Newspaper Page Text
THE VALDOSTA TIMES, , SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1905.
THE EMPIRE STORE
* Invites Your Attention to These Four Lines:
TIN WARE.
Funds 05c
Large cooking spoons 3 to 05c
1 1*2 pint covered bucket n 06c
Gallon covered buckets 06c
One quart meaauro 05c
One quart cups 04c
One-half gallon tin cups 05c
Two tin dippers 05c
10 cents k^chen dippers 08c
10 cents water dippers 08c
Mufflin rings {C.rinca) 08c
Mufllin rings .ME»rings) 15c
One quart coffee ,pots 08c
Half gallon coffee pots 10c
Pie plats 3 coots to...: 04c
Large funels, with handle 10c
One-half glalon measure (graduate) 10c
One-half gallon tin crank sifter 10c
One-half pint to 4 quart dairy pans 3c to 08c
Wash basins 05c
10c large wash basins 08c
Three-pint to 4 quart pudding pans 5c to 08c
Ijarge milk strainers 10c
Dish pans, good size 15c to 19c
8ee our Blue Enameled Ware, too.
GLASS WARE.
Cheapest Glassware In town—get our prices.
Lamp chimneys
Salt and pepper shakers q6c
Spoon holders : (Jg c
Cream pitchers gg c
35 cents water pitchers 22c
Gold rim tumblers
One set nice glass tumblers
One set nice glass goblets
Fly proof syrup pitchers 26c
25 cents butier dishes 15^
Lantern globes ...10c
Straight top lamp chimneys iqq
Nice lamps 26c to...4fc^ A 1
Nice 12.00 parlor lamps $1.48
Fancy gold decorated $1.60 water pitchers.,..98c
Large store lamp chimneys ...23c
Pocket mirrors 05e
Ladles' hand mirrors
I-argo 10x13 mirrors 19c
Call for our Chinaware, too, while at the store.
CROCKERY WARE.
Our line of Crockeryware is more complete now
than ever before.
Assorted size flat dishes 10c to 49c
Assorted size bowls, values 8c to 33c
Assorted size deep dishes 10c to 35c
Assorted size scallops 10c to 39c
Fancy shape cups and saucers, good values
per set 48c
Baltimore shapes, per set 45c
Fancy shape cups and saucers—
75 cents nglish make, per set 63c
Seven-inch plain plates 33c
50 cents plain plates 39c
75 cents plain heavy plates 49c
65 cents fancy shaped plates 49c
75 cents fancy shape plates
English make 63c
$1.00 fancy figured plates 78c
$1.25 bowls and pitchers 98c
$1.50 bowls and pitchers $1.29
We guarantee ail of our English goods against
crazing.
SPECIALS.
$4.00 large family Bibles 9g c
$3.50 large eight-day clocks |i.,g
$2.00 large 16x20 framed pictures 98c
$1.50 30x60 Smyrna rugs 9g 0
26 cents 10x13 mirrors ; i9 C
50 cents framed pictures [25c
35 cents galvanized water palls 18c
$1.00 cobbler sets, consisting of stand, three
lasts, one hammer, One knife, two awls, two
paper tacks for
Two rolls cotton bats 25c
200 rolls plain and decorated crepe paper re
duced from 10 and 15c per roll to....8 and 10c
1001 OTHER BARGAINS.
-THE-
Empire Store,
vai.dosta, PA - TER - 0N Georgia.
a*
DR. WOOLLbY’S
Opium and Whiskey
ANTIDOTE
•fill Cor* Permanently at Voor Own
Hume.
Mr.T. M. Brown, of Dt-Queen, Ark., rays:
•■Oier seven jrar* ego I wee enrol of the opium
Jit.bit by your medicine, end Jinve continued In
the verr beat of health aince."
Mr. W M. Tunstell, of Livingston, Vn ,
nri: 'Tern glad to »ay tbatl firmly believe
that lam enfl»t‘ *
I) • Drink Habit,
SMITH TALKS COTTON.
8AY8 ADVOCATES OF BIG CROP
HAVE INJURED THE 80UTH.
I»*lv and permanently cured of
it, ft I i.uve not!
» drink In hit r ^r
yi.*r •radlcator, now 18 n.uU
Ih** beat money I erer invest. <1-
Mrs. Virginia Townaend. of ^brerej
:ol. James M. Smith, the Biggest
Farmer in Georgia, Says 10,000,000
Bales is Enough for the Needs of
the World.
Atlanta, G.
CORDELE HAS A “PEEPING TOM.’
