Newspaper Page Text
Twenty-Second Year.
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f you can’t come to see us write about your suit
] Walk M
denson, Walker and Moore,
The Up-to-date Clothiers.
120 and 422 Third St. MACON, GEORGIA.
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| | NN No Wonder—
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[ ! fi( fi\h}‘;{, ""&“‘:\“‘S‘"i\‘\; < He Gets Up SO
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L 554 R "Q‘;L‘f/ 2 Wiy '
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: 7,}?;“*?) —;fiw_— k— He bas bought a Sewing Ma- ¢
i(/ é;,i’,_\ ‘\:" chine and Bicycle from J. 8. I
l,\‘r-/‘.t;r_'{:&’w;;‘; n’f‘/ "“? Clay for the same money he ¢
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e T at some other place.
' JOSEPH S. CLAY
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| Plumber and Machinist
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- e pos - s ot Y __—_—_————————_——M'
ARLOAD OF
JUST RECEIVED.‘
| We have just received a carload of fine buggies embrac
ng _the latest models of High Art WUrL:manshlp of the pro
fuction of the best manufacturers in this country. We con
ratulqte ourselves in having bought these goods at extremely
ow prices, which placesus in a position to offer the trade
alues that cannot be duplicated by any other dealer in south
vest Georeia. Come to our repository and inspect our line
pnd you will be convinced. Every vehicle sold on guarantee.
Two Cars of
\
STANDARD GRADE WAGONS
Have Just Been Received
We have just received one car of the famous Studeng’kem
Ind also one car of the celebrated Mitcheil wagons. Tne§e!
foods are standard grade work all over the world and the oniy
Mandard wagons sold in this market. We have these goods
It reasonable figures, and it will be to your interest to call on|
sand inspect our line and get prices before placing your or-!
fer. Thanking you for your past liberal patronage and
Waiting your further commands, we are your friends,
\‘—'_\“—_——__—___________________—————-———’—__———
L ] o
ry The News for Job Printing.
All work the very best. |
'WEDDING PRESENTS, BIRTHDAY PRESENTS,
v ADAMS., ‘ ' Fikg
THE DAWSON NEWS.
A Well
Dressed Man
Makes you stop and consider the very
important point, “Do [ look like him
oram I shabby? 1 wonder what it
costs him to look like that®”
NOW LISTEN—If he lacks good
judgment iv costs him a lot of money,
It he places himself in our hands it
doesn’t. We endeavor 10 place every
man that deals with us under obliga
tions to us, and then he starts out to
cancel that obligation by bringing in
a friend, who becomes a customer, and
who in turn starts out to bring his
friends in—and so on.
HOW DO WE PLAGE A CUSTOMER UNDER
OBLIGATION TO US?
Why, we just give him more than
his money calls for—more than he ex
pects —-consider his whims and feelings
and pocketbook.
He comes in expecting to pay a cer
tain price for a suit, and he gets some
thing that suits him exactly for less
money than he expected to pay. He's
pleased and he can’t help telling his
friends so.
THUS THE GOOD WORK GOES ON
Dawson, Ga., Wednesday, November 4th, 1903.
GOLLUSION IS CHARGED AGAINST WIMBISH
Lawyer Who Took Evidence in Dawson Waterworks Case Figures
in Sensational Interventions Filed in the Federal District
Court. Petition Seeks to Recover About $90,000.
The Atlanta Constitution says charg
ing that W. A. Wimbish of Atlanta
and Bird Robinson of New York are
made residuary legatees of the estates
of the Atlanta National Building and
Loan Association and the Southern
Home Building and Loan Association
two exceedingly salty interventions
have been filed in the office of the
clerk of the United States court.
The interventiou against the Atlan
ta National Building and Loan Asso
ciation is brought in the name of A.
E. Dixon et al., and that against the
Southern Home in the name of Mrs.
M. C. Alexander et al.
One hundred and thirty stockhold
ers join in the former suit and 242 in
the latter.
