Newspaper Page Text
WOMEN FOUGHT ‘
Pension Records Disclose One in
’76 and One in '6l. |
BOTH REAL “FIGHTING MEN”
The unique records of two women
serving as private soldlers, one
throughout the Revolutionary war and
another in the Civil war, fighting on
the battlefields and being wuun(led,l
have just been discovered In the pen
slon hureau files, |
Both women, one from Illinols, suc
ceeded in hiding their sex from the
other soldiers, and the fact that they |
were women was only disclosed when
they were awarded pensions. Their
names are Deborah Gannett and “Al
pert” D. J. Cashier, or Hodgers, and
they are the only women in American
history who were paid pensions for
actual military service,
The first of these women warriors
was Deborah Gannett of Magsachu
getts, She enlisted April, 1781, in a
Massnchusetts regiment commanded by
Col, Henry Jackson under the assumed
name of Robert Shurtleff, and servei
until November, 1783, as a private sol
dier, when she was honorably dis
charged.
Fought at Tarrytown,
She fought at Tarrytown, where she
was wounded, and was in the ranks
when Lord Cornwallis was captured.
Her real identity was revealed after
the war, and in 1838 congress passed a
special bill for the relief of her heirs,
awarding them a pension in which she
was described as “Deborah Gannett, a
goldier of the revolution.”
The second woman was Albert D,
J. Cashier, whose real name was
Hodgers, but whose Christian name
was never revealed, She enlisted as a
private in Company G, Ninety-fifth [l}i
nols infantry, In August, 1865, At the
time she joined she was nineteen, with
blue eyes and auburn hair. She gave
her occupation as a farmer and her
residence at Belvidere, 1L
She went through the entire cam
paign with the Ninety-fiftth Illinois in
fantry, was in the engagements leading
to the fall of Vicksburg, including a
charge against the besleged city. She
also participated in the Jackson and
East Meridian raids, the Red River ex
peditions, capture of Fort De Russy,
and the hattles of Old river, Cloutier
ville, Mansura and Yellow Bayou.
In Thickest of Fight.
In April, 1864, she was in the thick
est of the fight of Guntown, Miss,,
where the regiment lost heavily in
killed and wounded, Later she par
ticipated in the battle of Nashville and
the pursuit of General Hood's defeated
army, and was at I'ranklin, Columbia,
Pulaski, Lawrenceburg and East Port.
After being discharged, she returned
to Illinois and worked on a farm herd
ing cattle, Later she was awarded a
pension and became an inmate of the
Soldiers’ home at Quincy, 111, and re
mained there except for intervals,
when she engaged in farm labor on
farms in Boone, Kankakee and Liv
ingston counties In Illinois,
It was on one of these occasions,
while employed by State Senator Lish
of Saunemin, 111, that she was struck
by an automobile, and it was while
recelving surgical attention that her
secret was discovered, She pleaded
with the ph_\'sicmf)s not to reveal her
sex. She died at Watertown, 111, In
10185.
An investigation of her early life
conducted by the pension bureau re
sulted in the discovery that she was
born in Clogher Head, Ireland, where,
with a twin brother, she herded sheep
and dressed in male attive because she
could do her work better.
GERMAN OFFICER IN BOLIVIA
General Kundt Said to Have Re
nounced His Nationality,
Gen. Hans Kundt, during the war
a commander of a Prussian regiment
of grenadler guards, has lald aside
his German nationality in order to ac
cept the appointment as minister of
war of Bolivia, according to advices
recelved by friends in Berlin. He
organized the Bollvlan army hefore
the war and returned to that country
in 1919, The entente, however, ob
jected to his connection with the army
as a Germam national, and hg became
naturalized, whereupon he was ap
pointed to the government post,
24,816,599 ACRES IN GRAPES
Italy Leads World With 4282 Per
Cent of Vineyards.
Approximately 24,816,509 acres of
the world's surface are covered with
vineyards according to a grape-grow
erg’ trade journal issued in Berlin.
