Houston home journal. (Perry, GA) 1971-01-14 [p ] · 2019-07-09 · S. Harris, Jr., Capt.,...

1
I s£SMDBSjft H I THURSDAY, JANUARY 14,1971 f notice OF INTENT TO I iN !bODUCE LEGISLATION ¦ The Houston County Legislative legation to the General Kembly intends to introduce Ks! ha ve enacted Legislation EmMM Te.epbone ¦ Ihorify for the City of Perry; Hich Legislation will enable said ¦ufhority to build and establish ¦r adequate Telephone System or Kan alternative in its descretion Kourchase the existing telephone Katies and to provide other Kdditional powers desirable and ¦ecessary to implement its ob- ¦ec fives. ¦ STANLEY SMITH, Senator I SAM A. NUNN, JR., Post 1 I VINCE MOYER, Post 2 I 3tc 1-7 I NOTICE | OF FORECLOSURE OF GEORGIA, Bounty of Houston: B Because of the default in the Ba/ment of the indebtedness Becured by a deed to secure debt, Bxecuted by HARVEY L. Bryant 8. joyce c. bryant Bo FEDERAL NATIONAL Bortgage association. Bated May 29 1968, recorded in Bleed Book 304, Page 439, Clerk s Bffice, Houston Superior Court, Bubiect instrument, security, lien, Bnd the indebtedness secured Bereby having been acquired by Bederal National Mortgage Bssociation under Section 305 or ¦O6 of the Federal National Bortgage Association Charter Bet and thereafter vested in, and Bequired by the Government Rational Mortgage Association Bursuant to the provisions of Bublic Law 90 448, the Housing Bnd Urban Development Act of H 968, notice of which was Bublished in the Federal Register B 133 F. R. 11035, the undersigned, I lovernment National Mortgage I association, pursuant to said deed I nd the note thereby secured, has I eclared, and does hereby declare I le entire amount of said in- I ebtedness due and payableand, Hursuant to the power of sale I ontained in said deed, will on the B rst Tuesday in February, 1971, I iring the legal hours of sale, at I e Courthouse door in Houston I ounty, Georgia, sell at public Mtcry to the highest bidder for Bsh the property described in Aid deed, to wit: ¦ All that real estate situated and I >ing in the City of Perry, I ouston County, Georgia, known I id designated as Lot 66 in the I ndrew Smoak Subdivision ac- H >rding to a plat of said sub- I ivision made by Rhodes Sewell, I urveyor, on September 13, 1941, I copy of said plat being of record B 1 Map Book 1, Page 317, Clerk's I ffice, Houston Superior Court. I aid plat and the recorded copy I hereof are hereby made a part of I his description by reference I hereto. Said lot is further I lescribed as follows: I Beginning on the south side of ¦ forth Avenue at a point which is 177,2 feet in a westerly direction I is measured along the south line Bf North Avenue from the west I ine of Parkway Drive, if said I itreef lines were extended to form I m angle instead of a curve at the I ntersection of North Avenue and 1 3 arkway Drive; thence South 1 ¦ legree 2 minutes East for a Instance of 155 feet; thence South I* 8 de 9 rees 48 minutes West for a ¦ distance of 75 feet; thence North 1 ¦ degree 12 minutes West for a I distance of 155 feet; thence North |BB degrees 48 minutes East for a distance of 75 feet to the point of Said lot is bounded II by North Avenue '' East by I h .67; West b V Lot 65; and south I c ybot . 47 in ,he Andrew Smoak I u division. A dwelling house and I her improvements are located I °n said land. Th is, the above described Property will be sold as the BRylmt/' HARVEY L. BRY ANT & C. BRYANT ~.W lll be sold subject to to sain c V L COVOnantS a PP |icable rerni-H subdlvlSlon - easements of r «ord and 1971 taxes. aoni e w r ° Ceedso,saidsalewil| be sen rl as P rovided in said deed to will o d6bt and,he undersigned SLr *e ! U,e a deed the pur- «id deei. Said 53,6 35 provided in t9aQp o^ National Mor- Fact J^‘ ation as Attorney in JOYfP r ARVEY L. BRYANT & JOYCE C. BRYANT At'w ER,SMITH & WILLIAMS attorneys at Law rner Robins, Georgia 4tc 1-7 NOTICE OF The MEET 'NG meeting memb ership United r- the Hous ton County January a? Fund wi " be held Flint ci 971 at 7:30 P.M. at CorDoraf« ec,ric Membership Robins r-° n Bui,di ng in Warner The ' Geor 9'a- eiecf h!®,* 1 " 9 is bein 9 held to Directs ' ed Fund Board of Unites r- AII con trlbutors to the M the cn' VerS Fund are members vote in , r l pora ti° n and eligible to e election of Directors. 2tc 1-14 NOTICE IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HOUSTON, STATE OF GEORGIA CIVIL ACTION, ADOPTION Date Filed September 24, 1970. Order for Service by Publication dated October, 9, 1970. SUMMONS JACK R. BENNEY is hereby commanded to file with the Clerk and serve upon Aultman, Hulbert, Buice 8. Cowart, Attorneys at Law, whose address is Post Office Box 89, Perry, Georgia 31069, an answer within sixty (60) days of the date of the order for service by publication filed concerning the adoption of his daughter, Terri Lynn Benney. WITNESS, The Honorable George B. Culpepper, 111, Judge of said Court, this 24th day of September, 1970. Carolyn V. Mitchell Deputy Clerk, Houston Superior Court Aultman, Hulbert, Buice & Cowart Perry, Georgia 4tc 1-14 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO INTRODUCE LOCAL LEGISLATION Notice is hereby given that there will be introduced at the 1971 Session of the General Assembly of Georgia a local bill to amend the Charter of the City of Warner Robins, Georgia, as follows: To annex certain property into the corporate limits of said City; To abolish the city manager provisions of said Charter; To define the duties of the Mayor of said City; To abolish the Civil Service Board; To abolish requirement of public notice of reimbursable expenses, and for other purposes. This the 12fh day of January, 1971. William Wisse City Attorney Warner Robins, Georgia 3tc 1-14 NOTICE GEORGIA PULASKI COUNTY: By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordinary of Pulaski County, Georgia, granted on Septmeber 7, 1970, there will be sold before the courthouse door in Hawkinsville, Pulaski County, Georgia, on the first Tuesday in February 1971, between the legal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property: That tract or parcel of land lying in the 12th land district of Houston and Pulaski Counties, Georgia, consisting of 121 acres, more or less, in Houston County and 36 acres, more orless, in Pulaski County, said lands lying and being in land lots Nos. 70 and 98 of both counties