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THE WAYCROSS HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 4. 1893.
HORRIBLE HERDER BY A CRAZY
WOMAN IN ATLANTA.
Mini Julia Force Murders her Two
Sinters in The Mont Brutal
Manner.
Atlanta. Feb. 23.—Tlie past week
has witnessed a carnival of crimes and
casualties which was rarely ever equaled
in any city.
Lewis Red wine's defalcation, followed
immediately by the suspension of the
bank with which he was connected, had
been hardly chronicled before Tom Cobb
Jackson, a brilliant young attorney,
took his own life, the exact cause for
which will perhaps never lie known;
then, in less than twenty four hours,
Crowley, the dry {foods drummer, who
loved a Marietta girl, and by wliom be
had been rejected, grew despondent and
sent a ballet ploughing through his
vitals and died within a few hours.
A negro man grew jealous, and blew
tbe brains of a woman ont, and finally
the climax which is still more appall
ing, was reached Saturday evening
when Miss Julia Force, 38 years of age,
shot and killed her two younger sisters,
Florence, 32 years of age. and Minuie,
28 years old, at the residence of their
brother, Mr. A. W. Force, at tbe corner
of Crew street and Woodward avenue.
A short while after the killing Miss
Jnlia entered police head-quarters and
gave herself up. saying to Captain
Wright: *‘I have committed a crime
and want to get the protection of the
law.” She was immediately taken into
the office of chief of detectives. She is
thought to l>e insane. A few moments
after the terrible tragedy was an
nounced at tlie police station, people
began hurrying toward the residence
with an expression of horror.
A small crown hail lieen gathered in
front of the residence on Crew street.
At first no one save the officers respond
ed. Captain Manley and Chief of De
tectives Wright were admitted. Force
himself answered the knocks at the front
door. His face expressed the deejwst
jMiiti and his eyes were filled with tears
as he shook the hands of his neighbors
who called to offer their assistance. He
explained to them all that his two sisters
were dead and that their sister was in
the hands of the police. Mr. Ft
fectly sane and willing to suffer for
crimes. She has given out a written
statement which is substantially the
same as the foregoing.
After summing up a great many in
stances of imaginary wrong she goes on:
1 was willing to bear my private griefs
in private. I aid not wish to harrow the
public with the story of my personal
griefs. Bat when public disgrace is piled
upon me by notifying merchants not to
credit me, the limit of endurance has been
reached. When tbe clerks along the
streets can thus point at me. for wbat
have 1 to live? Just think of it! I am
thus marked out, while my sisters are fa
vored and fondled and petted. Public
disgrace is too much, and 1 can’t, will not
stand it.
Miss Jnlia was alone in the house at
the time, and it is believed that she
crept behind her sisters and shot them
while they were not looking. Miss Min
nie Force, aged 28. was killed instantly
and Miss Florence, aged 32, lingered in
great agony for two hours.
Locking her victims in the room in
which they bad been shot, Miss Jnlia
quietly donned her street costume, and
walking hurriedly to police headquar
ters, she surrendered herself. She had
lost uone of her steady nerve and the
officers did not notice the maniacal
gleam in her calm eyes. She told the
officers of her uee<l without a quiver.
At an inqnest it was found simply
that the two yonng women had met
their death at the hands of their sister.
Mr. J. L. Hardeman, of Macon, who
is a cousin of the Force sisters, came to
Atlanta immediately after reading the
account of the tragedy and volunteered
his services to conduct the defence of
prisoner.
Mr. Hardeman is one of the best law
yers in criminal practice in the south,
and won a national reputation as lead
ing council in the prosecution of Tom
Woolfolk. the Jones county murderer
who slew his father and his entire fam
ily. and it was due to the skill of Mr.
Hardeman that conviction and execu
tion was secured.
JULIA FORCE INSANE.
The Jury II:«
elded and Thl
ters i
scribed how he bad discovered tbe vic
tims. At 1-30 o’clock a servant called at
his store on Whitehall street for a bun
dle to be carried to the house, whica
she said Miss Julia had sent her for.
There was no bundle at the store for
Miss Julia, and Mr. Force said he at
once suspected something wrong. He
seized his hat. and, accompanied by his
brother, Mr. G. H. Force.lmrried home
As lie entered the honse he fonnd every
thing hnshed as if the place had been
deserted.
