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legal ads
advertising payable in
LEGAL advance. , law below, all ,,
[will seen from the
LiivertisinS be, must be paid for in advance,
accompany each and every
ssh when the copy is sent in be
isement t ' ne ^ type We can not and
he san J advertisement upon O. K.
rule ot "'' advertisement up" nn strictly adherred wil be to inserted. in all
or wi Ua> I 0 ,!*! vinie ADVERTISING be put in type. FEE PAID
r Deputy
164 JVANCE "r u’H KN_No Sheriff or
o shaI1 b e required to ad
i in th Of any defendant in fifa
the m,prty y of ch advertisement
t until the c08t SU
lie, attorney. the p i a intiff j n
p have his b^ ' n t or plaintiff or Provided his agent that or
»• 3U ,6 narty, make and file afli
l«" ftey any him h ® shall an
H for » . hat ow ing to his poverty he
Sable such cost, that it shall be the
E “/sheriff or law. his deputy to proceed
required by
E TITlON for incorporation
,
1 GIA,
bUNTY: CSV*- of J B. Wight, J. E. Shaw,
a' ■' •rell, E. B. Stone respect- and
Gainey, all 2, said County,
i
■shows: Ii j
they desire- for’ themselves their as
K successors and assigns, to be con
“ i body - corporate under the name
fd a oi Grady Livestock Association,
Btyle term of thirty-five years, with
— i for a removal at the expiration of
■rivilege 1 of
' ir::- ■ 2
.
ener a! nature of the business to be
- ,,
r^e , j u v the Corporation is: it is formed
ft purposes for Which
wal? e in the marketing, selling ex
lit g -or preserving agricultural of any animals agricultural of any
Sr’the t or any of farm animal
1 by-products any |
to operate an auction sale mar
d to sell any livestock or other farm
„ third on commission,
for persons sale, the
m at public auction or private
A of any agricultural or farm lmple
ise machinery of any kind or the pur
pits or distribution of merchandise or
■ or any
rnay be required in the grow
up production of nny farm products what
« j-jtlS t «
Ek of the Civil Code of Georgia.
Wm retirement of all debts ana
1 Lions of the Corporation including all
8 L, indebtedness incurred in the opera-
1 _L jo; its business and buildings making proper and equip- pro
{or necessary its busi
t for the proper carrying on of
„ ■ surplus created may be used m
HL an y commission ther charges
„ the or O
■ for selling livestock an Q- other farm
™ for third persons.
P Ike maximum number 3. of shares of stock
■ par value that the Corporation is au
■ ; to have outstanding at any time
■be three hundred, the value of which
■be fixed by the stockholders or directors
Kvided for in Section 22-1830 of the
■Code.
4.
■ amount of capital with which the
■ation I will begin business shall be
5.
fee principal place of business Grady of County, the
■ration ■ shall be in Cairo,
but the Corporation shall have the
-bt to establish branch offices or agencies
tin j other places, either within Board or of with- Di
the State of Georgia if the
bits of the Corporation from time to time
■provide. 6.
rhe name and Post Office address of each
fthe pplicants is as ADDRESS follows:
■ NAME
Wight, Cairo, Georgia.
Shaw, Ochlocknee, Georgia.
. Laing, Cairo, Georgia.
f . Stone, Whigham, Georgia,
i Gainey, Cairo, Georgia.
. Harrell, Whigham, Georgia. _
7.
tioners submit herewith a certificate
the Secretary of State as provided for
BEREFORE, Petitioners pray that after
u etition has been filed an order be
by the above-named Court, declaring
(m a body corporate under the name and
■aforesaid, ■nmunities with the powers, privileges
herein set forth, and as are
■or may hereafter be, allowed a Corpor
of similiar character under the laws of
Btate of Georgia.
S. P. CAIN,
Attorney for Petitioner.
