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S.S.S.
CURES
MALARIAL
POISON
LIFE HAD NO CHARMS.
For three years I was troubled with mala
rial poison, which caused my appetite to fail,
and I was greatly reduced in flesh, and life
lost all its charms. I tried mercurial and
potash remedies, but to no effect. I could
getno relief. I then decided to tr Y fcjSSSBSa
A few bottles of this wonderful
medicine made a complete and permanent
cure, and I now enjoy better health than ever.
J. A. Rice, Ottawa, Kan.
Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free.
Swift Specific Cos., Atlanta, Ga,
JOHNSON’S
MAGNETIC OSL!
B Instant Ki.ler of Pain.
Internal and External.
W I cures RHEUMATISM, NEURAL
\ IW GIA, Lame Back, Sprains, Bruises,
' A, Swelling*, Stiff Joints, COLIC end
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' MA. bus, Croup,Diptheria, Sore Throat,
t I! EADACHE, 88 it by magic.
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JOHNSON’S ORIENTAL SOAP.
Medicated and Toilet. The Great Skin Cure and
Face Baautificr. Ladies will find it the most
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the market Itis absolutely pure. Makes the
skin soft and velvety and restores the lost corvi-
Diexisnt is a luxury for the Bath for Infants.
It alays ’itching, cleanses the scalp and promotes
the growth of huir. Price 25c. For sale by
Sold in Cartersville bv
M. !'■ WORD, YOUNG BROS.
and druggists everywhere.
SAILED THE SEAS 38 YEARS.
One of His Experiences.
For thirty-eight years Capt. Loud followed
the sea, most of that time as master of a ves
sel, and upon retiring from the water was ap
pointed by the Secretary of the United States
Treasury to superintend the sea! fisheries in
Alaska, which position he held five years. He
relates one experience as follows:
‘'For several years I had been troubled with
general nervousness and pain in the region
of my heart. My greatest affliction was
sleeple aness; It was almost impossible at any
time to obtain rest and sleep. Having seen
Dr. Miles’ remedies advertised I began using
Nervine. After taking a small quantity the
benefit received was so great that I was posi
tively alarmed, thinking the remedy con
tained opiates which would finally be Injuri
ous to me; but on being assured by the drug
gist that it was perfectly harmless, I contin
ued It together with the Heait Cure. Today
I can conscientiously say that Dr. Miles’ K -
storative Nervine and Now Heart Cure did
more for me than anything I had ever taken.
I had been treated by eminent physicians
in New York and San Francisco without ben
efit. I owe my present pood health to the
judicious use of these most valuable remedies,
and heartily recommend them to all afflicted
as I was.”—Capt. A. P. Loud, Hampden, Me.
Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine and New Cure
are sold by all druggists on a positive guaran
tee, or by Dr. Miles Medical Cos., Elkhart,
Ind., on receipt of price, Si per bottle, or six
bottles for jo, express prepaid. They are
free from all opiates ana dangerous drugs.
For Sale bv All Drueclsts.
iIR. HATHAWAY & C&.
(Regular Graduate*.)
Are the leading and most successful specialists and
Will give you help.
to guarantee to all' patients. If they can possibly
be restored, our own exclusive treatment
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WOMEN! Don’t you want to get cured of that
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CATARRH, and diseases of the Skin, Blood,
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SYPHILIS— The most rapid, safe and effective
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SKIN DISEASES of all kinds cured where
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UNKATURAI. DISCHARGES promptly
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TRUTH AND FACTS.
