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LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
BARTOW SHmn SALE
For February, 1884.
“WILL lIE SOLD before the court bouw do^r
T In (Jartemwille, Ga., on the flrgt Tuesday
in February, 1884, between the legal sale hours,
the following described property, to-wlt: The
undivided one-half interest in and to lots of
land Nos 48, 44. 65, . 69. 80. 81, 101, 109, 144, 148
and 182. and all of the following lots: Nos. 100
1-ifl, 1,17, 181,187 and 247, all in the 22<t district
and second section of Bartow county, Ga., each
lot containing 160 acres, more or less. AH lev
ied on and will be sold as the property of K. 11.
Woodward, to aatisly one Bartow'superior
court mortgage n. la. in favor ol Mrs. Emily
A Pool, executrix of B. U Pool, deceased, vs.
Edward 11. Woodward, Property pointed out
and described in a;d mortgage fl. fa., and in
possession of T. F. Barratt, agent of *aid
Woodward. Jan 1, 1884-14.30
Also, two acres of land lying in C'assvili*,
Bartow county Georgia, number not knoavn,
bounded on the west by public road, on the
north by lands o< Dr. W. ilardy, on the ka>r
ly lands of W. W. Myers, hud on the south bj
lot oI H. H. Holmes. Levied on and will be *olil
as the property of W. 8. Barron, to satisfy one
justice court fl. fa. from 828th distret G. M ,
in favor ol W. L. Aycock vs. W. 8. Barton.
Property in possession of defendant. Lievv
made and returned by W. 8. Powell, L. C.
*3,06.
Also, one lottn the city of Cartersville, Ga.,
bounded as follows: On the north by M. A.
Collin’s lot, on the east by Tennessee strfeet;
on the south by Main street, and on the vtest
by Gilmer street. Levied on and will be bold
as the property of the Pyrolusite Manganese
Company, to 6atisiy one distress warrant re
turnable to Bartow superior court in lavor of
Mrs. Mary F. Hackett vs the Pyroiusite Manga
nese Company. Property in possession ©l
defendants. *2,4b.
Also, one dwelling house and lot, lot con
taining one-lourth acre more or less, InJthe
city of Cartersville, aid county, bounded! on
the north by the “Holly Mills” propeity, ami
lying in the fork of Gilmer ami Tennessee
streets, Also, the old livery stable and lot,
upon which there are also two frame hodses
(one a tenement, the other a Store house), suid
lot bounded north by Main street, south by
Mrs. Jane Smith’s lot. east by Gilmer street,
and west by the property of B. G. Poole’s es
tate, all in Cartersvjlle, said county, and in
possession of defendants. Levied on and will
tie sold as the property of the Pyrolusite Man
ganese Company, te satisfy one state and
county tax fl. fa. for 1883, against said Pyrolu
site Manganese Company. s4.uß.
Also, all that tract or parcel of land situated,
’yiug and being in the 6th district and 3rd
section of Bartow county Georgia, to-vfit:
Being ten (10) acres of land, bounded on the
west by John Allen’s land, on the south by
W. B. Bishops laud, north and east by lands of
K. H. Woodward, being part of lot of land No.
288, this teu acres to include and taKe in the im
provements, this being the ten acres excepted"
In the deed from D. F. Bishop to E. 11. Wood
ward. Levied on and will be sold as the prop
erty of R. H. Furguson, to satisfy two justice’s
court fl. fas from 822nd district G. M., for
purchase money, in favor of Elijah Smith vs.
said it. H. Furguson. Property in possession
of defendant. Deed filed and recorded in
clerks office Bartow superior court. *4.56.
Also, one house and lot in the town of Tay
lorsville, Bartow county Georgia, bounded as
follows: On the east by Emma street, on the
north and west by lands of T. M. Ansiy, and
on the souih bv land* of N, Cochran, contain
ing one-half acre more or less, and being lot I
No 33, in the town survey of Taylorsville.
Levied on and will be sold as the property of
J. M. Dorsey, and now in bis possession, to
satisfy four justice court fll. fas. from 851st dis
trict G. M., in favor of J. W. Goldsmith & Cos.
vs. J. M. AH. A. Dorsey. Levy made and Te
turned to me by E. M. Crow, L. C. *3.36.
