Newspaper Page Text
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I LOCAL - PERSONAL ||
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Mr. Chester Mcßae has during j
the past week entertained a
number of his former class-mates, 1
including Mess/'s. J. G. McDan
iel and Lawton Griffin of East- 1
man, Ben Alexander of Reids
ville and R. V. Durden of Gray
mont.
Miss Ella Dickerson of Atlanta
returned home yesterday after
spending a few days with her!
friend. Miss Alleen Mcßae.
COTTON shipped to BATTEY I
& CO., The Proficient Cotton’
Factors of Savannah, Ga., yields
satisfaction as is evidenced by
the large volume of business en
trusted to them. Isn’t it to your
interest to try them? Do it now
and be convinced.
Misses Mattie Hugh and Nan
nie Lou Mclntyre of Sadie re
turned home Tuesday after
spending a few days with their
cousin, Miss Willie Allene Elliott.
Miss Bertha Lee BrewAon re
turned Monday from Bellville,
where she visited relatives. She
was accompanied by her cousin,
Mr. C. J. Brewton, who will vis
it the family in Mt. Vernon.
Mr. Harry Lee left Monday
for Auburn, Ala., where he will
enter college.
BATTEY & CO., The Large
■ and Reliable Cotton Factors of
Savannah, Ga., offer a service,
that combines long and success
ful experience, expert salesman
ship and financial soundness.
Miss Annie Johnson left a few
days ago for Barnesville, where!
she will teach in the Gordon In
stitute.
CHILD’S CLOAK Found on
public road and brought to this
office. Owner may prove prop
erty, pay cost of advertising and
get same.
Miss Anna Morrison of Macon
spent part of the past week with
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Morrison.
Mr. Thomas S. Daniel of Sa
vannah is spending a few days
with his mother, Mrs. I). W. Fol
som. He is connected w'ith the
Atlantic Coast Line road.
How in West Virginia
Caused by Foreigners.
\
Americus, Ga. Sept. 7, —Most
of the disturbances in the West
Virginia war area can be traced
to the large foreign element liv- j
ing there, and Americanization j
is the only remedy for existing j
contitions, according to VV. H. |
Ester, an Americus man, who
has been traveling that territory
the past year or two.
A majority of the miners. Es
ter says, are foreigners, speak
ing their several native tongues
and continuing their European
customs. During the wftr, and
for some time following, many of
them made big money, and the
general business depression
which resulted in a reduction of
these unusual earnings caused
much dissatisfaction among
them.
The disturbers, Estes says,
lost one of their most foremost
leaders in the death of Sid Hat
field, Hatfield being a foreigner
and not a member of the famous
Hatfield mountaineer family as is
generally understood throughout
Georgia.
Auto Painting.
1 am prepared to do first class
autoihobile painting, Give me a
trial and be convinced. Satis
faction guaranteed, prices rea
sonable.
H. H. Johnson.
Registered l>uroe
.1 erseys.
m •
Registered Duroc Jersey hogs
hogs for sale; the best in the
country; will sell or exchange
for other hogs. See me at once.
J. Wade Johnson,
Mouut Vernon, Ga.
Prof. E. H. McNeil of Macon
is visiting in Mt. Vernon for a
few days, having been called to
this section to render the wed
ding march at the Hogan-Nixon
weeding in Glenwood yesterday
afternoon.
Rev. A. G. Brewton is conduct
ing a protracted meeting at the
Methodist church in Ailey this
! week. He is assisted by Rev.
! S. A. Hearne of Claxton.
I After spending his vacation in
i Mt. Vernon, Mr. Spurgeon Bush
lest a few days ago for Savannah,
where he accepts a position in
the city market. Mrs. Bush re
mains with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. McCrimmon, for a
short while, after which she will
join Mr. Bush in Savannah,
where they will reside. Since
their marriage in the spring they
have made their home in Dublin.
