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EftTriiA From early child
, ■ !■ / ; !¥* 0 h<xx:i until 1 was 1
' gWgjlglJßn grown my family (
> spent a' fortune
trymg to cure me of this disease. I
visited Hot Springs, and was treated
, by the best medical men, but was not
Benefited FROM When all'
things had failed I
determined to try S. S. S., antf in,
four months was entirely cured. The
terrible Eczema was gone, not a sign
of it left; my general health built up,
and I have never had any return of
SdS CHILDHOOD
> h ,lumb<ir of Wends for skin dis
r eases, and have never yet known a failure to
l cure. GEO. W. IRWIN, Irwin. Pa.
L [■> W Nover fall* to cure.
H I 111 eVt> n after all other
, nVfcWMkRMxTsi remedies have. Our
> Treatise on Blood and
‘ Bk ‘“ Dl8e “ 8e8 malled
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, 6a.
DR. HATHAWAY & Ct
(Kegnlar firadaatei.)
WufglV h e e yoS d help. nd moet Bucce ** ful Peclall.ts and
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WOMEN! Don’t you want to get cured of that
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TRUTH AND FACTS.
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ists and medical Institutes.
—maREMEMBFR that there Is hope
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Beware of free and cheap treatment We give
the best andmost scientific treatment at moderate
prices—as low as can be done for safe and skillful
treatment. FREE consultation at the office or
by mall. Thorough examination and careful diag
. nosis. A home treatment can ke given lu amajority
Hof cases. Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men;
■No. 2 for Women; No. 8 for Skin Diseases. Allcorre
SAundence answered promptly. Business strictly con
.identlal. Entire treatment Bent free from observg
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m ““ Agents. $75
£\ \S/ a week. Exclusive territory. The
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®. & A. R. R.
—AND—
ville, Chattanooga &
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3 DAILY TRAINS 3
TO
CHATTANOOGA, NASHVILLE,
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PATENTS!
j Cavoats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all rat- J
t ent business conducted for moderate Fees. *
Jour Office is Opposite U. S. Paten- Of
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IMATUfIE’S I SCHENCKS
Remedy '~~
for IVI ANDRAKE
r L,ver i
wOMPLAINT \ -=
SWEETHEARTS.
By A. CONAN DOYLE.
[Copyright, 185)5, by the Author.]
It is ill for the general practitioner
yrho sits amoiig lik patients botli morn
fng and evening and sees them in their
homes between to sto.-.l time for one lit
tle daily breath of cleanly air. To win
it he must slip early from his bed and
walk out between shuttered shops, when
it is chill, but clear, and all things are
sharply outlined, as in a frost. It is an
hour that Ims a charm of its own, when
but for a postman or a milkman, one
has the pavement to oneself, and even
the most common thing takes an ever
recurring freshness, as though oansewav
and lamp and signboard hud all waken
ed to the new day. Then even an in
land city may seem beautiful and bear
virtue in its smoke tainted air.
But it was by the sea that I lived in
a town that was unlovely enongh were
it not for its glorious neighbor. And
who cares for the town when one can
sit om the bench at the headland and
look out over the hnge blue bay and the
yellow scimeter that curves before it! I
loved it when its great face was freckled
with the ftehing boots, and I loved it
when the big ships went past, far out, a
little hillock of white and no hull, with
topsail curved like a bodioe, so stately
and demure. But most of all I loved it
wheu no trace of man marred the maj
esty of nature and when the sunbursts
slanted down on it from between the
drifting rainclouds. Then I have seen
the farther edge draped in the gauze of
the driving rain, with its thin gray
shading under the clouds, while my
headland was golden, und the sun
gleamed upon the breakers and struck
deep through the green waves be
yond, showing np the purple patches
where the beds of seaweed are lying.
Such a morning ns that, with the wind
in his hair and the spray on his lips and
the cry of the eddying gulls iu his ear,
may send a man back braced afresh to
the reek of a sickroom and the dead
drab weariness of practice.
