The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, March 07, 1935, Image 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MARCH 7, 1935, KWS SUMMARY OF THE WEEK IN GEORGIA Georgia GCC workers last year | A hearing will be held in Ander- METHODIST PASTOR mapped 3,937,397 acres of timber sonville at 10 o’clock on the mornir.g i TO BE GIV'EN HOME land in the state and reduced tire of March 27, by the Public Service j | hazards on 82,223 acres, accord rg commission of <»eorgia, at which time 1 Swainsboro, Ga., March 2.—Mem- j to figures submitted to the Le^.-hi- the Georgia Power company has bers tbe Swainsboro Methodist | ture and Governor Talmadge Mon- been requested to show cause, if any, cburcb have purchased a buidling A gigantic civic celebration in honor i da >' b >' the Commission of Forestry why electrical service should not be , ()t here ttnd wi n erect a home for of Augusta’s 2(Wth birthday is being Geolog.cal Development .furnished to citizens of .Anderson- planned by residents of that historic The numbcr Q f persons in Georgia u *’ Wa ® earncd ‘ on ay ' who are qualified to vote in general j Every ice delivery wagon, 5very Ralph Shepperd, 54, Macon night elections has dropped 65,000 since ; bakery delivery truck and every ve- watchinan, died suddenly Tuesday af- 1925, H. A. Hixon, assistant state , hide from which retail sales of any ter drinking a mixture of ginger ale treasurer in commenting on meas- : kind are made would be taxed under and soda. ures introduced in the legislature to the provisions of the chain store tax „ , , , . ,- modify poll tax requirements. 1 bill now pending in the state senate,! / Some years after he had erected a ’ . having been passed by the house, ac-1 Americus, March 4. R. S. Broad- cemetery stone bearing his name, K. I Judge J S. foster, 62, prominent, e „ r ,\\ r . K to Representative William B. I hurst Americus broker, Monday re- B. Sanders, erf Bowman, Ga., died . Jackson barrister and cler.c of Butts | Hartsfield, of the Fulton delegation. 1 oeived ar order for 2 100 pounds of there last week. Superior court since 1911, lied Mon- cei\ed an oroer ior z.iuu poumm ui Plans are being mad- to open Mil-! , in an Atlanta hospital. I Robert O. Pitts, president of the , f He had been in declining health for Commercial Bank, of Cedartown, and A "A e . .. ,, a leader in business and financial cir- i Broadhurst said he had sold Rev. J. M. Foster, a superannuated minister of the South Georgia con ference. Plans are underway to com mence work on the building at once. MANY PECAN’S SOLD BY AMERICUS BROKER will receive ordered Monday. ledgoviile’s new $50,003 theater —. , . , , . , March 18, according to Frank D. ® lx weeks and was taken Sunday to uicawi “V“““ '.'l*? 1 <7‘1 more than 25 000 pounds of shelled Adams, manager. I Atlanta for treatment and an opera- cles in northwest Georgia, died feat- He wi" Ition. urday. Mr. Pitts, who was 75, had pecans mis »nicer, ne Charles Gleason, 20, a post office I | been in failing health for some time, a P ound * or the nuts employe, of Savannah, was injured | Mrs. Georgia Ann Stanley, 82, but bad continued at his post of duty fatally Sunday in an automobile ac- , pioneer settler of the Cartersville 1 un yi he was taken seriously ill two rident near that city. I section, died Monday at the .home of wee k 8 ago. He was a native of Har- u .. her daughter, Mrs. Hardy Rhyne, in , ?' S ; J a , Ho ° f k8 I Y /■ ^Cartersville. One of its first mem-1 " S C0U " ty former resident of Leslie, Ga., died ;b \[ rSi g tan | ey waa an active I Contributions for the purpose of at Perry Sunday at the home of her wo & er in the Ca rtersville Baptist 1 making a bronze bust of Gov. Eu- c hunch. MRS. HERBERT MILLER, HEAD OF CUSSETA SCHOOLS, DIES AFTER ONE WEEK’S ILLNESS Columbus, Ga., Maich 6.—Mrs. , . . . - , . - — Cardelle Castleberry Miller, wife of °* su e . contained in the deed to LEGAL SALE UNDER POWER OF SALE GEORGIA—Taylor County: Under and by virtue of the p 0Wet Herbert Miller and prominent Cusse- t . u !' e ^>1 MKUted by Mrs. Mamie . . Anisims f-.n Mrs R M u;„*_ _ ta woman, died Monday morning: at the Columbus city hospital after an illness of one week. Mrs. Miller was born April 10, Adams to Mrs. B. H. Watson on th. first day of February, 1929, and re corded in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court, said state TWO BROTHERS DIE (. H AT TA N < K)G A WOMAN KILLED IN ACCIDENT ON AMERICUS ROAD I daughter, Mrs. J. M Golden. Funeral services were held Mon day for C. A. Love, 81, one of Hawk- i.