Newspaper Page Text
THE WRIGHTSVILLE RECORD.
Entered at the nostoffioe at Wrights¬
ville ns second class mail matter.
A. B. PIERCE, : : : : : EDITOR.
OFFICIAL ORCAN JOHNSON CQ.
SUBSCRIPTION. RATES:
One Year $1.00. | 3 Months 2f»c.
Months ' 50c. 5 Weeks 10c.
(5
Wrightsville, Ga., March 8,1900.
The democratic state executive
committee meets in Atlanta on
March 16th.
Cotton lias reached tbt 10 cents
notch, and we have no idea where
it will stop at now.
Mr. H. M. Franklin, mayor of
Tennille, is spoken of us a candi¬
date {or representative of Wash¬
ington county.
If the Populists do not amount
to anything, why do the demo¬
crats keep up their appeal for them
to return to the d, o. p. ?
Tennille will not have any Chau¬
tauqua this year, but will join in
with Wrightsville, and next year
the compliment will be returned
if Tennille decides to have ono.
Factories are being built all
arbund us, but it. seems that no
one will take the lead here and
push the matter. If we expect to
keep up with the procession we
must have factories.
The Georgia Tribune, an Augus¬
ta Populist paper, does not believe
that party should put out a Hate
ticket this year'.—Dublin Courier
Dispa,cli. Th*
The above is misleading.
Tribune said it saw no reason for
the Populist to .put out candidate. 1
before the democrats acted.
A western paper with ideas of
its own as to the proper method
of receiving pay from those it
serves, printed the following ed
itorial: “Persons knowing them
selves indebted to this office are
requested to call and settle. All
those indebted to this office and
not knowing it, are requested to
call and find out. All those know¬
ing themselves indebted and not
wishing to call are requested to
stay in one place long enough for
us tocutoh them. All those not in¬
debted are requested to call and
gut indebted.”
STATE CONVENTION.
The Populists of the State of
Georgia are hereby called to meot
in State Convention at the Capi¬
tol building in the city of Atlanta
on Tuesday, April 10 (second Tues¬
day), 1900, at 11 o'clock a. m., for
the purpose of electing delegates to
fhe Middle-of-tho-Road Populist
National Convention, which meets
at Cincinnati, O., on Wednesday,
May 9th, 1900. And to nominate
candidates for Governor and other
State house offices, and to attend
to such other business as may
properly come before the Conven¬
tion.
The representation shall be two
delegates from each county for
each representative io tho lower
house of the Georgia legislature.
Let the County Chairman of each
county and Populists and reform¬
ers everywhere throughout the
State go to work with a will and
make this the largest and most en¬
thusiastic meeting we have ever
held iu the State.
We urge those counties that
have uot yet dona so to call meet¬
ings at once and mnkp prepa¬
rations to attend the Convention
in large numbers. If we expect
to win this great battle we must
prepare to make a vigorous fight
in every county and product
throughout the State. So go to
work at once.
S. J. MoKkight, Chairman.
This Feb. 21st, 1900.
DEWEY CELEBRATION MACON,
GA., MARCH 23d.
CHEAP RATES VIA CENTRAL OF GEORGIA,
Tickets will be sold from Augustri
and Gaines, Millen, Eiifaula, Ga., Columbia, (Jolumbus, A la, Fort
Ga., Ala.,
Thomaston, Newnan, Atlanta, Athens
and intermediate points, at one fare
for the round trip for civilians, and
one lc. per mile traveled for military
companies and brass bands, twenty or
more on one ticket. Tickets will be
sold on March 22, and for trams sched¬
uled to arrive in Macon forenoon of
28d., final limit returning March 2-lHi.
For. tickets, rates and full iuforma
tldn apply to nearest ngent or In
J. C. Haile,
G. P. A., Savannah, Ga.
NOTICE TO POPULISTS
To t|ie.Populists of Johnson Co.:
The state chairninq lias issued n
call for a Populist meeting, to be
held in Atlanta on Tuesday, April
10th, 1900, to transact business of
importance. We are entitled to
two delegates to said convention.
Therefore I now call a meeting of
the populists of Johnson county,
to meet in the court house in
Wrightsville, on the 7th day of
April, 1900, (tho first Saturday))
promptly at 11 o’clock, to elect
delegates to the state convention,
and otherwise brush up lor the
fall campaign. Lot every Popu¬
list who sees this cull show it t°
every Populist he meets,^wctyluy
ing all other business aside, we
will have a rousing and
siastic meeting.'
