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THJE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1905.
MMTMN AVOIDED
EXPEBIEHCEOFHISSMEBKLEY
She Was Told That an Operation Was
Inevitable. How She Escaped It
When a physician tells a woman suf
fering with ovarian or womb trouble
that an operation is necessary, the very
thought of the knife and the operating
table strikes terror to her heart, ana
our hospitals are full of women coming
for ovarian or womb operations.
There are cases where an operation
Is the only resource, but when one con
siders the great number of cases of
ovarian ana womb trouble cured by
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound after physicians have advised
operations, no woman should submit to
one without first trying the Vegetable
Compound and writing Mrs. Pinkham,
Lynn, Mass., for advice, which is free.
Miss Margret Merkley of 275 Third
Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
"Loss of strength, extreme nervousness
shooting pains through the pelvic organs,
bearing down pains and cramps compelled
me to seek medical advice. The doctor, after
making an examination, said I had ovarian
trouble and ulceration and advised an opera-
John L. Sullivan, The Pugilist
Gives Some Interesting Sketches
THE EX-CHAMPION OF THE FI8TIC ARENA TELLS OF HIS MEETING
OF POPE LEO AND OF THE PRESENT WHICH THE POPE GAVE
HIM—HE AL80 TOUCHES UP PHASES OF HIS MNIQUE CAREER.
KING KELLEY'S EXTRAVAGANCE.
1 had a nice talk with Pope Leo
when I was in Rome. He didn’t do
any preaching at me because of my
business, the dear old man. He seem
ed very glad to see me, and when we
parted I took from the* Vatican with
me a feeling of reverence for him as a
kindly soul who understood that all
of us couldn't be as perfect as he was.
Before leaving, 1 gave him a $500
United States bill for his poor. His
Holiness told me that he appreciated
the gift, and asked:
“Isn’t there something I can give
you to remember your visit?’’
I told him I would always remem
ber him and my visit to Rome. At
first I couldn’t think of anything he
could give me, but he urged me to
a run for the money.
Figures on How Much Ho Hasn’t
Saved.
When the money was pouring in
upon me, twenty years ago, R repre
sented a big fortune for that time.
Twenty years ago, a man with $20,000
In money was more conspicuous than
a millionaire is today. When the tel
ephone was new, It got its first push
in Boston, and I could have been on
the ground floor for a sum I tossed to
the cuckoos every month. A big slice
was offered to me for not much
money, but that use for money was
too slow for me. For $5,000 I could
have got enough of street railway
stock which today would be pulling in
a wad that would keep me busy to
spend. A fellow I grew up with beg-
ged me, with tears in his eyes, to let
make a selection. There was a fine h|m put tbe profltB from one of my
tree growing near by In the Vatican flghtB lnto a corner lot ln the heart
once more strong, vigorous and well.”
Ovarian and womb troubles are stead*
ilyon the increase among women,
the monthly periods are very painful,
or too frequent and excessive—if you
have pain or swelling low down in the
left aide, bearing down pains, leucor-
rhcea, don’t neglect yourself: try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Mother’s Friend.
.iotlicr’a Friend It n enn'.hing, *nftenlttff, relaz-
agoil, a muse’e maker,invi|(»ra(ur and in-alien-
r bark u
ii frt
r*,—no do-
of nakly drug*’—no in>iJb treitm
of the mother dttrln;
with h-
:r;.r
'"ludi'tnst ih why i-rathni should walch their
mdition and themsrives from pain. Ilrr
health, mat of the child and their liv. •..depend
on krtepln* free from torture, worry and melan
choly. He of good cheer, strong of heart and
reful mind. Mother's rrieud ran and will
_ e you ao. bearing down puiue, morning
sickness, soreness of hrea*t. and Insomnia are
all relieved and diminished by this wonderful
remedy hacked hy two scoro years of succcbs.
Of druggistsfl.no
Send for our hook— Motherhood—free.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.
Atlanta, Qa.
In The Spring Time
The housekeeper’s thoughts turn to new
furnishings for the home. We hate every
thing for the parlor, bedroom, sitting room
or dining room, All of the new Spring Goods
are ready for your inspection.
stock of medium and
FURNITURE
Call and
Mr. J.
glad to see
nr stock.
Mr. J. D. Regtat-r !• with ne, and will be
and serve his friends when they
come to town.
GIDDENS
FURNITURE CO.
ASHLEY STREET.
J- LUTHER GIDDEN, Mgr-
garden, and it occurred to me that a
cane from one of Its branches would
be a nice thing to have. I told him so.
