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THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1 9 0S.
STORK
TIME
to women ii a term of much L
anxiety,serious thought and I
aweet anticipation. Pain and ll
dread^love and joy, come \
With the cessation of nain
necessary to childbirth there
comes calm nerves, sleep,
recuperation.
MOTHER’S
FRIEND <*4^
§yisfrjfcggrs&!&fSgR
babies, sweet dispositioned babies and ideal
into the world. Take away the pain
•f childbirth and you have bliss and ecstacy.
Morning sickness, sore breasts and excru
ciating pains caused by the gradually ex-
pending organs, are relieved by this re
markable soothing balm.
_Among_the_ manifold aids to childbirth
Mathmr'a Friend has grown in nopular-
Qed a prestige among ricn women
i poor; it is found and welcomed
Itynnd gained a prestige among rich women
it is found and w«‘
s well as the cabin.
i*nnaren, strong intellectually and phjrsic-
nlljr Is a duty every pregnant woman owes
society.
- ®/.V es f e P* n £ the mother’s agony of mind
end diminishing pain a beautiful influence Is
wroughtupon the child, and instead of peev
ish, ill-tempered and sickly forms you hare
laughing humanity that remains a blessing
erer after to you and its country.
Try a |1 bottle. Druggists everywhere
sell Mother’s Friend.
Write us for our froO book “Motherhood,”
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR C0„
Atlanta, Oa.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
l)r. Clarence Whittington
DENTIST
PHCENIX LODGE NO. 4.
I. O. 0. F
Meets ovory Friday orening at eight
Valdosta Lodge No. 115,
K. of P.
Meets every Tuesday evening. Ail vis
iting brothers cordially invited.
Dr. R. H. Thomas,
DENTIST.
Office new Converse Building Over
Thomas Furniture Co.
BOLL WEEVIL HOLDS FORT.
The Best of Cotton Growers Cannot
Be Routed, Says Department.
Washington, March 22.—The De
partment of Agriculture has thrown
up the sponge in the combat with the
boll weevil. The little Guatemalan
ant which was heralded as the great
weevil destroyer, has apparently fail
ed to "make good,” and all the other
insect and chemical exterminators
tried from time to time by the depart
ment having proved futile against the
weevil, Secretary Wilson retires from
the the field with a swan song, tech
nically termed "Farmers 1 Bulletin No.
216.” Dr. W. D. Hunter, special
agent In charge of cotton boll weevil
investigations, has written the bulle
tin of the secretary, and though his
pamphlet Is given the cheerful title,
Control of the Boll Weevil," he
makes the following discouraging an
nouncement at the outset:
The work of the bureau of ento
mology for several years has indica
ted that there Is not even a remote
probability that the boll-weevil will
ever be exterminated. As a matter
of fact, no injurious insect has ever
been exterminated.”
Dr. Hunter devotes the thirty-two
pages of his pamphlet to the best
methods of dodging tho weevil. Brief
ly summed up. It is to plant early cot
ton, and after the crop is gathered,
plow In the old stalks. By this meth
od, the crop will be harvested before
the weevil has an opportunity to do
damage, and with the old stalks
buried the little beetles will have
nothing to live on through the win-
Dr. Hunter suggests that the
planters get their early varieties of
seeds from points as far north as pos
sible, and also advises fertilizing the
fields In order to hurry up the growth.
THE RU88IAN8 L08T 175,000 MEN.
NOT A R08Y OUTLOOK.
CRANFORD & WALKER,
Attorneys-at-Law
VALDOSTA, • . GEORGIA
Office* Ashley building, rooms 1 and f.
B. K. WILCJOX. J. M. JOHNSON.
Wilcox & Johnson,
*— Attorneys-At-Law-
Yoldocta, . . Georgia.
B. S. Richardson,
REAL ESTATE [AGENT,
Valdosta, Ga.
T. H. NOLAN,
Attorney - at - Law,
Valdosta, Ga.
Office over First National Bank.
H. J. Dame,
LAWYER.
8TATENVILLE, GA.
Prompt attention given to all matters
plaoed in my hand..
Dr. S. T. Harris,
omee Phono 149.
Residence PhoM 106 Z.
Oalla left at Dimmook'a Drug Store
promptly attended.
British Not Hopeful of Cotton Grow
ing in East Africa.
London, March 21.—The report of
the commissioners sent out by the
British government to investigate the
cotton growing possibility in East Af
rica Is published this evening in the
form of a White Paper. It says:
"Unless difficulties which at pres
ent seem to be insuperable, can be
removed, cotton cultivation In East
Africa will never be undertaken on
any considerable scale.”
