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THE DEiifO
FOR COTTON.
Conditions Reversed by Mills in
South Carolina-
NEXT TO MASSACHUSETTS.
l-firee-Fourths of South Carolina's
Cotton is Now Manufactured at
Home. Avoidinsr Long Hauls.
Columbia,S. C., July 27. —While,
•according to government reports,
the condition of cotton in South
Carolina is poorer than in any oth
er state, the farmers may expect
higher prices than anywhere in
this country. A few years ago
prices here were 30 to 40 points
lower than in New York. Last
year that condition was reversed
.and, because of the increased local
demand, the difference this fall
will probably be as much as a half
cent in favor of the local markets.
This cnanged condition is due to
the cotton mills now running in
every section of the state. If the
crop is as short as indicated these
mills will consume three-fourths of
the production, and to secure their
stock at home without having to
send buyers into other states and
have long hauls on the-railroads
will offer the bonus indicated.
In the last twelve months South
Carolina has taken her position
next to Massachusetts in cotton
manufacturing. There is yet a
big gap between these two leading
states, but the Palmetto is gaining
with phenomenal rapidity. This
state has led Rhode Island in the
number of looms operated for sev
eral years, but it is only now that
.the textile authorities unite in put
ting her ahead of that state in both
looms and spindles.. The figures
for the present time give Rhode
Island 2,000,138 spindles and South
Car01ina'2,249,709. Rhode Island
has 43,691 looms and South Caro
lina 63,612.
North Carolina is next to South
Carolina in the south in cotton
manufacturing, and takes fourth
place in the union. There the rule
.lias been to build small mills.
There are many more mills than in
this state, but with an aggregate
capital and capacity of much less.
She has 1,692,332 spindles and
35,588 looms. New Hampshire
ranks after North Carolina, then
Georgia and Connecticut. The
other states that manufacture op
erate less than 1,000,000 spindles.
According to the figures of a
recognized textile authority, there
was a gain in the United State?
for the last year of 1,578,089 spin
dles, or 75.10 per cent; and 34,084
lcotns, or 7 per cent. South Caro
lina furnished 40 per cent, of the
entire loom increase for the United
States and about 68 per cent, of
the increase in the south. The in
crease for twelve months in spin
dles was 390,363 for this state, or
just about one-fourth of the total
increase in the United States, and
40 per cent, of the additions in the
south.
Two years ago some business
men declared that manufacturing
here was being overdone, but after
such remarkable expansion that
idea is not now entertained. There
seems no disposition to check mill
building. A great water power in
the Catawba river has recently
been purchased by persons who
contemplate its immediate develop
ment, and it is intended to not
only build mills near the river, but
distribute thousands of horse-power,
by electricity 7, where wanted in ad
jacent counties.
The China war has been a set
back to a few South Carolina mills
that haye for years been shipping
goods direct to that market, and
had these not been so strongly
financially fortified, might have
proved disastrous. As it was,most
of them met the emergency 7 by 7 put
ting in machinery for the weaving
of finer cloth. There has been not
the least trouble as to labor. The
DYSPEPSIA
“For ilx rtri I wan a rlotlm of dyM
pep*#.* 'E its worst form I could eat nothing
but milk toast, and at times my stomach would
not retain and digest even that. Last March I
began taking CASCAKETS and since then I
have steadily improved, until I am as well as I
ever was in inj life.'' , _
David H. Murphy. Newark. O.
m CATHARTIC
bwccueto
thaoi waa* m—nn***o^^^r
nSS a,ant - Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Sicken Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. 50c.
••• CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
B'trUag Heaifdj €•■■, Chime*, Mnlitil, R*w T*rk. Sll
NO*Tn k RAP Sold an<l guaranteed by all drug
nu * U-EAU inl3 w else Tobacco Habit.
operatives in a number of mills
have been organized; in others the
m mage me nt has excluded organiz
ers and union men, and tlietje the
matter has rested. The labor is
almost all local, but in the heav
iest manufacturing centers the sup
ply has been exhausted and in
some instances the mountain re
gions of Tennessee have been
drawn on for hundreds of opera
tives.
In three factories in Columb a
and Charleston the negro has been
given trials in cotton mills and in
every instance has failed. They
are bright enough, but will not
work steadily.
Two Waysof Sayingthe Same Thing
New York Times.
