Newspaper Page Text
2*88? egal ads
piYABlE
AD ' below, all legal
[ TO nJd the 'aw advance. The
,wn ** ? for in adver
mst pany each ,nn ami every before the
, com coP>.; 9 8 e "ot t j n will not
n fe c ca n and rule
-ertisewent n type- 7 u p I 0n al 0. , K. cases> This or n0
'w'l dh ri serted ’ neitber WlU
in type- ,, R . rr mNG' FEE PAID
59) No Sheriff or Deputy
E WH m%liall be required toad
is htf 4 defendant in fi fa
rty f I an y such advertisement
■n; |jt n f
1 th’ **#£». ei ; , j^e plaintiff that in
on Provided
flit or or his agent or
h par P niake and file an afD
l. hall to his poverty he
in* th^ owing °* shall be the
t that it
’"oriff or his dt ‘ PUty t0 PT
red by law
SHERIFF’S SALE.
? “T&^nty. l l id”' before fc .forTaah! within the
t S r thS hi^Bt property, b ! . < to-w.t:
de wribed land and premises situ
■act ot f la 7th Land District
1 being ty I" ^containing 69
)Un , ’s Number security 173, being more
3f jescribed in deed from
Th rtorded state Life j n .
,0 e in Deed Book
Ced a s K^rtls of Constable, said county. and
,,,/Jgned 1 , n ov perkins, advertisement and
for
as tert t.°f. a p5s£
fa. co ^ y
■r
b day ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
E. 0. County, Georgia.
Grady
SHERIFF'S SALE.
C a° UI pubUc outcry before the
1 d Cairo, said county, withm
° in the first Tuesday
’"the of sale, on bidder for cash,
highest to-wit.
’described property, land of Lot of Land
lain Staining tract of the
63 acres known as
the 17th District of Grady
p'iy ,r n being from more M. particularly S. McCord de- to
deed recorded . Deed
bmmissioner as in
348 Deed Records of said
.
[by Roy Perkins, Constable, and
Bdersigned for advertisement and
the property of M. S. McCord
la. in favor of T. F. Proctor,
inner of Grady county and
McCord for 1937 State,
.
bhool District taxes.^
h day of March, 1939.
E O. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
Grady County, Georgia.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
y County. . before , ,, the
Id at public outcry
or in Cairo, said county, within
is of sale, on the first Tuesday
I, to the highest bidder for cash,
described property, to-wit:
alf of Lot of Land Number 259
strict of Decatur County, Geor
ax re- in the northwest corner ot
d by Mary McNair, said tract
i acres, more or less, being more
lescribed in security deed from
F. Wheat as recorded in Deed
ge 325, Deed Records of said
by Roy Perkins, Constable, and
ndersigned for advertisement and
as the property of Ed Neal
fa. in favor of T. F. Proctor,
aioner of Grady county and
Neal for 1937 State,
School District taxes.
I ii day of March, 1939.
E. 0. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
Grady County, Georgia.
CITATION,
dy County.
Iryant, guardian of Leroy Guest,
v me for a discharge from her
of Leroy Guest, this is to notify
concerned, to file their objec
they have, on or before the first
ipril next, else Mrs. Foy Bryant
arged from her guardianship as
5SIE S. McMANKUo, Ordinary.
iOTIICE OF SALE,
ly County.
at public outcry before the City
City of Cairo, Georgia, on the
irii, 1939, within the legal hours
ho highest bidler for cash, the
:ribed lands, to-wit:
i tract, parcel or lot of land in
airo, Grady County, Georgia and
■" follows:
act of land fronting 210 feet on
Street and bounded on the north
• A. Belcher, west by lands
by P. H. Herring, south by 6 th
formerly Grady Street and east
e J" described . property abutting
Im* on
No 3, and Ueu having
agauist said property of C. G.
Jrnie 30th, 1927, for the paving
> ° n nt sa ‘ d ing assessments
.L the P av
11 fust, ,. d ay 0 f September
1934, 1935, and 1936, and the
nt' been paid the above describ
be sold for the purpose of pay
? assessments due theeron on the
leptember 1981, 1932, 1933. 1934,
' together with interest thereon
J '• day W of THOMAS, March, 1939.