We have cured cases of Chronic Diseases that
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ists and medical institutes.
that there is hope
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Beware of free and cheap treatments. We give
the best and most scientific treatment at moderate
prices—as low as can be done for safe and skillful
treatment. FREE consultation at the office or
by mail. Thorough examination and careful .diag
nosis. A home treatment can he given in a majority
of cases. Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men;
No. 2 for Women; No. 8 for Skin Diseases. All corre
spondence answered promptly. Business strictly con
fldential. Entire treatment cent free from
tlou. Refer to our patients, banks and business n ji
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DR. HATHAWAY & CG
-2 South llrond Street, Atlanta*
B CiiStS Writhe all lloc y AILS-
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in tiiaa Sold by druggists.
qgEEgEEEEHEgafyi
LAPSES DO YOU KNOW
DR. FELIX LE BRUN’S
STEEL HID PEPHYHOYHL PILLS
are the original and only FItENCH, safe am! re
liable lure on the market. Price $1.00,; seat by
mail. Genuine eold only by
Nature should be
assisted to throw
off impurities of the
blood. Nothing
does it so well, so
promptly, or so
safely as Swift’s
Specific.
THEIR RISE AND FALL.
Dictators Before Debs Who Have
Sunk Into Obscurity.
IRONS AND DENNIS KEARNEY
From a Position to Strangle Temporarily Half
the Commerce of the Country Reduced
to a Common Loafer.
Debs’ rise and fall as a “labor
leader,” says the New York Sun,
are nothing new in the history of
strikes, except as the rise and fall
were both more rapid and violent
than is usual. Debs has had plenty
of predecessors who have gone up
like rockets and come down like
the sticks. Next Debs Martin
Irons was suddenly in fame and
suddenly in oblivion. It was more
through accident, however, than by
reason of personal energy that
Irons was put in a position in 1886
to strangle temporarily the com
merce of half the country. His
character was reflected in his reply
to Jay Gould when the latter offered
to confer with him on a settlement
of the railroad strikes. When he
received word of Gould’s desire he
replied that Gouid could find him
at Kansas City.
From his dicatorship Irons went
to jail, and a year and a half after
the strikes he was keeping a small
fruit stand under an alias in the
poorer section of St. Louis. He had
been expelled from the organiza
tion which he had ruled and in
which his word was law. He was
reduced to the most abject poverty
and had become a victim of drink.
Later he drifted into one of the
sterile mountain counties of Mis
souri and became a fugitive lrom
justice, having stolen a horse and
wagon. A year ago he was met bv
a former friend in a little settle
ment in the heart of the Ozarks.
He had then sunk tor the level of
a common village and drunk
ard, and lived under an assumed
name.
Irons in 'BB6 was as greata bower
as Debs was a week ago. When
Irons was asked later: “How was
it possible for a man of your calibre
and absolute lack of qualification
for leadership to attain the position
that you held for a month?” he re
plied:
“I cannot tell, I found myself on
the back of a runaway horse. I
could not get off nor stop the ani
mal, although'l knew I was riding
straight to destruction. I thought
I might as well sit up straight and
pretend to ride. There was a time
when I could have got out with
money enough to live in luxury the
rest of my life, but I waited too
long, and when I was thrown at
last the men who had most admir
ed me were the first to kick me.”
There was no end to Irons’ am
bitions, and he sacrificed every
thing to attain them. He was Mas
ter Workman of a district assembly
of the Knights of Labor at Sedalia,
Mo., when that order flourished,
and aspired to succeed Grand Mas
ter Workman Powderly. His hench
men were the wild men of the or
der. Powderly visited the scene of
the great strike and saw at once
that it was unjustifiable, but he
had not the courage to tell Irons
and his crowd so.
The private life of Irons was as
bad as his public career. He was a
brutal husband, and treated his
wife and child inhumanly. He was
born in Dundee, Scotland, in 18:52,
and emigrated to this country when
14 years old. He married a woman
named Mary Brown in Lexington,
Ivy., In 1852, and wandered around
in the southwest, working here ar.d
there in Missouri and Kentucky,
but never remaining in one place
long. His wife separted from him
in 187(5, and his son Robert ssvore
out a warrarA for his arrest for
beating hi. hut the matter
was compromised. When Irons
was in the height of his power he
was requested by Lippincott’s Mag
azine to write his autobiography,
and agreed to do it for SSO. A. O.
