The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, August 22, 1901, Image 2

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UNDER TWO FLAGS By “ QUIDA ” patient of lending so much attention to a mere Chasseur d'Afrlque. She discovered the ring of true gold In his words and the carriage of pure breed ing in Ids actions. lie Interested tier more thau it pleased her that tie should. A man so utterly beneath her, doubtless brought Into the grade t which he had fallen by every kind of error, of improvidence, of folly, of probably worse than folly! She laugh ed a little at herself as she stretched out her hand for anew volume of ' Fre-!i.poems dedicated to tier by their accomplished writer, who was a Pari eVtn’ diplomatist. "One would imagine I was Just out cf a convent and 'reaving a marvelous romance from u mystery because the first soldier J notice in Algeria has a gentleman’s voice and is ill treated by his officers,” she thought, with a smile. "Such a man as that buried in the ranks *f this brutalized armjf!” she mused. “ What fatal chance could bring him here? Misfortune, not miscon duct, surely. I wonder If Lyon eouid learn? lie shall try.” "lour chasseur has the air of a prince, - my love,” said a \ oice behind her. ' | "Equivocal compliment! A much ; better air than most princes,” said | lime. Corona, glancing up, with a slight shrug of her shoulders, as her guest and traveling companion, the Marquise de Itenardiere, entered. "Indeed! I saw him as he passed , out, and 2m saluted me as if he had been a marshal. Why did he come?” Venetia Corona pointed to the napo- j Icons and told the story rather listless ly and briefly. “Ah! The man has been a gentle man. I dare say. So many of them come to our army. I remember Gener al Villefleur’s telling me—he command ed here awhile—that the rnnks of the Zephyrs and zouaves were full of well - bom men, utterly good for nothing, the I handsomest scoundrels possible, who I had every gift and every grace and yet come to no better end than a pistol shot, in a ditch or a mortal thrust from Bedouin steel. I dare say your corpo ral is one of them.” “It may be so. But this person Is certainly unlike a man to whom dis grace has ever attached. Through his skill at sculpture and my notice of it considerable indignity has been brought upon him, and a soldier can feel, It seems, though it Is very absurd that he shovdd. That la all my concern with the matter, except that I have to teach his commander not to play with my name in his barrack yard.” "’v 'j -- . .! f ~ * CHAPTER XI. ■'■■■'■• tlie subject of I jVI I their first discourse returned *° the chambree. It was omp- WBbbl ty when he returned. The men were scattered over the town in one of their scant pauses of liberty. There was only the dog of the regiment, Eliek- Flaek, a snow white poodle, asleep In the heat on a sack, who, without wak ing, moved his tail In a sign of gratifi cation as Cecil stroked him and sat down near, betaking himself to the •work he had In hand. H-. was a stone for the grave of Leon Ramon. There was no other to re member the dead chasseur, no other blades himself save an old woman sitting spinning at her wheel under the low sloping shingle roof of a cottage by the western BI scat'll n sea. veeciTs TkiluT pressed the graver along th? letters, but Ills thoughts wandered far from the place where he was. Alouo there in the great sun scorched barrack room the news that he had read, the presence he had quitted, seemed like a dream. He had never known fully.all that he had lost until he had stood be fore the beauty of this woman. In whose d<H>p, imperial eyes the light of other years seemed to lie, the memo ries of other worlds seemed to slumber. Those blue, proud, fathomless eyes! j Why had they looked on him? She had : come to pain, to weaken, to disturb, to influence him, to shadow his peace, to wring his pride, to unman his resolve, as women do mostly with men. Was life not hard enough here already that she must make it more bitter -yet to bear? “If I had my heritage,” he thought. And the chisel fell from his hands as he looked down the length of the bar rack room, with the blue glare of the African sky through the casement. Then he smiled at bis own folly, in dreaming Idly thus of things that might have been. “I will see her no