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[perfect rind Peerless
feheumalisiri
ni all Liver, Kidney and Blad
drr troubles caused by uric acid
in the system. It cure* h/
Jean sing and vit- Wring the
blood, thus removing the causa
0 { disease. It gives vigor and
tone and builds up the health
and strength of the patient
while using the remedy.
URICSOL is a luminary In
the medical world. It has cured
gnd will continue to cure more
of the above diseases than all
other known remedies, many of
| which do more harm than good.
This great and thoroughly tested
gad endorsed California Remedy
rever disappoints. It cures ia
i fallibly if taken as directed.
Try it and be convinced that
It is a wonder and a blessing to
suffering humanity.
Price SI.OO per bottle, or 8 bot
tles for $5. For sale by druggist*,
j Send stamp for book of partic-
I ulars and wonderful cures. If
your druggist cannot supply you
it will be sent, prepaid, upon
receipt of price. Address:
URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., Lai Aagtlw, Cal,
or tki
U2AB k RANKIN DBUO CO., AtlaaU, Ha.
DlMrUwtlag I|NU.
Vor sale bv Youn®- Bros’
et Us Help You Find a Home
in the Southwest.
Along the Cotton Belt Route, where
md can be bought for $2, $3, $6 an acre
;iit-over timbjr land that affords
od range for live stock; rich bottom
md for corn, wheat, oats, cotton; up
inds for fruits and vegetables—peaches.
Bars, plums, strawberries, tomatoes,
otatoes. onions, melons—finding good
larkets at fancy prices in the North on
■count of excellent qualities and mar
sting ahead of other sections. A land
here living is cheap—lumber at if? to $8
thousand, fuel for the cutting, range
>r the stock nearly the year round,
arden truck for this table from March
> December. The farmer who pays
igh rent in the North, or tills worn out
nil in the East, is missing some ol the
est things of life by not securing a
ome in the Southwest.
Write for copies of our “Homes in the
louthwest,” “Glimpses of Southeast
lissouri, Arkansas and Northwest
.ouisiana,” “Through lexas With a
’amera,” “Fortunes in Growing Vege
ables,” “List of Real Estate Agents
Uong the Cotton Belt,” “Developing
he St. Francis Country,” “The Diver
ifier,” a fruit and truck growers’ jour
mi.
On the first and third Tuesdays of
lack month the Cotton Belt Route will
sell one-way tickets from St, Louis,
Thebes, Cairo and Memphis, to points
n Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas, at
ialf the one-way rate, plus $2.00, or
round trip, tickets at one fare for the
round trip, plus $2.00.
.Fir full information, ad press
E. W.LkBEaUME,
G. P. AT, A., St. Louis, Mo.
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
Safc. Alwavs reliable. L.adie, ask Druggist for
J'HICHEATER'S EN<<<LIKII in Red and
Wai metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon.
Take no oilier. Refuse dangerous
tutioimand imitation*. Buy of your Druggist,
| or send 4c. in stamps for Particular*. Te*tl
iuoni<i and “Relief for in letter,
return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by
ail Druggists.
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO.
2100 Yladi*on Square, I*IIILA., PA,
Meution this paper.
Jill EPFOB^ s |
lBl&£SDBA^ flT f
I THE GREAT I
I^arMEDICINEj
Thedford's Black-Draught has R
saved doctors' bills for more than K
sixty years. For the common fam- K
|!y ailments, such as constipation, E
indigestion, hard colds, bowel com- E
plaints, chills and fever, bilious- ■
ness , s headaches and other like I
wuipiaints no other medicine is 5
necessary. It invigorates and reg- ■
ulates the liver, assists digestion, p
stimulates action of the kidneys, If
purifies the blood, and purges the 0
towels of foul accumulations. It e
cures liver complaint, indigestion, j|
sour stomach, dizziness, chills, w
I rheumatic pains, sideache, back- 1
I <|che, kidnev troubles, constipation, 1
I .biliousness, piles, hard I
colds and headache. Every drug- I
gist has Thedford's Black-Draught I
ln “? cent packages and in mam- |
moth size for SI.OO. Never accept I
a substitute. Insist on having the I
cnginal made by the Chattanooga I
-ledicme Company. i
I believe Thedford’s Black-Draught I
,s the best medicine on earth. It is I
good for any and everything, i have S
f fami 'y °f twelve children, and for I
ou f years I have kept them on foot B
■ end healthy with no doctor but Black- ■
1 draught. A. J. GREEN, lllewara. La. §
THRIFTY TOWN
OF TAYLORSVILLE.
