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THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1905.
, m
PROFESSIONAL CARD&
Or. Clarence Whittington
DENTIST
PHCENIX LODGE NO. 4.
I. C. O. F
Meets every Friday evening at etgb
o’clock, Ashley Building, corner
Patterson St. and Hill Ave
Valdosta Lodge No. 115,
K. of f>.
Meets every Tuesday evening. Ail vis
lting brothers cordially invited.
Dr. R. H. Thomas,
DENTIST.
CRANFORD & WALKER
Att ornoys-at La w
VAIjDOHTA, GEORGIA
Offlre** Ashloy buildlnu. rooms 1 and 2.
K WILCOX. J. M. JOHNSON
Wilcox & Johnson.
Attorneys-At-Law-
Valdosta,
Georgia.
B. S. Richardson,
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Valdosta, Ga.
r. H. NOLAN,
Attorney - at - Law,
Valdosta, Ga.
Office over First National Bank.
Dr. S. T. Harris,
Offloa Phone 149.
Residence Phone 106 Z.
Calls left at Dimmook's Drug ?itor»
promptly attended.
DR. J. C. WILSON,
Physician and Surgeon.
Valdosta, Ga.
Office in Converse building. Leave calls
irithC. 8 " *
donee 148.
vrithO. 8. Bondurant. Phone No. 246; real-
A. J. LITTLE. A. E. SMITH.
Little & Smith, '
ATTORNEYS AT LA\V,
Valdosta, Ga.
Offloa Over First National Bank.
HENDRICKS, SMITH &
CHRISTIAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Nashville, Georgia.
Collections and Criminal Law
Specialty. Offioe in Peoples Block.
2-11.6m.
J. F. CROSBY,
Builder, Contractor
Soperlntendeut of Constwcttons,
nfty to bid on a I klndi
t wood, brie or stone.
W. L. ZIN,
ARCHITECT.
Plans and snperintondonoe for all olaaaea
< 1 boildings. Orders in or out of town
given prompt attention.
W. L. ZIN,
U Oianc Ave. VALDOSTA, GA.
We are again prepared to fill any
and all ordara for both early and late
varieties of Cabbage Plante at 11.50
par 1,OOj. We make apaclal prieea on
larger lota and aollclt correspondence.
All our plante are grown in open air,
near aalt water, from beet known
etralna of seed to experienced truck
farmers, and will stand tevera cold
without Injury. They are sure headers
and thoroughly guaranteed.
Plants all picker. In light baskets
and shipped C. O. D. when money does
not accompany orders.
Address all ordara to
w.
N. Sands & Son,
Meggetts, S- C-
Established in 1901.
D. H BELL,
Wholesale and Retail.
Fish, Oysters, Etc.
Only Fresh Stock.
At the Old Hamilton and Brinaon Stand,
112 Ashley Street. Phone 104 as usual.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
nwi and Snuffle* tb* hate
mote* a JutgriAOl growth.
I (Xji * V p tlianwa * htdT fklUaffl
■ Drugk*^
A HAPPY
HOME
la ooe where health abounds.
With Impure blood there can
not be good health.
Wltbadlsordered LIVER there
cannot be good blood.
revivify thetdrpM
Its natural action.
A healthy LIVER means pure
blood. i
Pure blood means health.
Health means happiness.
Take no Substitute. All Druggists.
CLAIRVOYANT
And Scientific Palmist Will
be in the City a Short
Time Only.
Can be consulted on all affairs of
life, business, speculation, love, court*
ship, marriage, divorce In fact every
thing connected with daily 11 it.
true clairvoyant is born, not
made. When in trouble disciuragod
or unhappy, and are anxious to be
truthfully advised, consul', tho orcult
wonder.
Fortune telling by cards etc., may
be very amusing and entertaining, out
is not reliable. Remember the Madam
not a fortune teller, but one ei
dowed with the gift of prophet
spoken of In 1st Corinthians, xil, chap
ter, 10th verse. She has helped oth
ere, why not you?
Everything strictly confidential.
Office hours: 10 a.m. to 8. p. m.
daily. At Ricks boarding house, 514
N. Patterson street, Valdosta, Qa.
AN UNUSUAL OFFER
By Haiiira Drag Co., who aroofforing
their jwtrons an opportunity of a free
trial of the wonderful healing remedy,
Paracamph, First Aid to the Injured.
