Newspaper Page Text
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This Week we Piace on Sale the Greatest Bargains ever shown. We Assert Boldly that the Bar¬
gains we Offer are without a Parallel in the Business History.
X 1
5.000 yanls 30 inch wide French Percales a( 5 cents ;i yard, Match them if
you can for less Ilian 10 cents.
2.500 yards Twill Cheviots at 5 cents a yard. Sold everywhere at 12 l-2c.
1.000 yards Satteens (Cashmere finish) at 5 cents a yard, You can't match
them for less than 12 1-2 cents.
SILKS, SILKS, SILKS.
Another Greater and Grander Cut in Prices.
1.000 yards kai Kai China Silks at 25 cents a yard.
25 pieces Striped Taffeta Silks worth 75 cents, at 45 cents.
125 pieces Fancy Taffeta Silks worth $1.00. at 75 cents a yard.
DRESS GOODS.
Every New Coloring and Weave of the Most Desirable Styles Shown
In order to effect a larger sale than usual some extraordinary values will be
< iffered in CKEPONS, HENRIETTAS, SERGES, FRENCH CHEVIOTS, FRENCH
FOGLE SUITING, and English Meets in Checks, Stripes and Heather Mixtures.
MIC IIAEL BROS., i Corner New Clayton Five-Story and Jackson Building, Sts.. i ATHENS, GA.
The Oglethorpe Echo
LEXINCTON, CEORCI A.
ZLTOTICDEL
A A LL | nr sons are hereby warned not to hire or
harbor TOM FREEMAN, colored, an he IW5. In
under a contract with me to work during
I will prosecute nny or all who may Kivu him
work or shelter. JOHN W. NOELL.
Land Wanted.
1MIOM I 1 1,000 to 25,000 arrow of Farming Land in
a body for a colony of Northern school* people.
Land* near railroad depot, churches,
and call in Oglethorpe counjv BENJAMIN prefered. (HLIIAM, Write to or
d once on
n23tf] jiOxington, C«a.
IMPROVED COTTON SEED.
T HAN E for sale a lot of IMPROVED CROSS
LAND COTTON SEED. Price $1 per bu.
This cotton produces more seed amt cotton will per gin acre
than any other cotton known out
full 40 pounds of lint to every 100 pounds of seed
cotton. The lint prolUabiy is as good as llu* best. It is THE
cotton to rai»e WASH* at 5c.
G. RROOlfcS, Lexington.
—; —
/NSOUGlA.om.KTiioiti-K * , county.- Applies
* lion for Leave to Sell. Whereas,.!. I', utul
.1. M. Ai-mi.Hieail, Hi ecu tors, on the estate of
M.S, Manila k. ArtiiiMomi,iiecM. apply to me
for leave to sell nil of Die fiuul in Ureene county,
(is, Kflonging te said ilccessci!■ These, lire,
tneicfoie, In vile admonish all persons interest
cd to show cause, if any thm can, why saitl
louvr should not be granted on tlie iirst Monday
in April, im. TliiMtli day of March, im.
.............. "■ ■ -
Sheriff's Solo.
w ii. 1 . in' sold before the Court -house floor
in the town or Lexington, tigietiiorpe
eounty, on the first Tuesday In April, l«W, be
iween the legiii hours of wile live shares »r the
enpital led on under stock |""1 111 Masonic In virtue Mull of of a Lexington, II fa. Issued lev by
.1. It. t row ley, 1 nx-( olloclor of Oglethorpe
county, for Suite and county taxes of the estate
of \v. u. Johnson said and against for K. L. Johnson as
executor of estate the year 1SIM No
tico given a* KlHiAlt required MAXWKLL, bylaw. Terms cash.
Sheriffo. t\
-
( 1 I FoRGlA, Om.KTHOUrK COUNTY.— Applicil
Don for Letters of Dismission. Whereas,
W. M. McCannon, administrator, raw# testamento
fimif.ro, oa estate ol Kobt. Coxe, dec’d, applies
to me for letters of Dismission from said estate:
Then* are, therefore, to cite ami admonish all
persons interested, to show cause, if graiite<l any they oil
can, wliv said letters should not he
the first Monday in April, lMkY This Sth <iay of
January, IbUY J. J. HACON, Ordinary, O. C.
mmmm ( for letters of nisiiiissien‘from said
me estate
TIicm* are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
IHTfons why interested, said letters to show cause, if anv Hun oil
can, should not be granted
ihe first Mommy m May, im This tstii day of
J. J. BACON, Ordinary, O. C.
_
( 8 ^^ kohuia, Oo.i.kthokj'b county.—A pplies
or Dismission.—Whereas,
ihitler, .’Imwlwd.' “{.pUeS saui 't^me’fw'LdUMm^
Dismission from estate: These are, there
should noi i... granted on the first Mondttv in
May, imi.v lhis, Feb. li, is»5.
