Newspaper Page Text
THE '.VAYCROSS HERALD, JULY 31 189?
JDajjjjrasxa 3^*raJU5t.
l'rsferday | U Camp.
St. Simon. Ga.. July 26.—°or the fifth
time during tbe pre*en| encampment the
WayrroM Riflea furnished the orderly yes
terday. Every dry tld* Irmorha* been hol
ly contested tor hy the ocher companies >4
tbe regiment, and every'single time it ha*
"t>een wen by the Wsyctn** company. Pri*
vate Jimlb-acb won the honor yesterday.
The orderlim selected %o far are Privates
Paine. Lowber, Waldron. Kills and Beach.
Du rtn* (life past four encampments the
Biflea hare contested for orderly nineteen
times, and have wpn seventeen tiroes—pro)►-
ably more than c*rerv milirary compan> in
the State combined hare won.
The Waycros* boys are certainly the most
E ipuiar in camp. Their gentlemanly be-
irior has made them stores of friends.
The Rifles entertain*-*! al-out fifty ladies at
dinner yesterday.
The siyf Saturday afternoon was the best
of the season. Hundreds of bathers were in
the water for two or three hours.
The Jacksonville band furnishes music for
the parade* of the troopers, and the concert*
nt the pavilion, morning. afternoon an*
evening, are do ichftil.
It is estimated that there were . r **0 Way*
cross people on tlie island yesterday. I
Capt. O’Prirn may not allow his men to |
contest for orderly today. He thinks that I
Absolutely. Pure. .
Celebrated tor treat leavening strength
and healthfulness. Assures the food against
alum and all forms of adulteration common
to the cheap brand*. Royal linking Powder
Company. New York.
liny i
Told by a Mountain Preacher.
A preacher of this section, since deceased,
used to tell the following, says the Hazel
Green Herald: He said he was in Letcher
county preaching on one occasion, when he
stopped at a farm house to get dinner, and
w hile eating, the lady of the house asked his
business He replied, • ] am hunting the
lost sheep of Israel.*'
She left the room, returning in a few min*
tlte* with her husband, when she said:
"This man is hunting some stray sheep, and
I’ll l»et that old, long wool ram that's !>een
around here is his’n.”
"No. i
i hunting sinners; the
Chr
"And is he dead?" she queried
"Yes," replied the preacher.
"And buried too. I reckon.”
•Oh yes, long, long ago.
’Then
old i
. I told y
e’d die
efor not taking a
spaper
And they lynch ’em when they catch
tm and they catch ’em every time.
J After the Ohio election Mark and
Mac* will know more thau they do now.
Armenia’s wheat crop is threatened by
| heavy fights ol locusts ia several cl the
States.
Judge Spencer Atkiuson will not give
up the supreme court judgeship just at
presell',
The electric trolley has supplanted
the horse in running the street cars of
Cnarieston, t$. C.
It is lawful to shoot doves after ti e
loth ot next month, and it is sa>d thui
the dove crop .s large.
Georgia is becoming famous as a fruit
growing state, although the fruit Indus*
try is only in it’s infancy here.
In addition to the large stock of buggies,
Jones & Ihoraas gave an order Saturuay for
another car load to be shipped at once.
Coal ground very fine is now being
used on the Coutiueul lor steaui boilers,
iu order to avoid black smoke.
I TO PRETEXT LTXCRIXG.
It is a deplorable state of affairs when
j mob violence is thought to be necessary
j for the protection of society. What all
j good otizrn* would be glad to see would
i be a general recognizance among ail
| classes that not even the semblance of
| sn excuse to resort to lynch law existed,
j But has society with us reached the
! point, an* wnere in America, where we
i can depend with perfect confidence upon
the courts to tit the punishment to the
crime? Have the statutory laws in
many .States, in fact, placed a sufficing
punishment upon certaiu heinous crimes
to deter the evilly minded and protect
* o :iety? In Ohio, for example, the max
imum penalty for rape appears to be
twenty years imprisonment. Is that an
adequate punishment for such a fiendish
outrage—especially when the chances
dor pardon or early discharge lor “good
behavior/’ are taken into account?
The criminal lavf is, notoriously, loose
ly administered in this country. The
delays and technical maneuvers during
the pendency of prosecution render the
cbauces of conviction, and particularly
of the imposition ot a heavy sentence,
extremely light and problematical. If
ihe law and courts do not protect society
mu*t not society protect itself? l^ave
we suriendered our right of self-defense,
either individually or collectively, by
becoming citizens or organized society?