- of Marshall
the City of Cairo.
? tRS’ r R s 0LES FEED ALE GROCERS, MEAT
DEALERS. MILLS AND
‘ “f received by the State Pur
AtLnt! te ot until G ' a - 10 No. o’clock 2 Cap
a.
Wit ’f j /urnishing f or month groceries, of April,
farioi-s PTl vlct - Gamps maintain
w » “'anks and information
, de '! ver y Points be ob
V. w Assistant can Supervis
le'usod es at ab ?ve address. Our
submit bid
Bade ,1*^ txvL ^ys ting from bids. date Pay.
toTTf. f of
I bettp ° g00ds - Goods
'B here r tha n that used by
1 a PPfoximat m te satisfactor y
i “ only and ma y he
,he Dept- aces fit.
ormalitS V Gontraet n / ° r 811 of purchase bid3 and
1 to be v d,n
ia ttment aS '? sucb * on the d State
°r inriivij d< i E ' an not on
!d bid ThGroceries on Grn " Velope must b «
l9 ” to be opened
of the P otlce IS in accordance
5V H d ,G^"’ MmeT R a (? ^ , ARD A 7 8Sembly ° f
D OF GA -
h
on > Member.
3-10-2t.
6
'• *0 the hiJfc. tb 5. «»t Tuesday
described" land ?,* pr est ° pe J ty )lcl 'ier to-wit: for cash,
6th in T J f La . d Number
■' 6-1 District V„L of r Grady !J County,
‘“'ras of < S VB : Bounded on
« J. w F. Maxwell,
W m th!? ll’ on the
’ on We on the RoMh
?&? '*■ in y °, { Griner «
favay T Brothers
10ner of r ' F - Proctor,
* Mothers y County »" d
r
E. 0 M a r S h HS9.
A T '
T 1 ?. 001 ?’
Grady y County, She rlff.
r~~-- Ration; Georgia.
he s are represent
scents at Boston uni-
negotiating peace in labor ranks
■ i il HI M SBi 1
I ifi VX ::
fl ff ™
ja {RHO? ■irm : J ¥
W: * - . W mm
- ■ > $
ill yii •*. -s- : v'.
/5. K!' • » ••
• rife' & $
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.
o
New York City.—Representatives
of the American -Feckration of Labor
and of the Congress of Industrial Or
ganizations as they met in joint con
ference here Saturday, their third
MINIITES OF BOARD
CO. COMMISSIONERS
r*
The Board of Commissioners of roads and
revenues of Grady county, met in regular ses
sion March 7th, 1939, with the following com
missioners present: Waiter Davis, chairman,
L. O. Maxwell, W. E. Wamble, T. W. Aid
r«< e ana G‘. W. Connell.
Minutes of the last regular session of Feb
ruary 7th, 1989, read and approved.
This being the first meeting of the new
five-member board, Messrs. T. W. Aldredge
and G. W. Connell, having been added by a
legislative act passed by the present Legisla
ture, now in session in Atlanta.
On motion the board passed a resolution
requesting the Grand Jury now in session to
recommend that the Ellis Health law now in
force in Grady county, be discontinued, and
directed the Clerk to go before the Grand
Jury and make known this request, which
was done.
Later on, Dr. W. A. Walker appeared be
fore the Board endorsing the above resolution,
spending some time with the Board, discussing
tins and other matters.
Messrs. W. L. Perkins and Clower Hal)
came before the Board with a petition signed
by a number of tax-payers, requesting a road
be opened through the lands of W. L. Perkins,
R. E. Cox, C. B. Harrell, Clower Han ana
Hugh Davis. Their request was granted.
Chairman R. W. Davis opposed the granting
of the petition because the Board recenttly
passed a resolution to the effect that the
county was not financially able to construct
any additional roads, and would discontinue
road building for the present, and devote their
time to the upkeep of the present roads. Also
in securing right-of-ways on roads Nos. Ill
and 93, which are in line to be paved at an
early date. Chairman Davis though it neces
sary that the county secure the right-of-ways
in question as fast as possible, and while we
have the opportunity of securing these much
needed road improvements. the
In compliance with the authority given
Board by a recent legislative act. a motion
was made and it v t3 ordered that the sa'ary
of the Judge of the City Court of Cairo, for
the month of March, 1939, be fixed at $150.00 :
and the salary of the Judge of the City Court,
beginning April 1st, 1939, be fixed at $125.00
per month, as provided by law.