Also, one lot containing one-half acre more
or less, in the city of Cartersville, Bartow
county Georgi, on which there is situated a
cotton gin; lot bounded on tae south by a
street and the Wallace property, north by the
M. It. Stansill’s property, east by Erwin streets,
and west by Skinner street. Levied on and
will be sold as the property of D. F. Bishop,
to satisfy one state and county tax fl. fa. for
1883, against said D. F. Bishop. Property in
possession of dofendant. *2.64.
Also, lots of land Nos. 12 and 13 in the sth
district and 3rd section of Bartow county
Georgia. Levied on and will be sold as the
property ot C. F. Price, to satisfy one state and
county tax fl. la. for 1883, against said C. F.
Price, and in his possession. *1.66
Also, lot of land No. 961 in the 17th district
ond 3rd section of Bartow county Georgia.
Levied on and will be sold as the property of
T. A. Rogers & Son, to satisfy one state and
county tax fl. fa. lor 1883, against s.ild T. A.
Rogers & Son. $1.66.
Also, lots of land Nos. 234 and 247 in the 16th
district and 3rd section of Bartow county
Georgia. Levied ou and will be sold as the
property of Mrs. J. C. Branson, to satisfy one
st tc and county tax fl. fa. for 1883, against
J. C. Branson, agent. Property in possession
old fend ant. $1.89.
Also, 19 acres ot land in Cartersville, Bartow
county, Ga., beginning at the southeast corner
of the old Salter land, running west with the
original land line 75 poles ami 6 links to the
northwest corner of said lot; thence soutn 61
poles and 15 links to the centre of Rowland’.-
ferry road; thence north 86 degrees east 24
poles and 8 link* with said road; thence north
69 degrees east; 62poles and 18 links to the fork
of Rowland’s ferry and Douthet’s road; thence
north 16degress east, 9 poles and 12 links to the
corner of G. W. Hill’s lot; thence north 38 de
grees west with said Hill’s lot to the beginning
corner, being the property sat apart as a
homestead to Mary J. Ruekman out of the
property of her husband, the deiendant,J. 11.
Ruekman, according to plat by G. W. Hill,
county surveyor, recorded on book “A,” of
homesteads’ clerks’ office, Bartow superior
court, page 26. Levied on and will be sold as
the property ot the estate ot J. H. Ruekman,
deceased, to satisfy one Bartow superior court
li. fa., in favor of Murgaret Curi y, executrix of
J. W. Curry, deceased, vs. John H. Ruekman.
Property pointed out by D. W- Curry, plain
tiff's agent, and in possession of Mis. Mary J.
Wilson. J. A. GLADDEN, Sheriff,
A. M. FRAN KLIN, Dep. Sh’ff.
Jan 1,1884-4 t
Adniiniiitrator’s Sale*
Will be sold before the court-house door, in
Car'ersviHo, Ga., on the ♦’rst Tuesday in Feb
ruary next, between the legal hours of sale,
the interest which Charles W. Sproull had at
the time of his death in and to lots of lsnd
Nos. 654, 715, 726, 722 and 787: also, a** of 714, ex
cept ten acres in the northeast corner; also,
the fractional parts of 786 and 798, wlrich'lie
north of the Etowah river; and also, all of lots
Nos. 716, 785, 788, 797 and 86U, which lie on the
north of the Etowah river and east of aline
running north and south through said
cutting thorn so as to leave five-eights ot said
lots on t he east of said line and three-eights on
the west, all said lots and parts of lots being in
the 4th district and third section ol originally
Cherokee (now Bartow) countv, and being £he
dower which was laid off to Eliza M. Sproull
out ot the lands of her deceased husband,
James C. Bproull, by the superior conrtol Bar
tow county, Ga. The interest of said C. W.
Sproull in said land was one undivided fourth
interest in remainder after the expiration of
the Hie estate oi Eliza M. Sproull; which said
interest in remainder the said C. W. Sproull
had, in his lifetime, conveyed to R. T. Fouehe.
by deed, and the interest to be sold is any
equity of redemption which the estate ol said
CnarleS W. Sproull has, or may have, in anfl to
said land. Terms of sale cash.
R. T. FOtTCFK,
Dec2s-4t Administrator.
r EORGIA, Bartow County.
