The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, October 31, 1901, Image 3

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SCIENCE SKETCHES BY MR. A. O. GRANGER. NUMBER 5. LIGHT— HOW IT WAS DISCOVERED THAT TIME IS REQUIRED FOR ITS TRANSMISSION. Southern Woman. I have no doubt that the readers of the Southern Woman have ob served that when an engine driver of a locomotive, a long distance away, blows the whistle that in stantly the puff of steam is seen, but the sound of the whistle is not heard for some time afterwards. One of my numerous sons noted a similar fact when sitting on the porch of our house at Overlook; he saw a man chopping wood some distance off and saw the axe fall, but it was several seconds later when the sound reached his earsj The reason of this is that sound travels at a rate of 1,190 feet per second, while light rushes along at the enormous veulocity of 186,300 miles per second, a distant equal to about seven times around the world. Thus it is seen that for any dis tance onthe earth light is practically instantaneous in its transmission. Previous to 1675 it was thought that light passed instantly over any distance, however great. In that year the Danish astouomer, Romer, who was employed as an assistant to Dominic Cassini, the director of the Observatory at Paris, was carefully observing the eclipse of one of the satellites or moons of Jupiter and making up an exact time table, as it were, at the moment when the eclipse oc curred, and when the moon came out from the shadow of the giant planet Jupiter. This was at a time when both the earth and Jupiter were on the same side of the sun In following up his observations he noted the strange fact that about six mouths later in the year the eclipse took place about fifteen minutes later. This fact had been observed by various astonomers, and the reason for it could not be explained. It was then that the great thought flashed upon the mind of Rorner that has immortalized him, that when he made up his time tables the earth was on the side of the sun nearest Jupiter, and that six monthslater theearth wasat the opposite side of its orbit, or aboyt 194,000,000 of miles further away, and that tne iigiit of the sun re flected from Jupiter’s moon had sfcaken about fifteen minutes to cross the diameter of the earth’s orbit. A simple calculation show's that light thus requires about 186,000 miles per second for its transmis sion. An eclipse is when a moon enters the shadow of a planet, and an oc cultation is when the moon is di rectly behind the planet. This difference wdl be seen by reference to the cut which shows the second of jupiter’s moons eclipsed, and the third moon occulted. At the time of an eclipse the moon will suddenly be blotted out of the sky, and then as suddenly reappear without being near the planet, while at the time of an oc culation the moon disappears be hind the planet. There are few more interesting sights in the heavens than the view of Jupiter and its moons. We have often at Overlook on a star-light night had our friends and neighbors come over and enjoy, .perhaps for the first time, the sight of Jupiter and his four moons, being really a miniature of the sun arid his system of planets. The latest determination of the time required for light to pass from the sun to the earth is 8 minutes and 18 seconds, and this is called the equation of light. Asa matter of fact if the sun could be blotted out we would continue to receive the full amount of sunlight for over 8 minutes. At the time that Dominic Cas sini was director of the great Ob servatory at Paris he was the most prominent astronomer in the world BAD BLOOD . "CigCAKFTi S> mi claimed Tor thsm •JO1 are a tvuly wonderful medicine I have often Jlsned for a medicine pleasant to take and at laa* oave found it in Cascarets. Since tahlng them, my olood has been Dorihed and my complexion has im proved wonderfully and I feel much better in every way.” Mas. Balli* K. Bkllahs, Luttrell. Tana. m CATHAPrn^ wmmm® TWADf MAMS MOMTZIKO PleMant. Palatable. Potent. Ta-te Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken- nr Gripe. !oc. 2 te, fiOO. