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HOME JOURNAL. Perry, Ga. Mar. 13, 1947
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PUBLIC SALE OF LAND
Under and by virture of an order
cran ted by the Court of Ordinary of
Houston County, Georgia, on the
Fh-st Monday in March, 1947, I will
n at public outcry to the highest
hlidcr for cash, before the Court
House door in Fort Valley Peach
county Georgia, during the legal
hours of sale, on the First Tuesday
in April 1947, the following de- j
scribed tract of land; |
-That tract or parcel of land si- 1
tuatcd. Iving and being partly in the
9th and partly in the 10th District
of Peach County, formerly Houston
County, Georgia, comprising 150
acres, more or less, and being
bounded on the on the north by,
lands of Clint Howard: on the east
by lands now or formerly owned by
the Culpepper Estate: on the south
bv the A. J. Houser land: and on
the west by Mossy Creek. Said tract
of land being known as the old
George C. Hartley Place.”
This 4th day of March, 1947.
P. W. Hartley
Executor of Will of George
C. Hartley, Deceased
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
To Mrs. Margaret Elaine Hayden
Phelps, greeting:
Robert H. Phelps vs. Mrs. Marga
ret Elaine Hayden Phelps, divorce.
The defendant is hereby required
personally, or by attorney, to be and
appear at the next Superior Court
to be held in and for said county on
the first Monday in April next, then
and there to answer the plaintiffs
demands in an action of divorce as
in default thereof the court will
proceed as to justice shall apper
tain.
Witness the Honorables Mallorr
C. Atkinson and A. M. Anderson,
judges of said court, this 19th day
of February, 1947.
Tommie S. Hunt Clerk
S. Gus Jones, Plaintiffs Attorney
NOTICE OF
SPECIAL ELECTION
Georgia, Houston County.
Whereas A. L. Sasser, a Mem
ber of the Board of Commissioners
of Roads and Revenue of Houston
County, has departed this life leav
ing a vacancy in said Office;
It is therefore ordered that a
Special Election be held in said
County to fill said vacancy on Tues
day, March 25, 1947.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this February 25, 1947.
John L. Hodges
Ordinary, Houston County,Ga.
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
STATE OF GEORGIA,
HOUSTON COUNTY
To Charles Bigham, Greeting;
Mildred Bigham Vs Charles
Bigham
THE DEFENDANT Charles Big
ham is hereby required personally,
or by attorney, to be and appear at
the next Superior Court to be held
in and for said County on the First
Monday in April next, then and
there to answer the Plaintiffs de
mands in an action of DIVORCE as
in default thereof the Court will
proceed as to justice shall apper
tain.
WITNESS the Honorables A. M.
ANDERSON AND MALLORY C.
ATKINSON, Judges of said Court,
this Bth day of February, 1947.
Tommie S. Hunt
Clerk S. C. Ho. Co. Ga.
J- W. Bloodworth
Plaintiffs Attorney
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
STATE OF GEORGIA.
HOUSTON COUNTY
To Hobert Mound, Greeting:
Bernice Mound Vs Hobert Mound
THE DEFENDANT Hobert
Mound is hereby required person
aPy, or by attorney, to be and ap
pear at the next Superior Court to
1 e held in and for said County on
! he First Monday in April next,
'hen and there to answer the Plain
-I|ffs demands in action of DI
VORCE as in default thereof the
f ourt will proceed as to justice
shall appertain.
ITNESS the Honorables A. M.
ANDERSON AND MALLORY C.
- TKINSON, Judges of said Court,
ibis Bth day of February, 1947.
Tommie S. Hunt
Clerk S. C. Ho. Co. Ga.
W. Bloodworth
Plaintiffs Attorney
Ironing Hint
t en y°u find you have sprinkled
r '?? any .clothes for one ironing,
f . t, ' lern in a towel and place in
.“ refrigerator until you are ready
iroa another time. This keeps
from mildewing or becoming
• ' ir , and saves the trouble and time
01 sprinkling again.
PETITION FOR CHARTER
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF HOUSTON
To the Superior Court of
Houston County:
The Petition of Mrs. Estelle A.
Talton, whose Post Office'ScWress is
Kathleen, Georgia, R. F. D., B. H.