Europe contains 92.7 per cent of the
total acreage,
Ttaly has more vineyards than any
other country, its plats running to 42.82
per cent of all vineyards in the world.
Spain ranks second with 18.4 per cent,
then France with 15.5 per cent, while
Germany at the present time has only
.72 per cent.
German Citizens Pay 51 Taxes.
German citizens are subfect to 51
different kinds of tax. The federal
government has 40, while the munici
palities add 11 more. They include
taxes on income, property, sugar, salt,
matches, playing cards, dogs, automo
biles, beer, wine, amusements, and
PRy other necessities and luxwrjes.
e ——
Frozen Hydrogen and the Same
Element Liquefied Produced
in the Bureau of Standards,
A small quantity of frozen hydrogen
and about two quarts of the same ele
ment liquefied were produced at the
bureaun of standards, in a successful
test of liquefying apparatus cmuluct-l
ed by O, W. Kanolt,
This represented the result after
chilling many thousand cuble feet of
the gas down to a point close to abso
lute zero,
Several experiments were made with |
the hydrogen fee and liquid later be
fore the Washineton Philosophical sBo
clety, a scientitic organization, where
My, Kanolt exhibited the product,
The frozen hydrogen was dr*s(-rilmd'
as similar in appearance to snow,
while the liguid was colorless, 1
Doctor Kanolt told his hearers that |
a gallon of liquefied hydrogen was
made in about two hours at the bu
reau of standards, The experiments
there are on a larger scale than has
ever been employed before,
In his talk he said:
“Phe method is rather simple In
principle but Involves practical difli
culties which have interfered with its
extensive use, The purpose of the
bhureau of standards hag been first to
socure liguid hydrogen when desired
in very large quantities.
“The work at the burean has been
facilituated by the development of a
method of analysis by which very
small quantities of impurities can be
measured, After liquid has been ob
tained, It is comparatively easy to
freoze It by evaporating under re
duced pressure. The freezing point of
the liquid is minus 259 degrees Centl
grade, which is 14 degrees above ab
solute zero.”
In order to liqufy the gas, a tem
perature of 253 degrees Centigrade—
ahout 420 degrees Fahrenheit—below
zoero had to be attained. The hydro
cen fce began to form a few degrees
lower, at about 430 Fahrenheit below
Zero,
All the low temperatures were pro
duced by expanding the gas Itself
after it had been compresced under
pressure of 3,000 pounds a square
inch, chilled by application of lquid
air and then allowed to expand.
I'roduction of the lHguid gases will
be continued as a part of the bureau's
experimental work in studying -be
havior of materials and metals at very
low temperatures.
Hydrogen has been liquefied bhefore
in the United States, but temperatures
lower than those induced in the proe
¢os have only been reached hitherto
in Burope, where heliura has been
successfully liquefied.
Absolute zero, represented by 273.1
degrees on the Centigrade scale and
by 459.6 degrees on the Fahrenheit,
Lias thus been very nearly approached,
according to the above dispateh, Ab
solute zero represents the temperature
where there is an entire absence of
heat and has never been attalned by
man, :
FOOTBALLS FOR POILUS
Paris Sends “Parcels for Soldiers”
to the Ruhr.
“Parcels for soldiers” are leaving
P'aris for Dusseldort daily in carload
lots, just as they used to be forward
ed to the front during the war, and
are helping to remind the French peo
ple of the continuing military occupa
tion of the Ruhr,
Cigarettes and tobacco of all kinds,
except that for chewing, form the bulk
of the five-pound packages, with food
and candy a good seconi. Games,
fruit, books and jellies and pams are
also popular with the army of oc
cupation, One hundred footballs,
sent at the special request of several
units, formed one package which
brought joy to the lonely poilus.
PHARACH HAD INSOMNIA
Papyrus Reveals Hippopotami Dis
turbed Tut-Ankh-Amen’s Sleep.
