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Legal Notices
TWELVE MONTHS’ SUPPORT
Chattooga Court of Ordinary—At Cham
bers—May 1, 1939.
The appraisers upon application of
Mrs. Nancy Simmons, widow of said T.
R. Simmons, for a twelve months’ sup
port for herself, having filed their re
turn ; all persons concerned hereby are
cited to show cause, if any they have, at
the next regular June term of this court,
why said application should not be
granted. H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
APPLICATION FOR LETTERS OF
ADMINISTRATION
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
W. T. Morton having, in proper form,
applied to me for permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of George
Morton, late of said county, this is to
cite all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of George Morton to be and
appear at my office within the time al
lowed by law, and show cause, if any
they ean, why permanent administration
should not be granted to W. T. Morton
on George Morton’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture, this Ist day of May, 1939.
H. A. ROSS. Ordinary.
CITATION.
Chattooga Court of Ordinary May
Term, 1939.
L. C. Turner, as executor of the es
tate of Jno. D. Taylor, late of said coun
ty, deceased, having filed in this Court,
his petition for letters of dismission as
such executor of said estate in due form,
and alleging that he has fully performed
all of his duties as such executor, this is
to cite all persons whomsoever to be and
appear at the June term of the court of
Ordinary of said county, to show cause,
if any they have or can, why the prayer
of said petition should not be had and
allowed and the said executor dismissed
from his trust as prayed, and letters <
dismission be issued.
This Ist day of May, 1939.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
4t-May4,11,18,25
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
GEORGIA, Chattooga County :
WHEREAS, Mrs. Pearl Henderson,
administrator of Gertrude Little, rep
resents to the Court in her petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that she has
fully administered said estate: This is,
therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administator
should not be discharged from her admin
istration, and receive Letters of Dismis
sion, on the first Monday in June, 1939.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
WHEREAS, Mrs. Pearl Henderson,
administrator of the estate of Robert
Hall Little, represents to the Court in
her petition, duly filed and entered on
record, that she has fully administered
eaid estate: This is, therefore, to cite all
persons concerned, kindred and creditors,
to show cause, if any they can, why
said administrator should not be dis
charged from her administration, and re
ceive Letters of Dismission on the first
Monday in June, 1939.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
WHEREAS, O. A. Selman, executor
of the last will of W. W. Drew, repre
sents to the Court in his petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that he has
fully administered said W. W. Drew’s
estate: This is, therefore, to cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and creditors, to
show cause, if any they ean, why said
executor should not be discharged from
his administration, and receive Letters
of Dismission on the first Monday in
June, 1939.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND
DEBTORS.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County :
Creditors of Miss Minnie Henry, late of
said county, deceased, are required to file
verified statements of their claims with
the undersigned. All persons indebted to
said deceased to make payment to the
undersigned who duly qualified as execu
trix of the will of said deceased on the
second day of May. 1939.
MISS KATHERINE HENRY.
Summerville, Ga.
CCC SALVE
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PUBLIC SALE.
By virtue of an order of the Judge of
the Superior Court of Chattooga County,
Georgia, in the case of A. W. Ledlwtter
vs. Cloudland Park Club, there will be
sold at public outcry to the highest, bidder
for cash, on the 27th day of May, 1939,
before the Court House door in Summer
ville, Chattooga County, Georgia, begin
ning at 12 o’clock, noon, the following
described property, to-wit:
Real Estate
All of Block No. 35 of Cloudland Park,
with the exception of Blocks No. 1, No. 2
and' No. 3, as shown on Plat of said
Cloudland, surveyed October, 1924, by
Co. ,O Dietz, Civil Engineer Rome, Ga.
Said property having thereon a building
known as Cloudland Park Club House,
together with other buildings of the na
ture of seven houses and garages.