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Otrrlliig Rtmrd; Caafuf. Ciilean, loatnal, krw York. 319 kn.Tn.RfiP Sold and imaranteed by all drng *U*iyOAw gists to CUBE Tobacco Uablt. and Romer was one of his little known assistants, but his achieve ment in being first to disco% r er the great fact that light requires time for its transmission has placed his name high on the inmortal roll of astronomers, and it will be remem bered long after Casr ini is forgot ten. No lb nsonul)la Man imagines that a neglected cold can be cured in a day. The uncount able air-cells in the lungs are in flamed and the throat is as tender as an open sore. But time and Allen’s Lung Balsam will overcome the cold and stave off consump tion. The cough will cease and the lungs will be sound as a new' dollar. All druggists sell Allen’s Lung Balsam. THOUSANDS SENT INTO EXILE. Every year a large numbei of poor sfferers whose lungs are sore and racked with coughs are urged to go to anotlier climate. But this is costly and not always sure. Don’t be an exile when Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption wM 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. Kodhl Oyspepsia Cure what you cat. Do you suffer from piles? If so do not turn to surgery for relief. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve will act more quickly, surely and safe ly, saving you the expense and danger of an operation. Ibis eignature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets the remedy that ra.te a o-id bn *ne day World’s Great Fever Medicine Johnson’s Tonic does in a day what slow Quinine cannot do in ten days. Its splendid cures are in striking con trast with the feeble cures made bv qui nine. If you are utterly wretched, take a thorough dose of Johnson’s Tonic and drive out every trace of malarial poi soning The wise Insure their lives and the wiser insure their health by using Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic. It costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if it does not. The Royal Month and the Royal Disease. Sudden changes of weather are espe cially trying, and probably to none more so than to liio scrofulous and con sumptive. The progress of scrofula dur ing a normal October is commonly great. We never think ot scrofula—its buuch e-, cutaneous eruptions, and wasting of the bodily substance—withoutthinking ot the great good many sufferers from it have derived from Hood’s Sarsap arilla, -whose radical and permanen! cures of this one disease are enough to malic it the most famous medicine in the world. There is probably not a city or town where Hood’s Sarsaparilla h f s not proved its merit in more homes t ; an one, in arresting and completely en-d i'cating scrofula, wnich is almost as se rious and as much to be feared as its near relative.—consumption. W. T. Wesson, Gholsonville, Va., druggists, writes: “Your One Minute Cough Cure gives perfect satisfaction. My customers say it is the best remedy for coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles.” OASTORIA. ■Beam the Ttie Kmd You Have Always Bore- T CS&jffZisfc HE KEPT HIS LEG. Twelve years ago J. W. Sullivan, of Ilartfort, Conn., 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 i 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. o ja. sToniwal. . Bear* the /} Iho Kin(l v * Haw Always Bough} Cheap Kates to the West. The Western A Atlantic Railroad and the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Lou ie Railway w2ll sell round trip home seekers tickets to all points in Oklaho ma and Indian Territory on the follow ing dates: October loth. November sth and 19$h, December 3d and I7th Tick ets go()f1 twenty-one days from date nt sale. Stopover privileges will be allow ed fifteen days going, at any point in Arkansas. Texas, Oklahomaand Indian Territory. For rates and full informa tion call on or write to JOHN L EDMONDSON, 8. N. P. A.. Atlanta, (Ja. oASTonii.. Bear* the Th ® Kin(l You Ha,e AlwayS BlgW T* <2U&7J£&c AN OLD EASHIONED DINNER- Mrs. J G. Greene Entertains Friends Delightfully Last Week. A notable event