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NEW STORE
Mr John Lindsey Carswell has
a nice stock of Fancy Groceries
and Cold Drinks in the Irwinton
Bank building, and invites you
to visit the new store.
THE BULLETIN
Ofifcial Organ of Wilkinson
County.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Lamar and Mary Tigner. Editors
Subscription $1.50 per year,
paid in advance.
Entered as second clars mail
matter at the postoffice at Ir
winton, Ga., under the let of
contrrese of March 8. IR/9.
GEORGIA —Wilkinson County.
Under and by virtue of a power
contained in a deed to secure debt,
executed by C. L Bentley to M G.
Smith, dated Feb 15th, 1932, and
recorded in Clerks office of the sune
rior court of Wilkinson county in
Book 47, page 285. the undersigned
executors of the estate ot grantee, (the
said grantee haying died testate since
the making of said deed, and the un
dersigned having been appointed as
executors and having qualified as
such), will by virtue of the power
contained in said deed and by virtue
of the power of their office as exneu
tors of testate, sell at public sale be
fore the court house door of said coun
ty, between the legal hours of sale to
the highest bidder for cash on the
24th day of November, 1234, the
following described tract of land, to
wit:
All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing, being and situate in the fourth
land district of Wilkinson county,
Georgia, contaiuing (62) sixty two
acres, more or less, known as the S.
E. Carter old home place, and being
the same land formerly owned by M,
I. Youngblood, and on the 15th day
of February. 1932, deeded to C. L.
Bentley by M. G. Smith, and bound
ed as follows: North by lands N. H.
Whittaker; East by lands of W. W-
Bentley, and Mrs Abbie Ussery ;South
and West by lands of Mrs Abbie Us
sery.
Said sale will be made for the pur
pose of paying four promisory notes,
dated February 15th. 1932. the first
one maturing the 15th day of October
1932, and each subsequent note due
one, two, three and four years from
date respectively, for SIOO each and
drawing interest from date at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum. Said deed
contains a provision that should mak
er default in the payment of any note
the entire debt should automatically
become due. Debtor has defaulted
in the payment of all of said notes,
and the undersigned have declared
all of said notes due under said pro
vision. The proceeds of said sale
will be used in the payment of said
notes, aud the remainder, if any, will
be paid over to maker.
A deed conveying a fee simple
title to said lands will be made to the
purchaser as provided in said security
deed.
This the 22nd day of October 1934.
R D. Smith,
Mrs M, G Smith,
As Executors of M- G. Smith.
* Deceased.
By Eli B. Hubbard.
ROOFING
Os all kinds; Metal, Composition
or Shingles—House Paints- Can
put them on for you. Let me
show you samples for your next
house improving job and wall
papering. Reliable material.
E. L. ANDERSON
Irwinton.
PTA Meetings: Officers
PTA meetings are held twice a
month, 2nd Thursday, 3.30 pm , and
last Wednesday, 8 00 pm.
The officers for the year are: Mrs
C. J. Grinstead, pres., Mrs J. M.
Hall, vice pres , Mrs Thad Player,
secretary, Mrs Victor Davidson, treas
urer.
Buggy For Sale
Barnesville buggy in good condi
tion; many miles of service for so lit
tle money. Corne see it.
W. I- Dixon, Toomsboro.
Cabbage Plants
Fresh, juicy cabbage plants at
10c hundred; SI.OO thousand; on
3 thousand order will pay post
age. Frank Pate, Gordon, Ga.
Route 2. adv
PTA Program Committees
The following teachers, as chair
men, and their committees will' pro
duce benefit programs sponsored by
PTA during the term
November. Miss Juanita Puckett.
4th and sth; Mrs J. M. Hall, Mrs
Ella Dixon, Mrs Fllmer Shepherd.
December. Miss Althea Smith,
6th and 7th: Mrs Rosa Lindsey, Mrs
I. C. Walker, Mrs I. F. Billue.
January. Miss Evelyn Ragsdale,
Bth; Mrs C. E. Todd, MrsH F. Hay
wood, Mrs Cosby Council.
February. 9th grade; Miss Ruth
Childs; Mrs J..E. Butler, Mrs Gene
Anderson, Mrs Tom Bell.
March. Mr Philip Covington,loth
Mrs N- H. Bacon, Mrs B. W. Davis,
Mrs C. J. Grinstead.