Caughlin, a lay Baptist preacher,
wrote the autobiography, and Irons
knew nothing about it until it was
printed, when they divided the
money,
Dennis Kearney was really the
father of the intense, unreasoning
hatred of the Southern Pacific rail
road and all large corporations and
millionaries which has become so
general in California. Ithasreached
such a point in twenty years that
no corporation and no millionaire
in California can get justice before
a jury. This was shown very con
spicuously when an old crank dan
gerously wounded Bonanza Mil
lionaire Maekay last year. This
crank lost his money in mining
stock speculations, for which he
held Maekay responsible, and one
of the jurors, having suffered simi
lar losses, refused to find Mackay’s
assailant guilty.
In this present strike the yeno
mous hatred of the railroad may
be traced to the teachings of Kear
ney on the sand lot. Kearney was
a poor Irish drayman in 1876, when
the agitation against the importa
tion of the Chinese first began.
Kearney had studied the question
closely, and, though he had no edu
cation and was a poor speaker, his
intense earnestness overcame all
defects, and he never failed to
arouse his audiences. He believed
that the oqly safety for laboring
men in California was to check this
flood of coolie labor from the Orient,
and to pass law# curtailing the
powers of great corporations, and
especially the railroad company.
Kearney enjoyed the great advan
tage of the active aid at this time
of one of the brightest newspaper
men on the coast. This was Ches
ter B. Hull, who gained national
notoriety by the Cardiff giant fraud.
Hull dearly loved a hoax, and he
was a master of rhetoric. He was
the author of all the picturesque
phrases in Kearney’s speeches.
For months he wrote Kearney’s ad
dresses aud gave him valuable ad
vice.
Kearney soon formed the work
ingmen’s party, which gained ad
herents by thousands. He spoke
every Sunday on the sand lots ad
joining the new city hall, and the
burden of all his addresses was
that the workingmen should unite
and drive out this asiatic labor.
Kearney organized a convention of
workingmen in January, 1877, which
passed resolutions against Chinese
immigration and land monopoly,
and in favor of an eight-hour day
and the reduction of the power of
corporations.
The agitation was carried on so
strongly that in June an election
was held for members of a conven
tion to draft anew constitution em
bodying many of the reforms advo
cated by Kearney. In July Kear
ney had become very violent. He
advocated destruction of the ships
ot the Pacific Mail company A'hich
brought over Chinese, and organ
ized a force to burn them. His
plans also included burning the
fine houses of railroad millionaires
on Nob hill. These plans would
have succeeded but for the large
citizen force organized by William
T. Coleman, the old vigilance com
mittee leader. There was one live
ly fight at the Pacific Mail docks
in which the Kearneyites were
whipped soundly, and the city was
saved.
In September the constitution
convention met, and in May, 1878,
by a heavy vote the new constitu
tion was adopted. This victory
gave Kearney a national reputa
tion. He went to New York and
Boston and spoke in Faneuil hall,
but was a failure in the east. On
his return he continued his sandlot
harangues, but he gradually lost
his hold on the workingmen’s party,
as they suspected he had received
money from the railroad.
In 1880 he was deposed from the
presidency of the workingmen’s
party. Since that time he has tried
several times to regain his old su
premacy, but vainly. The Chinese
question has been his hobby in all
these years, and he has frequently
appealed on the sand lots and in
communications to the newspapers.
For ten years Kearney has done
very little work. For several years
he ran an employment agency, but
the profits wouldn’t have kept a
cow. He now lives in the suburbs
on a large lot which he bought, and
he is seldom seen in town. Several
months ago he called on the police
to protect his property,as he claimed
enemies wanted to burn his house.
He says he is gathering materials
to write his life and the his’ory ol
California. Where he was once so
powerful he is now regarded as a
crank. During the recent excite
ment over registering Chinese he
hired a hall and announced that he
would speak on the subject, but no
audience came.
FIGURING THE COST-
Tne Losses of the Railroads May Reach
Ji0, 000,000.
