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THE aMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDERs WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER U, Igftl.
Can't be found
—the equal of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. If other medi
cines of its class were like it, they’d
be guaranteed. This is. If it
doesn’t benefit or cure, in every
caso for which it’s recommended,
you get your money back. It
isn’t a “cure-all,” but it does euro
all diseases arising from a torpid
or deranged liver, or from impure
blood. For all Scrofulous, Skin and
Scalp Diseases, it’s a positive rem
edy. Even Consumption, or Lung-
scrofula, is cured by it, if taken in
timo and given a fair trial. That’s
all that’s asked for it—a fair trial.
Then, if it doesn’t help you, there’s
no pay.
Wo claim it to bo an unoqualed
remedy to purify tho blood and in
vigorate the liver. Wo claim it to
be lasting in its effects, creating an
appetite, purifying the blood, and
preventing Bilious, Typhoid and
Malarial fevers, if taken in time.
Tho timo to take it is when you
first feel the signs of irearincss and
weakness. By druggists.
THE TASTE FOR POETRV.
Ilow On* Author Dlaaoverad Bl» tor*
for V.rs. at tho A** of Fifteen.
It would be interesting, were it pos
sible. to know what proportion of peo
ple really care for poetry, and bow the
love of poetry came to them and grew in
them—and where and when it stopped.
Modem |to»ts whom one meets are apt
to say that poetry is not read at all.
Byron's Murray ceased to publish poetry
in 18.10. jn»t when Tennyson and Brown
ing were striking their preludes. Prob
ably Mr. Murray was wise in ais gen
eration.
But it ia also likely that many persons
even now are attached to poetry, though
they certainly do not buy contemporary
verse. How did the passion come to
them ? How long did it stay? When did
the Muse say goodby? To myself poetry
tame with Sir Walter Scott, for one
/ ■ail Shakespeare as a child, rather in a
kind of dream of fairyland and enchanted
isles, than with any distinct conscious
ness that one was occupied with poetry.
Nest to Scott, with me. came Longfel
low. who pleased one as more reflective
and tenderly sentimental, while the re
flections were not so deep as to he puz
zling I remember bow “Hiawatha"
Tame out. when one was a boy, and how
delightful was the free forest life, and
Minnehaha and Punpukkeewis and X
is One did not then know that the
same charm, with a yet fresher dew
upon. it, was to meet one inter in the
K.'.icwala. But at that time one had
110 conscious pleasure in poetic style,
except ill such ringing verse us Scott's,
and Campbell's in his patriotic pieces.
The pleasure and enchantment of style
first appealed to me at about the age of
fifteen, when one read for the first time:
So nil ilny Iona tile noise of Imttle rolled
Among the niimnlHlns by the northern sen.
CmII Kina Arthur's Table, man by man.
tluil fallen In l.yotiesne atsiul their Liril.
Next I tried Tennyson, and instantly a
new light of poetry dawned, u new music
was audible, a new god came into my
medley of a Pantheon, a god never to he
dethroned. "Men scarcely know liow
beautiful fire is." Shelley says. I am
convinced that we scarcely know how
great a poet Lord Tennyson is; use has
made him too familiar.—Andrew Lang
in Scribner's.
TWO KINGS.
One was a king of ruthless power
Who spurned his people’s trust,
AU whiteness from his soul erased
By tyranny and lost.
One was a monarch just to alt
Within his kingdom's reach.
His creed of charity and lore
Flowered lo act and speech.
The tyrant on a sumptuous couch
Outhrenthcd his final breath.
And his life lapsed all unconsciously
From tranquil sleep to death.
The king beloved by grateful hearta
Throughout his prosperous land.
While issuing some benign decree
Died from a murderer's hand!
—William H. llayue lu Century.
This is the way
with the Ball corset: if you
•want ease and shapeliness,
you buy it—but you don’t
keep it unless you like it.
After two or three weeks’
wear, you can return it and
have your money.
Comfort isn’t all of It
though. Soft Eyelets, and
“bones” that can’t break or
kink—Ball’s corsets have
both of these.
Forssle by GEO. D. WHEATLEY.
1
7
6
8
Old Nick Whiskey
Is the best and ia noted for its we
and purity, having been made on the
same plantation over
133 years
without a rival as we constantly keep
four year old
RYE AND CORN
on hand—ship any quantity, so write
for price-list.
Old Nick Whiskey Co.,
Yadkin Co. PANTHER CREEK, N. C.
