Newspaper Page Text
8
I | t ;
e———— SRR
A Perfect
Wall Coating
Combines Cleaniiness
and Durability
Any one can brush it on
No one can rub it off
Plastico is a pure, permanent
and porous wall coating, and
does not require washing off
to renew as do all kalsomines.
It is a dry powder, ready for
use by adding cold water and
can be easily brushed on by
any one. Made in white and
fourteen fashionable tints.
Sample card free.
ANTI-KALSOMINE CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Dawson Hardware Co.
BREAKFAST BACON
PICNIC HAMS, SUN
LIGHT FLOUR.
These goods are not
excelled. Try them.
We sell the best hay
and oats in Dawson.
F. 6.
THOMPSON.
ICE,
COAL,
WOOD.
DAWSON
ICE CO.
..SAVE..
AGENTS COMMISSION
.. 2 by buying your
" }’-‘W_"';. Monuments, [ron
{",‘Q‘u.“" Fencing, ete., di
—rt A rect from the man
ufacturer. Forde
- - signs, prices, ete.,
write C. B. KEL
’ L ER. Manager,
/i Eufaula, Ala,
Ccan refer to nu
merous parties in
i Dawson to whom
2 wa have sold mon-
J il '3 uments.
‘ f Eufaula
P N %
¥ 1 Marble W’ks
B
S S
i Eufaula, Ala.
The News guarantees to
Please its job patrons.
APainless Cure of Curable Pain
Never resign yourself to suffer pain. Women’s
pains are curable. They are the sign of dangerous
conditions of the female organs, which Should be
promptly attended to or dangerous results will follow.
W, TAKE o
IT COMES TO WOMAN’S RELIEF
whenever she suffers from any of woman's biting and weakening pains.
It not only compels the pains to stop, but it follows up and drives out
the cause of the pains, which prevents them from coming back.
It makes you well. Try it.
Sold everywhere 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
cure them. Address: Ladies’ Advisory
Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
SON WANTS TO HANG IN FATHER'S STEAD
A Twenty-Year Old Boy Mm M”Al;b;m;; Offers Himself for the
Noose to Save His Parent.
A specialto the Birmingham News
from Cullman, Ala., says that the jury
in the case of John Williams, charged
with the murder of State Senator Rob
ert L. Hipp, returned a verdict of
murder in the first degree and fixed
punishment at death. Williams was
sentenced to hang July 14.
INDIANS SELDOM INSANE.
A Demented Red Man Was Almost
Unheard of.
In my experience of twenty six years
residence among the Chippewas of
Minnesota | have known only two
cases of insanity proper among the
full bloods." One of them, a young
boy, was insane from birth: the other
was a very old woman, who became
demented over the death of her child
ren three years ago, and is now at the
hospital for the insane.
[ have known of about six or more
persons of mixed white and Indian
blood who were lunatics. And it
seems, from my observation, that the
more modernized the Indian becomes.
the more liable he become to lunacy
or imbeeility. The reservation now
has three members in the Indian in
sane hospital; one of them is the old
woman cited above, another a mixed
blood about 55 vears old, who has al
ways been weak mentally, and who
was unfortunate in marrying a shrew
(a being who is capable of driving any
man, not excepting an Indian, to in
sanity), and the other subject a young
mixed blood Indian boy about 15
vears old, who is not a lunatic in the
proper sense of the word, but, more
properly sveaking, an incorrigible
being.
I have talked over the subject with
several men, some of them old trad
ers, and others who have lived among
different tribes of Indians, and the
universal verdict seems to be that in
the earlier history of the country in
sanity was not only rare, but was al
most unheard of among the Indians,
but of recent years it seems to have
developed itself in a high degree.—
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
A FLY FARM.
Pennsylvania Man's Unique Business,
He Makes Money at It
From the Philadelphia Bulletin.
“I raise flies on my farm—artificial
flies,’”’ he said, smiling. ‘I am, in
fact, an artificial ly farmer.
“That confuses you, don’t it? Yet
it is simple enough. I raise birds that
give those little delicate bright feath
ers that compose fishermen’s Hfies.
That is all.
“*The finest birds I raise are golden
pheasants. You have wseen salmon
flies? You know their beautiful top
pings ? Well, those toppings can
only be got from the golden pheas
ant’s crest.
**At a certain season of the vear [
gather my golden pheasants around
me. [ take one between my knees. 1
pluck out his crest. How mad he gets !
[ wrap his crest in silver paper. And
so I go on till every bird has been
plucked. Do you know what I get for
these crests 7. I get $2.50 apiece for
them.