We would like to see justice legally
administered on all occasions, in a swift
and adequate manner. But is it so ad
ministered anywhere in this country?
With the peculiar conditions existing
in the South the Southern people hnve
to deal with an element that bothers no
other American community It w ill not
do to argue to Southern people that
lynching does not lessen rape—they
know better. Where the crime is now
too frequent it would become common
did not dca'.h in its quickest and wor*t
form stare the brutes in the face.’
The unwritten law, therefore, will con
tinue to be administered until the writ
ten law and its enforcement fully meet
Jhe exigencies ot the situation. And
this seein* to be the determination else
where than in the South,—Houston
Post.
THE DANGER
to which the Expectant Mother is
exposed and the foreboding and
dread with which she looks for-
ward to the hour of woman's
severest trial is appreciated by but
few. All effort should be made
to smooth these rugged places
in life's pathway for her, ere she
presses to her bosom her babe.
MOTHER’S FRIEND
allays Nervousness, and so assists
Nature that the change goes for
ward in an easy manner, without
such violent protest in the way of
Nausea, Headache, Etc. Gloomy
forebodings yield to cheerful and
hopeful anticipations—she passes
through the ordeal quickly and
without pain—is left strong and
vigorous and enabled to joyously
perform the high and holy duties
now devolved upon her. Safety
to life of both is assured by the
use of “Mother’s Friend,” and
the time of recovery shortened.
I know one lady, the mother of three
children, who suffered greatly in the
birth of each, who obtained a bottle of
‘Mother's Friend' of me before her
fourth confinement, and was relieved
quickly and easily. All agree that their
labor was shorter and less painful.”
Johx G. Polhill, Macon, Ga.
T. -I., .h.FI.M.ct. , ““ v ' h '*
; for outrage change* hi* tune when some
rl ‘<; Waycross llafehnll Club will leave j , j. own family are the victims,
on a trip through Honda where they will j J x
play all the strongest club* iu that state
Manager Wilson ha* signed ’
plHFt- . - -
will at pear in Tuesday*# Herald. Tin
will he a very strong one and he expects
great work from them He will have about
four home !»oy* along with him and there
will fa* twelve men on the team. The fol
lowing are some of the the cluta who they
will play against: Jacksonville, Feman-
slinu. St. Augustine, Palntka. Orlando, Ocala
Bartow. Tallahassee. Quincy. Tampa, Mon
ticello, Gainesville and Port Tampa. Dates
an- given by both clubs in most place* and
which trill also appear tomorrow. On their
return they will play ul«rat twelve games at
home And will close* for the season. Keep
your eyes on the boys.
Trrmrndiom Strides cf the Bell.
The Sonthv-rn Bell Telephone Company
has reached Jacksonville with is long dis
tance line from Savannah, and within a few
weeks they will have conneetions to Atlan
ta. Montgomery, Tallahassee and interme
diate points. The probability is that the
company will hnild exchanges in all impor
tant towns and citieswhere they have no ox-
changes. The Bell has nearly readied
Montgomery from Atlanta and Augn*tu
The Western Union Telegraph < lorn pan v’s
poles ore being used by the Bell ami the
sreteliing of the line* i* done rapidly
Way cross may l>e connected with the. »ys-
Bcv. D. Morrl
> Otsdi
Rev. 1) M mispo, an aged Methodist di
vine of Warcsboro, died |at hi* home iSun-
day morning at 11 o’clock: after a few day.
illness. Rev. Morrison was borp June 19
UC3. and entered the ministry in August,
1853. He preached his last sermon at
Pierce chapel, in Fierce county, on Sunday.
A Bit of Local History.
During the late war lietwen the north and
south* number of wealthy^ slav
and planter* from i
>!kcr* along the Georgia .-oast fai
n and just -outh of Waycmn*
i-I.ed several farms. At the ci
var the refugees sold the land
itnl returned home. The i
ibandoned ami old field pjr.es have
cultivate*!-
ght lamb
ml .-tab
-e of th«
If Pryfersor Andree gets back
Anoift Abbott, “the little Georgia
wonder,” is entertaining the people ot*
Tampa with het so-called super-natural
power.
The lock-step has been abolished at
the Detroit house ot correction because
it was thought to facilitate the spread ot
contagion.
The output of coal in Yorkshire last
year was' *23,939,059 tous, an increase of
1,131,562 tons as compared with the
previous year.
Wanted—To exchange house in Atlanta
rone in IPaycruss. Value, $1,700.00.
17 3d3w W. A. Roberts,
Way cross, Ga.
