Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, September 05, 1946, Image 8
HO.ViE JOURNAL Pe I I CHAS. P. GRAY (Your Firestone Man) We Wills i. Inspect, clean and repack w ’ front wheel bearings. 2. Inspect Hydraulic system. 0 3' Turn drums if scored or out • ’ of round. (Extra charge.) A. Ivcline shoes with factory <• ' specification lining. • 5. Adjust brake shoos to , secure full pedal. - • 6. Give you 30-day free brake w I ’ adjustment service. * l * Wo ore Headquarter* for . Tire. Battery. Spark Plug. .0 Lubrication and Broke 0 ( firestone union MOTOR CO. World Income It is estimated that 81 per cent of 1 ■the people in the world have a real income of less than $lO per bread winner per week. A Service of Dignity and Beauty The dignity and beauty of a service held in Memorial Chapel impresses all visi tors. The gracious setting as well as the caieful direction provided by our experi enced personnel contribute to the unusual character of our service. Ijapp] Funeral Director* , J £ver*tt Simmon* A. R. King, Sr. i RUSSELL lOMLINSON, Resident Manager Phone 110 Perry, Ga. i ( i I irry, Ga., Sept. 5, 1946 ! Canning at Home Pays House Bills A Muscogee Ci unty farm wo rn n, s'hn has l»r < n a member of her local home demonstration club or 14 years, u,-es a home canning reject to provide for her family the year round, to help feed starv ing peoples overseas anu to bring in extra cash for household ex ! penses. With the profits from surplus] | canned food. Mrs. C. E. Ileti has bought a new electric stove for her home,new vacuum cleaner, r finished some of tier furniture and helped buy clothes for the family. By turning out a quality pro- Inct, Mrs. Hett is able to obtain advance orders for all surplus I canned foods, and in this way determines what vegetable and fruit plantings to make at the pro per planting seasons, Mrs. trank (lames, home demonstration LEGAL SALE OF LAND GEORGIA, Houston County. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed to secure debt dated August 6, 1945, and recorded in Book 58, Folio 317, Clerk’s Office, Houston Superior Court, executed by A. Skipper, to James W. Lee, there will he sold before the courthouse door of Houston County, on Oc tober 1. 1946, the same being the first Tuesday in October,between ] the legal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder for cash, 1 the following described property, to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land, lying and being in the Lower sth District of Houston County, Georgia, described as a lot 50 x 100 feet to an alley and being the same as the one trans ferred to C. A. Skipper by Koyce I’ratt, on which he has built and has located the place of business known at Skipper’s Market at Warner Robins, Georgia, on First Street. The above described deed to secure debt having been given to secure the payment of a series of promissory notes, and providing that upon default in the pay ment of principal or interest as evidenced by said notes, the power of sale contained in said deed to secure debt would be come operative, notice is hereby given that default occurred in :.he payment of principal and in terest. and that the said James W. Lee, as holder of said deed to to secure debt elects to declare 1 the balance due and payable, and to exercise the power of sale as therein provided. Proceeds of said sale will be applied as pro- 1 vided in said deed to secure bebt. Said property will be sold sub- 1 ject to a first Security Deed given by C. A. Skipper to R. R Pratt, recorded in Clerk’s Of lice, Houston Superior Court, in Book 61, Folio 374, and trans ferred by R. R. Pratt to J. W.Lee. Clerk’s Olfice, Houston Superior Court, in Book 61. Folio 374, on which there is an unpaid balance of $398.00 Dollars plus interest secured by said deed. This, the 3rd day of Septem ber. 1946. JAMES W. LEE. W. Horace Vandiver, Atty. Macon, Georgia agent in Muscogee county, point ed rut that Mrs. Hett has been unable to supply the demands for her earned products. “I began canning a few pro ducts for sale six years ago. And most of my food for canning comes from a two-acre home gar den. ” Mrs. Ilett explained. “This year, however, I have canned peas and corn from our field crops. Already, I have 730 pints put up in glass y ,and 300 No. 2 tin cans filled. By canning meats, fruits and vegetables I find | that I can do some kind of food work all the year.” ‘Rod Danube’ An ancient invasion route, the Danube has seen innumerable tides of fighting men including Huns, Romans, Crusaders and American and Soviet forces of World War 11. So much blood has been shed that it has been suggested the “Blue Danube,” actually silver in its clear upper stretches and later silt brown, should be called the “Red Danube.” Like that of the Rhine, the Danube’s scenery ranges from ruined castles of robber knights to busy factory towns and from the narrow, rock-filled gorge known as the Iron Gate to a broad delta where sluggish streams wander through flat, wooded swamps, over which countless wildfowl fly. LEGAL SALE OF LAND GEORGIA,—Houston County; Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed to secure debt dated May 30, 1945, and recorded in Book 61, , Folio 374, Clerk’s Office, Houston Superior Court, executed by C. iA. Skipper to R. K, Pratt, and transferred by R. R. Pratt to J. W. Lee, said transfer record ed in Book 61, Folio 374, Clerk’s Office, Houston Superior Court, there will be sold before the courthouse door of Houston County, on October 1, 1946, the same being the first Tuesday in October, between the legal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property, to-wit: All of