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The Winona Times from Winona, Mississippi • 6

Publication:
The Winona Timesi
Location:
Winona, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Paper the People Read. WINONA, (MISS.) TIMES, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1922. Official Organ City, County and State. THE TIMES CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS AND LEGAL NOTICES Forewarned IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR BARGAINS The charge for Classified Advertisements is 2 Cents per word for each insertion. No advertisement accepted under this heading for less than SO Cents.

Price is the same whether one or more insertions are taken. Classified Advertisements are Cash in Advance Always. Charge for Cards in Business Directory Quoted upon Application. All Legal Notices at Legal Rate. NOTICE OF SALE.

February 23, 1922. The following described property seized from Will McKinney, under Warrant For Distraint for the non-payment of assessed taxes due, will be sold as provided by Section 3190, Revised Statutes, at public auction, on Tuesday, April 4, 1922, at 2 P. M. in front of the Post Office at Duck Hill, Mississippi: W4, SEVi, and SW, Section 1, Township 20, Range 6, Montgomery County, Mississippi. G.

L. Donald, Collector of Internal Revenue. By T. J. Wyatt, U.

S. Deputy Collector. M3-10-17-24 A TO IV I Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup.

So pleasant even children like it. The blood needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect 60c 1 LESPEDEZA AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR COTTON We give you fair warning, if you are looking for bargains in Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Notions, We are making a determined effort to clear our shelves of all winter stock. We have for a time lost sight of cost. Goods are going at just what they will bring, often far below wholesale cost You are forewarned. If ycu miss these wonderful bargains, don't blame us.

It will be your misfortune. Eut you still have time to gather them in. MAX DAVITTS "Save Children cf Near East" Pleads Member of Relief Commission Airs. Florence Spencer Duryea, Just Returned From a Journey thru the Levant, Says Scores of Children are Dying Daily FLORENCE SPENCER DURYEA THOUSANDS of orphans throughout the Near East who owe their lives to America still look to us for their food and shelter, according to Mrs. Florence Spencer Duryea, Director of the Women's Organizations of the Near East Relief.

Mrs. Duryea was a member of the Commission which las just returned to this country after a two months' investigation conditions in the Levant. Inr.k to us, for they have no one eh.e look to," Mrs. Dur-jea declares. "We have been caring for tliem during the long years cf warfare, which has not yet ceased in the Near East, and we mu't continue while the present need exists.

"Though much of our work has been dene and it will require just a little more effort to complete the task, the situation this year makes immediate and effective action necessary. Due to invasion and disturbed political conditions an additional burden has been thrown upon us, especially in Armenia, where there are thousands of little tots facing a dreadful death unless we answer their appeal. "I saw hundreds of children, so thin and weak from under-nourish- rop. SALE FOR SALE All kinds of printing, send copy of what you want printed and write for prices. Times, Winona, Miss.

M-3-10-17-24-31. FOR SALE Winona Stationery 250 sheets of paper and 250 Envelopes, the thing for farmers, printed $4.50. Times Office, Winona, Miss. M-3-10-17-24 31- iXV UiHJ" 8 11, 75c per 1000. By parcel post 85c per 1000.

Winona Times. FOR SALE Ringlet Barred Rock Eggs. Setting of 15 post paid to any address for $1.00. J. A.

Jones, R. 1. Kilmichael, Miss. F-24-M-3-10-pd. FOR SALE Setting Eggs from the Prize winning Dixie Strain White Wyandottes.

Price $2.50 for 15. DR. E. C. O'CAIN, Winona, Miss.

F-24-tf. FOR SALE Pure Bred White Leg horn Eggs. $1.00 for 15. Twenty-f iv cents txtra by mail. Post-paid.

Mrs. S. W. Bailey, Koiciusko, Mi-, lliaippl, R. 2.

F-24-M-3-P FOR SALE Finest laying strain single comb Rhode Island Red eggs, 11.28 yet setting of 15, Mrs, C. BRYAN, R. F. 5, Winona, Miss. F-24-M-3-pd Mrs.

James Harrington, 232 Mc-Lemore Memphis, Tenn. Light Brannah, prize winning strain, $5.00 per setting of 15; Buff Orphington fine large strain at $3.00 per 15. Duck eggs $2.25 per setting. FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE 4 work mules, 1 horse, 1 mare, 2 wagons, want combination saddle and buggy horse, milch cow, corn and peas. Walter H.

