Newspaper Page Text
2
We Like to Trade At
G. \WW. DOZIER & CO’S,
ist G G .R B OP e e ey
They keep what we want.
They keep good, reliable goods.
They sell for a small profit.
They are nice and attentive to customers.
Sece Us Before You Buy Anything.
We will appreciate your trade. Your Friends,
G. W. DOZIER & COMPANY.
Dillingham’s Plant Juice Remedies Are Accomplish
ing Wonders Here. Sale of Medicines at the
Drug Stores Passes All Expectations.
No one who has not called personal
ly at the drug stores can appreciate
the enormous number of people who
are taking the Plant Juice remedies.
From early morn until late at night
one continual stream of people flow in
and out of the drug stores, and before
the day is done many people have
called to buy or inquire about Plant
Juice remedies.
It is very interesting to stand for a
moment and listen to the hum of con
versation of the waiting people. One
aut of every two who have called to
sbtain Plant Juice have done so be
gsause they have had direct proof of
the remedy through some neighbor,
friend or even member of their own
family. On every side can be. heard
people telling of remarkable cases
which they themselves have witnessed
of people who have been restored to
health in from a few days to two
weeks' treatment. :
In some parts of the store will be
people relating their experiences to
eager listeners, telling of their condi
tion before they purchased the re
markable remedy and of the immedi
ate benefit they have received from its
ase. Here will be a happy mother
telling how one of her children bad
heen ill for a number of years despite
all that conld be done for the child,
and that finally Plant Juice had been
the meanss of almost miraculous
ly vutting the little one on the road to
health and happiness.
In other parts of the store will be
some one telling of an unusual case
of some neighbor whom they had
known intimately all of their life, and
who had always been a sufferer and
who was once more able to attend to
his or her duties, owing to the Plant
Juice remedy.
No wonder the people of this section
are obtaining these remedies in enor
mous quantities. Each day the sale
increases, and each day Col. Dilling
ham’'s remedies earn a host of new
friends. The first day on which the
remedies were placed on sale at Bell
Bros.’ drug store every drop that had
seen distributed was disposed by one
a'clock, and although another large
e
CASTORIA.
Dot The Kind You Have Always Bought
Siguatare M_—
quantity was hurriedly sent to the dif
ferent stores by the time the medicine
arrived customers were awaiting its
arrival, and many had to leave with
out being supplied.
Probably the most remarkable de
inonstration of the interest this new
remedy is arousing is the fact that or
ders have been received from 23 phy
sicians throughout this section who
have sent for the remedies with which
to treat their own patients.
Among the many who were heard
from as having been benefited the case
of Mr. N. J. Austin of Thomasville,
Ga., is probably the most unusual.
Mr. Austin is an old man between 60
and 70 years of age. He has been af
flicted with rheumatism for over 20
vears, which has been growing con
stantly worse, so that for the past sev
eral years he has found great diffi
culty in moving about. A friend se
cured some of Dillingham’s Plant
Juice for the old gentleman. He has
taken but a bottle of the remedy, and
is now apparently cured and is so
happy over his good fortune that he
tells all he meets how good he is feel
ing and showers blessings upon the
medicine.
Another case was that of Mrs. T F.
Whipple, who was also cured of rheu
matism of some years®’ standing by
part of one bottle of Plant Juice med
icine. This is one of the most re
markable cases on record when it is
considered that rheumatism is caused
primarily by uric acid in the blood,
and it is always a most difficult matter
to remove this, and as a rule takes
many months of careful treatment by
the most competent physicians, and
even then often there is no improve
ment. §
When it is considered that only a
few doses of this remedy remove all
traces of a disease as stubborn as
rheumatism too much cannot be said
for Plant Juice.
Srdeg C cnd oot
Rainmaker Gets Big Pay.
Charles F. Hatfield, a ‘‘rainmaker’’
‘who has been working since December
to produce eighteen inches of rain for
‘southern California by May upon a
pledge of several Los Angeles citizens
to pay him $l.OOO if he suceeeded, has
completed his demonstration, anc has
been paid a large proportion of the
sum promised. There are a lot of
fools in the world vet. |
The Dawson News. Wednesday, May 24, 1905.
BIG MONEY IN BLUEBERRIES.