A piece of papyrus just transiated
by the British museum shows that
King Tut-Ankh-Amen suffered from in
somnia. Responsibility for the Phara
ol’s ailment seems to have rested with
~certain hippopotami which made so
~much nolse as they wallowed im the
‘ sacred lakes of Thebes that he found
sleep impossible,
The papyrus tells of a quarral the
ancient monarch had with the owner
of the beasts over whether the King's
slumber should be sacrificed to their
physical comfort. How the dispute
wias settled is not discloged.
To Heligoland for Health,
leligoland, in the North sea, whose
guns once frowned on England from
Germany, has been converied into a
health resort for children.
Hundreds of children play on walks
where German soldiers strolled. Grim
fortresses on the island ave being con
- verted into living quarters.
Shoots Famous Outlaw.
Albert Conner, famous Qklahoma
bandit, is dying in a hospital at Coffey
ville, Kan. His pal, Max Weabe, is
dead.
The two men were shot by Robert
Spriggs, World war veteran, when they
attempted to rob his store.
: U. S. to Seli Old Forts.
' TUnecle Sam has offered for sale 80 or
40 forts along the New England shore.
Several of the forts have disappeared,
however, and the rest are ramshackle.
Only a few are in good condition.
THE LEE COUNTY JOURNAL, LEESBURG, GEORGIA.
TURK Bbfiml IS
‘l
1
|
Angora Stronghold on Frontiers I
of Roman Empi&. '
Angora Is plcturesque directly you
get outside it, for only then can you
gsee the two Gibraltar-like rocks that
form the background to the present
day town. They lie end to end, sep
arated hy a steep ravine through
which rushes a narrow, muddy strean, |
The hill on the further side of thlsi
river is bare, except for a crumbling
pile of stones which passes for the
ruins of a memorial to the legend that
Tamerlane stood there in 1402 to re
view his army of Mongols after it
had overthrown Sultan Bayazid in the
plain below. DBut the rocky height
that looms above Angora town Is
crowned with an unbroken wall or|
medieval fortifications,
Its bastions are of red sandstone,
and shaped to a sharp point, like the
bows of a ship. The unconscious vsm-‘
dalism of the Middle ages is witnessed
in its structure, for among the huge
freestone blocks that form it are built
in all sorts of relies of the dead and
gone Angoras of the past. Here is a‘
delicately fretted cornice from an old
Greek tempfo. Close by the fragment
of some majestic Roman inscription,
clear cut as the day it wasg first carved,
recalls the time when Angora was a
stronghold of the frontiers of the
[toman empire, Gravestones and brok
en bits of friezes, millstones and Rom
an titles have all gone to strengthen
the still unbroken wall.
Oddly Foreign Look.
IL.ower down the hill stand the gray
ruing of a castle of feudal type. Per
haps Godefroy de Bouillon built it
when the Crusaders held Angora for
twenty years. It has an oddly for
eign look here in the heart of Asia
Minor. Its c¢rumbling battlements
wonld harmonize much better with a
background of green English meadow
land or Norman orchards.
But apart from this hill eftadel Ane
gora has no characteristics that it
does not share with every other of the
drab village towns of Anatolia. Yet,
half hidden behind its largest mosque
is a splendid relic of what must have
heen an Angora out of all comparison,
more beautiful and stately, It is the
‘ ruined fragment of a Roman temple of
- Augustus, just a square decorated
~archway 30 feet high, leading to a
i('ham('ol, in which a flight of steps
- goes down to a vaulted dungeon be
neath where the altar must have
stood, entered by a doorway only two
feet high. The walls of this monu
ment to a race that was not only con
quering, but constructive, are of free
stone with several courses of sand
stone of a brilliant crimson. They
still bear broken patehes of frieze of
Greek wave design, and in another
place, of a conventional pattern rep
- resenting apparently an octopus.
