Newspaper Page Text
SHERIFF SALE
GEORGIA —Wheeler County.
Will be sold at public outcry, be
fore the court house door in Alamo,
Wheeler County, Georgia, within the
legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash on the first Tuesde.y
in May, 1932, the following described
property, to-wit:
All of the Northwest half of lot of
land No. 445, excepting one quarter
acre on the Northeast side thereof
whereon the Justice Court House
stands, said one-quarter acre except
ed being bound as follows: Beginning
at the point where the Northeast line
of said land lot crosses the Public
Road known as the Towns and Alamo
road and running thence South 46 de
grees’East 35 yards, thence South 44
degrees west 35 yards, thence North
46 degrees West 35 yards, thence
North 44 degrees East 35 yards to the
point of beginning. The portion of
said land lot No 445 hereby conveyed
containing 101 acres, more or less; al
so all of land lot No. 446, containing
202 1-2 acres, more or less; also a cer
tain tract of land in the North corner
of land lot No. 404 bounded as follows
to-wit: Beginning at the North corner
of said lot No. 404 and running thence
South 44 degrees West 18.18 chains
along the Northwest line thereof to «
lightwood post near the middle of the
first branch head, thence South 64 de
grees East 30.80 chaines to a light
wood post in the the edge of a branch
thence up said branch North 10 de
grees East 12.72 chains to a stake on
original Northeast line of said lot No.
404 located 22.72 chaines from the
North corner thereof, thence North 46
degrees west 22.72 chains along said
■ Northeast line to the point of begin
ning, containing 40 acres, more or
less; all of said three adjoining tracts
of land hereby described and convey
ed containing in aggregate Three
Hundred Forty three ane one half
343 1-2 acres, more or less, and lying
in one solid and continuous body of
land in the Seventh 7th district of
Wheeler county, Georgia.
Levied upon and will be sold as the
property of the Estate of Eli B V\ ai
nock, deceased, in the hands of J. A.
Pope, as administrator of the estate
of Eli B. Warnock, deceased, to be
administered, to satisfy an execution
Issued by the Superior Court of
Wheeler County, Georgia, in favot
of The Prudential Insurance Com
pany of America against the said J.
A. Pope, as administrator as afore
said, said execution issued on March
30 th, 1932.
Written notice of lew and time and
place of sale given d< fen lant in fi. fa
and tenants in possess! m as required
by law.
This April s‘h
3. N. SEARS, Sheriff.
SHERIFF’S SALLE
o
Georgia—Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court house
door of said county, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder
for cash, on the first Tuesday in May
1932, the following property, to-wit:
Town lots numbers 13 and 14 in
block “C” in the Town of Alamo,said
■county and State, fronting 50 feet
■each on Lucile Avenue, and running
back 150 feet to an alley.
Said property levied on undsr an
•execution in favor of Southern States
Phosphate & Fertilizer Company
against Mrs. Jewell H. Currie, issued
from Wheeler superior court, and will
be sold as the property of said de
fendant, the same being found in her
possession, for the purpose of satis
fying said execution. Written notice
J levy given defendant in fi. fa.
This 6th day of April, 1932.
H. N. SEARS, Sheriff.
CITATION.
Georgia, Wheeler County.
whereas. Mrs. Rilla Browning, ad
ministrator of Otis Baxter Browning,
represents to the court in her petition
duly filed and entered on record, that
she has fnlly administered said estate
This is, therefore, to cite all persons
concerned, kindred and creditors, to
show cause, if any they can, why said
administrator should not be discharg
ed from her administration and re
ceive letters of dismission on the first
Monday in May, 1932.
H. L. SEARS, Ordinary.
CITATION.
^GEORGIA—WheeIer County.
To all whom it may Concren:
Machel Powers, taviD^ made application for
gear's support o n of the estate of Koxer
iPowers. late of said county, deceased, and
*aid appraisers duly appointed tn set apart the
Biume having filed their return, all persons
caoeemed are hereby required to show cause
before tire Court of Ordinary ot said County
on the first Monday in .way 1932. why said
application should not be granted
This April 6th. 191.'.
H. L. SEARS, Ordinary,
666
LIQVIE - TABLETS - SALVE
666 Liqufd or Tablets used internally
and 666 Salve externally, make a com
plete and effective treatment for colds
Most Speedy Remedies Known
NOTICE OF SALE.