was the dining given on the 3rd. of October by Mrs. J. G. Greene in honor ot the eighty-first anniversary of her mother, Mrs. S. EL Buford. It was "a spend-the-day affair” and the invited guests were: Mrs. Mary Akin, Mrs. Virginia Witcher, Mrs. Lou Milner, Mrs. W. A. Bradley, Mrs. Charles H. Smith, Mrs. Fan ny Johnson, Mrs. Sarah Young, Mrs. Mary Stephns,Mrs. H. K. Wil liams, Mrs. Holmes, Mrs. Hamiter, Mrs. Lovelace, Mrs. Montgomery, Mrs. Lewis. The hospitable home w'ore quite a gala appearance in honor of the occasion. There were roses, and nasturtiums and dahlias in the drawing room and hall. The din ing room was especially beautiful in its decorations of white, green and gold. The side-boards, and mantel were banked with golden rod, asters, and palms. The long table with its snowy linen and array of gold-edged China, its lovely cen trepiece of yellow dahlias, and vases of ferns, was ‘‘a thing of beauty,” and "a joy forever,” was the circle of earnest, old-fashioned gentlewomen gathered about the festal board to render homage to one w :ose long life has been filled with loving service and golden deeds. The menu was in keeping with the occasion, and the repast wound up with that most toothsome of all desserts whether old, or new fash ioned pound cake and boiled cus tard. During the meal, the guests were also tegaled with sweet music by Mrs. J. D. Thomas and Miss Attaway, who, with Miss Mary Smith, and Mrs. W. W. Davis, assisted Mrs. Greene in receiving her guests. After dinner, the ladies repaired to the parlor and dis cussed old times, and old friends, and then “Mrs. Arp” was trium phantly escorted to the piano, and under her skillful fingers rang out cleai and strong, the melodies of other days. By and by, one and all found their voices joining in “Auld lang syne,” and just as the moment became critical, while smile and tear were both struggling for ascendancy, “the cup-o-tea” relieved the pressure and ended up a beautiful day,—one long to be remembered —whose influence will be felt as presaging the glories of the world beyond, for “at evening it shall be light.” Cheap Rates to the West. The Western & Atlantic Railroad and the Nashville, Chattanooga and St .Louis Railway will sell round trip homeseekers tickets to all points in Ok lahoma and Indian Territory on the following dates : October 15th, Novem ber sth and 19th, December 3d and 17th, Tickets good twenty-one Lorn date of sale. Stopover privileges will he all lowed fil'ten days going, at any point in Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma andln dion Territory. For rates and full in formation. call on or write to JOHN L, EDMONDSON. 2m. 'S. N. P. AAtlanta. Ua. f£odol Dyspepsia Digests what you eat. November Ladies’ Home Journal. The Thanksgiving number of The Ladies’ Home Journal is replete with good fiction and inter esting and novel features. It opens appropriately with an article which tells “Where the President’s Tur key Comes From.” Then there are delightful stories by Hezekiah Butterworth and Laura Spencer Porter, and anew love story called “Christine,” by Frederick M. Smith. Cleveland Moffett has an interesting story about Ira D. San key. the great evangelist, and Edith King Swain recounts the famous ascents she has made in various parts of the world. Will Bradley’s original designs for a house begin with the breakfast room, and Wilson Eyre, Jr., pre sents plans for a country-house and garden. Mr. Bok gives much good advice to young married couples in his editorial. Another most timdy feature is “Why Should a Young Man Support the Church?” by the Rev. Francis E. Clark. Many home-made Christ mas gifts are shown, and the first of “The Journal's Amusing Puz zles” appear. The regular depart ments are exceptionally good and the illustrations superb. By the Curtis Publishing Company, Phil adelphia. One dollar a year; ten cents a copy. Tutfs Pills ttimxAmte the TORPID LIVER, strengthen the digestive organs, regainte the bowels, and are un. equaled m an ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE, In malarial districts their virtues are widely recognized, as they