It was on such another day that I first
saw' my old man. He came to my bench
just as I was leaving it. My eye must
have picked him out even in a crowded
street, for he was a man of large frame
and fine presence, with something of
distinction in the set of his lip and the
poise of his head. He limped up the
winding path, leaning heavily on his
stick, as though those great shoulders
had become too much at last for the
failing limbs that bore them. As he ap
proached my eyes caught nature’s danger
signal—that faint bluish tinge in nose
and lip which tells of a laboring heart.
“The brae is a little trying, sir,” said
I. “Speaking as a physician, I should
say that yon would do well to rest here
before you go farther. ’ ’
He inclined his head in a stately old
w'orld fashion and seated himself upon
the bench. Seeing that he had no wish
to speak, I was silent also, but I could
not help watching him out of the corner
of my.eyes, ior he was such a wonder
ful survival of the early half of the cen
tury, with his low crowmed, curly
brimmed hat, his black satin tie, which
fastened with a buckle at the hack, and,
above all, his large, fleshy, clean shaven
face, shot with its mesh of wrinkles.
Those eyes, ere they had grown dim,
had looked out from the box seat of mail
coaches and had seen the knots of nav-
‘‘The brae is a little trying, sir."
vies as they toiled on the brown em
bankments. Those lips had smiled over
the first number of “Pickwick” and had
gossiped of the promising young man
who wrote them. The face itself was a
70 year almanac and every seam an
entry upon it, where public as well as
private sorrow left its trace.
That packer on the forehead stood for
the mutiny perhaps; that line of care
for the Crimean winter, it may be, and
that last little sheaf of wrinkles, as my
fancy hoped, for the death of Gordon.
And so, as I dreamed in my foolish way,
the old gentleman with the shining
stock was gone, and it was 70 years of
a great nation’s life that took shape be
fore me on the headland in the morning.
But he soon brought me back to earth
' again. As he recovered his breath he
j took a letter out of his pocketffcmd put
ting on a pair of horn rimmed eye
| glasses he read it through very careful
]y. Without any design of playing the
gpy, I could not help observing that it
was in a woman’s hayd. When he had
finished it, he read it again, aud then
sat with the corners of his mouth drawn
down and his eves staring vacantly out
over the bay, the most' forlorn looking
i _ __ a.i~,v. fl-o t ovor T hnyp Sf‘Pll. All
> OiU gWUlcnimi .......
that was kindly within me was set stir
ring by that wistful face, but I knew
that he was in no humor for talk, and
so at lust, with my breakfast mid my
patents calling me, I left him on the
I bench and started for home
I never gave him another thought nn
! til the next momHig, when, at thesame
hour, he turned up upon the headland
. lt nd shared the bench which I had been
uncustomed to look upon as my own. He
! bowed ‘again before sitting down, but
1 was no more inclined than before U, en
; Ter into conversation There had been a
change iu him during the last 24 hours,
and all for the worse. The face seemed
more heavy and more wrinkled, while
that ominous venous tinge was more
pronounced as he panted up the hill.
The clean lines of his cheek and chin
were marred by a day’s growth of gray
stubble, and his large, shapely head had
lost something of the brave carriage
which had struck me when first I glanced
at him.
He had a letter there, the same, or
another, but still in a woman’s hand,
and over this he was moping and
mumbling in his senile fashion, with
his brow puckered and the corners of
his mouth drawn down like those of a
fretting child. So I left him, with a
vague wonder as to who he might be
and why a single spring day shonld
have wronght such a change upon him.
So interested was I that next morn
ing I was on the lookout for him. Sure
enough, at the same hour I saw him
coming up the hill, but very slowly,
with a bent back and a heavy head. It
was shocking tome to see the change iu
him as he approached.
“I am afraid that onr air does not
agree with you, sir,” I ventured to re
mark.