and in the north part of the west half of lot No. 13, Houston County, being formerly known as the Wes Brown place, the Sara Brown place and part of the Jessie H. Pate place. All being known as the Walter R. Brown property and being sold as the property of the late Walter R. Brown, deceased. Said property will be offered by the tract and as a whole. Walter Lou Brown Dixon, Administratrix Walter R. Brown Estate 4tp 1-7 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO INTRODUCE LOCAL LEGISLATION NOTICE is hereby given that there will be introduced at the 1971 Session of the General Assembly of Georgia, a bill to ammend the Charter of the City of Centerville, Georgia, to provide that contested primaries or elections shall be governed by the Georgia laws pertaining to con- test for a state office in any particular as to which the Georgia laws pertaining to municipal elections do not contain a provision governing same, to provide that ammendments to said Georgia Laws shall also apply to any such contest and other purposes. This 11th day of January 1971. R. T. SPENCER as City Attorney for Cen- terville, Georgia 3tc 1-14 NEWSPAPER ADVERTISEMENT A statement of Intent to Dissolve MEDICAL CENTER, INC., a Georgia corporation with registered office at Warner Robins, Georgia, has been delivered to the Secretary of State by said corporation and filed by him on November 27, 1970, in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Georgia Business Corporation Code. 4tp 1-14 NOTICE Amos Collins has applied to City of Perry for permission to open a package store for beer and wine at 1445 Swift Street. Mayor and Council. 2tC 1-14 In Higher Education By Dr. DuPree Jordan, Jr. In some institutions, enrollment is being limited in both the undergraduate and graduate levels. Campus construction is being side-tracked, or postponed indefinitely, and maintenance work is being held to an absolute minimum. One official who was consulted in the Carnegie study said that he could not remember when the windows at his school were last washed. Expenditures for supplies, equipment and travel are being trimmed drastically. Majority In Trouble This special Carnegie report indicates that out of 2,340 colleges throughout the nation, 1,000 of them, with more than half of all the students in the United States (56 per cent) are “headed for trouble financially”; another 540 colleges, with one fifth of all college students (21 per cent) are in “financial difficulty already”, and the other 800 colleges, enrolling less than one fourth of the students (23 per cent) are “not yet in financial trouble”. Illustrative of the problems of higher education today, particularly in the independent colleges and universities, is the fact that Princeton University is currently wrestling with an operating deficit of 2.4 million dollars. Dr. William Bowen, Princeton’s provost and a national expert on the financing of higher education says: “Virtually every private university will show red ink this year. Some just have not closed their books yet.” Some of the early reports are far from encouraging. After struggling with deficits for five years, Columbia University finds itself sls million in the red. New York University, which was facing a deficit of more than $9.5 million in its usual budget, still has a deficit of some $4.5 million after paring down every possible expenditure. A $1.4 million deficit at the University of Detroit has raised the accumulated deficiency of that institution to $4.7 million. The financial problems are so overwhelming for many independent colleges and universities that 21 of these institutions shut their doors this year, and more than a score of others have merged to avoid bankruptcy. Dr. Carl Franklin, financial vice-president of the University of Southern California says: “As near as I can determine, USC is the only major private university not fighting deficit financing this year, and how long we can stay in the black remains to be seen.” These are not superficial problems, or just a case of educators verbalizing their alarm. These are deep and far-reaching difficulties which should concern every thinking citizen. NOTICE To Walter Clifford Bond in accordance with Georgia Laws 1956, Act 362, codified as Code Section 92A-611, you are notified that security in the amount of $646.67 will be deposited in the general funds of the Treasury if not claimed by you before December 17, 1972. D. S. Harris, Jr., Capt., Supervisor, Bureau of Safety Responsibility. 4tc 1-14 Sixth in a Series The problems of higher education are complex and far-reaching. Every concerned citizen and taxpayer is interested in the dilemma of our schools, because more and more of our population are taking advantage of the educational facilities which these colleges and universities offer. Thus, every intelligent taxpayer wants to know all he can about the problems of education, and the prospects for improving and extending educational opportunities. The first part of December the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education issued a most significant report which has commanded a great deal of news coverage in national magazines and periodicals throughout the nation. Some of that report was alarming and discouraging, and all of it tended to dramatize the complicated problems which face leaders in higher education today. The Carnegie Commission described in detail the economy wave which of necessity is sweeping American colleges and universities with a sudden belt-tightening, in an effort to meet what the Commission calls “an acute financial crisis”. Graphic Examples The Commission described a number of things which colleges are already doing to avoid financial catastrophe. Among them are these: Some universities are closing down entire departments. As one example, St. Louis University has just dropped its schools of engineering and dentistry. Academic programs are being cut back or postponed. Many experimental classes are being eliminated, as well as courses in foreign languages, agricultural technology, religious, urban and black studies. Tulane University in New Orleans eliminated six graduate programs this year. Student aid is being limited sharply, just at the time it is needed most. In one group of schools described by the Commission as “headed for financial trouble” the annual rate of increase in