He hurriedly examined the house, ami
rushing upstairs to the room where his
Florence lay in her sick bed, he
fonnd her laying across the bed. welter
ing in blood that poured from a wound
in front of and just above her left ear.
Mr. Force said that he hardly stopT**!
to take a second look at the awful sight
that met his gaze, but turned and ran
down stairs to soo if the worst hail
come. In the sitting room, on the north
side of the house, lie found the body of I means .T. C. <>
his other sister. Minnie. Her body was
lying near the door of the room, and
blood was oozing from a great hole in
her right temple, directly above the
right eye. Mr. Force sent his brother
for physicians and then started to look
for Alisa Julia.
In Miss Julia's room, which is jnst in
front of that in which the dead body of
Miss Minnie lay, he found lying on the
burean a small hammer, with which he
at ouco suspected that the crime had
been committed. He examined it, but
could find no blood on it. He then ob
served a small pistol lying on the floor.
He picked that np, and, on examination
fonnd two of its chambers empty. Mr.
Force, as s-xm as the officers arrived,
begged them to go and find his sister.
Miss Jnlia. **My GodP be exclaimed,
“go and find mv sister.” “She is crazy.
My two sons are both at the store, and
she will kill them too.” The policemen
assured him that Miss Jnlia was already
under arrest. This seemed to reassure
him.
Miss Julia Force, who did the killing,
is the eldest sister of G. H. and A. W.
Force, the proprietors of a shoe store on
Whitehall street She is about 38 years
old, and is a fine specimen of physical
womanhood, thongli not beautiful in
face. Since the family removed here,
some years ago, Miss Julia Force has
made her home with her two brothers.
She received every attention that broth
erly love could prompt. She had always
'the Mutter.
Atlanta. March 1.—Uuder a writ of
lunacy sworn ont before Judge Calhoun,
ordinary of Fulton county. Miss Jnlia
Force lias been tried by that official and
adjudged insane.
The evidence of Drs. Baird. Olinstead
and Kendrick, three of the most promi
nent physicians in Atlanta, was heard
before the jury, and they were all per
fectly agree*', that Miss Force is mentally
unbalanced when she committed the
fearfnl crime of murdering her two sis-
old blood last Saturday evening:
5v*pay
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The XUtemaU&c Power.
This is what Aldace F. Walker, chair
man of tho joint committee of the Trunk
Line and Central Traffic associations,
says about railroad rates in The Railway
Age and Northwestern Railroader: “The
fact is—and it is so often overlooked that
it must bo 6tated strongly—the ratemak
ing power of a railway company is its
highest corporate function. It is a char
ier power. Its control rests ultimately
in the state. In* acts of incorporation
this power is universally conferred upon
tho boards of directors—the highest seat
of corporate authority. It should have
been treated with seriousness and as rep
resenting the most important duty of the
several boards. But instead of this our
country has been treated to a carnival of
rates—rates—rates. Hundreds of thou
sands of tariffs have been filed in Wash
ington during the last five years. The
directors of every corporation have prac
tically abdicated this most important
dnty and have left it in the hands of sub
ordinates, who have patiently developed
a most ingenious confusion through
which they alone aro competent to pick
their wav. **
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
WARE COUNTY'.
Foreclosure of Mortgage.
Will be sold liefore the court house door
in the city of Waycross, Ware county, Geor
gia, on the first Tuesday in April next, with
in the legal hours of sale, the following
property to-wit:
That tract or parcel of land described as
follows: commencing on the north side of
Prendergast street at the southeast corner of
the land of Jordan and Jeffords, which street
at that point is sixty feet wide, thence east
along said Prendergast street two hundred
feet, more or less, to tlm center of the south
prong olTebeau branch, thence northeaster
ly down the center of said branch two hun
dred feet, more or less, to the south side of
Wadlcy street, three hundred feet, more or
less, to the northeast corner of said Jordan
and Jeffords land, tlience south along said
land to Jordan and Jeffords two hundred
feet to said Prendergast street to the point of
licginning. said land with all and singular
improvements thereon to Ik*sold as the prop-
of I). J. McIntosh together with all his
‘ le, interest or demand, in or to the
public outcry, to the highest bid-
Now is The Time to Plant,
the opinion prevailed among the physi
cians that lier malady was of long stand- !
ing, and that, fof years, she had been i
laboring under an insane delusion that i
her sisters, and her mother, who had
been made a •‘fat's paw” of. had con- J
spired to injure lier and cause her ,
brothers to mistreat her.
