The Valdosta times. (Valdosta, Ga.) 1874-194?, March 25, 1905, Image 8

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THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, MAJRCJI 2 S , 1905. mm «aop w VEGETABLE SICILIAN HAJLI^S Hair Renewer my not stop this falling of your hair? At this rateyou will soon be wiihout sr.v hair* Just remember that Hal! s Hair Renewer Stops fullir.T end mafccs hair prow. ^V'W’iia.orCgj. - NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbidden to hunt, ttah or otherwis- trespaae on any 0 ,.»r Uad.. -.o-“ r not R *ncl°.d E E. WEST. I KILLING OF WILLIAM HARRELL. To Sea Island Planters: Make uo mistakf by using inferior *©ed. It means a year lost anti money gone. LaRoche S. 1. COTTON SEED Are known tor tlio length, utrengtli nnil quality of staplo they produce. Write for them to J. M. LaROCHE, F.disto Island S- C- Next Visit to Val dosta Will be Monday, Mar. 27th POSITIVELY ONE DAY ONLY. Examination free un til further notice. SATISFACTION CUAHAHTEtD J. E. Springer & Co. —«J«e»UERS. Ingram 8«nt to Jail Without Bond at Conspirator in the Murder. Hawklnsvllle, Ga.. March 22.—The commitment trial of Ingram, cha.ged with conspiracy in the murder of William Harrell, of Cochran, recently, was heard today before Judge Pearce. Able speeches were made by attor ney h on both Hides. T. C. Taylor and Grice & Son were-retained by the de fense. and the state was represented by Fort & Grice and Robert L. Ber ner. William Wynne swore that Ingram called Harrell a liar, and testified as follows: "Harrell said: T am not physically able to fight you, but we can have It out fairly.’ They started outside, when Ingram grabbed Har rell and snatched Harrell’s pistol out of Harrells pocket, throwing It to the ground near the alley, Harrell not drawing his pistol. "At this juncture, while Harrell was engaged, .John Blount ran in with his pistol drawn, shouting, ‘Shoot him, kill him.' and shot Harrell down. "Ingram nt the same time had his pistol drawn on Harrell, Harrell being unarmed. Harrell exclaimed, after being shot down: ‘John’ don’t shoot me any more; you have killed me already.’ John Blount then beat him over the head with his pistol." Linton Wynne swore to about the same thing. B. F. Lord swore that he saw part of the difficulty, and that when Ingrnm and Harrell were en gaged, some one, whom he supposed to be Blount, ran up and said: "Kill him; If you cannot kill him I can." A. Fauce, a hardware salesman, swore that Just before the difficulty Jim Ingrain bought from him a new pistol and cartridges, having it charged to Blount. Ingrnm was sent back to Jail with out bond, and Blount waived com mitment trial. Both will have to re main In Jail till the regular term of court. John L. Sullivan Writes of King Edward, Dr. Olser and Others. Piles! Piled Piles! Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment Is prepared to cure piles, and DOES iT In short order. Easy to apply; ev ery box guaranteed. 60c and II. All drugglata, or by mall. WILLIAMS M'FQ. CO., • Cleveland, o. Carnegie says be lov«?s Scotland wit and America next beet f Trfol The New Body Builder As delicious as a Fresh Orange | Supersedes old-fashioned Cod Liver Oil and Emulsion* (in.irantrod to contain all the modicina! elements, actually taken from gcimino fresh cods' livers, with organic iron and other body-building ingredients, but no oil or grease, making tho greatest strength ami flesh creator known to medicine. For old people, puny children, weak, pale women, nursing mothers, chronic cold, hacking coughs, throat ard lung troubles, Incipient consumption—nothing equals Vino!. T.- :: —: f y.