—Mrs. Mrs. Jas. A. Browning, 20, wife of the youth held in an attempted gene Talmadge as a testimonial from ] Amcicus, Ga., March , ■ to the Margaret Royce Brown, 27, of Chat- I tanooga, was killed instantly and iitr | inn vi lie’s best known citizns who died j boldtup at BucUbea< | last week has Friday at his home after a short wr ;tten a confession stating she is Uliess. | the “blond” sought in the Wall Dry ^ Ijeroy Chastain, 28, was indicted by I Cleaning Co., and Cox-Carlton Hotel | nouncemer.t. a Graily county grand jury Tuesday j robberies in Atlanta early last De- j in connection with the $5,419 holdup | cember. Contrary to early reports, the re cent cold snap ini South Georgia did little harm to winter crops in the Moultrie area, it was reported Tues- I day Some tobacco plants which were Georgia people for his services state are being taken up in a state wide movement, it is said. There is a 1 unhand, limit of $1 on contributions, no more than that being accepted from any one person, according to the an- and robbery of the Cairo Banking company last Dec. 12. A pecan shelling plant, Macon’s newest industry, has begun operations here, employing twenty-six girls. It is planned eventually to give em ployment to many more. Leland Harvey and Aubrey Smith notorious bandits recently pardoned by Gov. Talmadge, were identified in two more robberies in a line-up staged Monday at the Fulton Tower. Amid spirited bidding which closed after nearly two hours with $2,280,(100 as the high offer, Hurt Building largest office structure in the south, tentatively was sold at auction in front of the Fulton County Court house Tuesday afternoon. The high bidder was Charles Hlcmlb, Atlanta Raloh Brown, sustain or injuries Tuesday when their i-,r struck a fruit truck near here. ; overturned and was demolished. Ihe . „;iuple were en route to Florida. Mrs. Brown’s neck was broken TWO DIE IN CRASH AT HAWK1NSV1LLE not well advanced were destroyed, it is reported, but crops in the main , ^TtoV, "representing “tbe^Hurt were unhurt. The commissioners of roads ana revenue of Baldwin county at their Hawkinsville, Ga., March 2.—Two men, tentatively identified as G W. Ritzier ar.d Arthur Mauk, of Spring- field, Ohio, were killed instantly when the automobile in which they were riding crashed into a bridge on Mrs. Ralph Brown, of Chattanooga ' the outskirts of the city Saturday v.-as instantly killed Tuesday when a morning. Identification was establish I terests. next regular meeting are expected to Fopd v _ 8 driven by her husband col- ed by papers in their pockets ai>pr° ve plans to enlarge and remod- jj^ed head-on with an orange truck the bodies had been brought el the county court house and also a tSumter> between orange Americus and after to a , . , , , ... . . , . , ,. . . .. cl I.OUI11LCI , UCtneCIl AlUcIlCUS CtllU The state highway board Monday consider plans to build a new jail, Albanyt Tbe Browns were traveling announced cuds on a million dollars both buildings to be located at Mil- sou th eT1 route to Bainbridge to visit worth of highway work, including 10 ledgeville. 'vl r. Brown’s parents. iMr. Brown miles of paving in Bulloch and Jenk ins counties, will be received March 8th. J B. Brazier, 86-year-old Confed erate veteran and one of the oldest Hawkinsville funeral home. i FORMER ASSOCIATE JUSTICE I U. S. SUPREME COURT J 0. W. HOLMES PASSES Washington, March 6.