Newspaper Page Text
i
THE VALDOSTA TIMES. SAYUKDAV ARCH 3I, 1906.
STATE OF GEORGIA — Lowndes
County. . „ M j
To the Superior Court or Said 1
County:
The petition of A. F. LangforJ
and C. E. Davis, both of Valdosta, in
said state and county, respectfully
Bhows:
First: That they desire for them
selves, their associates, successors
and assigns to become Incorporated
in the name and style of the Val
dosta Stone and Brick Company.
Second: The term for which pe
titioners ask to be Incorporated is
twenty years, with the privilege of
renewal at the end of that time.
Third: The capital stock of said
corporation is to be two thousand
dollars, divided into shares of $109
each. Petitioners further ask the
privilege of increasing said capital
, stock from time to time to any
anmunt not exceeding In the aggre
gate ten thousand dollars, and also
to decrease said capital stock from
time to time not lower than the
original amount of two thousand
dollars.
Fourth: The whole of said capi
tal stock of two thousand dollars has
already been actually paid in.
Fifth: The object of the proposed
corporation is pecuniary gain and
profit to its stock holders. Petition
ers propose to carry on the business
of manufacturing brick, tile, arti
ficial stone and other building ma
terial; to contract for and build
houses and other structures, and to
contract for and do street and road
paving; and they further desire the
power and authority to trade in and
handle all kinds of Duilding materi
als, and all other such articles and
things as may be profitably handled
and sold in connection with their
said business. They desire the pow
er to act as general or special agents
of other persons or companies In
selling or handling any article or ar
ticles appropriate to their said busi
ness or usually and conveniently
connected with their business; and
to make contracts to act as such
agents, and to exercise the usual
powers and to do all other necessary
and proper acts which pertain to or
ma* be connected with said manu
facturing business, and the said
business of dealing in and selling
all s» ch articles and thing.! as may
be profitably connected with said
business. They further desire
power and authority to lease or own
such real estate as may be necessary
in their said business.
Sixth. The principal office and
place of business of the proposed
corporation will be in the city
Valdosta, said state and county, but
they desire the right to establish
branch offices, agencies and factories
elsewhere.
Wherefore, petitioners pray to be
made a body corporate in the name
and style aforesaid, entitled to the
rights, privileges and immunities
and subject to the liabilities fixed by
This February 27th, 1906.
WOODWARD & SMITH,
Attorneys for Petitioners,
Filed in office this February 27th,
1906. R. T. MYDDELTON,
kk'VClerk Superior Court Lowndes coun-
M ty, Georgia.
^vPGEORGIA—Lowndes County:
j,r I, R. T. Myddelton, Clerk of the
Superior Court of Bald county, here
by certify that the above and fore
going is a true and correct copy of
the original petition filed In my of
fice this February 27th. 1906.
R. T. MYDDELTON.
Clerk Superior Court Lowndes Coun
ty, Georgia. *
x-.-r-ra-j
V 5
OLD LEAP YEAR LAWS.
W.5 V
YYaahltiartoii 8i
Plant 54,
L. McLeau,
LARGEST PflACH ORCHARD.
IlnrtlcnltnrlNta to
,c»«» With Tree*.
wident of the Spokane
also of the Met how*
ipany ami one of the
asthma, and coughs of,
kinds, you cannot take an
thing better than Ayer's
Cherry
Pectoral
Cherry Pectoral. Ask yout
own doctor if this is not so.
He uses it. He- understands
why it soothes and heals.
I had a terrible cough for weeks. Then I
‘yer’e Cherry Pet-tor* I and onlr one
ompletely
took Ayer’t
Mas. J. B. dVnfokth
25C.. 50c., f 1.00.
for
t. Joseph. Midi.
I druggists.
Coughs,Colds
; When Women Proponed Sis Centuries
j Ago the Man litut to Ampt.
J In two countries, at least, and more
! than tino years ago laws were passed Canal compan;
I which gave women the right of prajms- ; Valley Cana) <i«
j ing marriage. These enactments went foremost promoters of irrigation proj-
even farther than this. They also stip- ! ects in the btake of Washington,
ulated that if the man whose hand cently passWFl J through Wenatehi
they had sought should i-efuse be
should incur a heavy fine.