A meeting ot’ five thousand negroes
asst moled at Ocean Grove, N. J. They
were considering the matter of immi
grating to Africa.
Mr. Sherman may be getting along
in years, but he still seems to be entirely
too vigorous to suit the London editors.
—Cleveland Leader.
Berrien county took the prize ter the
largest melon raised in the Cfouth this
season. It was two aud a half feet long
and weighed 78 pounds.
So far the McKinley administration
has made itself notable more by the
good It has undone than by the good it
has done.—Atlanta Journal.
Last year no fewer than 10,000 school
children were taught to swim by instruc
tors employed by the London Schools
Swimming Association.
ith
Woycroaa HUtea.—They ■*» m Corps of
Uoori Allots and *plendlrf gm.
"Captain O’Brien’s boys.” as the Way-
eross Rifles an- known, are veterans in camp
service at St, Simon. They have participa
ted in every one of the encampments lit Id
there, and nea ly all of them know* every
nook and corner ot t*re island.
Hie Rifles are particularly well kuown as
Daw Crawford Brsght Book.
Deputy Sheriff Cason returned last night
from Georgetown with Dan Crawford, the
murderer. Mr. Cason had notmuhle in
bringing Crawford back, and reports that
the negro had nothing to say.
Dan Crawford killed bis wife in Way-
crow about a month since in cold blood and
will doubtless pay the penalty of his crime.
a population
saloons since
no-license
Cambridge. Mass.,
of 85,000, has had
1886, the people voting
eleven consecutive years.
Neuralgia, and long depression, caus
the hair to turn gray prematurely. Hull
Hair Renewer will restore the color, and
prevent the hair from falling.
The total revenue of the United King
dom for the second quarter of 1897 was
$127,479,300, an increase of $7,023,^95
over the same period of* 1896.
A lateral canal »«»th>* river Loir**, so
us to make the rivt-r navigable, is uuder
way in Franc. The canal ia tub** 150
miles long and cost 12**,; lift,00<1 franc-.
Itch on human, mange on horses «!»*•
and all acock, cured ra 30 minutes I y
Woolford’a pjanitarv L *ti«*n. *i*liis never
fail*. 5*.I«i byA.B McWhorter * C*»
Fifty Years A to.
This H the way it was bound to look
When grandfather had his “picter took.*
These were the shadows cast before
The coming of Conjurer Daguerre
And his art; like a girl in a pinafore
Borne day to bloom to a goddess fair.
Men certainly were not as black, we know
As they pictured them, 50 years ago.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
began to make new men. Just
as the new pictures ot men
began to be made. Thousands
of people fronted the camera
with skins made clean from
blotch and blemish, because
they had purified the blood
with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It
Is as powerful now as then.
Its record proves it. Others
imitate' the remedy ; they
Bant imitate the record:
80 Years of Cures.
HI, S«l. nr
Ticket Agent Drayton sold 151 tickets to
Brunswick. 41 to m-ksoiiville, a to Tybee
and 45 focal tickets Sunday morning l*efore
6 *M-l**ek. On the excursion to Savannah
yesterday be sold 36 tickets.'
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that
contain Mercury,
murcury will surely destroy the senm
of smell and completely derange the
whole sys ein when entering it through
the mucous surfaces. Such urtic.es
should never be u-ed except on prescrip
lions from reputable physicians, us the
damage they will do is ten told to the
good you can possibly derive from them.
Hall’s Catarrh Cute, manufactured by
F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O.. ••••mains
no mercury, and is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood aud mucous
surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's
Ca arrh Cure, be sure yon get the gen
uine. It is taken internally and is made
in Toledc, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A Co.
Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bot
tle.
$1.00 FEB BOTTLE at all Drag Stores,
t sent by mail on receipt of price.
RflOKS Containing invalnaltle information of
Voce I®*®”** to all women, will be sent to
rnfcc any address upon' application, bj
The ADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. *n*N*». O A.
The Qattmau Base Ball Club Here.
The Quitman base hall club arrived in the
city this morning and will play the Waycross
at the park this afternoon. The Quit-
club came in from Savannah where
they have just played two games, defeating
kivamiah club Saturday, and playing
even inning game yesterday, each club
making only one run. The game this after-
i prui
j he a good c
McKinley’s prosperity boom i
bursted bubble.
Relief in Six Hours.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder di-
eases relieved in six hours by the "New
Great South American Kidney Cure.”
