The Marietta journal and courier. (Marietta, Ga.) 1909-1918, September 03, 1909, Image 3

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    LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
Twelve Months’ Support.
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
The ;of the appraisers setting
apart twelve ‘months’ support to the
wife of Squire Jackson, deceased
having been®filed in my office, all
persons concerned are cited to show
cause by the 6th day of September,
1909, why said application for twelve
months’ sgpport‘ should’ not- be
granted. This Au&ust 6th, 1909,
J;-. M: GANN, Ordinary.
>
Leavé to Sell Land. »
: 3
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
To all wh(%: it may concern: J. P,
Cheney, ex-Officio, Administrator of
the estate of Lizzie Heard, late of said
County, deceased, has in due form
applied to tHe undersigned for leave
‘to sell the ldnds belongin.% to said es
tate and the‘application will be heard
at my officé on the'first Monday in
Bestember fiext, 1909. This August
2nd, 1909; . :
J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
e e e e e it
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
John M. Edge, Guardian of P. W,
Edge, has applied to me for a dis
charge from his Guardianship of P.
Ww. Igdge, this therefore to notify all
persons concerned, to file their ob
jections, if ang'( they have, on or be
fore the first Mcnday in Se%tember
next, else John M. Edge will be dis
charged from his Guardianship as
applied for,-
J. M. GANN,
Ordinary Cobb County.
Twelve Month’s Support.
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
Mrs. E. J. Hutcherson having made
application for twelve month’s sup
port for herself and four minor chil
dren out of the estate of H. L.
Hutcherson, and appraisers duly:ap
pointed to set apart the same, hivy
ing filed their return, all persons
concerned are hereby required to show
cause before the Court of Ordinary of
said County on the Ist Monday in
September, 1909, why said application
should not be granted.
© This August 2nd, 1909.
J: M. GANN,
Ordinary.
Letters Administration.
GEGRGIA, Cobb County.
To all whom it may concern : Aman
da Cokine having in due form applied
to me for Permanent Letters of Ad
ministration on the estate of William
Cokine, late of said County deceased,
this is to cite all and singular the cred
itors and next of kin of William
&, Cokine to be and appear at my office
fion the first Monday in September,
Winext, and show cause, if any they can
Wwhy Permanent Administration should
3 not be granted to Amanda Cokine or
dsome fit and proper personon William
"#Cokine’s estate.
Withess my official signature of
. office. This 4th day of August 1909,
| J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
i
ot s i o e o
~ Letters Administration.
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
To all whom it may concern: Mat
tie Crowley having in due form ap
plied to me for permanent Letters
Administration on the estate of John
O. Crowley late of said County de
ceased, this is to cite all and singular
the creditors and next of kin of John
O. Crowley to be and appear at my
office on the first Monday in Septem
ber next, and show canse, if any they
can, why Permanent Administration,
should not be granted to Mattie
Crowley or some fit and proper per
son on John O, Crowlely’s estate. ,
Witness my official signature of
office. This 9th day of August, 1909.
J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
A PSR R D R P TR N
Letters Administrators.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Cobb County.
To all whom it may ‘concern:
B. T. Frey having in due form ap
plied to me for permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of Wm
M, Frey late of said County deceased,
¢ this is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next kin of Wm M. Frey
to be and appear at my office on the
first Monday in SBeptember next, and
show cause, if any they can, why Per
manent Administration should not
begranted i T Fre& or some fit
and proper person on Wm M. Frey’s
estate,
’Witneu my official signature of office. This 10th
day of Aug, 1909.
J. M. GANN,
Ordinary.
Administrators Sale.
GEORGIA, Cobb County :
By virtue of an order of the Court
of Ordinary of said county.
Granted at the July Term 1909, of said
Court, I will sel to the highest bidder,
on the first Tuesday inSeptembernext
before the Court house door in Mari
etta, within the legal hours ofsale; the
following described real estate, to-wit:
Land Lots No’s., 1197, 1246 and 1271,
in the 19th District and 2nd Section
Cobb county, Ga., and containing for
ty acres each. This isasplendid farm
with good improvements. Land in
high state of cultivation, plenty of
timber, pasture and water. 'Sold as
the property of the estate of W. B.