J. J. BACON, Ordinary,O. C.
/ (i IKOIUHA, o.;i.:nioi;n PisniHon.—'vv tors.
tiou for letters of heress,
'' -'’'kins administrator on estate of Rd
disimUnni'treis said *>sl«!«v ''Vhese anq'tbere
fasa,ia-iS letters should not be grantcl on skvs the first Mon
day in May, lsw. Tins Feb. t, isn:,
J. J. ft icon, ordinary, o. c.
\ ndrew smith, vs. JAXK smith, alias
Latimer.-Libel for divorce in Oglethorpe
sffi!Mi«u r timer! ,r n«p^ri , ^frow5^re e
turn of the >h#rifV in the aU)ve stated ease that
the defendant, Jane Smith, alias Latimer, resides
out of said county, and an order hating been ta
ken b. pert evt servi.-e on aa,d defendant bv ,.ub
lieation. ibe said Jane smith, alias Ijitiiiier, is
(a-nur .''url'u. J' 0 held",',! "and foVVaui
<»sietiH.r t >e on the third Mondav in April, is.it,
to anauel libellantv petition for total divorce.
T. ti. I-i'm kIG ierk Ui b ' K ' s ' c * c
-
<* Jirifi-ii si'i'o'S'S'Ji'wi'y-f
i Y FREE TO ALL!!
(• o2X>S£S ,, ¥t2S£ 2
» mT'S nl lai l ““’
■ s Trel't'. f •)
OrnumrntM
t mSSd S
a
i .kkSsssi _
THE OGLETHORPE ECHO, LEXINGTON, GA.: FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1895.
THE MOON.
Facts About “Casta Diva” Which Are
Not Generally Known.
•
A full moon reflects one three-thous
andtli part of ihe sun’s light.
The height of the mountains on the
moon is measured bv the length of the
shadows they cast upon the plains.
Would°appear to be does sixtv-four residents times
larger than the sun to
this planet
The moon is believed tube the only
niemoer of the planetary system which
is wholly devoid of the least trace of an
\
I H is estimated 1 that the r light 11 rtf of a f lull „
moon is at least .'100,000 times weaker
than the sunlight when the “great orb
of day” is standing at meridian.
Our moon weighs one-eight ielh
(1.-80 th) as much as the earth. No
other system exceeds one one-lhou
sand th (1-1,000) of the weight of its
planet. which
The 132,8.10 “craters” have
been discovered on the moon,
and which have long been supposed (o
. be CX l T C VOl T U ' e n r, ,
-
, Moved , to have been caused M by a bom
hardment 1 of aerolites
1 he month ol February, 1 oS(i, was
known among lovers of the curious ill
‘aunt . as Un b mi unless i •• ill ... I b h, lull r..
the fact ot It having IlO full IllOOll.
Thifi 11118 V cannot / 1 nossihlv P V occur occur more molt fre- irt
;! hull r, n J eats, or eight times in a ci atury.
The moon is not so small a8 sonu
people have imagined. A rcient as
troDomical calculation attributes to
5i« stu i faf.- 1 -m a 'ii e i fullv V es ‘ oreat as
”
that of Africa , and , Australia combined. , „
The most powerful ‘ telescope 1 now ill
mugmhes .. IKK) diameters, ,. . As ihe
moon is 240,000 miles from the earth,
it is unis, to , an n liiienis ana nnm purposes, .iRes
brought to wilhiu 120 miles of our
world.
• WHEN SPRING COMES
“1 Recommend Pe-ru na to All Suffer¬
ers,” Says Editor W. T. Powell,
of Clanngton, Ohio.
mmm
a terrible condition, lii»li! lungs were badly
•iHYeied ’ hem.' so and sore 7 he
could hardly . ,, breathe, I , and , coughed , al- ,
most incessantly. For two months
tried local physicians, took cough mod
iciues and other medicines. Took
three bottles of l’e-ru-na aud was en
tirclv cured.
