Newspaper Page Text
Z::i Advsrtlsing Medium.
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Informat!:
One Dollar Per Annum
VOL. XV—NO.
DAIII,ONEGA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1904.
VV. B. TOWNSEND, Editor and Propnetcr
Asidev R
•fused to
Road,
W.
IWHMRnMM
1 What Makes the South Solid?
yen r
y.'iir
• n, v
’[’hi! followiu2 affidavit 1 !■,>'») Mi
Tucker, of Dawson couiov, ex
plains itself:
STATE OF GKO KG I A — II, !i
(,'minty.
I’ , rsonnlly appeared ' "Vie Me
un<k Tsignoil, an officer n:rIn.rT; !
!,v law to a Irtiinister o ebs. A -
Toeki will) du!v , : e.
siv-u Tinit lit' was for M
1(N)‘2. 1908 and for part of 1!
1901 a road overseer in the
of Dawson, State of Geoiv-i.; iV
in and during the year 19"'* li ,
proper discharge of his Try, hi
personally summoned Jo - M.
Ashley, who was at that ti.oe iiv
ingin Dawson County, C»,
to appear and work tho ro 1 I , m,d
that he said Ashley refused 1 > i.Iht
said summons or pay to • luxe.-,
stating that.he. (Ashley) w.- - n •.
resident of Dawson count > . (I r.
gia.
The doponent, Asa Tuck r. a - in
duty hound, reported the >ii,| AM-
Icyto the commissioners of dd
Dawson County, and heard nr
knows nothing further firm said
matter, except that depon et, Asa
Tucker supposes the comm issionet s
sustained said Ashley in his con
tention that he was, ui point of
fact, not a resident of the afore
said Dawson County', as said A-h
ley was not required by said com
missioners to work the roads.
(Signed.) A. V. Tucker.
Sworn to and subscribed boh re
me this September 29, 190 I.
B. G. Parks.
Notary Public, Hall Couniy . G u.
“Life is what we are alive to.
It, is not length, but breath. To
bo alive Only..to appetite, pleas
ure, pride, money-making and not
to goodness and kindness, purity
and love, history, poetry', music,
flowers, stars, God eternal hopes,
is to be all but dead.”
W’liv is
South
Two souls with but a single thought,
Two hem Is. that beat ns one.
Oh how happy'.
■■PHBBBHBHBaBBBBBHS iHBBEEEKE
Even if some things refuse to go
' your way, there arc other things.
The girl with a new enga; uncut j
ring invariably extends the glad |
hand when she meets hi r girl j
friend. I
Many a man, while walking to
ve car fare, indulges in a ten
n! cigar.
Money docs not .always
happiness, but it helps
search very materially.
lead to
in tho
E53B3S£*rSI3
C L O
Tom
Watson.
Idol
Republican
rom former opponents must be Wealth won
very gratifying to Mr. Watson, by magic.
No doubt the cat, was greatly en- j
couraged by the monkey’s un- j
Whitson, Populist | , lii;i(ed applause tht! while s | ie
was pulling the simian’s, chestnuts -
out of the fire.—New York-World. i
by' tricks vanishes
GO
1—E"
O
o
Largest,
Thomas E.
candidate for President of the
United States, suddenly finds
himself the object of most dis
tinguished consideration on the
part of all Republican newspapers
and orators.
It was only a few years ago that
j Mr. Watson was defined exten
sively in Republican dictionaries
as a “red-headed lunatic from
Georgia,” as “an enemy of tin*
national honor,” as a “crazy Pop
ulist,” as a “crank,” as a “mounte
bank” and a “blatant dema
gogue,” hut the times have
changed and the Republicans have
changed with them. Mr. Watson
now is a very aide man, perhaps 11
Your mistake may
the wisdom of others,
contribute to
still solid?
Collier’s Weekly, a New York
publication, gives this reason:
“That the South is solid and that
the nnti-Kcpublican feeling is
•stronger than when McKinley
i died, are conditions easily under
stood and sympathized with by
Northerners who have sufficient
1 imagination to project themselves
, "'it of their own environment. No
| wonder there is but one issue, and
| no wonder the South cannot vote
tor the parly of reconstruction
outrage, force bills, bloody sbiits
j and negro exploitioii. Who is go-
| mg to consider tariff problems
when his wife and daughter are in
danger? Who is going to put cur-
j toncy and lrnpcralism ahead of tho
j survival of his own race? Tho
Republican party earned glory by
I freeing the slaves and giving tho
' li 11111 answer to a disrupting ques
tion. It deserves obloquy for the
narrowness, tactlessnessand politis
cal chicanery with which it has
handled the negroes and tho South
erners ever since.”
This is a Northern, not a South
ern criticism.
If your goods won’t stand ad
vertising, advertise your business
for sale. Tho goods that are not
advertised may lie as good as
those that are, but nobody knows
it. If nobody knew you, you
couldn’t sell a dollar’s worth of
goods. If a few people know you,
you’ll sell a few goods. The more
people there are who know you
and your goods, tho more you will
sell. If you can make a person be
lieve your goods arc superior, you
will find them easier to sell.—-
j Great Falls Leadar.
You save your money because
, * /
I you are economical ; other people
save money because they are
1 stingy.
Did you ever pause to think how
One hundred
white houso was
cost of #20,000.
years ago the
remodeled at a
President lioose-
YVisclom’s Whispers.
When a woman becomes a gush
er there is no toiling what foolish
things she may say.
Many men arc extreme in their
generosity so long as the purse is
not touched.
It ph ases a woman to recall
som'e incident in which she bore a
conspicuous pait.
Some men are flattered by the
thought that other - fear them.
A woman’s idea of good living
is embraced in having others' pro-
m-'i'iy people there are in the world j volt-asks for chauges in tho white
house stable that will cost.#90,000
m Cheapest Stock
Ever Brought Here.
Abundance of Dry (foods and Groceries.
rr 1 ci
great inan—not altogether right |
on a few trifling issues such as j v '''°
currency, the tariff, the regula-j Men find fault often
[ tion of trusts, the initiative and i show they have somethin^
referndum and the like, but withal j NV:I >' "I ideas.
a man of high character, real con-j It takes away a woman’s pleas-
victione and forensic eloquence of j uro to reurembeT her most attrac-
the first order. I t-ive gown is only a hold over.
Every Republican editor isj Even the careful man occasion-
hanging upon Mr. Watson’s words ; M ]] y w jn f„ii into ways which de-
and sipping wisdou from them.!
Every attaot made by Mr. Wat
son on Judge Parker is hailed as
the unprejudiced opinion of a
great orator and statesman. Mr.
Watson’s speeches have the right
of way in the columns of every
Republican newspaper. The Sun
was so eager to print his letter of
acceptance that it could not wait
for the formal release, and made
i the letter public twenty four hours
i in advance of the date agreed upon
j for publication.
Even some of Air. Bryan’s Dem-
! oeratic friends who sneered at
| Mr. Watson’s candidacy for
j President in 1896 find that Mr. |
Watson as an assailant of Judge 1
Parker is “the plain pee—j
pul’s s o 1 i t a r y ' ingle-minded 1
friend,”
Such favorable consider it im