UPPKAB 3m.. Proprietor*,
OrsjjliU, Lippatin'a Hock. SAVANNAH. QA.
For sale by the DAVENPORT DRUG
COMPANY, Americas, Ga.
n*Aik for ctUkinip
SRflBY M’pg CO.. Nashville. Teim
$500 Reward!
■ WEwJ'l pay Um above reward for any cam of Liver
OMptalMt. Dyp%wU. lick llwikrtw, Ooo-
•UpAtlott or OortirtMM wm cannot cur* wltfc Wwt'i
Vrjretable r.ivarPlilo. abm the tfreeOoM *restrictly
-tu. rh.rnMiMMiSwwqywyhonee. and at first «wr awtsbow
Am to *it. >.M.faction. BBgnM.’ooioi. Lor*, houa. me anything but a lot of old aecond-
ncu. -jfftnNfu haadifea that looked u If U had cons
tu* JOB* c. WES.' company. cmcAoo. HA- over lo the ark.—New York Weekly.
kiiAL■ -
A Com plicated Lawsuit.
If the besetting sin of the Singhalese
is their inordinate love of litigation, this
certainly is fostered by their very
troublesome law of inheritance, which
resnlts in sr.cli minute subdivisions of
property that the one hundred and nine
ty-ninth share of u field, or the fiftieth
of asmall garden, (containing, perhaps,
a dozen palms and a few plantains), be
come a fruitful source of legal conten
tion, of quarrels and of crime. Emerson
Tenant mentions a case in which the
claim was for the two tlionsand five
hundred and twentieth shure in the pro
duce of ten cocoa palms.
To illustrate this sort of litigation the
Rev. R. Spence Hardy quoted an intrt-
cnteclaim on disputed property, iu which
the case of the plaintiff was as follows:
“By inheritance through my father I am
entitled to one-fonrth of one-third of
oue-eightb. Through my mother I am
further entitled to one-fourth of one-
third of one-eighth. By purchase from
one set of co-heirs 1 am entitled to one
ninety-ninth; from another set also one
ninety-ninth, and from a third one
ninety-ninth more. Finally, from a
fourth set of co-heirs 1 have purchased
one one hundred and forty-fonrtb of the
whole." There is a nice question to
solve ere a landowner can begin to till
hia field orrenpita produce!—National
P.oview.
"Wh*n."
Host people who read a paper would
like to have it come to their hands with
out any typographical or editorial er
rors. This is quite possible when all the
following conditions come together:
When the coutribntor has written cor
rectly.
When he has written the correct thing
distinctly.
Whon the compositor has only tho cor
rect letters ill the different cases.
When he does not take letters from a
a wrong case.
When he sets them correctly.
When the “reader" corrects every er
ror.
When the compositor corrects the
•rough proof properly.
When the "reader" reads the corrected
proof attentively.
When the comjiositor corrects the sec
ond proof properly.
When the revised proof is carefully
“read."
When the “reader" has sufficient time
to >lo this,
And when a dozen other circumstances
work together for good.—Excluiuge.
The Scents of Flowers.
in popular auao.tatiou, the soul of the
flower resides in its perfume. But cer
tain loveliest flower souls sometimes ex
ercise singular repellences for individuals
of the human family. There have been
those even who could not endure the
fragrance of the rose. To my knowl
edge one observer finds in the scent of
lilacs an unpleasant reminder of the
odor of escaping gas. Another makes
no distinction lietween the breath of
mignonette and tho smell of fresh corn-
meal. To me the scent of the thistle is
identical with that of tlie bumblebee
sprawling luxuriously among its purple
filaments, and the first timo the delicate,
feathery flower of the beach plum were
brought me. surely their odor was the
same l had noted in downy chicks and
nestling birds.
Besides the gratification which flowers
provide for the sense of sight and the
sense of smell, there is another and quite
distinct pleasure—that which is con
veyed in the contact of a flower: as in a
subtle spray of lilacs brushing against
your face, the dabbling touches of the
snowball, the tender coolness of apple
blossoms dashed with rain, the refined
sleekness of the lily, which gave an old
time poet countenance in describing his
lady's hand; so smooth, so white, so soft
it was, “as it had worn a lily for a glove."
Further tactile differentiation is to be
found in the warm, vital and airy touch
of the rose (so unlike the quality of the
lily petal), in the viscid snltriuess of the
poppy and the petunia, in the tissuey
thinness and dryness of the larkspur
blossom.—Edith M. Thomas in Atlantic.
for Infants and Children*
FurtliworiiM and Salt Water.
