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X LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. *
H4+*+*+++M+444+*
SHERIFF’S SALE FOR UNRETURN
ED WILD LAND FOR TAXES FOR
IT*
GEORGIA—7/art Count/.
Will bfc sold uii the lat Taesds7 In
May next at the court house door In
■nid county within the legal hours of
aaJe. to the highest and host bidder for
tub, the folio wing lot of onretvraed
wild land; »•
Lot of land No. slxty-elght (68) In
the 11th district of said county.
Levied or and by virtue of a tax
execution Issued by ft If. Lanier. Tax
Collector, Ware County, On., for Bute
and County tax due thereon and un
paid for the year 1105, to which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein reference la now had.
Also at the same time and place
will be sold lot of unreturned wild
land;'
• Lot of land No. sixty-nine (60) In
the 11th Dist. of said county.
Levied on and by virtue of- a tax
execution Issued by R. M. Lanier, Tax
Collector, Ware County, Ga., for State
and County tax due thereon and un
paid for the year 1905, to which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein reference Is now had.
Also at the same time and place
will be sold lot of unreturned wild
land:
Lot of land No. sixty-seven (67) In
the 11th Dlst. of esld county.
Levied on and by virtue of a tax
execution issued by II. M. Lanier, Tax
Collector. Ware County, Ga., for State
and County tax dc thereon and un
paid for the year 1905, to which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein reference is now had.
Also at the sjur.e timo and place
will bo sold lot of uhreturned wild
land: ' ' •« ■
Lot of land No. flfty-oas (51) In the
11th Dlst. of said county.
Levied *nn and ‘by virtue of a tax
execution Issuod by R, M. Lanier. Tax
Collec'or, Ware County, Ga . for State
and County tnx due thereon and un
paid for the year 1905, to which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein references Is now had.
Also at the same time and place
will be sold lot of unreturned wild
land;
Lot of land No. throo hundred and
twsnty-six in the 12th Dist of wafd
county.
levied on and by virtue of a tax
execution Issued by R. M. Lanier, Tax
Collector, War-* County, uL, for State
sn.1 County tax due tberoon and un
paid for the year 1905, to Which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein reference Is now had.
AIro at the sa.n
will he gold lot of
land:
Lot of land No. three hundred and
twenty (320) in the 12th Dist of said
county. 1
Levied on and hy virtue of 0 tax
execution issued hy R. M* louder. Tax
(^Hector. Woro County, Oa., for State
and County tax due thereon and
paid for the year 1905, to which exe
cution and each sod every recital
therein reference Is now had
count of their demands to me with
in the time prescribed by the law ol
Georgia, properly made out;.and si)
persona ladebtedgto said deceased arc
hereby requested to make Immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This, 9th day of January, 1906.
Georg# Walters, Jr.,
Administrator of George Walters,
38 Ogdem Avenue,
Chicago, Illinois.
GEORGIA—Ware County.
Nntioe in hereby given to Ml per
sons having demands against U. C.
Keith, late of said oount7, deceased,
to preaunt them to me, properly made
out, within the time prescribed by law,
in to show the character and^
amount; and all persons indebted to
said deceased are requested to maks
immediate payment to me.
J.-.G. Reynold!,
Jacksonville, Fla.
Executor of & last will and testa
ment of H. C. Keith, deceased.
Ware Superior Court. April term,
1906.
J. H. Anderson, %
u.
Mary Anderson.
To Mary Anderson:
Tou are hereby required to appear
at the Superior Court of Ware county
on the third Monday in April next to
answer plaintiff’s petition for divorce.
In default whereof the court will pro
ceed as to justice shall appertain.
Witness the Hon. T. A. j Parker,
Judge of said court, tjiis 24th day of
February, 1906.
E. J. DERRY, Clerk'.
In the District Court of the United
States for the Southwestern Div
ision of the Southern District of
# Gdb/gia.
In the"matter of
D. P. Wooley, Bankrupt,
In Bankruptcy.
