Newspaper Page Text
' V
LEGAL SALE OF LAND.
Georgia, Houston County,
o Under and by virtue of the
gotlierwitk all the right, title and
terest of the Said Thompson in nnd
. being the northern half of lot No. 87,
i containing 101 1-4 acres, more or less;
also all that tract of land being lot No.
108 containing 202 1-2 acres, more or
less; all the above described lands being
located in the 9th district of Houston
• , a , 4 P ower °f County, Georgia,' and aggregating 1836
sale contained in a certain deed lo secure , Ceres, from which land is to be deducted
debt executed by Ellen R H .rtley to E. | i 5 acres in northwest corner of lot No.
Jerome Thompson on the ist day of May I08 .sold.by the Ail.augh-Georgia Fruit
:0U Company to Zack Harper, evidenced by
t.ic .Hst dav of October, 19 h msferr- deod recorded in Book A-A, page 539;
ed and assigned by tlie.said Thomson also right-of-way 50 feet in width sold
to Taylor 0 »U«m Company, together | by Albaugh-Georgia Fruit company to
fo- ; central of Georgia Railway Company,
in ‘ I evidenced by deed recorded in Book 0*c,
page 396; -also - church /lot doed'-d by
to
nil the land conveyed 111 said sccirnty Albangh-Georgia
deed to said Thompson) the; undersigned,: coiored Methodist Episcopal church in
Taylor Cotton Company will sell at pub - ' America, recorded in Book 9, page 83.
hooutcry before the court house door of The lallds herein ,Mtibe«lj being the
Heston County to the highest bidder : entire fruit farm formerly known as tlie
^ r 8 , ,noo T u e r day & mm °t De- Albdugh.Georsia Fruit company and now
cember, 1922, between the legal horn's of | known ng tho Buckeye Fruit and Farm
sale, the following described real estate: company
All that tract or parcel of land lying and I The debt secured by said deed is two
being m Houston County, Georgia, same . cort l i n promisaorV nobs. each for the
being lot of land No. 17 in tlie 14tli Dis- I principal sum of ‘ $7,715.00, each dated
strict of said County containing 203 j M, iy l8 t.i 9 20. eaclt bearing interest from
Fruit company to the
acres, and being 3024 feet east and west!
Jpv 2927 feet north and south; also lot
No, 317 iuthe.lSth District of sni«l Conn- '
ty containing 186.4 acres, and being
2685 feet east and west by 2927 feet north
and south; also part of lot No. 318 in the
13th district,of said County commencing
at the northeast corner of sa^d lot and
running south along the east line of said
. lot.1042 feet to the Perry and Henderson
public road, thence southwest along said
, road I960 feet to a point, thence north
west 1181 feet to the west line of said
lot, thence north along the west line of
said lot 2067 feet to tlie northwest corner
tliqnoe .east along the north line 2085
feet-to the beginning point, and con
taining 115 acres, more or le^s, of said
lot'; also 12.1 acres, more or less, of lot
’’ IJo.48 in the 14th diet'iet of said County
..commencing at the . northeast corner of
lid lot and running south along the
east line of. said lot 347 feet to a point,
thence west 1552 feet, .tlience north 347
feet to the not th line of said 1 lbt, thence
. east along <he north line of said lot 1552
• feet to thes tarting point; all of
said lots and parts of lots
lying and being in one body and com-
* prising 516.5 acres of land, more or less;
excepting from said land one-fourth of an
apre, more or less, in the ' shape of 11
' triangle in the northeast corner of lot
No. 17 in the 14th district de ded to J W
Bloodworth by deed dated July 29, 1913
and recorded in Deed Book 27, page 0
Clerk' 8 Offiee Houston Superior Court.
The debt secured by said deed is two
certain promissory notes, each for the
principal sum of $7,715.00, each dated
Mgy 1st, 1920, ench bearing intere-t
from date at the rate of 8 per cent per
, annum, interest payable aftnually. one
due August 1st, 1921 and the other due
Ailgustlst, 1922.
Both of said notes having hecome due
and remaining unpaid, the power of sale
contained in said deed I1113 become
•operative. The proceeds of said salo will
be applied to .the payment' oil said debt
and the expenses of this proceeding, and
the‘ remainder, if any, will be paid to
said Ellen R. Hartley.
f iid real estate will be sold subject,
inferior to two prior and superior
liens in faVor of Atlanta Trust Company
one for the principal sum of $1,700.00
and: tho other lor the principal sum of
$27(50.00, said liens being evidenced by
amp certain security deeds bo h executed
by, said E Jerome Thompson on Novem
ber 6, 1919, to. said Atlanta Trust Com
pany, as recorded in Deed Book 28',
pages 140 to 141 inclusive, in the Office
•of. Clerk of the Superior Court of
Houston County.
This November 14, 1922.
TAYLOR COTTON COMPANY ..
