The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, June 24, 1921, Image 2

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NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY.THE NEWNAN HERALD, JUNE 24, 1921 THE NEWNAN HERALD KEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 24 Official Organ of Coweta County. Jas. B. Brown.' p. W. Paennvant, BROWN & PASSAVANT Editors and Publl.k.r.. The Horahl omoo Is located In tho ■aoodrum Building. 12 Jaakson Street 'Phono (. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. A Splendid Gift. Out of all the ruck anil rancor aimed ot the Federal Farm Bureau Federation •by L. B. .Tuckaou, J. .T. Brown, and other enemies of the organisation, it is rofrosb ing to note some of tho good wok it 1ms done and i» doing, A nows item on our doak tells of a splendid gift by members of tho Farm Bureau Federation of tho Midlilo West for the rollof of tho strav ing thousands of Europe. It Bays— “The first two trnln loads of gift corn from the corn bolt farmern invaded tho East Inst week, and are now bolng processed at mills at Genova, N. Y., and Wilkos-Barro, Pn„ and made ready for export. The trnln bound for Geneva was Toaplondont in rod, blnck and white ban tiers bearing Inscriptions such as 'First Train of Gift Corn to Starving Europe,’ * Wo Market Our Grain in Re 1l«f, and Take Our Pny in Good Will, 1 nml 'American Farm Bnronu Federation , Gift Corn to Europe,’ In addition to tho huge banners strotehing across tho cars, smaller postors gave the nnmos of tho State* which contributed to tho train loads of corn and otlior facts concern Ing tho movomont. Tho trains wore routed through Indiana nnd Ohio, making stops at Elklinrt, Toledo and Cleveland. Many an Indiana or Ohio farmer, along tho right-of-way looked up from his plowing and saw tho gift-corn to which bo had contributed on its errand of mer- «y. Tho trainmen donated their tlmo to tlio hauling of tho grnin, nnd the roads •gave their oqulpinont. Tho Chicago firm of Jackson & Bro. gave ovor its organi zation to tho loading of tho grnin. That's the true Amorlcan Fnnn Buronu 'Fodorntion spirit I” Has anybody ovor hoard of tho Fnr- inors’ Union or other farinors’ organisa tion doing nnytlilng ns magnificent as thisT Wo havon’t. By tho way, tho Stnto Farm Buronu has recently estahlishod a snlcs agency for tho huneflt of its memhors, and it is now in active operation. An example of tho valuo of this umrkotlng servico may bo had in considering tho. sweet potato situation. Georgia is. one of tho loading Statos of the South in tho production of sweat potatoes, but on Account of inad equate storage facilities and lack: of ■touch with dosirnblo markets, tho crop has not hoon ns profitable as it might boro boon, and, should lip. . With tho drop in tho price of cotton, and' tho roducod yield on neemint' of hell woovil damage, twice ns many potatoes will'-bo grown ' Oils year as wore ovor raised boforo, nnd it eras for tho purpose of providing an nutlet for the crop end its proper lmnd- Hng that tho Farm Burcn snles ngoncy ' has boon created. This will ho under tho wiporvislou of n mnungor who is thor oughly acquainted with tho mhrkots of * tho country nnd familiar with tho proper ' handling nnd marketing of swoot. pota to!*. Other commodity divisions will bo orcaiiiited upon tho sumo linos, to tho end ' that ultimately a considerable portion of 1 tho crops qf Georgia may bo mnrkoted 'through ono great organization. Tho instances of real helpfulness noted Si boro increases onr faith in tho Farm 'Bureau Federation ns ono farmers’ or- Rnnization that is doing good, (Communicated.) \ '"DON’T WANT NO MORE LEAD ERS." One of my noighborB whom I will call .John Jones—that is,not his name, of . coarse, but it will nnswor for the purpose - Of this article—camo back a fow morn ings »nco from nn inspection of his brag . ootion putch near by, which ho had been nursing and tending with much care, and, passing uij- gate, stopped for a chat, as top .frequently does. Now, John is a good fellow'—a bit tcmpommontal, porhnps— that is to say, at times ho is carried away ker enthusiasm ovor aomo now scheme proposed to help tho "poor, downtrodden fbrmor,” nnd nt other times just about as downhearted because of tho failure of said "scheme" to materialize. On tho morning referred to ho had found tool! weevils stirring about among his young cotton, and was consequently marh depressed. 