666 quickly relieves Constipa
tion, Biliousness, Loss of Appe
tite and Headaches due to Torpid
Liver. \
The program for the fall meet
ings of the Parent-Teachers As
sociation will be published in the
next issue of the Monitor. Tne
| program is being prepared for
jthe full series, and the members
and those interested should pre
serve the program as given, for
: use throughout the fall.
Miss Hazel McQueen has re
| turned to her home at Perry, af
| ter spending a week with rela
tives in Mt. Vernon.
i COTTON- Ample storage ca
-1 pacity at reaeonable rates and
liberal advances on consignments
in any quantity, for prompt sale
or to be held, offered by BATTEY
& CO., The Substantial Cotton
Factors of Savannah, Ga.
For best results, ship your cot
ton to The John Flannery Com
pany, Savannah, Ga. Liberal
advances made on consignments.
i For best results, ship your cot
ton to The John Flannery Com
pany, Savannah, Ga. Liberal
advances made on consignments.
Miss Eva Conner will teach at,
Milltown this year. She has ta
ken up her work there.
Formal Opening of
the State Normal.
Athens, Ga., Sept. s.—The
formal opening of the State Nor
■ mal School will be held Thursday j
, September 8. Classification of i
I Students, however, will begin
I Tuesday, September 6.
The officials of the school antic
ipate a successful year and appli
cations for entrance that have al
ready been received indicate that
the enrollment will be well up to
’ that of last year.
During the 1921 22 session at
the Normal School there will be a,
number of new teachers on the
staff as follows: Miss Irma Ricks,
of Cedartown; Miss Doris Rober
son. of Superior, Wis.: Miss Car
rie Clay, of Savannah: Miss Lu- j
cile Charlton, of Savannah; Miss j
Cloo Rainwater, of Monroe; Miss
Hannah Hanson of Ln ram ore, N. |
1)., and Mrs Frank Osterman, of
Natal, South Africa.
i; Monticello Flour Mill.
Monticello, Ga., Sept. 5.- A
modern flour mill with a capacity
iofsixtv barrels a day is being
|erected at Monticello by the
! Farmers’ Milling Company, a
I new corporation organized re
. Icently with a capital stock of
t , SIO,OOO. The mill will be one of
j the largest and most up-to-date
jin this section. With its erect-1
■ j ion, Monticello will have two
] flour mills and farmers of Jasper
. county and surrounding territory I
will find adequate means of
turning into meal and flour all
| the grain they raise. Hereto
fore farmers in this part of the |
! state have neglected the wheat
industry because of inadequate
s I facilities for getting it ground,
, j but as a large number of flour
’ i mills will b" built in Monroe and
| nearby counties soon, it is be
i lieved that more wheat will be
! planted this Fall than ever be
| fore. I
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1921.
California Plan
Brings up Price.
Atlanta. Aug. 30.—Leaders
here of the Georgia Cotton!
Growers’ Co-operative Associa-’
tion, which is organizing Geor
gia cotton growers for do-opera
tive marketing upon the Califor
nia plan, are jubilant over the:
abrupt rise in the price of cotton i
during the past week, and yery j
; insistant that the organization of
Southern cotton growers under
the plan has been more responsi
i ble than any other one thing for
! the abrupt bull market.
Only last week, Chas. S. Bar
ret, chairman of the Georgia Or
jeanization Committee, issued a
| statement in which he set forth
that the new flood of credit which
j has been secured for Southern
cotton growers chiefly through
the financial stability \>f the
great cotton co-operatives already
organized in the western cotton
belt and their consequent success
in obtaining assistance from the
Finance Corporotion, was
the backbone of any stability
then existing in the cotton mar
ket.
As though to confirm his view,
it is a well-dnown fact that the
sensational rise in cotton the past
week began immediately upon
confirmation by the War Finance
Cerporation of great loans to the
Co-operative Associa! ions of Tex
as and Oklahoma, and reiteration
by Managing Director Eugene L.
Meyer of the policy of the War
Finance Corporation to furnish
similar assistance directly to oth
er growers of the South as soon
as they would qualify, by proper
organization.