The Citizens Are Arming to Get Rid
of Him.
Cortlele, Feb. 22.—Cordele his a
"Peeping Tom. ’ He has been seen
five or six times this week peerirjg in
through blinds that he has been try
ing to open or had opened. Hq|has
been shot at several times, ant) has
irrln
writes: ‘No
other r$mady ti<
take when I any that my heaL
Ibanlteyrrwa* in inv fife, Ami 1 owe it to you
and your remedy. It has been twelve yearn
%. mid I mak* no
health la Iwtter
T)r. Woolly has thouaanda of auchta*timo-
mat* with permission to use them. A treat-
inen| With SO many recoinineiidntid
Feb. 23.—"Those pco- j been run away from windoWs several
•II good articles harc)~perhap* you have tried
* "hid, hut there ia nothing 1“
It has stood *h(j test of thii
of them, hut
Wwil'n'* *
years. No _ r
* rform, or who hna friends
whiskey t
pie who have strongly advocated
planting a twelve million bale cotton
crop and who have assisted in getting
it planted, have done an immense
amount of harm to the South. There
is no necessity for me to say who they
are—the public is well Informed and
nothing like knows as well as I the people wtlo
opium*™* have urged the farmers to plant more
“cotton."
' Col. James M. Smith, of Smithonia,
woman win
_— . ... „.jv form, or who .
afflicted, abouid h« situtu to write to
OH. II. M. WOOLLRY.
leg Nor.h Pryor sr., i*. o. Ho*. No. 307 ,hc biggest planter in Georgia, and a
iisnrgu 'man who has made over a million
{dollars In farming alone, a candidate
for the governorship of Georgia, Is
in Atlanta. He oame here from bj
lthoi
!«v his book on these diseases, which he will,
FRBB AND CONFIDENTIAL.
times.
Many Cordelians are laying for the
man, so bold has lie become, and
there are probably more firearms to
the square Inch hero than In any oth-
•er city twice* its size in the state.
More than ninety Winchester rifles
were ordered here at one time, to sup
ply sales already made by one deal
er. There are also shotguns galore,
the finest revolvers and shooting
irons of indifferent propensities. The
police are also laying for the prowl
er. “Somebody will gel hlm/'Tls the
general verdict.
TO MAK€ MONEY NEXT YEAR
BY GH0W1NQ GOOD WITtR*
MELONS FROM EDEN SEED?
I ant spring the ravages of rats forced
sm to ulsnt my watermelon crop three
times before s stand was scoured. Con
sequently my melons ripened too Ute
for pn Stable shipment and inetoed of
allowing thrm to dtoay ! anted seed in
the following pelnMtelitng manner from
perfertlv shaped, sited and rtpensd
selected market melons, the first on
I.— [ fBdT made them a rousing speech,
| which won for him » greet oration
from the lmmenee crowd In the hall
ait, in. -
tho perfectly matured seed taken from
the renter and dried with special care.
No Seed veto saved from rejected or
decay, d melons.
I gunrontee these seed to 1m. strictly
flint clnm. «• good as l ate ever been
grown 1 will plant my next year'a
crop from fed In the mime box from
i.l to my cuatonu
only one thou*ntd p.mmla
•rop fi
A'hich ]
As 1
i hand the Mooner order* are vent in
j)ey will be filled,
vnta per pound, caxh. Aa to
•**•■*-, i refer to any mer*
r«M|M>nklblu buxines*
t reap* h!billty ! refei
HENRY D. STILL,
Blackvliln, S. C.
COEN SEED. 1
of the house of representatives at the °f Itself. The most common caul 3 of
coughing Is colds. Anodynes will
Oculist.
Next Visit to Val
dosta Will be
Feb. 20th to 25th,
ONE WEEK ONLY.
Examination free un*
til further notice.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
J. E. Springer & Co.
state capital.
I As tho biggest fanner In Georgia
and possessing one of tho largest
farms In the country. Col. Smith has
for some time been advocating a re
duction In cotton acreage.
“Last year,*' he Said Wednesday
morning to an Atlanta Journal report
er, "I beggod and plead with tho farm
ers of my section, and with every
farmer I could find, to reduce his acre
age. I heard of tho plan to raise*
twelve million bale crop and ! fought
it bitterly.
Cut His Own Crop.
"I went among my neighbors and
insisted that they reduce their crop.
I told them that o ten million halo
crop of American cotton was all tho
world needed. But I was not Incon
sistent— I cut my own crop. I did not
plant as much cotton as I had on pre
vious years. I raised more grain than
I had ever raLiod before. But tho big
crop was raised, and now the South
sees the folly of Its ways.