Enterprising Citizenshi*. Keep Up
Its Business Interests-
HEALTHY SECTION OF COUNTRY-
Interesting Sketch of One of Bar
tow s ProsDerous Railroad Towns
—lts Churches and Schools.
While vast growth and improve
ment are in progress in most of the
cities, countries and the world at
large, the little town ol Taylors
ville is not on a stand-still, but it
is receiving its share of the im
provements in bountiful measure.
Taylorsville is situated among
the rural hills of North Georgia on
the East & West railroad, twelve
miles from Cartersville. No prettier
site for a town can be found any
where than is this, with its stately
mountains towering round about
its many springs of crystal and
healthful water which drinks out
health to all, and its fair and exten
sive plains of rich and undulated
farms surrounding it, which are as
fine and productive as ahy to 1 •
found. The Euharlee creek whicu
flows through the town affords a
great water power, and along its
banks is a great expanse of the
richest and most fertile bottom
lands. It is a place
“Where Nature’s gifts in rich abun
dance flow,
Where luscious fruits and Hovers
perennial grow,
Where health is found by those who
coming seek,
And beauty blooms on each liiaiden’s
cheek.”
But the most admirable feature
of the town is the energetic and
enterprising spirit which is mani
fested on eyery hand.
Only a few years ago Taylors
ville was an insignificant and al
most unheard of little place, but so
rapid has been its growth for the
last few years that it has passed
beyond that state and is rapidly
pushing forward; and if its present
growth continues it will within a
few decades be numbered among
the leading towns of Georgia.
To form some idea of the rate at
which it is growing a small number
of the improvements of the last
year or two will be given.
The town now supports three
cotton gins; the Baptist of the
place have in hand the money and
plan to erect a three thousand dol
lar house of worship, which will
be begun at an early date; Mr. J.
B. Davis has just completed a
beautiful twelve room cottage; the
Odd Fellow's have just finished
their handsome hall and furnished
it nicely; Dr. P. M. Rhodes is hav
ing his old home renovated into a
lovely two story building; Dr. R.
E. Adair, Mr. J. M. Dorsey, Mr.
Eugene Smith and Mr. W. M.
Trippe have recently improved
their residences and there are many
other improvements too numerous
to mention.
With the energetic and indus
trious men, the pious and cultured
women, and material and
advantages with which they have
to work, it is not probable that the
town will soon retrograde but with
the motto “Excelsior” inscribed on
its banner in letters of gold, it will
rise higher and higher in the esti
mation of all. Taylorsville.
Better Than a Plaster.
A piece of flannel dampened with
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and bound
on the affected parts is better than a
plaster for a lame back and for pains
in the side or chest. Pain Balm has
no superior as a liniment for the re
lief of deep-seated muscular and
rheumatic pains. For sale by J. H.
GKlreath & Son. sept
If you know of a poor old stifled horse
--a h’orst with a sore back, a barbed-wire
wound, unnatural growths, stitt joints
or swollen limbs, send him around. We
can cure him with a tew applications oi
Nerve & Bone Oil. 25 cents. aug.
No Substitute Offered.
Say what you wil about druggists
ofiering something “just as good”
because it pays a better profit, the
fact still stands that ninety-nine out
of a hundred druggists recommend
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Di
arrhoea when the best remedy for di
arroea is askeu for and do so because
they know it is the one remedy that
can always be depended upon, even
in the most severe and dangerous
cases. Sold by J. H. Gilreath & Son.
DON’T GET THIN
get fat; get nice and plump, there is
safety in plumpness.
Summer has tried your foodworks;
winter is coining to try your breath
mill. Fall is the time to brace your-
S But weather is tricky; lookout!
Lookout for colds especially.
Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil is
the subtlest of helps. It is food, the
easiest food in the world; it is more
than food, it helps you digest your
food and get more nutriment from it.
Don't get thin, there is safety in
plumpness. Man. woman, and child.
