Newspaper Page Text
u 111L
o doubt you will want to
k, beautify and preserve
i? grave of your loved one.
so, see me, or let me see
^Anything in Marble
>r Granite, from a Head
stone to a MausoJem.
J. R. HUNT,
Perry, Ga.
jRenew V our Health
%. by Purification
n Any physician will tell you that
oTerfect Purification of the System
>'is Nature's Foundation of Perfect
Health." Why not rid yourself of
t chronic ailments that are undermin
f Injj your vitality? Purify your en
r tire systerra by taking a thorough
4 C< urne of Calotabs,?once or twice a
L* n i ok for ?cvcral weeks?and see how
( towards you with health.
Calotabs are the greatest of all
s i>stem purifiers. Get a family pack
b/tc, containing full directions. Only
, 8D eta. At any drug store. (Adv.)
! PLENTY OF MONEY
? To Loan On Farm Lands
j Thirty-Three Years to Pay Back
Only 6 Per Cent Interest
THE FIRST JOINT STOCK
LAND BANK
Of Montgomery, Ala.
(Under Government Supervision) :
See EMMETT HOUSER.
Local Corresdondent,
Fc rt Valley, Ga.
20 Mule Farm For Rent
i ?
Best cotton farms in Houston
County, Farms from 1 mnle to 20
1 mile from Perry on National
Highway, well equipped Apply
A, A, S in oak. Perry, Ga,
\ AN EXHILARATING EFFECT
? A bottle of Ilerbine on the shelf
I at home is like having a doctor in
( tho house nil the time. It gives
: Instant relief when the digestion
! gets out of order or the bowels
' Fail to act. One or two do3es is
all that is necessary to Btart
things moving and restore that
fino feeling of exhilaration and
buoyancy of spirits which belongs
HJdMy to perfect hcrith: Price GOc.
Gold by
R. L. CATER
Perry, Ga.
I CORRECT ENGLISH
Monthly Magazine
i .
Authoritative Exponent of
English for 24 Years
EdiUul and Founded by
'm
Josern ine ukck Baker
Famous World Authority
on English
| Scud 10 Cents for Sample Copy
Correct English Publishing
?1 Company
?. EVANSTON, ILLINOIS.
Agent?Vaunted Everywhere.
mj'ar
?"IVT
"NOTICE
Taxi service dafr or night at
reasonable rates. See mo and 1
will go. Phone 127.
Henry Griflin; Mgr.
Perry, Qa.
MONEY TO LOAN
1 am prepared to Loan Money
?a Ileal Estate without Coinmis
eion. A. A. Smoak,
Perry, Ga.
Children's Fatal Diseases
Worms and parasites in tho in
testines of children undermine
-health and so weakens their vital
ity that they arc unable to resist
the diseases so fatal to child life.
"The safe course is to give ft few
I*0*08 ^^itc's Creain Vermifuge,
tit destroys and expels tho worms
-Without the plightcst injury to tho
faalth or activity of the. child.
Tni? 35c. Sold by <
R. L. CATER,
Perry Ga.
KENT Flamler's Place as
flWnole or port. See Cooper Jone?
? ar' information.
can make money with Pe
eaosjl fcjwfte orchards produced
%IO.).O0 pec*acre thin year; one]
?<*00.00 pef iurrc. Get fine depen
t?ea from Wm. P. Bullard.
^fcaay,**.
mMriM
h Ded T? Scan Debt
Qcorgit, Houston County.
Under and by virtue of the row"
?ale contained is m deed to secure debt
from Mr?. Marjr ?11? Wilton to F. C.
McCormick, dated June 18, 1A98, and
recorded on June 27, 11)23 in tlie oflic?
of the ClerV of the Superior Court of
Houston County in Hook ?4, Pages 110,
119 inclusive, will be sold b?fore the
door of the Court House of Houston
County. Georgia, te?w?en tlie l?gal
houra of sate on the 4th day of January
1027, to the highest bidder for ca*h all
of the following d< scribed property,
to-wit:
All that tract, lot or parcel of land,
xjtuat*, lying and be i d? in said 'loua'on
County, Georgia, and in the 14th Dis
trict therein, known as the plantation
of the I*te Henry Toomer, and consist
ing of wholo lota numbers fifty-one (Til)
fifty-two (52), ?<Yeuty-eight [7*] and
eighty-four [84], ?11 those part* of lot.'
nunfbcrti eighty-three [Klj and one
hundred and nine [10?J lying on th^
North side of Flat Cfeek; and nil of lot
lot number seventy-seven [77] except
forty.five acres in the West part of same
which was conveyed by Henry Toomrr
lo Walter Tofnier, Trustee for Ainands
Toomor, which deed is recorded in Deed
Hook O, l'age 161, in the office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Houston
County, Gcor^lu; the tract hereby con
veyed containing eleven hundred, [1, loO]
acre*, moro or lets.