A searcher among the ancient rec
ords of Scotland discovered an act of
the Scottish parliament, which was
passed In the year 1288, which runs as
follows:
"It is statut and orilalnt that during
the rein of his maist blissit Megeste, ilk
for the years knowne as Lepe Yeare.
ilk mayden ladye of baitbe highe and.
lowe estaet shall line liberte to bespeke j famed Wenat'fcbee valley.
You will hasten recovery by tak
ing one of Ayer’s Pills at bedtime.
STATE OF GEORGIA — Lowndes
County:
To the Superior Court of Said County
The petition of the Dalton Grocery
Company, ( a corporation of said
county, respectfully shows:
1st. That at the May Term, 1904,
of the Superior Court of said county,
petitioners were duly Incorporated
under the name and style herein
stated for and during the period of
twenty years.
2nd. That pursuant to the order
of incorporation, petitioners was du
ly organized, and Bince that time has
been, and still is, engaged in the en
terprise authorized by the order of
incorporation.
3rd. That the entire stock of
said corporation is now owned by
0. D. Dalton, J. H. Osborne, W.
M. Scott, H. S. Candlish and A.
Hoagland.
4th. It is the purpose and desire
of petitioner to amend its charter
and petition for incorporation by
striking the word "fifty thousand dol
lars” from the "fifth” paragraph of
said petition, and inserting In lieu
thereof, the words "one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars,” so that
1. Jloner may have the privilege
increasing the capital stock and the
power to increase the same from
time to time, In the discretion of the
said corporation, not to exceed the
sum of one hundred and fifty thous
and dollars and also of decreasing
the capital stock in like manner, not
below the sum of ten thousand dol
lars. as provided in its charter.
5th. By unanimous vote of the
stock-holders of the petitioning cor
poration, it has been determined that
petitioner file its application for such
amendment, such vote being had at
the regular meeting of the stock
holders of the corporation.
Wherefore, petitioner prays that
an order be passed amending its
said charter as herein set out.
WOODWARD & SMITH,
Attorneys for Petitioner.
Filed in office this March 5, 1906.
R. T. MYDDELTON. Clerk,
GEORGIA—I^owndes County:
I, R. T. Myddelton, Clerk Superi
or Court of said county, do hereby
certify that the foregoing is a true
copy of a petition for charter as ap
pears of file in my office. This
March 5, 1906.
R. T. MYDDELTON,
Clerk S. C.
Libel for Divorce.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
J. W. Walker vs Katie Wilber Walker
Supreme Court of said Count May
term 1906. Libel for Divorce.
To the Defendant, Katie Wilber
Walker: You are hereby required
to be and appear at the Superior
Court of Lowndes County, Ga., to be
held In and for said county on
third Monday in May next, 1906, then
and there to answer plaintiff's com
plaint of divorce, as in default there*
of said court will proceed as to jus
tice shall appertain.
Witness the Hon. Robt. G. Mitch
ell, Judge of said court. This 19th
day of March, 1906.
R. T. MYDDELTON, Clerk.
. .3 24 w 2m.
To Amend a Charter.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
To the Superior Court of Said
County:
The petition of the Henderson-
Cranford Buggy Company shows un
to the court as follows:
First: That petitioner was under
its present name duly incorporated
by order of this Honorable Court at
the November adjourned term, 1902,
thereof, being the 15th day of Janu
ary, 1902.
Second: That your peti H oner de
sires that its charter be amended so
that it shall have the right and pow
er to issue from time to time Pre*
ferred Stock in such amount not ex
ceeding fifty thousand doParg, under
such rules and regulations and upon
such terms and conditions and bear'
Ing such rate of interest as Its stock
holders or board of directors may
deem wise and desirable, and that
its capital stock be increased to
such an amount.
Third: Petitioner desires that its
charter be further amended by add
ing the words "or near” between the
twenty-first and twenty second words
of paragraph seven of lt$. original
petition.