more,” he said to himself. “If I do not take care, I shall end by thinking myself a mar tyr, the last refuge and consolation of emasculate vanity, of impotent ego tism.” At that instant retit Piepon’s keen, pale, Parisian face peered through the door: his great black eyes, that at times had so pathetic a melancholy. and at others sneh a monueyisn mint) and malice, were sparkling excitedly and gleefully. “You, Picpon? Wlmt is it?” “My corporal, there is great news. Fighting has begun, the Arabs want a skirmish and Rake has run a spahis through the stomach, that is all. I don’t think the man Is so much as dead, even. He always does something when he thinks promotion is coming— something to get himself out of If i way, do you see? And The reason is (.this: He’s a good friend, and loves you, j and he will not be put over your head.' 1 ‘Me rise afore him?’ said be to me 1 ouce. ‘He’s a prince, and I’m a raon- I grel got in a gutter! I owe him more’n , | 1 11 ever paw. and I*ll ‘kill the general himself afore I’ll Insult him that way. | So say iiVtle to him about‘the* spahls.’ fie loves you well, does your Lake.” “Well, indeed! Good God*! What : nobility!” Piepon glanced at him; then with the tact of his nation, glided a way -and j busied Flick-Flatk to shoulder and present arms, the weapon being ti long chibouque stick. “Is this true, Base —that you inten tionally commit these freaks of mis conduct to escape promotion?” Cecil asked of the man when he stood alone with him in his place of confinement. Bake flushed a iittle. “Mischief’s bred In me, sir; it must come out. It’s just bottled up in me like ale. If I didn’t take the cork out now and then, I should fly a-picccs!” “But many a time when you have been close on the reward cf your splendid gallantry in the field you have frustrated your own fortune and the wishes of your superiors by wantonly proving yourself unfit for the higher grade they were going to raise you to. Why do you do that?” Bake fidgeted restlessly and, to avoid the awkwardness of the question, re plied like a parliamentary orator by a flow of rhetoric. “Sir, there’s a uwiny chaps like me. They can’t help nohow busting out when the fit takes ’em. ’Tain’t reasona ble to blame ’em for It. They’re just made so. like a chestnut’s made to bust its pod and a chicken to bust its shell.” “But you wander from my question,” said Cecil gently. “Do you avoid pro motion ?” “Yes, sir, I do,” said Ilake, something sulkily, for he felt he was being driv en “up a corner.” “I do. I ain’t not one bit fitter for an officer than a riot ing pup is fit to lead them crack packs at home. I should l>e in a straifwalst coat if I was promoted. And as for the cross, Lord, sir, that would get me Into a world of trouble! I should pawn It for a toss of wine the first dayfout or give it to the first girl that winked her black eye for it,” Cecil’s eyes rested on him with a look that said far rnore than his an swer. “Rake, I know you better than you would let me do if you had your way. My noble fellow, you re ject advancement and earn yonrself an unjust reputation for mutinous con duct because you are too generous to be given a step above mine In the regi ment.” “Who’s been telling you that trash, sir?” retorted Rake, with ferocity. “No matter who. It is no trash. It Is splendid loyalty of which I am ut terly unworthy, and it shall be my care that it is known at the bureaus, so that henceforth your great merits may be”— “Stow that, sir!” cried Rake vehe mently. “Stow that if you please! Promoted I won’t be—no, not if the emperor hissetf was to order It and come here to see It done! A pretty thing r surely! Me a officer, and you never? a one; me a-commanding of you, and you a-saluting of me! By thd Lord, sir, we might as well see the camp scullions a-riding in state and the marshal a-scouring out the soup pots! If you don’t let me have my own way and do the littlest thing to get me a step, why, sir, I swear as I’m a liv ing being that I’ll draw on Chateauroy the first time I see him afterward and slit his throat as I’d slit a jackal’s! There, my oath’s took!” And Cecil knew that it was hopeless either to persuade him to his own ad vantage or to convince him of his dis obedience in speaking thus*of his su preme before his noncommissioned of j fleer. He was himself, moreover, deep | ly moved by the man’s fidelity. He stretched his hand out. “I wish there were more black guards with hearts like yours. 