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UNDER TWO
FLAGS By •° uida '
Cecil sat quite still, as lie had sat
looking down on the record of his
fa tiler's death when Cigarette had
rallied him with her gay challenge
among the Morcsco ruins. His face
flushed hotly under the warm golden
hue of the desert bronze, then lost all
color as suddenly, till It was as pale
as any of the Ivory he carved. He,
imm
He laid, on the table the gold.
a common soldier In the Algerian cav
alry, knew that by every law of birth
right he was pow a peer of England.
The vagabond throngs Moorish,
Frank, negro. Colon-paused as they
pushed their way over the uneven
road and stored at him vacantly where
he stood. There was something In his
attitude, in his look, which swept over
thorn, seeing none of them. In the eager
lifting of his head. In the excited tire In
his eyes, that arrested all, from the
dullest muleteer plodding on with bis
string of patient beasts to the most vol
atile French girl laughing on her way.
lie did not note them, hear them,
think of them. He remembered noth
ing save that he, and he alone, was the
rightful lord of Royallieu. Holding
the journal clinched close In his hand,
he went swiftly through the masses of
the people out and away, he little not
ed where, till he had forced his road
beyond the gates, beyond the town, be
yond all reach of its dust and its bab
ble and its discord, and was alone In
the farther outskirts.
Reaching the heights, he stood still
Involuntarily and looked down once
more on the words that told him of his
birthright. He was Viscount Royal
lieu as surely as any of his fathers had
been so before him and was dead for
ever in the world’s belief. He must
live and grow old and perish by shot
or steel, by sickness or by age, with
his name and his rights burled and his
years passed as a private soldier of
France. There was a passionate re
volt, a bitter heartsickness on him.
All the old freedom and peace and lux
ury and pleasure of the life he had left
so long allured him with a terrible
temptation. The honors of the rank
that he should uow Ipaye tilled were not
u ' l :“fhe rememuefed. JVhat be longed
for with an agonized uesire was" to
6tand once more stainless among his
equals, to reach once more the liberty
of unchallenged, unfettered life, to re
turn once more to those who held him
but as a dishonored memory, as one
whom violent dentil had well snatched
from the shame of a criminal career.
“But who would believe me now?”
he thought. “Besides, this makes no
difference. If three words spoken
would reinstate me, I could not speak
them at that cost The beginning per
haps was folly, but for sheer justice's
sake there is no drawing back now.
Let him enjoy It God knows I do not
grudge him it”
The distant mellow ringing ootes of
a trumpet call floated to his ear from
the town at his feet It was sounding
the return to camp. Old Instinct long
habit made him start and shake his
harness together and listen. The trum
pet blast winding cheerily from afar
off recalled him to the truth, summon
ed him sharply back from vain regrets
to the facts of dally life. It awoke him
as It wakes a sleeping charger. It
roused him as it rouses a pounded
trooper.
lie stood hearkening to the familiar
music until it had died away, spirited,
yet still lingering; full of fire, yet fad
ing softly down the wind. He lis
tened till the last echo ceased. Then
he tore the paper that he held in strips i
and let it float away, drifting down the I
yellow current of the reedy river chan- 1
net.
“So best after all perhaps,” he said
half aloud in the solitude of the ruined
and abandoned mosque. “He cannot
well come to shipwreck with such a
fair wind and such a smooth sea. And
I—l am Just as well here. To ride
with the chasseurs is more exciting
than to ride with the Pytchley. And
the rules of the ehambree are scarce
more tedious than the rules of a court.
Nature turned me out for a soldier, '
though fashion spoiled me for one. 1
can make a good campaigner. I should
never make anything else.”
And he let his sword drop back again
into the scabbard and quarreled no
more with fate.
His hand touched the 30 goldpiece*
in his sash.
He started aa the recollection of th
forgotten Insult came back on him.
He stood awhile In thought; then ho
took his resolve.
A half hour of quick movement
brought him before the entrance gates
of the Villa Aioussa. A native of Su
dun in a rich dress who had the office
of porter asked him politely his errand.
“Ask if Corporal Victor of the chas
seurs can be permitted a moment’s in
terview with your mistress. I come
by permission,” he added ns the native
hesitated between his fear of a soldier
and his sense of the appalling uuflt
tingness of a corporal seeking audience
of a Spanish princess. The message
was passed about among several of the
household. At last a servant of higher
atAliorlty appeared.
“Madame permitted Corporal Victor
to be taken to her presence. Would he
follow?”
lie uncovered his iiead nnd entered,
passing through several passages and
chambers richly hung and furnished.