J. 15. Howard, Chairman.
MORE REQUESTS.
There never was any need of the
Populist party. The work of op¬
posing the doctrines of the repub¬
licans which huve encroached upon
the liberties of the people should
have been left to the democracy.
The populists this year have no
reason whatever for maintaining
their organization. They should
join with the democracy under the
leadership of Mr. Bryan to save
the country from the centralizing
tendencies which are about to
transform the government into a
plutocratic despotism. No ques¬
tion will lie asked as to past rela¬
tions if they will come into the
fold.—Dublin Courier-Dispatch.
Tho above is only a sample of
tho many appeals that are being
made every day by the democrats
to the Populists to return to the
fold. Only four years ago tho
Populists tried to help the detno
;rats to elect Mr. Bryan, and they
were treated with contempt and
scorn, and Mr. Bryan was defeated
when if the Populists had been
treated right he would no doubt
have been elected. As a whole,
the Populist parly will never go
back to the democratic organiza¬
tion. Tho country is in better
shape today tiiar, it has been in
years. Cotton is bringing 10 cents
and everything else is a good price.
Will our neighbor tell us what as¬
surance tho Populists would get
that they would not he treated
again as they were in 189(5 were
they to join with them under
Bryan’s leadership to “save the
country,” ns tho Courier-Dispatch
puts it.
GOOD ADVICE TO FARMERS.
The following, clipped from our
correspondent’s letter from New
Haven, meets with our hearty
endorsement:
v ‘My advice is for the farmer to
make his obligations this year so
he can meet them next year with
5 or 6 cents cotton. Then if we
get 8 or 10 cents for it wo will tie
in better circumstances :he next
year.”
This, by a practical farmer, is
nothing but cold, bard sense. If
the farmer’s cotton was raised for
6 cents and marketed for 8
he would be a gainer by at least
$10 per bale over thnt of the
cotton raised on an 8-cent
And, if the market opened as low
as 61 cents, there would still bo a
small profit to the thrifty and
economical planter, who had
forethought to plant a
crop. Abide by this practical
planter’s advice, curtail the acre¬
age as much ns possible, and
results will surpass
and all the farmer’s
can be met in a purely
manner.
COnE IN AND PAY.
Next week is city cohrt and
will be iu attendance many
are due Tins Record for
tion. We have names on our
which date bnck two or three
amt we hope they will not let
opportunity pass for them to pay
up. The date to which your paper
is paid is opposite your name, and
if you are behind or if there is any
error in the date, please come in
aud let’s get the matter straight.
Win. Orr, Newark, O., says, “We
never feel sale without One Minute
Cough Cure in the WhUse. It saved
my little hoy’s life when In? had the
pneumonia. medicine We think it isthebes’
made.” It cures coughs,
colds and all lung diseases. Pleasant
to take, harmless, and gives immedi¬
ate results. J. W. Eland ers.
Whim needing hardware seeGil
, ‘;ert Hardware Co., „ Dublin, Ga.
KNITTING MILL AND YARN FACTORY
Wrightsville Is to Have the Enterprise Established at Once.
Big Thing For This Part of Georgia.
ALREADY $15,000 SUBSCRIBED!
More than $15,000 of the necessary $25,000 which it will
take to build and equip a knitting mill and yarn factory have
been subscribed, and new subscriptions are daily being added
to the list by our citizens.
Messrs. II. E. Cook and \V. W. Cook, the prime movers in
the enterprise, are working hard for its success, and the fact
that they have put their shoulders behind it will make it a
success beyond a doubt.
Two weeks ago The Record made an appeal to our citizens
to get together and do something in the way of getting some
factories here, and we are happy to see that we struck a
popular chord in the minds of our people.
Prices on machinery have been asked for, and the work in
every detail will be pushed as soon as possible. It is the
earnest desire of the promoters to have the factories in full
operation by October 1st, next.
This enterprise is going to be a big thing for cotton plant¬
ers in our section, and will be of lasting benefit to the mer
chants of Wrightsville and property ownurs. The farmer will
have access to an open market for cotton the year round, and
can sell it at prices which will compare with any other inland
market in the cotton belt.
