Newspaper Page Text
Dakota's K.lltur-Scnator.
_ B who knew Hansbrough when
;in Sap Francisco twelve years
: dreamed be wonld fetch np in
;ted States senate; Hansbrough
f ib a telegraph editor’s desk on the
aide for many months, and he was
« rattling good editor of news, besides
being an expert on head writing. At
that time the newspapers here got only
a light telegraphic service, because the
overland wires were in poor condition
and the rates extremely heavy. Proba
bly 5,000 words a night was an average
report. Under these conditions it was
necessary to add any descriptive matter
that would supplement a dispatch, and
also to make an attractive head. Hans-
brongh was an artist in this kind of
" work.
Once, when Alexander □ made
wholesale sweep of a lot of nihilists,
shooting several and exiling the remain
der to Siberia, Hansbrough headed the
rather lurid report of Russian imperial
crnelty ns “Czar-Saparilln!” WoAt at a
desk, however, proved too monotonous
for Hansbrough, and finally, in 1879, he
conceived the idea of taking an educated
Chinese to the east on a lecture trip.
Hansbrough hired Hull, themost accom
plished newspaper “fakir” on the coast,
who made Denis Kearney famons by
writing his sand lot speeches, to prepare
the lectnre, and it was a very entertain
ing one.
The east didn’t bite as Hansbrough ex
pected, and the lecture outfit went to
pieces somewhere between Chicago and
New York. Then Hansbrough went to
Iowa and started a paper. When the
Dakota boom started he saw his oppor
tunity, and now he is reaping the fruits
of it. He may not know os much about
Jpw or parliamentary procedure as
many other senators, but there are few
in. that body who have more general in
formation than Hansbrough.—St Louis
Globe-Democrat.
- Precaution Against Floods.
Floods may be successfully opposed or
escaped. Railways and wagon roads
may- and must be laid on river flood
plains, but the-embankmeuts and tres
tles and bridges should be raised)not
only above the latest freshet mark, but
well above the great natural flood mark
found in the plain itself, and the recip
rocal effects of embankments and other
structures on future TWshets should be
cautiously reckoned. Farms may and
ought to bo located bn fertile bottom
lands enriched by annual or decennial
overflow; but the farmers should dig
deep for his foundations and build his
superstftictures strong and high.
On every flood plain of eastern Amer
ica he should provide for the loss of crop
and fences once in three, or five; or ten
years: and both common humanity and
economic policy urge that dumb beasts
should be pastured and fed on the up
lands, so that the fertile river bottoms
may be devoted to their best use—name
ly, the production of plant crops.
Cities and towns onght not to be bnilt
on the flood ridden and miasniatic low
lands; yet they have been in the past
and will be in the future, so the towns
man, like the farmer, should build high
and strong and hold himself ready to re
move his dear ones and carry his goods
to upper stories. And *the flood swept
bottom lands of the American riven
afford a business opportunity, curiously
neglected in the post, though destined
to be successfully grasped at no distant
day—namely, insurance against floods.
The great desideratum is general re
cognition of tbe.facts-a-wkicb ore dem
onstrated by the observations of thou
sands and gainsaid by none, though
ignored by multitudes—that rivers ^or
their own flood marks in the alluvial
plains by which they are skirted; and
that men occupy theile plains at their
peril.—Wi J. McGee in Forum.
A Snake Story from India, j !
There is a belief current in all parts of
India-that, a certain-variety of-snake
.dhlled 'Shesh Nag, when it attains the
age of 1,000 yeflrs, lias a ferocious Jewel
formed in its head. The jewel, it is
affirfMd, posse** lb# q«ali tyof sacking
UP the poison Of the deadliest snake if
applied to the wounded part' Strangely
enough a Paris gentleman is reputed to
poeaets this invaluable jewel, according
to a correspondent; of a Gujarati weekly,
published at. Wadhwan, in GnJaratL
The correspondent says that when the
present owner—who, bj the Way, is now
sixty-three—was twenty-three years old
he lighted upon a snake of the ab^ve
mentioned variety which he killed. Then
he.fonnd the jewel in his head. It baa
already saved several lives. •
When Mr. Vidal, the collector of the
district, was thebe, it was shown to him
foa The jewel is raid to contain a thin,
crescent like liber, which unceasingly
oeoilliates in the center. The gaikwar
of Baroda, the maharajah of Kolhapm.
and several of her native princes ore said
to have offered several hundred thousand
rupees for this unique jewel. The name
of the o.wncr is Mr. Framji Dadabbai
Goveknr, Tarspnr, Bombay presidency
Feline Sagacity.