She moved forward as her servant an
nounced him. She saw him pause there
like one spellbound and thought it the
hesitation of one who felt sensitively
his own low grade in life. She came
toward him with the silent, sweeping
grace that gave her the carriage of an
empress. Her voice fell on his ear
with the accent of a woman immeasur
ably proud, but too proud not to bend
softly and graciously to those who
were so far beneath her that without
such aid from her they could never
have addressed or have approached her.
“You have come, I trust, to withdraw
your prohibition? Nothing will give
me greater pleasure than to bring his
majesty's notice to one of the best sol
diers his army holds.”
“Pardon me, tnadame; I do not come
to trespass so far upon your benigni
ty,” he answered as he bent before her.
“I come to express rather my regret
that you should have made one single
error.”
Error! A haughty surprise glanced
from her eyes as they swept over him.
Such a word had never been used to
her in the whole course of her brilliant
and pampered life of sovereignty and
Indulgence.
“One common enough, madame. In
your order—the error to suppose that
under the rough cloth of a private
trooper's uniform there cannot possibly
be such aristocratic monopolies as
nerves to wound.”
“I do not comprehend you.” She
spoke very coldly. She repented pro
foundly her concession in admitting
a Chasseur d’Afrique to her presence.
"Possibly uot. Mine was the folly
to dream that you would ever do so.
I should not have intruded on you now
but for this reason: The humiliation
you were pleased to pass on me I
could neither refuse nor resent to the
dealer of it. Had I done so men who are
only too loyal to me would have resent
ed with me and been thrashed or been
shot as payment. I was compelled to
accept it and to wait until I could re
turn your gift to you. 1 have no right
to complain that you pained me with
it since one who occupies my position
ought, I presume, to consider remem
brancdjffeven by an outrage, an honor
done to him by the Princess Corona.”
As he said the last words he laid on
the table that stood near him the gold
of Cbateauroy’s insult. She had lis
tened with a bewildered wonder, held
in check by the haughtier impulse of
offense that a man In this grade should
venture thus to address, thus to ar
raign her. As he laid the goldjHeces
down upon her table an idea of the
truth came to her.
“I kuow nothing of what you com
plain of. I sent you no money. What
Is it you would imply?” she asked him,
looking up from where she leaned
back In the low couch into whose depth
she had sunk as he had spoken.
“You did not send me these—not as
payment for the chess service?”
“Assuredly not After what you said
the other day I should have scarcely
been so ill bred and so heedless of In
flicting pain. Who used my name
thus?”
His face lightened with a pleasure
and a relief that changed it wonder
fully—that brighter look of gladness
that had been a stranger to it for so
many years.
“You give me Infinite happiness,
madame. You little dream how bitter
such slights are when one has lost the
power to resent them! It was Colonel
Chateauroy who this morning’’—
“Dared to tell you I sent you those
coins?”
The serenity of a courtly woman of
the world was unbroken, but her blue
and brilliant eyes darkened and
gleamed beneath the sweep of their
lashes.
“Perhaps I can scarcely say so much.
He gave them, and he implied that he
gave them from you. The words he
spoke were these.”
He told her them as they had been
uttered, adding no more. She saw the
construction they had been intended
to bear and that which they had borne
naturally to his ear. She listened ear
nestly to the end. Then she turned to
bim with the exquisite softness of
grace which, when she w r as moved to
it, contrasted so vividly with the
haughty and almost chill languor of
her habitual manner.
"Believe me, I regret deeply that you
should have been wounded by this
most coarse indignity. I grieve sin
i cerely that through myself in any
T~ .i ii mi————
j It should have been brought upon you.
I As for the perpetrator of It, Colonel
! Chateauroy will be received here no
j more, and It shall be my care that he
learns not only how I resent this un-
I pardonable use of nsr name, but how
T esteem his cruel outrage to a de
i fender of Ills own flag. You did ex
ceedingly well and wisely to acquaint
j me; in your treatment of it as an
| affront that I was without warrant to
I offer you. you showed the Just indlgna
-1 tion of a soldier, and—of what lam
lery sure that you are—a gentleman.”
Tn bowed low before her.
“Madame, you have made me the
debtor of my enemy's outrage. Those
words 'from you are more than suffi
cient compensation for it.”
“A poor one, I fear. Your colonel
is your enemy, then? And where
fore r
He paused a moment.
“Why, at fust I scarcely know. We
are ;uitagonistic, 1 suppose.”
