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o ALLEN 5. CLARK
- BERTHA L. CLARK j
i Superior Court.—November
: #or-. 1925.—Libel for Divorce.
; To Bertha L. Clark:
You are hmtg commanded to be
:and appear at the November Term
* 1926, of Jasper Surrior Court to
.answer the petition filed in the above
:stated.matter.
. Witness the Hon. James B. Park
Ju%r of said Court,
is the 23 day of ngg, 1925.
"THOS. G. POUND, Clerk.
GEORGIA—Jasper County, 4
Mrs, J. 8. Grubbs, hsvinfi made
.application for twelve months’ - sup
port out of the estate of J. S, Grubbs,
and q:gnilerl duly appointed to set
apart the same having filed their re
turn, all persons concerned are here
by required to show cause before the
~Court of Ordinary of said county on
the first Monday in September
1925, why said application shoul(‘
‘not be granted.
This, July 29th, 1925.
J. J. WINBURN, Ordinary.
‘GEORGIA—Jasper County.
Florence Wormley has filed appli
“«cation for twelve months’ lulg{)ort out
of the estate of Elijah Wormiey, and
appraisers duly appointed to set
' apart the same having filed their re
turn, all persons concerned are here
by required to show cause before the
Court' of Ordinary of said County on
" the first Monday in Seg‘tember, 1925,
why said application should not be
granted.
This 4th d% of August, 1925.
J. J. WINBURN, Ordinary.
'GEORGIA, Jasper County: |
More than Five percent of the
?ualified voters of said county having
iled their petition recommending the
calling of an election for the purpose
of submitting the question of whether
or not the Tax levying authorities of
said county shall exempt from taxa
tion for a space of five years such
property as is provided in Article 7
section 2, paragraph 2-a of the Con
stitution of the State ‘of Georgia,
Now, therefore, as is provided for
by an Act of the General Assembly
of the State of Georgia, approved
July 27th 1925, I, T. G. Pound, Clerk
of The Superior Court of said Coun
ty, (there being at this time no Or
dinary in and for said county) and
as provided for especially in Section
2 of said Act of the General As
sembly,) do hereby call an election
to be held on the 25th day of Septem
ber 1925,—at each precinct in said
county, and under the same rules as
is provided for elections for mem
bers of the General Assembly, for
the purpose of determining whether
or nat the tax levying authorities of
said county of Jasper shall exempt
from taxation for a space of five
years such property as is provided in
¢ Article 7, Section 2, Paragraph 2-a
of the Constitution of the State of
Georgia; s
All_ persons favoring said five
years tax exemption as herein set out,
shall have written or printed on their
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- Pragtes CaminerrCo
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Ll WHITE
for persons comi:{.“ m’um!
visions of Article 7, Sec. 2, Pa ph
2-a of the Constitution of Goo;: as
lp!‘ov!d‘dl!n Section 1, Acts of De
cember 19, 1923;” and those oppos
ing said five year tax exemption, as
herein set out, shall have xx:tten or
&rilmd on their ballots, “Against a
ve year tax exemption for persons
comin‘f within the grovillonu of Ar-1
ticle 7, Section 2, Paragraph 2-a of
the Conastitution of Gaorslu. as pro
vided in Section 1, Acts of December
19, 1923.” |
All persons qualified to vote for
members of the General Assembly
are c‘uullflod to vote in this election.'
This the 24th day of August, 1025,
T. G. POUND,
* + Clerk, Jasper Superior Court.
—————————————— \
Ancient Castle Now ‘
Used as an Office
There 18 a castle twenty odd miles
down the river from London which
houses a complete office staff In much
the same manner as might a block of
chambers In the -city of London or
elsewhere, It‘was Ltullt in the Seven
teenth century, and is of Norman de
sign.
This once fortified stronghold lles
off the London road which runs into
Gravesend, the castle overlooking the
Thames is almost in direct line with
Tilbury Docks on the opposite side,
The approach to the castle is by a
slope cut out of the chalk cliffs off the
main highway. Northfleet town lles
several hundred yards distant. Once
the ornamental gateway at the foot
of the slope is reached, the Twentieth
century is left behind.