11 is needless to attempt to give only
the vaguest outline ol the wonderful
success which l’e-ru-na has met wilh
in the cure «f catarrh. 1 his success is
entirely due to ihe fact that l’e-ru-na
eradicates the disease from the system, ;
of temporarily relieving same
disagreeable symptom. Not only is
catarrh io all stages and varieties cured
promptly, but also colds, coughs, brou
n,- !- 0
the curative virtues - . of Pe-ru na.
As a spring medicine Pe-ru-na is a
never-failing blood remedy. It cleanses the
through digestion, and gives
tone to the w hole system bv increasing food"
ihe nutritive value of' the
“Snriiur ,1 ievur ’ v it is sometimes
caunl, , ■ WDldl ... produces , ,. UK'U-OUl , ,
a
sleepy feeling, and inability to do
much mental or nhv*ical work 'and is the
result of a sluggish digestion, no
biood '
medicine will he of auv u«e
whatever nnioss it i« nils t.x reetifv th,.
impaired larilv digestion The -'real popu- Ihe
that lV-ru-ua has is due to
fact that in all such cases it at ouce
corrects digestive derangemeuts and
enriches the blood by purifying this
'i l ‘ I T important source of that vital
fluid, bend for book eu spring mt di
Cities and spring diseases. Also a val
liable treatise on catarrh, la grippe,
Ilarlman, Columbus. Ohio.
Why Georgians Are Happy.
It affords genuine pleasure to learn
that there are parts @f the country un
i affected by the present financial and
industrial . . . depression. r Ihe rho f following,
tak en .( rom a trustworthy contempoia
*7 111 . peorgia, may be considered au
Sports from various counties in
Lf. ^nuleneralTv’have^ttTe ^“ y wif;i to l T.A ^omnlain
of tins winter While the , season has i
been unusually severe and this State
| ia8 DOt ® 8ca P ad l * ie depression com
J* 10 ' 1 ( of^hominyand^irn, from* huncrer ^ * Therp° is
Plenty P y ’ and Geor
„• faave „ t been fatt er 8luce we
can remember ”
Hanger iu Georgia! Appetites go¬
ing unappeased with hominy, corn and
j hog in plenty!
I What is more succulent than homi
: j ny cake! Nothing in the whole art of
cookery, least it likely, be corn dodgers and
hog; or, more hoecake with a
piece of Georgia bacon alongside.
Who, we ask of titled chefs, would
order citii, or heuriettes, or crullers,
when he could have hoeeakes, patted
by, M amtny s baud and fried Oil a grid
die lubricated with the fat of a Geor
° . . te!
" e ato assured on unimpeachable
aulbor ity that Hie lion. Hoke Smith
( ^ 18( each morning before imLen going »nin » to to
tho department of interior six steam
»****• *««»rr»«o..< •
()( ^ unbroken Georgia lineage.
An ,i every Geotgia poet nibbles reflec
,. 11 “•* , , L 8nowv y “ homiuv y cakes as he
weaves his rhymes, K
Glorious Georgia! Happy, 11 ■” conteut
ed, , wed ,, led . , Georgians, ., , 1 hough , the ,,
world be troubled with famine, pest.
lenee and bond issues, there is plenty
o (oin am lonniiy on nun am ,L
hogs have not been falter since we can
n in h i.
Hog ('hiratio and hominy Jtecord. for one. - Make r . . it
two.
She Just Wanted to know.
The Griffin News says that a white
eyed black woman went into a Griltiu
dry goods store and asked:
me coat-tails, muen to the amuse
metlt of all the idle clerks, who began
to to gamer .rather around arouna to to see see* tne lie tun. fnn -‘1 l
!lin 1 ax you yfl- Got any pins an cot
lou stripes, an silk dresses an par sols
au bleeched termistics au blue ribbiu
an piller cases an undershirts an
. iiiacuiues tuble
so'win au cmrs an
’
Bop mis way, aim l will snow you
"ir' 6 ’thiDkin^^sh^wi tninking sne was ^botftTo aDOUt to
break dow n, but she had only paused
for breath.
“\Wiat mek you won t t lemme ax you
"hat 1 wants. she went on. Got;
a “Y ceokin stoves au lace curtains,
au lam P chimblies an carpets au
.