“I sold some of my cotton early In
the season, and I got good prices for
it. Tho rest, and a largo proportion
of what I raised, I aih holding. I am
also assisting my neighbors to hold
their own cotton, by lending them
money. I am firmly of the opinion
that the Southern farmers haYe at
last realized that they must regulate
the supply of cotton by the demand,
and that they will in future hold the
crop down to, what is needed.
“At present 11,000,000 bales of
American cotton is all that is needed.
Wo are holding two million bales. I
therefore believe that tho farmers of
the South should raise only 10,000,000
this year, and that If they will hold
the crop down to that figure, or low
er, they will got 10 cents for their
cotton. The Increase for the demand
of American cotton Is about 300,000
bales a year.
“But,*' he continued, “It is much
better for the farmers to raise a nine
million bale crop and make money on
it than to raise a 12,000,000 bale crop
and lose money. Tho formers of the
South can get more for 10,000,000
bales of cotton than they can for 12,-
000,000, and if they don't hold the
crop down to the demand, they are
tho biggest set of dunces in the
world."
FILMS! PILES! FILMS!
Dr. WUUama* Indian PUa Ointment la pre
pared to onto Pile*, and DOSS IT la short
order, Easy to applv arery box guaranteed
POPE BROWN WILL RUN.
HE HAS PRACTICALLY ADMIT
TED IT IN ATLANTA.
Chairman of the Railroad Commis
sion Said He Would Be Heard From
Later on This Point—Declares the
Constitution Tried to Put Him in
a Hole.
Atlanta, Feb. 22.—Hon* J. Pope
Brown, chairman of tho railroad com
mission, almost admitted )n talking
politics today that he expected to be
in the race for governor. On that
point he said he would be heard from
later, but regarding his recent inter
view in Savannah, into which he
brought Commissioner O. B. Stevens
as a prospective candidate for rail
road commissioner, ho made the fol
lowing rather warm statement:
“I want to say this, that while In
Savannah a newspaper reporter ask
ed me the quesUon If I would ba re-
It J waa an applicant for
npolhi
sioner, and I told him that I was not
He also asked me who would be ap
pointed In my place, and I stated to
him that I did not know; that I was
not In Governor Terrell’s confidence,
but that I had heard It stated that
Mr. O. B. Stevens would be appoint
ed in my place.
'Now, when I made that statement
I simply repeated what had been
going the rounds of this state for
eighteen months or two years, and
what every man in the state who has
ears to hear has hoard. Now tho Con
stitution tries to make it appear that
I originated the report. They know
that was not truo. They also know
that the report had been going the
rounds, as I said, for many months,
nt least.
j! "The Constitution also knew that I
Mr. Frank Analey, Jr., Married. \'! had no desire to bo commissioner of
Mr. Frank J. Anslcy, Jr., of thllsj»sriculture. and that I had no deal
' on hand to that effect. The Consti
tution also knows that I am not a
member of the combination that has
worked u^ all this talk about * my
m b|jJ-i
fiywl
t&fluppreit it; but remove the
The cough li only a symptom of dome
disease, and the disease Is what you
should cure, then the cough will stop
promptly suppress the cough, and
preparations containing chlorofc rm,
opium, etc., are used for that pur
pose, but they do not cure the cold.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, on the
other hand, does not suppress the
cough, but relieves It by remoi ing
from the throat and lungs tho ml cus
which obstructed the breathing ind
allaying the Irritation and tickling in
the throat It also opens the se :ro)
tlons and effectually and porman mtH
ly euros the cold as well as the cougnl
For sale by W. D. Dunaway. j .
city, was married yesterday afternoon
in Montgomery, Ala., to MJss Mas-
Hall, ono of Alabama’s most charm]
ing young ladies. Tho marriage fvlll
bo a surprlso to tho many friends ofJ^ cu ]^ ure ~ etc
wanting to*Vo commissioner of agrl-
this popular young lumberman, as|-hfr
had not made known his intention
his friends. He left for Montgomary
Sunday, presumably on a buslr ess
trip, and wiU return this morning,
bringing his bride with him.
will be at home for tho present
the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. ^
ley, Sr., on Hansell street. Mr. J
ley’s host of friends will welcome
wife ns a charming addition to the
clety circles of the city, and wilUi^ve
multitude of congratulations
store for both.—Thomasvllle Tin
Enterprise.
his
“I have no desire whatever, and
disclaim any intention of having done
Mr. Stqvens any injustice."
