Newspaper Page Text
2
DAWSON NEWS.
'______r.__.——-—:_—____——._,__———_—.._.:—‘“_'———————'—:-
PURLISHED WEEKLY AT $l.OO PER YEAR.
BY E. L. RAINEY.
;-—_-2—__—.:.’————“"—"‘_—'_—2l:::‘.:__-":—:::—7::_7
DAWSON, GA., Marcu 7, 1906,
__.———_——__—:_———______—_—_‘_"—__._——-———-'_—_—:_——_—_—-
TEN PAGES.
e ————————————————
TIME FOR ACTION.
The question, ‘‘Shall 1 Advertise?’’
comes to every merchant at the time
when business is dull. He sometimes
satisfies himself, observes an ex
change, with the conclusion that while
husiness is dull he cannot afford it.
When business picks up one merchant
says that he has all the business he
needs, and another says that while
business is good he will advertise.
There is with many merchants a mis
taken idea in regard to advertising.
A man who has a business should ad
vertise it continually.
When business is slow endeavor to
liven it up, and when it does liven up
endeavor to keep it alive. Some bus
ness men say that with their particu
lar business they have nothing to ad
vertise. If not, then they ought to]
keep their names before the public
continually in a way that will attract
attention. If you can’t advertise
your goods advertise your personali
ty, and if people do not buy your
goods because of their merit make
them buy out of respect for your pluck
and mgenuity in placing them before
the public.
Advertise with all the money you
gan spare. It pays. I
A DEMAND FOR SOBRIETY.
Business is setting its face sternly
against the drinker.
The great trusts of the country have
* made some amends for the evil they
do by establishing the rule that only
sober men can serve them in the places
- of responsibility.
The railroad companies, the tele
oraph companies, the express compa
nies and all of the rest of the great
public service corporations hold
drunkenness in an employe to be
grounds for discharge.
The banking institution, though it
had millions at its back, could not
live a year with drunken men at its
wicket.
Drunken men in the government de
partments would cause national shame
and scandal.
The place in business for the drink
ing man is shrinking smaller and
smaller each year. Today he seldom
rises above a menial position. He is
heavily handicapped, and only extra
ordinary abilities can overcome the
distrust for him and give him an equal
footing with sober men. For high
success he must pay an enormous ex
tra price of energy and effort.
it is the same in the professions.
The old-time lawyer who made great
pleas only when he was drunk has
been crowded down by the lawyer who
makes abler pleas when sober. The
drunken physician is no longer deem
ed a genius. A
Iven the best bartender is the sober
one. Saloon keepers, just as all oth
er business men, recognize the busi
ness value of sobriety, even in deal
ing out drinks, and the bartenders
who ‘‘never drink behind the bar”
get the biggest wages.
Sobriety has its advantages in ev
ery way. Booze and high salary no
longer mix.
THE SITUATION IN CHINA.
Anti-American feeling in China is
increasingly manifest. Diplomatic
and consular agents in different parts
of the empire report the publication of
decrees by local authorities which ex
press this feeling, and manifestoes by
(‘hinese organizations urging the
maintenance of a bovcott’ against
Awmerican goods. The wviceroy of
Pechili province has dismissed Pro
fessor Tenney, the foreign director of
education, who organized the school
system in that province, because of
the hostility to him as an American.
An armed band of Chinese recently |
looted the residence of an Amemcanl
missionary at Fati, and the local au-'
thorities refused protection. Later‘
English missions at Chang-pu, near
Amooy, were destroyed by the mob.
To some extent the unfriendly agita
tion is directed against all foreigners,
but it is specially aimed at Ameri
cans because of resentment occasion
ed by the enforcement of the Chinese
exclusion laws in this country.
A GREEK forty forty years old be
gan his business life in America as a
push-cart fruit peddler, with earnings
of nine dollars a week. Of that sum
he saved seven dollar. He is now
worth fifty thousand dellars, all of
which he has made in the fruit busi
ness. And yet there are people who
complain there is no longer a chance
to get ahead. They ought to push.
MAYOR WOODWARD is going to run
for the legislature in Fulton county.
The mayor despises a dull time him
self, and he and Joe Hall may be de
pended on to keep things agoing.