The indebtedness teCured by said deed
to secure debt is r pret entid by a series
of notes thiitoeu in number aggr^'atiDg
the principal sum <>f Forty-two Thous
u n d Eighty Hundred Seventy-eight
[?42,878.00 Dollars.)
Default has been made in 'he pay
ment of the principal and interest due
thereon as to notes numbers six, seven,
eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve and
thirteen; and pursuant to the provision^
of the aforementioned deed to secure
debt the granteo therein n?mnd has
elect' d to decluro the entire indebted
ness due and pavnblc nnd bring the
properly to tale as provided In the deed
to secure debt for the purpose of paying
the indebti dness due to the said grantee
and represented by the said described
promissory noten.
Title will be made to the purchaser at
?aid sale as provided under the terms ?f
the deed to secure debt. Thia Decem
ber 7th, 192?.
F. C. McCORMICK
Hy C. L. Shepard His Attornay-at
Law, Fort Valley, Ga.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE
Georgia, Houston County.
Hy virtue of mi order of the Court of
Ord.nary of said County printed upon
tbo application ut L. W. Houbtr ad
ministrator of the rsiate of Jno. F.
Ilousor late of s.?id county decexfed to
cell ilir land* of the said Jno. F. Houser
deceased, for pu:jx?se of paying d bts
and distribution, ttero will be ?old
before the Court House door at public
outcry to tho highest bi'idrr, in the citj
of L'erry said county, hetwxn the legal
hours of sal?*, on the fiist Tt:eydny in
January 1927, as the properly of ?aid
deceased, the following described lands,
to-wit: That tract of land consisting of
the West half lots No?. 179 and 180 in
the 13th District ?f Houston County
Georgia and containing Two Hundred
?cres moro or less. Terms of sale cash.
This December 6, li>26.
L. W. HOUSER
Administrator of ostat of John F. Houser
deceased.
Farm For Rent:?Five horse
farm, ample tenant houses and
nice dwelling, throe miles from
town on good road and in good
neighborhood. Apply to Mrs C. E.
Gilbert, Perry, Ga.
?FOR SALFi?Four good Mules,
reasonable price or terms. R. L.
Mathews. Phono 8003, Wigwam
Peach Orchards, Byron. Ga., R.
F. I). No. 1.
PIANO
FOR SALE
Nationally known Music
House will sell Piano near
Perry for unpaid balance.
Terms can be arranged.
For full particulars write
Box 487
Macon, Ga.
?WANTED - Mattresses to reno
vate. We send for and deliv?r
We also make new cues. Youi
patronage appreciated.
lort Valley Mattress Co ,
Phono 2N.8-J. J. P. Sheets, M?r..
Port Val ley,
ICE DELIVERY
Wo will deliver lee from our
t ruck to customers in town Tues
datys, Thursdays and Saturdays
Not enough business to keep lee
House open
J H. Davis & Son.
666
Is a prescription for
Colds, Grippe, F*ue, Dengue
Bilious Fever and Malaria.
It Kills llie Germs
100 PER CENT IN TEN YEARS
Builds Character, Preserves Morale Pcid He]?*
Students Pay Way Through School, Conn
Music Center Survey Shows,
By J. F. BOYER
Music has become an Indispensable
part of college life. It Is of Inestima
ble value to the college proper, und
of great materlul and splrltuul benefit
to the student who takes an acllve
part In It.
This Is the composite ientlment of
close to 200 presidents of American
colleges and universities nnd heads of
music departments In institutions of
higher learning who contributed to a
survey of college music Just completed
by the Conn Music Center, Elkhart,
Ind. The survey shows that musical
trulnlng in colleges has doubled In
popularity In ten years.
Music not only adds color to college
athletic events, supplements and
rounds out the varied activities of tbe
enmpus find assembly hall, but Is of
distinct advantage to the member of
the glee dub, the sextette, the college
orchestra, band or whatever other or
ganizations may be functioning within
the college, In the opinion of theso
College executives. Music helps pre
serve n high morale In the Institution,
it aids In building the character of its
young men and women, provides an
opportunity for a good number of
them to pay their own way through
college, nnd In many instances, pre
pares them for u life of usefulness
along lines they are naturally best fit
ted for.
Helps Character Building.
Greot stress Is laid by college heads
on tha benefits of musical training In
character building, the survey re
vealed. Fully one-fifth of the college
executives who contributed the re
sults of their experience to the survey
J. F. BOYER
Supervisor Conn Muslo Center.
considered this the best argument for
' music In their college or university.
Others mentioned the social and cul
tural advantages accruing to the mu
sic student, the effect of music In re
; fining the student's taste for art, mu
1 sic as an aid toward developing clear
thinking, Improving the discipline and
enhancing the student's power of con
centration, as well as mnklng for bet
ter team work and co-operation In col
! lege matters. Music on the campus
us un outlet for surplus fnergy and
' as a help In getting many youths
through school, was brought In by
still others.