A very important fact in the economy
of earthworms is their susceptibility to
salt water: they are for the most part
soon killed by an immersion in salt
water, nnd it uppears that their eggs are
also incapable of withstanding its influ
ence for a prolonged period. However,
the eggs are not deposited singly, but
are inclosed in large numbers in an egg
case of a leathery consistence, which
may be, for a time at least, impermeable
to sea water, it is therefore just com
ceivable that the cocoons might cross in
safety a narrow sea inclosed in a ball of
earth upon the roots of a floating tree.
But it seems certain that a very long
time does not elapse before the eggs in
the cocoon are fatally injured by the
sea-water. The only exception at pres
ent known is an earthworm which is
found in heaps of cast np seaweed on
the seashores of the Mediterranean and
North sea.—Chambers’ Journal.
“Caatorik ’’so .refi adapted to chlM kJA,
I recommend It as superior to any preierlpCtca
known to mV, H. A. Aacnxm, M. D.,
UJ Bo. Oxford SL, Brooklyn, N. V.
“The us* of 'CaatorU' la ao untraraal and
it* merit* ao well known that It aeema a work
of uperwrownUon to tndone It. Few are the
Intelligent famine* who do not keep Caatorla
within easy reach."
CABLoa Mxrttk, D. D.,
New York CUy.
latte Paator Bloomlngdalo Reformed Church.
Constipation,
oaa. Eructation,
leep, and protncl a <f
Tn* Caauna Coaraar, 77 Mdhhat 6te*st, New You.
Going west or east, north or south, who goes
by the "Racket Store” without drooping in
and examining our goods and prices is
BADLY FITTED
to support a family. He needs a kind but firm
hand to knock some sense into him. Ours is
the only stock in town wnich is calculated
TO SUPPORT
extravagant claims, but we won’t make ’em.
We prefer to have a man and his family come
in and look us over; in fact, ours is
A FAMILY
store, and each member of your family will
find something to interest and instruct them,
ROGERS & WILDER,
104 Lee Street.
SepMfaltVW
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER,
state or OE0BG1A—Scar** Comrrr
, To the Superior Court of aald County •
' The pe'ttfon of E.H. Ftryuaon J. j ce'm-..
both of Louisville, Jfy, Joliu M.OrMnTl
Atlanta, Go., R. C. tlngtey and M. 8 Har
per, respeelfully, ehowa that I hoy sad their
successors desire lo be Incorporated unde?
tho corporate name end ityl.oi '• . merlen!
Oil Company." That their object* aud p ar .
jsoaaaar* for pecuniary gain for t bemsalve,
tlielr aaaoelatee and ancceeeora; and that th«
bualui-aa they propose to carry oo ta (he buy!
log and selling of cotton seed and Ita pro
ducts, such os, cotton seed oil, crude and re.
fined, roitou seed meal and cake, cotton >e,,l
hubs aud aches, oruablua, pre-alng and re!
flulng of same; further, th-tof purchasing
andue.lngin seed cotton and cotton seed
alter the cotton haul bean ginned, of all kind!
and varied*,; nnd the manufae'ure, preps,
ration and sale or products derived rom
cottonseed; and the carrying on, mans*.,
ment and control of such business or m nu.
factureconnected therewith; and gener-liv
tn engage In all such employments and line;
of business, whe-e cotton seed or its products
»r utilized who Is or lo part. Also, the
leasing and owning of tank cars, mtinur.c.
turn g of barrels end rnska, and all other
commndtilea In connection with aald bush,
n—a. The main bi-lnessof‘.heeorpor.tioe
Is to bo iliv manufacture and salsot cotton
#« ed oil and ua Incident therett the utilising
and sale of all' » roditct* oi seed cotton and
cottonseed. Pet‘t opera further show note
th-court that their principal place of bus!,
ness wM be In Hie county oi »uinter, State or
Georgia; but tl.ut they d sire lo carry on
business, employ and send ogents elsewhere
In said state, ami “tto other states and terrl
torles of the I It list mates, ni.d establish
branch olHcts therein. If they deem ltad-
visible. *tnut the onto ml of capital to be
employed by petitioners ta one hundred
thou-and (|l(JO,tJOU> dollars, flttv thousand
*50,QUO) dollars ol which s actually pul.l in
tefore beginning business, with the privilege
of Increasing tlielr capital to any H .,y u
not exeeO' lug one hunured and fifty Ihous.
and (Hot0(10) collars. Petitionersde.-lre to he
Incorporated for t we,.ly ve .rs, with the priv.
