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Wr
frOMEN WHO CHARM
HEALTH IS T IE FIRST ESSENTIAL
It Halpa Women to Win and Sold
Man's Admiration, ftespaot and Lora
Woman'* greatest gift a the power to
lniplre admiration, respect, and lore.
There I* a beauty in health which is
inoreattractiTs toman than mere regu
larity of feature.
lore an! admiration of her husband,
ahonld be a woman's constant study.
At the first indication of ill-health,
painful or irregtflar menstruation,
headache or backache, secure Lydia B.
I'inkham's Vegetable Compound and
begin its uae.
Mrs. Chao. P. Brown, Vice-President
Mother*’ Club, >1 Cedar Terrace, Hot
Spring*, Arlc., writes i
Dear Mrs, rinlthamj—
“ Fonda* years I dragged through a mlssr-
THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1905.
pusuainvuMa aoosuajnouceuawo^
man! bra woman anserineas I was, but who
had been ottrad by Lydia 11.1’lnkhani'i H
t table Compound, end I determined to t
At the end of three months IwaeadlsMi
wocnaA Every one remarked about It, and
my hatband fell in lore with me ell over
again. Lydia H. Plnkhara's Vegetable Com-
L Pinhham'a Vegetable Com-
rxKzna nuns up my entirr ‘ *
wemb trouble, and I fait
I am ears It wfll make every saffering i
strong, will and hawy, as it has me."
Women who are troubled with paln-
ful or irregular menstruation, baok-
ache, bloating (or flatulenoe), leuoor-
rhoea, (ailing, Inflammation or uloera
tion of the uterus, ovarian troubles,
that “bearing-down'' feeling, dizzi
ness, faintness, Indigestion, or nervous
prostration may be restored to perfect
health and atrength by taking Lydia
1, Pinhham'a Vegetable Compound,
GIDDEN’S
FURNITURE CO.
A Great Meeting at Waycroaa.
The twenty-elxth state convention
of the Georgia Young Men’s Christian
Association will be held at Waycross,
February 18-21, 1905. Reduced rates
have been secured on the railroads,
and free entertainment will be pro
vided.
The state committee, through the
columns of this paper, extends a spe
cial invitation to tho men of this com
munity to be represented and to par
ticipate In the discussions relating to
definite religious work among men
and boys. Pastors of churches ancj
their Christian workers who are inter
ested in the young men of their re
spective towns are Invited to attend.
Among the strong speakers to be
present may be mentioned Mr. Geo.
B. Hodge, educational secretary of
International committee, New
York, with bis charts and diagrams,
showing the remarkable growth of the
department of education. Monday
night will be given to a stereopticon
xhlbltion of the many points of In
Brest In connection with it. Mr. H.
O. Williams, of Richmond, Va., will
speak on the industrial department of
the association, which is now being
utilized not only by the railroad com
panies, hut also by the lumber men,
mill owners, street car and other em
ployers of large bodies of men. Other
speakers will be Mr. C. L. Gates, field
secretary of the International commit
tee, Atlanta, and many of the strong
est workers of tho Young Men's Chris
tlan Associations of Georgia.
The convention will open with
banquet on Saturday nlgth, 18th lu
slant, where aftor-dinnor talks will bo
made by several of tho delegates. So
dal features will bo prominent
throughout the convention.
la Showing a Very Full Line of High
grade and Uodinm Priced
FURNITURE
—AND-
House Furnishing Goods.
Wo carry everything for thofnraish-
ing of the homo, and to roaponziblo peo
ple offer^juods on inateUmenti at cash
prices. Call and see our stock
Mr- J. D. Register la with us, and
will be glad to zeo and servo his friends
wlion they oomo to town.
The Value of Advertising.
The time Is rapidly approaching
when no business which depends for
Its success on (he patronago of tho
general public can agord to Ignore
the power and the commercial value
of newspaper advertising. In this pro
gressive and enlightened ago It has
become such a science and has been
dovelopcd to such a high degree of
perfection that it is ono or the indis
pensable factors In tho progress of
tho world.
There was a time whon the banks,
for instance, did not feel the neces
sity of appealing to the public through
the newspapers, but that time has
passed away, and it has recently been
reduced to a certainty that, everything
else being equal, the bank which ad-
verities has a.distinct advantagfover
- -oiUTwhlctt does not.
Five years ago, some banks In Pitts
burg began to advertise, and recent
ly thoy measured the results by com
paring their business with that ot
banks that did not advertise. In the
live years tho banks that sought now
business through printer's Ink gained
38 per cent. In assets and 85 per cent.
In deposits. The other banks gained
27 per cont. In assets and 11 pel- cent.
In deposits. During tho last year tho
former gained 22 per cent, and the
latter lost 7 per cent In dopostts.
These simple facts carry their own
story with thorn. ThSy show beyond
a doubt that advertising—and partic
ularly newspaper advertising—Is high
ly effective In Increasing tho business
of a bank, and this Is but a reflection
of the same conditions which pcrvall
In every other modern business.—At
lanta Nows •
ASHLKY STREKT.
