Newspaper Page Text
Cumminp, Georgia
Legal Ads
NOTICE
BTATE OF GEORGIA
County of Forsyth
Pursuant to the authority vested In
the undersigned under anil by virtue
of the powers set out and contained
in a certain deed to secure debt
made by THOMAS J. PIRKLE on or
about the 3rd day of February l!)2u
to the undersigned, THE ATLANTA
JOINT STOCK LAND BANK 01 1
ATLANTA, and recorded on the 9th.
day of February. 1925 in Deed Book
8, Page 40, Forsyth County records,
there will he sold before the court
house door or said Forsyth County
on the first Tuesday in May, May (>.
1941, at public outcry, within the
legal hours of sale, all of the follow
ing property, to-wit:
All that certain lot, tract or parcel
of land containing 222 acres, more or
less, located, lying and being in
Vickery (880th G. M.) 2nd District
and Ist Section, Forsyth County,
Georgia, now known as the Noah
L. Pirkle place, and consisting of a
strip 30 rods wide extending across
the South side of Lot No. Two hun
dred and Sixty Three (203), contain
ing 15 acres, more or less, the divid
ing line on the North being plainly
marked by a ditch; 23 acres, more
or less, of Lot No. Two Hundred and
Sixty-Four (264), consisting of a strip
30 rode wide extending across the
South side of said lot, the line cut
ting orf tills strip marked by blazed
trees, and that part across the Fast
side of the balance of said lot lying
Hast of the old creek run; all of
Lot No. tfwo Hundred and Sixty-
Five (2C5); the West half of Lot
No. Three Hundred and Fifteen
(315); all of lyots Numbers Three
Hundred and Fourteen (314), Three
Hundred and Thirty-Four (334) and
Three Hundred and Thirty-Five (335)
3 acres more or less, of the West
side of Lot No. Three Hundred and
Thirty-Six (336), and being all of
said lot lying West of the public
road, this road being the line; and
that part of Lot No. Three Hundred
and Eighty-Seven (387) in the North
west corner In the forkß of the two
creeks, containing 1 acre, more or
less. The said tract of land is in one
body and bounded on the North by
the lands of William Tallant and S.
H. Allen; Bast by the lands of S. H.
Allen, E. F. Hawkins, and B. P-
Roper, also William Tallant; South
by lands of S. H. Allen; West by
lands of S. H. Allen. B. L. Brannon
and William Tallant. The lands here
in conveyed being the same lands
conveyed to T. J. Pirkle by warranty
deed from Mrs. M. C. Pirkle, W. L.
Pirkle and Estella P. Suddetli, which
deed is dated December 22nd. 1924,
and recorded in Deed Book 8, Page
609, records Forsyth County, Georgia.
The property above described is
that conveyed by and described in
the deed to secure debt aforesaid.
Said sale will be made under and
pursuant to the provisions of said
deed and said property will he sold
to the highest bidder for cash, de
fault having been made in the pay
ment of installments of principal and
interest which became due under the
provisions of said deed on 4lie first
day of November, 1938, the first days
of May and November, 1939 and the
first days of May and November,
1940, and the entire debt so secured
having become due by reason of said
defaults.
There will be due on the date of
sale the sum of FIVE THOUSAND
SEVEN HUNDRED EIGHTY FOUR
and 95-100 DOLLARS (J 5.754.95),
which amount Includes unpaid princi
pal and accnred interest.
The undersigned will make deed
to purchase as such sale as is pro
vided for in the deed to scute debt
above described.
THE ATLANTA JOINT STOCK
LAND BANK OF ATLANTA
Ry F. W. ALLCORN, Jr., President
As Attorney in Fact for Them as J.
Pirkle
STATE OF GEORGIA.
COUNTY OF FORSYTH:
Pursuant to the authority vested
in the undersigned under and by vir
ture of the powers set out and con
tained in a certain deed to secure
debt made by Mrs. Evie Beavers on
the 21st day of September 193:1 to
A. W. Stewart, the undersigned, and
recorded in Deed Book 16 at page
248 of the Clerk's Office of Forsyth
County, Georgia, there will be sold
before the court house door in dim
ming, Forsyth County, on the first
Tuesday in May, 1941, within the leg
al hours of sale all of the following
described real estate, to wit. A one
half undivided interest in
All that Tract or Parcel of land
lying and being in the Third district
and First section of Cherokee County
Georgia, and being the east half of
lot of land number 1152 aud also 25
acres, more or loss, of lot of land
number 1153 in Forsyth County, Geor
gia, Said last mentioned Tract de
scribed as beginning at the original
line on the Alpharetta and Atlanta
Public Road and running thenca
southeast along said public road to a
conditional line of Gordon Lummus,
this tract being all of said lot lying
west of said public road. Said Tract
containing in the aggregate 45 acres,
more or lobb.
The property above described is
that conveyed by and described in
the deed to secure debt, aforesaid.