Witty. 17-24 3. FOR SALE OR TRADE All kinds of shafting, pulleys and some -small belting. Will trade for corn. Apply at Times Office.

tf FOR SALE OR TRADE One gasoline tank and pump. Can be seen at Times Office. tf BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES. jregg bhorthand, 1 ouch writing, Spelling and Applied Busi ness English taught. Remington and Underwood machines used.

Those desiring to enroll call 272. MRS. LLON TROTTER. F-3-10-18-27. OLD SHOES Repaired cheap and returned promptly.

Postage paid both ways. Mail them to us. West Point Shoe Shop, West Point, Miss. 27-F 3-10-17-24 319-17. WANTED Miss Maggie Hodges, Finger, Tenn.

Wants two barred rock cockerels. C. G. Stelle, County Agent, Clarks-dale, Miss. Wants corn in car lots.

C. G. Stelle, County Agent, Clarks-dale, Miss. Cow peas in car lots or less. Ci H.

Steele, County Agent, Clarks-dale, Miss. Wants Texas seeded ribbon cane seed. C. G. Steele, County Agent, Cla'rks-.

dale, Miss. Wants several cars of good Lespedeza hay. R. Mitchell, County Agent, Cal-' h'oun City, Miss. Wants Miller and Mebane cotton seed.

WANTED To trade for a buggy and horse, a Chevrolet car. Car is It good running crder. Apply at Time? Office. tf M. W.

Muldrow, County Agent, Fay-etteville, wants prices' on good registered yearling Jersey heifCTs F. Myrillo, vants a registered Guerensy bull. W. A. Woods, Turabull, Miss.

Wants Jersey i wi imd siriitrers, car lots and less. B. fc. Urant, County Agent, ASiuanu, Miss. Wants Biloxi and oo-too tan soy beans and speckled vel-Vet beam.

W. F. Martin, Grenada, Miss. Wants 1 car good dryslip shuck corn, 72 pounds to the bushel. Wants 1 car shell white corn.

Quote delivery price. B. E. Grant, County Agent, Ashland Miss. Wants certified sweet potato JJjdNan T.Y.

Williford, County Agent, Sar-, dis, Miss. Wants quotations on lespedeza seed in 25 to 100 bushel Jota. L. W. Parker, Rt.

2, Cruger, Miss. Wants 50 bushels whip peas; 50 bushels soy beans. J30CHANGE William Fyfr, Covington, 2 year old Hereford bull, Fairfax breeding $50.00 or will exchange for milk cow, young mule, corn, or lespedeza seed. FtixrNicolQoGTrAnen Miss. 10-20 Titan Tractor for sale or will trade for 50 bushels recleaned lespedeza seed or 250 bushels of whippoorwill peas.

Samuel J. Barber, Havana, Ark. Big Tim. rinrnp nies at ten dol lars each, for Lespedeza seed, or sweet clover or seea ow. rigs sir jidJyjKejaji Ernest Bowles, Rt.

2, Lucy, Tenn. 1 or more barrels first class ribbon cane molasses for groceries. A Sparkling Stimulant, Full of Wit and Humor. Free copy will be sent upon receipt of your name with nMre complete. Write to G.

Mitchell, 397 Pearl St. Brooklyn, N. Y. J. W.

CONGER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will Practice in all Courts. Office PURNELL BLDG. Winona, Miss. Notice of Substituted Trustee's Sale.

By virtue of the power vested in me, the undersigned V. D. Rowe, Substituted trustee in that certain deed of trust, executed on the 8th day of December, 1917, by Ed Drake and his wife, Mary Drake, to Z. W. Littleton, Trustee, to secure an indebtedness acknowledged therein to be owing to J.

W. Hearon, which said deed of trust is duly recorded in Book No. 49, page 550 of the records of land deeds of Montgomery County, Mississippi, the said V. D. Rowe having been duly appointed and substituted as trustee in said deed of trust in the room and stead of the said Z.

W. Littleton, Trustee therein named, by writing duly recorded in book page 616 of the land deed records of said County on the 26th day of January, 1922 default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness, and being thereto requested by the said W. Hearon, the holder and owner of said indebtedness, V. D. Rowe, substituted trustee, as aforesaid, will on Saturday, the 11th day of March, 1922, within legal hours, in front of the East door of the court-house of said County of Montgomery, in the City of Winona, Mississippi, offer for sale and sell, or cause to be sold, at public auction, for cash, the following described lands embraced in said deed of trust, or so much thereof as may be necessary to meet said indebtedness, and the expense of executing this trust, said lands being described as follows to-wit: of SEV4 of NEV and NE14 of NEV and SW of NE'A and part NW of NE, 2 acres, in Section 1, Township 19, Range 5 and W2 of SE less 2 aeres, Section 36, Township 20, Range 6 all situated in Montgomery County, Miss.

