Thomasville times-enterprise and South Georgia progress. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1904-1905, March 31, 1905, Image 10
PEOPLE OF THE tUV gain* a French Duke, Levi Parsons Morton, who was vice president of the United State3 daring K IS b a common expres sion we hear on every side.. Unless there,is some organic trouble, the con dition can doubtless be remedied. Your doctor b the best adviser. Do not dose yourself with ,all Rinds of advertised remedies 1 *- gct his opinion. More thaii likely the'administration of President Harri son. has brought an actlou In the su preme, court of New York'against a French duke. Mr. Morton seeks to have set aside the transfer of property which Mr. Morton made to the Morton Trust company in contemplation of the inurriagc of his daughter. Miss Helen Morton, to the Count, now Duke, Boson Talleyrand. Lamar's Lemon Laxative Is the original lemon medicine. It Is made of lemons and other harmless but powerful vege table Ingredients, Is a safe, sure and speedy cure for Indigestion, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Headache. It cleanses the system of all Impurities, tones up the stomach and bowels, puts the liver and kidnevs in perfect order——in short “makes yon new.” It is gentle but prompt and powerful In action, pleasant to take and always reliable. FOB SALE BY ALL MtVGGIMTK. LAMAR, TAYLOR A RILEY ORUQ CO., Manufacturers, Macon, 6a. The court has granted an, order for the sendee by publication on the duke. The marriage > of Miss . Morton to Count Talleyrand took plpce on Oct 4, you need a concentrated fat fpod to enrich your blood and tone up the system. Scott’s Emulsion IN SUNDAY SCRAP GORE GUSHED FREELY. is just such a food in its best form. It will build up the weakened and wasted body when .all other foods fail to nourish. If you are run down or emaciated, give it a trial it cannot hbrt you. It is essentially the best possible nourishment for delicate children and pale, anaemic girls. We will send ydu a sample free. (JOHN S. LONG. Hr. S. Weir. Mitchell, the Great Neurolo gist, Warns Americans Who Neg lect Their Nerves. -la bto, ccatcn ttu number oi dutfu dua to ortom Citan bu tacruwd twenty p.r ccnt.ta frrty ye ttp Oca- fourth of the rfuthi in dttee today are bom "-Dr S. Weir Ml chell. Si t "The dean, rich nerve-force that was behind the I , fliealth and happiness of thousands upon thous- !r lands is literally burning itself up like the dry 1 wick of an einpty lamp. It is the "Strenuous y • !Ufe,” with a vengeance. Congo H'luan Jmii-js SI. GrirK- llw. •ant the Times-GuterpHse 000 packngei of Rorernment Ksrdeu seed, , It i» fh. pnrpoteof this paper to diftribota jho seed .. w.do'y u prutble among ti heopl. of ' U, .rotlQO. Tho gardening day. are p»«»lug by, and any one wish ing to have their garden green tu liojinr 0f Sir Wr-gg* uud IhwTinjtae Elite ■houtd call at once and necnre a pack age- T o,y»rlat ». an parsnip, tnn.k- melon, rdiopto, radish, lettnoe, onion, •qoaihf’Wt, bean., peas, carrot and manyothere. i ,.i , ... i Cap-mem who go to their work in the morning ■ired and .with fax spirits give tp'their own af fairs the-elcctrie-touch of confidence and power V 'tired _ fairs the-elcctrie-touch -mpon which success depends? . Can mothers worn out and nervous, plodding dully or iil-tcmpcred through the routine of ■ hortiqkecpmg, bring into the family life that'pre- , >«ic|hs'spirit of hopefulness and happiness with-' i '<)ut which the word “home” seems a mockery? When you feel exhausted—when you grow i tired sooner than you should—when you lose pa- o i tienee with the irritating cares of daily life— •when you feel discouraged—when .you feel that " your hopes and ambitions are not r.s high as they 1 idscd to he—when you spend a' sleepless night— " -when you get tin almost as weary as when you •went to bed—when you are worried. These are all signs that your nerve forces are f>urning low. i Neglect the nerves and they will make you •feel this neglect in many ways, they control all ■«of the organs of the body and must be kept Stealthy and strong tb do their work properly,— -'fired nerves cannot keep the organs of the body work properly,— rgans of the body working in that harmony which is essential to -weal health. This is why