Newspaper Page Text
The COVINGTON NEWS
Official Organ of Newton County
and the City of Covington.
Published every Thursday by the
News Publishing Company.
W. E. LIGHTFOOT, Editor-Mgr.
Entered as second class mail matter
December 2, 1908, at the Post Office
at Covington, Ga„, under the act of
March 3, 1879,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year, (in advance) ........ $2.00
Six Months, (in advance,) ....... $1.25
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1921.
Henry Ford has promised to give
employment to a million men if the
government will sell him the Muscle
Shoals project. He says he will then es
tablish a great aluminum plant for the
manufacture of machinery from that
material. What a boom there will be in
northern Alabama if Henry Ford ae
quires Muscle. Shoals.
Things have come to a pretty pass,
when a University freshman has a
"valet to do everything but dress his
hair.” Joke or no joke, such an an¬
nouncement going out from a time
honored institution reflects on its stand¬
ards.
"Ill fares the school to hastening lux¬
uries a prey,
Where indulgences accumulate and
minds decay.”
Germany has notified the Allies that
she cannot pay her next reperations
installment of 500,000,000 gold marks,
which becomes due January 15, 1922.
That is all old stuff. That bluff has been
worked before, and will be worked
again and again if the Allies pay any
heed to it. Germany, deprived of her
military institution, is in better condi¬
tion economically than at any time in
her history, and it is the belief of the
Allies, and especially of France, that
Germany can pay if she desires to do
so
The National Association of ball
room managers has decied that there
will be a change in dance music. There
is to be a return to the music tempo
of ’74. This means faster and cleaner
dancing, and end of jazz and shimmie,
the crawl and the toddle, Hereafter, if
the edict is observed, dancing will be
conducted in a more dignified manner.
Efforts will be made to put a stop to
improper postures, strangle holds and
every erratic notion that has crept into
present day dancing.
Certain corporations in the state
take great pains in sending out litera¬
ture to the weekly papers for them to
publish any or all of it, released at
once, etc. And we notice some papers
publish this free advertising matter,
which only encourages these concerns
to try and use the papers to further
their private schemes. If all the papers
would relegate such stuff to the waste
basket, it would eventually stop com¬
ing, and possibly some paid matter
might come in its stead. Of course some
of this free advertising gets by us, but
not if we know it.
Do not try to evade responsibility if
you want to succeed in business. Get
down to the real work you have to do
and do it. If you make a mistake own
up to It and try to do better. Your
friends will sympathize with you and,
ten chances to one, they will help you;
but if you try to evade responsibility
or attempt to put the blame for your
misfortunes upon some other person or
something that could be avoided, you
lose. Take your own medicine with as
good a relish as you expect others to
take theirs and you will find friends
who will make life’s path smoother for
you.
There is a growing sentiment
throughout the country to combine
Armistice and Thanksgiving days in
one grand holiday. The tw r o holidays
coming so close together, and the sen¬
timent being very much the same,
there seems to be good and sound lxgic
in the plea of those who favor the
movement. Armistice day is truly one
of thanksgiving legalized in honor
the great achievements ■which
earth’s proudest empire and put an
to the domination of autocratic gov¬
ernment. Armistice day is a day of in
ternational thanksgiving, a day
marks the lifting of the burdens of
world and the enfranchisement of
lions of liberty-loving people. It
a change in the policies of the nations,
the crumbling of empires, the fall
tottering thrones and the freedom
nations. Thanksgiving day is a purely
American instituttion, commemorating
the achievements of the Pilgrim Fath¬
ers at Plymouth, and is now a national
harvest festival, fixed by proclamation
of the president and the governors of
the states. Thanksgiving day could
easily and appropriately be combined
with Armistice day, and then not only
the United States but the whole
would rejoice together, pray together,
and together thank Almighty God
only for the mercies of the
year but for human freedom
the world.