A very much petted cat of mine, aged
ten, was nj'th me while sewing recently.
Hhe hail seated herself on a portion of
the calico which was before mo on a
amall table, and before leaving the room
for a few minutes I carefully arranged
the port of the work with the needle in
it so that it hung over the edge of the
table and was well oqj of Tiny’s way.
On my return I found she had gathered
np ’the calico and was sitting upon it,
but had kept out the unfinished hem,
and was holding.down the needle with
her right pat*, purring loudly the while
at what she evidently considered a suc
cessful imitation of her mistress.—Lon
don Spectator.
days’ board is outrageous-* regular
swindle, sir.
Hotel Proprietor—Yon must remem
ber that hotel charges ore not based on
what a guest consumes, bnt on what is
provided. The waste of food at hotels is
eaormouft.
Guest—Then why don’t yon cook-it
better.—New York Wo
mgr
Uy hoard Is books, loved alnuist ss mymlft
U bora, I pat them on the upper shelf;
If Mends, I dolly to o lover dollies
With his heart’s choice la the eweet carder
Where the rich vines to tangled Hot ran.
And luscious poaches blush against the ante
Steadfast I find »hera here from day to day,
Drawn up lil^e soldiers in their stanch array:
I open one; behold the trace of tears
Shod by aome heart it touched in vanished
years;
Somo aro new comers, and smiio cheerfully;
Somo aro worn old and sad by constancy;
I love then: all, llio beaming face or sod,
Tbosf that have made mo weep, or made me
glad.
All but the dull Ones on the upper shelf,
Thom ( would fain exchange for needed pelf.
.Sometimes I leave them, and go calmly out
To where hearts faster b»>at, where children
-shout.
To feel tlio impulse of tho eager crowd.
And hear traffic’s babel, harsh and loud;
£ tost them as a man mlffht tcat'hfs wife.
To teach her sho is not tho whole of life;
A schoolboy’s trick it Is, for so#n I find
I’ve loft my better self, my heart, behind.
Tho hundred souls whom I go forth to meet
Are strangers to me in the greedy street;
Tho world scorns nearest when my lamp la lit.
And by Us midnight glow I quiet .sit;
Volumes with welcome greeting then look
down.
And night shuts out the noisy, rt^stlcss town:
This is my haven, this my marringo bower.
Wedded'to my lmoks and happy ovory hour.
—Mrs. Napoleon U» Moraugo in Arkansaw
Traveler.
The Insect World*
Entomologists generally concede that
upward of 100',000 specieaof insects have
been recognized mid classified; eoiuo au
thors even place the number as high as
150,000, while it is not at all improbable
that this vast nnmber may not represent
more than one-tenth of the number ac
tually inhabiting the globe. Not less
than one-half of the whole nnmber be
long to tho order coleopatera, or beetles,
which order is by far tho most numer
ously represented of all. The lcpidop-
tera, or butterflies, have than far yielded
some 15,000 species, or abont one-thir
teenth of the total nnmber (300,000), esti
mated by Speyer for the world at large,
and an equal nnmber may perhaps be
credited tothehymenoptera(bees, wasps,
etc.), the licmiptera (bags) and diptera
(flies).
Tho orthoptera or straight winged in
sects, which include the locusts, grass
hoppers, etc., are considerably less nu
merous. The species with netted wings
(neuroptora) probably number some p|ace
between 2,000 and.3,000. Insects aro, of
course, most numerously developed in
the tropics, but they aro not rare by any
as in the coldest regions which have
yet been visited by man.—St. Louis Re
public. ■
Peculiar Taste lu Dreu.
Sir Humphrey Davy, it is said, “rarely
washed himself; and on the plea of sav
ingtime he used to put on his clean linen
over his dirty, so that hahns been known
to wear at the same time five shirt* and
five pairs, of stockings.” Hero is a rare
example <if the indifference of the man
of genius to the mere husk, or series of
husks, which keep that royal part of
him, his mind, in working order. Yet
was not Sir Humphrey a mere sloven,
content nt all times with the first article
of clothing upon which he might lay bis
hand. Though he was so reckless in the
matter of shirts upon common occasions,
when he used to fco fishing “he would
wear green,” to resemble vegetable life
os much as passible, so that the trout
might have some difficulty in 1 distin
guishing the bi;>eU from the mere roots of
the field; and when shooting he worl a
Scarlet cap, "to shield himself from ncci-
dent from other guns.”—All the Year
Round. •
In every town of good size in Mexico
there ore public school* These are well
attended, thongh most of the rich Mexi
cans send their children to the schools of
the City'of Mexico or to foreign coun-
trice, orhavs private'teachers forthem;
and to finish their education - (bey are
often sent to Europe or the -United
States. The great majority are left at
home, however, and the schools are well
filled. c - - <; ;
In a very judicious dietetic outline for
reducing obesity, from ten to twenty
drops of liquor potassm aro given in a
glass of water three times a day. and the
food is largely* composed of flncbdfeed
local-fruiti, lemons, oranges, suoculent
salad vegetables, acid wines, loan’ meat,
white blooded nh, ’ game, arid poultry,
lemonade, batter-milk, and tea and toast.