—Oliver Wen F. R. Lampkin, of Columbus presi- 1 V /as P ain f u Uy b ut not seriously in dent of the Georgia State Teachers’ j J ure< * 1S thought. and Educational Associationl, an or- An airp]ane rkle over Macon Sun - ganization representing 5,000 teach- ' day alm , ost cost the , ife of D s . I dell Holmes died early today ...... era m •»:gro schools in Georgia said Baldwin, 26, of Marshallville, it was 1 Caused by bronchial pneumonia, citizens of Stewart county, died at his today the association would hold its i reported bv attaches at the Macon it ended a public service which which near Lumpkin at noon Mon- annual meeting in Macon April I 1 , I hoanital. where he ml.mit.neH fnr began wi 1889, being the daughter of the late ^' oarlt .' in * io °^ ^ Folio 53-54, the Homer and George Patrick Castel- “^'Rned wiU sell at p u blic ^ berry, pioneer Chattahoochee county e coart house door in said Taylor citizens. Her family had been long vty ’ * l . nn « legal hours 0 f assoriated with the politisal, sorial :/ le b . rs ^ Tuesday in April, and business interests of the rom- , ’’ 10 the hiKnest and best bidder munity, her grandfather, Judge J. B. ° r , ‘•“"t th ,® ™ lowing described Castleberry having served as ordi- j P , • v , .A^ °t lots Nos. 3. nary of Chattahoochee county for 32 . ’ ’’ a l d 'P J oc . a in the years. (,wn Batler sa “l state and com,. ty, with all improvements thereon and bounded as follows: On the h tH®* north by Central of Georgia WITHIN AN HOUR way; on West by State Sway No' 13; east by negro Masonic Lodge l'ot : Sparks, Ga., Feb. 28.—Two broth- south by lots of S E. Brown and R ers, James and Luther McCraine, j S. West. prominent residents of Cook county | For the purpose of paying a eer- died Thursday within a few minutes j tain promissory note being dated the of each other. I 1st day of February, 1929, ai d pay. James, 40, serving the third term able on the first day of February of bis political career as tax receiv-1 1930, and made and executed by the er for the county, died at his home j sa > ( i Mrs. Mamie Adams, payable shortly before noon following a brief ! Mrs. B. H. Watson, said note being illness and a few minutes later, his l’ or the sum of Two Thousand brother was found dead near his rur- Hundred a r.. d Fifty Dollars al residence. Luther was 55 and do.c- (?2,260.00) as principal with inter iors said his death resulted from na- est from maturity at 8 per cent per tural causes. annum, the total amount due on said note on the day of sale being Twe Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars, as principal and Five Hun dred and Thirty Dollars ($530.00) ..... , ... ~ ’ , , _ | as interest, together with the costs Mil ledgeville, Ga., March L—Con-1 0 f this proceedings as provided in victed ol the slaying of Jim Black- sa id deed. A deed will be made lo stone, a Thomson, Ga., merchant, , the purchaser by the undersigned, as two negroes were electrocuted at the authorized in the said deed state prison Friday. This March 5th, 1935 Rome Lawrence, superintendent of — — — the state prison, said both the men, John Wright and Rack Reese, denied just before they went to the chair that they had killed Stone. Mr Stone was found on a street in Thom son on the evening of Nov. 9, 1934. He had been struck on the head. The negroes were convicted in McDuffie county last December two McDuffie men ARE ELECTROCUTED residnece near Lumpkin day. He had been ill weieks, for several! 12 and 13, hospital, where he was admitted for began with years of soldering in the treatment When the pilot of the civ il war and included 29 years spent | plane landed at Miller Field he ob- as associate justice of the supreme The oldest man among 44,-08 per-1 daughter of Mr._and'^nd that” his nose was bleeding!"'He | ford, he was known as sons receiving annuities from the . page, died at the home of ,.er pa.encs liberal." Civil Service Retirement Fund is a near Hahira early Saturday moimn;' ^« n “t K now “° w h ‘ on ^ t “f > <)Une ' ' former slave. He iS Mark Thrash, rf; of burns received Friday, ihe child’s j man had been in that condition. Chickamauga, Ga., and he lists age as 114 years. Evelyn Coppage, {oU Leo^GVm ! served* tiiat^aldwin 1 ' was "unconscious \ ctu rt, where by almost universal ac . ^ I ] i • i* ■»». r»f.rci no wnC' Im/VWn ne- tlio <4 o»»»c.a' the “great his ’ cit thing is said to have became iguit 1 ed from a fire in the yard where soani/~> ul, l uc ‘‘ u . sy l w ..„ * ‘ Company since inception of the pres b ent company in 1919 have amounted to $75,000,000, besides special stock Cash dividends paid by Coca Cola , MRS. C. W. SAUNDERS PASSES AT ENGLISHV1LLE HOME Only a few more days remain for the filing of 1934 federal income taxi Automobile license tag sales ..... . ... , ... returns, Collector of Internal Reve- ! year are almost 2,000 under the num- dividends, it was reported Monday by nue Page warned Saturday. March her disposed of up to March 1 in 1935 Ba ^ ood ^ a ^ e ’ c-.'