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NOTICE OF APPLICATION
GUARDIAN TO SELL FOR
INVESTMENT AND
NANCE
GEORGIA, PEACH COUNTY
EDWINA H. COLLINS,
ian of William Burton Colling
Joe Houser Collins, minors,
notice that she will apply to
Honorable Judges of the
Courts of the Macon Judicial
cuit, at ten o’clock A. M. on
25th da y of July, 11*63, at
Valley, Georgia, to seil the M
lowing described real estate:
Lying and being in the
of Floyd and State of
and being that portion of
E” in the Town of East
(according to the Hand &
map and survey of said town)
which is specifically described as
follows: Beginning at a point on
Brooks Street (west side) 140
south of the intersection of Brooks
and Division Streets and
thence south along the line
Brooks Street 75 1/4 feet;
at right angles back from Brooks
Street 146 1/2 feet to the line
Lot No. Nine (9); thence at right
angles with the last named line
and running along the line of
No. Nine (9) a distance of 75 1/4
feet towards Division Street;
thence at right angles with said
last named line 146 1/2 feet to the
point of beginning, 140 feet from
the corner of Brooks Street and
Division Streets.
Also on that tract or parcel of
land situated lying and being in
the Town of East Rome, Floyd
County, Georgia, being that part
of Lot No. Nine (9) in Block “E ••
in said town (now the Seventh
Ward of the City of Rome) begin¬
ning at a pent 140 feet south of
formerly Division Street, no vf
East Seventh Street, and running
south the full width of said lot
75 1-4 feet, being a tract of sev¬
enty (70) feet by seventy-five and
one-fourth (75 1/4) feet.
The above described property be¬
ing the same as described in a
deed exeeuted May 30th, 1953, and
recorded in-Deed Book 156, Page
437, Floyd County deed records.
’'he above dr r-b*d property
does not produce any income for
said wards, and it is to their best
interest to sell the same. The pro¬
ceeds derived from said sale will
be used to reinvest and for main¬
tenance of said minor wards.
This 27th day of June, 1953.
EDWINA H. COLLINS, Guard¬
ian oi William Burton Collins and
Joe Hotfser Collins, Minors.
GEORGIA. PEACH COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern:
Delores J. Stamps, having
plied for Guardianship of the per¬
son and property of Willis D.
Stamps, incompetent, of said Coun
ty, notice is given that said ap¬
plication will be heard at my of-
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ACM Ascorbic Acid — Additional Lines In
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Fort Valley Phone 3/5
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BANK OF FORT VALLEY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Capital, Surplus and Profits Over $300,000.00
«
YOU and A
YOUR
CONGRESS
WASHINGTON—Should baby-eit
ter fees be deductlble for tax P ar '
P° 8es? Are medical ex P enM *
deductions adequate under pres¬
ent tax laws? Is diaper service
a proper medical expense?
Should a school teacher who is
required by contract to go to sum¬
mer school be allowed to deduct
the cost for tax purposes?
Are Federal tax excise taxes too
high? too low?
Those are just a few of hundreds
of tax questions to which answers
are being sought in an exhaustive
study getting under way in Con¬
gress. Included are others concern¬
ing the most intricate points of
business and finance taxation,
which all new tax laws originate,
cuss.
Being conducted by the House
Ways and Means Committee, with
which all nex tax laws originate,
this is the broadest study of the
Internal Revenue Code and other
tax matters that Congress has
made in years. It will produce the
most sweeping changes in U.S.
tax laws of the present century.
Literally millions of taxpayers
will be affected when results of
this investigation reach the leg¬
islative stage next year.
It is much too early ,of course
to predict any of the results but
one point already seems obvious.
The Ways and Means Committee
will go slow in recommending pro¬
posals to increase tax exemptions,
even though there is a great deal
of pressure for such increases.
The reason for Committee re¬
luctance in this respect is made
clear by Chairman Daniel A. Reed
(R-N.Y.), who says that increases
in tax deductions cause more loss
in revenues than any other chang¬
es in tax laws. He estimates that
for every $100 added to the indi¬
vidual’s personal exemption iiw
government's total loss in revenue
is more than $2 billion.
