The Carroll free press. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1883-1948, August 11, 1910, Image 1
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THE OFFICIAL ORGAN OF CARROLL COUNTY AND CITY OF CARROLLTON
CARROLLTON, CARROLL COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST II 1910
LOSE YOUR MONEY
AND IT IS GONE
But if you lose your check book, we will give
you another. In this lies the safety of paying all
bills with bank checks. Your money is secure
with us, yet ready to use as you require it.
You are tempting the hold-up man so long as
you carry a roll of bills. Better keep your cash
in this bank and rest easy.
The First National Bank
Of Carrollton, Ga.
Capital $roo,ooo Surplus $100,000
Safty Deposit Boxes for Rent.
Citizens flank
Carrollton, Ga., July 27, 1910.
Mr. Prospective Customer,
Carrollton, Ga.
Dear Sir'.
This is to invite you to come
into our Bank and permit us to
show you why you should patronize us.
Very truly,
A. K. SNEAD, Cashier.
WANTED
FIFTY good honest boys from
Carroll county who really want to
get something practical in agriculture
and mechanic arts, and at the same
time get a high school English edu
cation. Everything free except what
you eat. Apply early if you want
room.
J. H. MELSON, Prin.
REFEREE
CIGARS
Represent Three hundred Years
Improvement Over Henry Hud
son’s Pipe.
Making Real Progress]
In The State of Georgia.
The candidacy ol ex-Governor
Hoke Smith, brought about by
the earnest and repeated request
of citizens from all over Georgia
and torced upon him despite his
own wishes at this time, stands
for the real progressive jspirit of
a great state, and|lor]the aroused
interest and enthusiasm of a
great people. |Georgia is a
progressive state that has just
beguu to grow by leaps and
bounds. Day by day, larger
and greater and more numerous
and weighty, problems are fac
ing our people and the state
government.
The people ol Georgia realize
this—they know that it is going
to take time and energy, intelli
gence and activity and hard work
day alter day, to handle proper
ly and patriotically the big prob
lems that constantly face a great
people.
Just as New York needs such
governors as Hughes or Roose
velt, or a Cleveland in the old
days, so Georgia today needs its
biggest and best and ablest citis
zeus ia the gubernatorial chair.
The work 01 Folk, of Missouri,
or Harmon, of Ohio, is not more
important to the people ol these
two big states than such work
as the state ol Georgia 'can and
will get trom a man like Hoke
Smith in the executive office ol
the state.ij
Georgia has its big problems
of education, finance, transporta
tion, road improvement, the
work ot the convicts, taxation,
registration and pure election
laws—the work ol a great state,
a great work to be done lor the
farmers and the merchants and
the industries and the {(people of
the state. It’s a big woik that
Georgia is engaged j t n at the
present time, whether it is put.
ting out a 6,000 car peach crop,
preparing against the boll weevil
saving the people of the state
$20,000,000 a yeai from the
black root, paying pensions to
tne old soldiers and paying its
school teachers promptly, appro
priating a couple of million or
more to the schools, looking
alter the higher educational in
stitutions of the state, securing
proper rates and transportation
facilities, or encouraging manu
factures and merchandising.
Let’s not forget that Georgia
is a big state and constantly
growing bigger and better. She
has a man’s work to do and she
needs her biggest and best men
to help,do ^the -work . As the
darky says, “This is no time for
chillun.” This is no time lor
petty, personal, factional politics.
It really isn’t so much a question
of Brown or Smith, as it is a
question of who can and will do
the great work that must be done
for the people of a great state.
Some one must face and handle,
some one must understand and
settle the big problems that con
front the state of Georgia. It is
going to take a big mao, an able
and energetic, lorcefui man to
do this work for the people of
the state. It is this kind of a
man you want to do your own
work for you. Why not com
mission such a man to do the
work for the people of the state.
The people ot Georgia can
select such a man for the state’s
work in the primary on August
23rd, and we imagine they are
going to do it. You really need
a big man to run the great busi
ness of a great state,—Augusta
Herald.
PROGRAM
Foreign Missionary Society of
M. E. Church, August 22--4p.m.
Brazil (Continued)
As leader points to each
missionary’s name let her repre
sentative answer with her name.
1 Location, size, shape.
2 Climate, Agriculture, Com*
rnerce.
3 People, population, races,
language spoken.
4 Education. (80 per cent.
illiterate, tho some good
schools.)
5 Government. (Federal Re.
public, 20 states.)
6 Religion. (90 per cent.
Roman Catholics.)
7 Brief history of Brazil .
8 Missions in Brazil.
9 Work of the Methodist
Church in Brazil.
10 Our Women’s work in
Brazil.
11 Institutional Church in
Brazil.
12 The illumination of God’s
Word.
13 Bulletin.
Mayor Gaynor Shot.
Hon. Wm. J. Gaynor, the
honored Mayor of New York
Ci y, was shot Tuesday morning
just as he had boarded a steam
er tor a trip to Europe. A dis
charged city employee named
Gallagher fired the shot that may
remove one of our country’s
greatest men. The bullet struck
him in the neck |near the right
ear inflicting a dangerous wound.
The would-be murderer was
captured after a hard struggle .
Mayor Gaynor has made a
model Chief Executive since his
induction into office January 1st,
and has been fearless in institut.
iog much needed relorms. Many
prominent Democrats have had
him in mind as good Presiden.
tial ^timber in 1912. He is a
great and useful man and the
law-abiding people of the entire
nation join >u the hope that his
life may not prove a stcralice to
the assassin’s bullet.
Paving the Way
Efficient, and accommodating banking service
may mean paving the way for richness and suc
cess to yon.
The main thing is to choose for your banking
needs an institution of character where you may
expect reasonable accommodations, combined with
absolute safety,
On this platform of service, we invite your
patronage.
Carrollton Bank
J T Bradley. Pres C H Stewart Vice-Pres.
H N, Spence, Cashier.
The R. D. Cole Mfg, Co.
made yesterday the heaviest bulk
shipments ot engines, boilers,
standpipes, elevated tanks, and
pressure tanks ever sent out of
the shops in one day. The ship
ment made up a special train
load of twenty one cars, and
was consigned to points in Ga.
Ala. La. N. C. and Oklahoma.
The lreight charges on the train
load of four hundred tons will
foot up nearly $2,000,—Newnan
News.
Hay Fever and Asthma
Bring discontort and misery to
people but Foley’s Honey and Tar
gives ease and comfort to the suf
fering ones. It relieves the con
gestion in the head and throat and
soothjng and healing, None ginuine
but Foley's Honey and Tar In the
yellow package. Scld by Johnson
Drug Co,
NO CROP FAILURE
when yob
PLANT MONEY
THE BANK
MTS SURE TO GROW
t Copyright 1909, by C. E. Zimmerman Co.—No. 36
THERE is certinty to the returns for money sown in the
bank. Nothing increases with such steady growth and as
constant as dollars when deposited in a reliable banking
instution. In order to be sure what your harvest will he,
you should have some money in the bank.
PEOPLES BANK
CAPITAL STOCK $60,000
J. R. ADAMSON, Fuesident. JNO. M. JACKSON, Vice-Prns.
G. C. COOK. Cashier.
Up=to=the=Minute Styles
Are what we go after, and we get
them, too.
And when we have them, and when
we’ve marked on them onr lowest price
and when we have the maker’s guar=
antee, and when YOU have OURS, we
are able to offer you as much as any
jeweler ever offered anybody.
Will you call some day and let us
show you how easy it is for us to please
you. And we especially request that
you give us an opportunity to prove to
you how unnecessary it is for you to
buy elsewhere.
XIreel fowelrii XZo.