student aid has dropped from a 10-year average of 18 per cent down to only 3.6 per cent this year. Faculties and staffs at many schools are being reduced either by cutbacks or by freezes on hiring. The College of San Mateo, a two-year school in California. is reported planning to reduce its staff by a full 40 per cent. In some cases, raises have been postponed indefinitely. Faculty members are being asked to take on bigger teaching loads, which often means larger classes and less individual attention in the classroom. NOTICE THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HOUSTON STATE OF GEORGIA EARLA JEAN SHOMPER VS DONALD LeROY SHOMPER, JR. Civil Action, Divorce Docket No. 11162, Date Filed January 6, 1971, Order for Service by Publication dated January 6,1971. Summons THE DEFENDANT Donald Leßoy Shomper, Jr. is hereby commanded to file with the clerk and serve upon Spencer, Smith and Williams Plaintiff's attorney, whose address is 608 Watson Blvd., Warner Robins, Ga. an answer within 60 days of the date of the order for service by publication. WITNESS, The Honorable Geo. B. Culpepper, Judge of said Court, this 6th day of January, 1971. Carolyn V. Mitchell Deputy Clerk, Houston Superior Court 4tp 1-14 v % \ud \*V !J!'j /,/¦.’ * aj llnlflfißHfflP Crossing Big Red Oak Creek in Meriwether County, southwest of Atlanta, is a partly-covered 412-foot bridge, longest of Georgia's antique bridges. (PRN) TOUR GEORGIA (fitate [o/y/lofa&ituke; ATLANTA (PRN) - Within a surprisingly short distance of Atlanta’s soaring skyscrapers stand a number of rustic reminders of an earlier, more leisurely age---Georgia’s covered bridges. Several of these picturesque relics of the road are within range of a Sunday drive from the capital, waiting quietly for those willing to search them out on little-used but often scenic side roads. Some of their names are amusing, like Settendown or Snapping Shoals. Others, such as Auchumpkee, Wehadkee, and Apalachee, show their Indian heritage. At historic Stone Mountain in DeKalb County is the former Athens covered bridge. Built in 1880’s, it saw service there until the 1960’s when it was dismantled and reassembled at Stone Mountain. On the opposite side of Atlanta is Cobb County’s covered bridge, still in use over Nickajack Creek. It is located on Concord Bridge Road near Smyrna. Banks County in northeast Georgia boasts five of the state’s 26 covered bridges. Its longest is the 92-foot span over the Middle Fork of the Broad River. Banks also has Georgia’s shortest covered bridge, a 35-foot one over Grove Creek. Crossing Big Red Oak Creek in Meriwether County, southwest of Atlanta, is a partly-covered 412-foot bridge, longest of Georgia’s antique spans. Another Meriwether County bridge crosses White Oak Creek near Alvaton. Both stand firm, serving back country dirt roads of little traffic. Neighboring Troup County’s Whitewater Creek Bridge still functions near LaGrange; another Troup bridge now stands at Callaway Gardens in Harris County near Pine Mountain. It was moved to the Gardens and restored to provide an intriguing historical attraction at this tourist mecca. Other counties throughout the state which number covered bridges among their assets are: Stephens, Upson, W alton, Barrow, White, Jackson, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Madison, Early, Forsyth, Franklin, Bartow, and Dawson. The Department of Industry and Trade, Tourist Division, believes that history buffs will be well rewarded by a search for these survivors of the 19th century, still alive and well in the Space Age. You and Your Dollar by the Georgia Consumer Services Program COSMETIC SAFETY My teen-age daughter is spending all of her allowance on different kinds of make-up. I know that this is a phase she’ll get over, but in the meantime I am afraid that she may ruin her skin, that her hair may fall out and any number of other things. I may be over-reacting, but is there any way to be sure that this stuff she is putting on herself is safe? You really don’t have much to worry about. Almost all cosmetics, including those you buy in the dime store, are perfectly safe for normal use. However, if your daughter has an allergy, she may need to use special make-up. Also, if she uses cosmetics improperly, she may develop an infection. The Food and Drug Administration regulates the manufacture and sale of cosmetics. Any ingredient known to cause an allergy must be listed on the label, and, in the case of drugs, all ingredients must be on the label. Your daughter should read labels carefully, and follow the instructions to the letter. Cosmetics that she should be especially careful with are deodorants, hair dyes, permanent wave solutions, skin bleaches, hormone creams and cream hair removers. For all of these except deodorants and hormone creams, she should make a “patch test”. This means that she places a small amount of the solution on an out-of-the-way patch of skin, and ./aits several hours to see if a rash develops. There are two kinds of deodorant; one that merely stops odor, and another which stops odor and limits perspiration. The latter, called an anti-perspirant is classified as a drug. Either may cause a rash. If such a rash continues, another brand should be used. Needless to say, many of these preparations are dangerous or fatal if swallowed, and should be kept tightly sealed and out of the hands of children. Never light a cigarette or have one in your mouth when using hair spray. The real keys to using make-up safely are following instructions and plenty of soap and water. Make up used incorrectly, or applied on top of an old layer may certainly cause irritation and infection. As a rule, you should not buy make-up from people on the street, and use caution in buying unknown brands from door-to-door salesman. FILING TAX RETURNS In a recent You and Your Dollar, we offered some suggestions on income tax deductions, and we hope they will help people in obtaining all tax benefits that are legally theirs. However, whether you itemize your deductions or not, there are certain things that all taxpayers must include on their returns, things that thousands forget each year. Your correct Social Security number, and that of your wife if you are filing a joint return, must be on form 1040. This number is your IRS identity number. You can be fined five dollars