Newspaper Page Text
MS SHE *
PRINCESS ?
Qeath of Mme- Kent Recalls the
Story of Her Life-
CLAIMED TO HAVE BEEN THE
First-Born Daughter of V.ctoria-
Daughters Exchanged at Time
of Baptism.
Sophia Adelaide, who astounded
England a few years ago by assert
ing that she was the daughter of
prince Albert and Queen Victoria,
j s dead, says a late New York
Globe-Democrat special.
She passed away yesterday at
the German hospital. Inanition
and the hot weather were the con
tributing causes of death.
The life story of this woman who
claimed the birthright of a princess
to the throne of great Britain reads
like a bit of romance from the lives
of kings and the royal houses of
ancient days.
Briefly, the story is of two chil
dren who were changed at christen
ing, one of them being the princess
royal, Sophia Adelaide, the eldest
daughter of Queen Victoria and
the Prince Consort, and the other
child of the Prince Consort by a
morganatic marriage with a lady
of the court of Saxe-Coburg.
Prince Albert, so the story goes,
was deeply enamored of a beauti
ful woman of the court, and was
united to her in a left hand marri
age before his fateful meeting with
Victoria and her choice of him for
her consort. When this royal fa
vor came to him, of course it was
not to be put aside. It was not
thought that the morganatic mar
liage would cut any great figure,
but when the left-handed wife
learned that her husband was
about to contract a marriage with
the youthful queen, she threatened
to make public the story of the
previous marriage, which had
hitherto been kept secret from all
excepting two members of the
prince’s family. It was feared
that the queen, with her well
known religious principles and her
firm adherence to duty as she saw
it, would withdraw her proposal to
Prince Albert, did she learn of this
marriage. The wife was firm in
her determination, and finally
yielded only upon one condition:
That her child should be substitu
ted for the firstborn of the royal
marriage, and should eventually
cime to the throne of England.
Prince Albert, seeing no other way
out of the difficulty, consented,
and the story of his marriage with
Oueen Victoria is known to all the
world.
In the meantime, a relative of
Prince Albert’s wedded his forsak
en wife. The two children were
born very nearly at the same time,
there being but a slight difference
in their ages, and both were little
girls.
KXCHANGE OK BABIES.
With the christening of the little
princess royal came the supreme
moment. It was then that the ex
change of babies was made, and it
was the little daughter of Prince
Albert and his morganatic wife
who was christened as the princess
royal, and who henceforth all
her life received the homage
due to that exalted position
becoming finally the wife of the
emperor of Germany, while the real
little princess passed under the
name of the Piitice.-sS Adelaide, and
was supposed to be the daughtei of
the relative of Prince Albert, who
wedded the latter’s discarded wife.
She was placed in charge of a lady
and a gentleman in waiting, who
hsd charge of the education, and
the prince placed at their disposal
large sums of money, in order that
nothing might be lacking for her.
It was a strange education that
she received, however. Nothing
taught her of the history of
England, either in the present or
BEST FOR THE
BOWELS
” J°u haven’t a regular, healthy movement of the
£ e i every dav, you're ill or will be. Keep yojn
f open, and be well. Forae.in the shape of vio-
Jr Physio or pill poison, is dangerous. The smooth
‘•JMteKt. most perfect way of Weeping the bowel*
UT Ul *d clean is to take
JSI CANDY
CATHARTIC*
EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY
ra 'taWe. Potent. Tonte flood, PoGood
r Bl ken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10, *5, and 50 eentf
h ea i,v**-. Writ* for free sample, and booklet on
STrt>, Ac *drees <33
KLIXG UKUEDT COHPASY, CHICAGO or JiRW TORS.
keep your blood glean
•"** KI Him ... ae| ii
the past; she was not even rightly
given the names of the royal fam
ily, and newspapers and perioricals
were religiously kept fruu her.
Of all that had taken place, of
course, Queen Victoria was kept in
complete ignorance. Site never
knew of the little princess other
I than as a distant relative of her
i husband, and never connected with
| her the absences which took the
prince consort away from herself
at intervals, for the prince was pas
sionately fond of his little wronged
daughter, loving her far more de
votedly than any one of his ' ac
knowledged children, and he used
to go and visit her for days at a
time, though the child only knew
him as an “uncle,” and was never
toki that he was the prince consort
of the queen.