To the creditors of D. P. Wooley, of
Waycross, In the county of Ware said
District, a bankrupt:
Notice is hereby given that on the
3rd. day of April 1906, the said D. P.
Wooley was duly adjudged bankrupt,
and that the first meeting of his
creditors will be held at Brunswick,
Georgia, on the 13th, day of April
1906, at- ten o'clock In the forenoon
at which time the said creditors may
attend, prove their claims* appoint
a trustee, examine the bankrupt and
transact such other business as may
properly come before said meeting.
At Brunswick, Georgia, this 3rd, Jay
of April 1906.
MAX ISAAC,
1 U. 8. Referee.
Also at the same time aid place
will be sold lot of unreturned wild
lands:
Lot of Isnd^No. three hundred and
twenty-seven (327) in ths 12th Dist.
of said county:
Levied on and hy virtue of a tax
execution issued by R. M. latnier, Tax
Collector, Ware County, Ga., for State
and County tax due thereon and un
paid for the year 1905, to which exe
cution and each and 1 every recital
therein reference Is now had.
Also at the same time and plnce
will be sold U»t of unreturned wild
land: J
Lot of land No. two hundred and
fifty-one (251) in ths 12th Dist. of said
county.
Levied on nnd by virtue of a tax
execution Issued by R. M. Lanier. Tax
Collector. Ware County, Ga., for State
and County tax dua thereon and un
paid for the year 1905, to which axw
cut ion and each and every recital
reference u now nad.
Go to M. J. Murray* for first class
plumbing at reasonable pricet. Don’t
fail to let him estimate on any work
you may contemplate doing in the
plur.blng line. 1 ’Phone 254 30 tf.
GEORGIA—Wore County.
J. M. Williams, administrator of the \q anc j conveyed
estate of Ella A. Journlganj late of I
Some idea of the scandalous over
production in the government print
ing office in Washington of worthless
publications which can not be forced
Into circulation or given away may be
formed from the statement of an in
vestigating committee that there are
MAGIC ON TAP.
It Mmy It Doasht flit Sam* hi Dry
Goods or Groceries.
Magic has become a mail order busi
ness. Chicago is the center of tlie trade-
in the United States. There Is tnauu
factured in Chicago magic enough to
supply the Merlins of the world, and
400 cartoads of this dead documentary eTer j week large orders for sleight of
matter on hand, and that the govern
ment is renting three buildings at a
cost of $18,600 dollars a year for the
sole purpose of storing the stuff.
There is good money enough wasted In
the yearly printing outlay to build a
battleship every four years. ‘
We regret that we could not go up
to Moultrie to see Smith. Not Hoke,
but Ralph, the young, correspondent
of the Atlonta Journal, who is the
possessor of positively the most en
larged imagination now in captivity.
—Thomasville T-E.
Items of Interest.
Edinburg has adopted a scheme for
collecting for charity througl! a cen
tral office on the lines of the Liverpool
system.
giyde Fitch has gone abroad to
spend tpe summer. He has a vlla at
Florence, where he passes* much of
h:s time while In Europe. ,
There is a shuttlecock famine In Eu-
band tricks are filled and tent off to
the Philippines, Australia, Germany.
England and France.
The times of Cagliostro are dead.
Black magic and the delusions which
belief In It made possible are things
if the past. Conjuring has been lifted
from the plane of witchcraft to that of
pure legerdemain. It has become a
white art yet the world la not less
eager to be deceived than It waa in the
old days. Yoganldra, the goddess of il
lusion, still reigns. This fact consti
tutes fully one-half of the unusual
business of the magic shop.
A New Colony on The Atlentie.Coast
Line.
Prof. C. W. Waugbtel, of Pennsyl
vania, has just closed a deal with T.