.'ff 'll 15 is the last day for filing returns motor Collector Page said. Americus, Ga., March 5.—Funeral services were held Monday at Red ; r . ... . Hill Baptist Church, Englishville i ehicle department records Johnson, Lane, Space & Company in i commun jt y ncar Andersonville, for i Mrs. C. W. Saunders, 43, She is sur- The federal ei/ergency relief ad- on ly 287,610 were checked off’ nniistration in Washington Tuesday same period this year. .1 _ _ r (Miior, IOR J mn announced a grant of $1035,125 to Georgia for general relief for the first half of March and tansient re lie for the full month. Miss Kate Edwards, distinguished show. A total of 311,193 were sold in Atlanta, stock and bond dealers, ... the first three months of 1934, while an ir> teresting review following an ‘ J , yived Mrs. S. B. Duke, of Englishville ’ ... - nouncement that Coca-Cola will pay. six children Flora Saunders, Eloise a quarterly dividend of $2 a share: Saunders, Aleen Saunders, Lamar April 1. 1 - - Believed to have been dead at lea^t 1 , 48 hours, a man registered as R. D. I . - More than 60,000 persons ranging SCaumlers, Frank Saunders and Don ald Saunders; one brother, J A. -jo miuis, U man regisiereu as f-'* ’ from "the Dreschool” chiffl 'to the adult” 1 Cuke, and two sisters, Mrs. G. W. McRae, of Atlanta and Jacksonville, irom tne prescnooi cima to tne aauit, m< »t™don ami Miss Lilia nuke all was fou. d Monday in his room at an have been enrolled in the last nine ’ ^ ‘ S J ’ Atlanta hotel, a revolver in his left months in the educational classes of \ 01 ^igus-vme. Georgia artist, has been entertained band and a bu i let wound ; n tbe j e ft the Georgia Federal Emergency Re al a series of informal affairs while temple. Detectives investigated and hef Administration Miss Gay B, the guest of Col. and Mrs. Chaffin at reported the death a suicide. Shepperson, state administrator, an- Fort Benning friends here of Miss , ! nounced Saturday. These classes are Edwards have learned. ! During last December Lowndes conducted in every .county in the state county farmers sold to the govern- for relief families and others who are Salvage work was under way Sat- men t 6,564 No. 10 cans of Lowndes . in need of further general education- nrday at the Gould Building, Atlanta, county' syrup of the vintage ..f 1934. al opportunities, following a fire shortly after mid- Government checks are now being I. . night Friday which gutted the upper distributed among the farmers in pay- 1 Cities of Georgia, says J. Marvin two floors. Damage to the building nient for the syTup, the total amount Starr, superintendent of schools at was estimated at $25,000. j coming to countv being $3,150.72. Newnan, would do well to take par- 1 ■ ticular interest in education of chil- Robert F. Hargroves, convicted slayer of James Zittrouer in what has come to be known as the “Go- phei Hole” murder near Springfield, Ga., has been sertenced to die in the electric chair on March 15. $308,862 SENT OUT TO CONFEDERATE VETS AND STATE SCHOOLS A total of $308,862 went out from the state Saturday to the common schools and Confederate veterans and their widows in 1 Georgia according to a news dispatch from Atlanta. The schools got $226,632 from the equalization fund 1 for the month of n T n . , .- ;Jar.uary. The pensioners drew $82,- Dr. J. M. Rogers, 39 for 33 years dren in country districts. Speaking , gw from the cigar and cigarette tax one of Barnesville s leading phy- at a meeting of the Kiwarus club at fnr . Tsmnnrv sicians, died at his home at Barnes- Columbus last week, Starr said if ville early Thursday night, follow- such children did not grow up to be ing an illness of only three days Dr. come good citizens, the- cities are Rogers was stricken with severe sore likely to suffer. Of Georgia’s 900,000 Miss Sylvia Raskin, of Savannah,! tbroat Tuesday, and Thursday it de- children of school age, 600,000 are in rho came to Athens for the week- j vel °P«» lnto bronchial pneumonia, .the country, he said. end dances at the University of Geor gia, was killed Sunday in the crash of an airplane piloted by Ben T. Epps, pioneer Georgia aviator vine on July 4. Mr. McLarty r Ur L w i „° r( !j u entitled to i ^ ocal committee for arrange- sedan, said to have been driven tor W. W Larsen, Jr ^ entitled to for the cornerst one celebra- Miss Elizabeth Scheifer, of Sar; a;,“.i£; g rh. a».