50HGIA, GRADY COUNTY: J.
pe foregoing petition of J. B. Wight,
■to', C. C. Laing, R. A. Harrell, E. B.
pe und Ralph Gainey to be incorporated
(M the name of Grady Livestock Associa
Blne., ■aid read and considered, it appearing
petition is within the purview and
■on of the laws applicable thereto, and
■il of said laws have been fully com
Bwith, ■cate including the presentation of a
from the Secretary of State, as
■ed by law;
■ p|the ordered, adjudged, and decreed that
■fed prayers of the petition are granted
applicants, their associates, success
B*|'i assigns, are hereby incorporated and
B a body politic under the name and
Bof Grady Livestock Association, Inc.,
Bd during a period of thirty-five years,
Bho privilege of renewal in terms of the
Band that said corporation is hereby
■ and vested with all the rights and
LV- mentioned in said petition ar.d
to corporations of like kind.
less my official signature, this 17 day
i, 1944.
CARL E. CROW,
J. S. C. A. C.
notice of call for
ELECTION.
Gra d y County.
jt!ce°is wt T ’given”
* to the hereby toat pur
&:ned in provisions of law as
Sec. 62-501 of the Code
l 933 L an <: lect ,i, on w iU
M.t"t G v(SLs C 0 U n S’ G uly°Tl' .
Jg, d a y J
to-wit: On July 5th, 1944,
5 Uf\S C to !l e q n ues ! ion Ul V sha11 °C be fence’,” sub T
election or
to be held at the court
or ground in each malitia dis
and und e r the same rules and
at ions as provided for election
embers of the general assem
ls the 2nd day of June, 1944.
■ E. F. WILLIS,
nar L Grady County, Georgia.
t.
iy BEANS PINCH HITTING
IN WAR.
-fifths of the fats and oils
, imported in pre-war years
i e re Placed by the oil from the
fgrown crop of soybeans, ac
* l ° figures developed the
by
•n-.ent of Agriculture. The
? ha s War given time fa tand oil situa
added pressure for
?an Production.
1941 the acreage harvested
»eans Was 5,855,000 acres; in
it Was 10,762,000 11,-
10 acres;
uCres estimaetd for the 1943
«t, and a goal of 14,000,000
’ Das bo en requested for 1944.
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I Y i
HEAVY RUSSIAN ARTILLERY ON MOVE: The Finnish Front.—This radiophoto for Moscow shows heavy
Soviet artillery passing through the smashed Finnish d;fense zone, enroute to Viipuri, and beyond. The Red
offensive in the far north continued to push beck the Finns this week as big pushes further south gained much
ground, also.
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR REPRESENTATIVE IN
LEGISLATURE.
To the Voters of Grady County:
Never at any time in any of my
political campaigns have I resort
ed to mudslinging or participation
in factional fights—and I will not
do so at this time.
I have at all times stood for what
I thought was right. My public
service is a matter of public record,
that is open to the public, a record
which any friend or political foe
can see, as I have at my home a
Copy of the records showing my po
licies and votes on the various mat
ters and legislative proposals. 1
have endeavored to let the people
know where I stand and for what
I will work to carry out. Don’t get
confused at this late hour.
I respectfully solicit your vote at
the polls next Tuesday and I want
each and every voter to know your
vote and support will be genuinely
appreciated.
As ever,
P. A. JONES.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
IN LEGISLATURE.
To the People of Grady County:
I herewith submit for your care
ful consideration my announcement
as a candidate for Representative in
the Legislature subject to the action
of the voters in the July 4th white
otate Democratic primary.
I will work and vote to keep our
primary elections white and to keep
the schools from Deing equalized. I
will work to increase the Confeder
ate pensions from $30 to $50 a month
and to get more Federal welfare
funds for Georgia so old age pen
sions can be raised to a minimum of
$30 a month. I will work to have
our motor vehicle tag and license
business handled in the various
counties for greater convenience.
I promise to be guided solely by
what I believe to be for the best
interests of my county as a whole
—and my state; to act as my con
science dictates and not from any
motive of personal profit or prestige;
to serve as best I know how in ac
cordance with the Christian prin
ciples which led to the establish
ment of this nation, principles which
must be preserved if this nation is
to survive. support
I respectfully seek your
and vote at the polls and assure
you your help will be genuinely ap
preciated. Your Friend,
GROVER W. RAGAN.
FOOD OUTLOOK NOT NOW
SO BRIGHT.
Civilian .... , . COnSUnip
Per capita IOOu about
tion in . 19‘i‘l IS • exDe e p cted to be
in Spite tne ,
same 3S in 1943, OI
fact that about 25 per cent of the
total food output will be used for
military and lend-lease purposes.