for leaving it off. •An amazing number of people forget to sign their tax returns. Your tax return is not final until you, or you and your wife if filing jointly, have signed it. Failure to list dependents properly is another common error. If the dependents are children, you need only list their first names, but if you list other dependents, you owmmrn / ? BY DEAN WOHLGEMUTH Georgia Game and Fisn Commission Old Kate she’d get caught in the briars or weeds and her back legs weren’t strong enough to get her through, she’d bark three times and I’d come get her,” said Mr. Blanchard. “And, if I missed her and called to her, she’d bark three times to let me know where she was. I’d go to her and help her out of where.ar she was stuck in the briars.” Having hunted several hours behind her, I would never have guessed what the plucky setter had gone through. She tired quickly, and wasn’t able to range much at all by the end of the day. Had I known her story, I wouldn’t have wondered! Nonetheless, she worked well. Though the coveys were few, she showed she knew what hunting was all about. If there were birds around, she found them. And she was the one that found the well-hidden downed birds. You have to have a great deal of respect for a dog like old Kate. She loves to hunt and works hard at it, harder than meets the unknowing eye. Having such a deg adds immeasurably to the enjoyment of the hunt, not to mention the tremendous addition to the success of the hunt. It’s nearly as much pleasure to see the dog on point as to see the covey rise, and almost as pleasant to see a well-executed retrieve as it is to hit the bird. No wonder there’s such a bond between a man and his dog. Perhaps that’s what bird hunting is all about. different scales for each filing status. There are three tables for people who make less than $5,000 a year, and do not itemize deductions, and three rate schedules for everybody else. For instance, if a married man with an income of $7,000 selected the tax scale for a single man with the same income, he would be paying too much. Be sure you look at the right column and the right line on the table. Also be sure to list the amount of taxes due and refund due on the correct line of the 1040 form. YOU AND YOUR DOLLAR is a service of the Georgia Consumer Services Program. If you have any questions concerning credit problems, contracts or how to spend your money wisely, call us free at 1-80(1282-8900, or ask your local operator to dial the number for you. Remember, the call is free and the service is free. ATLANTA (PRN) - My aching legs were getting a well-deserved rest. 1 leaned back in the chair and soothed my hot, dry mouth with a soft drink, basking in the glow you feel after a day hunting quail. I’ll have to admit the day wasn’t exactly the kind you write in your diary as one of the more outstanding variety. Yet, Cecil Blanchard and I had taken a few birds, and had had a very enjoyable day afield, watching a pointer and a pair of setters work. It had been the kind of day you dream about, weather-wise . . .heavy frost that didn’t melt off until after 9, and a bit crisp all day. Even so, all that walking kept us plenty warm. Now, at Cecil’s father’s place we returned the dogs to the pen and listened to H.M. Blanchard talk of his dogs. Now, there’s little mote fascinating than listening to an old bird-dog man from ‘way back. “Old Kate, the old setter you hunted with today,” he was saying, “did right well to keep up with you today. She’s 11 years old, and with all the ‘mileage’ she has on her, she’s about equivalent to a 90-year-old man. “Would you believe that when she was three, she got her pelvis broken?” His eyes searched my face. “The vet told me to put her to sleep, but 1 just couldn’t do it. We kept her in the basement for several weeks on a pad. When she needed to go outside, she’d bark three times. No matter whether it was 8 p.m. or 2 a.m., we’d carry her out. “After a time, I began taking her out to hunt. If must give their full names, relationship to you, how long they have lived with you if they do, their income, and how much support you contribute. Remember, you must contribute more than half of their living expenses to claim them as dependents. •Be sure to attach all necessary forms and documents to the return. Don’t forget your W-2 form. Your 1040 form will have a number of “schedules” attached to it. These schedules cover such things as outside income or retirement income. Anyone living on a pension should be sure to use the schedule claiming retirement income credit, or he will be paying more taxes than he owes. Read all schedules to be sure you use the ones that apply to you. •Be careful to use the tax tables correctly. There are -- ¦ - (HlvTiMaTcJlvUlaßsl 113 CROSSWORD PUZZLE i|||||l by Suzanne Craver |d|S|n ojjfo MlnßSo hp 3 ° nbißi|o i ¦Ais ilf w ACROSS 30. Jewish llrt. month OUuIzMMv I. Old Doric name 31. The United Slates d for Zeus 33. Mister; abbr. ¦MB"! IfolM 4. Rustling sound 34. Untidy Jl ?Ijj|? :? ~ 9. Stinging insect 36. Fresh water fish N /tßpjN]3l3i n W 3 12. Flightless. 3-toed bird 37. "Status " 1 3 1 BlflMHlgp ']• 38 - p °T^ r " ANSWER 14. Vase of Sailors 15. Academic honorary 39, One: Spanish distinction 40. Whey 17. Fleshy edible fruit 41. Augmenting DOWN 4. Stair 19. Swindle 43. Signal to begin 1- ?6th letter 5. Very small 20. Burn with anger 44. Spotter 2 * Wooden core 6. That i,: abbr. 21. Take flight 46. Thief 3 * Lump of gold 7. Trap 23. Molt beverage 49. Heated 8- Photography solution 24. Ship-shaped clocks 50. Rabbit fur 9. Firearm projectile 27. "Stinker": slang 52. Compass point 10. Before 28. American Medical 53. Ice: German Ii» Ensign: abbr. Association: abbr. 54. Public warehouse Bread type 29. Mexican Indian tribe 55. Bricklayer's helper Opera star, Ezio ffiߦ 20. Sound loudly, at y >0 II a trumpet slang JPI 22. Tog ~ 23. Soul: French 26. Young codfish IH 11 28. Alcott heroine 273-232 B.C. Uj] 32. Morriog._yov,: 2 wd.. 11 35. Small, tllvary M 31 ¦/» (oodfi* " IB 37, Provinc. ol Canada tt —slHao 39, R *"’ov " - >( B * B 40. Lion', young gngnsi « ggß «• IPIbsIPI Wimi 44 45 IB?* 47 M AA. ¦P| 45. Hawaiian dish 49 "^TbI 1 #” ft ~~ TBIsT~ 46. Lacerate Bb| 47. Alfonso’s queen ti Bh - 48. Crimton . 1 I I I .. 51. "Old manskmg I nuHouHm i | | I I ;"ftXr#: , X:XrXrXvXwWrX!W:XwXrXrX - X?XrXvXrX:XrXrXrWSSvftW;W>x