Fourth: Petitioner avers that its
stock holders desire, assent and au
thorize the foregoing amendments
as is shown by a certified copy from
its minutes filed with this petition,
Wherefore, petitioner prays that
said amendment be allowed.
This March 26th, 1906.
Henderson-Cranford Buggy Co,
By Cranford & WalUe:
Its Attorneys.
Filed In Office March 26th, 1906.
GEORGIA—T.owndos County *.
I, R. T. Myddelton, Clerk of the
Superior Court of said county,
certify that the above is a true and
correct copy of the petition
amendment t charter of the Hen
derson-Cranford Buggy Co., now
file in this office.
R. T. MYDDELTON, Clerk.
3 27 4w.
ye man she likes, albeit gif he Refuses
ta talk Uir to be his lawful wyfe, he
shall be mulcted In ye sum of ane dun-
dls or less, us his estait may be, except
and awls gif he can make it appeare
that he is betrothit ane ither woman,
he then shall be free.”
A year or two later a law almost
similar to the Scottish enactment was
passed lu Frauee autl received the ap
proval of the king. It is also said that
before Columbus sailed on his famous
voyage to the westward a similr.r privi
lege was granted to the maidens of
Genoa and Florence.
There is no record extant of any
fines imposed under the conditions of
this Scotch law and no trace of statis
tics regarding the number of spinsters
who took advantage of it or of the sim
ilar regulations in France, but the cus
tom seems to have taken firm hold
upon the popular mind about that time.
The next mention of it is dated nearly
400 years later, and it is a curious little
treatise called "Love, Courtship \d
Matrimony,” which was publisher a
London in 1000. In this quaint w.. k
the “privilege” is thus alluded to:
"Albeit it now becomes a part of the
common law in regard to social rela
tions of life that, as often as every
leap yeare doth return, the ladyes have
the sole privilege duriug the time it
continued! of making love either by
wordes or lookes, no man will be en
titled to benefit of clergy who doth in
any wise treat her proposal with slight
or contumely.” f
Up to within about a ceutury ago it
was one of the unwritten laws of leap
year that if a man should decline a
proposal he should soften the disap
pointment which his answer would
bring about by the presentation of a
silk, dress to the unsuccessful suitor
for his hand.
A curious leap year superstition Is
still to be met with In some parts of
New England, and that is that during
leap year the “beaus grow on tho
wrong side of the pod.”
Wash., on ho* Jway up the ■'Columbia
river to hi* lfanch opposite Chelan
Falls, where hi will begin the lrriga
tioa of a tract (of laud upon which he
will beglu the! planting of the largest
peach orchard’ in the world, says n
Wenatchee correspondent of the Seat
tle Times. Toe tract comprises 2,000
acres of some »of the finest land in the
Columbia valley, the soil rauklug in
productiveness even above that of the
Accompanying Mr. McLean is A. Van
Hohlerbeke, ex-commissioner of horti
culture for the state of Washington,
who goes to assume the active manage
ment of the “planting of the trees and
who will alsf look after the construc
tion of the, new irrigation system,
which will j be Installed ns needed.
There 1^ n«*w enough water coming
from the springs to Irrigate 400 acres
of land. This will be utilized Immedi
ately. To provide for the large acreage
besides this some reservoirs will be
made. Bald Mr. Van Holderbeke:
“The first yenr we expect to get
about 200 acres of trees planted. Each
subsequent yenr a like acreage will be
planned Until the whole tract is plant
ed. 'Aside from the sides of tho hills,
which will be utilized for grape culture,
the whole tract will he given over to
peaches. Besides being tho largest
peach orchard in the world, it will also
bo the N largest orchard of any kind lu
the state of Washington, the only or
chard approaching It in size lu the
state being the Blalock orchard, near
Wailawnlla, which contains 1,400
acres.”
WHO SHE WAS
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound
Had Its Birth and How the “Panic of ’73“ Caused
It to be Offered for Public Sale In Drug Stores.'
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For some years she taught school, and
became known as a woman of an alert
STREEET RAILWAY'S BIG GIFT.
Fifty Thousand Dollars Put up for
Atlanta Exposition.
Atlanta, March 29—Fifty thousand
dollars is the donation made by the
Georgia Railway and Electric Com
and Investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of \ wonderfully sympa
thetic nnture.
