Newspaper Page Text
THXWAY0R0B8 JOURNAL,
FRIDAY, FEB. 6, 1911
Ware Legal Advertisements
W. M. Toomer, for the use of the
Firit National Hank of Way
•tors,
Vs.
Riverside Park Company.
Foreclosure on Mortgagi
Realty.
In Ware Superior Court, I)e
eember Term, 1913.
It being represented to tit
court by the petition of plaintiff
in above stated ease, that bv deed
of mortgage dated December If),
1010, the said Riverside Park
Company, defendant in said case
conveyed to the said W. M. Too
mer, the realty described in said
petition for the purpose of secur
ing the payment of the three
promissory notes, likewise there
in described, including that eer
*ain note made by the said River
side Park Company to the said
W. ?►*. Toomer, dated on said De
cember If), 1910, and due two
year after dute, for the principal
sum of $2500.00, with interest af
ter maturity at the rate of eight
per cent per annum, which said
note is now post due and unpaid
It is therefore, ordered by the
court, that the said Riverside
Park Company do pay into this
court by the first day of the next
regular term thereof, to he held
on the first Monday in May 1914,
the principal, interest and cotta
due on said note, or show cause,
if any it has to the contrary, or
- in default thereof foreclosure he
granted to the said plaintiff, W.
Af. Toomer, for the use of the said
First National Hank of Waycrosa,
of said mortgage and the equity
of redemption of the said River
side Park Company therein ho
forever barred, and that service
of this rule he perfected on said
Riverside Park Company accord
ing to law.
Granted in open court, this De
cember 2, 1912.
T. A. Parker.
.Fudge S. C. W. C.
J. L. Sweat,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
A true copy from the minutes
of said court.
K. J. Berry,
Clerk Wore Superior Court.
1 9 oaw 4m.
Georgia, commencing at
terman
along w
id Qnar-
r south
U. S. Secretary of Labor
Issues His Annual Report
Wash i i
That nn
street 11> <
idled and ten IV
of Im
l»!ae„
sold as the property
talc of .Minnie T, Sir
••'I. for Hit inirpo
bntion &c„ as set out
.1 prop*
of the
plbuitb
Terms Cash.
.1. H. Strickland,
strator Instate of Mil
T Strickland, de.
1 0 4w
SHERIFF'S SALE.
GEORGIA Ware < omitv.
Will lie sold on the first Ti
v in March next, at public <
v, at the court-house door
id county . within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest hid
ler for cash an undivided one
half interest in tin- following do
rihed real estate situated in tin
city of Way cross, Ware county,
Georgia, to-wit:—Lots Nos. 12, 13,
14, 15, Hi. 34 and 35 in Block No.
1, oil in Central Park Sub-Divis
ion, in said city, a plat of which
of record in the office of the
Jlork of Ware Superior Court.
Said real estate levied Oil as the
property of .lolm T. Myers, to
satisfy an execution issued on the
22nd <In\ of September, 1908.
from the t'it\ Court of Way cross,
in said county, in favor of E. L.
Tannei. Cashier, against J. E. T.
Bowden and John T. M.\crs.
This February 4th. 1911.
I). W. Pittman.
Sheriff Ware County, Da.
Wilson, Bennett A Lamhdiii.
and Herbert W. Wilson. At
torne.vs for Plaintiff.
2 6 4w.
Ellis Island
if Labor,
lent of till
ugrant statin
'ew York bai
i. when
aboard
| Wales, 2,745. < in th
1890.553 (about 75 p»
I total) came from
| southern Europe s
Asia, divided fol
205.542; Ru^ia.
other hand,
cent of the
astern and
d western
ws: Italy,
principally
lithe
V,
biding Finland,!
137.245: II.
SAYS GLASS
IS NOT ENTITLED
TO SENATE SEAT.
By Wire to The Journal.
Washington, Feb. 3.—Vice-
President Marshall today laid be
fore the Senate a resolution from
a committee that “Frank Glass
is not entitled to a seat in the
Senate as Senator from Ala
bama." This is regarded as coil-
elusive that Glass will be denied
a seat.
14.128: Turkey
Portugal. 14.171
Kou ii
la i
brr ke window glass
part of Manhattan
. he sav.s: .
"The explosion
point considerably
Ellis Island than
which explosives ,
occurred at a
further from
the point at
re now habi-
made. It damaged tli>
migration station to the extent of
I!!!«.-.' til,'in *25.,mil. nnil would
.probably have caused great loss
j of life but for the fortunate fact
I that on the day of the explosion
there bail been no arrivals of Im
migrants at the station. In con
sequence of this destructive ex
plosion and of the fact that explo
sives are commonly transhipped
within about half the distance
from the station, efforts have
been made to lessen the dangers
of those transshipments to per
sons and property on Ellis Island.