possess peculiar properties in freeing the system (ram that poison. Elegantly surar coated. Take No Substitute* English Proverbs- Reboboth Herald. Hear twice before you speak once. ' He dances well to whom fortune pipes. He doubles his gift who gives in time. He fights with his own shadow. He giveth twice that giveth in a trice. He has a bee in his bonnet. He has bought his noble for nine pence. He has had a bite upon his bri dle. He is a wise man who speaks little. He is proper who hath proper conditions. He knows not B from a bull’s foot. He knows not a hawk from a hand-saw. He lacks most that longs most. Help the lame dog over the stile. He liveth long, and liveth well. He’ll find some hole to creep out at. He loseth nothing for the taking. He loseth his thanks who prom ises and delayeth. He loseth nothing who keepetli God for his friend. He loves roast beef well that licks the spit. He may well be contented who needs neither borrow nor flatter. He must needs run whom the devil driyes. He must stocp low that hath a low door. Pie plays well that wins. He’s a Jack in office. He’s gone upon a sleeveless errand. He that always complains is never pitied, He that bows in the dust fills his eyes. He that falls in an evil cause falls in the devil’s frying pan. He that goes a-borowing goes a-sorrowing. He that hath no shame hath no conscience. He that hath no silver in his purse should have silver on his tongue. He that hath a good harvest may be content with some thistles. He that is angry is seldom at ease. He that is warm thinks all are so. He that leudeth loses double (loses both his money and his friend.) He that licks honey from horns pays too dear for it. He that lies down with dogs must expect to rise with fleas. He that lives uot well one year sorrows for it seven. He that liveth wickedly can hardly die honestly. He that runs fast must not run long. He that runs in the night stum bles. He that reckons without his host must reckon again. Great Reading vs- Good Reading woman’s Home Companion. There is one very important thing to be remembered, and that is that being a “great” reader is not, by any means, the same thing as oeing a “good” reader. The one gobbles her way through a mass of matter, books, magazines, whatever she can get hold of; the other takes a less quantity, but makes what she reads a part of her mental equipment. The mind of the first is like a colander, taking everything which is ponied imoit, but retaining nothing; everything slips through, leaving it as empty as it was in the beginning, but nol so clean. Indiscriminate reading ener vates the mind and lowers the mental receptive powers; conse quently it shouM be avoided. There is no reason why one may not have a course of reading mark ed out for her that shall be help ful and educative. If there is no one at hand to do it, one may join the Chautauqua Circle or the Study at Home Society, whose headquar ters are at Boston, and work un der wise direction, choosing the special lines along which tiie read ing is to lie. They Work While You Sleep. While your mind and body rest Cas carets Candy Cathartic repair your digestion, your liver, your bowels, put them in perfect order. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, ioc. Dr. Cady’s Condition Powder arts just 1 what a horse needs when in bad condition. Tonic,blood pur ifier and vermifuge. They are not food but medicine and the best m use to put a horse in pritue ewtdf. tion. Price 2C cents per package For sale by alldruggists. C. M. Phelps, Forestdale, Vt., rays his child was comp’etely cur ed of a bad case of eczema by the use of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Beware of all counterfeits. It in stantly relieves piles. Catarrh lias become such a common disease that a person entirely free from this disgusting complaint is seldom met with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh as nothing more serioua than a bad celd. a simple inflammation of the nose ana throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and very dangerous disease ; if not at first, il very soon becomes so. The blood is quickly contaminated bj the foul secretions, amt the j*oison through the general circulation is carried to al; parts of the system. Salves, ■washes and sprays arc unsatis factory and disappointing, because they da not reach the seat of the trouble. S. A. S. does. It cleanses the blood of the poisot and eliminates from the system all catar rhal secretions, and thus cures thoroughlj ami permanently the worst cases. Mr T. A. Wlllinm*. a lea.litiß dny-good* mer chant of Sparlanlmi jj, P. C., writes : “ For year! I had a seven.