1 can not repay your love, Rake, but I can value it.” Rake put his own hands behind his back. “God bless you, sir, you’ve repaid It ten dozen times over. But you shan’t do that, sir. I told you long ago I'm too much of a scamp. Some day, perhaps, as I said, when I’ve set tled scores with myself and wiped off all the bad uus with a clear sweep tol erably clean; not afore, sir.” And Rake was so sturdily obstinate uot to always carry his point. Mean while Picpon's news was correct. The regiment was ordered out on the march. There was fresh war In the interior, and wherever there was the hottest slaughter there the Black Hawk always flew down with his fal con flock. When Cecil left his incorri gible comrade, the trumpets were sounding an assembly. There were noise, tumult, eagerness, excitement, delighted zest, on every side. A gener al order was read to the enraptured squadrons. They were to leave the town at the first streak of dawn. That evening at the Vllia Aioussa chore gathered a courtly assembly of 1 much higher rank than Algiers can commonly afford, because many of sta , tion as lofty as her own had been - • ... * * r*' drawn thither to rouow ner toTp. the Princess Corona called her banish ment. There was a variety of distractions to prevent ennui. There were half'a dozen clever Parts actors playing that airiest of vaidevllles in the bijou the ater beyond the drawing rooms; there were some celebrated Italian singers whom an fmi>eriai prince hud brought over In his yacht; there was the best music; there was wit as well as hom age whispered in her ear. Yet she was not altogether amused; she was a little touched with ennui. “Those men are very stupid! They have not half the talent of that sol dier!” she thought once, turning from a peer of France, an Austrian arch duke and a Russian diplomatist. “Cliateauroy and his'chasseurs have | an' order to march;” a voice was say ing that moment behind her chair. “There Is always fighting here, I sup pose?” • “Oh, yes. The losses in men. are Im mense, only the journals would get In trouble If they ventured to say so In France. How delicious La Docbe is! File comes in again with the next seeno.” * The Princess Corona listened, and her attention wandered farther from the archduke to the peer and the di plomatist as from (lie vaudeville. She did not find Mine. Doche very charm ing. and she'was absorbed for a time looking at the miniatures on her fan. At the same moment, through the lighted streets' of Algiers, Cigarette, like a union of fairy and of fury, was flying with the news. Cigarette had seen the flame of war at its height and had danced in tlie'midst of its .whitest heiu children dance to see the fires lean red in the black winter’s night. Cigarette loved the battle, the charge, the wild music of bugles, the thunder tramp of battalions, tbe siroc co sweep of light squadrons. CHAPTER XTI. THE African day was at its noon. gppS , From the first break of dawn the battle had raged. Now, at midday, it was at its height Far in the Interior, almost at the edge of the great desert, in that terrible reason when the air that is flame by day Is ice by night and when the scorch of a blaz ing sun may be followed in an hour by the blinding fury of a snowstorm, the slaughter had gone on hour through hour under a shadowless sky, blue as steel, hard as a sheet of brass. The Arabs had surprised tbe French en campment where it. lay In the center of an arid plain thaftwas called Zaras la. Hovering like a <,doud of hawks on the eutrance of the Ss* op-a, massed to gether for one mighty effort, with all their ancient war lust and with anew despair, the tribe*\who re fused the yoke of the alien empire were once again in arms, were once again combined in defense of those limitless kingdoms of drifting jetnd, of that be loved belt of bare and desolate land so useless to the conqueror, so dear to the nomad. Circling, sweeping, silewtly, swiftly, with that rapid spring, that marvellous whirlwind of force, that A of Africa and of Africa alone, the tribes had rushed down in the darkness of night, lightly as a kite rushes through tlw gloom of the dawn. For once the vigj lunce of the invader served hte naught? for