Other routine matters were discussed and
considered.
On motion, the following bills were ap
proved and ordered paid: $ 13.00
Mrs. K. Powell, interest on warrant
R. W. Davis, salary as Chairman
of County Commissioners ................ $ 125.00
W. E. Wamble, salary as Co. Com. .... 15.00
L. O. Maxwell, salary as Co. Com....... 15.00
R. A. Bell, salary as Co. Attorney ........ 3o.00
W. B. Fincher, salary as Clerk ................ 65.00
Ira Carlisle, salary City Court Judge 200.00
T. F. Proctor, salary Tax Commissioner 250.00
H. L. Trussell, salary County Agent 100.00
C. F. Richter, salary Probation Officer 50.00
G. S. Long, salary Courthousee keeper 40.00
S. C. Collins, salary as warden ............ 100.00
Mrs. R. E. Lashley, one-half rent for
sewing room for November ............. 6.63
R. E. Lashley, rent on land for State
Convict Camp ................................... ■ 10.00
Southern Industrial Orphanage 20.00
pauper aid .........................
Dorris Nichols, county's maintenance to
Camp Sawyer ........................................ 3-25
Mrs. L. C. Sellers, pauper aid........5.00
Freeman Wamble, salary bridge foreman 65.00
Grady County Board of Health
monthly budget ....................... ....... 375.00
7’- B. Bell, - salary, tractor . driver , . _ ......... . 60.00
Belton Bell, salary, tractor driver ..... . 50.00
Ed Carr, salary, tractor driver ............ . 65.00
H. L. Wamble, salary tractor driver . . 45.00
Wayne McCrory, salary tractor driver 65.00
Cairo Messenger, pu . minu s.
Wight Hardware Co., • •
Wight & Browne, drugs ...................... jgg
Lawsons Pharmacy, » g 75
H- Fred Hart, packing a , 79 15
Elt !L “Lil nowder L40
j J- R - White & Co., washing p ■ g Q5
, Gairo , Telephone Co., P 49.30
Grady Cairo Motor County Co^, Motor parts Co., p , repairs ^75
blacksmith' o 00
; R ; F • Dixon, , gco’gy
i Thomas-Robmson Lbr. Co., _ 'g 0
L L. Olivers Son, pa e .......... 30 00
Eusiiin s, dry goods, welfare dept. ^......
Roddenbery Hardware Co., 14.76
Marshall & Bruce Co., printi g ............ ■
H. v. Kell Co., nails ....... ......... ....... ...........170i36
Standard Oil Co., gas and oils ...
E. O. Alligood, Sheriff expense 148.80
-
Pete’s Garage, repairs 1 go
..................... 3 24
Grady Pharmacy, drugs ................. 3.24
S. C. Collins, bills paid ............... .66
S. C. Collins, bills paid .....■ buttons, 13^65
Rogers 5 & 10c store, thread, 67.18
Harrell Lbr. Co., lumber ................■■■—■• ..
P. M. Baggett, recording highway deed
and Court expense ...................... 18.75
Roy Dunlap, blacksmith work ....... ........ 1.20
Cairo Banking Co., bills paid 745 .I 6
....... 5.75
Hunter & Williams, tire repairs, etc.,
H. L. Glover, welding 9.50
....... .......
1 Mary Louise Maxwell, monthly budget 412.00
Stokes Tire Co., spark further plugs, business, tractor meeting — J:
There being no
adjourned. R. W. Davis, Chairman,
W. E. Wamble.
L. O. Maxwell,
T. W. Aldredge,
G’. W. Connell.
Attest: W. B. Fincher, Clerk.
The 1938 hay crop of 92 million
tons is the largest in 10 years, re
ports the Department of Agriculture.