Under and by Virtue of the author
ity contained in a security deed execu
ted by Lindsey Anderson to Fearsons-
Taft Land Credit Company, dated
April Bth, 1919, and recorded in the
office of the clerk of the superior court
in Wheeler county, Georgia, on April
11th, 1919, in book 3, pages 455-6,
which deed was assigned by Pearson-
Taft Land Credit Company to Conti
nental Assurance Company by assign
ment dated May 16th, 1919, and re
corded May 21st, 1919, in book 3, page
471. there will be sold before the court
house door of Wheeler county, Geor
gia, on Tuesday, May 3rd, 1932, be
tween the hours of ten o’clock A. M.
and four o’clock P, M. to the highest
and best bidder for cash the property
conveyed by said deed and described
as follows:
All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing and being in the Eleventh (11th)
land district of Wheeler, formerly
Montgomery county, Georgia, and
more particularly described as lot
number 148 in the Eleventh [llth j land
district of Wheeler county, Georgia,
containing 202 acres, more or less.
Default has been made in the pay
ment of the debt to secure which said
security deed was executed and the
said Continental Assurance Company
assignee and present legal holder of
said security deed and notes, acting
under the power in. said deed, has
elected to declare the entire indebted
ness due and payale, in accordance
with the terms of said security deed,
and said property will be sold as the
propert, of Lindsey Anderson for
the purpose of paying said indebted
ness, which will amount to Twenty
two Hundred and Five[s22os.oo) Dol
lars on the date of sale, plus any
unpaid taxes and plus the cost of this
forec’osure proceeding.
T B. McKenzie of Ashburn, Turner
county, Georgia, under an appoint
ment of agent duly executed and re
corded will attend and conduct said
sale.
Continental Assurance Company
will execute to the purchaser at said
sale fee simple title to the above des
cribed property.
This 31st day of March, 1932.
(Signed)
Continental Assurance Co.
By George S. Beaumont,
Asst. Treas-
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of a decree
rendered in the case of United States
vs. J. T. Wommack, J. I. McKay, J.
Hobson Walker, et al., equitable
mortgage foreclosure pending in the
District Court of the United States for
he Southern District of Georgia,
Dublin Division, granted March 25th,
1932, the undersigned, acting as
Commissiner, will sell before the
courthouse door, in Alamo, Wheeler
county, Georgia, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder
for cash, on the 3rd day of May,1932,
the following described property:
Seven bales of cotton, averaging
approximately 500 pounds each, and
being numbered 450, 461, 500, 1124,
1137, 1218,1230, and being stored in
the Walker Warehouse, Alamo, Ga.,
the proceeds of said sale to be applied
as directed in said decree. .
S. C. TURBEVILLE,
Commissioner.
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court
house door of Wheeler county, in
the town of Alamo, Georgia, on
the first Tuesday in May, 6th.
1932, to the highest bidder with
in the legal hours of sale, the
following described property,
to wit:
All of lot land number 23 in
the 11th land district of Wbeelei
county, containing 202 1 2 acres,
more or ess, Levied on as the
property of F. B Keen to satisfy
an execution issued on the 18tb
day of October. 1923, from the
superior court of Wheeler coun
ty, in favor of Swift ar.d Company
and against F. B. Keen.
This 6th day of April, 1632.
H. N. SEARS, Sheriff,
falotabs
lA TRADE MARK REG.
For lazy liver, stomach and
kidneys, biliousness, indi
gestion, constipation, head
ache, colds and fever.
10/ and 35/ at dealer*.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO,GEORGIA
WHEN prosperity left, it didn’t just disap
pear around a corner.
It came down the grade behind us. Now it’s
up the grade ahead of us. And we’re not going
America hasn't gone to pot. We have encoun
tered sterner emergencies than this. And we have
conquered them. Each time we have gone on to
even greater prosperity.
Don’t say you can’t help. Don’t say you’re tc«
little to help cure a big national crisis. YOU
CAN HELP!
Have you hidden your money away, buried it
in the ground, put it in a sock, locked it up in a
safety vault?
Then, bring it out, if you want to help end
this depression. You’ll help your state and your
nation and your fellow man. And you’ll help
YOURSELF.
Every dollar you put back into use helps. It
helps make jobs for the unemployed. It helps
stimulate business. It helps make a market for the
things you grow. And it helps YOU.
Your money is worth more now, in terms of
what it will buy, than it’s been in many, many
years.
And there is a feast of bargains spread out be
fore you.
Fortunes disappear in times like these. And
new fortunes are made. They are NOT made by
people who hoard their money. They are made
by folks who have got not just CASH but
COURAGE, too.
Whatever reason there may have been for
hoarding, it has passed. Well planned, carefully
Two Texans Have Important Roles
In Drive for Business Recovery
ui 100., Houston Texas, a Director of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora-
Jesse K Jones of First National Bank of Ch.caoo.