liege of renewing their charter from time to
time aa they see proper. Petitioners ueslre
the further right to purchase, lease, hold
own and control, sell, assign, transfer, or dis
pose of such real o-t.te, «r interest In rest
estate, as mas 1st necessary and proper for
the legitimate and convenient transaction
of tlielr husines*. Petitioners desire the
rt lit mid power to make all such by-laws
and alter tlie saute at pleasure, as they may
see proper; to have nnd use a common seal
and to change tlie same at pleasure; to have
a right tn aue and he seed, and to make all
neceasary contracts In the conduct of Its
buslnessjto borrow money, and to secure the
same by giving notea, ludentures, bonds,
mortgages and land, as the crporalou may
res proper to do; and lurtber to be Inverted
with all the rights, powers, pitvileges, im
munities and franchises Incident to corpora
tions of the alnd. and necessary to carry on
ai»l ronduo' the objects and purposes of the
business of petit oners. Petitioners further
dealt* that they shall ha Incorporated aothat
no atockhold-r In the corporation shall be
bound In any way fo the debts or liabilities
of the corporation beyond the amount of bis
unpaid subscription of the capital stock of
sit'it company.
Wherefore petitioner* pray that after this
petition .half have been filed recnidcd and
published, according to law. that the rourt
wl 1 grant an order granting this application.
P..YNK&TYE,
Petitioner’s Attorneys.
Filed lu office SepteruherSilil 1801.
.1 H. Ai.LKN, Clerk s.c.
I certify the above nnd foregolog to be a
truoextroet r o .. the hecordof Charters iu
stunner Huperlor Court this (September 2trd
1801.
J. H. ALLEN, Clerk 8. C.
Cement Stronger Than 8lnne.
From a number of careful tests made
to ascertain the precise strength of an
chor bolts set in Portland cement in the
ordinnr)' way, the fact appeared that the
joint was really stronger than the stone.
In this demonstration 3-inch iron rods
were set into the stones some ill inches
and then subjected to the'test. The first
rod had a screw thread to improve thi
grip of the cement, and the cement be
gan to yield at a load of 83,000 pounds,
the breaking of the stone taking place at
SO,000 pounds. With a plaiu, smooth
rod it wits found tliat the cement began
to yield at a load of 84,000 pounds, but
the rock broke at 67.000 pounds. Thus,
though the strength of the cement joint
was uot developed, it waa inferred that,
in a suitable setting, the cement joint on
a smooth rod might be made to break
the rod.—New York Son.
People Who Have No Timo to Head.
It U rather remarkable how the thou
sands who patronize the postoffice lack
eyes. A little while ago there were
signs and notices enough about the
building to give any one who looked all
the information necessary about the ar
rival and the departure of mails and the
Other matters abont which those who
nsed the building would naturally want
to-know. But the clerks had to answer
so many questions that the postmaster
established a Bureau of Information,
where all qneetions shonld be cheerfully
answered by a clerk with nothing else to
do. And now, although the Btamp win.
dows are conspicuously placed and plain
ly marked, it has been fonnd necessary
to put up over tho window of the inquiry
burcan, in addition to its sign as such, a
sign rending: “No stumps sold here."
The clerk had ns many requests for
stamps aa he did for information.—New
York Times.
Trials of Sudden Wealth.
Mrs. Gaswell—It jnst makes me m*d.
Here I go out shopping in my $5,000
Worth dress, aud jnst loaded with tlist-
mouds. yet folks think I'm poor.
Air. Gaswell—They does?
Mrs. Gaswell—Yes. they do. I went
into Antique. Pedgn St Co.'s grand
store today to get some furniture for the
Knowledge Wine.
Two farmers recently laid a wager
that one could bold a wasp longer in bis
hand than the other. The man who
rubbed chloroform on his hands expected
to win, but the other happened to know
that male wasps do not sting, and ac
cordingly got one of that sex. They sat
and smiled at each other, while the
crowd wondered, until the chloroform
evaporated, and then the man who used
it suddenly let go hia wasp. The other
man got the money.—London Tit-Bits.
The number of immigrants into the
United States daring the year 1890 was
rather more than 495,000—that is more
than the population of St. Louis. Balti
more or Boston. Sixteen thousand more
immigrants nrri ved daring the first three
months of 1891 than daring the corre
sponding months of 1890.
It Is known that wasps' nests often
taka fire, supposed to be caused by the
chemical action of the wax upon the pa
per material of the nest Itself. May
this not account for.many mysterious
free tn tarns and outbuildings?