Inventory of Cloudland Park Club
Furniture and Fixtures
Beds
Room D S Dressers Tables Chairs
11 112
2 2 1 12
3 2 11
4 11 1
5 2 11
6 1 112
71 11
8 11 12
9 11
10 1 11
12 1 . 11 2
14 11 2
15 2 1 11
16 11 12
17 11 1
18 11 11
19 11 11
20 2 1 ® 1
21 1111
22 2 11 3
23 2 1 2
3rd Fl. 6 3 1 2 6
L. Rm. 2 2 13
23 17 24 17 35
Miscellaneous Fixtures
Three chiffoniers, 1 dressing table, 1
leather top desk, 1 sewing machine, 1
kitchen cabinet, 1 book case, 10 dozen
sheets, 140 pillow cases, 110 bath towels,
90 face towels, 20 bath mats, 40 bureau
scarfs. 0 napkins rented, 50 bedspreads,
84 pillows, 60 side towels, 40 blankets,
14 comforts, 8 mirrors, 2 badminton
nets, 2 badminton rackets, 1 tennis net,
1 coil heater, 2 washstands 20 cots, 2
porch swings, 37 porch chairs, 3 settees,
24 mission chairs, 3 grass rugs, 3 library
tables, 4 small tables, 1 magazine stand,
4 floor lamps, 1 desk, 1 display card, 1
key rack, 1 coca-cola ice box, 1 flat top
desk, 2 water coolers, 4 high chairs.
Two pianos, 1 small billiard table, 4
flower baskets, 19 tables, 96 chairs. 3
buffets, 1 coffee urn, 72 knives, 72 forks.
115 tea spoons, 48 soup spoons, 36 serv
ice spoons, 108 plates, 72 cups and sau
cers, 55 serving platters, 157 glasses, 36
water pitchers, 85 sherbets, 33 salts and
peppers, 18 sugars, 8 syrup pitchers, 11
jelly stands. 21 flower vases, 1 refrigera
tor, 1 Frigidaire, 1 table, 2 ranges. 1
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1939
meat block, 4 aluminum pots, 9 alumi
num trays, 3 small aluminum trays, 6
aluminum stewers, 12 biscuit pans, 4 fry
pans, 2 colanders, 6 enamel bowls, 10
enamel pans, 9 knives and spoons, 2 tea
kettles, 4 garbage cans.
Also all other property, real or person
al, of the Cloudland Park Club.
Terms of said sale cash. Said sale to
be made subject to confirmation by the
Con rt.
Said property to be sold as the prop
erty of Cloudland Park Club, a corpora
tion.
R. N. WEST, Receiver
SALE UNDER POWER.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Because of default under the terms and
provisions of the deed to secure debt ex
ecuted by GEORGE F. JOHNSTON and
HARVEY B. JOHNSTON to the Land
Bank Commissioner, dated the 19th day
of June, 1934, and recorded in the clerk’s
office of the Chattooga County Superior
Court in Book 20, Page 251, which deed,
and the note and indebtedness secured
thereby, are owned and held by Federal
Farm Mortgage Corporation, the under
signed has declared the entire unpaid
amount of the indebtedness secured by
said deed due and payable, and, acting
under the power of sale contained in said
deed, for the purpose of paying said in
debtedness, will, on the 6th day of June,
1939, during the legal hours of sale at
the court house in said County, sell at
public quitcry to the highest bidder for
cash, the lands described in said deed,
to-wit:
One Hundred Fifty-One and Four-
Tenths acres of land, more or less, in
Lots Numbers 317 and 296, in the Sixth
District and Fourth Section of Chattoo
ga County, Georgia, said land being now
or formerly bounded on the North by
lands of George Morton, Esquire. East
by lands of Johnston and Trimble, South
by lands of Hix and Dawson, and West
by lands of Dawson ; also Three Hundred
Twenty acres of land, more or less, in
Lots Numbers 294 and 295, in the Sixth
District and Fourth Section of Chattoo
ga County, Georgia, said land being now
or formerly bounded on the North by
lands of E. Y. Clements, East by lands
of George Morton, Esq., South by lands
of Mrs. G. T. Dawson, and West by lands
of Wright and Clements; both of said
tracts of land being the same land de
scribed in the security deed executed by
George F. Johnston and Harvey B. John
ston to the Land Bank Commissioner.
June 19. 1934, and recorded in Book 20,
Page 251. in the office of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Chattooga County.
Georgia, to the record of which deed ref
erence is hereby made for a more particu
lar description.
Subject to first security deed dated
June 19, 1934, executed by George F.