Turner late, of said County, deceased.
Bold for the purpose of distribution
among the heirs of said W. B. Turner.
Terms 1C per cent cash, balance due
December Ist 1909. This is a fine red
land farm, 3 miles South-west of Pow
der Springs, in good settlement, con
venient to school and churches.
This Aug 10th 1909. J, H. Hendrix,
Administrator of the estate of
W. B. TURNER, deed.
- Letters Administration.
GEORGIA, Cobb County.
To all whom it may concern: Mary
E. Howell having in due form ap
plied to me for permanent letters of
Administration on the estate of J, .
Howell late of said county, deceased,
this is to cite all and singular the
creditors aud next of kin of J, H.
Howell to be and appear at my office
on the first Mongsy in Se%tember
next, and show cause, if any they can
why i’ermanent Administration should
not be granted to herself or some fit
and proper person on J. H., Howell’s
estate.
Witness my official signature of
office. This 2nd day of August 1909,
J. M. GANN, (frdinary,
eii b i i s T
Twelve Month’s Support.
GEORGIA, Cobb County,
Mary Nichols having made applica
tion for twelve month’s support for
herself and one out of the estate of
Anderson Nichols, and appraisers
duly appointed to set apart the same,
having filed their returns, all persons
concerned are hereby required to show
cause before the Court of Ordinary of
gaid County on the Ist Monday in
September, 1909, why said applica
tion should not be granted,
This Augast 2nd, 1909.
J. M. GANN,
Ordinary.
R SRR T s SRR S R
Letters Administration.
GEORGIA, Cobb County,
To whom it may concern: Z. E.
Carnes having in due form applied to
me for permanent Letters Administra
tion on the estate of Julia C. Hurston
late of said County deceased, this is
to cite all and singular the creditcrs
and next of kin of Julia Hurston, to
be and appear at my office on the first
Monday in September next, and show
cause, if any they can, why Perma
nent Administration should not be
granted to Jonh P. Cheney or some
fit and proper person on Julia C.
Hurston estate,
Witness my official signature of
office. This 2nd day of August, 1909,
. J. M. GANN,
Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA, Cobb county.
. By virtue of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of said County, granted at
the August Term 1909 of said court, I
will sell before the Court House door
in the city of Marietta, to the
highest bidder, within the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tues
day in September next, the following
described real estate to-wit: Land lot
No. 135, lot No, 136, lot No. 1387, con
taining forty (40) acres each, more or
less, also six (6) acres in the north
east corner of land lot No., 152 and
two (2) acres in the West corner of lot
No. 153. All of said land being in
the 16th District and Second Section
of Cobb County.
On said land there is one good sev
en room dwelling, and two tenant
houses, good orchard and plenty of
water. About 100 acres in cultivation,
80 of which is bottom land, 10acres in
pasture and balance in original forest.
Sold as the property of the estate of
D. W. Dobbs deceased and to be sold
for the purpose of distribution among
the heirs, 3
_'This farm lies about eight (8) miles
North of Marietta.
Terms of sale—Twenty-five per cent
of price cash, balance due December
Ist, 1909.
This August 4th, 1909,
J. M. DOBBS,
Administrator of D. W. Dobbs dec’d:
o£L9
Sheriff’s Sales.
GEORGIA, Cebb County :
Will be sold before the courthouse door 1n Gobb
county in the City of Marietta, betweea the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in Sept, 1909,
to the highest bidder for cash, the foliowing de
scribed property to-wit
All that stock of goods in brick store heretofore
occupied by W. H, Cason on corner joining Mc-
Clure's store, on West side of railroad in town of
Kennesaw, Ga., said stock consisting of an assort
ment of groceries, hardware, stationary, and dry
gocds; also all fixtures in said store including five
show cases, 3 prs. scales, 1 cheese cutter, 1 pea
nut machine, said levy covering all goods and fix
tures this day found in said store; said property lev
ied on as the property ot W. H. Cason to satisfy a
mortgage execution on personality issved on the 10th
day of August, 1905 from the superior court of said
county fn favor or Harry M. Pyron against W. H.