But it was as though he had no heart
for talk. He tried, as I thought, to make
some fitting reply, bnt it slurred off
into a mumble and silence. How beat,
and weak and old be seemed—ten years
older at the least than when first I had
seen him! It went to my heart to see
this sweet old fellow wasting away be
fore my eyes. There was the eternal let
ter, which he unfolded with his shaking
fingers. Who was this woman whose
words moved him so? Some daughter,
perhaps, or granddaughter, who shonld
have been the light of his home instead
of ! I smiled to find how bitter I
was growing and how swiftly I was
weaving a romance round an unshaven
old man and his correspondence. Yet
all day he lingered in my mind, and I
had fitful glimpses of those two trem
bling, blue veined knuckly hands, with
the paper rustling between them.
I had hardly hoped to see him again.
Another day’s decline must, I thought,
hold him to his room, if not to his bed.
Great, then, was my surprise when, as
I approached my bench, I saw that he
was already there. Bnt as I came up to
him I could scarce be sure that it was
indeed the same man. Ther'> were the
curly brimmed hat, and the shining
stock, and the horn glasses, but where
were the stoop and the gray stubbled,
pitiable face? He was clean shaven
and firm lipped, with a bright eye and
a head that poised itself upon his shoul
ders like an eagle on a rock. His hack
was as straight and square as a grena
dier’s, and he switched at the pebbles
with his stick in his exuberant vitality.
In the buttonhole of his well brushed
black coat there glinted a golden blos
som, and the corner of a dainty red silk
handkerchief lapped over from his breast
pocket. He might have been tho eldest
son of the weary creature who had sat
there the morning before.
“Good morning, sir, good morning!”
he cried, with a merry waggle of his
cane.
“ Good morning!” I answered. “How
beautiful the bay is looking !”
“Yes, sir, hut you should have seen
it just before the sun rose. ”
“What, you have been here since
then?”
“I was here when there was scarce
light to see the path. ”
“You are a very early riser. ”
“On occasion, sir, on occasion.” He
cocked his eye at me as if to gauge
whether I were worthy of his confidence.
“The fact is, sir, that my wife is com
ing back to me today. ”
I suppose that my face showed that I
did not quite see the force of the ex
planation. My eyes, too, may have given
him assurance of sympathy,for he moved
quite close to me and began speaking in
a low, confidential voice, as if the mat
ter were of such weight that even the
sea gulls must be kept out of our coun
sels.
“Are you a married man, sir?”
“No, I am not. ”
“Ah, then you cannot quite under
stand it. My wife and I have been mar
ried for nearly 50 years, and we have
never been parted, never at all until
now. ”
“Was it for long?” I asked.
“Yes, sir. This is the fourth day. She
had<lo go to Scotland —a matter of duty,
you understand —and the doctors would
not let me go. Not that I'would have
allowed them to stop me, but she was
on their side. Now, thank God, it is
over, and she may be here at any mo
ment. ’ ’
“Here!”
“Yes, here. This headland and bench
svere old friends of ours 30 years ago.
The people with whom we stay are not,
to tell the truth, very congenial, and wo
have little privacy among them. That
is why we prefer to meet here. I conld
not be sure which train would bring
her, but if she had come by the very
earliest she would have found me wait
ing. ”
“In that case” —said I, rising.
“No, sir, no,” ha entreated. “I beg
that you will stay. It does not weary
you, this domestic talk of mine?”
‘ ‘ ( On the contrary. ’ ’
“1 have been so driven inward during
these last few days. Ah, what a night
mare it has been! She was very good in
writing, but still it was dreadful. Per
haps it may seem strange to you that an
old fellow like me should feel like this?”
“It is charming. ”
“No credit to me, sir! There’s not a
man on this planet but would feel the
same if he had the good fortune to be
married to such a woman. Perhaps be
cause you see me like this and hear me
j speak of our long life together you con
| ceive that she is old too. ” He laughed
heartily, and his eyes twinkled at the
humor of the idea.