Chicago, July 22.—Now that the
railroads are getting their traffic in
shape and business is assuming its
normal condition, some speculation
as to the cost of the great strike to
the railroads and others in Chicago
alone may he interesting. All the
general managers’ commission say
at present they have not sufficient
data to hazard an opinion that could
be relied upon. Urged to make a
guess, one of them tonight said the
losses of the roads would reach at
least $5,000,000 and might go as
high as $8,000,000. He declined to
permit the use of his name, how
ever, as the father of the random
opinion.
It will probably be many weeks
before the managers can secure fig
ures tor a detailed report. Mai y
things must be taken into con
sideration. The loss occasioned by
suspended traffic will he the larg
est sum, hut the destruction of prop-
THEY’RE PLAYING YET-
The Morgan Danielson Game Has Gone on
Forty Years.
Governor Hogg, of Texas, never
plays poker himself, hut he tells
more good stories of the national
game than anyother public man in
his section of the country. His
story of the great Morgan-Daniel
son game, now running in Austin,
is one of the most unique in all the
history of poker.
“Old man Morgan,” said the gov
ernor at the Fifth Avenue hotel a
day or two ago, “was one of the
most inveterate poker players in
the Lone Star state away hack in
the ’so’s. His passion for the game
was rivaled only by that of his
bosom friend and next-door neigh
bor, Major Danielson. The two old
cronies used to get together every
night and indulge in a quiet little
game of table stakes. Sometimes
they lost large sums to one another,
but they were both enormously
rich and the balance was generally
pretty even.
“One night they started to play
soon after supper—folks dined in
the middle of the day in those days,
you know. The exact date was
June 15, 1853, and the hour was 8
p. m.
“After they had been playing a
couple of hours Morgan, who had
just finished dealing, straightened
up in his chair and became rigid.
The next moment lie kicked him
selt vigorously because he feared
he had betrayed to Danielson the
fact that he had an extraordinary
hand.
“But the major had also caught
something wonderful. Each was
so excited that he didn’t notice the
perturbation of the other. Both
were so nervous that they could
scarcely speak.
“At length Major Danielson start
ed the ball. He bet cautiously at
first, as did Morgan. Then the bet
ting became livelier, and inside of
a couple of hours the action was
fast and furious.
“After midnight the bets became
larger. Each of the players had
had about SIO,OOO on the table when
the game began. At 2 o’clock in
the morning all of the chips were
stacked up in the center, tint neith
er of the men showed any sign of
weariness.
“At Morgan’s suggestion they 1
made it a no-limit game. I’hen
they began to bet with SI,OOO checks
and pretty soon the table just fairly
groaned beneath the weight of
wealth.
“Daylight found them still bet
ting. The weight of the chips had
broken down the table, and the
players had written their checks
for the amounts they had wagered
during the night. Each of those
checks bore five figures.
“Stoppingonly for meals, Morgan
and Danielson continued to bet
against each other on those won
deful hands until nightfall. Then
they adjourned for six hours of
sleep and resumed the play again
at midnight. They kept it up all
the rest of the week and tor the re
mainder of the year.
“At the end of the year each of
them had invested his entire for
tune —cash,bonds, stocks, livestock,
land, houses, everything—in that
game. People began to flock to
Austin from all parts of the state
and from the neighboring principal
cities to see the great Morgan-Dan
ielson game.
“The war came along, hut the
game never stopped. Morgan and
Danielson were both too old to he
conscripted, so they stayed at-home
and went on with their betting.
“Finally it became apparent that
neither would ever call the other,
so the hands were sealed up sepa
rately in tin boxes and the rest of
the deck was put in another one.
The three boxes were deposited in
the national bank, each bearing
the seals of the players and of a
dozen witnesses. Then Morgan
and Danielson went on with their
betting.
“Both of the old men died in
1872, having been playing for twen
ty-one years, but they left instruc
tions in their wills to the effect
that their eldest sons should carry
on the game.
“The heirs did so for five years.
