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| Legal Notices
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER POWER
GEORGIA, CHATTOOGA COUNTY:
Because of default in the payment of the
indebtedness secured by a deed to secure debt
executed by ROY ('l;h{l'l'()N McCARY, JR.
and MARSHA S McCARY to FIRST
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SUMMERVILLE,
GEORGIA dated July 1, 1986 and recorded
in Deed Book 209, Page 212, Chattooga Coun
ty Deed Records, the undersigned, FIRST
FEDERAL SAVINGS Afil) LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SUMMERVILLE,
GEORGIA pursuant to said deed and the note
thereby secured has declared the entire amount
ol said indebtedness due and payable and pur
suant to the power of sale contained in said
deed, will, on the first Tuesday in April, 1989,
during the legal hours of sale, at the Cour
thouse in Chattooga County, sell at public out
cry to the highest bidder for cash, Sw proper
ty described in said deed, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land situated, ly
ing and being in the 25th District and 3rd Sec
tion of Chattooga County, Georgia in Land Lot
74. and possibly in Land Lot 73, and more par
ticulary d(-scri{wd as follows;
BEGINNING at an iron stake on the
westerly side of the Gore-Subligna Public Road
marking the southeast comer of property now
or formerly owned by Edward E. Scoggins;
thence northwesterly along the southwester-
Iy line of said Scoggins property 418 feet to
an iron stake; lfi-‘nn- southwesterly and
parallel with said public road 209 feet to a
stake; thence southeast and parallel with said
Scoggins line 418 feet to a stake on the wester-
Iy -,«ig(- of said Gore-Subligna Public Road;
thence northeasterly along the westerly side
of said public road 209 feet to the point of
beginning: and being the same pru.)erty con
veyed William R. Roper by Mae M. Pendley
in deed dated October 7, 1968, recorded Oc
tober 24, 1968 in Deed Book 117, Page 485 and
re-recorded April 5, 1971 in Deed fimk 129,
Page 590, h()tfi references being to Chattooga
County Deed Records.
The above-described property is conveyed
together with all improvements located or
situated thereon, including, but not limited to,
a dwelling.
Said property will be sold as the property
of ROY ('LK'I‘()N McCARY and MARSHA
S. McCARY and the proceeds of said sale will
be applied to the payment of said in
debtedness, the expense of said sale, all azlilrr(r
vided in said deed, and the undersigned will ex
ecute a deed to the purchaser at said sale as
provided in aforementioned deed to secure
debt
First Federal Savings and Loan Associ
ation of Summerville, Geor%ia, as
Attorney in Fact for thy “linton
McCary and Marsha S. McCary
William U. Hyden, Jr
\ttorney at Law
P. 0. Box 468
Summerville, Georgia 30747
3-30¢
e e i o SR S
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER POWER
GEORGIA, CHATTOOGA COUNTY:
Because of default in the payment of the
indebtedness secured by a deed to secure debt
executed by DAVID LEE ROGERS to FIRST
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
\SSOCIATION OF SUMMERVILLE,
GEORGIA dated October 22, 1988 and record
edin Deed Book 225, Page 684-689, Chattooga
County Deed Kecords, the undersigned.
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SUMMERVILLE,
GEORGIA pursuant to said deed and the note
thereby secured has declared the entire amount
of said indebtedness due and payable and pur
suant to the power of sale contained in said
deed, will, on the first Tuesday in April, 1989,
during the legal hours of safe, at the Cour
thouse in Chattooga County, sell at public out
cry to the highest bidder for cash, the proper
tv described in said deed. to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land lying and be
ing in Land Lot 19 in the 6th District and 4th
Section of Chattooga County, Georgia and be
ing all of Lot 21 and a portion of Lot 20 in Ad
(10) New Case 580 Super E wheel loader Backhoes
equipped with case or wobble, stick control, $32,500
each. Approx. 50 other pieces of construction equip
ment. Call collect for prices and description.
Ringgold, Ga.
. (404) 935-2378
- Nights and Sundays (404) 861-4914 or 891-9522
LIVESTOCK MARKET REPORT
FORT PAYNE STOCKYARD, INC.