that certain tract, lot or parcel of land in the town of Warner Robins in the sth land District of Houston County, Georgia, being known and desig-1 nated as Lot No. 2 in Block No. 1 according to plat of Wellston addition, copy of said plat being recorded in map book 1, page No. 315, Clerk’s Office. Houston Superior Court. Said lot having such shapes, metes, bounds, courses and distances as are shown on said plat. Said lot is fronting East Fifty (50) feet on First Street and running back a distance of One Hundred (100) feet an even widtli to a 20 Ft. Utility Way or Alley. The above described deed to secure debt having been given to secure the payment of a series of promissory notes, and provid ing that upon default in the pay ment of the principal or interest as evidenced by said notes, the power of sale contained in deed to secure debt would become operative, notice is hereby given that default occurred in the pay ment of principal and interest, and that the said J. W. Lee, as holder of said deed to secure debt elects to declare the balance due and payable and to exercise the power of sale as therein pro vided. Proceeds of said sale will be applied as provided in said deed to secure debt. This, the 3rd day of Septem ber, 1946. J. W. LEE W. Horace Vandiver, Atty. Macon, Georgia Affidavit Of Ownership GEORGIA, Houston County. Personally appeared before me Miss Flo Sims wffiose address is Warner Robins, Georgia, who on oath deposes and says that she is doing business in Houston Coun ty at Warner Robins, Ga’, under the name and style of Warner Robins Beauty Shop and that she is the true and lawful owner of said Warner Robins Beauty Shop. The business to be carried on is Beauty Shop. This affidavit is made in ac cordance with the Act of the Georgia Legislature approved August 15, 1929, and amended ! March 29, 1937 and March 20,1 1943. Sworn to and subscribed be fore me this 27th day of August, 1946, Tommie S. Hunt, Clerk S. C. Ho. Co. Ga. MISS FLO SIMS. ATHLETES FOOT ITCH HOW TO STOP IT MAKE 5 MINUTE TEST Get TE-OL at any drug store. Apply this POWERFUL PENE TRATING fungicide FULL STRENGTH. Reaches MORE germs to kill the itch. Get NEW foot comfort or your 35c back. ' -I GEORGIA TURKEYS 1 While farmers in the Nation = as a whole are reducing the out put of turkeys nine percent this - year as compared with 1945, Geor -1 gia production is being stepped up five percent- All states except • 14 show decreases from last year’s production. Turkey mar ; keting this season are expected to be the earliest in 11 years and 1 considerably earlier than in 1945. Jf producers carry out their in ' tentions, marketing in October I or earlier will account for about ( 25 percent of the crop. IF A FELLOW KEEPS j HIS EVES OPEN THERE‘S BEAUTY TO BE SEEN AND HEARD EVEPYW^^ ipirJS JUST RECEIVED NEW RADIOS : GILBERT ELEGTRiG GO. Phone 175 Perry, Ga. COTTON GINNING And WAREHOUSE FACILITIES □ Machinery in Tip-Top Shape! Warehouse will be operated this season and highest prices paid for your cotton % All Charges Will Be in Line With Other Gins and Warehouses Davis Warehouse Co. Phone 87 Perry, Ga. Georgia Facing Teacher Shortage ' Georgia is now facing one of ' I the most serious teacher short- ; t ages in the history of its public | t schools, according to Dr. A. J. ■ Allman, assistant state school I superintendent. I More renumerative positions, ; • in the stenographic and mercan- ' • tile fields, have caused some of r the instructors to leave t h o \ f classroom. Furthermore, with the war over, a number of teach ers are returning to their former occupation as housewife. Then, too, said Dr. Allman, the col leges are not turning out as." many teachers as heretofore. So, in spite of the recent 50 i per cent increase in salary for;] the instructors, the personnel j: problem looms large and some- i thing of a crisis is at hand with 1 the opening of the fall term. ( Last year, seven thousand £ Georgia teachers departed from ( the profession, whereas t h e 1 number of new recruits totalled 1 only 445, or less than one-four- i teenth the number leaving. < The new pay schedule elevat- i es Georgia’s teacher-salary scale to a point above all the other Southeastern states, but it must become better stabilized before NEW BEDROOM SUITES BLOND and WALNUT Innespring Mattrrsses Living Room Suites 2 and 3 PIECE Just received—-a new shipment of those hard-to*get VENETIAN' BLINDS Centra! Georgia Furniture Co. C. M. DRIGGERS, Mgr. Phone 242 Perry, Ga. Btamtammmmßmmmaammmmmtmmn umwßmamaßmßaammmwmmmmmmmmmmmmatmmmKammmm many teachers can be drawn • from out of the state H nln quite a number of teaching in other states w-S 1 ? come home, and these are ! 0 mg mquiry as to the i mDr “? : ; rate ot compensation, Allman d serted, But as yet, he Zll 3S ' ed, the 50 percent raise is ??' for the last four months of tt year and its continuance th ei? after is still just a promise a ' though it seems certain on ' count of the position taken ¥' the winning candidate forfW nor in the recent primary. INVEST IN IMPROVEMENT It will pay more farmers tnin vest in the land they already 0 ?n rather than to buy more acm economists point out. With prices at high levels i n Z areas, expenditures for i mDrn : mg land frequently will bd,. better returns than the purcfanS of uneeded additional land Th significant increase in farmoutnm during the war has taken heavy toll of soil resources. Expenditure tor lime and fertilizer to restore and increase productive capacity of these famrs will prove a sound investment. Sound Parried 1,400 Miles “* The volcanic explosion of the is land of Krakatoa, Java, in 1883 was heard 1,400 miles away. ’