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LEGALS
FOR DIVORCE
The Superior Court for the
County of Butts, State of Geor
gia.
Civil Action, File Number 1051
JACQUELINE ELAINE SMITH
BRIDWELL, Plaintiff
vs.
STANLEY ROBERT
BRIDWELL, Defendant
COMPLAINT FOR DIVORCE
Complaint Filed May 21, 1970.
Date of Order for Service by
Publication May 19, 1970.
To: STANLEY ROBERT
BRIDWELL, Defendant Named
Above:
You are hereby commanded
and required to file with the
Clerk of said Court and serve
upon Ray M. Tucker, Plaintiff’s
•attorney, whose address is P. O.
Box 469, McDonough, Georgia
30253, an answer within sixty
(60) days of the date of the
order for service by publication.
Witness the Honorable Hugh
D. Sosebee, Judge of said court.
This the 21st day of May,
1970.
DAVID P. RIDGEWAY
Clerk Butts Superior Court
5/28/4tc.
NOTICE
We will not be responsible for
any debts made by William Dan
iel Blankenship.
JACK AND ANNIE JOLLY
5/28/4te.
FOR LEAVE TO SELL
Georgia, Butts County.
Mrs. Charlotte C. Barber,
guardian of George Caston Bar
ber and David Charles Barber,
minors, having applied for leave
to sell timber on real estate of
her wards, notice is hereby given
that said application will be heard
at the office of the Ordinary in
Jackson, Georgia, at 10:00
o’clock a. m. on the Bth day of
June, 1970.
This 11th day of May, 1970.
L. J. WASHINGTON
Ordinary, Butts County,
Georgia. 5/14/4tp.
NOTICE
We will not be responsible for
any debts made by anyone other
than ourselves as of May 11th,
1970.
GERALD & MARY DAVIS
5/14 / 4tc.
NOTICE OF INCORPORATION
Upon the application of Ennis
S. O’Neal, articles of incorpora
tion have been granted to “Ennis
S. O’Neal Mobile Homes, Inc.” by
Judge Hugh D. Sosebee, Judge
of the Superior Court of Butts
County, Georgia, in accordance
with the applicable provisions of
Georgia law.
The registered office of the
corporation is located at East
Second Street, Jackson, Georgia
and its registered agent at such
address in Ennis S. O’Neal.
The purpose of the corporation
is pecuniary gain and profit to
its shareholders. The general na
ture of the business for which the
corporation is organized is the
purchase, sale, installation, equip
ping and servicing' of mobile
homes and the operation of an
automobile dealership and used
car business, septic tank service,
and tractor dealerships.
The minimum capital with
which the corporation shall com
mence business is $500.00.
This the Bth day of May, 1970.
Ennis S. O’Neal Mobile Homes,
Inc.
By: Richard W. Watkins Jr.,
Attorney for Applicant.
Richard W. Watkins Jr.
169 Dempsey Avenue
Jackson, Georgia 30233
5/14/4tp
FOR ADMINISTRATION
Georgia, Butts County
To All Whom it May Concern:
SILAS L. AARON having in
proper form applied to me for
Permanent Letters of Administra
tion on the estate of JOHN
WILEY DIGBY, late of said
County, this is to cite all and
singular the creditors and next of
kin of John Wiley Digby to be
and appear at my office within
the time allowed by law, and show
cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not
be granted to Silas L. Aaron on
John Wiley Digby estate.
Witness my hand and official
■ signature, this 2nd day of May,
1970.
L. J. WASHINGTON,
Ordinary. 5/7/4tc.
NOTICE
Mrs. Delores Yvonne Burdiss
Stover Dawson
Vs.
Spencer Edward Dawson
Suit for Divorce in Superior
Court of Butts County,
May Term, 1970
Date Action Filed, May 26,
1970
Date of order for service by
publication on May 26, 1970
To Spencer Edward Dawson,
Defendant in said matter:
You are hereby commanded to
be and appear in the Superior
Court of Butts County, Georgia
to answer the complaint of the
plaintiff mentioned in the cap
tion hereof within sixty days
after the date of the order for
service by publication in this
case.
Witness the Honorable Hugh
D. Sosebee, Judge of the Superior
Court of Butts County, Georgia.
This 26th day of May, 1970.
DAVID P. RIDGEWAY
Clerk Superior Court of
Butts County, Georgia
5/28/4tc.
FOR YEAR’S SUPPORT
State of Georgia
Butts County Court of Ordin
ary.
