Joses you * day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up and you feel great. No salt* necessary. Give b to the children because it ia perfect ly harmless and can not salivate. Blackheaded Pimples Quit WifhS.S. S. Why? Pimple-Poison Goes When Red- Blood-Cells Increase! S. 5. S. Builds These Red-Blood-Cells. Tou can be sure of this, natore has no ftnhfititute for red-blood-cells. Pimple poison can't live In the rel riven, of your tiinml h loner as there are enough rich red-blood-ccllu lu it. Morered-blood-ceUa! / /Theshame ofablemishedjace l That Is what you need when you see pim ples staring at you In the mirror. Black hcaded pimples are worse! Eczema Is worse yet! You can try everything under the sun, —you’ll find only one answer, more cell-power in your blood! The tre mendous results, produced by an Increase in red-blood-cells Is one of the A. B. C. s of medical science. Ked-cells mean clear-pure rich blood. They mean clear, ruddy, lovable complexions. They mean nerve power, because all your norvoß are fed by your blood. They mean freedom forever from pimples, from the blackhead pest, from boils, from eczema and skin eruptions, from rheumatism impurities, from that tired, exhausted, run-down feel ing. lted-blood-eells are the most Impor tant thing in the world to each of us. S. S. S. will build them for yon. S. S. S. has been known since IS2U, as one of the greatest blood-builders, blood-eleansers and svstem strengtheners ever produced. S S. S. Is sold at all drug stores in two sizes. The larger size bottle is the rnoro economical. |3 # 19 • Me yourself again WHY A COUNTY HEALTH NURSE? Many people do not know the dif ference between a trained nurse and a public health, or county health nurse. The trained nurse is one who, after a long period of prepara tion, specializes in the care of the sick. She is called upon when one is very ill and skilled nursing is need ed. The public health nurse is not a nurse for those who are sick. She is especially trained to aid in pre venting illness by educating the peo ple in the fundamental laws of healtl\ and hygiene. In other words, the trained nurse is to care for the sick and GET them well, while the public health nurse has for her duty the task of KEEPING WELL those in the community she serves. The ways in which a public health nurse benefits all in a county are many. As her work is primarily education and prevention, we may look upon her as a teacher of health principles. This is an era when education in things literary, scien tific, mechanical, and in almost every other way, has progressed by leaps and bounds. And yet in the field of preventive medicine there is much need for improvement and advance ment. The general practitioner is often confronted with remnants of the days of barbarism and witchcraft among patients who are otherwise well-educated. Take for example the mother who believes that a cer tain amount of teas from various and sundry herbs must be given every child whether he needs it or not. Also note the parent who firmly be lieves that a bag of asafoetida tied avound her baby’s neck wards off all diseases. Or the mother who thinks that her children must run the gamut of measles, mumps and other ills, as being necessary evils to childhood. The public health nurse educates the people in many ways. She j teaches mothers important principles necessary in conserving the health of their children. She gives instruc tions in regard to providing nourish ing food of the right kind for them; in regard to forming their daily hab its so that they have a firm founda tion for later life. The teaching of infant hygiene and child welfare constitutes one of the chief duties of a public health nurse, and one wherein lies the greatest need for education. Another of the duties of the public health nurse is the visiting and ad vising about infection and contagious diseases. She teaches the mother how to detect symptoms of various diseases, so that if they occur, they may be treated in time. She also instructs the family how to keep the diseases from spreading. More and more people are realiz ing the necessity of medical inspec tion in the schools. The county health nurse assists the doctors in making the inspections. The parents of childrt n with defective teeth, bad hearing, poor eyesight, diseased ton sils and adenoids, and other common conditions, she advises to remedy these defects before it is too late. And it is she who helps these. pa rents to realize the importance of correcting small physical impedi ments before the general health is impaired. Instructing the public in first aid methods is also within the scope of the public health nurse’s duties. She teaches what to do in case of drown ing, accidents of various types, suf focation, and many other dangers. Statistics compiled by authorities show that there is a decrease in the mortality rate in communities where first aid instruction is general knowl edge. As the trained nurse is the “angel of mercy” to those who are ill, so is the public health nurse an “angel of mercy” in keeping folks well. Where people need to be instructed in the fundamental principles of home hy giene and sanitation, she goes; where ignorance in matters of phy sical welfare make it well-nigh im possible for the physician to get good results, she assists; in short, as Florence Nightingale was the “lady with the lamp” to those sufferers in the Crimean War, so is the public health nurse a lady with the lamp of knowledge to all who are ignorant of the laws of health and hygiene. This county of ours needs a pub lic health nurse. The Red Cross is putting on a roll-call for membership in order that we may get funds for such a nurse. Let all of us do our part and make it a point to give lib erally to this worthy cause. JNO. M. ANDERSON. M. D. GOOD REALTY Large and small farms for sale. Also vacant lots and homes in the city. All at reasonable prices. GREENE REALTY CO. Elliott Building BamesvJle, Ga. COST OF LIVING^RISING Washington, D. €., Nov. 20.—The cost of living is on the rise again in the face of approaching winter. On top of an increase in wholesale prices, the Department of Labor an nounced Monday that retail food prices increased 2 per cent during October. The principal increases were “strictly” fresh eggs, which advanced 21 per cent in price; rolled oats, 10 per cent; butter, 9 per cent; cheese, 6 per cent; plate beef, fresh milk and lard, 2 per cent; pork chops and bacon, 1 per cent. Among the food articles that de creased in price during the month were onions, 14; navy beans, raisins and oranges, 6 per cent; cabbage, 5 per cent; 2 per cent, and sirloin steak, round steak, ham, baked beans and canned peas, 15 per cent. There was a decline of 6 per cent in the cost of food during the period from October 15, 1921, to October 15, 1922, while for the nine-year period there was an increase of 37 per cent. 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 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 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 efTect of drove 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. GIN NOTICE This is to notify the public that my Gin will not operate after this week. Those having cotton to gin should get it to me without fail dur ing this week. W. H. CROWDER. o 5 Yz per cent 5 1 /z per cent FEDERAL FARM LOANS We are authorized to make loans in the Coun ties of Lamar, Spald ing, PiV.e, Butts and Monroe. S. B. WALLACE Sec.-Treas. GRIFFIN, GA. Spalding N. F. L. A. * ** jygf Contents 15TluidI)racln| | 1 ' 3 PEBc|Ntr| IMS I CheerfulnessandßestGaffl 1 neither (toitim, Morphine n® |i >HneraLN OT NABGQTIC Hi Jjtrtnt gf (St (He 1 figr I IcJsasssg -111 Facsimile Signature of Exact Copy of Wrapper. New Fall Novelties Are coming in, consisting of late designs in WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY and SILVER. Come in and inspect them. J. H. BATE & CO. JEWELERS and OPTOMETRISTS BARNESVILLE, GA. H. G. JORDAN & SON. Market St. Barnesville, Ga. DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES Get our Prices Before Buying Lumber prices have dropped and beginning to advance. If you need anything in the building line be sure to call on Bamesville Planing Mill Co* “Everything To Build With” BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always / . Bears the /j/ ffl r# ft jj^ W For Over Thirty Years I CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.