RUNNING THE CITY
Dyring 1918 and 191% and part of
1920 the country was so rush with bus¬
iness that no indivuai cared whether
school kept or not. Dollars were rolling
in so fast it was bard for some folks to
even take care of their private business,
much less consider the city's affairs—
things were humming. But there is al¬
ways a reaction and the reverse is here
and everywhere; individuals, corpora¬
tions and every Dranoh of business in
the country have been driven to re¬
trench, dispense with certain expense
that had heretofore been carried with
ease and profit to them—settling down
to meet the demand of business today.
Why is it that nothing of extra im¬
portance in the way of a business move
has been made in running our city?
There is not a business house we know
in the city that has not changed its
business methods, reduced expenses,
not only in one way, hut from every
angle it is studied and given more
thought than ever before. Who is
studying, worrying, scheming and
planning for the betterment of our
city? What do we elect men for? Not
to hold a public job for the sake of
spending the city’s money too liberally.
Nor do we choose those who are afraid
to move in the right direction because
they might hurt some dear friends
feelings, or injure their own business
by curtailing the expense of- our city’s
government.
A man who holds public office and
will not guard the public’s interest, as
a whole, just the same as he would his
own is not fit to manage anything.
One great trouble with the city’s af¬
fairs today is that we need fearless
men, who feel their honor at stake,
who will do a thing, laying kinfolks
and friendship aside when a thing is
right. During this money stringency
some people are beginning to wake up,
thanks for that, but we must keep on
the job. It will take good men, and
time to put this city right, and you
know it; if you don’t as a citizen you
should take time to find out, and help
put men in command that will save us
from further financial embarrassment.
On another page will be found a
statement from Councilman Gary show¬
ing the financial condition of the city
for the four months just past. Every
citizen should look it over carefully,
and let it be known whether they desire
the city run on in the same manner or
not. Mr. Gary is right in wanting to
put this matter before the eyes of the
public, in order that he may get the
co-operation in trying to better condi¬
tions. It is the citizens business; and
they should always know where their
money is going.
FORI) SOLVES NAVAL PROBLEM
Henry Ford has solved the naval
problem of the nations. He has offered
to buy the navies of the world at junk
prices and convert them into useful ar¬
ticles of peace, such as agricultural
machinery, automobiles and such other
devices as his fancy may direct, pro
vided the nations will agree to disarm.
He says he is fully prepared to finance
the undertaking and with acetylene
torches and electricity cut the warships
to pieces and make useful things out
of them. (
Mr. Ford favors complete disarma¬
ment upon the sea, and he is willing to
buy the ships in order to secure raw
materials for manufacture into auto¬
mobiles, etc. He must have the mate¬
rials from some source, and if the na¬
tions are now prepared to abandon
their naval programs they will find a
market for the junk and will not be
obliged to suffer a total loss, as would
be the case if the vessels were sunk.
Mr. Ford wants the whole world out¬
fit of fighting craft, and once the ships
are in his possession no nation will
need fear an attack from another from
the sea, and the tax-burdened people
would be freed from the yoke of servi¬
tude for naval construction and
support of a naval institution.
Mr. Ford offers to relieve the unem¬
ployment situation that would
from the scrapping of the navies by
giving employement to thousands
men in his factories and other
ments of his business, and indirectly
to many thousands more who will be
employed in the transportation,
and use of the machines he will
facture, as well as in the business
machines will create.
Now that the disarmament
tion is before the delegates of
Washington conference, and America
ready and willing to take th first
in disarmament, and Mr. Ford
to buy the ships at their junk value,
there should be no obstacle in the way
of a speedy settlement of the
ment proposition. The money each
tion would receive from the sale of its
useless ships would help to pay the
debts of the nation, and by relieving
the people of an enormous burden of
taxation hasten the day when the debts
will be paid and the world settled down
to a program of peace and internation¬
al harmony.
Three thousand less marriages in
1921 in New York than the preceeding
year. Peace is gradually settling over
the country.—Augusta Chronicle.
mm UOViNOTON wisWa, coiimmiw ««ff0KA
■ i a. i i * a
F|H£T STEP TO STOP
SHIP BUILDING
Secretary of State Charles E. Hughes
proposed to the ..... Armistice conference ..
the complete abandonment of all cap
ital shipbuilding programs, actual or
projected. This is the first step in the
world wide plan to limit the navies of
the power, and one which if adopted
will bring relief to a tax-ridden and
debt-ridded world.
