Newspaper Page Text
iO
T11E VA1
ITA TIMES, SAT UK DAY, FEBRUARY i7, 1906.
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AVERY’S DISC CULTIVATORS.
Gantt Cotton Planters and Gujano Distributors.
Vulcan Steel Beam Plow3. Dixie Plows
Georgia Ratchet Stocks! Double Stocks.
Plow Gear. Steel Shapes=^=The Best Made.
Kokomo and Pioneer Wire Fence, ■ . .
The Most Complete Line of Labor Saving Farm Tools Ever Carried in Valdosta.
.CALL AND SEE OUR LINE.™—^
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J. E. Roberts Hardware Co.,
BUILDERS’ HARDWARE.
STOVES AND RANGES.
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ANNA MAY LOSE
HER CHILDREN.
I GROWING WEALTH CF THE [
I SOUTH I
The rapid progress of the souths' I
recovery from the devastation and pa |
I ralysis caused by the civil war has j
I been made the subject of an inter j
eating article contributed to the Re*
view of Reviews by Mr. Richard H.
j Edmonds, editor of the Manufactur
| ers Record of Baltimore. The grat-
| ifying array of facts and figures
( which he furnishes shows the aston
ishing advance the wouth has made
on the road to industrial Independ
ence as well as the particular things
are Indlgmnt | In which independence hae been al* •
ready achieved.
Mr. Edmonds recalls the fact that
FROM WAYCROSS
TO ST. MARYS’
r Railroad 1
Waycross
New York Women
Over Threat Made by Friends cf
Bonl tie Castellane — Crusade little more than two decades ago the
Against r.irl. Marrying Foreigners Iron roasters of Pennsylvania laugn-
eJ at file Idea that the Bouth would
Wilt tie Commenced I onc j a y become a great Iron maker
New York, Fell 13-—Prominent wo- while the spinners of New England
men of tlilH city have become aroua' P redlcte(1 1118 lltm08t conflJe “ ce
that the south would remain a pro
od over the threat made In Paris ducer and not a manufactur er of cof
that unlonS* the Countess de Castel- ^ on j, U (. time Is the witness that*has
lane becomes reconciled to her hus- disproved both assertions. In the
band her children may be taken away period of twenty-five years, from
from her by the courts. j 1880 to 1905 the number of cotton
Intense indignation Is expressed spindles In the south Increased from
Everywhere over the brutal threat. 007,000 to 9,205,000, and what is still
lvoalers of women’s clubs, equality more remarkable, the amount of cot>-
loa-uos, etc., are very bitter In their ton used by southern mills increased
denunciation of this contemptible from 225,000 bales to 2,103,000 bales,
last resort on the part of the friends and during the year 1905 the mills of
of the count, or may he he count him’ ' all the other sections of the country
self, to force his
him or else to n
there shall he no
wife to live with
radge It so that
separation or dl-
Fight Against Foreigners.
The agitation and indignation Is
wpreadlng rapidly and the outcome
will probably he an organized effort
to wlucate American girls against
the marrying 6f titled foreigners.
Plans are already being made to
start the campaign of education by
lectures, pamphlets, magazine and
newspaper articles. Statistics show*
lag tlia large number of unhappy
marriages of American girls with
poverty stricken dukes, count?, etc.,
are to he gathered and the facts sent
broadcast.
It Is already pointed out that In
some forty marriages of American
girls to titled money grabbers that
many are divorced and many more
separated'
In these forty marriages alone
nearly 225,000,000 good .American
dollars have been handed/ over to
spendthrifts with handles to their
names.
May Appeal to France.
Indignation lias reached such a
pitch over tbe throat to separate the
countess from her children that here
is talk of sending a delegation of pro m
incut women to Washington to de
mand of the French ambassador a
guarantee that the countess shall
, have justice before the law tribunals
in France and that the threat that
film shall be deprived of her children
lu case she wins the action shall no'
be held over her head and that she
shall not be Compelled through her
mother love to make any compro
mise with the count.
For Over 81xty Year*.