In 1843 she merried Isaac Pinkhara,
a builder and re.M estate operator, and
their early marred life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a
daughter.
In those good old fashioned days it
pany and the Atlanta Gas Light , common fw mothers to make
Company to the Southern Industrial ~ U * *
•i- *:• *’• * -i- *:• *:• *’•
I THERE ARE ONLY FOUR
CAUSES FOR ALL OISEASES
StoimKlDNEYCURE
Make* Kidney, and Bladder Right
E0LEYSH0NEMCAR
Cure* Cold.; Prevent. Pneumonia
DR.RM CARIS-: ;
L & B.
FOR
*ii/m m mi
STOMACH ANO KIDNEY
CURES
RHEUMATISM
IN ALL FORMS
Backache, headache, tooth
ache, inflammation of the kid
neys, gravel, neuralgia, sore
throat, diptheria, sprains,
bruises, contracted cords, mus
cles and stiff joints, cramp
colic and cholera morbus, bil
lions colic, chills and fever,
bites of insects, reptiles and
mad dogs, croup, caked
breast*, suppressed menstrua
tion, corns, felons, palpitation
of the heart, piles, gonorrhea,
erysipelas, etc.
FOR INTERNAL and EXTERNAL
CARLISLE & GO.
MACON, - GEORGIA
Pries, • 50 Cents
. . . FOB MAI.E BY ■ . .
A E. DIMMOCK'M PHARMACY.
•:* *!•
CURRAN R. ELLIS,
ARCHITECT,
An Incantloaa Critic.
Almost the last work that Sir Edwin
Landseer was engaged on was a life
sized picture of Nell Gwynn passing
through au archway on a wMto palfrey.
This picture, In which the hffse along
was finished, was bought b;
Rothschild family and
John Millais to complete. One mui
Ing a celebrated art critfc called anil
was much Impressed with this work.
"Ah, to be sure!” ho said, going up
close and examining a deerhound,
which almost breathed, in the fore
ground of the picture. "How easily
one can recognize Landseer’s dogs!
Wonderful, isn’t it?” “Yes, it is won
derful,” remarked Sir John, lighting an
other pipe. “I finished painting that
dog yesterday and have done the whole
of it myself." That critic was sorry he
spoke.
exposition which is to be held i n At* ,
lanfa in 1910.
Notice of this fact was given tho
exposition committee yesterday by 1
Preston S. Arkwright, of the Geor- j
gia Railway and Electric Company. ;
There are no strings attached to the J
gift. }
The directors of the street car -
jpompany know that the exposition ;
will be located near some of the coin* 1
pany's lines, so there is nothing to j
fear that- the street Tailway concern
will not get some return from the
exposition.
Another Renaon.
Aunt Emeline is the best loved wom
an in Saymouth, for her charity is alike
of hand hud heart. Like many other, cle of friends,
excellent persons. Aunt Emelino i9 not, "Owing to severe inflammatio.. of th
NAVAL STORES MARKET.
e^ls Listless and Quotations
* Have Fallen Off,.**
Savannah, March 29—Tfhe spirits
.turpentine market is very listless.
There is hut little inquiry at the quo*
tations. There was a falling off yes
terday afternoon of a cent a gallon
when the quotation was G7 cents, and
dull.
.Rosins continue firm with some
trading on the lower grades.
Doctors are Puzzled.
The remarkable recovery of Ken
neth Mclver, of Vanceboro, Me., Is
the subject of much interest to the
medical fraternity and a wide clr-
He says of his case:
a church member, but she is a regular
attendant at the village church, which
is so near her cottage ns to seem un
der the same roof. When, at the close
of a recent sermon, the minister re
quested all those present who had nev-
throat and congestion of the lungR,
tbrpe doctors gave me up to die,
when, as a last re&ort, I was induced
to try Dr. King’s New Discovery and
I am happy to say, it saved my life.”
er united with tho church to retire at P ures .,2f e worst coughs and colds,
tho end of nervlce, overly w„ our- ^
prised to see Aunt Emeline rise and
•tart down the aisle.