First among the difficulties the com
missioners place labor, on account of
the apathy of the natives and their
disinclination for work. The total
area devoted to cotton growing under
European‘supervision can scarcely ex
ceed a few thousand acres. The com
missioners' opinion is that the only
solution o{ the difficulty it Indentured
labor from India or China.
The Japanese Estimate Runs the
Figures Very High.
Tokio, March 22.—No reports of the
Russian retreat or Japanese pursuit
were received today, which is
strengthening the belief that the Rus
sians plan to hold the line from Chang
Chun to Kirin. The Japanese con
tinue to closely follow Gen. Llne-
vitch’s rear guard, but the damaged
bridges impede their progress and
possibly will creat sufficient delay to
permit the Russians to reconcentrate,
reinforce, partially reorganize and
construct works at Chang Chu and
Kirin.
It is reported that a part of the
Vladivostok garrison has been with
drawn and hurried to Harbin, but no
confirmation of the rumor is obtain
able.
The first Mukden prisoners are ar
riving in Japan. (The government has
chartered and fitted out forty steam
ers to assist the transports in carry
ing prisoners and wounded.
Revised figures of the Japanese
losses at the battle of Mukden place
the number at 50,000, and revised esti
mates of the Russian losses from tlje
commencement of theJbattle and end
ing with the fighting at Tie Pass
place the total at 175,000 killed,
wounded or captured.
We Offer $ 1,000
For a Disease Germ That tiquozone Can’t Kill.
WHAT IS CATARRH?
Hyomei Cures This Common and Dis
agreeable Disease.
Hyomei cures catarrh by the simple
method of breathing it into the air
passages and lungs. It kills the germs
of the catarrhal poison heals and
soothes the irritated mucous mem
brane, enters the blood with the oxy
gen and kills the germs present there,
effectually driving this disease from
the system.
If you have any of the following
symptoms, catarrhal germs are at
work somewhere in the mucocus mem
brane of the nose, throat, bronchial
tubes or tissues of the lungs:
LARGE 8UIT FOR DAMAGES^
In Berrien Superior Court Against the
8outh Georgia Railway Company.
A suit for something like fifty thou
sand dollars is being brought In the
Berrien superior court and will like
ly come up for trial this week. Tho
suit is for damages, brought by the
relatives of Young Niles, who was
killed In a wreck on the South Geor
gia, at Little river, some two years
ago. The plaintiffs are represented
by Col. S. S. Bennett as leading at
torney, while the South Georgia
represented by Col. L. W. Branch.
Mr. Branch Is in Nashville today
and Mr. Bennett and the South Geor
gia officials will go up tomorrow, as
the case will likely come up for trial
some time during the day.—Quitman
Advertiser.
A. J. LITTLE.
A. E. SMITH.
Little & Smith,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Valdosta, Ga.
Office Over Pint National Bank.
HENDRICKS, SMITH 6
CHRISTIAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Y Nashville, Georgia.
Collections and Criminal Law
Specialty. Office in Peeples Block.
2-11.6m.
J. F. CROSBY,
[Builder, Contractor
1 Aa*d
^Superintendent of ConstncHons,
nfty to bid on a 1 kind*
t wood, bpln or atone.
W. L. ZIN,
ARCHITECT.
flans and superintendence for all classes
I buildings. Orders in or out of town
|»cu prompt attention.
W. L. ZIN,
\ Crane Atc. VALDOSTA, OA.
MAN BITTEN BY A RATTLER
Victim Was Seized With Convulsion!
and Will Probably Die,
Statesboro, Ga., March 21—John W.
Davis, aged 22 years, a farmer, living
about thirteen miles south of States
boro, was bitten on the ankle yester
day by a large rattlesnake while out
hunting, and will probably die. He
was taken with convulsions, but is
still alive.
There were two companions with
Mr. Davis. They were some distance
from where ho could get medical at
tention, and they did everything in
their power to save his life, binding
his leg in every way possible to stop
circulation and prevent the poison
from reaching other parts of his body.
An Indoor 8nowstorm.
"It has been a cold winter,” said
the laundress, according to the Phila
delphia Bulletin. "In our laundry It
actually snowed indoors one day.
"The laundry was hot and full of
steam at the time. The moist, heavy
air would have registered, I fancy,
more than 90 degrees. All of a sud
den some one opened the wide doors,
and In there rushed great volumes of
pure, dry air that registered only a
little over zero.
"The results of this sudden cold was
that the steam in the laundry froze
suddenly and descended on us girls
In big, soft, white flakes.
