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GEORGIA, CHATTOOGA COUNTY.
All creditors of the estate of Miss
Salhe Moyers, late of the Chattooga
County, deceased, are hereby noti
fied to render in their demands to
the undersigned according to law,
and all persons indebted to the said
estate are required to make imme
diate payment to me.
This 21st of May, 1941.
Mrs. George D. Espy, Admin
istratrix with the Will an
nexed of the estate of Sallie
Moyers, deceased.
6TJune26
GEORGIA —Chattooga County:
Al creditors of the etsate of T. J.
Echols, late of said county, deceased
are hereby notified to render in
their demands to the undersigned
administrator, according to law and
all persons indebted to this estate
are required to make immediate
payment to me.
This June 2nd, 1941..
DR. H. D. BROWN,
Administrator of the estate of T. J.
Echols, Deceased. 4-June 29
GEORGlA—Chattooga County:
Pursuant to an order granted at]
the June term of the Court of Ordi
nary of Chattooga County, Georgia,
the following described property
will be sold before the courthouse
door at Summerville, Ga., on Tues
day, July 1, 1941, between the legal
hours of sale.
Land in the 14th District and 4th
Section of Chattooga County, be
ing three and one-fourth acres, in
land Lot No. One, beginning at the
south side of the gate on LaFayette
and Gaylesville Public road; thence
south 40’ East 12 poles; thence
south 25 poles to original land lot
line; thence west with said Land
Line 12 Poles; thence North 22’ westj
10 poles; thence North 40’ east with,
said road 31 poles to beginning
point. Also one acre, more or less,
in land Lot No. One, in said dis
trict and Section of said County,
described as follows: Starting on
the public road leading from Sum
merville to Gaylesville, Alabama, at
a point on one of the Mobley lands;
thence in a northeasterly direction
along said road seven and one-half
rods to a Persimmon tree; thence
in a southeasterly direction nine
rods to a point, on the North line
of the said Mobley lands which is
13 rods east of beginning point;
thence west on the north line of
said Mobley land 13 rods to start
ing point. Said lands were sold to
W. F. and V. F. Mobley by G. E.
Martin deeds, dated November 1,
1900, January 1, 1904. Said lands
containing four and one-fourth
acres, more or less.
Terms cash.
W. C. CARTER,
Administrator of estate of Laura
Carter, deceased. June 26
GEORGlA—Chattooga County:
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that Mary
E. Lansdell and Elva Lawrence, as
administratrixs of D. F. Lawrence,
deceased, having applied to me by
petition for leave to sell, the real
estate of said D. F. Lawrence, de
ceased; and that an order was made,
thereon at the June term, 1941, for
citation, and that citation issue; all
the heirs at law and creditors of the
said D. F. Lawrence, deceased, will
take notice that I will pass upon
said application at the July term,
1941, of the Court of Ordinary of
Chattooga County; and that un
less cause is shown to the contrary,
at said time, said leave will be
granted. This June 4th, 1941.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
EXECUTOR’S SALE
GEORGIA— Chattooga County:
By leave granted by the Court of
Ordinary of Walker county, at its
July Term, 1937, recorded in Minute
Book 10, page 406, Ordinary of
Walker County, Georgia, the Ex
ecutrix of the estate of R. Y. Rudi
cil now deceased. Will sell for cash
under the laws governing sales of
real estate by said Executrix before
the courthouse door of Chattooga
County on the first Tuesday in July,
1941, the same being the following
described property.
One acre more or less on the west
side of the Summerville-LaFayette
Highway in lot of land No. 83 in the
6th District and 4th Section of
Chattooga County, Georgia, which
is bounded as follows: Beginning
where the north line of Frank Scog
gins strikes said highway; thence
150 feet northwardly with said
highway; thence westwardly to the
Central of Georgia Railroad right
of way; thence 150 feet southward
ly with said Railroad right of way
to the said Scoggins line; thence
east of said Scoggins line to the
beginning point, being the lands al
lotted under the will of R. Y. Rudi
cil to the beneficiaries of the Will
of C. C. L. Rudicil as shown by plat
in Volume 7, page 57 of Minutes of
the Court of Ordinary of Chattooga
County.
June 4, 1941.
MRS. LYDIA ROWLAND RUDICIL,
Executrix of the Will of R. Y. Rudi
eil. June 26
GEORGIA —Chattooga County:
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that Mrs.