Paine’s Celerv Compound is able to . Wring. health in «onmt\y different forms- Paine’s Celery Compound feeds and nourishes the nerves, ift mike new Nerve Force, It makes pure, rich 'Wood, a clean fictlve liver, a stomach that acts .Quietly and strongly upon all the food that is given •o it, bowels that throw away promptly and surely ah the ashes from life’s engine room. It makes the heart beat true and evenly, it wake* the brain clear and vigorous. The Nerve Force does this all,- and Paine’s Cel* - Wry Compound makes the Nerve Force. . • Best of alt it makes that buoyant life-spirit, the .Uhrill of health, that is the secret of happiness and fte kevnote of individual sd'cceis. ~ .Without Nerve F^rce thttctm be no health at am m success—no joy in living. . John S. Long's case is simply one of thousandi WpOn thousands; ~ An average case and an object Sesaon to the average person.^ or tiervousnesa- a*S •fomssP- troubln l GOVERNMENT GARDEN SEEDS HERE FOR DISTRIBUTION GLEN ARVEN DIRECTORS I Q CALL SPCCIAL MEETING .The<U»eofnr* of the Glen Arveii 1 ind oqqiliuiVjW}iifh iea>es tl.o gfoutids.of i)te ( our\nv Clu’vtO rl»e club, held a meeting s yt-i"©rd»»v morning. A divi dend of four per ceut. on Hit) ta mal A specinl meniiug ot atccklioMera'wns called for A| ril Utli. On that day 'sev eral important matters will be ditcuiw- ed Hud'iw-cd npon. Atnoug them Will be the qur-Hiiou of suiliug nr leasing a portion of ilio company’s property. I was almost a phy«iciTwreck'wheJi'l'com. enancad to u» Palno'a Calory Compound, and now I am aa healthy aa any man In -the.wortf, and ) owe it all to Palna'a Celery •CohWOimd. Tho Prat bottle I took helped in. wonderfully, and by the time the second -waa uatd I waa a well man, and I can cheer- . rfully recommend It to anyone aa being tht tbeat medicine I have ever used.''- - ■*- - " —John 8, Long, Ballard, Waeb. >' Try Paitie's CeferV(5imtidurtd to-day.- If brace* jcu rid *t qnfe. „ Taftl:4jpSda.\jsf trV.-dpieul.' | Se»-libw much bet ter f&r feet- SW litwf Rplteh-Piort easily the trials Wall away. * ♦-v^brovet years- Paine’s Celery Compound . .Ou been the most universally used nerve vitalizer ' jUndtonie in the world. Remember this—Paine’s Celery Compound is ’ tflie prescription of one of the most famous physi- * BS this country has ever known, Prof. E. E. idpp, of Dartmouth University. All reputable uggisfs recommend and sell Paine's Celery "nd. J-J . WU.ll, RICHARDSON A CO. WURLINOTON, VERMONT. ... Pansyvllto. Thotuaevtll* misfit well be .toilet Panayvtlle, iu Mnrcli. Th». etar-» ved rnnrteta nf lyminer make averv yard »hero they bloom, a bower of beau-y A choice collection of diuae adorned thia office the other day, and caused mueli admiral on They wan tram the yard of Hra. Wm. Ritter, on Broad stroet Any one who likes to see a pretty eight should walk by there and feaat Ills •yea. Hon., Jaa. T. Mann of Albany, waa here on legal bnaineae Monday. Mr. Mann repreaente Doapliorty county in thf hoase and it captain of Albany'a military company. A pleasant feature of the Epworth League meeting Sunday afternoon waa a talk jy B. F. Hawes, jrof Bainbridge, who waa present. - Mr. O. G; Fleetwood, a prominent citizen of Oclilockonee, Waa in town Monday. f‘ r - * 1 '•), ' Mr. Oat 1 Ooehrau spent Sunday and Monday In to*ii. He Is now located iu Flint, TtA.,1s iu good health and: doing well'. » MONEY TO LOAN. I neRutiAte five* years loans oQ farm ands at lowest ratost of interd«c. 0ja mission charges reasonable. A small abstract iet, consistent with the amount of work and trouble involved, will be chargedineachoa.se. Bring yoar chain of title with yon. EDWIN L. BRYAN. Attbmey-at Law. Moultrie Ga LEVI P. MORTOlf. 1001, and the coUp*e went to I’arls to reside. Tlie wife obtained a jndgment dissolving their marriage on July 0 last, and by this decree all gifts made by her In favor of her husband, either by contract bt marriage or during mar riage, ntul nil other qontrauU made ei ther In France or elsewhere were elnrod void. Mr. Morton Is a native of Vermont and a descendant 6f George Morton o? Battery, Yorkshire, England, tho ilnon clal agent of the Mayflower pilgrims, who arrived at Plymouth, Maas..' on the ship Ann in 1023. Since early youth Mr. Morton has lived in New York and besides being elected vice president has served thb Empire' State in congress aud ns ,lts governor. He was minister to France from 1381 to 1885. Mr. Morton Is elghty-bne years Old;- . 