This 14th day of February, 1922. V. D. ROWE, Substituted Trustee. 17-24-M-3-10.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE By virtue and authority and power vested in me as trustee in a certain deed in trust executed the 17th day of November, 1919 by William Sisson and his wife, Nancy Sisson, to secure Bank of Kilmichael in certain indebtedness therein mentioned, the said deed in trust being duly recorded in the Chancery Clerk's office at Winona, on page 436, Book 48, for the records of deeds Trust on lands in Montgomery County, and which certain note representing said indebtedness and the trust deed having been transferred by said Bank of Kilmichael, which transfer was made under date of Dec. 18, 1920, record of said transfer being shown at page and book, where said deed in trust is recorded, to A. Bruns, without recourse on said bank, and which said deed in trust and the indebtedness secured thereby is still held by A. Bruns, and default having been made in the payment of the secured by said deed in trust, and as such trustee, having been requested by said A. Bruns, the holder and owner of said deed in trust and the debt secured thereby, to advertise and sell the lands and personal property mentioned and described in said deed in trust, B.

F. Poison, will, as such trustee, on Monday the 27th day of March, 1922, in front of the east door of the courthouse in the city of Winona, Montgomery county, during legal hours, offer for sale and will sell for cash to the highest and best bidder, at public outcry, the following described ral and personal property, situated in Montgomery county, to-wit: Beginning at the south east corner of the west half of north east quarter of the southwest quarter of section four, township eighteen, range seven, east, and running thence west along the south line of the said west half of the northeast quarter of southwest nuarter to the Kilmichael and Wi nona public road, thence in a norther ly direction along the eastern Douna- ary of said road to it's intersection with the Winona and Mayfield public road, thence in a easterly direction along the southern boundary of said Winona and Mayfield public road to the eastern line of of said west half of northeast quarter, thence south to beginning point, less that part thereof owned by the colored Klmichael Lodge of Independent Order of Oddfellows, and the NW of SE'A section five, T. 17, R. 8, east, together with all improvements there upon situated and all appurtenances thereunto belonging. I The proceeds of this sale are to be applied to the payment of the costs of executing this trust ana towards the payment of the debt secured by i said deed in trust.

I will only con-I vey such title as is vested in me as trustee. This the 21st day of February, 1922. B. F. POLSON, Trustee.

F-24-M-3-10-17. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. No. 4009. Letters of administration upon the estate of T.

A. Holmes, deceased, having been granted to the undersigned Mrs. Lena Holmes by the Chancery Court of Montgomery County, Mississippi, on the 24th day of February, 1922; now, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to have the same probated and registered by the clerk of said court within six months, and that a failure to so probate and register said claim for six months will bar said claims. This 24th day of February, 1922. MRS.

LENA HOLMES, Administratrix. McLean Rowe, Solicitors. M-3-10-17. W. A.

MOORE Coal and Drayage. Good Teams and Wagons. Prompt Service. Headquarters at Sturdivant Smith. Phone 177 When You Want Hauling Done Call Me.

Personal Attention Given All Orders. Residence Phone 146. Winona, Miss. W. A.

Holman FIRE A TORNADO INSURANCE Vhen your house is burning up your neighbors will all stand around until it is a little pile of ashes, then walk off and there will be nothing left standing but the chimneys and I- I go right after your money for you. My companies all pay losses, no waiting or parleying. I keep up with your policy that's my business and only business. THAT'S WHY I AM YOUR FRIEND AFTER THE FIRE. Winona, Miss.

D. Swift Co. PATENT LAWYERS Patents Obtained. If you have an invention to patent please send us a model or sketch, with a brief explanation for preliminary examination and advice. Your disclosures and all business is strictly confidential, and will receive our prompt and personal attention.

Washington, D. C. DRESS UP We can make your old clothes look new. There is no better way to economize than to have your old clothes Dry Cleaned and Pressed by us. Our prices are reasonable and our work prevents yea from buying new clothes.

QUICK SERVICE. Phone 323. Boy will call. Out of town work given special attention. Peoples Pressing Shop WINONA, MISSISSIPPI.

The Thrice-a-Week Edition of The New York World IN 1922 and 1923. Practically a Daily at the Price Of a Weekly. No other Newspaper in the world gives so much at so low a price. The whole world is being made over and the United States is taking the lead in the work. This year, particularly, history will be made, and every American citizen will be dc jply interested.