J. LUTHER GIDDENS, Mgr.
‘A BEAUTY.”
"Those who know" indorse the quality
of the finger rings we eelt as enthusiaa-
ttoolly as those who only judge by ap
peoranoo. Critical examination merely
tend, to enhanoe the value of the genu
we show.
J. E. Springer & Co.,
Watoh Ins Deo ion u. a. 6 F. R. R.
Fire insurance,
ado Insurance.
Your Property With
Richardson,
tho beat Insurance in the
We represent nothing
108 S. Patterson
Fads of Men of Money.
These strong men ot monoy have
their weak sides; they have their
fads, and will spend money like
water on them. Mr. Keene's weak
ness Is tho race horse: Mr. Morgan's
Is pictures; the late Mr. Whitney's
was rugs (he Is said to have paid $25.-
000 for one, and . tho transaction
would have been all right had ho left
the two last ciphers off the prlco);
Mr. Brady's of tho tobacco trust, Is
black poaris; Mr. Addlcks' of Bay
Stato Gas Is emeralds, while Mr. I-aw-
son will go In pawn to buy a ruby.
Mr. I-awebn travels boyond fads,
and owns to superstitions. He pins
his faith to the numeral throe, and
Its multiples. Hla telephones are 3333
and 3339; his offices are 33 State
street; one of his pet copper mines
Is tho Trinity, and he begins his great
enterprises on the third of the month.
Hla "big medicine,”, es the Indians
would call It, la a chain of 333 golden
bonds, each with a gypsy girl’s face
enameled thereon, and this fetish he
consu'ts and communes with In ways
known only to himself.—Saturday
Evening Post.
ENTIRE WORLD’6 FIRST BILLION
AIR..
The New York Commercial Is a
conservative financial journal. I’J hua
been Its tendency to under-estimate
rather than to exaggerate. And that
paper states that In a few yean the
fortune of John D. Rockefeller wijl be
fully one billion dollars) and that the
oil king’s present income is $5,Of),000
a month. i
As fsr as the actual possession of
money Is concerned, the public ife not
harmed. The gold la noil Iockeq up.
It has not been burled. l|The dillars
are In circulation and pasllng th.lough
the hands of the butchem the baker
and manufacturer. I)
And Mr. Rockefeller cannot eat
them nor wear them; or ward o^f dis
ease and old age with them. As far
as he is personally concerned and be
yond the million or two that he spi-nds
annually in gratifying hobbles and in
actual living expenses, these dollars
might as well be so much old junk
for all the real good they do him
But they do represent power.
They do make it possible for ona
man to say who shall work arnT who
shall starve, and who shall engail
business and who shall not be alio
to compete in the markets of
world. They make it possible to con
trol legislation as well as the finances
of tho country. By centralizing indus
try and hogging opportunity thoy force
an increase in the number of those
who must work for wage* • dnd de
crease the number of those who em
bark in business for themselqvts.
There are wise men In this country
who see in this coming billionaire and
what he represents a greater danger
than America has ever known before
and who believes that it can only be?
curbed by one of two method*/—Leg
islation, rightly enforced, or revolu
tion.
The last must not be.
And while the world awaits
peaceful solution of this great prob
lem the fortune that Is too great for
the human mind to comprehend is
growing, growing. j
A HAPPY
HOME
/ I* one when health abounds.
I With Impure blood there can-
I not be good health.
With a disordered UVER there
cannot be good blood.
TutfsPills
revivify the torpid UVER and gators
Its natural action.
A healthy UVER means pure
blood. im
Pure blood means health.
Health means happiness.
Take no Substitute. All Druggists.
WE WANT ALL INTERESTED IN
.MACHINERY
to Have oun name ezrosc them
DURING 1809
Write us stating what kind of
Maohinehv you use or will
Install, and we' will msll you
Fnae of All Cost
A HAND30UC AND USIFUL
Pocket Diary and atlas
on A LASOZ
COMMERCIAL CALENDAR
Glbbes Machinery Company,
COLUMBIA, & a
A STOOK op horsk power mat
PR CASKS TO ■■ OLOSKD OUT AT
8PEC1AL PR1CE8
Looks Good, Tastes Good, Is Good,
LEE 61 RYE
“Old Enough to Vote.”
W. D. NEWSOM, Distributor,
Valdosta, Qeorgia.
S0+0+0+04-0+0+0+0v.0*t.0d-0+0«|.u*0^u+0»*'l>'i-0‘p0l*0+0+0+0«p0+04'®
o
Inirata Lumber Company,
LUMBER,
Shingles and Wood.
Mill No. 1, Doerun, Qa.
Mill No. 2, Cutting, Oa.
ROUGH AND DRESSED
*
TELEPHONE NO. 107.
Valdosta, Qa. J
'•'+0+0+.-+0+0+0+0+0 J+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+OO
Death of Mr. Wilkinson.
Speaking of the death of Mr,|j. O.