This remedy has become popnlar in a
remarkably short length of time by its
and merits of Paracamph, and enable
them to.do so without risk or Ion of
money Mr. G. O. Miloy, the
has produced apian. "Being rally con
vinced of the merits of Paracamph, all
yon bay* to do, says Dr. E. J. Smith is
to deposit the price of a bottle at onr
drag store, take home a bottle of Para
camph, give it an honest trial, and If
not satisfied, tell ns and we will return
your money.”
No remedy on earth compares with
Paracamph for the cure of Rheumatism,
and Hurts of every description. ’ Para-
eamph absolutely prevents blood poison,
Paracamph soothes and heals likemagio.
No honsehold should be without a bottle
always at hand.
If yon receive a card making a special
offer to you for a trial of Paracamph,
bring it to our drag store without do-
*»y. 4-1-dwks
NEW
Meat Market
C. C. JOYNER,
An Expert in that Line,
Has bought out J. Mansor's market on
Ashley street and will conduct a high
class place in every particular. The
Best Stall-fed and West
ern Beef, Pork, Sausage
and other mcata always on*hand.
Give me a trial, at Mansor's old stand
—same telephone number.
PATENTS
, free M<rto*. how to obula patent*, t
patent*, trad* maria, I
money and often the patent.
Patent and lafrliifainMt Practice Exclusively.
CASNOW
For Divorce.
GEORGIA—Lows DEN Comrrr :
Frank P. Smith, j
Julia Smith. 1
The defendant, Jolla Smith, is hereby re
quired personally, or by attorney, to appear at
the Superior Court, to be held in and for said
county on the third Monday in May next, then
and there to answer the plaintiff's complaint
in an action for divorce. As in default there
of the court will proceed aa to Justice shall
the Hon. Robt G. Mitchell, Judge
Q A. Whitaker, Atty.
Clerk H. C L. Co. Ga.
S-M 18-a 25-A 8 15.
Money to Loan.
Money to loan, at reasonable rates, on
Lowndes county farm lands.
ERNEST W. EDWARDS,
Attomey-at-Law.
Thirty-two Factt About Japan.
Japan has nearly 50,000,000 people,
more than hajf as many as the United
States.
The word "Mikado" signifies some
thing like "the Sacred Gate" or the
"8ublime Porte.”
The name of the reigning mikado Is
Mutso Hito.
The name of the empress is O Haru
—"spring."
The name of the crown prince is
Yoshl Hito.
At 'to Primaries.
•All Simon Pure Democrats should
be able to subscribe to Mr. Bryan's
plan.for reorganizing the Democratic
party, rfs proposes that all Demo
crats attejnd all primaries in future
and give I expression to their prefer
ence of men and principle. By this
means we will come nearer knowing
in 1908 what the Democrats of the
country really do want.—McDuffie Ob-
server.’’ " 1
That It a good plan, but it is not a
European dress is worn at all court new plan. That was the plan sup-
functions. posed tO k In vogue in 1896 when the
Rice is the common food of the party wait reorganised; and it was the
common people. plan under which we were supposed
Sixteen cents a day is now good pay to be operating in 1904 when it was
for unskilled labor in Japan. Ten years
ago it was 6 cents.
Japan has very few millionaires
and practically no multi-millionaires.
Tokio Is a hundred years older than
St. Petersburg.
The lovely Japanese cherry trees
produce no cherries.
On the Japanese stage male actors
play the female roles.
There is only one Japanese actress
—Madame Sada Yacco.
Danjiro, the great Japanese trage
dian, is also the most skillful dancer
of Japan.
Japanese dead are buried ,in
squatting posture, chin upon knees.
More than 10,000 pilgrims, male and
female, ascend Fujiyama every year.
Fujiyama is 12,365 feet high, a thou
sand feet for eve.y month, plus one
foot for - every day in the year.
The Japanese people, even the poor,
travel much in their own country.
Modern Japanese coins and bank
notes bear legends in English as well
as in Japanese.
Semi-nudity is common in rural Ja
pan, and furthermore it is respectable
and healthful.
The average Japanese is better
bathed than the average Britisher.
Wijnkles are poetically termed by
the Japanese 'waves of old age."
It is quite proper, even complimen
tary, to ask a lady’s age in Japan.
The Japanese "Hello" at the tele
phone is “Moshi moshi!" or "Ano
ne!" with the accent on the "noy."
The Japanese farewell, "Sayonara”
means something like "if it must be
” or “if we must part thus, so be
it."
up
mW
Kissing and shaking hands are rare
ly practiced in Japan.
Japanese mothers do not klm ttteif
children, though they may prate the
lips to the forehead or cbeelr&f-a-tbry
young baby.
