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fHE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 1909.
THE VALDOSTA TIMES.
C. 6. BRANTLEY, Editor.
■, L. TURNER, Bustoss* Manager.
BUB9CRI9T40N PRICE »1 A YEAR.
Bntorotf at tha Poetofflco at Valdosta,
Oa, a* Eaeond Claaa Mall Matter.
VALDOSTA, OA., FBB. 8. 1909
TWELVE PAGES
Mr. Taft ta engaged on tala farewel*
appearance aa a globo trotter.
What will Panama bare to offer
In the place of Georgia 'possums?
Atlanta's effort to boost Brer'
'Poseum .teems to he a loirs on At
lanta
Evidently Senator Tillman will
hare to lnreatlgate himself, as no
one else wants to.
If Utehmond Pearson Hobson re
ally wants war, lat him get Into the
grand opera game In "Nanr York.
Tea. Angelina, all the girl* who
get "arrested'' are beautiful—except
Carrie Nation and Emma Goldman.
Boston people who hare nothing
oho to do are hunting up a full line
of ancestors to present to Mr. Taft
Bryan's assertion that free silver
Is still a lire Issue Indicates that
eome one has been, robbing the po
litical graveyard.
Joke Kllraln has been at the
White House, and It la thought he
mar be the bodyguard of the Prasl
dent In Central Africa. Lions, be
ware!
The Anti-Saloon league dreams of
a "dry nation" In twenty years. If
no, It/will come as s resalt of real
temperance and not of intemperat
fanaticism.
Three cats haring escaped from
house lh Chester, Pa., where chil
dren with diphtheria were quaran
tined. the health department
structed Its officers _to And the ani
mats nt any cost.
It is ssld~lkgt Roosevelt turnoJ
down the preposition to tour ths
count y with a circus of rough-rid
ers even though a Mg salary was
offered. There was too mnoh formal
ity la a proceeding of that tort tor
an esptraira temperament like fed'
Duncan V. Fletcher, the new Unit'
ed State* Senator from Florida,
• lawyer, by profession and a gardu-
ata of Vanderbilt University,
baa long been prominent for bis nat
ive Interest In the movement for the
Improvement of the Inland water
way*.
Charles T. Booker, of Connect!
cut, who Is elated to succeed Frank
Hitchcock aa chairman of the Re
public on national oommtttee. Is
prominent as a flnnncler and Indus
trial leader In hi* home state.
Hough active la politics for a num
ber of years h* has never sought
pnbllc office.
Wesley L. Jones, the new sena
tor from the state of Washington.
Is 45 year* old and a native of Illi
nois. He was graduated from Sou
thern Illinois College, read law 'In
Ohlrsgo and removed to Washing
ton In (IIP. He lived at North
Yakima and hat been Representa
tive-at-large In Congress since 199*.
It appears that the surest way to
be-ome a member of the United
State* Senate Is to have a name be
ginning with the letter B. There
are now 13 Senators whose names
begin with that letter and In the
pert Centres* two more will Join
.’•e group The newcomers will be
Burton of Ohio and Bristow of Kan-
Tom Watson ha* -written a good
v.aay readable things, but nothing
•••ire entertaining than the article
the Intt Jeffersonian on the negro
icing through the literature gad
ts of Egypt up to the present time.
• also traces out the Anglo-Saxons'
owing how far apart the two races
re always been and how utterly
similar they most always be.
qenntor Teller of Colorado, one
the veterans whore term* will ex
’s nest March, began his official
-eer an Senator In 19T9, and with
<1 exception of three years'eerrlee
Secretary of the Interior, under
thar has served continuously In
• v Senate. His case Is somewhat'
■ -altar, aa he had never held office
i any kind before. Until his fan-
*"i bolt, in 1999, he was g Republi
can. bat In the last thtrteaa yean
fas haem a free lance Democrat, and
b* occupied a seat oa tho platform
at the Dearer convention.
“LITTLE JOE’S" INAUGURATION,
The -Record, for one, takes of
fense at the spirit of levity iwblch
Che Atlanta Journal uses in mention
ing edltorllly the met that ’ Hon.
Joseph M. Brown Is to be Inaugurat
ed without the usual festivities ana
blatant show-.
