Newspaper Page Text
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., Jan. 1, 1959
PUBLIC SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
Georgia, Houston County
WHEREAS, on December 20,
1956, Mabry T. Smith of said State
and County, executed and deliver
ed to Perry Federal Savings and
Loan Association of Perry, Hous
ton County, Georgia, a promissory
note for the sum of Nine Thousand
Five Hundred Dollars ($9500.00)
bearing interest at the rale of 6
per cent per annum and payable in
monthly installments at the rate of
One Hundred Twenty-Five Dollars
($125.00) per month; and to se
cure the payment of said note did
at the same time execute and de
liver to said Perry Federal Savings
and Loan Association a deed to
secure debt on the land herein
altcr described, same being re
corded in Deed Rook 110, page 32
et seq., in the Office of the Clerk
of Superior Court of Houston j
County, Georgia; and
WHEREAS, the said Mabry T.
Smith did default in the payment
of several monthly installments
due on said note, and because of
said default Perry Federal Savings
and Loan Association did elect to
declare the entire balance due
thereon immediately due and pay
able, and the power of sale con
tained in said deed to secure debt
thereupon became operative.
NOW THEREFORE, because of
said default and under the power j
of sale contained in the said deed
to secure debt, the undersigned (
will sell at public outcry before j
the Court House Door in Perry,
Houston County, Georgia, during
the legal hours of sale, to the high
est bidder for cash, on the first
Tuesday in January 1959, same be
ing January 6, 1959, the following
described real estate described in
Guaranteed 3 Pei Cent
INTEREST
On Savings Accounts
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS
RANK
ANY TYPE
ASPHALT
PAVING
DRIVEWAYS - PARKING
LOTS
Residence or Commercial
Free Estimates
Call
FAIL M. TURNER
CALL GA 9-1459
Perry, Georgia
i
r
E. F. BELLFLOWER
MACHINE SHOP AND GARAGE
TRUCK BODIES BUILT
Complete Line of Hardware and Auto Parts
LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE
MOVING AND HAULING
PHONE GA 9-1202 PERRY, GEORGIA
IF YOU PLAN TO
Buy—Build
or Bofiiiuuce
See Us. We Will Work
Out a Loan for You with No
Unnecessary “Red Tape”
A loan where the monthly payments are fitted
to your income, where you save interest and
where you can talk with the holders of your
mortgage.
PERRY FEDERAL
i Savings & Loan Association
JERNIGAN ST. PERRY, GA.
WHERE you save DOES make a difference.
I I
and conveyed by said deed to se-,
cure debt, to-wit:
That certain city lot in the City
of Warner Robins, formerly known
as Wellston, and in the Fifth Land;
District of Houston County, Geor-|
gia, being a part of Lot No. 155
in Block 27 of the old Wellston
Township. Plat of survey of said
Township of Wellston being re
corded in Map Book 1, page 283,
Clerk’s Office, Houston Superior
Court. Said lot or tract of land
having such shapes, metes, bounds,
courses and distances as are shown
on plat of survey of same made by
Theodore W. Waddle, State Sur
veyor No. 924, on August 10, 1955, |
a copy of said plat being recorded j
in Map Book 3, page 286, Clerk’s
s Office, Houston Superior Court, j
Said tract or parcel of land being!
more fully described as follows.
BEGINNING at a point on the;
north side of Watson Avenue
1 which point is west 100 feet from I
the northwest corner of the inter-1
section of Watson Avenue and
Fifth Street and from said begin-1
ning point running South 88 de
grees 43 minutes 30 seconds west
along the north line of Watson
Avenue a distance of 125.4 feet to
a point marking the southeast cor
ner of land of J. H. Rosenhurg
and Evelyn S. Rosenhurg; which
point is designated as “E” on the
I aforesaid Waddle plat; thence
j running in a northerly direction
along the east line of said Rosen
burg property a distance of 100
' feet to property of Croft W. How
( ard to point marked “D” on said
plat; thence running north 88 de
grees 43 minutes 30 seconds east
a distance of 76.1 feet to a point;
thence running north 1 degree 26
minutes east a distance of 75 feet
to a point; thence running north
88 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds
east a distance of 75 feet to a I
point; thence running south 1 de
gree 26 minutes east a distance of
75 feet to a point; thence running
south 88 degrees 43 minutes 30
seconds west a distance of 25 feet
to a point; thence running south 1
degree 26 minutes cast a distance
of 100 feet to beginning point.
