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Legal Notices |
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 such
creditors to the undersigned within the
time allowed by law.
This June 5, 1939. 6t-Jull3
LEE A. MARTIN. Executor.
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
EXECUTOR’S SALE OF LAND.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Under and by virtue of an order grant
ed at the July term, 1937, of the Court
of Ordinary of Walker County, Georgia,
there will be sold for cash to the highest
bidder at public outcry before the court
house door of Chattooga County, Georgia,
within the legal hours of sale on the first
Tuesday in August, 1939, next, as the
property of the estate of C. C. L. Rudicil,
late of said Walker county, deceased :
First, One undivided sixth interest in
a tract of Seventy-Eight Acres, more or
less, of land in Lots of Land Nos. 96,
97 and 98 in the Sixth district and
Fourth section of said Chattooga county,
being that tract in which L. D. V. Rud
icil owned two-thirds undivided interest
at the time of his death, and being the
most western of the two larger tracts,
which are described in Item Five of the
will of Robert Young Rudicil, late of
said Chattooga county, extending from
the eenter of Chattooga River in said
Lot No. 96, north to th; north line of
said lot No. 98, and having width of 607
feet, more or less, from east to west:
second, an undivided half-interest in all
the two smaller tracts named in said
Item Five of said Robert Young Rudicil
will, except that corner of the most
western of said two smaller tracts, that
lies on the west side of the State High
way. The‘said two smaller tracts. Said
two smaller tracts contain a total of 125
acres, more or less, in said Lots Nos.
96, 97. and 98 and are bounded on the
east by the larger tract, first above de
scribed.
This July 3. 1939.
MRS. LYDIA R. RUDICIL,
Executrix, Last Will of C. C. L. Rud
icil. Deceased.
ADMINISTRATOR’S LAND SALE.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County :
Under and by virtue of an order grant
ed by the Court of Ordinary of said
County on the 3rd day of July, 1939,
there will be sold for cash to the highest
bidder at public outcry before the court
house door of said conntv within the le
gal hours of sale on the first Tuesday in
August, 1939, next, as the property of
the estate of L. D. V. Rudicil, late o'
said county, now deceased, TWO
THIRDS undivided interest in a tract
of Seventy-Eight acres, more or less, of
land.Jn Lots of Land, Nos. 96. 97 and 98
in the Sixth district and Fourth section
of said county, being the same tract
which is described in the deed of W. R.
Henry to said L. D. V. Rudicil. as re
corded in Book 8, Page 512 of the Deed
Records of said county, and in other
deeds in said records, being located and
bounded by lines, as follows: Beginning
where the west line of a tract owned by
J. N. Alexander in the same Lots of
Land, striker the north line of said Lot
of LaridyzNo. 98; thence running west
on the original north line of said Lot
No. 98 a distanea of 607 feet, more or
less, to the northeast corner of the most
eastern of the two smaller tracts describ
ed in Item Five of the will of Robert
Young Rudicil, late of said county, now
deceased ; thence running south along the
east line of said smaller tract to the
center of Chattooga River in Lot of Land
No. 96, aforesaid; thence running east
wardly with the center of said river to
whbre the west line of the tract of said
J. N. Alexander line to the point of be
ginning.
This July 3, 1939.
ROWLAND W. HENRY,
Administrator, Estate of L. D. V. Rud
icil, Deceased.
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County.
To All Whom It May Concern :
Rowland W. Henry having, in proper
form, applied to me for Permanent Let
ters of Administration on the estate nf
Rowland Knox Rudicil. late of said coun
ty. this is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next of kin of Rowland
Knox Rudicil to be and appear at my
office within the time allowed by law,
and show- cause, if any they can, why
permanent administration should not be
granted to said Rowland W. Henry on
said estate.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture, this 3rd day of July, 1939.
4t-Ju27 H A. ROSS, Ordinary.
News Want Ads bring quick results
T. J. ESPY, JR.
Attorney-at-Law
Summerville, Georgia.
Office over McGinnis Drug Co.
Baseball Immortal Receives Award
L *
r fOFM .. -W
Z 40 IMb
J#J
CONNIE MACK, one of baseball’s immortals, is shown receiving a
Gruen Curvex watch from Chairman Theodore Lettis of the Coopers
town Centennial Committee on the occasion of baseball's 100th anni
versary. The watches were presented to the eleven living members
of Baseball’s Hall of Fame, all of whom were in Cooperstown, N. Y.,
for the Centennial celebration. They were Connie Mack, Babe Ruth, Ty
Cobb, Walter Johnson, Hans Wagner, Grover Cleveland Alexander, Ed
die Collins, Cy Young, Tris Speaker, George Sisler and Napoleon Lajoie.