E Much of this old Roman masonry
that still stands so firmly is inscribed
- with half effaced histories of the cam
paigns of the “Divine Augustus”
carved, as the Latin script says, by
" his own order. DBut there are also
many marks of its eventful history
since those times,
‘ Made by Crusader?
Ilere is a Maltese cross hammered
out with the chisel. Did some idle
crusader, perhaps from far away Kng
land, fill in his afternoon by making
it? Close hy an industrious Turk has
chipped a long phrase in the difficult
caligraphy of his language, and oppo
site 1 modern Greek, in an impulse of
bravado, has scratched his name with
the date 1914-1922,
" Tombstones of old Roman prefects
lie prone on the ground and close by
them stand the turbaned headstones of
the graves of Turkish janissaries who
died here in the Sixteenth and Sevene
teenth centuries.
. The idea of rebuilding some such
| imposing city as the Romans set upon
this open and lofty plateau is strong
in the minds of the new Turkish gov
~ernment, They plan it in the plain
- outside the present tfown and say that
its avenues will be broader than the
il‘h:nnps Elysees, The scheme, in its
i;xx'osenr form, reminds one rather of
' the layout of the city of Eden, where
I.\lm-tin Whitehall of Angora is the
| railway station, for there the Premier
lives in what was meant for the sta
l tfonmaster's house, while the French
I representative has a similar building
on the platform and the American
lomiss:u‘_\' to the Angora government
. with his wife occupies a railway coach
fitted up inside as the most delight
fully compact bungalow imaginable.
|3l GOLF BALLS IN A NEST
, e
| Squirre! Which Gathered Them Must
g Have Imagined Them Nuts.
| On the ground of the Augusta Coun
| try club at Manchester, Me., recently
| was found a squirel’s mest. In his
'nost a squirrel. had concealed 31 golf
. balls. The place near the nest is one
- of the most dificult drives of the
i'cuurse and sometimes the golf balls
- are knocked inte the woods and are
ilnst. The nest was found by rare
' chance.
. Evidently during the summer
months the squirrel thought a new
crop of nuts was invented and watched
the balls speed through the air into
’the woods. After things had quieted
down he began his work of collecting.
Many of the balls were in good condi
’ tion, while some bore the teeth marks
of the hoarder. i
9o CITATION
GEORGIA—LEE COUNTY.
To All Whom It May Concern: :
W, T, Gais-ert of sa'd state, having in !
sraper form applied w e as 8 creditor!
the estate of Charlie Saler, deceased, |
or permant letters of adiministration on
the esate of faid Charlie Sales, Mleceased ‘
ate of said county, this is to cite ull mnli
ingular the ereditorsand heire 6f Charlie,
‘ales to be and appear utui& uflh-o'atfln-l
Vay teri of court of Ordinary of said
county, ard show cause, il any they can ‘
why permant letters ol Adininistration
<hould not be granted to W, T Gaissert
on the estate of Charlie Sales, deceased,
. Witness my hand and official sig
pature, This the 2nd day of April, 1923,
¢ H. L. LONG, SR., Ordinary.
4 Lee County Georgia.
|\ — |
| LIBEL FOR DIVORCE
‘Superior Court of Lee County, May
Term, 1923.
Mrs. E. E. Chance vs. Eulas Chance.
To Eulas Chance, Defendant:
You are hereby commanded to be
and appear at the next term of the
,‘iuperior Court of Lee County, State
of Ceorgia, to be held on the first
Vionday in May, 1923, at the hour of
nine o’clock, A. M., and make your
answer in the above stated casze, as
required by the order of said court.
‘ Witness the }Honorable Z. A. Lit
tleiohn, Judge of the Superior Court
of said County, this the 3rd day of
March, 1923.
G. A. WALLACE,
Clerk, Superior Court, Lee County.
Reinhardt Schmidt From Ger
many Has Glorious Time, Due
fo Fast Siumping Mark.
