Newspaper Page Text
M
THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1907.
(ATOR BACON IS
ELECTED.
i M: ny New Bills Introduced and Lit-
4le was Accomplished—Number of
tesolutions for and Against Prohi
bition Were Introduced—Lithia
Vater Remedies the Water Famine
it the Capitol.
- v
\tlanta, Ga., July 10—United States
Q nator A. 0. Bacon was‘today re
el icted to the senate, by both houses
in joint session. The house and sen-
at s held separate nominations yester-
d£y at which Senator Bacon’3 name
^as.the only one proposed, and his
election was unaimous. Senator Ba
ton was invited to address the gen
eral.* assembly, and responded with
an eloquent address.
Tuesday was unproductive of im
portant legislation except for the in
troduction of new bills. But a few
bills have been acted upon by the
recently appointed committees, and
until they are reported upon but lit
tle can ba done.
A number of resplutions for and
against the prohibition bill were read
in the house, but today brings the
big fight on the impending measure.
Both houses will, through their com
mittees, consider the bill this after
noon, and delegations from Savannah,
'* Macon, Columbus, Augusta and At
lanta will appear before the commit
tees to oppose the bill. The work
ers for prohibition will be on hand to
defend the measure and a formidable
array of facts and figures will be pre
sented.
The water famine in the house and
senate has been remedied by a sup
ply of lithia water, produced in re
sponse to a demand for pure water
by prohibitionists and anils alike.
Representative Swilling, of Frank
lin, who has been absent from the
sessions was sworn in yesterday.
The bill of Mr. Edwards, of Hab
ersham, providing for the rotation of
superior court judges has been taken
up and adversely reported by the com-
B . Mr. Edwards spoke in be-
f his bill. Mr. Hall, of Bibb,
d its passage, as did Mr. Ad-
»f Chatham. The bill was de
feated . x
A resolution by Mr. Nix, of Gwyn-
nett, providing for a request that the
raiir^d commission look into he mer
its "di'vthe Born safety appliance to
prevent railway wrecks, wag adopted.
Humor <ma Philosophy
By DUNCAN M. SMITH
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
Some men are loved tor the money
that they have made.
Love is trust, but trust is more apt
» be money than anything else.
Art is long and youth is fleeting, and
soap advertisements bring in the
money.
The way of the transgressor is fine
for speeding.
A word to the foolish is as good as
a paid advertisement.
All governments receive their unjust
power from the conseut of the moneyed
Interests.
The pride of possession doesn't seem
to inure in red hair.
It Is a heap easier to believe in our
virtues than in our vices.
Gossip is the small change of his
tory.
REST ROOM III STORE
Suggestion of Value to Merchants
Who Want Country Trade.
The Summer Drink
PLEASE THE FARMER'S WIFE.
Provide Accommodation For Women
and Children Who Spend a Day or
an Afternoon In Town—Headquarters
With Home Comfort*.
Probably most suicides are sorry they
did It.
A Rare Specimen.
Oh. poor nr-glccted mortal,
So modest and abashed.
Who looks for all the world t
though
His only check was cashed—
So sad. forlorn and lonely,
A child of adverse fate,
One Island In an ocean—,
The lone boy graduate.
Among your many sisters
You only get a frost;
It really seems a wonder
You do not turn up lost.
You sit back In a corner
And dare not think aloud.
For what can one lone mortal
Accomplish In a crowd?
And you nr6
iselesa
such little worth,
have In your essay
For j
Told how to run the earth.
But when It comes to raiment.
Glad rags and all that thing.
Up there among the maidens.
So lovely and so thick,
You Well deserve a medal
Or two because you stick.
You have the goods to prove It
That you uro truly great, >
Lost In a sea of dresses,
Poor lone boy graduate.
HORSE AND DOG IN FIGHT.
Several Kind*.
“Who Is that
Some merchants wonder why so
many of the women on the farms keep
mall order catalogues constantly on
hand and buy articles from the big
city houses which they might purchase
from the home stores to equal advan
tage. Did it ever occur to you that the
town merchants who make any special
provision for the comfort of farmers’
wives and daughters who patronize
the stores are scarcer than hens’ teeth?