CATTLE AUCTION TUESDAYS AT 12:30 (CENTRAL TIME)
Hauling Available
Phone (205) 845-1028
March 28, 1989
RECEIPTS THIS WEEK — 673
RECEIPTS LAST WEEK — 863
RECEIPTS A YEAR AGO — 914
FEEDER CLASSES
200-300 pounds — 128.00-147.00
300-400 pounds — 115.00-128.00
400-500 pounds — 99.00-112.00
500-600 pounds — 88.00-94.00
. 'STEERS
600-800 pounds — 79.00-86.00
HEIFERS (GOOD & CHOICE)
200-300 pounds — 113.00-120.00
300-400 pounds — 96.00-110.00
400-500 pounds — 89.00-95.00
500-600 pounds — 75.00-85.00
600-700 pounds — 70.00-74.00
SLAUGHTER CLASSES
CALVES (GOOD & CHOICE)
74.00-83.00
. Ccows BULLS
Utility — 54.25 Down Heavy — 64.00 Down
Cutter — 47.00 Down
Canner & Culls — 45.00 Down ;
M Chattooga
’ .
Parent-Child Genter
Now Enrolling
& "
Preschool Handicapped Children
The Chattooga Parent-Child Center is recruiting preschool
handicapped children to take part in the program.
The children are being enrolled to use the full range of
education, health, and other program services under a new
Congressional mandate nationwide for the handicapped.
For more information or to enroll a child, call 857-6610 or
857-1651 or come by the center at 702 South Congress St.
Summerville, Georgia.
dition No, One (1) to Knollwood Subdivision,
shown on a plat thereof recorded in Plat Book
1, Page 266 in the office of the Clerk of
%u&mim Court of (Thutl.m‘)lfn County, Georgia,
and being more particularly described as
follows:
BEGINNING at an established point ly
ing on the easterly side of the west leg of
Knollwood Circle located 295 feet in a nortgu-r
ly direction as measured along said easterly
side of said west leg of said Knollwood Circle
from its intersection with the north side of
Catawba Road: thence along the easterly side
of said west leg of Knollwood Circle north 12
dvgirws 45 minutes east a distance of 80 feet
and north 33 degrees 10 minutes east a
distance of 15 feet to a point and thence conti
nuing along the east side of said west leg of
snidfi(nullwmd Circle a distance of 15 flm.
more or less, Lo the southwest corner of Lot
22 in Addition No. One (1) to Knollwood Sub
division as shown on the plat recorded in Plat
Book 4, Page 266; thence south 88 degrees 30
minutes west along the south line of said Lot
22 a distance of 170 feet to the southeast cor
ner thereof; thence south 17 degrees 30
minutes west a distance of 97 feet to an
established Koint, being the southeast corner
of Lot 21 in Addition No. One (1) to Knollwood
Subdivision; thence south 14 degrees 30
minutes west 76 feet to an established point;
thence north 69 degrees 15 minutes west 166.3
feet to the point (xfl)e inning on the easterly
side of the west leg omelfwnnd Circle.
Said property is improved property with a
residence erected thereon un(ris bounded on
the north by those lands conveyed Lawrence
L. Broom and Betty J. Broom under warran
ty deed from Michael F. King and Pamela S.
Kinfi dated December 17, 157.’1. recorded in
Deed Book 145, Page 133, and on the south by
those lands conveyed James D). Riley and
Elizabeth Riley under warranty deed from
Maggie Wood Gilreath Riley dated July 13,
1976, recorded in Deed Book 157, Page 20 of
Chattooga County Deed Records,
Said Frnrerlv will be sold as the property
of DAVID LEE ROGERS and the proceeds
of said sale will be applied to the payment of
said indebtedness, the expense of said sale, all
as ‘)mvided in said deed, and the undvrsifned
will execute a deed to the purchaser at said sale
a;s provided in aforementioned deed to secure
debt
First Federal Savings and Loan Associ
ation of Summerville, Georgia, as
Attorney in Fact for David Lee Rogers
William U. Hyden, Jr
\ttorney at Law
P 00. Box 468
Summerville, Georgia 30747
3-30¢
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF CHATTOOGA
All creditors of the estate of Middleton
Miles Allen, Jr., late of Chattooga County
Georgia, deceased, are hereby notified to
render their demands to the under‘s‘ifined ac
cording to law, and all persons indebted to said
estate are required to make immediate
pavment.
