Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, AUGUST 14, 1930.
Letter From Mr. Rives
NATIONAL CANNING CON.
TEST STIRS INTEREST
OK BUTLER W O M E N
Cuthbert, Ga., July 27, 1930. j hundred dollars for a quart jar*
Editor Herald: 0 f canned food! Can one jar of food
Some years since you asked me to , be wortb that?
•write some for your paper and 1 com- j This is a question that is agitating
plied with your request to the extent jj u tler home-makers since word got
of several articles. But being busy at aound that $600 in cash would be
my daily occupation of making a liv- pa j d f or the best jar of fruit, vege-
ing and writing for John Howell’s tables or meat entered in the second
Leader, I could not write regularly. National Canning Contest which is be-
Now confined closer to my home, ( ng held at Shenandoah, Iowa, under
since being retired from active serv- the auspices of the Household Science
ice—on pension—by my employer the institute.
C. of Ga. Ry. Co. I am employing my; The contest seeks to further the
time in enlightening the younger work of the U. S. Department of
generation of the South on some Agriculture and the home demonstra-
things that it is needful for them to tion agents throughout the country by
know in order to quiet their conceit, focusing the attention of American
of which at their age, all men are housewives on the economy and
possessed, by showing them that it healthfulness of home canned foods,
took sacrifice and manhood in former, First prize winner in the National
times to prepare them and their day Canning Contest last year was Mrs.
to solve the constantly recurring Mary Hvass, Kennan, Wise., farm
problems of this life.
Yours,
ANDREW P. RIVES.
Mr. Rives* article is as follows:
woman, whose entry of a quart jar of
green peas was chosen as the best
entered by the girls and * women from
all sections of the United States.
The holding of the contest in Iowa
“Say not that the former days were this year is due to the influence of
better than these. Whatever has Henry Field, Shenandoah „ farmer,
t„ h Lp^ en merchant and KFNF announcer whose
presages that which is to come. — i .
Solomon. . j career is one of the romances of
As to the customs and laws pre 1 American life. Imbued with the spirit
! of thrift, he readily agreed to serve
ceding slavery and its abolishment in
as president and to oversee the in-
all states, this law had to be universal numerab , e detai , s connected with a
wherever Africans were held as slaver project of such ^ an( , sco ^
from the Supreme court’s decision m Four hundred and sevent j
the “Dread Scott Case”, for the pro-! totaling $4i250 in cash) lovin
tection of isolated white families
and ribbons, will be distributed to the
against fugitive blacks, and this pro- winners in the contest> which com .
tecuon of slave property from steal- prises three major divisions . {ruits ,
age and moblaw. In the Georgia Jus- vegetables and meats The ^ entry
tice, which I gave J. W. Harris my j n eacb division will be awarded $100.
father’s copy before Mr. Harris had 0ne of ^ win a , so rece i ve tbe
graduated out of being my lawyer in- $500 swee p S teakes prize. Second
to Rotary and other dissipations, prize in eacb division will ^ $50, the
like the Shriners, both good but only; t)l j rd prize ?2 6, and the fourth prize
befitting men who are rich and have $io. T he winners will also receive a
reached Shakespeare’s sixth age of i ov ing cup and ribbon. There will also
Legal Advertisements.
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
WHEREAS: On the 3rd day of
December, 1928, L. P. Skeen executed
and delivered to Decatur Bank and
Trust Company a certain loan or se-
urity deed conveying the following
described land, to wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
situate, lying and being in Land lot
218 in the 11th District of Marion
County, Ga. described- as follows:
Ninety-six and one-fourth (96 1-4)
acres, more or less, off the north and
east portions of said lot, better de
scribed as beginning at a point on the
west line of said lot, which is the di
viding point between the land hereby
conveyed and land of H. V. Mont
gomery, and running thcr.ce east
along the dividing line between said
land and land of said Montgomery,
which is divided by -a hog and barb P
wire fence, to the head or terminus j Lucas, Administrator, of T. B,
of-a certain lane there situated which ' ' " x **"
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
"If you do, there’s a good job wait
ing for you; if you don’t I’m offering
you a chance to learn. And let me tell
Under and by virtue of an order y 0U , my friend, such an opportunity
of the Court of Ordinary of suid coun- : , .. ’. _ . " „ '
tv. the undersigned administrator of lsn * to be lightly regarded. I m not
ty, the undersigned administrator .. .