April, Mr H. W. Gunn, 11th;
Mrs Eli Hubbard, Mrs Bessie Lee
Rutland, Mrs Lee Justice.
Mrs Charlie Deason
Funeral services for Mrs Charlie
Deason, of Mclntyre, were held Sun
day at Mt. Nebo cemetery.
Mrs Deason died Friday night after
an illnees of several weeks. She is
survived by her husband and several
young children.
Cotton Census v
Census report shows there were
1,709. bales of cotton ginned in Wil
kinson county from the crop of 1934
prior to Oct. 18, as compared with
2,634 bales ginned to Oct. 18, cron of
1933.
! Jessie C. Richardson.
Special Agent.
1 ax Collector Notice
Schedule first round, October 1934;
Monday sth, Griffin. Cross Roads,
10 to 12 o'clock.
5 High Hill, Davidson’s
store, 12.30 to 1.30
- Wed. 7cb, Allentown, 10 to 12
I " " Danville, J. M. Brown’s
store 12.39 to 2
1 Thur Sth, Gordon, E E. Miller’s
store, 10 to 3
Fri 9th, Ivey, P. O- 10 to 11.30
Bloodworth court ground 12-1
Saturday 10, Toomsboro P.O, 10 to 3.
O. W. Bell. T- C.
Pensions Are Economical
The story of Old Age Pension op
eration is a story of astounding sav
ings. In every state that is paying
pensions the cost per pensioner is
much less than the cost of maintain
ing a person in'the state’s poorhouses.
■ The saving per person aided ranges
from sl^2 71 in New York to $738.
0- in Wyoming! In the light of
these revealing figures, is it any won
der that even a natural conservative
like Sidney Edward Moses, President
of the City Bank of New York City,
said:
1 “I thisk it is plain to all thinking
men that the poorhouse system is ex
pensive, ineffective, and unnecessarily
unnatural. The plan of state-paid
pensions is much to be preferred.”
An example: California’s average
1 annual pension is $275.28; average
annual cost of poorhouse care per in
mate 3484.12; saving to tax payer
1 per pensioner $209 84. Other states
have savings about like this. The
greatest saving of all is effected in
Wyoming. There it costs $738.02
less to pension an aged person for a
year than to care for him in a poor
house.
. Now how much does the pensions
cost each resident of the state? In
California .56 cents per year; Ken
tucky 6 cents; Nevada, the highest.
SI.BO.
We paid, each of us, $1.91 to
build federal highways, and many
other expenses we have ceased think
ing about.
t)
Baptist Young People
Georgia Baptist young people 1000
strong, will meet in Macon November
30, December 1 and 2. in the first an
nual State B. Y F. U. Convention
held in a large city during the past
six years. Outstanding inspirational
speakers and representative leaders
of young people will appear on the
three dav program which will begin
the Friday morning after Thanksgiv
ng-
Government Farm
Work is progressing rapidly on the
government’s farm project in Putnam
and Jasner counties with 1000 acres
already under cultivation- Wheat
and oats have been planted and the
first tractor used. Ten families will
be allowed the use of one tractor.
The first carload of horses arrived.
: STREET OF IRWINTON :
The hermit may be right, after al),
and living alone best for a man. So
many people know just what shoubl
be done about fanning and other bus
iness, and so few ideas are alike, thev
can’t agree on a plan.
A little spatter of rain Tuesday
night. Wish it had fallen in daytime
so the children could see.
The Stevens Hotel cat is up a tree
most of the time —dogs in the neigh
borhood are about four to one.
Mockingbirds, tanked up on poke
berries, sing day and night, but they
keep in tune and the music is fine-
Options on government-owned cot
ton have paid Georgia farmers $4,
471,290.
Georgia is to get 20U families from
drought areas of the west for federal
colony on 10,900 acres. The proper,
ty is along the Allapaha riyer.
It’s getting along toward the time
of year when a partridge better not
bioUr his whistle too much.
Mrs Guy Lunsford of Millen was
guest of Mr and Mrs H. W. Gunn
Tuesday.
\\ DOYLE C KNIGHTTAV/
Finest of Infiltration
Particles as small as two-thou-.
sandths of an inch, or one-fifteenth as
large as those that pass through felt
and metal filters, are removed from
motor oil by an infiltration device.