Secretary Hughes submitted his
proposition as chairman of the Ameri¬
can delegation. It was like the explo¬
sion of a bombshell in their midst, hut
it served its purpose. The disarma¬
ment or limitation jilan is now before
the delegates and all the cards are
face up. It was not expected that
America would take the lead in the
disarmament program in such a decid¬
ed manner, but it has been done in
true Yankee fashion, and the matter
is now open to argument and discus¬
sion. By the terms of the plan sub¬
mitted the United States navy will be
limited to eighteen capital ships, hav¬
ing a total tonnage of 500.000 tons;
Great Britain twenty-two capital shops
with a total of 644,451) tons and Japan
ten capital ships with a total of 299,-
799 tons.
This is an opening wedge that should
he driven steadily until the entire mil¬
itary and naval equipment of the
world is reduced to the actual require¬
ment of police duty, and that police an
international organization.
It is admitted that all nations need a
certain military force to preserve do¬
mestic tranquility, but that is of minor
importance compared with the support
of an army and a navy to overawe
other nations.
A military peace is dearly bought,
and no nation can afford the price, yet
all must pay it if a continuance of the
military system is insisted upon.
BEATING THE GOVERNMENT
Although the statute of limitations
became effective on November 11th,
in the cases of those who are alleged to
have grafted and profiteered at the
expense of the government during the
war, the Department of Justice will
not drop its prosecutions. This action
is based upon the opinion of the Attor¬
ney General who contends that the
statute of limitations should not be¬
come effective until three years after
the date upon which the Department
of Justice was officially apprised of the
alleged overt acts. If the alleged profi¬
teers contend that they are entitled to
immunity a court decision will be
sought. The-*profiteers assume that the
statute of limitations became effective
three yars after the signing of the
armistice. Justice demands that the
profiteers be punished for their mis¬
deeds. They robbed the people right
and left. They put their hands into the
public in the greatest extortion scan¬
dal on record, and if they escape be¬
cause of a technicality of the law and
because the courts have been lax in
their duties, it will be an everlasting
shame, and the officials who have al¬
lowed them to escape upon so flimsy
an account should be punished for neg¬
lect of duty and suspended from their
official capacities.
PEACE WITH GERMANY
President Harding has declared ofli
eially that the war is over with the
central powers. Diplomatic relations
are to be resumed and consular agen
cies established in Germany at once.
Since the outbreak of the war Spain
has been handling the United States’
affairs in Germany. The opening of
peaceful relations and the cementing
of new ties of friendship will open to
the country a new avenue of trade,
that may or may not be beneficial. If
it means the flooding of this country
with cheaply manufactured German
goods it may mean a prolonging of the
adjustment of our economic system
American mills need to be opened and
the wheels kept turning briskly, with a
maximum of production, in order to
give employment to American labor,
and if the new relations mean an open¬
ing of our markets to foreign-manufac
tured goods, that have been produced
much cheaper than can be done in
America, the result will be harmful to
American industries, The science of
political economy teaches that it is
good business to buy in the cheapest
market and sell in the dearest, but if
that policy is carried out, regardless
of limitations, it is easy to see where
the American people will soon lack
the means to purchase because of un¬
employment.
Russia is coming to her senses. She
is now willing to submit the question
of Russian debts to the arbitration of
an international congress, and the mat¬
ter may be discussed at Washington
before the adjournment of the arma¬
ment limitation conference. In any
event Russia is coming around to a
more sane view of international af¬
fairs. She finds she cannot dictate the
policy of the nations or live without in¬
ternational intercourse. She also real¬
izes that the people of the world have
hearts that sympathize with the dis¬
tressed whether they be friends or en
mies, and that despite her attempts to
overthrow the governments of the
world those whom she would destroy
are giving aid to her suffering people,
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
Ol It 1921 THAN&SGjYINfi
q'he three hundredth Pilgrims anniversary gives a pe- of
t he landing of the Thanksgiv
““‘“^“^ovember ...ijop significance to this
24th, 1921. for, not
ti i ikvi that thev observed their first
Thanksgiving—then thankful to
f . the land which they saw m a vis¬
0I should be through the
ion of what it
years to come, which they should leave
to their posterity. with high , . , . hopes
The Pilgrims came almost insurmount¬
and vet they faced
able'obstacles, and the greatest dan¬
gers, but our forefathers were men and
women who were strong and sturdy,
willing to suffer privations, willing to
f aee the greatest dangers, willing even
to die if needs be if through privation
and danger and death they could see
the planting of a great nation whose
birth and development might furnish a
home for their children and children’s
children where they would be insured a
liberty and a religious freedom which
they themselves had never known.
