The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, November 09, 1922, Image 8
® w&&o r ®i® '©''©’'©'.©'o 0 m I LOCAL - PERSONAL g © : f| it ©•©:•©'.©:•©:<© ©© ; ©.© 0 © '© M.r and Mrs. C. J. Phares, of Winter Haven, Fla., have re turned home after a visit to rela tives. Mrs. T. B. Hughes, sister of Mrs. Thares, accompanied them home. Mr. F. M. Conner, Agricultur al Agent of the Seaboard Air Line, with headquarters at Cor dele, was a visitor here Tuesday. Mrs. Fred G. Brewton spent Friday with relatives in Dublin. Mr. J. R. Buttersworth arrived j a few days ago. It will be re membered that he was called in to servitude on account of an un fortunate tragedy here about four years ago. He is enjoying excellent health, and friends are' glad to have him return. Mrs. C. T. Bickley of Bellville, en route to visit relatives at va rious points, stopped over here’ Monday night to visit Mrs. D. W. Folsom. Mr. E. 0. Dixon was called to Stapleton Wednesday afternoon on account of the death of an aunt. Mr. S. Z. Salter and a party | of friends left Tuesday for Liber ty county, where they will enjoy chasing the deer that scampers over that section. Tarrytown. Mrs. W. T. Dickens and fami ly were the spend-the-day guests of the former’s brother, Mr. Newt Dickens at Adrian Satur day last. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Simons visitey the latter’s parents at Adrian Sunday last. Mr. J. T. Warnock is the pos sessor of a new Buick. Messrs. It. D. Beatty, J. E. Calhoun, J. E. Boyd, Guy Coop er and B. S. Beatty left Tuesday on a fishing trip to the coast near Crescen t. Mrs. Addie Stephens and chil dren, who have been visiting relatives here for the past two weeks left for their home at Val dosta Wednesday. Messrs. W. B. Cadle and I. E. Brooks were business visitors to Hazlehurst and Denton Monday Mrs. D. O. Calhoun is visiting her daughter, Mrs AllieLowrey, near Soper ton this week. Mr. Gaston Calhoun of Cosmo politan is visiting relatives here this week. Mrs. R. J. Boyd who has been sick, is much improved at this writing. Mrs. W. B. Cadle is ill this week. We wish her an early re covery. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Branch of Rockledge are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Calhoon. A large number of our citizens are attending court in Alt. Ver non this week. Mr. Johnie Davis and sister, 1 Miss Mellie, Miss Lula Mcßride, and Theo Mcßrunson, of Soper ton, were B. Y. P. U. visitors here Sunday evening. HAWKES GLASSES Preserve your eyes. Hawkes Optician will be at our st< >re Tues day, November 14. The Genuine Hawkes Glasses only will In* V fitted. He sure to see him and take no chan-i ees on poor and fake goods. Glasses scien tifically fitted at reg ular prices. Don’t take chances on your priceless eyesight. D. A. Mcßae Store - - - Mrs W. R. Dixon and little son, Talmadge, of Cottondale, Fla., Mrs- R. H. Cawley of An dalusia, Ala., Mrs. Hattie Math ews of Savannah, Mrs. E. N. Wicker of Wrightsville. Mrs. A. N. Watkins of Kite, Mrs. B. E. Belcher of Bartow, Mr. C. A. Stephens of Summit, and Mr. J. W. Stephens of Bartow, formed a happy house party visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Stephens at Kibbee this week. Mr. A. F. Sawyer, with the Vidalia Advance, attended court here Monday. Two of the* Monitor force have been patriotically serving on the I grand jury this week, which will account for the lateness of the hour in going to press, and other discrepancies that may crop out- Mr. and Mrs. G. W. McCrim mon have been indisposed this week, but now improving. Mrs. J.C. Johnson, mother of Hiram, J. Wade, Harley and Henry Johnson, has been very ill at her home on Institute Heights. Her recovery being almost de spaired of some days this week. The Mount Vernon Bank will be closed on Saturday, the same being a legal holiday. Sale of Real Estate Under Power of Sale. Georgia Montgomery County. Under ad by virtue of Hie power I contained in that certain deed to se j cun' debt, made by Mrs. Ella Clark 1 to I*. It. Gotten, under date of No | vcinbcr 15th 1920, and recorded l)e --| cent Iter Kill. 1920 in deed book No. 25, i pagds 424-5 Clerk’s office Montgom ery county. Georgia, the undortdgned will soil at public outcry before the court bouse door of said county, to highest bidder for cnsli, between the legal hours of sale on the First Tues day in December. 