The sales of the merchants will be at least one-third larger,
and we predict that they will be kept busy clothing and feed¬
ing the few hundred employes who will live here and operate
big mills. Property owners will see their town lots and
residences enhance in value, building trades will boom and
all business will be visibly affected.
What Caused Populism ?
There seems to lion general im¬
pression in eastern newspaper offi¬
ces mid-eastern political heiulqiuvr
ters that the western and southern
Populist is a long-n luskered, igno¬
rant, fanatical and impractical
man, who wants to remedy social
conditions, but does not know how¬
to go about the task. These mis¬
taken estimates of the Populists
would be speedily removed if some
of the editors and politicians from
the east would come west or south
and undertake to hold joint de¬
bates with the Populists of
braska or Georgia, whose hands
nre calloused and whose skins are
tanned by the western and south¬
ern sun and wind . It is noc hard
to find proof that havd times and
short crops had little or nothing
to do with the growth of Populism
in the west and south. The Popu¬
list party made its first great show¬
ing in 1890, and the year before
the west and south had good crops
and fair prices. The Populist
party won in the Nebraska
tioii3 of 1894, 1896 and 1898,
crops were good in these years and
the prices up to the nvorege of a
series of years. \Vhat, then, caused
the growth of Populism ?
15y their firesides during the
long winter evenings the farmers
of tho south and west read and
studied political history.
They noted tho constant and
steady drifting away from the old
landmarks; they noted the steady
drifting of power naturally be¬
longing to the people into the
hands of money grabbers.
They read history and compared
the principles laid down by the
founders with the principles being
acted upon by the men who had
assumed control of the govern¬
ment, and by the comparison they
saw the dangers ahead. Like pat¬
riots, they protested, and when no
heed was given to their protests
they organized and sought to se¬
cure at the ballot box and return
to first principles. True it 19 that
men Icoked upon as fanatics joined
the ranks of Populism, but time
was when William Lloyd Garri¬
son, Wendell Phillips and John
Brown were regarded as fanatics.
The ‘fanatics” of the Populist
party were living a few years ahead
of their time. Every dny brings
its vindication to their course^
Populist9 are uot Populists be¬
cause their fathers tfgfe Populists:
They are Populists because they
havo read and studied and thought.
Ten years ngo the founders of the
Popntist party pointed out the
advantages of municipal control of
public utilities, , They were laugh¬
ed at. by the men who art today
the staunchest advocates of num i c •
ipnl control, ft is time that men
should realize .that. Populism i-*
something »uoi)e than the out
growlli of hard times and drouth
and mortgages. It jg th< 3 out¬
growth of study and endeavor of
patriotism) and n desire to secure
greatest good loathe greatest num
ber,—"A Democrat,” in Omaha
World-Herald. .! i
■
Pulpit’s Influence.
4
A number of sermons lately
announce that tjje influence of the
pulpit is waning. That has been
noted by outsiders for many years.
There IS too mifoh formality and
not enough real'Christian spirit in
many of the pulpits. They are
time servers; they will preach to
the charge thaLwill pay the larg¬
est salary ; they scheme to get put
over the richest congregations;
they preach to please rather than
instruct; th»y talk of nun-essen¬
tials rat her than social duties;
they tell of things in the long ngo
father than Imw man should live
and act todaythey close their
eyes to the various forms of usury
(profit, interest, and rent) and ex¬
tend the glad hand to those who
live by these means if they will
only contribute jibei-ally. Not all
preachers are of this kind, but so
ninny are that the character 1ms
been estimated by this standard,
and the [leopltT have fallen away
from the church, and, you will
hear remarks of this kind made in
almost any gathering whon the
subject turns <?h religion. It is
not said in the presence of the
cloth, out of that respect, men
have for, it is timro
and consoquefffK^Ifio chpteh has
lost its influence and .power/ Peo¬
ple go tn. church largely;out of
habit and to see who is there, but
the Christian spirit has fled the
house.—Appeal to Reason.
Church Directory,
Methodist—Services eyery Sunday
morning and uveniii£. Prayer
meeting Tuesday evening. Sunday
school at 4 :D0 p. in. Strangers visitiKg
(he city are cordially invited to attend
these services, Rev. K. F. Morgan,
pastor.
