Newspaper Page Text
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V99999V VVVVOVRD
PLAST'GO is a durables
I hRVIIVY sanitary and
economical material for
tinting and decorating
walls, superior to kalso
mine and wall paper, and
much cheaper than paint.
PLAST'GO combines all
FAWROIIVW the good fea
@ tures of other wall coat
ings, and none of their dis
advantages.
Packed in dry powder form,
in white and tints, ready
$ for use by adding cold
. water, Full directions on
package. Any one can apply
it. Sample card of beautiful
tints for the asking.
Anti-Kalsomine Co.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Dawson Hardware Co.
BREAKFAST BACON
PICNIC HAMS, SUN
LIGHT FLOUR.
These goods are not
excelled. Try them. i
We sell the best hay '
and oats in Dawson.
F.. @. l
THOMPSON.
ICE,
COAL,
WOOD.
DAWSON
ICE CO.
; SAVE..
AGENTS COMMISSION
»’f’;"w‘, by buying your
vf"*’"}“"v"‘f‘-’ Monuments, [ron
i "";'-'i\Qy:’m‘ Fencingz. ete., dis
N (e rect from the man-
S g " ufacturer. Forde
i A, sSlZns, prices, ete.,
- i write C. B. KEL
oS L ER. Manager,
; 4 , Eufaula, Ala.
il Can refer to nu
< 3 N merous parties 1o
AT ooh Dawson to whon
] "“‘s»*“‘__‘: _' wao have sold mon
£ ‘?v_\ uments
‘!W Eufaula
. b
7 l Marble W'ks
Bl
Eufaula, Ala,
The News guarantees to
Please its job patrons.
e s e R RI S GO DA
You will never get well and strong, bright, hap
py, hearty and free from pain, until you build up your
constitution with a nerve refreshing, blood-making
tonic, like
L
v.~ : { ; 2 3
Ine
-~ ‘ | -
°
It Makes Pale Cheeks Pink
It is a pure, harmless, medicinal tonic, made from vegetable
ingredients, which relieve female pain and distress, such as headache,
backache, bowel ache, dizziness, chills, scanty or profuse menstru
ation, dragging down pains, etc.
It is a building, strength-making medicine for women, the only
medicine that is certain to do you good. Try it.
Sold by every druggest in $l.OO bottles.
\
WRITE US A LETTER
freely and frankly, in strictest confid
ence, telling us all your symptoms and |
troubles, We will send free advice]
(in plain sealed envelope), how to
curethem, Address: Ladies’ Advisory
Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Chattanooga, Tenn. |
R s g e e AL SR R S AT
MRS. JORDAN WON'T MARRY MINISTER COREA
What Was Learned Dul'—in;i;l_;;;t_i—;;;ion of Reports Relative to
the Character of Corea Are Not Known.
A Macon special says it is reported
on good authority that the engage
ment of Mrs. liah Dunlap Jordan and
Senor Don Louis F. Corea, Nicarau
gan minister to Washington, is at an
end.
It has been rumored for some time
that Mrs. Jordan is seeking to forget
that chapter in her life. She does not
feel that she is accountable to the pub
ATLANTA HOTEL MEN “GAVE."
Subscribed $6OO and Proceeded to
Collect It from Men They Buy from.
The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
is sending out a letter to about thirty
Atlanta firms, some of whom are mem
bers of the chamber, explaining why
they were not invited to take part in
the series of entertainments civen to
the national manufacturers, wvho re
cently met in convention there.
| It seems that the Atlanta Hotel
Men's Association was called on for
{a subscription to the entertainment
fund and subsecribed $6OO. The asso
ciation then sent around to those tirms
from whom the hotels are large pur
chasers and collected the larger part
of this amount.
The tirms subscribed under the sup
position that they were subscribing
directly to the entertainment fund,
while as a matter of fact the subscrp
tions were never reported to the en
‘tertainment, consequently they received
‘no invitations.
~ The chamber of commerce is now
engaged in explaining how it all came
about, and is putting the burden on
the hotel association.
In addition to this one of the hotels
raised its rates for the convention
and compelled one man oceupying a
room to pay the same priee as is
charged for two. Many of the for
eign manufacturers who attended the
convention declared that this was the
only unpleasant feature of their \'isit‘
to Atlanta. .
WILL CELEBRATE MASS.
Maimed Priest Is Granted Special
Privilege by Pope.
Information has been. received in
New York from Rome that the Pope
will accord to the Very Rev. Louis
Martin, general of the Jesuits, the
lexm'um‘dinzn'y privilege of still cele
brating mass, although his right arm
has been amputated. One of the strict
est rules of the Roman Catholic church
is that in regard to what are designat
ed the ‘‘canonical fingers’’ of the
priests. These are the thumb and in
‘dex finger of each hand, whieh alone
are allowed to touch the Blessed Sac
rament. They are especially anointed
with holy oil when the priest is or
dained.