It seems to he very doubtful,
however, from the voluminous
orrespondenee and reports upon
he subject ori file in the Bureau
of Immigration whether any rein- i
possible without eongres-1
sional legislation
291.040; Anst
gary, 117.580
Turkiaii Euro
in Asia. 23,95.
Spain, 6,167 :
and Montcncy
nia, 2.155:
The percentage of excluded
aliens is decreasing. In 1912 it
was 1.55 of those applying, and
in 1913, 1.38. The commissioner
general admitted this is partly
due to lack of funds an dimprop-
er inspection.
There were admitted 0,859 Ja
panese in th»» year. These con
sisted of forn
2,817:1 JACKSONVILLE SEEKS
GAME WITH WAYCROSS
According to letters received
by the local baseball association
today Jacksonville wants to play
Waveross a game in Jacksonville
during March or early in April.
The game may be played if the
right kind of terms are secured.
Other games that are being con
sidered in addition to the games
with the St. Louis Americans here
March 24 and 25 are games with
the St. Louis Nationals. The
sklents, par-j Brooklyn team wants to pla
Radium as Cancer Cure
Is Rapped by Speakers
WOLF OF WALL STREET
NOT NAMED LAMAR.
Washington. 1>.
(.•IV.vm-o to I la vi,
■Wolf <if Wall St
or NVwlamls ihiriii
on of (l,-ori;ia to
In- record show" i
lacon. “that this
not Lamar; that he
I know the nan
honored one in
spomlcd Mr. Newli
date the semi ti
protect its dignity.
in* incident aro
tor Lane was criti
•lands' com mitt
to hear testimony
debate in tin
■d name,
i* of Lama
\s desire tc
while Seua-
sing Senator
for refusing
William II
dents
vi ve
non laborers
t ti l ists.
The report
firearms in
warfare in c<
strikes," referring
recent happenings
Colorado. These n
hild
als, who wen
settled agricul
of resi-|P amo here »l*o. hut it Is believed
the expense of getting the Dodg
ers here from Augusta will he too
heavy.
us "the use of
eies of private
tion with labor
specially to
n Southern
ii arc trans
ported from state to state and
the traffic should be regulated
by the government the secretary
thinks. He refers to a business
•era engaged commercially
across state lines in supplying
corporations with an armed train
ed soldiery or police in numbers
running into hundreds and even
thousands."
This is the lirst report of the
II,. fecit,'* the' long history „f Department of I,t.l.or. which j Itailen sai( , tll(1 j,.,.,,
efforts to avert this ihuiirer »n,i ai ' ls 1,1 eomtrcsa «P- ,| le stat( , oi-eanizati
SHERIFF'S SALE.
STATE OK GEORGIA County
of Ware.
Ed Darby vs Minnie Darby. Pe
tition in the Superior Court of
Ware County, May Term, 1914.
To the Sheriff of Ware County
or his Deputy :
The defendant in the above
stated ease, the said Minnie Dar
by, is hereby required to he and
appear personally or by attorney
at the next term of the said .Su
perior Court to he held in and for
tlie .said County of Ware on the
first Monday in May next, then
and there to answer the plaintiff’s
petition for di\qrc* to which this
process h annexed, ns in default
thereof the court will proceed as
to justice shall appertain.
Witness the Honorable J. W.
Quineey, Judge of said Court, this
the 19th day of January. 1914.
K. J. BERRY, Clerk.
1-23-4 wk*
GEORGIA
Will be .v
day in Man
erv, at the
Wn
1111 \
I on the first Tie
next, at public oi
ourt liou.se in sji
county, within the legal hours
sale, to the highest hidd<
Otm Purcell Piano
4251*2:; Said personal property
levied oil as the property of Irene
Henderson, to satisfy an execu
tion issued from the December
Term 1913 of the City Court of
Wayeroiw, in said county, in favor
of l. S. Purcell against Irene Hen
derson.
I) W. Pittman.
Sheriff Ware County, Georgia.
Willson, Bennett & Lainbdin, and
Herbert W. Wilson. Attor
neys for Plaintiff.
2 0 4wks.
I hilosoplii/es:
Were ;i catastrophe to occur,
•sponsible Federal officials could
•t explain their own inaction b.v
•ferring to the vigilance, as it
is been suggested that they may
do, of local authorities. Such ex
ruses, though usually accepted
before disasters, are seldom ad
mitted afterwards."