These strong, rugged men will make a
fine pair.
MAKING THE]DIRT FLY.
Collier’'s Weekly of March 3rd. con
tains an article by Professor Freder
ick Palmer on Panama. He says
there are now seventeen steam shovels
at work ‘‘making the dirt fly.” Two
or three years from now there will be
a hundred steam shovels at work.
They lift a half ton each of dirt and
rock in their steel teeth and drop it
into a dump car ‘‘as easily as you
would put a lump of sugar in your
coffee.’”’ The difficulty is not so much
in digging the dirt as in carrvying it
away. When the steam shovel has
filled a dump car, which it does in
three bites, you cannot say that this
amount of earth is ev.avated. The
dump car must deposit its burden far
away from the canal, out where, by
no possibility, will it ever be washed
or slide back into the canal. It must
be hauled down hill.
" THE Golden Age, a weekly newspa
per of Atlanta, with Mr. Wwill D. Up
shaw as editor, is just out with its
initial number. The first inside page
shows a fine group picture of the
stockholders and staff members of the
publication. The group includes some
of the best known names in the south,
and would seem to insure a fine finan
cial as well as literary basis for the
publication.
How things do change politically.
Here is the Macon Telegraph saying
that **Senator Tillman has more ‘grit’
than any man now in American pub
lic life,”” and that ‘*he is an exceed
ingly useful member of the senate,
wherein he sometimes does things the
other members wish to see done, but
are afraid, or for other reasons de
cline, to do themselves.”’
NorMAN E. MACK, of Buffalo, N.
Y., member of the national democratic
executive committee for many years,
and who supported both Cleveland
and Parker, declares that William J.
Bryan is the logical democratic can
didate for president. Mr. Bryan has
been consistent, the New Yorker says,
and his maturity will make him more
formidable than ever.
REPRESENTATIVE TALBERT of
Amite county has made himself the
most popular man in his state by in
troducing an act ‘‘to regulate and en
courage matrimonial alliances and to
discourage race suicide in the state of
Mississippi.”” Should the bill be
passed Mr. Talbert’s name will imme
diately be placed in the Hall of Fame
in the new capitol.
THE Albany Herald informs us that
the visiting congressmen will be given
something more than artesian water
to drink while in that city. We sus
pected as much all the while. And
there are none who can mix and em
bellish it so delightfully as the hos
pitable and warm-hearted Albanians!
THE president of the Savannah re
form political party confesses that he
plays poker and drinks whiskey. Just
so. The reformer is too often a hypo
crite. The greatest difference between
him and the ring politician usually is
that the latter is in office and he wants
to get in.
JUDGE GRIGGS, it seems, will be
called on again to lead the democrat
ic congressional campaign. Well, if
there is anybody who can reverse the
republican landside of two years ago
Jim's the man.
ALL of the counties around Terrell—
Sumter, I.ee, Dougherty, Calhoun and
Randolph—will hold their primaries
in the next few weeks. . Some of them
will vote this montl, and the others
early in April.
THE Perry Home Journal hopes the
smoking car and hotel corridor votes
now being taken for governor will not
entirely displace the democratic pri
mary it is proposed to hold later.
~ ATLANTA continues to grow. About
two hundred more federal prisoners
will soon take up their abode there,
and the building will have to be en
larged for their accommodation.
YOUR Uncle Joe Hall has lit at last,
and is no longer flying around in
space. In a speech a few days ago he
declared for Brother Nunnally for
governor.
THE czar, notes a contemporary,
seems to have desisted in his effort 1o
force political freedonm: and self-gov
ernment upon his unwi'ling subjects.
THE Atlanta News is just as bright
and prosperous as ever. The fact is,
that family fuss seems to have helped
our red-headed contemiorary.
THERE'S nothing the matter with
Macon’s local pride. Her loyal eiti
zens are bragging on the city’'s fine
chaingang headquarters.
THE pure food bill discussion re
veals the fact that there is water in
‘whiskey. There is much indignation
iin congress as a result.
‘[ JUDGE SPEER is still making them
t lawyers toe the mark down at Savan
!nah. Marse Emory is a cauiion.
| eEs
' IT is said that the Tillman rate bill
'is going through the senate as slick as
’a streak of greased lightning.
| WHERE is T. Watson at? He sud
| denly dropped out of the campaign.
