Newspaper Page Text
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga„ Thursday, June 17, 1963
I Stock Yard I
I News I
I At our sale last Friday, hog prices were as =
follows: RI, $17.01; LI, $17.02; Hl, $16.00; No.
■ 2, $15.55; No. 3, $15.00; No. 4, $15.10; No. 5,
f $15.15; LR, $14.00; HR, $14.11; and males, SB.- ,
00.
Heavy cows sold up to $17.90, steers and
heifers up to $24.10 and heavy bulls up to
$20.40.
■ Station WBSG in Blackshear will broadcast
S hog prices Friday afternoon at 3:00 from the Ss?
5 Pierce County Stock Yard.
. We invite you to jell with us each Friday.
I Our good line of buyers assures you of the top
W dollar.
I WE APPRECIATE YOUR SELLING WITH
THE PIERCE COUNTY STOCK YARD.
I PIERCE COUNTY I
I STOCK YARD I
I H. F. Allen Jr. I
I 0. R. Peacock, Phone 449-5522 I
I OPERATORS AND MANAGERS I
I BLACKSHEAR. GEORGIA *
Stock Yard Phones 449-5305 and 449-5471
/ For Hauling, contact O. J. AMMONS,
Hoboken, Ga., phone GL 8-3122.
Just the people
Every thing else in the picture on the preceding page was made entirely or
partly of cellulose. And so are sausage casings, photo film, cellophane, tire
cord — and some 6,000 other familiar products. Cellulose is so useful that
man consumes enormous quantities of it. Rayonier alone can produce
nearly 2 billion pounds a year from its giant tree farms—and world demand
continues to grow! • Will the supply last? Don’t worry. We plant as well
as harvest trees, just as a fanner plants and harvests his crops. (In Florida
and Georgia during recent years, we planted well over 100,000,000 pine
seedlings!) So you — and your descendants — can continue to your heart’s
content to buy, sell, wash with, paint with, ride on, look at, look through
and smoke through products made of Rayonier cellulose.
LEGAL NOTICE
Georgia, Brantley County.
Because of defaults in the pay
ment of the indebtedness secur
ed by the Deed to Secure Debt
dated February 12, 1962, from
Marie G. Morgan, also known as
Mrs. L. W. Morgan, also known
as Carrie Marie Griffin Morgan,
to Mattie S. Ungar and Helen W.
Schemer, duly of public record
in said County, in Mortgage Book
48, page 549, to which instrument
and record reference is hereby
made for all purposes, said holder
and owner has declared all of
the indebtedness due and pay-
IN GEORGIA
BEER IS A NATURAL
Brewed slowly, by a centuries-old natural process, beer Is
Georgia’s traditional beverage of moderation —light,
sparkling, delicious.
And naturally, the Brewing Industry Is proud of the busi
ness it generates in Georgia among the people and indus
tries who serve as suppliers, such as pulpwood growers;
manufacturers of paper-board, cartons and containers;
producers of cans and glass bottles, and many others. In
Georgia, beer belongs—enjoy it
UNITED STATES BREWERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
GEORGIA DIVISION
RAYONI ER
able forthwith.
To enforce payment, the under
signed will sell at public auction
and outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash, before the court
house door in Brantley County,
Georgia, between the legal hours
for sale on the first Tuesday in
July next, the same being July 2,
1963, all the realty embraced in
said Security Deed, to-wit: (See
Schedule A hereto attached and
made a part hereof by reference.)
Said Deed to Secure Debt con
taining a covenant to pay in
addition to all other indebtedness
a reasonable sum as attorney fees
in the amount of fifteen percent
NATURAL RESOURCES CHEMISTRY
of the amount due, and notice
being given as provided by law
for the collection of said sum,
payment of said fee and expense
of making title also will be de
manded, all as provided by law.
Upon compliance with the bid
and terms of sale, a proper deed
of conveyance in fee simple will
be executed and delivered to the
purchaser by the undersigned, as
attorney in fact for the grantor
in said Security Deed.
This the Ist day of June, 1963.
Mattie S. Ungar and Helen
W. Schemer, As Attorneys in
Fact for Mrs. Marie G. Gra
ham, also known as Mrs. L.