To Query Women
All Over South
Touring Reporters have now asked
over 1,200 women and girls of
leading Southern Cities the now
famous question: “Were you
helped by CARDUI ? ”
Averaging all replies so far shows
that 93 out of every 100 users
questioned declared CARDUI
benefitted them!
Users by thousands are eager to
tell how CARDUI has given
them appetite; helped them gain
strength; has thus relieved them
of the symptoms of functional
dysmenorrhea due to malnutrition.
Many also say that, when symp
toms indicate the need, CARDUI
in larger doses helps “at the
time” to soothe pain.
THE CAIRO MESSENGER, F RIDAY, MARCH 17TH, 1939.
since President Roosevelt appealed to
the leaders of both organizations for
peace in the ranks of labor. Left to
right: H. C. Bates, Matthew Woll, T.
J. Rickert and Dan Tobin, the A. -F.
Want To Reduce
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Here’s the way to say farewell to
j OUiKJ. waistline, Wallace, nat
ionally known calisthenics director,
puts lovely ....... dlSCiple through . an
a ex
ercise borrowed from the ballet. Ex
tending the arms outward at shoulder
level, she twists at the waist, turn
ing as far as possible in each direc
tion. And a.s you notice, there’s noth
( i ing wrong with that waistline.
j
SHERIFF’S SALE.
(ieorgia, Grady County.
Will be sold at public outcry before che
Courthouse door in Cairo, said county, within
the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday
j n April, 1939, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described property, to-wit:
a certain lot in the City of Cairo,
Grady County, Georgia, being more particu
l a rly described in a deed to secure debt from
j l. recorded t. Hadley in to Deed Wight Book Hardware 37, Page 162, Company Deed
as
Records of said county.
; Levy made by Roy Perkins, Constable, and
! delivered to undersigned for advertisement and
sale.
Levied on as the property of L. T. Hadley
under a fi. fa. in favor of T. F. Proctor,
Tax Commissioner of Grady county and
against L. T. Hadley for 1937 State,
j County and 7th School District of March, taxes. 1939.
This the day
j E. O. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
! Grady County, Georgia.
j SHERIFF’S SALE.
Georgia, Grady County.
Will be sold at public outcry before the
Courthouse door in Cairo, said county, within
] ega i hours of sale, on the first Tuesday
j n April, 1939, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described property, to-wit:
A tract of land situated in Cairo, Grady
County, Georgia, to-wit: Beginning at the cor
ner G f p owe ll and Monroe Streets and run
ning along the east side of Powell Street a
distance of 141 feet, thence east 182 feet to
the land line of T. S. Copeland, thence along
said line to the run of a certain branch or
ditch, thence along said ditch in a south
westerly direction to Monroe Street, thence
weg( . a|<)ng Monroe street to starting point.
Levy made by Roy Perkins, Constable, and
delivered to undersigned for advertisement and
sale.
Levied on as property of James McLendon
under a fi. fa. in favor of T. F. Proctor,
Tax Commissioner of Grady county and
against James McLendon for 1937 State,
County and School District taxes.
1 This the 7th day of March, 1939.
E. O. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
Grady County, Georgia.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
Georgia, Grady County.
Will be sold at public outcry before the
Courthouse door in Cairo, said county, within
the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday
in April, 1939, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described property, to-wit:
One certain house and lot in the City of
Cairo, G’rady County, Georgia, being more
particularly described in security deed from
Arch Weatherspoon to Wight Hardware Com
pany as recorded in Deed Book 35, Page 431,
Deed Records of Grady county, Georgia.
Levy made by Roy Perkins, Constable, and
delivered to undersigned for advertisement and
sale. Arch Weatherspoon
Levied on as property of
under a fi. fa. in favor of T. F. Proctor,
Tax Commissioner of Grady county and
against Arch Weatherspoon for 1937 State,
County and School District taxes.
This the 7th day of March, 1939.
E. O. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff,
Grady County, Georgia.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
Georgia, Grady County.
Will be sold at public outcry before the
Courthouse door in Cairo, said county, within
the legal houre of sale, on the first Tuesday
in April, 1939, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described property, to-wit:
72 acres of land on Lot of Land Number
140 in the 17th district of Grady County,
Georgia, and being more particularly describ
ed in security deed from Mrs. Mattie Lee
Taylor to Volunteer State Life Insurance
Company as recorded in Deed Book 37, Page
101, Deed Records of said county.