once tiie Frankish camp was sur prised off its guard. While the air was still chilly with the breath of the night, while the first gleam of morning hTid barely broken through the mists- of the east, while the picket tires fcnrned through the dusky gloom and the senti nels and vedettes paced slowly t# and fro and circled round, hearing nothing worse than the stealthy tread of the jackal @r the muffled flight of a night bird, afar in th’e south a great dark cloud had risen, darker than the brood ing shadows of the earth and sky. The cloud swept onward, like a mass of cirri, in those shadows shrouded. Fleet as though wind driven, dense as though thunder charged, it moved o>ver the planes. As it grew nearer and nearer it grew grayer, a changing mass of white and black that fused, in the obscurity, into a shadow color, a dense array cf men and horses flitting noise lessly like spirits and as though guided alone by one rein and moved alone by one breath and one will; not a bit champed, net a linen fold loosened, aot a shiver of steel was heard. As silent ly as the winds*of the desert sweep up northward over the plains, so they rede now, host upon host ©f the warrior* ©f the soik The outlying vedettes, the advanced sentinels, had scrutinized so loug through the night every wavering shade of cloud aud moving form of j buffalo iu the dim distance that their i sleepless eyes, strained and aching, j failed to distinguish this moving mass j that was so like the brown plains aud starless sky that it could scarce'be told | from them. Awake while his comrades slept l around him, Cecil was stretched half ! unharnessed. Do what he would, forc e 1 himself into the fullness of this tierce and hard existence as he might, he could uot burn out or banish a thing that had many a time haunted him, hut never as it did now—the remembrance of a woman. He almost laughed as he lay there on a pile of rotting straw and wrung the truth out of his own heart that he, a soldier of these exiled squad rons, was mad enough to love that wo man whose deep, round eyes had dwelt with such serene pity upon him. Well, it was but one thing more that was added to all that he had of his own will given up. He was dead lie must be content, as the dead must be, to ; leave the warmth of kisses, the glow of delight, the possession of a woman's loveliness, the homage of men's honor, the gladness of successful desires, to those who still lived in the light be had ' quitted. ’— Ttw h* rfivTTtrm ] A lame shoulder is usually caused by rheumatism of the mus cles, and may be cured by a few' applications of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. For sale by Hall-' and Greene. Dp. Cady’a Condition Powder are just what a horse needs when in had condition. Tonic, blood pur ifler and vermifuge. They are not food but medicine and the best in use to put a horse in pri.je condl. tion. Price 2 cents per package For sale by alldruggists. Ladies Can Wear Shoes. One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-Ease, a po.w-der to beslaken into the siioes. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy; gives instant relief to corns and bunions. I greatest comfort discovery of the sge. Cures and pre vents swollen fett, blisters, callous and sore spots. Alien’s Foot-Ease is a cer tain cure for sweating, hot, aching feet. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. j Trial package Free bv mail. Address, Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. I Attractive Women. All women sensi.dy desire to be attractive. Beauty is the stamp of health because it is the outward manifestation of inner purity. A healthy wonria 1 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 attactiveness by making strong and healthy those organ-, which make her a woman. Try Wine of Cardui, and in a month your friends will hardly know you. CASTOR IA For Infaats and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought JOB COULDN’T HAVE STOOD JT. If he’d had Itching Piles. They’re terribly annoying"; but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve will cure the worst cace of piles on earth. It has cured thousands. For Injuries, Pains or Bodily Eruptions it’s the best salve m the world. Price 25c a box. Cure guaranteed. by Young Bros. The laws of health require that the bowel’s move once each day and one of the penalties of this Law is piles. Keep yotsar bowels regyilar by taking a dose of Cham berlain’s Stomach and Ltver Tab lets when necessary and you will never have that severe punish meal inflicted upon you. Price, 25 cts.. For sale by Hall and Greene. Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk., Beware of the dealer who tries sell “something, jpst as good* Stops the Coup-Ja and W wks off the t old. Laxative Rromo-Quinine*Tablet* cure a cold in one day. No Chre, No pay. Price 25 eeats. Only a Mask. Many are not being benefited by tie summer vacation as they -should fee. Now. notwithstanding mur-ti outdoor life, they are tittle if any stronger ti.Mii they were The tan on their lace* is darke-- and make* them lo< k healthier, but it is only a .nasK, They are still nervous, easily tired, upset by trhftes, and they do net eat nor sleep well. What they need is what tonosthenwves per hots digest: n. creates appetite, and 'makes sleep refreshing, and that is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Pupils and teach ers gsneraliy will find the chief pur p >se of the vacation besl .subserved by this great medicine which, as we know, “builds up the whole system.” Get What You Ask For! When you ask for Cascarets Candy Cathartic be you get them. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. A substitutor is always a cheat and a fraud. Beware! All druggists, ioc. will save the dyspeptic from many days of misery, and enable him to eat whatever he wishes. They prevent SICK HEADACHE, cause the food to assimilate and nour> ish the body, give keen appetite, DEVELOP FLESH and solid muscle. Elegantly sugar coated. Take No Substitute. Pretty Children “We have three children. Before the birth of the last one my wife used four bot tles of MOTHER'S FRIEND. If you had the pictures of our children, you could see at a glance that the last one Is healthiest, prettiest and finest-looking of them all. My wife thinks Mother’s Friend is the greatest and grandest ttj mam v remedy in the (,*--* fflSwt' world for expect- fc. a n't mothers.”— V'*T, ■ JfEw ; Written by a Ken- pt * ' tuckyAttorney-at vVS } WEB’S rnjryn preveets nine-tenths of the ni| suffering incident to child- ' birth. The coming mother’s disposition and temper remain unruffled throughout the ordeal, because this selax- Ing, penetrating liniment relieves the usual distress. A good-natured mother is pretty sure to have a good-natured child. The patient is kept in a strong, healthy condition, which the child also inherits. Mother’s Friend takes a wife through the crisis quickly and almost painlessly. II assists in her rapid recovery, and wards off the dangers that so often follow de livery. Sold by druggists for $1 a bottle. THE BRADEIELD REGULATOR CO, ATLANTA, QA. Send fo* our free illustrated book writtee expressly for expectant mothers. Commissioner’s Sale of Valua- ble farming Lands. By virtue of an order from the Supe rior Court or Bartow eotintv, Georgia, in re S. W. Bradford vs. A. E, Vincent and Mrs. Sarah E. Higgins, petition for partition, So. 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 tersvide, said county, within the legal sale hours, on the first Tuesday, the 3d day of September, 1901, tAw following property, to-wit: The known as the William H.King farm, consisting of whole lots numbers 277 and 278, and ninety-four and one half ag-res of lot number 299 and ninety-lour acres of lot number 300, all in the 6th district and 3d section of Bartow county, Georgia, and all ot lot numow 252 in the 23d dis trict and 2d section of said cowrity of Bartow, the whole tract containi?:g 668>t acres, more or less. Sal# land's sold under and l>y virtue ot the afore said order lor the purpose of d-rvimen among the said S. W. Bradford? A. E. Vincent and Mrs. Sarah E. Higgins,, according to their several interest's as appear* from said order. This is a valuable farrin. Pine Log creek runs through the place, several springs and branches, good pasta-res with running water in tlvein, will make fine stock farm. Well timbered, gsod' barns and tenant houses. Altogether one of ®>nest and most deswrable Tarsae in north Georgia. Tills;*®st July, 1901. R. L. GRIFFIN’, CoMKiiissioner, VIRGINIA C OS.LEGE For YOUHC LADIES, Roe-flcke, Va Opens Sept. 21st, 19ul. Okie of