The Valdosta times. (Valdosta, Ga.) 1874-194?, April 15, 1905, Image 11

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mm THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 1 5 , l 9 05. 11 LIST OF SECOND HAND MACHINERY. Valdosta Foundry and Machine Co. LOCOMOTIVES. One 40-ton Rhode Island, 16x24 cylinders, stand ard gauge, 65-lnch wheel centers, new tires. Monitor njf tors, air brakes. Overhauled and In thorough repair. Immediate delivery. One 16-ton, rebuilt locomotive, 9-lnch cylinders, standard gauge, 44-lnch wheel centers; en gine on 4 wheels; tender on 4 wheels. A. typ ical logging engine. Immediate delivery. One 35-ton, rebuilt locomotive, 14-lnch cylinders, tandard gauge, 60-lnch wheel centers, new tires, two injecto-s, sight feed lubricator, steam brakes, 2,000 gallon tank. Thirty days delivery. One 28-ton, rebuilt locomotive, 14H-lnch cylinders, standard gauge, 44-inch wheel centers, 2,000 gallon tank, six weeks delivery. ENGINE3. One 22x28 200-H. P., fitted complete with new cyl inder, new governor, new 120 ln:h by 24-lncb band wheel. Overhauled and practically new. One 14x20 100H.P. Atlas Automatic. Overhauled and comp -te. One 14x18 76-H.P. Vormer side crank. Overhaul ed and complete. One 14x18 76-H.P. Erie City side crank. A beauty. One 14x16 60-H.P. Nagle, centre crank. Cheap for quick sale. One 12x18 60-H.P. Lane ft Bodley, semi-side crank. Practically new. One 12x18 76-H.P. Taylor Automatic, side crank, self contained. A dandy for planing mill or light plant. One 12x16 60-H.P. Sinker & Davis, side crank. Good for any purpos . One 13-lnch 60-H.P. side crank, with 60x12 band wheel. At a bargain for quick sale. |One 11x18 40-H.P. Talbott centre crank. Over- auled, and a good one. ne 11x14 36-H.P. Atlas centre cran.;. Good for any use. One 10x12 26-H.P. Schofield centre crank. Over hauled and complete. One 10-inch 25-H.P. Metropolitan centre crank. A good bargain. One 8-lnch 26-H.P. Automatic centre crank. Bar gain for quick sale. One 9-Inch 20-H.P. Watertown centre crank. Good seller. One 8-lnch 16-H.P. Leftel centre orank. Over hauled. One 7x10 10-H.P. Atlas side crank. Almost new One 8x12 16-H.P. centre crank. Overhauled. . A lot of 6 and 8-H. P. Engines. BOILERS. One 80-H.P. Return Tubular, with new fixtures. Two 70-H.P. Return Tubular, with new fixtures. Two 60-H.P. Return Tubular, with new fixtures. Two 50-H.P. Return Tubular. Complete, with all fittings. Two 40-H.P. Return Tubular, with new fixtures. Two 36-H.P. Return Tubular, with new fixtures. One 30-H.P. Atlas Return Tubular, with new fix tures. Four 20-H.P. Return Tubular, overhauled, ready for use. One 18-H.P. Return Tubular, new fixtures. One 16-H.P. Return Tubular; old, but cheap. Six 30 inch by 30 feet Cylinder Boilers. Will sell cheap as whole or in parcels to suit pur chaser. Two 26-H.P. internal fired. One 16-H.P. Leffel internal fire 1. Two 16-H.P. fire box, new fixtures. One 12-H.P. fire box, good value. One 10-H.P. fire box, at a bargain. One 10-H.P. internal fired, cheap. Five 8-H.P. fire box, must be sold. Four 6-H.P. fire box, will sell cheap. Ono 6-H. P., Leffel internal fired, at a bargain. Two 6-H.P. fire box, with engines on top. Get my price on mem. One 3-H.P. uprljt, for still pump. JSAW MILL8. One Filer ft Stofell 40-foot carriage, 6 blocks, all complete, liust he sold. One Stearns vO-llot carriage, 6 blocks, very heavy and cotnpMft One Curtis 60-foot carriage, 6 steel blockB. One Filer & Stowcli 50-foot carriage, 4 blocks. Now set up.jcady for use. One Salem Iron yorka 45-foot carriage, medium sice. Three Pony Milks. small sizes. All of the above Mills we can furnish complete. We,also have others in stock not yet refitted, which we can fit up to suit purchasers. We are giving big bargain In all Saw Mills They must go. PLANER8 AND MATCHERS. One 4x14 E. & B. Holmes. A good strong ma chine at a low price. One 4x14 H. If. Smith. Overhauled, ready