“She’s one of those women, you
know, who have youth in their hearts,
1 and so it can never be very far from
their faces. To me she s just as she was
when she first took my hand in hers,*in
j 1845. A wee little bit stouter, perhaps,
but then, if she had a fault as a girl, it
‘ woman’s beau
— ..JSSU sunken eye,
follow the disorders of the womanly
functions. Cupid is in demand for
healthy woman—not for sick and
ailing ones.
The “Favorito Prescription * is m
powerful, invigorating tonic, and a
strengthening nervine to be used in
all those distressing troubles which
make woman’s life miserable. You’ll
find relief from sleeplessness, back
ache and bearing-down sensations.
It’s a medicine prescribed by an emi
nent physician for those nervous
conditions brought on by functional
disorders —such as Nervous Prostra
tion, Excitability, Fainting Spells,
Dizziness, and St, Vitus’s Dance.
In every case of “ female complaint ”
if it doesn’t benefit or eure, you
have your money back.
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy
cures Catarrh in the Head.
was that she was a shade too slender.
She was above me in station, you know
—I a clerk and she the daughter of my
employer. Oh, it was quite a romance,
I give you my word, and I won her,
aud somehow I have never got over the
freshness and the wonder of it! To
think that tl at sweet, lovely girl has
walked by my side all through life, aud
that I have been able”—
He stopped suddenly, and I glanced
round at him in surpris e. He was shak
ing all over, iu every liber of his great
body. His hands were clawing at the
woodwork and his feet shuffling on the
gravel. I saw what it was. He was try-
I saw that he put out both his hands.
ing to rise, but was so excited that he
could not. I half extended my hand,
but a higher courtesy constrained me to
draw it back again and turn my face to
the sea. An instant afterward he was
up and hurrying down the path.
A woman was coming toward us. She
was quite close before he had seen her
—3O yards at the utmost. I know not
if she had ever been as he described her,
or whether it was but some idea which
he carried in his brain. The person
upon whom I looked was tall, it is true,
but she was thick and shapeless, with
a ruddy, full blown face and a skirt
grotesquely gathered up. There was a
green ribbon in her hat which jarred
upon my eyes, and her blouselike bodice
was full and clumsy. And this was the
lovely girl, the ever youthful! My heart
sank as I thought how little such a
woman,might appreciate him, how un
worthy she might be of his love.
She came up the path in her solid
way, while he staggered along to meet
her. Then, us they came together, look
ing discreetly out of the farthest corner
of my eye, I saw that he put out both
his hands, like a child when its little
journey is done, while she, shrinking
from a public caress, took one of them
in hers and shook it. As she did so I
saw her face, and I was easy in my
mind for my old man. God grant that
when tlifh hand is shaking and when
this back is bowed a woman’s eyes may
look so into mine!
THE END.
Dismission from Administration.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas, F. M. Durham, administrator of Eli
jah Smith, represents to the court in bis petition
duly filed tlint he has fully administered Elijah
Smith’s estate. This is therefore lo cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and creditors, to show
j eause. if any they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from iiis adn.inistra
j lion and receive letters of dismission on the first
I Monday in October, lsito. This .Inly Ist, lefts,
i G. VV. HENDRICKS. Ordinary.
Administrator's Sale.
I GEORGIA, Barlow County.
By virtue of an order of the Court of
[ Ordinary ol said eountv, will be sold
! before the eourt house door in said coun
ty, on the first Tuesday in October next,
the estate in reversion after the termi
nal ion of the estate in dower of the wid
ow of James M. Sliavv, in the following
described land, to-wit: Fifty acres more
or less, as per return of the commission
j ers to assign aower. and which return
is of record iu the Clerk’s office of the
I superior eour. of said county, in the
southwest corner of lot No. 71, in the
! Kith district and 3d section of said
| county. Sold as tlie* property of James
I M. Shaw, deceased, to pay debts. Terms
i one-half cash, balance January Ist next,
j with interest.