The Journal may have opposed
the nomination of Mr. Brown the
private citizen, but it can scarcely
afford to poke fun at the official,
Che Governor-elect Brown. Such a
thing on the part of the Journal has
surprised this scribe, who fought
side by side with It through two
fierce political battles in the Interest
of Hon. Iloke Smith.
Whatever its efforts may have
l>een In the past to heHttle the per
sonal qualifications of Mr. Brown,
no matter how It may hereaf
ter view his regime and acts as gov
ernor of the empire state of the
south, it Is due the Intelligence and
fair-mindedness of .ts Inhabitants
that the dignity and responsibility
of the office be not handled In inch
light manner as In the editorial of
Sunday's Journal.
It may, however, take serious is
sue wth any act of Mr. Brwn. That
Is its privllge and its duty. If no be
If the Journal agree* not with him.
That It has no cause as yet to
do so Is certain, for 1f all the official
acts of Mr. Brown are aa clear-cut
and sensible as the determination to
quietly assume his Important duties
without "blare of trumpet* and
shouts of the multitude,” neither
newspaper organ nor Individual will
have room to grumble.
The Record will support
Bi own's administration aa faithful
ly as It did Mr. 8mth‘a—ao long as
It deserves support. It It does not It
will even thin 'refuse to participate
in rnlslng a laugh at the expense of
the dignity of the governor.—Mont
gomery Record.
No Coronation for “Little Joe,
Hon. Joseph M. Brown, governor-
elect of Oeorgls, has been, compelled
to give out his plan of Inauguration
which he had wanted to hold until
eome time nearer Che day of "has-
been" coronation.
There is to be no coronation, no
grand royalty rides nor drives,
kingly fuse nor feathers. True Jef
fersonian simplicity iwill, for the
first time in the history of the state
be the crowning feature of the entire
inauguration. Thl* ts "Little Joe'*"
preferment in (he mater, as it Is IS
all mattera with which he i* concern- y a an antl-aonth (arty: * 'II
No pomp nor ipLudor, no en
thusiastic acclamations nor emble
matical sounds ot national airs, no
visible evidence od|bh| Influence and
prominence Is to be tolerated on this
heretofore momentous and fanciful
occasion, it we would bftleve Editor
Gray.
.. He prefers to be Inaugurated sim
ply as Georgia's "Uttle Joe,'
modestly shrinks from hny assump
tion that ‘I am the stato.'
Be five* out the Interesting state
ment that it is bis Intention
walk to the capital to be Inaugurat
ed. And why not?
If he earries out hla determination
to make the day oncof pure almpllc'
ty, -would It not bo fitting to avoid
the coach-and-four, or go on horse
back to the capltol and “hitch his
nag at the gate," nor accept any
patronage from"any corporation, civ
il or military, nor bo born to the
goal In a Jlnrlkaha, not just take a
qutot stroll up to tie capital and re
ceive his commission?
Meanwhile Mr. Gray of the Jour
nal, don't you be so perplexed over
this Choice of transportation! Mr.
Brown sill easily fix hie choice and
when he does the question will
loom large before you, "How like
the man, simple yet great ns he It,
was this manner of Inauguration
from beginning to end."—Gruymont
Hustler.
Will Establish a l'recedenL
Little Joe” Brown has again
Shown tils strong common tense.
has announced that he does not wish
any blare of trumpets and ckmh of
tymbals and rotting of kettle drums
and marching ot uniformed thou
sands when he ts Inaugurated gov
ernor. All ot 'his unnecessary dis
play and pomp and expense is
he cut out. Mr, Bnowu-'wtll come
down to the capital, like any plain;
ordinary citizen, enter the legislative
hall, tuko tho oath of ottl-e In the
prescnco ot the legislature, go to hla
office and begin buafaees. And there
will be more dignity In this perform
once than there would be .a all the
hurrah and noise and show of the
Old mile Inauguration*. Let ua hope
"IAtle Joe" la establishing the pre
cedent that future governors will
follow.—Tlmea-Reeord.
No Attempt at Show or Itlu-ter.
“Little Joo” ban tabooed any dam-
nitrations at his inauguration ts
governor in June. He wants to he
Inducted Into office in a dignified,
boslncet-llke may • and then he
pronUees to administer the office In
like manner—with no attempt at
Show or Master bat eolely tor the
"THE NORTH AND THE SOUTH.”