Distress After Eating; Cured
Jud t e W. T. Holland, of Greens
burg, La., who is well and favorably
known, says: “Two years ago 1 suf
fered greatly from indigestion. Af
ter eating, great distress would inva
riably result, lasting for an hour or
so, and my nights were restless. I
concluded to try Kodo. Dyspepsia
Cure, and it cured me entirely. Now
my sleep is refreshing and digestion
perfect.” Sold by M. F. Word.
sept
If constipated or bilious, call tor
Kamon’s Piiis, aud be certain our clerks
give you the gemline Ramon’s; Com
plete treatment—2s doses 25c. sept.
When troubled by constipationtrv
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets. They are easy to take and
produce no griping or other unpleas
ant effect. For sale by J. H. Gil
reath & Son. ' sept.
\Ve have in our shelves many remedies
for constipation and biliousness, but
the never-failing, common-sense cure
is found only in Ramon’s Liver Pills
and Tonic Pellets. This Treatment
cures by relieving the cause of the
trouble; the Pink Pill arouses the liver,
while the Tonic Pellets tone up the
organs and insure natural and heaithv
conditions. Complete Treatment—two
medicines—2s doses—full directions—
only 25 cents. sept..
Sour Stomach.
When the quantity of food taken
is too large and the quality too rich,
sour stomach is likely to follow, an i
especially so if the' digestion hax
been weakened by constipation. Eat
slowly and not too freely of easily
digested food. Masticate the food
thoou ghlv. Let five hours elapse
between meals, and when you feel a
fullness and weight in the region of
the stomach after eating take Cham
berlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets
and the sour stomach may be avoided.
For sale by J. H. Gilreath k Son.
sept
Trustee’s sale.
In the district court of the United
Slates for the northern district of
Georgia.
In re ) No. iOO9,
W. L. Stallings. y
Bankrupt ) In Bankruptcy.
In pursuance of an order of the dis
trict court of the United States for the
northern district of Georgia, as a court
of bankruptcy, passed by the Honora
ble P. H. Adams, referee in and lor said
court, September.!, 1903,1, the under
signed trustee, will sell,belore the court
house door in Cartersville, Bartow Cos.,
Georgia, on the first Tuesday in Octo
ber. 1903. the sam6 being the 6th day of
the month, within the legal hours of
sale, to the highest ant* best bidder, for
cash, all that tract or parcel of land sit
uate, lying and being in the 17th dis
trict arid 3d section of Bartow county,
Georgia, and known as the Terhune
place, and more particularly described
as lollows: Consisting of lots of land in
said district, state and county, num
bers ninety-three (93). ninety-four (94),
ninety-five (95), ninety-six (96*), one hun
dred and twenty (120), one hundred and
twenty-one (121).0ne hundred and twen
ty-two (122), one hundred sixty-seven
(167), one hundred sixtv-eight (i6B), one
hundred sixty-nine (169). and parts of
lots numbers'one hundred twenty-three
(123), one hundred sixty-six (166), one
hundred ninety-two (192), one huudred
ninety-three (193) and one hundred
ninety-iour (194), the same being the
said tract of land of five hundred acre s
more or less, conveyed by the said
VV. L. Stallings to John W. Akin by a
deed dated November 15. 1900, and re
corded in deed book JJ, page 93 of the
records of the clerk of the superior
court of Bartow county, Georgia. Said
sale being made free irom all iieDS and
encumbrances ol every character, in
accordance with the terms of said order.
R H. DODD.
Trustee in Bankruptcy for VV. L.
Stallings.
Tax Assessment for 1903
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
Court of Commissioners ot Roads and
Revenues, Bartow County, Georgia,Sep
tember Term, 1903.
It is ordered by the court that there
be assessed, levied and collected on all
the taxable property in said county on
the digest for the year 1903 the fo 1 low
ing/tax for county purposes for said
year 1903, towit:
Is'. Twenty-three [231 cents od the one
hundred dollars to pay any lawful in
debtedness of Bartow county, past due
and to become due, the necessary court
expenses for the year, including salary
of the judge of the city court, expenses
of commissioner’s court, coroner’s tees,
expenses of lunatics, public buildings
and tor any other lawful charge against
the county not otherwise provided for.