Annie Ruth Henderson, guardian
of Jessie Marlene Brown, having
applied to me by petition for leave
to sell the real estate of Jessie
Marlene Brown and that an order
was made thereon at the June term,
1941, for citation and that citation
issue; all the heirs at law and cred
itors of the said Jessie Marlene
Brown, minor will take notice that
I will pass upon said application at
j the July term, 1941, of the court of
i Ordinary of said Chattooga County;
i and that unless cause is shown to
the contrary at the said time, said
leave will be granted.
This 4th day of June, 1941.
H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
June 26
GEORGlA—Chattooga County:
To Whom It May Concern.
H. G. Ramey, of said county, hav
ing applied for guardianship of the
person and property of Mrs. Jewell
Battle Suit, minor child of Addie
l Williams, late of said county, de
-1 ceased.
Notice is hereby given that said
application will be heard at the
next Court of Ordinary for said
county, to be held on the first Mon
day in July, 1941.
Witness my hand and official
j signature this 2nd day of June,
1941.
July 3 H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
GEORGlA—Chattooga County:
To All Whom It May Concern:
H. N. Rutherford, having, in
proper form, applied to me for Per
manent Letters of Administration
on the estate of G. L. Rutherford,
late of said County, this is to cite
all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of G. L. Rutherford to
be and appear at my office within
the time allowed by law, and show
cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not
be granted to H. N. Rutherford on
G. L. Rutherford’s estate.
Witness my hand and official
signature this 2nd day of June,
1941.
July 3 H. A. ROSS, Ordinary.
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING OF
CREDITORS
In the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District
of Georgia.
In Bankruptcy
In the matter of George Perry
Hill, bankrupt.
No. 6499 in bankruptcy.
To the creditors of said bankrupt,
of Trion, R. F. D. No. 1, in the
county of Chattooga, State of Geor
gia, and district aforesaid.
Notice is hereby given that on
June 5, 1941, the above named was
duly adjudicated bankrupt; and
that the first meeting of creditors
will be held at the Referee’s office,
in the Masonic Temple Annex.
Rome, Ga., on June 21, 1941, at 10]
o’clock A. M., (E. S. T.) at which
time the said creditors may attend,
prove their claims, appoint a trus
tee, examine the bankrupt and
transact such other business as
may properly come before said
meeting.
ROWELL C. STANTON,
Referee in Bankruptcy,
Rome, Ga.
LYERLY F.F. A. CHAPTER
The Lyerly F. F. A. Chapter has
finished a Sanitary Split Pig Dem
onstration. The chapter started
with two pigs, treating both pigs for
worms, lice and cholera. Ist pig
weighed 48 lbs. when the feeding
started; was fed 86 days on corn
and water and gained 32 lbs., con
suming $5.10 worth of feed costing
16c a pound to put fat on.
The 2nd pig weighed 38 lbs. and
was fed 86 days, gaining 124 1-2 lbs,j
consuming $8.99 worth of corn, wa
ter plus a good supplement costing
only 7.2 c per lb. to put on the fat.
Roy Hammett, Summerville,, Rt.
3, won the hog worming kit as first
prize, guessing closest to the weight
oi hogs. Eugene Phillips won 2nd
with a Purina knife.
The Lyerly F. F. A. chapter with
the American Nitrate of Soda peo
ple have finished the Fertilizer
Demonstration on oats. J. N. Young,
Vocational Agriculture teacher, and
TRION THEATRE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
“THIRD FINGER LEFT HAND”
They don’t make them any funnier and faster than this—another •
comedy for the whole family
Myrna Loy and Melvin Douglas
FRIDAY
$60.00 Gift Night “DULCY” $60.00 Gift Night
The World’s Dizziest Dame She’s Daffy, She’s Dumb . . and
More Delightful Than Ever.
SATURDAY
“BACK IN THE SADDLE”
GENE AUTRY
—aIso—
“ELLERY QUEEN, MASTER DETECTIVE”
Ralph Bellamy and Margaret Lindsay
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
“GONE WITH THE WIND”
Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
“KITTY FOYLE”
Ginger Rogers and Dennis Morgan
June 30 and July I—“ Gone With the Wind”— Doors will
open at 10:30 A. M. both Monday and Tuesday. Show will ■
start promptly at 11:00 A. M. Evening show will start at
Matinee Prices: 25c and 40c. Evening Prices: 55c only.
