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Administrator’s Sale of Land,
By authority of an order of the court
of Ordinary" of Houston county, Qa., I
-will sell on the first Tuesday in Decem
ber, 1902, within the legal hours of sale,
before the court house door in Perry,
Ga., the following lands belonging to
the estate of T. N- Bowman, deceased,
to-wit: The east half of lot of land No.
78 and the east half of lot of land No. 77,
each half lot containing 101^ acres,
anore or less, and both aggregating 202%
acres, more or less, and both of said lots
being in the 6th district .of Houston
county, by original survey, now the up
per 6th distriot. Bold to pay the debts
of said deoeased and for distribution.
'Terms cash. Nov. 3rd, 1902.
O.O. Richardson,
Adm’r. of T. N. Bowman, deo’d.
HOUSTON SHERIFF’S SALES.
Will be sold before the court house
door in tile town of Perry, Houston
county, Ga., between the legal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in December
1902, the following property, to-wit:
All that tract of land lying in the sixth
•district of Houston county and consist
ing of the north half of lot-number one
hundred and ten, containing 101acres,
all of lot of land number eighty-three,
except tLe south-east thirty acres, being
in
east
fifty acres of lot number eighty-four in
Crawford county. All of said lands ly
ing and being in one body aud aggregat-
ind fivehundrod and twenty-six aud one-
fourth aoros, more or less, and described
iu a judgment in favor of the British &
American Mortgage Company Limited
against Henry G Hardison, obtained at
October term 1902 of Houston Superior
Court, in the county of the defendant’s
residence. Levied upon as the property
of Henry G. Hardison to satisfy a fl-fa
from Houston Superior court in favoi of
the British’* American Mortgage Com
pany Limited vs. Henxv G. Hardison.
Defendant notified. Terms cash.*
Also at the same time aud place all
that tract of land lying in the niuth dis
trict of Houston county, Ga., ami being
lots of land numbers one hundred and
thirty-five, one hundred and fifty-four
and one hundred and twenty-one, each
containing 202^ acres and aggregating
six hundred seven und one-half acres,
more or less, and.all lying in one body
and being the same land desoribed iu a
judgment obtained at the October term,
1902, of Houston Superior court in favor
of the British & American Mortgage
Company Limited against John F. San
ders, trustee for wife and children, and
Hattie Sanders, W. H, Sanders, Armiu-
da Sanders and Alice Tharpe. Levied on
as the property-of said John F. Sanders,
trustee for wife and ohildren, aud Hattie
Sanders, W. H. Sanders, Arminda San
ders and Alioe Tharpe to satisfy a fi-fa
issued from Houston Superior court iu
favor of the British & Amerioan Mort
gage Company Limited vs. said John F,
Sanders, trustee for wife and children,
and Hattie Sanders, W. H. Sanders, Ar
minda Sanders and Alice Tharpe. De
fendants notified. Terms cash.
Also at the same time and place, that
tract or parcel of laud lying in the origi
nal sixth, now upper fifth, distriot of
Houston county, and being that thirty
acres off of lot No. 10,"in said distriot,
conveyed by Sterling Jordan and Mary
Jordan to Augustus Hill by their deed
•dated 6th day of December, 1872, and re
corded in book of deeds Q, pages 63 and
65, in the Clerk’s office of Houston supe
rior court, and by Gus Fill to Mayer <fc
Watts by his deed .dated 1st day of Feb
ruary, 1896, and recorded in book A A,
page 839, clerk’s office, Houston superi
or rourt, and by Mayer & Watts reeon-
veyed to Gus Hill oil The 8th day of Oc
tober, 1902, and recorded in deed book 3,
page 489, in Clerk’s office of Houston su
perior court. Said lands being bounded
ns follows: On the north by the lands
■of Louisa Hill, east by the lauds of Dave
Walker, south by the lands of Mrs. 8. A.
Bassett and on the west by the lands of
G.P, Lamar, and known as the Gus Hill
land. Levied on as the property of said
Gus Hill, and in his possession, to satis
fy a fi fa from Houston superior "court,
April term, 1900, in favor of Mayer &
Watts, vs Gus Hill. Tenant in posses
sion notified as the statute requires.
>T M. L. COOPER, Sheriff.
Nov. 4th, 1902.
