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SALE OF VALUABLE PROPERTY
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Under and by virtue cf a power of
sale contained in the deed to secure
debt executed and delivered by E.
Frank Jones to The Mutual Benefit
Life Insurance Company, on the Ist
day of November, 1925 and recorded in
the office of the Clerk of the Superior
Court of Wheeler County. Georgia, in
deed book 6 page 253 on the 15th day
of January, 1926 the undersigned will
sell at public outcry at the court house
door in said county of Wheeler, be
tween the legal hours of sale namely
10 A. M. and 4 P. M., to the highest
and best bidder for cash, on the Ist
day of December, 1931, the following
described property, to-wit:
All of lot of land number two hund
red and thirty-seven (237) in the
eleventh (11th) land district of Wheel
er County, Georgia, containing two
hundred two and one half (202%)
acres of land more or less, being the
lands formerly owned by, in possessi
on of and known as the Joel C. Pad
gett farm, now owned by and in pos
session of E. Frank Jones.
For the purpose of paying a certain
promissory note for the sum of Forty
Five Hundred ($4500.00) Dollars, ex
ecuted and delivered by' the said E.
Frank Jones to the said The Mutual
Benefit Life Insurance Company on
the Ist day of November, 1925 and
due on the Ist day of October, 1930,
stipulating for interest from date of
said note to maturity at the rate of
six per cent (6%) per annum, payable
annually, said interest being represent
ed by interest notes, one of said notes
due on October Ist of each of the
years 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929 and 1930
/ . actively. Said principal note
(pars interest from date of maturity
ifntll paid at the rate of six per cent
(6%) per annum, and said interest
notes bear interest froni date of ma
turity until paid at the rate of eight
pet; cent (8%) per annum. Said prin
cipal note of Forty Five Hundred
($4500.00) Dollars which became due
October Ist, 1930, together with inter
est from due date at the rate of six
per cent (6%) per annum, and the in
■ terest coupon which became due Oc
tober Ist, 1930, of Two Hundred Sev
enty ($270.00) Dollars, together with
interest from due date at the rate of
eight per cent (8 $4) per annum, re
main unpaid, and said E. Frank Jones
fails and refuses to pay the same on
demand, and the same are now due
and unpaid.
Said deed to secure debt made by
the said E. Frank Jones to said The
Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Com
pany hereinbefore mentioned, contains
a power of sale, which provides that
said E. Frank Jones convenants and
agrees that in case of default in pay
ment of the debt above mentioned
when due or in case of default in any
of the conditions named in the bond to
reconvey, said The Mutual Benefit
Life Insurance Company may sell the
property, including the right, title and
interest therein of said E. Frank Jones
his heirs and assigns, at auction at the
court house door in the county in
which said land lies, to the highest
bidder for cash, first giving four
weeks’ notice of the time, terms and
place of sale by advertising once a
week for four weeks in a newspaper
published in the county where said
land lies as provided in said deed
Special reference as to the terms and
conditions of said power of sale con
tained in said deed to secure debt is
hereby referred to and made a part of
this advertisement, as if all the term
and conditions of said power of sale
were incorporated iti this advertise
g^nt, and all the terms and conditions
■Paid power of sale in said deed to
secure debt are hereby made a part of
this advertisement.
Said property will be sold as the
property of E. Frank Jones and deed
made to the purchaser by the under
signed. as provided in said power of
sale in said deed to secure debt, as
hereinbefore stated.
THE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
By Ellis, Webb & Ellis,
Its Attorneys
Americus, Ga.
Cotton Storage
Don’t hold your cotton at
home subject to fire, weath
er damage, and theft, when
you can store it with us for
a whole year for less than
1c per pound. You cannot
afford to take the risk of
holding at home.
We make liberal advances,
and quick settlements when
you get ready to sell. Write
us about your fertilizer ob
ligation and seed loan.
We will get more for your
cotton
SAVANNAH COTTON
FACTORAGE COMPANY
Savannah, Georgia,.
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court house
door of said county, within the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
December, 1931. to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
property, to-wit:
One2-horse wagon, Fort Smith make
One 2-horse wagon. Brown make.
Three guano distributors.
One Cole planter.
One middle buster.
Two steel beam 2-horse plows.
Two steel beam 1-horse plows.
One Gant cotton planter.
One Joe harrow.
Four scooter stocks.
One Planet Junior cultivator.
One single tree.
Five scrapes.
Four sets of gear.
One two-mule arch axle timber cart
with stretchers.
Said abeve described property will
be brought to the place of sale.
Also will be sold:
One cane mill and pan.
One stalk cutter.
One cut-away harrow.
Said last described property being
bulky and expensive to move, the
same will not be brought to the place
of sale, but will be sold where now
located on F. B. Elam farm near
Glenwood, Georgia, and prospective
purchasers may inspect the same on
applacation to me.
