Newspaper Page Text
CITATION
Court of Ordinary of Newton County,
Georgia.
Petition for Probate of Will in
Form.
IN RE Mrs. Nannie C. Starr.
To Jim Childs. Bert Childs, Frank
Childs. Joe Childs, Mrs. Ava Roberts,
Mrs. May Kaeerovsky, Mrs. Viola Mc
Alpine, heirs at law of Mrs. Nannie C.
Starr:
E. C. Benton and Jesse H. Childs hav¬
ing applied, as executors, for probate
in solemn form of the last will and tes¬
tament of Mrs. Nannie C. Starr, late of
said county, deceased, you and each of
you, as an heir at law of the said de¬
ceased, being non-residents of this
State, are hereby required to be and ap¬
pear at the Court of Ordinary for said
county on the first Monday in January,
1923, when said application for probate
will he heard, and show cause, if any
you have or can, why the prayer of the
petition should not be had and allowed.
This 4th day of December, 1922.
A. L. LOYD,
52-3c Ordinary.
CITATION
GERGIA, NEWTON COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern:
Susie Chaney, having in proper form
applied for permanent letters of admin¬
istration on the estate of Choice Pitts,
late of said county, deceased, this is to
cite all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of said deceased, to he and
appear at the Court of Ordinary of said
county, at the January term, 1923, and
show cause, if any they have or can,
why permanent letters of administra¬
tion should not be granted to said Susie
Chaney on said estate.
This 4th day of December, 1922.
A. L. LOYD,
52-3c Ordinary.
GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY
Will be sold at the Court House door
in said county on the first Tuesday in
January, 1923, within the legal hours
of sale, towit:
All that tract or parcel of land situ¬
ated, lying and being in the city of Cov¬
ington, said state beginning on the pub¬
lic road leading from Covington to the
Dealing Quarters, and running east
along alley 170 feet, thence south 100
feet, thence west 170 feet to public road,
thence north along said public road 100
feet to beginning corner. Same being
part of lot deeded to E. W. Fowler by
J. T. Swann on the 7th day of October,
1919. Said property levied upon by
virtue of a Superior Court fi fa issued
from the September term, 1922, in fa¬
vor of R. W. Campbell and T. J. Swann
against Mamie Hardman. Written no¬
tice given tenant in possession.
This Dec. 6th, 1922.
B. L. JOHNSON,
52-3c Sheriff.
GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY
Will be sold before the Court House
door on the first Tuesday in January,
1923, within the legal hours of sale,
the following described property, towit:
All that stock of merchandise and fix¬
tures in the City of Mansfield, Ga.,
said property known as the City Phar¬
macy. Said property levied upon as the
property of C. E. Hardman and Thomas
F, Hardman, levied upon by virtue of
Superior Court fi fa issued from the
July term. 1922, in favor of the Atlanta
National Bank against the said C. E.
and Thomas F. Hardman.
This Dec. 6th, 1922.
B. L. JOHNSON,
*2-3e Sheriff.
GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY
Under and by virtue of an order
passed by the Court of Ordinary at the
regular soid December term, 1922, will be
before the Court House door of
Newton County, Georgia, in the city
of Covington, on the first Tuesday in
January, 1923, within the legal hours
of sale, to the highest bidder for cash,
the following described real property,
to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land lying,
situated and being in said State and
county, in Cedar Shoals district, boun¬
ded as follows: On the north by land of
Robert Lee and Mrs. Middlebrooks, on
east by lands of Willis Roseberry and
John S. Brown; on the south by lands
of W. L. Floyd and Lizzie Roseberry
and on the west by other lands of the
estate of Joe Henderson and P. E. Mid¬
dlebrooks, containing 50 acres, more or
less.
This December 5th, 1922.
L. W. Jarman,
John S. Brown,
52-3e Exec, of Joe Henderson, deceased.
STATE AND COUNTY TAX NOTICE
The state and county tax books of
Newton county are now open for the
purpose of collecting taxes for the year
1922. This is important and should be
attended to now, as the tax books will
close December 20, 1922.
O. M. Neely,
to 12-20 Tax Collector.
Georgia, Newton County.
Notice to debtors and creditors:
All creditors of the estate of S. P.
