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'GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
The return of appraisers setting apart 12
months’ support to the «family of Fay Morris,
decea: having been filed in my office, all
‘persons concerned are cited to show cause by
“the sth day of January, 1920, why said ap
;.mwr 12 months’ support should not
'!g:.“Deomber 2nd, 1919. b
5053 J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
DISMISSION FROM ADMINISTRATION ‘
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY. *
Wheveas, W. E. Megee, Administrator of
R. B. Megee, represents to the Court in his
petition, duly filed and entered on record,
that he has fully administered R, B. Megee'’s
estate: '
This is, therefore, to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show ecause,
if any they can, why said Administrator should
not be discharged from his administration, and
receive Letters of Dismission on the first Mon
day in January, 1920.
This 2nd day of December, 1919,
50-53 J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
; LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
To All Whom It May Concern:
W. D. Bullard and T. L. Pittman having in
proper form, applied to me for Permanent Let
ters of Administration on the estate of I. M.
Pittman, late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular, the creditors and next of kin of
I. M. Pittman to be and appear at my office
within the time allowed by law, and show
cause, if any they can, why permanent ad
ministration should not be gramted to W. D,
Bullard and T. L. Pittman on I. M. Pittman’s
estate.
Witness my hand and official signature, this
2nd day of December, 1919.
50-53 ? J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
To All Whom It May Concern:
T. W. Florence having in proper form ap
plied to me for Permanent Letters of Ad
ministration on the estate of Mrs. T. W. Flor
ence, late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular, the creditors and next of kin
of Mrs. T. W. Florence to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by law,
and show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should not be granted
to petitioner on Mrs. T. W. Florence’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signature, this
2nd day of December, 1919.
50-53 J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
DISMISSION FROM ADMINISTRATION
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
Whereas, R .A. Hill, Administrator of An
nie (). Gray, represents to the Court in his
petition, duly filed and entered on record,
that he has fully administered Annie O. Gray’s
estate:
This is, therefore, to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause,
if any they can, why said Administrator should
not be discharged from his administration,
and receive Letters of Dismission on the first
Monday in January, 1920.
This 2nd day of December, 1919,
50-53 J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE -
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi
nary fo sadi county, 1 will sell before the
court house door in the City of Mraietta, Ga.,
on the first Tuesday in January, 1920, to the
highest bidder for cash, the following desecrib
ed property, to-wit: |
Ten shares of the capital stock of the Merch
ants and Farmers Bank, of Marietta, Ga., of
the par value of $lOO.OO each. Also, one house
and lot in the City of Marietta, deseribed
as follows: Lot No. 7, block C, fronting on
east side of South avenue, eighty (80) feet:
extending two hundred feet to_the rear from
South avenue; also Lot No. 8 fronting on
said avenue 116 feet, and extending east from
said avenue 200 feet, and being 107 feet to
the rear. Also one house and lot in Cobb
county, Ga., south of Marietta, near Butler
addition, known as the George W. Crane lot,
fronting on north side of Glover street 75
feet, and running back north a uniform width
of 210 feet, hounded on the north by property
of J. A. Mitchell, west by property of Mitchell,
and south by street. Also all of Land Lot
No. 1212, north of the Roswell road, in the
16th district and 2nd section of Cobb county,
Ga., except one acre, more or less, sold to
Wallace, out of the southeast corner, on the
north side of said road, being in all, ‘39 acres,
more or less; on this property there is one
large barn, and one small tenant house. Sold
as the property of the estate of H. P. Sauls,
late of said county, deceased.
This December 2nd, 1919,
50-53 MARY E. SAULS,
Administratrix of H. P. Sauls, deceased.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi
nary of said county, granted at the December
term, 1919, I will sell before the courthouss
door in the City of Marietta, Ga., on the first
Tuesday in January, 1920, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder,
the following described real estate, to-wit :
- Being a one-third undivided interest in what
is known and distinguished by land Lot No.