PASSENGER SCHEDULE
Georgia Souibem&FlariilaRy.
SUWANEE RIVER ROUTE TO FLORIDA,
Taking Effect Sept. 11,1881# Standard Time, 00th Meridian.
"TkJing e*OUTH.
4 lo p m
8 06 p m
8 ao pm
10 80 pm
1* S3 p tn
'ORTH.
7 lu am
10 46 am
(1 00 am
2 11 p m
883pm
2 57 am 5 M pm
B 48 ami 7 18 pro
I 20 pm |
... Auk la..
.....Macon....
Macon...
.... Gordeie..,
. ...Tlfton...
....Valdonta.,
... Lake City.
.Jacksonville
Hi pm
8 43pm
8 4 » p tn
l'i oil p m
1 48 p m
0 ’4 pro
7 33 a m
10 fio am
7 00 am
8 fti a m
4 07 am
2 4ft am
18U am
10 80 pm
9 46 am 10 U> pmlAr..
......Ur
l*v| 8 00 a m | 7 48pm
Palatka 7. .'.Lvl 4 8ft a ml 6 ta p m
Wt. Angnitlne Lt|,
Trainr arrive and depart from anion drpoM In Maoon and Palatka and F. C. d P.
depot lo Jacksonville.
Connection nerth bound end «on*h bound !a made In Macon with trains of Central,
Macon and Northern and E. T. V. d Q. railroads.
A. C. KNAPP. Traffics Manager L. J. HARRIS, Ticket Agent, Union Depot.
HEN ry BURNS. T. P. A. Macon. Go.
JAMES MENZIE8, Southeastern Agent, 98 Weet Bay Ht, Jacksonville, Fla.
beforeth* Court House door in the city of
Amerlcus, Ga., between the legal hours of I
sal»s on the flint Tuesday 1u November next,
the following described lots and parts of lou
of laud, to-witr
Lots of laud numbers twenty-nix, thirty-
five and thirty-six (26,35 and 36), In the 27th
District of Sumter county, Ga.» each cou-
talnlng two hundred aud two and one~half |
%) acres, more or less.
no east half of lot if land number
hundred and twenty-six (126), bounded on
the west by public r ad running north from
Amerlcus towards th« late Barney Parker’i
place nntll said road Intersects the Travel*
or’s Rest road, tben due south to the south
line of sold lot, containing one hunurca (loo)
acres, more or left (except one-half (Jf) —
acre deeded to W. W. Barlow In the norl
west corner of said lot, and also except tbs I
right cf wav of the H. W. Railroad), »ald laud
In the 27th Dlstrlot of Hum ter county, Ga.
Also a strip of lend on the notth side of
east half of lot 145 In 27th district of BumUr
County, being 257 feet wide and bounded on
noth by the south line of tbeoast half of lot
121 In said district: containing seven acm
more or lets, the right of way of the 8. W.
railroad excepted. These two parcels of land f
Jnst above described containing In the aggrs*
gate, oce hundred and seventeen acres mon
or less. ,f
All of said property sold by virtue of esld
decree as tb» property of the estate of W, R.
Stewart, *at© or Sumter County, dec—id,
sold to pay the debts of said ornate, and for
the purposes of distribution among the beln
according to the terms of said decree.
This October 1,1881.
R. R. Btswaet,
Executor of W. M. Stewart, deceased.
ALLISON & AYCOCK
The Booksellers and Stationers
ARE NOW IN THEIR
is-0t.ii
Earthworms In the Now World.
It is a remarkable fact that in two
kinds of earthworms, inhabitants of the
New World, the little bristles, which are
the locomotive appendages, are greatly
enlarged in the tail segments. In one A TITfiAN Ar AYf!0f!Tf
of these, tho Diochmta windlei. tho bris- lLULIIOUDI VX> iVAVA/UIY,
ties In question are enonnonsly enlarged
and of a hooklike form, so that the
creature must be able to retain a very
firm grip upon the soil. These facts are
surprising, as an earthworm is perhaps
an animal in which we should uot ex
pect mnch manifestation of intellect;
bnt, on the other hand, Mr. Romanes’
discoveries about the intellectual possi
bilities of Bally, the chimpunzee, may
be regarded as having moved the whole
animal ereutiou up a peg or two in men
tal caliber.—Chambers' Joarnul.
New quarters in the New Hotel Build
ing “The Windsor” and are
Ready for Business.