Years passed by and finally' the
prince consort was about to die.
Remorse for the deception he had
practiced preyed upon him. Final
ly he confessed all to the queen,
whose indignation and anger,
when she learned how she had
been duped, knew no bounds. * In
fact, it became necessary' to re
move her from the bed chamber of
the prince, lest she do him some
harm, and it was the Princess Al
ice who kept watch by his bedside
and who soothed his last hours.
Policy', cf course, demanded that
not a whisper of this reach *ne pub
lic. and the sad affair was success
fully kept secret from all except
John Brown, who heard the story
from the prince, and his knowledge
of this secret would explain, doubt
less, the mysterious hold which he
had upon the queen.
PRINCE ALBERT’S WILL.
Iu his will Price Albert made
such restitution as he could, leav
ing a large fortune in trust with
Paris bankers for his child, and it
is supposed that this was the reas
on why Queen Victoria forbade
the contents of his will from being
made public, defying the laws of
England upon that question.
Later, it will be remembered, the
queen caused a law to be passed by
parliament, providing that the last
testaments of royalty should be ex
empt from publication.
Years later, when Victoria was
very ill, she relented, and told
John Brown that she wanted him
to send for Princess Adelaide, and
that in case it was decided that she
could not recover she would
acknowledge her daughter. Prin
cess Adelaide was sent for post
haste, and came without delay to
Windsor castle. The queen’s ill
ness took a favorable turn, how
ever, and the princess departed
again without seeing her royal
mother.
Throughout all these years, the
princes's had been supplied by'
Paris bankers with a very large
income, which had been left for
her by the prince consort. All at
once this income stopped. No
reason was given for its cessation,
but it was surmised that the dis
sipations of the Prince of Wales,
which at that time were at their
height, had caused such a drain
upon the royal coffers that the
queen found it expedient to divert
from their purpose the funds which
the prince had left for his daugh
ter.
WENT TO NEW ORLEANS.
Thus thrown upon her own re
sources, the poor princess, today
unfitted to cope with the hardships
of the world, came to America, ac
companied by her faithful gentle
in-waiting, the noblewoman who
had so long been her devoted per
sonal attendant having died some
time before These two came to
New Orleans, where the man was
taken ill with yellow fever.
Upon hig deathbed lie persuaded the
princess to marry him and the cer
emony was performed. She, how
ever, did not take his name, but
passed as Mine. Kent. Later she
was married again, this time to a
physician who attended her first
husband, and who learned from
him the secret of Mine. Kent’s par
entage. A few years later he
also died, leaving the poor woman
practically alone in the world.
Some prominent people in New
York, to whom her story had been
confided, and who believed it, did
their best to assist her, and a few
years ago she published a book
telling the strange story of her life
just as it had developed, and at the
last heard from her she was living
i;i poverty in New York city, ex
isting upon the sales of the book
and upon the charity of her
friends.
Mine. Kent was a woman of won
derful grace and refinement and ex
quisite charm of manner, with the
most remarkable resemblance to
Queen Victoria, the similarity be
tween them being much more
marked than between the queen
and the acknowledged princess
royal, the Dowager Empress of
Germany.
OABTOHIA.
B*arg tie Kin(l Haife BOUgtlt
SYMPTOMS OF BAD BLOOD
There is a popular belief that every boil is worth
many times its weight in gold, and the sufferer
patiently, even cheerfully, endures the pain under the
mistaken idea that these little tormentors are health
promoters; that the}' thin the blood when too thick,
and cleanse and cool it when too hot or too rich. On
the contrary, boils and carbuncles are evidence of blood
poverty, or a fearfully depraved condition of that fluid.
There may be no external evidence of bad blood until
the warm days of spring set in motion the sluggish
circulation and the pent-up impurities, unable to escape
through the natural outlets, gather near the surface of
the skin, and a Carbuncle or a Boil is the result. When the blood is burdened with an
undue amount of this impure matter, the Boils come hi greater number, eat deeper into the
surrounding flesh, and, being nearly always located on a bed of nerves, cause the most
intense suffering. Robust and apparently healthy people are subject to Boils, and there is
always some hidden agency at work within the "blood and system that will eventually
undermine the health, but those whose constitutions are broken down by previous sickness
or other causes, are most often the unhappy victims of Boils and Carbuncles. Exposure to
the deadly malaria destroys the red corpuscles and reduces the blood to such a weak and
watery condition that it succumbs to the boil-producing poisons, and the pale and sallow
DANGEROUS CARBUNCLES.
