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SALE OF LAND 1
Georgia, Houston County
Under and by virtue of the pow
er of sale contained in a certain
deed to secure debt given by F. E.
Richards to P. H. Williams, dated
January 25, 1955, and recorded in
the Clerk’s Office, Houston Super
ior Court in Book 86, folio 188,
the undersigned will, on the first
Tuesday in April, 1959, to-wit,
April 7, 1959, sell before the court
house door in Houston County,
Georgia between the legal hours
of sale to the highest bidder for
cash the following described pro
perty, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in Land Lot No.
214 in the Lower sth District of
Houston County, Georgia, and
more particularly described as Lot
No. 13 in Block C of Paulella
Gardens, a subdivision recorded
in Map Book 2, page 228, in the
< P 9 '/
*
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or tract * on *
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S2l CARROLL ST. GA 9-2955
t Clerk’s Office of the Superior
| Court of Houston County.
Said deed to secure debt was
given to secure 163 promissory
notes of the same date due month
ly after date beginning March 1,
1955, all of said notes being in the
amount of $35.00 except the last
in the amount of SIB.OO, with in
terest from maturity at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum. 43 of
said notes, including the notes due
on and prior to September 1, 1958,
have been paid. Default was made
in the payment of the note due
October 1, 1958, and subsequent
months, and by virtue of the pro
visions of said notes the entire
indebtedness is now due and pay
able, with interest from October 1,
1958 at the rate of 8 per cent per
annum.
Said property will be sold freed
of the lien of all ad valorem taxes
for 1958 and prior years, but will
be sold subject to ad valorem taxes
for the current year. The amount
realized at said sale will be used
to pay the principal and interest
due on said indebtedness, and
other sums as provided in said
notes, together with the costs of
lhis proceeding, and the balance,
if any, will be paid to the maker
of said note or his heirs, executors,
administrators or assigns. A fee
simple title will be made to the
purchaser at said sale.
This 10th day of March, 1959.
P. H. WILLIAMS
By Jones, Sparks, Benton and
Cork, his Attorneys
4tc. 3-12
NOTICE TO DEBTORS
AND CREDITORS
Georgia, Houston County:
All creditors of the Estate of
Ulysses “Doc” Davis, deceased,
late of Houston County, are hereby
notified to render in their de
mands to the undersigned, accord
ing to law, and all persons indebt
ed to said estate are required to
make immediate payment to me.
March 2, 1959.
Aletha Davis, Administratrix
of the Estate of Ulysses “Doc”
Davis, Deceased.
By; David P. Hulbert,
Attorney for Administratrix
6tc. 3-5.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS
AND CREDITORS:
Georgia, Houston County
All creditors of the Estate of
Nancy Elizabeth Corder, late of
Houston County, Georgia, deceas
ed, are hereby notified to render
in their demands to the undersign
ed according to law, and all per
sons indebted to said estate are re
quired to make immediate pay
ment to us.
March 2, 1959.
Mrs. Clyde Jones Peacock
Calvin Arthur Kirkland
Executors of the Will of
Nancy Elizabeth Corder, de- I
ceased 6tc. 3-5.
READ THE WANT ADS!
To Be Built at FFA-FHA Camp
Ground-breaking exercises will be held April 1 for a new auditorium to be constructed
at the FFA-FHA camp at Jackson Lake under sponsorship of the Georgia Power
Company. The building will cost $50,000. John J. McDonough, company president,
will turn the first shovelful of earth. State educational leaders will attend.
‘Shots' Available;
Keep Up to Date
How long has it been since your
last smallpox vaccination? Bet you
don’t remember. Have you had a
full schedule of Salk vaccine to
protect against polio? Too many
haven’t. Os course, you make sure
that your children have all the
shots recommended to protect
their health. But too many adults
forget about their own protection.
It’s just plain wasteful not to
take full advantage of the immun
ization science has made available
to us. Every person under 40
should be protected against small
pox, poliomyelitis, and tetanus.
Smallpox vaccination needs rein
forcing every three years. You
should have three doses of Salk
vaccine. A fourth dose, one year
after the third dose, is a good
idea, according to the latest re
ports. Your original tetanus pro
tection should be followed up with
booster doses whenever an injury
with danger of tetanus happens,
otherwise every five years.
Influenza injections are wise ev
ery year for high risk cases, such
as old or chronically ill people,
; especially those with circulatory or
respiratory disease. High risk is
I also the criterion for BCG vaccina
tion against tuberculosis. Vaccin
ation is recommended for tubercu
lin-negative people in the follow
ing groups: (1) children in areas
where the prevalence of TB is
high; (2) doctors, nurses, and oth
ers working with tuberculosis pa
tients in hospitals; (3) persons
unavoidably exposed to continued
contact with infectious TB in the
home; (4) patients and employees
of institutions, such as mental hos
pitals where the incidence of TB
is known to be high.
These recommendations are, of
course, only general guidelines.
Your family doctor will advise the
program of immunization that’s
right for you.
Soil testing is the only way to
determine accurately how much
fertilizer and what kind to use,
says J. R. Johnson, agronomist,
Agricultural Extension Service.
h REMEMBER"
1 BV THE OLD TIMERS |
From Ray Loesch, Minneapo
lis, Minn.: I remember from my
old home town: the first o] n
window that let the sound of the
birds and the warm south winds
into the house. My father spading
the garden with my mother a-:d
me raking out the clods, a .d
mothi digging a sweet pea
trench and tenderly planting the
seeds. Lugging the living room
and dining room rugs out to a
spot on the back lawn where the
grass was long enough and green
enough to lay them. And then
the laborious task of beating
them with a rug beater until my
knuckles were red and raw and
winter’s dust permeated my nos
trils.