the leading Schools for Young Ladies in the soth. New buildings, pianos and equipment. Campus ten acres. Grand mountain see-aery in A’allep of Y’a., famed for health European and Amer ican teachers. Full course. Conserv atory advantages in Art, Musife and El ocution*. Star dents from thirty States. For catalogue address MATTIE P. HARRIS, PVeside-nt, Roanoke, Va, Bartow Sheriff’s Sales. Will be soldi liefore the court house 1 door is the town of Cartersvilhg Bartow : county, Ga.. within the legal hours of I sale, on the first Tuesday in September, i 1901, the following property, to-wit: Lots of iandi numbers 536, 537!, 539, 515 and . r 4fl.in the fourth district,ami 3d sec tion f iiartoAV county, Ge >rgia. Levied nn and will be sold as' the property of Etowah Iran Ccaapany to satisfy the following ii fas, to-wit: 3fi faseaoh.in favor of th<- Bartow M angane.se, Mining and Manufacturing company for use of offers of Court vs. Etowah "iron Com pany;. one subpoena ti fa in favor ot Jo An Rickards vs. Etowah Iron Com pany in case of I), J, Guy tor vs. Etowali Iroa.Company, and one subpsena ti fa in favor of Joim Richards vs F towah Iron Company ;n case of Etowah Iron Company vs, Georgia Iron and Coat Company and others, Property in pos session of defendants. K. L.GRIPFIX, Sheriff. W. A, BRADLEY, Dep’tv Sheriff, N. M. ADAMS, Dep’ty Siiritt ' August JO, 190! TO ALL PERSONS HAVING F Alt 511X0, TIMBERED OR MINERAL LANDS, OR WATER POWERS FOR SALE. The Nash vide, Chattanooga and St Rot,is Railway proposes in i jj h, st efforts to induce a got i class or in,mi giants toet’tle in territory eontigu* us to its lines. and io engage ;ne n> nt on of capitalists seeking Matiltt'noturing Sites or Mining Property. !i :h,ieioe solirj s !lie support, tin; io operation and the as*i stance of t he people ol evert enmity'through which Its lines r>a-s. 'ldle tnanu'r inert earnest!- , eijiiwets that all persons who have farms for sale or lease, those who have timbered lands, water power* or mineral lands tor sale, will se.sd a lire ! description ot the same t° the railroad agent nearest them, giving the prices end terms nt sale. The print s must correspond with the prices asked ot local buver*. Th management tine* rot propose to aid i , selling lands t.> immigrant* at exorbi tant or specula’i l e prices Large tracts suitable for cAloniz i" at low prices, are espe dully wante.Vgt. J. IS. KiLLIBUKW, Industrial and Commercial H. F. Smith, Traffic Manager, A ashville, Ter.n, Administrator s SalT G EORGI A, Bartow County Bv virtue ot an oraer to. ol Ordinary of saiu co Unl 7 L ( . le l 'Co ft at .he court Louse door oi J be *< n> the first Tuesday , n Sept *' ''*: w:th.n the legal hou.s o?s, “ b t, r lowing property, to-wit- l, ’ Ul <‘ foi land bounded as follows’ a, ' c ®* a a rock at foot of hid adjoining i farm (now Banisters)runnirJfJ 16 J o| on a straight line 287 rods trae; thenceea-d to land ot G ens, .hence with the Stephen’' ?- tfe Pb the southwest corner, then * * ine ‘ rock, thence south with creek to another rock, thence west imti, ? d * l < rods to another rock, and -ho hll U 87 rods to tiie beginning point V, loftl acres, more or less, lM>i>n„J, ’ , Als <>2 Harrison Dooley's lands an,i * >’] north by Charley Dfxdey’s ' ther by laud formerly owned i w u" n| V\ right. Allot above described are in thefith di-tnet and :{,i .TL I *"* said county Sold as the nmi tl ° n Mrs p. A. Whitw.. r rip f (, cash. JAM ES VV. WH ] T VVo kth^’J August sth, 1901 Administrator, Letters of Administration. GEORGIA, Bartow Ciounty To whom it may concern: r o s .. ver lias in due form applied to n, ■ designed for permanent letters'?,"S ministration on t)ie estate of Keever,deceased, and I will p aß , ~“ el said application first Monday in TANARUS" tember dext August sth, fwii G. VV. HKXPRR’Ks, Ordinary Letters of Administration. GEORG IA. Bartow County. To whom it imiy concern: J j m. well has in due form applied to the un' designed for permanent letters of an ministration to be granted to J Moon on tjie estate of r oe! p Maxwell' deceased, and I will pass upon saiu plication first Monday in .NeptemS* next. Aug"st sth, 19(11, G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary Letters of Administration GEORGIA, Ba tow Countv To whom it may concern: H jj Green has in due form applied to