Sewing on buttons is not a wifely
duty In Japan—there are no buttons.
Japanese inns furnish fresh tooth
brushes every morning free to every
guests. The brush is of wood, shaped
like a pencil, and frayed to a tufty
brush of fibre at the large end.
All of the food served to a guest at
a Japanese banquet and not consumed
by him at the time Is taken to his
home by the servants of his host.
Japanese chop-sticks are delivered
to the guest in a decorated envelope.
The two sticks, already shaped, form
one tong-shaped piece of wood and
are broken apart by the guest.
Japan has one of the largest steam
ship companies in the world, with
service to the United States and to
England by way of Suez.
Don't Kill the Song Birds.
There are boys so thoughtlessly
cruel, or so cruelly thoughtless, as to
go abdut with guns trying to kill the
song birds that have just come back
the harbinger of the coming
spring. Not only is It unlawful to
kill robbins, bluebirds, larks, wood
peckers, thrushes, orioles, grosbeaks,
cedar birds, blue jays, mocking birds
and many other familiar songsters,
but It Is cruel and barbarous
in the extreme. No kind-hearted,
right-minded person would want to
slaughter the songbirds. The law
seeks to protect the songbirds, and
every intelligent citizen should seek
to aid in checking the brutal warfare
that so many boys and men wage in
spite of the state laws passed to
guard these little creatures that are
most useful to man, as well as giving
attraction to lawn, field and forest by
their presence.
In treasury circles considerable is
heard of the probabilities-of a call on
the national banks for $20,000,000
some time this spring, which would
be about 20 per cent, of the govern
ment funds now on deposit with them.
The argument heard In behalf of the
course is that if the secretary is to
have any available balance from
which to make deposits In the autumn
to gt^e elasticity to the money market
at the crop moving season he must
draw on something now. The work
ing balance stands at about $46,000,-
000; It would doubtless be increasod
somewhat between now and the close
of the fiscal year \ty ordinary treas
ury operations, perhaps by $5,000,000,
but the early summer payments of the
next fiscal year, opening July 1, will
deplete this balance badly, as July is
a month of heavy payments.
Of the $5,600,000,000 of gold In the
world, the United States possesses
$1,300,000,000, or nearly one-fourth.
reorganised. We can see no objec
tlon to lt*!n the proposed third reor
ganization! In 1908. The fact remains,
however, that the great mass of Dem
ocrats In the country remained at
home, or at their places of business,
on both occasions. A minority always
governs In party primaries. We some
times think that it would bo better to
return to' the old county convention
system, apd send the best men in the
county unlnstructed to the state con
ventions, who in turn should send the
best men in the state uninstructed to
the, national convention.
Of course there would bo cries of
"county ring," "court-house ring" and
so forth, but how are we going to get
rid of the ringsters
Wo 'are inclined to the opinion that
the choice is between the old plan and
the South Carolina plan, advocated
now in Georgia by Hon. Popo Brown
The crazy quilt affair submitted by the
state executive committee, and sub
mitted to by the people last year, was
very , much of a frauu — Macon Tele
graph.
South Atlantic Inventions.
The following patents were recently
issued to South Atlantic clients, re
ported by D. Swift & Co., patent law
yers, Washington, D. C., who will fur
nish complete copies of them to the
readers of this paper for 6 conts per
copy. - Some of them are exceedingly
Interesting and Instructive.
Georgia—Jos. Benor, Macon, turpen
tine still; Henry C. Hopkins, Lithonia.
well bucket sinker ; Archie T. Ingram,
Doctoriown, annunciator; David A.
Sox, Atlanta, platform ladder; John
H. Waters, Augusta, track-sanding de
vice (sold); Geo. C. Wimpeo, Rome,
lifting Jack.
Nojth Carolina—John H. Crowley,
hirmttO, *tMrry s hJom; Theo B. Daria,
'Inston-Salem, warp dyeing, ma
chine; Frank M. Sawyer, Charlotte,
mold.
South Carolina—Chas. T. # Mason,
Sumpter, telephone desk set.
8uit Case Robbed En Route.
Fitzgerald, March 28.—Some time
ago, while en route from here to Ma
con, Mrs./H. W. Stetson lost several
valuabW articles from her suit case,
which*ffad been checked, and it is al
leged that the case was opened and
the articles purloined. H. E. Oxner,
express messenger on the run from
Montezuma to this city, has been ar
rested on suspicion of having commit
ted the theft, and following his ar
raignment before Justice Faulk, was
bound over to the*grand Jury. Oxner
made an attempt to implicate the bag
gage man who was on tho same mn.
but the latter was turned loose for
want of evidence.