Bishop Warren A. Candler, JH hla
recent article on "Dissolving the
Solid South." says:
"I would like to enquire why so
much objection Is urgsd~ to a Wolid
south,’ while nothing la said of a
'solid New England'? The solidity
of the latter Is as obdurate and
persistent az the solidity of (to?
former.” • • • from
the days of the colonies until now
there hare been distinct types of
people In both New England and
the south, and for most natural
reasons they hare been solid
Regarding the early use of the
terms the “north" and the “south,"
Dr. J. L. M. Curry In his book,
"The southern states of the Ameri
can Union," says: "From an aarly
period the colonies of the south
ern portion of the British possess
ions were, In the broad phrase,
specialized as southern. In - "the
course of time the south became a
geographical term to designate the
slave-holding section, and a politi
cal term to designate a theory of
government or a peculiar interpre
tation of the constitution. ‘South
and North' as descriptive class!flec
tions because fixed to onr political
vocabulary, and parties were distin
guished by local discriminations or
epithets."
It was the North and the South
from the beginning. “In 17*9 the
Hartford Courant, an organ of the
federalists, spoke of the "general op
position - f sentiment which dlstKP
gulehes the two great districts ot ter
ritory."
Dr. J. L. M. Cury further says,
that ‘‘distinct political economics to
the trading and the planting col
on Ice, distinct social and labor sys
tems, differences to habits, thoughts
and Interest tended to give perman-
ncy to geographical issues.”
So It is seen the terms ‘north’ and
‘south' are not post-bellum phrases,
but antedated the constitution and
even tile revolutionary war Itself.
They are of colonial origin.
But prior to the war the south
was never sectional. Even to 1990
the south divided Its vote, on the no
tional ticket.
The party of sectionalism was the
Republican party. It had Its .very
birth to 1954 In’a conspiracy to
cede from the constitution,
throw Us authority, and deprive
of her Influences In the governin'
Vi •_ *1 .
MRS.FRANKSTRQEBE
/was a ncrvotls wrick.
I felt no desire to live.
REMARKABLE RECOVERY,
THANKS TO PE-RU-NA.
Mr*. Franfc troebe, R. F. D. 1, Apple
ton, Wla., U rites:
“I began using Peruna a few months
ago when my health and strength were
all gone, and I wG nothing hut a
nervous wrec% oonJd no*, sloop, eat or
rent properly, and felt no desire to lire.
♦‘Three bnitlcs of Peruna made me
look at life in a different light, as I he*
gun to regain my loit atrrngth. While
my looovery took nearly four months,
at the end of that time 1 was better than
I erer had ln»on before. 1 had a splen
did color and never weighed* more in
my life.
“I certainly think Peruna is without
a rival as a tonic and strength builder,
and it has my eudoraeuieut.”
This lady entirely recovered from a
non oils breakdown. She did not go
sway to a sanitarium, and spend hun
dreds of dollars for a cure. She Just
staid at home, took Penn**, and in fonr
months weighed more than ever in her
life, had a *plemlid color, life looked
bright to her. Peruna did all thla for
her. What more could be expected of
any temedy?
Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative.
Ask four Druggist for a Free Peruns
Almanac for 1909.
NOTIC* OF SALE. \
GEORGIA—-Lowndes county.
Under end by virtue of the pow
er of sale contained to a certain
deed dated the 3rd. day of March,
1904. by Mary and Corlnthia Mor
gan to the undersigned, recorded to
hook -V." folio 261 In the Clerk’s
office of the Superior court of eald
county on March 25, 1904. will be
sold at public outcry to the highest
and be.it bidder for cash before the
court house door In said county and
Mate on the flijst Tuesday to March.
1909. between the legal hours of
sale, the following property, to-wlt:
All that tract or parcel of land
situated, lying and being in the city I
of Valdosta, raid county and state,
and Iwglnnlng at the Southeastern
corner of the lands of W. L. Mor
gan and running along and fronting
Morgan avenue one hundred and
forty feet east, thence north one
hundred and sixty nine feet, thence
west one hundred and forty feet,
thence south one hundred and sixty
nine feet tp starting point; bound
ed on the north by lands of B. F.