**l raise mynahs, finches, mallards,
jays and green parrots. [ supply the
fly makers with all the feathers they
can use.’’
Released on a Technicality.
It isn’t against the law to crack a
corn crib in Ohio and haul away the
corn, provided the enterprising thief
does not go inside the erib. In Cosh
octon county a corn thief pried a
board off a erib and reaching his arm
in pulled out as much corn as he
wanted. He was convicted and sen
tenced to the penitentiary. The other
day he was given his liberty npon an
order of court on the ground that he
had made no entry of the house.
The hand of fate has a finger in al
most every pie.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
oo X T
“WITHOUT A PAIN,”
writes Mary E. Shelton, of Poplar
Bluff, Mo., ‘‘l can do my housework,
although, before taking CARDUI, two
doctors had done me no good. I can
truthfully say I was cured by Cardui.
I want every suffering lady to know of
this wonderful ;medicine.’’
The Dawson News. Wednesday, June 7, 1905.
Williams' son, Frank, aged 20,
begged the court to permit him to be
hanged in his father’'s stead. Wil
liams is a farmer, and shot Hipp while
he and a deputy sheriff were attempt
tng to levy upon some of Williams’
property. An appeal will be taken to
the supreme court. .
THE CRADLE OF TEARS.
Where Dethroned Virtue Finds a
Hiding Place.
from Tom Watson's Magazine.
There is a cradle within the door of
one of the great institutions of New
York before which a constantly re
curring tragedy is being enacted. It
is a plain eradle, quite simply draped
in’white, but with such a look of cozy
comfort about it that one would
scarcely suspect it to be a eradle of
SOrrow.
And this cradle is the most useful
and, in a way, the most inhabited cra
dle in the world. Day after day and
vear after year it is the recipient of
more small wayfaring souls than any
other erardle in the history of the race.
[n it the real children of sorrow are
placed. and over it more tears are
shed than if it were an open grave.
It is the place where annually 1,200
foundlings are placed—the silent wit
ness of more truly heart-breaking
scenes than any other cradle since the
world began. For nearly thirty-five
years it has stood where it does to
day, ready-draped, open, while
many thousand mothers have stolen
shame-facedly in and, after looking
hopelessly about, have laid their help
less offspring within its depths.
For thirty-five years, winter and
summer, in the bitterest cold and the
most stiling heat, it has seen them
come-—the poor, the rich, the humble,
the proud, the beautiful, the homely—
and one by one they have laid their
children down and brooded over them,
wondering whether it were possible
for human love to make so great a
sacrifice and yet not die.
Still the tragedy repeats itself, and
year after year and day after day the
unlocked door is opened and dethron
ed virtue enters—the victim of igno
rance and passion and affection—and
a child is robbed of an honorable
home.
THE WOOING OF FARMS.
Ten Thousand Proposals to Young
Women Who Drew Homesteads.
The 120 marriageable young women
who drew homesteads on the Rosebud
Indian reservation in South Dakota
have received proposals from 10,000
men.
Most of them have come by mail,
from men who never saw the young
women and know nothing about them
except that among the charms of each
is a 160-acre tract of good land.
It would look as if these 10,000 men
and perhaps many more still remain
ing to be heard from would like to
marry the 160 acres, without much re
gard for the nature of the female in
cumbrance.
There is nothing remarkable about
it. We have got used to it, seeing
rich American girls marry foreign
titles and titled foreigners marry
American millions. And even in
humbler life the practice of marrying
for money is not so uncommon as it
might be.
But the remarkable part of the
Rosebud incident lies in the faet that
every one of the 120 young women
have refused the offers, have organiz
ed and announced that the only way
to get into their favor is to work for
it.
The girls invite their admirers to
come out and show what they can do
in the way of plowing, sowing and
harvesting. Suitors who prove by
one or two seasons’' work that they
are industrious and provident and in
every way competent to care for a
farm will stand a chance. No others
need apply.
~ Now here is fine discriminating
judgment. If a manis to marry for a
farm he must be worthy of the farm.
Dying of Famine
is, in its torments, like dying of con
sumption. The progress of consump
tion, from the beginning to the very
end, is a long torture, both to victin”
and friends. ‘“When I had consump
tion in its first stage,’”’ writes Wm.
Myers of Cearfoss, Md., ‘‘after trying
different medicines and a good doctor
in vain T at last took Dr. King’s New
Discovery, which quickly and per
fectly cured me.’”” Prompt relief and
sure cure for coughs, colds, sore
throat. bronchitis, ete. Positively
prevents pneumonia. Guaranteed by
‘Dawson Drug Co.: price 50¢ and $l.OO
la bottle. Trial bottles free.