PETITION FOR YEAR’S SUPPORT
Chattooga Court of Ordinary—July 5,
1939:
The appraisers upon application of
Mrs. Matilda Gilreath Huskey, widow of
said Brittain G. Huskey, for a twelve
months’ support for herself and one mi
nor child, having filed their return, all
persons concerned hereby are cited to
show cause, if any they have, at the next
regular term of this court, why said ap
plication should not be granted.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
SALE TO SELL LAND.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
In accordance with the terms of an or
der of the Superior Court of said county
and a writ directed to us by the Clerk
of said court in the matter of Henry N.
Williams, et al, vs. J. A. Williams, et
al, being a petition for partition brougnt
to the February, 1939. term of said
court, we. the undersigned, will sell at
public outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash before the courthouse
door in said County within the legal hours
of sale on the first Tuesday in August.
1939, the lands hereinafter described,
same being sold as the property of Hen
ry N. Williams, M. O. Williams, Mrs.
M. M. Williams Floyd, Mrs. A. M. Wil
liams Loggins, Mrs. R. B. Williams Giles.
Mrs. P. M. Williams Ramey, J. A. Wil
liams and Mrs. M. B. Williams Arnold,
and for the purpose of partition and di
vision, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land situate,
lying and being in the county of Chat
tooga as follows : 13 acres, more or less,
lying and being in the Northwest corner
o lot No. 76 ; also 85 acres, more or less,
of lot No. 69. being all of said lot lying
North of Chattooga River, except a small
tract in the Northwest corner thereof
owned by J. C. Shamlin; also the right
to build and maintain a fence on the
South bank of Chattooga River, and ex
cepting certain water rights owned by
the Trion Company. All said above de
scribed lands lying and being in one
body and in the 6th District and Ith
Section of Chattooga County. Georgia.
Same being those lands heretofore con
veyed by the late R. N. Williams to the
late Mrs. Cornelia B. Turnbull by deed
which is recorded on page 110 of Book 7
of the Record of Deeds of Chattooga
County, Georgia.
This tlje sth day of July. 1939.
JNO. B. WHISNANT.
J. A. SCOGGINS,
S. H. GILKESON.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County :
Whereas, Florence McCary and Mattie
McCary did on the 3rd day of January,
1934, execute and deliver to F. F. Chap
man as Trustee for his minor child. An
dry Chapman, a certain deed to secure
debt to certain property hereinafter d -
scribed, said deed being recorded in book
T 9”, page 559 of deeds in the office of
the Clerk of Chattooga Superior Court,
and —
Whereas, said deed provided that upon
failure of default in the payment of any
of said notes or any part thereof or the
taxes or the payment of insurance prem
iums according to the stipulations herein
then the party of the second part may
declare all of said unpaid indebtedness
immediately due and payable, and is
hereby authorized to sell at public outcry
before the court house door in said coun
ty. to the highest bidder for cash all of
said property after advertising the time,
place and terms of sale in the public ga
zette of said county in which sheriff's
advertisements are published once a week
for four weeks and may bid at said sale
and may make the purchaser of said
property a fee simple title thereto and
put him in summary possession thereof.
The proceeds to be applied to the pay
ment of said indebtedness the cost of said
proceedings, and the balance, if any. to
be paid to the party of the first part, and
Whereas, default was made in the pay
ment of the principal and interest due
on said indebtedness according to the
stipulations in said deed and said prin
cipal and interest is past due and unpaid
and the entire indebtedness secured by
said deed is- now due and payable and.
Whereas, exercising the option provid
ed for in said security deed, F. F. Chap
man, trustee for his minor child. Audry
Chapman declared the entire indebted
ness secured by said deed to be due and.
payable and default was made in pay
ment of said indebtedness which default
has continued up to the present timee.
Now. therefore, in accordance with the
terms of the provisions of said deed, F.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1939
F. Chapman, trustee for his minor child.
Audry Chapman, will sell before the
court house door in Summerville said
county, on the first Tuesday in August.
1939, between the legal hours of sale to
the highest bidder for cash, the property
described in said deed and being as fol
lows :
In the City of Summerville town lots
Nos. (10), and Seven (7) in Block No.
(10) and all that part of lot (11) that
lies south of the Mathis Branch running
through said lot, the same being 49 feet
on the west, 44 feet on the east and 28
feet in the center, the north bank of said
branch being the north boundar.v of said
lot No. Eleven (11) the above whole lots
facing each 60 feet and running back
within parallel lines 120 feet all in one
body.