406 Jackson Street.
AMHIRIC CTS. GA. ’
Americus Iron Works,
-BUILDERS OP-
Engines, Boilers, Cotton Gins,
Presses, Feeders and Condensers, Saw and Grist Mills,
Shingle Machines, Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Boiler
Feeders, Valves, Jets, Etc.
Shaftings, Hangers, Bnxes and Pulleys
S0~Special attention given to repairing all kinds of
Machinery. Telephone 79. *- ,Mm
Saw Mill Men, Attention!
Our special business Is heavy machinery inch asj
ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS, AND WOOD-WORIING MACHINERY,
end for first-class machinery, we defy competition. We are general agents for
H. B. SMITH MACHINE CO.'S celebrated Wood-working machines, and can dis
count factory prices. Write for circular of “Farmers’ Favorite” saw mill: It le the
beet on the market Second-hand machinery constantly on band. Write for
price*; we can save yon money.
Perkins Machinery Comp;
lass* * i 1 ri
the highest bidder brforv tbs court houM
door in the city of Americas, Sumter count?,
Georgia, on the first Tuesday In November,
between the legal hours of sale, tLe
following property belor - -—* ‘
R. Coulter, deceased, t<
wagons (now) two with t ,
fonr sets strong double harness, two sets for I
large mules, one set black-smith t*.ols and I
forge, five tents with flys, twelve or flftta f
metres— with covers, blankets, etc., onf
bedstead and spring, three wlro cots, tw# I
box-stoves and pipes, one No. 8 eookiof I
stove aud utensils, one box orockery.kltcbro I
furniture and camp outflt,four ches s of com* I
B lete tools for bridge and trestle bulldlnc. I
sn log chains, lotorlarge rope* and tackle I
and pile bands, tnree pile driver hamrota I
two pile driver engines, also two buildioi P
lota In Bmoklyu Heights survey, known * I
lots two and three in block seven. Ternu I
cash W. E. MURPHEY, I
ddtftnes. 1 Administrator. I
1*FLIC.THIN ,Ot PUMLIp ROAfi |
i ' ' GEORGIA—8u*T*E Coustt. I
Daniel, G.W.Morgan and others ha" I
Rpllcatlon for a second-class road «• I
In aald petition, oa ttetlnnlnt; at it* I
Charles Morgan place, leading tlietic. ea*. I
between th. lands of R. E. Merrill and’Ll
H. Hagerson, then between lands of I
Jones and It. E. Merrell, then between Um' ■
of Mrs. Masbburnand Mrs. Jones, then «• |
tween lands of A. J. Logan and Hn. I
burn, then across Or. Logan’s land andwa
tween the lande of I. W, Dozier and J. J. P*' I
pree, intersecting th. amerlcuz and f rlend- ■
ship road; whlcuhaa been marked out °!l
the commissioner! and a report turret* i
made on oath by them, I
All penon* are notified that aald new row 1
--and after the first Monday In hove* t
, by the Commtxlonera of toad* “J I
of sold county,baflnallygrantednw I
— —sc bo shown to the contrary, w* I
5th day of October, 1801. _
J.W. WHEATLE1,
ocl0 wU Clerk County Commission*[*•
A DMINISTRATOR'S SACK. „ 1
GEORGIA—SUJtTEB cocxrei
Agreeable to an order granted by ijl
Honorable Toart of Ordinary of Soat'Jf
county, will be sold before the court h°«*l
door In the city of Americua,buinl«reo“«^.l
Georgia, on tba lint Tuesday In FoveniJJI
neat, b tween the legal hoars of sal* 2|
following Iota or land, to-wlti Lois >*JI
hundred and eighty (Ml), three hundredit»|
thirteen (SIX), aid three hundred and fen ■
■our (Ml) In the 78th district of saBWS
county, Georgia. Each lot otatalnlngi I
handled two and a half (tF-JXI acres n or*J|
lass, said property sold aa tba proP'iVJI
the estate olid. H. Clerk, late of
county, deceased. Mold for tb*
paying the debts and legaclos ofsaidw-ra
and carrying out the provtalons of ;«s>TJ,(
will. Terms mad. known on day sale. • ■
tetob rS,INI. 8. U. CLAKK. I
Admlurator de bonis non cam testate"-1
anneao of 8, H, Clark.
A DMINISTR VTOR’8 SALE. r
A OEORgIA—Wanttr***
Agreeable lo an order Rom tbe
Ordinary of Webster county will b, 5L,
vember next, the following
* number iw
C5