Civilian food consumption in 1943
was about six per cent greater than
during the 1935-39 five year aver
age, in spite of the fact that about
one-fifth of our food output m
went for military and lend-lease
uses This has been possible be
cause of the tremendous supplies of
foods which have been produced
for the past three years.
Production prospects at present
are not as bright as was the cas
a t this time a year ago, and mdica-
4l0 ” s 3 V" that demand for American
food products will be hp ^ g rea ter er in in the
months ahead than m months past.
THE CAIRO MESSENGER. FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1944.
MINUTES OF BOARD
CO. COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS of Roads
and Revenue of Grady County, Ga., in regu
lar session June 6th, 1944.
All members present.
Minutes of the last regular meeting and
special meeting of May 27th read and ap
proved.
Messrs. Guyt Singletary, G. D. Nicholson
and Willie Horn came before the board and
requested that a road be worked up through
their lands near Pine Park to continue road
already worked and improved so as to con
nect the State Road No. 38 with the lower
Pine Park road south of Pine Park, to fol
low the general lines of a settlement road
through the old Bryant place. After discus
sion of this matter it was moved, seconded
and unanimously carried that this request
be granted and that the road in question be
worked by the county provided that the in
terested property owners move back and put
up fences at their expense along the rights
of-way. additional
The matter of the county buying
War Bonds during the present War Loan
Drive was discussed, and, it was moved and
carried that this matter be left to the judg
ment and discretion of the Chairman and
Clerk.
Rev. T. R. Crawford, in behalf of a com
mittee of the American Legion, came before
the board and again presented the matter
of the county helping out in the expense of
securing a capable service worker or service
officer for the county to assist World War
Veterans and citizens of the county, gener
ally, in preparing necessary papers in con
nection with service claims or service mat
ters. After a discussion it was moved,
seconded and unanimously carried that the
county for the time being appropriate $35.00
per month for this purpose, provided the
City of Cairo contribute a like amount.
On motion duly seconded and carried the
board allowance to the Sheriff for prisoners
confined in the county joil was fixed at
$1.00 per day. monthly
In addition to the regular pay
roll. the following bills were approved and
ordered paid; ofc., supplies $63.3o
Messenger Pubishing Co., ........................$ -94
Western Union, telegrams
Whitfield-Paulk Motor Co., parts . 51.75
Whidden’s Groceteria, groceries .... .. 29.90
R. F. Dixon, plows ......................■ 5.55
Cairo Motor Co., parts and repairs 233.40
Roddenbery Hdwe, Co., hdwe. supplies 126.59
Grady Motors, parts and repairs ..........25.40
Grady Co. Dept, of Public Welfare,
monthly budget .... 493.35
Farmers Fertilizer Co., fert., peanuts ... 149.93
R R. Van Landinghom, parts ............ 116.34
Republic Steel & Tool Co., teeth for
road ripper .................................•••— ......... 71.94
Jack Gandy’s Service Station, relme . 4.50
P. Murry’s M. Baggett, Grocery, court groceries costs........................ jO.UO
■............
Wight Hdw. Co., hdw. sup, tubes .... 417.52
Wight & Browne, drugs bulbs, peanuts 16.38
ulu „ 5.10
Eskew’s Service Station, valve stems ....
Hill Mfg. Co., supplies 22.25
O. F. Sadler, per diem as tax equalizer 60.00
W L Muggridge, per diem as tax equl. 60.00
J. W. Davis, per diem as tax equalizer . 60.00
Lillie Shores, per diem as clerk, tax
equalizers ............................................... 45.00
Cairo Telephone ------ Co., telephone bill .... 22.05
H. V. Kell Co., supplies ................... 42.76
Standard Oil Co., gasoline and oil ... 470.92
White Bros. Elec. Co., fixtures and
installation costs ...................... ....... 18.90
C. H. Strickland, Sheriff’s costs 233.50
T. F. Proctor, sup. for equalizers .... 26.18
Citizens Bank, county bills paid 69.75
Mizell Drug Co., drugs ...... 6.26
Western Auto Assoc. Store, supplies .... 13-42
—
further business, . the meet
There being no
ing adjournd. F. HARRISON, ___■ Chairman,
BEN ALDREDGE,
T J.’ W.
