Newspaper Page Text
3:od Advertising Medium,
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information.
One Dollar Per Annum
VOL, XIV—NO. 44.
DAHLONEGA, GA., SATURDAY, MARCH 19. i 9 oq,
T. .1
& HEO..
DEALERS IN
O
(-—I
Clothing.
Shoes,
£ Dry Goods
Hats
Notions
cn
•-S
b—i •
t=3
CfQ
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦
IBARGAIN STORE.
Anderson
& Jones.
CLOTHING,
IShoes, Hats,:
Furnishings,
Dry Goods, Notions,
o, 111U.VIU11VU, Groceries.
Clothing a specialty.)
They wilfsell you clothing for cash)
fat Gainesville or Atlanta prices. At
I
nice line of samples and will
your order for tailor made goods.
take I
DAHL ONE Gw
Livery Stable
Moore I3ro-, Propr’s.
JFA1Z
Dealer in
FAMILY
GROCERIES
AND
General Merchandise.
‘Thor Pesky Canderdites.”
Ther woods 1111’ town air loaded
With ther pesky canderdites,
Ershakin’ hands nn’ bowin’
Like er gander with tlier lits.
Its: '‘Howdy Mister Smith an’ .Tones,
I hope yer all air well;
Yergwinter hev’ good craps this year,
An’ lots o’ stulT ter sell.”
An’: “Hello, little gals an’ boys ;
Yer the finest. in the land,
I know yer !*ap is proud o’ yer;
Jest let m(> shake yer hand.”
O’ course yer got ter ask ’em in,
An’ trot out wliat yer got;
Thot yer hev’ dug an’ sweated fer,
Ter 1111 tlier dinner pot.
They look so orful piterful,
With borrowed poor-house faces,
Ercroakin’ o’ therpoverty,
An’ how “They need ther places.”
Hut when yor’ve went an’ east yer
vote,
Ter help ’em up ther hill,
It ain’t no “MisterSmith an’ Jones,”
Hut jest plain “John or Hill.”
Thar mout he good in polertiks,
An’ honest canderdites,
Hilt I ain’t never see’d tlier heat :
Ther dog-gone liypercrites.
—“Si. Harr.”
DEMOCRATIC RESOLUTIONS
Adopted by the Executive
Committee of Lumpkin
County, March 12,
1904.
It is hereby resolved by the I
Democratic Executive Committee
of Lumpkin county:
j (I.) That in pursuance of in- j
! structions passed by the State Ex*. |
ocutivo Committee held February
29th, 1904, a general primary clec->
tiou be held in said county of
Lumpkin on the 20th day of April,
1904, for the purpose of
gressional District of Georgia,
shall order a primary election for
the selection of a democratic can
didate for congress on the said
20th day of April, 1901, that such
election shall he consolidated with
tho other elections herein before
provided for.
(7.) It is further ordered that
tho secretary of this committee in
conjuction with the chairman shall
have n ballot prepared, containing
a list of the names of all tho said
state house officers and all candi
dates for congress, should said
Congressional primary booidered,
and all candidates foi represent!!-
j tivo and all candidatesf or county
officers of tho said county of Lump
kin and have at least 2500 copies
1 thereof printed and distributed to
the managers of said election, said
managers to furnish the same to
i the voters, as they may desire
them and distribute the same
i among tho respective candidates.
(8.) Each and every voter shall
be required to use tho ballot thus
j prepared and to strike from tho
| ballot all the candidates except tho
! one for whom he decides to vote.
No ticket shall be counted by the
managers except tho one herein
provided for.
(9.) Said voters are required to
vote in tho precinct in which they
lives except those now accepted in
W. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Proprietor
Dealer in
General Merchandise.
SHOES for ALL.
Children’s a Specialty.
Call and See my Sprinj
Goods.
(10.) It is further ordered that
said primary election shall be held
under tho provisions of tho goner*,
al primary election law of this
state.
(11.) It is further ordered that
all white qualified voters without
selecting i regard to past party affiliation
a candidate for governor, secret who desire to nli £ n themselves
tary of elate, comptroller general, I w,th tbe democratic party, are cu-
state treasurer, attorney general, j. filed to vote m said primary olcc-
statc school commissioner of agri- tIon fo1 ' representative and county
culture, prison commissioner, chief | offioers are cordially invited to
justice of the Supreme court and I do so, but every such voter who
PI lew Staple oq College SI.
|llU3sr a DAILY HACK LITST E
to and from G aiiiesyille.