Transcript of Houston home journal. (Perry, GA) 1971-01-14 [p ] · 2019-07-09 · S. Harris, Jr., Capt.,...

Page 1: Houston home journal. (Perry, GA) 1971-01-14 [p ] · 2019-07-09 · S. Harris, Jr., Capt., Supervisor, Bureau of Safety Responsibility. 4tc 1-14 Sixth in a Series The problems of

Is£SMDBSjftH

I THURSDAY, JANUARY 14,1971

f notice OF INTENT TO

I iN!bODUCE LEGISLATION

¦ The Houston County Legislative

legation to the GeneralKembly intends to introduceKs! ha ve enacted Legislation

EmMM • Te.epbone

¦ Ihorify for the City of Perry;

Hich Legislation will enable said

¦ufhority to build and establish

¦r adequate Telephone System or

Kan alternative in its descretionKourchase the existing telephone

Katies and to provide other

Kdditional powers desirable and

¦ecessary to implement its ob-

¦ec fives.¦ STANLEY SMITH, Senator

I SAM A. NUNN, JR., Post 1

I VINCE MOYER, Post 2I 3tc 1-7

I NOTICE| OF FORECLOSURE

OF GEORGIA,Bounty of Houston:B Because of the default in the

Ba/ment of the indebtednessBecured by a deed to secure debt,

Bxecuted by HARVEY L.Bryant 8. joyce c. bryant

Bo FEDERAL NATIONALBortgage association.Bated May 29 1968, recorded in

Bleed Book 304, Page 439, Clerk sBffice, Houston Superior Court,

Bubiect instrument, security, lien,

Bnd the indebtedness securedBereby having been acquired by

Bederal National Mortgage

Bssociation under Section 305 or¦O6 of the Federal NationalBortgage Association Charter

Bet and thereafter vested in, andBequired by the Government

Rational Mortgage Association

Bursuant to the provisions of

Bublic Law 90 448, the Housing

Bnd Urban Development Act ofH968, notice of which was

Bublished in the Federal RegisterB 133 F. R. 11035, the undersigned,I lovernment National MortgageI association, pursuant to said deedInd the note thereby secured, hasI eclared, and does hereby declareI le entire amount of said in-I ebtedness due and payableand,Hursuant to the power of saleIontained in said deed, will on the

B rst Tuesday in February, 1971,

Iiring the legal hours of sale, atI e Courthouse door in HoustonIounty, Georgia, sell at publicMtcry to the highest bidder forBsh the property described in

Aid deed, to wit:¦ All that real estate situated andI>ing in the City of Perry,Iouston County, Georgia, knownIid designated as Lot 66 in theIndrew Smoak Subdivision ac-H >rding to a plat of said sub-I ivision made by Rhodes Sewell,I urveyor, on September 13, 1941,I copy of said plat being of recordB 1 Map Book 1, Page 317, Clerk'sIffice, Houston Superior Court.I aid plat and the recorded copyI hereof are hereby made a part ofI his description by referenceI hereto. Said lot is furtherI lescribed as follows:I Beginning on the south side of¦ forth Avenue at a point which is177,2 feet in a westerly directionI is measured along the south lineBf North Avenue from the westI ine of Parkway Drive, if saidI itreef lines were extended to formIm angle instead of a curve at theI ntersection of North Avenue and1 3 arkway Drive; thence South 1¦ legree 2 minutes East for aInstance of 155 feet; thence SouthI*8 de9 rees 48 minutes West for a¦ distance of 75 feet; thence North 1¦ degree 12 minutes West for aI distance of 155 feet; thence North|BB degrees 48 minutes East for a

distance of 75 feet to the point ofSaid lot is bounded

I I by North Avenue '' East by

I h .67; West b V Lot 65; and southI c

ybot . 47 in ,he Andrew SmoakI u division. A dwelling house andI her improvements are locatedI °n said land.

Th is, the above describedProperty will be sold as theBRylmt/' HARVEY L.BRY ANT & C. BRYANT~.W

lll be sold subject to

to sain cVLCOVOnantS a PP |icable

rerni-H subdlvlSlon - easements ofr «ord and 1971 taxes.aoni

ewr°Ceedso,saidsalewil| be

sen rl as P rovided in said deed towill o

d6bt and,he undersigned

SLr*e!U,e a deed the pur-

«id deei. Said 53,6 35 provided in

t9aQp o^ National Mor-

Fact J^‘ation as Attorney in

JOYfP rARVEY L. BRYANT &JOYCE C. BRYANT

At'wER,SMITH & WILLIAMSattorneys at Lawrner Robins, Georgia4tc 1-7

NOTICE OF

TheMEET'NG

meeting memb ership

United r- the Hous ton CountyJanuary a? Fund wi" be held

Flint ci971 at 7:30 P.M. at

CorDoraf«ec,ric Membership

Robins r-° n Bui,di ng in Warner

The' Geor 9'a-

eiecf h!®,* 1"9 is bein 9 held to

Directs' ed Fund Board of

Unites r-AII con trlbutors to the

M the cn' VerS Fund are membersvote in ,

rl

pora ti°n and eligible toe election of Directors.

2tc 1-14

NOTICEIN THE SUPERIOR COURT

FOR THE COUNTY OFHOUSTON, STATE OFGEORGIACIVIL ACTION, ADOPTIONDate Filed September 24, 1970.Order for Service by Publicationdated October, 9, 1970.

SUMMONSJACK R. BENNEY is hereby

commanded to file with the Clerkand serve upon Aultman, Hulbert,Buice 8. Cowart, Attorneys atLaw, whose address is Post OfficeBox 89, Perry, Georgia 31069, ananswer within sixty (60) days ofthe date of the order for service bypublication filed concerning theadoption of his daughter, TerriLynn Benney.