Said property levied on under a
mortgage fi fa issued from Wheeler
superior court in favor of The Farm
ers Bank and against F. B. Elam, as
the property of the defendant, F. B.
Elam, for the purpose of satisfying
said 11 fa.
This 2nd day of October, 1931.
H. N. SEARS, Sheriff.
SHERIFF SALE-
Georgia, Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court house
door of said couutj, within the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
December, 1931, to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
property, to-wit:
25 feet of buffet shelving, 20 feet of
drug shelving, ten feet prescription
counter, 4 show cas s, ■ f at long each,
one Lippincott soda fount, ten feet
complete, one carbonator, one cigar
and cigarette case, ten feet long,wrap
ping counter, twelve feet long; also
town lots one to sixteen inclusive of
block “G”, same being all of said
block and bounded as follows: By
Broad and Jefferson streets and Fear 1
and Lucile avenues in the Town of
Alamo, Georgia, said lots being a
part of the land conveyed to Mrs.
Margaret Alice Terrell by Mrs. Isa
belle E. Clements by deed dated Sep
tember Ist, 1926, and recorded in the
clerk’s office of the superior court of
Wheeler County, Georgia, in deco
book number one, pages 544-i>4s.
Also town lots in Alamo, Wheeler
County, Georgia, lots numbers 13, 14,
15 and 16, except fifty feet off of ihe
Southeast end thereof ~where the tin
hotel building once stood, in block
“B”, said lots fronting on Lucile
avenue fifty feet each and running
back to an alley 150 feet, except lot 16,
which extends back only 100 feet.
Said property levied on and will be
sold under a superior court fi. fa,
issued from the Wheeler superior
court in favor of the Citizens and
Southern National Bank, transferee,
and against W. E. Currie and W. M.
Pope; trading as the City Pharmacy,
as the property of the defendants, W.
E Currie and W. M. Pope, trading
as City Pharmacy for the purpose of
satisfying said fi. fa.
This 2nd day of November, 1931.
H. N. SEARS, Sheriff.
Renew Your Health
by Purification*
Any physician will tell you that
“Perfect Purification of the System
is Nature’s Foundation of Perfect
Health.” Why not rid yourself of
chronic ailments that are undermin
ing your vitality? Purify your en
tire system by taking a thorough
course of Calotabs, —once or twice a
week for several weeks—and see how
Nature rewards you with health.
Calotabs are the greatest oof all
system purifiers. Get a family pack
age, containing full directions. Only
35 cts. At <ny drug (.tore. (Adv.)
S
For
j sswjsjs^ess
« Made By »
THE CHATTANOOG^v O
« M,_ MEDICINE
Chattanooga, Tena. WB
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO.GEORGIA
Restless,
could not sleep
«THERE were days
1 when I felt like I
I could not get my work
d done. I would get so
I nervous and ‘trembly’
| I would have to lie
T down. I was very rest
less, and could not
|H sleep at night.
My mother advised
s|| me to take Cardul,
□ and I certainly am
hi glad she did. It Is
ba the first thing that
seemed to give me
<1 any strength. I felt
'3 better after the first
J J bottle. I kept it up
and am now feel-
4 Ing fine.”—Mrs.
R. Gibson, Fort
Payne, Ala.
H E ALTH
Take Thedford’s Blade-Draught
tor Constipation, Indigestion,
and Biliousness.
SALE OF VALUABLE PROPERTY
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Under and by virture of a power
of sale contained in a deed to secure
debt executed and delivered by Mat
tie Lee Sears to the Empire Loan &
Trust Company on the Ist day of
October, 1926, and recorded in the
office of the Clerk of the Superior
Court of Wheeler County, Georgia,
in deed book 6, page 463, on the
19th day of January, 1927, the un
dersigned will sell at public outcry
at the court house door in said
county of Wheeler, between the le
gal hours of sale, namely 10' A. M.