1 - i Ipi ' f Able to Pmr. Jefferson ^c Angells bad met In a Chicago club a man who professed a great liking for actors and who had sho^n himself to be a pleasant gentle man. Tho Actor Was a llttlt auiprlsed a few days later, to receive from his new acquaintance a. letter to this ef fect: “I have heard from many sources that your performance Jn ‘Fantana* Is excellent. WUI you aend me two seats for any night next week?” Mr. de Anso’.is made luqnlrles and lenmetl that tlie nmn.wna the possessor of per haps int a million, but. nt any rale, of Inrge rreajtlv , he rpplUnl: *‘I liaVe l^rnrd from many sources that you are a mlmdn'nlre' W’fll you send me $4 for the scats?” - Stmulnrcl Oil rsTeetlgjitor. Commissioner James Rudolph , Gar field of tl^i* bureau of corporations, dp- pdrttrioiit of conimPrce nnd labor. Who recently began In New York n:i Invest!- I^ntlon of ,the. Standard Oil cw: • will visit Kansas and ithtr oil fields In the conduct of the Inquiry. . It is the intention of Commissioner Garfield, under direction of President Roosevelt, tj make Inquiry as com prehensive and exhaustive as possible. It has been stated that the Btphdard Oil company, through its pipe lines, la JAMIS H. GJkUFIFLD. not a common carrier under the law, und It cannht be compelled to carry oil from any given field-unlefs the pro ducers accede to Its terms. The com pany maintains that It ha!s cohdUCted lta business not only in accordance with the law, but Ip .perfect repurj to recognlzcnl business principled, and that, therefore’It h perfectly ; willing to ^ave the govcrtmicht make.as rigid nn in quiry aft it may deslyi 4 into, its uvet^otls of doing liocness. ‘ ', ’ Commissioner Garfield U- tho Bfepond sou of the. lau\ President GarficliL : lie was born at Hiram* O.. and, lllrf his father. Is a' ghUltliio of Wllliaci^ col lege. lie is a, lawyer by profession and has served a term In the Ohio sepate. He was made aiiietnber of the Uadonal civil service commission in 190^ and when the department of commerc* and labor was formed the following year President Roosevelt appointed i bin* commissioner of corporations. Mr. Garfield was married In 1890 to: Miss Helen Newell, daughter of the presi dent of the Lake Shore railroad. He is forty years old. WEST ANT) THE TELEGRAPH. The Macon'Telegi'aph in a recent is-| sae eays: * “The Telegraph does not believe in! sectionalism, but it does believe! ini neighborly good will and feclprocity. All things being eqoal—or nearly so— we think that one should support his neiu’ibor in preference to on jat a greater disr nice. For instance, we believe that the Tithes Enterprise and ono or two of its friends at Thom isvUle, are making a mistake in their attitade-towards: their neighbor over at Valdostu. * . i l | “Two things in this connection, may ho’ put down as certain. The* one is that West Will be elected < president of jbY'>efiafe. Theodjeris that cousum- imdon will not eiid south .'Georgia l»olitic# f , or j>olitics in south Georgia," Senator West nor any* of his friends except thn Telegraph, has not express* d dissatisfaction with the attitude of this paper or any of its friends. So far as yre are concerned we are nov definitely ommitted to the support of the Val dosta man, or any body elhe for presi dent of the senate. The situation is too haotic to make a choice just yet. we plunged out trusty Faber into the senatorial pie we might pull it ode with P4U West, or Murphy Cacdler or Brick Mfiler, or some other aspiring • toga wv oarer, impaled on its point, and be none the wiser, or none tlie wono. want to wait a bit before we go .the whole hog; and understand the situation a little better. As for the Telegraph’) two certainties we a.*e not so sure. West may be entitled Co write Prod- dent before tils name, then again he may not. The other certainty i bnirs-e?e shot. As long|as there is life there is hope—and politics. The gubernatorial r*ce isn't really going on. 1 These stunts are only the trying out canters—probably to find the winner.