“«» 1 «-• i ■-*. «• *• *■» •* ident nor a tax payer of that city. Wedding presents and other jewelry , l ’ ay s J 0 fi,vc ex ^i" a j 0, bs, because it ce i v ing minor injuries. TYV i e onh i uolps business. Merchants, co-operat- valued a a to a o i ‘ • I ing with the National Re-employment The Pulaski Chamber of Com- B. H McLarty, editor of the Ly- | Anthony Durden, 65-year-old rner- ons Progress, announces arrange- chant of Vidalia, and his wife were merits were being made to lay the instantly killed in an automobile ac- corner-stone of the new federal-fi- cident of U. S. Highway No. 1, IS moved prison building near Reids- miles north of Lyon® Sunday niorn- ville on July 4. Mr. McLarty is head ing when their car collided with a sedan, said to have been driven by wac Scheifer, . mother of the driver, was seriously Macon merchants said Tuesday it injured in the crash, Miss Scheifer re- were stolen from the home of Grier Mar visit -day L. | Service, gave jobs Monday to scores i merce is now actively engaged in not a number of projects which if corn- some pleted will mean much in the way of em- advancement for the city oi Hawk- Deason, former advertising j ployed regularly j insville and Pulaski county. One im- I art in of Atlanta during thu family’s I bervice - Monday to sco sit to Florida, it was learned Satur-, ““a P Ta ™ ey „ when ,h, Martins burned h.n.=, | "“K Stftl Stone axe weighing about three portant project will be the plans and efforts to get a nev^. postoffice build ing for the city. Local postoffice manager of the Waycross Journal Fieiu..,. alter an absence of about , , . ... eight years. Jack Williams, Jr„ be- : Ttw a wTli!r th , an - - comes associateo with the advertis- . ® , ‘ v , t a °”p V , ll L sl<ie a | receipts are rapidly increasing and ing department of the Journal-Herald I f f he R M p CO j Telegraph it is sajd tbat tbe ar , nU a 1 receipts * „ ,, office last week by BR. Andrews, of, are now more than the amount re- The Central of Georgia Magazine , Haddock, who said his Jones county Dllired for a new buildine- for March has an attractive cover of farm fields had yielded many relics ] qu,rM CW Duimin S- Lookout Mountain annd Chattanooga , of this tjpe, behved to have originat- | .Mrs. A. W. McMahon, correspond- where the northern terminus of the Central is located. There is also an interesting story about the termi nals. ed with the Indians. | ing secretary-treasurer of the Geor- Joel Gortatowsky, of DeSoto, in fj a . Woman’s Missionary Sumter county is said to have had a bmon, and chairman of the program flo^k of turkons hptwApn *1 ' committee for t-ho tinnu<i 1 coiiAcntion, • TT , ... , , , t Ke . (cr ss between a which meete at . Be ssie Tift adlege I Hlne , s y ille sometime during tbe night Llldll . l HA L to to < j I Kv fnnAVPc wVio mada fVuvir ntrf ra rirn for January. The equalization fund is financed by a 1-cent tax on kerosene ar.d one- sixth of the state gasoline tax. GEORGE MOODY, VETERAN NEWSPAPER REPORTER, DIES SUDDENLY AT HAPEVILLE Atlanta, March 6.—Death wrote “Copy All in” early Tuesday after noon for Mr. Geo. O. Moody, for 16 years a reporter on the staff of The Atlanta Journal. He passed away at his home in Hapeville. The veteran newspaper man had been seriously ill of a heart ailment for two months. He was injured' in an automobile accident in Hapeville about a year ago, the car in which he was riding being struck and over turned by another machine. Injuries and shock from this accident are be lieved to have brought on his fatal illness. Mr. Moody was 55 years old, and had a long and colorful career as a newspaper man both in Atlanta and in Providence, R. I. TAX EXEMPTION PLAN DEFEATED IN LEGISLATURE Atlanta, March 5.