After the jury had heard the evidence j
of these physicians, and members of tho j
family they were not long in reaching ;
a verdict which consigns the nnfortn- |
nate woman to a home within the cheer- j
les* walls of a lunatic asylum.
FURNISHED THE FIGURES. j
*'«• “f Appropriation. S« T*t j
PiiKsrit by C'ongrett* This Session. 1
Washington. March 1.—At the re- j
quest of the committee on ways and
ts, clerk of the honse
committee for appropriations, has sub
mit ted to the committee a statement of
appropriations, exclusive of miscella
neous matters, made by the honse this
session. It shows an aggregate of $513,-
783,083 aud this amount has been in
creased to $519,273,447 by changes made
in bills by the senate. Following is the
statement of appropriations contained
in the bills according to their present
status as agreed upon in both houses:
Army. $124,225,639: fortification. $2,-
219,055; District of Columbia, $5,413,-
223 (conference reported agreed to but
not yet adopted.) As passed by tbe sen
ate: Diplomatic and consular, $1,570,-
045; military academy, $342,556; sundry
civil. $43,934,475. As reported to tbe
senate: Legislative, $31,908,828; navy,
$22,082,131; pension. $166,561,350. As
passed by the honse: Agricultural, $3,-
294.300: Indian. $7,088,615; postoffice,
$83,904,314; general deficiency, $31,-
209,633.
A comparison between appropriations
and estimates for the past five years
shows that contrary to what has been
the generally accepted opinion the ap
propriations have exceeded the estimates
1)0 NOT ITT IT OFF ANOTHER DAY,
But come at once and see them, or write them for prices.
For the Balance ok the Season,
LIBERAL DISCOUNTS
Will be made on all cash orders amounting to Five Dollars or more.
Agents wanted in every county in the South.
CHEROKEE HD^SE^Y CO.,
"WAYCROSS, GEORGIA.
been regarded as queer, was willful,
and wonld become melancholy and
wretched for days at a time over some
fancied slight. She was of an extreme
ly jealous nature, aud it was a favorite
delusion of liers that her mother and
two younger sisters were her enemies,
and were coutinnally plotting to make
her unhappy.
The family is one of the oldest and
best of Charleston, S. C. Before the
war they were prominent in tbe social
life of the Carolina city, and were types
of the old southern aristocracy. After
the war George H. Force and his
brother. Albert W„ came to this city,
and have lived here since. They are ex
cellent business men.
After the death of their fa her they
brought their mother and three listers
here to live with them. Of recenJ years
they have lived at 44 Crew stnet. on
the’eorner of Woodward avetirp. The
elder of the two brothers. Mr. A. W.
Force, has been married for twenty-two
years, bnt lost Iris wiff twoYBJUths ago.
He has two sons, aboit grown. Mr.
George Force has never married, al
though he is past middle age. He has
devoted his time to the care of his wid-
owed mother and fatherless sisters.
In a statement given by the murder
ess she states tliar. for years her two
sisters have been preferred before her
in everything, aud that the whole fam
ily showed snch' partiality in favor of
her younger sister* against herself that
she could not bear it any longer; the
climax coming when Miss Minnie went
to one of the leading dry goods stores
of this city and requested the proprie
tors to extend no further credit to her
sister Jnlia. and to sell her nothing
else except for the money.
She stated that, after having helped
to raise and eve for her younger sisters,
she could not I bear the treatment any
longer and d^ermined to-rid herself of
averaging $350,000 or more per anum.
Tbe reason for this is fonnd in the fact
that appropriations have been made for
the Indians and for rivers and harbors,
which were not included in the esti
mates. By an amendment to the sun
dry civil bill, it is provided that in the
future river and harbor work must be
regularly estimated for.
Boston, March 1.—Charley Mitchell,
the fighter, and his backer, Abingdon,
arrived in the city at 7 a. m.. and regis
tered at the Parker house. At 3 p. in.
they met David H. Blanchard at his
home on Columbus avenue, and a pri
vate consultation was held, at the close
of which Baird said the money was all
up for the Mitchell-Corbett fight, but
wonld give no particulars regarding it.