This 7th day of March, 1988.
Jack B. Allen, Middleton M. Allen, 111,
Route 4, Box 345, Summerville, Georgia
30747
3-30 p
GEORGIA, CHATTOOGA COUNTY :
WHEREAS, LELAND TRAMMELL, did.
on the 19th day of July, 1988, meke and ex
ecute to UNITED COMPANIES MOR
TGAGE OF GEORGIA, INC., a certain deed
to secure a debt of $16.500.00, which deed was
duly recorded in the Office of the (ilerk of
Superior Court of Chattooga County, Georgia
in F)(;ed Book 224, page 30: and WéERF,AS.
there has been a degufit in the payment of the
indebtedness secured by the above referred-to
warranty deed to secure debt to United Com
panies Mortgage of Georgia, Inc., and
WHEREAS, because of said default and in ac
cordance with the terms and the stipulations
contained in the aforesaid deed to secure debt,
United Compaiies Mortgage of Georgia, Tne
has declared the « hole vnnl'hlmhw« ag secured
by said warranty deed to secure debt due and
payable.
NOW THEREFORE, in accordance with
the terms and stipulations as contained in the
deed to secure dlgl!. the undersigned will sell
ulxuhli(' outery on the first Tuesday in April
1989 before the Courthouse door in Chattoogn
County. Georgia during the legal hours of ~<ufn
to the highest bidder for cash the following
(11-scrilx-lrpmpi-rty, to-wit
All that tract or anr(-l of land lying and he
ins; in the south half of Land Lot 142 in the
6th District and 4th Section of Chattooga
County, Georgia. Said lands more particular
ly described as follows
BEGINNING at a corner joining the
William McDaniel property on the east thus
running in a northerly direction 200 feet, more
or less, thus westerly for 100 feet, more or less
to a point joining the Sutherland property thus
is a southerly direction for 200 feet to o point
fronting the ‘N(‘k‘nml' Hill Road, thus 100 feet
in an easterly direction, more or less, to the
point of beginning.
A sufficient conveyance of the premises in
fee simple will be executed and delivered to the
purchaser at the sale in accordance with the
provisions contained in said deed to secure
debt. Said property will be sold subject to all
outstanding taxes, assessments and
casements,
This Ist day of March, 1989
United Companies Mortgage of Georgia
Inc., as Attorney in Fact for Leland
Trammell, By: J. Bryant Durham. Jr
Jones, Morgan & Byington, Its
Attorney at Law, Post Office Drawer
5595, Rome. Georgia 301625595
(404) 2918100
b 30«
Rex Evans Construction Company has been
duly incorporated on March 13, 1989, by the
issuance of a Certificate of Incorporation by
the Secretary of State, in accordance with the
applicable provisions of the Georgia Business
Corporations code. The initial registered office
of tmmrpmmion is located at 517 Martin St
Summerville, Ga. 30747 The agent is Rex
Evans
1-20 p
IN THE PROBATE COUR'T
FOR THE COUNTY OF CHATTOOGA
STATE OF GEORGIA
IN RE: PETITION FOR LEAVE TO SELI
REAL PROPERTY
CITATION
CONNIE THERESA RAINES. as guar
dian of Amanda Marie Raines, a minor, hay
ing filed a petition to sell real property of smd
ward, this is to notify interested parties who
are not required to be personally served that
they must file their response to the petition
with the Court on or prior to the 3rd day of
April, 1989 at 10:00 oclock am. If no
responses are filed, the petition may be granted
without a hearing. All objections to the peti
tion must be in writing, setting forth the
grounds of any such objections, and must be
filed at or before the time stated in the citation
This 20th day of February, 1989
Judge, Probate Court, By s Rebecca
w f‘)uko. Clerk
3-30 p
from front page
inmates to be housed at the
prison from the originally
estimated 750, despite the ad
ditional staffing and inmate
overcrowding problems
elsewhere in the prison system.