for Immediate use. I One 6x24 FrsalJL A fine machine for small plant. One 6xJ!' Tar Reel, wood frame. A machine for settlement plant. j STEAM FEEDS. One 12x20 FilcT ft Stowell, for wire rope. Two 9x12 Filet ft Stowell, for wire rope. One 10-lnch Wilkins, geared drum, very power ful, for wl'e rope. One 8-lnch shin gun for 60-Inch carriage. MI8CELLANEOU8. One 10-block'Parkins shingle machine. Ono Hand, shltnie machine. One Filer, ft Ito veil power bolter. Three Cook's'GxHG deep well pumps, 4-lnch. One Cook's 7x36 deep well pump, 6-lnch. Four 4-lnch doublo thick dry kiln headers, tapped. One' Butterworth ft Lowe lath machine. One Iron frame, 4-saw lath machine. I One Filer ft Stowell 42-lnch edger. Inserted saws. One Union IroL Works edgor. Three logging cars, small wheels. Two logging trucks, 24-lnch wheels. One U-foot by 24-lnch engine wh-jl. One Feed .water heater. One Goodell & Waters 80-lnoh fan, One 2,000-pound balance wheel. One Gardner duplex pump, 4-lnch suction. One Brush dynamo and lamps. One shaving blower and pipe. Two saw lmmmercrB anvils. Three slab conveyors. Oue friction haul up rig and car. One 8-foot by 16-inch fly wheel. Thlrty-flve tfmbor cart tires. One old-style pump, 2-lnch suction. One sawdust conveyor, complete. l,600feet 8-8 by 2 strap track. One butting saw outfit; Two board saw outfits. One Buffalo knife grinder. One hog for 12-lnch slabs and rubbish. A big lot saw mandrels, all sizes. Two iron husk saw frames. PlpeB and fittings, all sizes. _ Second hand belting, all sizes, kinds ana grades. Will sell you if you get our prices. Pulleys, all sizes. (Send me list of your require ments for figures). Circular saws, all sizes and kinds. Three 17x36-foot Moore patent dry kilns, complete, with trucks, track, etc. 8TOCK AT ALL TIME8. Boiler Fronts, Grate Bars, Back Arch Plates, Soot Doors, Grate Rests. Ventilators, Door Liners. Castings of every kind made on short notice. Two tons’ capacity. ALDOSTA FOUNDRY AND MAOHINE CO., T7“eilcLoeteL. Q-©^rg*ieu. STOOD BEFORE MIRROR And Sent a Bullet Through Her Brain. Columbus, Ga., April 10—Mrs. Alice dj r1t -, ivif„-aHV .John oSicis, a merchant t at Loflin, Russell counTJC ^la., com mitted suicide yesterday afternoon at ther homb by shooting herself with’a ire a mirror and shot 5f in the back of the head. Fast l- iili 07*aunt-torn «4-:by i the violence M the explosion, and she was Instantly killed, i She had been In 111 health for some np, and had been treated at a san- rium, having been a victim of the drug habit She left a note to her husband, saying that she could not stand her sufferings any longer. It is believed that her mind had become unbalanced. Besides her husband, seven children survive her, the youngest a baby five months old. She was the daughter of Dr. Dlsmuke, of Irwin county. Ga. Last Hope Vanished. When leading physicians said.that W. M. Smlthart, of Pekin, la., had in curable consumption, his last hope vanished, but Dr. King's New Discov ery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds kept him out of his grave. He says; "This great specific completely cured me and saved my life. 3ince then, I have used It over ten years, and consider it a marvelous throat and lung cure." Strictly scientific cure for coughs, sore throats or colds; sure preventive of pneumonia. Guaran teed, 50c and 31 bottles at W. D. Dunaway’s and A. E. Dlmmock’s drug stores. Trial bottle free. MAY GET 1,200,000 ACRES Along the Apalachicola River In West Florida. Jacksonville, Fla., April 10.