Andrew, Mrs. Ruth A. McLendon
and C. E. Andrew, each of whose
j P° st Office address is Perry, Geor
j gia, respectfully showeth to the
i Court:
1. Petitioners desire for them
selves, others to be associated with
them, and their successors, to be in
corporated for a period of thirty
five (35) years under the corporate
name and style of ANDREW
:TRUCK AND TRACTOR COM
PANY, INC.
2. The object of said Corporation
is pecuniary gain to the Corpora
tion and to the stockholders.
3. The principal office of said
Corporation will be located in the
City of Perry, Houston County,
Georgia.
4. The business to be carried on
by said Corporation is as follows:
a. The buying, selling, exchang
ing and generally dealing in trucks,
tractors, power units, farm machi
nery and farm implements of all
kinds.
b. The buying, selling and gene
rally dealing in hardware and
farm supplies.
c. The buyiny, selling and gene
rally dealing in farm products of
all kinds.
5. The capital stock of said Cor
poration shall be Twenty Thou
sand Dollars ($20,000.00), repre
sented by Two Hundred Shares of
capital stock of the par value of
One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per
share: and Petitioners pray that
they be granted the right to in
crease such capital stock from time
to time, by a vote of a majority of
the stockholders of said Corpora
tion, to an amount not to exceed
Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00),
such increase in capital stock to be
either in preferred or in common
stock, as a majority of the stock
holders may determine.
6. The minimum amount of cap
ital stock with which the said Cor
poration shall commence to do busi
ness shall be Twenty Thousand
Dollars ‘$20,000.00), all of which
has been fully paid in.
7. Petitioners exhibit to the Court
herewith a certificate from the
Secretary of State of the State of
Georgia in manner and form as re
quired by law, certifying and de
claring that the name of the pro
posed corporation is not the name of
any other corporation now register
ed in the office of the Secretary of
State of the State of Georgia.
Wherefore, Petitioners pray that
they may be incorporated under the
name and style as herein set out
and that they be granted all rights,
privileges and immunities, which
are now or may be hereafter per
mitted by the laws of the State of
Georgia.
This sth day of March, 1947.
S. A. NUNN
Attorney for Petitioners
HOUSTON SUPERIOR COURT
The above and foregoing petition
coming on regularly to be heard,
and it being made to appear that
said petition is legitimately within
the purview and intention of the
laws of the State of Georgia, and
the said Petitioners having exhibit
ed to the Court with said petition a
certificate from the Secretary of
State of the State of Georgia, certi
fying that the name ANDREW
TRUCK AND TRACTOR COM
PANY, INC. is not the name of any
other existing corporation now
registered in the office of the Secre
tary of State of the State of Geor
gia.
It is therefore considered, ordered
adjudged that the said petition for
( charter be, and the same is hereby
( granted, and the Petitioners, their
associates and successors, are here
by incorporated under the name an 4
style of ANDREW TRUCK AND
’ TRACTOR COMPANY, INC. and
’ with all the rights, powers and
privileges as prayed.
At Chambers, Perry, Georgia,
this 6th day of March, 1947.
A. M. ANDERSON
’ J. S. C. M. C.
Filed in Office this 6th day of
March, 1947.
Tommie S. Hunt, Clerk
Farm Electricity
1 A 20th Century Fund report esti
, mates that 40 to 30 per cent of farm
i electric power is used for irrigation,
• 30 per cent for household appliances
i and 20 to 30 per cent for lighting
; barns and operating such small
i equipment as pump® and milking
nachines.
Pathology Work
Done by Ethridge
Gene Ethridge, hospital appren
tice first class, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. G. Ethridge of Perrys is
making an outstanding record at
the U. S. Uaval Hospital in Dublin
in the study of pathology which
concerns the changes instructure
and function of the organs of the
body occuring in disease.
Here is part of a story about
Gene’s work which appeared in The
Dublin Murmur, hospital publica
tion.
“Let us assume that a rheumatic
fever patient has just had his tin
sils removed and they have been
delivered to the Pathology Depart
ment wrapped in sterile gauze. Af
ter the tonsils have been through
the Technicon and properly stained,
our promising young pathologist,
Gene Ethridge goes to work. He
places the tonsils in a small mold
and pours melted paraffin over
them. As soon as the paraffin sets,
Ethridge removes the mold and
places the now solid square block of
paraffin in a jar or beaker contain
ing ice water. As soon as he thinks
the blocks are sufficiently hardened
by the cold water to prevent their
falling apart, he starts to work with
them.