Another source told The News
that the prison will eventually
house more than 750 prisoners
if overcrowding problems
continue.
Although the DOC said in
itially that the prison would
house medium security
f)risoners, spokesmen conceded
ast year that one section of the
prison would house ‘‘special
management’’ or hard core
criminals.
Carlson Southeast submit
ted a low bid of $23,866.000 on
the prison in mid-1987. The
state had expected a bid closer
to sl9- or S2O-million. Several
alternates or options were
deleted from the project so that
sufficient funch would be
available for the project.
Carlson started work on the
prison in November, 1987. The
actual prison grounds are
located on 40 acres within a
larger 186-acre site just east of
the Pennville residential area
Plans for the prison call for
500 inmates to be housed in
two-bed cells and 250 in one
bed cells.
The huge facility will con
tain 327,000 square feet —the
equivalent of 2%5 average-sized
1,600-square foot homes.
WARDEN
Tom Jones, a former coach
at Chattooga High and now a
warden elsewhere in the state
prison system, was announced
as warden for the facility
before construction started on
the project.
The City of Summerville
has provided water and
sewerage to the prison site.
AltEou h the prison was
supported %y most community
organizations and leaders,
most residents of the Pennville
and South Trion areas fought
the state's decision to locate
the facility so close to a
residential area.
To Hear Ref
Haywood Patton, a
member of the Northwest
Georgia Association of High
School Football Officials will
gaeak at noon Frida())* to the
ummerville-Trion Optimist
Club at The Tavern, Trion.
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REP. JOHN CRAWFORD (R) SPEAKER AT DEMO MEETING
Chattooga Democratic Officials Katherine Camp, A. B. Day
More Interest In
from front page
will receive a total of $508,627,
and Trion will receive $183,447
in.f,isrnl yvear 1990, Crawford
said.
ADA TO FTE
i This year, Chattooga
| received $217,570 in tax
i “relief” and Trion received
$20,000. Those numbers were
| based on the Average Daily
| Attendance (ADA) of students
| residing in the school district
| who also attended school in
| that district.
} In fiscal year 1990, which
| starts this July, QBE formula
| earnings will be based on FTE,
or full time equivalent; a school
such as Trion that has such a
high percentage of students in
attendance from outside the
| school district will now get
| credit for each student.
Trion will receive an addi
' tional £145,975 because of this
| change in the QBE earnings
formula. The system will also
receive $17,426 in increased
equalization earnings. Chat
tooga County will receive an
ud«fiti«mu! $237.000 in formula
earnings, and $54,057 in in
creased equalization earnings.
“EARNINGS"”
The increased equalization
“earnings’’ are granted to
schools with too few students
for the svstem to get top dollar
through the new QBE funding
formula.
Without the equalization
earnings, Crawford said ‘‘all
the money would stay in Atlan
ta schools.” He also pointed
out that these funds have been
used in the past by the Chat
tooga Board of Education for
property tax relief, but that the
law says the board may also
use the additional funds for
maintaining existing buildings.
|
! NO RELIEF?
Bill Kinzy, superintendent
of Trion City Schools said he
didn't know how these funds
could be called rebates or tax
relief. “We're told we have to
spend 90 percent of all funds
appropriated for a certain area
(of the school's programs), and
that we have to spend 100 per
cent overall. How can you get
| property tax relief out of
that?”
Kinzy also said that school
systems that charge a local
property tax rate of 18 or 20
mills might be able to use the
extra funds to rollback taxes,
but a system must have at
least a millage rate of eight to
receive ABE formula funding.
Trion's rate is 8.35, he said. %
mill is $1 in tax for every
SI,OOO worth of taxable
property.
OTHER MATTERS
Other results from the 1989
(General Assembly:
~ Crawford proposed a bill
to tax illoga]'p drugs that
foundered in committee.