E. Walnright for 6 000 acres of land,
In this undertaking the advantage
adjacent to Folkston, Ga., and will be
gin at once to settle it. Professor
Waughtel has had considerable experi
ence ^n the colony business. He has
in hmls undertaking the advanta(4fl
of being at the county* site, with a
good system of public schools and
churches already established. ‘ *
The land is north and west of Folk-
ston, bordering tie town on two sides
and only about half a mile from the
depot. In addition to being near the
There Is not a feat known to the pro- town, both the main line and the Jesup
fesslon which cannot be bought, and so- . . ll o - ..
clety to full of people, young and old. tsort 1,ne of ,Ile At l #nUc Coast Line
who are eager to become magicians. Railroad run through the land. This
Apparently there I. no other kind of wlth the i an( j, on the cast sl(]e
dust In the eyes which is so popular , . •. ,
socially as this double mystery of sight * own recent, y purchased by Dr. H. A.
Administrator's Sate.
Will be,sold before the Court House
door In Waycross, Ware county, Ga.,
between legal hours of sale on May
1st. 1906 to the highest, bidder, for
cash, the following described lanJ, ly
ing and being in the City of Waycross, | r0 pe and players of Badminton are anisin by which the “father of modern
in said County and State,- (containing I therefore In trouble. The couse of | f .’ prlmary and the word democrat ls
■ the famine Is a strike In the Parts I ^e X^ tt -Zdvauce to ShLC ! ““'W lett 0,,t - Somo mon,h “ a *°
and touch. Success Is equally a mat
ter of simplicity of apparatus and the
perfvrmer's skill. Anybody con become
a conjurer who has inanunl dexterity,
personal presence, tact nud fluency of
speech. To become a phenomenon In
this calling, however, requires, of
course, phenomenal capacity.
The magic shop is an .interesting
plnce, full of curious - apparatus nnO
familiar objects which are all bewitch
ed, subject to the spell of the ma £
glcinn's hand. Conspicuous among the
collection is the famous orange tree
of Robert Houdln, that piece of mech-
Cannon if Waycross, will open up at
once for settlement about 15 000 acres
of land.—Southern Investor,’ (New
York.)
Strange as it may sounds Warn
county made provisions for every
shade of political*'division to vote ex
cept democrats. The resolution reads
that any republican, populist, social
ist or prohibitionist can vote in the
originally 37% acres, more or letfn;)
bounded on North and East by At
lantic Coast Line Railroad Company’s
right of way and on the South an !
We«t by the original Jot lines of lot
shuttlecock factory, the only place at
*.’’licit the toys are produced.
The parisn church at Tobblng, Eng-
! nd, which dates hack to the thir
teenth century, and was recently re
number two hundred nflJ three, being J stored, possesses n retnnrkable ancient
all of t.ie Southwest corner of said I instrument, a barrel orgon, which has
lot .203 of the Eighth District of Ware ! three barrel * ““d
County, lying South and West of said
Railroad's right of way, except such
parts thereof as were sold by George
Walters prior to his death,,said ports
being as fol-
said county deceased, having filed his-
Lot^i numbered one (1) to eight (8)
artificial orange tree, yet once, be
fore the startled eyes of Faris, it burst
miraculously into bloom at the wave-of
Iloudiu's wand. Us blossoms became
fruit, ripe oranges, which were dis
tributed among the audiChce, and from
the orange at the top two .butterflies
flew out bearing a handberchlef be
longing to one of the spectators.
American conjuriug, declares the
play thirty-six mmj w |, om the shop belongs, is the
j tunes. It is turned by the usual han- hiost original and inventive In the
j e - world. Its range Is much wider than
\ j that of the marvelous Chinese Jug-
“ • glory, nnd beside the delicacy of Its
A Very Industrious Hen. 1 method the famous Indian Jugglery Is
_______ 1 clumsiness personified.
Magic has certainly become at hist
Mr. W. J. Durant, who has been j “an art ns lawful as eating.” now that
alstng chickens- largely for Mexl* j tl,e ™rUl is linked by It. and the
magicians In the various countries
form a great broth'
deal to say around his home about ( Mage M6rlin. of vast wit nud a huu>
First Monday in April, 1906.
WARREN LOTT,
Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Ware County.