Pickett, late of Newton county, deceas¬
ed, are hereby notified to render in
their demands to the undersigned ac¬
cording to law, and all persons indebt¬
ed to said estate are required to make
immediate payment.
This November 15, 1922.
W. H. Pickett, Sr.,
W. H. Pickett, Jr.,
Administrators of S. P. Pickett, de¬
ceased. i-fje
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
All persons indebted to the estate of
Mrs. H. B. Anderson, deceased, are
hereby requested to Fay same to the
executrix of said estate, and all persons
having accounts against said estate are
requested to present same for payment.
Mrs. Susie P. Jarman,
Executrix of estate
l-2p of Mrs. H. B. Anderson.
FARM LOANS
I make Loans on Newton County
farm lands for five years time, Interest
payable annually on November 1st, In
amounts from $1,000.00 to $100,000.00.
O. H. ADAMS.
SIX PER CENT MONEY. Under the
Bankers’ Reserve System 6 per cent
loans may be secured on city or farm
property, to buy, build, improve or pay
indebtedness. Bankers’ Reserve Deposit
Company, 1648 California street, Den¬
ver, Colorado. 49-4c
FOR SALE
Large lot. 117x127, with sewerage.
Fine residence lot on Monti
cello street. See
D. A. THOMPSON
STRICT REGULATIONS OF
CARS IN CALIFORNIA
Sacramento, Cal., Dec. 3 3.—Deter¬
mined to check the mounting wave of
automobile deaths, following recent
publicity given to the big death list in
California, as well as many other states
the California state motor vehicle
partment has drawn up a drastic set of
automobile regulations which will be
presented to the legislature for enaet
ment as law.
The strict code also seeks to govern
the actions of pedestrians, holding that
the automobilist is not always to blame
for highway accidents, and provides
stiff penalties for violations.
The code, outlined in ten concise
rules, provides for:
1. Placing reckless driving in the
same category with driving under the
influence of intoxicating liquor, with a
penalty of imprisonment of from six
months to five years.
2. Keeping children on roller skates
off the streets.
3. Prohibiting parking automobiles
on the highway.
4. Prohibiting jay-walking on the
highway as strictly as on the city
streets.
5. Requiring an applicant for license
to operate motor vehicles to pass a
thorough examination before the li¬
cense is issued.
6. Forbidding any person under IS
years of age to drive a motor vehicle.
7. Forbidding the extension of bag¬
gage over the running board on the left
hand side of an automobile.
8. Compelling pedestrians to walk on
the left hand side of the road where
there are no sidewalks.
9. Requiring the placing of a white
flag in the center of a tow line when
one vehicle is towing another .
10. Requiring all motorists to stop
when flagged at a crossing.
‘AUNT’ SUSANNA WANTS
WARRANT FOR WITCHES
“Witches” have been troubling and
molesting “Aunt” Susanna Johnson,
who lives back of the city stockade, so
much recently that Wednesday she ap¬
peared before Judge T. O. Hathcock,
of the municipal court, with the unu¬
sual request that a warrant be issued
for their arrest.
“Aunt" Susanna explained that the
“witches” continually followed her,
causing her to lose job after job. She
claimed that they also took her wash¬
ing from the line, and went so far as
to take the cover from her bed and car¬
ry it out in the yard.
Judge Hathcock scratched his head,
reached for a blank warrant, and dip¬
ped his pen in ink.
“What’s the name of these witches?”
he asked.
The old woman shook her head. She
could furnish no names. All she knew
was that they were witches.
“Sorry, auntie, but we can’t issue
warrants without names.”
And the old woman left the office,
mumbling something about “settin’ a
trap herself.”—Atlanta Georgian.
HUSBAND CUT HER HAIR
TO KEEP HER AT HOME
Atlanta, Ga.—With her tresses cut
almost to the scalp, and her clothes
locked away where she could not get
them, Mrs. Hope Harris Goldwine stay¬
ed virtually a prisoner in her own home
according to her divorce petition filed
in Fulton Superior Court last week,
in which she seeks release from Gil¬
bert N. Goldwine.
Asserting that her husband was in¬
ordinately jealous, Mrs. Goldwine says
that in May he overpowered her, fas¬
tened her to a bed with a leather strap
and cut off her hair.