The proceeds of said sale are to be ap
plied to the payments of all sums due
under the terms of said deed, both prin
cipal and interest and to the expenses of
this proceeding.
Said property will be sold as the prop
erty of Florence McCary and Mattie Mc-
Cary. and assigns and to divest out of
the said grantors and, or their assigns,
all right title or interest they may have
in and to said premises in law or equity
ind vest same In the purchaser.
This sth day of July 1939.
THOMAS, J. ESPY. JR..
Atttorney for F. F. Chapman, Grantee
Under Said Deed.
FARM BRIEFS
District meetings to explain regula
lions governing 1939 marketing quotas
on cotton for agricultural adjustment ad
ministrator workers in Georgia are now
being held throughout the state. The
meetings opened at Swainsboro July 3
and 4; Albany, July 7 and 8: Perry,
July 10 and 11; Thomson, July 12 and
13; Athens. July 14 and 15; Cartersville.
Inly 17 and 18; Newnan, July 19 and 20.
The farm population of the United
States on Jan. 1, 1939. was close to the
largest on record, the bureau of agricul
tural economics estimates. The total was
32,059.000 persons. This compares with
31.819.000 on Jan. 1. 1938. and with the
all-tim" high of 32,077.000 on Jan. 1.
1910. From 1910 to 1927 there was a
decline of almost 2.000,000 persons in the
farm population. Since 1927 there has
been an increase of about 2,000.000.
The farm security administration re
ports that tenants and sharecroppers, who
have borrowed government money to buy
farms of their own, are repaying their
loans far in advance of the date due. As
the tenant purchase program neared the
end of its se"ond year of operation, FSA
announced that repayments on loans made
under the Bankhead-Jones farm tenant
act had totalled 135 per cent, of maturi
ties. Although only $103,033 was due, as
of March 31. 1939. the borrowers already
had repaid $138,978. By the close of its
Getting Up Nights
Backache
Tj LEG PAINS - LOSS OF ENERGY - TIRE 6,
LISTLESS - LAZY FEELING - BURNING
PASSAGE - DIZZINESS - SWOLLEN ANKLES
NERVOUSNESS
May be caused by functional
KIDNEY WEAKNESS
n from inorganic causes
Many times kidneys become stjiggish and need aid to filter and
pass off acids and poisonous Wastes. KIDANS is a long-popular
formula indicated as a stimulant diuretic for the kidneys and
bladder. Thousands of sufferers from sluggish kidneys have used
KIDANS. Repprts of pleasing results reach us regularly. If your
kidneys need help\o carry on their normal eliminative functions,
write for KIDANS today.'Test "KIDANS on our guarantee of
results or no cost. Two regular, full size boxes, only SI.OO.
Send No Money
Results or Money Bacl<
Write today for two boxes KIDANS. Send no money with order On ar
rival deposit only SI.OO, plus postage with postman Take one Lox accord
ing to easy, simple directions. Then if you don’t agree results are really
wonderful, return the second, unused KIDANS and we will relund your
full SI.OO. The risk is ours so don’t wait but order today. It remit: ance
crimes with order we pay all postage. THE KIDANS COMPANY. Dept
21. /-'--rta. Georgia.
second year of operation, on June 30,
1939, the tenant purchase program will
have enabled about 7.000 tenants and
sharecroppers to buy their own farms.
The money is repayable over a forty-year
period at 3 per cent, interest. In the great
majority of cases, the annual payments,
plus taxes and insurance, amount to less
than the tenant formerly paid in rent for
the same farm.
An increasing percentage of Abruzzi
rye shipments into the southern states
during the past three years have been
misbranded as to variety, the U. S. de
partment of agriculture reported today
following tests made under the federal
seed act and in co-operation with a num-1
ber of southern states. More than 45 per |
cent, of the shipments in the fall of 1938 i
were found to be misbranded. Abruzzi i
rye usually sells in the south at a prem- |
ium over other rye. Since 1930 the de-1
partment has co-operated with southern
states in testing rye shipped into the
south as Abruzzi. The test involves plant
ing in the fall and observing the plant
characters during the winter. The varie
ties cannot be distinguished by seed
characters.