, $150
one associate justice of the Su
preme court.
(2.) It is further ordered that on
the said 20th day of April, 1904,
and at tbe same time and under the
same rules and regulations, there
shall be held in the said county of
Lumpkin a general primary elec
tion for tho purpose of selecting a
candidate for the legislature, for
ordinary, for clerk of the Superior
court, for sheriff, for tax collector,
tax receiver, treasurer, county
surveyor, and coroner.
(3.) It is ordered further that no
one shall he allowed to vote
the above named officers except
qualified white democratic voters,
who have registered in the year
1903, or before the 10th day of
April, 1904.
(4.) The Executive Committee of
each district are hereby appointed
managers of said election in their
respective districts and authorized
to appoint such assistants as they
i deem necessary in ho
filing s
said
j election,
and upon tho
failure
of
any said
committeemen
to act
or
to make
the appointments,
any
C. W. SATTERFIELD,
three qualified white democratic
voters of said district may hold
said election. The secretary of
flic committee is hereby instructed
to furnish the managers of each
voting precinct with a list of the
qualified voters of each district,
said list, except in Dahlonega dis
trict, shall be confined to the white
qualified voters of said district and
in said Dahlonega district to he a
list of the while voters of (he en
tire county.
(5.) It is further ordered that tho
secretary of this committee shall
furnish the managers of such vots
ing place with such necessary
blanks as may bo necessary :n
holding said election.
(0.) It is further ordered that in
the event the Democratic Execu
tivfe Committee of tho Ninth Con-
lias not heretofore aligned himself
with the democratic party who
may vote in said primary, thereby
pledges his honor that he becomes
a democrat and that ho will sup
port the nominees of the demo
cratic party. Tho right of every
such voter to participate in said
primary may be challenged, and
unless when challenged he shall
giye his personal pledge that he is
a democrat and will support tho
nominees of the democratic party
his ballot shall not ho counted. It
shall he the duty of the Executive
f or j Committeeman, in his district, to
carefully observe the balloting and
to challenge the vote of any per
son who did not, in the last gener**
al election for representative and
county officers, act with the demo
cratic party.
(12.) It is further ordered that
tho managers of the various pre
cincts shall mako their returns to
the secretary of the Executive
Committee at the court house in
Dahlonega by 12 o’clock m. on the
2Jst day of April, 1904, and it is
further ordered that said Execu
tive Committee shall meet at 12
o’clock on tho said 21st day of
April, 1904, to consolidate the re
turns and declare the result of
said election, and for the transac
tion of such other business as may
come before it.
(13.) In order to defray the ex
penses of said election, it is ordered
that on or before the 10th day of
April, 1904, that tho candidate to
he voted for at said election, shall
pay to the secretary of this com
mittee the following sums respect
fully : Each candidate for congress
$10.00. Each candidate for rep-
i resentative $5.00. Each candi-
j date for ordinary $5.00. Each
i candidate’for sheriff $5.00. Each
' candidate for clerk $5.00. Each
candidate for tax collector $4.00.
Each candidate for tax receiver
$3.00. Each candidate for county
1 treasurer $3.00. Each candidate
for county surveyor $2.00.
| Each candidate for coroner $2.-
j 00, anil it is provided that said
I secretary and chairman shall not
insert in said ballot the name of
any candidate who fails or refuses
to pay said assessment.
(14.) It is hereby ordered that a
general mass meeting of the demo
crats of Lumpkin county lie called
to meet at the court house in Dah
lonega at l o’clock p. m. on the
21st day of April, 1904, for the
purpose of selecting delegates to
the State Democratic Convention,
and for the transaction of such
other business as may come before
the meeting.
II ow Men and Women Love.
When a woman’s love is strong
it takes possession of her to the
exclusion of pretty nearly every
thing else. When a man’s love is
strong it does the Bame, and, as
the records of every-day crimes so
to prove, with an even greater in-
intensity; but a man has more
self-control, more dissimulation,
more cunning, which all go to
screen his real seif from the eyes
of his fellows. He may not, I
CITY DIRECTORY
SUPERIOR COURT.