A recent writer in Collier’s has some
thing to say which may offer a valua
ble suggestion in the matter of keeping
and Increasing borne trade.
Suppose you’re a Kansas farmer’s
wife, says this writer. You have driv-
into town for street fair day in the
wilting heat of the prairie summer,
your husband, tbe three small children,
Including tbe baby, under the big yel
low umbrella strapped to the wagon
seat. Shopping done, the wagon un
hitched in a vacant lot, lunch eaten in
its shade, the man goes back to the
holiday street. The woman stays be
hind to mind the children. She might I
go to a store, to be sure, where she |
would be In every one’s way. Well |
meaning folks would give the childrcu \
candy until their little hands would i
stick to everything they touched. In- j
eluding their mother’s skirts, and there I
would be nothing to do but go out Into .
the street and walk, then return and ;
wait and wait. So nil that long after- |
noon she sits on the ground, holding 1
the baby in the little patch of shade, j
The sun beats down; clouds of dust j
| envelop them; tbe children’s hands und 1
j faces become grimy. Finally, at 0 j
! o’clock, the mnu returns, hitches up. j
I They watch the balloon ascension and j
j start home. Then what? Supper to
! get, milk to strain and put away, j
! dishes to wash, chickens to shut up, ;
| calves to feed and the tired babies to j
! bathe and soothe to sleep. The woman i
! had looked forward to this outing as a !
‘ much needed change. When she final-!
\ ly gets to bed she is too tired to sleep. I
: H^r holldny had been spent under a j
j wagon on a dirty vacant lot. The !
j shade of the trees of her own yard
j would have l>een pleasanter. .
I “This,” writes n woman from Car-;
j bondale, Ivan., “is the condition in the ,
j average town. There are numerous
I places where tho men are welcomed,
I where they can spend an hour "without
| a thought of being in the way. Should
' not these busy women have a place of ;
I their own where, when their shopping
| is done, they can take their babies and
j visit nnd rest and go home refreshed
and strengthened rather than utterly
! worn out?”
j Collier’s asks if this is a case for
- some plutocrat with money to donate
: for the establishment of a town club
for country women or should it be
Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer is the ideal summer drink.
Cooling, satisfying and refreshing, it adds to the enjoyment
of the outdoor luncheon for it is a food as well as a drink.
Pabst brews fbr food qualities as well as for purity and
flavor. Pabst found the only way to get all of the food-values
out of the barley-grain was to follow Nature in making the
malt, by growing it slowly and scientifically, and he there
fore perfected the Pabst Eight-Day Malting Process. Pabst
Malt is richer in nutriment than other malts.
Pabst BlueRibbon
The Beer of Quality
is a more healthful, wholesome food than other beers. The Pabst
Perfect Brewing Process blends the rich food values of Pabst Malt
with the tonic properties of the choicest hops under con
ditions that insure positive purity, while reducing the
percentage of alcohol to the minimum—less than 3&9&.
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the ideal family beer, because
of its food values, its purity and its remarkably small
amount of alcohol, making it a truly temperance drink.
When ordering beer, ask
for Pabst Blue Ribbon.
Made by
Pabst at Milwaukee
And Bottled only at the Brewery.
W. D. Newsom,
108 Ashley St., Valdosta.
Phone 127.
I
FOOTS
DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT
RrIJsvm Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Belching of Oat, Etc.
PRKfARRD ONl.V AT TH* LABORATORY OP
E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY, CHICAGO, IIX.
o d codger across looked nftcr by the township or the
“nrfn’t ' count 3’^ ^ appears that it should he
n Y 0 w looked after by the Individual store
keepers. Here Is a fine opportunity
D. Dunaway, Valdosta, Ga
know him? That
is Bill Jones one ! **«*■■ « « uu„ uwivi-ii’imy Alabama is the only State in the
of our old land- i for Rome t - nter l»rlslng merchant who Union whoso legislature meets but
or our oia tana i wnnts to g00(lg to the women who . , i4
live on farms. onCe ,n four >’ ears * Then lts session
Suppose you nre)n farmer’s wife nnd is limited to forty days and the mem-
you drive Into town for n day's recrea- berg 0 , tbo Legislature get ,4 a day.
marks."