tne estate of Mrs. Eveline Lucas will suggesting that you stay m our press
sell at pablic outcry on the first 'lues- room; I’m merely suggesting that you
day in September, 1930, before the there!”
court house door of said county, dur-1 ,, .
ing the legal hours of sale, to the . Do you suppose,” came the blazing
highest bidder for cash, the following answer, “that I have spent all these
property, to-wit: I years in school, and finally won my
One-half undivided interest in the „„.
following described lands: All of lot diploma and my degree, just to run
of land No. 310 containing 202 1-2 a dirty press? To do the work of a
acres more or less. Also all that por- common printer? Never!”
tion of lot of land No. 306 lying be- I ... , nvninin. v
tween what is known as the Old Shan-1 Y
ty Lake on the east and the New w le . n Hl1 " e * 1I ® a( ’ be " as
Shanty Lake on the west; and also selling some kind of trick mousetrap
one acre on the west side of the New from door to door, and bewailing his
Shanty Lake and being in the north- i ot i„ an unkind, unappreciative world.
west corner of said above fifty acres,
all lying and being in the first land
district of Taylor County, Ga.
Forty-seven (47) acres of land be
ing all of the land deeded by G. R.
Bee-
man. First the patrol law whichyen-
rolled every white male of sufficient
physical health, from 18 to 50 years
of age in each' militia district, beat or
be 30 prizes of five dollars each, 75
prizes of $2.50 each and 300 prizes of
$1.00 each. In addition, $500 in cash
will be awarded to .the home demon-
leads easterly to a fish pond on
adjoining lot, and running theius due
south from the head of said iane to
the soutn line of said lot; thence east
along- the south line to tne southeast
corner ot said lot; thence north along
the east line of said lot to north-east
corner of same; thence west along the
north line to north-
thence south along
lot to point of beginning
said lot except 106 1-4 acres, more or
less, rectangular in shape in south
west corner of same now owned by H.
V. Montgomery.
Also five (5) acres, more or less, in
northeast quarter of land lot 2z6 in
the 11th District of Marion County,
Ga., the same described as being ana
lying west of the old public road,
which is the east boundary of same,
and being a set off into said lot at the
south-east comer of a tract of 119
acres in land lot 225 in the 11th Dis
trict of Taylor County, Ga., this day
conveyed by the grantor to the gran
tee, herein, through which, however,
runs the public road as at present
used, on which is located two tenant
houses of two rooms each, and being
bounded.north by said 119 acres, cast
by the old public road aforesaid and
west and south by land of H. V.
Montgomery.
Also the north half of land lot 227
land estate to Mrs. Eveline Lucas,
recorded in Deed Book “I” pages 331
MOTOR TRANSPORTATION
RULING BY SUPREME COURT
CIED BY CENTRAL PRESIDENT
SUIT FOR DIVor^
S E ?.?i? IA ~ TayIor County
To Whom It May Concern;'
Alvin L. Cooper gives
at the October term, 1930 J f* t
perior court of said cduntv V
on the first Monday in OctoW^
he will apply to said court bv n«.
to be relieved of his disabilities!,,
upon him by the verdict of the?
the case of Myrtle Bazemore ■
vs. Alvin L. Cooper in a -uit r°
\°. Tc . e ^ Myrtle Bazemore ^
Alvin L. Cooper tried at »v.
term, 1929, of said court
total divorce was granted botw
parties, and petitioner, Alvin i e
er, was left, under the disabilit
to man
not being allowed
and Alvin L. Coope'r” paWiX/'*
notice as required by law.