“But is it usual for officers of his
high grade to show such malice to their
soldiers?”
“Most unusual. In this service espe
cially so. although officers rising from
the ranks themselves more apt to
contract prejudices and ill feeling
against as they are to feel favoritism
to their men titan when they enter the
regiment in a superior grade at once,
■hec I am here, mudame, let me thank
you, in the army's name, for your in
finite goodness in acting so munificent
ly on my slight hint. Your generosity
has made many happy hearts In the
hospital.”
“Generosity! Oh, do not call it by
any such nume! What did it cost me?
We are terribly selfish here. I am in
debted to you that for once you made
me remember those who suffered.”
She spoke with a certain Impulse of
candor and of self accusation that
broke with great sweetness the some
what careless coldness of her general
manner. It was like a gleam of light
that showed all the depth and the
warmth that In truth lay beneath that
Imperious languor of habit It broke
further the ice of distance that severed
the grande dame from the cavalry sol
dier. lie wholly forgot their respec
tive stations. lie only remembered that
for the first time for so many years he
had the charm of converse with a wo
man of high breeding, of inexpressible
beauty and of keen and delicate intui
tion. He wholly forgot how time pass
ed, and she did not seek to remind him.
Indeed she but little noted it herself.
At last the conversation turned back
to his chief.
“You seem to be aware of some mo
tive for your commandant’s dislike?”
she asked him. “Tell me to what you
attribute it?”
He obeyed and told to her the story
of the emir and of the Pearl of the Des
ert, and Venetla Corona listened, as
she had listened to him throughout,
with an Interest that she rarely vouch
safed to the recitals nnd the witticisms
of her owu circle.
“This barbarian is your chief?” she
said as the tale closed, “nis eumity
Is your honor. I can well credit that
he will never pardon your having
stood between him and his crime. But
I have not heard one thing. What ar
gument did you use to obtain her re
lease?”
“No one has ever heard it,” he an
swered her, while ills voice sank low.
“1 will trust you with it. It will not
pass elsewhere. I told him enough of
—of my own past life to show him
that I knew what his had been and
that I knew, moreover, though they
were dead to me now, men in that
greater world of Europe who would
believe my statement If I wrote them
this outrage on the emir and would
avenge it for the reputation of the em
pire, aud unless he released the emir’s
wife I swore to him that I would so
write, though he had me shot on the
morrow, and he knew I should keep
my word.”
She was silent some moments, look
ing ou him with a musing gaze in
which some pity and more honor for
him were blended.
“You told him your past. Will you
confess It to me?”
“1 cannot, madame.”
“And why?”
“Because I am dead, because in your
presence it becomes more bitter to me
to remember that I ever lived.”
“You speak strangely. Cannot your
life have a resurrection?”
“Never, madame. For a brief hour
you have given it one—in dreams. It
will have no other. As I am now so
I desire to live and die.”
“You voluntarily condemn yourself
to this?”
“I have voluntarily chosen it I am
well sure that the silence I entreat will
be kept by you?”
“Assuredly, unless by your wish It
be broken. Yet—l await my brother's
arrival here. He la a soldier himself.
I shall hope that he will persuade you
to think differently of your future.
At any rate both his and my own In
fluence will always be exerted for you,
if you will avail yourself of it"
“You do me much honor, madame.
All I will ever ask of you Is to return
those coins to my colonel and to forget
that your gentleness has made me dis
regard for one merciful half hour the
sufferance on which alone a trooper can
present himself here.”
He swept the ground with his cap as
though it were the plumed hat of a
marshal and backed slowly from her
presence, as he had many a time long
: before backed out of a throneroom.
As he went bis eyes caught the ar
■ mies of the ivory chessmen. They
stood under the glass and had not been
I broken by her lapdog.
Miladi, left alone there in her lutruri
ous morning room, sat awhile lost in
thought. He attracted her; he inter
ested her; he aroused her sympathy
and her wonder as the men of her own
world had failed to do—aroused them
despite the pride which made her im
fro mr co’rrrvravl
A lame shoulder i? usually
caused by rheumatism of the mus
cles, and may be cured by a few
applications of Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm. For sale by Hail auu
Greene^
Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up a brok
en down system. It be gins its work
right, that is, on the blood.
Dr. Cady’s Condition Powder
are just what a horse needs when
|in bad condition. Tonic, blood pur
ifier and vermifuge. They are not
food but medicine and the best in
; use to put a horse in priue eondi.
; tion. Price 2b cents per package
For sale by alldruggists.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes.