“Looks to me
like an old easy
mark.”
Latter’s Head Had to be Cut off to
Release its Hold.
A prominent citizen of Gallatin,
Tenn, recently imported an Englisn
bulldog warranted never to op^n its
Jaws when once they had closed on
an enemy, says the Nashville Ameri
can. He was very proud of his pur
chase, and exhibited it frequently.
The dog was given a corner In foe Bim „„ Am , ric>nt .
stable, where was also kept a fast j Some sweet tempered Englishmen Blank & Co., general merchants. In
pacing hone. Recently the owner; who are not allowing their soreness to j * be store building is a commodious evei ^ year,
locked the two animals in the barn, I stick out except all over are predict- j room set aside for women and cbil- r ' '
and went away on a visit When he lDg that the duy wl11 80oa como wben drea - Thero nre coz y chairs, tables
returned and opened the barn door' Americans will be barred from the "ith the newspapers and magazines In
« *
tlou and shopping. Instead of having
to keep the children by the tied up Ani! at tnat the sta, o Bee '«“ to get
team nnd eat n cold luncheon on tho along a 3 well as Georgia and
fj™ 8 ® ® r lD th ° d V sty 8troet y° u take one or two other Commonwealths
the little ones to^hejuterpri 8 Jn_g.tore whoM , eK , 8lature as3enlb , los meet
■ ; ™ “““ 7 cuea uara a ™ r bent hotels In Europe. I easy reach, a couch or two for loung-
n me evening he was horrified to find doesn’t serve to confirm in their ,n £ or napping and a motherly woman
rne horse on the floor nearly dead, ra ind the rumor that all men, partlc- on duty to look after the children,
while hanging to its under Jaw from ularly Americans, are brothers when You find In this store a place where
* dch the flesh had been torn, leaving they see untitled Yunkees sweep over you may wash the dust of the drive
the bone almost bare was the hid’doT the old worId P lckIn » U P afl th ey go a from your fuce and do up your back
• 1 ’ «, linn nF 111,, luvaf In Ihft ahnn ! hfl!l* flTIfl IttIfflf vnil, hnf la nn
11 ’ve, but badly bruised. The owner
neat line of the best in the shop. •' hair and see that your hat Is on
.. • Maybe the hotel keepers will listen straight. You make the rest room your
e pair called in his friends and j 0 them on the day that the landlords headquarters for the day, leaving your
a once set to work to relieve th* ! want to go bankrupt, but until that on- bundles there as well as your children;
horse of his terrible antagonist. The happy moment they will keep on tak- You nre free to go about town on er-
dTg was choked kicked pounded Mng the money of Americans and telling rands, returning at noon to eat your
f'M-ned with hot’Irons and a wedve 1 them not t0 torget the place whea luncheon from onc of the Per-
11 4 ’ aUU a ncraln hfinH With A flln nf llu>
V', driven into hi i ’ w „ * they come again. haps with a cup of coffee hot off the
li * J 8 ^ aW8 ’ but a to a0 . It might be more in accord with their little stove provided for that purpose,
-pose. Finally, an axe was procur- artistic sense to see Englishmen walk-, You meet here also some of the wo-
and the dog’s head chop?»*d oft. lng around dressed in an eyeglass and men who live in town and who drop In
i*n it was difficult to loos a rh? , an ill fitting coat, but tho pocketbook to rest and chat while doing their
Tip. j hankers after the other kind, and It shopping. When the time comes for
The horse will probably dlo His ‘ wJU sUn dictate the pollCJ ’ i you t0 bundle the chIldren ,nto the
i kin wna 4 . p . y “ * H,s I 1 wagon and start for home you will feel
1 , n r f om a,s b0< Jy 5n nil ay ; Touching His Wsaknsss. 1 a great deal better than if you have bad
aces where the dog had evidently 1 “i wonder if these advertisement* . to undergo tbe experience of the wo-
To make Ice Cream la 10 min
ute* for 1 cent a plate. Stir
content* of one package
jeii-olce Cream Powder
Into a quart of milk and freeze, without
Save* tbe coat *ffjrt,Rag*r sod flavoring.