«u ilon't tlkn It wv will Hum mooey. A. E. DIA1A10CK, Druggist. in prices and iu quality. There is no comparison. Best made in the world. sot* onr lino. Wt* will arrange pnym If you art* in not'd of a cart come nits to suit any oue. Mail Orders Solicited. Thomas Furniture Co., VALDOSTA, GEORGIA. Lumber Lur liber. FENDER LT DKAl.Ktrt Itt am. KINDS or 0011 FMBER .CO., ii on in ... Honldlnxi or All Kindi, rd oo Valdoita Soath.ro Railway, aad Alloa tie Doom Liao Ballioado. KUU Alin Lttm. Htroll Worl tViS*-. If III «•«! Lumber Tt Hhw.h iiMtcit Booth.rm M riorlcU When I met the present King Ed-1 ward VII, then Prince of Wales, in 1887, I shook his flipper and wished him well. He struck me as a sport of the right sort, and we chinned one another for two hours. ‘Tm sorry Mr. Sullivan," said the king (then prince) “that your people ever left Ireland. You would be a credit to the British empire as one of her majesty’s subjects, as you cer tainly are to the American republic, where I have many true friends." “My people didn’t want to leave Ireland, your highness," said I, "but they couldn’t slay, not with their ap petites.” You mean—’’ • I mean that if I lived in Ireland a year there’d be another famine there, that there isn’t enough to feed the Sullivans in that country; that’s why so many of us had to vamoose the ranch." You Irish-Americans—If that is the right way to say it—arc a fine blend, a fine blend," said the prince, smiling cordially. "You have caused us over here some trouble which we would have been better off without." ‘‘Yew, your highness, it would have been money in your pockets to have kept the Irish Just plain Irish. As plain Irish they don’t want much. As Americans they want everything In sight.” And we chatted as hail fellows well mot. I boxed at a private exhibition before tho prince, there being about 250 persons present, and he admitted that he’d got his money’s worth. When He Didn't Punch Edward. After my return home to Boston I was telling a few of my friends about my meeting with the prince. It was along about 8t. Patrick’s day time when Irishmen feel like "doing" ev erything English, %nd one of my friends, a fellow who believes that some day England will bo used as a browsing place for Irish goats, got very much excited. Do ye mane to say yes were all thot toimo widdln arrum’s reach of tho bloody tyrant," he asked. "Sure I was, Dlnny.” "O, melia, murther, what a chanst. And ye let It go by?" "Let what go by?" "The chanst to land on him. And you wid the pounch that could git square for siven hundred years of star vation and misery. O my, O my! Yes ought f 'to be ashamed to toll It If Ol'd been In yer place I'd given It till him ifc. Ja*’4 JwuirillK to iprfflOw land f^ee when he kJm out »v i R thV robbtn* Invader." My private opinion of the king is that if he had his way he'd give Ire land freedom, for he is a pretty good sort and would rather make friends than enemies. But he has to keep hfs Job by doing what he’s told. If he tried to get gay with thlngB he wouldn’t last as long In the king bus iness as a ham sandwich at a Hebrew picnic. He's only a hired man. John L.'a Marvelous Constitution. As I sit here and tally the past I cannot but wonder what a cracker- jack of a constitution I must hav had to stand up under what I’ve been through. Talk about crowded hours and strenuous living, why I’ve got the best of them skinned a mile. A few years ago when I was sick in New York, to the hospital for mine. The doctors got out their dinky little saws and things and began to cut the bad all out of me. They put me down and while I took their count they found that I had a rupture of the bowels, and that I'd had It from birth. I took their word for it. They had to go back over my record to be convinced that I’d lived so many years Without complaining. "I never made any complaint at being alive," I told them, "although some others had." They thought it wonderful that I'd been able to train and fight so long. I told them that in 1888 some time after my three hours’ fight with Mitchell'in France, during March of that year a severe Illness got me and I was in my nighty in bed for nine weeks, suffering with typhoid fever, gastric fever, inflammation of the bowels, liver complaint and heart trouble—all at the same time. This sounds like some of the things you hear members of congress and skin ny women telling about in patent medicine advertisements, but its sure enough truth. When I was turned loose by the doctors in the hospital I was partly paralysed, my legs being on strike and refusing to work. With the use of crutches I was able to get around to meet the boys and see If the supply of coffin varnish was holding out. It was six weeks before I gave the crutches the glad heave. Threw