Vnd as we think back during the
years that have passed even to the full
three hundred, when our forefathers
were a mere haundful of men and wo¬
men when they knew nothing in those
early days but hardship, they had few
if any necessities and no comforts,
and as we come to the day set apart by
our own president of the United States
and by the governors of our states, we
come to realize that we have much, so
much more than they, for which to be
thankful. Thanksgiving Day,
And so this, our
the most sacred of our national holi
days—the only religious festival of the
year sponsored by our government- grati¬
should be celebrated with true
tude, fifst of all for the gift of God,
His only Son who loved us and died to
save us, and when we love Him in re¬
turn we love all men. Then for His
church, the real and only organized
work that is doing the uplift work
which not only cleans up a fellow on
the outside, but cleans him up on the
inside and fixes him sd he will stay
clean. And again for His next greatest
gift, the Christian home, which still
wields the greatest influence in this
land of ours, and although the great¬
est efforts of the devil and those engag¬
ed in his service are aiming their
greatest warfare in an effort to tear
down, the Christian home will prevail
as losg as even one man and woman
really know and love God.
And as our barns are bursting with
plenty and our storehouses are filled
with the fruit of the land, we must
not forget that at our very door whole
races of people are starving.
And as we remember the genuine
Thanksgiving day of the Pilgrim fath¬
ers, when they thanked God for His
promises, though unfulfilled, let us ask
Him even as we praise Him, to help us
to be a race of people of whom our de¬
scendants shall have a pride in our
achievement, for after all, this must he
the real Thanksgiving spirit of 1921.
Exchange.
WHAT DOES YOUR LABOR MEAN?
It was probably never intertded that
our tasks in this world should be as
irksome to us as they are. Physical ex¬
haustion cannot be avoided, but too
many of us go about our work with a
heaviness of heart and a tiredness of
the spirit which might be avoided if
our thoughts ran in the proper chan¬
nels and if we would catch the proper
vision of the tasks that we perform.
The greatest( burden of weariness
comes to the man who watches the
clock. The work of his life seems no
more than the enduring of a certain
amount of exertion within a specified
time. The result of his labor means
no more to him than the number of
dollars which make up the salary he
receives. Such men are without vision
and become the slaves who are driven
by their tasks.
The burden of toil depends much up¬
on the degree to which a man is able
to visualize the future. It is the man
who lives only for the present who
hates work with an enduring hatred.
Taking it for granted that he is labor¬
ing at tasks to which he is suited, the
laborer who feels least the burden of
his task is the man who realizes that
what he is doing will reach out into
the future. It may be that the struc
ure upon which he is engaged will en¬
dure for generations while men admire
its usefulness and beauty and for that
reason he toils happily, knowing the
greatness of what he does. This, how¬
ever, is not the lot of many, since they
must be giving their time to that which
is less noble and enduring. Neverthe¬
less, there should be for every man the
urge of the future in his work. It may
he that the toil of today is bringing him
greater skill and a greater salary for
tomorrow. He may remember that what
he does today will enable him to save
against that day when the hand of want
will seek to reach him. While about his
daily tasks he may carry with him also
the thought that the things he is doing
are making it possible for him to build
a home as a monument of comfort
through many years. In ways like
these it may come to pass that a man
who toils no less than others is able
to face his duties with a smile, and
no man will be entirely satisfied so long
as what he makes is wrought into no
more enduring structures than
steak and silk stockings.—Monroe Ad¬
vertiser.