A Microtome is a machine with a
razor-sharp blade that is used for
slicing or cutting extremely thin
layers from the paraffin block. As
the tonsils were sitting on the bot
tom of the mold when the paraffin
was poured over them, Ethridge
places the side of the block show
ing the tonsils against the edge of
the knife blade. By the mere turn of
a crank on the side of the Micro
tome, thin layers of the paraffin
im 111 H 'I ' ii »in mi min ii— iimh urn mm n i mi i i ip'~mr riiir mi r * wwnwwi
Rings Mr, Hartman’s Register
I “Anything that stirs up and increases trade is good., .pulp
and papermaking docs just that,” according to C. C. Hartman
who runs a store at Jcsup, Georgia.
«***! “Fifty extra dollars received for pine trees harvested from
rA* | a previously idle woodlot represent hundreds of dollars in
I TTWjJ How I trade when they have passed around and finally been rung up
I P' ,,<hrrn | ° n
I Wm b^p"r. C *." “ Extra dollars from extra pulpwood, which almost any
I farm can grow, arc like the cup of water you put in the pump
, to make it produce gallons.”
• • •
Would you like to know how Because of the steady market for pulpwood, it is a valuable builder of
pme becomes paper!* Send trade for general business in the Southeast. But, without the kraft
for this short pictorial des- , _ i i i • i
cription. h is frre. Address*. paper industry to buy it, pulpwood could prime no trade pumps . . .
Woodlands Division, Union increase no farm incomes.
Bug & Paper Corporation,
Savannah, Georgia. Pulp and paper mills have helped fill out the economy of the South
east . . . they have provided the source of that extra income which
makes a profit margin for many farmers and their home towns.
UNION BAG & PAPER CORPORATION, Savannah. Ou
Sixth of a series of advertisements in which Southeastern Citizens point oat how a maruifacturing business,
converting a home-grown raw material into finished products , contributes to the prosperity of the region it serves*
| block are cut. As soon as he feels *
j he has cut a complete section with
out any tears in the section of the
| paraffin, Ethridge gently places the
' cut layer into a beaker of warm wa
ter. This softens the paraffin and
with careful manipulation, all
wrinkles are removed, this section
then mounted on a glass slide ready
to be examined under the micro
scope.” (
The writer of the article says he
lost out after that, but that patho
logy is one of the most important
functions in medicine today. His
reasoning was, “Dead men do tell
tales.”
So you see that Perry’s Gene
Ethridge is liable to show u p any
day with a microscope and a micro
tome and scare you to pieces.
litre Incidence
Every minute, day and night, fire
breaks out somewhere in the Unit
ed States. Every hour a life is
lost.
Examine Eskimo Eyesight
Eye charts using Eskimo lan
guage symbols are being employed
in studies of eyesight in the far
north, says the Better Vision Insti
tute. About half of the Eskimos ex
amined had faulty vision.
ORDINARY’S CITATION
Georgia, Houston County
J. J. Rooney, Administrator of
the Estate of Mahalie Dixon, de
ceased, having applied for Leave to
Sell all the land of said Estate: This
is therefore to notify all persons
concerned to show cause, if any
they can, why this application
should not be granted at the Court
of Ordinary on the First Monday in
April, 1947.
This March 10, 1947.
John L. Hodges, Ordinary
Ice Cream Course
The first ice cream manufactur
ing course in this country was
taught at Penn State in 1092—more
than 50 years ago.
Favorite Combination
A survey by a leading American
paint manufacturer has developed
that white with green trim continues
to be the most popular exterior color
scheme for houses. However, it is
noted that there are various shades
of green and that just any green
won’t meet all requirements.
FARMER - BANKER
Teamed Up for Building a
BETTER COMMUNITY
A complete banking service
for more than half a cen
tury-1889 to 1947—devoted
to building a great farming
section.
Loan & Savings Bank
Member, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
■ ■■■ ■ --
Boy Wonder
Philo Farnsworth was just 15
years old when he got the idea that
has successfully developed into
modern television.
Cows Need Rest'
After heavy milk production, cows
require a dry period of six to eight
weeks for rebuilding their bodies.
They should be fed plenty of good
roughage plus additional grain to
put them in good flesh prior to fresh
ening.