A few days after, a walking stick,
beautifuly carved, was brought to my
hotel In Rome by a messenger ln uni
form, and given to me, with the com
pliments of His Holiness. That cane
I carried for a long time, but I never
had a day’s luck while it was in my
possession.
Gives Away a Present From Pope Leo.
Often I have thought that I was not
good enough to take a gift from so
holy a man; but whatever the cause,
everything I attempted went side^
ways. After Corbett made me run
twenty-five miles ln a small ring, I
was in Providence, R. I., and Patsey
Parker, the detective, a good friend of
mine, carried the cane all day and fre
quently expressed admiration for it.
He thought so much of it that I said
to him: "Patsey, that stick is yours.
I hope you will have better luck while
you own it than I hav.e had since it
of Boston, which was going for a song.
That lot is now near the new Union
Station, and earns as much money ev
ery year as Teddy gets for passing
the pie to Booker Washington. There
and some more tales I could tell of
good thingB I passed up which would
read like some of the statements in
Lawson’s frlcassed finance.
But me and Mike Kelley were finan
ciers of the same stripe. We couldn’t
sleep well If there was any money
unspent at the end of the day. The
birds got all of it, and they’re too
swift to be caught now, and made to
give up. Any day ln Mike Kelley’s
life sounds like many In mine. Once
Mike earned $800 at the races at
Sheepshead Bay. On the train back
to New York he “loaned” half of It
to needy ones, and before Broadway
closed up that night every cent of It
was given away or spent.
Difference Between King Kelley and
Emperor Lajoie.
_ . „ „ What with firing away his mpney
has been mine. Poor Patsey! Like and havIng (un Anaonr < K , ng KeI .
many of my old friends he has gone , ey . merryilIfe> but a Bbort one .
where there are no troubles. ! He was a king among ball players and
A woman reporter who Interviewed a prlnce among spendthrlftB . 0nce he
me a couple of weeks ago asked me Iectured m , „„ the wtBdom of gettlng
how I kept the wrinkles away. Plain tSe BaTlngB bank hablt .
living and plenty of It. lots of salt, .. You .„ nee( , |t Mme d Jo w? b( ,
said.
"How about yourself
Mike?" I asked.
“Not me. When I need money, J
We Offer $1,000
For a Disease Germ That Licjuozone Can’t Kill.
On every bottle of Llquozone we of-- and Llquozone—like an excess of oxy-
fer $1,000 for a disease germ that It 'gen—is deadly to vegetal matter,
cannot kill. We do this to assure you ' Llquozone goes into the stomach,
that Llquozone does kill germs. into the bowels and into the blood,
And it is the only way known to kill j to go wherever the blood goes. No
germs in the body without killing the , germ can escape it and none can re-
Ussues, too. Any drug that kills germs isist it The results are inevitable, for
it a poison, and it cannot be taken in-1 a germ disease must end w’hen the
ternally. Medicine is almost helpless j germs are killed. Then Llquozone,
in any germ disease. It is this fact lading as a wonderful ionic, quickly
which gives Llquozone its worth to restores a condition of perfect health,
humanity; a worth *o great that, after j Diseases which have resisted mertl-
testing the product for two years, jrine for years yield at or.ce to Liqro-
through physicians and hospitals, we zone, and it cures diseases which n»e<’l-
paid $100,000 for the American rights, cine never cures. Half the people you
And we have spent over one million dol-! meet—wherever you are—can tell you
lars. in one year, to buy the first hot-, of cures that were made by it.
tie and give it free to each sick one
who would try it. Germ Diseases.
’ ! There an> the I nown perm diseases
Acts LlKc Oxygon. All that medicine can t.u lor there
.. . . troubles la to help Nature overcome
Llquozone is not made hy com- germs, and such results are indi-
Pounding drugs, r.or is there any aleo* | r0c ^ and uncertain. Llquozone attacks
hoTln It. Its virtues are derived t.olo- thc germB wber evcr they are. And
ly from gas largely oxygen gas hy a I w hen the germs which cause a disease
process requiring Immense apparatus nre dealroye d, the disease most end.
and 14 days time. This process has. and forevor That inevitable,
for more than 20 years, been the con-
‘slant subject of scientific and chemical |A«»fcrt»
research.