This new remedy is a great surprise on
account of its exceeding promptness in
relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys,
back and every part of the urinary pas
sages in male or female. It relieves re
tention of water and pain in passing it
almon immediately. If you want qu»ck
relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold
by A. B. McWhorter & Co-, Druggist,
Way cross, Ga.
'Don’t Limp
■Through Life)
racked by Rheumatic pains. It
handicaps your whole career.
Of course you wouldn't If you
could help it—and you can.
La Granger-
Female College.
This institution leads in the ad
vantages of Sdid Chriatsan Ed
ucation. Music. Art, Elocution.
Health and Economy of Dress,
Invite Investigation. Catalogue
beautiful. Session begins Sept.
. 15th, 1897.
Rufus W. Smith, Pres.
LA GRANGE; GA.
A Big Excursion. i
The largest excursion of the season passed |
through the city yesterday enroute from j AWWlBV(
Tliomasville to Savannah. There were lif- I the higiu-
•en cars in the train and they were packed
•ith a living muss of jolly humanity. The
excursionists have two day* in Savunnali.
1 Wa
- Wa
Give us plenty of silver dollars in Way-
cross and the boys may liave all the goll in
Alaska.
For all kinds of harness and saddles, Jones
and Thomas can make you prices as well as
quality satisfactorily.
We wouldn't mind going to Alaska if we
could take a little canned Wnycross weather
along for use next winter.
Capt. J. F. Stone, who makes monthly
tours of this section, s*ys the crops of .Strath
Georgia are unusually fine.
The Teachers’Institute for Ware county
will convene next. Monday at the high
school building in Way cross.
It is right to educate your children, but
don’t give them all education and fail to
lecrii them a little common sense.
Truck raising in the neighborhood of
Waycross is a* coming industry which will
prove a gold mine for this section.
The Satilla river is rising rapidly. This
will break up the dynamiting business, for
a time at least.
Mr. Blalock. Boston. Thomas county, is
here today. Mr. Blalock is an old time
friend of the editor of the Herald.
Allen Townsend, formerly of the Call,
now of the Waycross Herald spent yester
day in the city.—Brunswick Call.
Misses Cleo Archie and Della Cosby re
turned to their home in Waycross last night
after spending several weeks on St. Simon.—
Brunswick Call.
Educate Your Daughters.
The LaGrauge (Ga.) Female College offers
unequalled facilities for educating young
ladies. Read their advertisement and send
for catalogue. It will intrress you
jy 31 8tw
English Spavin Liniment removes all
hard, soft, or calloused Lumps and
Blemishes from bones, blood spavins,
curbs, splints, sweeney. ring-bone, stifles,
sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc
Save $50 by use of one bottle. War
rant* d the most wonderful blemish cure
ever known. Sold by A B. McWhor
ter A Co., Druggists, Waycross, Ga.
I and Whbfcey HsbRs
1 - t hoxaewit"
l Bock of p
Jill. Forakef, of Ohio, is the only
member of the U. S rienare who was
graduated at Cornell, although that
that'bodv contains a number ot gradu
ates of Yale ami Harvard.
The Atlanta city authorities have
pa*s£d an ordinance forbidding the oe-
groea from being on the streets of the
Gate’City after midnight. After mid
night is the time that the average dar
key likes to take liis airing.
The action ofithe 4 *pops” at the receut
Nashville conference -hows that the
party is divided in twain. t >ne taction
will be headed by Butler, the other by
Wataon. Between the two no agree
ment seems p ^ssible and the beginning
of the end of "populism” is at hand*
Tutt’s Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
Perfect Health.
| Keep the system in perfect or-
, ; der by the occasional use of
the! Tutt’s Liver Pills. They reg-
e guest ot honor at the Waterloo i the bowels and produce
banquet in the department of the Youne. <■ ^ Vi^OfOUS Body*
A great «ute*man r.vrofiv ■ reiu.rted For sick headache, malaria, bil-
that if this great union were i<» be pre
served for any great length of time the
South would have to do it. The editor
of the Herald made tha» statement
twenty yearn ago.
T. G. Stevens, of Boston. Ga..
today. Mr. S'evens i* an old \
of the editor of the Herald and
best men in Thomas county.
in the city
com ra< le
one of the
tU- National gaili-y
rw’se go muoreigii or ;
And there’* Flanagan, tin 1/
murder* r. win we trial »:n-tveti j
: time or thru. Fuat thing y**»
Judge Lynch will W wanting t**
someth.nr almut him.