April 20, 1970
The appraisers upon applica
tion of Mrs. Howard R. James
widow of said Howard R. James
for a twelve months’ support for
herself and No minor children,
having filed their return; all per
sons concerned hereby are cited
to show cause, if any they have,
at the next regular June term
of this Court, why said applica
tion should not be granted.
L. J. WASHINGTON
Ordinary Butts County.
5/7/4tp.
FOR DISMISSION
GUARDIANSHIP
Georgia, Butts County
Mrs. Don (Noli) Edwards,
Guardian of Mrs. Felix (Leonor)
Solana, has applied to me for a
discharge from her guardianship
of Mrs. Felix Leonor Solana:
This is therefore to notify all
persons concerned to file their
objections, if any they have, on
or before the first Monday in
June next, else she will be dis
charged from her guardianship as
applied for.
L. J. WASHINGTON,
Ordinary. 5/7/4tc.
CITATION
To Whom It May Concern:
Mrs. Woodrow Booth, as Guar
diun of Odell Whitted, of Butts
County, Georgia, has filed her
petition asking for leave to sell
the property of said ward in Mus
cogee County, Georgia for pur
poses of care, maintenance, and
support of said ward. All inter
ested persons are hereby cited
to show cause before the Court
of Ordinary on the first Monday
in June, 1970, at 10 a. in., why
said order should not be granted
as prayed.
This the 4th day of May, 1970.
L. J. WASHINGTON
Ordinary, Butts County,
Georgia 5/7/4tc.
READ THE WANT ADS
I YOUly K ndtpendrat I
\ l Hsu ran c( / AGENT /
few * *. Pmt. a#
For Your Insurance Needs
Call 775-3129
• FIRE * AUTOMOBILE
* LIABILITY
Carmichael Insurance Agency
JACKSON. GEORGIA
$339,000 Spent
For Cigarettes
In The County
(Special to the Progress-Argus)
NEW YORK, Apr. 27 —What
has been the effect of the anti
smoking campaign on cigarette
smoking in Butts County? How
much are local people smoking
these days compared with those
in other areas?
Judging from the latest region
al figures on cigarette sales, a
growing number of local residents
have cut down on their consump
tion. Many have given up the
habit completely.
Organizations and individuals
who are active in the crusade
against smoking believe that this
decline, now in its third year
in most sections of the country,
is the real thing.
This is seen in nationwide sur
veys made by the Department of
Agriculture, the Tobacco Tax
Council and others on the rate
of consumption in the past year.
In Butts County, according to
a breakdown of these figures, an
estimated 988,000 packs of cig
arettes were smoked in the year.
Related to the local population
over age 18, this was equivalent
to 174 packs per person.
In some parts of the country,
the rate of consumption was con
siderably greater than this and,
in other areas, smaller.
The national average, among
persons over 18, was 207 packs.
In the South Atlantic States it
was 197 packs.
According to a recent estimate
by the National Center for Health
Statistics, about 1,400,000 Amer
icans gave up cigarette smoking
in a period of one year.
It feels, as a result that the
situation is quite different than
it was in 1964, when cigarette
sales dropped for the first time
in many years following the sur
geon-general’s report linking
smoking with lung cancer and
heart disease.
That drop was short-lived,
however. Within a few months
people were puffing away at
their usual rate and sales were
back to normal.
More recently, the public has
been taking to heart the warn
ings from health officials and has
been making a serious effort to
cut down on its consumption.
As to the cost of smoking,
approximately $9.7 billion was
spent for cigarettes in fhe United
States in the year.
Butts County’s share of the
bill was $339,000, or about S6O
per smoker.
PERSONAL
Mrs. Lila McLendon is visiting
Captain and Mrs. John T. Collins
and family in El Paso, Texas.
OLD INDUSTRY
Georgia is now producing ap
proximately 85 per cent of the
U. S. Supply of gum naval
stores. Foresters with the Univer
sity of Georgia Cooperative Ex
tension Service report the tur
pentine and rosin industry is one
of the world’s oldest.
THE JACKSON PROGRESS AFGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
Progress-Argus
Honor Roll
New and Renewal Subscriptions
Of The Past Few Days
Mrs. John R. Caldwell, Hamp
ton
J. M. Strawn, Jackson
J. Bailey Jones, Jackson
SP/4 Mark D. Ingram, APSF
96491
Mrs. J. T. Strickland, Jackson
Mrs. Hoke East, Jackson
Mrs. A. M. Cochran, Jackson
Fred Raney, Jackson
Freddie Dodson, Jackson
Alton P. Long, Jackson
Mrs. Ruby G. Long, Jackson
W. L. Corley, Jackson
W. O. Ball, Jackson
Arthur A. Cheves, Jackson
Bertha Mae Stewart, Jackson
Chaplain E. E. Galloway, Webb
AF Base, Tex.
Wilbur Thaxton, Jackson
J. F. Wilkerson, Jackson
Charles L. Cochran, Griffin
W. S. Lynch, Sulphus Springs,
Texas
Mrs. H. D. Smith, Jackson
L. H. Duke, Jackson
James F. Taylor, Richardson,
Texas
Mrs. M. O. McCord, Sr., Jack
son
E. P. Colwell Jr., Jackson
Frank Fountain, Jackson
Mrs. Martha Thurston, Jackson
Mrs. Katherine Williamson,
Griffin
Mrs. A. G. Potts, Jackson
Ollie Jean Barnes, Jackson
SSG Ennis Hardy, APO N. Y.
Mrs. Marvin E. McLeod, Jack
son
John C. Cawthon, Forest Park
R. R. Powell, Montieello
Thomas Beatty, Savannah
Mrs. Edith Britton, Flovilla
Mrs. Willie McLean, Atlanta
Mrs. H. W. McElheney, Jack
son
Mrs. , Henry Murfee, Tampa,
Fla.
Mrs. Van D. Folds, Eatonton
Mrs. W. F. Duke, Cocoa, Fla.
Mrs. H. O. Smith, Jackson
S. L. Letson, Jackson
Mrs. Len Torbet, Atlanta
Mrs. Mildred Daley, Jackson
S. A. Elliott, Flovilla
Mrs. Evelyn T. Page, East
Point
Frances Goodrum, Jackson
F. L. Maddox, Jackson
Mrs. Sammy Webb, Jackson
Silas Aaron, Montieello
Grover Kitchens, Jackson
C. A. Turner, Jackson
Lanier Burford, Covington
WWemojlm
W are made of this ■
V _____ V
fill Here's hoping this will p
be just one of many |f§
If! pleasant and happy jiff
111 mm memories to
come.
THE KYM CO.
Causes Of Fatal
Traffic Wrecks
Cited By Patrol
ATLANTA, (GPS) Direct
causes of fatal traffic accidents
in Georgia so far this year are
listed as (1) cars that ran off
the road; (2) head-on collisions,
and (3) lost control of cars.
These three causes accounted
for well over half of Georgia’s
traffic death toll during the first
four months, according to a State
Patrol report released by Col. R.
H. Burson, director of the Geor
gia Department of Public Safety.
Of the 532 traffic fatalities re
ported in the four-month period,
“ran off road” accounted for
118 deaths, “head-on collisions”
for 112, and “lost control” for
73—a total of 303 lives lost.
“These violent smash-ups are
fiendish and unwarranted,” de
clared Col. Burson. “They oc
cur because the driver operates
the car with reckless extrav
agance with no regard for his
safety or the safety of others,
many of whom are innocent vic
tims of these wanton acts.
“Unfortunately, this tragic sit
uation will continue unless driv
ers put common sense in their
driving. If only they would obey
our traffic laws and drive care
fully and sensibly at all times
most of these tragedies could be
averted. It is squarely up to the
individual driver.”
More than half of the people
who were killed in these traffic
mishaps were 39 years of age or
younger—a total of 312.
Of these, 251 were in the 16-39
age group. The highest of all was
age 21 which recorded 21 deaths.
Second highest was age 19 which
recorded 19 fatalities, while ages
20 and 23 tied for third places
with 17 deaths each. Close be
hind were age 17 with 16 deaths,
age 22 with 15, and age 16 with
14 fatalities, the report showed.
Warren Furlow, Winter Haven,
Fla.
Mrs. Hueston Morgan, McDon
ough
A. G. Cook, Jackson
Buy l).S.Savings Bonds
t REGULARLY
Ask where you WOfltK
Ask where you BANK
' Safe L. v.*fv . ' > .
• ' :
life K X M
.gw
. i ■ 1,. ■‘4^'
* - W Milk-
ESSAY WINNERS —Essay winners of Jackson High School
in the recently sponsored Central Georgia Electric Membership
Corporation essay writing contest, are pictured above. They are
front row, seated, left to right, Louette Vaughn, first place winner'
Vicki Washington, third place winner; Ellen Pinckney, second place
winner. Standing are Paul Stockhammer and Mrs. Nancy Houghtal
ing, English teacTiers.
i ,
IK Be proud!
1 earned it!
Etheridge-Smith Company
It’s bound to be one
of excellence.
Class of 1970
ADAMS-BRISCOE SEED CO.
THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1 970