The result is a liquid that does what
oxyren does. It Is a nerve food and
blood food—the most helnftil thing In i oniitnn tion
■the world to you. Its effects are ex- o»iic--cmnp
hihratlng. vitalizing, purif-inp. Yet it 1 r^mm^-concer
Is an absolutely certain r°rtnfcide. The,
reason is that germs are vegetables; 1 iSwiwi* w
Varicocele*
(met**-A mriti! n
ltrlghi'K DIM
Era
**ln D’vhm-h
Htoraurli Trouble*
TliruAi Trouble*
JjteMma—Itr^elpe’a
Gonorrhea—Gleet Women's
All diseases the* :,oirln with fe- ur-*il infl.im-
maUon—Ull «At*rrh-ml oonutrlou* dit>< ;ioeA-s»U
the remits of imnuro or pontoned l.'oo.l.
In nerrnua debility llquozone act it h« u vltallzer,
aooottjpiuhltiy r. hut no druse can do.
50c. Bottle Free.
If you need Llquozone, 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 Llquozone Is, and what it
can do. In justice to yourself, please,
acre pi it lo-day. for it places you un
der no obligation whatever.
Llquozone costs 50c. and $1.
COT OUT THIS COUPON
fnr this offer may not appear again. Fill on!
P>r- bl:.nk* nud mail It to Thc Liquozono
Company, 45H-M4 Wabash Ave., Chicago.
My disease is
I have never iried Llquozone. hi\t if you will
supply me a uOc. bv..ie free 1 will take it.
Any phyaldan or hospital not jet vali
Llquozone Win be gladly supplied
Coffins
and
Caskets.
ID. £L TXTXlL&OlXr,
Orders by
wire or Meil
UNDERTAKER & FUNERAL DIRECTOR
fWog prompt
ly. Residence
Phono 167 Z
Office Phene
V gave herjata* J|lsh thesis people who
think that I am all in could read her
report as to my condition. They would
change their notions as to where I am
at. 8he reported that my eye is clear,
my step springy as a colt's, and my
skin as soft and pink as an Infant’s.
“Just shove that information along
to Jeff, Fitz and the Pompadour,” I
asked her when she showed me what
she had written. “You see, these fel
lows aro advertising me as a has-been
and an also-ran, and as you’re not pre
judiced, your word ought to go, even
with them.’’
This woman said she was surprised
that my hands wero not the worse for
wear after all they’d been through,
and now that she’d seen them, she
wasn't surprised that Charley Hoyt
had written “the Rag Baby” around
them. She was so friendly that I
gave her some advice.
Advice to a Woman Reporter,
told her when she got ready to get
married, and she ought to be ready
at any time now, to pick a man who
could box. Says I. "A man who can
box never goes hunting trouble, and
trouble seldom hunts him; when It
does, he’s there to meet it with the
right kind of jounce and bounce. Box
ing freshens the brain, makes the
body strong, fits a man to work gaily
for those depending on him. A man
who can box Is always fair, he has
help for the weak, and the strong can’t
fling any scares Into him. Tie up to
a man who can box and you'll tie up
to a sport who won’t throw you down
and who’ll bo handy in all of your
roubles.”
I guess she never got so thoroughly
Interviewed in all her experience as
a reporter. She was blushing like a
bride when she left.
would advise Jeffries to get
’onto” tys Job or the public will be
'onto” him. While I don’t like to.
say that Jack Johnson, the smoked
pug, lay down for Marvin Hart, the
go, from the first gong to the refer
ee’s decision, had a fishy look. All the
same, it’s up to Jeffries to give Hart
an early meeting. Jeff is doing too
much monologue work through the
newspapers, and not enough fighting.
Why don’t he meet all comers except
coons (as I did for twelve years) and
see what’ll happen? Ho bars me out,
but he ought to take on Hart or quit.
After Hart, he ought to fight my spar
ring partner, Jim McCormick. I’ll
challenge the winner In those fights,
and then Jeff can’t dodge me. McCor
mick’s a comer, all right, with 6 feet
two inches and 195 pounds of sand
and steam. If Jeff would only stand
up and fight like ft human being, and
not crouch over like ft williwallupu*,
think George Gardner could give him
_ . „ . gift and F
Upjohn, he^ pj an t e( j j a
JL- Tobacco
&ful, and 1
can take my turn-out and go selling
milk,” he replied. ..
The turn-out he referred to was a
horse and buggy given to him Just
before a ball game on the National
League grounds in Boston. The rig
was a present to the king by his sub
jects ln my town.
When King Kelley passed out, the
future Emperor Napoleon Lajoie was
driving an ice cart ln Woomsocket.