THE Shellman Sun is shining
‘Dbrightly. 5
The Dawson News. Wednesday, March 7, 1906.
MEAT RAISING IN SOUTH GEORGIA.
The Dawson News says the farmers
of Brooks county will sell a hundred
thousand dollars worth of meat this
season. This is a splendid showing
for the progress of south Georgia, il
lustrating as it does the superb mate
rial growth of that section. Mr. E. J.
Young sold 15,000 pounds of meat at
Quitman a few days ago, and Mr. Wal
ter Avera sold 11,000 pounds. It is
said that nearly every farmer in
Brooks county raises meat for mar
ket. The farmers have cold storage
facilities, and the warm weather does
not interfere with this industry.
South Georgia has been known as
the home of the razor-back, prized on
account of his speed and his ability
to ‘‘outrun a nigger.”’
General Gordon used to tell a story
of a worthy colored man who tried
to speculate on a lot of razor-backs
which he drove up to Columbus. The
old man said that all he made was
‘‘just the company of the hogs. up
there.’’
The Brooks county farmers, we dare
say, raise blooded hogs, and yet the
much-laughed at razor-back furnishes
the most famous hams in the world,
the noted product of Smithtield, Va.,
which frequently sells at 25 cents a
pound wholesale. The Virginia
razor-backs are allowed to run wild
until the time for fattening comes and
then, we believe, they are fed on
corn. As to that, however, and the
process of curing we can refer our
readers to Captain Bob Wright, of
SURGERY IN DAWSON.
True Cataract Operation Was Per
formed Here Successfully.
It will be remembered by many
persons in Dawson that about the
middle of December the ‘‘true cataract
operation’’ was performed here in
Dawson, Mrs. Fannie Huff, wife of
Mr. Frank Huff of near Yeomans, one
of Terrell’s most estimable families,
being the patient.
The operation was performed at the
home of Mr. Walter Dozier, Mrs.
Huff being nursed by Mrs. Susie
Dozier, an eold-time friend, three
weeks. The operation was a success
in every way.
At the t'me there was much discus
sion about town among those who heard
of the operation as to whether the eye
was actually cut open. In this in
stance the cataract was what is known
as ‘‘the true senile cataract,”’ and it
is true that the eye was laid wide
open, Mrs. Huff lying flat on her
back, never feeling pain or flinching:
and at once, on having the cataract
removed and the wound closed where
the knife entered and did its work, she
could see, something she had notdone
for years in that eye.
Mrs. Huff was intending to go to
Dr. Calhoun soon for the operation,
but the feebleness of her husband
caused her to not do so; and when the
opportunity presented to have it
done in Dawson she accepted at once,
and to her satisfaction she now sees
out of the eye that was before blind,
with the surgeon’s assurance that it
will never go blind any more, but will
improve in sight for two years.
The cataract can be seen at the
Dawson Drug Co’s., by asking Mr.
Charlie Harris or Mr. Raymond
Dozier, in a little bottle of glycerine,
and as many persons do not know
what a ‘‘true internal cataract’’ is
any one can see by examining it.
GRAVES GLEANINGS.
A Batch of Personal Notes About
People in and Around the Village.
Miss Sarah Graves, of Washing
ton, . €, ‘Mr. and Mrs. John
White, of Whitehall, and Mrs. As
bury Hodgson, of Athens, who have
been the guests of Miss Cora Graves,
have returned to their homes.
Miss Belle Brown, who has been
the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Otho L.
MeNiel, has returned to her home-in
Dawson.
Mrs. Will Davidson has returned
from a delightful visit to relatives in
Montgomery and Opp, Ala,
After an extended visit to relatives
here Mr.. Joe Cowart has returned to
his home in Texas.
Miss Ethel Hill is in Pelham, the
guest of her sister, Mrs, Hillard Mec-
Cree.
Mrs. Henry Graves of Washington,
D. C.. is the guest of Miss Cora
Graves.
Mr. Iverson 1.. Graves returned
Sunday to his home at Memphis,
Tenn.
