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Legal Notices|
SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Pursuant to an order of the Superior
court Os said County, and a writ directed
to us by the Clerk of said court on the
third day of June, 1939, we, the under
signed, will sell at public outcry to the
highest bidder for cash, before the Court
House door of said County and within
the legal hours of sale on the first Tues
day in July, 1939, next, and as the prop
erty of Willie L. Smith, G. W. Smith,
Richard James, Frank James and Mrs.
Lila Sway, the following described land :
A tract ot 65 acres, more or less, of land
in Lot of Land No. 34 in the Sixth
district and Fourth section of Chattooga
County. Georgia, located in said Lot of
Land and bounded by lines, as follows:
beginning at the original Northwest cor
ner of said Lot of Land. No. 34 ; thence
running South on the original West line
of said Lot of Land to the point where
the same is intersected by the north line
of Dawson's tract in said Lof* of Land ;
thence running Eastwardly on the North
line of said Dawson tract to Chattooga
River; thence running up said river to
the original north line of said Lot of
Land, No. 34 ; thence running West on
said original north line to the point of
the beginning. ,
I. M. HENDERSON,
D. P. HENLEY.
J. L. M'GINNIS,
Commissioners
4t-Jun29
LEAVE TO SELL REAL ESTATE.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
To Whom It May Concern :
Notice is hereby given that Rowland
W. Henry, as administrator of L. D. V.
Rudicil, deceased, having applied to me
for petition for leave to sell the real es
tate'of said L. L. V. Rudicil, deceased;
and that an order was made thereon nt
the June term, 1939. for citation, and
that citation issue: all the heirs at law
and creditors of the said L. D. V. Rudi
cil, deceased, will take notice that I will
pass upon said application at the July
term, 1939. of the Court of Ordinary of
Chattooga county : and that unless cause
is shown to the contrary at said time,
said leave will be granted.
This Junes, 1939. 4t-Jun29
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
GEORGIA, Chattooga County :
All persons indebted to George Morton,
late of said county, deceased, are hereby
required to make settlement of their in
debtedness with me; and all creditors of
said deceased are notified to verify and
present to me their claims against the
estate of deceased, within the time al
lowed by law, twelve months from this
date. This June 5. 1939.
W. T. MORTON. Admr.
Estate of George Morton, Deceased.
6t-.1u1y13
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County ;
All persons indebted to G. E. Martin,
late of said county, deceased, are hereby
required to pay such indebtedness to the
undersigned, duly qualified executor of
the last will of said deceased. And all
creditors of said deceased are required
to give full notice of their claims as sirh
creditors to the undersigned within the
tini" allowed by law.
This June 5. 1939. Gt-.Tu11."
LEE A. MARTIN, Executor.
LEAVE TO SELL REAL ESTATE
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
To Whom It May Concern :
Notice is hereby given that W. C.
Christian, as administrator of C. M.
Christian, deceased, having applied to
me for petition for leave to sell the real
estate of said C. M. Christian, deceased ;
and that an order was made thereon a'
the June term, 1939. for citation, and
that citation issue; alf the heirs at law
and creditors of the said C. M. Christian
deceased, will take notice that I wil 1
pass upon said application at the Jul
term. 1919. of the court of ordinary of
Chattooga county, and that unless caus
is shown to the contrary, at said time
said leave will be granted. This June 5.
1939. 4t.Tun29
IL A. ROSS, Ordinary.
IN MEMORY OF G. H. RAMEY
AND SONS.
All is dark in our home. Lonely are
our heAts for the ones we loved so
dearly has forever passed away. Our lov
ed ones are gone but not forgotten. Nev
er will their memory fade. Sweetest
thoughts will ever linger around the
graves where they are laid.
We loved you all but Jesus loved you
more, and He has sweetly called you to
yonder shining shore. The golden gates
Were open. A gentle voice said, “Come”,
and with farewells unspoken you all en
tered home.
We hope to meet you some sweet day.
It seems so sad and lonely as the days
go by but we long to meet our dear ones
up in heaven some sweet day.