WITNESS, The HonorableGeorge B. Culpepper, 111, Judgeof said Court, this 24th day ofSeptember, 1970.

Carolyn V. MitchellDeputy Clerk,Houston Superior Court

Aultman, Hulbert, Buice &

CowartPerry, Georgia

4tc 1-14

NOTICE OF INTENTION TOINTRODUCE LOCALLEGISLATION

Notice is hereby given thatthere will be introduced at the1971 Session of the GeneralAssembly of Georgia a local bill toamend the Charter of the City ofWarner Robins, Georgia, asfollows:

To annex certain property intothe corporate limits of said City;

To abolish the city managerprovisions of said Charter;

To define the duties of theMayor of said City;

To abolish the Civil ServiceBoard;

To abolish requirement ofpublic notice of reimbursableexpenses, and for other purposes.

This the 12fh day of January,1971.

William WisseCity AttorneyWarner Robins, Georgia

3tc 1-14

NOTICEGEORGIA PULASKI COUNTY:

By virtue of an order of theCourt of Ordinary of PulaskiCounty, Georgia, granted onSeptmeber 7, 1970, there will besold before the courthouse door inHawkinsville, Pulaski County,Georgia, on the first Tuesday inFebruary 1971, between the legal

hours of sale, to the highest andbest bidder for cash, the followingdescribed property:

That tract or parcel of landlying in the 12th land district ofHouston and Pulaski Counties,Georgia, consisting of 121 acres,more or less, in Houston Countyand 36 acres, more orless, inPulaski County, said lands lyingand being in land lots Nos. 70 and98 of both counties and in the northpart of the west half of lot No. 13,Houston County, being formerlyknown as the Wes Brown place,the Sara Brown place and part ofthe Jessie H. Pate place. All beingknown as the Walter R. Brownproperty and being sold as theproperty of the late Walter R.Brown, deceased.

Said property will be offered bythe tract and as a whole.

Walter Lou Brown Dixon,Administratrix Walter R. BrownEstate

4tp 1-7

NOTICE OF INTENTION TOINTRODUCE LOCALLEGISLATION

NOTICE is hereby given thatthere will be introduced at the1971 Session of the GeneralAssembly of Georgia, a bill toammend the Charter of the City ofCenterville, Georgia, to providethat contested primaries orelections shall be governed by theGeorgia laws pertaining to con-test for a state office in anyparticular as to which the Georgialaws pertaining to municipalelections do not contain aprovision governing same, toprovide that ammendments tosaid Georgia Laws shall alsoapply to any such contest andother purposes.

This 11th day of January 1971.R. T. SPENCERas City Attorney for Cen-

terville, Georgia3tc 1-14

NEWSPAPERADVERTISEMENT

A statement of Intent toDissolve MEDICAL CENTER,

INC., a Georgia corporation withregistered office at WarnerRobins, Georgia, has beendelivered to the Secretary of Stateby said corporation and filed by

him on November 27, 1970, inaccordance with the applicableprovisions of the Georgia

Business Corporation Code.4tp 1-14

NOTICEAmos Collins has applied to City

of Perry for permission to open apackage store for beer and wineat 1445 Swift Street.

Mayor and Council.2tC 1-14

In Higher Education

By Dr. DuPree Jordan, Jr.

• In some institutions,enrollment is being limited inboth the undergraduate andgraduate levels.• Campus construction isbeing side-tracked, orpostponed indefinitely, andmaintenance work is beingheld to an absolute minimum.One official who wasconsulted in the Carnegiestudy said that he could notremember when the windowsat his school were last washed.• Expenditures for supplies,equipment and travel are beingtrimmed drastically.

Majority In Trouble

This special Carnegie reportindicates that out of 2,340colleges throughout thenation, 1,000 of them, withmore than half of all thestudents in the United States(56 per cent) are “headed fortrouble financially”; another540 colleges, with one fifth ofall college students (21 percent) are in “financialdifficulty already”, and theother 800 colleges, enrollingless than one fourth of thestudents (23 per cent) are“not yet in financial trouble”.

Illustrative of the problemsof higher education today,particularly in theindependent colleges anduniversities, is the fact thatPrinceton University iscurrently wrestling with anoperating deficit of 2.4 milliondollars. Dr. William Bowen,Princeton’s provost and anational expert on thefinancing of higher educationsays: “Virtually every privateuniversity will show red inkthis year. Some just have notclosed their books yet.”

Some of the early reportsare far from encouraging.After struggling with deficitsfor five years, ColumbiaUniversity finds itself slsmillionin the red.

New York University,which was facing a deficit ofmore than $9.5 million in itsusual budget, still has a deficitof some $4.5 million afterparing down every possibleexpenditure.

A $1.4 million deficit at theUniversity of Detroit hasraised the accumulateddeficiency of that institutionto $4.7 million.

The financial problems areso overwhelming for manyindependent colleges anduniversities that 21 of theseinstitutions shut their doorsthis year, and more than ascore of others have merged toavoid bankruptcy.

Dr. Carl Franklin, financialvice-president of theUniversity of SouthernCalifornia says: “As near as Ican determine, USC is theonly major private universitynot fighting deficit financingthis year, and how long we canstay in the black remains to beseen.”

These are not superficialproblems, or just a case ofeducators verbalizing theiralarm. These are deep andfar-reaching difficulties whichshould concern every thinkingcitizen.

NOTICETo Walter Clifford Bond in

accordance with Georgia Laws1956, Act 362, codified as CodeSection 92A-611, you are notifiedthat security in the amount of$646.67 will be deposited in thegeneral funds of the Treasury ifnot claimed by you beforeDecember 17, 1972. D. S. Harris,Jr., Capt., Supervisor, Bureau ofSafety Responsibility.

4tc 1-14

Sixth in a Series

The problems of highereducation are complex andfar-reaching.