TEXAS has a double interest in the
success of the new Reconstruction
Finance Corporation which has
become an important business factor
under the leadership of General
Charles G. Dawes, former Ambassador
to Great Britain.
Selection of Jesse H. Jones of Hous
ton as a director of this $2,000,000,000
credit corporation is generally regard
ed as recognition of Mr. Jones’ talent
for tackling large business problems.
Os equal interest to Texans and
many others in the Southwest is the
fact that Melvin A. Traylor, a native
of Kentucky and a former Texan,
made one of the most important con
tributions to the organization of the
Reconstruction Corporation. Mr. Tray
lor, who is now a Chi: ago bank presi
dent and. often mentioned by his friends
PROSPERITY
isn’t around the comer....
(It Never Was)
For those who wish the maximum safety for their now idle money—the United
States government offers for sale a special issue of Treasury certificates, "baby
bonds,” which are redeemable on sixty days’ notice at their full face value and
therefore are protected against price fluctuations. Ask your banker. These bonds
are as sound as money itself.
(Published by the Georgia Power Company in the interest of the campaign of the Citisens ReconstractiM Orfaaisatisa) e
throughout the country as a potential
Democratic candidate for the Presl
; dential nomination, went to Washing
■ ton and gave a Senate Sub-Committee
I the benefit of his exceptional experi
■ ence in agricultural banking. One of
his outstanding suggestions was that
the Reconstruction Finance Corpora
tion be authorized to make loans to
the receivers of closed banks as a
; means of alleviating distress of thou
sands of depositors in small financial
institutions throughout the country.
Mr. Traylor’s suggestion made such
: an impression that it was embodied in
. the Bill as finally passed by Congress.
■ He, more than any other man, is re
। sponsible for the timely assistance that
■ will now be possible for many deposl
■ tors of small banks throughout the
i country.
to get up that grade
without a good stiff
pull.
It’s dark, gloomy,
chilly, down here in
the valley.
But STANDIN’
AND DREADIN’
aren’t going to get us
out of the valley.
executed acts — the Reconstruction Finance Cor
poration, the Glass-Steagall bill and others — have !
changed the financial situation. Bank failures have
been checked, hoarding has been checked, mm y
is coming out of hiding, credits are becoming
easier.
This fundamental, essential, necessary improve
ment in financial conditions had to happen before
business conditions COULD improve. And it IS
happening.
As it happens, prices will go up. The value of
your money in terms of what it will buy will
shrink. It will shrivel if it remains hoarded.
Bring it out into the sunlight. Let it sprout and
grow you a new crop of dollars! Not in wild spec
ulation, not in wildcat schemes. No need to lose
it that way. The best securities, the best lands,
the best investments of all kinds, are waiting for
you on the bargain table.
Did you know that the biggest fortunes were
NOT founded in periods of prosperity? They
were founded in times of adversity like these by
men who had cash —
and COURAGE!
Why, you can make
YOURSELF into a
fine old ancestor. You
can found a family for
tune of your own. And
your great grandchil
dren will paint your
portrait and hang it
over the mantel piece.
And they will look up
to it with pride in
.their voices as they'
say —
“That’s Great Grandfather. He was a wise old {
guy. He had sense. He knew when to buy, ’way
back in 1932 when things were cheap.”
*»
Horseshoe Bend Farm
PUREBRED LIVESTOCK
FOR SERVICE
Aberdeen Angus Bulls, serv. fee $2.50
Jersey Bull, service fee $5.00
Reg. Duroc Jersey Boar, serv. fee SI.OO
For Sale
Purebred Duroc Jersey sows and gilts,
bred or uubred. Few choice young
Duroc Jersey boars. Call or write
HORSESHOE BEND FARM
GLENWOOD. GA.
About the only thing farmers
around Alamo can get for noth
ing this month is a straw hat to
put on a scare crow.
What nature should have done
was provide women with figures
they could inflate and deflate to
suit the changing styles.
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 purify the blood by acti
vating the liver, kidneys, stomach and
bowels. Trial package, 10 cts. Fami
ly package, 35 cts. AU dealers. (Adv.),
How many of you old timers
can remember when dancers re
mained far enough apart to keep
from tramping on each other’s
toes? *
—
Tax Notice.
* - ......
I am now prepared to pay your
tax on real estate, large or small,
W. E. Currie.
JNO. S. STAMPS
INSURANCE
Mcßae, Ga,
Now that the bathing Season
is over, the girls can use their
swimming costumes for pen*
wipers. »>