and 4 P. M. to the highest and best
bidder for cash, on the Ist day of
December, 1931, the following de
scribed property, to-wit:
Twenty (20) acres, more or less,
of lot of land number seventy-four
(74), described as follows, to-wit:
Begin at the north corner of said
lot and run along the northwest lot
line south forty-four (44) degrees
west nineteen and eighty hundredths
(19.80) chains to a stake, thence run
south forty-six (46) degrees east
ten and twelve hundredths (10.12)
chains to a stake, thence run north
forty-four (44) degrees east nine
teen and eigthy hundredths (19.80)
chains to a stake on the original
northeast lot line of said lot, thence
run along said northeast lot line north
forty-six (46) degrees west ten and
twelve hundredths (10.12) chains to
the north corner, the point of be
genning; also fifty (50) acres,
more or less, carved out of the west
corner of lot of land number seven
ty-seven (77), more particularly de
scribed as follows: Beginning at
the original west corner of said lot
and run south forty-six (46) de
grees east along the southwest lot
•ine of said lot a distance of twent
six and forty hundredths (26.40)
chains to a stake on said lot line,
thence run north nineteen (19) de
grees east thirteen and fifty hun
derdths (13.50) chains to a stake
in the run of a branch, thenceirun in
a northwesterly direction along the
meanderings of said branch to where
same crosses the northwest lot line
of said lot, thence run south
along the northwest lot line
of said , lot forty four (44)
degrees west eleven and
twelve hundredths (11.12) chains to
the west corner of said lot, the point
of beginning, said lands situate, ly
ing and being in one body in the
eleventh (11th) land district of
Wheeler county, Georgia, and bound
ed on the northwest by lands of
J. H. Stroud, southwest by lands of
Mrs. Christian Bright, southeast by
lands of Mrs. Christian Bright and
R. R. McAHum, and on the north
east by lands of R. R. McAHum.
For the purpose of paying a cer
tain promissory note for the sum of
Twelve Hundred ($1,200.00) Dol
lars executed and delivered by the
said Mattie Lee Sears to the Em
pire Loan & Trust Company on the
Ist day of October, 1926, and due
October 1, 1931, stipulating for in
terest from the date of said note
to maturity at the rate of six and
one half (6 1-2%) per cent per an
num, payable annually, and ten per
cent (10%) attorney fees, the in
terest on said note being evidenced
by five interest coupons of the same
date, one of said interest notes to
become due and payable on the Ist
day of October of the years 1927,
1928, 1929, 1930, and 1931, re
spectively. Said interest notes
bear interest from date of maturity
at the rate of eight per cent (8%)
per annum until paid. Said princi
pal note of Twelve Hundred
($1,200.00) Dollars, which became
due October Ist, 1931, together
with interest from due date at the
rate of six and one half per cent
(6 1-20 ) per annum until paid, and
the interest coupons which became
due October Ist, 1930 and October
Ist, 1931, amounting to Seventy-
Eight ($78.00) Dollars each, to
gether with interest from due dates
at the rate of eight per cent (8%)
per annum until paid, remain un
paid, and the said Mattie Leo Sears
fails and refuses to pay the same I
on demand and the same are now
due and unpaid.
Said deed to secure debt made by
the said Mattie Lee Sears to the said
Empire Loan & Trust Company
hereinbefore mentioned, contains a
power of sale which provides that
said Mattie Lee Sears covenants and
agrees that in case of default in
payment of the debt above mention
ed when due, or in case of default
in any of the conditions named in
the bond to reconvey, said Empire
Loan & Trust Company, or the per
son to whom said power is assign
ed or delegated, or the person who
holds the papers in connection with
said loan, may sell the property,
including the right, title and inter
est therein of the said Mattie Lee
Sears, her heirs and assigns, at
auction at the court house door in
the county in wihch the land lies,
to the highest bidder for cash,
first giving four weeks’ notice of
the time, terms and place of sale
by advertising once a week for four
weeks in a newspaper published in
the county where said land lies, as
provided in said deed. The above
described deed to secure debt, to
gether with the legal title to the
land therein described and all the
right, title, interest and powers
therein contained, including the pow
er of sail” in said deed to secure
debt have been assigned and delegat
ed to ami are now held and owned
by the undersigned. All the terms
and conditions of said power of sale
are hereby specially referred to
and made a part of this advertise
ment just as if incorporated here
in
Said property will be sold and
deed made to the purchaser by the
undersigned as provided in said
power of sale in said deed to secure
debt, as hereinbefore stated.
WILMINGTON SAVINGS BANK
By Ellis, Webb & Ellis,
Its Attorneys, *
Americsu, Georgia.
SHERIFF SALE
State of Georgia, County of Wheel
er.
Will be sold before the court
house door of Wheeler County, in
the town of Alamo, Georgia, on the
first Tuesday in December, 1931,
to the highest bidder for cash,
within the legal hours for sale, the
following described property, to
wit:
The whole of lot of land number
eighty-four (84) in the Eleventh
(11th) land district of Wheeler
county, Georgia, said lot of land
containing two hundred two and
one-half (202 1-2) acres, more or
less, and being the homeplace of
Hugh G. Gillis.
Levied on as the property of
Hugh G. Gillis to satisfy an execu
tion issued from the Superior Court
of Wheeler County at the Septem
ber Term, 1931, in favor of Rut
land Savings Bank, and against
said Hugh G. Gillis.
Written notice of levy given de
fendant as provided by law.
This November 6th, 1931.
H. N. SEARS,
Sheriff, Wheeler County, Georgia.
CITATION— YEARS SUPPORT.