“I will fix you so you can’t leave the
house,” she decleres her husband told
her. Owing to the disfigurement, she
says, she remained indoors for one
month. Mrs. Goldwine said that when
she married Goldwine they were both
19 years old. He refused to work, she
stated.
HIS LUCK
“Well, I’ll be getting lots of pres¬
ents soon,” he said. He had just mot
some pleasant new friends.
“Yes,” he continued. “Christmas is a
good time for me. You see, I’m
with wives. I get notes from hundreds
of them; there are any number who
write to me, and when Christmas comes
they knit ties for me, or buy a hand¬
some siik handkerchief or two, or a
muffler—a little thought of me at any
rate. And I've never been in a divorce
case yet,” he ended.
“You must be a diplomat, or luckier
than you deserve,” someone remarked.
“Neither,” he answered. “I’m a milk¬
man, and a milkman’s Christmas is apt
to be full of good cheer and the goo 1
hearted wishes of the ladies!”
CATARRH
Catarrh is a Local disease greatly in¬
fluenced by Constitutional conditions.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con¬
sists of an Ointment which gives Quick
Relief by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur¬
faces and assists in ridding your System
of Catarrh.
Sold by druggists for over 40 Years.
F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O.
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVluw^, GEORGIA
AS “ fls Imasb
_ Memories
j 1 M.TWpirx
fend HE years'cay fome/ihe years may go, witbseasons drear or (air,
! winiels add tlseir graying touch tiQ snow white an nyhair;
j The cares of life may bear me down throughlong gears’ busy day*,
And fainter grow the sunsets glow before my dimming"gaze.
But naught can take away the joys that Christmas brings ti
When I can beard thd rushing train that’s pulled by Memoi
And travel back to youthful days to take new heart of g^a
While wraiths cf Childhoods(nefatej) round the ^ *
I see the old school house tkat%o£ heath the swaying
Whose supple limbs oft worried me with lusty downward str
I see again die star-eyed maid whose face illumed with
Made Fortune’s road to wealth and fame of that old school a
The swimmin hole, the big nut trees, the berry thicket^
All come to me on Memory’s train when falls tihe evi
And gazing in the fire 1 see each youthful, smiling fa<
When wraiths of Childhood’s!
The years may come, the years fayIppoiit while Memory^^SJ Hesjgmn me ®
I’ll sit before the Christmas blaze and live in
Be long-gone days of childhood joys and be a boy thenj|d^^.^ again^
To live again the old, old days in Memory—and
Cast Have oft fullest the years with with youthful all their z^tkal load and their with the Christmas girfeaM^/ jo \
part
An easy chair, the briar pipe With sntolrelwreatlis curling grace,
WMe wraiths of UUteifireplace.
V fi
u)4WWJ
£5E5ESZSZ5Z5HSiiS3SHSE5Z5a5HSc!5asaSc
The ChristmasTree
i525ES25ESi!5552SZ5iSE5E5aSZSa5SSi53
’ | ’HERE’S a stir among the trees,
* There’s a whisper in the breeze,
Little ice-points clash and clink,
Little needles nod and wink.
Sturdy fir-trees sway and sigh—
“Here am I! Here am l!
“All the summer long ! stood
In the silence of the woods.
Tall and tapering I grew;
What might happen well 1 knew;
For one day a little bird
Sang, and in the song I heard
Many things quite strange to me
Of Christmas and the Christmas tree.
“When the sun was hid from sight
In the darkness of the night,
When the wind with sudden fret
Pulled at my green coronet,
Staunch 1 stood, and hid my fears,
Weeping silent, fragant tears.
Praying still that I might be
Fitted for a Christmas tree.
“Now here we stand
On every hand!
In us a hoard of summer stored,
Birds have flown over us,
Blue sky has covered us.
Soft winds have sung to us.
Blossoms have flung to us.
Measureless sweetness.
Now in completeness
We wait.”
—Mary F. Butts,
fip2SS5asaSESE5E52SHSESaS2SaSESaS^'B I
~ = “......" - rL I
GRANDMOTHER’S
S CHRISTMAS @
—- ------' =zru j
cidSESZSHSESZSZSZi'ESZSSSHSESlCii
r Jf'HEY brought their gifts to grandma;
A good gray flannel sack,
A neat little bag for her spectacles,
And a cushion for her back.
