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RECEIVER’S SALE.
Houston County Land and Personal
Property.
Under and by virtue of an order
passed by the Hon. H. A. Mathews,
Judge of the Superior Courts of the
Macon Circuit on the 17th day of
December, 1919, in the case of L.
O. Benton vs. J. E. Holsenbeck, now
pending in Houston Superior Court,
there will be sold by myself, as re¬
ceiver, of the assets of the late firm
of Benton & Holsenbeck, the follow¬
ing described property, to-wit:
1. On Tuesday, January 6th, 1920,
before the Court Houae door in Perry,
Georgia, within the legal hours of
sale, the land hereinafter described,
and consisting of three tracts or
parcels of land. Said land will be
■oifafed for tale separately and in se¬
parate tracts, and will be first offer¬
ed for sale for cash, and next offer¬
ed for Bale upon the following terms
•—1-3 cash, the remainder to be paid
January 1st, 1921, with interest up¬
on the remainder at eight (8) per
cent per annum, from the date of
the confirmation of said sale. The
highest price bid for each tract se¬
parately, both for cash and upon the
terms named, will be reported to the
Court on Thursday, January 8th,
1920, for rejection or confirmation;
and the successful bidder, upon the
day of sale, under both methods, for
cash or on the terms named, will be
required to deposit teh (10) per
. cent of his bid, which will be return¬
ed in the event the sale be not con¬
firmed, and in the event the sale be
Confirmed, will be credited upon the
purchase price.
2. On Wednesday, January 7th, |
1920, will be sold by myself, as said
receiver, within the legal hours of'
sale, on the premises of what is known
as the Bryant Brown Place in Hous¬
ton County, where the said J. E.
Holsenbeck formerly resided, to the
highest bidder for cash, all and sing¬
ular, the personal property herein¬
after described and set out. The
highest bidder for said various items
of personal property—the same to
be sold separately—will be required j
upon the day of the sale, to deposit
ten (10) per cent of the bid, and
said sale will be reported to the
court for confirmation or rejection
on Thursday, the 8th day of January,
1920, and in the event of rejection
said ten (10) per cant deposit will
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be returned to the bidder, and in the
event of confirmation, the same will
be credited upon the purchase price.
Said personal property above re¬
ferred to being described as follows:
7 mules, 18 hogs and 12 pigs, 1
lot of corn in shuck estimated to be
700 bushels, 1 lot of fodder estimated
to be 2500 bushels, 1 lot loose hay
estimated to be 5 tons, 1 lot of pea¬
nuts, unthrashed, estimated to be 4
tons; 1 lot of unthrashed peas, esti¬
mated to be 2000 pounds; 1 lot of
cotton in the seed, estimated to be
3500 pounds; 5 sacks of rye, esti¬
mated to be 1000 pounds; 1 lot of
potatoes in banks, estimated to be
100 bushels; 1 '.ar lo»d of cotton
seed hulls; 1 sack of vetch; 3 sacks
of nitrate of soda about 600 pounds;
3 two-horse wagons; 8 single plow
stocks, some gears; 1 corn planter;
2 cotton planters; 2 guano distribu¬
ters; 5 two-horse plow stocks, some
tools and plows; 1 Ford truck, 1 Disc
harrow; 1 drag harrow, 2 Fowler
cultivators, about 23 cows and calves;
1 middle buster.
SAW MILL PROPERTY; l boiler
and engine and saw mill com¬
plete; 1 edger 1 cut off saw, 1 log
dray, 2 log carts; 4 mules and 4 seta
of gear; some saw mill tools, consist¬
ing of wrenchs, hammers, etc.; about
26000 feet of lumber on halves; about
50,000 feet of lumber; some oil and
grease, axes , canthooka, etc.
The three tracts or parcels of land
above referred to are described as
follows:
1. A tract of land lying and being
the County of Houston, State of
and known and described
the plan of said County as lots
seventy-seven (77), except
portions of said lot, one on the
end of about seven (7) acres,
to John D. Rutherford in front
his house and running in a lane
the public.road, and marked by
and the other part excepted
about three acres near the north
corner of said lot, marked by a
around Mrs. Garden's house.
The whole of lots number seventy
(78) and seventy-nine (79),
all of Jots number eighty (80)
eighty-nine (89) that lie on the
°uth side of Big Indian Creek; and
eastern half of lots numbers for
(47), forty-eight (48), for
(49) and fifty (50), the
v hole amounting to twelve hundred
(1250) acres, more or less,
as the Bryan Brown home
place in Houston County, Georgia.
2. All that tract or parcel of land
in Houston County, Georgia, describ¬
ed m follows: In lot No. 9 in the
12th District, being on the east side
of the Perry and Haynesville road,
and part of lot No. 13 in the 13th
District, and where said road inter¬
sects the Clarke’s bridge road, thence
northwest along said Perry and
Haynesville road 378 yards- thence
east 368 y*ards; thence northwest 270
yards to the north line of lot No. 13;
thence east 391 yards to the east
line of lot No. 13; thence south along
the line of said lot No. 13, 396 yards
to the said Clarke’s bridge road,
thence southwest along said last men¬
tioned road 700 yards to the place of
beginning, containing sixty (60)
acres, more or less. Also part of lot
No. 9, described as follows: beginning
at a point where said Clarke’s Bridge
Road crosses the north line of said
lot No. 9, thence west along the north
line of said lot No. 9, 20.20 chs to
the west line of said lot No. 9, thence
south along said west line 20.12 chs
to Clarke’s Bridge Road, thence north
easterly along said road 30.39 chs
to the place of beginning, contain¬
ing twenty-four (24) acres, more or
less.
3. Also the store house lot of E.
H. Wimberly, said lot being eighty
five (85) feet square, and situate in
the fork of the Haynesville and
Clarke Bridge Road and the Perry
road and across the said Perry road
from the above first described land
in paragraph 2 hereof.
This the 20tb day of December,
1919.
L. B. AULTMAN,
Receiver.
the 6th, 1920. 12-2S-2t.
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STYLE HEADQUARTERS
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