Most every boy and girl in America
at some time has sat down out be
hind the barn or in the tradesmen’s
entrance to the apartment house or
somewhere and said: “Wish I had a
million dollars—l'd go to the show
and buy candy and—"
Well, everyone knows how it goes.
And over in Germany boys and
girls aren’t much different down deep
in their hearts than they are in Amer
ica, perhaps.
With this exception—
Reinhardt Schmidt, aged fourteen,
of Hamburg, Germany, captain’s mess
boy on the German steamer Hans
Hensoth, has had his wish come true.
When he was back in Germany he
did his wishing—only, of course, he
wished for marks instead of glollars.
Then he came to San Francisco,
and out stepped a fairy or something
and all of a sudden young Reinhardt
found himself in the midst of riches.
A newspaper reporter found Rein
hardt interesting, He told his editor.
And as a result, a girl reporter was
assigned to give Reinhardt one mem
orable day.
The lad was running around the
decks of the big freighter which had
been his home for months, when the
mate stopped him and told him that
for the day he was to have shore
leave and be the guest of the fair
lady, who awaited at the gang plank.
Bewildered but anxious for just
one taste of real fun, he eagerly ac
cepted. And the day started. Rein
hardt was to do as he pleased. And
the lady would foot the bill.
It started with candy at the ferry
building. _
Then a ride through the city in a
luxurious sedan—the Ilikes of which
Reinhardt had never seen.
Then to a store for a pair of good,
American shoes to replace the wooden
ones he wore. Then lunch at the
city’s most fashionable hotel—the
first fruit he had tasted for eight
months was served him in a fruit
cocktail; ox-tail soup, chicken pie,
apple pie with ice cream, and quanti
ties of Inilk,
4] drink no alcohol,” he announced
in German, “But milk, at home it is
so expensive.,” He reveled in bottles
of it.
Then a trip to the top of the tall
est building in the city, and, next,
out to the beach to the roller-coast
er, the merry-go-round and all the
other wonders.
TReinhardt was gaining his polse and
he hardly could wait for each suc
cessive thrill.
“powder River—lletter buck,” he
shouted in his funny English as he
mounted a pony on the merry-go-round
and waved his cap, cowboy fashion.
No satisfactory explanation could
be secured as to where he picked
up the phrase, but it was good evi
dence that somewhere back in the
days of the war he had met som
one who knew something of the Ninet{
first division which erushed through
the Argonne forest with that battle
ery.
smE ol
~ APROPOS OF NOTHING
Everyone who is steadfast is bound
to be leaned on, |
If your friend cares enough for )ou,!
he’ll monopolize you. ‘
1f one gets cranky enough, he knows
what an artistic temperament is.. ‘
1f a man can stay in polities for
ten years, he can stay for a ntulme.‘
PRINCE MUST EARN LIVING
Aage of Denmark Serves in French
Army After Loss in Bank
: Failure,
Copenhagen, Denmark~—Prince Aage
of Denthark, whose fortune was wiped
out in a recent bank failure, has gone |
to Moroceo to earn a living as a major
in the French colonial forces. Just
before Yie departed, at the time of the
Christmas holidays, he said he was
genuinely sorry that he could not take
up an active business career in his
own cowitry. He had never enjoyed
anything more, he added, than the job
e once held for several months in a
foreign branch of a well-known Ameri
can firm, neither his employers nor the
other employees knowing his real
identity. -
In Denmark Prince Aage was called
the American prince. His habits and
tastes were similar to those character
jzing citizens of the United States.
Most of his intimate friends were
Amertcans, and their mode of life was
nis. Soon after the war the prince
visited the United States, plunged into
society, and adopted many American
ways. ;
Recently it was thought desirable to’
use the prince in an ambassadorial ca
pacity, but with his fortune gone he
was unable to accept a post paying
only a small income. So he has en
tered military life, having the reputa
tion of being one of the finest soldiers
fn Denmark. Princess Aage and the
couple’s five-year-old son have gone
|to live in Ttaly at the home of tne
| princess’ father, Count Calvi di Ber
| golo.
l This Singer Is a Whole Quartet.
| London throat specialists are great.
ly interested in a man singer who i¢
‘ gaid to have a most unusual voice
The young man’s name is Strathie
| Mackay, and he is employed as a
cleaner at a bank in Threadneedle
' street. While Sir James Dundas Grant
listened he sang in a tenor voice, a
{ barytone, a falsetto and at last in a
t doubie voice, barytone and tenor sim:
ultaneously.