No other newspaper is better equipped to give the news of the world at the time it is news than the New York World. The Trice-a-eek edition of the World is the greatest example of comprehensive journalism in America. It will keep you as thoroughly informed as a daily, which would cost five or six times as much. It is a unique newspaper published three times a week, for $1 a year This is the regular subscription price and it pays for 156 newspapers. We offer this unequalled newspaper and The Winona Times one year for $2.75.

The regular subscription price of the two papers is $3.00. Subscribe Now. LONESOME? MEN, WOMEN, GIRLS, BACHELORS, WIDOWS, ETC. Join our correspondence club and make many interesting friends. Get acquainted throughout the world through our medium.

Marry Wealth Happiness. Hundreds rich, attractive and congenial, willing to wed. Photos free. Send 50 cents for four months' subscription. $1.00 for one year.

Florence Bellaire BROOKLYN, N. Y. 200 Montague O-M-31 G. A. McLean V.

D. Rowe McLean Rowe ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Will Practice in All Courts Office in Masonic Building Telephone No. 2. Winona, Miss. W.

T. KNOX ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Will Practice in All Courts, Both State and Federal, Office over the Hitt, Hart Blackston Co. Phone No. 389. Winona, Miss.

4 Dr. Frank Harris PHYSICIAN Purnell Building, Quitman Ave. Res. Phone 85 Office Phone 184 Winona, Miss. Minnie Mitchell OPTOMETRIST Glasses Fitted Scientifically Winona, Miss.

N-l-19-b Dr. A. M. Bailey Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist Office Kelly Drug Co. Phone 19.

Residence Phone 23 Winona, Miss. A-13-tf W. C. GEORGE TINNING PLUMBING Office in Ritcney Building. PHONE NO.

227. First Class Work in every respect absolutely guaranteed. Winona, Miss. D. B.

DOTSON Prepared to do All Kinds of hauling. Truck Service. Moving Van. All Business Given Prompt Attention. Figure With Me on Coal in Small or Car Lots.

Office Caldwell Sykes, Phone 70. Residence Phone 243. Winona, Miss. Jan-l-21-tf We Can Handle It If you have property FOR SALE FOR RENT FOR LEASE If you want to buy city property or farm land on easy terms or for cash, we have propositions that will interest you. Don't worry about your property being rented and collecting the rents.

Turn your business over to us. We can handle it on a small percentage, and in many instances make your property bring you in a better income than you are getting now. Wood Real Estate Co. I WINONA, MISSISSIPPI 4 Lespedeza, one of the South's greatest legumes, is the title of an interesting article prepared for the Lespedeza Seed Growers' Cooperative by Dr. R.

E. Lewis, Bains. Louisiana a prominent farmer who is specializing in the growing of this prof itable crop. While the name. Lespedeza, was supposed to have been given this plant by botanists in 1800; it was not until 1880 that it received the attention its merits warranted, as a commercial farm product, under the development of Col.

J. B. McGehee, of Laurel Hill, Louisiana, who recognized its value as a feed for farm animals and as a soil builder, and who sang its praises for years. Its place in southern agriculture is due largely to Col. McGehee, says Dr.

Lewis. Lespedeza is an annual, maturing its seed in the fall, which sW-ter readily and reseed the ground for the coming year. Normally, these seeds which shatter off at maturing time remain dormant until the warmth and moisture germinate them. It is the practice to plant from February 15 to May 1. The stems and branches of the Lespedeza plant are slender and the leaves small but very numerous.

A good crop will grow to the height of 15 to 18 inches, and on fertile soils 30 inches is not unknown. It is estimated that a good stand of Lespedeza will represent a ton of hay for each 6 inches of its growth. This plant will grow on almost any of the types of soil in the cotton belt, but of course like most other plants does best on a more fertile, well drained soil. It is thought that no plant is more suitable to follow cotton, as Lespedeza brings the soil back to its former state of fertility. The custom of seeding Lespedeza with oats has become more or less a fixed habit among the producers, as the oats, by virtue of its shade keeps down weeds and grasses and allows the Lespedeza to make rapid growth However, just as good crops can be produced when the seed is sown alone; but seeding with oats has the advantage of giving the planter two crops from the same ground during the year, with but one cost of culti-vaton.

Experience indicates that one bushel of seed (25 lbs.) per acre is about the right amount to be planted. It requires no inoculation, as the rough little jackets containing the seed carry enough from the fields from which they were taken to insure perfect inoculatiou. No special soil preparation is necessary, although it has been demonstrated beyond a doubt that soils well supplied with phosphates will produce the greatest growth. The method of harvesting the hay will depend somewhat on the grade of hay desired. In any event, the chief effort should be directed to the preservation of the leaves upon the stem as they constitute a great part of the feeding value.