An Old and Well Tried Remedy —
lieeu used for over sixty yean* bv mil-
Mrs. Winslow's 8oothing Syrup. v»<l
lions of mothers for their children
while teething, with perfect succes
It soothes the child, softens the gums
allays all pain, cures wind colic aud
Is the best remedy for diarrhoea, (s
pleasant to the taste. Sold by drug*
gists in every part of the world.
Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value
Is incalculable. Be sure and ask to*
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Symp has
take no other.
A. D. Parker, the new vice-presi
dent of the Colorado & Southern
railway five years ago, was “grub*
staked.’* Today he is worth nearly
a million.
combined consumed only a little
more than the south. In the last
five years the south’s consumption of
raw material has quadrupled, while
New England's Increase was only 2S
per cent.
With respect to Iron and coal pro*
ductlon. the progress of the south
has been wonderfully rapid. As ihucm
pig Iron was produced In the south
ern states in 1903 as was made in
the entire country in 18S0 and the
bituminous coal mined there In 1905
was CG per cent*, more than the out
put In the whole of the United States
25 years ago.
Cotton, coru and coal constitutes
an enormuos proportion of the wealth
of the country but all this material
unbuilding ns Mr Edmonds well says
as nothing compared to “the val
of the experience gained, the cap
ital accumulated and the realization
of power and strength against the
weakness and hopelessness of 25
>ars ago.*
The people of the north are begin
ning to realize as never before that
the possibilities of trie south are sim
ply normmis and unlimited, and that
twenty years more of development at
the present rate will make It the
althiest and most powerful section
of the country. In his article Mr.
Sdmonds makes use of the case of
Texas to Illustrate the potentiality of
the south. The I.one Star state has
iren ns extensive as that of the
whole empire of Japan, and In nat-
lral advantages of soil, climate and
mineral deposits, Texas rivals the
great districts extending from Ra*
llegh westward to Little Rock, and
from Chicago to the Louisiana gulf
line, hence that state alone is capa
ble of supporting a population
50,000.000.
Company Has Been Formed to
Build This New Line of Road—It
is Also Planned to Extend Branch
By Way of Folkston to St. George.
Waycross, Ga., Feb. 13—The Even
ing Herald today publishes notice
of a petition for charter for a new
railroad which is to run from Way
cross to St. Mary’s, Ga.. with a
branch by the way of Folkston, to St
George, the new colony city in Charl
ton county.
The petitioners are H. A. Cannon,
D. Lott, W. E. Sirmans, A. T.
Hitch, W. H. Cason, M. V. Little,
Ship Cannon, K. Meeks, W. W.
Meeks and J. E. T. Bowden.
The name of the ncom*
pany will be the Waycross, Satilla
and St. Mary’s Railroad Company,
and It will have about 110 miles of
trackage. Dr. H. A. Cannon, a den
tist in this city, Is the principal pro
moter of the new railroad. He has
recently purchased several large
blocks of timber lands in Charlton
county, and his first intention was to
construct saw mills and ,run small
tram roads to utilize the timber. The
new railroad scheme was later le-
clded upon. However, Mr. Cannon
has now associated himself with sev
eral men of capital, and it is their in*
tentlon to push the road through dur
ing the present year.
The capital stock of the proposed j
corporation will be $200,000 and the j
company desires the right to in-
crease the stock to $1,000,000. The !
new road will cross the Atlantic
Coast Line at a point known as Wlno I
kur in Charlton county and from i
there to St. Mary’s on the St. Mary’s |
From Bullhea 1 Bluff the road j
will run to St George on the Georgia |
Southern and Florida railway, again j
crossing the Atlantic Coast Line at j
Folkston. The counties of Ware, j
re, Charlton, and Comden will j
be traversed. ,
Mr. Cannpu thinks that actual |
cork on the new rartoad will com- j
mence within ninety tjays, the short !
Top Bany, sum.
factored by ns bars
i In AtUnts, OeorgU.