American style; “President Mc-
Kinley attended church this morn
ing.”
Turkish style (from the
the official Constantinople organ);
“The sun which lights up the
firmament of the caliphate; the
sublime moon of prosperitj; the
most divine caliph; the head of all
true believers, yesterday, a day
full of bliss, attended the mosque,
dazzling with holy light, which
bears his august name, and which
is one only of his lustrous and re
nowned works.
“In the elevated desire, which
pleases God, to render the homage
due to him, our august master,who
is the source of immeasurable
goodness; who wears the crown of
charity, and who was seated in a
marvelous carriage, a model in
honor and of dignity without equal
and hallowed by the shadow cast
upon it by his majesty, arrived at
the said mosque dazzling with holy
light. There he acquitted his debt
of homage, gaining by this means
renewed holiness and bliss, which
are added to his rare qualities.
Then he returned again, surround
ed by all that is majestic, to his
palace, which is unique in the
world.
“Cries of‘Long live my padisha!’
‘May God prolong his life eternal
ly,’ (prayers worthy of him), rose
toward the heavens, uttered by the
imperial army, to which victory is
already promised, and by his faith
ful subjects.”
Drouth Damage to Western Crcps-
New York Evening Post.
We published yesterday a series
of letters%nd dispatches from thor
oughly trustworthy correspondents
on the spot, which sum up the
damage done by the six weeks’
western dtought, and its probable
effect 0:1 the prosperity of agricul
tural America. The conclusions
drawn seem to us genuinely reas
suring. That is not because un
nleasant facts regarding the loss of
growing corn are disguised or ques
tioned. Our correspondents frank
ly state, as the concensus of sober
trade opinion, that one fourth to
one-third of the huge crop, which
promised so well at the opening of
June, is ruined. The further and
serious loss in fodder, in oats, in
vegetables, and in cattle, is also
conceded, and a falling-off in both
east-bound and west-bound rail
way traffic is shown to be inevi- j
tible. Nor is there any effoitj
made, aftet the familiar Wall strett
fashion, to argue that prices fer j
what is left will rise so high that
the country will be all the richer
for the crop failure. But all of the
writers agree ou two salient points,
which are full of significance for
the future. The farmers them
selves are neither ruined nor dis
couraged. They have accepted
this year’s misfortune as one of the
vicissitudes of life. Five succes
sive years of abundant crops, sold
at the best prices in a generation,
have left them out of debt, and in
many cases rich. The erstwhile
populist farmers, as a Kansas cor
respondent lately noticed, are es
tablishing banks for the benefit of
their own communities. Undoub
tedly, their aggreate loss in 1901
will turn out very heavy but they
can bear it.
HE KEPT HIS LEG.
Twelve years ago J. W. Sullivan,
of Hartfort, Ccn.r, scratched his
leg with a rusty wire. Inflamation
and blood poisoning set in. For
two years he suffered intensely.
Then the best doctors urged am
putation/'but,” he writes, “I used
one bottle of Electric Bitters and
1 1-2 boxes of Bucklen's Arnica
Salve and my leg was sound and
well as ever." For Eruptions,
Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum,Sores
and all blood disorders Electric
Bitters has no rival on earth. Try
them at Young Bros. Drug store
will guarantee satisfaction or re
fund money. Only 50 cents.
“C. C. C.” on Every Tablet.
Every tablet of Cascarets Candy
Cathartic bears the famous C. C. C.
Never sold in bulk. Look for it and
accept no other. Beware of fraud.
All druggists, xoc.
Aerated ti.iij.ue, foul breath, sour
stnmnrh, ran be cured by using K. K.
K. Pills. 25 cents. Do not gripe. I
CARBUNCLES
AND BOILS
SYMPTOMS OF BAD BLOOD
There is a popular belief that every boil is worth
many times its weight in gold, and the sufferer
patiently, even cheerfully, endures the pain under the
mistaken idea that these little tormentors are health
promoters; that they thin the blood when too thick,
and cleanse and cool it when too hot or too rich. 011
the contrary, boils and carbuncles are evidence of blood
poverty, or a fearfully depraved condition of that fluid.