After the Hall-Fitzsimmons fight Mitch
ell will go to England to do some pre
liminary work and return to this coun
try about eight weeks before the date
of his fight. Mitchell expects to weigh
in at 170 or 176 pounds.
Immense Trade!
I F you do not believe that A. R. BENNETT
in Owen*s Block, is doing a big business, jnst
look at the sidewalk in front of his store, it is
wom (lowif to such an extent by the continuous
stream of customers that pass in and out buying
groceries, that he has had to have boards laid till
such time as it can be repaired.
Application for Tear’s Support.
GEORGIA, Ware County:
To All Whom It May Concern!
Sarah J. Wilds, widow of John Wilds, late
of said county, has applied for a year’s sup
port to be set aside out of his estate for her
self and one minor child; appraisers for
that purpose have been appointed, who have
filed their report setting aside the entire es
tate of said deceased for that purpose.
Notice is hereby given that I will pass
upon said return on the first Monday in
March next.
ness my hand and soul this January
28. 1803. Warren Lott,
Ordinary.
Georgia, Ware County:
To the Superior Court of Said County i
The pe*ition of J. 8. Williams. A. H. Mor
gan. E. II. (Yawley, Sr., W. M. Wilson, E.
II. Crawley, Jr., J. C. Rippard. W. B. Folks,
H. F. Butler, J. A. Miller. J. A. Jones,
. .. Lott, L. Johnson, J. L. Crawley,
and such other persons as may hereafter be
associated with them, desire to be ineorpo-
rated under the name of “Life Preserver
Medicine Company,” for the purpose of
manufacturing, bartering and selling a medi
cine known as Wonderful Life Preserver,
and such other medicines or drugs as they
may deem proper in carrying on their busi
ness. That the capital stock of said com
pany shall be two thousand dollars($2,000.00),
divided into eighty shares of twenty-five
dollars ($25,00) each, twenty per cent, to be
paid in on organizing and the remainder in
such installments as.may be culled for, each
share-holder to be liable to the extent of the
stock subscribed for by him and no more,
which capital stock may be increased at any
time, or from time to time, not exceeding
twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000.00).
That the officers of said company shall con
sist of a president, vice-president, secretary,
treasurer ami board of directors, and that
the principal office of said company shall
be at Way cross, Ware county. Georgia, and
they desire to establish their business in
other places through agencies or otherwise,
as they may deem expedient.
They therefore pray that they and tlieir
associates and successors 1h* incorporated for
tlie term of twenty years, with the privilege
of renewal at the expiration of said term,
under the name of Life Preserver Medicine
Company, with all the rights, {towers and
privileges authorized by law, including the
right of purchasing, holding and using any
real or personal property, or both, that may
be necessary or proper to have in the con
duct of their business, to alienate, dispose
of or incumber at pleasure.
And your petitionc:
This January 4th, ISO:
will -
r pray,
ertv of
right, t
dor for I’uVIi, under and by virtue of.•imurt- I'i!,-,! in „m,v imd‘ wordi'd.' diisd.Vnuurv
yuec ejvra thorn,n by smd l>. I Mc Intosh , 4tl , , W1 \y. M. WiUKW.niTkS.V. W. C.
to J. H. Wnglit, dated April lith. 1891, to, . ....
secure payment of two certain promissory Vk!!!kv.
Uric's
I hereby .
•opy«
unty.
rtify that tlie foregoing is a true
• petition for incorporation of
ver Medicine Company, as up-
• oil file in my of-
ord no
J. McIntosh & Co., payable t
Dr. R. P. Daniel and the othei i« .m>. n.v. .
Hines for four ami six hundred dollars each ■ * l ‘‘ ,. r<s
and due January 1st, 1892. on which there j p t * 1 | rs ,ro1
is now past due the sum of eight hundred | 1 , , , , tea
lollars principal and one hundred and t..»» : . D«ven under my hand and seal of oil
lollars interest, I
interest from January 12,1891, ...
thority given therein by said 1>. .1. McIntosh
tosaidJ. H. Wright in case of default in
said property. Said mortgage with all right
and title having been transferred by said J.
H. Wright to A. M. Knight for value receiv
ed, said transfer being recorded in book J of
leeds
333, Febr
lary 14.
Application for Letters of Administra
tion.
GEORGIA, Ware County;
To All Whom It May Concern:
J. II. Hillhousc having, in due form, ap
plied to me for permanent letters of admin
stratio!
i the
rW. II. Manglia
unty, this is to cite all and
reditors and next of kin of
l appe
Application for Letter* Dismissory.