1 1’m plumb dUguBted with every thin’,” ho bogan, "un’ feci like qiiittin’ for good.- Horo I am nigh on to sixty* year old, an’ dunged if I ain>t poorer than I was when I started. Nothin ’ turnB out right for mo. ’Bout when I think I’vb Bortor got my benrin’s and cun begin to soe'abend a little, sump’ll alius happens to fling mo back. Scorns liko everythin ’ I tocli blows up or gets squshod somehow. I begun my fool cn- roor nearly thirty yenr ago. 1 jinoil tho Farmers’ Alliance, which was sweep- in’ the country in them days. I thought Jerry Simpson an’ old Lon Livinston was the biggest men in Amoriky, but soon’s Livinston got elected to Congress nn’ a lot of other Alliance loaders got a office of some kind tho thing foil through. Then Tom Watson ho rlz up an ’ said there wasn’t nothin ’ to the Alliance no more—that the politicians had ruint It—and nskod tho boys to come with him into, the Populist party an’ ho’d see that they got what was comin ’ to ’em. I thon went in with the Pops, an’ most all iny neighbors quit speakin ’ to mo for deserting the Dorn myerats. But I stuck it out for a spell, nn' then, begosh, tho next thing that happoned Watson was runnin’ for Con gross on the Populist tickot. That come purty nigh shaking my confidence in lm nmn iiatur’, for I lmd mighty high hopes of Watson, ho tnlkod so fuir. Thar was othor loaders that rlz up from time to time, but I was plumb discouraged an paid no ’tention to ’em. I’d followed Jerry Simpson an' old Lon Livinston an they’d lod mo into tho woods an’ left mo to find my way out tho boat I could 1 ’d followed Tom Watson, nn ’ he led mo into a briar patch, an’ I come purty nigh losin’ my pants tryin’ to git out, they-was tore so bad. But the wust took In I ever wob was whon this fellow J. J. Brown come along—his first name ought to bo Jaw Jaw, sooms to mo, con slderin’ tho mouthin’ way he latherdd us farmers with his soft soap an’ sicli, tryin ’ to make us bolleve ho was the only sho’ ’nougli friend tho farmors had in Goorgy. I’d bocomo ’spicious of every body by that tlmo anil was slow 'bout bitin’, but evonchully I fell for his talk and was bogipnln’ to fool like maybe IM hung up with tho real thing at lust nn’ that he’d pint tho way to salvation for us farmers. Woll, sir, I’d hoard him speak in Newnan whin he was goin’ 'bout ovor the State organizin’ this here ’Morlcan Cotton Association, nn’ lid sho’ did rnlso my sporits. He told ub fnrmors tho association was for our ben efit exclusive, an’ wo all trod on one nnotliors’ toes tryin’ to git to tho secre tary an’ Imvo our names put down ns mombors nt so much per head. Wo kep’ waitin’ for sump’n to como out of this, but I nin’t got mine yit. Just whon I was boginnln’ to lose lionrt ‘long como Hnrvio Jordan Inst August nnd spike in Newnan. He said tho 'Merican Cotton Association was nil right, ’cause ho..was secretary and know'd wlmt he was talk- in ’ ’bout. Said tho association was doin ’ a great work nnd not to bo discouraged ; that thiso big movements lmd to have timo in order to show rosults. He then told us farmers to stick together an J we could do anythin’ we wanted; that tho world whs, half naked and wns obleogcd to have ; our cotton t that it dost us ; 38 cents to make it, an’'on- no. account ought to bo sold for less’n 40 cents; In fact, ho wouldn’t be ’sprised' if it wont ns high ub 50 conts. Well, sir, the court- house wi(8 plumb full of peoplo, an’ tliey whooped mi ’ yelled, an ’ we nil wont away foelln ’ mighty good. What hope our foolin’s still more was what J. J'. Brown kopt suyin’ in Ids speeches an’ in the newspapers, advisln ’ tho farmers to hold their cotton for 40 cents; that