2d. Seven |7J centson the one hundred
dollars to pay jurors.
3d. Ten [loj cents on the one hundred
dollars for a public road fund, as pr®-
yided by law. '
4th. Three (3) cents on the one hun
dred dollars to pay commissioner ot
pauper farm and support of paupers.
sth. Two (2] cents on the one hundred
dollars to pay bailifl’s tees, non-resident
witnesses, fuel, stationery, ete.
6th. Three [3] cents on the one hun
dred dollars to pay sheriffs, jailor’s and
other officer"’ fees, that they mav be
legally entitled to out of the county
treasury.
7th. Twelve ! 121 cents on the one hun
dred dollars to pay balance due for new
court house and furnishing same.
The foregoing items making the
county tax for the year 1903 sixty [6o]
cents on the one hundred dollars,
It is further ordered that the tax col
lector of said county collect said taxes
hereinbefore levied as provided by Jaw.
It is further ordered that this order
be spread upon the minutes of this
court, and published for 30 days in the
News and Courant, the newspaper in
which the sheriff's sales of said county
are published, a copy posted at the
court house door for :k) da> s, end a copy
furnished the tax collector of said coun
ty, as provided by law.
Done in open court this 2d day of Sep
tember, 1903.
JOHN S. LEAK, Chairman.
W. M. TURNER,
W. D. ROWLAND,
I. D. HENDERSON,
R. J. RAIDEN,
' Commissioners Rgads and Revenue
Bartow Countv, Ga.
A true extract from the minutes this
2d dav of September, 1903.
R. J. RAIDEN,
Clerk J ioatd Commissioners R. R. of
Bartow Countv. Ga.
Citation for Guardianship.
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
To All Whom It May Concern: Pat
rick Mansfield, having applied for
guardianship of the person and prop
erty of Henry C. Mansfield, a lunatic
ot said county, notice is given that said
application will be heard on the first
Monday in October next. This Septem
ber 7, 1903.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
THE PEOPLE S PAPER
THE ATLANTA NEWS
Only $3.00 a Year.
Published Daily ( except Sunday).
Ably Edited by John Temple Graves.
Under Management Charles Daniel.
An absolutely Free and Independent Daily Newspaper, carrying the important
news of the world, mailed direct to subscriber* everywhere at the rate of ONE
CENT A DAY.
Subscriptions accepted at the office of HEWS AND COURANT
Or Remit Direct to
THE ATLANTA NEWS. Atlanta. Ga.
North Carolina Corn Whiskey.
A51.50, $1.75. $2.00 and $3.00 Per Gallon.
Rye Whiskey at $2, $2.50, $3 and $3.20 per Gallon.
Direct to consumer, saving middlemen’s profit. All express
charges paid by me on packages of two gallons or more to limits
of Southern Express Company. Terms: Cash with order.
Write for descriptive circular of wines aud brandies with your
first order.
Reference: Commercial agencies or any merchant here.
J. H. WOOLLEY, Cherryville, N. C.
THE NEW
Interchangeable Mileage Tickets
s. %
. OVER THE .
SEABOARD
flli Line Railway
are on sale now by any agent of the
svstem at
per 1.900 Miles
and are good over
15.000 Miles.
covering the following roads:
Atlanta, Knoxville and Northern Rail
way; Atlanta and West Point Railroad;
Western Railway of Alabama; Atlantic
Coast Line; Louisville and Nashville
Railroad; Louisville Henderson and
St. Louis Railroad; Nashville, Chatta
nooga and St. Louis Railroad; North
western Railway of South Carolina; Bal
timore Steam Packet Company; Plant
System; Brunswick and Birmingham
Railroad; Richmond, Fredericksburg
and Potomac Railroad; Charleston and
Western Carolina Railway; Washington
Southern Railway; Chesapeake Steam
ship Company; Seaboard Air Line Rail
way; Columbia, Newberry and Laurens
Railroad; Georgia Railroad; Western
and Atlantic Railroad.
For further information relative to
scheuu.es, reservation of sleeper accom
mociai:< o tc., apply to
iARRY E KROUSE,
C. P. anu A., 12 Kimball House.
Atlanta, Ga.
W T M. B. CLEM ENTS,
Trav, Pass. Agt., 12 Kimball House,
Atlanta, Ga.