Baptist—First Sunday 11 a. in. and
evening. Third Sunday, morning and
Strangers visiting Sunday school 10:00
a. m. the city are
cordially ices. jnviled to attend these serv¬
Rev. Tims. Walker, pastor.
and Christian—Every evening Sunday Prayer morn ing
Thursday evening. services. Strangers meul visiting iiig
Wrightsville cordially Itev. . ihvit«L to at¬
tend guson, these pastor. services. liilpy Fer¬
The Whole Truth.
A newspaper lias no business
for office, says theCarlinsville En¬
quirer:
. “It is his business to get an office
for auother fellow; and to Eound
the praise of another candidate
and keep quiet his own feelings;
to Whoop her up for his man aud
let Ins man forget all when he
elected; to defend his candidate
against the unjust attacks of the
opposition and see that whatever
favors his candidate has to bestow
goes to the other fellow. It is his
business to boom the city month
after month, for all it is worth;
- U00 worth of priming *,
out of the city because 10 cents
can be saved by doing so. It. is
the business of the newspaper to
give ® every enterprise 1 a
seudoff and then catch shuel . be-,
cause he has failed to record the
fact that some citizen has had his
delivery wagon painted. To sub¬
scribe libirallv to every public,
charitable and church entertain¬
ment, advertising them for nothing
pay his own way to everything, and
then be called prejudiced and mean
spirited because a column is not
devoted to that particular affair.
Do yon wontler that there are so
many cranks in the newspaper bus¬
iness? It is bound to make a crank
or a philosopher out of a man.”
SCIENCE OF FEEDING
valuable: information FUR¬
NISHED BY STATE CHEM¬
IST M’CANDLKSS.
IMPORTANCE OF COTTON SEED
Mow the Urogrissive Kurin-r May
Calculate the Heat Ration*
Kor III* Stork.
To A. B. C.—Renewing my letter* to
yon, which have for a time been inter¬
rupted by more pressing official duties,
1 here give yon the table of analyses of
the more common feeding etnffs, which
I promised you in my last
TABLE Of DIGESTIBLE MATTER IN 100
POUNDS OF FUST) STUFFS.
& t»ls. In- ; i I Csrtc- ky- r»t.
(Corn Fodder esses? Aratee_
2 fe x j 5 I ^ l Cowpea......... Oat f Rye ern Fodder....... Fodder...... Silage c*or^-i P-NN- 1 22.06 I2.U8 11 14 8 06 79 11 y 0 (I 0 1 iff 04 25 05 44
Hay chard made Gross.......... from Or¬
Cowpea. Timothy.............. Crab-grass............. Crimson Mixed Red White Clover............. Grasses......... Clover......... Clover........ ........... *SS£5££S b**>oc^Y*~>oqe^ 11 W 10 6 «- 2 5 4 4 m 04 70 56 4e 2. * i as 2f 41 as. 41 99 7 82 4 4i. in i- ; 1 1 1 1 1:8 1 1.51 1 '33 40 48 29 43 41
Roots, Grains, etc...... off
Turnips................ Ruta-bugas............. '0 81 ?:S
Corn 0 88 o n
Oats (grainy. 7 02 06 a
Wheat (grain).. 9 25 S3 4 13
Cotton Seed (grain) 10.26 1 83
W hole. . 11 0b <3 15 13.44
Corn Moal_____ 7 01 85 £ 3- 25
Corn and Cob Meal 6.46 55 2.87
Ground Corn and Oats
Wh»r Wheat 8) :::::::: et-,w) 12.91 7.i» 61.20 41 25 3W 2 37
Whsftt Shorts Middlings...... 12.79 58.15 3 40
Out Seed Meal______ ......... K 12.22 » 00 3.33
feSSS. ton c<sqc . 37.01 10 52 12 53
HlUli ::;: 0 42 30 96 1.39
SpSmOTMUk:■ 3.43 4.77 8 70
Blitter Whey. Milk.......... ........... = ac4*o 3 0 0 2 W 87 84 id 4.89 4 .<l 0 °_g] I 63 *
I hope yon will now go back aud care
fully read again my previous letters
and fix in your mind the explanations
there given of the varion* terms, which
are nsed in the above table of analyses,
what protein is and what function it
fills in the animal economy, building
muscle and lean meat, blood, nerves,
hair, tendons and even part of the
bones, alto tbo office of tbs carbohy¬
drates and the fat prodnoing fat, in the
body, keeping np its heat and prodno¬
ing foroe or energy. Yon will then
better understand the table jnst given.