Although we are sad and lonely by the
vacancy left in our home, we know it
was God’s will when He took them away.
Written By a Loved One.
Scientific Farming
Urged By Dr. Miller
ATLANTA, June 20 (GPS).—Esti
mating approximately half of the state’s
potato and tomato crops would be lost
by diseases, Dr. Julian H. Miller, Uni
versity of Georgia plant pathologist,
urged modern scientific farming methods
in a report to Chancellor S. V. Sanford,
of the University System. The report
urged application of “exact science” tn
farming.
“Years ago,” Dr. Miller said, “many
Georgians saved their own seed or plant
parts for propagation and grew success
ful crops year after year. Now this has
changed. In buying tomato, cabbage,
sweet potato and other plants as well as
bringing in new seeds, we have brought
along all the diseases of most every sec
tion of this country and many from Eu
rope.”
WITH THE STARS
Dolly Haas, who has been in this coun
try for two years and who has not ap
peared in a picture, has at last been as
signed to an important role. It is the
feminine lead in James Hilton’s “We
Are Not Alone,” playing opposite Paul
Muni . . .
Helen Fortesque Reynolds, former wife
of Julian Reynolds, tobacco heir, has a
contract with RKO. Her first picture
will be in Carole Lombard’s “Vigil In
th* Night.” . . .
Marlene Deitrich sailed recently on the
Normandie for Paris where she will
make “The Image,” for Forrester Par
rant. Her husband and daughter met her
in New York and sailed with her . . .
The production of “The Mikado” will
experiment with encores during the early
showings of the picture. The musical
numbers, which are loudly applauded, will
be repeated by switching to a change
over projector which holds a duplicate
print . . .
“Twenty-Mule Team.” a story of Death
Valley, will be filmed with Wallace Bee
ry and Mickey Rooney having the prin
cipal parts ....
Errol Flynn is trying to interest his
studio in a script he has prepared of
“Blood and Sand.” Rudolf Valentino
made the silent version in 1922 . . .
Jane Withers and the Ritz brothers
are to be teamed in a picture . . .
FARM BRIEFS
By WHITNEY THARIN,
A negro tenant farmer in Washington
county claims some kind of a record
for chicken-raising. Ephriam Tucker and
his wife, Emma, report they raised 600
chickens out of 600 hatched—-and that's
batting 1.000 per cent, in anybody's
league. He reports also that his crops
are “doing fine,” with “no sign of boll
weevils in my cotton yet.”
Recent rains throughout south Geor
ia have caused tremendous improve
ment in Georgia’s tobacco crop. E. C.
Westbrook, extension tobacco specialist,
reports. “Before the recent rains,” he
says, “the crop looked disappointing.
However, probably none of the tobacco
had been topped and was, therefore, in
condition to obtain full benefit from the
good seasons which have prevailed gen
erally throughout the tobacco territory
recently.”
The department of state has extended
invitations, on behalf of Secretary of
Agriculture Wallace, to the governments
of ten cotton-exporting countries, asking
them to send representatives to a meet
ing in Washington, beginning Sept. 5.
'939, to discuss the possibility of working
out a world cotton agreement. The coun
tries to which invitations have been Ex
tended are Argentina. Brazil. Egypt.
I rance (for the French cotton exporting
colonies). Great Britain (for the British
cotton exporting colonies). India. Mexico.
Ueru, Sudan, and Union of Soviet Soci
alist Republics.
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1939.
Enid Bennett who retired from the
screen in 1931 and who has been living
with her husband on their ranch in Lake
Port, 'Calif., will return to the screen in
‘lntermezzo” . . .
Dennis O’Keefe will replace Jack Oak
ie in "Bachelor's Baby,” which features
Mischa Auer and Shirley Ross. . .
Sigrid Guthrie, who was to be featur
d in “Forgotten Women,” has been ele
vated to stardom as a result of her per
formance in the picture and its title has
been changed to that of “The Forgotten
Woman” . . .
Four million dollars have been spent
on “Gone With the Wind” and it will
have to be the most successful picture
ver made, including “Snow White,” to
how' any profit . . .
