Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, January 22, 1925, Image 6

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UMTUM MIlMMMUt. Sunday School ' Lesson' kBy Rev. P. ?. riTZWATIR, I>.D.. I>aan of tha Evening School. Moudjr nibla ln atltuta of CklctfO.) l<6). llll. Wmlarn Nawapayar Ualon.) Lesson for January 25 UESUS COMFORTS HIS DI8CIPLE? LESSON TEXT?John 14:1-31, OOL.DEN TEXT?"1 am th? way. th? truth, and the life; no man cometh vnto the leather, but by me."?John 14:1. PRIMARY TOPIC?Th? Heavenly Home. JUNIOR TOPIC?Walking In Christ's Way. INTERMEDIATE ANI) SENIOR TOP IC? How Jesun Comfort* His I ?!?<?! YOUNO PK'JFL?K AND ADULT TOP IC?Sourcos of the Christian's Comfort. The hopes of the disciples were ut terly shattered when Jesus told them About the cross. Jesus hud told them that He was going nway, and that they could net follow 111m. Their ftettrts were flooded with grief. He con soled them l?y I. Pointing to th? Reunion In th? Father's House (vv. 1-3). 1. lie AsUs Them to Trust In Him Even as <jJ?h1 (v. 1). Faith In the God man. Christ Jesus, will steady the lieart, no matter how Intense the grief or how great the sorrow. 2. He Informed Them mint He Wns (Going t'> the Father's House In Heaven to Prepare a Home for Them (v. 2). He assured them that there was abun dant room for nil. Heaven Is an eter nal dwelling place. 8. He Assured Them That He Would iCome Again nnd Kscort Them to tllenven (v. 3). Jesus will not wait for His own to come to Him, hut will come and mil forth from the graves (those who have died, and transform living believers, and take them all to 'l>e with Himself In the heavenly home foreverniore (I Thess. 4:10-17). II. Revealing the Way to th? Fa ther'? House (vv. 4-11). ! Jesus Informed the disciples that they knew the place to which He was igolng and the way. To this Thomas Jlntcrposed a doubt. In anawer to which Christ asserts that He Is i 1. The Way to OJod (v. 3). lie Is something more than a mere guide or tencher. He Is the way Itself. He la the door of the 8hcep-fold. 2. The Truth (v. 3). He Is not mere ly the teacher, but the truth Incarnate. Iln Ills Incarnation the splrltunl and material worlds were united, there fore every line of truth whether spir tftual or materini converge? In Him. No lone who does not have Christ can ever have the real truth about anything. In Him we hnve the truth about man. Iwhat he is, what he ought to be, and Jwhat he shnll be In eternity. In Him IWipeclally we have th? truth about jOod. i 3. The Life (v. 3). Ohrlat 1? not imerely the giver of life, but He la the (essence of life. Only those who re ceive Christ have life In the true sense. [Since He Is God incarnate, to know Him la to know God. III. Assuring Them That His Work ?Was to Continue (vv. 12-14). Jesus' going away was not to end [the work which He had begun. This (no doubt meant that through the min istry of the Splrlt-fllled disciples, the ,-work which Christ began would as Siuine larger proportions. There would >? u much greater number of conver sions thnn under Ills ministry. After 'the Day of Pentecost the gospel did take n much wider range. During Ills jminlstry the message wns confined to Ithe Jews, while under the ministry of jthe disciples It was only limited by Ithe world Itself. The disciples' min istry wns ushered In by the conversion lof three thousand In one day. | IV. Promises Another Comforter j(vv. 12-17). The word comforter means literally ?one called to the side of another to Iglve help, protection and deliverance. "Thla comforter wns the Holy Spirit. jJesus was the Comforter while here Iln the body. The Holy Spirit was to Ibe "another comforter." V. Assuring Them of His Return to {Them (vv. 18-24). . Although Christ went away He did ?not leave His disciples as orphans. X*he Father and the Son make their labode with the disciples who love and Krtiey Jesus Christ. VI. Assuring Them That the Holy 'Spirit Would Aid Them In Remember |lng and Understanding Hla Word? [<vv. 2,1-23). This (he Holy Spirit does by Illu minating the minds of the disciples. VII. Giving the Lsgacy of His Peace i(rv. 22-31). By His peace Is meant the serenity iof soul which ore enjoys who Is recon ciled to God. who knows that his sins Isfe forgiven. Doing Better Tt i* not n question of how much we S re to do, hut of how It I? to he done, t 1? not n question of doing more, but Ipt doing better.?John Kuakla. The Salad Woman By CLARISSA MACKIg (Copyright.) MARK LONSDALE sat down at the yellow painted table and looked with a bored and weary eye at the flock* of black geese that flew In tri ungles over the yellow walla. Geeae everywhere, all slaes, but alwnyb black, either