‘Aunt Emeline,” the minister called
softly, "that does not apply to you!”
‘That isu’t why I’m going,” Aqnt
Emeline responded serenely. "I smell
my dinner burning up.”—Youth’s Com
panion.
Th# Oily Menhaden.
The oily character of the menhaden
familiar. It is caught for Its on*
which is tiled out in factories. Men
haden fishermen nee pom nets, wWd*
are tarred to preserve them. To keep
their bands from sticking to the tarred
nets they rub on them a freshly caught
menhaden, handling It somewhat as
they would a cake of soap. 4o oily Is ly after rounds are made until books
the menhaden that the simple pressure close T une 1st.
thus applied Is enough to bring
hoarseness and lagrippe. Guaranteed
b‘ A. E. Dimmock’s and W. D.
Dunaway’s drug stores. 50c and$l.
Trial bottle free.
their own home medicines from roots
and herbs, nature's own remedies—
calling in a phyfdcian only in specially
urgent cases. By tradition and ex
perience many of them gained a won
derful knowledge of the curative prop
erties of the vallous roots and herbs.
I Mrs. Pinkhara took a great interest
I in the study of roots and herbs, their
, characteristics and power over disease.
; She maintained that just as nature so
bountifully provides in tho harvest-
fields and orchards vegetable foods of
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains
to find them, in the roots and herbs
1 of the field there are remedies ex
pressly designed to cure the various
ilia and weaknesses of the body, and
it was her pleasure to search these out,
and prepare simple and effective medi
cines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combina
tion of the choicest medicinal roots
and herbs found best adapted for the
cure of the Ills and weaknesses pecu
liar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pink-
ham's friends and neighbors learned
that her compound relieved and cured
and it became quite popular among
them.
All this so far was done freely, with
out money and without price, as
labor of love.
Butin 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity were too
much for the large real estate interests
of the Pinkham family, as this class
of business suffered most from
fearful depression, so when the Centen
nial year dawned it found their prop
erty swept away. Some other source
of income had to be found.
At this point Lydia E. Plnkham’s
Vegetable Compound was made known
to the world.
The three sons and ths daughter,
ivith their mother, combined forces to
restore the family fortune. They
argued that the medicine which was
so good for their woman friends and
neighbors waa equally good for the
women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and
little credit. Their first laboratory
was the kitchen, whero roots and
herbs were steeped on the stove,
gradually filling a grow of bottle*.
Then came the question of selling
it, for always before they had given
it away freely. They hired a Job
printer to run off some pamphlet*
setting forth the merit* of the medi
cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham'*
Vegetable Compound, and these were
distributed by the Pinkham son* in
Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and th© de
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the fam
ily had saved enough money to com
mence newspaper advertising and from
that time tne growth and success of
the enterprise were assured, until' to
day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vege
table Compound have become house
hold words everywhere, and many
tons of roots and herbs are used annu
ally in its manufacture.
Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not
live to see the great success of thia
work. She passed to her reward year*
ago, but not till she had provided
means for continuing her work *a
effectively as she could bare done it
hersplf.
During her long and eventful expe
rience she was ever methodical in her
work and she was always careful to pro*
serve a record of every case that came to
her attention. The case of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice—
and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ
ing symptoms, treatment and result*
were recorded for future reference, and
to-day these records, together with
hundreds of thousands made since, are
available to sick women the world
over, and represent a vast collabora
tion of information regarding th*
treatment of woman's ills, which for
authenticity and accuracy can hardly
be equaled in any library in the
world.
With Lyd! v JS. Pinkham worked her
daughter-in-iaw, the present Mrs.
Pinkham. She was carefully instructed
In all her hard-won knowledge, and
for years she assisted her in her vast
correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the
direction of the work when its origina
tor passed away. For nearly twenty,
five years she has continued R, and
nothing in the work shows when th#
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropnedjjgr
pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,
now the mother of a large family, took
it up. With women assistants, some at
capable as herself, the present Mrs.