This the 4th day of August Id-,
ALVIN L. COOPER
LEGAL SALE
GEORGIA—Taylor County
■By virtue of an order al
and 332, clerk’s office of Tayior Su
perior Court, Feb. 8, 1909, except Supreme
tlfty acres of said land which, the said A. E. Clift
Quoting a recent decision of the
the Honorable C. F,
granted
McLaug
a lecent decision or tne Judge Superlor Court ’
Court of Georgia, President on the 12th day of July mn -
- ._ , , — — —ft of the Central of Georgia petition for partition'’of M
Z Ra «'vay in a statement issued recent- Mercantile.Company and R. LD
6Q to 1T16) for the purpose of estub* . . _ ett. udmimsmtnr nf fk n . ,
lishing a dividing line between tne ly disuesses certain features of the ^ Lockett deceased e v estate °f
m parties of this deed which descrip- regulation of motor vehicles using the Marie Matthews Guardian * U t> J
rth-west corner; tion of said line contained in the deed public highways. Mr. Clift’s quotation Theus and Estelle S. ■
west line to said from Mrs Eveline Lucas to ^myself, is from the op{nlon of Justice Gilbert will be sold by :theuna5 M d1S
mng; being all ot made this day, is'hereby adopted by JLSL. -tLk* missioners on the first 553! “
me as being the correct ’dividing line, ‘ n the decision upholding the right of September °L930 le befiL ,1
anr) fKie rlon/1 nvtrl flio rlnnrl -F**r\w» Mvo flip rjpnTffln PllhHn Softilnn PftmmJe. 1 » « tuQ
and this deed and the deed from Mrs. the Georgia Public Service Commis- house door of sa’id coumr ■ u ■ ‘
Eveline Lucas to me, being made for sion to regulate motor vehicles, and legal hours of sale, mbWiT 1
that nurnoso the saul Mrs. Eveline —- firmation by the court tift, Sj
that purpose the said Mrs. Eveline reads as fo „ ows;
Lucas having on Feb. 8, 1909 deeded
to me the north half of the land de- “The effect of the growing business gerfbed^realty,* to-wit:
scribed in the Lucas deed, and the of operating motor vehicles for hire |
„ ., ,• . . - - One tract or parcel of land in
line on the south side having been on the public highways must be ap- city of Reynolds, said state and
possible to definitely establish a di- sense. Courts cannot be blind to those J unning ) west a dttanS
viding line between us, except for things which are apparent to every hundred and fifty (160) feeu
deeds this day^ made. 1 ritizen. The construction and main- alley, and being of even wih
This 5th day of August, 1930. tenance of the public highways is of seventy-nine and. one-half (3
Administrator of the estate of’ Mrs'. vast importance to the happiness and north S by d knds a 5 in | ) b “ unde „ ( l®
Eveline Lucas, deceased. prosperity of all. Upon our public sou th by lands of S. H Bryan-
■ highways are expended immense sums tract of land having a dwelling'
j of money, time and labor, all of which ° n which is now used and
TAYLOR COUNTY TAX SALES ) . Pi
. _ , _ must be supulied bythe general public T |? e ^ s . a ,? d ij s two
GEORGIA—Taylor County: ' Th t . Randall and Estelle Theus.
Will be sold before the courthouse The con ?f t * on , ta say nothing of Sald tract of land bein ^
door in the town of Butler, Ga., on P ure accidents and negligence, is ex- provided in Section 5365 of tte
the first Tuesday in September, 1930, acting a Toll of human lives and de- Code of Georgia.
parish, and placed them under a j stration agent whose county sends in
captain for the county-beat or parish the largest number of entries, $250 to
who appointed in each district a fore- the agent whose county sends in the
man to command his portion of the next largest number, and $100 to the
county, now called districts. It was agent of the county sending in the
the duty of these patrols to go by third largest number.
. two’s over every road in their turn The contest is open to every woman
every night and Sabbath day to ar- and girl in the United States. There
rest ard whip not to exceed 39 jashes iare no restrictions' as to the nature
on he bare back, every negro of of the food sent. Contestants may en-
both sexes who did not have a pass ter one, two or all three divisions,
from the owner giving the negroes | Entries should be sent in as soon as
tb e right to be away from home, and possible after canning. These will be
it was dilUgently enforced. And i n placed and kept on exhibition at
1860 the situation .had become so Shenandoah until after the closing of
acute for fear of uprising among the the contest, which will be on Oct. 1.
blanks that the largest slave owner j Fruit and vegetable entries in the
iu Georgia, JoReph Bonds, was mur- |C ontest will be judged for clearness,
dered in cold blood by an overseer, I color, pack, neatness, flavor and tex-
wbo contrary to law had whipped one ’
in the 11th District *of Marion County, 1 within the legal hours of sale to the struction of property that is appal-
Ga., the same containing one hundred highest bidder for cash, the following j; ng . i t constitutes an increasing
one and one-fourth (101 1-4) acres, described pro^rty:^ _ Imem.ee. The size and weight of such
One house and lot in the City of motor vehicles constitute an extra
Reynolds, Ga., levied upon as the burden on the wear and tear of high-
property of -E. E. Powell and where he ways, and add to the dangers. It is
now lives, for his state and county lint hinkable that the soverign state
taxes for the year 1929. Levy made . . . , , . ° _. „,
and returned to me by L. E. Peter- not ,ay lts band an the traffic for, wbom rt v'av'r’nnro™-
man, L. C. | the Purpose of regulation, control or 10 Tl V a ? m 14 Concern.