Cason.
Said stock will be sold in bulk for cash and pos
session given immedistely thereafter; and owing to
difficulty and expense of transporting same, said
stock will remain at Kennesaw while the sale will
be at Marietta as aforesaid.
Prospective purchasers may communicate with
me and privilege of examining said stock will be
granted before date of sale.
Written notice given defendant as required by law
Levied on This Aug- 11th. 1909,
Wm NcKINNEY, :
Sheriff Cobb County, Georgia.
o e i s s, s
Libel. For Divorce.
Lizzie May Rice) Libel for Divorce
VB. Cobb Superior Court
John Rice Nov. Term, 1909,
The defendant John Rice, is hereby
cited and required personally or by
attorney to be and appear at the Su
perior Court held in and for said
county, on the third Monday in No
vember, 19089, to make answer to
plaintiff’s libel, or in default thereof,
the court’ will proceed zocording to
the statutes made anhd provided. in
such cases,
Witness the Hon. N. A, Morris,
Judge of said Court, this 12th day of
August, 1909,
J. M. AUSTIN, Clerk.
REMEMBER, IN COOKING VEGETA.
o BLES, S
| That most vegetables should be
lpnt on to cook in freshly boiling
water.
That salt should be added when
’they are about two-thirds done.
~ That lying in very cold water for
an hour or more will partially re
store to wilted vegetables gquality
and freshness.
That over{ green vegetable
should be cuoked rapidly and un
covered, to retain its cofor.
That if the water is very hard,
a tiny bit of soda added, no larger
than a pea, will make the vege
tables cooked in it tender and of
l better color, Ordinary water does
‘not require such addition.
' That when soft water is used the
Balt must be in from the first to
prevent loss of flavor and sub
stance. : '
That cooking a vegetable after
it is done toughens, darkens and
detracts from Its flavor.
That the best dressing for vege
tables at their perfection is butter,
pepper and salt—cauliflower and,
perhaps, asparague excepted.
That older or staler vegetables
are improved by a cream or butter
sauce—the basis for the latter be
ing the reduced liquid left when
the cooking is finished.
Washington’s Plague Spots
lie in the low, marshy bottoms of the
Potomac, the breeding ground of ma
laria germs. The germs cause chills,
fever and ague, biliousness, jaundice,
lassitude, weakness and general de
bility and bring suffering or death to
thousands yearly. But Electric = Bit
ters never fails to destroy them and
cure malaria troubles. ‘‘They are the
best all-around tonic and cure for
malaria I ever used,” writes R. M.
James, of Louellen, S. C. They cure
Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Blood
Troubles and will prevent Typhoid.
Try them, 50c. Guaranteed by R E
Butler, Sons & Co.
NOTHING EXTRAORDINARY.
An American tourist hailing
from the Weet was out sightseeing
in London. They took him aboard
the old battleship Vietory, which
was Lord Nelson’s flagship in sev.
eral of his most famous naval tri
umphs. An English sailor escort
ed the American over the vessel,
and coming to a raised brass tab-.
let ou the deck, he said, as he rev
erently removed his bat:
‘“’Ere, sir, is the spot where
Lord Nelsoo fell.”? '
““Oh, is it?"’ replied the Ameri
can, blankly. ‘““Well, that ain’t
nothin’. I nearly tripped on the
blame thing myself.”’—Pittsburg
Chronicle-Telegraph.
“Yep, th’ cunnel isused to cy
clones. He had half a dozen of ’em
at that ranch of his out in Kansas.
He was tellin’ me yesterday ’bout
the wust one. It unloofed his house
an’ crushed his barn, an’ blew two
miles of fence clean over inter th’
next county.”
“Pretty stiff blow.”