. As stated in the cable dispatches
some time ago FKFather Martin, owing
lt() a cancerous aftection, had to have
his whole right arm amputated. 'This
would ordinarily have prevented his
ever celebrating mass again. When
the pope learned of the operation and
that Father Martin was rallying from
the effects he said that “*so beloved a
priest should not be deprived of the
consolation of his daily mass.”” An
other priest will have to assist him at
the altar, however.
LIGHTNING EXPLODED BOTTLE.
Contained Turpentine, and Czusd a
Child’s Death in a Short Time.
Lightning playved a curious and fa
tai prank at the home of Morris Petty,
a weaver at the Rome cotton mills. A
bolt of lightning struck the house and
descended the chimney to the mantel,
where it exploded a bottle of turpen
tine and scattered the blazing liguid
over the children in front of the fire
place. One of the children died in a
short time, and others are in a serious
condition.
Biscuit from Supreme four make a
smile that won't come oft.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
oo A
“YOU ARE FRIENDS “
of mine,”’ writes Mrs. F. L. Jones, of
Gallatin, Tenn.: |
““For since taking Cardui 1 have
gained 35 Ibs., and am in better health
than for the past 9 years, I tell my
husband that Cardui js worth its
weizht in gold to all suffering ladies.’” i
The Dawson News. Wednesday, May 31, 1905.
lic for her private affairs, and for this
reason she does not have anything to
say to the newspapers.
The subject is rarely, if ever, men
tioned in the family cirele.
What was learned during the inves
tigation of the reports relative to the
character of Mr. Corea has never been
known, but the subject has been a
dead issue for some time.
THE NEED OF FARM LABORERS
Help as Scarce in Many Other States
as It Is in Georgia. .
From many parts of the south comes
the report that there is need of farm
laborers, says the Savannah News.
In our Atlanta dispatches yesterday it
' was stated on the authority of Com
‘missioner of Agriculture Stevens that
‘there was such a scarcity of labor in
‘southeast Georgia that the farmers
would lose a large percentage of their
cotton crop on account of their inabil
ity to get the grass out of their cotton
fields. That part of Georgia isn’t the
only part of this state where there is a
scarcity of labor. The negroes are
leaving the farms all the time. They
are going to the towns, to the rail
roads, to the sawmills and the naval
stores plants. |
It is evident that the farmers will
have to change their system of farm
ing—that is, they will have to cultivate
less land and cultivate it on the in
tensive system, or else find a new sup
ply of labor.
The Italian ambassador, within the
last week, has been in Arkansas, Mis
sissippi and Louisiana for the pur
pose of finding out the opportunities
there are in those states for Italian
immigrants to better their material
condition, and it seems he is so well
satisfied that it is his purpose to
recommend [talian farmers and farm
laborers to migrate to those states. A
large number of Italians have settled
in Arkansas within the last two or
three years, and many of them have
become prosperous farmers.
FLAMES WIPE OUT TY-TY.
Several Stores in the Worth County
Town Are Burned.
Ly-Ty, in Worth county, was nearly
wiped out by a fire which was discov
ered in the store of R. T. Ford about
8:30 o’clock at night.
The flames were breaking through
the roof when discovered by Mr. Hor
ton, a mill man, who was having some
blacksmith work done. They rapidly
spread to the stores of J. H. Ford, E.
M. Ford and T. E. Fletcher & Co., all
of which were consumed.
By hard work the store and gin
nery of I. L. Ford, which were threat
ened, were saved. ’
The losses are estimated as follows:
R. T. Ford, stock and building $4,300,
insurance $2.800; J. H. & E. M. Ford,
total loss, about $1,600 with no insur
ance: T. E. Fletcher & Co., stock
valued at $l,BOO, insurance $l,OOO.
Many of the goods were saved from
the building occupied by Fleteher &
Co.. owned by Mrs. John Murvow of
Tifton, insured for $2OO, valued at
3350, :
None of the stores were open at the
time, the merchants having closed for
the night.
THOUGHT THEY BURIED HIM.
Mclntyre's Family Had Hysterics
When He Reappeared at Home.
William Mcintyre, who disappeared
five weeks ago, reached heome last
nicht and threw hi= family and the
neighbors into hysterics, for they
thought they had buried him a month
ago, says a Carnegie, Pa., dispatch.
This morning Mc¢lntyre netified an
insurance agent who had promised to
pay insurance to the supposed widow
that he need not mind. At the same
time he ealled on his brother and ask
ed for a detailed bill of his funeral
expenses.
One week after Mclntyre disappear
ed a body was pulled from the river
at Beaver, Penn., and buried. Later
it was disinterrved, and both Mrs. Me-
Intyre and a brother of William iden
tified it as that of the Carnegie man.
A few days ago, while working in De
troit, Melntyre read in a paper that
he was dead and buried, and said he
thought he would come home to look
things over.
A Creeping Death.
Blood poison creeps up towards the
heart. causing death. J. k. 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. 25¢ at Dawson Drug Co’s.
A Correction.