Wilkinson In Alapaha last week,
correspondent of the Wlllacoochee
Sun says:
“Mr. Wilkinson was a man of cul
ture and well connected, being
nephew of the late Ben J. Hill. He
was born in TroupS county. Sept 25,
1846. On SepL 14, 1865, he was. mar
ried to Miss Polly Ingram, a daughter
of one ot Schley county’sgMgjLa).
Ilea. __ Fifteen children, five' aonri tud
seven daughters, who aurvlve 'him,
while three have preceded him to
heaven, rcsultod from this union. He
Joined the Methodist church In early
life and was a faithful member to
the end.
“Savo four, all of his children are
away from home, some lu other
states, yot with two exceptions, all
were with him through the greater
part of his extreme Illness and by his
bedside whon he died. More thought
ful, faithful and affectionate children,
the writer thinks, never stood by the
bedBldo of a sick father. He knew no
want that a faithful wife and children
could supply.
“Much could bo said of tho life 'and
death of such a man.
‘His remains were taken to the
Methodist church where tho funeral
look place, and from thence to the
Alapaha cemetery, and notwithstand
ing the Inclemency of the weather,
was followed by a largo procession.'
MONEY TO LEND
MONEY TO LEND
MONEY TO LEND
The Valdosta National Building and
Loan Association
DESIRES TO LEND
$50,000 Fifty Thousand Dollars $50,000
HOW?
HOW?
HOW?
FIRST—On improved real estate
in the City of Valdosta
SECOND—For building porjioses
on vacant lots
THIRD—On farm lands near
Valdosta.
Today the English language
spoken by 136,000,000 people.
Value of Farm Products.
Tho total products ot the farm tn
the United States for 1904 are 15,000,-
000.000. That Is nearly equal to tho
total capital stock of all American
railroads before tho “boom" of 1900.
This sum ts more than six tlmei the
capital stock ot all the national banks.
It Is three times the gross earnings
ot all the railroads. It is nearly as
great as the value ot manufactures
in 1900, less cost of raw material. In
two years the farmer* have produced
wealth exceeding the output of all the
gold mines of the world since Colum
bus discovered America.
SI
Columbus, Ohio, May 20, 1903.
Bix years ago I had s severe attack of
inflammatory Rheumatism. I was laid up
a bed for alx months, and the doctor* I
ixd did me no good. They change ’. med-
dnes every week and nothing they pre
scribed seemed to help me. Finally Ibc-
E the use of S.S. 3. My knee and el
ts were swollen terribly, and at one
5 my Mots wen eo swollen and pain
ful that I could not close them when
opened. I was so bad that I could not
move knee or foot. I was getting iiscour-
aged, yon may be sure, when I begins. S.
8., but ms I saw it was helping me I con tin
ned it, and to-day I am a aound well man
and have never had a return of the disease.
S. S. S. purified my blood and cured urn
of this severe cue of Rheumatism after
everything else had failed. I have tec-
commended it to other* with good re-
sulu. R. H. Chatman.
1355 ML Vernon Are.
The poisonous adds that produce the In-
flammstion and pain are absorbed into the
blood and Rheumatism can never be con
quered till these are neutralized aid fil
tered oat of the blood and system. S. S. S.
goes directly into the circulation and at
tacks the disease itself. It purifies sad re
stores the blood to a healthy, vigorous
condition. It contains no potash, alkali or
other strong min
erals, bat is guar
anteed entirely
vegetable. Write
us and our physi-
cians will advise
without any
charge whatever.
Our book os Rheu
matism aent free. .
Tbs Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, fit
HU III LI AT TCP IA 0 FIRST—Monthly payment* of $15.00 for each $1,000 borrowed.
Ull flflM I I til ll f SECOND—Bach borrower becomes a stockholder and shares in tho profits
lie helps to accnmnlate.
THIRD—Evory borrower has the privledge of paying his loan in full at ANY TIME by giving ns back onr
money loss the value of his steak and the value of his stock is identical with that of any other stockholder who
s NOT borrowod from the Association.
OFFICE AT THE MERCHANTS BANK.
A. J. STRICKLAND, -
Vice-President.
J. T. BLALOCK,
Secretary & Treas.
Schofield’s Iron Works,
High
M iHU .’AO TURSRS OP.
Grade Machinery,
MACON, GEORGIA,
Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mill*, Cano Mills, Corn Mills,
Iron Grinders, Shafting, Pul
leys, Boxing, Gearing, Iron
and Brass Castings of every
description. We are Original
Inventors of the Turpentine
Distillers Steam Pumping Out-
flt.fl V rttSf
Wo have lately equipped our
already extensive boiler shops,
which now gives us largest ca
pacity of any manufacturers
in the South.
Wo are headquarters for Steam
Pumps, Inspirators, Injectors,
Valves, Lubricators, Wrought
Iron Pipe, Boiler Tubes, Pipe
Fittings and Pipe Fitters’ Ma
terials.
SAVE MONEY AND DEAL DIRECT WITH THE*MANUFACTURERS.
J. S. SCHOFIELD’S SONS CO., Proprietors/Macon, Ga.