TWO PAPERS FOR -
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Q current events is helpful to young
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THE HOME JOURNAL,
Perry, Ga.
Subscribe for the Home Journal
Election Possibilities.
Atianta Journal.
Piff sfcoi 'y oomes from
I ittsfield. Mass., where former
Senator Daws now lives, having
completed his 86th year. He is
now the head of the National Tn-
whicl1 Position
he has held for many years,. and
somebody asked him about voting
to the recent election.
The ex-senator remarked inci
dentally that he always voted the
republican ticket and his coach-
man, Pat O’Hearn, always voted
with the democrats. -Said the
venerable statesman ; “Pat has
always voted the straight demo
cratic ticket, and I the straight
republican ticket, all these years.
I hold Pat in high regard, because
nothing I have ever said to him
has turned his own political be
lief. Together , we drive to the
polling place and Pat holds the
horses while I go in and vote.
Then I come out and hold the
horses while Pat casts his ballot.
This- is what we have done for 27
years, and I guess it is what we
will do this year.” And the ex
senator respects his coachman for
calmly going his own way so long
regardless of the desires as well as
the arguments of his employer,
who, of course, is known by Pat
to be well informed on all such
matters.
And it ss delightful to think
that 27 years have come and gone
without collision or friction be
tween Pat and the ex-senator,
when it a fact that election strife
can be set down as capable of ex
ceeding acrimony and bitterness
on occasion. As Pat’s vote killed
the senator’s vote, they might
have driven to some beautiful
park or otherwise interesting lo
cality and put the election bnsi-
nesr in their pipes and smoked a
pipe of peace. But it speaks well
for both parties that they agreed
so well in their election disagree
ments.
Do You Understand English?
It has been our ^ood fortune,
says the New York Tribuue, to
discover .An a Gertnan-English
dictionary, 'edited by a learned
German, an Ehglish word which
clearly ought to be in the English
language—‘‘Oonjobble.” It needs
no definition, and is worthy of
Lewis Carroll. But a correspond
ent of the London Chronicle, who
has been investigating Dr. Fel
ler’s German dictionary, avers
that thousands, of people are sol
emnly speaking- English of this
type:
“Have you had, a good dorman
cy?”
“No, I was too much disturbed
by a dragonet that went apitpat
round my head.”
“That is a pituitous thing, but
perhaps you will not be too wea-
rish to draii yourself to the
shops?”
“I will not get up.”
“Then I will give you a shog.”
“I shall screak if you do, and
befretty all the afternoon; I will
not be tactile, but froppish, and
that will make you frenetic.”
“I am sorry. I did not mean
to make you sulcated, but I think
all the same you are rather a droll
all this gradient won’t do, you
had much better come out of this
confinity into the sun, if not, you
will be quite deal bated.”
“I will my friend, and will feel
gratulatory to you for laze : ing
me.”
Seitara Takeda is the only Jap
anese who has ever been admitted
to the York rite and Scottish rite
degrees in Freemasonry. He is a
member of Genesee Falls Blue
Lodge No. 507, of. Rochester, N.
Y., which has ,the largest ..mem
bership in- the world, its roll co.
taining the names»,of 1,100 active
members. Mr. Takeda was born
in Shimonoseki,. Japan, in 1856,
has traveled all over the world
and has been a residentof-Roch-
ester for twelve yeafs.
Rheumatism o£ 17 Years Cured.
People who have been cured sound the
praise of Ubicsol. Mrs. Mary E. Hart
well, wife of the treasurer of Los Angel
es, Cal, says: “I desire to express my
riucere appreciation of your remedy.
ItHpV i••"•onteen years of constant afflic
tion pitmtimes helpless with swollen
feet and hands, I used six be tiles of
Ubicsol, and now, after two j ears’ re
lease, gratefully acknowledge a perma
nent cure.” Druggists^sell it at §1.00
per bottle, or six bottlOsfor §5 00.
The State Wouldn’t Lose.
M|
Savannah News.
President Johu M. Egan, of the
Central railroad returned yester-
day from a trip to Washiugtoii,'
Hfi \Vn.Q QQQn K*rr -a*. ' i
He was seen by a rep rese u ta oiv e
asked about the'
of the News and « 0tt c U uue
project that has been launched by
the Central and the Southern for
the erection of a passenger sta
tion in Atlanta, which all the
lines entering that city may use.