The dynamite vessels, are said
to fail to keep the anchorage
boundaries marked out for them p*"
by the Bureau of Navigation. V ‘B
•the northerly limits of which are . VeH
• J(>,500 feet southerly from Ellis Is-| tWf
1 1 laud, he reports.
f| The Commissioner
last. It took
I Mar
four older bureaus. The sei
ry reviews the numerous labor!
disputes in which flic departnien
has offered mediation and draw
ji hopeful conclusion for the set
tlenient of strike troubles in th
HAYDEN A
BIG BOOSTER
Saturday night early Charles J.
Iladen, president of the Georgia
Chamber of Commerce, was in
Waycross, en route to his home in
Atlanta following a short bus
iness trip into Florida.
While here he stated that Way-
cross was one of the live ones of
Georgia and he was certainly de
lighted to see that progress was
a regular standby of this city. Mr.
nt meeting of
ion in Macon
unusually miccogwful, and he
j believed the Chamber of Com
merce was accomplishing much
good.
Discussing
•lie. on a resolution to inquire
whether the I'nited Steel Corpor
ation had received illegal rebates
from railroads.
The committee when it develop
ed that Greene's "board of strat
egy" was Lamar, and that Green
refused to testify unless he could
name a certain attorney to make
the investigation, amended Sena
tor Lane’s resolution for trans
mission to Attorney General Mc-
Reynolds and the Interstate Com
merce Commission merely for in
information.
Senator Lane attacked the com
mittee’s report as partial and in
complete. Senator Xewlands
quoted Green ns having said La
mar presented the resolution
tor Lane.
V have often wondered who
furnished the tolls for some of the
If-made men.
our children are subject to
attacks of croup, watch for th
first symptoms, hoarseness. Giv
situation eon- Chaiuberlain’s Cough Remedy
fronting the cotton growers of
the state Mr. Iladen said he was
satisfied everyone was now aware
of the condition to be met in the
next few years in Georgia and he
hoped by crop diversification
^ j Georgians would not be left in
soon as the child becomes hoarse
ami the attack may be wanted
off. Fore sale by all dealers.
OLIVER VICTIM OF
MISTAKEN IDENTITY.
Jackson, Miss., Feb. 4. - A
. a merchant ol Thomas- s t a tc so common among farm-
lin., was on his way homo jn othpr sc( . tions of t | lc South
lay alter having servo,! jtheir cotton was invaded by
General ori'' 1 .'
•idder for cash . Immigration reports that during
Style is No. x \ u . year ended July 1. 1913.
1.197,872 immigrant aliens enter
ed the I’nited States, compared
with 838,172, the fiscal year pre
ceding. The actual increase in
the alien population for the fiscal
year 1913 was 815,303 compared
with 401,Ht>3 for the fiscal year
1912. The immigrant aliens ad-!
court
dur-
Notiee is hereby given to all
creditors of the estate of Mrs.
Jenny M. Cochran, late of said
county, deceased, to render in an
account of their demands to me
within the time prescribed by law, jo?
properly made out, anti all pej- hfook No. 132 of that subdivision
sons indebted to said deceased are 0 f t i„. (*{ tv «f Waycross. Ware
herebv requested to make imme- County, Georgia, known as ltiv-
‘Hate payment to the undersign- >r*jde p a rk. levied on as the
GKoRgIA Ware County.
Will be sold before tin
house door of said count
ing the legal hours of sale, on the
first Tuesday in March. 1914. to
the highest bidder for cash, an
undivided one half interest in
lots Nos. 13 ami 14 of bloek No.
121. lots Nos 1 and 2 of block
I lots Nos. 1 ami 2 of
ed.
'ibis 15th day of January. 1914
ARTHUR K. COCIIRAN.
Administraicr of Mrs. Jenny
Cochran. 1-23-6-’
j property of S. Dioh to satisfy an
ution against him in favor
NOTICE OF SALE
GEORGIA—Ware County
By virtue of an order from the
Court of Ordinary of Ware coun
ty* granted September 6, 1909,,
will be sold at public outcry on
the first Tuesday in March, 1914,
at the court house door in said
county, between the legal hours of
|of the Peoples Bank of Savan-
M.'nab. issued from the City Court
h*. 1 of Savannah on November 12th,
11913. for a total sum of six hum
jdred and fifty five ami 55.100 dol
lars (#055.55.)
Thus 4th day of February. 1914
l>. W. PITTMAN.
Sheriff Ware Comity. Georgia.
2-t*-4wks.