There may be no external evidence of bad blood until
the warm days of spring set in motion the sluggish
circulation and the pent-up impurities, unable to escape
through the natural outlets, gather near the surface of
the skin, and a Carbuncle or a Boil is the result. When the blood is burdened with an
undue amount of this impure matter, the Bcfils come in greater number, eat deeper into the
surrounding flesh, and, being nearly always located on a bed of nerves, cause the most
intense suffering. Robust and apparently healthy people are subject to Boils, and there is
always some hidden agency at work within the blood and system that will eventually
undermine the health, but those whose constitutions are broken down by previous sickness
or other causes, are most often the unhappy victims of Boils and Carbuncles. Exposure to
the deadly malaria destroys the red corpuscles and reduces the blood to such a weak and
watery condition that it succumbs to the boil-producing poisons, and the pale and sallow
DANGEROUS CARBUNCLES.
Mr. J. B. Soott, a resident of Hasel
hurst, Miss., writes: “S. S. S. cured
a malignant carbuncle on my neck
which the dootors had been unable to
bring to a head. Ae soon as I began
to use S. S. S. I was relieved of pain
and the dreadful carbuncle got entirely
well. My skin is clear, sound and
smooth, and I am well today through
using S. S. S. lam 65 years old.”
*
.4 O
kidneys or chronic liver trouble, brought on by lack of nutritious blood; or it may develop
into a running abscess or ugly eating sore, causing years of suffering, and often terminating
fatally. To seek relief from the inflammation and pain produced by these terrifying erup
tions through the application of local remedies is natural and right, but this method of
treatment does not prevent others coming, or bring the slightest relief to the disease-burdened,
deeply poisoned blood. Only a thorough regeneration and building up of the depreciated
blood can bring about a lasting cure of Carbuncles and Boils and prevent their reappearance.
S. S. S. restores to the old blood all its lost properties, re-invigorating and giving it the
healthy red color that only pure, fresh blood can have, and through this new blood strength
S. S. S. uemoves every vestige of it, thus insuring a faultless circulation and healthy body.
Those subject to boils or any skin eruption, old sores or ulcers, are asked to write our
physicians all about their disease, and any information or advice wanted will be cheerfully
and promptly given without any cost to the patient whatever. A valuable book on Blood
and Skin Diseases sent free. ' THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
DISGRACEO THEMSELVES
Soldiers Burn a Respectable Wo
man's Home Near Atlanta.
Atlanta. Ga.. Aug. 1. —Last
night the United States soldiers
who are stationed at Fort McPher
son barracks went to the home of
Julia Whitfield, a respectable wo
man living near the fort, and after
driving her from the house set fire
to it. The house occupied by the J
woman and an adjoining house, 1
which was vacant, were burned to J
the ground. One of the soldiers
was traced to Fort McPherson.
The officer of the day placed him
under arrest. He is Private R. L.
Teverton, Cos. I). 27th regiment.
The identity of the other soldier
has not yet been discovered. The
attack on the woman is said to
have been entirely unprovoked.
The crime of arson is a hanging
one in Georgia.
THOUSANDS ISENT INTO
EXILE.
Every year a large numbei of
poor sfferers whose lungs are sore
and racked with coughs are urged
to go to another climate. But this
is costly and not always sure. Don’t
be an exile when Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Consumption will
cure you -at home. It’s the most
infallible medicine for Coughs,
Colds, and all Throat and Lung
diseases on earth. The first dose
brings relief. Astounding cures
result from persistent use. Trial
bottles free at Young Bros Drug
store Price 50c and SI.OO Every
bottle guaranteed.
If have a baby in the house
you will wish to know the best way
to check any unusual looseness of
the bowels, or dr rrhoea so com
mon to small children. O. P. M.
Holliday, of Deming, Ind., who
has an eleven months’ old child,
says: “Through the months of
fune and July our baby was teeth
ing and took a running off of the
bowels and sickness of the stom
ach. His bowels would move
from five to eight times a day. I
had a bottle of Chamoerlain's Co
lic, Cho'era and Diarrhoea Rem
edy in the house and gave him 4
dreps in a teaspoonful of water
and he got better at once.” For
sale by Hall ami Greer e
sufferer is continually nurs
ing one or more of these
feverish and painful erup
tions. A harmless Boil is
sometimes the precursor of
dreaded Cancer, and too
often the best evidence of a
deranged condition of the
and vigor comes to the bodily organs; the skin resumes its
functions, and impurities of whatever character are taken
up and filtered out of the system in nature’s way.