Although the two voices could be
heard distinetly, the tenor voice pre
| dominated, and Sir James remarked
i that if Mr. Mackay could harmonize
with the two and render the barytone
with the same clarity and volume as
the tenor the result would be star
tling,
The examination of Mr. Mackay’s
larynx showed that it was quite nor
mal, and he said it did not strain
him to use both volees at once.
“Roosevelt’s Religion.”
President Roosevelt writes Ethel an
interesting account of a ‘“rescue.”
Sloan, the secret service man, and
he were en route to church when he
saw two dogs chasing a kitten. He
drove the dogs off with his cane whil¢
Sloan captured the “kitty.” Then.the
President inquired from the smiling
spectators if the cat belonged to them,
but not finding an owner, he went
down the block with the kitten in hia
arms until he saw “a very nice col
ored woman with a little girl looking
out the window of a small house” and
gave her the kitten. Then, straight
ening his clothes and brushing his
silk hat, he went on to church in a
better frame to “worship.”—From
“Roosevelt’s Religion,” by C. F. Rels
ner.
Study of Dreams. '
Much valuable information as to the
mental makeup of a child could be ob
tained from a study of his dreams, Dr.
C. W. Kimmins, an English savant,
recently declared during a discussion
on psycho-analysis and education at a
meeting of the British association at
Hull., It would be interesting, he sug
gested, to hear from psychologists to
what extent children’s dreams could
be used for schbol purposes. Doctor
Kimmins emphasized the danger of
extravagant hopes in regard to the
use of psycho-analysis for educational
purposes, which might lead to an in
Xinite amount of harm.
DREAM OF MANY INVENTORS
'Much Time and Thought Wasted on
Machines Meant to Attain .
Perpetual Motion.
Perpetual motion has been the
dream of inyentors for many cen
' turies. By perpetual motion is usually
| meant -a mechanical device which will
operate of its own pewer without such
‘ external or internal aids as wind, gas,
steam or any other element of force.
| Some have come very near to- attain
ilnga kind of perfection by a series
lof weights and balances; also by the
i use of quicksilver, but while these
{machines will operate for a time, they
are unable in that time to develop
' sufficient power to work machinery or
[-be of any real benefit. In the town of
' Minnedosa, Man., an old gentleman
“had for some years a machine of his
own invention operated by a series of
- weights by which he was said to have
run a small lathe. A sclentist named’
lStx’utt has invented an apparatus
iwhlch takes advantage of radium
emanations upon a gold leaf electro
lscope. This perhaps comes near to
an endless motion, but is maintained
’at the expense of the molecular en
ergy of the radium.
‘e L —
{ In the United States more than 155,
- 000,000 telegraphic messages are trans
mitted each year,
It is estimuated that two-thirds ot
the retail buying in the United States
{s done by women,
The average college student pays
$365 annually for education secured
in the United States, o =a
GEORGIA—Lece County. |
Will be sold before the court house
door in said county on the first Tues
day in June, 1923, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest S
for cash, the following de” 0
property, to-wit: All that tract of
land in the Second District of Lee
County, Georgia, being all of lot of
land No. 84, except three acres in the
northwest corner, northwest of the
public road leading to Leesburg; all
Eot‘ lot No. 85 cast of Kinchafoonee
Creek, and southeast of the public
road leading to Leesburg; and all of
lot No. 77 southeast of the publie
road leading to Leesburg ' except
13.4 acres next to the public road
leading from Leesburg to Albany,
as chown by a plat of record in the
Clerk’s Office of Lee Superior Court,
Book 11, page 317, Said land levied
on and to be sold as the property of
J. R. Long and Mrs. Agnes Long, as
administratrix of the estate of Wm,
H. Long, deceased, to satisfy an exe
qution iscued from the City Court of
i.eesburg, on the 16th day of April,
1023, in favor of Mrs. Johnnie Lo
zan Lewis vs. J. R. Long and Mrs.