One size smaller after using Allen’s
Foot-Ease, a powder to lie slaken into
the shoes. It makes tight or new shoes
feel easy ; gives instant relief to corns
and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort
discovery of the age. Cures and pre
vents swollen feet, blisters, callous and
sore spots. Allen’s Foot-Ease is a cer
tain cure for s-vesting, hot. aching feet.
At all druggists and shoe stores, 25e
Trial package Free bv mail. Address,
Allen S, Olmsted, be Roy. N. Y.
Attractive Women.
All women sensibly desire to be
attractive. Beauty is the stamp of
health because it i9 the outward
manifestation of inner purity. A
healthy woman is always attract
ive, bright and happy. When
every drop of blood in the veins is
pure a beauteous flush is on the
cheek. But when the blood is im
pure, moroseness, bad temper and
a sallow complexion tells the tale
of sickness, all too plainly. And
women to-day know there is no
beauty without health. Wine of
Cardui crowns women with beauty
and attacti veness by making strong
and healthy those organs which
make her a woman. Try Wine of
Cardui, and in a month your friends
will hardly know you.
CASTOR IA
Foi Infants and Children.
Tin Kind YOl Kin Aliiji Boaght
sX
STEPPED INTO LIVE COALS.
“When a child I burned my fool
frightfully,” writes W. H. Eads,
of Jonesville, Va.,“which caused
horrible leg sores for 30 years,
but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve who'ly
cured me after everything else
failed.” Infallible for Burns,
Scalds, Cuts, Sores, Bruises and
p iles. Sold by Young Bros at 24c
The laws of health require that
the bowels move once each day
and one of the penalties of this
law is piles. Keep your bowels
reguict, uy taking a dose of Cham
berlain's Stomach and Liver Tab
lets when necessary and you will
never have that severe punishment
inflicted upon you. Price, 25 cts.
For sale by Hall and Greene.
Genuine stamped CCC. Never sold in bulk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something just as good.”
Stops the Cough and Works oft
the Cold.
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets
cure a cold in one day. No Cure, No
pay. Price 25 cents.
Sorrow in a Side Show-
Philadelphia Bulletin.
“How did the bearded woman
take it when the manager discharg
ed her?”
“She faced it like a maq till she
went in the dressing room and got
her false whiskers off, then she
broke down and cried like a wo
man.”
Nell —“I suppose she’s long and
lanky, just the same as ever.”
Belle —“Not at all. You know
she recently came into a fortune.
She’s ‘divinely tali’ now.”
A HAPPY
HOME
Is one where health abounds.
With Impure blood there cannot
be good health.
With a disordered LIVER there
cannot he good blood.
Ms Pills
revivify the torpid LIVER and restore
its natural action.
A h. slthy LIVER means pure
blooo.
Pure blood means health.
Health means happiness.
Take no Substitute. All Druggists.
Every woman in the country
ought to kuow about
Mer’s Friend
Those who do know about it
wonder how they ever got along
without it. It has robbed child
birth of its terrors for many a
young wife. It has preserved her
girlish figure and saved her much
suffering. It is an external lini
ment and carries with it therefore,
absolutely no danger of upsetting
the system as drugs taken intern
ally are apt to do. It is to be
rubbed into the abdomen to soften
and strengthen the muscles which
are to bear the strain. This means
much less pain. It also prevents
morning sickness and all of the
other discomforts of pregnancy.
A druggist of Macon, Ga., says:
“I have sold a large quantity of
Mother s Friend and have never
known an instance where it has
failed to produce the good results
claimed for it.”
A prominent lady of Lam
berton, Ark., writes: “With my
first six children 1 was in labor
from 24 to 30 hours. After using
Mother’s Friend, my seventh was
born in 4 hours.’’
Get Mother’* Friend at the drns
store, #I.OO per bottle.
THE BiADFIFID REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
Writ* to r oar fro* illuntrateit book, “BEFORE BABY
IS BORN.”
Commissioner's Sale of Valua
ble Farming Lands.
By virtue of an order from the Supe
rior Court or Bartow county, Georgia,
in re S. W. Bradford vs. A. E, Vincent
and Mrs. Sarah E. Higgins, petition for
partition,No. 18,January term 1901. The
undersigned, as commissioner, will sell
at public outcry to the highest bidder
for cash at the court house door in Car
tersville, said counts’, within the legal
sale hours, on the first Tuesday, the 3d
day of September, 1901, the following
property, to-wit: The place known as
the William H.King farm, consisting
of whole lots numbers 277 and 278, and
ninety-four and one half acres of lot
number u 99 and ninety-four acres of lot
number 300, all in the 6th district and
3d section of Bartow county, Georgia,
and all of lot numoer 252 in the 23d dis
trict and 2d section of said county of
Bartow, the whole tract containing
008)4 acres, more or less. Said lands
sold under and by virtue of the afore
said order lor the purpose of division
among the said S. W. Bradford, A. E.