This is a short table selected from nu¬
merous analyses, as containing the ma¬
terials most likely to be met with on
the average southern farm and nsed for
the feeding of stook.
The above table does not give the
complete analysis of the feeding stuffs
mentioned, bnt gives the digestible
matter in 100 pounds of eaoh feed. For
instance, the oomplete analysis of oot
ton seed meal is as follows: Water AS
per cent, ash 7.2 per cent, protein 42 3
percent, carbohydrates 29.3 per cent,
fat 18.1 per cent, or total 100 per cent.
By referring to the table, however, yon
will see that about five pounds of the
protein is indigestible and about
13 pound* of tho carbohydrates
are also indigeatihlo. 1 ue figure* in
the above table h vs he«n obtained by
careful feeding exp i me its. aud are
the result of much painstaking, cureful,
conscientious work, and are therefore
very valuable as being practical in the
best sense. Only that part of the food
is of value to the animal which pasaes
into the circulation, after beiug acted
on by the fluids of tbe stomach and in¬
testines, and being taken np by the
blood goee to repair the waste of the
body, 10 make new flesh, to add fat, or
to serve as a source of energy or work.
In preparing these tabies of digesti¬
ble matter the, experimenters care:nlly
weighed the animals at the beginning
of each experiment, carefully analysed
the ration* fed to them, carefnlly saved
every drop of liquid- and eolid of the
dnng and urine and analysed them,
and then by «tndiontly comparing
and these percentages they called the
"digestion ooefficienta” Such table*
a* these are the basie of scientific feed- ”,
ing. ...... Little as you may .... think of . it . thia
subject is of the utmost practical im
portance. not only to the agricultural
»,»
ity of the nation.
TO THE PEOPLE OF JOHNSON CO.
r -•
I beg to announce my candidacy
for re-efection to the office of Solic¬
itor General, subject to the Demo¬
cratic primary, and solicit your sup¬
port. Respect fully,
B, T. RAWLINGS.
^ exporienoe of tba ^ decade hms
d , moni trat*d, and I hop* conclusively
to our farmer* at least, that the day ha*
passed when their exclusive attention
can be devoted to the production cf one
orop, and that crop, one whieh is not
essential to the life of man; at least in
the way in which it is at present ban
died, it is only oondneive to the com
human family as raiment,
£“XZ
Te i6pment and sustenance of life itsell
To explain my meaning in a* few word*
*• possible, ie this, that we have been
«***> «* **? * ““
to be spnn into cloth, when we should
h#Te bean ^uing n for the sake of its
precions seed, born into the world in a
manner befitting its royal origin as the
eon of King Cotton, swaddled and en¬
circled in th* downiest fur and not na¬
ked and forlorn as is the wont ot earthly
princelings. It does seem as if this
jealous care of Mother Nature should
have made ns recognise earlier the great
valne of the little aeed which she
wrapped np so carefnlly. As I said,
we have been raising it for the sake of
its fibre to be spun into doth when we
should have been raising it chiefly for
the sake of the protein andcarbohy
drate* of its seeds to be transmuted by
wonderful alchemy of the brute crea¬
tion into beefmilk, mutton and pork,
with the lint simply thrown in as a by¬
product When we consider the won¬
derful nutritive valne of cottonseed
meal and fanlla, after the oil, another
byproduct, has been extracted from
them, and the further fact that this
rich, nutrition* food may be pasied
through the domestic animals, giving
them life, growth and development,
and yet in that process lose only about
10 per cent of the rich fertilizing con¬
stituents found in the original food,
and yielding a manure of the very best
quality, it doe* seem as though nature
had been too iavLb and generous in her
gift* to n* of the sonth.
We have been slow to realize the im
portance of the “talent which we hare
buried," but the day is breaking, and
ere long we shall, by developing the va
riona product* of this wonderful plant,
become the richest people in the world,
and by consequence th* oenter of civili¬
sation, refinement and the arts. I have
thus digressed from the teohnical de¬
tails we have been discussing for tho
purpose of impressing more strongly
upon yon their importance. In my next
letter, w th the aid of another table and
some explanations, I hope to be able to
show yon how to calculate for vonrsalf
a scientific ration for th* stock yoa are
feeding. Yonrs truly.
. •: John 2d. McCaxdless.
State Chemist.
:s ■ Worlk Kor the Mouth.