The business of removing the
storm windows and carrying them
to the woodshed for replacement
with screens, many of which had
been marked for the proper win
dows. Also bringing the canary
in his cage out to the back porch
for his first exposure to the sun
shine of spring.
Spring also meant removing the
hard coal burner from the living
room and the dismantling of the
sections of stove pipe that led
from the stove to the chimmey.
1 can still see my mother with a
White dust cloth wrapped around
her head laying newspapers on
the floor under the stove and hear
her squawking to father when he
carelessly let some soot fall from
the stove pipe sections.
It was a happy day for me
each spring when the hard coal
burner was relegated to the wood
shed. It meant that for six months
I would not have to carry in the
coal and carry out the ashes.
(Send contribution* to thle column
to The Old Timer, Community Pres*
Service. Box 39, Frankfort, Kentucky.)
Junior High Cage
Tournament Opens
In Perry Tonight
The fourth annual Perry Junior
High Invitational Basketball Tour
nament will get underway tonight
in the old Perry gymnasium as
eight of Middle Georgia’s finest
eighth grade teams take the floor
for the championship fight. This
will be the first of many eighth
grade dribble derbies that will
take place in and around Middle
Georgia during the next few
weeks.
Invitations have been accepted
be Cordele Junior High, Hawkins
ville, Reynolds, Roberta, Ogle
thorpe, Butler and Perry. The Per
ry seventh grade team will be en
tered as the eighth team in order
to round out the brackets.
Oglethorpe, with an 8-2 record,
appears to be the tournament fav
orite especially after the 39 to 22
trouncing they handed the Perry
eighth graders last week.
The tournament opens Thurs
day night at 5:15 o’clock when the
Perry seventh grade takes on the
10,000"] r ' r
-
soon I ' 4 t ’
6000 J^%sfe ai _ Py
4000 __M[M|[^MM|i||^^^^M^mpß^^^^- /.
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2000 _J L _ {_ | y __L
28 DAYS 1 YEAR 2 YEARS 3 YEARS 4 YEARS 5 YEARS 6 YEARS 7 YEARS
Compressive strength in
pounds per square inch
On the Pennsylvania TurnpLo... U &
shows a rising curve of strength year by year!
Actual core tests just completed on strength of 7,226 pounds per square
this pioneer turnpike system again inch ... a gain in strength of 29%!
show why concrete lasts so long. A basic characteristic of concrete With its specially designed subbases,
, , , . today s concrete gives you an ex
has been proved again: Concrete pected 50 years and more of safe,
St ten years ago concrete cores cut constantly increases in strength. smooth driving. No wonder concrete
from the Pennsylvania Turnpike This strength “bonus” is one rea- is the preferred pavement for the
when it was three months old showed son engineers stayed with concrete new * nterstate System and all
an average compressive strength of for all the Turnpike extensions. Con- heavy-duty roads as welll
5,068 pounds per square inch. Crete is the only pavement that
Cores recently cut from the same can be mathematically designed to
locations showed a compressive specific traffic load requirements.
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
507 Mortgage Guarantee Building, Atlanta 3, Ga.
A national organization to improve and extend the uses of concrete
Reynolds eighth graders. Ogle
thorpe meets Roberta in the se
cond game at 6; 15 followed by the
Butler-Hawkinsville game at 7:15.
The final game of the evening
will place the host team, Perry,
against the strong Crisp County
quintet from Cordele.
Friday night’s games will be
played at 7 o’clock and 8 o’clock.
Saturday’s games begin at 7
o’clock with the championship
game at 8.
Coach Jim Worrall, who is
rounding out his seventh year as
junior high coach, will serve as
tournament director. J. T. Moss,
physical education teacher and
football coach in the junior high,
will once again serve as business
manager.
The local junior high school has
sponsored this tournament for the
past three years but has yet to
bring home the winner’s trophy.
Previous winners are Unadilla,
Abbeville and Roberta.
Georgia producers now receive
less than 30 cents of the consum
ers’ food dollar, declare market
ing specialists, Agricultural Exten
sion Service.
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., Mar. 26, 1953
Clinchfieltl Club
Conducts Meeting
BY MRS. W. J. TYSON
The Clinchfield HD Club held
its monthly meeting at the home
of Mrs. L. M. McCormick on Wed
nesday, March 18 with Mrs. G. L.
Hulsey as co-hostess.
The meeting opened with every
one singing The More We Get To
gether. An Easter devotion was
given by Mrs. Sarah Stone. Mrs.
A. E. Harris Jr. gave the report of
the district meeting held at Ma
con. Reports were given by pro
ject chairmen.
Mrs. S. W. Fisher gave a demon-
n '
OF TWi'j* W %
AN&SOO
iswJJ
Yes sir, it won’t be long before he’s out of
there and into kindergarten... school... high
school then college!
Where’s the money coming from? That’s
up to you, his parents. But it’s not so hard, if
you begin now, with a savings account at this
bank, and add to it every payday. Next pay
day is a good time to start!
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS BANK
MEMBER OF F. D. I. C.
Established 1889 Perry, Georgia
stration on the proper way to n
in facings, interfacings, binding
and sleeves of clothing. ss
Mrs. Alma Beckham, HD Agent
gave a demonstration on ways ’
put in hems of clothing and a talk
on selecting correct assessor!*
and the proper way to wear them
Delicious refreshments of cheese
sticks, chicken salad sandwiches
cupcakes and coffee were served
Mrs. Barfield was a visitor.
Agronomists at the Agricultural
Extension Service say when apply,
ing fertilizer to cotton at, or be
fore planting, it should bo placed
in a band three inches to the side
and two inches below the seed.