W. Morgan, Also known as
Carrie Marie Griffin Morgan.
Exhibit A
Description
TRACT 1:
All of that tract or parcel of land
in the Second District of Brantley
County, Georgia, being one con
tiguous body of land containing
1753 acres, more or less, in the
aggregate, and consisting of all
of Land Lot No. 213 containing
490 acres, more or less; 462 acres,
more or less, in Land Lot No.
212, being all of said land lot ex
cept 25.1 acres in the western
central portion thereof owned by
G. W. Wainwright; 408 acres,
more or less, in Land Lot 172, and
being all of said Land Lot ex
cept 21.9 acres which fonnerly
belonged to H. J. Stewart, but
now belongs to Mrs. Marie G.
Morgan, and a tract of land own
ed by J. M. Herrin, both tracts
being in the northwestern corner
of said Lot 172, and 5.4 acres in
the eastern central portion of
said Lot owned by Little Buffalo
Baptist Church; 398 acres, more
or less, in Land Lot No. 173 and
being all of said Land Lot lying
northeast of Big Buffalo Creek.
Reference is hereby expressly
made to a plat of survey made
by J. J. Porter, Registered Sur
veyor No. 363, dated July 27,
1953, recorded in the Office of
the Clerk of the Superior Court
of Brantley County in Plat Book
2, page 101, for a complete and
particular description and for all
purposes. Said land is bounded
as follows: North by original
Land Lot lines and lands now, or
formerly owned by George Steed
ley and St. Mary’s Kraft and J.
♦
I ii
M. Herrin; East by original Lot
Lines and lands now, or formerly
owned by Timberlands and the
E. B. Wainwright Estate; South
by original lot lines and lands
now, or formerly owned by Lucy
Kaney, W. S. Wilds, O. Lewis, L.
Batten and Joe Herrin; West by
original lot lines and lands now
or formerly owned by E. Middle
ton, D. L. Lyons Estate, lands
formerly owned by H. J. Stewart,
now owned by Mrs. Marie G.
Morgan, grantor herein, and lands
of J. M. Herrin, now or formerly.
TRACT 2:
All that certain tract or parcel
of land situate, lying and being in
the Second Land District of
Brantley County, Georgia, and
being 21.3 acres, more or less, lo
cated on the west side of Land
Lot No. 172 and 63.5 acres, more
or less, located and being on the
east side of Land Lot No. 149,
being one contiguous tract con
taining 84.8 acres, more or less,
in the aggregate, and more par
ticularly described as follows:
BEGINNING at a point on the
Public Road to Nahunta, and on
the original west lot line of Land
Lot No. 172, which point is 581
feet southerly from the north-
Iwest corner of said Land Lot No.
172, and from said beginning
point running thence north 76 de
grees 30 minutes west for a dis
tance of 1096.3 feet to a stake
corner; thence running south 44
degrees 45 minutes west for a
distance of 307.9 feet to a stake;
running thence south 31 degrees
15 minutes west for a distance of
1029.2 feet to a twelve-inch light
wood pine tree corner; thence
running south 3 degrees 00 min
utes east, 936 feet, more or less,
to a stake; thence running south
76 degrees 30 minutes east for a
distance of 1296.0 feet, more or
less, to a stake on the original
lot line between Land Lots 149
and 172; thence northerly along
said original Land Lot line for a
distance of 224 feet to a stake;
thence south 76 degrees 30 min
utes east for a distance of 516 feet
to a stake and other lands of the
grantor herein; running thence
north 13 degrees 30 minutes east
for a distance of 1820 feet to a
stake; running thence north 76
1 degrees 30 minutes west for a
(distance of 516 feet, to the origi-
Rayonier Incorporated
Southeast operations at
Jesup and Glenville, Ga.;
Fernandina Beach and Yulee, Fl*
nal lot line between Land Lots
No. 172 and 149, the point of
beginning. As shown by plat of
record in the office of tht Clerk
of the Superior Court of Brant
ley County, Georgia, in Plat
Book 2, page 213, to which plat
reference is herein expressly
made for all purposes. Said land
is bounded as follows: North by
lands now or formerly owned by
J. M. Herrin and H. J. Stewart;
northwest by lands now or form
erly owned by H. J. Stewart;
southwest by lands now or form
erly owned by D. L. Lyons Estate;
south by lands now or formerly
owned by H. J. Stewart, and
other lands of the first party, Mrs.