Then one of them was killed in a
railroad accident and the other
went crazy.
“Their eldest sons, however, are
c irrying on the game in the same
old way. Every time either of
them gets a few hundred dollars
together he goes over to Austin and
r uses the other fellow out of his
boots. Both families are as poor as
church mice now, and its all they
can do to get enough for the neces
sities of life, but they’re game to
the last, and so long as either of
them can ears a cent the world
will never know what sort of hands
old man Morgan and Major Daniel
son drew’ that balmy June evening
forty-one years ago.”
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
World’s Fair Highest Award.
erty will he by no means a small
one. Nearly 600 pan handle cars
were destroyed in one blaze, and
of this number ninety-eight are
no.v known to have contained
merchandise. It will he necessary
to learn from the shippers’ invoices
just what those ninety-eight cars
contained before any computation
of the loss can he made, and that
will take much time. Within the
city limits tower houses have been
burned and tracks torn up. Damage
has been done in many railroad
shops and enormous sums expend
ed in defending the roads against
rioters.
General Manager St. John, of the
Itock Island road, said yesterday
that the total losses to his company
over their entire line would probab
ly be not far from $1,000,000.
A GENTLE CORRECTIVE
A is what you need
Jn when your liver
m§ becomes inactive.
jfflgEMA It’s what you get
when you take I )r.
Pierce’s Pellets;
fPsPi they’re free from
'S.. ; D the violence and
the griping that
come with the or
fj 9 dinary pill. All
s medical authorities
1 I agree that in regu
lating the bowels
mild methods are
I 1 1 preferable. For
1 1 i every trouble of
1 1 the liver, stomach
and bowels, these tiny, sugar
coated pills are most effective.
They go about their work in
an easy and natural way, and
their good lasts they
strengthen and tone up the
lining membranes of the stom
ach and bowels, thereby pro
moting digestion. Sick and
Bilious Headache, Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach, Indiges
tion, Bilious Attacks, Dizziness,
are prevented, relieved, and
permanently cured. They’re
the cheapest pill for they’re
guaranteed to give satisfaction
or your money is returned.
SAVES THE
BABIES.
For Teething, Cholera Infantum, Sum
mer Complaint, and other troubles common
to children, Germetuer is beyond doubt iho
Clearest of an remedies. Nothing on ear;h
will take children through the trying ordeal
of teething so pleasantly safely and surely
as Germetuer. Th -y all like to take it, and
it acta like magic in meeting the t oubles
of that critical period. It 1* perfectly harm
less, containing no slcohol or opium in any
form whatever. Thousands have tried it
and it has never been known to fail.
'*BAVED OUR BABY.”
Mr J. T. McAllister, of Atlanta, Ga., says:
“GermeSaer saved eur baby, Caul, carried
him safely through an extremely ba l case
of dysentery and teelhing, and from a mere
Skeleton of skin and bones, U. has made him
a great big solid chunk of thirty or thirty
five pounds.
‘ fat as A PIC.”
J J. Scruggs, of Sidon, Miss, says: •‘Our
little gML nine months old, was in a very low
State fiTOi summer complaint, and Geriae
tusr made he*r as fat as a pig. ”
"fat AND CROWING.”
Rev. ,T. I. Oxfoyd, Atlanta, Ga., says:
"My baby was sick from its birth, and we
eapected it would die. At the age of i*e
months we began to give It Germetuer. The
effects were magicaL It began to improve
St once and is now fat and growing every
day "
"well AND FAT.”
G. W. Clarke, McGregor, Texas, savs:
•‘Our little baby daughter has been cured o!
a violent case of Summer Dlarrlnca from
Teething by the use of Dr. Klim's Royal
Gennet aer. She had been redm e l nearly to
A skeleton. The first dose of Germetuer
helped her, and now she is well and fat.”
Germetuer Is the thing for children ;
It’s good as lemonade te take
And oc.res eiok folks without mistake.
SI.OO, C for §5.00 Sold by Druggists.