—Savannah Press. Jim Smith ’is a can’ter, all right enough. V . : , An Ohio boy is said to have two hearts. Only strange thing about that t|ip "boy” part.. TJ»e maiden with the o irdlac .dupiexlty (s fcoinmon t6*all lap- A Uustratcd' yotartfe - cleryuau, after preaching a funera’ sermon said. .* ‘W$ will now pars around the bier.” Thcsre’s m my a slip 'twixt the sound anfl : the meaning. J .-*‘ ™—rnv- PLEA.SANT AND HAKMLKSS. J J . - f l . : A . > ... * T Don't drug the s to ante h. to cure a cough. One Minute C»ugh Curr cuts the mucus, draws the mflamation put of t>u throat, lungs aud brooebia* lubes, Is. soothes and cur»s. A qu'ck cur*- for Croup wnd Wlioopiug Coug><. Sold acey Ph*rmacy Co, w the wrapper of every botUs of Emulsion you bt^. scon & BOWNE Chemists J 3 409 Pearl Strut, New York 50c. and $!. AH Dnftists I Itod supply of cotton aaod, the "* d ’ VA-Vt Howrjd N. Stantnn Builder: Plana and Specificationa lornlsh*-*. Estimates cheerfully given. Personal attention given to all werk Ofhce: Parker' building next doer Enterprise office safe cotfGH mediciyb fob children. In buying a cough medicine for chih dren never be afraid to buy Chamber- in's Cough Remedy. There Is no dan ver frpm it and relief ia always sura to ollow, It is especially valuable. : for colds, croup and whooping cough. For de by J. W Peacock, Thomasvilie. Ga. dkw For Aches and Pains. Suppose you tty oojhdtfwpg ouufo jgt home. See vrliat Mrs Eittreil says. Sandersville, Ga., March H\i IW5— Eclipse Medicine Co., J. R. Salter, proprietor, TbomasviUe, Ga. Where is your agent? Iwaut a bottle ;of your Msgio Electro Pain Relief. .It isi worth its wCigttihgold: ' ’ Mrs. N. E. Kittrell.’ FOK AN IMPAIRED APPBHTE, 1 Loss of app«-titi> always 1 results from faulty digestion. All that is needed is a few doses ot c'l-amberliua's Stomach and fover.Tablets. They will, invigorate the, stomach, strengthen the .digestion and give you an appetite like a wol*. These gablets »lso act as a gentle laxative. For Sale lyr J. W, Peacock, Thornyville . Buggy For Sale. High.class top buggy.in good order Address W. care Times Enterprise. 00 YOU CLIP ITEMS FROM NEWSPARER& To Subscribe for and Read all Papers 2 Published Would Cost ik50,600 ■ Y,,r. _ The Result Obtained From Tblsyfet- penditure Can be Had fpr f., ^ Few Cents a Osy v Any one 12 G-e public e\e c-vyr so slightly,anyonedesirng public t».« very one in any busies*,o^prol cssicwMW.I be interested iri a remarkabl* VfeA tn ti will be bf untold rajue tp hem at tbr cost of a few cents « day. The credit tor the ’«l-a’s due to Frank A. Burrell'-, dean of th*' press cbpu- rs. To a reporter Mr. Hurrellc A-u.: *,I point the way to new bus’ i-css along new lines and tt've aid of a mo-i valua ble nature to to.000 persons. ' Our cli ents include rnerchtnts, actors, waiters, lawyers, artists mini*i»*rs, dpeto s public speaker*, pugilists—in short all classes." "How done? Very simple. I am abls with a large forco Oi workers to read all papers pnbbshed, clipping tntfe rom it*ms ol interest to our clients.” 1 “I do not understand," s id the r-port* tr, “In the newpapers oi the United States," explained Mr. Burrelle, “there is printed every day material that ap plies directly to all mvn and to alL busi nesses.” . j "Oan you give any sjwc’fic case?" “Hundreds! Take for ♦•x-mp'e, the tnakvr of artificial limbs. I put on his desk every d»v tt c name of evifry person in the Unued S ates who has had an arm ** or a leg amputated That person needs an artificial limb. The fire ext nguisher man wa»it« -to know /»f p r*nn.%fr <* i.avo bad a loss by fire, and I keep Liu, posted. These are examples, but the idea applies to every business." J * "How do you hflp individuals? *T keep the artist informed of what the press says of his work; lt...ipu.»uthor wants material for a book, 1 gather it for him; on the death of anyone I am able to place before relatives the prTnted^xpres- sfous .of option concerning “the de- ceisW.” * A '*• ,‘Bow is it done?” , a •If there is 1 any on^, either individual or firm, who wishes to know. Jet thi'ra write to me, addressing “Hnrreue—New Yorkj.u wouM take too much jfi>Hce to tell tki whok- story here.’ CASTOI For Infant* and Cbildr Tbs Kind You Have. LOVELL H. REDPATH, M. t)., V. S., Skillful Veterinary Surgeon. P. O. Box 184 Phone 888 ThomzsvUle. Ga. | A Aiwa) Bears the 8lgaatare ; of