Marie G. Morgan; east by lands
described in Tract 1 above be
longing to Mrs. Marie G. Morgan,
first party. 6-27
Exhibit A
Ga. Patrol Plans
All-out Safety
Campaign July 4
ATLANTA — “State troopers will
lay aside their warning tickets and
we won’t handle maniac drivers
with kid gloves during the upcom
ing Fourth of July holiday period.”
That stern warning came from
Col. H. Lowell Conner, director of
the Georgia Department of Public
Safety, in announcing plans for what
is expected to be the most intensi
fied traffic enforcement campaign
in the State Patrol’s 26-year history.
The prolonged July 4th holiday
period this year lasts four and a
fourth days, or 102 hours, officially
beginning at 6 p. m. Wednesday,
July 3, and ending at midnight Sun
day, July 7.
With holiday travel at a peak,
traffic conditions will be more haz
ardous and drivers will be exposed
to more possibilities of accidents,
.he safety director pointed out.
In fact, based on past traffic ex
perience, present trends and other
factors, Col. Conner predicts that at
least 19 persons will be killed and
266 others injured in 760 accidents
during the 102-hour period.
“We certainly don’t want that to
happen,” he declared. “And we’ll
be out there in full force working
around the clock in an effort to keep
it from happening. But when you
get right down to it, it’s up to the
individual drivers themselves. They
are the ones who cause accidents
and they are the ones who can pre
vent them. It’s no sporting game,
this business of driving.
“Therefore, we appeal to all mo
torists to obey all traffic laws at all
times. If they will do that, they can
avoid accidents. It’s just that sim
ple. And for those who won’t take
this advice, but persist in breaking
the traffic laws, let me make this
clear: They will receive no warn
ing tickets — they’ll be arrested on
the spot.”
Col. Conner’s “get tough” orders
will be carried out by 470 officers
and men of the department, includ
ing GBI agents. All available equip
ment, including hard-to-detect pa
trol cars in many different colors,
radar, and other speed-timing de
vises, will be pressed into service.
Unannounced roadblocks to check
the physical condition of vehicles
and drivers will be set up on major
highways and secondary roads.
In short, the State Patrol, coop
erating with local law enforcement
agencies throughout Georgia, will
be doing everything within its power
to prevent accidents from marring
this year’s Independence Day cele
bration.
Col. Conner, Lt. Col. R. H. Bur
son, deputy safety director, and Ma
jor E. B. Harbin, commanding offi
cer of the Uniform Division, will
direct the massive enforcement op
eration during which all troopers
are on active duty.
Last year only two persons were
killed and 54 others were injured in
115 accidents. But that was for a
period of only 30 hours. The last
102-hour July 4th holiday period was
in 1961. That year only eight per
sons were killed and 219 injured in
573 accidents. What will 1963’s re
cord be?
“We hope it will be far better,”
commented Col. Conner “We hope
our prediction will be knocked into
a cocked hat. We of the State Pa
trol will be doing our part. We earn
estly hope the driving public will be
doing its part.”
Careless Smokers,
Appliance Users
Cause Many Fires
If there are smokers in your hou
se, be sure all cigarettes are extin
guished before you go to bed, says
the National Board of Fire Under
writers.
Keep plenty of ashtrays in every
room. Be sure, too, that electrici
appliances, such as irons, are turn
ed off. Nearly one-fourth of all fires
are caused by matches and smok
ing, and another 20.4 per cent are
the result of misuse of electrical
equipment.
Dr. Della Hickox, D. C.
ANNOUNCES CHANGE IN
OFFICE HOURS
Beginning June 10, Waycross
office, 501 Carswell Ave., will be
open Mondays, Tuesdays, Thurs
days. Fridays only. Hours, 10:00
to 12:00; 2:00 to 5.00. By appoint
ment only.
Phone AT 3-7252