GEORGIA, Ware County:
: To All Whom It May Concern:
* W. M. Wilson, guardian for Oliver
I Murphy, applies to me for letters of dism
sum from saul guardianship, and I will p:
U|K>n his application on the first Monday
! Mareh next, at my office in Wayvross, st
j county.
! Witness my hand and official sigmitui
i this January 30, 1893. Wakkkx Lott,
J Ordinary
Sheriff Sale.
GEORGIA, Ware County:
Will he sold, on the first Tuesday in
0 f -March,1893,next, at the court house, in said
said deceased, to he and appear at mv office county, within the. legal hours of sale, to the
on the first Monday in March next, and highest bidder for cash, the following prop-
show cause, if any they can. why pernia- |
nent administration should not he granted j ,
as applied for
id official signature. j ther
Which Plainly Shows That
The Place to Buy
GROCERIES
A. R. BENNETT S,
OWEN’S BLOCK.
WAYCROSS
Tobaeco Growers anil Manufacturers taiatiea,
LEM JOHNSON, President,
— /
Waycross, G-eorgia.
IWflHUFACtU^EHS OF CIGARS.
OTT iS HPF.CIAL BRANDS
“Boijnet tie Havana,” ‘‘Street Whispering*." “ Elegant
AH our Goods are Manufactured of Imported Tobacco.
And are as well made and of as fine quality as any in the market.
SOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN WAYCROSS.
Witness my hand ,
this January 28, 1893.
Ordinary.
Georgia, Ware County:
To AU Whom It Shy Concern.
All persons in ten's ted are hereby notified
that if no good cause Ik 1 shown to the con
trary, an order will he granted by the un
dersigned on tlie 7th day of March, 1893.
hanging the public: road as marked out by
the road processioners appointed for that
purpose, commencing at the end of the lane
on the north side of the residence of T. A.
W. Little, thence north about seven hun
dred yards, thence west about seven hun
dred yards, more or less, until it intersects
with the present public- road.
Also establishing a new road us marked
out by the road processioners appointed for
that purpose, commencing at a point near
John Mullis’ and running in nearly a direct
line to Mr. Bennett’s, from that point in
practically a direct line to the interaction
of the Glenmore road, in west Way cross
running by the lands of D. J. Jeffords and
others.
Also road as marked out by the road pro
cessioners appointed for that purpose, com
mencing at a point in west Waycross, al
ready located and graded, by tlie city au
thorities, easterly, through the land of the
land as Glenmore avenue, to a point, where
said Glenmore avenue, as laid ont in said
plots, intersects with said Glenmore road,
then continuing westerly in the line of said
Glenmore road; the new road being from
the tirst indicated point, in west Waycross,
to the point of intersection with the Glen
more road as already established. February
7th 1893. Warren Lott, Chairman.
W. A. Cason.
J. W. Davidson,
I). J. Blackburn,
Commissioners Ware County, Georgia.
of land Xo 172 in the ~
county together with all impmveii
mi. levied on to satisfy two ji
ed by D. K. Walk.
trict of
•N.
Orders Solicited from Abroad.
Give Us a Trial
SWEAT & WILSON, (JK
QUITMAN, GEORGIA.
[gjj & BILUIBP Sjjjjjjjg '
QUITMAN, GA.
l> RETAIL BUUlt 1
And Dealers in
Fine Whiskies, Wines, Rums, Gin* anti
Brandies,
direct from the Distilleries and the best
markets and will give our customers jhe
benefit of same. We have tlie largest stock
in South Georgia.
Orders by mail accompanied by the CASH
will receive prompt attention, j
Xo Charges for Packing.
Heart/ anti Fancy
GROCERIES, ~~
Country Produce of all kind:.
Orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed.
Special Attention poUl to
Packing and Shipping Goods.
i\ ex. off. J. 1*. of 1372d
favor of J. L. Johnson 8r. against I>. I).
Sillinant. lYoporty levied on by 11. A. Thorn-
OFFICERS OF CHARLTON COUNTY.
Aaron Dowling, Ordinary.
A.G. Gowen, Clerk Superior Court C. C.
J. A. Wainright, Sheriff.
James Thompson. School Commissioner.