"‘An Indoor snowstorm!’ was
shrieked, ‘An Indoor snowstorm!’
“It was, indeed, a pretty and rare
sight.”
Offensive breath, dry
ness of the nose, pain
acroaathe eyes, pain
in back of 'head, pain
in front of the head,
tendency to take cold,
burning pain in the
throat, hawking to
clear the throat, pain
in the cheat, a cough,
stitch in aide, losing
flesh, variable appe
tite, low spirited at
timea, raising of
frothy mucous, ex
pectorating yellow
matter, difficulty in
breathing and fre
quent sneezing.
Huakinesi of voice,
discharge from the
noae at night, •ehing
of the body, drop-
nintra In the throat.
open while
mouth
bad?
tn th
of the throat in the
- - - . —‘Ugh
short and hackinr
cough worse
ghi
’ nuking,
.. nights
and mornings, loss In
vital force, • feeling
or tightness across
the upper part of the
cheat.
On every bottle of Liquozone we of-i and Liquozone—like an excess of oxy-
fer 51,000 for a disease germ that it {gen—is deadly to vegetal matter,
cannot kill. We do this to assure you ! Liquozone goes Into the stomach,
that Liquozone does kill germs. jinto the bowels and into the blood,
And it is the only way Known to kill [to go wherever the blood goes. No
germs in the body without killing the germ can escape It and none can re-
tiaaues, too. Any drug that kills germs isist it. The results are Inevitable, for
is a poison, and it cannot be taken in-{a germ disease must end when the
ternally. Medicine is almost helpless germs are killed. Then Liquozone,
in any germ disease. It is this fact!acting as a wonderful tonic, quickly
which gives Liquozone its worth to restores a condition of perfect health,
humanity; a worth so great that, after Diseases which have resisted medi
tating the product for two years, \clnc tor years yield at once to Liquo-
through physicians and hospitals, we zone, and it cures diseases which medl-
paid $100,000 for the American rights, cine never euros. Half the people you
And we have spent ever one million dol- meet—wherever you are—can tell you
Jars. In one year, to buy the first bot- of cures that were made by it.
tie ar.d give it free to each sick one
who would try it. !
Acts LiKe Oxygen.
Germ Diseases.
These are the known germ diseases
All iIt u medicine can do for these
. . , , troubles is to help Nature overeome
Liquozone is not made by com- (ho germs> nn d such results are Indi
es -here any aleo- rec t am j uncertain. Liquozone attacks
: are derived sole-j th© germs, wherever they are. And
Ras—by a , w j ien th 0 perms \^hich cause a disease
apparatus are destroyed, the disease mint end,
and forever. That is inevitable.
x- Erysipelas
l-evcra-Gaii Hionos
(Joitre-Uout
Tu be ren Ion In
Tumors-L’9
Variooeele
_—. . v»noocel L1<< f>
Gonorrhea—Gleet W unions
All dlasoses that l><>idn with fevi
nation—ail *-
the results n
iiuuoione aets u« a vlUllier,
i drugs can do.
-ull Inflam-
I cantafflotni diseases—all
ui-Anu-uiia
pounding drug
hoi in It. Its virtu
ly from gas—largei,
process requiring i
and 1-1 days’ time. This process ha
for more than 20 years, bren* the con
stant subject of scientific and chemical
research.
The result is a liquid that docs what
oxygen does. It is a nerve food and j ttowei Troubles
blood food—the most, hclnful thing in 's-onwumToVon*
the world to you. its effects are ex- CoIIo-Cmmp
hilaratlng. vitalizing, purifying. Yet it. TJreSKlFncer
Is flu absolutely certain germicide. The, i»r««*niwrr-i>iarrt
reason is that germs aro vegetables; j Dyspepsia rop * 7
r Fovi
r i>!»
-tnflui
Throat Truubtus
aooompllsblng whai
5Oc. Bottle Free.
If you need l iquozone, and have
never tried It, please send us this
coupon. We will then mail you an or
der on a local druggist for a full-
size bottle, and we will pay the drug
gist ourselves for It. This is our free
gift, made to convince you; to show
you what Liquozone Is, and what it
can do. In justice to yourself, please,
accept it to-day. for It places you un
der no obligation whatever.
Liquozone costs 50c. and $1.
CUT OUT THlS COUPON
f< r thin offer may imt appear nxain. Fill out
the Man:.. nn<l mail ii to The Liquosom
Company, 45,s-H>4 Wabash Ave., Chicago.
I have never tried Liquozone, hut if yon «
supply me a 50c. bottle free t will take it.
Give full address—write plainly.