.By its Attorney at Law, 0 E Brunson
[. Georgia, Houston County
Under and by virtue of the power of.
•sale contained in a certain deed to secure
debt executed by Ellen R Hartley to E
i Jerome Thompson on the 13th dav of
• January, 1922, [which said security deed
’ was on the l8tlx day of October, 1922,
transferred and nssigned by the said
• Thompson to Taylor C'’tton Cortfpnny,
i together with the notes secured by, said
Jeed, and together with all. the right,
title and interest of the said Thompson
in and to all the land conveyed in „ said
security deed to said Thompson] the
undersigned Taylor Cotton Company will
sell at public outcry before the court-
house door of Houston County to the
, highes’. bidder for cash, on Tuesday the
. 26th day of December, 1922, between the
legal hoprs of sale, the following de-
I scribed real estate: All of lot No,- 106
and all of part of lot No. 119 adjoining
lot 100 on the west, and bounded by Bay
Creek swamp, and running to the middle
•of the creek, and containing 65 acres
more or less; also ttmt’ part of lot No.
105 lying west, of tne Macon Traveler’l
Best vosd, being 195 acres, more or less;
the above land aggregating 460 acres,
more or less; also 100 acres more or
less being the south one-half of lot No.
87 and 60 acres in the northern portion
of lot No. 88. lying between parallel
lines aoross the entire length c<:' said lot
the lot line between lots 87 and 88 using
the northern Foundry and a parallel line
across lot 88 being the southern bounda
ry, the distance between said lines being
sufficient to contain 60 acres; also all
that part of lot No. 108 lying in the
•southern portion of said lot, bounded on
south by line between lots 108 and 107,
and on north by line located by two
stakes, being--yards apart the said tract
containing 4 acres, more or less, same
being land deeded by Mrs Emily Glass to
the Albaugh-Georgia Fruit Company,
said deed recorded in Book B-B,page 425,
record of Deeds, Houston Superior
■ Court: also all that tract of land being
all of lot No. 107 and No. 86 and 4
acres off of southern part of lot No. 85,
as described in deed from Tryphenia
Mathews to 1W Green, recorded in Book
T. folio 22, paid land aggregating 409
stores more or less; also th f > traot of land
date at the r ite of 8 per cent per nnntun,
interest payable annually, one due Au
gust ,1st, 1921. ami the other due August
1st, 1922.
Both of said notes having bebome due
and remaining unpaid, the power of sale
contained in said, deed has become oper
ative. The proceeds of said sale will be
applied to tlie payment of said debt and
the expenses of this proceeding, and the
remainder if any. will be paid to said
Ellen R, Hartley,
Said real estate will be sold subject nnd
inferior to a prior and superior lien in
favor ot the Mutual Benefit Life Insur
ance Company for tlie principal sum of
$40,000.00, said lien '>eing evidenced by
a Certain security deed executed by said
Ellen R. Hartley on Decemqer 28, 1920,
to said The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance
company recorded J|n Deed Record 31,
page 132, Cl -rk’s Office Houston Superior
Court. This November 14, 1922.
Taylor Cotton Company, By its At
torney at Law, C. E, Brunson.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
All creditors of tho estate • of I
T Woodard late of Houston Coun
ty, deceased are hereby notified to
render in their demands to the un
dersigned according to law and all
persons indebted to said estate
are required to make immediate
payment to rtie.
.T. Houser Edwards, Adrnr.
of estate of I T Woodard, deceased
PAY FOR ONE
GET TWO
Home Journal Subscribers who Pay Up their
Subscription In Advance, or New Subscribers
who Pay In Advance will Receive
The Southern Agriculturist
FREE FOR ONE YEAR
I ' ‘ ^ : ■; V ; ■
We offer for A Limited Time Only both papers
at the regular subscription price of the Home
/
Journal, $1.50 per year.
No doubt you expect to pay up soon. Why
" " • ■ ' ' •’ 1
not pay now and get this excellent farm 1
' * _ * •
paper FREE.
The Home Journal
PERRY, GA.
WHY CREAMERIES PAY COW KEEPERS.
WHY
The growthof the i creamery in
dustry in Tennessee is one of the
very encouraging developments in
the State's agriculture. We have
called,attention to it before , this.
A post card just received carries
this brief but significant message,
“flutter, 2,000,000 pounds at Mur
freesboro in 1922.’ 5 Which is a
whole lot of butter for a little Ten
nessee town to be making.
The creamery development has
given-a new impetus to the dairy
industry in the sections where it
has developed’. By standardizing
the product, it has made the pro
duction of butter-fat profitable on
thousands of farms where the pro
duction of butter was not profitable
For most farms butter is nob pro
fitably produced. It is not profit
ably produced because it is a poor
product. The exceptional farm
that produces good butter finds
it profitable to keep cow3 for but
ter making, but it is the exception,
al farm that produces good butter,
Mosb farm butter sells, for less
than it costs to make and market
it. It sells this way because it is
an inferior and an unstandatdized
product.'