Kr. J. B. Scott, a. resident of Hnzel
hurst, Miss., writes: “S.'S. S. cured
a malignant carbuncle on my neck
which tire doctors had been unable to
bring to a head. As soon as I began
to use S. S. S. I was relieved of pain
and the dreadful carbuncle got entirely
well. My skin is clear, sound and
smooth, and I am well today through
using S. S. S. lam 6f years eld.”
kidneys or chronic liver trouble, brought on by lack of nutritious blood; or it may develop
into a running abscess or ugly eating sore, causing years of suffering, and often terminating
fatally. To seek relief from the inflammation and pain produced by these terrifying erup
tions through the application of local remedies is natural and right, but this method of
treatment does not prevent others coming, or bring the slightest relief to the disease-burdened,
deeply poisoned blood. Only a thorough regeneration and building up of the depreciated
blood can bring about a lasting cure of Carbuncles and Boils and prevent their reappearance.
S. S. S. restores to the old blood all its lost properties, re-invigorating and giving it the
healthy red color that only pure, fresh blood can have, and through this new blood strength
and vigor comes to the bodily organs; the skin resumes its
ft functions, and impurities of whatever character are taken
1 tip and filtered out of the system in nature’s way.
S. S. S. is made exclusively of roots and herbs selected
1 I for their wonderful purifying and tonic properties. It cures
blood poison diseases of all kinds, whether acute or chronic.
No matter how long the poison may have been in the blood,
S. S. S. removes every vestige of it, thus insuring a faultless circulation and healthy body.
Those subject to boils or any skin eruption, old sores or ulcers, are asked to write our
physicians all about their disease, and any information or advice wanted will be cheerfully
and promptly given without any cost to the patient whatever. A valuable book on Blood
and Skin Diseases sent free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
FOOD VALUE OF VEGETABLES.
Specific Effects of Various Plants
That Reach the Table.
What To Eat.
Tomatoes rouse torpid liver and
do the work ordinarily of a doctor’s
prescription.
Lettuce has a soothing, quieting
effect upon cne nerves, and is an
insomnia remedy.
Celery is an acknowledged nerve
tonic, and is more and more used
in medical prescriptions.
Onions are also a tonic for the
nerves.
Dandelions purify the b'ood and
generally are declared to tone up
the system.
Watercress, which is now at its
best, is a “good, all around” brace
up for the system.
Potatoes should be eschewed by
those who ‘‘have a horror of get
ting fat,” as that is one penalty of
eating them.
Spinach has medicinal proper
ties and qualities equal to the most
indigo of all blue pills ever made.
Parsnips, it is now contended by
scientists, possess almost tne same
virtues that are claimed for sarsap
arilla.
Beets are fattening, and even a
moderately learned man will ex
pand because of the sugar con
tained in them.
Asparagus is efficacious in kid
ney ailments to an extent that is |
not yet perhaps thoroughly appre
ciated.
Cucumbers, aside from sunbeam
emitting properties known to read
ers of facetious paragraphs, con
tain an acid that is helpful in some
cases of dyspepsia.
Cabbage in Holland is regarded
as something of a blood purifier,
but the authority is vague. In
Germany its efficacy is purely
sauerkraut.
Parsley will assist good digest-.j
ion like cheese and nuts, but a
quantity in excess of ordinary cap
acity has to be consumed. Therein i
lies the joker.
Pumpkins are an ingredient in
a patent medicine that is guaran
teed to cure quite a variety of ail
ments flesh is heir to, but the world
is increasing her inhabitants who
do not believe all they hear.
sufferer is continually nurs
ing one or more of these
feverish and painful erup
tions. A harmless Boil is
sometimes the precursor of
dreaded Cancer, and too
often the best evidence of a
deranged condition of the
New Boxer Movement-
Shanghai, July io.—A new
boxer movement is being started,
according to Chinese intelligence.
