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THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1905.
The New Scale $400 Ludden & Bates Piano J
Is not in competition with ordinary Pianos. It’s different and better. It appeals alike to musicians and business men, in fact ail who believe in get= ■
ting a dollar value for every dollar invested. The Ludden & Bates Piano Club is the result of careful planning, the result of the combination of large 5
production, and lessened the cost of construction. By selling in lots of One Hundred under our Club Plan the selling expense has been reduced to a ■
minimum, and thereby The New Scale $400 Ludden & Bates Piano is sold for $287 on terms of $10 cash and $8 monthly—eight per cent interest— 5
Cash Price no Lower—$287 to one and all. Not one fractional part of a dollar less, not a dime more, be it to the closest or shrewdest buyer in state. ■
about' IZLTT’EIREST’ |
The dealer who charges “no interest” conceals in the price of the piano (no matter what the price is) a higher charge for the money than he would dare announce openly. Any £
business man knows that. If you buy of us you you may take time at the cash price and pay as fast as you like to reduce your interest. This plan is fair to buyer and seller alike, ■
with nothing concealed. We pledge our business reputation upon the New Scale $400 Ludden & Bates Piano as being the best for $287 that has ever or will ever be offered as far , ■
as our experience shows—and we have sold many of the best pianos manufactured. , , , *
It is considered by all who Have seen and thoroghly tested the piano to the Best 'Piano Proposition hver Offered. I he club is rapidly filling—only one hundred will be sold at B
$278 to introduce them—tile regular price will be $400. If interested call at the store, or if not convenient to come, write for Booklet A,” which will explain our club plan fully and 5
how we propose to save you a third of your piano money. To Join the Club send $10, mention choice of woods—either Mahogany, Walnut or English Oak, also give plain shipping ■
directions if piano goes out of the city. We deliver them to members in the city, and at depot here for shipment for members out of town, who pay freight. No one can make close ■
figures on the club plan and deliver pianos out of town. All expenses must be figured out'before you start the club, and the whole amount divided by one hundred, which gives the
price the piano must be sold at. Some clubs are gotten up “over night.” The Ludden & Bates Piano Club is a plain, fair business proposition. Send for Booklet “A,” *
and with all the facts before you, you can then buy your piano on the most economical plan. , g
The associated firms of Carter & Dorough and Ludden & Bates sell the largest line of standard and reliable Pianos in the South.
CARTER & DOROUGH,
"it Only OostH About
25 Cents a Day
. » strictly High Grade Piano
Under Our Club Plan.
"LARGEST ORGAN DEALERS IN UNITED STATES." VALDOSTA, GA.
■in
NO BURKING IN TEXAS
BECAUSE PEOPLE COULDN'T GET
THE NEGRO THEY WANTED.
Search for Monk Gibaon, the Alleged
Murderer of Five, Hal Been Boot
ies!!—Military Gathered at Edna to
Prevent a Lynching Have Very Lit-
tie to Do.
Kdna, Tex., Oct. 15.—There In little
In the Hit mil ion regarding the chase
after the negro, Monk Gibson, charg
ed with the murder of five members
of the Condltt family. There are still
200 men in the bottom, who have
been searching for miles, with no
trace of the negro that ha* led any
.where.
Four comjmnieH of mllitury are on
camped here, and they are being Jeer
ed by many of the younger element,
while the older headH content them-
selves with criticisms of the gover
nor ami facetious remarks about “tin
soldiers.”
Adjt.-den. Union is In command of
the troopH and has had a number of
conferences with the authorities, but
there are no developments ns a result
thereof.
If the officers had had the negro,
they would certainly have turned him
over to this formidable array of mili
tary.
There are now many who believe,
that the negro uuibt have got away
or died. The negro got away Friday
night, after having been given a se
vere thrashing, enough to have mate
rially weakened a much stronger
man. During the four nlgjitH and
four days since then he «mld have
had little sleep, if he wore in the bot
toms, even though other negroes fed
him, and none has been found who
would admit that he had done so.