Nearby s an anclent dockyard. This
fell into disuse many generations
back ; but not long ago a plant for the
manufacture of paper was Installed
on the site. Thus arose the problem
of accommodating the clerical and
other staffs employed in the business
during the ordinary working hours,
The demand for castles by the
moneyed classes being somewhat
limited, the stronghold at Northfleet
was taken over and its interior con
verted into up-to-date offices. Yet,
modern as is the interior aspect, the
view from within across the river Is
still 'by means. of cross-bow windows
and stone mullions. 1
Land of Hot Tamales {
* Americans traveling in South Amer- |
fca soon became acquainted with the |
“hot tamales’ south of the Rio Grande. ]
They are of the maize-and-meat va- |
riety, put up in corn husks. But “the '
elder brother of all tamales” is the
Mongolian rice tamale. In America
it can be found only in Chinatown. |
It is wrapped in rush leaves and is
made like a miniature pyramid of rice
pulverized with pork, pinon nuts and
chestnuts.
The largest tamale known is made|
in South America in the region of
the Orinoco and the Amazon. It ls‘
called allaka and is composed of
minced chicken, .chickapeas and pep
per, well cooked and rolled up in
banana skins, _
.o
Paint to Protect
~ As Well as to
Beautify
WHEN you get ready to
paint and are talking it
- over, debating this color.and
that, don’t overlook the most
vital point—protection. The big
gest job paint has to do is to
. save the surface. It is a well
known fact that Pee Gee
Mastic Paint has never been
surpassed in protecting any
surface to which applied. Its
beautyis anincident to its real
value —adding long years of
life to your home, barn, out
buildings—wherever used. It
stays “put’’ and retains its
high gloss for years.
'MONTICELLO HARDWARE
COMPANY
MONTICELLO, GEORGIA
— ‘f«“:.t
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THE MONTICELLO NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1925.
"8" ".fl“’l‘" a
Traced to the Druids
The idea that It Is lucky v find a
horseshoe is regarded by authorities on
folklore as a Druldical survival,
The superstition is pecullar to re
‘glons where Druldism once flourished,
‘and the Druldical places of worship, as
‘exemplified by Stonehenge, made thelr
Inner circle of stones a broken or open
ones
‘ The idea that a horseshoe brings the
‘best luck when you find it lylng with
the polnts toward you-—the sacred in
ner circle open to you, as it were—
also bears updn this theory. ‘
Druidism passed, but the supersti
tlon outlasts empires and religions, and
when horseshoes became common the
'lupenltloun found ready at hand a
representation of the ancient symbol of
the broken circle. The idea that in
attaching the symbol to the house the
points should be up had a Druidicdl
signification which has been lost. Peo
ple nowadays say it is “to prevent the
illuck running out.”
Architectural Gems
' Besides Wolsey’s great hall and
ikltchen. Christ church, Oxford, boasts
two of the finest English examples
of the Gothic style of architecture,
both built more than a century after
[Gothic became merely a historical
term. One of these, the stalrway to
the hall, was designed in 1640 by a
genful known only as “Smith of Lon
don.”
} The other, Tom tower, carrying the
'Great Tom bell which every night
rings 101 peals to announce the clos
;lng of college gates, was designed
by Christopher Wren, architect of St.
Paul's, in one of the few happy mo
"ments when he really sensed the feel
}lng of medieval bullders.
‘L Read as Death Beckoned-:
‘ A reader asks whether we know
‘which work of Voltaire it was that
‘was found on Sargent's deathbed. We
don’t. But it may interest him and
others to know that Tennyson died
with his Shakespeare open at “Cym
beline” ; Macaulay when he was found
dead in his library had a number of
the Cornhill magazine before him,
open at the first chapter of Thack
eray’'s “Lovel the Widower.,” Mark
Twain with almost the last effort of
his mind turned to Carlyle's “French
Revolution.”—W, Orton Tewson in the
New York Evening Post.
Groundless Fear .
' Some persons dread to take an anes
thetic because they fear they will talk
in their sleep. This is largely a myth,
says Dr. Floyd Troutman Romberger,
an anesthetist, who is a contributor to
Hygeia, health magazine published by
the American Medical association,
Under modern methods of inducifg
anesthetic sleep, consclousness’is lost
gso rapidly that the patient does not
have time to say anything. When he
is ceming to, }ne usually is so. drowsy
that he does not care to talk.
X
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