Pu Chun, the heir apparent, with
other members of Prince Tuan’s
family, lias gone to join Prince
Tuan on the borders of Mongolia,
and there are indications tliai
Prince Tuan is preparing to march
against the foreigners, with the
tacit approval of the empress dow
ager.
IT GIRDLES THE GLOBE.
The fame of Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve, as best in the world, extends
round the earth. It’s the one per
fect healer of Cuts, Corns, Burns,
Bruises, Sores, Scalds, Boils, Ul
cers, Felons, Aches, Pain and all
Skin Eruption. Only infallible
Pile cure. 25c a box at Young
Bros’.
Night Was Her Terror.
“I would cough nearly all ni.h
long,” writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate,
of Alexandria, Ind., “and could
hardly get any sleep. I had con
sumption so bad that if I walked a
block I would cough frightfully and
spit blood, but, when all other tried- ]
icine failed, three .SI.OO bottles of {
l)r. King’s New Discovery wholly J
cured me and I gained 58 pounds.”
It’s absolutely guaranteed to cure
Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe, Bronchi
tis and all Throat and Lung Troub
les. Price 50c and SI.OO. Trial bot
tles free at Young Bros, drug store.
A Fir < man’s Clse Call.
•‘1 stuck to my engine, although
every joint ached and every nerve
was racked with pain,” writes C.
\V. Bellamy, a locomotive fireman,
of Burlington, lowa.. “I was weak
and pale, without any appetite and
all run down. As I was about to
give up, I got a bottle of Electric
Bitters and, after taking it, I felt as
well a I ever did in my li’e.” Weak
sickly, run down people always
gain new life, strength and vigor
from their use. Try them. Satis
faction guaranteed ny Young Bros
Price 50 cents.
CASTOTtIA.
Bears the /) The Kind You Hate Always Bough
rtf''
/ x
BANEFUL BOILS.
Mr. R. M. Pratt, Cave, S. C., says :
“For twenty years I was afflicted with
boils and carbuncles, part of the time
being unable to work or sleep. Several
doctors treated mo and I tried numer
ous blood remedies, but roceived no
benefit. During the summer of 1888 I
was persuaded to try S. S. S. A few
bottles cured me entirely and I have
had no return of these painful pests.”
Mrs. Malaprop—“ Well, her hus
band has given her that hat she
wanted.” Mrs. Gabble—“l sup
pose she’s pleased now.” Mrs.
Malaprop—“ Pleased? She’s posi
tively elaborated.”
Attractive Women.
All women sensiulv desire to be
att. active. Beauty is the stamp of
health because it is the outward
manifestation of inner purity. A
healthy woman is always attract
ive, bright and happy. When
drop of blood in the veins is
pure a beauteous flush is on the
cheek. But when the blood is im
pure, moroseness, had temper and
a sallow complexion tells the tale
of sickness, all too plainly. And
women to-day know is no
[beauty without health. Witte of
jCardui crowns women with beauty
and attaetiveness by making strong
and healthy those organs which
make her a woman. Try Wine of
Cardui, and in a month your friends
will hardly know you.
Says He Was Tortured.
“I suffered such pain from corns
I could hardly walk,” writes H.
Robinson, of Hillshurough. Ills ~
“but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve com
pletely cured them.” Acts like
magic on sprains, bruises, cuts
sores, scalds, burns, boils, ulcers.
Perfect healer of skin diseases and
piles. Cure guaranteed by Young
Bro*. 25c.
Citation for Dismission.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
Clias. A Davis, executor of the last will and
testament of Martha E. Jackson, deceased, hav
ing hied his petition for discharge from said ex
ecutorship, this is therefore to cite all persons
concerned, to show cause against the granting of
discharge, if anv they can. at the regular
term of the Court of Ordinary for said county to
be held on the first Monday in September, iooi,
else the same will be granted as applied for. This
June 3, 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Notice.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To Jane, Lindsey and Emma Milner, of said
county, and Robert Thompson. Sarah Parker,
Spencer Marsh, Ambrose Marsh and Carrie
Perkins, non-residents of said state, heirs-at-law
of Timothy Marsh, deceased:
Notice is hereby gien that 1 have hied my ap
plication with the ordinary of said county, for an
order for attribution in kind of the residue of
the estate of Timothv Marsh, late of said county,
deceased, now remaining in my hands as adminis
trator and that said application will be heard at
the regular term of the Court of Ordinary for
said county to be held on the first Monday in Oc
tober, 1901. This June 4th, 1901.