waddled up and down or flew across the walls. "Good huntln' here," he grinned to himself aa a waitress approached. He rather ex pected her to be attired as the famous Goose Girl, and leading a black goose In leiiHh, but she was }wst a plain everyday little wultress. Mark studied the menu thought fully. He was lunching early, and his uppetlte was fickle. "A salad?some ten?and you might bring me some cake." "What kind of salnd?" she asked. "Something good, that's all," and he opened the magazine he had bought. As he surveyed the delectable lunch eon placed before him, Mark fell' a pang of homesickness. "Mny Appleby's own recipe," he thought, startled out of his weariness; "there's that trick of flavoring that she would never tell a soul?no one could guess what It was!" He leaned j bnck In his clmlr and beckoned to the waitress. "This salnd," he tried to speak care | lessly, but the matter was of such great I Importance to him that his voice i shook, "this salad Is very good." She beamed upon him. "Yes, sir. It 1 is one of our specialties." "Of course It Is made here?at the i Black Goose?" "Ves, sir." "Perhaps It Is the manager's own i recipe?" he suggested. "No, sir, we have a very good salnd . woma i," she said primly and moved , away. She thought the pale, stern j young man was trying to flirt with her. Mark ate the salnd slowly, dwelling j painfully on his one romance?a pitl , able romance whose aroma was not that of rose or violet, the delicate pun gency of a salad. But In the old days they had called It "Mayapple Salad," because May Appleby had contrived I Its peculiar dellclousness. i He had been on the point of ask ing Mny Appleby to marry hltn when business suddenly called him to the Far West. From there he had gone to British Columbia, and finally j Alaska. He wrote letters to May I and never had a reply. Ills own people wrote that Mr. Appleby had suddenly died, the family had scat ! tered, and May and her mother had , disappeared. When Mark came home he went' to . the Appleby farm and found It in the hands of strangers. No one knew ? where May and her mother were at ! present, -but they had "gone to the city," and aa the city happened to be a very large one, Mark was still go ing through the needle-and-haystack experience. At last the salad came to an end and n delicious chocolate layer cake was set before him. "What Is the name of the salad I have just eaten?" he asked. She referred to the menu. "That Is mayapple salad," she said, and hur ried o way. Mark went out of the place In a daze. Somebody was making May's own particular salnd, and he was a poor sleuth if he could not discover his love's whereabouts through the medium of that delectable dish. He knew that In the busy tea shop there was little chance'of obtaining such in formation, but he did try the telephone lu a nearby drug store. "1 am so sorry," trilled a sweet voice, "but Miss Appleby went home Rt eleven o'clock. Her home address?" a sudden congealing of the sweetness, "I ntn very sorry, but that is quite im possible." "She will come tomororw morning," argued Mark doggedly, "and I will I take my early stand In this drug store window even If I have to pay a rental for it?and I will wait until she does cornel" Hnvlng mnde'tfhls threat he finished the day contentedly enough and slept wonderfully well for a harassed man. At seven o'clock the next morning he took his stand on the corner near the drug store, which did not open until eight. In the drug store it is a matter of history that he waited two mortal hours before he rec ognized a certain slim, erect form come swinging around the corner. Ills dash from the store was in record time, and he mnnaged to catapult into May Appleby In front of the tea shop. The basket she carried went flying. "Mark Lonsdale!" gasped Miss Ap pleby. "Why?Mark, you've upset my salnd forever!" She bent over him as he picked up the basket and found the well-packed salad quite unharmed. "May, do you love me?" he asked, desperately, after ?he had hurriedly ex plained her mother's jqortlfled pride ?i Ui?ir taliva luriuues nad compelled , their hiding themselves for awhUe. "May, do you love me as much aa 1 j love you?" "To ask such a question nt such a | time! Well. If you Insist. Mark," she lowered her voice to u whisper and blushed rosily. "1 don't know how touch you care?tout I do!" If It bad not been for tbs crowds on the sidewalk and the curious eyes looking from the tea shop. Mark would have embraced her then und there. "1 will not kiss you now," he threatened, "If you will promise never to make mayapple salad for anyone except me!" Water Denizen That Hag Few Vital Organs The little creature called