Equally as important in affect
ing the market, they hold, was
amendment adopted to the new
War Finance Corporation bill, al
lowing loans to farmers, which
makes it possible for the Corpor
ation to lend money on farm pro
ducts assigned for domestic as
well as export sales, and leaders
of the big cotton movement point
out that representatives of the
American Cotton Growers’ Ex
change appearing before a con
ference of uhe House and Senate
committees, then in deadlock ov
er this amendment, and urging
its passage, were chiefly respon
sible for this vital'development.
The short crop, they say, to
which the rise has been attribut
ed by market reports.from spec
ulative sources, h; s been only a
limited factor in the great ad
vance, as a disastrous crop year
has long been foreseen.
The has sent , cotton
up, they say, is the sudden know
ledge that has dawned upon the
speculators and buyers that Sou
thern cotton growers will not be
compelled to dump both last
year’s and this year’s crop sud
denly upon the market this fall,
as had been anticipated, and for
this state of affairs, they main
tain the California plan, which
has, for the first time, put the
farmer in a position to say to the
gorernnignt, “We are a sound
! financial risk now. Lend us mon-1
|ey, or we will know that you are j
|no friend of the farmer,” has;
: been chiefly responsible.
I Bargains in Real Es
tate in Mt. Vernon.
Two of the best located homes |
in town for sale, immediate pos- j
session, well located as to busi
ness and school and ample kind
with each for garden. Bargain j
prices and c tr, give good terms on
either. See me at once if inter
ested. J. W ide Johnson,
Mount Vernon, Ga.
Trespass Notice.'
This is to warn all persons
against removing wood or timber I
of any kind from lands of the un-j
dersigned. I his lund has been |
fully posted, and from this date
trespassers will have to answer to j
the sheriff of Montg nnerv county, j
Dec. 16, 1920.
Mrs Li. B Fulo. m.
■ Again Reduces Pric3
dxtra Sise 30x3'A*16®§
Qfoul* 13 9 - 5
Firestone first made the lew price to Plant No. 2. This permits the
<:f .#13.95 on the Standard Non-Skid, price reduction on this tire from f
.y _ Unusual purchasing power $16.65 to $13.95. No such vuliiu has
t troughbig volume of business, and ever before been offered tire users,
t’vj . ;; efficiency of its $7,000,000 If your dealer hasn’t the Extra-
I :'r , No. 2, manufacturing exclu- Size in stock ask for our Stand
i . y3O size, made this possible. ard Non-Skid type at the same
! v .w, the production of the Extra- price. You will still be getting an
Si.ie aOx3J/o tire has been transferred unusual tire value.
.
Cords That Don’t Blow Out
Y m feel secure on Firestone Cords. year—lo,ooo, 15,000 and 20,000
I? : ui.-e Firestone Cords don’t blow miles, and the tires still going
iu i Your repair man will tell you strong. See your Firestone dealer
Le hasn't seen a blowout this past today. Name below.
Firestone Cord Tires are being sold at lowest price* in cord
tire history: 3iH3j *-$24.50 32x4 $46.30 24x4*4 -$5 4.90
P. J. McNATT
Mt. Vernon and Uvalda
- inllll I mmfiTffifir—Twi Tirriyirnr r.ri rirttir - 'iTtirmnniiT nlinrmrrnnmiMrw aMMiMMI—nT irnTT rrr ——irrrTWrw—■
Trustee’s Sale Os Real Estate. |
State Os Georgia—Montgomery County:
Under and by virture of the powers contained
in that certain deed to secure debt, made, execut
<>d and delivered by Mrs. Josie Johnson to Realty
Savings and Trust Company, (A Corporation un
der the laws oi Georgia) on the 15th day of May. j
1917, and recorded on May 24th, 1917, in deed book i
No. 24, on pages 197 and 198 of the Clerk’s Office ;
of Montgomery County, Georgia, and in accord
ance with the appointment of the undersigned as
Trustee, and in pursuance of the pow’ers in said
deed to secure debt, the undersigned a9 Sole Trus
tee, will sell before the Court House Door at Mt. [
Vernon, in said County, on the First Tuesday in :
October, 1921, that being the 4th day of said month,
between the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash, the following described real es
tate, to-wit:
All those certain lots or parcels of land, situate,
lying and being in the town of Uvalda, and in the
•275th District G. M. Montgomery County, Ga., and j
more particularly described as follows: All of lot
of land number two (2) and Forty One (41) feet off
the east side of lot number Three (3); said Forty |
One (41) feet adjoining lot number two, all of said
property located in Block number Twenty Four
(24) and fronting ,pn Myrtle Street a distance of
One Hundred and Seven (107) feet, and extend
ing back north along Warren Street, a distance of
One Hundred and Fifty Five (155) feet to an alley,
as shown by map of the Towm of Uvalda,
as recorded in deed book No. 10, page 228, .