From Washington Star.
“You lost ‘vour money in Wall
street, did you?"’
“T wouldn't say T lost it,”’ answered
the precise, though unworldly man.
“The word lost implies a remote pos
sibility of it being found again.”
An ldeal Combination.
The editor of the Wilkesbero (N.
C.) Journal has been appointed a ru
ral free delivery carrier. The editor
carrier will not only be able to. gath
er all the news of his route, but print
it in his paper and then deliver it to
‘»his admiring patrons.
!Bilious Bill was getting bloated,
'And his tongue was muchly coated.
Patent “‘tonies’ wouldn’t cure him,
'(‘ompanies would not insure him.
All his friends were badly frightened,
But their spirits soon were lightened,
For Bill said—and they believed him—
EarLY RISER pills relieved him.
The famous little pills, Early Ris
ers. cure constipation, sick headache,
biliousness. etc., by their tonic effect
lon the liver. They never gripe or
;sicken. but impart early rising energy.
| Good for children or adults. Sold by
[Dmvson Drug Co., Dawson, and H.
A. Wall, Bronwood.
We have on display a certain number of empty cigar }oyes
that we have sold during 1905. Every 25 cents worth of ciogp.
purchased of us entitles you to a guess at the number of hoyes
on the counter before you.
This Contest Is Now On
And Will Last Till June 23
We will give to the one who guesses nearest to number of hoy.
es on counter 100 Arthurettes or any other standard brand of )
cent cicars. To the second best guess we will give 50 Arthurettes
or any standard brand of 5 cent cigars. Should the first guess he
the exact number of cigar boxes appearing on the counter we will
oive in addition to the 100 Arthurettes 50 more standard 5 ceng
cigars. ' 1
Come and count the boxes. They are plainly before you. '
Anti-Trust Drug Store.
Phone 50. Under Opera House, Main Street,
Dawson, Georgia.
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MODERN DENTISTRY.
DR. CHAS. F. CROUCH.
Dean building. Specialities :
Crown and Bridge Work. Cor
recting irregularities. Difticult
cases artificial teeth: All dent
tal operations according to the
latest scientific methods. Office
phone 203 residence phone 125.
Dawson, Ga.
DR.T. H. THURMOND.
All dental work. Office central
ly located. Open at 6:30 a. m.
to 5 p. m. Office phone 129;
residence phone 131.
DR. S. D. BOWMAN.
Office Adams’ old place, 21-22
Baldwin building. Hours 7a.
to 6 p. m. Office phone 163,
residence phone 31.
%DR. R. M. STEWART.
| Office over store formerly occu
| pied by F. M. Jennings. Pat
‘ ronage solicited. Work guar
| anteed. Office phone No. 30.
SANNER SALYE
it Mmost hagling salvain tha werid
AP NSNS NS PN NSNS NG NGNS NSNS SNTNT NSNS NN
W. H. GURR,
Dawson, Ga.
Office in brick building next to
the old court house. Prompt
attention will be given to all
business.
JAMES G. PARKS,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL
LOR AT LAW.
Will practice in all the courts,
both State and Federal. Prompt
and careful attention given to
the interests of every client who
may put business in my hands.
I make a specialty of preparing
all kinds of legal papers, such
as wills, deeds, bonds and con
tracts, examining and abstract
ing titles, also commereial law
and collections. Office in brick
building west of the old court
house.
. :l‘oßCure a Cold in One Day fi“’r‘fif?‘a’wry
Tak T ini o
Tas Laxative Bromo Quinine Takets. 0 7% /7, 50x.25
. 20 CENTURY DISCEVERY
r TAKES THE PLACE OF CALOMEL
PRICE 35 CENTS., AT ALL DRUGGISTS.
3 LA Torsaleby [JBELL BROTHERS.
GAS AND GASOLINE ENGINES.
Stand supreme for all power purposes. Simplicity
itself. One team can take it anywhere. A full line of
Stationery, Portable and Connection Outfits.
Sizes 8, 12, 15 and 2.
You can see every movement. Nothing complicated
about the Blakeslee. Positively safe. Write for catalog
and prices.'
White-Blakeslee M'f'g Company:
Birmingham, Ala.
i o v ;’f )
» TAYLOR STEAM ENGiv:o
AR ey RV b
COMPLETE ¢ i
CINNING 1§ ho SAW MLk
LUTFITS ohon k’ N vewy
(o :\\\:% A 2 \33»“7 , g Equiml\:‘?{l d
GRIST S o S N ] Boiler WO
“““-'f‘"’?'»i}f«;%: o 5 «ggg, 7 Machiné
MILL T, Shops and
W /.
SUPPLIES A /// / Foundry
Woven Wire Fence, Fire Proof Roofing, Spray Pumps, Mowers, Rakes, separate®
We will Make it to Your Interest to Figure with Us. ,'l}"}
MALLARY BROS.- MACHINERY CO.
o T MACON, CA. ol
TDR AR R s s e
The News for the Best Printind