Mr. Davis Marlin was the guest of
Mr. J. T. Grimes on Wednesday.
Miss Pearl Melton is visiting Miss
Mary Jolly Oxford at Sardis.
Dr. k. C. Lasseter has returned
from a \ sit to Cuthbert.
Mr. Dave Oxford, of Sardis, was
here Sundsay.
Dawson Drug Co's. New Departure.
After two months of remarkable
sales the Dawson Drug Co., the en
terprising druggists, say that their
plan of selling at half price the regu
lar 50 cent size of Dr. Howard's
specitic for the cure of constipation
and dyspepsia, and guaranteeing to
refund the money if it does not cure,
has been the greatest success they
have ever known.
They have sold hundreds of bottles
of the specific: and as yet have not
had one returned, although they stand
ready at any time to refund the mon
ey should any customer become dis
satisfied. This is the strongest testi
mony that can be furnished to the
real merit of this medicine.
Anyone suffering with dyspepsia,
constipation, liver troubles, head
aches, dizziness, coated tongue, or
the general tired feeling. caused by
inactive liver and bowels or disorder
ed digestion, should take advantage
of the Dawson Drug Co’s. new de
parture and buy a bottle of Dr. How
ard’s specific at half price with their
personal guarantee to refund the
money if it does not cure. i
Council Meeting.
The city couneil will meet in regular
monthly session tonight (Tuesday).
Several matters of interest will likely
engage their attention, among them
the heating apparatus in the public
school building and the lawsuit that
has grown out of it.
the department of agriculture, who
has some literature on that subject.
We can vouch fcr the excellence
of the Smithfield hams, and we should
like to see Georgia hams attain a
reputation like those of Virginia.
We make this suggestion for the ben
efit of our south Georgia friends,
but it is a suggestion merely. We do
not pretend to any practical knowl
edge of hog raising, but we do know
that the modern ice plant opens up
possibilities for south Georgia that
ought to be improved to the fullest
extent. We know, also, thut no west
ern ham possesses the flayor of the
country cured ham, and that the
Smithfield ham possesses, a delicacy
and flavor absolutely unknown to the
western hams. We should like to see
the Georgia ham made famous.
In this connection we wish to con
gratulate the whole south Georgia
section on its developement and pros
perity. Some years ago there was
apprehension that the pine beit would
become a barren waste when denuded
of its timber. Instead, that whole
country is as luxuriant as a garden
and lands have enormously increased
in value. A veritable horn of plenty
has showered blessings from the Sa
vannah to the Chattahoochee, and the
tales of prosperity we hear are enough
to make every Georgian’s heart glow
with pride.
Truly we have a great state, and a
noble, industrious and happy peo
ple. :
THE HONOR ROLL.
Of the Dawson Public Schools for
the Month of February.
Jim Hankins, Carlton Marshall,
Hattie Baldwin, Lora Horsley, Helen
Thornton. Nellie Crouch, William
Christie, A. J. Baldwin, Beverly Ir
win, Louise Marlin, Vada Granger,
Annie Lora Davis, Jesse Chambless,
Clive Moore, Haygood Smith, Annie
Hill Geise, Melissa Hankins, Hilda
Mcßee, Marilu McLendon, Mertice
Christie, George Haigler, Foster
Hankins, Eddie Mathews, Howard
Smith, Bonnie Brown, Susie Chris
tie, Gladys Glass, Nannie Littleton,
Susie Dozier, Annie Will Hamilton,
Rutb Mathews, Sallie McLain, Mary
Yeomans, Edna Kelly, Juanita Math
is, Elizabeth Patterson, Ida Christie,
Marinel Garner, Mary Marshall,
Louise McNulty, Clarence Ragan,
Helen Cannon, Nellie Laing, Johnnie
Will MceClelland, Pearl Turner, An
nie May Christie, Rucker Tweedy,
Berta Baldwin, Leila Will Chambless,
Maribel Irwin, Pnoebe Laing, Dadie
Moran.
Answers His Own Question.
Editor News: That was rather an
evasive answer to my conundrum,
“Why isit every time a new candidate
pops up for governor the Howellites
champion his cause?’’ The answer is
very perceptible to every one. It is:
they hope to confuse the people and
devide the Hoke Smith supporters.