- cm-r of nasal Catarrh, with nil tUIK the disagreeable effects Jt' ' wjL. which belong to that IS Ytd disease. □n<fw hi c h B SjSk make life painful mid y&S unendurable. I used | medicines prescribed by \ I \ V 9 leading ph -sicians and VmRWjL JT sufjyested by numbers •f friends, but without \-f ’'lx fl, , L eett-ing any better. I then began' to take 8. 8. .aVI V■' 6. It Iml tne desired - eFect, and cured me Jk jraf after taking eighteen ' e'-dwLl bottles In mv opinion R. S. S. is the only medV cine n-'iv in use that will effect a permanent cun of Catarrh.” is the only purely veg- ViCa etuble blood purifiet WMV NkSk known, and the great fesTj hw;j eßt of all Wootl mcdi ' If you have Catarrh don’t wait until it becomes deep-suited and chronic, but be gin at or.ee the use of S. S. S., and send for our h->ok on Blood and Skin Diseases ami w rive our physicians about your case THE CtVfFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. OA Bmrtow Sheriff's Sales. Wilt !>> sold iiuTors liio court house door in U.c a-w : •’artorsvißo, Burmw county, Gh., within the legal hours ot sate, on iho first Tm-sday in November, 1901, the following property, to-wit: Lot. of land number one hundred and eight;,, in the .out th district and third son ion ot Bartow county, containing inrty acres, more or i as, levied on and will bo sold as the property of M. V. Lanbatu, to satisfy two executions is sued porn tiie Justeo’s Court of the s-Ald district, <l. M.. <>; said county, in favor of Smith Brothers A Gaston, against said M. Y. L.iniam, said exeen l ions proceeding for the use of J. B. and K. A. Smith, transferees. L> v.es made and returned to me by F C Watkins. L. C. Defendant in possession notifieu. R L Rl FK IN, Sheriff. W. S, iiIIADLI'IY. liep’jy Sheriff, N. M. ADAMS, Dep’ty Sheritl. October i)th, 1901. Administrator's saie. Bv virtue of an order from the Couri of Ordinary of Bartow colony, Georgia I will sell before toe courthouse dim in the city ol Cartersviile. said canity and state, between the legal bouts ol sale on the first Tuesday in Novembi r, 1901, (terms of sale cash or to be paid toe Ist day of December, loot ) at the op tion of the purchaser, the follow!' j lands belonging to the cstat >1 Liofoul Abernathy, decea*"d, to wit; 80 <cr> - more or less of land being ail of lot.i t land number 446, 17 acres of lot 445 and 15 acres of lot number 420, alt in 21st dis trb-t and 2d section ol said county, be >nu all the lands included vt itbin the following boundaries, bounded east and mutli by lands of the Etowah company, west by Dick Howell’s and E. K A her nathy’s lar d,north by E. R. Aliernatby’s land, excepting Irmn said oescrihee lands; one acre ami a hall hereto nr< deeded by Linioid Abema hv to hi primitive'Baptist church of .Maeedo. iS, where said church now stands, and cm acre in southwest corner of said ! ! number 420, owned by W.VV. Rob rt, and the rents for present >our, po-per l herein excepted will not bo sold. Told for payments of debts of deceased an ! for distribution. October 9, 1901. JOE M. MOON, Adm’r. Estate Linford Abernathy. Administrator’s Sale. On the first Tuesday in November, 1901, between the legal hours of sale, be fore the court house door in the city of C’artersville, Bartow county, Georgia,to tne highest bidder, (terms of sale cash) I will sell by virtue of an order from the (limit of Ordinary of said county, as the property of the estate ofGeorgo Y. Layton, deceased, for purposes of paying debts, and for distribution, the luliowiiig lan Is, to-wit: All the sou thern portion of lot of laud number 305, in the sth