Europe had to have it, an’ all we had to do was to sot stoddy in the boat an ’ pny no ’ten tion to what tho cotton gamblers and Wall street said. Well, I s'posed of course that Brown niid Jordan, bein’ on tho inside ns you might say, know’d wlmt they was talkin’ ’bout, nn’ so 1 licit my cotton. I didn’t have but five bales, boll weevils glttin ’ most of my crap last year, an’ It seemed to mo like I was obleeged to have 40 cents for it bi order to come out anywheres nigh even. I was offered 20 cents for it in Newnan one day, but I wouldn’t take it, an' I’ve .got that cotton yit. Now, what in thunder’s goin’ to 'come of mo I don’t know. I do know one thing, though—I ain ’t a-goin’ to follow no more (eadors as lbng as I live. I’m done, and dadburn my pictur’ if I don’t do my own loadin ’ hereafter. YeB, sir-reel" Neighbor Jones' ease appealed to me, for lie is a straightforward, hard-work ing man nnd good citizen, but I saw no way to help him out of the doldrums into which he had fallen. I wondered, though, how many other Joneses there were in Coweta county who had suffered in liko manner from bad (bdvicB and worse leadership. Some cases I know of are really pitiful. Cincinnati^. Old Irish Maps. In the library of Trinity college. Dublin, are maps of each county In Ireland, drawn by hand on vellum in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. and on the south by C. B. Glover—In pursuance of a bond for title made by L. A. Perdtie to the said G. W. Jackson In his lifetime, the said O. W. Jackson alleging that he has fully met hlB ob ligations In said bond. This Is there fore to notify Mrs. L. Ai Perdue, as administrator on tho estate of L. A. Perdue, and Mrs. L. A. Perdue and Mrs. Nina P Davis, helrs-at-law of tho said L. A. Perdue, deceased, to be and ap pear at the July term, 11121, of the Court of Ordinary of Coweta county and show cause. If any they have, why the said administrator should not be required to make said deed, as prayed for by tho said G, W. Jackson, petition er. This June 6. 1921. J. A. R. CAMP, Ordinary. Piled In office this 8th day of June, 1021. L. TURNER.. Clerk Superior Court, Coweta County GEORGIA—Coweta County; I, L. Turner, Clerk of the Superior Court of said county, do hereby cer tify that the foregoing IS a true and corfect copy ot .the original for charter of TURIN WARBmSni! COMPANY, as appears of record P„ SE offloe. r4 ln my Witness my hand and the 8e „ . said Court this 8th day of Ju ne j 9: °' Clerk Superior Court, UoI'lJ Legal Notice*. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: All creditors of the estate of James E. Hines, deceased, late of said State and county, are hereby notified to ren der ln their demands to the undersign ed according to law; and all persons Indebted to said eBtate are required to/ make Immediate payment to the un dersigned. This May 20, 1921.- “ B william A. Hines, Madras, Ga. Administrator. Twelve Months’ Support. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Tho return of the appraisers setting apart twelve months' support to the family of A. Cagle, deceased, having been filed ln my office, all persons concerned are cited to show oause^by the first Monday In July, 1921, why said aprfllcation for twelve months support should- not be granted. T.his Juno 6, 1921. ^ R CAMP, Ordinary. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA—Coweta County: - C. H. Kempson and I. A. Soott hav ing applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for Letters of Adminis tration on the estate of J. A. Kempson, deoeasod, all persons concerned are re quired to show cause in said Court by the flrBt Monday in July next^ If any they can, why said application should not ho granted. This June 6. 