Mr. Brown says in conclusion that
tho objects and purposes of “all the
strenuous efforts to put me In a hole
and deceive the peoplo will be made
known later."
ESTABLISHED IN 1881.
The Oldest Whiskey House in Georgia.
OLD SHARP WILLIAMS
OunntmdkTnraold. Brthog.llon
$8.00. Four full quarts for $8.50 expreu
prepah
ANVIL
CLIFFORD hYE
Four full quarts
Guaranteed 4-years old. By the gallon
12.60. Four full quarts $2.75, express
prepaid.
OLD KENTUCKY CORN
Guaranteed 8-years old, by the gallon
$3 00. Four full quarts $3 25, express
\ prepaid.
Wo handle all tho leading brands of Rye and Bourbon Whiskies in tho
market, and will savo you from 25 per cent, to 50 per cent, on your purchases.
Send for price list and catalogue—mailed freo upon application.
The Altmayer & Flatau Liquor Company,
606-608-510-612 Fourth Street, Macon, Ga. *
BRONCHODA
FOR THROAT AND LUNGS,
CURES
Colds, Coughs, Croup and Bronchitis.
CONTAINS
NO OPIATE OR POISON,
Stops cough, cures cold. Cost 25 cents. If you
continue to cough it Is your fault. Ask your
druggist for it.
Sherrouse Medicine Co.,
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
The Good Old Way.
A severe cold or attack of la grlipo
is like a lire; the sooner you com »t
It the better your chances are to ot
power 1L But few mothers In t Us
ago are willing to do the necesst ry
work required to give a good old-fa ih
toned, reliable treatment such as wo Ud
bo administered by their grandmoth-
backod by Boscho's German
Syrup, which was always liberally
used lu connection with the home
treatment of colds and la still In great
er household favor than any known
remedy. But even without the appll-
caUon of the old-faihloned aids, Gor
man Syrup will care a severe cold'In
quick Ume. It will cure colds In chll-
uren or grown people. It relieves the
congested organs, allays the Irrita
tion and effecttveely atop* the cough.
Any child will take it It la Invalua
ble In a household ot children. Trial
site bottles, 25c; regular alse, 75c.
For salo by W. D. Dunaway.
All the ships of the Ualted States
navy are being supplied with steel
furniture.
Are Your Kidneys Well?
Bright's disease, dtabetls, rheuma
tism, gout, gravel, dropsy, inflamma
tion ot tho bladder, bad blood and ner
vous troubles caused by sick kidneys.
A. E. Dimmock, the well known
druggist of Valdosta, knows by expe
rience that HIND1PO will cure all
forms of kidney and nervous troubles,
and will guarantee It In all cases.
Can’t you afford to try It at his
risk? It costs you nothing if It don't
do the work.
Sent by mall to any address, pre
paid, on receipt of 50 cents. 6 boxes
$2.50, under a positive guarantee.
Statistics of Convicts.
Secretary Goodloo Yancey, of the
prison commission, has about com
pleted some Interesting statistics re
lating to the Georgia penitentiary for
tho United States census bureau.
These statistics show that on Janua
ry 1, 1905, there were In the state pen
itentiary 2,232 convicts, as compared
with 2,316 on the date of the last re
port, showing a decrease of 83. Of
those In the penitentiary 51.2 per
cent, can read and write, 8.8 per cent,
can read only, while 40 per cent, are
wholly Illiterate. There are a few
more than 1,000 married men In the
pel ltcntiary, while the balance are
sin ;!e.
WE
From Hey*
wood Bros.
& Wakefield
Co., and we
are now able
to suit you
in prices and in quality. There is no
comparison. Bost made in the
world.
If yon are in need of a cart como
see onr line. Wo will arrange payments to suit any ono. *
Mail Orders Solicited.
Thomas Furniture Go.,
VALDOSTA, GEORGIA.
NOTICE.
I want every man and woman in the
United Staten interested in the care of
the Optam or Whiskey habits, either for
themselves or friends to have one of my
books on these diseases. Address Dr
B M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box 307,
and one will be sent you free.
Machinery for Sale.
One 20-horse engine and boiler; one No. 3
saw mill oomplrte with Beppard roller; one
grist mill; three English gins; one steam can#
mill sad two SOgauoti boilers: ooe log cart:
one lot belting end shafting. All in fair order.
The shore wifi be eokl for esah to the highest
bidder, it the George W. Herndon homestead
in Lowndes county, on Wednesday. March
8th. 1005. M. M. HERNDON,
Administrator.