C. B. WALKER,
Depot Ticket Agt., Union Station,
Atlanta. Ga.
W. H. FULTON,
TANARUS, P. A., Equitable Building
Atlanta. Ga,
W. E. CHRDsTI \N
ss’t. Gen’l. Pass. Agt., Atlanta Ga
: "n
INSIST UPON HAVING -
;!]/ THE GENUINE 1 |
I LAMMS I
; FLOBiDA WATER I
THE MOST REFRESHING AND
DELIGHTFUL PERFUME FOR THE
HANDKERCHIEF,TOILET AND BATH.
pne I GUARANTEED nnaer reasonabl*
lUOlllUilO conditions. May deposit money
for tuition in bank till position is secured, oi
give notes, or contract to pay oat of salary
and without security, after course iscompletec
and position is secured. Our facilities torse
Curing positions, and the proficiency .of out
graduates, are strongly endorsed by business
men from Maine to California. Our 150-page
catalogue will explain all. Send for it. Ad
ires* Draughon’s College at either place.
DRAUGHON*S~ S} AA
praotioal 4
l BUSINESS-^
Nashville, Tenn.
Atlanta, da. ' A Ft. Worth, Texas,
Montgomery, Ala. tL Oalveston, Texas
Little Rock, Ark. Q Shreveport, La.
No Vacation St. Louis, Ho. Enter any time
Most thorough, practical and progressive
schools of the kind in the world. Author foui
text-books on bookkeeping. Four weeks book
keeping with us equal to twelve by theold plan
Also give superior course shorthand, etc. W
expend more money securing positions than al
most any business college takes in as tuition
Cheap board; car fare paid. CATALOG FREE
HOME.STUOY mSb
PENMANSM IP, etc., successfully ‘uJWvf/Kjl
taught by mall or no charges. We fjjP
give better Home Study Course than !•• *1
50 per cent of the business colleges Ueg
give by personal instruction. Write ftSßS'*
for pricelist of Home Study Course Address
DRAUGHON’S PUS. fni 1.. Nashville. Tenu
ReallEstate Insurance
C. H. AUBREY,
Attorney at Law.
Loans Negotiated.
Ofßo< in Bam Jones building.
"la CURESWHtfttAU ELSE FAILS.
U Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
lYj la tune. Sold by dniggi-t*.
r^2flQi
Application for Charter.
GEORGIA, Barlow County.
1 o the Superior Court of said county.
The petition of Oliver C. Bradford, A.
R. Jackson, John Richardson, A. J.
Green, M. I). Striplin, Vv. M. Turner,
H. R. Maxwell and N. A. White, all of
said state and county respectfully
shows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns
to become incorporated under the name
and style of the Pine Log College.
2. The term for which petition asks to
be incorporated is twenty (20) years,
with the privilege ol renewal at the end
of that time. *
3. The capital stock of the corporation
is to be $1,000.00, divided into shares of
SI.OO each. Petitioners, however, ask
the privilege of increasing said stock
from time to time not exceeding in the
aggregate $25,000.00.
4. The sole object and purpose of the
corporation is to promote education.
Petitioners propose to erect and main
tain suitable buildings, and to equip the
same in such manner as may be neces
sary for the erection and maintaincnce
ot said educational institution; and ask
that they be imbued with the power to
buy, own, hold, and sell such real
estate as may deemed necessary. To
erect or make contracts for the erection
of buildings necessary. To receive, in
vest, or hold as trustee, donations given
to said institution as endowments, and
to reserve the usual powers and to do
all necessary, and proper acts which
pertain or may be connected with the
operation ana maintainence of said in
stitution.
5. The principal office and place of
business of the proposed corporation
will be in the city of Pine Log, said stale
and county.
Wherefore pelitioners pray for them
selves and their legal successors to be
made a body corporate and politic with
ail the rigiits privileges and restrictions
fixed hv law.
Thus. w. milner & sons,
Petitioners Attorneys.
GEORGIA. Bartow County.
I. W. O, Walton, clerk, do hereby
certify that the foregoing is a true and
correct copy of the petition for charter
ior the Pine Log College filed in this
office on the 28th dav of Julv, 1903.
W. C WALTON, C. S. C.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors-
Georgia, Bartow County.