S
ma ma ’l s fln au ’ kid gloves oloves an’ au head neaa naux bank
cbers an , I
—
“Step this way.
“Wait a minute, chile, tell de ole
’oman git t’rough. can't ’tall you? today. 1 i
d* want to look at nothin’
^ ^ ax 3'^ U ' ls J ou got ’em?’
“Yes” |
“Hall, now, dat . s what , , . Ivvanter , git -,
at. Whyneher sav sa at fust, den I
wouldn't he here pesterin’you so long.
You see, it 8 dts8erway. He old man
come home tother night au‘ foteh me .
er speckle pullet, an’ when spring ’gins
to open dat pullet jes'natchelly gwine
s t ar l 1° mil t ^he. T\al), dat s
huccome 1 come here axtn you what
you got, so's I'll know what to 'sped
ferdem aigs when I fetch cm to town,
dal's all. ' i
_____________________
Sciatica Fared.
Wm. Price. Luttsville. Mo., writes: “1
commuuity.” See advertisemeut elsewhere,
HOUSE FURNISHINGS.
Nothing that we can say here can give even an idea of the variety and mag
nificenee of this stock.
40 yard roll of China Matting for $4.00.
40 yard roll of China Matting for $5.00.
« 40 yard roll Cotton Warp Japanese Matting for $10 00.
Carpets, Rugs and Art Squares in New Designs.
We are showing the handsomest line of Decorated China, Japanese Screens
*
and Brie-a-Brac to be seen anywhere.
Gent’s all Silk Four-in-Hand Ties in correct spring styles, would be a bargain
at 50 cents. Your choice for 25. cents.
MR. FELIX PHILLIPS, Practical Optician, can be found at our store with
a complete line of Spectacles and Eye Glasses.
DISCOVERY OF CATSUP.
All Through a Mistake in Using the
i Wrong Ingredients.
j discovery of „ catsup and , , how ,, the
0 dd-sounding name came to be applied
t0 that common and important table
garniture was, curiously enough, due
Sar^o^hen t^eannin? im
du9try was in ils 8Wa(ldlin g clothes,
Thls 8tatemcnl was made by a veteran
me mber of the Western farmers aDd
Packers’Association,
n ts another illustration how mis
take s sometimes lead to important dis
“'weTknJln 5*2 h5e boifiD«r 1 k hu“ecauldron
dead, while w boiling a huge cauldion
°f tomatoes for preserves, one day ac
cidentallv put the wrong spices and
o! Ile’di.i vGelableT not'discover 81 =
his error until
some lime afterwards, when, tasting
the mixture to ascertain whether it had
been boiled to the proper consistency,
he saw that something was wrong,
Tomato preserves never tasted like
that. He smacked his lips and pucker
ed his mouth and made a very vvrv face
as the bilter-sweet and now familiar
pungent flavor of the mixture made
itself felt.
“Well,” said he, with a rueful ex
pression on his face, speaking to an at
tendant, “the cat’s up.” meaning by
that slang term that the tomatoes had
been spoiled.
The whole mess was about to be
thrown out, but, fortunately for catsup
loving mankind, a happy thought sug
gested itself to the author of the trouble,
The taste of the new mixture still ling
ere ^ 0n his palate, ! r’ and he had to con
fe89 that j, w as ve v pleasant.
wonder ll0w {imt will taste on a
piece of roast meat,” he remarked, and
the 8U?ge s t ion was immediately acted
upon, with the result that the cauldron
ful of boiletl tomatoes was carefully
bottled, and it soon became a popular
table adjunct and a source of great
prolit to the discoverer.
The name “ketchings” was first used
1° desi S na * e i le new condiment, and it
18 1° l ,e occasionally met with, but
n or. p rntc r | r< .» B s cream p-pam K.tino- onuiig PmvJer ruwucr
World’s Fair Highest Medal and Diploma.
_ -----«...
geemg that this year is to be a re¬
niarkable one both from an astromical
as well as rc li»io U8 standpoint.
On good Friday, April 12, the hea
venly bodies which exactly gravitate round the
sun will be in tie s same posi
linn they occupied in the firmament the
day be the ^brUt first died time on such the a cross. thing has It will oc
curred since that day, just 1,802 years
‘
ago. -
That was the thirty-third year of the
Christiao era, which dated from the
birth of Jesus Christ.