1921. J. A. R. CAMP, Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: . Monroe Talley, executor of the last will of Mrs. Mary Jane Broadwater, deceased, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for Letters of Dismission from his said trust, all persons concerned are required to show cause ln said Court by the first Monday/ In July next, If any they can, why said application should not be granted. This June 6, 1921. J. A. R, CAMP. ■ Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Mrs S. A. Sears, administrator on tho eBtate of W. A, Sears, deceased, having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said county for letters, of dismis sion from her said truBt, all persons r oomed are required, to show .cause Hald Court by the' first. Monday in July next, if any they can, . .Why. .sfftd application should not be granted. This Juno 0, 1921. J. A. R. CAMP. .Ordinary. PETITION FOR CHARTER. GEORGIA—Coweta County: ' To the Superior Court of said counts: The petition of E. Domlnlok, R. H, Dominick, Dominick Mercantile Com pany, J, B, Shell, W. H. Summers, L. S. Page, J D Johnson, G W Shell, Judson Harris, J A. Daniel, Z. Christopher, B. T. Thompson, Miss Ruth Thompson, MrB. Annie Hunter Caldwell, Mrs. Pat- tie Hunter Drake, Mrs. Minnie Hunter Cole, all of Coweta county, Ga., shows: 1. That they desire for themselves, their associates, successors and as signs to be Incorporated and made a body politic under the laws of Georgia for the period of twenty years, with the privilege of renewal at the expir ation of said term, under the name and style of TURIN WAREHOUSE COM PANY. 2. The .object of the proposed corpor ation Is pecuniary gain to Itself and Its stockholders. 3. The principal office and place of business of said corporation Bhall he in the town of Turin, said county F.nd State. 4. Tho business to be carried on by said corporation Is to receive, stoi'e and Weigh cotton and other farm pro ducts, guano, fertilizers, and such other articles desired: and to do any and all things Incident and necessary to the conduct of the business of a first- class warehouse. 5.. The capital stock of said corpor ation Bhall be Six Thousand Pour Hun dred Dollars, all of which Is paid ln In cash, and the said Incorporators hereby desire the privilege of increas ing the same to Ten Thousand Dollars, as may be determined by Its inoorpor- ators. The shares' of stock to be of the par value of One Hundred Dollars per share. 6. Petitioners desire the right to sue and be sued; to plead and be Impleaded; to contract and ■ be contracted with; to have and use a common seal; to make by-laws and- regulations neces sary for the conduct of said business, Including the right to own, buy, hold and sell real estate and personal prop erty suitable to the purposes of said corporation; to encumber said proper ty owned by them, and to execute notes and bonds as evidence of indebtedness Incurred, or which may be inourred In the conduct of the affairs of said cor poration, and to secure the same by mortgage, security deed, or any other form of security Hen under existing law. s , L ■ The affairs of said corporation shall be managed and conducted by a board of directors consisting of such number as may be fixed by the corpor ate action of said corporation, and your petitioners further desire the privilege at any time during the life of said corporation of liquidating the affairs of the same, or a dissolution of the same by a two-thirds vote of the stock holders of the same, according to the by-laws of said corporation. WHEREFORE your petitioners pray . he Incorporated under the name and, style aforesaid, with the powers, priv ileges and Immunities herein set forth, and as are now or may hereafter be allowed a corporation of similar char acter under the laws of the State of Georgia. GARLAND M. JONES. Petitioner’s Attorney. L. A. PROUTY SODA FOUNTAIN IN AMERICA If interested, let us know and we will mail you catalog and photographs. We also carry aCOinplctClillCof Soda Fountain supplies Distributors for J. Hungerford Smith Concentrated Syrups and Crushed Fruits. KOLMAN FOUNTAIN SUPPLY CO. 302-4 BRYAN ST., WEST, p. O. BOX 1273 SAVANNAH. GA Notice to Debtors nnd Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta County: ’ •' - All creditors of the estate of Wilbur R.. Sewell,, late of- Coweta