S. S. S. is made exclusively of roots and herbs selected
for their wonderful purifying and tonic properties. It cures
blood poison diseases of all kinds, whether acute or chronic.
No matter how long the poison may have been in the blood,
NOTICE CONTRACTORS.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
Office Commissioners of Roads aud
Revenues.
Sealed proposals will be received by
1 tbe County Commissioners of Bartow
I County at their office in the court
! house, Cartirsville, Georgia, up to 12
o’clock noon. Tuesday’ September 17th,
I 1901 for Mie furnishing of ail material
| and labor id the erection of a county
1 court house for Bartow county, anti
l building the same in accordance with
the plans and specifications,
j Said plans and specifications are now
I on tile at the County Commissioners’
| office at Cartersvilie, Ga., and also
jon iile at the office of Kenneth McDon
ald t Si J. E. Sheblessy, architects, N. E
corner 4th and Main Streets. Louisville.
Ky.,and at the office of J. W. Goluoke
it .ompany, architects, 4th tfoor Tem
ple Court, Atlanta. Georgia where they
can lie seen by prospective bidders.
The building will be two stories high,
abotu SO x loS leet in size, constructed
of brick, stone.and terracotta and iron,
The first floor will contain rooms lor
the different county offices and vaults
for records. The second floor will con
ta'ii the court room, jury rooms, judge’s
room, witness rooms, etc •
Bids will be received in two ways:
First, tor the complete foundation up to
the top of the water table, and also for
the entire building as per plans and
specifications.
Payments for said work are t) be
made in cash from time to time as the
work progresses upon the estimates of
J. VV. Golucke <fe Cos., architects, reserv
ing out of each payment ten per cent.
(.10) of the amount of estimate until
the whole work is completed.
Each contractor must enclose in his
bid a One Thousand ($1,000.00) dollar
certified check made payable to the
Chairman of the County Commissioners
of Bartow county as a guarantee tnalhe
wili enter into contract at his bid, and
give a good and solvent bond in double
the amount of his bid to be approved by
the Board of County Commissioners
within twenty (20)days after said con
tract is a wanted him. and on his failure
to comply with these terms, the said
cheek to revert to toe County of Bartow
as liquidated damage.
The right is reserved to 1 eject any or
all bids. Bv order of the County Com
missioners of Bartow Countv sitting tor
county purposes this the 17th day of Ju
ly, 1901. Address all bids to the Hon.
L. B Matthews, chairman of the Board
of County Commissioners of Bartow
countv, Cartersvilie. Ga
L B. MATTHEWS, Chairman.
W.M. KING,
A. M. PUi KETT,
T. A. JENKINS,
W. I>. ROWLAND,
Commissioners of Roads and Reve
nues for Bartow County, Georgia.
Leave to Sell Land.
GEORGIA. Bartow County.
To whom it may conrem: lames W. Whit
worth. Administrator of P. A Whitworth, de
ceased. has in due form applied to the undersign
ed for leave to sell the lands belonging to the es
tate of said deceased, and said application will be
heard on the first Monday in August next This
July 3rd, 1901.
G W HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
BANEFUL BOILS.
Mr. R. M. Pratt, Cave, S. C., says :
“ For twenty years I was afflicted with
boils and carbuncles, part of the time
being unable to work or sleep. Several
doctors treated me and I tried numer
ous blood remedies, but roceived no
benefit. During the summer of 1888 I
was persuaded to try S. S. S. A few
bottles cured me entirely and I have
had no return of these painful pests.”
Petition lor Charter.
GE< *RGlA—Bartow County.
To tiie Superior Court of said count;.-;
The petition of John P. Stegall,.!. H,
Vivion, T. It. Jones and Paul A. Stegall
shows:
1 Petitioners desire to beineorpo a
ted for a term of twenty (20) years, witii
the privilege ot renewal at tne end of
that time, under the corporate name
and style of “Stegall Gold Mining Cos.”
2 The object of said corporation is pe
cuniary profit.
3. The principal office and place of
business of said corporation is to be in
Cartersvilie, Bartow county, Georgia,
witii the right to do business and have
olhees elsewhere, in or out of Georgia,
as said corporation may determine.