The petition seeks to recoyer for the
stockholders a sum that will amount to
about 390,000, according to the deczlara
tion, and which is alleged to be now
in the hands of W. A. Wimbish or un
der his control. The petition alleges
that there was collusion among the
attorneys, and that the assets uf the
COFFEE ON THE FIRING LINE
A Unique Memorial to the Late
William McKinley.
There is a unique memorial ia An
tietam battle park to the late William
McKinley, says the Savannah Press.
Upon the monument erected in one
pars of the field is an inscription that
the shaft is sacred to the memory of
William McKinley, commissary ser
geant of an Ohio company, who served
coffee on the firing iine on the morn
ing of September 19, 1862. Some peo
ple may think that the mobument as
sociation has gone a long way to get
up a pretext to honor the memory of
the Chio statesman. Hereis a ma.nl
who was a member of congress, gov-i
ernor of the state and president of|
the United States who is held up as a
cook who furnished refreshments
while the other men were doing the
fighting.
There were doubtless other commis
sary sergeants who did the same thing
that Mr. McKinley is praised for hav
ing done. But it was a very important
function. A cup of coffee befure battle
to men who often rushed into the fight
on empty stomachs was a real service.
Many a poor Ccenfederate that day at
Sharpsburg did gallant fighting with
out any refreshment for the inner
man. Indeed, during the Confederate
war nobo®y in the south had anv cof
fee, soldiers or civilians. Housekeep
ers secured a substitute in the way of
potatoes and parched corn. These are
said to have been admirable counter
feits for coffee.
NOVEL EFFORT AT SUICIDE
A French Nurse Swallowed Pure
Culture of Typhoid Bacillus.
The London Laancet reports that a
a nurse at one of the French hospitals
has tried a new way of committing sui
cide by swallowing two tubes of El
bert’s pure culture of typhoid bacillus.
On the third day the nurse had a head
ache, but no fever. Several spots were
visible on the eighth day.
The short duration of the period of
incubation is explained by the large
pumber of bacilli introduced at one
time. It proved to be a very short at
tack of tyohoid fever, but apparently
not fatal. :
DROPPING POOR MEMBERS,
Columbus Church Is Blue-Pencil
ing Its Roll.
Broad street Methodist church, one
of the largest Methodist cburches of
Columbus, has extended a cordial in
vitation to those of its church mem
bers who do not pay jtheir dues and
who fail in other respects to live up o
cheir obligations toleave the church.
At a recent conference fifty (members
were dropped from the roll, and anoth
er meeting will be held soon at which
the church roll will be still further
blue penciled.
two companies were not. properly val
ued when sold to the National Finance
Co. of New York,
SAYS COMPANY WAS A DUMMY.
It is further alieged that there was
no such company in existence, and
that Wimbish and Robinson used it as
a dummy to get possession of the re
maining assets of the building and;
loan companies. Petitioners state
that they have searched the records of
New York financial companies and
that they failed to find any record of
the one that bid in and secured the as
sets, or some of them, of the building
and loan companies.
The intervention papers go at great
length into the details of the transac
tion, and there is no mincing of words
in their characterization of what they
disapprove in the matter.
Persons all over the country were
interested in the two companies, and
many lost thousands when they went
to the wall, very small percentages
of the money invested ever being real
ized. f
BLACKS CAN'T USE SLEEPERS
Railroads and Pullman Company
Issue Order. /
Negroes cannot ride in the same
!sleepers nor use the same dining cars
as white people in Tennessee, says in
lorder just issued by the Pullman Com
pany, the Nashyille, Chattanooga and
ISG. Louis railroad and the Louisville
and Nashville road.
- The movement, it is understood, is
traceable to ;Goyernor Frazier, who
was recently treated to an exhibition
of five negroes in,a sleeper who made
themselves very obnoxious to the
white passengers.;
A meeting igahort.ly to be held in
Chicago, when it is thought the Pull
man company will take steps to have
the negroes excluded from sleepers
and dining cars over the country gen
erally.
BUZZARD WITH A BABY.
Big Vulture Tries to Fly Away
With a Little Child.