Every concerned citizen andtaxpayer is interested in thedilemma of our schools,because more and more of ourpopulation are takingadvantage of the educationalfacilities which these collegesand universities offer. Thus,every intelligent taxpayerwants to know all he canabout the problems ofeducation, and the prospectsfor improving and extendingeducational opportunities.

The first part of Decemberthe Carnegie Commission onHigher Education issued amost significant report whichhas commanded a great deal ofnews coverage in nationalmagazines and periodicalsthroughout the nation. Someof that report was alarmingand discouraging, and all of ittended to dramatize thecomplicated problems whichface leaders in highereducation today.

The Carnegie Commissiondescribed in detail theeconomy wave which ofnecessity is sweepingAmerican colleges anduniversities with a suddenbelt-tightening, in an effort tomeet what the Commissioncalls “an acute financialcrisis”.

Graphic Examples

The Commission describeda number of things whichcolleges are already doing toavoid financial catastrophe.Among them are these:• Some universities areclosing down entiredepartments. As one example,St. Louis University has justdropped its schools ofengineering and dentistry.• Academic programs are

being cut back or postponed.Many experimental classes arebeing eliminated, as well ascourses in foreign languages,agricultural technology,religious, urban and blackstudies. Tulane University inNew Orleans eliminated sixgraduate programs this year.• Student aid is being limited

sharply, just at the time it isneeded most. In one group ofschools described by theCommission as “headed forfinancial trouble” the annualrate of increase in student aidhas dropped from a 10-yearaverage of 18 per cent downto only 3.6 per cent this year.• Faculties and staffs at many

schools are being reducedeither by cutbacks or byfreezes on hiring. The Collegeof San Mateo, a two-yearschool in California. isreported planning to reduce itsstaff by a full 40 per cent. Insome cases, raises have beenpostponed indefinitely.• Faculty members are beingasked to take on biggerteaching loads, which oftenmeans larger classes and lessindividual attention in theclassroom.

NOTICE

THE SUPERIOR COURT FORTHE COUNTY OF HOUSTONSTATE OF GEORGIA

EARLA JEAN SHOMPER VSDONALD LeROY SHOMPER,

JR. Civil Action, Divorce DocketNo. 11162, Date Filed January 6,1971, Order for Service byPublication dated January 6,1971.Summons

THE DEFENDANT DonaldLeßoy Shomper, Jr. is herebycommanded to file with the clerkand serve upon Spencer, Smithand Williams Plaintiff's attorney,whose address is 608 WatsonBlvd., Warner Robins, Ga. ananswer within 60 days of the dateof the order for service bypublication.

WITNESS, The Honorable Geo.B. Culpepper, Judge of said Court,this 6th day of January, 1971.

Carolyn V. MitchellDeputy Clerk,

Houston Superior Court4tp 1-14

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Crossing Big Red Oak Creek in Meriwether County, southwestof Atlanta, is a partly-covered 412-foot bridge, longest ofGeorgia's antique bridges. (PRN)

TOUR

GEORGIA(fitate [o/y/lofa&ituke;

ATLANTA (PRN) -Withina surprisingly short distance ofAtlanta’s soaring skyscrapersstand a number of rusticreminders of an earlier, moreleisurely age---Georgia’scovered bridges.

Several of these picturesquerelics of the road are withinrange of a Sunday drive fromthe capital, waiting quietly forthose willing to search themout on little-used but oftenscenic side roads.

Some of their names areamusing, like Settendown orSnapping Shoals. Others, suchas Auchumpkee, Wehadkee,and Apalachee, show theirIndian heritage.

At historic Stone Mountainin DeKalb County is theformer Athens covered bridge.Built in 1880’s, it saw servicethere until the 1960’s when itwas dismantled andreassembled at StoneMountain.

On the opposite side ofAtlanta is Cobb County’scovered bridge, still in use overNickajack Creek. It is locatedon Concord Bridge Road nearSmyrna.

Banks County in northeastGeorgia boasts five of thestate’s 26 covered bridges. Itslongest is the 92-foot spanover the Middle Fork of theBroad River. Banks also hasGeorgia’s shortest covered

bridge, a 35-foot one overGrove Creek.

Crossing Big Red Oak Creekin Meriwether County,southwest of Atlanta, is apartly-covered 412-footbridge, longest of Georgia’santique spans. AnotherMeriwether County bridgecrosses White Oak Creek nearAlvaton. Both stand firm,serving back country dirtroads of little traffic.

Neighboring TroupCounty’s Whitewater CreekBridge still functions nearLaGrange; another Troupbridge now stands at CallawayGardens in Harris County nearPine Mountain. It was movedto the Gardens and restored toprovide an intriguing historicalattraction at this touristmecca.

Other counties throughoutthe state which numbercovered bridges among theirassets are: Stephens, Upson,W alton, Barrow, White,Jackson, Oconee, Oglethorpe,Madison, Early, Forsyth,Franklin, Bartow, andDawson.

The Department ofIndustry and Trade, TouristDivision, believes that historybuffs will be well rewarded bya search for these survivors ofthe 19th century, still aliveand well in the Space Age.

You and Your Dollarby the Georgia Consumer Services Program

COSMETIC SAFETYMy teen-age daughter is

spending all of her allowanceon different kinds of make-up.I know that this is a phaseshe’ll get over, but in themeantime I am afraid that shemay ruin her skin, that herhair may fall out and anynumber of other things. I maybe over-reacting, but is thereany way to be sure that thisstuff she is putting on herselfis safe?

You really don’t have muchto worry about. Almost allcosmetics, including those youbuy in the dime store, areperfectly safe for normal use.However, if your daughter hasan allergy, she may need touse special make-up. Also, ifshe uses cosmetics improperly,she may develop an infection.

The Food and DrugAdministration regulates themanufacture and sale ofcosmetics. Any ingredientknown to cause an allergymust be listed on the label,and, in the case of drugs, allingredients must be on thelabel. Your daughter shouldread labels carefully, andfollow the instructions to theletter.