Kiig's Royal Qermeluw Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
NO MQREy^E-GLfISSES
Xtn Ejrs!
EXITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain Safe and Effective Remedy for
SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED ETES,
Producing ho ng-S ig Medness, and
Restoring the Sight of the oM.
Cures Tear Drops, Granulation, Stye
Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes,
AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
Also, eqnally effirndoui when used In
other maladies, sneli os Ulcers, Fever
Sores, 'rumors, Salt Rheum, Hums,
Piles, or wherever inflammation exi Us,
NITCIIELL’S Bi.VI.VE may be used to
advantage.
SOLO BY AIL PRUGuiSTS AT 25 CENTS.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA— Bartow County.
Whereas, R. W. Landers, administrator of R.
M. Collins, represents to the Court in his petition
duly filed and entered on record, that he ’tag
luiiy administered It, M. Collius’ estate. This is,
therefore, to cite all persons concerned, kin
dred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his administration and receive
letters of dismission on the first Monday iu No
vember, 18 4. This July 0. 1894.
G. W. HE \ BRICKS, Ordinary.
Burtcw Sheriff Sales.
Will bf- sold before the court house door Mr the
town o! ('urtersviiie, Bartow county, Ga., witniu
the letral hours of sale, on the first Tuesday i
August, Is:i4. (he followliur property. to-wit -
The following lands in the 21st district and 2d
section of Bartow county, to wit: Lots of land
numbers tUU and 1141 and three acres of tot So,
ll 5. said 3 acres measured as follows: litginnioir
at ihe nor heast corner of said lot 1165 and rov
-niiiß west Ml rods thence south 6 rods, thence
east Si rods, thence niwtti to beginning corner, S
rods; said entire tract being acres, more or
less. Levied on and will be sold as the properly
of Wi liam Smallwood to satisfy one fi fa fruits
eit court of Cartersville, Bartow county, in fa
vor of .1. It Humphreys vs. William Smallwood.
This levy made mid tenant In possession notified
after deed was made and recorded from .1. HL
Humphreys to William Smahwood as provided
by section 3654 Code of Geortf is. John Small
wood teuant in possession.
Also, one acre of land, more or less, of lot of
land No. 420, In the 21st district ami 2nd sect on
of Bartow count v. Ha , and lying In the north
east corner of said lot, and lies west of Macedo
nia meeting house; ont dwelling house and one*
smoke house on said land. Levied on and will
be sold as the property of A. L. Ab-rnathy to
satisfytnie fl la from justices court R22nd district
G. M., In favor of S. It. Arnold 4 Cos. vs. A. I*.
Abernathy. Levy made and returned by M. H_
Keys, L. C.
Also lot of land number 501, Id the 4th district
an.i 3d section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied os
and will be sol i as the property ot J. W, Harris,
Jr, to satisfy two fi las from justice court 322il
district. G. M.. one In favor ot W. F. Baker v_
.1, W, Harris, Jr, and one in favor of John Ja
cobs, hearer, vs. ,1. W. Harris. Jr, maker, and A.
Strickland endorser. herbs made and retui r*t
by J. O. Broughton, 1,. C. Property in posses
sion of defendant.
Also the undivided one-fourlh part of and in
terest in lot of land No 53. iu the 16th district
and 3.1 section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied on
and w ill be sold as the property of A. P. Silva to
satisfy one fi fa from the city court of Carters
vllle, Bartow county, Ga, in favor of W. H.
Howard vs. A P. Silva. Property pointed oat
in said fi fa.