A dispatch from Lakeland to the
Florida Times-Union says: One of the
most remarkable sights ever witnessed
here was seen Wednesday afternoon,
when R. O. Cresap and H. J. Drane
were out driving and discovered u‘
large buzzard trying to fly away with |
a small baby., Itseems that the babv‘
had been left alone for a while and the ;
buzzard had come along and gotten its
feet entangled in the child’s clothing
‘a.nd could not extricate itself. The
'puzzard could fly about a foot from the
‘ground, but could not get away. The
‘baby was, of course, rescued, and
proved to be unhurt, but it was a nar
‘row escape for the little one.
WILL HANG HIMSELF, ‘
Condemned Man to Be His Own
Executioner in Wyoming.
According to the Chicago T'ribune,
Sheriff Smalley of Cheyenne has les
the contract for the scaffold upon
which Tom Horn, the notorious cattle
rustler, will be his own execubionerl
on November 20 to J. P. Julian.
When Charles Miller, 15 years old,l
was sentenced to hang Sheriff Kelley‘
had compunctions about executing the
boy. Julian, an invencor, told Kelley
he could contrive a gallows which
would work automatically. Miller’s
scaffold was the result. The simplicity
of ité construction makes the opera
tion sure. When the condemned man
steps on the trap his weight opens a
valve in a vessel of water under the
3scafl’old, and when the vessel becomes
empty the counterbalance operates
and jerks the plug under the trap, let
ting the drop fall and shooting the
mau into eternity.
b
Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs
and colds; reliable, tried and tested,
safe and sure.
KENDRICK'S DRUG STORE.
’ Raincoat
Advantages.
A raincoat does two things
you want done---keeps you and
itself dry in the rain; and if it’s
a Hart Schaffner & Marx
L'Aiglon it keeps you well
dressed.
All raincoats won‘t do
these things for you; but if you
stick to usand the H S & M
label you will be sure ot get
ting your kind.
To get a good raincoat pay
enoungh; if you come to us you
wont pay too much,
FOR SALE BY
A° Jo
BALDWIN & CO.,
Dawson, Ga.
JUST RECEIVED
144 PACKAGES OF
Black Hawk Stock Powdets.
3 Lb. Package 50c.
With each package a formula for mak
ing your own stock food at a saving of 25.
per cent. Makes fat, slick stock out of
gaunt lean ones. Try it.
KENDRICK’S
DRUG STORE.
Next to P. O.
- TAYLORISTEAM ENGINES
COMPLETE & . SEY;?ELS
gINNING U 4 R 8
OQUTFITS ofiss v Q& Newly
e G "vébgifi'\\’“\{" ‘ Equipped
GRIST A = i/v/‘ Boiler Works
it Uy Machine
Mlh - / Shops and
MSUPPLIES, / Foundry
monc-:w‘l::lcuec. Fire Proof Roofing, Spray Pumps, Mowers, Rakes, Separators.
YRR eWe will Make It to Your Interest to Figure with Us.
42 |MALLARY BROS. MACHINERY CO.
emimon mn ¥ ArE, MACON, CA.
:-::—_-,:—_:——___w'-:_—:m
r—————-
SHIELDS % COX.
DEALERS IN
Artistic Oak Mantles and Tiling, Doors,
Sash and Blinds, Builders’ Hardware,
Paints and Oils, Dressed and Rough g
Lumber, Brick, Lime and Cement, Shin
gles, Laths and Plaster Hair, etc. Coal a
Specialty
&
! Shields & Cox.
\[L—-—-—
! WHEN ANTICIPATING THE PURCHASE OF A
TOMBSTONE, HEADSTONE,
lonEencing or anything in the way of Cemetery Suppies, write
or particuars to C. B. KELLER,
M’g’r. Eufaula Marble Works, Eufaula, Ala.
& Can refer to many parties in Dawson to whom we have sold Monuments,
e ———————————————————— e
Best of Printing at The News Office
Number Seven.
Hart Schaffner S :
& Marx 1
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Copyright 1903 by Hart Schaffner & Marx