The Smith boys are up to snuff—no
suckers: won’t nibble at such a bait,
much less swallow it. They are going
to stand by the reform measures and
land Hoke in the governor’s chair
beyond the possibility of a doubt.
They were hard up for timber when
they brought out our old friend,
Parson Nunnally, with the view of
catching the Baptist vote. But it’s no
o 0: politics and church won’t work
together. SIMON PURE.
A Hint to Travelers.
While in Suffolk, Va., Henry Croll,
Jr., proprietor of the Beaverton,
Mich., Hardware Clo., was taken very
sick with bowel trouble. A traveling
salesman from Saginaw, Mich., ad
vised him to get a bottle of Chambezx
lain’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, which he did. ‘‘lt soon
cured me, and I take pleasure in
recommending it,’”’ he says. No one
should leave home on a journey with
out a bottle of this remedy. It is al
most sure to be needed and is not ob
tainable on steamships and cars.
Sold by Dawson Drug Co.
An Editor's Bad Bargain.
A store-bought bride may turn out
to be a questionable bargain, as has
been learned by a Shenandoah county,
Virginia, country editor. He procur
ed a bride through a Philadelphia
matrimonial agency, paying a stipu
lated sum for the introduction and the
negotiations. The couple had lived
together about two weeks when a dis
pute arose with respect to their prop-.
erty rights, and the bride thrashed
her husband soundly and got on the
train and went back to Philadelphia.
What Will Be It's Nane,
What name is this railroad rate bill
going to bear, in the event of its pas
sage? It is customary to call a bill af
ter the name of the man who has
charge of it in congress, or who writes
it. The republican leaders desire that
a railroad rate law shall be identified
with their party. But it looks now as
if, in all fairness, the bill that is now
receiving attention should be called
the Tillman bill.
Notice.
I am now with McLain Bros. & Co.,
and would be glad to have my friends
call to see me. Yours to s rve,
Cod,. TVREY.
Indigestion is much of a habit.
Don’t get the habit. Take a little
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure after eating,
and you will quit belehing, puffing,
palpitating and frowning. Kodel di
gests what you eat and makes the
stomach sweet. Sold by Dawson
Drug Co. |
Residence for Rent. |
Nice. almost new, 5.r00m residence on Church
street fOr rent. Apply to |
DAVIS-DAVIDSON CO.
Ey'e 4 |
Six Per Cent Long Loans
Loans negotiated at 6 per cent interest. Com
missions very reasonable. JNO. R. IRWIN. f
To Cure a Cold in One Day x 5
- e = » 3 ery
Tek» Laxative Bromo Quinine Tikes. 22x £ - ined
For Sale.
Dr. T. H. Thurmond’s residence for sale.
E. T. JORDAN.
o eet Sl
Money to Loan.
The Georgia Loan and 'trust Company loans
money at 6 per cent per wnnum.on real estate.
Prompt service guaranteed. [f you want to bors
row money see H. A. WILKINSON.
e oTt
Y
Lost Shoe.
Tuesday morning between my residence in
Dawson and the Bill Huckaby place I lost a No.
8 Forbush shoe with new hall soie and rubber
heel, Liberal reward for its return.
J. S.CLAY.
et
N
(Cabbage Plants.
If you will write me at Shellman, Ga., I can
send them to you at $1.50 per 1,000 F. O. B. at
Shellman, or by mail prepaid for 25 cents per 100,
or 50 plants for 15 cents.
MONROE STEVENS.
—_—
%&. . v
Notice to City Voters.
The books of registration for the hond eiection
to be held on April 11th, 1008, are now open.
Please call and register promptiy. Books will
close ten days before said election. This Feb.
26th, 1906, R. E. BELL, City Clerk.
N * Y
Gin Outfit for Sale.
Complete gin outfit, 20-horse power engine, 5
horse power boiler and two 80 saw gips, revolving
press box. Bargain in it. Engine and boiler
will be soid separately, if desired. :
M. E. JENNINGS, Bronwood. Ga. R. F. D, 1
. . ¥y e
Dissolution Notice.