Some seasonable reduction in hog mar
ketings is expected during the next few’
months, according to the bureau of agri
cultural economics. But in view of the
probable large increase in the 1939 spring
pig crop, the seasonable increase in mar
ketings from the late summer through the
fall months probably will be relatively
large. Supplies of hogs for slaughter
probably will continue larger than a year
earlier during the remainder of the 1938-
39 marketing year, which ends Sept. 30. j
and also in the first half of the 1939-40 !
marketing year. Consumer demand for
Report of Condition of
BANK OF TRION
Os Trion, in the State of Georgia, at
the close of business on June 30, 1939 :
Assets
Loans and discounts $107,492.04
United States government ob-
ligations, direct and guar
anteed 110,300.00
Obligations of states and po-
litcal subdivisions 6,845.00
Cash, balances with other
banks, including reserve bal
ances. and cash items in
process of collection 127,796.07
Furniture and fixtures .... 587 00
Real estate owned other than
bank promises 3.996.00
Other assets 30,412.59
Total assets $387,428.70
Liabilities
Demand deposits of individ
uals, partnerships and cor
porations $197,633.02
Time deposits of individuals,
partnerships and corpora
tions 108,661.03
Other deposits (certified and
officers' checks, etc.) 9.171.75
Total Deposits 315,471.80
Capital Accounts
•Capital 25.000.001
. Surplus 25,000.00
Undivided profits 21,956.90
Total Capital Accounts .... 71,956.90
Total Liabilities and capital
accounts 387.428.701
•This bank’s capital consists of com
mon stock with total par value of $25,- i
000.00.
(a) On date of report the re
quired legal reserve against
deposits of this bank was 36.654.06|
(b) Assets reported above
which were eligible as legal
reserve amounted to 238.096.07 j
I. Grady \V. Cole, of the above-named I
bank, do solemnly swear that the above '
statement is true, and that it fully and .
cf erectly represents the true state of the
several matters herein contained and set j
forth, to the best of my knowledge and |
belief.
(’orrect. —Attest:
J. L. HENDERSON,
J. A. AGNEW,
L. B. COLBERT.
Directors.
State of Georgia. Count)’ of Chattooga, i
ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this
12th day of July, 1939. and I hereby cer- i
tify that I am not an officer or director I
of this bank.
B. L. PECK. N. P.
My commission expires July, 1941. I
hog products may improve moderately or
at least hold near present levels during
ths remainder of 1939.
Owners of both dairy and beef cattle
in practically all states are making
progress in eradicating Bang's disease
from their herds, according to officials
of the federal-state campaign against this
disease. The work has been in progress
Bids Wanted
'******■*•#**■*
GEORGI,A Chattooga County:
Sealed bids will be received by the
Board of Commissioners of Chattooga
County until 10 a.m. July 17th, for ap
proximately:
48 ’ of 30 ” Cross Drain Pipe.
700 ’ Side Drain Pipe.
Genuine Chevrolet and Ford Parts and
Tractor Parts for July, August and Sep
tember.
4,100 Tax Receipts, 3 to page with Poll
l ax attached as copy furnished; 2 col
ors, punched, perforated, folded, num
bered and T. W. Carbon inserted.
The right to reject any or all bids is
reserved. County Warrants to be given
for above, payable when funds are avail
able.
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
OF CHATTOOGA COUNTY,
F. A. JUSTICE, Chairman
R. M. CRAWFORD, Clerk
FARM AUCTION SALE
Friday July 21,10:30 A. M.
Lindsey Johnson Farm
CLOSE TO LYERLY, GEORGIA
on the Lyerly-Summerville-Chattanooga
Highway.
564 Acres of fine bottom land —A fine spring
—On the river—A good fish pond—and a
fine site for a nice lake.
SUB-DIVIDED INTO SMALL FARMS OF
60 TO 100 ACRES
This is one of the finest farms in Chattooga
County, it produces corn as good as any
farm in the south or better.
Farm lands are coming back, and you can
buy land cheaper now than you will ever be
able to buy again.
■ WBMWSfW-1 ■I 1— —WP——w—WWW*— B—H—WL U . M I.U . L—■* WBW^^WW—■*
North Georgia is growing faster and do
ing more building than it ever done in its his
tory . . This section of the country will be
the greatest industrial center in the world
within the next ten years.
EASY TERMS -
CASH PRlZES—Barbecue
£ TCC Dinner MUSIC £ ICC
Todd & Co. R g” e
on a systematic nation-wide scale since
July, 1934.
20 BREAKS IN 8 YEARS.
CLARKSBURG. W. Ya. Everett
Case, Jr., is back in the hospital for
j treatment of his twentieth bone fracture
in eight years. Everett suffers a deficien
cy in bone structure which causes “soft
bones.”