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DADE COUNTY TIMES: FEBRUARY 21, 1935.
With
Valentine Party
Mr. ami Mrs. Car! Scruggs
Miss Thelma Dean enter¬
tained Saturday night with a
party in one of the
on the vast estate of
Mr. and Mrs. B. W . Newsom
Newsomville.
The house was beautifully
in valentine colors
forest greenery. Games,
music ami contests were en joy¬
throughout the evening.
of the most entertaining
of the evening w as a
race run by Messrs H.
Phillips, Walter Cureton,
Kenimer and Luther
Mr. Cureton being
the winner.
Delicious refreshments and
hot punch was served at a late
hour.
Those attending were Mr.
Mrs. H. S. Phillips, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Kenimer, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Long, Mr. and Mrs.
C. S. Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
B. W. Newsom, Mas. Milton
Wilson, Mrs. Charles Wright
and Mrs. Forest Fricks; Misses
Elizabeth W iggs, Bertha W iggs
Grace Chapman, Flora New¬
man, Lois Tatum, Mary Nelle
Wilson, Margaret Newman,
Edna Scruggs, Iris Scruggs,
Sarah Hale Folabelle Smith
and Mable Wright; Messrs
Phillip, Lawrence and Mont-
ford Newman, Wilmer and
Ray McNair, Clyde W right,
Homer and Harry Powell, Jim¬
mie Tom Wilson, Robert Hitt,
Lucion and Bates Wilkerson,
Newell Scruggs, Lewis New¬
som, Charles Newman, Luther
Allison, Giles Robertson, Ar¬
nold Dawkins, Billie W iggs,
Harold and Clifton Allison and
Lunsford Fricks.
“When I Die”
When 1 am dead and my life
work is done; when I am about
to he laid away to await the
trumpet of the arch-angel.and
my loved ones are gathered a-
bout my coflin to hid a last
farewell to my remains, then,
I want no flowers from those
who did not give me such and
wish me good cheer while I
lived. I want no hypocritical
or fair speeches of praise front
those who cursed, blamed or
falsely accused me in life. I
want no preacher display of
funeral oratory from those
who could not or would not
fellowship me in the service of
my Master. \\ hen my life is
ended, let me go; turn to tin
living, the suffering and give
to them the sympathy and
praise which may do them
good. If any have cheered or
blessed me while living or. if
there he any whose lives I have
made brighter, or any upon
whose countenance l have pro¬
voked an innocent smile, or
whose burdens 1 have helped
to bear—if these should attend
my funeral and shed an hon¬
est tear or lay one flower upon
my grave from sincere love, so
be it and may God bless them.
1 am sure that in life is the
time to do good to our fellow
being and that when they arc
dear! our opportunities toward
them have forever ceased. No
amount of praise can undo
the evil we may have done
them. Life’s road is a hard
one, at best, and those who
have found a sort of spiritual
sort of pleasure in throwing
at me and across my pathway
of life should not add insult to
injury by professing a sorrow
they do not feel, or lis express¬
ing a hypocritical praise f o r
one they scorned through life.
Still, nothing a person can do
or say can change the destiny
ol the dead. His own life, now
finished, has worked out for
Him an eternal weight of glor\
or sunk him down amidst the
wreck of a world through sin
to unutterable woe.
—Mother Tatum.
PLAINTS FOR SALE: Oniony,
Tomato and Collard Plants,
All assorted, 500 plants, 75e,
1000 plants, $1.25, prepaid.
Sweet Potato, Pepper a n d
Egg Plants, All assorted 500
plants $1.00, 1000 plants $1.75
prepaid. Good plants, prompt
shipment.
DORRIS PLANT CO.
Valdosta, Ga.
—o—
Train Hits Bus
Mr. J. E. Price school bus
operator of the South end of
the county, narrowly escaped
death Tuesday afternoon when
“train 18” hit the front part
of his bus at the crossing South
of G. W. Foresters’, near Clo-
vervale, it is reported.
Mr. Price, it is said, was re¬
turning from delivering the
school children and failed to
stop clear of the crossing on
account of his brakes not hold
ing as they should.
Mr. Price was not injured;
the train side-swiping th e
front wheels and bumper of
t he bus.
W. M. S. Meets
The Vi.M.S. of Trenton, met
Thursday afternoon at the M.
E. Church with Mrs. J. G.
Nethery in charge of the pro¬
gram and Mrs. E. A. Ellis pre¬
siding at the business session.
Mrs. John L. Case gave the Bi¬
ble lesson. The Leaflet was
given by Mrs. G.C. Tatum and
Mrs. S. J. Hale. Rev. Tom J.
limits and Mrs. Amy Camp¬
bell were present. The next
meeting will he February 28lh
with Mrs. E. G. Wright, study
chairman, in charge of the
progra m.
i Lost
Black and white spotted fe¬
male fox hound, w hite streak
on right hip. red head. Has
my name and address on coll¬
ar. Lost Feb., 12. near Stew-
ardtown. Liberal reward.
Finder please return to me,
the Times or O. M. Foster at
Trenton. J. L. McCauley,
Wildwood, Ga.
u- j i ' Silia
, ill — —- ----- , -
OST cotton and corn growers in
the South will envy the rec¬
ords made last season by Mr. A. P.
Johns of Toccoa, Georgia, pictured
above. On an acre, of cotton 1 1-16
staple, he obtained a yield of 1.276
lbs. of lint and 2,394 of seed. The
result was a net gain of $165.38 on
the acre.
On his cotton, Mr. Johns used
400 lbs. of a 4-10-4 fertilizer at
planting and side-dressed with
100 lbs. of American nitrate of soda.
With the same application on an
acre of corn, he made 159 bu. of
Hastings Prolific at a net gain of
$140.65.
Both demonstrations were con-
under the supervision of the
American Cotton Association and
Farming Campaign. Col.
Jordan, Managing Director
the Association said that all of
Association’s results last sea¬
prove the value of intensive
“There are two things I’m
of,” Col. Jordan remarked,
‘And they are that we Southerners
to adopt intensive culture in
field and have to support our
industries. When I look at a
like this, made with our own
nitrate of soda, I think
have a combination the whole
can’t beat.”
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BRISBANE
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Citation
-"
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY-
T To All \\ hom _ It May Concern:
R. Q. Quinton having in proper form
a PP lle d to me for Permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of W. H.
Tinker, late of said county, this is to
cite all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of W. H. Tinker to be and
appear at my office within the time all¬
owed by law and show cause if any
they can, why permanent administra¬
tion should not be granted to R. Q.
Quinton on W. H Tinker estate.
Witness my hand and official signa¬
ture, this 4th day February, 1935.
W. T. McCauley, Ordinary.
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