V* Whereas, John Crawlord has applied, for
letters of guardianship of the property of BE. F.
Crawford, an insane person oi said county.
This is to cite all persons concerned to be and
appear at the February term.' 1884, to show
cause, if any they have, why said appointment
should not be made. Dec. 81, 1883.
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
Jan 1, 1884-4t-$2.10
r\ eo KOI A, Bartow County.
v Whereas, B, F. Posey has applied for let
ters ol administration on the estate of Jiohu
Posey, late of said county, deceased. There
fore, all persons concerned arc hereby notified
to file their objections, if any they have, in my
office, within tbe time presc iked by raw, else
letters will be granted applicant as appjied
for. This Dec. 31,1883. J. A. HOWARD,
Jan 1. 1884-4t‘62.10. Ordinary!
n EOIiOIA, Bartow Countt.
Whereas, B. D. Clark has applied for let
ters of administration on the estate of W. I.
Clark, late of said county, deceased. Therefore,
all persons concerned are hereby notified to file
their objections, if any they have, in my office,
within the time prescribed by law, else letters
will be granted applicant as applied lor.
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
dec2£>-2t i ..
C EORGIA, BARTOW COUNTY.
Whereas, J- A. Fleming, guardian of Ben*
tannin W., Kate and Lula Hill, minors, has ap
plied for leave to sell the land belonging to
said minors. Therefore, all persons concerned
are hereby notified to file their objections, if
any they have, in my office, within the time
prescribed aW,‘else leuv.. will oe granted
applicant as applied lojv !>' 17,1888.
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
• It c25-4t
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas Ella Chilton has appiied for letters
of administration on the estate of John L. Chil
ton, late of said county, deceased: Therefore
all persons concerned are hereby notifi ed to
iil" their objections, if any they have, in, my
0f11,.e within the time prescribed by law, else
letters will be granted applicant as applied,
lor. January 15,1884. r ,
1 * J. A. HOWARD, j
JanU-4t91.10 Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
A. D. Gilbert, administrator of Wm.
H. Gilbert, deceased, has applied for leave to
•ell a part of the lands b longing to the estate
of said deceased: Therefore all persons con
cerned are hereby notified to file their objec
tions, if any they have, in mr office within the
time prescribed by law, else leave will be
granted applicant as applied I or. Jan. 16, ’B4.
J. A. HOWARD,
jan22-4t52.25 “ Ordinary,
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Wherea* 11. XX.Lewis ha* applied for letters
ot administration on the estate of James W.
Lewis, late or said county, deceased: Therefore
all persons concerned are hereby no titled to
file their objection*, if anv they have, ip nay
office within the time prescribed by law, else
letters will he granted applicat as applied for.
January )5,1884. J. A, HOWARD,
. jau22-4ts2.lQ . Ordinary.
Etray Notice.
GEORGIA-—Bartow County.
All persons interested are hereby notified
that w. c. Hackett, ot th*s2d district, G. M ,
aid county, tolls before B. H. McMeakin, R.
R- Dodd and G. M. Isbell, freeholders, as an
estray, one bay horse, with one eye, bob or
short tail,short mane.has saddle matks.fs a lit
tle hipped in the right hip, aboat 12 or 14 years
old, about 16 hand* high, and valued by said
freeholders to be worth fifty dollars.
1 he owner of said estray is required to come
lorward, pay charges, and take said horse
away, or he will be dealt with as the law di
rects. This 18th day of January, 1884.
JNO. H. WJKLE,
j*n22tl Cl’k. Board Com.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA.
“Whew,” said the groceryman, as
the bad boy came in and backed up
agatngt the stove, when a strong
smell of horse filled the air and
counteracted the smell of decayed
eggs, “you haven't gone to work in
the livery stable again, have you?”
“No, but it is about the same. I
am taking care of pa’s trotter, aqd it
is more work than running a whole
livery stable, ’cause you have to rub
a trotter about ail the time, in one
place or another, and blanket him,
and bed him down, and treat him
like a baby,” a .id the bad boy, as he
took a leather trotting boot out of
his coat pocket, and sat down by the
stove to punch a hole in the strap.
