Newspaper Page Text
DECEMBER SHERIFF SALES
GEORGIA —Lamar County.
Will be sold at the City Hall, the
place where public sales are held,"ln
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 ahd containg 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
l.amar county against L. T. Graham
in favor of D. R'othchilds & 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: GOO pounds seed
cotton, more or less, in cotton house,
175 bushels corn, more or less, in
com crib. Said property levied on
and to be sold to sntisfy 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:
H 6 acres of land, more or less, lo
cated in Redbone district, of said
county .bounded on the north by
lands of J. S. Keudle, 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 66 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 Lamar 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 6, 1922.
B. H. HARDY, Ordinary
TO THE PUBUC
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
f>o4th 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 (2Ms)” as
they appear in the second item of
said tax levy and inserting in lieu
thereof the words and figures “Three
and one-half (3Vi).”
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 (Vi)” and in
serting in lieu thereof the words and
figures, “One-half (Vi).”
4. By striking from the 10th item
of said levy the words and figures,
“One and one-half (1 Vi)” ns they
appear in said item and inserting in
lieu thereof the words and figures,
“One-half (Vi).”
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.
Those Icy Mountains.
There’s many a man In Greenland
who Is honest as the day Is long be
cause there they have slx-iuontb
nlglits.
Weak
Back !
Mrs. Mildred Pipkin, of
R. F. D 8, Columbia. Term .
says: “My experience with
Cardui has covered a number ;f
years Nineteen years ago . .
I got down with weak back I
was run-down and so weak and
nervous 1 had to stay in bed
I read of r
CARDUI
The Woman's Tonic
and sent lor it. 1 took only one
bottle at that time, and it helped
me; seemed to strengthen and
build me right up. So that is
how 1 first knew of Cardui.
After that, . . . when I began to
gel weak and 'no account’, I
sent right for Cardui. and it
never tailed to help me.”
If you are weak and suffering
from womanly ailments. Cardui
may be just what you need
Take Cardui. It has helped
thousands, and ought to help
you
At all druggists' and dealers’.
< e* -
Real News.
Headline “Hogs Decline." That,
young students of Journalism, Is news,
because It Is unusual. It Is not In
the nature of hogs to decline anything.
—Boston Transcript.
SPENT HALF HER
TIME IN BED
Farmer’s Wife Tells How Lydia E.
Piukham’s Vegetable Compound
Made Her a Well Woman
Carter’s Creek, Tenn. “Three years
ago i was almost an invalid. I spent
half of my time in
bed, being atllicted
with a trouble which
women of a certain
age are apt to have.
I took Lydia E.
Pink ham's Vegetable
Compound Tablets
and used Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Sanative
Wash. lam a well
woman now and have
been for two years.
1 can work as well as
lir , 7 ,, ni|]
in. 11
any one who is younger and as I am a
farmer’s wife I have plenty to do for I
cultivate my own garden, raise many
chickens and do my own housework.
You may publish this letter as I am
ready to ao anything to help other
women as I have been so well and happy
since my troubles are past. ’’—Mrs. E.T.
Galloway, Carter’s Creek, Tenn.
Most women find plenty to do. If
they are upset with some female ailment
and troubled with such symptoms as
Mrs. Galloway had, the smallest duty
seems a mountain.
If you find it hard to keep up, if you
are nervous and irritable, without ambi
tion and out of sorts generally, give the
Vegetable Compound a fair trial. We
believe it will nelp you greatly, for it
has helped others.
Height of Insomnia.
“Confound It! This Insomnia is get
ting worse. Can't even sleep when it’a
time to get up:*’
GOOD REALTY
Large and small farms
for sale. Also vacant lots
and homes in the city. All
at reasonable prices.
GREENE REALTY CO.
Elliott ibidding
BarnesviUe, Ga.
coins'
Try it
Free yourself from your
cough and your cold. Dis
agreeable phlegm cleared
away; scratchy, tender
membranes soothed; cough
checked; cold broken up.