“Yep. Ninety miles an hour.
‘Th cunnel says he crawled out of
his cyclone cellar after it was all
over, an’ what do you suppose was
the fust thing he saw?”’ -
“Give it up.”
““He looked across his back lot,
an’ by gum, there was his hired
man still sittin’ on th’ fence !”’—
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Some men can’t make good even
with free raw material.
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Jfifir ‘-cf'/\
Some are planned. There is noth
ing accidental ahout our stock of
Nor the prices at which we sell. All
that has been thought out long ago,
'and the ovest goods sought and
bought. Now we feel that the
finest, line of
. ishere almost for the asking. You'll
. like the goode as well as we do.
PHONE 150.
DR. HOLD_EQBY WRITBS OF BEAU.
l“‘ : TIFUL MARIETTA,
j [From the Atlanta Journal.]
~ Eprtor JourNAL :—Permit me to make
a few feeble remarks throngh your col
umns in behalf of this beautiful town
of Marietta. Now, Marietts may not
need my voice or pen to speak its
praises, but I feel somehow under obli
gations to rise up in the meeting and
say something nice.
I have been asojourner here during
the present summer, ‘““‘camping out”’
with my family, with horse and dog
thrown in, Having visited many of the
Summer resorts around about Atlanta
for the past twenty years, I am in a po
sition to express my opinion and to pass
judgment.
Ot all the places I know for rest and
real comfort, Marietta excels them all.
You get here sll the conditions neces
sary for a sweet, quint, restful summer
outing, and at the same time be in
tonch with the big city only twenty
miles away,
Marietta is an ideal town from every
point of view. Beiug a hundred feet or
more higher than Atlanta, and nestled
at the foot of the mountains and fanned
by day and by night by the mountain
breezes, it is free from malaria. . Hu.
midity at this point is less intense than
in lower altitudes, and the temperature
by day is moderated by the constant
breezes, and the nights are eool and
pleasant. Under these physical condi
tions, we may naturally expeet to find
a good class of people. Bad folks ean’t
live in this kind of atmosphere.
After asojourn here of two months
and going around through the alleys
and lanes and streets, I hsve yet to
meet the first drunken man. |
A 8 a matter of fact, I have not been
able to get hold of a bottle of “nigh
beer” or any other kind of beer, and as
to whisky, that is clean out of sight
It there is any drinking up here, it
must be done ‘‘on the sly.”
The people of Marietta are not only
sober folks, but they are a law-loving
and a law-abiding people.
They attend strictly to their own busi
ness and let other people’s alona.
The truth of the business is that the
people here are so good, I am going
home to Atlanta soon,'where I think I
am more needed. lam just one preacher
here too many, and if the people here
remain as good ss they are now, Ido
not see why the other preachers should
stay. lam afraid that Dr. Patton, Dr.
Bryan, Dr. Bond, and the Episcopal
and [Catholiec preachers will all have
to leave and go down to Atlanta where
they are needed. But I am inelined to
think that it would be well to run all of
the preachers out of Atlanta, unless
they ean have more influence over the
liquor forces than they have had in the
past, The preachers do not seem to
count for much when it comes to the
matter of putting ‘‘near-beer” out.
What has become of the influence of
the three hundred preachers in Atlanta,
and of a hundred and forty churches
with a membership of forty thousand
people.
It seems that the liquor gang, with
their money, had more influence over
the legislature than all of the preachers
and churches combined.
The Hooper Alexander bill was de
feated because the preachers and
churches laid down and did nothing.
But the liquor crowd and the next legis
lature need not think that the preach
ers and churches are dead. They are
only taking a nap. They will wake up
soon and see to it that the liquor men
who have been coming up to Atlanta to
debauch our State, will be elected to
stay at home,
Now, Mr. Editor, if you want to have
a nice, quiet rest from your arduous
newspaper labors, just eoms up to Ma
rietta, You ean come in good style on
the splendid trolley line if you will pay
the conduetor 35 cents, unless you have
s free pass.