the lance- I lot Is slender and pointed at both end* und not very easy to nee, since It Is Almost transparent and is only from an Inch and a half to two and a half Inches In length. It lives In shallow water and likes to stick Its head end into the sand, Into which it burrows with great rapidity. It remains thus for a long time with Its tuil sticking out. When on the surface of the water it lies on its side. While It can neither see nor hear, there Is reason for believing that It possesses the Benses of smell and taste. Its eggs are laid about sunset and the larvae hatch out early the next morning. The lancelot has no head. More over, it has neither legs nor pairs of (Ins. It has a mouth, however, placed at one end, which, therefore, may be called the head end of the body. It has a stomach, a very simple form of liver and another simple or gan which takes the place of a heart, since It Is capable of contracting and thus forcing the blood, which Is quite colorless, forwnrd to the area of the gills, where it is purified.?Review of Reviews. ? Business Now Made of Producing Spider Silk Spider farming Is one of the little known industries of modern times. The end in view is not the Intensive fighting of the fly peril, but the produc tion of spider silk, than which there is nothing better for the cross lines of surveying and other instruments. Supplies in vastly larger quantities are needed for the manufacture of spi der-sllk stockings, and it is to meet this demand that special spider farms have been started from time to time, says Tit-Bits. It is no easy matter to keep and feed the spiders, to prevent them from engaging In mortal combat, and to collect their silk in suitable form. The process of "silking" tlie spider amounts to playing catchhall, with the spider as ball. In its passage through the air the Rplder Instinctively pays out silk, and It can be induced to part with a hundred y: rds or more during a suc cession of such flights. I Secret Safe ?'Oh, Alice!" Virginia exclaimed, "have you heard about Gladys?" "No; what about her?" Alice de manded. "Well, she and Dick Rodney are going to bo married In June!" "You don't say! Well, I always knew Pick thought a lot of Oladys, but I never dij iliink she would agree to marry him." "And Alice," Virginia continued, "the engagement is a secret just now. I promised Gladys I wouldn't tell h living soul, so don't you breathe a word of it to anyone." "Why, Virginia," Alice replied, "you know 1 wouldn't any more think of telling it than you would!" Genuine Article Salesmen may be gracious and cheer ful and yet lack knowledge of the goods they are expected to sell. This Is a sad fault and a handicap to good salesmanship. A story is told of a genial storekeeper In central Ohio whose education in selling was of the kindergarten variety. A custojner v-ame in and asked for a little cheese cloth. The storekeeper disappeared, but ;ame back lugging a lnrge specimen of a New Ycfrk cheese. "Here's the cheese," he said, "but I'll be ding busted if I know bow I'm goin' to get (lie cloth offen it!" Bog Ornaments Irish Asset One of the industries of Ireland has long been the manufacture of bog oak ornaments, llefore the period of up heaval in Ireland the export of these goods from the Emorald Isle through the port of Dublin equaled a value of $1'X>.000 a year. The trade originated in the reign of George IV. soon nfter his visit to Ireland in 1821, London Tlt H!rs says. At first all the ornaments wore hand carved and polished, but machinery was us,-d with the Increased demand. Yew. fir and birch, as well as oak. are woods used by the makers of the ornaments. The one necessity is that the logs shall have been long | burled in the bogs. PETITION FOR CHARTER G?*r(U Houston County To the Superior Court of Houston County. The petition of VaughanCamp of the State of South Carolina and County of Charleston and J. Meade Tolleson and S. A. Nunn, both of the county of Houston and state of Geor gia respectfully shows. 1. That they deaire to be incorporated and be made a body corporate under ihe corporate name and style of *'Gro vania Groves, Incorporated", for* and during a period of twenty years with the privilege of renewal at the ex { piralion of said period 01 time. *? The object of said corporation is pecunin&ry gain to its stock holders. 