—Tax exemp tion for Georgia home owners was defeated in the senate here today along with a substitute which would have removed all property taxes and opened the state tax system t.o complete reorganization. The home exemption bill, a con stitutional amendment offered by tion on homes up to $5,000 in value, ar.d its supporters in the senate served notice of reconsideration. FORT GAINES MAYOR GFTS APPOINTMENT W. F. GRAY, Administrator, Mrs. B. H. Watson, Deceased. LEGAL SALE BURGLARS AGAIN RAID BANK AT HINESVILLE AND FLEE WITH CASH Hinesville, Ga., March 5.—An un determined amount of money, be- _ lieved not to exceed a few hundred committee for the annual convention, i dollars, was stolen from the Bark of -be A shipment of Georgia pine will turkey anda clucken) for more than, “££££ • made as soon as possible from a year. He probably has had more ■££££ ,& nZ£ of the conv^nttan 'into the building through a rear win- sp«a3^ms, Siief among whom will be dow. able the English firm to test the wood for use in the manufacture of newsprint. Trial of Arthur M. Cochran for the Maying of D. J. Yarborough, adeputy sheriff, has been set for Tuesday, March 19, in Superior Court, it was ready to eat when two months old, ing secretary -treasurer, Woman’s I SOCOTW * within the past year. Both and the meat is delicious. I Missionary Union of the Southern I we ^ accomplished by similar means Baptist Convention, I and authorities believe the two rob- T. J. Howell, 72, died at Blakely | beries were .committed by the same Friday at the home of his son, Sher-1 School teachers, who in days gone : party or parties, iff S. W. Howell, following an illness by emphasized the three R’s and the — L ~ — ? ___ __ j __ since Christmas Day when he suffer- hickory switch, will talk “New ' announced’ Tuesday by W. L. Owen, j e,i a stroke of paralysis. For 18 Deal” educational methods at Macon ! special investigator of the Atlanta years, from 1910 thru 1928, Mr. April 11, 12 and 13, when hundreds! Police Department. e Howell served as sheriff of Early of educators gather there for the . county and was succeeded by his son Georgia Education Association’s an- Byron Phillips and Mitchell W:ili-|when he did not offer for re-election, nual convention. The keynote of the amson, long term .convicts who es-; He had served as a member of the convention, says Miss Allie Mann, of caped from the Pierce county chain state DpTOx . ratic comm ittee from | Atlanta, president of the G. E. A„ gang near Blackshear abou: two ' . w ill be “a discussion of the new weeks ago, both were back in stripes , tlme to U1 *' e aad was a P ast cbalr ' mands of education in view of chang- Saturday, their privileges os trusties . man of the Democratic executive \ conditions, greater leisure, and so having been removed. 'committee of Early county. I forth. FEED YOUR CHICKS PURINA STARTENA/ CASH GROCERY CO. BUTLER, GEORGIA Atlanta, Feb. 28.—The appoint ment of Zach Arnold, mayor of Ft Gaires, Ga., and chairman of the Georgia Mayors’ Association legisla tive committee, as a full-time field representative of the association was announced Thursday by Mayor Key, president. Arrold accepted the post after con ferring with Mayor Key and C. W. Ham, field consultant of the Ameri can Municipal Association. He will devote his entire time to solidifying the organization of mu nicipalities in this state and provid ing for co-operative solution of their problems. I. H. MOBLEY, MAYOR OF HAMILTON, DIES SUDDENLY FROM A HEART DISEASE Hamilton, Ga., March 4.—Mayor J. H Mobley, 79, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Maude Blanken ship, early Monday, of a heart ail ment. While he was in feeble health the end came suddenly and unex pectedly. Mr. Mobley was mayor of Hamil ton at the time of his death and for several years he was .county com missioner of Harris county and dur ing his middle age he was represen tative of Harris county in the gen eral assembly. Mr. Mobley is survived by one sis ter, and several sons and daughters. He had beer, a steward and trus tee of the Methodist church for a number of years. He was a member of the board of directors of the Geor gia Experiment Station at Griffin, until his declining years rendered him unable to attend that duty. He was a Royal Arch Mason GEORGIA—Taylor County: Because of default in the payment of a loan secured by a deed to secure debt executed by Mrs. Nina Hill to the undersingr.ed, The F’ederal Land Bank of Columbia, dated the 19th day of March, 