Newspaper Page Text
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TEE VAL
fe s*y :
TIMES, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23,1905.
During the Christmas Holidays
And Every Day For the Next Twenty Years,
A New Scale $400. oo Ludden
& Bates Club Piano at $287.oo
Will afford more general satisfaction to musical minded people than any $400.00
piano ever sold.
Booklet tells why==-stating* only the best of many good points for any one abou
buying a piano. Write for it FOW, as you ought to know what you are getting!
a piano by all means.
More than thirty of the NBW SCALE $400,00 LUDDEN & BATES CLU—.
PIANOS are now ready for immediate shipment, and every order sent in will W
personally selected by an expert who knows every requirement of a first=c£^s§
piano.
You Save Nearly $125.00 as the New Scale $400.00
Ludden & Bates Club Piano is Sold to Club Members
At $287.00
■r
ik
CARTER &
Valdosta,- -
DOROUGH, 1
- Georgia.
SAFES BLOWN AT
Some Large Hauls Are Made by
The stores of C. W. Hodges, Ousley
Brothers and E. D. Edmondson
Were Entered Tuesday Night and
Dynamite was Used in Breaking
Into the 8afes,
News was received here this morn
ing of a wholesale robbery which oc
curred at Morven, twelve miles above
here Tuesday night.
The stores of C. W. fledges, Ous-
ley Brothers, and E. D. Edmondson
were entered and the robbers used
dynamite or some other explosive
And blew open the safe in each store.
They secured about $200 in money
from Edmondson's store and $100
each from Ousley aud Hodges. It
seems that the robbers were after
money principally, as very few oth
er things were missing.
On Sunday night the country store
of J. M. Hester at Talloka3 was rob
bed at $214, his safe being blown
open.
It is thought that the robberies
were committed by a gang that has
been following McDonald Bros., show'
PER80NAL MENTION.
The ladies took to the plan of furn
ishing a Christmas dinner for the pris
oners in Jail and many of them vol
unteered offers of cake, etc., besides
over $25 in money.
WELL KNOWN PHY8ICIAN.
The sea island cotton mnrket con
tinues very sluggish. The price is
lower now than it was two or three
weeks ago and the demand for it is
also slack. The spinners either do
not want the stnple or else they have
little confidence In the ability of the
growers to Htlck together.
Messrs. W. L. Swindle, Clayton
Avern and H. A. Whitehurst, were
among the visitors from Nashville
In town today.
Mrs. M. A. Warllck, who has been
spending some time with relatives
in Valdosta .returned home last night.
She was accompanied home by her
eon, W. H. Warllck, of Tallahassee,
Fla., who returned home this morn
ing. Griffin Call.
4 t
License were Issued this morning
for the marriage of Mr. Cary T. Pros
ser and Miss Mamie V. Iioyott In the
Hahira district.
Mrs. S. S. Townitey, of Atlanta, is
in the city and will spend the holi
days with the family of Mrs. G. A.
Ellis and other relatives here. She
will be pleasantly remembered as
Miss Leila Walker, a sister of Mrs.
Carlton Dougherty.
Talks About Catarrh As a Cause of
Other Diseases.
A prominent physician of Valdonta
was heard to make the following re
mark :
.Mr. John H. Bowden and wife, of
Milltown, are spending the day in
Valdosta.
Two Fell From a Scaffold.
Two men who were at work on the
new school building at Dasher hap
pened to painful injuries yesterday
by the fall of a scaffold on which
they were standing. The men wore
seventeen feet above the ground
when the scaffold fell with a crash,
precipitating them to the ground.
The men were Duffy Lucius and
Joe )$nlyek. who were at work upon
the building. It was thought that
r n’e of the bones In Mulkey's leg
were broken and both of the men
sustained painful injuries. They
were brought to this city for treat
ment
Mr. Mnrcus Luke, Jr., and wife, of
Irwinville, are spending the day in
this city.
Miss Evelyn Farmer, of Dothan,
reached the city from Washington
City yesterday, and is spending a day
or so with Misses Emma Mae and
Valley Ferrell, who have Just
turned from Montgomery. Miss Far
mer will spend the holidays with her
parents at Dothan.
Messrs M. Moore and Charlie Lee,
of Alapaha, are spending a day or
an In Valdosta on business.
Mr. and Mrs. James Green leave
tonight for Macon where they are to
spend the holidays with relatives and
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. W, J. Wallace, of Ar-
gyle, are spending m day or to In the
city on expedition. They
are naatr4Mtrt. N. J. Burt.
kSafe
“If I were asked to name the dis
ease which most rarely de«troys life
I would name catarrh. But were I
asked to namo the disease which sets
up in the system oftenest diseases
which do destroy life I would again
name catarrh. Catarrh while it re
mains simply catarrh very rarely de
stroy* life, although It makes life
miserable, but catarrh surely leads to
a bijft of conditions, many of which
are ratal to life. It is sufficient to
say that the nervous system controls
all the functions of tne human body.
Every minute blood vessel which
permeates the human body contracts
and expands under the Influence of
the nonius system. The portions of
the nervous system which preside
especially over the circulation of the
blood ifi the mucous membranes of
the body, iB known as the vaso-motor
system of nerves. When these nerves
become weakened and allow more
blood than normal to pass into the
capillary vessels, the condition of the
mucous membrane Is known as ca
tarrh. The congestion may occur in
the mucous linings of the nose,
throat or bronchial tubes, lungs,
stomach, bowels, kidneys or pelvic
organs. Wherever It occurs it pro
duces the same condition, chronic
catarrh."