1922, the follow ing described real estate, to-wtt. All that tract or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the 275th • District*!!. M. Montgomery County, '. (icorgia, bounded north by lands of . .1 • M. Daniel, cast by lands of J. F. Clark, south by lands of J. JelT Mc- Arthur and west by lands of T. G. McArthur, containing seventy-five (76) acres, more or less and known as the Ella Clark home place, i Said sale to lie bad for the purpose of paying the indebtedness set out in ; said deed to secure debt, the amount i now duo being Two Thousand ($2000) dollars principal, and One Hundred I Seventy Seven and 59-100 (177.69) i dollars interest to December Ist. 1922, togcthei with cost of this pro ceeding Including ten per cent of tin* ainnuni of principal and interest for Commissioner's fees for the making of sale and all advertising fees, de | fault having been made in the nay | men! of tlie interest due on May Ist, 1922, and the principal and Inter est due Nov. Ist 1922, said deed pro -1 viding that in event of default In the j pay men! of nn.v of said notes princi pal or interest, then the whole of said debt would become due and payable at the option of the holder, time being the essence of the coii ! tract, and the holder having by this proceeding declared tho whole sum due and payeble by reason of the above default. A complete conveyance will be made to the purenaser on day of sale such purchaser paying for title and revenue stamps. This tiili day of November, 1922. I*. K. Cohen. Attorney in fact for Mrs. Elia Clark J. Wade Johnson, Attorney. Commissioner. Sheriff Sale. Georgia Montgomery County. Will be sold before the court house door in said county, on the first Tuesday in December, 1922, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder for cash, all that certain tract or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the 275th (1. M. District Montgomery county, Georgia, con taining on, hundred and twenty-two 1 122) acres more, or less, hounded north hy lands of estate Matthew Sharpe, east and south by lands of | i stab M. Sharpe and west by lands 1 estate Mrs. \\ E. Mathias and lands ot J. T. Langford, made up of two tracts, one containing 99 8-4 acres, . more nr less as shown by plat of the ; same made by S. II Morris, Feb. 14th 1902. recorded deed book 2d, page 227 r 1* rk's (itllce Montgomery County, I Ga , and one tract containing 22 1-4 acres more or less, as shown by plat recorded iii deed book 10 page 119 Cl. rk's Office Montgomery County, Ga.. and known as the home place of said.l.W. Mclntyre, with the Im provements thereon Levied on as : tlie property of J. \V. Mclntyre, to satisfy an execution issued from Su- I pei ior Court of said County on No | veinber tiili., 191.2, in favor of F. R. |v obeli and against J. \V. Mclntyre. < Written notice given the defendant, J. W. Mclntyre, in terms of the law. This Kill day of November Ht 22. L. K. IJUKCH, Sheriff. THE MONTGOMERY iMONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA. VENT OF VOLCANO IN CITY Autherltlss sf Edinburgh, ftcotland, leaiwtm Stirred Up by Unlooksd ter Disc ovary. 