Number 3092 even prohibition where regulations ested that 4 the°firm ^f P B^emo
One house and lot in the City of jare not obeyed. Such is a necessity for Williamson, composed of E. H.
Reynolds, Ga^, levied upon as the th6 public safety and because of the more and M. R. Williamson, of
property of Oscar Mitchell for his heflvy burd(m q{ construction and .ler^Ga., has this day dissolved
more or less.
Also all that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in land lot 226 in the
11th District of Taylor County, Ga.,
described as follows: One hundred and
twenty acres, more or less off of lot
225 divided from east portion of said and
lot by public road running) north and
south through said lot, except a strip
on east side of said public road, bet
ter described as beginning on the
north line of said lot where said pub
lic road crosses same and thence run
ning south along the east side of smd
public road to what is known as the
Feed House (originally built by S.
Montgomery) ;thence east on the north
side of said Feed House, so as to in-
This July 25, 1930
J. M. WEAVER,
J. T. MATHEWS,
J. Jt. LUNSFORD,
Commission
DISSOLUTION NOTICE
Butler, Ga., Aug. 11,
for his
state and county taxes for the -year
1929. Levy made and returned to me 1 maintenance. The state’s constitution- I pidd by'E.^H. 'HL
by L. E. Peterman, L. C. [al power to tax and to regulate pri- and all debts due the said firm
Number 2934 |vate operations of automobiles using paid to said E. H. Bazemore.
One house and lot in the Gty of t h e public highways is in this day no 1 T1 »s dissolution is by mutua
Reynolds, Ga., levied upon
Slue OI SUiu rccu 1‘wuou, — V xveyiiutus, vju., icvieu upon Lite 1 „
elude same herein, thirty (30)1 yards; p ro p er ty of Wiley and Leola Bryan 1' e denied,
thence southeasterly, practically par; ■ j or their state and county taxes for| Mr. Clift closes with the assertion
alleling said public road to south line the year 1929. Levy made and return- * ~ '
of said lot, all lying and being west ed ; 0 me by l, e. Peterman, L. C.
of said public road, except the strip j Number 2969
of Bond’s negroes who had a pass;
and the murderer was turned, loose
on his own recognizance by the sher
iff, and acquitted when tried by a
traverse jury composed of slavehol
ders. This is a parrell case to what
is constantly appearing all over the
coun‘rv. The negroe’s exodus North
Is a blessing to the last slave-holding
statps of the Union. It will help in
"their final expulsion from this coun-
01 saiu puunt lua.,., _ r | JNumoer zUbU
lying and being south of said reed Q ne bouse and j n the City of
i House down to the south lme of sa d ReynoldS( Ga . ( levied upon as the
ture. The meat entries will be judged 1 House down to the soutn nne 01 Reynolds, Ga., levied upon as the
on neatness texture mid flnvm- ' o4 > which is on the east side of sail proper ty 0 f Eulis Davis and where he
on neatness, texture and flavor. | bUc road> less 0 ne aefe in the shape ^ liy ' s for his state and count
Judges, .pach one a recognized food 1 0 f a square on the south line of said taxeg for tbe year 1929 L made
,,, , | di ** ovjuu.v * . __iJ IdAco XUl Lite ycdr Ijcvy lllauc
authority, will be Dr. Louise Stanley, ilot in the south-east comer of said an ^ returned to me by L E. Peterman,
-i; 1 . I n . . in n4" riVOCflDT n three V *
director bureau of home economics, U
S. Department of Agriculture; Dr.
Margaret Justin, president American
Home Economics Association; George
Farrell, director of extension' for the
north central states for the Depart
ment of Agriculture; Mrs. Josephine
A. Bakke, director of home economics
try. enmasse, and the elimina'ion of for Iowa State Agricultural' College:
strip, on which is at present a three L c
room tenant house, leaving one hun-. Niimhpr 9121
dred and nineteen (119) acres, more ^ M c;ty of
or less, . I Reynolds, Ga., levied upon as the
, T °„ s ®“ ar ® th , e . iqojf property of Judge and Willis New-
for $2,260.00, dated December 1, 192 , gom j or their istate and county taxes
maturing ten days after date, made , for the 1929- Levy made and re .
by said skeen, payable to said bank' tUrned tQ me b L E , p e terman, L.
and bearing interest from date at the G
rate of 8 per cent per annum and en
their unfair competition with white
labor and white progress. This is not
a new theory. It was advocated by
the first abolitionist society formed
directly after the Revolutionary war.