A splendid tonic fnr the hair, msfces the hair grow long and heavy.
Always restores color to ray h-ir, all the dark,rich color of youtn.
Stops falling Mr, Iso. t: - fifty years.»
va; ;
DO, DO, COJVE AND
Get A Dish or Two!
Vonldn’t you accept apretty dish, plate or onp and saucer if yon
1 pit it without cost? Wouldn’t you take a pretty butter dish, vege-
dish, or a sot of soup platen for nothing? Many of yoor neighbors aro
Wouldn’t
could
table . . 1 „
gotting these nice things—you are miming them by hot _
Remember this fine ehinaware does not cost you a cent—wo gtveifc
free to all onr customers. This, in addition to having the very
goods and selling at most reasonable prices.
you. We are so anxious that you
see exactly what you are getting, that we have gone to a largo expense to
put in a fine stock of china to bo given away. The goods aro of thevery
best quality, and fully warranted to givo perfect satisfaction. We know
that you cannot help but be well pleased with them.
Again we invite you to como and soo the display in our store. We
know you will bo attracted by the beautiful waro we are giving without
monoy and wihout price.
J. E. Culpepper,
VALDOSTA, GEORGIA.
1
f FURNITURE
_
Everything to furnish your home from par
lor to kitchen at LOWEST PRICES IN CITY
Out-of-town orders receive our prompt At
tention.
Remember we Pay the Freight and
Your Money Back if You are
Pleased.
“Wreckers of High Prices,V
116 N. PattersoirSt. .Telephone No. 8,
Next to M. A. Briggs,
Valdosta, Ga.
8ome Contrasts.
He paid taxes on $600,000,000 and
yet his grandchildren are in the De
catur Orphanage Home. How is this?
He is dead, his property swept away
by war and disaster, his son is a semi-
idiot, and his motherless grandchild
ren have to ask the charity of the
public. Rich and poor find the best
Insurance for their descendants is
some good orphan homo. These homes
ought to be made great blessings to
every suffering child.
Last week there was a beautiful
baby in her forlorn mother’s arms in
a county Jail, where they had been
placed because it was a better place
than where they wero found. The
poor girl-mother had never had a
chance In life. The kind citizens said
we will give her a chance in the Crit
tenden home if the orphans’ home will
take the baby.
From the home of a preacher his
daughter married a drinking man to
reform him. His abuse, blows, curs
Ing.^hsults, his cruelty in kicking her
down the steps and beating her with
feet and fists, has finally sent him a
maniac to MUledgerillc and has made
almost a devil of her. Recently when
landed in jail she plead that her chil
dren be sent to the orphans’ home so
that they might love God and not fol
low their parents to ruin.
These contrasts reveal the good
done by the orphans’ homes of Geor
gia
Jones’
Business College
Valdosta, Georgia.
It’s always hard to do justice to really good work in print, especially
whou space is limited. That’s why wo invite yon to como and see us.
Wo know, and can prove to you oakily, if you will but como or write,
that wo liavo the best equipped school and best instructors in this coun
try. Onr work proves this. Tho domand for our students proves it.
Lot us give you the names of somo of oar graduates. W rite and ask them
about our systems and tho kind of work we do. They will bock us up.
If you cannot come in tho day
Come Enter Our Night School
And get a first-clam business education without losing any time from
your work. Remember onr motto: "No better school at any price."
G. P. JONES, President
Governor Fraser, of Tennessee, ve
toed a bill raising bis own salary.
His reason was that the measuro was
unconstitutional. That will strike
many latter day statesmen as a very
peculiar reason.
The Santa Fe paid back more than
a million dollars of "over charges" to
shippers in a year.
YOU
ARE
PAYING
FORE
SHADOWS
unless your home, your office or
your note is fitted with The
Angle Lamp. The only fight
in the world that is all fight and
no under shadow. As superior
to gu and electricity as these are
to gasolene and acetylene.
The Angle Lamp
gives at all times an absolutely
V steady light—ideal to read by—
of greater radiance than electricity and at lets than one-eighth the Co*.
No smoke or odon Explosion impossible. Can be operated by ■
a child. Requires cleaning only twice a month and filing twice •
week' A clean, cool, mellow odlighL far superior in quality and quan
tity of radiance to any other. Ornamental—economical rlfc-irnt.
.20 styles. Prices $1.80-$ 12.00. Cal and see the lacqi demonstrated
Thomas Furniture Company.