Maggie L Willlaius, administratrix
ou the estate of Henry C. Williams,
havlngdeceased having applied to
the Court of Ordinary of
said County for leave to
sell the real estate and personal prop-
erty, belonging to said estate
persons concerned are required
to show cause in said Court by the
tlret Monday in May next, if any they
can, why said application should not be
granted.
This 2nd, day of April, 1906.
John T. Myers. Judge C. C. W.
Presiding—Warren Lott Ordinary of
said county beiug disqualified.
GEORGIA—Ware County.
The appraisers appointed to sot
apart a twelve months support for
the family of John S. «6harp, deceased,
having filed thalf return, all persons
concerned are hereby cited and re
quired to show canse in the Court of
of block 45;) lots numbered ono (1)
to seven (7) inclusive of
blodk six (6;) lots two (2)
three (3.) four (4.) five (6) and seven
(7) of block seven (7;) lots one (1)
and two (2) of block eight (8;) lots
four (4) and six (6) of block nine (9;)
lot eight (8) of block ten (10;) lots
two (2) and three (3) of block
thirteen (13;) lots one (1) three (3,)
four (4,) five (5.) seven (7.) nine (9)
and ten (10) of block fourtee^ (14;)
lots ono (1.) two (2,) three (3.) four
(4.) five (6.) six (6.) seven (7.) eight
(8,) nine (9.) twenty (20,1 twenty-one
(21) and twenty-two (22) of block
fifteen (15;) lots two (2,) four (4)
and six (6) of block sixteen (16;) lots
three (3) and seven (7) of block
seventeen (17;) lots two (2) and four
(4) of block eighteen (18;) lots two
(21 and three (3) of block twenty-one
(21;) lot one (1) of block twenty-two
(22,*) lots six (6) and seven (7) of
block fifty-one (51;) lot A of block
eleven (11;) lot two (2) block
conveyed to MJtch Floyd by deed re
corded March 26th, 1894, In book “K”
593 of Ware County Records; four (4)
lot* bounded West by Railroad, North
Mso at th 1 *ame time and j Ordinary of »ald county, on the first! by eight (8) foot walk. East by land
rill be sold lot of unreturned wild j M°nday ln May next, why the applica-! of Milly Roff, then 8outh onehundred-
v , ’ tlon for said twelve months support j six (106) feet to forty-(40) foot street
Lot of land No. two hundred and , . , t ,
fifty-one (251) In the 12th Dist. of said M h°nM not be granted. * j convoyed to A. R. Bennett by deed
' This April 2nd, 1906.
Levied on and bv virtue of a taxi
execution Issued by R. M. I-nnlor. Tax j J °an T. Myers, ;
Collector, Ware County, Go., for State • • j n f *‘h,> r- n u- !
nad County tnx due thereon and un-*
paid for the year 1905, to which exo-j The Qramary of said county being
enil-m and’-MBtrtrtd eWJ recital, ..n^wiinvj.
ther In reference Is now had. j
Also at the same tlma aud plncfc? ... , * i
will be sold lot of un returned wild j OhORUIA—N\ are County.
’ Mary Goetee, administratrix on the :
the Increasing demand for Georgia
chickens in that market. One of
the old hens evidently heard him
talking on this line, nnd decided to
do her part toward meeting the de
mand. A little over three weeks
ago she was set on twenty-one eggs,
and last Saturday she came off the
nest with twenty-four chickens, some
of the eggs being doubles.
As we have about all we can stand
up under in vouching for things that
happen we tfhlft the responsibility
for this sjory to Mr. Durant, who held
up pfetty well in such matters in
the past.- Valdosta Times.