“Well, by gum, that beats me,”
said the grocery man, as he put on his
spectacles and looked at the boy, and
held his nose as the horse fumes came
fresh from the stove. ‘-Only two
weeks ago your father failed, and
now he keeps a trotter, and he is a
member of the church, too, in good
standing, and prays regularly. I
swow, I have lost confidence in ev
erybody.”
‘‘o, you don’t have to worry about
pa,” said the boy, as he buckled the
trotting boot around his own ankle,
and kicked his ankle’s together to
see if it would hurt if he interfered.
“Pa knows his business. Times were
never so good in our family as they
have been since pa failed, unless it
was that time when pa was selling
stock in the silver mine. Why, pa
is full of fun at home, and ma, she
laffs, and pa erets her anything she
wants. He bought her a diamond
lace pin last week with four big dia
monds as big as hazel nuts. But ma
isn’t going to wear it here at home,
where people think pa is busted, but
she is going to wait till they go off
traveling, and paralize people at the
hotels. But I s’pose pa has more
fun with the trotter than you can
shake a stick at. He paid a terrible
price for the horse, ’cause he was
learned to trot without pulling on
the lines. Pa goes out on the road,
and when anybody tries to pass him
he lets the reins lay on the dashboard
of the cutter loose, and pa sort of
shuts his eyes as though he was
sweetly sleeping, and the horse just
paws the snow. If anybody comes
along that belongs to oui church, pa
begins to sing a hymn like he was
happy, and the trotter goes for all
that is out. Some of ’em think pa’s
mind is affected by his failure, and
that his head iis weak, but they don’t
want to fool themselves much an pa.
A man who can settle with his credi
tors for ten cents on a dollar, and
stand them off for the ten cents, and
put his money in bonds, don’t need
rauc i sympathy.”
“Well, I guess your pa will pull
through. But what is this I hear
about you and your chum hanging
around the police court? I heard that
you and him made up a purse to pay
a fellow’s fine, and save him from
going to the house of correction
You fellows will get to mixing in
with thieves, and the first thing you
know, you will get pulled by the
police, and saltpetre won’t save you,”
and the groceryman looked wise, as
though h bad saved two boys from
ruin by his sago remarks.
“Well, air, if we hadn’t happened
down to the police court, that morn
ing, that boy would have been ruin
ed. The judge had just said, five
dollars fine, or ten days in the house
of correction, and the policeman led
the boy out, and as he passed me I
thought his face was familiar, and as
I knew the cop’s sister, he let me go
to the station and see the boy. He
used to live where we did, before we
came here, and liis folks were rich
then, but his father failed and his
mother died, and the boy never
learned to do anything, and he has
been, for a year, walking around
from town to t#wn, eating when
anybody offered him a meal, and
going without when they didn’t.
’Tother night he struck this town,
and he was hungry and he didn’t
have ambition enough to even go
and beg a piece of b’ead, and he
stood leaningagainst an iron • fence,
ready to freeze, when a policeman
took him in. The ambition was alt
chilled out of him, and be didn’t
make any defense at the charge of
vagrancy, and waff going to-be sent
up with thieves and drunkards,
when we happened to see him. I
tall you, it dos> make indifference j
how rich a boy’s father, is, every boy l
ought to learn to do some kind of
work, because the time may come
when he will have to work or starve.
Well, be was tickled to see me, and
cried some, and said when be got oui
of jail he guessed he would go and
drown himself, cause be wasn’t no
good, and he talked about his moth
er’s dying, until it broke us all up.
and then we paid bis fine and I took
him up to our house, and gave hlnj
some of my clothes, and we tried al
the evening to think of some work
he could do, but he neve r learned to
do a thing when his pa was rich, ex
cept to walk down town and back.
I never see a boy so helpless. 1 hap
pened to think that when W’e wen
little boys, we used to go in his maV
kitchen on baking days, and they
would give us some dough to mix,
and I asked him if be rememberoo
it, and he said he did. That was th
only thing he could do. So I wen<
down to the bakery and told the
baker that I had a friend who didn’t
know anything on earth but to mix
dough, and I wanted to get a job for
him. Wt>ll, sir, it happened tbai
one of the bakers was off on a drunk,
and the boss said to bring my friend
in, and I told the boy, and impres
sed upon his mind that he must act
as though he had been brought, up
ou dough, and knew all about it, and
I took him down there, and the bak
er gave him a job, and he caught on
so well the baker is going to give
him twelve dollars a week after uext
week. O, dear, but he could sling
dough. Now this shows what a little
thing will save a boy, but H was a
narrow escape, and every boy should
learn something. Seems singular,
dou’t it, that the only thing that hoy
knew, by which he could earo a liv
ing, was something he learned when
he was playing,,in childhood, in his
ma’s kitchen. Say, I wish I was an
orator, and could ge around giving
lectures, like Ingersoll and Beecher.