A. M. Foete,
Administrator Est. James M. Shaw.
1 August 2S, 1895.
Notice to Debtors and C-cditore.
All persons having demands against
| the estate of K. B. Moon, late of Bartow
county, deceased, are hereby notified to
j vender in their demands to" the under
j signed according to law, and ail persons
I indebted to said estate are required to
make immediate payment. September
4th, 1895. J 0. CALDWELL,
Administrator R. B. Moon, d'eo’d.
A BUY, BABY MARTYR.
Mysterious Death of a Three-Year-Old Child
at Birniinubnin.
A special from Birmingham,
Ala., dated September 5, says: The
coroner’s inquest into the death ot
little Tommie llowe, the 3-year-old
son of H. S. Howe, who died myste
riously last Friday, and with whose
murder the child’s stepmother,
Mrs. Laura Howe, and her colored
servant girl, Ellen Moore, stand
charged, began today.
County Physician Gillispie testi
fied that as the result of a post mor
tem he was of the opinion that
death was brought on by exhaus
tion, caused in part, if not entirely,
by severe punishment inflicted.
Mrs. Howe, the comely young
stepmother, admitted having slap
ped the child, but claimed that it
fell from the porch and was killed
while sick.
Neighbors testified that Mrs.
Howe had been very brutal in her
treatment of Howe’s children, and
had on one occasion forced two of
the boys to throw rocks at their
elder brother and run him away
from home, while she stood on the
porch and called to them to “kill
him.” They also swore to having
seen Mrs. Howe strip the little chil
nren and whip them on their naked
bodies unmereifully.
Mrs. M. L. MeCloskey testified
that when Tommie died and was
being prepared for burial Mrs.
Howe undertook to persuade her
to promise her to tell of the bruises
on his body, but Mrs. MeCloskey
declined to do so. She said that
the dead child showed signs of the
worst beating she ever saw.
Ellen Moore, the servaut, swore
that Mrs. Howe brutally heat Tom
mie with a stick on Thursday and
Friday, and on the last named day
choked him and slammed his body
repeatedly against the fioor, death
soon afterward resulting.
The feeling against Mrs. Howe is
very bitter. She was Howe’s
housekeeper prior to her marriage,
and married him a tew months af
ter his first wife’s death.
A Household Treasury.
D. W. Fuller, of Canujoharic, V. Y.,
says that he always keeps Dr. King’s
New Discovery in the house and his
family has always found the very best
results follow its use; .hat he would not
be without it, if procurable. G. A. Dye
man Druggist, fatskill, N. Y., says
that Dr. King’s Now Discovery is un
doubtdly the best Cough remedy; that
he lias used it in liis iannly for eight
years, and it has never failed to do all
that it is claimed ior it. Why not try a
remedy so Jong tried and tested.
Trial bottles free at Young Brothers
Drug Store. ltegular size 50c. and sl.uO.
Notice.
George W. Satterfield 1 Rule nisi to fore
[close mortgage
v | in Bartow Nu
Mrs Ella A Thornton j perior Court.
GEORGIA —Bartow County.
It appearing to the court by the peti
tion of George VV. Satterfield that on
the 2Pth day of August, 18!K), Mrs. Ella
A Thornton executed and delivered to
the said George VV. Satterfield a mort
gage on a certain lot of land lying in
said county and described as follows:
That parcel of land lying and being in
the city of Cartersvitle, Bartow county,
Ga., commencing at the south side oi
Johnson street 210 feet east of the cor
ner of Johnson and Gilmer streets, run
ning thence east along the south side oi
Johnson street 290 feet, more or less, to
lot of Busco Moody, thence south along
the west line of "said Moody 200 feet,
more or less, through Johnson street to
Wells (this measurement to the centre
of Wells street) thence west along the
north side of Wells street 254 feet,
thence in a straight line northward to
the point of commencing on Johnson
street. The same being two lots of the
Lewis Tuinlin estate, conveyed to G.