Some Notes Doctors Get.
Kducation is certainly a failure,
for a druggist in Denver who has
been saving some of the notes he
has received says they read like
this: *‘l have a cute pain in my ba
by's stummick, please send me some
thing to cure it.”” *'My little girl has
eat up a lot of button. Please send
me a emetic by enclosed boy.’” Dear
doctor a dog bit my child on the leg,
please send some cork plaster and but
her eyves.”” ‘‘Dear doctor, what is
good for tirefoy fever send some quick
I got it.”’
The Vice of Idleness.
Of all vices to which young wen be
come slaves idleness is by no means
the least. It is a vice easily contracted
in youth and hard to throw off in
manhood or old age. Unfortunately,
it is not generally looked upon as an
evil in the sense that drinking, gamb
ling and debauchery are evils, yet its
influence is no less certain in breaking
down character and sapping physical
and intellectual strenght.—Portland
Oregonian.
No Secret About It
It is no secret that for cuts, burns,
ulcers, fever sores, sore eyes, boils,
ete., nothing is so effective as Buck
len’'s Arnica Salve. ‘lt didn’'t take
long to cure a bad sore [ had, and it
lis all O. K. for sore eyes,’”’ writes D.
{L. Gregory of Hope, Tex. 25c. at
Dawson Drug Co’s.
(ontains qualities not found m any other soap. Is now
enjoying the preference of all other soaps. An excellent
preparation for shampooing the scalp and in the treatment
of all skin diseases, and is an all-round toilet soap. Rap
idly becoming the standard with the medical profession
and the public. For sale only by Davidson & Baldwin at
|5 cents per cake, 2 for 25 cents
Don’t forget that we are still chopping the price on (Col
cate's Perfumes, Talcums, Soaps, ete., notwithstanding
that we have been reported to headquarters and asked to
be cut off of their list.
Tooth Brushes and Dentrifices
in abundance to go at same reductions. Hair brushes
and combs in great variety to go at cut prices. Many
| other things too numerous to mention, and, to tell it in
short, we will cut prices on evervthing kept in a first-class
drug store. The guessing contest is now in full blast.
Ends June 23rd.
Anti-Trust Drug Store.
Phone 50. Under Opera House, Main Street.
Dawson, Georgia.
DENTISTS.
NN NSNS NSNS NS IS NSNS NSNS NG NSNS NSNS
- MODERN DENTISTRY.
DR. CHAS. ¥. CROUCH,
Dean building. Specialities :
Crown and Bridge Work. Cor
recting irregularities. Difficult
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 81.
DR. R. M. STEWART.
Office over store formerly occu
pied by F. M. Jennings. FPat
ronage solicited. Work guar
anteed. Office phone No. 30.
-
BANNER SALVE,
tP<most healing salvain the worid
PN NS NI NSNS NSNS NSNS NSNS NSNS TN NSNS NSNS
W. H. GURR,
Dawson, Ga.
Office in brick building next to
the old ¢ourt 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 commercial law
2 and collections. Office in brick
building west of the old court
i house.
. To Cure a Cold in One Day <7
Take Laxati ini every
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tuets. .0 o £ jor2s¢
20 CENTURY OBOISCOVERY
TAKES THE PLACE OF CALOMEL
PRICE 35 CENTS, AT ALL DRUGGISTS.
iy Forsaleby BELL BROTHERS.
GAS AND GASOLINE ENGINES.
Stand supreme for all power purposes. Simplicity
itself. One team can take it anywhere. A full line o
Stationery, Portable and Connection Outfits.
Sizes 8, 12, 15 and 20.
You can see every movement. Nothing complicated
about the Blakeslee. Positively safe. Write for catalos
and prices.
White-Blakeslee M’f'g Company:
Birmingham, Ala. i
- ’ | Ire
» TAYLOR STEAM ENGINE>
COMPLETE TAYLERS
LUTFITS \% .’ N Newly
GEgT §(K§f£’ AD% fi:l‘ EqUippff .
B 8‘ . Boiler Wcrt
MILLS e %}{ 5 e
WL /// e
SUPPLIES o / Foundry
Weven Wire Fence, Fire Proof Roofing, Jpray Pumps, Mowers, Rakes, .reparatoflr
We will Make it to Your interest to Figure with Us. /»f',
MALLARY BROS.- MACHINERY CO.
The News for the Best Printind