Away His Crutches. It was in the latter part of Decem ber, 1888, that I chucked the crutches. Stick a pin in this date, and then re member that on July 8, 1889, 1 fought Jake Kllran at Rlchburg, Miss., that battle lasting seventy-five rounds. What do you think of that? And I let that battle go seventy-five rounds on purpose to show that I was able to go any distance any living fighter could do. I’ll tell you in my next how I let Kllraln dp all that was in him that fight, holding off the knockout till everybody was tired of the battle, Just to show that I was still the cham pion. and the crutches £idn't show in the count. I have brought out these facts at this time to show that I can recover from anything to good enough notch to put It over the twenty-pound lady birds who are today doing vaudeville stunts and calling it fighting. I have me to press the button for the beJt of them, and they can’t talk doy/n the facts of the past any more than they can duck the dead sure things that I’m futuring for them. have a “front" that makes my belt wider than it ought to be, but I’m getting that reduced every day. My netk I 8 the same size it was in my b«'9l day. My arms are the same size hard, my legs tell the same pretty and comfort able story. He and Lillian Will 8how Osier. Since I stored away Jack McCor- mic'« at Grand Rapids a few weeks af* all the smart Alecks have been explaining it as an accident. The Texan thinks it was almost a fatal ac*4dent for him. But there was just much left In tho swipe that made McCormick forget the allamo as there war In the one that persuaded Joe Ooss in 1880 that I was a comer. Here's the report from the Knockers’ Af rotation: Jeffries—“I won't fight John L., be cause It would be a case of assault aqd battery on my part." Fitzsimmons—"Sullivan is an odjus old man, and I haven’t time from my theatrical engagements." Corbett—(Mostly bad language and a swift run for shelter). They are making It appear that I ought to be In somo old ladles’ home, and they don’t want to make some money anyway. They are three of a kind, and they* are afraid to see my "bluff" as they call It, with my pair of dukes. Ain’t they the limit? Jef fries said the other day that Pres ident Roosevelt was good enough Boxer to get in the swing with some of tho best of them today, yet the president, good scrapper that he is, and all honor to him for it, is older I am. T'itz la 43. nearly aa old As I am, and be baa tbe gall to put 'em. up. Jem Mace at 40 and Joe Goaa dl4jome good work. And John hjk going to batbk In loTbe Kndckera' Asroclatlon, and be'a going to make tbe motion to adjourn. They can't come too (aat for me, and they can't lqte yours truly. Say, this Osier must be > horse doctor when be talks of 40 being the time to dope out. Me and Lillian Russell are going to make him ralae hla figures, or we'll send him to somo correspondents' school to learo his lesson over again. BEST TONIC 8PECIAL RATE8. Round trip colonist rates to Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Indian Ter rltory, each first and third Tuesday. Ono way and round trip colonist rates to tho West and Northwest. One way colony rates to California and the Northwest from March 1st until May 16th, 1906. 8peclal Brat class round trip rates to Colorado every day until May 1st. Return limit, Juno 1st, 1906. The choice of the two most direct routes and three gateways, Union end Southern Pacific. Through Pullman tourist cars op erated each Monday from Binning, ham, Ala., and three care & week from Washington, D. C, to Kin Francisco, via Atlanta, Montgomery and Now Or- leans, without change. Effective March 1st, we operate every Monday and Wednesday, Pullman tourist cars from St. Iouls to Sail Francisco with- out change, via the Chicago and Al ton railroad and tbe Union Pacific rail road via Kansas City anl Denver. Ask for particulars. J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, General Agent, 13 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. R. 0. BEAN. T. r. A. G. W. ELY. T. P. A. la It Right? Is It right that a property owner should lose 34.20 to let a dealer make 60 cents? A dealer makes 60 cents moro on fourteen gallons of ready-for- use