CONCERNING THE WOMAN VOTE
The New York Evening Post has
come to the melancholy conclusion
that, after all, women vote like men.
As an earnest opponent of Mayor Hy
lan it moralizes as follows:
“The election offered a notable test
of the theory of woman’s political su
periority. Since women have voted in
this state only two years they might
have been supposed to be much freer
of partisanship than men. And since
the schools were so important an issue,
the women might have been supposed
to be extraordinarily interested in bring¬
ing about a change of administration.
The figures belie both of these conclu¬
sions. In so overwhelming a majority
there can be no particular difference
between the ballots cast by men and
those cast by women. Although they
are new voters, women “react” politi¬
cally like their husbands and sons
and brothers.
There has never been any basis
worth mentioning for the theory that
the line of political division among wo¬
men voters would differ in any conse¬
quential degree from that which the
male vote follows. Why should it?
In certain States of the far West
that recognized the political equality of
women long ago, beginning with the
State of Washington which adopted
woman suffrage as far back as 1889, it
was observed that the party alignments
as between men and women were vir¬
tually coincident. Later. in Illinois,
which by statute law gave women the
right to vote for Presidential Electors
some time before the Nineteenth
amendment was adopted, and which
kept a separate record of feminine bal
j | lots, the same State, condition in 1917, was disclosed.
In our own a striking
1 illustration of the same import was
furnished in the city of Amsterdam
PUBLIC LAND SALE
In accordance with a certain agree¬
ment, I will sell before the court house
door,’ between the legal hours Newton of sale
In the City of Covington, coun¬
ty, Georgia, the first Tuesday in De¬
cember the'following:
All that tract or parcel of land situ¬
ated, lying and being in the county of
New'ton, said State of Georgia, and
consisting of all that tract or parcel
of land known as the A. J. Allen
home place in the town of Newborn,
and bounded as follows: On the North
by Sam Holcomb; South by J. L. Har¬
well; East by B. M. Whitten, and West
by public road, said lot containing 25
acres more or less.
Now, this sale is made to satisfy a
certairf note for $1,500.00 signed by J.
L. Harwell, dated January 8th, 1920,
with eight per cent interest from Jan¬
uary 8th, 1920, with the cost of this
sale. Terms of sale cash.
47-50-p J. P. FREEMAN.
GEORGIA, Newton County.
Under and by virtue of an order
passed by the Court of Ordinary, said
county, will be sold before theHioui't
house door in Covington, Georgia, on
the first Tuesday in December, 1921,
within the legal.hours of sale, to the
highest bidder the following described
land as the property of S. P. Pickett,
late of said county, deceased, to-wit:
All that tract of land lying, being
and situated in said State and county,
and in Brewers District, containing
nine and sevienty-five hundredths
(9.75) acres by survey and bounded
follows: Lying in what is known
the horse-shoe .bend of Alcovy
and bounded on the northeast by
covy river and on the other three
by the old run of Alcovy river
lands of the Central Georgia
Company. Terms of sale cash
This 8th day of November, 1921.
W. H. PICKETT, SR.,
W. H. PICKETT, JR.,
Administrators estate of S. P. Pickett,
deceased.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
GEORGIA, Newton County.
Will be sold before the court
door, in said county, on the first
day in December, 1921, within the
hours of sale, to the highest bidder,
cash, the following described
property, to-wit: 159 shocks of
more or less 600 pounds of peas,
or less, 1,000 bundles fodder, more
less, 12 wagon loads of hay, more
less, 75 gallons syrup more or less.
Also Will Hurst’s crop, consisting
acres corn, more or less; COO
seed cotton, more or less.
Also Manse Henderson’s crop,
bales lint cotton and cotton seed.
Also Joe Rogers’ crop of 700
cotton, more or less.
Also Dave Hurst’s and Ed
crop, 2 bales cotton, more or less
8 acres of corn, more or less.
Also Elias Thompson’s crop of
bales of cotton, more or less and
acres of corn, more or less.
Also Nancy Hurst's crop of 2
cotton and 10 acres corn, more or less.