‘I do not understand the cry
that is raised that the state’s
property will suffer if the site of
the present union station is aban
doned,” said Mr. Egan. “The
value of the property will hot be
impaired. It would be available
for other than passenger station
purposes, and there is no reason
why the view should be entertain
ed that so desirable a tract will
not he equally as valuable for
commeicial as for railway pur
poses.
“In this territory passenger
earnings represenc only about
one-third the revenue derived
from freight traffic. The passen?
ger earnings therefore have not
the same importance as th©
freight earnings. To take a step
that might "affect the- value of
passenger terminals could not
mean anjy very tremendous loss,
comparatively, to a railway com
pany.
“If the Western and Atlantic
uses the new station it will mean
less distance for it to traverse
through the city. Blocks of
buildings could be erected upon
the site of the present depot.”
— ^ ■■■ n■
CREAM
—
:
r riTI<:
Sf8gsi&!
14 I f I I I It
% y- \ §||ji
It is made of the best wheat, for'm-
^ ' ' L>r$
is the best product of a New Roller
Process Mill.
dividual customers of the mill and
for the trade.
C. M. Schwab Failed Once.
“Even a great man has to choose
his trade. He can’t succeed at
any old thing,” a,horsedealer told
an outsider at the Philadelphia
convention of the trade last week,
according to the New York Sun.
“A genius in the iron trade once
tried mine and gave it up after
one attempt.
“You’ve heard of Charles M.
Schwab, the steel magnate who is
building a palace for himself in
New York with a few of his mill
ions. Well, he tried to shoe a
horse once and couldn’t do it.
“It was when he was a young
man jusb about old enough to earn
his own living. He used to take
his father’s horse to the shop of
Pat Moran, the horseshcer iii Lo-
retto village, to be sliod.
“Time and time again he asked
Pat to let him nail on a shoe. He
seemed to like the business.
“ ‘Ah, g’wan,’ Put would tell
him. ‘Yercan’t shoe yerselt, Yer
daddy has to do it fer yer.’
“But young Schwab stuck to it,
and finally one day the smith let
him try it. And he bungled it so
that after a while the patient
horse landed out with his foot
and away went the youngster to
the other side of the smithy.
“ ‘I guess I can never learn
horseshoeing,’ lie said when he
picked himself, up.
“He never tried again, but took
up a trade of which he could
make himself the master.
“He calls to see Moran when
ever he goes home to Loretto now,
and they talk about how a prom
ising recruit/to the trade gave it
up.
“‘Well, he couldn’t shoe a
horse, whatever else he’s able to
do’, the blacksmith says when he
hears about another of Mr.
Schwab’s successes.” '
Nature “makes all things beau
tiful in their time.” Every one
of life’s seasons, when lifemoves
on Nature’s lines, has its own
charm and beauty. Many wom
en dread, that period when'they
must experience change of life.
They fear that face and form, may
.ivffer by the change, and that
the!.- may fail to please those
whom >/they love. The value of
Doctor ’Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip
tion in this crisis of woman’s life
lies in the fact that it assists.Na
ture. Its use preserves the bal
ance and buoyancy of the mind
and sustains the physical powers.
Many women have expressed their
gratitude for the help and com
fort given by “Favofiie Prescrip
tion” in this trying period. It3
benefits are not passing hut per
manent. ancl conduce to mental
happiness as well as physical
strength.
Ask your merchant for JE11E Y CREAM fpLOFR,
or bring your wheat to
HOUSER’S HVCIXjIL,.
A. J. HOUSER, Prop’r,* EVA, GA.
■ -
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HFW YORK
I
I I
r am olfering my coinpl.itc and choice stock of Dry Goods,
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, ISTotiona, etc., at
BARGAIN '
Having bought cheap, I sell at lowest possible figures.
My friends arc invited; to make my store headquarters, and
leave their packages, especially during Carnival Week and
the Farmers’ National Congress.
Wagon-.yard and stable in rear of store free to my cus
tomers. • •
I can save you-money. Come to see me.
454 MULBERRY ST.
>1AC0N, GEORGIA
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than you ever bought them bcfm», to ma .e j-ojm inn. ic-
duce storage and insurance. .
^ cos ’ J. W SHINHILSER MAC0N
; GA. w* VY ♦ ULlILUlWlJOlJll, H GAJ y