Whittington, east by latMs of Mary
and Corlnthia Morgan, squth by
Morgan avenue and west by kind* of
W. L. Morgan, said property sold to
satisfy certsln Indebtedness now
due by the said Marry and Corlnthia
Morgan to the undersigned, and the
proceeds of said sale to be applied
to the payment of said Indebtedness
and the expense, herof. Good and
sufficient titles will be made by the
undersigned to the purchaser, or pur
chasers under this sale.
This 5th day of February, 1909.
Citizens Building & Loan Associa
tion, by J. F. Lewis, President.
Cranford ft Wilcox, Attorneys.
2-6-09.
It was born not as's national,
malned sectional until thin
After the war the south became
solid. Tho Republican party refuted
fellowship with the whites of'the
south, but allied itself .with the ne
groes. They forced on uz the negro
problem by pairing the ‘fifteenth
amendment, and President-elect Taft
distinctly put the south on notice to
his New Tork speech that It was
the will of the nation’ that the
south recognize the civic and poli
tical rights ot negroes ai'dld tho
states of the north, and that the na
tion to future would have no sym
pathy with the south If she remain
ed "soIM.
Rlshop Can Her to his article show
ing that the south has all to !<
an nothing to gain dissolving fear*
the Greeks bearing gifts. Ha sayt:
T take It no Trojan horse will be
admitted within our gates. Our
people may gaze on such devlci
with a certain sort of Interest, but
they wITT not he so simple as not to
see that the contents ot the animal
are something more wnr-ltke than
grass."
ft Is Inspiring. In the race of the
now surreptftlous movement, to read
again what Bishop Candler says;
"\Vtth~ITs cotton fields and facto
ries. Its fruits nnd flowers—anj
above aB, Its uncompromising prin
ciples—the sooth asks no favor and
begs no one for fellowship. The
people of the south are not wanting
to Independence of thought. They
ore not terrified Into being ‘solid. 1
They do not divide, because ‘hey are
honestly agreed. It has not been
for • sham solidarity, force! upoa
them by northern Intolerance, that
they have .contended In peace and
•war.'
As ft was In colonial days, so. It is
now, and no “olive branch”
been extended since the war, exp:
ston et any sympathy for the whites
of the south. England gave |20,-
000,000 to rebuild the Boer homes
she destroyed. But the north still
keeps the tax money on cotton, long
ago declared an unconstitutional tax.
Ben Tillman cries out for repeal ot
the fifteenth amendment as the so
lution of the race problem, declar
ing there will be no “peace, peace"
until It ts done. But the president
elect replied In his New York speech
before the North Carolina Society
Jbat It would never be repealed and
that education to fit the nsgroes to
meet demands of those amendments
was the remedy the nation proposed
And that the Sooth moat accept the
“will of tho notion."—Jam#* Calla
way, to Macon Tetagraph.
Notice of Application for Appoint
ment of Administrator.
Notice is hereby given to the dls-
‘tmtoes and persons entitled
trlbntlon out of the estate
'McClannln. deceased, that
ipllettfon has been, made for the
polntment of a creditor of the es-
of sold deceased er some other
person administrator of the said
~ ‘ire all person!: ori-
,a[|l'"HWluf;ied to
out of the said eatfev
GT hereby notified that unless saldjeaid comptery 1
Administrator's Sale.
GEORGIA—Echols county.
By virtue of an order from the
Court of Ordinary of said county,
Miere wll be sold at public outcry
on the first Tuesday In March, 1909
at the court house door to said coun
ty, between the legal hours of sale,
to the highest and best bidder, the
following described proprty to-wit:
Two hundred acres more or less
of tots of land numberel34 and 135
In the 16th district of saldcounty,
being that part of the Samuel Sta
ten old homestead on wMch the
dwelling Is situated, and not dispos
ed" of prior to tils death, bounded
on the North by lands of Frank Sta
ten. east by what IB known as the
Willie lands, south by lands of J.
B. Staten and west by the Allapaba
river, with the exception of one
acre thereon for cemetery purposes,
where Samuel Staten was burled, to
lie laid out and measured from the
centcr^^ and also
or
Farm*, Town Property,
Timber.
W. F. Floyd,
Real Estate
Broker.