Notice is hereby given" to ail creditors
of the estate of M rs. M. E, Gordon, late
of said county, deceased, to render in
an account of their demands to me
within the time prescribed by law,
properly made out, and persons indent
ed to said deceased are hereby request
ed to make immediate payment to the
undersigned. This June SO, 1903.
JOE M. MOON, Admr.
Estate Mrs. M.E. Gordon .
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUNC LADIES, Roanoke, Va,
Opens Sept. 21, 1903. One of the leading
Scnools tor Young Ladies in the South.
New buildings, pianos and equipments.
Campus ten acres. Grand mountain
scenery in Valley of Virginia, famed
for health. KuroDean and American
teache.s. Full course. Conservatory
advantages in Art. Music and Elocu
tion. Certificates Wellesley. Students
Iron 30 states. For catalogue address
MATTIE P. HARRIS, President,
6-25 8t Roanoke. Va.
m Seeds W
are planted by farmer
KSm and c r denrr wbo lias
Mopped ex perUnrnring. It
pays to pay a little more
for Kerry sand reap a great mtm
drill iitorr at the liarvest. All
maw dealers. iitOtt Seed Ann.xl wm&k
postpaid free to all appiieanu.
MBS D. M. FERRY dr CO.,
Bf Detroit, Mich.
“Fruit Growing- and Truck
Farming Along the
Cotton Belt”
Is the name of anew and finely illus
trated booklet just published by the
Cotton Belt Route. It tells in their
own words the story of those who
have “gone west” and achieved great
success growing peaches, strawber
ries, pears, grapes, tomatoes, onions,
melons, potatoes and other fruit and
truck on lands that f innerly sold for
t‘S to $lO an acre and now' yield SIOO
to S3OO per acre net in a single season.
Write for a copy, free, also how to
secure a home in the Southwest for
the rent you would pay in the Eaet
or North.
E. W, LaBEAUME. G. P. & T. A.,
Cotton Belt,
St. Louis, Mo.
Bartow Sheriff Sales.
Will be sold before the court house
door in the town of Cartersville, Bartow
county, Ga., within the legal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in October.
i903, the foil >wing property, tewit:
Lots of land numbers 111, 112, 113,
114, 115. 98, 96, 104, 105 and 194 in the 17th
district and 3rd section of Bartow
county, Georgia. Levied on and will be
sold as the property of M. A. Harden to
satisfy one .state and county tax Ufa for
the year 1903, against said M. A. Hardin.
Property in possession ot defendant.
Levy made and returned by F. C.
Watkins, L. C.
Also, at same time and place, all that
certain tract of land lying in the sth
district and 3d section ot Bartow county,
Georgia, known as the J, G. Lowry
home place, the same being composed
of parts of land lots numbers 165, 196
and 201, and containing two hundred
and ninety-four acres of land, more or
less, which tract of land is more partic
ularly described as follows, to-wit: All
ol said land lot number 165, except that
portion thereof known as the \V. D.
Fowler part of said lot; all of the south
halves of said land lots numbers 196 and
2ul, except small portions thereof, de
scribed in and previously conveyed to
others by said J. G. I,o\vry by his three
certain deeds, to-wit: His deed to the
Dade Coal Company, dated October 13,
1879, recorded on pages 319 and 320 of
Btiok “V” ot the deed records of said
county; his deed to the Georgia Iron A
Coal Company, dated May 12,1890, re
corned on pages 675 and'676 of Book
“BB ’ of the deed records of said coun
ty: and his deed to the Georgia Iron A
Coal Company, dated May 17 1890, re
corded on pages 717 and 718 ol Book
“BB” ot the deed records of said county,
said excepted parcels aggregating eight
een acres of land, more or less, with
certain mining rights and privileges
ami rigiits of way therein mentioned
and fully described, said excepted par
cels of land, mining rights and privi
leges and rights of way, now known as
the Georgia Iron A Coal Company land;
said above described land known as the
J. G. Lowry home place, containing 294
acres, more or less. All levied on and
will be sold as the property ot J. G.
Lowry, to satisfy one Bartow Superior
Court fi fa. in favor of L. 8. Munford
vs. said J. G. Lowry. Property pointed
out in said ti. fa. arid in defendants’ pos
session, deed of reconveyance filed and
recorded before lew made.