The main objective of this tax
study is to eliminate as many in¬
equities as possble from the tax
laws. This mass of laws has grown
up over a period of many years
in a patchwork manner which bad¬
ly needs straightening out.
fice, at 10 o’clock a. m., on the
first Monday in August next.
This July 1, 1953.
B. A. YOUNG
Ordinary and ex officio Clerk
C. O. 10-17-24-31
Meanwhile, however, Reed cau
ions that all proposals for end¬
ing inequities under the law will
lave to be considered in the light
if federal government’s need for
evenue.
The committee is hearing pro
posals aplenty for ending inequi
ties. It can be reported at this
early date that there is general
sympathy within the Committee
for permitting working mothers
some tax deductions for the ex
pense of baby-sitters, maids, and
nursery schools. It is estimated
mat tms now is denied to about
5,000,000 women. That figure in
eludes, among others, about 335,
000 nurses ,the American Nurses
Association reports.
Involved there, however, is the
rather delicate question of whether
all working mothers actually
should be working, Rep. Noah M.
Mason (R-Ill.), for one, says some,
women ought to be home taking
care of their children instead of
out earning fur coats and other
luxuries.
There is considerable dissatis
faction with present permissable
deductions for medical expenses.
Rep. Kenneth B. Keating (R- N.
Y.) says persons in the lower
come brackets should get a better
break from Uncle Sam on medical
deductions. Rep. Oliver P. Bolton
(R-Ohio) contends that taxpayers \
should be permitted to deduct all
medical, dental and health insur-;
ance expenses. The American Med
ical Association believes a larger
portion of medical expenses should!
be deductible.'
A man who run? a diaper laun
dry told the Committee that babies
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FORT VALLEY MOTORS
iV. Macon Street Fort Valley , Georgia
*
Soil Conservation
j By H. G. Breedlove
0. M. Ware, Kenneth Thompson
and Bo Hart completed a drain
ditch on their farm located west
of Fort Valley last week. The drain
ditch, of the V-type construction, ap-!
is 1350 feet long and drains
proximately 15 acres of bottom
la nd.
The land was idle and holding 1
water for long periods during the
lacking fresh pin-ons are apt to
get sick and, therefore, the cost
of professional diaper cleaning
should be deductible as a medical!
expense. That, of course, imme-1 I
tiatey raised the question of whe
^ ber * be8e should be special tax
consideration for the husband i
whose wife launders the diapers
at bome ‘
Smokey Says:
I
I * BURn «5»l
j SHAMt in< * .
j j
I
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I
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7
jj AU. UMtlLtn 40 M t*
HAC0Y
Ijfjzarl -- s,
To make us ever mindful..,
Keason - It; was located near
the farm entrance, thus
an eye-sore area on every visit to
the farm. The Ware, Hart, and
Thompson farm trio plan to use
this 15 acres of rich land now for
oats and later for pasture when
they increase their cattle,
The partners had this work done
w jth a bulldozer owned by Hardy
Stone Construction Company
0 f perry. The Ocmulgee Soil Con
District gave technical
in laying out the ditch
proper damage,
Dr. and Mrs. A B. Brann had
their guests over the weekend,
and Mrs. William Tatum of
Ala.
/incM • ••
new GULF f fl ]
-
TRAFFIC TIRES ' * WARKAMUD fuur
HIGH ON MILEAGE * LOW IN COST
<9
Trade Wearing, yoarjitadbart’ Unsafe Tires for Long-”!
Dependable Gulf Traffic Tires
SOUTHSIDE SERVICE STATION, Ft. Valley—H. W. MAPLES, Rober t«
ADAMS GULF STATION, Ft. Valley—HARRIS H. HAFER, Ft. Valley
JACK DENT, ROBERTA—D. M. JONES, Marshallville
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE — Thursday, July 9, 1953
_
.
BARGAINS IN CLASSIFIED^ Classified* — Little but mighty
New and Used
FURNITURE VALUES
Bedroom Suites (Used) $59.50
Dining Room Suite, 10 pc. (Used) 139.50
Sofa Beds (New) 39.50
China Cabinets 29.50 up
Bunk Beds and Mattresses
Odd Dressers and Vanities
McClure’s Fjrniture Exchange
565 POPLAR STREET, MACON, GA.
Phone 2-4631 or 5-8257