Agine: Long, as hdmimsiratrix of the
estate of Wm. Long, deceased, and
the above described land. Due and
legal notice given to the defendants
in 1l fa :
Thiz Ist day of April, 1923.
P. C. COXWELL, Sheriff.
GEORGIA—Lee County.
Under and by virtue of a power of
sale vested in the Phoenix Mutual
Life Insurance Co., by deed made
and delivered to it by Dillard Wal
llace Tison, dated May 15th, 1917,
and recorded in the office of the
’Clcrk of the Superior Court of Lee
County, Georgia, in Deed Book “J”,
folio 290, the undersigned, as legal
transferee of ail remedies and powers
contained in said deed, will sell at
public outery to the highest bidder
for cash on the first Tuesday in
June, 1923, before the courthouse
door in Leesburg, Lee County, Geor
zia, betwcen the legal hours of Sher
iff’s sale the following described pro
petry, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land sit
uate, lying and being in the 138th
Diztrict of the County of Lee, State
>f Georgia, consisting of whole land
lots Numbers Two Hundred and Six
seen (216) and Two Hundred and
Seventeen (217), each containing
Two Hundred, Two and One:half
(262 1-2) acres, more or less. “
whole lying in one body of c%0(.-é
Hundred and Five (405) acres, more
or less, bounded North by the Har
grove lands; East by lands of Cecil
Pettis and J. A. Lipsey; South by
lands of Mrs. C. H. Tison and C. R.
Mcßride; West by the Hollis lands,
ind being known as the D. W. Tison
Place.
Said lands will be sold as the pro
perty of the estate of said Dillard
Wallace Tison, deceased, to pay the
indebtedness referred to in said deed
and more particularly described as
follows:
One principal note for the sum of
$4,000.00, dated May 15th, 1917,
and maturing November Ist, 1921.
Also, one interest note for the sum
of $240.00, dated May 15th, 1917,
and due November Ist, 1921, with in
terest on both of said notes from
their maturity at the rate of 8 per
cent., per annum, also all expenses
of this proceeding. Said nothes be
ing made and delivered to the Phoe
nix Mutual Life Insurance Company
of Hartfort, Connecticut, by the said
Dillard Wallace Tison, and being pro
perly transferred to the undersigned,
and the amount of principal and in
terest due on said notes to date of
sale being $4,782.72, besides the
costs of this proceeding.
Default having been made by the
said Dillard Wallace Tison and the
estate of the said Tison, in the pay
ment of said indebtedness, the power
of sale contained in said deed has
become operative. The proceeds of
said sale will be applied first to the
payment of said indebtedness and all
costs and expenses of this proceed
ing, and the balance, if any, paid te
the estate of Dillard Wallace Tison,
its legal representatives or assigns.
This the 25th day of April, 1923.
R. W. BINGHAM, -
: Transferee as Aforesaid.
LIPPETT & BURT, Attorneys,
: Albany, Ga.
CITATION :
'GEORGIA—Lee County.
’ The appraisers appointed to set apart
to Mrs. Avy lowell, ‘a twelve months
‘:np[.ort out of theestate of Wm, Howell,
deceased, liusband, having filed their
return in my office. All persons concern
ed are hereby required to show cause, if
any they have, before the court of Ord
inary, of said county, on the first Men
day in May,1923, why said return should
not be make the judgment of the Court.
This April, 2ud, 1923, )
H. L. LONG, SR., Ordit:"@:z*