However Marcus Collins, com
missioner of the Georgia
Department of Revenue, has
said such a tax is a good idea,
Crawford said. The idea will be
reviewed between now and the
1990 General Assembly,
Crawford said, but passage of
the bill may depend on how
many new revenue agents can
be included in the 1991 budget.
They would have to be agents
trained for the task, Crawford
said.
— There are no plans for the
state to build a reservoir in
(Chattooga County, Crawford
said. The 12 to 15 reservoirs
the state plans to build in the
next 20 years will all be built
within a 50-mile radius of
Atlanta. The City of Summer
ville, perhaps in collaboration
with the county, could build a
reservoir to satisfy the water
needs of area residents. he said.
NO FUNDS
— No funds for the promis
ed fire department at the Hays
Correctional Institution in
Pennville were in the 1990
budget. Crawford said that the
Department of Corrections
1( fi‘ had estimated the cost of
the prison based on two
estimates probably made in
1986 for two similar facilities in
South Georgia. The bids on
those two earlier projects both
came in far below DOC
estimates, and the DOC revis
ed estimates downward for the
Hays prison accordingly,
Crawford said. When the l%ids
came in they were much higher
than expected, he said.
No more money has been
allotted for the fire department
because of the outcry for more
prison beds, he said. In the
1990 budget, $l5O-million has
been appropriated for six new
prisons with 80,000 new beds.
.8 27
— No new schedule has
been set for widening Highway
27 or building the Summerville
bypass, Crawford said. “When
[ ask the DOT about that, they
just tell me ‘next spring.’”
Crawford pointed out tr])"nat with
the $135-million earmarked for
roads, chances are improved
for getting the highway widen
ed sooner rather than later.
— Also, S4O-million for local
road improvements was ap
proved %y the legislature,
Crawford said. **“How much of
that Jim Parker gets depends
on how aggressive he is. I think
he's eager to work with them
(DOT) and I think he'll get a lot
of roads fixed. The state has
already committed to paving
nine miles of county roads,”
Crawford said.
— The proposed crime
laboratory for Pennville got a
boost with $45,000 for plann
ing the facility. **l'm hoping to
go back next year and af)-
propriate the money to build
it,” Crawford said.
— A total of $63,526 has
been allotted for planning the
new armory to be guilt in Sum
merville. Part of that, $15,881,
is state money, the rest is from
the federal government, he
said.
— Enough funding was pro
vided to add an in-school
suspension supervisor for
every high school, Crawford
said. Afihough Chattooga
already has an ISS (in school
suspension) program, the
supervisor will now be covered
with state funds.
BT W
A R
The Proud
1989
Little Mister
Chattooga
County
Jeffrey Allen
Keen, Jr.
14 month old grandson
of Elbert and Charlotte
Keen of Teloga, Fred
Money of Rome, Martha
Money of Summerville.
Great-grandson of Birdie
Keen of Teloga, Mrs.
Fred Money, Sr. of Sum
merville and Lawson
and Audrey Bailey of
Cloudland.
We Love You,
Mommy
and Da’Da
Lottery
TRION LIBRARY
— All requests for building
local libraries were approved as
well, Crawford said, and he ex
pects no problems with getting
state funds for Trion's %ranch
of the Chattooga Library
system. ¥
" — There was no funding in
the 1990 budget for the propos
ed new licensing center at
Trion's Industrial park,
Crawford said.
— Some $1.6-million will be
divided between Walker, Up
son and Pickens Technical In
stitutions, Crawford said.
Walker will use the money it
gets for a career development
center.
Crawford also said he co
sgonsored a bill that requires
those who discharge pollutants
upstream to notify water
systems downstream of the
effluent.
— A bill passed that re
quired all police chiefs to
receive 40 hours of training a
year, but Crawford said he
worked on it to disallow those
chiefs who had no supervisory
powers. This allowed towns
such as Lyerly to avoid sen
ding its one policeman for
training every year, he said.