Levied on as property of Mrs. Mattie Lee
Taylor under a fi fa in favor of T. F. Proctor,
Tax Commissioner of Grady county and
against Mrs. Mattie Lee Taylor for 1937 State,
County and School District taxes.
This the 7th day of March, 1939.
E. O. ALLIGOOD, Sheriff.
Grady County, Georgia.
Success is a hard thing to obtain
but it is well worth the effort.
All things are not even. It’s eas
ier to start a fight than it is to stop
one.
of L. negotiators; Sidney Hillman,
Phillip Murray and John L. Lewis,
head of the C. I. 0. The last three
men are negotiators of thei C. I. 0,
HEALTH LETTER
By Howard P. Rankin, Grady
County Health Commissioner.
HEALTH PROGRAM NEEDS
SUPPORT.
No public health program can be a
success in any county unless it has the
confidence and support of the people
that benefit by it. Full support can
not be secured unless the people un
derstand the purposes and objectives
of the program.
People certainly should be willing
and anxious to provide for those
things which assure them a better in.
dividual and community life, The
chief difficulty has been that adults of
the present generation did not re
ceive thorough instruction in the prin
ciples of hygiene during their elemen
tary school training. Their scientific
information is limited and their ideas
are often bizarre—founded on super
stition, tradition, and misinformation.
Furthermnce, adults are slotv to re
ceive new ideas.
Health education in this county
must, therefore, be divided into two
distinct phases:
Child training in the principles of
personal and community hygiene.
This training must be given during
the formative period of life, The
health instruction should not be a
thing apart, but should be a part of
the elementary school program.
Health information. This phase of
health education is planned primarily
for adults. Its purpose is to inform
the people of the community concern
ing current public health problems and
to advise them of the policies of the
health department in its attempt to
solve these problems.
The success of the second half of the
health education program is dependent
in no small part upon the first. The
most essential feature of health educa
tion is proper health training in the
schools.
Public health work begins with the
unborn baby—instructing the mother
as to proper prenatal care and pre
paring for the baby, instructions as
to proper postnatal care and caring
for the baby, instructions as to the
proper preschool care and then the
child is followed through its entire
school life. Adults and children are
instructed as to preventative vaccines
for communicable diseases. Home oc
cupants are instructed as to proper
home sanitation, home care of the
sick, and prevention of disease.
Good health, long life and happi
ness are not just accidents that come
to the fortunate people only. The hap
piest people are those whose abound
ing health carries them through to a
ripe old age. They are the ones whose
laughter rings true. ■ Health, happi
ness, laughter, consists*of sleep and
rest, fresh air, sunlight, exercise,
cleanliness, pure water and food, com
fortable clothing, work, play, good
posture, good mental habits, public
sanitation and public disease preven
tion.
Our aim is for more and more
health, happiness and laughter.
Great Power Of Music.
Music has power not only to soothe,
but also to irritate and to destroy.
Sounds are caused by air vibrations
which produce high of loNv notes ac
cording to their frequency. The low
est note audible to the human ear is
about 16 vibrations per second, and
the highest is 20,000. The higher the
note the more disagreeable it can
sound, and these vibrations have a
damaging effect upon the nerves if
experienced too often. Others can
shatter glass vessels; Caruso could
break a wine glass by singing a cer
tain high note, and many scientists
believe that in this power lies the se
cret of the shattering of the walls of
Jericho, as related in the Bible.
A cow produces from four to five
pounds of water for each pound of
milk she produces. !
The Rhoades Family . . . by Squier
SCRAM/ ill take: \
V YOUR. PAY THIS WEEK./ yr$
> i * - v\ [cashier j
(\ need PAPA/M
.SHOES.
Ml c «Sj ' 4-1
c tm St
% oA x \%
r.
TWO WEEKS'WAGES GO TOR MOTOR TAXES
More than half of the motorists earn less than $30 per week and they pay
an average of $50 a year m taxes on their cars. That means that nearly
two whole weeks’ wages are paid by many motorists for automotive taxes.