Start the plows as soon as possible,
anti finish sowing wheat and oats. Take
advantage of every day when the ground
is in suitable condition and speed tbo
plow, that yon may be ready to plant
the various crops at the proper time.
Subsoil, or at least double furrow as
much of your laud as possible, particu
larly for such crops as corn, sorghum
and sngarcane. Arrange for a good
garden by heavy manuring and deep
plowing, and in Sonth Georgia plant
the hardier vegetables the latter part of
the month. During the many days that
R will be too wet to plow, repair the
fences, gates, terraces, eto. Make your
composts: mix your fertilizers; haul
leaves and keep yonr stock well bedded;
P nt Sood homemade bandies in all yonr
tool*. »nd keep away from town. Too
much of this month is often frittered
away in comparative idleness, many
farmers thinking they have plenty of
time ahead in which to prepare their
land for planting, and then should Feb
ruary and Maroh be very wet, planting
time will catoh them unprepared.
Special Offer
From this date until April I, we will
give to tho pergon sending us tho
most subscribers to The Rkcohd. at
our special rate of 75 cts. per annum,
“The Story of France”
(By Hon. Tho*. E. Watson)
The story is in two volumes,contain¬
ing 1700 pages, well bound and costs
$.3.00.
Subscriptions may bo sent in as you
got them, only you must state shat you
are working for the prize. Wo have the
books now In our office, where they can
be inspected any time.
A copy will be given free tor
30 names at 75 cts. per year.
Mrs. Harriet- Evans, Hinsdale, 111.,
children writes, **I never fail to relieve my
One Minute from croup at once by using
Cough Cure. 1 would not
feel sale without it,” Quickly cures
coughs, colds, grippe, and all throat
and lung troubles. J. W. Flanders.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Djnests what VOI1 eat
Struct!ng the exhausted digestive or
gkns. It Is the latest discovered digest
approach it in efficiency. Preparation It
can In*
stantly Dyspepsia, relieves and permanently cures
Flatulence, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nausea,
SBS^lSSSSSHffiSSi
Prepared by E. C. DeWItt A Co., Chicago.
SHERIFFS SALES.
Will be sold before tbe conrt hou.ie door, in
the city of Wrightsville, on the first Tuesday iff
April. 1900, within the legal hours of sale, tlie
following property, po wit: 200 acres of land,
more or less, lying and being in the HOoth dis
- Johnson county, Georgia; bounded
on the north by lands of Wright Snmner, south
by W. B. Moorman, west by Lncy Bray, cast by
Kimbal Smith. Levied on and to be sold as the
property or Mrs. Be Walker to satisfy a justice
court fi fa. issued from court of 1105th district,
G. M„ in favor of the Savannah Guano Com¬
pany vs. Be Walker. Legal notice given defen¬
dant. Levy made by J. F. Carter, L. C\ aud
returned to me this Feb. 8,1900.
J. W. ROWLAND, Sheriff J. C.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
Georgia Johnson County.
Whereas,Elizabeth Powell,adminis¬
tratrix of Bennett Powell, represents
to this court in her petition duly filed
and entered on record, that she has
fully administered Bennett Powell’s
estate, Ibis is is, therefore, to cite all
persons concerned, heirs and creditors,
to show cause, if any they can, why
said administratrix should not be dis¬
charged from her administration ami
receive letter of dismission on the first
Monday in April, 1000. This, Jan. 1st,
1000, J. E. Page, Ordinary, J. C.
lawSin
GEORGIA—Johnson Co.
Whereas Jacob llicKs, administrator
of Louis Arline, deceased, represents
to the court in his petition, duly filed
ami entered on record, that he lias ful¬
ly administered said estate. This is
therefore to cite all persons concerned
kindred and creditors, to show cause,
if any they can, why said administra¬
tor should not be discharged from his
administration aud receive letters of
dismission on the 1st Monday in April
IDOO. This, Jan. 1st, 1900.
J. E. Page, Ordinary, J. C.
GEORGIA— Johnson County.
Charles and Henry llicks, executors
upon the estate of James Hicks, late
of said county, deceased, have filed
their therefore,tocite petition for discharge; this is,
all persons concerned
to show cause against the granting ot
this discharge at the regular term of
the court of ordinary for said county,
to be held on the first Monday in May,
1900. This Feb. 6th,1900.
J. E. Page, Ordinary.
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