district and 3d section ol said county, containing 115 acres, more or joss, and bounded north by lands of J. W. Akin and F. V. Smith, and south, east and west bv origin il land hues of said lot, property now in possession and cultivation by said Layton’s estate, excepting hereby the ores and mineral interests’in said southern portion of said lot which will not be sold. Rents present year reserved. October 9, 1901. JOE M MOON, Adm’r. Est. G Y. Layton. Dicjnleglou from Qaardianship- GEORGIA, Bartow County. Geo. B. Elrod, guardian of Oscar F Cook, has applied to me for a discharge iroui his guard bio ahip of Oscar E.Coo'k, this is therefore to notify all persons i oncerned, to tim ih.ir objections, ii any they' have, on or before the first iVmidav in November next, else be will be discharged from his guardianship as applied for. October Pth. 1901. G. W. HENDRICKS, ordinary. Citation for Disaiisnion- GEORGIA, Bartow County. Whereas. John P. ’-'tcgsll and R. B. Stegall, executors o! Einsl-y Stegall, represent to the court in their oeu tion duly filed, th it they have fully ad ministered Ems’oy Stegall’s estate Tbisis therefore to cite ailpersons con cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, 11 anv they can, why said exec utors should not be discharged from their executorship, and receive letters 01 dismission on th° first Monday in January 1902. This Oct. 9,1901. G. VV. HENDRICKS, Ordinary. HAM*T TOBACCO SPIT UyjM I and SMOKE *■“—™i Your Llfeawayt You can be cured of any form of tobacco using easily, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor by taking MO-TO-BAC, that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten day 6. Over 5 00,000 cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book let and advice FREE. Address STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicago or New York. 437 Tax Collectors Notice. I will attend the places named below on the days stated for the purpose of collecting .-state and County taxes for the year 1901 to-wlt. Carto-svllle Oct, 7,19, 31; Nov, 16, 30, Dec, 14, tO, 17, 18. 19, 20. Emerson Oct, 8, 26; Nov, 13. Aliatoona Del. 9,26, Nov, 12. Stump Creek Oct, 10, 28; Nov, 14, Wolf Fen Oct, 11, 29; Nov, 15. Cassville Oct, 12; Nov, 2, 23. Fine Log Oct, 14, 30; Nov, 19. iSamcwu Oct. 16, 31; Nov, 20. Sixth Oot, 16; Nov, 4, 21. Aduirsvilie Oct, 17;Noy, 5. 25. Kingston Oct, 18; Nov. 6, 29. Eulmr.ee Oct, 21 Nov, 7, Dec, 2. iron Hilt Oct, 22; Nov,B; Dec. 4, Taylorsville Oct. 23; Nov, 9. Dec, 6. Stii-isbom U'-t, 24; Nov, il; Dec, 7. Waite Nov, 18. Homo's Shoo Nov, 22. Ooonslets Nov, 2b. Lin wood Noy, 27. Cement Nov. 28. Ford it* <-, 3. Hitchcocks’ Dec,s. Sugar lfili Dec, 9. Rogers Dec, 10. Csss Station Dec, 11. Ladds Dec, 12. Do itnitts Dec, 13. 1 a o required by the laws to make settlrinciits, and issue litas for all un paid taxes on Dec 2l)th. r have given tax pavers the longest Line possible. I copy Die following from my instruc tions from liio Comptroler General The Legislature impowers and requires me lo cause taxes to bo collected by the 20th of Dee, next and upon tailuro of any tax collector to do so it is made my duty to issue ilia’s against each and every collector wno has failed lo settle his nccouut and place tiia’s in itands of an oilioer for collection. I now fore warn you that the Jaw relating to ~u-faulting faulting collectors will be rigidly and strictiv enforced and the securities on you i bond noli lied if your settlements are not promptly made. I hope tax pay ers will give prompt attention and make payment within the time named The rate is ($14,84) fourteen dollars and eighty four cents per thousand This 16th day or Sept • "r ’l. F. V. SMITH, Tax Collector Bartow Cos. Ga, Libel for Divorce. Mariali Young) In t-ne Superior Court vs -of Bartow County, B-.-u Voting 1 Georgia. Libel for Divorce. Vo. 28, Julv term. lseu. To the defendant, Ben Young: You are (oreby notified, required ami com ma ded personally ornv attorney, to be > nit appear at the Superior Court to be 1-eld i:t and for said county <>i Kar lov on trio second Monday in ' ui.ry next, ’.ben and there to answer the plaintill’s libel fora divorce, and in de ta"lt thereof the court will proceed as to justice sliall appertain. SVitn -ss the Honorable A. VV. Fite, judge ol said court, this Julv 30. 