Renting and General'
Trading,
Adel, - Ga,
If ,you want to buy or tell s
GOOD FARM or soma real
good Timber QUICK, write or
see me. I will do the work
for you right. I have 2 or 3
ellants now wanting some good
yellow pine Timber in large
tracts. If the price Is right
W. F. FLOYD,
ADEL. GA.
estate la administered' on within
four weeks from this date, I, as
comity Judge of Taylor county, Flor
ida, where letters of administration
are authorised under, the law to oe
granted, will appoint some creditor
Of the said estate or some lit and
proper person administrator ot the
■aid estate.
Witness my hand and seal of of
fice this Feb. 1st, 1909.
JNO. O. CULPEPPER.
County Judge Taylor County, FIs.
Times Want Ads
TAKEN UP—One dark bay biased
face mare, white hind feet l mouse
colored -Jenny mule. Owner con get
same by calling at B. P. Jones place
“»e» north of Valdosta and pay-
! a * co,t ' 2-2-d2t wit
STOLEN.—Edison No. E phono
graph and six records last Thurs
day night, by well-dressed white
man, giving name as Frank Thomas:
A suitable reward wll] be paid for
return of phonograph to Times offl-
W. F. Bass, Naylor, Oa.
2-2 dlt iwlt.
FOR SALE—Selected Sea Island
cotton seed. These seed are seconu
crop from, the Islands, and have
been carefully selected. During ths
growth of the crop, *11 hybrid or In
ferior stalks were eliminated and
careful attention given to the select
ing of these seed tram the first
pickings. J. L. Collins, R. F. D. No.
2. Lake Park, Oa. 2-9-swCt
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
To in whom It may concern:
John Belote having In proper form
applied to me for permanent tetters
of administration on the estate <if
Albert Belote. late of said county,
this Is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next of kin of Albert
Belote to be nnd appear at my of
fice on the first Monday to March,
and show cause. If sny they can,
why permsnent administration
should not be granted to John Be
lots on Albert Belote’s estate.
Witness my hand snd official sig
nature tbts 1st day of Feb.. 1909.
A. V. STMMS,_Ordlnary._
A8THMA VANISHES.
So Does Catarrh. Crouo, Hay Fever
and Bronchitis.
Hvomel la a confidence creator
The first time yon*, breathe In this
powerful vet soothlUg. antiseptic air,
you will know that It has marvel
ous curative vlrtges. There Is noth*
tog disagreeable about Hyomet. Tt
very pleasant and nrompt rem
edy for catarrh, colds, asthma,
croup, bronchitis, etc.
If your head • la so stuffed with
mucous that you cannot breathe a
partiefp of air through your nostril.:,
Hvomel will open them op nnd give
relief In five minutes.
Why will sensible people suffer
longer, why will they Wheeze and
hawk and spit and zmother. when
A E. Dlmmock wtll gugrantee Hy-
omel to cure or money hack. 91.60
Is all A. E. Dlmmock maka tor a
complete outfit.
"I have used Hyomet for hay fe-
leadlng from 8tatqpvHle to Jaspek
Terms coBh.
Thl# February 4. 1909.
W. -T. Staten, as administrator
the estate of Samuel Staten, de
ceased.
Lowndes Court of Ordinary, Febru
ary Term, 1009.
Mrs. Minnie I. Touchtone, widow
of James L. Touchtone, deceased, to
behalf of herself and her three min
or children, haying filed her petition
to set asldo and declare null and
void the report of the appraisers ap
pointed at the October term, 1908,
of tibia court, to set apart to her for
the benefit of hereelf and her said
children a year’s support out of the
estate ot her deceased husband
aforesaid, 'which said report was
made and filed on Ootober 9, 1609,
and also set wide the order admit
ting said report to record and mak
ing the same the Judgment of the
court, granted at 1 the December
term. 1908; all pc mm a concerned
are hereby required to show cause
before the Court of Ordinary of sail
county on the first Monday In
March, 1909, why sold petition
should not lie granted.
This February 1, 1909.
• A. V. SIMMS. Ordinary.
CABBAGE PLANTSL-CroWn to the _
open air will Btqwe arwe -onv.- Prices''
from 81.00 to |1?° Per thousand t o.
In fro— Jv.Meggetts, 8. 1. N. H. Blltch (to,
^ho public road Meggetts.~ 3. OXl^e tonrert—Iroek .
m *- farm to the wo&#
1-25-d-ms-w-s-marl .