cdunty, Ga., deceased, are hereby notified to render In their demands to the under signed according to law; and all per sons indebted to said estate are, re quired to make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This Mav 20, 1921. Marie Sewell, Marguerite Sewell, Administrators, 6 Oxford Place, Kirkwood, Ga, Cigarette To seal In the delicious Burley -tobacco flavor. It’s Toasted Application for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA—Coweta County: John James Wells, administrator on the estate of Paul Henry Wells; de ceased, having applied to the Courfof Ordinary of. said county for leave to sell stocks and bonds of said estate for the purpose of distribution to the helrs-at-law, all persons concerned, are required to shpw cause ln said Court by the first Monday ln July, next, if any they can, why said application should not bo granted. This June 6, 1921. J, - A. R. CAMP. Ordinary, : CITATION TO COMPEL TITLE, GEORGIA—Coweta County: G. W- Jackson having applied to. the Ordinary by petition asking that Mrs. L, A. Perdue, as administrator on the estate of L. A. Perdue, late of - said county, deceased, be required to make to him a deed to the following describ ed lands, to-wlt: A certain tract dr parool of land lying and being in the original- Fifth, now Hurricane district, of said county, on the east side of the Central of Georgia railway, and front ing on said railway right-of-way, and described as follows: Begin at a rail road stake on the east side of the said right-of-way, about 60 yards from the road leading from the J B. Crane place to the public road running from NeW- nan to Sargent; run from said stake In a straight line east to the corner of H. A. Hall and the County Farm lands Just east of the branch 22 chains .and 60 links; thence south along the line of said County Farm to the line of C. B. Glover 16 chains and -17 links: thence west along the line of said C. B. Glover 16 chains and 27 links to the said right-of-way of the Central Qeo , r » Ia , railway; thence north along the said right-of-way to the beginning point at said stake 11 chains and 27 twenty-five and one-half (26H) acres, bounded on the west by Central of Georgia right-of- wayj on the north by lands of J. H. McKoy, on the east by County Farm, For $6.50—a right new growing girl’s new shade brown strap pump, brogue pattern; sizes 2% to 7; all widths, A to D. This pump is the newest^ and it is a beauty. For $5.00 to $7.50—new oxfords and pumps in ladies’ shoes. We can fit your feet correctly, and we take particular pains to do so. Brown oxfords and strap pumps with military heels are the correct styles, and we have them. For $2.95, $3.00 and $5 00—we have just the shoes to please you with real comfort and wear- home comfort shoes. For $3.25 and $3.50—we have a real comfort slipper for men. Everett at $3.25, Congress at $3.50. You should see these shoes to appreciate their real worth. The Shoe Shop “ON THE SQUARE—NORTH SIDE.” W. M. Askew. ’Phone 326. P. S—Don’t forget our good shoe repairing, and don’t forget to watch your shoes and let us have them for repairs before they are worn out. CREAM! Sure! It’s a food, and its good for you. It is not heavy like meats, and yet just as much a food, of more so. But if you are going to call this dessert a “food” you want the BEST, and take a tip from us: Jessup & Antrim’s is the best. We have been selling it for ten years;—we have tried many others but they are not in line with “Ja-an-Ay!” Phone us your orders for dinners, parties, recep tions, etc. Chocolate, Vanilla, Peach and Pineapple in stock. Brick cream on special order, any flavor. Orange Ice and Pineapple Ice on specif orders. We invite you to our store for your ice cream, drinks and drug store requirements. LEE-KING DRUG JS&4 TWO PHONES—66 PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY Beginning July 1st we will conduct our business on a STRICTLY CASH basis. Cash only! No tickets—no evasions. We do this in order to give you better service and lower prices. After July 1st cash to all!