Such men as Jefferson, Madison, Mon
roe and Patrick Henry were its spon
sors. Their idea was to buy from
some nation on the border of Africa,
as Liberia was later, pay the owners
of the slaves with long term bonds of
the L T nited Sta'es, and transport
every African black to thi place,and
make it a capital crime for another to
come into America, and apply this 1o
the owner, owner and officials of the
vessel that brought the African.
Avorieiousness killed this and encour
aged the importation, just as Avor-
cieiisness is keeping the black, the
brown and the yellow in the states.
And back of that recently enacted
pact advocated by Mr. Hoover be
tween the Empire of GreatBritnin and
America, and that accursed menace
to all thatGhristian civilization means
and who like the negro and the Chi
naman is unmoral, as to morals of
the white race, and not immoral.
They have no white conception of
morality as taught in sacred writ I
means the Japs embraced Chi-istian-
ity for about 50 years in the 12th
century and when tired of it they
threw .it off, and closed their ports to
Europe. The “Good old negro" of Har
ris, was the House negro reared with
the master’s children in the home, by
the small planter who owned a few.
By the large planter who kept them
in his country home, and in the ab
sence of the overseer taken from the
families of non-slave holders who
owned their land, were made head
men over the “Plantation Nigger” as
he was designated with contempt by
the slaves of the small and the house
negroes of the large slave-owners.
and Miss Elaine Massey, leader
girls club work for Mississippi.
Contetants are free to use any
method of canning they prefer, ac
cording to Grace Viall Gray, national
ly-known canning expert and secre
tary of the Contest. However, the use
of a steam pressure cooker is recom
mended by the U. S. Department of
Agriculture, especially in the canning
of meat, since this method not only
naves time and fuel and assures abso
lute sterility, but also preserves the
natural flavor and texture, which, of
course, are important considerations
in contest judging.
That the judging may be thoroughly
impartial and the display jars abso
lutely uniform, contestants are re-
dorsed by "Augusta Skeen. 1 said deed
providing that it was given to secure
the payment of the above describe
note or any renewal or .renewals
that statements such as Justice Gil
bert’s should cause the public to give
serious consideration to this feature
of the transportation situation.
M. R. WILLIAMS0
E. H. BAZEMORE
Some laboratories devoted to
culture employed special “chef
prepare food for the .organisms
Number 707
One lot of land No. 287 containing.
200 acres, more or less, in the first j
district, second section, Taylor Coun-
thereof or^anyparT thereof any , J £ ■/-£»
ffl ° £ any t ar the r grantor saidMot^'now^used by te Reynolds
thereafter owing by the grantor _ * and ^ b(j
LOANS ON AUTOMOBILES
1928 and Later Models
Amounts of
$100.00 To $300.00
At Legal Rates
PAYABLE IN MONTHLY
INSTALLMENTS
therein;
AND WHEREAS: Said note has
been renewed from time to time the
last renewal of said note being for the
sum of $2,376.27, dated August 9,
1929, due 90 days after date, ami
bearing interest from date at the
rate of 8 per cent per annum, said
note representing an increase in said
indebtedness of $125.27;the said Skeen
being also indebted to said .bank a
note of $50.00, dated September 17,
1929, due 30 days after date, with in
terest from maturity at the rate of
8 per cent per annum, each of said
hotes being past due and unpaid;
AND WHEREAS: Said deed fur-
quired to submit their entries in stan- |ther provides that in case of default
upon
sold for state and county taxes for
the year, 1929.
This 6th day of August, 1930.
R. P. McGUFFIN, Sheriff.
Here’s a story from which young
men may draw a good lesson:
A young man, a fine up-standing
chap, with a newly acquired college
degree—which we stop to remark in
passing may be either an asset or a
liability—went to a large publishing
establishment to apply for work. He
had some leanings toward literary
pursuits, but there was no opening for
in the payment of the debt secured to him in the editorial
dard glass jars of the quart size. A i’ n tne payment 01 rne aeoi secureu w
sample Mason jar ami carton together lenterupon and take possession of the wh,oh was his choice-
with prize entry labels for use in | above described land and sell the
sending entries may be had without
cost by writing the National Canning
Contest, Shenandoah, Iowa.
same for th e purpose of paying the
debt thereby secured to be paid, after
first advertising the time, place and
terms of said sale in some newsnaner
published in said county of Taylor
once a week for four weeks x imme
diately preceding said sale, which
shall be on a legal sale dav, within
the legal hours of sale and in front
of the court house door in said county
of Taylor.