ISLAND RED ts the finest
chicken to Georgia. The eggs can
be had at (1.00 a setting. Mm. W.
E. Rouse. l-30-sw2m.
FOR SALE—Limited amotmt off
fine upland cotton seed, 91.00 per
bushel. Seed freah, grown only one
season In this section. Paid 89.00
per bushel tor them last seaaon and
made a hale and a quarter to the
acre. Place orders at once If yon.
want some of the seed. H. T. Tlh^
man, Valdosta, Ga.
l-26-8t-aw.
FTSHi FISH—^WlrT^flsh trapA
2V4x8 feet. Price 93.00. For sale by
W. T. Corbett ft Son, Lake Park, Oa.
H. P. Nunn, Jennings, Fla. . ,u
1-19-W8L .«
Administrator’s Sale.
Under nnd by virtue of an order
granted bv the Court of Ordinary of
said county, at the regular February
term. 1909, will he sold at the court
house fiSor In said county, on the
first Tuesday In March, 1909. be
tween the legal hours of sale, to the
highest bidder for cash, the follow-
tog described pronerty. to-wlt: 4
houses on the following property
Lying In east Valdosta, lying on the
east side of Jones street 200 feri
and on the north side of Magnolia
street 210 feet, boneded ns follows:
On the north by. lands of W. A. Be
lote. and on tho eaat by lands of
O. K. Jones, and on the south by
Magnolia street, and on the west hy
-------- Jones atreet. Said property belong-
yer. and can pronounce It the beat | |„g to the estate of Mrs. M. M.
relief for this trouhte that I ever Knight, deceased, and sold for the
tried or heard of. I hare had this purpose of maintenance' and educa-
tna’sdr for yehrs. and have doctored'^ )on 0 f the minor children of said
nw'inv ior years, ana n»ve noaorea >t|on of tl
and used many remedies but Hyomet dheeated.
ts far ahead of any of the others,
and has my hearty endorsement.”—
Mrs. M. S. Martin. Cataopolla. Mich,
Aug. 17. 1908.
MIO-NA
Cures Dyspepsia.
R. B. MYDDEl.TON.
Administrator.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
The report of the appralseri ap
pointed to set apart a year’s sup
port to the widow of N. McLeod,
late of Lowndes countv. deceased, _ __
lhaving been duly filed; this Is to; fjliy administered J. W. Stubbs'
cite all. persons concerned, -to ahow t ate; this Is therefore to cite all
| cause. If any they can, why vld re- persons, kindred »n(f creditors, to
Y on? mooep back undent. Gives uu-. port should not be admitted to re-lsbow cause, If any they can, why
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
To all whom It may concern:
S. W. Wright and D. L. Duncan
having In proper form applied t* me
for permanent fetters of administra
tion on the estate of Annie Wright, .
late of said county, this la to cite
all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of Annie Wright to be
and appear at my office on the first
Monday in March and show cause,
If any they can, why permanent a*-,
ministration should not be granted
to 8. W. Wright and D. L. Duncan
on Annie Wright’s estate.
Witness my hand and official rig-
nature this 1st day of Feb.. 1909.
A. V. 3IMM8, Ordinary.
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Echols County:
G. W. Prtne. s resident of said
state having duly applied to be ap
pointed guardian of the pertoh and
property of Ewell Crawsbey, a mi
nor under the age of fourteen yean,
resident in said county, notice ts
hereby given that aald application
wtll be passed on at the next court
of ordinary for aald county to be
held on the firat Monday to March,
1909. .
This February 1st. 1909. 1
J. E. PARRISH.
Ordinary Echols County.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
Whereas. Frank Stubbs, adminis
trator of J. W. Stubbs, represents to
the Court In his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, tbat he has
mediate relief from heartburn, tout stom-
irb, •.cuach <£atreas sad tick headache,
j -ti-i .• lar^e box al
A C. O mmock'a.
cord and be tnsde the judgment of said admlnlatrator should not be dlz-
the court, on the first Monday to
March, 1909.
A. V. SIMMS.
Ordinary Lowndes County.
charged from hla administration and
receive letters of dismission on the
first Monday to March. 1909.
A V. SIMMS. Ordinary.