paint, at 91.60 per gallon, than our agent does on eight gallons of L. A M. paint and six gallons of linseed oil, which makes fourteen gallons of tho best paint In tho world, at 91.20 per gallon; the property owner loses jnst 34.20. Is It rght? It only requires 4 gallons of L. & M. and 3 gallons linseed oil to paint a moderate sited house. Ten Thousand Churches painted with Longman & Martinez L. & M. PalnL Liberal quantity given to churches when bought from B. F. Whittington, Valdosta. Tho earth contains a quantity of salt equal to one-seventh of its weight. The salt is dissolved little by little and hence the saltaess of the ocean Is Increasing. When the system gets debilitated and in w ______ run-down condition it needs a tonic and there has never- been one discovered that is the equal of S. S. S. It is especially adapted for • systemic remedy, because it contains no strong minerals to derange the stomach and digestion, and affect the liver and bowels. It is made entirely of roots, herbs and barks selected for their purifying and healing qualities, and possesses jnst the properties that are needed to restore to the body strong robust health. .When tbe blood becomes impure and clogged with waste matters and poisons the body does not receive suf- I have used your S. S. S. and found it to be an ficient 'nourishment and suf- excellent tonic to build up the general health and sleeplessness, ne T*i u |l? c **' me more good than everything else combined. As loss of appetite, bad diges- toiu tom p c properties it gives a splendid appetite, tion and many other disa- refreshing sleep, and the system undergoes a gen- greeable symptoms of a dis- eral building up under its invigorating influence, ordered blood circulation, 548 Woodland Ave., Warren, O. Mas. Kath Beck. and if it is not corrected some form of malignant fever or other dangerous disorder will follow. S. S. S. builds up the broken down constitution, clears the blood of all poisons and Impurities and makes it strong and healthy. The nerves are restored to a calm restful state, refreshing sleep is had again, the appetite returns and the whole system is toned up by this great remedy. S. S. S. is a blood puri fier and tonic and acts promptly in this run-down depleted condition of the •ystem. Book on the blood and medical advice furnished by our physicians, without charge. 77/£- SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATIAHTA, GA. Tbe Grieg Bros. Co. Nursery Men WHO ARE THEY ? WHAT IS THEIR BUSINESS ? And they are largest in their line on their plan; tho only nursery in existence allowing you to see trees growing before yon pay for them. Is that not onongh to convince yon that you will got ex actly what you buy and of the best grade? They fully guarantee their trees and are absolutely responsible. Prices are right and I give my guarantee too. ■ [[) Pecans, Pears, Peaches, Plnms, Figs ud all Olher t!! Kinds of Trees and Ornamentals, Roses Etc. Remember that no other nursery makes so such liberal proposition, and hold your order ’til salesman calls and he will submit you tho proposition in a few words. In what home is fruit and flowers not appreciated and worth their cost? C. B. PEEPLES, Agent. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ F renzied Furniture, And you will say & too when you get our prices and compare with others. * 1 ♦ Prettiest line of Window Curtains and J Matting in the city just received. Other ♦ goods arriving daily. 4 Our Stock is all new—not shop worn. + ♦ Your patronage will please us and our ♦ 4. goods and prices will please you. A I South Georgia Furniture Co., | T Wreckers of High Prices, 1 X 116 N. Patterson St. Valdosta, Georgia. X ♦ Out ef Town Orders Receive Onr Prompt Attention. 4 *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦ C. B. Peeples, -DEALER IN— Paints, Oil, Varnish, Brushes, Fine Mantels, Tiling, Grates, Brick, Lime and Cement. * I Sell "White Rose" Lime, the Best Lime Hide in the South, and Atlas ud Lehigh's Portland Cements, McCormick & Plano Mowing Machines and Rakes, Parts of all Mowers and Rakes. I occupy my own building, pay no rent and sell cheaper than any one. C. B. Peeples, US Hill Ave.. West, VALDOSTA, GA