Clerk’s Office Superior Court Montgomery
County,. Georgia, and being same property
conveyed by R. L. O’Neal to B. F. Wolfe on
July 22nd, 1911, and Recorded in deed book
No. 16, page 134, Clerk’s Office of said Coun
ty. and conveyed by B. F. Wolfe to Mrs. Josie
Johnson.
The sale ofthe above described property is to be
had for the purpose of paying the indebtedness
secured by said deed to secure debt, the amount
now due and owing to said Realty Savings and I
Company, being the sum of Twelve Hundred and \
Seventy Five and 20-100 ($1275.20) Dollars, and al
so all costs and expenses of this proceeding, in
cluding fees for Trustee as well as all other items
secured by said deed to secure debt, default hav
ing been made in the payment of the installments
in said deed mentioned.
Purchaser paying for titles and Revenue stamps.
This Stpt. Ist, 1921.
J. Wade Johnson,
t Sole Trustee.
Administrator’s Sale.
! Georgia—Montgomery County.
Under and by virtue of an or
der granted by the court of ordi
| nary of said county, will be sold
|on the first. Tuesday m October,
I 1921, before the court house door
! in said county, betwei n the legal i
hours of sale, to the highest bid
der for cash, the following prop
erty to wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
; lying and being in the 275th G.
M. District of Montgomery coun
ty, Ga., and being three certain
lots of land in the town of Uval
da. Number 3, -1 and 5. in Block
No. 26 of tfie Town of Uvalda, all
(of said lots fronting on Main
street 66 feet and running back
155 feet to an alley. Said land is
better known as the .1. A. Grace
land. To be sold as the property
lof the estate of Mrs. Mary Belle
McDaniel for the purpose of divi
sion. E. J. Hadden,
Adr. Estate Mrs. Mary
Belle McDaniel.
For best results, ship your cot
ton to The John Flannery Com
pany, Savannah, Ga. Liberal
advances made on consignments.,
Rub-My-Tism is a great pain
killer. Relieves pain and sore
ness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
j Sprains. &c.
■ ___________________________________________
mtvfTmTmmr»fTm»rmmTmTTTTTTfmTTTT»» *
l PA R A L, OA N S
► On Improved Montgomery, Treutlen and 4
t Wheeler County Improved Farm Lands 3
1 QUICK ACTION LOW COST 3
► ◄
l A. B. Hutcheson 3
► I MT. VERNON, GA. 3
► (>*A4A*IUAmAUAA*AiiIAU •AAAAUamAAAAAAiAAAAAAAii
1 This Brush
We*ll give you
ter ' pint can o{
Cl.ar and eight T7 TJ TC^
beautiful colors J 1 | % jli
We want you to know how easily you can
x protect your
Floors, Furniture and Woodwork
Come in to our store with this advertisement— pay us for the brush,
the can of KYANIZE is yours without charge.
Choice of Eight Colors or Clear Varnish.
Just try KYANIZE once and you’ll always u«e this easy working,
waterproof, hard-drying varnish to beautify your home.
Csas to oar Aims Today foe yo«r fK£E Cm
MT. VERNON DRUG CO.
666 has more imitations than
any other Fever Tonic on the
market, but no one wants imita
tions. ad