tbs undersigned lor permanent letters administration on the estate of T. p Barron, deceased, and I will pass upon said application first Monday in .Sen. tember next. August sth, G. \\ . H EA DRICKS, Ordinary. Twelve Month',’ Support, GEORGIA, Bartow County. The Appraisers appointed to set apart a twelvemonths’ support toe tbe family of Thos. C. Barron, deceased, having Sled their return, all persons concerned are hereby cited and required’ to show cause in the Court of Ordinary of said county, within lour weeks from the publication of .his noijce, why Cheap plication for said twelve mouths’ - sup port should not be granted, This Auguststh, 1901. G. VV'. HENDfiIciSS.-Ordinary. Application to Malfce Titles. GEORGIA, Barto n County. To whom it miy concern: Carters ville Land Company has in due lons applied t > the undersigned for an order requiring It. A. Clayton, e see u tor of J - J Howard, to execute 1 i ties-Tosail com pany to cei tain lands to wheel) it holds bend for title.-, signed bv J. J. Howard, and said application will he heard 0:1 first Monrl'av in September next. August sth, 1901. G. \V. HENDRICKS, Ordinary. —_ ——— - n CUsrtioit tor Dismission, GEORGIA. Bar i o w County. Chas. A. D*-/is ese-cutor of the bat will and testament of Martha E. Jackson, deoea-ed. hav ing filed his petition tor discharge from said ex editorship, tike is therefore to cite ail persons cone rned, to showcause agamst the gran 01 said discharge, it - anv they- can, at t>e regular . teTm of the Court. of' Ordinary for Said' county to be held on He finst- Monday in September, wot, else the same will-be- granted as applied for. -ha j Jcae 3, root. G. W. HENDRICKS, Crfcnary. Citation for Dismission. Estate t.D. ISowdoin. ©EOEGIA, Baattov County. Whereas, E C Bowdeta. administratrix ! D>. bowdoin, represents to the court in .let petU tioa duly filed, that ahe has f-tllv administered t It'. Bowdoin’s • stats-. This is therefore ttreite all persons concerned,.kindred alid cr, ditor?, lie show cause it any they can, why said administration and receive letters of dismission on the first Mon da's in October nest. This July ist, root G VV. HENDRICKS, Ord.aary. Notice. GEORGIA, B.wiS'W Count.v. Tojsne, Lindsay and Emma Milner, f said county, and h obert Thompson. Sarali- Tarter, Spencer Marsh, Ambrose Marsh and Carrie Perkins non-residents of said state heirs-at-la* of Timothy Marsh, deceased: Notice is hereby given that I have filed niy ap pli ration with the ordinary of said count-/, for an order for distribution in kind of the residue ot 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 ths-regular term of the Court of Ordinary tot said county to beheld on the first Monday in Cc tcber, loot. This une 4th, tool. JAME- CRSN, Adu in strator Estate of Timothy Marshy dec ). Citation for Bismissten. Estate Caleb Gfireath. GEORGIA. Bartow County: , Whereas, W. A. Jackson, executor of Caleb • Silreath. represents to the Court in his duly filed and entered on record, that; >re has tun administered Caleb A. Gilreath’sestate. therefore to cite all persons concerned, Ktnor and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, wr >. said exe-utor should not be discharged from ” 1 administration, and receive letters of dismissto on the first Monday in October next | This July ist. iqoi -t. G W. II END KICKS, Ordinary^ Libel for Divorce. Marialt Young) In tne Superior l e ,ir ‘ vi -of Bartow Count}. Ben Young j Georgia, bidet 101 Divorce. No- -*> July term. To the defendant, Ben Yotiig- * v are hereby notified, m; tired c.nu c° manded personally or fry attorney! be and appear at the Superior t'°V r '. be held in and for said coin’.tv ot tow on the second Monday > !1 ■' *'! ,he n-x . then and there to answer plaintiff’s libel for a divorce, un ! ’N S 'a"it thereof tile court will proree to justice shall appertain. e.;,,, ’it'it ties* the Honorable A- y ’ judge .it said court, this July u ” L W. RKEVBS.JB;. Clerk Superiorl S*> CHICMtETEB'S ENGUSH #£l Pehnyroyal, £ y-S ■ Or Ur 1-I*l nn-l l.’nly , SAKE. Alwmv* ruliifcO *i( fur CHIC K KST ER S with blwrlM-n. i ak? • i ic tt4* W Wwurvrou. sHkstltuUat" 7 “ u<.n. But y -wir 1 *** for PuKleulftpH D , V *s* fJ and • Bette? for l**4lc* •"* rf 'JiiW A r rn M U. 1*- <>'M> mX *ll I>.ufgiita C Ulchcutee Cfecatt Mtattou tiii* i*psr. iladUifft 1 1 ‘