4. The principal business of said cor
poration is mining of gold and any oth
er metal or mineral, or buying, selling
and leasing of mineral and other lands
and water rights and mining privileges
and timber rights, the buying, leasing,
selling and operating ot any and all
kind of mineral and other lands and
mines and mining operations, the con
duct ot any manufacturing or miring
enterprise, particularly gold and silver
and other precious metals and minerals.
5 The common capital stock ot said
corporation is to be One Hundred Thou
sand Dollars, with the privilege of in
creasing the same at any time or times
to any sum or sums not exceeding One
Million Dollars, as may be determined
bv a majority yote of the capital stock
of said corporation; with the right and
privilege also of issuing prefer] e 4 cap
ital stock in any amount not less than
Filty Thousand Dollars and not exceed
ing in the aggregate Five Hundred
Thousand Dollars at such times and
under such circumstances and condi
tions and iu such amounts as may be
determined by a majority vote of the
capital stock; 11 stock to be of the par
value of Five Dollars each share; all
stock, preierred and common,to be paid
for in cash or proper tv or partly in each,
as mav be determined by a majority
vote of the corporators oroaoital stock
respectively, tbe valuation of the prop
erty taken in pavment oi the capital
stock to lie fixed by the corporators or
majority of the capital stood respective
ly and such valuation so fixed to be con
clusive
Petitioners prav for said corporation
all the rights and privileges incident to
corporations under the laws of Georgia.
JOHN W. A PAUL F. aKIN.
Petitioners’ Attorneys
Filed in Clerk’s offi -e, Bartow Supe
rior Court, this Julv 17th. 1901,
I certify that the above is a true and
“xact copy of the original this dav filed
in office. L. W. REEVES, JR.,
Clerk Bartow Superior Court.
Citation for Dismission.
Estate Caleb Gilreath.
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
Whereas, VV. A. Jackson, executor of Caleb A.
Gilreath. represents to the Court in his petition,
duly filed and entered on record, that he has fuilv
administered Caleb A. Gilreafh’s estate. This is
therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why
said executor should not be discharged from his
administration, and receive letters of dismission
on the first Monday in October next |
This Ju'y ist. 1901 .
G. VV. HENDRICKS, Ordinary
Petition for Charter.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
. To the Superior Court of wd county:
The oeiition of 11. A. Chapman,- 1). B.
Freeman and A. M. Willingham, ail of
said state and county, respect fully
shows:
(1.) That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns,
to become incorporated under the name
and style of "The Cartersville Printing
Company.”
tit.) The term for which petitioners
ask to he incorporated Is twenty vears,
with privilege of renewal at the end of
that time.
(111.) The object ot said corporation is
pecuniary gain and profit to its stock
holders
(1 V.) The particular business of said
corporation is to do a general printing
and publishing business, the publishing
and issuing a newspaper or newsoapers
and such other periodicals and publica
tions as said corporation may desire.
(V ) Petitioners also Hsk and desire
lor said corporation the right to buy,
hold, sell, lease and 1 ent fur the purpo
ses of said business ail kinds of real and
personal property, the light to mort
gage or otherwise encumber the same,
borrow money, make proinisory notes,
issue bonds or other evidences of debt
ami to ecure the sains by mortgage or
otherwise, and to make all other con
tracts necessary and proper to the con
duct of su'd business. Also the right to
sue and he sued, plead and he implead
ed under its corporate name, and to
have and use a com 111911 seal; to have *.
constitution and by-laws, to elect offi
cers and directors, to employ agents,
and to have any and all other such pow
ers and priyilf ges as are necessary to
carry out the purposes aforesaid, not in
consistent with the laws of said state.
(VI.) The principal office of said cor
posation to he in Cartersville, said State
and county.
(VII ) The capital stock of said cor
poration is to he Five Thousand Dollars,
divided into shares of titty dollai s each,
with the privilege of Increasing aaid
capital stock to any amount or amounts
not exceeding Twenty-live Tnousana
Dollars, with power and authority to
receive lor said canitai stock or sny
part thereof, cash or such property, ma
terial and machinery as the said corpo
ration may require' in the transaction,
of its proposed business.
Wherefore petitioners pray the grant
ing ot an order by the court incorpora
ting them and tiiose wlio may become
associated with them and their success
ors, lor the term of twenty y r ars, with
!,lie privilege of renewal, with all the
powers and privileges enumerated,and
with all other powers rightsand immu
nities incident to corporations of like
character as prescribed by the laws of
said state, and petitioners will ever
pray, etc. JNO. T.NORRIS.