1920, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of lay lor County, Georgia, in Book “O” Page 387, the undersignod has declared the full amount of the loan, with i nterest, and advances made by the undersigned, due and payable, and will, on the 2nd day of April, 1936, acting under the power of sale contained in said deed, during the legal hours of sale, at the Court House in said County, sell at Speaker E. D. Rivrs of the house, fu "H on }° highest bidder for cash was beaten by a 28 to 16 vote. It i l ands described in said deed, to- provides for ad valorem tax emep- Wlt ' All that certain {need, parcel or tract of land containing One Hun dred Fifty-five (155) acres, more or less, situate, lying and being on the Butler and Oglethorpe Road, about six and a half miles south of the town of Butler in the Thirteenth Land District of Taylor County, Georgia, as will appear by a nlat thereof made by E. G. W. Williams. C. S., Taylor County, Georgia, of date of December 17, 1919, and be ing bounded on the north by lands of J. C. Forehand, and J. M. What ley; East by lands of Mrs. Owen Barfield; South by J. T. Peacock and L. & L. D. Shira and West by J. C- Forehand. This being the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to the i said Mrs. Nina Hill by J. F. Hand by Warranty Deed dated November 15, 1910, and rcorded in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said county in Deed Book “J”, pages 285-6. The undersigned will execute a deed to the purchaser as authorized by the deed aforesaid. This 15th day of February, 1935. THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF COLUMBIA. C. B. MARSHALL, Attorney for The Federal Land Bank of Columbia. SHERIFFS SALE GEORGIA—Taylor County: Will be sold' before the court house door in Taylor county on the first Tuesday in April, 1935, being the second day of April, 1935, with in the legal hours of sale to the highest and best bidder for cash the following property, to-wit: Three hundred ar.d thirty acres of land, lots Numbers 145, 146, 176 am. 176 in the Second Land District of Taylor County, Georgia, and 1 known as the property of G. P. Parks, and more fully described as follows: Bounded on the south by Macon County line, and on east, west and north by others Levied upon ar.d to be sold as the property of B. H. Hambrick, agent for the P. G. Shepperd estate, to satisfy a tax execution for state and county taxes for the years 1930, 1931 1932, 1933 and 1934. Levy made and returned to me by C. C, Cooper, L This sixth day of March, 1935. R P. McGUFFIN, Sheriff. SHERIFFS SALE THIRD OFFICER OF BIBB COUNTY DIES AS RESULT OF RECENT CAR ACCIDENT Macon, Ga., March 4.—Earl T. Moseley, 46, Bibb county police of ficer, died at 7:30 a. m Sunday in a local hospital. He was the thirdcoun- ty peace officer to succumb to in juries 1 suffered near Haddock late on the night of Feb. 20. : For the past 11 days Mr. Moseley, with a fractured 1 pelvis and crushed r.bs, had waged an uphill fight against death. On two previous oc casions the officer had narrowly es capee! death in motorcycle accidents. Twice he had lain in the Macon hos pital and each time his predictions that he would recover came true. This time his prediction that he GEORGIA—Taylor County: Will be sold before the court house door in Taylor county on the first Tuesday in April, 1935, being the second day of April, 1935, with in the legal hours of sale to the highest and best bidder for cash the following property, to-wit: r . One lot of land No. 156 in the would “get out of her” bowed to Twelfth (12th) Land District of Tay- mternal complications and pneu- j lor County, Georgia, monia settling in his punctured I Said lqt of land levied upon and to lungs. ! be sold 1 as the property of I. "■ Two of Mr Moseley’s fellow wor- j Garrett to satisfy a fi fa issued from kers, Luther Stevens, deputy sheriff : the Superior Court of Taylor Count) and Arnold Long, county officer, also j Georgia in favor of Mrs. Jim Rogers, were killed in the crash near Had- | Said property pointed out by pl ain " (lock. Mr. Long died almost instant-1 tiff’s attorney, ly and Mr Stevens died at the hos- This March 4th. 1935. pital on the day following his ad- R P. MoGUFFIN, Sheriff, mission. Taylor County, Georgrt