Also Sam Hurst's crop of 1 bale
cotton, more or less, in the seed.
Levied upon as the property of J. P.
and W. L. Cowan, defendants in fi fa
by virtue of a mortgage fi fa issued
from the Superior court of said county
in favor of Miss Madge G. Cowan, Jan¬
uary Term, 1921.
B. L.'JOHNSON,
48-51-c Sheriff Newton County.
Petition tor Divorce
Newton. Superior. Court,. September
Term. 1921,
Millie Flemister Goolsby vs. Rufus
Goolsby.
The plaintiff, Mary Flemister Gools-
when the second and third class cities
of the state held a special election on
the question of local option for the sale
of intoxicants. Amsterdam kept sepa¬
rate polls of the male and female elec¬
tors. The city went “wet” and it was
found the percentage of women favor¬
ing license was almost identical with
the percentage of men.
All these disclosures and many oth¬
ers of like meaning, simply prove that
the members of families, in the great
majoirity of cases, think alike on po¬
litical questions, as they do, as a rule,
on social, religious and other questions.
It must not be inferred, however, that
because husband and wife, father and
daughter, brother and sister are in
nearly all instances inclined to \ U
alike, the women necessarily talc ir
cue from the men. Very likely there
are many women who have never taken
an Interest in politics and are now
serving their political novitiates, xvho
rely for advice upon their more expe¬
rienced male relatives. But in manv
other cases the family vote is cast af¬
ter discussion and an earnest exchange
of views; and in these cases women’s
instinct and influence are often de¬
cisive.
Of course, women are frequently
governed hy their prejudices and un¬
thinking impulses in voting. But the
same is true, and always has been
true, of many male voters. Women
who have no male relatives—sprinsters.
let us say—frequently vote the party
ticket whirh their fathers preferred.
This influence of herehity is always
strong among voters, particularly in
national contests, but we do not believe
it is any stronger among unmarried fe¬
males than it is among males, unmar¬
ried or married.
We see nothing either surprising or
alarming in the discovery that the men
and women of nearly every family are
inclined to vote alike on election day.
—Syracuse Herald.
CO OPERATION AND RIGHT PRICES
If a town grows and its merchants
prosper all interests must work togeth¬
er in an effort to bring the business to
the town that legitimately belongs to it.
Local business must also be had by the
local merchants. Prices on merchan¬
dise must be right; that is, the prices
must not be higher on the same goods
than they are in other towns. Such a
condition will drive trade away quick
er than anything else.
Somehow we feel that people, at
least the great majority of them, will
trade at home if quality and price are
on the same level with neighboring
markets.
“No town can prosper where every
business man in it lives to himself.
Merchants and business men of a town
must co-operate with one another if
they would hold the trade in the terri¬
tory that belongs to them. All business
institutions and property owners of a
town to be permanently prosperous
must be always working together to
bring trade of the territory in their di¬
rection or else it will go elsewhere
where more alluring inducements are
offered. Merchants of no town of any
importance should he without an or
ganization of their own. All business
institutions of a town besides a mer-
'*1'*™™*^* against R U f her j” 1 ' Petiti 0n " f 7*1
Us f ;°S' t£ div
returnable to th L1,tem 3 t y ’ j <
this court, and it ber ^ Co
of that RufEs Goolshv ?i n - S U**
said countv ail not a rwj v,^
not reside within s ° th at
ft' hlm having been ^ ml*
’ , r
this, therefore, is to nntL ? u N£tJ 9
Goolsby, ’ “ 0 notify 7?!
t„ be ?, PI) l
term of Newton g ear at the n! get
u .