Art is always its own best reward, and
the poet's dearest object tn life mu#
always be to givo to the world “the
message that in .him burns.” SHU, he
needs friends, requires leisure, wants
bread. Thackeray once wrote to a
friend, “Our' twopemiy reputations get
ns at least twopence-halfpenny.”
One peculiarity of the principal dances
of savage nations is that in nearly every
instance they imitate the movements of
animals. This is cvidivjced in the buf
falo and bear dances o?vue North Amer
ican Indians, tho bear dance of the
Kamtcbntknns and the kangaroo dance
of the aboriginal Australians.
Bells are mostly cast from a composi
tion of copper and tin, though' other in
gredients are dften used. When the
right proportions of these two metals aro
combiued and reduced by intense heat
to liqnid form the mass is poured into a-
clay mold of the desired shape apd size.
It is wicked to be wasteful; is it not os
wicked to be penurious? Both habits en-
tail misery ou others; but os a personal.
matter it is more agreeable to hove todo
with a spendthrift than a miser, and
therefore the-world' loves -tho one and
bates the.other.’, , - ' ' *
Judge Holmes, eon of the “Autocrat, 1
att&jppretne
joys - writing piitr to opinion. His asso-
datetpreferopdottertow / r { f
The Duke of Edinburgh lias one of the
largest collections of postage stamps in
England. There ia one private collec
tion ha tho kingdom that is valued at
$250,000.
Companion of irtf liodrsof ii
How often wo*re del’ n 1
When lightly thus thy 3
Tho world grows t
weather! - •
Am I aweary? Turn I then to thee, .
“ To thy responsive strings my eoul revealing,
And eoon thy sympathetic minstrelsy
Sends subtle strength ■through my dulled
senses stealing.
In lonely moments, what a friend thou art! *
My minor moods, my fleeting fancies sharing;
Thou canst express the secrets of my heart
In accents of rejoicing or despairing.
The one whose love 1 so desire to gain.
Would surely cease to doubt, it seems to me,
If all my longing, all my speechless pain.
Could flud a voice, my loved guitar, through
thee!
—Amy Elizabeth Leigh in Drake’s Magazine.
for Infants and Children.
Took Him a Long While to See It.
A man who returned not long ago
from a stay of several months in Lon
don has some funny stories to tell of his
experience with British wit. “Themind
of the Briton is solid, bnt slow,” he said,
“and when it comes to his appreciation
of a joke he can fee trusted after a while
to get to it, but the process is slow.
This story is a capital illustration of
what I mean: One day l went into a,
book shop on the Strand and asked for
Hare's 'Walks in London.’ In America
the book is sold in one thick volume; the
clerk brought it in two. 'Oh,' I said, as
I looked at them, ‘yon part your Ilnre in
the middle, do yon?
“I, sir?’ he said with a bewildered
look; “oh! no, sir.”
I saw he didn't see the joke, so 1
didn’t explain, but bought the books and'
went away. A week Inter I entered the
lame shop. As soon as the clerk saw
me he rushed from the back of the shop
laughing vociferously, and seized me by
the hand:
“Good!” he shouted. “Capital: ’part
your Hare in the middle,’ thnt's capital,
sir; capital.”
I had thought it was rather neat my
self, and it didn't take me a week to Qnd
It out, either.—New York Evening Sun.
"CnstoiUfeoo wen adapted tocMMmn that
I recommend ltoo superior loony prwcriptiop
known to me." n. A. AncHX* M. D.i
U1 Bo. Oxford St r Brooklyn, N.T.'
