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RUB OUT PAIN
with good oil liniment. That’a |
the suretft way to stop them. I
Thc best rubbing liniment is J
ISJSTAfIS
LINIMENT
Good for the Ailments of 1
Horses, Mules, Cattle, Etc.
Good for your own Aches,
Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains,
Cuts, Burns, Etc.
25e. 50c. sl. At all Dealer*.
SIZEMORE—W HEELER
A very quiet, tint unique wedding
was that which Thursday at four
o’clock, united ,Mr. Julian .1. S'/.e
inorc and Miss Margaret Wheeler.
Having motorist to Chickamaugn,
the young people vedtired the servi
ces i f their pastor, the Itev. W. C.
Tallent, who orovflKwith them over
to the tieorgitt monument on the
park, where in the presence of a few
friends, in a beautiful and impres
sive manner (lie ceremony was per
formed, the party leaving at once
in curs for Chattanooga.
This marriage unites two of the
county's most interesting young
people. The hridn is attractive am!
popular, being the only daughter of
Mrs. Minnie Wheeler, and Moses
Wheeler deceased, and is the grand
daughter of the late John 11. Whee
ler. The groom is the eldest son of
Rev. A. B. Sizemore, is also himself,
a young Baptist minister, hut for the
last few years has been better 1
known in educational circles, having
served as superintendent of schools
respectively at. Graysville, Trion,
Sonoraville and Kensington, (ieorgin.
After a brief tour in Ensl Ten
nessee, they will tie at home to their
many friends at Quitman, Brooks
County, Ga., where Mr. Sizemore
goes to superintend ' the Marwick
High School.
• • •
CARO OF THANKS
W ■ wish to express through the
rblurons of the Messenger our
thanks to our many friends for their
assistance in the sickness and death
of our husband and father, and also
for other assistance which was so
generously bestowed upon us. Also
we wish lo lhr.nk I»r. Hale for his
untiring efforts May Clod in His
great love reward everyone, is our
prayer. Mrs. Annie Johnson. Flos
sie Johnson.
MONICA TO I.OAN Three or live
years on farm or improved city
property. Apply direct lo The
Volunteer State Life Insuranee
Company. Janies Building, Chat
tanooga, Tennessee. KMI-'d
HFSffl BSKfID Ti
Do The
Public
1 am glad to advise the public mul my old pat rolls dial l
iiin now hack in business with New ami llp-To-Oate stock and
Supply of Host Materials and 1(1 Jt f Jl'ijf !l? V 5
Located In
Express Building
On South Side of Square
In LaFayette
and will do any work in Leather, Harness, Shoes. etc n and shall
take especial pride in pleasing the people and shall appreciate
jtrnr work and patronage.
I am located permanently. Glad to show you my new line.
♦
Come In To See Me
E. F. Phipps
LaFayette, Georgia
•rri4 •H-W-I* WWW WW
4.
{• TRANS *
•*. 4*
•I-I-H* 4-I-I-1-1- ‘HWW WH*
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wyatt spent Sat
urdav night and Sunday with Mr-.
.1 C. (lavender.
Mrs. John Tate, who has been sick
for the past rnonlli is improving.
Miss Theresa Hegwood and Mack
Rainey attended the Walker County
Singing Convention at Chattooga
church Sunday'.
The infant of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
I (avis is slowly improving.
Miss Ethel Haines and Chas.
flames were guests of Misses Jim
mie Norton and Jessie Wyatt Sun
day.
Larnet and Harden Burke are
moving bay this week to the M. I*.
I (ill <V Co., land near Gore, where
they are to live next year. ,
Mrs. Clementine, Smith is on the
sick list this week.
I (live Peterson made a business
trip to Rome Monday.
W. (i. Morris spent the week-end
with his daughters, Mrs. G. W.
Wyati. and Mrs. T. Tate.
Last Friday was a very sad oc
casion at Concord, there being two
funerals, Mrs. G. W. Morris, at two
o’clock and the infant of Mr. anil
Mrs. Ed Woods of West Arinucbee
at 3 o’clock. The bereaved have the
sympathy of their many friends.
Mri. Ola Keown and Mrs. J. W.
Hegwood were guests of Mrs. John
Tate Sunday.
A large number of the young peo
ple from here attended the revival
meeting at Bethlehem last week.
The statewide Baptist Go-Tn-Hiin
day-Hehool-Day program was ob
served at East Armuchee Sunday
the program was gracefully carried
out bi every detail.
J. C. Clement, who has been sick
for sometime, shows no improve
ment.
lie.i Lavender is spending this
week with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wyatt
Edgar Hames spent Saturday and
Sunday with his brother, Luther
Ham ‘s, of LaFayetle.
JESSIE WYATT.
MRS. MARY JANE SIMS
Sister Sims departed this life Keb.
25, 11)10, after a very brief illness,
being stricken only a few hours tic
fore (led sent His angelic bond to
hear her spirit to its eternal home
above.
Mrs Sims was married twice, lira!
to Mr. Mall Cannon, last to Mr. G.