Forclosiire of Mortgage.
GEORGIA, Ware Comity:
Will be sold before the court house door,
in the city of Waycross, Ware county, Geor
gia, on the first Tuesday in March next,
w’itliin the legal hours of sale the following
property to-wit:
That certain lot, trai t or pan el of land
sitnate, lying and Ireing in the connty of
Ware, and state of Georgia, ami more par
ticularly described as being situated north
easterly from Wares boro, in said countjr.
GEORGIA, Cliarlton County:
Rufus S. Lang, residing in the state of
Georgia, having applied to he appointed
guardian of the person and property of Ru
pert Liston Lang, a minor under fourteen
yeftrs of age; this is to cite all persons con
cerned to be and appear at the term of court
of ordinary to be held next after the expira
tion of thirty days from the first publication
of this notice, and show cause, if any they can
why saul Ruffin S. Lang should not be en
trusted with tlie guardianship of the person
and property of said Rupert Liston Lang.
Witness my official signature this 13th day
of February, 1893. Aaron Dowling,
Ordinary.
: known
Cox’s
Sheriff Sales for Taxes.
GEORGIA, Charlton County:
Will be sold, on the first Tuesday in
March next, at the court house, said county,
within the legal hoars of sale, to the highest
bidder, for cash, the following property, to-
wit :
Lots of land, first section.Xoa. 1,2, 20, 27.
28, 29, 43, 45, 40, 47, 49, 50, 51,52, in the 11th
district. Second section ti, 19,20 and 21 in
the 10th district. First section C, 7, 22, 34,
35, 30,58 and 59 in the 10th district of said
connty levied on under and by virtue of an
execution issued by J. R. Hodges, tax collec
tor of said county for state and county taxes
due for the year 1892, levied on as the prop
erty of A.G. Butts agent for B. B. Liewes.
Also at the same time and place will be
sold lots of land 21, 50, 81. 83, 92, 179, 204.
257, first district 129,153,174. 79,180,125, 152
and 172 ofJCharlton county for state and
All of the above lots and parts of lots of
land are being sold as wild land. This Feb.
1.1893
J. A. Wa;
■, Sheriff.
just over
lieing a part of lot of land number 103 in the 1
8 tli district of said county and di-scribed as —■—— :
follows, commencing at the Mattox ford on GEORGIA, Charlton County ;
said creek, thence running easterly along j W| lt M . *
tlie south Side of the Waltertown road a I To All Whom It May Concern:
distance of seven acres*., more or less, to a i Rufus Duig of said state having in
corner post, thence southerly a distance of : proper form applied as a person selected by
three acres, more or loss, to %a corner post, i the next of kin for letters of administration
thence westerly a distance of seven acres . on tlie estate of William tang late of said
more or less to said Ox’s creek thence nor- ■ county deceased. This is to cite and ad-
therly along said creek a distance of three ; monish ail ami singular the creditors and
acres more or less to the point or place of heirs of the said William Lang to he ami
beginning. appear at my office, in the court of Ordin-
SSaid land with all aud singular the -im- : ary, in ami for said county, at the March
provements thereon to be sold as the prop- j term 1893 of said county, then and there to
erty of Catherine Wilcox, together with all ! show causes, if any they can, why penna-
deinand.
_ _ . . y, to the’ highest
bidder for cosh, under and by virtue of a
mortgage given thereon, by said Gatherim-
Wilcox to Warren Lott, dated 7tli day of
July 1892, to secure payment of certain
promissory notes of same date, on which
there is . now* past due the sum of $1,090
principal, besides one other of said notes for
the sum of $1,000 principal, to beeorae due
January 1st, 1894, both of said notes bearing
interest from date, and the authority given
therein, by saul Catherine Wilcox .to said
Warren Lott, in case of default in payment
of said notes, to sell and convey said prop
erty. This February 1st, 1893.
Warren Lott, Mortgagee.
letters bi administration should not be
granted to the said Rufus 8. tang upon the
estate of said William tang.
Witness my hand and official signature
this 21st day of Jannary-1893. *
A A ROX Dow LINO.
Oxtlinaay.
Dr Jonn Hull’s Worm Destroyer
taste goml and quickly remove worms from
Xo other worm medicine is so safe and surer
Price 25 cents at drug stores, or sent by mail
I... Iskfin II Pfirl* A Ort ITS rttwl 17?