THE JOY OF DANCINB EXERCISE
V< r» itw w>*»a or Bmu *«*<a to car* toT&nrocr
atl Ifeaciutf lattMH uok « Ukj mo mmt*4 U»
PIlllS fro* Uln-s Irrt 13M Alr«'« M-hw,
lauarpoc £t«tVr u> b» uto ifc rfcors,
home
i
months ill ii Mississippi pris-: thc , )ol | WP0V j|. “We have the
oil. tin- vi.-tini of inistnId'll ill'll ]„ ml t,, st state in the Union.” he
said, "hut we are sending too
much of our money to other states
•scape from a prison at # or products we can and should
Aberdeen, ot a man known as L.I ^ row j n Georgia. We want to
Charles Harding whom Oliver re- ( k eC p our money at home. When
sembled. Several days ago Oliver this is accomplished, you will see
obtained a writ of habeas corpus. s ^ a | e s0 prosperous that people
arrested last November
the i
He was taken before a chancellor w jjj pj nc h themselves to see if
and established an alibi and his |j |0 y really are awake and not
release was ordered,
To Begin Life Anew.
Atlanta, Feb. 3.- A. D. Oliver,
former president of the Climax,
Ga., hank, ami once a spectacular
figure in this section, passed here
yesterday on his way to Lee
county, Georgia, where he said
he was going to “begin life
anew." He said be had been re
mitted increased 43 per cent, and
the net addition increased 49 per
cent.
Twenty-six per cent of the
aliens over 14 years of age ad
mitted were illiterate. The aliens
had with them #40,890,197. an nv-
of #34 per person. Kighty-
three per cent had less than #50 lease,| from a Mississippi prison
Ill'll. Tliirtv-tw.i pi* i* I'l'iit ..f till', fit™ "Iff- I'lfl iM'i'n serving j les.|ii
ulii'iis admitted that their panage 11 wntenee wliieh should have
hail 1 ...on paid hv others than b * , <* iropom'.! upon another man,
themaelve*. saM to '' Unr.ling.
The propimderanre of aliens Oliver rlainie.! that Harding
from southern and .'astern Kii |»'»* <>•* hrother ami that he notv
was safe in Honduras. Accord-
dreaming. We’ve got to develop
our resources and I hope Geor
gians generally will co-operate in
the all-importnnt work ahead of
BOMB PROVED TO BE
FLORIDA COCOANUT
rope is increasing.
Only 182.R86 immigrants aliens! ‘"t to Oliver, it was his brother
(15 per rent of the total number! | ““'I "O' himself who perpetrated
eanie from northern and western I offenses wliieh have been laid at
Europe during the past year, di
vided ns follows: Belgium, ?.-
405; Denmark. 8.478; France, 9.-
i*75; German Empire. 34,329;
Netherlands, fi.902; Norway, 8.-
587; Sweden. 17.202: Switzer
land. 4.HM; England. 43.383: Ire
land, 27,876; Scotland. 14,220;
the forme
door.
Georgia banker*!
sale, the following described tract jeially intended.
7,t*v MM Of AtK*V
of laud lying and being in the
eity of Wayeroaa, Ware county, i Irn
rttsss;
Mrs. A. H. Tabor, or I'ri.lrr,
Mo., had been troubled with sick
headache for about live years,
when she began taking Chamber-j The 1.
Iain’s Tablets. She has taken two
bottles of them and they have' Gi\
cured her Sick headache is key’s
caused by a disordered stoma, h j feu- v
J for which these tablet* are e*|*e-
Tr>' them, get
11 a ad stay well. Sold by all
WINSTON-SALEM
HAS $100,000 FIRE
THIS MORNING.
Winston Salem. X. C„ Feb. 3.—
ChanloiLs Drug Store. Day’s Jew
elry store. Brown’s
offices and lodge rooms were
burned this morning and the store
of Meyer- A; Westbrook damaged,
placed at #100,000.
Atlanta. Feb. ». A second bur-
bomb outrage has stirred
; hall to it* foundation*!
Two months ago an infernal ma
chine was sent to Mayor Wood
ward; it pro*'e 1 to be a harmless
sample of a metal cartridge for
carbonating water. This morning
a life-size black hand bomb was
found on Bark Manager Dan Ca
rey’s desk; it proved to be a
eoeoannt sent by mail from si
friend in Florida.
HUERTA GIVES
UP LOAN HOPE.
The
l» IS UK*
of tile
Catarrh in this
ountry than all
other diseases put together, and
until the lust few years was sup
posed to be incurable. For a
great many years doctors pro
nounced it a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, ami by
constantly failing to cure with
local treatment, pronounced it
incurable. Scienee has proven
Catarrh to he a constitutional
disease, ami therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh (hire, manufactured by
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
is the only Constitutional care on
the market. It is taken internal
ly in doses from 10 drops to a
teaspoonful. Tt acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. They offer one hun
dred dollars for any ease it fails
to cure. Send for circulars and
testimonials.