M. PattilJo, one bv deed of A M.
Franklin, dated 10th of November,
1885, and recorded in book “AA” ol
deeds, page 578, Bartow county superior
court clerk’s office, the other by deed of
J M Neel, receiyer of Lewis TunilinV
estate, dated 9th of December, 1887,and
recorded in book “AA” of deeds, pain
579, except ten feet off the west side <
the iast named lot through from Job
son street to Wells street, and w.iich
net included in the above boUndarh
for the purpose of securing the nayinei
of a certain promissory note for $350.'
made bv the said Ella A. Thornton o*
the 29th day of August, 1890, payable i<
George VV'. Satterfield, due on the fir
day of November, 1891, with interest >
eight per cent, per annum from dal .
including ten per cent attorney's fees,
which said note Ella A. Thornton re
fuses to pay.
It is therefore ordered that the said
Ella A. Thornton pay into this court ou
of before the next term thereof, princi
pal and interest due on the said note
and the cost of the suit, including ten
percent, attorney's fees, or in default
thereof the court will proceed as to jus
tice shall appertain
it is further ordered that this rule oe
published in the (’ourant American, a
newspaper published in ihe county of
Bartow, once a month for four months
or served on said E A. Thornton or
iier special agent or attorney three
months previous to the next term of
this court.
THOMAS W MILNER,
once mo 4 mos J. S O. C. C.
Leave to Sell Lauds.
GEORGIA —Bartow County:
To whom it may concern: A. D.
MeCravey, administrator of W. A. Me-
iiADogaAd. lias in due lorm tip
plied "to the undersigned for leave to
sell the lands belonging to the estate of
said deceased, and said application will
be heard ou the first Monday in October
next. This, September 4th, 1895.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Leave to Sell Lands
GEORGIA —Bartow Count.v:
To whom it may concern: VV illiam B
Barger, administrator of Charles G.
Barger, deceased, has in due form ap
plied to the undersigned *or leave to sell
the lands belonging to tlieestate ot said
deceased, and said application will be
heard on the first Monday in October
next. This Septom Lm Uh, 1895
G. W. HENDRICKS. Ordinary.
Bartow Sheriff Sales.
Will I.- sold before the court, honee door in the
town of Cortersville, ifartow county, o*., within
the leant hour* of sale, on the first Tuesday in
October. 1885. the fofiowfnsr property, to-w!t:
The undivided one-half luterest In lot of land
T.-I::!:?! *“! Ip hi’ fth district imd Hd section of
llnrtow County, Oil., containing 40 acres, more
or less. Levied on and will lie sold as the prop
erty of.). W. Harris, .lr,, to satisfy one rt fa from
justice’s court 851st district. G. M.. in Tutor of
Lawyers’ Co-Operative Publishing Company. rs.
J. W. Harris. Jr. Property pointed out by de
fendant and In his possession. Levy made by
J. H. Howard, L. C.
Also at the same time and place the north
east quarter of lot of land number !38 In the 22d
district and 2d section of Bartow county Geor
gia. bounded as follows commencing at the
north east corner of said lot and running south
s<i rods along the original north and south line
between said lot and lot No. 1.17, thence due
west Ml rods, thence due north >0 rod-, to the
original east and west, line between said lot No.
138 and lot No 51, and then, e east along said
original line SO rods to the beginning place, con
taining 40 acres more or less Levied on and
will be sold as the property of F. D. Vernon, to
satisfy one fi fa from the city court of Carters
vllle. said county. in favor of J. M. Veach vs. p.
D. Vernon, Property in possession of H. F.
Roberts, and pointed dut by plaintiff attorney.
Also at the same time and place two hundred
acres ot land off the southern portion of land
lots Nos. 108 and 117 In the oth district and .'Hi
section of Bartow county Georgia, being a rec
tangle in shape extending east and west across
the southern portion of both of said lots 0
chains in length and ;’5 chains In width. Levied
on and will be sold as the properly of Hurnll L.