1901. L. W. REEVES, JR., Clerk Superior Court. Libel for Divorce. Eva Little Pugh, alias t Liberal fordi- Kv-i Little fowler | voree, Bartow vs. > Hupcnorcourt Andrew Pugh, alias 1 July term, Andrew Fowler. J 1901, To Andrew Pugh,(alias) Andrew Fow ler ; It. appearing to the court, by the re turn of the sheriff, that the defendant does not reside in this county, and it further appearing, that lie uocs not re side in this state. It is on motion of counsel ordered, that, the defendant ap pear and answer at the next term of this court., also, that the case he considered in default, and the plaintiff alidwed to proceed, and it is further ordered that thi". rule be published in the N nix and <’onrHTit.it newspaper published in this county twice a mouth for two months prior to the next term of this court. A. VV. FITE, J. 8. O. C. O. August 12, lijfll, A true extract from the minutes of said court, L. W. REEVE -4 , JR., Clerk. leave tu Sell fa Reinvestment. KORGI \, Bai tow County. Notice is hereby given, that, on the 2oth Cay of November, 1901, at Id o’clock i. m , at the court house in < ’artersviile, -aid county, John W, L. Brown a* guar dian for .la:.,o; R. B.v Wh.h it;,:.or of - >do county, tviil apply lo the judge of •be superior court of said county, for leave to so! I, for the purpose of reinvest ment. an undivided one halt interest, belonging to his said ward, James K. Brown, a minorinthe following prop erty, to-wit: That certain tract or parcel of land known as the lourth (4tli) division of the estate of Elijah M, Field, late of said county, deceased, awarded to Carrie S. Field, by the commissioners appointed to divide said Elijah a... Field's estate, to-wit: Beginning on the east lino ot lot nuinher 9XO in the4th district ana 3d section of Bartow county, Georgia, at the southeast corner of the 3d aivif.ion of said estate,runs south 8 chains,thence west 9fi chains to Pumpkinvine creek, thence along down ihe crick to the mouth of a certain ditch,thence up said ditch to the corner of the 3d division, thence east 99.25 chains to the point of beginning, being lots or parts of lots of laud Nos. 910, 911, gI2, 913 and oT4; also li<* north half of lot number Hp3,.aii in he 4th district and 3d section ol said, touuty, and as appears of record m the booK “<”’ of distributions, etc., paces ISi and 183, Ordinary’s office said coun ty. This application for leave to seii said property will be made lor the reason that the guardian cannot give it Jus per sonal attention, and the income resized upon the value ol ihe property c ni in vestment is very small, Hm-fuating and uncertain, and because the proceeds of tliis sale can be mo,e advantageously otherwise invested, securing a more certain and increased income, 'This 22d Oct. ToOl. JOHN W. 1 . BROWN, Guardian tor Jas, R. Brown, JOHN 11. WIKLE, Att’y. Application for i < a i it GEORGIA, Bartow Ceont.y, James H. Ford has applied for exemp tion of personalty under section 2828 et, seq. civil code of Georgia, and I will pass upon the same at ten o’clock m., on the 12ih day of Novemhei, li)0r, at my office, This 21st Qct. T}ol. id-2.3 2t. G.W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Notice is herebv given to all creditors of the estate of Thos. C. Barron, deceas ed, to render in an account of their de mands to me within the time prescribed bv law, properly made out Persons indebted to said deceased are hereby requested to make immediate payment to ine undersigned October 9th, 1901. H. M. GREEN, Admr,. L.tt*rs of Administration- GEORGIA, Bartow Countv. To whom it mav concern: D. A. Hardin has applied to me for permanent letters ot administration on estate of Meredith Anderson, late of said county, to be granted to Joe M. Moon, countv administrator, and l will pass upoiu said application on the first first Mon day in November, Ip'll. Witness mv' hand and official signature, this 7th dav of October. 1901. G. W. HEN PRICKS, Ordinary.