I would talk to boys and girls en
tirely, and I would show them that
they were the biggest fools on earth
to neglect to learn a trade.”
“Yes, that is all right, but what
do you know, by which you could
earn a living?” asked the grocery
man of the bad boy thinking he had
him.
“Me,” said the boy, indignant at
the idea that he didn’t know any
thing. “1 could do a dozen different
things that I have learned. 1 could
come into this grocery and double
your business, by keeping it clean,
giving full weight, treating everybo
dy kindly, keeping good groceries
instead of poor oues, and wearing a
clean shirt and a smile instead of a
dirty shirt and a frown, as you do.
I could—”
“That will do, you can go,” and
the groceryman let the boy out and
closed the grocery to go to dinner,
while the boy went to the barn to
feed his pa’s trotter.*
A COJRNER IN SMALLPOX.
There is physician in Washington,
D. C., who, at the moment of pen
ning these lines, is in a badly dem
oralized condition. He has been
speculating in smallpox and the deal
has gone against him. He has been
toying with smallpox options, and
has had to put up too many margins,
so many, in fact, that he is now pret
ty thoroughly cleaned out, financial
ly, and the neighborhood in whi'h
he resides is terror-stricken for fear
that he will go to practicing again.
To stoop from dizzy, high-flown
metaphor, and come down among
the barnyard fowls of rhetoric, this
Washington doctor has lost $6,000 in
the smallpox business. The Wash
ington doctor reasoned that for the
past three consecutive years the
United States had been singularly
free from any virulent visitations of
smallpox, and after figuring with
some Washington weather profits,
who occasionally have time todabble
a little with a few extraneous false
hoods outside of their regular pro
fession, he made up his mind that
this winter would witness a small
pox epidemic which would bore pits
into the arms of the gnarled oaks of
the forest like j a red-beaded wood
pecker.
The Washington doctor resolved
to corner it. So he drew his iittle
$6,000 out of the bank, purchased a
small farm up the Potomac, and
stocked thesmallbox ranch withcows
and geese, tbe cows to breed virus,
and the geese to grow quills with
which to can it for family use. All
last season the doctor was as busy as
a bee tapping his cows for virus, and
plucking his geese for quills. He
filled up his barn with loaded quills,
and it was only when he was down
to his last SIOO that he commenced
to look around for the visible supply
of smallpox.
But ; is was not visible. To any
alarming extent, smallpox had not
reared its horrid front on the horizon
“ofany community in the United
States. Ou the contrary, tbe various
answers which he has invariably re
ceived from local boards of health
with whom he has communicated,
hive all been in the one depressing
strain: “No smallpoxin sight. Town
perfectly healthy ”
Accordingly the Washington small
pox specialist begini to look down in
the mouth, his heart sinks like a
plummet, and hope and his SIOO are
ebbing fast away. He finds that he
is on the wrong side of the market.
| that the smallpox has gone back on
1 him, and that, so far from being a
regular visitor who can be depended
on to drop in at stated intervals, it is
inclined to he vaiiable and erratic in
its movements.
If a smallpox wave should, event
ually, sweep over the land, and aDy
parties are axious to go prospering
for virus, we have no doubt that the
Washington doctor will willingly
grub-stake them and let them sink
shafts all over his farm on the Po
tomac flats. In the meantime his
new sign reads: ‘'Going out to do
lay’s w’ork taken in here,” —Texas
Siftings.
NUTT S ACQUITTAL.
The Unjontown tragedy ended
yesterday. The jury declared that
James Nutt was not guilty of any
crime in killing N. L. Dukes, because
he was insane at the time. A com
inittee of citizens will examine his
mental condition to-day and conclude
that if he is a lunatic he is harmless.