Natural Impurities Are
Needed In Fertilizers
Because of their deficiency in the
minor, or secondary elements, some
doubt has developed as to the economy
and desirability of the new, highly
concentrated fertilizers. Until about
25 or 30 years ago, it was; generally
believed that nitrogen, potash and
acid satisfied the crop’s total need
for plant food. At that time, however,
nitrogen materials of high purity be
gan to be used instead of the old
style, natural materials like blood,
bone, scrap, stable manure and meal,
which had gotten scarce and expen
sive. Since then experience has reveal
ed the value of many of the plant food
elements contained in natural fertil
izers, as impurities and this, in turn,
has raised the question regarding the
economic efficiency of the pure fertil
izers.
“It -is a common complaint among
farmers,” says Professor L. G. Willis
of the North Carolina experiment sta
tion, “that the quality of fertilizers
has been lowered. It would seem that
it should take less of the concentrated
fertilizers to make a crop and that
farmers'would profit by using them.
Actually, ihe reverse has -been true.
Farmers have had to use more of these
newer fertilizers, but there is no evi
dence that crop yields have been cor
respondingly increased. As the anal
yses of fertilizers have increased, the
rate of application also has increased,
resulting in higher fertilizer costs.”
Purity in fertilizers can only be at
tained by eliminating the impurities.
Many of the impurities in natural fer
tilizers, ho*wever, are just as necessary
to plants as nitrogen, potash or phos
phate. They cannot make a crop tvith
out them.
In view of the Tather unsatisfactory
results thus far obtained with the new
high-purity materials and highly
concentrated fertilizers, it seems cer
tain that part of the efficiency of nat
ural materials is due both to the var
ious other plant food elements con
tained in them as impurities, and to
the combinations, the natural balance
and blend, in which they are found,
ffe&l 9%&¥.
CJaz 'fee
7
IS THE I l
FEED of CHAMPIONS
Leading poultrymen use from meat and buttermilk
Jazz All-Mash Starter be- build sturdy bodies and
cause it is a complete and fine feathers. Why gam
balanced ration for baby ble with inferior feeds,
chicks—everything chicks when Jazz feeds mature
need for health, growth more chicks that repay
and vitality. Fortified cod many times over the
liver oil provides liquid small difference in feed
sunshine for quicker cost. Once you try Jazz
growth. Animal proteins you’ll always use it.
V m <§> MIXON'S GROCERY
YOUR LOCAL JAZZ DEALER
It®* azz.
STARTER MASH — GROWING MASH
BROILER MASH LAYING MASH
NINE
CHEVROLET SALES JUMP
FIGURES SHOW.
Nearly 30 per cent more ne\v cars
and trucks have been sold at retail by
Chevrolet dealers of the nation in 1939,
year-to-date, than in the same period
in 1938, it was announced by Chevro
let officials in Detroit this week. Ex
act figure given was 29.6 per cent,
representing 102,699 units sold in
1939, as against 79,249 sold during
the same period last year.
Sales for the last 10-day period of
February totalled 17,138, an increase
of 4,129 units over the 13,009 sold last
year in the same period. This repre
sents and increase of 31.7 per cent.
Figures for the month of February
show an increase of 27.4 per cent
over February, 1938, with 50,706 units
sold as against 39,849 last year, an in
crease 10,917 units sold, according to
the Chevrolet announcement.
A total of 113,779 used cars were
sold during the month, 42,255 units
being sold during the final 10-day pe
riod.
DOES BLADDER IRRITATION
WAKE YOU UP? It’s not normal. It’s
nature’s warning “Danger Ahead”.
Your 25c back if this 4-day treatment
does not help nature flush excess acid
and other wastes from the kidney. Ex
cess acids can cause irritation result
ing in getting up nights, frequent or
scanty flow, burning, backache or leg
pains. Just say Brikets (25c) to any
druggist. Locally at Grady Pharmacy.
NEW MATTRESSES!
Priced to suit everyone.
Old Ones Renovated.
Inner-spring Mattresses
Made To Order
Cairo Mattress Co.
125 2nd Ave., N. E.