An Industry in Maine That Gives
Hundreds ot People Emsployment.
[n two counties of Maine, says the
Southern Farm Magazine, 2,600 acres
of land are covered with whwortleberry
bushes, and upon that basis lras arisen
quite a profitable industry, the rais
ing and canning of blueberries. The
canning companies have gained con
trol of most of the blueberry tields and
pay to their own pickers three cents a
quart for the berries and buy at high
er rates fromindependent growers and
pickers. The picking season lasts
about six weeks, and a rapid picker
makes from $4 to $8 a day and if he
has a large family to help him. makes
not unusually from $6OO to $BOO in the
season. In certain portions of the
south where there are large tracts of
whortleberries thousands of men,
women and children are occupied for
several months in midsummer in
gathering them, families or greoups of
families camping out on the mountain
sides and drying or otherwise pweserv
ing the bervies as they are picked.
A FYOOL AND A PISTOL.
Didn’t Know It Was Loaded andiShot
His Sweetheart’s Mother.
Mrs. Lula Lancaster was shot in
the neck, at her home in Atlanta, by
Robert Flynn, a 17-year-old boy who
was calling on her young daughter.
Young Flynn had a pistel and
thought he took the cartridges out of
it. He then snapped the pisteol, think
ing it was unloaded, when there was a
loud report and Mrs. Lancaster fell to
the floor. Her wound is said to be
quite dangerous.
Young Flynn is held at the police
station.
sSold $6OO Worth of Bacon.
Messrs. Mabbett, Groover & Thom
as bought last Saturday 5,500 pounds
of Bacon from a one-horse farmer of
Brooks county. The saverage price
paid was about 10 cents a pound,
making $550 which the farmer received
for his surplus bacon. He probably
sold $3O worth of lard, which made
the handsome sum of $6OO which this
farmer received from one of his side
crops, so to speak.—Quitman Adver
tiser.
At a Bargain.
One tio-horse power R. D. Cole re
turn tripple boiler, with all attach
ments complete, new grate, bars and
front. Full arch. Apply to J. S.
Jones. Yeomans, Ga.
CASTOXRIA.
Besie e The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
- THE “TOMBS " ANGEL.
| R R
‘Daughter of Millionaire Who Has Been
Engaged in Missionary Work
Will Marry.
A New York special says the
“Tombs Angel’’ is to be married. The
wedding will take place at the home
of her father in St. Louis, and the
bridegroom is one who has beem her
sweetheart ever since the days when
she was a freshman at Radeliffe and
he a sophomore at Harvard.
His name is F. Schofield, and at
present he is master of the Harward
preparatory school at Springfield,
Mass. So it seems that, after all, the
romantic surmises that were rife when
Miss Ada Eliot resigned as ‘‘Tombs.
Angel’’ last November were really
true despite her denials. i
Miss Eliot, whose father is a wealthy ]
St. Louis man, went to the Tombs two
vears ago and took up the work as :t‘
probation efficer in the most difficult
position ¢f the kind in New York, ow
ing to the traditions connected with
the revered name of Mrs. Foster, the
first ‘‘Tombs Angel,”” who met a terri
ble death in the Park Avenue hotel
fire.
Four years ago she went to New
York after being connected with a
charity organization of Dorchester,
Mass., and took up probation workim'
the Yorkville court. On the death of|
Mrs. Foster she was appointed to suc
ceed her as probation officer in the
Toombs.
Although her father, Henry Ware
Eliot, is one of the richest men in St.
Louis, Miss Eliot always abjured so
ciety and luxury. Being a serious
minded girl, deeply interested in soei
ological problems, she took it upon
herself not only to earn her own liv—j
ing, but to teach others to do the
same. _
Miss Eliot’s work was probably due
to the hereditary influence of a leng
line of altruistic ancestors, notable
among them being the Rev. William
Greenleaf Eliot, her grandfather, who,
when still a young man, left his home
in New England, where he was looked
upon as one of the most advanced
thinkers of his time, and went to St.
Louis, where he did a great deal to
advance the emancipation of slaves.
He founded Washington University
there. President Eliot of Harvard is
another member of the same family.
After her marriage Miss Eliot is
going back to that same New England
home that her grandfather left so
many vears ago, and she and her hus
band will take up their residepce in
Springfield. 1
l HIRAM CRONK DEAD AT 105.