1 _ i Tits back yard of ths tenement of i 80 Bt. Leonards hill, Edinburgh, ad jacent to the king’s park, has sud denly bao<M*e s center of Interest to ! geologists through the discovery, by Outhbert Day, secretary of the Ed in- | burgh Oeologlcal society, of s volcanic i vent. The place already has been visited by geologists from Norway and America, and has furnished material for some animated discussions. The visitor walking through the "cloaa" to the common drying green (i. e., common to all tenants, and not necessarily grassy) Is confronted with the Jagged, almost perpendicular, face of a small quarry, long tn disuse. On this face la exposed a basalt sill, Just where the once molten igneous rock was breedated by explosion In bygone ages, and has given rise to a parasitic volcanic vent, mainly choked by ba saltic debris. It can be seen clearly where the local explosion, with its concomitant escape of hot volcanic gases, notably cooled the adjacent por tions of the basalt sill. K. B. Ballsy, M. A., F. O. S., of his majesty's geological survey, ex pounded recently bis Interpretation of tba phenomenon to ths Edinburgh Ge ological society. Hls conclusions will be published in the transactions of the society.—Christian Science Mon itor. PLAYED WITH NATURAL GAS ■arlieat battlers Could Not Understand Wenderful Fart It Was te Play in Civilization. Natural gas flrat waa used for Il luminating purposes In Fredonla, N. Y., early In tha Nineteenth century. Indians formerly Inhabiting the region had legends of burning springs In Can adaway creak, a little stream running through the town. Children of the early whits settlers amused themselves by setting large onion stalks over fis sures In tha alate rock at tha bed of the stream, packing them around with sand, and lighting tha gas which amerged from the top. The first ga* well, tapping a pocket 200 fast below the surface, was drilled In 1820, the year Lafayette made his last triumphal tour of America. A load pipe was laid on the top of the ground te pipe the fluid to tba tavern whara ha was sntertalned when he passed through tho town on hls way from tba West. Lafayette commented oa tho now light In hls journal, still preserved In Parta. “ - ■ ■ ». Japan's Uniqua Papulation. Thar# Lae never before beau a na tion at unco so numerous and so homo geneous as tha Japanese. Their popu lation la estimated at somewhere be tween 00,000,000 and 75,000,000. Their territory, hardly so extensive as was controlled by our Revolutionary col onies, contains from half to three quartera as many people us Inhabit the whole United States. This popu lation, too, la remarkably uniform. Those who know Japan beat agree that. If we except the negligible abo rigines of some northern provinces, you can hardly find among the Japa nese any difference much more pro nounced than those which might dis tinguish New Hampshire from Con necticut. Compere this with our coun try, or with the widely various races and languages of China or of India, or with England, Scotland and Wales, and you will ate that tha patriotism of Japan haa to sanction ’ lta Intensity a population unique In human record. —Scribner’s Magazine. Green Dye Prom Cern Coba. Science haa found away of utiliz ing all corn cobs, short or long. In the manufacture of various chemicals. As tha corn cob consists of cellulose, which la valuable for the making of many products, such as celluloid and paper, It la considered desirable to save the aubatance of tha cob. The furfural, therefor#, la taken from the extract which is obtained by boiling the cob In water and the cellulose can thus be kept for other purposes. This liquid Is employed for many purposes In Industrial chemistry, and can be ao treated that It will yield a bright green dye, which la much liked by woiuea of fashion, aaya tha Detroit News. Fish Far Fram Home. Indians at Glacier Park, Mont., 5 caught In Iceberg lake a species of trout identified as the Salveliuum Rossi, which hitherto haa been known to exist only tn the Arctic ocean, and geologists In this territory are con- j vluoed this strange body of water in Glacier National park Is connected subterraneoualy with the Icy waters of tha Far North. This Is the second species of this trout taken from Ice berg lake, the other “furllke clad” member of the finny tribe having been hooked by a fly fleliernian about ten years ago. The specimen caught measures slightly ever two feet from nose te the fork ta lta tall. I An Clastic Budget. A New York expert says that a woman can dress on SBOO a year. She «an also drees on SI,BOO. $4,800 and various ether sums, to we don’t see the point es hie remark.