JAMES UREN
Administrator Estate of 1 imothy Marsh, dec.
am-4mo. ,
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To the Superior Court of said County. The
tv tsiion ot David iseman, T. H. Sloan, John
Brittain, all of the State of I’ennsylvania. and
J. F Brittain, oi the state of Tennessee, and B.
C h loan, of the state of Georgia, respectfully
shows:
First. That l'etitinnersdesirefor themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns, to Hi in
corporated ar.d made a bodv co-p-WYt.* and pol
itic, under the .uws ul , under the corpor
ate name and stvle of "'1 he Pittsburg & Georgia
Mining L- Manufacturing Company ”
Second Petitioners desire to be incorporated
for the term of twenty years, with the privilege of
renewal as often as the same can be done under
the law-s of the state.
Third. The objects of said corporation are
pecuniary gain to its stockholders, by means of
engaging in some one or more of the following
business enterprises, to wit:
(A) The buying, owning, leasing, selling,
sub-letting and renting of teal property.
(B) The mining, quarrying and selling iron
ore. manganese, ochre, barytes, limestone, and
any or all other metal, minerals, stones or clays
that they mav desire to mine, and also the pur
chasing and dealing in the above named articles.
(C) The manufacture of pig iron, ferro-man
ganese. steel and other products of ores and min
erals; and buving charcoal. coke, re
fining barytes, ochres and clays of a 1 kinds, as
they may desire to purchase or mine.
(D) The operation of such plants mills or
furn res as mav be required to convert the above
named crude materials into moie valuaole and
saleable condition, and the doing of anything and
everything u-Aial and necressary in the operation
of a mining and manufacturing enterprise.
Fourth. The particular business oi the-said
Corporation will be to mine, quarry. Prepare for
market and sell either in the crude or manufact
ured state, any or all of tl.e ores, minerals or
clays herein before enumeiated from properti-s to
be acquired by said corporation eh her bv deed or
contract of lease in the County of Ba tow State
of Georgia, or elsewhere, within or .without said
State.
Fifth. Petitioners show that the capital
stock of said Corporation will upon it-, organiz
ation lie Sixty Thousand Dollars, and they de
sire the corporation to have the power of increas
ing the same from time to time -is Hi ’ ■ ■clnffßij
andinterests may require, to Two Hundred Thous
and Dollars, and that said stock will tie divided
into shates of fifty- dollars each, which shall be
paid tor bv the subscribers either in cash or prop
erty, and if in property, then such property to be
taken by the corporation in payment ot subscrip
ed capital stock at such valuation as may be
agr edupon and such agreement to be conclusive,
and no stockholder to be liable for anv of the
debts or demands against the corporation or any
damages against the corporation, after the stock
has been fully paid for, eitlier ir. cash cr proper
ty or both.
- ixth. Petitioners desire the right to sue and
be sued: to have and use a common seal: to make
by-laws binding upon its members which aie not
inconsistent with the laws of the state and to al
ter or amend or rescind the same: to mertgaj e,
seP or convey any of its properties, real or person
al; to borrow money, issue notes, drafts, bills of
exchange, as well as to issue bonds and debent
ures and to secure the same vy mortgage, deed or
other conveyance either absolutely or in trust up
on any of its rights, properties or franchises as
may be determined bv a majority of its stock: to
issue capital stock both common and preferred as
may be determined, and to sell the same as well as
the bonds of the corporation for money or prop
erty and to receive property of anv kind in pay
ment of subscription to the capital stock upen
the organization oi the corporation.
Seventh f etitioners desire that no person
al liability attach to any of the officers or stock
holders oi the corporation after the stock sub
scribed tor shall have been fully paid up either in
money or property accepted by the corporation
and that the corporation shall have such other
rights, privileges and powers as are incident to a
corporation of this character and conducive to its
interests.