Said sale will be made under and
pursuant to the provisions of said
deed and said property will be sold
to the* highest bidder for cash, de
fault having been made in the pay
ment of the principal and interest
which became due under the provi
sions of said deed on the 21st day of
September 1939 and the entire debt
so secured having become due by
reason of said default.
There will be due on the date of
sale the sum of $200.00 principal be
sides accrued interest of $25.96, mak
ing a total of $225.95.
The undersigned will make deed to
purchaser as provided for in said
deed to secure the debt above describ
ed, and after payment of the above
described, and after payment of the
above sums, the remainder, if any,
will be paid to Mrs. Evie Beavers or
her representative.
A. W. STEWART, Attorney in
Fact for Mrs. Evie Beavers.
GEORGIA—FORSYTH COUNTY:
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Ralph W. Holbrook having made
application to me for Permanent Let
ters of Administration upon the Es
tate of J. O. Redd, late of said County
deceased, notice is hereby given that
said application will be heard at the
regular term of the Court of Ordinary
for said Counlv to be held on the
first Monday in May, 1941.
Given under my hand and official
signature, this 7th day of April, 1941.
J. P. FOWLER, Ordinary.
Georgia 4-H Members
To Demonstrate Use
Of Paints This Year
Georgia 4-H club boys and girls
have added another activity to their
list—a paint project designed mainly
to increase the consumption of tur
pentine and thereby boost the income
of Georgia gun farmers. Cluo boys
in 32 counties and girls in 24 counties
hare received paint kits and are en
gaged in preparing lemcr.stn.Pons on
rci'-ction of high-grad ■ paints ihr'r
uses, a i l methods ot application by
I arm jwn -.rs. The v bove’ work deala
with exterior painting, while ha gills
will do interior painc work.
Counties in which the H 2 exterior
paint kits have been placed include
Berrien, Bulloch, Chatham, Coffee,
Emanuel, Lowndes, Montgomery,
Toombs, Ware, Wayne, Clay. Crisp,
Dodge, Dougherty, Irwin, Mitchell,
Thomas, Tift, Webster, Ben Hill,
Baldwin, Clarke, Columbia, Haber
sham, Lincoln, Walton, Butts, Cobh.
Floyd. Muscogee, Troup, and Walker
Demonstrations: on paint will be
conducted by girls in Chatham, (Joffe
Emanuel, Montgomery, Toombs,
Ware, Wheeler, Bibb. Clay, Colquitt,
Crisp, Dodge. Mitchell, Sumter, Butts
Cobb, DeKalb, Fannin, Walker, Bar
row, Gwinnett, Greene, Hancock, and
Richmond.
At a state contest to be held -some
OF course he does! Uncle
Nalclicl has learned by cx
perienee it pays to work tcitk
Nature.
* Chilean Nitrate is natural —
the only natural nitrate in the
world. It's good for all your
crops. Itsquick-noting nitrogen
and natural balnnee of “vita
Be Sure You Get
-■xv-, - ■ -•
NATURAL CHILEAN
NITRATE OF SODA
The Forsyth County News
time next fall, two teams, one of boys
and one of girls, will be selected for
free trips to St. Louis and the lead
mines nearby. County and home de
monstration agents who coach the
winning teams will be awarded trips
also.
W. A. Sutton, assistant state 4-H
leader, explains that this paint de
monstration project isa new idea and
is being tried tentatively in these se
lected counties. If successful, it will
be extended to other counties in the
state, he said.
Mr. Sutton statd that this project
will show the use of turpentine In
paints, and is Expected to increase
the number of homes painted, thus
adding to the life and beauty of farm 1
dwellings in this state.
The new activity is being conduct
ed cooperatively by the Agricultural
Extension Service, the Lead Indus
tries Association, and the Regional
Lumber Association.
The paint project was inaugurated
for Georgia club members at the re
quest of the American Turplentine
Farmers Association Cooperative, of
Valdosta.
SCS Agronomist Says
Overgrazing Can Ruin
Good Fields Of Kudzu
Overgrazing and failure to supply
necessary fertilizer can easily ruin
well-established stands of kudzu, says
T. C. Maurer, assistant regional agro
nomist of the Soil Conservation Ser
vice.
Observations made by Mr. Maurer
in Georgia soil conservation districts
and old erosion control demonstra
tion areas show overgrazing and lack
of fertilizer as the principal cause
of failure to maintain good stands of
kudzu. He reports instances of good
fileds of kudzu being ruined in a sin
gle season by overgrazing.
“Kudzu is a good grazing plant, but
will not stand as close grazing as
the grasses,” Mr. Maurer says.
"The value of a good stand of kud
zu, ’’ he continues, “is too great to let
it be endangered by overgrazing and
lack of fertilizer. In recent years some
farmers have realized as high as SIOO
an acre from the sale of crowns for
establishing new fields of kudzu.
“Other farmers with well establish
ed stands that have been properly
cared for are cutting around two tons
of hay per acre, which represents a
return of $25 a year,” he points out.