1B2 2..then and 'til^tn Janu «
complaint answer g,
Witness Ju^T^
Court, Hutcheson, the J <*n
this Novembr - 15, ‘ 8ii| I
a ,, °- ] got
49-52-c c ta> i
Not.ee of ValuLteET^,,
State of Georgia K ™-t ^ ,
To whom it ° n Cou %'
: rh ta A rnav ^
mayor l and the councTfoF regular th^“ of
111 St on, Newton City of qJ «
Countv 01 C<
and ordinance* and cnunr.il council was paZd 1 bf hy said 1921 may! -
$15,000.00 to issue . the
worth refundin'!” sum $1,000.1
each, known .own as S ’ n ’Wl
off as and electric retire, light bond* t i is S , to kll0 >1 I;
1921, , July «l
there being no ’ it?
treasury to pay off said 3 in cil
funding bonds to rale be known* ®' SallJ ^ * l 4
bonds, bearing a oUntefesf
be Per said ff* interest'
paid annually on the
January after said 1
years one of said bonds issue-after. sh^TfX,’j
and one each year the.wi after
shall become due. Until a) |
Notice is further given that
days notice, in the v* n n 3
weekly newspaper Covington 1
ington, Ga„ and published m n
medium the
of said county of
phoation will be made to the Superi s, ’
Court of Newton county to
said refunding bonds in
law made and provided. f the l
This November 15, 1921
°i GEO. ( S:i,s- T. WELLsiViVJk’ ttr'z M ' Muy " r
a transcript of minutes n T Ve
council of November of mavor y r ar (1
7 19^ ‘
49-52-c GEO ' T ' ^ ELLS Clerk.
'
GEORGIA, CITATION
To Newton County
all Whom it May Concern:
J. W. Harwell has filed his
Hon to be appointed administrat a.ml„,
the estate of J. Frank Stubbs e of
sa.d county, deceased, and order
made there,,,, that i„ni„„ wa £
quirmg all . issuwl
kindred persons concerned, both
and creditors, to show C au
before me, if any they have, e
hist Monday m December, on the
letters nt administration 1:121, whv
should net
This 7th day of Nofember 1921
48 ' 51 I > A, L, LOYD, O rdinary,
_
Libel for Divorce.
Newton Superior Court, January
Term, 1922. '
Ruby Wood vs. Odell Wood
To Odell Wood:
You are hereby notified that Ruby
Wood has filed her suit for divoroe,
against you, returnable to the Januarv
Teiin. 1922, of.Newton Sueprior Court,
to answer said petition, or in default
thereof the court will proceed as to
justice will appertain.
Witness the Hon. John It. Hutihe
son, Judge of said court, this Novem¬
ber 1C, 1921.
C. O. NIXON, Clerk.
A. D. MEADOR, Plaintiff’s Attorney.
49-52-c
chants association should maintain a
well organized and well supported
chamber or board of trade. As we said
before and we will say it again no
I town can prosper where every business
man lives to himself.—Ex,
| DESPAIR LURKS
[ IN WEAK BLOOD
Gude’s Pepto-Man gan, (lie Blood
Builder, Arouses Dull Faculties.
Many a man and many a woman
feels all out of sorts from thin, weak¬
ened blood. The least little thing
gone wrong throws them into a wild
form of despondency. Instead of brac¬
ing up and meeting ordinary difficul¬
ties, they are downed. Nerves are on
edge. Appetite lags. Sleep is restless.
They are weak and tired and dull.
Poor blood works its havoc till the will
loses its power. Few people who fall
into habits of worry and despondency
realize that most of their troubles ate
due to lack of endurance—to blood that
hos become weakened by overwork ot
straining.
Healthy men and women with rich,
red blood see things brightly. T' 11 ’.'
tackle life with zest and go along srnil
inly, full of eagerness and endurame.
Glide’s Pepto-Mangan taken steadily
restores the blood to its natural in' 1
ness. It actually makes red corpuscle,
the tiny particles in blood which nad'
it red. Druggists have Goude s 1<1 IM
Mangan in liquid and tablets form. Ad¬
vertisement.
BARRETT HEADS FARMERS l M" N
Kan.—Charles S. Barrett, of
Topeka, unanimously
Union City. Ga., was
elected president of the Nations convention
ers’ Union at the annual
Thursday.
BUY
Advertised Products
They are Non-Advertised not only BETl^ Prod¬
than CHEAPE
ucts, but often
You can’t have good health
Correct > <nu ^
disordered stomach.
aeh disoredrs with Tanlac and
keep well and strong. Sold in '
ton hy City Pharmacy and by '
druggists everywhere.