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Legal Notices
SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Pursuant to an order of the Superior
court of 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, arid 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 Lot 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 at
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
10 shown to the contrary at said time,
said leave will be granted.
This Junes, 1939. 4t-Jun29
IL 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-Julyl3
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 I
to give full notice of their claims as such
creditors to the undersigned within the
time allowed by law.
This June 5. 1939. 6t-Jull3
LEE A. MARTIN. Executor. }
LEAVE TO SELL REAL ESTATE
GEORGIA. Chattooga County.
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that W. C. I
Christian, as administrator of C. M. |
Christian, deceased, having applied to j
me for petition for leave to sell the real |
estate of said C. M. Christian, deceased ;
and that an order was made thereon at
the June term, 1939, for citation, and I
that citation issue; all the heirs at law I
and creditors of the said C. M. Christian i
deceased, will take notice that I will
pass upon said application at the July I
term, 1919. 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 June 5,
1939. 4tJun29
11. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
To the Registered Voters of the Gore
School District of Chattooga County.
Georgia:
In accordance with resolution of the
Board of Trustees of the Gore School
District of Chattooga County, Georgia,
duly passed at meeting held June 14,
1939, notice is hereby given to the reg
istered qualified voters of the Gore School ]
District of Chattooga County, Georgia. I
that on the 20th day of July, 1939. an
election will be held in and for said Gore
School District in said County, at which
election there will be submitted to th“
registered qualified voters of said Dis
trict for their determination the question
of whether bonds shall be issued by said
Gore School District in the aggregate sum
of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00)
for the purpose of building and equipping
the schoolhouse in and for said Gore
School District, said bonds to bear date
of July 1, 1939, to bear interest at 5 per
cent, per annum, payable semi-annually
on the first day of January and first day
of July of each year as the same accrues;
the said bonds to be in denominations of
$500.00 each, the principal thereof to be
paid as follows, to-wit: $500.00 July 1.
1941; $500.00 July 1. 1943; SSOO 00
July 1, 1945: $500.00 July 1. 1947:
$500.00 July 1, 1949; and $500.00 July
1. 1951, so that the entire issue, principal
and interest, will be paid off, and retired
on or before July 1. 1951, in the install
ments heretofore specified.
Polls will be opened at 8 o’clock a.m.
and closed at 3 o’clock p.m.
The election will be held at the Gore
Schoolhouse in the Gore School District.
Those desiring to vote in favor of said ,
T. J. ESPY, JR.
Attorney-at-Law
Summerville, Georgia.
Office over McGinnis Drug Co.
bonds will do so by casting ballots hav
ing written or printed thereon the words
“FOR SCHOOLHOUSE,” and those vot
ing against said bonds shall have written
or printed upon said ballots the words
’AGAINST SCHOOLHOUSE.”
In the event said bonds are authorized
by said election to be issued and sold, a
tax will Ire levied annually and collection
thereof provided for from the property
included in said school district as re
cently consolidated, subject to taxation
sufficient, for the payment of the full
amount of principal and interest due, in
accordance with the terms of the law in
such cases made and provided.
HOMER HIX. Chairman
A. T. ROBERSON, Sec.-Treas.
JOHN S. JONES
TRUSTEES OF GORE SCHOOL
DISTRICT OF CHATTOOGA
COUNTY, GEORGIA.
MOSES E. BRINSON,
Attorney-at-Law 4t-J ul6
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1939
GEORGIA’S PROGRAM
' a7 7?X to RE-CREATE
/>“' *v«»'V\T H EEMPIRE/ NX
\ STATEOF /56Z /44n
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x \BILLS CUT y
The investigations made by the house
economy committee have done much to
clarity the status of state finances. Had
a session of the general assembly been
held before the completion and publica
tion of this report, an opportunity would
have been afforded to the exponents of a
doctrine of false economy to assert that
the state’s income was sufficient for its
needs. With the report of the committe,
full of serious errors and discrepencies
before them, members of the assembly
can afford to listen to real facts and
figures.
There was something of a note of in
dignation in some of the replies made to
the report of the economy committee. Dr.
M. D. Collins, the head of Georgia’s
common schools, was justly surpised
when the report failed to discuss the
question of paying the state's patriotic
teachers for their work in the past school
year. Hon. T. Grady Head, state revenue
commissioner, had even a greater cause
for indignation: his carefully prepared,
and —generally speaking—quite accurate
report, on the state's income had been
twisted out of form by the committee's
report, so that several million dollars in
fictional revenue appeared to be coming
to the state.
Mr. Head charged that the economy
committee had disregarded the existing
laws of the state and the provisions of
the state constitution. His statement in
that respect was both correct and justi
fied. He might, with equal justification,
have added that the committee report
disregarded its own findings and all the
elements of consistency.
The estimates made in the economy re
port as to increased revenues from addi
tional taxes recommended under the
guest of 'revision of present tax laws’
was disclosed to be chimerical in Mr.
Head’s analysis of the figures. The report
declared that $4,000,000 in new revenue
could be added for the fiscal year that
begins July 1, 1939. Assuming the figures
to be correct, which they are not, the
very language of the report shows that
of the committee estimate of four mil
lion dollars. $2,550,000 would arise from
changes that would not produce a dollar
until 1941.
On the face of the synopsis report that
the house economy committee so hastily
released to the press before the complete
report became available, the committee
appears to have usurped the functions of
the appropriations committee and com
mittee of the whole house of the state
house of representatives in recommending
appropriations figures for most state de
partments. This criticism may become
less justified when the full report is re
vealed, since it is barely possible that
the expensive four months of hearings by
the committee may have accumulated at
least some data upon economy to justify
the pontificial conclusions.
Apparently, however, whenever deter
mination of an appropriation meant the
assumption of real responsibility—as in
the case of the grants for welfare or the
common schools —the committee found
that this was a ‘matter of policy for the
general assembly.’ The ‘gutting' of the
library commission, most efficient and
effective agency in Georgia in ratio to
the money spent, carried out by the
committee in its blandist manner, was
not regarded as a matter of policy. Nor
was it. onsidered ‘ a matter of policy’
when the committee declared that Geor
gia should abandon the shade tobacco
experiments that, if successful, could add
many millions in farm income to the
state. Nor was it a ‘matter of policy’ to
determine whether or not the highly tech
nical job of ridding the state of the
white-fringed bettie, a dangerous threat
to farmers, should be continued in an ef
ficient manner; a 75 per cent, cut in this
work was recommended. ,
There is no doubt that some savings
can be achieved in administrative costs
in some departments, and that minor ad
justments in policy through legislative
enactments —as, for example, in the man
ner of distributing state funds for teach
ers’ salaries to assume payment only of
teachers who actually teach a ‘minimum
load' class —might save the state some
money.
The facts remain these: the minimum
need for reimbursing the counties for
their losses under homestead exemption
is about $2,000,000; to pay for the serv
ices that Georgians demand from their
state government $8,500,000 will be re
quired. Combined these total $10,500,000,
which must come from new revenues.
THE ANSWERS
1. An area in which a foreign nation
ality is self-governing.
2. 137 years.
3. The explosion of 250 carolads of
munitions near Jersey City July 30, 1916.
4. Yes.
5. About 400.000.
6. The fiscal year ending June 30 is the
ninth consecutive deficit.
7. A division which fought in Spain
and was praised by the pope.
8. 41 cents; the othei - 59 is the cost of
getting from the one to the other.
9. Recent rains have relieved fears
but considerable damage has been done
Io crops and lawns.
10. Yes: $4,000,000.
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