J. DOLLAR,
A. G. HARRISON,
L O. MERRITT, Commissioners.
Attst: Clerk.
R. A. BELL,
FARM REAL ESTATE IS
INFLATED.
Farm real estate values in Geor
gia have been increasing rather
rapidly during recent years and
these increases have been even
more rapid during recent months,
according to Kenneth Treanor,
farm management specialist of the
Extension Service. During the
year ended March 1, 1943, the per
acre value of farm real estate in
Georgia increased 11 per cent as
compared with an increase of only
nine per cent for the country as a
whole.
It is highly significant that land
land values in Georgia and for the
country as a whole have risen more
rapidly recently than at any time
since the inflationary land boom
which took place in 1919-1920.
NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS:
In order to give all our employees a
much needed rest, we will be closed all day
NEXT MONDAY, July 3rd, as well as all day
TUESDAY, July 4th.
Please be governed accordingly!
CAIRO DRY CLEANERS
GRADY COUNTY CLEANERS
* ****** «
* *
* ’PHONE US YOUR *
* LOCALS! *
* *
* Everyone is urged to ’phone *
* us local or personal news items *
* every week, if possible—’phone *
* either 212 or 203. *
* If you have visitors, or know *
* of friends or neighbors who *
* have, you owe it to them to *
* make certain the news appears •
* in The Messenger so that every- *
* one else may share the pleasure. *
* The same holds true if you go *
* away or know of anyone who *
* does. *
* Wednesday at 9 a. m. is the *
* deadline on notices of organiza* ’
* tions, etc., if they cannot be sent *
* in earlier in the week—and lo- *
* cals (or personal items) are wel- *
* corned along with them. Re- *
* member the Omnibus Column *
* —Everybody Rides In It—and *
* There’s Always Room For One *
* More!
* Thank you. *
- THE PUBLISHERS. *
* *
* * * * * * * *
LABOR SUPPLY 10 PER CENT
LESS THAN IN 1943.
Teh supply of labor on Georgia
farms at the present time is esti
mated by the Extension Service to
be 10 per cent less than in 1943
when many city people volunteered
to perform a war service by work
ing on farms.
About 200,000 volunteer workers
will be needed this year.
EXTRA 4V’A
5» WAR LOAN
BONDS
-S' i . * LS GROCERS IRRRRET &
1ST AVE. N. E., NEXT DOOR TO WILL LEE’S GARAGE
Phone 56-W We Deliver Anywhere In City
All Prices CASH—Open Thursday Until 8:30 P. M.
Trade With Us. We Will Save You $2 Out of Every $10 You Spend
With Us!
Drip or Regular in the jar
Maxwell House Coffee, lb. JOc
Baby Lima Beans, lb.......... 10c River Herring, can........................... 20c
Oysters, can (no points) ... 40c PINT FRUIT JARS, doz. complete 75c
Seedless Raisins, 2-lbs...... 25c B & M Baked Beans, 2 cans........... 25c
English Peas, 2 cans 25c Honey, tall jar ................................. 39c
...........
ONIONS, 3-lbs...................... 19c BROOMS .......................................... $1.19
Vermont Maid Maple Syrup 29c Ritz Crackers, 1-lb. 24c; small....... 1-H 4*
SALT, 3 for White Karo Syrup, 5 bottles ....... OO
..........................
lit Factory Packed 5-Pounds
Sua \ SUGAR I V
Octagon Soap and Powder, Large Ivory, Lux, Swan, Sweetheart, S £
Life Buoy, Palmolive, Woodbury, Super Suds, Duz, Oxydol, Rinso. 1
IN OUR MARKET
Good Stew Beef, lb. 24c Grade ‘A’ Wieners, lb. 33c
Grade ‘A’ Round Steak, lb. 42c Grade Wieners, lb. 25c
Hamburger Meat, lb............ 29c All Meat Stew, lb........ 30c
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce, Armour’s Boiled V
in tin ................................ i2y 2 c HAM, lb.................. ...65c V
C
We Will Have Several Old-Style Wisconsin a Cakes Saturday—Also We Will Be
Open All Da it
&0 £6 dOSXOa twsxceoxsxoso&xceo33xa
J. H Smithwick For Farm Security
Aid; Record Shows Cox
No one needs to say farmers
are patriotic. They have shown it
by their deeds. They are in a
most essential defense industry.