M. Bail lot, lt>4 years of age. a
be believes, the last survs\*ur
iousness, constipation and kin
dred diseases, anabsolutecure
"S Liver PILLS
sturnetl from the Is-
W. C. Holmes E-*q. \
land last night.
Miss Lnla Sweat letomed from St. Simon
with her father last night*
It looks now as if we were to have plenty
of rain for fodder palling time.
Hon. C. C. Thomas left this morning for
Oxford on a visit io his family.
Supt Dunham was in the city .Sunday
but left earlier than he expected.
peaches.
Mi#w Lucy and Anna Twitty and J/r.
Tuesday the third day
1 l»est bidder for cash, l e-
hours of sale, lot numl*er
ir in block number Four in that part of
city of Waycross. Ware county. Georgia,
*wn os New Waycross. Said property
levied on under an execution issued from
the county court of Ware county in favor ot
O J Lehman A < ompany and" against A.
R. Bennett. 8aid property being in the pos-
d having Iwn levied upon as
ofthed
of this 1
the said defendant
This 5th day ol July, 1807.
T. J. McClellan.
79 4t Sheriff. Ware County, Georgia.
Sheriff’s Sale.
There will be sold Indore t^e Ware county
court house door in Waycross Georgia on
Tuesday the third day of August, JK97. to
the highest ami liest bidder for cash, be
tween the legal hours of sale, that lot of
land lying an I l>eing in the city of Way-
cross, Ware county. Georgia, on the south
side of Thomas street and fa,utided
north by Thoihas street, on the west by
lands of Mrs. Geoigiu tones, on the south by
land of William Parker, and on the east by
land of C. H. Rahil, said land levied on as the
property oft he defendant, J. A. Murray, un-
of H. 8. McCreary and against the
said defedent, J. A. Murray and J W.
Mock A Bro., said land fa*ing "in the posses
sion of the said defendant Murray and legal
notice of said levy having been given the
said Murray.
This 5th day of July. 1897.
T. J. McClellan,
7 9 it Sheriff, Wan.* County. Georgia.
Micriff’s Sale.
There will be sold before the Ware county
court house door in Waycross, Georgia, on
Tuesday the thin! dgy of August, 1897, to
tlie highest aud best bidder for cash between
the legal hours of sale that tract of land in
the fifth district * f originally Appling, now
Ware county, Georgia, and being a part ot
lot number fonr hundred and seventy-nine
thereof. !>egimiing in the southwest corner
Of said lot and running north twenty-six
chains and thirty-three links, then w-s*
forty-three chains down a small drain north
into a branch known as the Middle Branch
said branch then i*eing the line west to
Ihe original line, then the original line hack
south and around to the same again, contain
ing two hundred and forty-five acres m re
or less and lieing the property described in
a certain deed recorded in the clerk’s office
of Ware county in deed book "G” on page
three hundred and eighteen, reference there
to being hereby made. Also that tract of
land lying in the northwest corner of lot
11.h. 1890 by Dailey Wilson to T J. Files!
ttis being the same property as described in
a certnin deed recorded in Deed Book "G”
page five hundred and thirty-one of the rec
ords in the office of theClerk of Ware hur-
K rior Cdurt, reference to said deed !>eing
reby made. The above described prop
erty is levied on as tne property of the de
fendant T. J. Fales under and by virtue of
a certain execution issue 1 from the
County Conrt of Ware county in favor of B.
H. Tanner and against the said defendant
T. J. Fales. Notice as required by law hav
ing been given the defendant, Fales. This
t. j. McClellan.
Sheriff Ware county, Georgia.
July, 5th. 1897.
anityeuralgiG
IQjket
f goes straight to the Liver, where
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dys
pepsia, Headache and most
ether ills start.
It cleanses this organ and
makes it active again—the add
leaves your blood, and you’re
cured. Testimonial below.
I nave been treated for general
debility and chronic rhetunatiam for
ten Teare without any relief. Three
bottles of your medicine has cared me-
S F. CLAKK, Warren ton, Fla.
Ask Your Druggist cr Merchant For lb
CCLLEN k NEWMAN,
£u!c Proprietors,
Knoxville* Tennessee.
Are different from all other
medicines. Each performs
a specific duty, thus doing away with
drastic purgatives and curing by the
Mild Power Theory.
One Pink Pill touches the liver, re-
moves the bile, the bile
moves the bowels. The
Tonic Pellet does the rest.
Have one? Sample free at any store.
Complete Treatment, 25 doses *5c.
Brown MPg. Co., N. Y. a Greeneville. Tenr.
■botanic!