3. The principal office and place of busi ness 01 said corporation shall be in Houston County Georgia out petitioners desire the privilege of estaolishing branch offices ana agencies in any county ot the state of Georgia and in other states should it become necessary or desirable to do so. 4. The principal business to be carried on by said corporation is the growing and marketing of peaches, pecans, asparagus and any anu all other agri cultural and horticultural products tuat they might desire to grow: The Lreed ing, raising and marketing of hogs, cattle, poultry and live stock of ail kinds: 'ihe planting, growing, budding grafting and marketing oi nursery stock ol all kinds: The buying, selling, handling on commibson and otherwise dealing m any and all of the above products. 5. The capital stock of said corporation shall be *?1U,OOO.OU and petitioners pray that they - be granted the privilege of increasing sucn capital stocK. lrorn time to time by a three-fourths vote of the oustanding stock to an amount not to exceed $60,000.00. 6. The capital stock of said corporation shall be divided into shares of the par value of $100.00 each. Petitioners pray that they be granted the right to ac cept improved and unimproved lands and equities therein, live stock, farm implements, farm products, and such other equipment or supplies as are necessary or desirable in the carrying on of tne business of said corporation, at a fair market value, in payment for capital stock of said corpoi'ation. 7. Petitioners pray that they be grant ed the right to have and use a corporate seal, to sue and to be sued, to pur chase, own, cultivate and sell real estate whether improved or unimprov ed, to borrow money and pledge any or all assets of the corporation as security therefor, to execute promissory notes, bonds or other evidences of indebted ness and to secure tJbe same by security deeas, mortgages, deeds of trust or otherwise, and that they be granted all other rights, powers and privileges necessary or incidental to the purposes hereinbefore enumerated. 8. Wherefore petitioners pray that they be incorporated for the term aforesaid and with all rights and privileges afore said, and with all rights, privilges and immunities that are now or may here after be granted to like corporations under the laws of the state of Georgia DUNCAN & NUNN Attorneys for Petitioners. CtoMSU, C?uty. I li. L. Wasden* Clerk of Houstbn Superior Court do hereby certify thit the above and foregoing is a true and correct copy of the petition for Charter of Grovania Groves, Incorporated, as of fiie in this office. Witness my official signature and seal of said court, this December 19, 1924. H. L. Wasden, Clerk Superior Court Houston County. COMMISSIONER'S SALE. State of Georgia; i oui;t) of huuston, S S.: Mrs. ?). J . (Smith et a). vs. S. A. Nunn, Trustee. Equitable petition for I'urtition, & o. To uiu October Term, 1924. of the Su perior Court of 8<?iU County. Take Notice that in pursuance oi an Order made and entered by t ho Honor able Malcolm D. Joue*, Judge of ?aid Court, on the fifth Uayof December, 1924 the undersigned, as t ho duly appointed, qualified and acting Commissioners in said cause, will, on Tuesday, the third day of February. 1925, within the legal hours of sale, at the places ot public sule hereinafter named, oiler lor sale and sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, all and singular the fol lowing described ical estate in taidOrdei referred to, situate in the Counties of Houston and Dooly, said state to-wit: All that tract of land situate in the City of Unadilla, in Dooly County, said Mate, being all of Blocks Nos. 3f>. 36, and 43, and all of Fourth Avenue Hast of Hudson Street,? the 30 ft. of J ifth Avenue East of Hudson Street, the 1 nst erly line of Gregory Street, and all ? f the streets and alley* between above-men t or.d ed avenues and blocks, together with all improvements thereon and being land formerly held by Mrs. Henrietta Bronnen under bond for title from R. E, Smith, recorded in Deed Book 21 folio 15 in the office of tbe elerk of the Superior Court of Dooly County, Georgia; also; T Li a t tract of land lying mud being in t h? Srd Land Diatrict oi Dooly County, uoorgia, being the Weil half of L<>1 No. 41 iu 8*'U Dhtricl ? oaluining 101U more or 1???, ?uu known u* tu? "Ei?Ur Kin* i'lace" t al?o, aH ol tu? following described laud iu the 13th Diatrict uf Houston County, Georgia; to wit: Lot of land No. ?51 containing 202 >? acre* mora or lew, fractional lot of iaud No. 252 containing 98 acre?, more or less, fractional lot of l?ud No. ill containing 28 ?cren, more or lea*, fractional lot of land No. 910 ceutaioiug 2b acres, more more or 1cm, 172^? acres, more or leas, ot Lot No. 80 in the 13th District of Houston County, Georgia, being: **11 ol said lot except SO acres, more or leas, lying en the South part of said lot and out off from the remniuder of said lot by an old road running immediate!) in front of the old K. ?. Smith dwelling