1 ioullneaii to satisfy one Bartow superior court
fi ta In favor o Equitable Mortgage Company
vs Hurrlll L. Boultueau. Property potntea out
iu sniil ft fa and in possession of defendant. Deed
f reconveyance filed and recorded In cierks of
fice said county In book “FF’’ of deeds page 481
before levy.
Also at the same time and place, a certain
tract of land lying In said county, In the city or
Carternville, fronting Bartow street 100 feet and
hounded on the east by said street, on the north
B*o feet, by the lot of Mrs. Phyllis Miles, on the
south 200 feet by Tumlln street, and on the west
100 test by Mrs. W. 11, Tumltn's lot. Levied on
and will be sold as the property of Clara E.
llradwell to satisfy one Bartow superior court
mortgage ft fa in favor ol The Southern Build
ing and Loan Association vs Clara E. BradwelL
Property pointed out in said fi fa.
Also at the same time and place, the following
as the property ot John T. Owen and know n and
distinguished as said John T. Owen's residence
in the city ol Cartersvllle, Ga., on August .’Sth,
1889, and the three (3) acres of land on which the
said residence was then situated; said premises
bounded west by Howard avenue, north by lot
then owned by said John T. Owen, east by
Owen street and south by a lot then owned by
John T. Norris. Levied on and will be sold as
(lie propery oi John T. Owen to satisfy one Bar
tow superior court mortgage fl fa in tavor of T.
Warren White vs. John T. Owen. Property
poinled out in said fl fa aud in possession of
Thomas Lumpkin.
Also at the same time and placu, lot of land
number 21)1, in (lie 6th district and 3d section of
Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and will be sold
•is the property of L, S. Munlord to satisfy one
fl fa Iront city court of Cartersville, said county,
in favor of C. M, Jones vs. L. S. Hanford. Prop
erty In possession of defendant.
Also, at the same time and place, the house
and lot whereon It, W. Murphey now resides and
as his properly, to-wit: bounded as follows : on
the north by Market street,, west by lot of B. It.
Mouutcastle, on the east by Bartow street, on
the south by the lot of B. F. Uodirey, iu Ihe
town of Cartersvllle, State of Georgia. Levied
on and will be sold as the property of it. W,
Mu.-phey, to satisfy one Bartow Superior Court
fl ia In favor of C. M. Marsh vs. R. W, Murphey.
proceeding tor use of W. H. Howard, transferee.
Property In possession of defendant. Lew
made by J. W, Williams; former deputy sheriff.
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
numbers 4!14, 493. 517 aiul 518, aud the south half
of lot ot land number 414, located In the 17rh dis
trict and lid section of Bartow couut.v, Georgia-
Said whole lots containing forty acres of land
eacti, more or less, and said half lot containing
twenty acres of land, mere or less, and lu tin
possession ot Thomas B. Meeks, tenant, being
levied on as the property of the estate ot Hillary
Meeks, deceased, in the hands ot Mary A, Alecks'
administratrix o! !Hilary Meeks, deceased, to be
administered to satisfy one tl fa justice's
court 1171st district.' 1 . M.. Harrow county, in
favor of Jane's |i. Conyers vs Mari’ A. Meeks,
administratrix of Hliler.v Meeks, deceased.
Also at the same time and place, thirt.v-nine
acres, more or iess, ot ianu, being trie 39 acre, off
the south side of lot of land number 128, in the
Ititli district and 3d section of Bartow county,
Ga , and lying south of the Barnesly road, run
ning through said lot. LcvL’d on and will be
sold as the property of Sullie J. Harris and M
E, Harris to satisfy one fl fa. from 952nd district,
G. M. said county. In tavor of Josephine H. Beck
vs. Halite .1. Harris and M K Harris. Property
in possession of defendants.