Nothing has been cut on this picture but the price,
7:30 and close at 11:15, both evenings.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE, 26, 1941
Squibs And Titbits
By A COUNTRY PARSON
It is good to get saved but it is
better to keep saved and it is best
to help save others.
You may be sure that those who
criticize the preacher do not try to
put his sermons into practice.
The strangest thing I know is:
Some people “wholly sanctified” can
get so mad that they quit the
church and say hard things about
the pastor and the other members.
The best way to be better is to do
better.
God gives soil, seed, rain, sun
shine, life, health and strength to
you, what do you give to Him?
To blacken another’s character
will not make yours any whiter.
A wise man will learn more from
one fool thin a fool will learn from
many wise men.
If tithing fails to bring material
success it is because it is not done
in the right spirit.
Those who back-bite are sure to
get back-bit—Just one of the ways;
to reap what is sown.
The reason we don’t have more
people to attend church is: The
devil has them tied to the post of
postponement.
You can taks a day off from go
ing to church but you can’t put it
back.
Happy are the people who love
flowers, little children and the
Lord.
PERTINENT FACTS
By DR. GUS W. DYER,
THE ETHICS OF BARBARISM
PERTINENT FACTS
(By Dr. Gus W. Dyer, for 30 years
Professor of Economics, Vander
bilt University, Nashville, Tenn.)
The creation of a huge public
debt is a new experience for this
country. The policy of borrowing
and consuming billions of dollars in
wealth in peace times and charging
up the indebtedness to unborn ba
bies is decidedly questionable if
not positively immoral. We are un
der a moral obligation to make con
tributions to the unborn. We cer
tainly have no right to force babies
to come into the world with big
mortgages tied around their necks.
The amounts of the national debt !
in different years were as follows:!
1855—$ 35,588,490.
1865—52,677,929,012.
1875—52,156,216,649.
1885—51,578,551,179.
1895—51,096,913,120.
1905—51,132,357,095.
1915—51,191,264,058.
Between 1881 and 1916 the na
tional debt was nearly as much as
two billion dollars. In 1919 the na
tional debt was $25,482,034,419. This
increase was due to the World War.
But under the administration of
President Coolidge the debt had
;een reduced to $16,931,058,484 in
1929.
We went through the very serious
world depressions of 1873 and 1893
F. A. Williams were well pleased
with the difference in yield.
The yields were as follows:
No top dressing per acre 23% bu.
100 lbs. Arcadian Soda 33.9 bu.
200 lbs. Arcadian Soda ..... 42.0 bu.
300 lbs. Arcadian Soda 47 2-3 bu.
The Lyerly F. F. A. Chapter put;
on a guesing contest. The follow
ing won prizes: R. N. Crawford,;
Duane Gaylor, Alfred Johnson, Dan
Smith, W. C. Woods and Henry G.
Alexander.
HOWARD MOUNT,
Reporter.
without any appreciable increase in
the national debt. Before the pres
ent preparedness policy was inaug
urated, the national debt had been
increased to nearly fifty billion dol
lars. It will, perhaps, reach one
hundred billion dollars within a
short time. This will mean an av
erage indebtedness of about $3,333
on each American family.
Are we true to the trust that we
hold for those who are to come af
ter us?
4-H SCHOLARSHIPS
A total of 48 Georgia 4-H boys
and girls will be admitted to three
Georgia colleges this fall as winners
of 4-H scholarships from these in
stitutions, reports G. V. Cunning
ham, state club leader. Os the 48
scholarships to be given, 24 will go
to boys and 24 to girls. The awards
will provide for part-time work as
a means of defraying a portion of
the college expenses. Donors of the
scholarships are Abraham Baldwin
Agricultural College, Tifton; West
Georgia College, Carrollton; and
South Georgia College, Douglas.
In the area north of the Fall Line
Hills in Georgia, approximately 50
per cent of the topsoil has been re-;
moved by erosion.