I note, with regret, that they do not
let preachers ride free. Hope they are
more charitable to newspaper men. But
the newspaper men do not need free
passes as much as the preachers do.
Now, Mr. rditor, if any of you news
paper brethren are looking for ‘‘near
beer,” don’t come up to Marietts. We
don’t keep the stuff up here, and we
won’t keep it much longer in Atlanta.
It will have to go. A, R, HoLpErnyY,
Marietta, Ga,
Farm for Sale.
250 acres of land, 914 miles from Ma
rietta and 3'4 miles from Blackwells,
Ga. A five horse crop in cultivation;
about 100 acres of good timber land.
There is also a grist mill ruaoning on the
place and paying a good rent.
The above described place is known
a 8 the Gault Farm. This is the home
place. Will sell at a bargsin and on
reasonable terms. Call or write J. T,
Gault, 412 Auvstell Building, Atlanta, Ga.
et e s e e S .
"Piety,” said Uncle Eben, “is
sumpin’ like yoh Sunday clothes.
Yon gits ‘’em every day in de week,
even if dey doesn’t attract so much
attention.”’-—Washington Star.
M
e T —
iR e
Shorthand & Typewriting
Miss V. T Elmer will open classes in
Shorthand nnd Typewriting. For terma,
ete., eall telephone 245. J . or addreas 201
Polk street, Mariotta, Ga. - 33 4¢
A< *~The Wash Lines
4@ i\ v SRS ~
R =N/ /S e
&> i Y.
gl 3
1 A /‘/ $
2y A _
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If the woolens are shrunken, colored goods faded, fine lace waists
worn 2nd torn, and the woman herself “worn to a frazzle” you can be
sure she is behind the times and does not know the many advantages
of using ! ‘
P 0 '}i Be. 58 ”a 574 e
It Softens the Water
Nothing shrinks, nothing fades and there's no hard rubbing and scrubbing when
.Lavadura is used. Your hands are kept soft, smooth and white, and all kinds of
cleaning is done quicker, easier and more satisfactorily.
Use Lavadura in dishwater instead of soap and see Kow much sweeter, brighter,
cleaner your china and glassware, pots and pans are. Once use Lavadurs ead
you'll never want to be without it.
Ask for it at Grocers and Druggists
In 5¢ and 10c Packages Pt
i- o s g 7 =}
Fine for shampoo, too. i
LAVADURA CHEMICAL CO. /
el R e
B-. l 2
£ .
({ us
/l, i J
/,/ ‘
- -
suve 9 Per Gent,
By making your cash purchases at
FAW & ROGERS’. Beginning 4
with August, we will give a check
showing amount of each cash pur
chase, and for each $lO.OO of these
checks returned to us we will give
FIFTY CENTS
in trade. It pays to buy for cash.
The quality of goods we handle is
well known, and this liberal dis
count places the best within the
reach of all. Be sure to get a rebate
check with each cash purchase. .
FAW & ROGERS,
TELEPHONE No, 20 MARIETTA, GEORGIA
gL »
No ready-to-wear stock
M'C of clothing can ofi'er-(yfid
41 the styles, the fabries, or the
eBl fit that we can through the
aid of our Chicago tailors,
bt Ed. V. Price &.Co. « . i
s Bezuriful fabries
g
qn‘;,;}i\ ~=»_ from tke world’s best looms,
g ”""’p and numberless fashion ideas
B SSNSS | give you an incomparable
PR range for satisfactory selec
% & ~ | tion, while fit, shape and
"’% 5 '-" quality are unsurpassed.
S (oot .vet & 05 Prices very attractive.
Come in and look at the line,
select your cloth and fashion, and leave youé
measure today. '
" i 15hd | N 5 ’
Marietta, Georgia. i
The average shirt-waist a woman
wears in the summer is 80 squeer ‘it
seems as if she might be more
dressed by taking it off.
Generally when a child is , iritat
ing to you it’s because it doesn’t
like you and doesn’t care y,i)otfior
you know itor not. : |