Any physician or hospital not yet ns
Liquosone will be gladly supplied lor • U
Administrator's Notice to Debtors
and Creditors.
Notice ia hereby given to all creditors of the
estate of Mrs. L. M. Overstreet, late of said
cornitv, deceased, to render in an account of
their demands to me within the time preecribed
by law, properly made out. And all persons
indebted to Bald deceased are hereby required
to make immediate payment to me.
This March 9th, 1905
.. , , R. T. MYODBLTON.
Administrator of Mrs. L. M. Overstreet.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
Whereas, _W._R. Massey, administrator of
ley, represents to the
persons concerned, kindred and creditors, to
why said admin
A. V. HIMMK, Ordinary.
Hyomei will cure the disease, des
troy activity of all germ life in the
respiratory organs, enrich and purify'
the blood with additional ozone, and
after a few days’ use _of this treatmi
the majority of^lboae symptoms wil
have disappeared. In a few weeks
the cure will be complete.
Catarrh or catarrhal colds cannot
exist when Hyomei Is used. This la a
strong statement, but A. E. Dlmmock
emphasizes it by agreeing to refund
your money if it does not cure.
GEORGIA—Lowndeh CodHty :
Whereas, John Clnvton and Ivey U. Clay
ton. administrators of Anna O. Clayton, repre
sents to the court in their petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that they have fully
administered Anna C. Clayton’s estate: This
is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kin
dred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrators should not be
discharged from their administration) and re
ceive letters of dismission on the first Monday
in April, 1905.
A. V. SIMMS, Ordinary.
New 1905 Models
Columbias, Crescents, Ramblers
and Hartfords.
I invite everybody to call and see the new
model bicycles, sample wheels of which are just
in. They are beauties and the low prices are
another interesting feature of them. Call and
get yours while you have the chance of your
choice.
H. K. McLendon,
109 West Central Avenue, Valdosta, Ga.
Uncle 8am’« Pottage Rates.
There Is nothing small about Uncle
Sam In matters of serving his people.
A 2-cent stamp carries sealed letters
to any part of the United States or
Canada. One price to everybody. The
humblest individual who may not
write more than one letter a month
pays the same price as the big con
cern that uses thousands of them
daily. No discount for large quanti
ties. Tho same Invariable rates
should govern railway transportation
■‘‘square deal for everybody.” This
is what the public has the right to
expect, and it will bo satisfied with
nothing less.
The Difference'.
Here are the tables of crime In
which the meaning is the same, but
the description different, says an ex
change:
THEFT.
Rich woman, kleptomania.
Rich man, shortage.
Poor man, stealing.
DRUNKENNESS.
Rich man, debility or heart failure,
Well-to-do man, alcoholism.
Poor man, delirium tremens.
IN WALL STREET.
Rich man, legitimate speculation
Well-to-do man, dabbling in stocks.
Poor man, gambling.
• Every Hour of the Day
A. E. Dimmock, tho reliable drug
gist of Valdosta, Is having calls for
“HINDIPO,” t*e new kidney cure and
nerve tonic, that he is selling under a
positive guarantee.
Its merits aro becoming the talk
of the town, and everybody wants to
try It, and why not? It costa nothing
if It don’t do you good—not one cent.
He don’t want your money if it
does not benefit you, and will cheer
fully refund the money. Try It to
day.
The river Jordan has long been
considered the most winding river in
the world, but it is not in the same
class as the White river In Arkansas.
This river flows 1,000 miles In going
thirty miles as the crow flies.
Since the beginning of the last cen
tury no fewer than fifty-two volcanic
islands have risen from the sea. Nine
teen have since disappeared, and ten
are inhabited.
Fit and Style.
There are some things which can’t be improved.
One of these things is the “Queen Quality” Shoe for
women. You can make it more elaborate, you can
1 decorate it, embellish it. use costly materials and all
that. But for $100 a pair
You Cannot Makea Better Shoe
Than “Queen Quality,” having regard solely to the
two great essentials of FIT and STYLE. This means
that mechanically it is perfect. As for its appearance,
the fact that one hundred thousand women choose it
instantly above all other shoes would seem to indicate
that it is attractive. Why don’t you go so far as to
try on a pair the next time you go to the store. It
costs nothing to see them fit your foot. Boots $3.00.
Oxfords $2.50. Special Styles 50-cents extra. Fast
color eyelets used exclusively.
The Leaders
Grocries and
in Staple Dry Goods, Heavy
Farmers’ Supplies.
W. T. Lane.
BOSTONIANS
FOR MEN
BOSTONIANS
FOR'MEN