At 1:30 in the morning, Paris time
a° k u, ti nme ”-f™,if" ).tne moon will pass 1 * b be £ to re
^ irgims (Ispica) and hide that con
stellation for over au hour,
Specimen lanes.
S. H. Cliffor.), New Cassel, Wis., wastroub
led with Neuralgia andlUH-umatisui, his
stomach was disordered, his Liver was af- j
*«cted to an alarming degree, appetite fell
awav, length. and he »;>.s terrihlv reiltieeii in tiesh
aiM j Three U>ttes of Electric Bitters
cured him j
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, IP., had a
rnnning sore on hi* leg of eight year’s stand
in?. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters
“tul seven boxes of Bnekleu’* Arnica Salve,
S'tatbJ.O “tad file^llrge Fever on
b j s | e g doctors said he was incurable. One
bottle Arnica Electric Salve Bittets and one box Bncklen s |
cured him entirely. Sold at
M.n. I.mK « Dru- store and \\. J. twper
* f °. s.
_
§£*» WINE OF CARDUL a Tonic f r Women
- . , . __
£ ^ : ssass
Ij as large Ones.
GAMBLING IN ENGLAND,
Young Fools Who Are Fleeced in Coun¬
try Houses.
While there is a determined crusade
against gambling in England, and hun¬
dreds of workingmen and tradesmen
are arrested every week for betting, no
check has been put upon the heavy
play going on in the country houses of
the nobility. The law is virtually
powerless to interfere with this class
of sport, says a London letter, and the
players do not belong to a type that
can be influenced by moral suasion,
but if current stories are true meas
ures of some sort should be adopted to
slippress or dimiuish the evi1 ' A1 ‘
thouffh the viutims are not dis P osed to
“squeal,” “red for various reasons, it is whis
p ^sorted that some very shady tricks are
to to relieve poor ’.Many fools of
their superfluous cash. young
me “ bers of bunting and shooting
partles are deSp ° A ar f ocratl °
? har Pf*' s ’ and instances of subsequent
hardshl P s are J° ld at the clu bs ’ with
comments that do not 4 spare the , coun
tr Z hostesses.
ihe women, indeed, . are more eager
b>1 ' baccarat and other high-toned
P ames than the men - and the 7 have
hiss pity for the young fools that are
inveigled into dropping their pocket
money and giving I O U’s when ready
cash is exhausted. Two young officers
of a smart regiment are said to have
been ruined byplay recently. They
have sent in their papers to the war
office, and start for the colonies soon to
try and retrieve their fortunes. So
long as men like the prince of Wales
patronize the gaming tables of coun
try houses it is difficult to keep the
gambling habit within bounds. It is
said the prince has reformed in other
respects, and that he is in a very moral
mood. If the opponents of gambling,
in high as well as low places, could se
cure his cooperation a great many
young men and not a few old fools
would be infinitely better off financial¬
ly at the end of the season, and there
would be fewer hints of scandal at the
clubs.
VACCINE POINTS.
Their Scarcity Felt In Washington, Wh*r«
People Cry for Them,
During the recent smallpox scare one
apothecary in Washington sold eight¬
een thousand “vaccine points” within
twenty-four hours. On a Friday, when
the general fright was greatest, the
supply gave out. Physicians tele¬
graphed in every direction for points.
In the drug store referred to a big
crowd was waiting. A small quantity
arrived and the people scrambled for
them. The scene was a most extraor
dinary one. Holding 1 their money in
‘ hands'over
their their heads men,
women and children struggled like
anxious betters at a racetrack. One
would have supposed, savs the Wash
ington Star, that their lives depended
on procuring the points, of which there
were not nearlv enoue-h to co around
“Here’s my money!” veiled one man.
-v*»„r«*«t ~w
, terday!” cried a woman,
“111 pay you one dollar apiece for
six points!” shouted another man, evi
dently the anxious father of a family.
In one day of the scare the apothe
= than ar y he ^idhehadmade ,, had , ever , , made in moremoney two days out ;
of his business. Somebody came to
lii 7 m aud V offered to bnv out his entire ^
stock , of points •* at the figures he
charged for them retail. The druggist
refused, because there was reason to
believe that an attempt was being
made to corner the supply.