The Waycross Base Ball Association
has now about completed the roster
of the Waycross team of the Georgia
State League. A pitcher from Wil
mington, N. C., was* signed yesterday,
which now gives the association
almost a full team. The base ball
park has recently been put in shape
the diamond clayed, and everything
will be in readiness for the team
when the members begin to arrive
the latter part of next week. The
opening game^of the season will be
played with Nashville, Tenn., on April
20 and 22.
dred winters, has give
petition for discharge this Is to cite) mclua Le. of block one (1;) lots numb- I can ,rad0 has reC< ' n,ly had a s ° od form n great brotherhood. The skill of
all persons concerned to show cause j ^ OB0 to ^ (5) lncIttslve of
against the granting of this discharge ; (dock two (2;) lots numbered one (1)
nt the rogdlar term of court of Ordl-! to six (G) inclusive of block tlyee (3;)
nary for said county to be held on the lefts numbered three (3) and four (4)
Mrs. Myrick wanted .to know if Tom
Watson would let democrats vote in
the coming democratic primary, and
it looks very much like ae will hot
In Ware county, at. least. That wos
an oversight on the part of Ware, but
straws show which way the wind is
trying to blow.’ We have these pecu
liar resolutions before us as publish
ed in The Waycross Journal.—Hawk-
lnsville Dispatch.
Editor Harvard, of the Dispatch, has
got tne thing all # wrong so far as
Ware county is concerned. He should
read the Evening Herald if he wants
a correct stotement from this county.
No one will be allowed to yote in our
primady except Democrats or those
magic no less subtle because more w ^ 0 promise to be Democrats in future
easily accessible and more reudiiy un-
derstood.—Chicago Tribune.
DUnpiirnrlnic Hotel Towels.
“We lose money enough in stolen
towels every week to board half a
dozen porters,” said n hotel clerk.
“We never know exactly where they
go. but they certainly disappear, and
that right fast If some of the people
who take our towels had exerted
their energies In a more laudable voca
tion they would have been rich many
moons ago. There is scarcely a room
In the hotel that does not lose a towel
at legpt thuee times a week. Of course,
we place several kinds — face towels,
bath towels and just plain towels—in
each one, and some one finds them so
attractive that they are dropped Into
a grip and hustled out with the re
mainder of the luggage. When you
figure that a good bntb towel costs
from 10 to 20 cents and other towels
anywhere from 3 to 6 cents, you prob
ably can estimate the dead loss to a
hotel. It ls very convenient to drop
them into satchels, suit cases or
trunks, nnd they are right handy to
wrap shoes or other dirty articles of
clothing in.”—Philadelphia Bulletin.
Col. 'Estills’ denial that bis can
didacy is in the interest of any one
but himself is forceful and to the
point. But the insinuation was no
puerile and contemptible as to be
scarcely worth a denial.—Tifton Ga
zette. ,
land:
Lot cf land No. three hundred and
twerty-flve (325) In ths 12th OliL of
said county.
IA?vi»*d on and by virtue of a tax
execution Issued hy R. M. Lanier. Tax
Collector, Ware County, Ga., for State,
an>1 County tnx due thereon and
paid for the year 1995, to which exe
cution and each and every recital
therein reference Is now had.
All the above lots of wild and un
improved land contain four hundred
and ninety (490V aftf*. more or lest
each This Feb. 6.1906.
a -F. MILLER. .
. . < « . k .f - - Sheriff-
Admlr.l«tr»Uf'» H«tlc» to ^odjtob
'to oil cr*d-
In* Woltoto.
estate nf Jack Houston.
having applied to the Court of Or
dinary of said C'^uy for leave to
sell the land* bek.. ,lut to said estate*
for the purpose of distribution and
paying the depts of said estate. All
person* eonct rued are required
to show cause in eaid Court by the
first Monday In May next, if any they
can, why said application should not
v, .*, #
Warren Lott,
Ordinary.
recorded February 14th, 18915, In book
**Y’ page 68S of Ware County Records,
all of said land heretofore sold and
convoyed being parts \it “Walters Add
ition \o Waycross.”
Said laud will b»- sold ns the prop
erty of George Walters’ deceased, by
undersigned, as Administrator of the
Estate of said Georg® Walters, for the
purpose of paying debts and for distri
bution, under an order of the Court
of Ordinary of said County, granted
February 5th. 1906, during the Feb-
mary tenn, 1906* of said Court, au
thorizing said sale by undersigned.
This April 2nd. 1906.