296 in the 20th district and 2nd section of
Cobb county, Ga., lying and being on the south
side of said land lot, bounded on the east, west
and south by the original line, and on the
north by a neighborhood road running from
the east line to the west line south of due east
and west, containing 100 acres, more or less ;
also 25 acres, more or less, of lot No. 296 in
said district, bezinnnig at the northeast cor
ner pf Lot No. 296, running thence west along
original line to higkory tree within 80 vards of
the Sand Town road; thence south to a made
lx_ne. thence along a made line east to the ori
ginal line: thence along the original line
north to beginning point. All of the above
tract containing 125 acres, more er less, and
g
LOST BANK CHECK
When a Bank Check that is drawn in
favor of a definite individual or firm is
lost, its payment at the Bank may be
stopped. When money is lost, it is im
: possible to trace and recover it. The
check is the best and safest method of
making payments, as your money is
safe and secure at the Bank until the
check is actually paid to the rightful
person and then you have the paid’
check as a receipt for the money. An
account subject to check at this Bank
will protect your money.
MARIETTA TRUST AND
§ ' BANKING CO.
i*fiapital and Surplus over $110,0600.00
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S eet T AL TTSAR N R eRt
P 1 GOl m?mum"‘“ NWt B
7 80 as m. -
Griggs, dd;e;ued. and sold for the purpose of
paying and distribution among the heirs.
Terms cash. This December Sth, 1919.
50-53 MRS. W. B. GRIGGS,
Administratrix of Wm. B. Griggs, deceased.
SHERIFF’S SALES FOR JANUARY
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY. |
Will be soild before the court house door in
the City of Marietta, Ga., said county, on the
first Tuesday in January, 1920, within the
legal hours of sale, the following real estate,
to-wit:
Bei. . all that tract or parcel of land be
ginning at the northwest corner of land lot
No. 866 in the 16th district and 2nd section
of Cobb county, Ga., at a certain iron post
and extending east 542 feet to an iron post;
thence south 1384 feet to an iron post on the
public road, said public road running parallel
with the right-of-way of the Western and
Atlantic railroad; thence in, a northwesterly
direction along said public r(kd to an iron post
at the intersection of said public road h:';finh
the original west land line of said lot; thence
north along said land line 1237 feet to point
of beginning, with improvements thereon.
Siad land levied on as the property of Abe
Dillard and R. D. Dillard, to satisfy an exe
cution issued on the 28th day of November,
1918, from the Superior Court of Cobb county,
in favor of J. W. Hardeman, against Abe Dil
lard and R. D. Dillard. Written notice given
parties and tenants in possession in terms of
‘ the law.
Also at the same time and place: Located
in the town of Smyrna, Ga., and being part
iof land lot No. 521, in the 17th district, 2nd
section, of said county, and more fully describ
ed as follows: Beginning at the northeast cor
ner of lot of reland subdivision as shown by
Plat Book 1, page 286, records of subdivision
and running south along the west side of At-
Jlanta-Marietta road, a distance of 66 feet to
the corner of the Thomas property; thence
west along the north line of Thomas property
to a ten-foot alley; thence north along said
alley a distance of 65 feet to the Prather
property, and thence eastd distance of 75 feet
to the beginning point, being all lot No. 1
and 20 feet off the north side of lot No. 2 of
Block “A’ of said division. Also lots Nos. 12,
13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19 of said subdivi
sion Block ““A”, fronting 410 feet on the north
side of Ireland avenue and bounded as follows:
’East by lot owned by Mrs. Hill, south by Ire
land avenue, west by Hamby property, and
‘north by ten foot alley, separating it from
‘the property of Hamby and Brewer. Also
lot No. 12 in said subdivision of Block "R
~containing 1.78 acres and bYornded north by
Ireland avenue, east by Mrs. ~. C. McWilliams,
~south by Ruff property and west by Hamby
‘property, and fronting 420 feet on Ireland
avenue, and extending back south 178 feet.