A Southern Burry
for Southern true,
er Top, r
Cushion, i
Bade, U elegantly painted and fully
Regular retail price *65.00 to *74.00.
SO For this fins Collar sad Rams,
«?««»ted Hsrnes*. sold with
,*£ OI * s BUOOY. regular retail
price su.60 to *14.00.
Catalog and full deKrlptloa aant oa requart.
. GOLDEN EAGLE BDG6T CO.
IBS-160 EdgewooA Are., ATlahta, Ga.
sgSiSEiSS gggggg Bsarea eng. sns..
■■SEjS. JSP5L
Schofield’s Iron Works,
M ^NUFAOrUR iIRS OF
High Grade Machinery, j
MACON, GEORGIA,
Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills, Oane Mills, Corn Mills,
Iron Grinders, Shafting, Pul
leys, Boxing, Gearing, Iron
aud Brass Castings of every
description. We are Original
Inventors of the Turpentine
Distillers Steam Pumping Out
fit.
We have lately equipped our
already extensive boiler shops,
winch now gives us largest ca
pacity of any manufacturers
in the South.
We are headquarters for Steam
Pumps, Inspirators, Injectors,
Valves, Lubricators, Wrought
Iron Pipe, Boiler Tubes, Pipe
Fittings and Pipe Fitters’ Ma
terials.
SAVE -nD DEAL DIRECT WITH THE MANUFACTURERS
J. S. SCHOFIELD’S SONS CO», Proprietors, Macon, Ga.
line fro
probabl.
Folkston to Bullhead Bluff
being starte,^ first.
A Healing Gospel.
The Row J. C. Warren, pastor of
Sharon Baptist church, Belalr, Ga.,
says of Electric Bitters: “It’s a
Godsend to mankind. It cured me of
lame back, stiff Joints, and complete
physical collapse. I was so weak It
took me half an hour to walk a mile.
Two bottles of Electric Bitters have
made me so strong I have Just walk
ed three miles in 50 minutes and
feel like walking three more. It’s
made a new man bf me.” Greatest
remedy for weakness and all Stom
ach. liver and kidney complaints.
Sold under guarantee at A. E. Dim-
mock's and W. D. Dunaway's drug
stores. Price 50c.
Luckiest Man in Arkansas.
I’m the luckiest man in Arkan
sas,’’ writes H. L. Stanley, of Bru*
“slnce the restoration of my
wife’s health after five years of con
tinuous coughing and bleeding from
the lungs: and I owe my good for
tune to the world's greatest medi
cine, Dr. King’s Now Discovery for
consumption, which I know from ex
perience will cure consumption
taken In time. My wife improved
with the first bottlo and twelve bot
tles completed the oure” Cures rile
worst coughs and colds or money re
funded. At A. E. Dlmmock’s and
W. D. Dunaway’s, druggists. 50c and
$1.00. Trial bottles free
The Atlas Copper Works,
• MANUFACTURERS OF
According to a Georgia professor
plants have all the five senses, ex
cept hearing Still a cautious mar.
will hardly tell his secrets In a corn
field.
Dyspepsia Is Am* lea's curse. Bur
dock Blood Bitters eonquers dyspep
sia every time. It drives out Impuri
ties, tones the stomach, restores per
fect digestion, normal weight, and
good health.
Shad! Shad! Phone 104 for shad
and oysters, Bell and Kirk. 10-tf
L
U K. BRIESENICK. FRED. GRIMM. C. P. THORNTON,
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OVED Turpentine Stills & Supplies t|
1 :
BEST EQUIPPED PLANT IN UNITED STATES. *
: -I-
MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP THE VERY BEST. *
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? ?fi eo , ial attention to repair work I EXTRA STILLS, WORMS, CAPS
-5- All classes of copper work solicited . _,. c ,, ’
.j. and prompt delivery of work. | AND ARMS ALWAYS ON HAND.
CURES
COUGHS and
COLDS
Foleys
Homey and Tar
A. E. Dimmock, Valdosta, Ga.
The genuine Is
in a Yellow
package
Refuse substitute*
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