Said lot or tract of land is
bounded on the north by lands of
Croft W. Howard and lands of
Leonard E. Carter; on the cast by
lands of A. F. Brown and Colson
lands; on the south by the north
line of Watson Avenue; and on
the west by lands of J. 11. Rosen
hurg and Evelyn S. Rosenhurg and
lands of Croft W. Howard, and
lands of Mrs. A. G. Wall.
There arc located on said pro-1
perty a building known as Smith’s
Curb Market and other structures.
Said property will be sold sub
ject to all unpaid ad valorem tax
es due and to become due thereon.
The proceeds of said sale will
be applied as set out in said deed
to secure debt.
A fee simple deed will be made
to the purchaser at said sale by
the undersigned.
This Ist day of December, 1958.
PERRY FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
F. M. Houser Sec.-Treas.
As Attorney in Fact for
Mabry T. Smith
Nunn and Aultman
Attorneys at Law
Perry, Georgia stc. 12-4.
““■"“““I
| THE BAFFLES By Mahoney
1 DON'T Mind VOUR ] HAVE PATIENCE, 6AV„ SERF, HAVE VOU SEEN )
UNCLE STAVING HERE,./ PEAR. I'M SURE THE 'HELP WANTED'
THERE... 1 TOLD VOU SO. I , _ V
UNCLE JULIAN WILL. M f , // l\
GO TO WORK. HE'S USING fHE SURE IS. /V/ //. .U,
THE CLASSIFIED SECTION H|| ' / '// // W
RIGHT NOW J j hWS ' L U/
|| Jp
TALES OUT OF SCHOOL
BY BERNICE McCULLAR
THE TEACHERS AND THE!
ORCHIDS Teachers have many;
different hobbies. I know two who
have started to growing orchids.
I They are Marjorie Bamble, past
president of the Georgia Associa
| tion of Classroom Teachers, and
her friend, Sue Standard, who
lives with the Gambles in their
Columbus home.
IN FATHER’S FOOTSTEPS
Recent test done by Harvard show
ed that only 3 out of 10 school
superintendents would advise their
own sons, or anybody’s sons, to
follow in their footsteps and be
come school superintendents. Do
you realize that although the aver
age school superintendent man
ages more property, disburses a
bigger payroll, and supervises
more employees than any other
I executive in the county, he often
gets the least appreciation—and
sometimes the lowest executive
salary?
WATCH IT HAPPEN Best
reason for your standing up and
screaming if they try to abolish
the 12th grade is this: the city
systems already had it when we
put it in statewide in Georgia.
They have money enough to keep
it, too. The ones who would be
really handicapped are your chil
dren out in Georgia’s small towns
and rural areas. Think hard about
this!
GEORGIA BOY: Tender tale in
A. J. Cronin’s autobiography AD
VENTURE IN TWO WORLDS
tells of a Georgia boy named John
ny, who became a GI in France.
Johnny went to some Georgia
school, maybe yours. He walked
in the woods, and he learned to
know the birds and the animals.
He loved them, and had gentle
hands to hold and tend them. He
lived with a French family on his
loaves. Dr. Cronin occupied the
room he had been in. On the win
dow was scratched, “Johnny stays
here.” The family told him about
this lad, who not so long ago was
going to a school in Georgia. They
told of how they thought more of
Georgia, and of America because
of Johnny. They told of how he
found a thrush with a broken leg,
and had set the tiny leg, and how
the bird sang again. Then they
showed him something else: John
ny’s grave. He was killed when a
land mine exploded. They keep!
flowers on (he grave of this gentle
Georgia boy, whom some school
and some family in our state help
ed to become an ambassador of
love and goodwill for us to the
people on the other side of the
world.
EDUCATION IN GEORGIA:
Just off (he press is a new booklet,
“Education in Georgia,” an attrac
tive red and white 64-page publica
tion which portrays (he advance of
education during the Griffin ad
ministration, from the first grade
through the university system. It
includes a beautiful color pull-out
in green and red and white show
ing the 12million dollar science
center that is taking shape at the
University in Athens.