There Is nothing In the bottoms that
could sustahi lift* for any length of
time.
Men and horses are worn out by
the long search, and fresli ones have
been put In the chase. Put the negro
has been kept on the go. If ho has
been where it was believed he went.
Every oonuty in this section of tin*
slate is now represented among the
Searchers, iwid every nook and corner
of this count* has been thoroughly
gone over.
A Judicious Inquiry.
A well known traveling man who
visits the drug trado says he has of
ten heard druggists Inquire of custom
ers who asked for a cough medicine,
whether it was wanted for a child or
for an adutt, and if for a child they
almost invariably recommend Cham
berlain's Gough Remedy. The
reason for this is that they know
there is no danger from it and that
It always enres. There is not the
least danger in giving It, and for
coughs, oelds aid croup It is unsur
passed. For sale by W. D. Dunaway,
Valdosta, Oa.
ADDRESSED FRESHMAN CLACC.
President of Harvard Advises E
Course for Students to Pursue.
Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 4.— l*n .-ddcii
Charles \V. Eliot, of Harvard, a
dressed the incoming fr< stimuli
at the faculty reception ye.iteiday « \ . l
ing. He said In part:
"The foundation of all dtirahb* satu
faction in life is that each man ... «
Cleii
vhole
vigor.
This means that drunkenness, lie, a
tlousncHH and dirt of all kinds must
be avoided.
“But this is not enough. It is the
intellectual life that gives the educat
ed man the real satisfaction that en
dures. The cullvation of vigorous,
Intense, mental work each day is hound
TO furnish one of the greatest and
most lasting satisfactions that come in
life. Don't lake three minutes to
do what might Just as well be done
in two minutes. Don’t take 4 years
In college to do what might he done
Just as well In three years.
“The third great source of satisfac
tion la a decent reputation. In order
to secure this, be a man of honor. Act
toward all women as though you v
going to marry some pure woman
side of a month. Ik* honest to
and more than this, be generous, espe.
daily to those less poor than yourself."
8TEAMER GOES ON ROCKS.
Col. Jim Hunt, the big Jones coun
ty fanner, is superintendent of the
Farmers' Fair at Macon. He is get
ting things in good shape and will
roll up the curtain on the magnifi
cent display of agricultural products
when the fair opens.
A boon to travelers. Dr. Fowler’s
Extract of Wild Strawberry. Cures
dysent try, diarrhoea, seasickness,
nausea. Pleasant to take. Acts
promptly.
Crews of 30 Rescued by Members of
Life Saving Station.
Norfolk, Va., Oct. 4.—The Italian
steamer Oltta Di Palermo, from Nor
folk, for New Orleans, in ballast, was
stranded on Diamond Shoals, 1 mile
from Cape Hatteraa Life Saving sta
tion, last night during thick weather.
The crew of thirty men was landed
In lifeboats today by the Cape Hat-
tera# and Creeds Hill Life Saving sta.
tlon, and are being cared for at the
station.
Tile ship Is lying In about 13 feet
of water, ami Is apparently In good
condition. There Is no water in her
hold. The sea Is smooth and the wind
is fresh from the north.
Reports received from the scene of
the wreck .say that If quick assistance
la rendered, the ship may, In all prob
ability. be floated though with mu
difficulty.
Wrecking tugs left at once for the
scene of the wreck.
Man Creamated by Flames.
Warren. O., Oct. 4.—xAn unknown
man is supposed to have been cremat-
•d, another perhaps fatally burned,
and a third seriously injured as a re
sult of a tire that destroyed the sta
ble of A. L. Pattingtll here early to
day. The men were here attending
a carnival and were sleeping In the
stable. Owen Kelly, of Niles. O., was
rescued after he had been badly burn
ed. A man named Wyiadi, of Brace-
villa, O., Jumped from the second story
of the burning building and received
a broken hip. It Is believed that a
third man whose name has not been
learned, was probably cremated.