~ Said property levied on as the property of
8. J. Ireland and Mrs. Cordelia Ireland, to
satisfy an execution issued from Cobb Superior
“Court in favor of Mrs. Emma Murner, and
‘against S. J. Ireland and Mrs. Cordelia Ire
land. A deed filed for the purpose of levy
‘and sale. Written notice given in terms of
the law.
~ This property will be sold first in separate
tracts. If this brings enough to satisfy the
fi fa, sale will be stopped. If not, sale will
again be made as a whole.
1 This the 10th day of December, 1919.
5052 W. E. SWANSON,
Sheriff Cobb County, Ga.
AN ATTORNEY ON ALCOHOL
The following wonderful piece of
word painting has been frequently
published, says the Chicago Tribune,
bue we reprint it at the request of
several readers who desire a com
plete copy. An attorney, in address
ing a jury in a case which involved
the manufacture of aleohol, made the
following terrible arraignment of
the demon.
“I am aware that there is a preju
dice against any man who manufac
tures alcohol. I believe that from
the time it issues from the coiled
and poisonous worm in the distillery
until it empties nto the !jaws of
death, dshonor and crime, it de
moralizes verybody that touches it,
from its source to where it ends. I
do not believe anybody can contem
plate the object without being pre
judiced against the liquor crime. All
we have to do, gentlemen, is to think
of the wrecks on either bank of the
stream of death, of the suicides, of
the insanity, of the ignorance, of
the destitution of the little children
tugging at the faded and withered
breasts of wgeping mothers, of
wives asking for bread, of the men
of genius it has wrecked, the men
struggling with imaginary serpents,
produced by this devilish thing; and
when you think of the jails, of the
almshouses, of the asylums, of the
prisons, of the scaffolds upon either
bank, I do not wonder that every
thoughtful man is prejudiced against
this damned stuc called alcohol. In
temperance cuts down youth in its
vigor, manhood in its strength, old
age in its weakness. It breaks the
age in its weakness. It breaks the
father’s heart, bereaves the doting
mother, extinguishes natural affec
tion, eraces conjugal love, blots out
filial attachment, blights parsntal
hopes, brings down mourning aze in!
sorrow to the grave. It produces
weakness, not strength, sickness, not
health; death, not life. It makes}
wives widows; children orphans;
fathers, fields; and all of them paup
ers and beggars. It feeds rheuma
tism, invites cholera, imparts pesti
lence, and embraces consumption.
It covers the land with idleness, mis
ery, crime. It fills your jails, sup
plies your almshouses, and demands
your asylums. It engenders contro
versies, fosters quarrels and cher
ishes riots. It crowds yoru peniten
tiaries and furnishes vietims for
your scaffolds. It is the life blood
of the gambler, the element of the
‘burglar, the prop of the highway
‘man and support of the midnight in
cendiary. It countenances the liar,
respects the thief, esteems the blas
phemer. It violates obligation,
reverences fraud and honors infamy.
In defames benevolence, hates love,
scorns virtue and slanders inno
cence. It incites the father to butch
er his helpless offsprings, help the
husband to massacre his wife and
the child to grind the paricidal ax.
It burns up men, consumes women,
detests life, curses God, despises
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THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
heaven. It suborns witnesses} nurs
es perjury, defies the jury bo and‘
stains judicial ermine. It degrates
the citizen, debases the legislator,
dishonors the statesman and disarms
the patriot. It brings shame, not
honor; misery, not safety; despair,
not hope; misery, not happiness, and
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with the malevolence of a fiend it
Aalmly surveys its frightful desola
tion and unsatisfied havoe. It poi
sons felicity, kills peace, ruins
morals, blights confidence, slays
reputations, and wipes out nat}onal
honor, then curses the world” and
laughs at its ruin. It does all that
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1919,
and more. It murders the soul. It
is the sum of all villianies, the fath
er of all crime, the mother of all
abominations, the devil’s best friend
and God’s worst enemy.”—Tri-Coun
ty Advertiser. .
THE JOURNAL IS $l.OO A YEAR.