Prosperity almost carried the French
man off his feet, but the lesson of
Mike Kelley and some more of us
foolish ones was drilled Into him. He
cut out the “red-eye," got a bank book,
and today he Is king of them all, and
getting rich. He doesn’t Intend to get
off the water wagon and go hack to
tho ice cart. The difference between
King Kelley and Emperor Lajoie is
the difference between the old style
and the new in all kinds of sport, and
the stayer Is the man behind the
pledge. I
Kelley died early. Lajoie grows
bettor every year, and If he were to
take up boxing he could sprint faster
than Corbett, punch as hard as my-‘
self, get away as quick as Fitz and
handle his fists like Tommy Ryan.
Moreover; his hat fits. I call the at
tention of all the temperance lectur
ers to Larry Lajoie, as one of the best
examples they can use In their busi
ness. Yours truly,
JOHN L. SULLIVAN.
PLANTING 18 DELAYED.
Fair to Good 8tanda in Georgia, Ala*
bama and Florida.
Washington, April 18.—The weekly
crop bulletin of the Weather Bureau
says:
Cotton planting is much delayed ln
Mississippi and Louisiana and is later
than usual in Texas and tho Caroli*
nas. Better progress with this work
has been made in Alabama and Geor
gia and ln the southern portions of
these states Is nearing completion.
Fair to good stands of tho early plant
ed are reported from Alabama, Geor
gia and Florida. In Texas tho early
reported as promising,
plants are generally plen-
transplanting-fe&ff begun in.
South Carolina and Florida.
While fruit must necessarily have
sustained Injury from the severe cold
during the latter part of the week ln
the central and southern districts, it
Is probable that ln tho more northerly
sections to the eastward of tho* Mis
sissippi river the damage has been
less serious. In New England and tho
northern portion of tho lake region It
is probable that no serious Injury has
been done.
Miller-Jones Shoe Co., ??
Wholesale_Dealers_in SHOES ¥
Wo have ample facilities for catering to tho retail merchant* of j)
Qoorgia, Florida and Alabama, and can servo thorn promptly at SS
all times. We can save you freight and other expenses U
on what you buy. ^Ve solicit tlio trade of merchants and dealers ^
Miller-Jones Shoe Co., |
“Itching hemorrhoids wero the
plague of my life. Was almost wild.
Doan’s Ointment cured mo quickly 11
and permanently, after doctors had >
failed.” C. F. Cornwell, Valley street, 11
Saugerties, N.*Y. j [i
Our Spring Oxfords Aire
The Latest to Be Had.
the
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy,
Beat and Most Popular.
“Mothers buy it for croupy children,
railroad men buy It for severe coughs
and elderly people buy it for
grippe," say Moore Bros., Eldon, Iowa.
“Wo sell more of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy than any other kind. It seems
to have taken the lead over several
other good brands.” There Is no Ques
tion but this medicine is the best that
can be prepared for coughs and colds,
whether it be a child or an adult that
Is afflicted. It always cures, and cures
quickly. 8old by W. D. Dunaway, Val
dosta, Ga.
Want Newspapers to Kick.
It is astonishing how many people
appear to think that it Is the busi
ness of a newspaper to jump in and
lambast everything In sight at the re
quest of any modest individual who
has not the nerve to move a hen off
her nest. If any honest man has occa
sion to rake a brother citizen over
the coais on account of a personal or
public grievance, he can send in a let
ter over his own name, and if It is not
a libel, we shall let him see how it
looks in print
■OUT’
Ayers
You know the medicine that |
makes pure, rich blood -
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Yctir
mother, grandmother, ail your
folks, used it. They misled |
Sarsaparilla
It. Their doctors trusted it.
Your doc;rr trusts it. Then
trust it yourself. There is
health and strength in it.
*• I eiifTer.wl terribly from indication
Rich Blood
We invite you jto„come and see
them Jbefore [buying. 1 -^ White
Canvas,|T ansJoTall coi^sand
kinds. Black, a large Assortment
or’s Pill, ars gently laxatlvo.
ey greatly aid the Sarsaparilla.
■1PLANIS FOR SUE.
We ire again prepared to till any
and all order* for both oarly and lata
varletiea of Cabbage Plant* at 11.50
per 1,00j. We make epeclel prlcea on
larger lot. and eollclt correspondence.
All our plant, ere grown In open air,
near eelt water, from beet known
etralne of eeed to experienced truck
farmer., end will stand severe cold
without Injury. They ere turs header,
and thoroughly guaranteed.
Plante all packee In light baakete
and ehlpped C. O. D. when money doea
not accompany order..
Addreaa all order, to
W. N. Sands & Son,
Meggetts, S- C-
Only Exclusive Shoe Store in City.
Dorris & Thigpen,