—Judge I-ocke, of the United States district court, has confirmed the report of the special commissioner appointed to In vestigate the validity of the grant of 1,200,000 acres of land In West Flori da, ' along the Apalachicola rlvei, made by the Spanish crown to John Wm&ef - Tile cnee lias been In' tfie^CTTTS since 1830, when suit was instituted against the government by Theodore Dalcour to recover the lands. The only direct living heir to the property is Miss Clementine Dalcour, of Phlla- delphia. As the case now stands, Judge Locke’s decision awards the land to Miss Dalcour. District Attorney Stripling has filed notice of an appeal and the case will go to the supreme court of the United States for final decision. GET IN8IDE. Your Friends and Neighbors In Val dosta Will 8how You How. Rubbing the back won’t cure back ache. A liniment may relieve, but can’t cure. Backache comes from the inside— from the kidneys. Doan’s Kidney Pills get inside. They cure sick kidneys. Here is Valdosta proof that this is so: The postofflee department has just made public some Interesting figures showing the growth of the rural de- - livery mail service. The number of •.rural mail routes in operation March 1 was 29,998, which is an Increase of 6,432 routes over the number in oper ation June 30, 1904, the close of the last fiscal year. There are pending 4,043 petitions for additional routes. Since the service was established there havo been filed 44,194 petitions for rural routes, of which 10,153 have been rejected on adverse reports. 'of tbo 29,998 rural routes in op ameans a monthly deficit of $25, ,hat being the average loss to the government on the operation of a sin gle route. This causes a total annual deficit of about $7,000,000 on account of rural service. For Over 8ixty Years. An Old and Well Tried Remedy — Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing 8yrup has been used for over sixty years by mil lions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by drug gists in every part^f the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask fov Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other. Russia, with a population of 127.000,- only 18,334 physicians. In ted States, with a population 76,000,000, there are 120,000 Russia, w o: ted t 7E About Rheumatism. There are few diseases that inflict moro torture than rheumatism,- and there is probably no disease for which such a varied and useless lot of reme dies have been suggested. To say that it can be cured is, therefore, a bold statement to make, but Chamber lain’s Pain Balm, which enjoys an ex tensive sale, has met with great suc cess in the treatment of this disease. One application of Pain Balm will re lieve the pain, and hundreds of suffer ers have testified to permanent cures by its use. Why suffer when Pain Balm affords such quick relief and costs but a trifle? For sale by W. D. Dunaway, Valdosta, Ga. Damage to Fruit Trees. Atlanta, April 10—Tlie state en tomologist, who has examined the fruit trees on the Georgia road and at Rome and Kingston, says the crop there is not hurt. Oommissionor Stevens, who has been to Cornelia, 6 been cut off one-h Frightful 8ufferlng Relieved. Suffering frightfully from the viru lent poisons of undigested food, C. G. Grayson, of Lula, Miss., took Dr. King’s New Life Pills, “with the re sult,” he writes, “that I was cured.” All stomach and bowel disorders give way to their tonic, laxative properties. 25 cents, at W. D. Dunaway’s and A. “I. Dlmmock’s drug stores, guaran teed. % Endurance is a necessary endow ment for any one who hopes to make a complete success of life’s efforts. If the young people, especially the young men, could realize this at the proper time in life there would be Infinitely fewer failures to record. T. & Palin, tfroprttfw- and wheelwright shop* and veteran ot the Civil war, says: ”1 found relief for my weak back in Doan’s Kidney Pills. I hurt my back some years ago in a runaway. The carriage fell on my back and injured my kidneys, I think, for ever since I have had great trouble. The kidneys have been all wrong, the secretions were very dark and I have had trouble in retainlm them, particularly at night, being call ed out of my bed many times. This seriously affected my general health and I was suffering all the time from terrible pains. I used plasters and liniments and tried several kidney specifics, but nothing gave me any re lief until I got a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills at A. E. Dimmock’s drug store. I used them according to directions. They found the spot at once and since using them all the pain has left my back. I am stronger In every way. The secretions have been restored to their normal color and have been reg ulated, and my health has been great ly benefited. I can sleep and rest well, and I give Doan’s Kidney Pills all the credit for it.