“This return, is equivalent to approxi
mately 8 percent interest on S3OO,
and clearly shovvs that kudzu is an
investment well worth maintaining.”
Extension Head Says
Diets Are Improving
For Georgia People
Director Walter S. Brown, of the
Agricultural Extension Service, this
week predicted definite improvement
in the diet and health of Georgia's
rural and city people as a result of
the coordinated activities of the Geor
gia State Nutrition Committee for Na
tional Defense, a group composed of
To relieve A|R| Q
Misery o/'^vLUO
Liquid, Tablets
Salve, Nose Drops
Cougli Drops
Try “Rub-My-Tism” a Wonderful
Liniment
min’'plant food elements help
you make larger crops and
higher quality, too.
In mixed fertilizer and as
side dressing use Natural Chil
ean Nitrate. Use it regularly,
year after year, to get full bene
fit of its natural fertilizing and
soil-improving qualities.
representative agencies organizations
and professions interested in nutri
tion from the standpoint of better
health.
Formed several months ago to aid
in making America strong through
use of proper foods in the diet, this
group has endeavored to inform the
people of Georgia relative to approv
ed recommendations for the family
food supply and the maintenance of
proper diets.
Throughout the state, Director
Brown reports, county and home de-
monstration agents, working in co
operation with other interested per
sons and in line with suggestions of
the Nutrition Committee, are spend
ing much time to create a conscious
ness for better nutrition among both
the farm and city people in the conn
ties. Asa matter of fact, he stated
that people today are more than ever
before thinking in terms of good nu
trition.
Considering the proximity of the
United States to the foreign entangle
ments of war, the Extension director
asserted that people in Georgia and
throughout the nation must prepare
for emergencies in all respects and
hat good foods of the proper kinds
are> essential to making stronger peo
ple and consequently a stronger coun
try.
U. S. considering ship control,
“purchase" of alien craft.
U. S. soldiers are very well fed,
diet expert assures women.
National sales tax for defense
gains wide support, survey finds.
Jackson urges U. S. turn fifth
column weapon on Hitler
Martin bids Republicans "police
and aduit New Deal.”
French industry works for Reich,
which supplies materials.
ond Ring Y °°*
Your motor will feel happy as a girl with a sparkling
new diamond—when you re-fill your crankcase with DIA- )
MOND JUBILEE VALVOLINE. It’s 75th Anniversary &
Year for America’s First Lubricating Oil . . . First to
give Good-as Gold Guarantee of money back if Valvo- i /■ I' vßjliJ li tjE&fyn*
line does not out-perform your present oil! Change today!
Otwell Motor Company, Inc.
75 Years of Valvoline Means Longer Life For Your Car
UNARMED NATION FACES
4200,000.000 MOTH LOSS!
L *w.m “ V% ' that does not hatch in 4to 8 times their
\ * eat your gar- weeks as lar- weight In wool
1 iV * m \ ments, but vae, which or fur.
i . KV- „o^ C \ gt g fis ti
Ik Cl W . Or GARMENTS BE
-nTn
AS ADVERTISED IN “LOOK’' |
PILGRIM-ESTES •rattarsst
( , Also equipped with autometic tray,
Gainesville, Georgia and an outstanding value.
CONSUMPTION OF COTTON
The annual consumption of lint cot
ton for each citizen of the United
States has been about 26 pounds for
the past quarter century. Of this
amount, clothing accounts for about
40 percent, and 20 percent of the con
sumption is utilized in household
goods. The remaining 40 percent goes
into the so-called'industrial uses. Cot
ton is used in more than 1,000 ways.
o ISCI o
FLOIUDA’O NEWEST FINEST & LARGEST
Ail-Year Hotel
,H [ BIVIf. I. *
I Near Daytona Beach. j
A , j
|Meal Convention or Conference Headquarters. Capacity <W.
The only Hotel Bar open all year between
Jacksonville & Palm Beach.
3adio and Fan in Every Room. Golf Links. Artesian Swimming
Pool with Sand Beach. Tennis, Badminton, Ping Pong, Croquet,
Horseshoe and Shuffleboard Courts. Ballroom and Convention
Hall. Banquet Facilities. Spacious Grounds.
COOLEST SPOT IN ALL FLORIDA, AT THE BIRTHPLACE OF
THE TRADE WINDS. Where the Labrador (Arctic) Current
meets the Gulf Stream, and Summer Bathing and Fishing are
Superb.
Ii Write for Special Summer Rates, April to December.
Hotel Riviera, Box 429, Daytona Beach, Fla. *
MOUNTAINEER, TAR HEEL & CRACKER
VACATION HEADQUARTERS.
Thursday, May Ist, 194 L
fostering wildlife
What kind of wildlife to grow on
the fa.m is often asked by farmers
who are interested in fostering game
birds and fish. In making the decision
as to what kind of wildlife to estab
lish, several factors have to be con
sidered, such as the geographical lo
cation of the farm, wildlife native to
the farm, wildlife food available,
range, type of farming, and predators