—Boston Transcript. Real Invention. Owners name plates, to be attached te umbrella rods abova the upper catches have beeu Invented by a resi dent of Seattls. f^AAAAAAAAAAA^ J Cabbage Plants > < 15c 100 S \i . > j Onion Sets £ 15c Qt. ► < i FOR THAT COLD £ 4 > i USE >\ < CURRIE’S COLD TABLETS ► < MOUNT. VERNON < DRUG CO. > M'VVVV VVVVVVVAi Estray Notice. Taken up at my place one dark bay mare mule. Owner can get same by paying expenses of keep! and the cost of this advertise- 1 , ment. Near Bear Creek Church. ! Nov. 8, ’22. O. K. Morgan, j | wjjm | 1 —— V G/, FOR THE RELIEF OF Pain in the Stomach and Bowels. Intestinal Cramp Colic, Diarrhoea - SOLD EVERYWHERE - Sale of Real Estate Under Power of Sale. Georgia—Montgomery Comity. Under and by virtue of the powers of sale contained in a certain mort - gage made by F. 15. Kell to The Com mercial Bank (a branch of The Mt. Vernon Bank, a banking corporation under the laws ot said State) dated the 19th day of April 1919, and re corded the 25th day of April 1919 in Book 38 page 8(5 of the Records of j Mortgages of Montgomery County, 1 Georgia, the undersigned will sell atj public outcry before the court house! door of said county on the first Tues-1 day in December 1922 within the ! legal hours of sale, all of the follow- j ing described real estate, to-wit: All that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in the 275th District G. M. of Montgomery Coun ty, Georgia, and in the Brown Divis ion of the colored portion of the Town of Uvalda. Georgia, and known in said plat as lots numbers seven (7) and eight (8) fronting i-.rmvn Street and being forty eight and one-half feet wide and running hack one hun dred and fifty feet to an alley. Said I sale to he had for the purpose of pay j ing an indebtedness as in said mortJJ j gage set out, together with the costs I of this proceeding including ten per; cent, of the amount for attorney's fees, as provided for in said mortgage aforesaid, the debt, secured by said j mortgage having matured and said , maker of said mortgage failing and refusing to pay the same, and the I amount, of said indebtedness on the' said day of sale being $65.00 princi- j pal; $11.31 interest and $7.63 attor ney’s fees. Title deeds to tlie pur-1 chaser will be executed by the pro per officers of the undersigned and in j the name ot the undersigned, as is | provided in said mortgage aforesaid. The Commercial Bank (Branch < f The Mt. Vernon Bank). THE UNIVERSAL. CAR 1 SSO REDUCTION I Effective Oct. 17, the Ford Motor Co- authorizes the following reduction in prices f. o- b. Detroit: Chassis ... $235 Runabout, regular - 269 Touring, regular - 298 Truck Chassis - - 380 Coupe - 530 I| Sedan, two door - - 595 Sedan, tour door - 725 j!j Starter ... 70 1 1 - Demountable Rims 25 | These are the Lowest Prices in the history of the Ford Motor Co. | ML VERNON MOTOR COMPANY | Eugene D. White. Manager Mt. Vernon, Ga. -!| SPECIAL) i TO MONITOR READERS | I Friday and 1 Saturday Only | $2.50 Shoes, Superb djl 7C Quality, for ip Lm § %J || Ginghams, Good 1 it Grade, yd. . lUC | Full Line of Men’s and Boys’ Fall and Winter Suits at Reduced Prices Stylish and Seasonable Goods at Economical Figures. Dry Goods, Shoes, Furnishings, Etc. ; THE FAIR STORE 1 | MOUNT VERNON, GA. £ $ I FRUIT CAKE FILLINGS § BREAD RECEIVED DAILY 8 WHITE CREST FLOUR 8 j CONNER-DICKSON CO. § be your grocers g ® Phone 69 Mt. Vernon j®