Also nt the same time and place the following
real estate, all levied on and will be sold under a
certain execution Issued from the superior court
ol Bartow county, Ga, in mvor of T. B Neal, et
al. ex .a-utors of John Neal vs, F, M Durham, ad
ministrator ofßranson, deceased, princi
pal, aud Thos. Tumlin and P. H, Reynolds,
sureties, and H. P. He,\ nobis, surety on appeal
bond, to-wit; One city lot in Cartersville. iia,
fronting west 26 feet on the east side of the pub
lic square, running bock ISO feet of even width,
bounded norih by the Frank Payne lot, ont
which is located a brick house, and on the south
by lot now oc upled by S. M. Rhea as a l<*t
market. Also one city lot in Cartersville, Ga.,
fronting west 20 feet on the east side of the pub
lic square and running back se feet of even
width, being the lot on which is situated a brink
office formerly known as the Dr. Lindsay John
son office, and now occupied by Dr. A. S Kiddle,
bounded east, north anil south by vacant lots
formerly belonging to Thomas Turnlln, aid
west by side walk on east siiie of public square.
All levied on and will be wold as the property ot
Thomas Tumlin, one of the defendants.
This July 4, IMI4.
LEE BURKOUGH, Sheriff.
R. L GRIFFIN Dep. Sheriff.
A. M. FRANKLIN. Dep. Sheriff.
Executors’ Sale.
By virtue of the power vested in us b.y the last
will of Z. W. .Jack hod, deceased, we will sell be
fore the court house door in Cartersvine, Bartow
county, Ga., within the legal sale hours, on the:
first Tuesday in August, 1894, the following prop
erty, to-wit:
The property known us the Z. W Jackwm
place, situated two miles east of Cassville. ou
the Canton road, and in the sth district and Sd
section of said county, and containing 3-J5 acre*,
more or less; being all of lot number 15 !. except
‘en acres in the northeast corner: the north half
of lot number 167; the east bait ot lot numbet
133, and fifteen acres lying in the northwest core
uer of lot i.umber 16s; about 150 acres cleared,
the balance ’veil timbered; a never-felling brand
runs through a part of the farm; good four room
dwelling house and two room kitchen; twotere
iinf houses, two barns, good crib and sheds ore
the place. This property is sold for the purpose
of distribution, as the property of estate ot 7L
\V. Jackson, deceased Terms, one third cash,
balan e one and two years, with interest at 8 per
cent, per annum. Bond lor titles given purchaw
t-r. This pine- is rented tor the year 1v94,l v 94, ami
the crops and rent* are reserve I. Possession of
whole premises will be given Jai.uu-y Ist. 1805,
Purchaser could have immediate possession of
the lauds not in cultivation. This 3d July, 1834,
G M.JACKSON.
E. i.. JACKSON.
Executorsof Z. W. Jackson, deceased.
n\ I tIItTUN A PATENT t 1 r
prompt, answer and an honest opinion, write to
MUnH fc CO., who have had nearly fifty year**
experience In the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and bow to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan
ical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Munn & Cos. recciT*
special notice in the Scientific A in eric aa. andl
thus a- e brought widely before the public with
out cost to thu inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far tin#
lar,- ■ t circulation of any scientific work in the
world. s>3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, t?.soa year, jingle
copies, ‘iH cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUNN St CO.. New Youk, litil Bkoaijwat.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas, J. F. Linn, executor, repre
sents to the court in liis petition duly
filed and entered on record that lie ha
fully administered said A. M. Linn’*
estate. This is therefore to cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and creditor*,,
to show cause, if any they can, why saitf
executor should not be discharged frou*
his executorship and receive letters of
dismission on the first Monday ip Octo
ber, ISO 4. G. W. HENDRICKS, Ord’y.
DR. R. B. HARRIS,
DENTIST.
Office Front Room, over linker & hail.
Calls special attention to his
of
Extracting Teeth Without Pain.
No no danger, no ether, nc*
pain. Difficult cases of extracting so
licited.
Teetii carefully treated and filled. Ar
tificial teeth inserted either on a plate:
or bridge. All work guaranteed strk-tr
ly. Prices as low as the lowest. Exam
am in at ions free.
52nd Year.
igggt
The Great Farm, Industrial mwi
Stock Jouual of the South.
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send Southern Cultivator tor one year and ft*
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liox 415. ATLANTA. GA
offi i& m e
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A C’ouijdcte of a!! Standard
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