Saves meuartng out IngredlenU and cook
ing. Does sway with all uncertainty, and In-
makea nearly two quarts ice cream. ~
Flavor a: ChotoloU, Fan«te, StraicUrry,
Lemon and Unfavored,
t packages f
. if your grt
does not keep it
sendee hie name
and S3 cents tor
The Qtnnet Pore Food Ce„ Le Key, X. Y.
P. 8. Delirious Cream Pudding caI
also la made from JelUQ ICE CREAM
Winn •Jonas
• * 4ic A frj,-* :%irt
Shoe Co,
Wholesale,
Manufacturers and
Distributors of
SHOES
led to fasten his teeth, and he was ' you see In the papers. 'Papa, com* man described above.
carred from head to foot,
ad evidently had one hold on -he
rse s breast, for there a large piece
flesh was torn out. It tad been a
ittle royal. Probably the dog, after
-siting his rope, had wandered Into
' pacer’s stall, and coming too near
b^ls, had been kicked. The dog
r ,f Hated with hi. .act. ... .*
“ted with his teeth, and the fight
1-n. There was hardly a whol
>i< left In the dog’s body, anl the
a*e Will not be good for anything
he lives.
“I V
P \
'«vnn a - a jtq p[0g . pooS no<
pooj jnoi seijBni lea noX jbom
,a IP lopox 'nonmots Xqiiuen s ttj
.oj iaopif eq» tniejuoo ptr* sp|ott
JnaSex ;o ptmodmoo v s| lopojr
1l«J Wmojd papjojys oq ip noX
_» X[pmoiFcooo iopoh , equ,
'Tan <B*tnojs jo nuoj Xn» ao eoner
‘J} Tunq hreeq ‘nonsoS|pnj jo non
t
home; all Is forgiven; everybody bro- - If Blank & Co. offer you such a club- - ^
ken hearted,’ ever bring results?** | room, where will you do most of your 1 I y T ./
“If they would advertise that • j trading? With Blank & Co., of course. ] ^ ^
square meal was waiting for the old j Thus the firm gets more than value re- A
reprobate it would be more likely to eelved for the expense of maintaining
bring him in.” *be clubroom nnd In addition has the
i satisfaction of making the farmer's
Who Was th# Angsl? • family comfortable for the day.
“Glodlays Ls going to star with a Any merchant who has the enter-
company her own next season.** prise to open such a rest room in con-
“Did you find out the name of the nectlon with his store and advertise
play?” ! the fact Is bound to get profitable re-
No; nor the name of the million- suits,
[»'
alre.”
Liks Papa.
The Iceman’s only daughter
Looked very good to Willie,
But when he thought he'd caught I
He found her very chilly.
Who Is going to be the first to make
this sensible bid for the patronage of
farmers’ wives?
Value of Good Roads.
The farmer is by no means the
| only one who benefit* by good bigb-
1 ways. Every town merchant ls vital*
Brassey—How do you like our naw ly concerned in the good road* move-
golf links? ment whether he ls aware of tbe fact
Cloek—It suits me to a tee. or not
An Appropriate Phrase.
Mr. MERCHANT:—
We can sell you at the same price you have to
pay In Boston or St. Louis, and save you the excessive
freight charges and unnecessary delays In transit.
We sell the Buffalo brand. When you see the
Buffalo on the bottom of a shoe, It's solid. We don't
allow anything but leather to go Into our Buffalo shoes.
Winn-Jones Shoe Co.
104 S. Patterson St., Valdosta, Ga.
P. S.—A postal will bring our salesman, or If you pre
fer coming to the house to place your order, we will
pay your expenses. „ :: :: :: ::
tJMM