Vincent and Mrs. Sarah E. Higgins,
according to tiicir several interests as
appears lrom said order.
Tins is a valuable farm. Pine Log
creek run* through the place, several
springs and branches, good pastures
with running water in them, will make
fine stock farm. Well timbered, good
barns and tenant bouses. Altogether
one of finest and most desirable farms
in north Georgia.
This 31st July, 1901.
R. L. GRIFFIN,
Commissioner,
VIRGINIA C OLLECE
For YOUNC LADIES, Roanoke, Va
Opens Hept. 21st, 19ul. One of the
leading Schools for Young Ladies in
the south. New buildings, pianos and
equipment. Campus ten acres. Grand
mountain scenery in Vallep of Ya.,
famed for health European and Amer
ican teachers Full eourse. Conserv
atory advantages in Art, Music and El
ocution. Students from thirty States.
For catologoe address
M ATTIK P. HARRIS.
President, Roanoke, Va,
Bartow Sheriff's Sales.
Will be sold before the court house
door in the ;ownof Cartersville, Bartow
county, Ga.. within the legal hours ef
sale, on the first Tuesday in September,
the following property, to-wit:
Lots of land numbers 536, 537, 539,516
and 542 in the fourth district and 3d sec
tion of Bartow county, Georgia. Levied
on and will be sold as the property of
Etowah Iron Company to satisfy the
following fi fas, to-wit: 3fi fas each, in
favor of tin Bartow' Manganese, Mining
and Manufacturing company for use of
offers of Court vs. Etowah Iron Com
pany; one subpoena fi fa in favor ot
John Richards vs. Etow’ah Iron Com
pany in case of D, J. Gu Yton vs. Etowah
iron Company, and one subpoena ti ta
in favor of John Richards vs Etowah
Iron Company in ease of Etowah Iron
Company vs. Georgia Iron and Coal
Company and others. Property in jx>s
session of defendants.
R. L. GRIFFIN, Sheriff.
W. A, BRADLEY, Dep’tv Sheriff,
N. M. ADAMS, Dep’ty Sheriff
August 10, 1901.
TO ALL PERSONS HAVINC
FARMING, TIMBERED OR
MINERAL LANDS, OR
WATER POWERS
FOR SALE.
The Nashville, Chattanooga and St.
Louis Railway proposes to use its'best
efforts to induce a good class of immi
grants to settle in territory contiguous
to its lines, and to engage the,attention
of capitalists seeking Manufacturing
I Sites or Mining Property. It therefore
I solicits the support, the co-operation
I and the assistance of the people of every
county through which its lines pass.
The management earnestly requests
that all persons who have farms for sale
or lease, those who have timbered
lands, water powers nr mineral lands
for sale, will send a briet description ot
the same to the railroad agent nearest
them, giving the prices and terms of
sale. The prices must correspond with
the prices asked ot local buyers. The
management does not propose to aid in
selling lands to immigrants at exorbi
tant or speculative prices.
Large traets suitable for coloniza
at low prices, are especially wanteAgt.
J. B. Kilt.ibrew,
Industrial and Commercial
H. ¥. Smith,
Traffic Manager,
Nashyille, Term.
Administrator's Sale
GEORGIA, Bartow Csnntv 1
By virtue ot an oroer from I
of Ordinary ofsaiu county wm®. C °J
at Hie court house dcor of s* s-jJ
on the first Tuesday in Sentemi
within the legal houis ofWi b ff
owing property, to-wit: w, ,v '
land bounded as follows be,,,,. of
a rock at foot of hill adjoining m 1 t
larm (now Banisters)running,,, J °U|
on a straight line 287 rods to a n lea *
tree; thence east to land ot o a e n, *t
ens, .hence with the Stephen’s i
the southwest corner, thence w lnet
rock, thence south with creek -c 1 to
another rock thence west up t ‘.V 1
rods to another rock, and
87 rods to the beginning point
a.-res, more or less, boifci.jpri 1,0 '
Harrison Dooley’s lands a nd b I
north by Charley Dooley’s ia nr i Ct ler *.
by laud formerly owned bv- ' u HOlltll
Wright. All 01 above described 1 nry
are in the 6th district, and 3d seen" dl
said county Sold as the prop * ” 0f
Mrs P. A. Whitworth,deceased t y **
cash. JAMES W. WHITWORTH 01 ®
August sth, 1901. Administrator,
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA, Bartow County
To whom it may concert: Lois Ro,
yer has 111 due form applied to the
dersigned for permanent letters
ministration on the estate of DaniV
Keever, deceased, and I will pass
said application first Monday in v,
tember dext. August sth, 1901. B‘>’ 8 ‘ > ’
G. W . HENDRICKS, Ordinary
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA. Bartow County.