Cutting is not started until the plants are in full bloom, and the hay should not be cut while the dew is on or while wet from rain. Little need be said in favor of Lespedeza hay as a feed for all kinds of stock after looking at the follow ing comparative analysis: Iimothy contains 2.8 percent protein, 28.3 per cent carbohydrates and 1.4 percent fats. Lespedeza contains 7.6 percent protein, 31.0 percent carbohydrates and 1.8 percent fats. As compared with other legume hays it has the advantage of being free from woody growth, permitting its entire consumption and is free from the extreme laxative properties which make some legume hays undesirable for work stock. When used as a pasture with other grases it helps to make a balanced ration and should be found in every pasture in the South, thinks Dr.

Lewis. As a soil builder it ranks with other legumes. The Lespedeza Seed Growers' Cooperative Association, of Baton Itouge, has done much in the way of standardizing the seed and seed prices, also in disseminating in formation in connection with the best known methods of cultivation and harvesting. According to reports sent out from the office of the As-. sociation, orders for more than one-I third of the seed pooled have been received.

This was on January 28th, at which time the seed market had hardly opened. habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days "LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially-prepareil Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regular action. It Cumulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take.

60c per bottle. SOON RUSH TO A BACK SEAT When the disarmament conference first met in Washington it attracted widespread attention, and scareheads plastered the first pages of the daily press. Of late days it has been almost 1 forgotten, important as it is, and generally a half column on an inside page was its recognition. We have too many murders, and holdups, and bank and mail robberies and divorce scandals and other at- 4 tractive forms of light amusement to A GOOD DINNER IS POSSIBLE Buy your groceries here and your wife can prepare a dinner fit for a king-yes, even better than that, one fit for an American citizen We sell groceries so cheap there is scarcely any profit left for us Seed Irish Potatoes, per peek 75c Snowdrift, 8 pounds $1 40 Snowdrift, 4 pounds 75 ih lb. Sack of Best Granulated Sugar Z.Z""Z 160 ment that they could hardly drag; themselves along the ground, crying for something to eat at the gates of Near East Relief orphanages in Alexandropol and Erivan.

The institutions are already overcrowded, and unless additional facilities are provided, no mjre can be admitted. "This means a situation so horrible that 1 hate to think of it, for winter is cuming, and winter in Transcaucasia is bitterly cold and the starvat'oti and disease that is now eanying off scores every day will grow worse. "If more American women could only see the sights that I saw, of b'bies dying in their mothers' arms; of youngsters who still need a mother's care scratching in refuse for a morsel of something to eat; of others so shriveled up from starvation that they more resembled mummies from some ancient Egyptian tomb than anything human; if they could only see these sights, and worse, I know they would see that America did not forsaVe a task that up to this time has been so wonderfully done." Mrs. Duryea was the only woman member of the Commission to visit Transcaucasia, where she was the guest of the various local governments. 1.00 $1.25 l.OO .25 .25 20 .50 1.25 30 90 per lb.

30c 31c per It). 3oo 40c il.15 per hu can Can TRIUMPH IRISH POTATO SEED GIBSON Winona. Miss. of sudden wealth. Now they have not even bread and are starving by the hundreds of thousands.

America is feeding many of them, as usual, but while engaged in this work of tne Samaritan we can not forget that they brought their plight upon themselves. Mob rule sounds good to the mob only until hunger begin to gnaw. WINONA TIMES, $2.00 PER YEAR ougar, iu pounds 48 lb. Country Meal, or 1 Bu. Best Self Rising Flour, per sack Best Plain Flour, per sack 14 lb.

Best Grade Rice 2 packages Best Grits 2 packages Oatmeal Pure Hog Lard, per pound High Noon Coffee, 1 pound Can High Noon Coffee, 3 pound Can French Market Coffee, 1 pound French Market Coffee, 3 pound Fresh Mince Meat R'ilir Picklr-s. per fczen Mixed Sweet Pickles Nice Size Dill Pickles per dozen Sweet Potatoes FRESH GARDEN. SEED, ALSO B. Phone 14. remember anything of a serious nature for long at a time.

WERE BAD BUT NOW WORSE Conditions were bad in Russia under the autocratic rule of the czars. But the people had bread, and enjoyed life, if but little more. Then they overthrew and murdered the czar and beggared the nobility and formed a government of the peasant class. They would be free and independent, and all had dreams.

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About The Winona Times Archive

Pages Available:
74,729
Years Available:
1894-2024