He will of course be permitted to re
turn to his home. There are few, if
any, who believe that Nutt was ever
lusaue, but nobody complains about
tne verdict. The facts advanced to
show’ insanity were sufficient, per
naps, to raise a doubt iu the minds
of the jury, and the accused was giv
eu the benefit of the doubt. Juries,
as a rule, are influenced by public
sentiment, and public sentiment jus
tified James Nutt’s act. Dukes had
traduced Nutt’s sister and killed his
father. It is true ajury acquitted
him of murder, but the popular ver
dict was against him. The popular
feeling of the communily was that
Duke* had committed a crime that
deserved death, and James Nutt, a
mere youth, influenced by that feel
ing executed the community’s judg
ment. As Senator Vorhees said, not
in 200 years has anyone been punish
ed for doing what James Nutt did.
The killing of Dukes and the circum
siances which led to the deed have
attracted wide attention. The peo
ple in every part of the country are
familiar with all the details. Their
Sympathies were with the accused
and his mother and sister. The fact
that James Nutt violated the Jaw
was recognized, hut it was a viola
tion with excited no indignation.—
Sav. News.
THE HUNTINGTON AND COD
TON LETTERS.
Considerable comment has recent
ly been made in the columns of some
of our exchanges on the subject of
these letters, and their bearing upon
the acts, opinions publicly expressed,
and the votes of General Gordon,
then a senator from Georgia. We
have always believed that he was
conscientious in the convictions he
then expressed, and that his position
was or the best interest of the south
and country at large. There is not
the slightest intimation in these let
ters that his opinions were not freely
and conscientiously arrived at.
There is not in them the slightest in
sinuation expressed, or that can be
inferred by a rational mind, that he
was purchased or purchasable. There
is nothing iu them calling for any
explanation at his hands. A truer
man never represented a brave peo
ple and any Georgian can point with
pride to him and his record. He is
right in refusing to explain that
which contains no imputation against
him. If Huntington was a lobbyist,
so was Scott. If those senators who
voted in the interest of the former
are to be forever kept on the rack and
asked to explain, why should those
who voted for the latter be exempt?
Gentlemen, let these old issues alone,
they can do no good. Let us look to
the present and prepare for the fu
ture. There are important questions
present and ahead of us worthy of
the deepest consideration. —Sparta
Ishmaelite.
STILL. AT IT.
If tha democratic party is not
thrown into tha oack ground by the
efforts of the democratic press and
would-be leaders.it will be fortunate.
The party has been beaten time and
again by bad management, and the
same thing is again threatened. One
wing is now trying to prove that
some democrats in congress are de
termined to force a straight out free
trade issue, and the other wing that
there is the utmost harmony on the
tariff question. Both are wrong.
There is undoubtedly a difference of
opinion, but a substantial agreement
as the necessity of tariff reform. The
anti-free trade element in the demo
cratic press persists in predicting a
free trade issue and talk about ail
sorts of schemes to the effect, and
that the result will be a great injury.
This is nonsense. The democratic
party is a free trade party, but
is of course desirous to give
incidental protection to Ameri
can industries needing it. Senator
Payne, of Ohio, whose election has
been much used as against the free
trade idea, makes a speech at his
own motion, putting himself square
ly in the liuewith free trade doctrine
with its incidental protection. We
slhcerely trust that the democrats in
congress will go straight forward in
showing to the country that it is
against all protection except such as
is incidental and that they are de
termined so far as they can effect it
to have tariff reform. The country
demands it, Tho people are in favor
of it, let the tariff party shriek ever
so loudly. —Monday Mail.
Advertise in the American.
Unrivalled in Appearance.
Unparalleled in Simplicity..
Unsurpassed in Construction.
Unprecedented in Durability.
Unexcelled in Economy of Fuel.
Undisputed in the BROAD CLAIM ol toeing tie
VEEY BEST OPERATING,
QUICKEST SELLING,
HANDSOMEST AND
BIRIMH
Ever offered to tbe public.
MADE ONLY BY
EXCELSIOR MANUFACTURING CO.
Nos. 612, 614, 616 Si 618 N. Main St.,
ST. LOTUS, MO.
Wil? bemaded'cCpC
customers of last ■ iIEC year without ordering it.