Vi . Sims; two children being given
lo the last union. She was the
daughter of one of the first settlers
of our country. James Shahan. She
is survived hy one daughter, twe
brothers, one sister, two step sons,
two little grand children and a host
of other relatives and friends whose
hea**ls are sad because of the de
parture of our dear sister. She had
lived in our immediate community
practically' all her life, coming here
with her father's family from East
WALKER COUNTY MESSENGER, SEPTEMBER 29, 1916.
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SI • I
| ANNOUNCEMENT 1
i i
hi y
“ ' 1
a g
S We are pleased to announce to our friends M
|| and customers that we will open a SAVING g
| DEPARTMENT in our Bank October Ist. ||
| We have for some time seen the need of a [§j
| SAVING BANK in LaFayette and we have de- |
Si cided to supply this need by installing a SAVING E
H DEPARTMENT in our Bank beginning Ist of g
| October. - |j
We hope our friends will help to make this |
Si Saving Department a success. . |
SW
ONE DOLLAR and up will start an ac- ||
I count and get a SAVING ACCOUNT BOOK. g
gi
H The interest will be computed twice a year jgj
| at 4 per cent, for even months, the Ist of Jan- |
| . uary and the Ist of July. |
jii H
[HI H
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S| ' I
I! Walker Comity Bank I
H J IS
K S
H LaFayette - Georgia Si
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t/? 'fuV'rur 'vurVut'm W*?' fut'njf m 'pvn 'n-n '*c*<r Vur rt-n. *EITJwJ -v Vv»»
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Tennessee. Wtyen she was quite
young sin* gave tier life to < loit amt
United herself with the Baptist
church where she remained faith
fully until death.
In the departure of sister Sims
we lose one of our oldest and most
devoted members. She was always
loyal to her church and its interest.
Ever ready and willing to do her
part in any Christian endeavor.
Oh. how we do miss the kind
friendship and Christian deeds of
this noble character and how deeply
we feel the loss sustained through
this departure. Yet we have suffi
cient evidence that our loss is heav
en's gain, so lei us bow in humble
submission realising it is God's way.
His will be done.
Sister Sims had lived out the al
lotted three score and ten years, be
ing in her seventy-fifth year at the
time of her death. Oh, may we have
others who will live sueh lives to
fill the vacancy she has left in the
church, home and community.
Funeral services were conducted
by her pastor. Rev. B. F. Hunt, in
terment in the old family burying
ground.—Mrs. 1.. P. Keith. Mrs. W.
M. Pnr»on. Mv« ,1. T Griffith. Com.
\\ ashington.—There are more
than 48,000 sawmills in the United
State-, and their output of waste in
the form of sawdust, shavings, slabs,
and other wood refuse is estimated
as 30 million cords per year. This
is equal to over 4 1-2 billion cubic
feet ot waste, which is tin 1 capacity
GET YOUR FEED SUPPLIES of all
kinds from Dan C. Wheeler A
Co., Chattanooga. They make a
specialty of Cotton Seed Meal
aud Hulls.
FOR SALE
Forty acre farm, well tim
bered, house and barn under
construction, one and a half
miles from pike, two miles
from R. R. Price is right.
Call on or w rite
OSCAR BIRD
LaFayette, Oa , Rfd I
of a bin one-half mile high with a
bast* covering a forty-acre lot. or,
considering each cord to contain
eighty cubic feet of solid wood with
all the cracks and air spaces taken
out, these 36 million cords would
make a block of wood more than a
quarter of a mile on each edge.
Perhaps one-half of this so-called
waste product is not strictly speak
ing wasted, hut serves a useful pur
pose as fuel under the boilers. Much
of the remaining 18 million cords
not only serves no useful purpose,
but ia most eases is a source of in
convenience anil danger, aniP costs
the mill time and money.
Sawmill waste is disposed of in
various ways. Some goes to the lo
cal fuel market, some to pulp mil!®
or to wood distillation plants. Shav
ings an<l hog cuttings, as well a»
other mill waste, are sometimes
used to till low places in the yird.
It is estimated that for a mill o f
one hundred thousand feet capacity
the cost- of conveying the waste from
the machine where it is made and
destroying it in a closed burner is 42
cents per cord or 81005 per day.
Burners seldom bring in any reve
nue, although in a few cases ashes
are soid for fertilizer, and in a num
ber of others the burner furnishes
hot teed water for the boilers.
| Both burners and fire-pits add to
the insurance rates on lumber, and
in the case of the pit on the mill it
self. In order to reduce the fire
’ hazard to zero, in the ease of the
i burners, it is necessary to keep all
j lumber piles at least one hundred
1 and fifty feet away from the burner.
I The matter is much worse in the
j case of pits, especially the open ones,
whicn must'be kept three hundred
| feet away from the mill and five
; hundred feet away from any lumber
! piles. When nearer than these dis
tances from the mill and yard re
spectfully, the insurance rates
mount up rapidly with closer prox
imity until they become practically
prohibitive when the tire-pit is
neom than one hundred feet.
No well manntred mill would pro
duce waste if it could be avoided.
This however, is not possible, so the
next best think' is to seek out some*
method of utilization of the wasto
so it will pay for its disposition. Thu
Forest Service is working on this
problem, but has not vet found %
satisfactory solution.