“A. tim of 'Cojtcrla* Is so nnlrenal and
Its marlla ,0 weU known that It sonno O wnft
of supwerocotioa to acdone it. Few ore tho
Intelligent fimllice who do not keep Coatoria
within easy roach.” „ „ „
“■“•“SSaWW
ES Wonno. gireo deep, and promote* dl
WltlloutInjurious medlcotlo*
* For oererol years I hare recommended
roar' Outwit,’ and shall olwnys conttnuetq
do so as It baslnrarlably produced-benefldal -
IteuBs." „
Xowm F. Poods* H. IX,
“the WInthrop,” UKh Street ami Tth At*,
New York City.
Tbs Osmans Ookri*T, 17 KraaOT Stassr, New Yoi
Kindness Nat Appreciated.
A little incident that amused the pu£-
sengers in a Brooklyn bridge car the
other day wonld seem to indicate that
the semi-tough young man with a baby-
in his arms does not appreciate polite-
nes* As the semi-tough yonng man is
seldom Been carrying a baby it might,
however, be bard to prove the rule.
But this one was carrying a baby, and
the tired looking woman with him was
lugging a bag that looked twice as
heavy as the baby. The woman was
the first to see the only vacant seat in
the car And dropped into it. And then
a dapper young fellow who bnd been
reading intently looked up, and his gaze
fell first on the baby.
He apparently didn’t notice that it was
a man holding the infant, for he jumped
up, lifted Ids hat, and said, “Please take
my seat’mmlum." The fellow with the
child scowled, but all he said was: “If
yer speakiu’ to de kid, dat’s all right,
but i* yer speakin’ to me I'll smash yer
face. See?” And. he stood up all the
way over, looking as if he felt much hi-'
suited.—New York Time*
For Rent! For Rent!
; #•
THREE NICE NEW COTTAGE HOMES, $12.50 EACH.
ONE HANDSOME NEW RESIDENCE, $25.00.
* ONE FIVE ROOM RESIDENCE, $16.00.
ONE HOTEL
A SNUG HOME.
Part Cash/ Balance monthly to the Loan
Company. •
See my list of Bargains for Vacant and Improved Property,
M. CALLAWAY,
JUal Estate Agent.
C. M. WHEATLEY, Pres’t
CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, Vice l'res’t
B. H. JOSSEY, Seo’y A Treat.
0. C. STONE, Supt
The Americus Construction Company,
or ru«.
Americua Street Railrc
GEORGIA—Hl'mter Cods
By vlrtnoofa decree or t!
of tn. siilil c
tae Central
Americus Street Railroad
the 28th dayofMay.lwl, sad a
me minutes dime .aid court*
closing the mortsnse for the
bondholders on thep opertyoftho c
I will offer for sale at public out-cr
highest bidder,Jtoforo the Court Ho
of raid county, lu tho city or Amoi
tween tho horns of 10 a. m. aud ) p
Saturday, ihetffth dnynf June, Ira
lowing property, to-wlt:
A certain piece or parcel of land <
dred feel front by one hundred and
In depth, .Hunted In toe ’
county ofHumternnd Rt.t
a part of lotnumbct 2011 nt.
districts)! Sumter county, (
situate lying and being on
Avonuo E.nnd on the West all .. ,
lln street and being on the corner o
streets nnd known on thcplnt of the 1
Bark Land t om. any recently luld out
seven nnd eight In block twenty
geihcr with all nnd singular the I
•neats and hereditaments of sal
Company then owned ortl
quircd by It, anti also Inch
road*,truck •‘.right* ot wny.maln II
lines, switches, suptrstruoure*. 1
pot .rounds, station houiei, cngl.
car houses, stable*, wood nonsea, *
erlng plaocs, work abopt, machine i
bridges, via luc's, culbert*, fences, r“
tnres, together with all Its Icnse*, l.
hired luuaa, tossed nr hired railroads,
its powor works, ongines. boilers,
appliances, apparatus, dynamos, a
tors, generators, storage batteries, n
motors, tender* cables, wires, tract
cars, carriages, coaches, trucks, and
motor and rolling stock, its
tools, weighing Beales turntl
wood, coat, oil, fuel, equip
a id material of every-
acrlptlon.tben held ot
quircd, together with all the e
privileges, immunities and ft
said llullroad Company then held t _
nflor to he acquired, Including the franchises
to be A corporation, and A'l the tolls, fares,
freights, rents. Income., lames r~ '
th-reor, ami ail tho rever.lon
remainder and remainders tl
Hsld sale will be for cub, ]
, that the bond* and coup
mortgage shall be receivable i
.iscaiti fur the amount ofcasli
would bo payable on such bonds and c _ r
out orthe proreedsof said sale, after the p
ment of all costa and expenses o' "
cost and compensation of the i
Purchaser will obtain pessest
upo s tho dosing ortho sale.