Dillingham’s Plant Juice,
beneficial action upon the vaso-mo
tor nerves, strikes at once
cause of a multitude of catarrhal
diseases. The vaso-motor system of
nerves controls all of the blood-ves-
I Mlflld I
larged and uneven tonsils—some
times causing deafness—in the
larynx hoarsness and weakness of
voice; in the bronchial couhg and
soreness of the chest; In the lungs
consumption; In the stomach dyspep
sia; In the duodenum and intestines,
diarhoea and dysentery, flatulency
ai;1 piles; in the kidneys Bright’
disease; in the bladder cystitis ca‘
1 Dnil of the bladder!: in the reprj-
ductive organs functional deu>
! ments.
| There is no disease more common
and more neglected, and often mpre
I difficult to cure. It is common be
cause all alike are exposed to sudden
tfcanges in temeperature; neglected
because it is rarely severe enough at
first to interfere with business, and
difficult to cure because usually it is
allowed to become chronic before
treatment is begun.
The sure and permanent cure for
catarrh in all Its different forms is
Dillingham’s Plant Juice, sold under
a guarantee to cure, or money back.
It can be obtained at the following
places; A. E. Dimmock’s Valdosta;
Hahira Drug Co., Hahira, Ga., and J.
P. Carter, Naylor, Ga.
BU8INESS LOCALS.
WANTED—Timber lands (Small
bodies) Address W. J. Willingham,
TIfton, Ga. 16-dlt-w-3t
sels and oucti'of the body. But par
ticularly do they control all the ar-
teriea an4r and capillary ves
sels of tha miaous membrane lining
every organ the human body, from
the head to the pelvlB. In catarrh
the vessels apt abnormally dilated.
DIJUnghailijfpiant Juice Increases
the tone blood vessels and
causes them to contract to their nor
mal healtjBjKnitUoa. It 1s this ac
tion/of PlaiS?Juice solely that cures
catai-rh in every part of the mucous
membrane no matter where located.
Chronic catarrtis another name for
ItI U dangerous con
dition, as itfwMl soon destroy the mu-
membrane, producing in the
Lth canker sores, in the throat en*
HOR8E8 AND MULE8.
A car load of horses and mules, ex
tra good animals, for sale at Ham
Bro’s. Stables. t-a-f2t
WANTED—Bright, honest young
man from Valdosta to prepare for
paying position in Government Mail
Service. Box One, Cedar Rapids, la
12-23-w-8t
HORSES AND MULES.
A car load of horses and mules, ex
tra good animals, for sale at Ham
Bro’s. Stables. t-a-f2t
AGENTS—A story book illustrated
with newro children at play. Is r fast
seller; all buy It. Agents make $10
per day. Outfit 10c; particulars free
Answer quick. Jenkins, Hertel &
Co., Atlanta, Georgia,
d-mon tuse-w-tuse
HORSES AND MULES.
A car load of horses and mules, ex
tra good animals, for sale at Ham
Bro’s. Stables. t-a!2t
Horse for Sale.
A thoroughbred Kentucky mare
six years ole good quality. Will
tell at a bargain. Inquire at lire de-
p&rtment. w-2t
FOR SALE—Large stylish black
horse. Apply to H. C. Briggs.
Good horses and mules at Roberts
& Jones, in their new stables.
For all kinds of surety bonds apply
to B. S. Richardson, Valdosta, Ga.
Roberts & Jones are now In their
new stables with 40 head of good
horses and mules at low prices.
23-w-2t
TURPENTINE PLACE FOR SAIL
-V
Syrup wanted at Hahira, or Val
dosta, A. J. Strickland. w
Go to Roberts & Jones for your
farm, mill and turpentine mules,
fine lot on hand now. 23-w2t
FOR RENT—One four room house
on Johnson street Possession given
Jan. 1, 1906. Apply to A. A.
Cardel, over First National Bank.
16-w2t,
Beautiful
Holiday
Goods.
We carry a magnificent line,
present from this store means some
thing.
HARDWARE.
Complete set of tools In chest, carv
ing sets, pearled pocket knives, fine
keen kutter scissors, shears, Rogers
1847 knives, forks and spoons, Gil-
lets’ Safety razor sets, Sh&ving mugs,
razors and straps, nut crackers and
picks, toy stoves but real cookers.
CROCKERY
Salad dishes, cake plates, fruit sau
cers, beautiful vases, child’s plates,
cups and saucers, child’s set knives
and forks, nut bowls, cake baskets,
Elegant lamps, chafing dishes, fern
Jars, fine Rochester coffee pots, serv-
lng dishes, fine china dinner sets, cut
glass, etc.
HARLEY HARDWARE COMPANY,
Valdosta, Ga.
Location 7 miles form Glenmor
Georgia.
One 18-barrel still and fixtures.;
One new pump and boiler.
1,100 acres of land in feea^
good timber.
40 acres cleared, a good farm.
25 houses, some of them good i
Cooper shop and tools.
Still shelter and barns.
100 dip barrels.
5 crops virgin boxes.
6 crops yearling boxes.
5 crops 4th year boxes.
Timber to cut, 6 to 8 crops paid ior.
3,600 acres saw mill and tle-4
8 to 10 year lease.
8 mules, good ones.
2 horses.
One 4-horse wagon and bameaf.
Four 2-horse wagons and hifDCVf
1 new buggy.
1 set double harness.
1 set single harness.
2 sadles.
All farming tools.
All turpentine tools.
$700 or $800 worth of
mlssary.
$1,000 worth of accounts on
Some new boxes cut.
Will take $15,000 for all
half or two-thirds interest i
man.
12-2t
m
Land for 8ila.4
I have 457 acres of fan
acres cleared—half ban
other half ■ ine land, 761
ham-i ock. Public road i
middle of place. K nov
the Wa ton p ace in the 1
Lowndes county. Will i
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ll-7-w-oaw-4t.