house. Maid road running from approximately the Southwest comer of said lot in m Northeasterly direction and parsing im mediately in front of the old K.E. Mnitb dwelling house, and continuing it. ft Northeasterly direction until it inter? sects with the present eounty line road? theme the line of said SO acres, more or less, continues along the present couuty line road fiem the intersection ef faid old road with the same to the Kast line of said lot No. 80, also, fractional lot No, 253 containing 28 acres, more or less, and lot No. ?54 containing 170 acres, more or less. baid sales of said lands will be had b#. fore the courthouse doors of said Countieg wherein the landsrespectively arc situate on said day of sale, 'i he successful bid der or bidders are required te deposit ten per cent, of the bid, which will be retiraed without deduction if not con firmed. No. deed or transfer of title will be made to purchaser until said sale has been reported, and approved by, said Judge. A report of said sales will be made to said Judge at his ollice at Ma con, Georgia, on or before Friday, Feb ruary 6, 1925. Said lands will be expo.-ed to sale in parcels and in the aggregate. The Kast half of lot 2M and the fractional lot No. 258 in the ISth Dis trict of Houston County, Georgio, are encumbered with a debt of approximate ly $1,(JOO.OC held by Title Guaranty & Trust Co.. of Bridgeport, Conn. Dated, December 26, 1924. C. E. Brunson, Roy B. Friedin, A. R. Ware. Commissioners as aforesaid. LAND SALE Uuder and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain dead to secure debt executed and delivered by J. B, Thompson to Dr. J. H. Heard and Walter Defore on the 18th day of June, 1923, and recorded in the oliice o I the Clerk of the Superior Court ol Houston County, Georgia, in deed book 31, folio 124, llie undersigned will on the 14th day of February, 1925, proceed to Bell, between the legal hours of sale, before the court heu&e door in Perry,. Houston County, Georgia, at public out cry, to the highest bidder f*r oas>h, the following described real estate: That lot, tract or parcel ot land situate lying and being in one body in the Coun ty of Houston and the County ol liibb, containing two hundred and two and one-half (202>?) acres bounded ob thw West by lands of Mrs. Gearge Jewett, oft ihe south by lands of Alex i'argason; 0D the East by lands of Mrs. J. S. Vinson; on the north by lands of Miuchcw and Thompson; and being the same property that .vas conveyed to J. B. Thompson by F. D. Kay by warranty deed dated the 22nd dny of August, 1904 and recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Houston Superior Court in Book 2, folio 218, The property hereby convey? d is known an all of lot Two Hundred and Five ^205) in the lower Fifth District of Houoton County and all of fractional lot No. Two Hundred and Five (405) iu tu? Kutl&ud District of Bibb, originally Houston | Gounty. /The said deed with power of tale to secure debt was given to secure the pay i ment of a ceitain principal note for tue sum of Three Tliousaud Dollars ^$3,000.00 p dated the 18th day of Juue, 1923, and' payable to the order of Dr. J. H. Henrd and Waller DeForo one jear afteruate, Un tbettth day of October, 1924, llie t-aidr J. B. Thompson executed an fextenbion agreement to the said Dr. J. H. Heard and Walter Defore wherein he undertook to extend the Pa\ ment of saiu note uutil the lHtli duy oi June, 1920, upon con dition that ho pay fcoOO.OO on said principal n?>te on or before the first day of November, 1924, and pay the pnucipal and interest on said note as the Hame ma tured.'1 he said d. B. Thompson failed to pay said $500.00 on the principal aud failed to pay the interest which matured on said $30u0.00 note on the 18th day of December, 1924, and thereupon the said Dr. J. H. Heard aud Walter Del1 ore exercised their optiou in said deed wittn power of ?ale to declare said debt due and thereupon the power of sale contain ed in taid deed became operative and is hereby exercised in this foreclosure pto ceeding. There will be due on said uebt ?u saiu 14th day of Feoruary, 1995, the sum of Three Thousand DollarsdSOOO.OO), principal, and the sum of One Hundred and forty $140.00) Dollars interest. Tke. undersigned will execete and deliver deed, conveying fee simple title to said property to the highest bidder as provided is said, deed with power of sale. Ths proceeds arising from the ?ale of said property, will be applied as provided in said deed with power of sale to secure debt. Dr. J. H, Heard, Walter DeFore. ?CASH Paid for False Teeth, dental gold, platinum and discard ed jewelry. Hoke 8melting&Re fining Co., Otsego, Michigan.