Mother had bought some slippers,
The very best she could find,
And father had bought a rocking-chair
Of the good grandmothery kind.
Aunt Nancy had made a night-cap,
With bands of tucking and lace.
And cousin had brought her an apron,
And Jenny a kerchief and vase;
But the things that she sat and fondled
Till the Christmas light burned low,
Till her cheeks grew pink and dim her eye
v... You __________7 never could j guess, I r know. ?
A card with a wreath of holly,
And a jolly old Santa Claus,
A cunning kitten cushion i
With a gray ball in his paws,
A bottle of rose perfumery.
And, oh, such a funny thing!
The baby's gift of peppermints
Tied up with a crimson string.
— M. M. Huey.
■tt wwwww
CHRISTMAS EVE
Of YESTERYEAR
AWWWUVJWJ
Ip'HRISTMAS ^ Little stockings eve of in long ego!
a row,
Hung with care, and mouth* all wide,
Begging by the chimney aide.
Children’* chatter, eager, fweet,
Romping patter of little feet;
Heart* all fluttering with delight.
Eyes with questioning wonder bright.
Children, when their prayer* were said.
Frolicking away to bed,
With the Child of Bethlehem
In their hurt*, a child with them!
Home hearts, which home joys could fill,
Shrine* of peace and all good-will;
Happy hand* of parent thrift
Placing for each child some gift.
Little stocking* in a row,
Filled at last from top to toe!—
Year* nor grief can dim it* glow,
Chistmas eve of long ago!
—Stokely S. Fisher.
|53ESH5Z53HSHSZ5S5Z5Hi!SHSZSaSSS?lj
The Christmas
Spectrum
•SBi
fjEVEN One is pointi the love hath that the shines Christmas star:
afar
From God to man, and one is the love
That leaps from the world to the Lord above*
And one is good will on the happy earth.
And cne is purity, one is peace,
And two are the joys that never eras*—
Aflame in the star of the wonderful Birth.
And the light of God's love is a golden light,
And man's love to man is crimson.bright,
And man's love to God is an azure ray —
Alas, when it flickers and dies awayl
And the seven rays through the worshiping night*
Like the flash of all jewels exult and play —
God’s joy,
Man’s joy—
Yet they shine as one, and the star is white.
—Amos R. I Veils,
| | SHELTER FOR | |
THE NIGHT
l ° as a child,
i A 11!ho Who needed needed a a mother't mothercar* care.
While He took o/ a mother’s sacrifice,
He heeded a mother’s prayer;
No mansion rare offered home so fair
As her tender love’s embrace,
Nor had costly bed for His tiny head.
Like those arms, fit resting-place.
And so must He ever enter in.
The Baby of Bethlehem,
meagre heart neoer room for Him,
The Lord of a boundless realm;
And the King of Kings seek* no better things
Than the ”child of thy love’s” sure part.
Who cradles this Babe hath His throne-room made.
For His kingdom is thy heart.
—Lltta Vms Shepherd, la Ltetng Chmrtk
■•~T,F . r73HT , ' W
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anyone you Bsfep!
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and almost invariably
they will tell you ROYAL.
“My cakes are 100% better
since 1 bought that can of
Royal,” writes one delighted
user, and everywhere—
among your friends, neigh¬
bors, relatives—you will
hear similar commendations.
Royal Contains No Alum
Leaves No Bitter Taste
Desirable Sifts ere
Ones That Please
Christmas ipir
Gifts
at Our
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L&S3 i
[1© PICK*
\
It is economy to come to our Drug Store!
for your Christmas gifts. You can find ex
quisite things which your friends will buy will treasj
ure; and a little money man}]
presents.
Come in now while you have plenty oi|
time to select your gifts.
Agents for Nunnally’s Candies.
Our line of Cigars is unexcelled. Thejj
would be appreciated by the men folks.
Christmas Cards
We are Careful Druggists.
GEO. T. SMITH DRUG Cfl
HOME SWEET MM
sounds just as sweet on a mouth or: u tiS
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a -
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if you please. ,
A real home can be built for an > ! 1(K> ‘
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See us for ideas and estimate"
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Contractors and Lumber Spec* lS
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