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United 8tates. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. Schofield’s Iron Works, MANUFACTURERS OF High Grade Machinery,. MACON, GEORGIA, Steam-Engines, (Boiler*, Saw Mills, Cans Mills, Oorn Mills, Iron Grinders, Shafting, Pol. leys,1 Boxing, ! Gearing, 5 Iron and Grass Castings of every description. We are Original Inventors of tho Turpentine DistUlon Steam Pumping Out fit. Wo have lately equipped our already oxtonsivo boiler shops, which now gives os Inrgost ca pacity of any manufacturers In tho Sontli. Wo aro headquarters for Steam Pomps, Inspirators, Injootors, Valves, Lubricators, Wrought Iron Pipe, Boiler Tabes, Pipe Fittings and Pipe Fitters' Ma- Handsomest Baby, Anyway. Sioux City, March 28.—"I want my name engraved In the blank space on this,” said a man of 26 years, passing a handsome, old-fashioned silver cup over the counter of a well-known Sioux City Jeweler. The engraved part read; Presented to SAVE m EY AND DEAL DIRECT WITH THE MANUFACTURERS. A Daredevil Ride. Often ends In a sad accident. To heal accidental injuries, use Bucklen’s Ar nica Salve. “A deep wound in my foot from an accident,” writes Theodore Schuele, of Columbus, O., “caused me great pain. Physicians were helpless, but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve quickly healed it” Soothes and heals burns llks magic. 26c, at W. D. Dunaway's and A. E. Dimmock’s. The first life insurance company was organized In London in 1706. What wondereful advancement during 199 years since that company came Into existence! For being the handsomest baby In Woodbury County. September 18, 1881. “Are you the baby?” demanded the jeweler. “Yes, and I want that space filled in with my name as a tsetimonial They try to make me think nowadays that I’m the homeliest man in the county, and I want this as a creden tial.” The Jeweler finally recalled having made the cup a present to the baby at a county fair, In a big competition. “Well,” he said, finally, ”it looks as'if you needed the credential. I’ll en grave it.” And he took the name down. It was Eli B. Woodford.—Philadel phia Record. Every Hour of the Day A. E. Dimmock, the 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 are becoming the talk of the town, and everybody wants to try It, and why not? It costs 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 — Cheapest, Saw Mill Is tho "■<» that does the best work and tho most work with Ithe least ex pense. Bend for catalogue describing the HEGE LOG-BEAM MILL — WITH — HeacocMUg tad Works. Engines, Boilers, Cotton Ginning Machinery, Brick- Making and .Wood-Work ing Machinery. Eto. GIBBES MiCHlim CO., Columbia) S. C. The Olbbw HUMU Muhin. C. B. Peeples, -DEALER IN- Paints, Oil, Varnish, Brushes, Fine Mantels, Tiling, Orates, Brick, Lime and Cement. I Sdl "Wblte Bose" lime, the Best Lime lade In the South, and Atlas and Lehigh’s Portland Cements. Administrator’s Not'oeto Debtors and Creditors. Nolle, la hereby riven to *U creditor* of th. date of Mrs. L. M. Oventrut, 1st. of uid county, deceased, to rudrr l» na account of their demand* to mewltUnthsUlMpreacrlbed todlfbT^t^^dS^Sed'.’rdh^byr^S tomitko immediatepayment *> 'ffl?Mareh«h,lffi RT DlLTON AdmlnOtmtor ot Mn.£|M. Oremtroet. McUormick & 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, 113 Hill Ave., West, VALDOSTA, GA