DOCTOR ZHIVAGO: I have just
finished reading Boris Pasternak’s
tragic new Russian novel, Doctor
Zhivago. It is not, I think, a great
novel in the sense of the old Rus
sian novels like those which Tol
stoy, Turgenev and Dostoevski
wrote. But, it is an important no
vel for (he world today because it
defies the horror of the Russian
attempts to crush the spirit of
man. Pasternak was awarded the
Nobel Prize, but was not allowed!
to go to Sweden to receive it. If
you have a bright youngster in j
senior high school, he would be j
interested in this book.
THEY ARE GOING AGAIN
NEXT SUMMER: Dr. Claude Pur
cell, State Superintendent of
| Schools, has just been authorized
| by the State Board of Education to
allot $210,000 to finance summer
study for 700 Georgia teachers in
math, science, and foreign langu
ages, on college campuses next
summer. You remember this was
started last summer. We have had
fine results. Your children are
learning more because of it.
HERE’S OUR MOTTO; The slo
gan of education in Georgia this
year is: “The Georgia child learn
ing more”. The front and center
of education’s drama is your child.
It is important that he learn more
this year than in any year before,
and that is the purpose of all we
do and plan in education in Geor
gia.
THEY ARE GOING DOWN TO
JEKYLL: On January 30 and 31
your lunchroom manager may be
going down to Jekyll Island to
learn how to run your lunchroom 1
better. The Georgia School Food)
Service Association is having its!
annual conference down there.)
Margaret Roper, our school lunch
supervisor at Waycross is in
charge of this conference.
PERSONALITIES IN EDUCA
TION: Dr. C. S. Hubbard, who is
now Assistant Superintendent of
Schools in Georgia, was the first
vocational agriculture teacher in
this state. Mr. Hubbard, who has
taught Sunday School for many
years at Charles Allen’s Grace Me
thodist Church in Atlanta, former
ly headed our library and text
book division. He built up Geor
gia’s school book and library pro
gram so that it was rated, last
year, as the finest one in the Na
tion. Schools of the state can now
provide text books for your child i
during his whole 12 years of school
for S4O that would cost you more
than S2OO if you bought them
yourself.
MAKE A NOTE: We have had
inquiries about whether the State
Board of Education can be reor
ganized as the State Highway
Board can. The answer is no. The
Highway Board is an appointed
group but the State Board of Edu
cation is a Constitutional body and
can not be reorganized in the same
manner.
NEWSMEN WHO COVER THE
HILL: Some very able and enter
i prising news reporters cover Cap
itol Hill and do many of our edu
cation stories. They are nice to
work with and we are always glad
to see them. Among them are:
Margaret Shannon and Billy Parr
of the Atlanta Journal; Bruce Gal
phin, Gene Nelson, Elizabeth Mor
gan, of the Atlanta Constitution;
Rege Murphy of the Macon Tele
graph; Dick Berger of the Savan
nah papers; Jim Thomasson of the
AP; and Glen Anthony of the UP.
NO need'Y n s
' ro 60 ON /V ' '” / V
JSAFAR|,,/~!3J|/
WHAT YOU WAl^r^
TRY NEWSPAPER f
APS- TODAY! j
0 WHITE SALE I
AT YOUR FRIENDLY ... f
Colonial Stores ,
PRICES IN THIS AD EFFECTIVE
p ft | n u | i I THRU SAT., JAN. 3RD.
COLONIAL oTORISI tity rights reserved.
L - -* NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.
FITTED [
SHEETS OiflM
PERCALE DOUBLE SIZE
FITTED IfI WSERE
SHEETS mSSjg^
MULTI-STRIPE
PILLOW TyFj? M
GASES 4ESH ’
PERCALE COMRED
DOUBLE „W|s|
SHEETS Hafil
(ASSORTED COLORS)
Percale Pillow Cases 2 « $ 2.19
Percale Steadied Sheets r $ 2.19
Bleached Sheets p “““ $ 2.39
Multi-Stripe Sheets r $ 2.39
Multi-Stripe Sheets Z 5 2.39
Percale Pillow Cases ~
I maxwell house
oMvKED i or cold label
HAMS i FRESH
45c; COFFEE
lB *
I LIMIT 1 OF YOUR CHOICE
WITH $5 ORDER OR MORE
DIAMOND PAPER BAKE-RITE
NAPKINS SHORTENING
r I0 C ™ 55*
LIMIT 1 WITH OTHER PURCHASES
TOTALING $5.00 OR MORE.
CORNER OF MAIN AND JERNIGAN ni _
AN PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE