Newspaper Page Text
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—CoBB COUNTY,
By virtue of an order from the Court
of Ordinary of said county, granted at
the regular September term, 1909, of
said court, the undersigned, as ad
ministrator of the estate of Lizzie
Heard, deceased, will sell at public
outcry, on the first Tuesday in October
1909, at the court house door in sai(i
county, between the legal hours of sale,
for cash and to the highest bidder,
seven (7) acres of land, more or less,
out of land lot No. 119, in the 19th Dis
trict and 2nd Section of said county,
known as the home place of Sang and
Lizzie Heard; said seven (7) acres be
ing bounded on the north and south
by lands of Calop Lemons, on west by
lands of James Go(fgins, and on east
by a settlement road which separates
this land from the land of saizf Calop
Lemons, said road leading towards the
old Atkinson farm. Said land is sold
as the property of the estate of the said
Lizzie Heard, deceased, and for the
purpose of paying the debts of said
estate and for distribution among the
heirs. This September 7th, 1909.
: JOHN P. CHENEY,
Adm’r Lizzie Heard, deceased.
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, 1909, to make answer to
plaintifi’s libel, or in default thereof,
the court. will proceed according to
the statutes made and provided in
such cases.
Witness the Hon. N. A. Morris,
Judge of said Court, this 12th day of
August, 1909.
J. M. AUSTIN, Clerk.
Application for Leave to
Sell Lands.
GEORGIA—Cobb County.
To All Whom It May Concern: W P
and T E Jiles, executors of the estate
of David Jiles, late of said county, de
ceased, have 1n due form applied to the
undersigned for leave to sell the lands
belonging to said estate, and the appli
cation will be heard at my office on the
first Monday in October next, 1909.
This September 7, 1909
J. M. GANN, Ordinaryy.
Citation.
GEORGIA—Cobb County.
To All Whom it May Concern:—W.
T. Nix having in due form applied to
the undersigned for the guardianship
of the person and property of Lucyan
Nix, a senile person, notice is hereby
given that said application will be
heard at my office on the first Monday
in October next. Witness my official
signature, this 7th day of Se({)tember,
1909. J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
Application for Letters of
Administration.
GEORGIA—Cobb County.
To All Whom it May Concern:—Ed
Williams, Jr., having in due form ap
plied to me for permanent letters of
administration on the estateof Hannah
Williams, late of said county, de
ceased, this is to cite all and singular,
the creditors and next of kin of Han
nah Williams, to be and appear at my
office on the tirst Monday in October
next, and show cause, ifany they can, |
why permanent administration should
not be granted to Ed Williams, or
some fit and proper person, on Hannah |
Williams’ estate. Witness my official
signature of office, this 7th day of Sep- i
tember, 1909.
J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
Application for Support.
GEORGIA—Cobb County.
Mattie Crowley having made appli
cation for twelve months’ support for
herself and two minor children out of ‘
the estate of J. O. Crowley, and ap
praisers duly apé)ointed toset apart the‘
same having filed their return, all
persons concerned are hereby required |
to show cause before the Court of Or
dinary of said Countr on the first‘
Monday in October, 1909, why said
a%plication should not be granted.
This September 6th, 1909.
J. M. GANN, Ordinary,
Application for Letters of Ad
ministration.
GEORGIA—Cobb County.
To AH Whom it May Concern:—G.
M. Dyson having in due form applied
to me for permanent letters of admin
istration on the estate of F. A. Dyson,
late of said county, deceased, this is to
cite all and singular, the creditors and
next of kin of F. A. Dyson, to be and
appear at my office on the first Monday
in October next, and show cause, if
any they can, why .permanent admin
istration should | not be granted to G.
M. Dyson, or some fit and pro&f,r per
son, on F, A, Dyson’s estate. itness
my official signature of office, this 7th
day of September, 1909.
J. M. GaxN, Ordinary.
A i ik i skl sttt
FOR SALE.
One good brood mare safe in foal; 2
young mares 3 years old this spring,
safe and broke and now ready for use;
one fine 2-year and six months old
stallion, all by McCleary and out of
standard bred mares; one medium
size work ox, well broke; one good
young milk cow; one good syrup mill
and evaporator, and ten acres of good
land with new four or five room house
at Kennesaw Marble works.
Cash or on time. Come down to
Belmont Farms and see me.
J. GID MORRIS.
The things you are going to do,
add nothing to your bank balance.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
s
Sheriff’s Sales.
GEORGIA, Cobb County:
Will be sold before the courthouse
door in Cobb county in the city of
Marietta, Ga., on the first Tuesday in
October, 1909, within the legal hours
of sale, to the highest bidder for cash,
the followin g described propert%towit:
A tract or lot of land in the Townof
Roswell, Ga., described more fully as
follows: Commencinfion the North side
of James Grogan’s alley at the corner
of the Dr. Ezzard house lot, and run
ning along said alley West about
sixty four yards to land of R. W.
Coleman; thence North along said
Coleman’s land seventy yards to land
of R. 0. Wiley; thence East along the
lands of said Wiley sixty-four yards;
thence South to starting point seven
ty yards, being part of original land
lot No. 388, in Ist District and Second
Section of Cobb county, Georgia,
containing one ‘acre more or less, said
land levied on as the groperty of
one of the defendants, eorge L.
Ezzard, who is in possessionand con
trolling said property, to satisfy an
execution issued on February 27th,
1909, from the Justice Court of the
845 District, G. M., said county, in
favor of R. O. Wiley principal in fifa,
and J. 8. Ellington transferer, aiainst
J. W. Talley, principal, Geo. L. Ez
zard, J. S, Ellington and J. T. Talley,
securities and J. S. Ellington and J.
T. Talley, securities on stay.
This levy made and returned to me
by J. R. Buice, constable.
This 21st day of August, 1909.
Also, at the same time and place,
%;’/4 acres, more or less, of lot of land
0. 865, in the 16th District and 2nd
Section of Cobb County, Ga., and be
ing in the Northwest corner of said
lot. Bounded on the North by prop
erty of W, A. DuPre, and bounded
on the East, South and West by propr
eety of Mrs. Ralf. Said Broperty 13
the possession of Dan Dillard, an
levied on as the f?roperty of Dan Dil
lard to satisfy a fifa issued from the
Justice Court of the 898th District of
Cobb county, in favor of John Poke,
against Dan Dillard. Written notice
given defendant as required by law.
Levy made and returned to me by
W. A. Bishop, L. C.
WM. McKINNEY,
Sheriff Cobb County.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—-Cobb County.
By virtue of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of said county, granted at the
regular July term, 1909, I will sell to
the highest bidder, before the court
house door, in Marietta, Ga., within
the legal hours of sale, on the first
Tuesday in October next, the following
described real estate, to-wit:
Land lots No. 1199, 1244, 1273, 1243
and 1242, containing 40 acres each,
more or less. Also, 22 acres of land lot
No. 1274, and 26 acres of land lot No.
1318, and 2 acres of land lot No. 1317,
and 1 acre of land lot No. 1319; 4 acres
of land lot No. 1272, and 8 acres of
land lot No. 1245. All of the above de
scribed land being in the 19th District
and 2nd Section of Cobb county, Ga.
Also, 1 acre of lot No. 14 and 1 acre
of lot No. 15, in the 18th District
and 2nd Section of said county. NIl
of the above land is fully described in
deeds made to J. A. gennett. This
farm lies 24 miles south of Powder
Springs, Ga., 24 miles west of Austell,
Ga.. 2)4 miles northwest of Lithia
Springs; has one good 6-room house,
and three tenant houses; lies on Sweet
water and Powder creeks; about 30 or
40 acres creek and branch bottom,
plenty of timber. The land all lies well,
and 18 in good state of cultivation.
There is in all 265 acres, It will be di
vided in three or four parts to suit
purchasers; convenient to schools and
churches, and on public road. Terms
of sale, 10 per cent. cash; the remain
der, December 15th, 1909. Sold as the
groperty of J. A. Bennett, deceased.
old for purpose of paying debts and
distribution among the heirs of de
ceased. For further particulars, ad
dress the undersigned at Dallas, Ga.
This September 7th, 1909.
Jas. K. BENNETT,
Administrator, cum testamentoannexo
de bonus non.
BRIGHT BITS.
A bank teller always has some
thing of interest on hand.
A woman nearly always gets her
impressions wrong end first.
Many a seemingly successful man
owes it all to his wife’s father.
And the way of the average wo
man exasperates the average man.
A guilty conseience is apt to be
its own excuser.
It’s too much to expect cross
bred dogs to be made amiable.
There’s a heap owed to a good
woman in the next world for what
she never gets in this.
All that goes up must come
down—so stand from under.
An accommodation train has as
many stops as a pipe organ.
There’s a streak of wolf and a
strezk of lamb in every man.
There are times when a con
science is an inconvenient thing to
have around.
A man can see beauty in any
woman if he has the right kind of
an imagination.