NOW THEREFORE: Decatur Bank
and Trust Company, under the power
vested in it by the ahove described
deed, herfeby'gives notice that, as at-
department,
.V
“Do you know shorthand?” queried
the general manager, who was inter
viewing him. “We can always use
good stenographers."
“No”—and he looked his surprise
at the question—“with editorial work
in view, I did not think it necessary
to take up stenography or typewrit
ing.”
“Too bad,” sighed the older man.
“I know many stenographers who
have used this knowledge as a step
ping-stone toward the fulfillment of
tomey-in-fact for the said L. P. their dreams. But"—and he looked up
Skeen, it will sell the above described , hopefully—"perhaps you have studied
S » m -
door in Taylor County. Go., within i „ " e ' s , as a beginning.” .
the legal hours of sale, nt public ou*- I No > the young man answered, “I
cry to the highest bidder, for cash, know nothing whatever about book-
Baid sale being for the purpose of keeping."
Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, world’s
champion tennis .player; photo-
.graphed on her return from her
’European victories. ‘1
Details Quickly Arranged
GEORGIA FINANCE COMPANY
308 Ga. Casualty Bldg;. MACON, GEORGI
TAX LEVY FOR 1930
GEORGIA—TAYLOR COUNTY:
It being the duty of the Commissioners of Roads and Revenue
county to raise by taxation an amount sufficient to nir
said
current expenses of the county for the year 1930, from the general
erty of the county; and the tax digest for 1930 shows the total propel
turned for taxes to be $1,884,516.
It is therefore ordered by the Commissioners of Roads and Revi
of said county that the total rate for said county be 30 mills, or tnr
centum, on all the property in said county incuding realty, P ers0
corporation, franchise and any and all other property in said county,
subject to be taxed. Same to be apportioned as 101
5.
Mills
Mills
6.
9.
paying said debt and the expenses of
said sale.
L. P. SKEEN,
By His Attorney-in-fact.
Decatur Bank & Trust Co,
By. J. Howell Green,
President,
C. M. Saunders,
Cashier. !
The manager ran his eye over the
cards of a “Help Wanted” file which
stood before him on the desk.
"There’s a vacancy in our press
room. Know anything about machin
ery. Hold on a minute’’—as the in
dignant upplicant sprang to his feet.
is under the law „ ,
1. To build a court house 1 - 6
2. To pay the legal-indebtedness of the coun- ...
, ty, dud or to become due during the year 31- *" 1S
3. To repair jails, bridges or ferries or other
public improvements accoording t# contract 8'/). " 1U1S
4. To pay sheriffs, jailers, ‘or other officers
i fees that they may be legally entitled to
out of the county funds 2
To pay coroners all fees that may be due
them by the county for holding inqhests _ 1
To pay the expense of the county for bai
liffs at court, non-resident witnesses in
criminal cases, fuel, servant hire, station- *
ery and the like Ik Mills
To pay.jurors a per diem compensation — 2 Mills
To pay expense incurred In supporting the
poor 114 iti* 11 ®
To pay any other lawful charge against the .....
county W11IS
10. To work rohds under the alternative road ^
Further ordered for county wide school purpos- _
es as provided by law 0
To pay principal and intereston bonds in But-
ler and Reynolds school districts “
To pay principal and interest on bonds in Wes
ley school district 0
For local school tax in each of the following
School Districts: Butler, Reynolds, Rupert,
Mauk, Wesley, Central, Turner and Cro-
welk It is ordered that there be levied — ■> m.
Further ordered that the Tax Collector of said county coll^
mentioned taxes on all property in said County or Districts,
samd over to the proper authorities. 11090
In regular monthly session this 5th day of Atigu^WSO-
' ' ' ' .1 T. COCHRAN' .
aBjgg$$iSiiama^*r^^ THURMAN W'HATL
Commissioners, Taylor Count j,
Mills
Mills
MW 8
Mills
Mills
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