)He Was the Only Survivor of the
i War of 188 X
{ FHiram Cronk, the only survivor of
‘t)‘e war of 1812, has just died in Ava,
N. Y., at the age of 105 years.
Hiram Cronk for years ewcupied a
unigue place in American history. As
the lust survivor of the first foreign
war in: which his country had engaved ‘
after securing its independence he
had been honored by the national
lg()vwmuent and by his native state as
well.
~ Born April 2%, 1300, at Frankfert, |
‘Herkimer county, N. Y., Cronk served
two terms of five weeks and forty days
in the ranks when he was a little more
than than 14 years old.
At the close of the war Mr. Cronk
learned the trade of shoemaker, at
which he gained a livelihood for many
vears. He was marvied in 1825 to Miss
Mary Thornton of Western, N. Y.,
and they lived together for sizty l
years on the old farm at Ava. They
had seven children. During the ]ast’
years of his life Mr. Cronk received
from the state of New York a special
pension of $72 a month in addition to
the pension granted by the govern
ment to all survivors of the war of
1812.
aved by Dynamite.
Sometimes a flaming city is saved
by dynamiting & space that the fire
can’t cross. Sometimes a cough hangs
on so long you feel as nothing but
dynamite would cure it. Z. T. Gray,
of Calboun, Ga.. writes: ‘‘My wife
had a very aggravated cough, which‘
kept her awake at night. Two physi
cians could not help her, so she took
Dr. King’s New Discovery for con
sumption, coughs and colds, which
eased her cough, gave her sleep and
tinally cured her.”” Strictly scientific‘
cure for bronchitis and a grippe. At
Dawson Drug Co’s., price 50c and $l.
guaranteed. Trial bottle free.
Court Postponed in Sumter.
Judge Littlejohn has announced the
postponement of the forthcoming ses
sion of Sumter superior court for two
weeks. This action was taken at the
urgent request of farmers, who are ex
ceedingly busy fighting grass in their
cotton fields, and attendance upon
court now would prove greatly to their
disadvantage.
. SEoes v
A Creeping Death.
Blood poison creeps up towards the
heart, causing death. J. E. Stearns,
Belle Plaine, Minn., writes that a
friend dreadfully injured his hand,
which swelled up like blood poisoning.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve- drew out the
poison, healed the wound, and saved
his life. Best in the world for burns
and sores. 2o¢ at Dawson Drug Co’s.
R DR s A
e ';...:-:,:.;:.’:&*‘-""-’-"{,'Z’/f' ISR eSN A g
R S ;:tl"&» . 3
-_..vfl'f.," " P B g Y \,-‘,._:‘.a. 5 I/
AT RAT PR e \
¢ Uil e
2T SN WA, LS. o ‘/’-":'r“, YA
ol GUTS - e n T Bt \ S
A . R o 2 g i B i
O R G ol el . AT
WTH SR PN SRnet e T SRE S Be W E) e A
ATRID. - ORI SAd)!
i kol
SR 1985
N B!
Garden Truck
can be raised profitably only in soil
containing plenty of Potash. All
vegetables require a fertilizer con
taining at least 10 per cent. actual
Without Potash no fertilizer is com
plete, and failure will follow its use.
Every farmer should have our valuable be ks
on fertilization—they are not advertising g
matter booming any special fertilizer, but
books of authoritative information that means
large profits to the farmers. S¢ut free forthe
asking.
GERMAN KALI WORKS
New York—9B Nassau Streef. or
Atlanta, Ga—22!; South 3road Street.
BREAKFAST BACON
PICNIC HAMS, SUN
LIGHT FLOUR.
These goods arc not
excelled. Try them.
We sell the best hay
and oats in Dawson.
F. 6.
THOMPSON.
| ..SAVE..
lAGENTS’ COMMISSION
s Bonumes . i
LER vianager
! Eufaula, Aid :
: | can refer to mfl
3 ‘l\,'. : .V-l‘- ~' 1‘;1:‘1’:1
| A ,r‘ nments
£ > Fufaula
" it ; e
4 ' Marble WK
» » '
“" Eufaula, A 3
Try The News for first®
class' job printing.