Eighth. Petitioners desire that the chief of
fice and place of business ot said corporati n slia’l
he in Bartow county. Georgia, and that it have
power to establish branch offices in the city of
Pittsburg, Pa., and at such other places tithe' in
or out of the state ot Geo-gia as may be deemed
necessary by the corporation
Wherefore pe itioners pray to be made a body
corporate and politic under the name and style
aforesaid, entitled to the rights, privilegs and im
munities and subject to the liabilities fixed by
law. 1 his J une 2}th, 1901.
J. \\. HARRIS,
Attornev-for Petitioners.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
I, L W. Reeves, Jr., Clerk of the Superier
Court of said county, do heieby certify that the
fo egoing is a true and correct copy of the origi
nal application for charter now ot file in my of
fice. Given under my hand and official seal this
2tth day of June. iqoi.
L. W. REEVES, JR , Clerk.
Twelve Month’* Support.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
The appraisers appointed to set ar art a twelve
months’ support for the tamilv ot William E.
Corbin, deceased, havinir filed their return, all
persons concerned are hereby cited and required
to show cause in the Court of Ordinary ot said
county, by July ist next, why the application for
said twelve month’s support should not be grant
ed. This June 4th, 1931.
<.KO W - END KICKS. Ordinary
Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: Joe M. Moon, ad
ministrator ot John nlliott. deceased, has in due
form applied to the undersigned for leave to sell
the lands belonging to the estate of said deceased,
and said application will be heard on the first
Monday in July next. This Tune ird. iqm.
G. W, HEN PRICKS, Ordin* ry. _
Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA. Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: Joe M. Moon, ad
ministrator of Linford Abernathy, deceased, has
in due form applied to the undersigned for leave
to sell lands belonging to the estate of said de
ceased, and. said application will be heard on the
first Monday 111 July next. This June trd. 1901.
G. W. HENDRICKS. Ordinary.
Leave to Sell Land.
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: lames \V. Whit
worth, Administrator of I’. A \\ hitworth, de
ceased. has in due form applied to the undersign
ed for leave to sell the lands belonging to the es
tate of said deceased, and said applica ion will be
heard on the hist Monday in August next This
July ard, 1901.
G W HENDRICKS, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration
GEORGIA, Bartow County.
To whom it may concern: Thos. H. Baker, as
a creditor, having in proper form applied to me
fer pernament letters of Administration on the
estate of Alexander Ferguson, late ot said coun
ty, to be granted to J. M Moon, county admr.
This is to cite all and singularly the creditors
and next ot kin of Alexander Ferguon, to be and
appear at my office wi bin the time allowed by
law, and show cause, if any they can, wfiv perma
nent adminlstracion should n-t be granted to J.
M. Moon, county administrator on Alexander
Ferguson’s estate. Hitness my hand and cfticial
signature, this "fid dayot July. 1931.
G. W. HEN Dr lIKS. Ordinary.
Citatisn for Dismission.
Estate Caleb Gi’reath.
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
Whereas, W. A. Jackson, executor of Caleb A.
Gilreath. represents to the Court in his petition,
duly filed and entered on record, th-it he has fully
administered. Caleb A. Gilrea'h sestate. I his is
therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause, if any they can. why
saidexecutorshouidnot.be discharged from his
administration, an 1 receive 1.-tters ot dismission
on the first Monday in October next f
This Ju j Ist. 1901.
G W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary
Citation tor Dismission.
Estate J. D. Ifowdoin.
GEOF.GIA, Bartow County.
Whereas, E. C. Bowdoin, administratrix oi f.
D Bowdoin, represents to the court in tier peti
tion duly hied, that she has fully administered J.
D Bowdoin’s estate. This is therefore to cite all
persons concerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause it any they can, why said administration
and receive letters of dismission on the first Mon
day in October next. This July Ist, 1901
G W. HENDRICKtv Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA, Bartow County:
To whom it may concern: James W. Whit
worth. having in proper form applied to n.e for
permanent letters of administration on the estate
of Mrs. P. A Whitworth, late of said county,
this is to cite all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of Mrs. P. A. Whitworth, to be and
appear at my office within the time allowed Dy
law, and show cause, if anv they can, why peima
nent administration should net >e granted to
James VV. Whitworth on Mrs. P. A. \\ hitworth’s
estate. Witness my hand and official signature,
this 16th day of May, 1901.
G. VV. HENDRICKS, Qrd narj.