i In the -irst
-Mrii k m six* year after Pearl
Harbor these
mm Farm Security
Administration
farmers came
m through with
an increase in
flv. eggs enough to
feed three mil
lion men for a
year, 190 mil
lion pounds
pork, 8 million bushels Irish pota
toes, 746,000 bushels sweet pota
toes and other farm products in
proportion. With less than eight
per cent of the total farms In the
United States these Farm Security
Administration farmers contrib
uted 38 per cent of the increase
in milk production in answer to
the need of our country In the
first year of the war.
It is not our intention to say
the Farm Security Administration
Farmers are better than other
farmers, but to show they have
been among the leaders in pro
ducing food for our country In
war time.
WHAT ABOUT GEORGIA?
The Farm Security Administra
tion has contributed much to the
State of Georgia. Georgia Farm
Security Administration farmers
raised their peanut production
35% in 1943 over 1942, and gained
a smaller percentage of produc
tion increase in dried beans and
black-eyed peas, going way ahead
of the national average in both
cases.
48,389 Georgia families have
been helped by Farm Security Ad
ministration and the total money
put into Georgia by this agency
for this particular class of bor
rowers is $35,611,695.00. This sum
has been loaned to farmers al
ready established.
In addition the agency has
loaned $13,758,825.00 to 3.546
Georgia tenants to help them be
come home owners. A high per
centage of repayment? have been
made.
The Moultrie Observer recently
republished from The Atlanta
Constitution an editorial by Ralph
McGill highly praising the Farm
Security Administration. The Ob
server refers to the agency as
having a “surprising record.”
Concerning Farm Security Ad
ministration McGill refers to It
as “the one government agency
with the fewest mistakes to its
credit and the most successes: the
one agency which has sincerely
devoted itself to those covered in
the original statement about ‘The
Forgotten Man’.”
McGill is mystified because
there is opposition to Farm Se
curity Administration by some
(PAID
ELEVEN
members of Congress. After list
ing many good works of Farm
Security Administration which we
do not have space to repeat here.
McGill asks:
“In the name of the best Inter
ests of this country: in the name
of common decency and honesty,
what do they want the Farm Se
curity Clients to do?”
Congressman E. E. Cox, from
this district, on June 26, 1942, in
the debate on Farm Security Ad
ministration in Congress, said:
“The record made by this out
fit, The Farm Security Adminis
tration, has been such as should
convince anybody It ought to be
liquidated (that Is, completely
done away with, ed.) .... The
record of the Farm Security Ad
ministration Is the worst of any
agency ever set up by the govern
ment.” See Page 5644, Vol. 88.
Congressional Record. (Many Re
publicans agreed with Cox.)
On the same page of the record,
a stalwart Democrat, in answer to
Congressman Cox, said:
“Why should we not protect
small agriculture? I am inter
ested not only in protecting small
business but also In protecting the
small farmer. Let the small fam
ily sisrj farm operator produce as
much as he can now, when he has
a chance to make a uttle money
.... for the whole future of
America depends on our always
having an agriculture that is car
ried on by men who own family
size farms. When we lose that
we shall have lost one of the three
or four most basic elements of de
mocracy itself.”
In his platform SMITHWICK
DECLARES HIMSELF TO BE A
STRONG SUPPORTER OF
FARM SECURITY ADMINIS
TRATION, of the Production
Credit Associations and the Rural
Electrification Administration and
all other measures that help the
farmers.
OPPOSITION TO FARM SE
CURITY ADMINISTRATION BY
CONGRESSMAN COX IS NOT
STATESMANSHIP. Smithwick’s
support of such a useful agency
as this, an agency that helps make
better citizens and helps business,
helps feed the country and Its
fighting forces. That is states
manship.
CHOOSE YOUR CONGRESSMAN
ACCORDING TO HIS
STATESMANSHIP
VOTE FOR
J. H. SMITHWICK
CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS
SECOND DISTRICT OF
GEORGIA
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY.
JULY 4.
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