Johnston and Harvey B. Johnston to The
Federal Land Bank of Columbia, said se
curity deed being recorded among the
records for Chattooga County, Georgia.
A deed will be exeertted to the purchas
er as authorized by the aforementioned
loan deed.
This 10th day of May, 1939.
FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE
CORPORATION
MOSES E. BRINSON,
Attorney 4t-Junl
FARM BRIEFS
By WHITNEY THARIN,
Extension Editor.
County Agent Gordon H. McGee, of
Gordon county, reports that Tom W. Ma
lone, a farmer living near Sugar Valley,
had forty acres of crimson clover this
year with a “perfect stand.” Agent Mc-
Gee says this is news because although
more Gordon county farmers than ever
before planted crimson clover this year,
only a few of them got good stands be
cause they failed to plant at the right
time. Mr. Malone has been planting crim
son clover for several years -as a soil
building crop and as a money crop, as
he has rad a good sale for his seed. Mr.
Malone keeps a farm account book and
his records show that his two-horse farm
netted him $713.64 in 1938.
Members of Georgia youth organiza
tions attending the seventh annual world
poultry congress at Cleveland, 0., July
28 to Aug. 7, will live at a well-equipped
camp on the Cuyahoga county fair
grounds at the edge of the city, accord
ing to Arthur Gannon, poultryman of
the Georgia Agricultural Extension serv
ice. Buildings on the fair grounds, with
cots and bedding furnished, will be used
as dormitories for boys, he said. The
girls will be quartered in college dormi
tories a fetv blocks from the grounds.
Dining-room space will accommodate sev
eral hundred youngsters at a meal.
Camping facilities will be available for
those attending in trucks and trailers.
Prof. R. B. Thompson, of Oklahoma A.
& M. college, is chairman of the youth
committee for the congress, and J. C.
Haynes, of Atlanta, is chairman of the
youth committee for Georgia.
It looks like the really good farmers
are always working hard to maintain
their reputations and to become even bet
ter farmers. J. P. Loughridge, of Mur
ray county, who, in 1937. was selected
as a Master Farmer of Georgia, recently
saw a copy of an extension bulletin en
titled “A Potable Motor For Georgia
Farms.” That gave him an idea and now
he has a small portable motor to operate
his corn shelter, tool grinder, fanning
mill, pea holier and do a dozen other odd
jobs around his place near Chatsworth.
Half a billion dollars of farm mortgage
debt held by the federal land banks and
land bank commissioner has beein repaid
in the last eight years, according to F.
F. Hill, governor of the farm credit ad
ministration. This represents both install
ment payments and loans paid in full.
Milk production continues at record
high levels. Total productions on April
1 was reported by the bureau of agricul
tural economics to be about 4 per cent.
higher than a year earlier and a new
high for that date. Even on a per
capita basis, production was the highest
in fifteen years of record.
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING OF
CREDITORS
In the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District of
Georgia.—lN BANKRUPTCY.
In the matter of William Jefferes,
Bankrupt. No. 6080 In Bankruptcy.
To the creditors of said bankrupt, of
Cloudland, in the county of Chattooga,
state of Georgia, and district aforesaid, j
Notice is hereby given that on May 3, |
1939, the above-named was duly adjudi
cated bankrupt; and that the first meet
ing of creditors will be held at the Ref
eree’s office, in the Masonic Temple an
nex, Rome, Ga., on May 20, 1939, at 10
o’clock A. M., at which time the said
creditors may attend, prove their claims,
appoint, a trustee, examine the bankrupt
and transact such other business as may
properly come before said meeting.
ROWELL C. STANTON,
Referee In Bankruptcy.
Rome, Georgia.
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REORGANIZATION.
Last week the president sent to con
gress his second plan of reorganization
which called for a re-grouping of about
a score of governmental bureaus and
agencies. The plan is expected to reduce
the cost of government by abouit $1,250,-
000 a year and, it was announced, that
this would be the last plan submitted to
the present session of congress.
F. H. A. LOANS
80 Pct. and 90 Pct.
Your Build —Summerville Grows
HALE REALTY CO.
ROME. GEORGIA
T. J. ESPY, JR.
A tiorney-at-Law
Summerville, Georgia,
over McGinnis Drug Store.