MONEY TO LOAN-— we
can make loans at 7 per cent on
%?ood real estate as security.
ans on farming lands a spec
ialty. It costs nothing to see us
at our office in Marietta and find
out all about it. :
R N Holland & Son.
How Delagrange Sold Aeroplane
A good story is told of M. Dela
grange, who is now to pilot one of
the Bleriot monoplanes with which
he made his record flights last
year, says the London Telegraph.
He was at his shed one morning
last week when a wealthy Russian
from St. Petersburg was intro
duced.
‘““Is your aeroplane for sale?”
asked the stranger.
“Yes, if you like.”’
**Would you mind taking it out
of the shed to let me see it?’’
“Certainly,” said M. Dela
grange.
The Russian examined it all
over, then asked the price, and was
told 12,000 francs. ‘I will take
it,” said the Russian, drawing out
his pocketbook and handing the
astonished Delagrange twelve new
notes of 1,000 francs each.
“Then the machine is mine?”’
‘“Yes,”’ replied the aviator, ‘‘it
is.”’
Thereupon the Russian got into
the pilot’s seat, and, looking up at
M. Delagrange, he said to him:
“‘Turn on the motor, please, I want
to see how the thing goes.”’
There was laughter and aston
ishment all around among the per
sous present. M. Delagrange, in
vain, tried to explain to the Rus
sian through an interpreter that a
good deal of preliminary practice
is required before one cau fly.
“But I paid for it,’”’ said the
Russian.
“I know you did.”’
‘““Then it is mine.’’
‘“Yes, certainly.”’
‘‘Then turn that handle, and let
me go.”’ '
Everybody tried to persuade the
Russian not to attempt it. All he
would reply was that he paid for
the machine, and he wanted to see
himself go up in it. - At last M.
Delagrange did turn the handle,
the motor started purring, the
aeroplane rau along over the grass
for some yards, rose a few feet into
the air, and then came down with
a smash. The Russian was extri
cated from the wreck considerably
scratched and bruised, but he did
not complain. On the contrary,
he seemed to be delighted at hav
ing had any sort of a flight, no
matter how disastrous it wae, for
his money. *‘l shall have the
machine repaired, then I shall try
again,’’ was all he said.
Don’t waste your money on cheap
cooking vessels, but buy a high grade
enamel ware from Dobbs Har(fware Co.
Between Doctors.
“Doctor, I want to engage you
to look after my practice while I'm
on vacation.”’
“But I'm just ont of college,
doctor. Have had little experi
vnce.”’
““That’s all right, my boy. My
practice, while large, includes very
few people who are actually ill.”’
‘*‘So you approve of Wagner?”’
‘““Yes,”” answered Mr. Comrox.
“I always did like Wagner, He
wrote so little that the folks around
the house could learn to whistle.”’
—Washington Star.
i % adl ' 'p ~ -
s lINTEEL
‘- ’ ' ';' -——~.
ome
‘ { "/"L ’&fl
o . \ ‘ @‘ (‘ U e
4 A 1
[] \A“’ Ly
S e |
¥| A 4 W 4 l
A éfl. b
e ‘L) * -
‘{'”/
Some are planned. There is noth
ing accidental ahout our stock of
Nor the prices at which we gell. All
that has been thought outlong ago.,
and the pest goods sought and
bought. Now we feel that (he
finegt line of
is here almost for the asking. You’ll
like the goods as well as we do
AB.GILBERT
PHONE 150,
Pellagra and Corn.
Albany Herald.
The appearance of pellagra, a
new disease in this country, in some
sections of the South has claimed
the attention of the scientists and
physicians, and of the United 3tates
Marine Hospital Service, and in a
sort of blind search for a cause,
somebody advanced the idea that
our Indian cormn was the guilty
party. And now the Marine Hos
pital service is sending out ‘‘litera
ture” explainring that palagra is
caused by eating bread made from
musty or moldy corn.
We don’t believe it. .
We don’t believe this hook worm
or “‘lazy worm’’ theory with which
the scientists are trying to place, a
sort of sectional blight on the
South, either. But we leave that
for another time.
We shall not presume to say that
there is no such disease as pellag
ra, but if it is caused by eating corn
in any form or condition, isn’t it
passing strange that it never made
its appearance in the United States
until recently, while cases of it
have been known in European
countries, where our Indian corn
was not used as a food, ages and
generations ago?