Cash, Drugs
®
Seized
from page 6-A
Lyerly, was charged March 22
with writing a bad check and
released on $5,000 bond.
— Donnie Ray Fowler, 37,
108 N. Congress St., Summer
ville, was charged March 22
with writing a bad check and
released on SSOO bond.
— Jessie Dalton Smith, 39,
Bryant, Ala., was charged on
March 22 with two counts of
writing a bad check and releas
ed on bond.
— Berlin Ladonn Ware, 21,
106 Sixth Ave., Summerville,
was charged with simple
assault on March 22 and releas
ed on SSOO bond.
UNOCAL®D
Tires Gasoline
Diesel Fuel
Lube and Oil Products
20W-50 Racing Oil
: m& BANKSON
B e
D
The Summerville News, March 30, 1989
Crawford Takes
Swipes At GOP
Chattooga County Rep.
John Craw?ord took several
swiges at the Republican Par
ty during a supper held last
week for newly elected
Democratic Party officials. The
event was held at The Lookout
restaurant, Cloudland, spon
sored by the Chattooga
Democratic Committee.
Crawford briefly touched on
action during the past session
of the Georgia General
Assembly. ge blasted
republic Ans for opposing the
one percent sales tax hike ap
roved by the legislature. GOP
f)egislators said spendin
should be cut, insteadg.
Crawford said, but came up
with only two reduction pro
posals. One would have
eliminated S7B-million in pro
perty tax relief for Georgians
and the other would %:ave
eliminated state payment to
merchants for collection of the
sales tax.
NOT CONSERVATIVE
“They aren't conservative;
they want all the money
themselves," Crawford said of
his Republican colleagues.
Republicans would prefer to
keep all spending in the metro
Atlanta area, tfie Chattooga
representative said. They
dign’t want to spend $63,000
for planning for the new Na
tional Guard armory for Sum
merville, $45,000 in planning
funds for a new North Georgia
crime laboratory for Pennvi%lle.
$2-million to equip Hays Cor
rectional Institution, aid for
Walker Tech, Northwest
Georgia Regional Hospital and
a new administration %uilding
at Floyd College, he indicated.
Seventy-five percent of the
state's $7.5-billion budget is
allocated to the university
system, education and human
services, Crawford said.
REASONS
The reason for the sales tax
increase is because the state’'s
population is growing faster
than its revenue, he said. It will
go in effect Saturday and
generate $678-million in addi
tional funds during its first
year. Food exemptions effec
tive on Sept. 1, 1990 will reduce
the annual amount to around
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UNOCAL »
D
$507-million, he said, althou:ih
the legislature likely will make
changes in the exemptions in
its 1990 session because of the
complexity to grocery stores
caused by the exemptions.
INCREASE
The legislature approved a
34 percent increase in guality
Basic Education (QBE) fun
ding as well as a three percent
raise for teachers, Crawford
continued. It also okayed
$9-million for an in-school
suspension program that pro
vides for one adgtional teacher
for each high school in the
state, he said.
Growth Strategies Commis
sion legislation enacted b{lthe
assemgly likely would have
been more controversial had it
not been for the sales tax issue,
Crawford said. It will require
every county to enact local zon
ing and provides for erosion
and sedimentation control
measures if a builder develops
more than 1.1 acres. The bill
allows the state to build water
reservoirs and to regulate
private landfills.
STADIUM
Crawford said the domed
stadium bill calls for the expen
diture of no state funds — ex
cept for land for the stadium,
he said.
Some $135-million was
allocated for the developmental
road system and s4(£million
fordlocal road assistance, he
said.
Katherine Camp, chairman
of the Chattooga Democratic
Committee, announced that
the Floyd County Democratic
Party's Jefferson-Jackson din
ner will be held at 7:30 p.m. Fri
day with Fourth Dist. Rep.
Ben Jones the main speaker.
She also welcomed former
chairman A. B. “Bud” Day,
Menlo. back on the committee.
Menlio Council
A discussion of the sewer
system and requests for water
service will be the main items
on the agenda for the Menlo Ci
8' Council at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
ther items will be routine
business.
D
9-A