BLOOD BALM
— City Marshal Miller is staying most of the
diy in the clerk’s oflSce. during the absence
of Clerk Bin!, whose daughter i* still very
Lick.
A negro suffering from a slight pfatol
wound in his head was in tlie dty this
morning. Whence be came, how he was
wonnded. and by whom, he did not say.
Tb Herald is proud of tlie Waycross
Rifle*. They never fail, no matter where
dk-y go. to make a recod for efficiency in
and dicipline. for soldierly bearing and
^ tit-manly l>ehavior. Our soldier boys
|i*tbebeatin the Sooth, or the North
STATE OF GEORGIA—Ware County:
Mattie J. James, wife of T. J. James, has
8tiuon applied for exemption of personalty and set
ting apart and valuation of homestead, and
I will pas* upon the same at 10 o’clock,
on the 28th day of July 1897 at my ••ffice in
Waycross. said county. This July 5.1897
WARREN LOTT. Ordinary.
1 ia recommended. It
benefit from tbe first dose,
effectually driving out all
m germs from the system tbroogh
leaiom of tbe skin, liver and kid
neys without nny unpleasant or Injurious
effects. It ia not tbe result of Ignorance
or aaperatitlon. bat it ia founded upon
common sente and a thorough knowledge
ot modern medical science. It effectually
£ 11 rifles and enriches the blood and brings
ealtb to tbe sufferer. As a general tonic
It ia wltbout a rival, and in Its analysis of
health-giving properties It is absolutely
beyond comparison with any remedy ever
offered to tbe poblL: **. Is a panacea for all
Ilia resulting Iron* ’ -<.»>ure and impover
ished blood—the - -nt of life; quickly
, t:-r% r-aawia. gkia
~ StVt&shsu
Femah* Wsak*
1, etc.
r with a wonder-
INVESTIGATE FOR YOURSELF.
Send for our Frew ■—k ef TalasMs
‘ torethe —
-. -ertificau
om tbe simplest to tba i
hicuv uisesae, after all known ><iuw<.
bad failed. These certificate* testify with
no uncertain sound, that Botanic Blood
Balm Is the besi.cheapeat, quick eat, great
est and moat powerful Blood Purifier ever
known to the world.
Pwca—CLOO per bottle; $5.00 for « bottles.
For sale by druggists; if not, send to us.
Address OLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ca.
BLOOD POISON
PATENTS PROCURED.
EUGENE W. JOHNSON.
Sslicitsr uflttimy in Patent Cisit
1729 N**w York a ve , Washington, D: (J
L/ffice eatablitheJ 1868, catr^e* m ilsfit
Corrcspondence solicited
War** Sheriff’s
Will In* .*
said county.
the fii»t Tiic-day
tin* t.rart H*»u«c,
the legal hours
of sale to the highest bitldei ....
the following pr»*perty. to-u it: One hun
dred (100) a«-re* of lot ffftand. immln-r t.»u*e
hundred and e ev«**i <3ll) in the 5th »;*-
triet of Ware county, fanind*-*! on the w««t
by lain!* *»f Karaite Sweat. efi*l l»v fa»:*l- -f
SylvesterTn tier, north by mn.N of K. W.
L*e. and south by faud- of Jesse I'.nilk. ami
hI**o tw«* hundn-d and ninety t
GEORGIA.
Wake Cocntt,
niieratf. ir. J. «;annon. Administrator of j twelve (:;i2t" iii tlV*^ 5fh *Di-
j. _ - — conrt' in . county, and Iranud*-*! a* f«dl*n
west by latid- «»I l: M. Ijewi*. e.
^ —■*— — |»fT 1*. .Lee. north hy Imnli
(^nnon s^ate. TU9 gt thercforeto cite aH } fhreat and Je*e Pa«dk. and
Snsan i’annon. represents
lib petition, duly filed add entered
cord, that he ha* fully administered 8usan
f laml iniinlte'' three litiiulre-1 ai d
~ ‘ I'Van*
«>u the
persons concerned, kindred and cleditors.
show cause, if any«tbey can, why said ad
mihbtrator should not be discharged from , M
his administration, and receive letters of; theWMth l>t*ttu-!. O
dt-niL-ston on the first Monday in October. 1 favor of the Grace-lirantlev
by land* of J. S. Jone*.
as the property of J
mn
tlu*
1897.
Given under my hand and official signa-
, against *aid J<
i*I land 1.
Paulk tn -citWv
i**up*l front the J11’ . ni
. Irwin«-rainy
ompu
Sheriff Ware Cot