GEORGIA —Wheeler County.
To all whom it may Concren:
Augusta M. oss having made ap
plication for year’s support out o
the estate of Epp Goss, late of said
county, deceased, and said apprais
ers duly appointed to set apart the
same having filed their return, all
persons concerned are hereby requir
ed to show cause before the court of
ordindty of said county on the first
Monday in December, 1931 wny said
application should not. be granted.
This November 6th. 1931.
H. L. SEARS, Ordinary.
Service Motor Co.
ALAMO, GEORGIA
Sales Service
Bring us Your Cream
Butter Fat Today,
22c per pound
ARMOUR CREAMERY
Alamo, Ga.
Cream More Profitable than Cotton
Summer Swallows Jane Rogers
rpo revive th® hot and dusty
tennis players and weary golf
ers, not to mention the porch
brigade who just sit and try to
keep cool, there Is nothing like a
well prepared iced beverage. Its
frosty coolness will quickly drive
away thoughts of the oppressive
heat, 'while generous sweetening
with sugar will provide renewed
energy for the fagged out players
Summer Menus Should Include Meat
By Jane Rogers
THIS is the time of the year
when the little red line on the
thermometer climbs close to ninety
—and the kitchen seems even
warmer —and the side porch looks
so cool and inviting—-and no house
wife wants to spend any more
time than necessary over a stove.
Certainly she is not wholly to
blame. It is so easy to assemble
a few left-over vegetables or fruits
and heap them artistically on cool,
crisp lettuce leaves, especially
when everyone seems entirely sat
isfied with the result.
Yet the need for more substan
tial foods is just as great in sum
mer as in the cold winter months.
Meats, potatoes and the heavier
offerings which form the ibulk of
the winter diet should not be omit
ted from the summer menu, just
because to* prepare them means a
little more time in the kitchen.
Even if the housewife is using
summer as an excuse to cut down
on the family meat bill, it is pos
sible through the medium of the
cheaper cuts to keep this impor
tant item on the menu and stili
pare the food budget.
Cheaper cuts can be made just
as tasty as the more expensive
ones if properly seasoned. Salt,
vinegar, sugar, parsley and the
other accepted seasonings will
work wonders in creating a really
substantial dish with appetite ap
peal.' The sugar is important be
cause it helps to blend the other
seasonings and point up the flavor
of the dish as a whole.
Better Breakfasts
«T>REAKFAST is the bulwark
A* of the American nation," re
marked the emissary of a foreign
nation who was sent here to ob
serve the customs of our country
for the benefit of his own. It is
true that we prefer to face the
fortunes of the day better fortified
than the average continental on
his cup of coffee or chocolate and
bit of bread.
We are right—for us, at least.
Life dashes along briskly over
here, and we need energy every
moment. Then, too, once im
mersed in the big business of liv
ing, we are loath to stop at mid
day precisely at they do across the
seas. A good breakfast goes a
long way towards a good day, so
if you would improve the family
fortunes give them a “better
and rocking chair athletes alike.
Frosty Mint
Crush one bunch fresh mint.
Combine juice with the juice of five
lemons. Add one-half cup water,
boiling hot, and one and a half cups
sugar. Let stand one-half hour.
Just before serving add three bottled
of ginger ale. Serve in the new,
squat glasses, with an ice cube, a
maraschino cherry and a slice of
lemon in each glass.
O MU
Here is a recipe for a meat dish
that can be made easily and eco
nomically from veal and a cup of
left-over boiled ham. It is excel
lent when served cold.
Veal and Ham Pie
2 pounds lean veal 1 tsp. salt
1 cup lean boiled 1 tbsp, vinegar
ham 1 tsp. sugar
2 hard cooked eggs 1 tsp. dried
’/a onion parsley
Simmer veal in water to which
seasonings and onion have been
added. When tender, cut the meat
in inch cubes. Put in deep baking
dish together with the ham cut in
small slices or cubes; the eggs,
sliced; and the liquid in which the
veal was cooked, reduced to one
cup. Cover with pie crust. Bake
in moderate oven and serve hot or
cold.
breakfast" tomorrow — here’s
one—
Sliced Oranges
Cold Cereal With Cream
Wholewheat Griddle Cakes With
Rhubarb Sauce
Coffee
Wholewheat Griddle Cakes-.
Beat one egg well and add one cup
diluted evaporated milk. Sift to
gether one-third cup wholewheat
flour, one teaspoon baking pow
der, one-fourth teaspoon salt and
add to milk. Add one tablespoon
melted butter and bake as usual
in small cakes. Serve with butter
and rhubarb sauce.
Rhubarb Sauce: Mash up one
8-ounce can rhubarb, add two
tablespoons sugar and two table
spoons water, and bring to boiling
to dissolve sugar; then cool.*