Now, today-ask your drug
gist for
OR.KINGS discovery
-usyrup for coughs & colds
THE COW AND THE HEN
(By N. E. Chapman, Poultry Exten
sion Specialist University Minnesota)
You are doubtless aware of the
contest that is on between the cow
and the hen for supremacy in the
United States. This contest is to
show which one can put the most in
the “jeans’ ’of 6,000,000 farmers.
According to the 1921 census both
are in the billion dollar class with
the cow leading by a few million.
Dairy products are given at one bil
lion, four hundred million, and “eggs
and chickens” at one billion and forty
million.
In the New England states the
dairy cow is leading by 98 million to
32 million. The cow still leads in
the Middle Atlantic states with 298
million dollars put to the credit of
New York, New Jersey and Pennsyl
vania farmers while the hen added
108 million more to pay their store
bills. In the East North Central Di
vision the contest is interesting. In
Ohio, the cow leads; in Indiana the
hen; but in Illinois, Michigan and
the great dairy state of Wisconsin
the cow again leads and has a plu
rality for the section of 448 million
to 249 million for the hen.
Turning to the West North Central
division we see the cow leading in
Minnesota, North and South Dakota,
but as we turn southward to lowa,
Nebraska, Missouri and Kansas the
hen gains enough millions to put her
in the lead for the section with 270
million to her credit and 263 for the
cow. In the next three divisions,
South Atlantic, East South Central
and West South Central, an era com
prising more than one-half of the
United States, the hen wins with a
majority of 62 million. In the eight
states of the Mountain division the
dairy cow leads the hen by nine mil
lion.
On the Pacific coast there is a
battle royal. The cow was in the
lead in 1919 with 100 million to 63,
but ardent admirers of the Biddy are
telling that she will rank first by the
close of 1922.
Let the contest go on! It is vast
ly more important to this country of
ours than the contest of political par
ties of labor and capital. With
out daily products of the cow and the
hen our children would not be prop
erly nourished. Without the daily
cash returns from cream and eggs
the farmers of the United States
would be in financial straits.
“Here’s to the two best friends of
men.
The Dairy Cow and the Laying
Hen.”'
o
To Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
healing the inllamed 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 effort of Haves' Healing Hooey in
side the throat combined with the healing effect of
Urove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of
the skin soon stops u 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.
ILL AT FITZGERALD
Mr. J. 11. Mayes, who has quite a
number of relatives throughout La
mar and Pike counties, has been
quite ill at his home in Fitzgerald
for the past few weeks, and little
hope is held out for his recovery.
Mrs. R. S. Berry of BarnesviUe,
who is a relative, was called to his
bedside the past week and upon her
return last Suturday she reports his
condition as very critical.
o
How Not to Take Cold.
Some persons are subject to fre
quent colds, while others seldom, if
ever have a cold. You will find that
the latter take good care of them
selves. They take a shower or cold
sponge bath every day in a warm
room, avoid over heated rooms, sleep
with a window open or partly open,
avoid excesses, over eating, becoming
over heated and then chilled and get
ting the feet wet. Then, when taev
feel the first indication of a cold,
they take Chamberlain’s Cough
15 “’"“dy without delay and it is soon
over.
WISE ASKS REPORT
ON CALCIUM COST
Washington, November 24.—Fol
lowing the receipt of several com
plaints from the state, Representa
tive J. W. Wise, of Georgia, today
introduced a resolution directing the
federal trade commission to report
to the house the cost of manufactur
ing and producing calcium arsenate,
an important element in fighting the
boll weevil, and whether the product
is controlled by any unlawful combi
nation. The recent rise in price of
calcium arsenate has resulted in a
flood of protests from cotton grow
ers of the south.
BE RID OF THAT ACHE
If you are a sufferer with lame
back, backache, dizziness, nervous
ness and kidney disorders, why don’t
you try the remedy that your own
neighbors recommend? Ask your
neighbor!
Miss Lizzie Gaston, 322 Lee St.,
Barnesville, says: “I was troubled
with backache and disordered kid
neys. Mornings my back felt lame
and sore and when I moved sudden
ly a sharp twinge of pain that felt
like a knife stab seized me in the
small of my back. My back was
weak and black specks passed before
my eyes. My kidneys acted too free
ly but Doan’s Kidney Pills, bought
at the Lamar County Drug Cos., cured
me of the trouble. I gladly recom
mend Doan’s Kidney Pills for what
they have done for me.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy'—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same
that Miss Caston had. Foster-Mil
burn Cos., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
BARNESVILLE BOY
HONORED AT TECH
Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Nov. 27.