Attorney for Petitioners.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
I, L. VV. Keev-es, Jr., Clerk of the Su
perior Courfbf said county, do hereby
certify mat the foregoing is a true and
correct copy ot the original apolication
for charter now of file in mv office. Giv
en under my hind and official seat this
tlie 17th day of July, 1901.
L W. REEVES, JR.
C. S C., Bartow County, Ga.
Petition for Charter.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To the Superior Court of said county:
The petition of W. O. Henderson,
John S. Leake, T. R. Hammond. J. M.
Jackson, J. VV. Saggers, J T. Conyers,
R F Kincatiuon, Mrs. F. L. Lucas and
L- VV Reeves, Jr., ah of said county
and state, respectively shows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns
to be incorporated under the corporate
name and style of “Raccoon Creek Gin
Company. ”
2. The term for which petitione-s ask
to be incorporated is twenty years, with
the priyilege of renewal a( dip expira
tion of that time,
3. The capital stock of said corpora,
tion is to be Five Thousand Dollars, to
be divided into fifty shares ol one hun
dred dollars each, Petitioners, however,
ask tbe priyilege of increasing said cap
ital stock Iron lime to time, to a sum
not exceeding in the aggreg te Twenty
i’nousand Dollars.
4. The object ol the proposed corpora
ri-m is pecuniary piofit and gain to its
stockholders. The b'isiaew cor
poration proposts to carry on is a gTftHr
eral ginning business, ana to erect and”
operate gins, presses and other machin
ery lor ginning and packing cotton for
the-public tor toll or cash, to purchase)
and sell cotton, cotton seed and to do
such other H'-ts as are nfeeessary and
convenient to carry out the purposes of
said corporation, and forthese purposes
petitioners ask for said corporation the
power to carry on the business herein
oefore set out; the power to purchase,
lease, have and own lands, buildings,
machinery, and anv other property,
real and personal, that they may deem
necessary for the purposes of the bus
iness of said corporation, with the pow
er to sell and carry same, and reinvest
the proceeds at their pleasures, the
right to borrow- money and issue notes
and obligations therefor, and tp.secure
same by deed, mortgage or otherwise,
with the sa.ne rights and powers as in
dividuals have in like matters; to enter
into contracts and employ agents and
servants; to haye and use a corporate
seal; to make by-laws not inconsistent
with the laws ol the land, and to alter
oriepeal same at pleasure; to sue and
be sued in their corporate name, and
generally, to have, enjoy and exercise
all the corporate powers and privileges
incident to private corporations for bus
iness purposes, as prescribed by the
law s of Georgia.
5. The principal office and place of
business of the proposed corporation
will be near Stilesboro, Bartow eounty,
Georgia.
0. Petitioners ask for said corporation
the rigiit and power to receive property
of any kind, at its fair market value, in
payment, for subscriptions to its capital
stock.
Wherefore petitioners pray to be made
a body corporate under the name and
style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights,
privileges and immunities and subject
to the liabilities fixed by laws.
This 17th July, 1901.
JNO. 11. VV'rKLE.
Attorney for Petitioners.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
I, L. VV. Reeves, Jr., clerk of tbe Su
perior Court oi said county, do hereoy
ce. tify that the foregoing is a true and
correct copy of the original petition for
charter for the “Raccoon Creek Gin
Company” now- of file in mv office.
Given under my hand and official sig
nature this 17ih day of Julv, 1901.
L W. REEVES, Clerk
Bartow Superior Court.
Notice.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To J*ne. Lindsey and Emma Milner, of said
county, and xobert Thompson. .Satah Parker,
Spencer Marsh, Ambrose Marsh and Carrie
Perkins, non-residents of said state, heirs-at-law
of Timothy Marsh, deceased:
Notice is hereby given that I have tiled my ap
plication with the ordinary of said county, for an
order for distribution in kind of the residue of
the estate of Timothv Marsh, late of said county,
deceased, now remaining in my hands as adminis
trator anithat said apoli'-ation will be heard at
the regular term of Court of Ordinary for
said county to be held on the first Monday in Oc
tober, 190!. This June 4th, iqoi.
JAMES UREN
Administrator Estate of Timothy Marsh, dec
am-amo. v