Argumanta Against New Trial.
Cincinnati, Oct. 4.-^The argument
of the government against-the conten.
tions in the petition for a new trial
for Mrs. Cassle L Chadwick now un
der sentence of ten years In the Ohio
penitentiary for conspiracy to wreck
an Oberlin, O.. national bank, was con
tlnued today by Assistant Attorney S
H. Garry before the United States
circuit court of appeals in this city.
The arguments are expected to con
ttnae until tomorrow.
MAN HAD NO ACCOMPLICES.
Young Bank Clerk Who Purloined Se
curities Makes Statement.
New York, Oct. 4.—The detectives
and the police have satisfied them
selves that Harry Leonard, the bo>
who did the National City bank out of
1359,000 worth of securities by means
of a forged Check, had no accomplices.
They announced yesterday that all the
evidence to convict young I^onard had
been obtained and that the case was
closed.
In court yesterday Leonard seemed
eager to talk concerning himself, but
the police would not let him. The
reporters and officers surrounded him
successfully and he got launched In the
story before the police shut him up,
“I have been making a stui
banking and banking methods,
began, “ever since I’ve been down In
the street. A month ago I wrote an
article for a Wall street publication
showing up the carelessnes of the mes.
senger service down there. I liked
the article so well that I decided to
demonstrate the thing and make
name for my self.”
At this point he was interrupted by
the officers.
EIGHTEEN INJURED IN WRECK.
DEFENDS J. D. ROCKEFELLER.
Cry of ‘‘Tainted Money” Cornea from
the Drones of Society.
Chicago, Oct. 4.—"I would rather be
John D. Rockefeller today, divested ol
his wealth and with his lovable per
sonality, than any of the crew, saints
or sinners, who are attacking him.
The foregoing Is a quotation from
an interview published today from !>r.
D. K. Parsons, a Chicago millionaire,
nationally known as a phllantroplsL
“Tainted money," continued Mr.
Parsons, "to the popular mind, exictcg
just now by socialistic outcries, th**re
Is no wealth that Is untainted. This
cry of ‘tainted money' is no jest. It is
unfair and not American. It has
come the rallying cry of the social
the drone and the discontented nu
her of society who hates those win
talents or wealth exeted his own.”
Dog Fell in the Well.
Tifton, Ga., Got. 4.—Saturday night
the residents of Fourth street, be
tween Love and Central avenue,
were startled out of their usual calm
by a dog falling Into a well at the
residence of Erwin Price. The
ladles of the household, thinking
burglar was breaking into the house,
raised the alarm, but soon the noise
was found to come from the well,
whereupon the cry arose that some
one had fallen into the well. Quite
a crowd collected, and finally a light
was lowered into the well and reveal-
ed a lone "purp,” paddling his own
canoe, though in rather restricted
quarters. He was rescued from his
perilous position a wetter if not a
wiser dog.
Plans to Get Rich
are often frustrated by sadden break
down, due to dyspepsia or constipa
tion. Brace up and take Dr. King’s
New Life Pills. They take out the
materials which are clogging your
energies, and give you a new start
Cure headache and dizziness, too.
At Wi, D. Dunaway and A. E Dim-
mock’s drug stores: 25 cents: guar
anteed.
The manager of the California air
ship that has been secured for the
fair in Macon will kindly allow one
man a day to go up with him. Here
Is a chance for somebody.
Train Leaves Track Upon a Curve and
Coachea Turn Over.
Conuellsville, Pa., Oct. 4.—Fifteen to
eighteen people were injured, five of
them seriously, in the wreck today
of train No. 1, the Fairmont express
on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad at
Round Bottom, near Morgantown, VV.
Va.