J. B. FELDER,:
Americua, Ga., May 20,1891.
QHERIFF’BHAIK.
O , GEORGIA—Sumter C
Will bn sold before tho court 1
Bumter County,
til, between the
wing dercrlbed
P One* douse and lot nnd one store room, in
tho city of Americus, Ga., bounded aa
"on: South l.y Whcolo
Bell’a store room, on ....
nue and east by place ocot
Johnson, and known as tbr
place, and now occupied by ..
storo room and by Charley I
dwelling house. Levied on as
of C. E. Crocker to satisfy three
from the County Court of Brnnte
favor or Thompton, Wilson A ....
said C. K.Cncker. Propertv pointed out by
plaintiff's nttorncy; levy mado by former
sheriff, W. It. Cobb, April 13. lt»i. Tenant In
possession nntifleu In ti t ms o the law.
L. B. Forrest, Sheriff.
A PPLICATION."
A LETiEtta OF ADMINI8TRA
Whereas. C. E. Clprk has nu
Ion to have w. K. Clark appoint
ratorde bonis non on the '
Clnrk deceased. Will pas
Monday In July next.
Thesoate therefore toclle
all parties concerned, whether
creditors, to show
Mohammed's Descendants.
To find families of an antiquity at
onto remote and certain we must go be
yond Europe and seek Ahem nearer the
cradle of the human race. Mohammed
died in 033, leaving nine wives and only
one child, his daughter Fatima, who was
married (as several other ladies were) to
All, the prophet's first convert and chief
lieutenant. From Fatlma j have descend
ed the numberless sultans,' nobles, cber-
ifs; kings and emperors who, ever since
the prophet's day, have constituted so
Important a part of the ruling dose in
the world which be organized. Today;
after the lapse of thirteen centuries, it is
the felood of the prophet that constitutes
the title to nobility in the several coun
tries of the east,-i-Chicago Time*
- Tha Karl last tons.
The earliest'known lens is one made
of rock crystal, unearthed by Layard at
Nineveh. This Jens, the age of which 1*
to he measured .by thousands of yean,
now lie* in the British museum, with its
surface aa bright as when it left the
maker’s band* ‘By tho side of it are
very recent specimens of lenses which
have been tuined by exposure to London
fog and smoko.—New York Telegram.
The only real work' of art in copper
that now 'exlsts in India is the casting of
Hindoo and other images for religion*
purpose* . These are, of course, mostly
to be found in old temple* Almost all
the temples which can really claim' An
tiquity have images made of copper,
which are the perfection of art, and
which, with all the assistance of ma
chinery, could never be excelled or even
imitated by European citie*
The largest kitchen in the world is in
the Bon Marche in Pari* It baa 4,000
employe* The tunallest kettle contains
100 quarts aud the largest 500. Each of
fifty roasting pans is bigienongh (or 300
cptlet* Every dish for baking potatoes
holds 225 pounds? When omelettes are
on the bill of fare 7,800 eggs are used at
once. For cooking alone sixty cooks and
100 Bssiatanls ore always at tho range*
A monkey on shipboard Used toarausa
hitnselfin the cook's absence by turnfcip
the water cocks, in order to enjoy that
worthy's surprise when fee,returned and
found the water rr-tling over the floor,
and tfeere are sc-.<- »11 authenticated iu-
stancee of-octual _ ptionpracHoed by
animals to gain somo desired tad.
In the Went Bsd'td London, at Olym
pia; the large Imll there, which is famous
at proeent for. it* fancy dross balls, is 440
tect loug; 250feet wideond 100 foot high,
arid contains an area of; nearly two nnd
a half acres. Twenty seven thousand
people wore pre-sent at a n-ftut ball'
Denman Thompson recreates at S
sea, N. H., the scene of
When ho ia there lie imp
self. He has built a t
has a mortgage t.
mortgageable in the t
Sdccissors to 0. M. Whkatlkt & Co.
Have the largest stopk of
Dry
•UMBER
Monday in Jrili ,
lion snould not be gran
Given under my band
ture, this, 80th day ofMi
,1 ulgna-
4PKKR, Ordinary.
Both Rough'ond Dressed, ever held' tn the city, with nnequslled capacity
for the execution of fine work. They will furnish the trade with
Sasb, Doors, Blinds, Mantels, Stairvork, Pnlpjts, Pevs,
COUNTERS, SHELVING, MOULDINGS, ORNAMENTS, ETC. .