To whom it may J. J
well has in due form applied to the un
dersigned for permanent letters ot ad'
ministration to be granted to J. v
Moon on the estateof 'oei P. Maxwell!
deceased, and I will pass upon sain ap
Dlic-ation first Monday in September
next. August sth, 19ul,
G, W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary
—
Letters of Administration
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: H. jj
Green has in due form applied to the
undersigned for permanent letters of
admimstratien on the estate of T. 0,
Barron, deceased, and 1 will pass upon
said application first Monday in Sep
tember next. August sth. 190 J.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Twelve Mouth'.'Support.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
The Appraisers appointed to set apart
a twelvemonths’ support tor the family
of Thos, C, Barron, deceased, having
filed their return, all persons concerned
are hereby cited and required to show
cause in the Court of Ordinary of said
county, within tour weeks from the
publicetion of this notice, wbv the ap
plication for said twelve months’ sup
port should not be granted,
This August sth, 1901.
G. W. HENDkICKS, Ordinary,
Apfliostioa to Maks Title*.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: Carters
ville Land Company has in due ism
applied to the undersigned for an order
requiring R. A. Clayton, executor ofJ.
J. Howard, toexecute titles to said com
pany to certain lands to which it holds
bond for title*, signed by J. J. Howard,
and said application will be heard ob
first Monday in September next.
August sth. 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Citation tor DitmUaira.
GEORGIA. Bartow County.
Chass. A. Davis, executor of the last will and
testament of Martha E. Jackson, decea-ed, hav
ing filed his petition for discharge from said ex
ecutorship, this is therefore to cite alt persons
concerned, to shew cause agamst the gran ing of
said discharge, if anv th-ey can, at the regular
term of the Court of Ordinary for said county to
be held on Ihe first Monday in September, woi,
else the same wiil be granted as applied for. This
June 3, 1-901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary^
Citation for Dismission.
Estate J.D. Bowdoin.
GEOEGIA. Bartow Couwty.
Whereas, E. C. Bowdoin, administratrix of J.
D Bowdoin, represents to the court in her peti
tion duly filed, that she has fullv administered J.
D. Bowdoin’s estate. This is therefore to cite ail
persons concerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause if any they can, why said administration
and receive letters of dismission on the first Mon
day in Octeber next. TliD July ist, 1901
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Notice.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To Jane, Lkudsey and Emma Milner, of said
county, and Bobert Thompson. Sarah 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 1 have filed my ap
plication with the ordinary of said county, for an
order for distribution in kind of the residue of
the estate of Timothy Marsh, late of said county,
deceased,, now remaining: in my hands as adminis
trator and that said application will be heard at
the regular term of the Court of Ordinary for
said county to be held on the first Monday in Oc
tober, loot. This June 4th, 1901.
JAMES UREN
Adn iivstartor Estate of Timothy Marsh, dec
am-.m. >.
Citation lor Dismission.
Estate Caleb Gilreath.
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
VVhereas. YV. A. Jackson, executor of Caleb A.
Gilreath, represents to the Court in his petition,
duly filed and entered on record, that he has fully
administered Caleb A. Gilreath 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 July Ist, 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary __
Libel for Divorce.
Mariah Young) In tne Superior Court
vs, -of Bartow County,
Ben Young ) Georgia. Libel tor
Divorce. No. 28,
July term. 1899.
To the defendant, Ben Youeg: i° u
are hereby notified, required and com*
manded personally or by attorney, to
be and appear at the Superior Court ti
be held in and for said county of Ba.-
tow on the second Monday in anu
next, then and there to answer toe
plaintiffs libel for a divorce, and in a *
fault thereof the court will proceed <
to justice shall appertain. ...
Witness the Honorable A. V J? 1 •
judge ol said court, this July 30. b"'“
L. W. REEVES, JR-
Clerk Superior Court.
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