3rd Mondays in April and Octo
ber. J. J. Kimsey, Judge, Cleve
land, Ga. W.A. Charters, Solici
tor General, Dahlonega, Ga.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
John Hull; Ordinary.
John II. Moore,Cletk.
James M. Davis Sheriff.
K. J. Walden, Tax Collector.
James L. Ilealan. Tax Receiver.
V. R. Hix, County Surveyor.
Joseph B. Brown, Treasurer.
D, O. Stow Coroner.
CITY GOVERNMENT.
R. II. Baker. Mayor.
Aldermen: E. W Strickland, J.
E. MeGcc. W. B. Townsend, E. B.
Vickery, T. J. Smith. W. P. Price,
Jr.
Wm. J. Worley, Clerk.
Geo. W. Walker, Marshal.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES.
Baptist Church — Rev. W. C.
Taylor, Paster. Services Sunday at
11 and at night. Prayer meeting
Thursday night.
Sunday School at 9 o’clock.
Methodist—Services every Sun
day at 11 and at night. Rev. J. D.
Turner, Pastor. Prayer meeting
every Wednesday night.
Sunday Schooi at 9 o’clock.
, , , , . Presbyterian—Services only on
grant you, be ready to give up his lsl atul 3r(l Sundays.
I). J Blackwell, pastor,
Sunday School 9 a.m.
horses, his trade, his hooks, his
sports, or—unless, indeed, he be
very young and very lovesick—
his dinner, but he, often enough,
stakes his all upon one throw,
and, if unlucky, is ready to give
up far more than all these put
together—viz., his lifo itself.
Here and there a woman puts
an end to her existence through
hopelessness, grief, and despair;
hero and there she droops and
fades, withering away silently be
cause she has lost her chief hold i
on life; here and there she sinks
into a heart-broken melancholy or
gentle passivity; but how rarely
do we find, even in the veriest
abandonment of love and passion,
that a woman will be driven there
by to commit a crime? A man,
driven to desperation by a wo
man’s perfidy or fickleness, kills
her, or his rival or himself. A
woman in like case may suffer a
thousand times as much, hut she
will never harm the one she loves,
or has loved, or her successor.
She will make no tragedy—but
her whole life is the tragedy. She
will forgive—because she is a wo
man ; but she will not forgot—be
cause she is a woman.-Mirror-
Farmer.
&lw^3£si-.
New stockings being made for
wo non have pockets in them. It
will not become fashionable, how
ever, for the ladies to stand
around with their hands in their
pockets.—Dalton Citizen.
My Breath.
Shortness of Breath
Is One of the Com
monest Signs of
Heart-Disease,
Notwithstanding what many physic
ians say, heart disease can he cured.
Dr. Miles’ New Heart Cure has per
manently restored to health many
thousands who had found no relief in
the medicines (allopathic or homoeo
pathic) of regular practicing physicians.
It has proved Itself unique In the his
tory of medicine, by being so uniformly
successful in curing those diseases.
Nearly always, one of the first signs
of trouble is shortness of breath. Wheth
er it comes as a result of walking or
running up stairs, or of other exercises.
If the heart Is unable to meet this extra
demand upon Its pumping powers—tliero
Is something wrong with it.
The very best tiling you can do, is to
take Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure. It
will go to the foundation of the trou
ble, and make a permanent cure by
strengthening and renewing the nerves.
"1 know that Dr. Miles' Now Heart
Cure is a great remedy. For a number
i t years 1 suffered from shortness of
breath, smothering spells, and pains in
my left side. For months at a time I
would be unable to He on my left side,
and if 1 lay fiat on my back would nearly
smother. A friend advised using Dr.
Mil. s' New Heart Cure, which 1 did
with good results. I began to improve
at once, and after taking several bottles
of tlie Heart Cure the pains in my side
and other symptoms vanished. I am
now entirely well. All those dreadful
smothering spells are a thing of the
past."—F. I*. DRAKE, Middletown, O.
If the first bottle does, not help you.
the druggist will refund your money.
T’RTIFI ^ rite to us for Free Trial
~ AbXUXi package of Dr. Miles’ Anti-
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< LABOR AT ELKHART, IND.
ms
mm