Three coaches, including the bag
gage car, ladles’ coacch and a Pullman
gage car, left the rails on a curve
and tumbled over the bank to the edge
of the Monogahela river.
Grant Burns, of Hazlewood, Pa., con-
ductor of the train, has a broken arm
and is bruised and cut.
James D. Ellenbergef, and son, C.
EJ’onberger, both of Dunbar, Pa.,
Baltimore and Ohio bridge carpenters,
among the most seriously injured.
Plotting to Overthrow Germans.
Berlin, Oct. 4.—The Colonial section
of the foreign office first heard of the
arrest of Andrew Dewet, near Vikhoe,
German Southwest Africa, on the
charge of plotting with four other
Boers to overthrow German rule in
Southwest Africa, from South African
papers of the latter part of August
which reached Berlin last Monday, but
were not opened until yesterday. The
foreign office telegraphed to the gov
ernor of Southwest Africa for a re
port on the subject but considers that
the Incident probably has been much
exaggerated as otherwise the gover
nor would have regarded it as worth
reporting.
Miss Roosevelt at Yokohama.
Yokomaha, Oct. 4.—'Miss Alice
Roosevelt and her party arrived here
today on the steamer L. Minnesota
from Shlmonosekl. Miss Roosevelt
was received by the American minister
the American consul, lue Imperial mas
ter of the ceremonies and the gover
nor, but declined any formalities. She
will stay at a hotel here tonight,
and tomorrow will go sightseeing Into
the interior until Oct. 13, when the
party headed by B. H. Harrlman and
Miss Roosevelt’s party will leave Yoko.
hama for San Francisco on the steam,
er Siberia.
Minister of Finance Reports.
Copenhagen. Oct. 4.—Minister of Fi
nance Lassen today submitted the bud-
g^t for 190G-07 to the lower house ol
parliament. He estimated the reve
nue at about 121,425,000, and the ex
pendlture at about $20,750,000. Minister
Lasen is the first minister of finance
to recognize In his budget the interna
tional chamber of agriculture started
under the auspices of the king of Italy
on the initiative of David Lubin, of
California. The minister asks for an
appropriation to enable Denmark to
participate in the establishment of the
chamber.
Chaplain Taggart Reports for Duty.
Columbus. O.. Oct, 4.—Captain a F.
Taggart, whose divorce case .in Woo-
cter attracted the attention of the en
tire country lor weeks, arrived at
the Columbus barracks and reported
for duty. He declined to talk in any
wiy of the divorce proceedings, or of
the probable outc< h etrouble.
Remorse lasts almost as long as
the punishment for the thing that
causes It.
A woman can pretend almost any
thing except that she likes to smoke.
Miller-Jones Shoe Co.
ss^SHOES
The merchant* of Qeoreln. Florida and Alabama can Rave money b;
their stock* here. Full lines carried. No need to fro Baltimore, .
other foctory markets. We duplicate their | goods and prices And
you the heavy freight charges. vv
Miller-Jones Shoe Co., Valdosta. 35
THE
A. & PENDLETON CO.
WHOLESALE GROCERS.
We are sole agents for the El Nacional Cigar Co.,
manufacturers of clear Havana cigars. Fama Nacional
and Triumpho Nacional brands. No Brands are more
popular.
SEND US YOURiORDERS;
The A. S. Pendleton Co.,
Valdosta, Ga.
This New Waverly
ONLY
Drop-Head, ballbearing
and one of the lightest
running Machines on
the market; five drawers,
full anartered oak and
handsomely finished.
Finest material and
workmanship in its con
strnction.
A ten year written
guarantee given with
every machine. Call
and soe it.
These special prices on
the New Waverly will
hold for only a short
while longer.
H. K. McLendon
Valdosta, Ga.
Thera it no opium or other harmful sub-
itance in Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It
may be given to a baby as confidently as to an
adult. It Is pleasant to take, too, and always
cores, and cores quickly. It is a favorite with
mothers of small children for colds and croop.