A well-known physieian in Washing
* t on ascer t alne d t.iat a patient of ms
had possession of an extra vaccine
He went and begged it of him.
little boy called at the Emergency
and asked, with tears in his
to be vaccinated. ■
“You go out and get one of those
”y on ““ ^ :
:
5
upon.
A Woman’s Heart.
ONE DISEASE THAI BAFFLES THE
PHYSICIAN.
The Story of a Woman who Suffered for
Klne Years. How She was Cured.
(From the Newark, N. J., Evening Newt}
Valvular disease of the heart lias always
been considered incurable. The following
interview therefore, will interest the medi¬
cal profession, since it desoribes the success¬
ful use of a new treatment for this disease.
The patient is Mrs. Geo. Archer, of Clifton,
N. J.,and this publication by the News is
the first mention made of the case by
any newspaper. All physicians consulted
pronounced vular disease the patient suffering "treated with val¬
of the heart, aud her
without the slightest relief. Mrs. Archer
said: “ I could not walk across the floor;
neiihcr could I go up stairs without stopping
to let the pain in mv chest and left arm
cease. I felt an awful constriction about
my arm and chest as though I were tied
with ropes. Then there was a terrible noise
at my right ear, like the labored breathing
of some great animal. J have often turned
expecting ‘‘Last to see some creature at my side.
Springfield, July,” continued Mrs. Archer,“ I
was at Mass, visiting, and my
mother showed me an account in the
Spriimfield derfuf Examiner, effected telling of the won
Williams’ cures Pink Pills by the use of Dr.
for Pale People.
My mother urged me to try the pills and
on November 25th last T bought a box
and began taking them, and i have taken
them ever since, except for a short in¬
terval. The first box did not seem to
benefit me, but I persevered, encouraged
by the requests of mv relatives. After be¬
ginning the on the second box, to my wonder,
noise at my right ear ceased entirely. I
kept right on and the distress (hat I used to
feel in my chest and arm gradually disap¬
peared. lips and Tiie blood has returned to my face,
ears, which were entirely devoid
of color, and I feel well and strong again.
“ My son, too, had been troubled with
gastritis and 1 induced him to trv the Pink
Pills, with great benefit. I feel that every¬
body ought to know of my wonderful cure
and I bless God that I have found some*
thing that has given me this great relief.’*
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are now given
to the public as an unfailing blood builder
and nerve restorer, curing all forms of
weakness arising from a watery condition *
of the blood or shattered nerves, two fruitful
causes of most every ill that flesh is heir to.
These pills are also a specific for the troubles
all peculiar forms to females, such as suppressions,
of weakness, chronic constipation,
bearing down pains, etc., and in the cn se of
~ mi :r n will give speedy relief and effect a per¬
manent cure in all cases arising from mental
worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever
nature. The pills are sold by all dealers,
or will be sent post paid on receipt of price,
(50 cents a box, or 6 boxes for $2.50—they
are never sold in hulk, or by the 100) by
addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Com¬
pany, Schenectady, N. Y.
J. L. JOHNSON,
Attorney - :it - I hi av,
LEXINGTON, GA.
VJ YNFFICE upstairs over postolfice. Will be
in Lexington on Friday evening and Satur¬
day of each week.
BENJAMIN GILHAM,
iLttcrney - at - La-wy
LEXINGTON, CA.
Officee in Court-house with W. M. Howard.
PHIL. W. DAVIS
Ljayuyyer,
LEXINGTON, - GEORGIA.
Office upstairs in Court house.
M. J. NICHOLSON,
Practicing * Physidan,
Obstetrician ana Surgeon,
^ * ktioch GA. Chronic and diseases of wo
^ne^ouf d^esLnd "i^s
oieye and ear. Has been ofl'ered one thousand
dollars for his treatment of blood poison,
Georgia O Leave'to Ooietuorpe sen-Whereas', roivrv _\„„ii,-a MrL’.VoTa
ti<™ for
E. Watkins, administratrix on the estate of IV.
E. Watkins, deceased, applies for leave to sell a
of the land belonging to the estate of the
being an individual one-fifth interest
a tract of land owned by W. E. Watkins at
time of his death as a tenant in common
B. W. Brawner, Willie Stevens, I r. P. R.
and W. T. Brooks, These are, there¬
to cite and admonish all persons interested,
show cause, if an they can, why said leave
not be granted on the first Monday in
1S95. This 4th day of March. 1895.
J. J. BACON, Ordinary, O. C.