“Red” Murphey, a student at Georgia
Tech from Barnesville, has been given
the honor of selection to member
ship in the Koseme, Junior honorary
society, according to the announce
ment of Dr. M. L. Brittain, president
of Tech.
This organization is among the
leading student organizations at
Georgia Tech, and selection to it is
deemed a high honor at the institu
tion. As in all the student organiza
tions high scholastic standing as well
as excellent personality is required,
and the aim of this organization and
the other student organizations on
the campus is to build “A Greater
Tech,” and promote the welfare of
the South’s greatest technical school
for the advancement of “A Greater
Industrial Georgia.”
The standard of student organiza
tions at Tech is among the highest of
all American institutions and com
petition for membership in each is
very keen, and the requirements for
selection are likewise exceedingly
high.
Membership in the Koseme society
is the highest honor that can be be
stowed upon a Junior at -Tech.
Mr. Murphey is a son of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Murphey and a grandson
of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Murphey of
Barnesville.
- Bg v rf ;yv t J<<w . JSI
Conceit Not of Real Value.
Conceit may putT a man up for a
moment, but never for a long tint It
is a mighty poor substitute for that
real knowledge of self which values at
actual worth. The world has use for
only the genuine article.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
Bn Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears —
Signature of
o—
Meat Dishes Rare in Greece.
In Greece there are hundreds <>l
futilities who never taste meat during
the entire year except on New Year's
duv and at Easter.
o
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets 1 It
stop-: the Cough and Headache and works o the
Cold E. V. GROVE'S signature on“ach box. 30c.
O
This One a Beauty.
Wild Carrot, r Bird's Nest, or
Queen Anne’s Lace, is a plant that
often spreads ever wide meadows und
along dusty country roads, says the
American Forestry Magazine. It is
a pest to farmers, it joy to the (lower
lover. and a welcome signal for re
freshment to flies, beetles, bees and
wasps.
GEORGIA REGAN TREES
Stuart, Mobile, the leading Standard Jumbo Paper
Shell varieties, we quote as follows f.o.b. here
No. Trees— Ito 4 sto 50 50 to 500 500 to 1000 1000 to 5000
1 to 3 ft. High 1.00 .90 .80 .75 .70
3 to 4 ft. High 1.10 1.00 .90 .85 .80
4 to 5 ft. High 1.25 1.10 1.00 .95 .90
5 to 6 ft. High 1.40 1.20 1.10 1.05 1.00
6 to 7 ft. High 1.60 1.30 1.20 1.15 1.10
7 to 8 ft. High 1.80 1.50 1.40 1.25 1.20
Bto 10 ft. High 2.00 1.75 1.65 1.35 1.30
Select Pecan Trees for lawn, street or yard, $1.50 ea.
Barnesville Nursery Cos.
S. M. HOWARD & SONS
P. O. Box 186 Barnesville, Ga.
THROUGH OUR
MEMBERSHIP
in the Federal Reserve Banking System
we are placed in a stronger position
than ever before to take care of the
requirements of all our depositors,
whether large or small, whether they
keep checking or savings accounts;
and at the same time to give them the
most modern banking service.
Why not open an account with us
and begin at once to participate in
these benefits and the additional pro
tection which this system gives to
your money deposited with us?
RESERVED*
BARNESVILLE BANK
STATE DEPOSITORY
H. G. JORDAN & SON.
Market St Barnesville, Ga.
DRY GOODS AND
GROCERIES
Get our Prices Before Buying
TIRES
At a PRICE
34x4 FABRICK $17.50
33x4 “ 16.75
32x4 “ 16.25
30x3 1-2 “ 9.50
30x3 “ 8.50
34x4 CORDS $24.00
33x4 “ 23.50
32x4 “ 22.75
30x3 1-2 “ 13.75
J. W. CARRIKER
12 Zebulon St.
BarnesviUe, Ga.