LYERLY NEWS
Rose Reunion
Misses Jessie, Pearl and Jim Rose
entertained Sunday with a family
reunion at their home. Those pres
ent were: Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Pick
ering and son, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hart and
daughter, Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Ster
ling Roth, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Turner and son, Mrs. G. W. Rose,;
H. R. Martin, Miss Charlotte Rose,!
Mrs. Venice Hodgekin, all of Chat
tanooga; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rose,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hall, Mary and
Herman Hall and Jessie Lee Bain.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wallace of
LaFayette are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Chapman.
Mr. and Mrs. George Reece and
children spent Saturday in Rome.
Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Neal and.
daughter, Judith, of Atlanta spent
the week-end with Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Doster. Mrs. Neal and daugh-i
ter remained for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hollis, Emily
Hollis, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Williams
and children were in Rome last
ARTHRITIS
Don’t despair 7 come relief in
of relief from Don t Arthritis due I
terrible Arthri- v to Sulphur de
tis aches or ficiency. Small
pains. The 9 ,ve daily cost. Mon-
NEW Colloidal ey back if no
lodized Sulphur UP relief after 30
capsules called _ ’ days’ dosage.
SULPHO-KAPS hooe Begin taking
often bringwel- r* c TODAY.
Your Druggist has SUtPHOjtAPS
k ZkSK FOR
I MENTHO I d
1 MULSION IM
COUGHS FROM COLDS E®
THAT WON I TURN LOOSE
V TAKE ONE SIP HcF-.l
■ OF MENTHO-MULSION
■ WAIT FIVE MINUTES
■ i IF YOU FAIL TO GET
■ EXPECTED RELIEF ■ J
[ASK FOR YOUR MONEY BACK J
I
CHATTOOGA I
INSURANCE AGENCY
"The Best Insurance"
JNO. D. TAYLOR
Summerville, Georgia
I . :: ' ' - '
Bl // w / /jr 4
■HB •• ■ J
WE CHALLENGE YOU TO SPEND TEN MINUTES IN A 1941
■ TOdmAC
R You ’ n say it’s the greatest car in the
W )*K world. 3 lines. 10 body styles. Your
[fjTjgpagiwauA ■ choice of a six or an eight in any model.
H EHu * Come in today!
Sti Anof far Jcar
. :S -' --I--- -
"I. ,
Ramey Motor Company
1 Mile South Os Trion
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Abrams spent
Sunday in Rome. 1
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cloudis spent
the week-end with relatives in
Gaylesville, Ala.
Mrs. Eva Jennings, Larry and
Jerry Jennings have returned home
after a visit to Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Abney spent
the week-end in Chickamauga.
Miss Virginia Chapman is visiting
relatives in LaFayette.
Miss Emily Hollis was the week
end guest of Miss Frances Elrod.
Mrs. Walt Jones of Cedartown was
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Will Jones
last week.
C. H. Hall and George Sitton
went on a fishing trip to Blue Ridge
last week.
Miss Sarah Luke has come to
spend, the summer months with her
parents, Rev. and Mrs. Luke.
Jordon Mercantile Company has
opened a new electric store in Lyerly
and is carrying a full line of ap
pliances. Any and everything from
the smallest staples used in wiring
to the largest and best Westing-
Beulah Shropshire
Summerville, Ga. ;
All Forms of Insurance
Also handling I
FHA Loans ■ :
New Schedules and Regulations i
40 years a
FAVORITE! \
ulm
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If you have ever suffered,
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At Your Drug Store:
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25 Tablets 25$
’Read full di
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: package.
house electric appliance. They ex
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' tion to visit them at your earliest
convenience.
NEW! “BACTERIOSTATIC’’
FEMININE
HYGIENE
now finding great favor
among women ...
Many doctors recommend regular use
of douches as a precautionary meas
ure for women who want to be clean,
dainty—for women troubled by offend
ing odor or discharge.
Some products may be harmful to
delicate tissues. But not Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Sanative Wash! Pinkham’s
Sanative Wash is gaining great favor
because it’s NOT a harmful germicide.
Instead-it’s a mighty effective “bac
teriostatic” (the modern trend). It not
only discourages bacterial growth and
infection but thoroughly cleanses, deo
dorizes. Very soothing—relieves minor
irritations and discharge and has a
tonic effect on delicate membranes.
Inexpensive! All druggists.
T. J. ESPY, JR. |
| Attorney-at-Law I;
4 ' Summerville, Georgia. ;>
£ Office over McGßnnis Drug Co. J;
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