The Waehington Post, in an ar
ticle dealing with the circulation of
“literature” upon pellagra, says:
“If the disease is due to musty '
corn why has it waited 300 years to
disclose itself ? Why has it not
appeared previously in the South,
and especially in Mexico where the
people have been living mainly on
corn for a thousand or more years, |
and on corn very carelessly pre
pared, ground and stored ? l
It is noticed as a coincidence
that pellagra appeared in Missis
sippi with the coming into the ag
ricultural districts of the state of |
he Italian, in whose land the dis
ease originated and among whom
it is most prevalent, and there is a
suggestion that pellagrous Italians
may have migrated to this country.
The disease was first reported in
America in 1883, when a newly ar
rived Italian was found in a New
York hospital suffering from it.
There is no suggestion by the
physicians that pellagra is conta
gious, although it was called of old
‘Lombardy leprosy.’ ”’
The Louisville Courier-Journal,
in an editorial which treats the pre
vailing pellagara scare in a rather
light view, taking occasion to de
fend the “‘corn pone,” tells us that
pellagra is known in Europe under
several names, including Lombardy
leprosy and Alpine scurvy. There
it takes the form of a kind of ele
phantis and manifests in recur
rent attacks, or as a form of eczema.
It is believed to be the result of a
petomaine poison resulting from the
putrefaction of corn.
All these things go to raise a
question as to whether the physi
cians who bave diagnosed the al
ledged cases of pellagra in the
United States are right in their con
clusion, and the more we read and
learn about it the more we are con
vinced that the disease is neither of
American origin nor caused by eat
ing corn.
““Is your son doing anything dur
ing vacation ?"’
“Yes. He’s making money
nand over fist selling a new tangled
diary.”
“Every woman buys one. It has
one page a day for what you do
yourgelf and ten pages for what
your neighbors do.”’—Puck.
The Real Spender.
“You don’t seem anxious to
meet a millionaire ?”’
“I met a millionaire here last
season,”” explained the summer
girl,” and he wouldn’t even buy an
ice cream cone. Could you intro
duce me to some young chap who
has come to the beach with $2OO
saved up?”’
o ——
INSTRUCTION
I i
Shorthand & Typewriting
Miss V. T Eimer will open classes in
Shorthsnd and Typewriting. For terms,
ete., eall lelephone 245 J or address 201
Polk street, Marietta, Ga, 83 4
r ; ‘
A /_ ,'_\‘ L’
G\ 1
557/74 i ;
SN o
/~ gs R ' ) B
7 e N
, i ; \ ) }
b B & ;
SR Your wash will be the first v .
i teb and the ‘finest on the line— e
woolens will be soft like new
- and won’t shrink, colored goods
won't fade, and dirt will dis
appear without the usual tiring,
tearing rubbing—if you use
“It Softens the Water”’
Your hands won't get red, rough and cracked
—and you'll need only half as much soap. Same
when you put Lavadura in the dishwmer—everythinhg
is sweeter, cleaner, brighter—and it actually benefits
vour hands.
Lavadura can be used in hot or cold water with the same
wonderfully helpful results. Perfectly harmless. Asc package
will show you how much it can accomplish for you.
Ask for it at Grocers and Druggists.
In 5¢ and 10c Pachages.
You can’t really enjoy a bath in hard water. Softem it with
*avadura and see how much better you feel. Removes perspiration
odors, cwres dandruff and preserves the hair.
LAVADURA CHEMICAL €0
suve § Per Gent,
By making your cash purchases at
FAW & ROGERS’. Beginning
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 Ne. 20 MARIETTA, GEORGIA
. e
No ready-to-wear stock
( 1 of clothing can offer you
/ the styles, the fabries, or the
2oy ...!......... fit that we can througzh the
aid of our Chicago tailors,
vt Ed. V. Price & Co.
) Beautiful fabrics
%3% » from the world’s best looms,
g 7e g and numbtcrless fashion ideas
,’ . 7y 3 s .y o 3
P ~ give ycu an incomparable
B! range for satisfactory selec
& F tion, while fit, shape and
N ¥ gB/ quality arz unsurpassed.
T loer @5 Pmen &o 0 Prices very attractive.
Come in and look at the line,
select your cloth and fashion, and le:ve yous
measure today.
E. G. GILBERT & CO.
Marietta, Georgia.
““Has he traveled much ?”
"I should say so. He's been
through two fortunes.”’—Detroit
Free Press,
““Tompus fugit, you know."’
‘“Yes, I met a young woman the
other day who ssid her mother had
been one of the members of the
originsl ‘Florodora’ sextes, ’—Chi«
cago Record-Herald,