Also at the same time and place, that parcel
of laud in the city of Cartersville, Bartow coun
ty, Ga,. containing one town acre, more or !e,s,
did leet on north and south lines, nod '.’Oilfeet ou
east line, known as the Maxwell brickyard lot,
hounded on Ihe east by land of Tumlin estate,
north by an alley, south by lands ol Henrietta
E. Woftord. Levied on and will be sold a. the
property of Winnie Reason to satisfy one Mar
tow superior court mortgage fi fa in lnvor of
Mis. lienrtettn L Wofford vs \Vtnni, He-,son.
Property pointed out in said tt fa nud in pos
session of King Reason.
Also at the same time and plat e, lots of land
nniubO'S 2tH and 277 located in the Sth district
anti .'ld section of Bartow county, Ut-oigiH. each
oi said lots containing lliti acres, more or less.
Levied on and will lie sold at*the property ot the
• state of William Aubrey; deceased. In the
hands of Rosa M. Aiibie.v ns executrix, *o satisfy
one Bartow superior court mortgage ti fa in fa
vor of William How. II R.-ed, executor of E!i?..i V.
Tout man vs Rosa M. Aubrey, executrix of Wil
liam Aubrev. deceased. Property in poestssion
of Thomas 11. Martin, tenant.
Also at the stiuie time and place, lota of land
numbers :i2lt and 829, iu the 17th district unit :id
section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and
will be sold as the property ot Lula T. Lyon to
satisfy two ti las from Bartow superior court,
one iu favor of Prank I’. Gray et a! lor its- of
officers of court, vs Lula T. Lyon, and one in fa
vor of J. M. Neel, receiver ot L. t'umiin's est ire,
lor use of officers of court, vs. Lula Tumlin
Lyon. Property in possession of defendant.
This August HHtli. 18!)5.
LEE BURROUGH, Sheriff.
K. L GRIFFIN Dep. Sheriff.
C. .VI. FRANKS, Dep. Sheriff
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas, Mrs. Georgia Tumlin, administra
trix of G. H. Tumlin. represents to the court in
her petition duly filed and entered ou record.
: hat she han fully administered G. H. Tumlin’s
sfule: tilts is therefore incite nil persons con
erned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
,n.y they car, why said administratrix should
aot be discharged trom her administration and
receive letters of dismission ou the first Monday
.n November, lsfls.
O. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA —Bartow County:
To Whom it may Concern: .Tames C. Cald
well having, in proper form, applied to me for
permanent letters ot administration ou the es
tate of R. B. Moon, late of said county, this is to
cite all and singular the creditors and next of
kin ot K. B. Moori to be and appear at m.v office
within tlie time allowed by law, and show cause,
if any they can. why permanent administration
should not be granted to James C. Caldwell on
U. B. Moon's estate. W’itsess my hand and of
ficial signature this. 7th <lsv ol August. IKT>.
G. M . HENDRICKS,. Ordinary.
Letters of Administration-
GEORGIA—Bartow founty:
To whom it may concern: William
T. Seay havitig applied to me for letters
of administration de bonis non, with
will annexed, on the estate of Silas B
Seay, late of said county, deceased, this
is to cite all and singular the creditors
and next of kin of said Silas B Seay to
lie and appear at the October term,
1895, of the court of ordinary of said
county, and show cause, if anv thev
can, why letters of administration, de
bonis non,with the will iinnexetl L shoi:ld
not be granted to said William T. spy
on Silas B Seay's estate. Witness ay
official signature tliis, 4th day of p.
tember, 1895.
. W. HEUDBICKs, onllnß-i-.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA —Bartow County:
To whom it may concern: .1. A. R
Parish lias applied to the undersigned
for permanent letters of administration
on the estate of Maggie llilburn, lai <i
said county, deceased, and I will ; :ss
upon said application on the first M on
day in October, lsts. Civet, under :ay
liand and official signature, Sep: .i, t ‘r
itii, 1895.
0. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
k