Tennessee cow keepers are find
ing this out auc^ establishing cream
eries- Many other Southern farm
ers have yet to find it out, or are
finding it out very slowly-ysweet
potato-growers, for example, or.’
beef cattle raisers, or apple , grow -1 ,
ers in most parts of the South, or a ’,
lot of other people who could be
named.
Co-operation pay£ in both pro-!
duction and marketing. “In union j
is strength," in standardization of i
product is hope for profitable mar- J
keting. —Southern Agriculturist.
DO
FLOWERS-
SMELLS
HAVE
W HILE the song of the birds and
the smell of the . flowers- appeal
to two entirely distinct and different
senses, they lune, in reality, the
same objective—tlie attraction of a
mate. The male bird accomplishes
tfiis by charming the female with Ills
voice; the flower by attracting bees
with its scent.
The bee, in going from flower to
flower in search of honey, scrapes
his legs against the Inside of the dif
ferent blossoms and collects a con
siderable amount of the pollen—or
fertilizing agent—which is necessary
for the production of seeds in other
plants. This pollen he carries with
him, unconsciously, and deposits It
upon the flowers which he subse
quently visits. If it were npt for the
perfume of the flowers the bee would
not be so much attracted nor , would
he know that honey is to be had for
the taking. And, if it were not for
the bee and kindred injects, ne"fibwer
would have "to depend upon the
vagaries of the wind ' for ' the pollen
necessary to- Its proper- growth und
tlie development of seed wit-h which
to reproduce Itself.
One of the most remarkable facts
about the distribution of poilen by the
bee is that the'"pqllen-powidei < ' v of one
kind of plant will not fertilize tlie
flowers of another, thus relieving the
bee of any responsibility of acting-
as an unconscious Luther Buabank
and njixing up the scheme of nature
by crossing a rose and a hyacinth
or a honeysuckle vine with a mag
nolia tree. .. v - '
£Copyright by the Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.).
' -o—
CARD OF THANKS.
We want to extend our heartfelt
thanks to the kindhearted friends
that have so kindly extended a
helping hand in late illness and
death of our beloved son Robert.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Farr.
=4*
A LINE O’ CHEER
By John Kendrick Bangs.
THE DAISIES
M EN call them weeds, those
' daisies fair
That greet my Vision every
where.
But weeds they'll never be to me,
For, as I pass them, cordially
They nod thfeir heads? and as they
bend \
Tis like the welcome of a friend.
. <® by MoCluro Newspaper Syndicate.).
ijmmimimimimiiimimiiiwiimimiu
I"* EDDIES SIX I
®» |
Will M. Maupin |
niiimiiijuiiiiimmuimimiiiiiiiiimiiiR
RELICS
A LITTLE box with tear-stained lid
.Beneath which many things .lie
hid, '
And often when the twilight’s gloom
Paints memory faces o’er the room,
I leave the world of toil and care,
And seated in the old armchair,
I ope the lid and fondly gaze
Upon the tilings of other days. •
,*■••• '. - . •
A little box witli tear-stained ild
Beneath which sacred things are hid.
A little shoo out at the t.oe—
O, buby boy, I love you so—
A tiny cap .with upturned brim '
That eloquently, speaks| of him—-.
These are the treasures laid away
To gaze upon at close of day.
A little box with tehr-stalned lid.
Beneath which treusured things are
hid.
A broken top, a toy, a/whip,
A crippled ox from Noah's ship;
A tiny stocking—all the wealth
That men secure by work, or stealth;
Would not suffice to buy from me
One thing I ope the lid to seel.
^iHSBsasiffasasBsasasasasasBsasusasasi
Estelle Taylor K
fESHSESclSESHSIHEESESEESSHIiHESSSSEUES
A little box with tear-stained ild
Beneath which love-worn things
bid. .• '
As long as Death’s angel roams
To lay a blight on happy homes,
Full many a box will hide away
The relics of a happier day;
And when the evening’s echoes call
Upon their lids hot tears will fall.
(Copyright by Wili M. Maupin.)
O:
are
Not only famous as a “movie” star,
beautiful Estelle Taylor became, fa
mous during the past football season
when she was selected as the mascot
to the Washington and Jefferson foot-
bafl team In the game with the UoD
versity of California. She was born
and reared near the W. and J. college.
ThiB is one of her most recent pic«
tures. >)•!
—r-trO.
Madagascar Gold.
The island of • Madagascar, accord-
Ing to reports received In Washington, 1
promises to assume some Importance
as a producer of gold. On the eastern
elope of the island are some aurifer
ous districts said to be very rich.
Nuggets and dust are found In the
streams’ beds, but the principal lode
has not, It appears, yet been dis
covered. Mining engineers have an
ticipated such discoveries, but the
methods of recovering the gold have
been very crude, and only native work
men have proved capable ot wltlv
the climate.