Cosmetics that she shouldbe especially careful with aredeodorants, hair dyes,permanent wave solutions,skin bleaches, hormone creamsand cream hair removers. Forall of these except deodorantsand hormone creams, sheshould make a “patch test”.This means that she places asmall amount of the solutionon an out-of-the-way patch ofskin, and ./aits several hoursto see if a rash develops. Thereare two kinds of deodorant;one that merely stops odor,and another which stops odor

and limits perspiration. Thelatter, called an anti-perspirantis classified as a drug. Either

may cause a rash. If such arash continues, another brandshould be used.

Needless to say, many ofthese preparations aredangerous or fatal ifswallowed, and should be kepttightly sealed and out of thehands of children. Never lighta cigarette or have one in yourmouth when using hair spray.

The real keys to usingmake-up safely are followinginstructions and plenty ofsoap and water. Make up usedincorrectly, or applied on topof an old layer may certainlycause irritation and infection.

As a rule, you should notbuy make-up from people onthe street, and use caution inbuying unknown brands fromdoor-to-door salesman.

FILING TAX RETURNSIn a recent You and Your

Dollar, we offered somesuggestions on income taxdeductions, and we hope theywill help people in obtainingall tax benefits that are legallytheirs. However, whether youitemize your deductions ornot, there are certain thingsthat all taxpayers must includeon their returns, things thatthousands forget each year.

• Your correct SocialSecurity number, and that ofyour wife if you are filing ajoint return, must be on form1040. This number is yourIRS identity number. You canbe fined five dollars for leavingit off.•An amazing number ofpeople forget to sign their taxreturns. Your tax return is not

final until you, or you andyour wife if filing jointly, havesigned it.• Failure to list dependentsproperly is another commonerror. If the dependents arechildren, you need only listtheir first names, but if youlist other dependents, you

owmmrn/?

BY DEAN WOHLGEMUTHGeorgia Game and

Fisn Commission

Old Kate

she’d get caught in the briarsor weeds and her back legsweren’t strong enough to gether through, she’d bark threetimes and I’d come get her,”said Mr. Blanchard. “And, if Imissed her and called to her,she’d bark three times to letme know where she was. I’dgo to her and help her out ofwhere.ar she was stuck in thebriars.”

Having hunted several hoursbehind her, I would never haveguessed what the plucky setterhad gone through. She tiredquickly, and wasn’t able torange much at all by the endof the day. Had I known herstory, I wouldn’t havewondered!

Nonetheless, she workedwell. Though the coveys werefew, she showed she knewwhat hunting was all about. Ifthere were birds around, shefound them. And she was theone that found thewell-hidden downed birds.

You have to have a greatdeal of respect for a dog likeold Kate. She loves to huntand works hard at it, harderthan meets the unknowingeye.

Having such a deg addsimmeasurably to theenjoyment of the hunt, not tomention the tremendousaddition to the success of thehunt.

It’s nearly as much pleasureto see the dog on point as tosee the covey rise, and almostas pleasant to see awell-executed retrieve as it isto hit the bird. No wonderthere’s such a bond between aman and his dog.

Perhaps that’s what birdhunting is all about.

different scales for each filingstatus. There are three tablesfor people who make less than$5,000 a year, and do notitemize deductions, and threerate schedules for everybodyelse. For instance, ifa marriedman with an income of $7,000selected the tax scale for asingle man with the sameincome, he would be payingtoo much. Be sure you look atthe right column and the rightline on the table. Also be sureto list the amount of taxes dueand refund due on the correctline of the 1040 form.

YOU AND YOUR DOLLAR isa service of the Georgia ConsumerServices Program. Ifyou have anyquestions concerning creditproblems, contracts or how to

spend your money wisely, call usfree at 1-80(1282-8900, or askyour local operator to dial thenumber for you. Remember, thecall is free and the service is free.

ATLANTA (PRN) - Myaching legs were getting awell-deserved rest. 1 leanedback in the chair and soothedmy hot, dry mouth with a softdrink, basking in the glow youfeel after a day hunting quail.

I’ll have to admit the daywasn’t exactly the kind youwrite in your diary as one ofthe more outstanding variety.Yet, Cecil Blanchard and I hadtaken a few birds, and had hada very enjoyable day afield,watching a pointer and a pairof setters work. It had beenthe kind of day you dreamabout, weather-wise . . .heavyfrost that didn’t melt off untilafter 9, and a bit crisp all day.Even so, all that walking keptus plenty warm.

Now, at Cecil’s father’splace we returned the dogs tothe pen and listened to H.M.Blanchard talk of his dogs.Now, there’s little mote

fascinating than listening to anold bird-dog man from ‘wayback.

“Old Kate, the old setteryou hunted with today,” hewas saying, “did right well tokeep up with you today. She’s11 years old, and with all the‘mileage’ she has on her, she’sabout equivalent to a90-year-old man.

“Would you believe thatwhen she was three, she gother pelvis broken?” His eyessearched my face. “The vettold me to put her to sleep,but 1 just couldn’t do it. Wekept her in the basement forseveral weeks on a pad. Whenshe needed to go outside,she’d bark three times. Nomatter whether it was 8 p.m.or 2 a.m., we’d carry her out.

“After a time, I begantaking her out to hunt. If

must give their full names,relationship to you, how longthey have lived with you ifthey do, their income, andhow much support youcontribute. Remember, youmust contribute more thanhalf of their living expenses toclaim them as dependents.•Be sure to attach allnecessary forms anddocuments to the return.Don’t forget your W-2 form.Your 1040 form will have anumber of “schedules”attached to it. These schedulescover such things as outsideincome or retirement income.Anyone living on a pensionshould be sure to use theschedule claiming retirementincome credit, or he will bepaying more taxes than heowes. Read all schedules to besure you use the ones thatapply to you.•Be careful to use the taxtables correctly. There are

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