Pinkham continues this great work,and
probably from the office of no other
person have so many women been ad
vised how to regain health. Hick wo
men, this advice is “Yours for Health"
freely given if you only write to ask
for it. (
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound; made
from simple roots and herbs; the one
great mcdicing for women’s ailments,
and the fitting monument to the nobis
woman whose name it bears.
Tax Receiver’s Notice.
I will be at the following places
on dates given below for the purpose
of receiving tax returns for the year
1906:
Naylor, April 2, 9. 19.
Cat Creek, April 10, 20.
Hahlra, April 3. 11, 23.
Ousley, 4, 12. 24.
Clyattvllle, April 5. 13, 26.
Lake Park. April 6, 16, 27.
Club House, April i8, 30.
Dasher, May 1st.
Darsey School House May 3d.
Valdosta on all Saturdays and dai-
A
Happy
Home
To have a happy home J
you should have children.
They are great happy-home'
makers. If a weak woman,
you can he made strong
enough to bear healthy chil- ,
dren, with little pain or dis-'
comfort to yourself,by taking
through the scales oil sufficient for the I
purpose. |
!. BACON,
T'» Receiver Lowndes Co. Ga.
3'10-nat.-2m.
I’leaaant Job.
"Oh, George, I’m so glac you’ve
come,” exclaimed the sweet gjl.
For Over 8!xty Years.
An Old and Well Tried Remedy —
beet* used for over sixty years by mil- !
marts so esc,ted and dtsturUV 1.4 go ȣ j
In and calm him. I while teething, with perfect aucces". !
’ well, replied Sir. Lovett, [ t soothes the child, softens the gums, j
“whnt'B the matter with tilniV allays all pain, cures wind colic tod ,
"WTiy—er—I Just told him ycu want- is the best remedy for diarrhoea. I* j
ed to marry me.”—Philadelphia Press. 1 pleasant to the taste. Sold by drug-
gists In every part of the world.
A Mmn Trick. j Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has
take no other.
"What do you do to make ta k when j*J, DC flltfhinVHvnm^ ha«
you call on a new girl?”
"I usually start by telling a Joke.”
"But the rest of the evening?” | )
th7?o a ke“ n f^ulfvm a U C P o^ier 1 jiu™Jf ‘hat oVenemy ofVhe race, con-
the Joke. Louisville Courier-Journal. Rtlpatlon. often ends in appendicitis.
To avoid all serious troubl.- with
Foresee misfortunes that thou mayest stomach, liver and bowels, take Dr.
strive to prevent therm but whenever King’s New Life Pills. They per-
they happen bear them with magna- fectly regulate these virgans, without
nim I ty.—Zoroaster. Pain or discomfort. 25c at A. E.
' Dimmock’o and W. V. Dunaway’s,
druggists.
It will ease all your pain, reduce
lafUmnation, cure leucorrhea,
(whites), falling womb, ovarian
trouble, disordered menses, back
ache, headache, etc., and make
childbirth natural and easy. Try it.
At all dealers in medicines, In
S1.0Q bottles.
“DUE TO CARDUI
fs ny baby girl, now two weeks
old,” writes Mrs. J. Priest, of Web
ster City, lows. “She is s fine
healthy babe and we are both doing
nicely. I sib stU taking Cardui,
and would not be without It in
the house.”
F0LEYSH0KEYHCAR
•or chlldrmnt tafm» aur». No opiates
PHOENIX LODGE NC. 4.
I. O. O. F 1
Meet, every Friday evening »l eight
o’clock, Ashley BnUdius, oorner
Fnttorson St. and Hill Are.
Dr. Clarence Whittington.
DKNTIST
B. S. Richardson,
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Valdosta, Ga.
CRANFORD & WALKER,
Attorney 8-ttt-Law
VALDOSTA, . UKOKQIA
•iftcHtt AhHIot balldit.g, room* t mu; 3.
WOODWARD & SMITH,
LAWYERS.
OFFICE UPSTAIRS IN #
COURT HOUSE.
Geo. W. KEENE,
DENI 1ST,
Lake Park, - Georgia.
DR. W. BARNES,
’ rinary Surgon,
208 PATTEIISON ST.
Valdosta Ga.
Treats all diseases! of '• .'live stock.
Special attention given to lame moles
and horses.