It contains illustrations, prices, descriptions and
directions for planting all Vegetable and Flower
Seeds, Plants, etc. Invaluable to all.
D.M. FERRY &Co.°*ick
1^!
fialj Kill \! ■; jj >RNO_rtME *' "• .:|1
m wj'li
.||i |R||
It is generally conceded by dealers and
manufacturers of Sewing Machines, that
MARTIN’S SEWING MACHINE OIL
Is the FINEST and BEST ever put up.
IT NEVER GUMS or clogs up a machine.
Is put up in Triangular Bottles (which hold a
third more than any other ot the usual two
and three ounce size) and is especially prepar
ed for Sewing Machine use. By vising it you
not only make your machine RUN EASIER,
but will save the many dollars usually paid
lor repairs caused by machines becoming gum
med up with cheap, worthless oils.
FOR SALE BY
WIKLE &CO.,
CORNER BANK BLOCK, NEXT TO P. O
Cartersville, Ca-
REAL ESTATE¥r~SALeI
ITaving determined to go into the Real Es
tate business, I offer the following valuable
property lor sale:
FIRST u
A valuable farm near Cartersville, contain
ing one hundred and sixty acres, open land,
and forty acres in timber. Over one humtred
acres, of the above, bottom land. Improve
ments first-class.
ST3COKTI>.
Beventy-llve to eighty acres farming land,
about sixty acres cleared, the remainder in
timber. On this place there are three tenant
houses. It is just at the incorporate limits and
is valuable.
THIRD.
<
A farm on the Etowah river, owned by Mrs.
Mattie L. Dodd, opposite Kingston. This farm
contains two hundred and t wenty acres, anti is
a good pi nee. Tnere is about 140 acres cleayed,
balance in timber. Good orchard, lCbidehce,
tenant h nises, Ac.
FOUHTII.
About four acres on Onssville street in Car
tersville. Ga., now in ciover. Valuable for
grazing purposes or to improve.
Nine unimproved town lots, immediately
back of T. W. Baxter’s residence, between
Bartow and Jones streets.
r*xx.
One hundred and sixty acres of land, unim
proved. on which there is one ol the best Brown
Hematite Iron ore mines in the county.
SEVEKTT EE.
For sale or rent the present home of Mrs.
"Warren Akin. The place has about twelve
acres of land, a first class nine room house and
all necessary one building. This is one of the
most desirable places in Cartersville.
EIGHTH
One six-room dwcllingjhouse on five acre lot.
situated on Cassvule street. All imprave
ments good, with good well of water and gpod
orchard. This is a choice place.
The above property or any part sold at a bars
gain. Call on or address,
D. W. K. PEACOCK.
Real Estate Agent.
3" o"fc> Printing
Of all kinds done at the
American office.
Advertising is the Foundation of Success.
NEAT, CHEAP and QUICK.
THE
CARTERSVILLE AMERICA! JOB OFFICE
IS PREPARED TO DO
ALL KINDS OP JOB HtlimiTG
In the Best Style and at Prices as Low as Good Printing can be done anywhere.
li® istliMi SepEimi
Of this establishment is supplied with the latest and most desirabls embellcabments known lo the An
aud is under the personal supervision of one of the bast
JOB PIIIIIBI
In the State, will do anything from a
VISITING CARD
TO A
MAMMOTH I'IKTJiK.
Particular attention given to
MERCANTILE PRINTING.
i J \cahton -0U J 11 I
V &a* (Fair .1/ mnd 'H? /° I > tA
' (CHATTANOOGA Sugar Z*™C* *o . ~ T '
S .X>K. r * TI> A ?
J\ oXigh Joint //PjtlhaJue r> \j
THE GARIERSVILLE AMERICAN,
PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY.
IT IS A JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE
INTERESTS OF BARTOW COUNTY.
THE OFFICIAL ORGAN!
SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE!
A Series of
Biagraphieal Sketches
' us&'i i ...... < | '-
Of the Prominent Citizens oi
BARTOWCOUNTY
Living and Stead.
WILL SOON BE PUBLISHED.
A NEWSY, DECENT, DEMOCRATIC JOURNAL.
$1.50 Per Annum.
Address,
AMERICAN PUBLISHING COMPANY,
CAHTKKKVIXX.E, CIA.