Address: F. J. Cheney & ('o..
Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills
constipation.
for
When you want a reliable med
icine for a cough or cold take
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
It can always be depended upon
and is pleasant and safe to take.
For sale by all dealers.
Mexico City. Feb. 3.—General
Huerta has abandoned all hope
lothing store, now of securing the European i
loan. The Finance Minister, who
is returning from Paris, will pre
pare plans to collect a forces! do
mestic loan to pay the army. Pro-
ision prices are already famine
dealer*.
let n* tell
8. Ilardy.
vor.r little chicks Con- high. Bacon is 50 cents a pound,
Starting Fowl the (trot bam 70 cents and other articles
*ks and watch them grow j proportionately high.
** ’ Free from disease. 10c, j —
d 50e pkg*. Come in and. It is better to hand your friends
on all about It. J. W. Jcash than advice, if you want to
4 18 5t wkj keep them.
! Pittsburgh. Pa.. Feb. 4.—Warn.
! ing against blind faith in th,*
'••lire of cancer by radium
given here last night, by repr..
1 seiitatives of the American Socji.
ty for the Control of Cam-,T
Memorial Hall in Pittsburgh.
According to the speakers, in
dium has probably been shown ; .
exert a definitely curative efiV. i
on certain of the moderately ma
ligning and superficial cancers ..
the skin, mouth and other read,
l.v accessible mucous membranes,
provided that it is applied whi
the disease is still local and i i
the early stages.
Radium definitely relieves M iii.
feriiig when used in the ad vane
I stages of deeper seated run
u\s: but in those cases it im-
roves only the visible or tangi
ble manifestations and exerts no
ffeet upon the disseminated dis-
ase as a whole. It is believed
that there is as yet no proof that
radium has finally cured any one
ase of advanced and disseminat
ed cancer.
Statistical evidence to support,
the advice and warning to seek
early operative treatment was
presented by Dr. Frederick L.
Hoffman, statistician of the Pm
dential Insurance Company. Ac
cording to Mr. Hoffman the re
corded experience of the best ho«
pitals goes to show that earliest
possible operations for cancer
seems to offer the only hope for
cure. These records are distinctly
encouraging, and prove conclu
sively that at least the initial loss
of life in such operations is very
low. The statisties of private
practise also prove that the risk
of recurrence is gradually be
coming less, while the percentage
of distinctly favorable results \<
increasing.
Mr. Hoffman described the ad
mirable results which had fol
lowed the campaign originally in
itiated in eastern Prussia by Win
ter of Keonigsberg for the in
struction of all people, but par
ticularly of women in the early
symptoms of cancer and the
nine of the earliest possible sur
gical and medical treatment. In
this campaign the co-operation of
the laity and the medical profes
sion, on the one hand, and the
press on the other, was enlistee!
with excellent results. When the
campaign was started in the ear
ly nineties the cancer death rate
of Koenigsberg had incrcaseel
from 53 in 1860 to 110 in 1893
The rate continued to increase up
to 1907, when it reached a maxi
mum of 139 per 100,000 of the
population. Subsequent to that
year the rate gradually declined
to n minimum point of 118 for th*-
year 1912.
Mr. Hoffman said, the number
of eleaths from cancer in Penn
sylvania during 1912 was 5,42‘*
and the death rate in the state
that year was 68 per 100,000 ol
population, as compared with air
average of 77 for the registration
area of the United States. Tin
cancer death rate is distinctly
higher in the eastern counties of
Pennsylvania, and lowest in the
•stern seetion.
In Pittsburg 2C9 deaths f.
cancer occurred in 1912, and the
rate was 67 per 100,000 of popu
lation, as compared-with 81 for
New York City, 90 for Philadul
phia. 79 for Chicago.
Persons troubled with partial
paralysis are often very much
benefited by massaging the af
feoted parts thoroughly when ap
plying Chamberlain’s Liniment.
Tliis liniment also relieves rheu
matic pains. For sale by all deal
For dusting hens and in nests
use Conkey’s Lie® Powder. 10c.
25e t and 50c. For mites in pom
try houses get Conkey’s Lice
Liquid, #1.00 gallon. For littP
chicks get Conkey’s Head Lie*
Ointment. 10e and 25c. Re^.i!
guaranteed. J. W. S. Hardy. Get
Conkey’s Poultry Book free.