Errol Flynn is bringing his sister,
Rosemary, from Ireland for a screen test.
Her parents, Prof, and Mrs. Thompson
Flynn, will also make the trip but they
have no movie ambitions . . .
Gene Autry is to appear in a million
dollar epic soon entitled "In Old Mont
gomery’’ . . .
Universal is preparing a western to
star Mae West and IV. C. Fields . . .
Some people doubt that Joan Craw
ford will appear on the stage. She is
nervous on appearing before the camera
and extremely so preceding her broad
casts . . .
Eighteen critical watersheds of the na
tion now are the object of a joint de
tailed study by the bureau of agricultur
al economics the soil conservation serv
ice. according to announcement from the
department of agriculture. These studies
are being conducted under authority of
the national flood control act of 1936.
with a view to determining how land re
sources within those watersheds may be
expected to contribute, through develop
ment and management, to the control of
floods.
Outstanding developments in the poul
try and egg situation are the continued
large receipts of eggs and the decline in
wholesale egg prices, according to the bu
reau of agricultural economics. The low
er egg prices are reflected in the stead
ily rising feed-egg ratio. During the past
month, the ratio has been much less fa
vorable for egg producers than in the
preceding month or last year, and sligUf
ly ess favorable than the 1928-37 aver
age for May. The purchase of eggs by
the Federal Surplus Commodities corpor
ation for relief distribution, which began
on May 23. will help to support egg
prices, the bureau says.
The general level of farm product
prices in mid-May was 1 point up from
a month earlier, the bureau of agricul
tural economics reports. This is the first
rise in the monthly index of prices re
ceived by farmers that has been recorded
in 1939. Cotton lint was up enough ddr
ing the month to raise the index of cot
ton and cottonseed prices by 2 points,
despite a slight decline in the price of
seed.
RECEIVES DEGREE.
k 1
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ke . . „ j
Richard Hoyt Allmon, age 26. son of
Mi’s. Mattie Ayers Allmon, resident of
Chattanooga, and member of the ‘35
graduating class of McCallie school, has
just received his B. A. degree from Car
son-Newman college, of Jefferson City.
Tenn. While at Carson-Newman, All
mon was a varsity debater, winner c-f
the Philomathean Declaimer’s medal,
member of the Dramatic club and A
Capella choir. As a member of the Phil
omathean Literary society he served as
critic and vice-president. Allmon is a
ministerial student and plans to enter the
Southwestern Baptist Theological semi
nary at Fort Worth. Tex., in the fall.
(NOTE : The above announcement will
be of much interest to the many friends
of young Allmon as he is a former Chat
tooga county boy.)
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to express our sincere thanks
to our many friends and neighbors for
their kindness during our recent bereave
ment.
MR. & MRS. EARL A. WILLIAMS
AND FAMILY.
A. F. WILLIAMS.
GORE W.H.D. CLUB MEETS.
Gore Woman's 11. D. club met Tues
day afternoon, June 13. at 2 o’clock, in
the home economics building, with the
president, Mrs. John King presiding.
After a short business meeting. Miss
Henry gave a very interesting demonstra
tion on the making of a barrel chair.
Following this, a social hour was en
joyed.
MRS. G. D. MORTON. Reporter.
NOTICE.
The regular fourth Sunday night sing
ing will be held at New Antioch Bap
tist church Sunday night beginning at
7 :30 o’clock.
The Summerville quartet, the T. A. G.
quartet, the Berryton quartet, the Trion
quartet and many good singers will be
present. You are cordially invited.
COMMITTEE.
WILL ROGERS.
In accepting the statue of Will Rogers,
presented to the nation by Oklahoma,
Senator Barkley called attention to the
fact that of seventy-two monuments plac
ed in the Hall of Fame in the Capitol,
the Rogers memorial was only tjfe twelfth
dedicated to a private citizen. Gov. Phil
lips. in presenting the statue, described
Will Rogers as ‘the best known and most
revered private citizen” this country ever
knew.
Monuments
0F
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