Prompt attention given all order* Write for Catalogue and prices
Office and Factory, COB. BAY ft JACKSON STS.' Telefebone No. 78.
Uptown Offloe, No. JACKSON ST. Telephone 110.
Daniel
LKTTKHhv<
Whereas J. F.
tlon for letters ol
of J. B. Klnard
enmeflnit Monday Jn Julj
Theoo are therefore to cite and admonish
all parties concerned, whether kindred or
S redltom, to show enuao on or before the
uly term of thu Court of Ordinary of Bum-
Wrcounty, to bo held on the Aral Monday
in July next, why Rnld letters should r * ‘
granted a* prayed for.
WltneM my hand nnd ofllctal stem
(his 15th day of Mr , 1W1.
A. C’.HPKEH, Ordinary.
L FPLIOATION,
CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, Pm.
ARCHIE R ELDRID0E, Gm'I Ming*
A* "LEAVE TO SELL.
Whereati J. M. Persons atimi n lot rat or of e
tateof H.H.Hloan deceased has made a
tlon for leave to Mil the real and per...
property belonging to aald d*ca*Md.
puMon name first Monday In July next.
TIiom are therefore to eite and aT
ill parties concerned, whether 1
jredltora, to ahow cauee on or
July term of court of Ordinary
county, to be held on the flret Monday 1
July next, why Mid petition ahouldnot l
granted aa prayed for.
WltneM «ny official signature, this !
j wi>
A. C,SPEER, Ordinary.
day of May,
.KTTKfi
GEORGIA—Wxhstsr.Court v.
To whom It may concern:
Respectfully state that their new £ce factory will start the
manufacture of Ice in a short time and will be prepared to
furnish Pure Crystal Ice in any quantity from a.'pound to a
car load. . Their Refrigerating Chambers will also soon be in,
readiness for the preservation of all perishable food products r a^Kj'o1n, , c i ^&^ fl r 1 S»i.
and will be perfect in every particular. For further partic- ‘te’.raViSStoraVcBS^'SBSSSi ■
nlars either telephone, write or call on
THE AMERICUS REFRIGERATING ,CO. r
Office & Factory Cor. Jackson & Bay Sts., on Central B. B.
april5-8mo
O. a HAWKINS.
O.O. LOVING.
HA WINS <& LOVING,
DCALEBS IN
-^Furniture, Bab; Carriages, Refrigerators,^-
METALIC CASES, CASKETS AND COFFINS.
405 Cotton Avenue. •
Nl.bt calls for coffins at night attended fc> by G. O. Loving, at residence west aide Brown
etreeL Bnrlal robe, ajwaye on band. mayB-ly.
S. a\ BYRD,
REPRESENTING TDE SAFESTAND STRONGEST COMPANIES INjTHE WORLD.
Insurance placed on City and Country Property.
Office on Jackson Street, next door below Mayor's Office. • ' •' • •
DUNLAP HATS.
HE LATEST STYLES AND SHAPES.
ARTHUR RYLANDER.
Corner I
men concerned, whether kind
iers, to show cause on or befo._
July term of the court of Ordinary of Web
ber county, to be held on the flret Monday
In July next, why raid petition nhould not
e crant*dAH prayed for.
Witness iny official signature, this 2nd
June, 1891.
W. H. C08B Y, Ordinary,
A 1 mCA ^LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
GEORGIA—WE118TBK COtTXTY,
To whom It may concern:'
Whereas, D. Davis, administrator on the
estate of Tamrin A. Col lie rt, deceased, hav-
injrflled Ills application for letlera of dlamie-
Thcsc are therefore to cite and ednn
all parties concerned, whether klndn.
creiAlors. to ebow cuuSo on or before
Heptemljcr term of tho court of Ord'
Webster county, to be held on the fli
ay fn Keptember next why ea1d nj
should not be tranred as '
R: E.
Auditor,
OFFICE 57i 'JACKSON STREET,
AMKKICl’S, GA.
Will adjust Rooks and Account aud do a
— — ‘ usiue**. A c>mapet«nl
n yy!S<^«ring 0 oUttei
fllela & Co., Bank of
rug Co. Oorreepon-
mayJl Jm^H
tr -
irt-uenil collecting tni-tlinta*.
wm r *tu
$500 Reward !
WE wfl! par Above reward ftor My mm t>( Uwr
Complftlnt. «lck IUmuImIW. Oow
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