All but three of tlie colleges repre
sented In the survey find their mu
sically trained students more efficient
In their studies thnn those not so
trained. "They usually make grades
above tho average," Is the experience
at Bethel college, in Tennessee, and
DePaul university at Chicago finds
"musically-trained pupils at the top
In their studies." At Wellesley col
lege our best musical students arc In
variably those huvlntr honors In aca
demic subjects." and at Lombard col
lege, Galesburg, 111., "the students i*
our music school are all ubove average
In their academic work."
8tudents as Leaders.
Forty-six per cent of the colleges
reported band and orchestra work a*
part of their school curriculum. Fire
per cent of the total enrollment of the
colleges are members of college ban<J?
nnd orchestras, of which 18 per cent
are women students, with the girlf
playing almost exclusively in orches
tras. Leaders for these college bunds
are drawn for the most part from the
faculty ranks, though some colleges
use students as leaders and another
small group goes outside for leader
tulent.
Playing in the college orchestra Is
somewhat more popular than the band
with the boys as. well as girls. Ap
proximately 10 per cent of college stu
dents who play an instrument in the
college band or orchestra end up
eventually in the ranks of professional
musicians.
"Horn Their Way Through."
"ITornlnfc one's way throuph college"
compares very favorably with other
methods of self-support through th<
college years, according to the collegf
executives contributing to the survey.
Despite the comparatively limited op
portunities offered in the average col
lege town, fully one-fourth of all the
students playing in" the college band.'
and orchestras nre paying for theli
education with their Instruments.
Students' earnings range all the way
from board and room, two-dollar-an
hour tuition fee, and up to two thou
sand dollars a year. Twelve per cenf
of the college executives In the sur
vey nre of the opinion that playing
one's way through school pays better
than other means; another 12 per
cent thought It offered an easier way
to make one's way through, while a
goodly number of others said that It
Interfered least with the students'
school work.
Saxophone Rates High.
Among those playing thetr way
through college, the violin conies first
in the preference of instruments.
The saxophone is second choice of
college players, but seventh with girl
musicians. Pluno is the second fa
vorite instrument with the girls, and
third with the boys. Cornet comes
fourth ir) the preference; of both the
y6ung men and women. Orgnn is the
qext favorite with the boys-, aiid flute
with the girls. Other Instruments In
the order of favor with the yoqng
men nre the trumpet, the trombone,
the horn, drum, banjo and mandolin.
With the girls. It Is'the drum, clarinet,
trombone, harp, banjo, trumpet, organ
and mandolin.
A striking fact brought out in the
stfrvey was the close relation be
tween music and student leadership.
Fully 40 per cent of all the outstand
ing college students, class presidents,
student leaders, etc., are reported to
be playing some kind of an instru
ment.
Music Fights Crimd.
That music is the greatest deterrent
to crime, Is the opinion voiced by the
dean o{ the college of music of New
York university, who wrote: *'If we
were to organize a band or orchestra
in every public school, high school,
college, university, boys' or girls' club,
or plnce an Instrument Into the hands
of every bpy or girl at an age when
understanding and appreciation be
come evident so that the child's mind
is aroused sufficiently to make him
want to excel in the instrument
which he likes best, I believe that we
would have, in from ten to fifteen
years, from DO to 7f> per cent less dope
fiends, criminals and gamblers in the
United States."
For Prompt Shipment Send
Your Orders For
Any Grade 01
Complete Fertilizers,
zer Materials or Nitrate
of Soda
Buy Direct from the Manufacturer and Save
Agents' and Dealers' Commissions
We sell White Mountain Brand CALCIUM
ARSENATE. Made In Accordance With
Government Specifications -
HEARD BROTHERS
"It's What's IN the Sack That Counts."
MACON, - GEORGIA
Don't Forget That We Are In The Market
For Your
PEAS, BEANS, HAY, CORN, SEED COTTON,
COTTON SEED
We carry a full line of John Lucas & Co. Paints.
We carry a full line of Building Materials such as
Brick, Lime, Cement, Sand, Slag, Shingles, Plaster,
and so forth.
Come to see us for satisfactory dealing.
Perry Warehouse Co.
PERRY, GEORGIA.
GOOD COAL
$10.00 Cash per Ton at Yard
Delivery Charges Must Be Added
Prepare for Cold Weather
"Better Be Safe Than Sorry"
H. P. HOUSER,
COAL and INSURANCE
Phone 36 . - Ferry, Ga.
Good Things
for
Christmas
You'll find plenty of good things for the Holi
days at our
GROCERY and MARKET
Fresh Fruits, Candies, Cakes. Canned GoodsJ
Fresh Meats and other things too numerous
to mention
Let Us Supply Your Christmas Table
J. M. Holloman
Prompt and Efficient Service
PHONE 7 - - - PERRY, GA.
RIES 8c ARMSTRONG
RELIABLE GOODS ONLY
Phone 836
315 Third Street Macon, Gi