H. R. MAHWELL, Sheriff.
T. W. TINSLEY. Dept. Sheriff,
September Btli, 1903.
Administrator’s Sale.
On the first Tuesda> in October, 1903,
between the legal hours ot sale, before
the court house door in the city ot Cart
ersville, Bartow county, Georgia, to the
highest bidder, terms of sale cash on
the day of sale, I will sell, at public
outcry, the south half of lot of laud
number 74, in the 16th district and 3d
section of said county and state, con
taining eighty [Bo] acres, more or less,
bounded north commencing on the
original line of said lot, on theyest
side and running nearly east with the
road leading to Cassville, to the origi
nal land line between said lot 74 and lot
75, thence south v ith said origiual line
of said lot to corner of said lot 74, thence
along south original line of lot 74 and
77 to west corner of said lot 74, thence
north along the original line to the start
ing point. Sold under order of the court
of ordinary of said county as property
of the estate of J. N. Peace, deceased,
lor the purpose of paying debts of said
deceased and for distribution.
JOE M. MOON,
Administrator of the estate of J N.
Peace.
September 1, 1903.
Administrator’* Sale.
Agreeable to an order of the court of
ordinary of Gordon county. Ua., will
be sold before the court house uoor in
the town of Cartersvillc, Bartow coun
ty, Ga., within the legal hours of sale,
on the first Tuesday in October, 1903, the
following property", to-wit :Three-quar
ters of lot No. 1211, three-quarters of
lot No. 1212, three-quarters of lot No,
1105 ami the whole of lot No. 114 c, all
lying and being in the 4th district and
3d section of Bartow county, Ga.,
bounded as follows: North by lands of
J. J. Conner, east by lands of S S.
Saggers, west by lands of John Brown,
south by lands of Jim Sinyard, and
containing one hundred and thirty
acres of land (130), more or less. All of
the above described land sold as the
property of J. J. lirawner, deceased.
Terms of sale cash,
MRS. M. A. BRWYNER,
Administratrix of J. J, Brawner, de
ceased,
September 2, 1903.
Guardian's Sale.
Agreeably to an order ot the court of
ordinary of Floyd county. Georgia, will
be sold at public outcry, at the eourt
house door of Bartow county, Georgia,
on the first Tuesdry in October, 1903,
within tbe legal hours of sale, the fol
lowing property, to-wit: An undivided
three-fourths interest in eighty acres ot
land, as follows: All of Lot No. 177, ex
cept ten acres, more or less, off of the
east aide oi said lot, also twenty acres,
more or less, oft'of the east side of Lot
No. 176, all lying and being in the 6th
district and 3d section of Bartow coun
ty, Georgia. Sold as the property of
Frank, Fannie and Turner Mooney,
minors. Terms cash. September 1,
1903. O. Mel), MOONEY.
Guardian of Frank, Fannie aud Tur
ner Mooney, minors.
Citation for Dismission
GEORGIA. Bartow County:
Wherevs, E. and A. Strickland, ad
ministrators of B. E. Strickland, repre
sent to the court in their petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that they
have fully administered B. E. Strick
land’s estate. This Is therefore to cite
all persons concerned, kindred and
creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrators should
not be discharged from their adminis
tration.and receive letters ot dismission
on the first Monday in October. 1903.
G. VV. HEN oRICKS, Ordinary.
Twelve Months' Snpp°rt.
GEORGIA. Bartow County:
The appraisers appointed to set apart
a tweiye months’ support for the family
of Frank Teems, deceased, having filed
their return, ail persons concerned are
hereby cited to show cause in the court
of ordinary of said county, by the first
Monday in" October next, why the appli
cation for said twelve months’ support
should not be granted. This Septem
hpr 7 1 <#■■*
WG' * HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA. Bartow County:
To All Whom It May Concern: M. D.
<fc J. J. Martin have "applied to me for
permanent letters of administration on
the estate of Willis Martin, late of said
county, to vest in Joe M. Moon, and X
will pass upon said application on the
first Monday in October, 1903,
Witness mv hand and official signa
ture this 7th dav of September, 1903.
G.W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
One Minute Cough Cure
For Coughs, Colds and Croup.