.George Walters, Jr„
Administrator of George Walters,
deceased. *». . ..
AUBnrtym’fifir George Walters, Jr.*,
Administrator,
/ '
Ths Post Card Evil.
When Bessie’s parlor car sped epst,
Forlorn. I watched it out of sight;
Mv heirt was sore; but I hud hope—
Bess said that she 'would write,”
In just six days a post card came.
It bore, to my chagrin.
The message. “Having splendid time,”
O’er “City hall at Lynn.”
Twelve pages with love’s protests sad
I fpent the night to fill. \
Soon came the tidings, “Yours rec’d,”
With “Shaft at Bunker Hill.” ✓
Farewell!" ! wrote. “You love me not!
That fact is plain. Miss Bly.
Unless some token I receive
I am resolved to die!” .< ^
Today* two cards the postman brought/
Now, what can they Impl^?
Toomtr and Reynolds/ 1 ‘One picture Spleny* “Lover’s .Leap; 1
ra'lthr (Inuva WalUr*. Jr * One is “The Bluff at Rye!”
°“!i
Keep Close to the Right Kind.
Whatever you do in life, make any
sacrifice necessary, to keep In an am
bition arousiug atmosphere, nn envi
ronment that will stimulate you to self
development. Keep close to people
who understand you. who believe in
you, who will help you to discover
yourself and encourage you to make
the most of yourself. This may make
all the difference to you between a
grahd success and a mediocre exist
ence. Stick to those who are trying
to do something and to be somebody
In the world —people of high alms,
lofty ambition. Keep close to those
who are dead In earnest. Ambition Is
eontagiou*. You will catch the spirit
that .laminate your environment. The
success of those about upu who, ary
try lag to climb upward null cuconftjgc
mid stimulate you to struggle hapdeS*
if. you have uot doue quite 1 so wfej?
yourself.—Success Magazine. ’ \V
T*» Waterproof Boot*. .
Put a pound of tallow*nnd naif a
pound of resin :u a pot on the fire.
When melted and mixed, warm \he
boots and sfppiy the hot stuff with a
painter's bru*b until neither the sole
nor the upper leather will suck in any
more. If it Is desired that the boots
suouhl immediately take a polish, melt
an ounce of wax with a tenspoonfu! of
lampblack. A day after the boots bare
been treated with tallow and resin rob
over-them this wax In turpentine, but
not before the fire. The exterior will
then have a coat of wax alone and will
shine like a mirror. Tallow or any oth
er greafe becomes rancid rots the
Stftcblac as well as leather, but the
resin gives ft -aa antiseptic quality
FhJch preserves the whole. Boots and
■hoe* should be so large* as to admit of
Tfaty wiU then be
Straws show which way the wind
blows. In Muscogee county last week
the candidate for representative ad
vocating the disfranchisement of the
negroes, was handsomely defeated by
the democrats and that in one of the
counties Hoke had “already carried.”
Next!—Fort Gainea Sentinel.
The United States will not be out
done by England In the matter of
the largest ‘ battleship. The latter
country is now building the Dread-
naught, which, when completed, will
be the most formidable battleship
afloat But this distinction will not
be for long. The House Committee on
Naval affairs has recommended the
building of an even more powerful
vessel, In accordance with the autoges
tions of Secretary Bonaparte. The
new battleship is estimated to cost
$6,000,000,000, exclusive of armor and
armament. The committee recom
mended the largest ship practicable
to be constructed.
There U everything in holding Ue
right attitude toward life. People can
tMl,whether there la victory or defeat
In your face and your bearing; wheth
er you have winnig or losing material
in you. If you wear the air of the
vanquished In life, no employer will
want you. There must be victory In
your bearing. *
< ■
Toe Atlanta New* welt says: “The
tog of prejudice, paaalon. Insincerity,
slander and vituperation that baa been
gathered In the political atmosphere
of Georgia for the past few months,
baa become to denao as to obscure the
blue dome of truth, and to abut out
the sunlight of, reason." But It looks
like the fog Is breaking away n
mue.