This Is to ecertily that T have withdrawn from
the firm of B. B, Perry & Co , the company as
suming all liabilities, I wish to thank the pube
lic for past patronage, and ask n continuance of
the same to the firm. 0. L. IVEY,
February 13, 1906.
T 1
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Notice is hereby given that an election will be
held on the 11th day of April, 1906, in the man
per und at the place vrescribed for city elections,
for the purpose of allowing the voters of the city
of Dawson to determine the question whether or
not the city of Dawson, by its Mayor and Coun
¢il, shall issue bonds to the amount of thirty
thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be
needed: said bonds to be issued for the purpose
of putting in a sewerage system ’in the city of
Dawson: said bonds to bear 5 per cen, interest
from date, to be dated November 1, 1906, and pay
able as follows:
Nov. 1, 1907..principa1....81,000. .interest . .$1,500
Nov. 1, 1908. .prinecipal.... 1,000. .interest .. 1,450
Nov. 1. 1909. .principal.... I,ooo..interest . 1,400
Nov, 1, 1910. .principal. ... I,ooo..interest .. 1.350
Nov. 1. 1911 .principal.... I,ooo..interest .. 1,300
Nov. 1, 1912, principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 1.250
Nov. 1, 1913. .prineipal. ... 1.000. interest .. 1,200
Nov. 1, 1914, .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 1,150
Nov. 1. 1915. .principal.... I,ooo..interest .. 1,100
Nov. 1, 1916, principsgl.... 1,000. interest .. 1,050
Nov. 1, 1917 .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 1,000
Nov. 1, 1918. .principal. ... 1.000. .interest 950
Nov. 1, 1919, .principal.... 1,000. .iuterest .. 900
Nov. 1, 1920. .principal.... 1.000. .interest .. 850
Nov, 1, 1921. .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 800
Nov. 1, 1922, .principal.... I,ooo..interest .. 750
Nov. 1. 1923. principal.... 1.00 .interest .. 700
Nov. 1, 1924 .principal.... 1,000. intzrest . 850
Nov. 1, 1925. .principal.... 1,000 .interest .. 600
Nov 1. 1926. .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 550
Nov. 1, 1927 .principal.... I,ooo..interest 500
Nov, 1, 1928 .principal.... 1,000. interest .. 450
Nov. 1, 1929. .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 400
Nov. 1,1930.. principal.... I,ooo..interest .. 350
Nov, 1, 1931 .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 300
Nov. 1. 1932 .principal.... 1,000. .interest .. 250
Nov. 1, 1633. .principal.... 1,000. loterest 200
Nov. 1, 1934, .prineipal.... 1000.. interest 150
Nov. 1. 1935. .principai.... 1,000. .interest .. 100
Nov. 1, 1936. .vrincipal.... 1,000. .interest 50
Said bonds to be fully paid oif and satisfied
within a period of thirty years from che date of
issue: and that a tax rate shall be fixed each year
sutficient to pay principal and interest on each
bond as will fall due, gaid bonds to be paid off on
or before the first day of November, 1936, there
being thirty bonds of the face value one thous
sand doliars each, The bailot at said election
shall read as follows: *‘For Bonds,” or “"Against
Bouds.”” This March 6, 1906,
J. R, MERCER, Mayor. Dawson, Ga.
RN BREEL: Clerk.
'REE LIFE INNSURANCE
FREE LIFE INNURANCE
During the past thirty-five years over one hun- |
dred thousaud discrimiuating customers, many
“of whom could not be suited elsewhere, found
complete and lasting satisfaction and a solution
of the piano question by purchasing of the
Ludden & Bates S. M. H. |
Let us prove that we candoas well to you |
We guarantee in our New Scale $4OO ]
Ludden & Bates Piano
that we give you an ipstrument that will cem
pare in tone, action aund general construction
with any $4OO piano in your neighborhood—purs
chased elsewhere.
We warrant this piano for a life time, and. be
sldes, we give a limitcd numoer of purchasers
FREE LIFE INSURANCE. In case of death
yvour heirs—wife, sister or children are handed a
receiptin full for any amount you may owe [
on the instrument. Isn’t this a fair and safe
proposition, a safeguard to keepthe piano in the !
home? ’
~ This offer holds good only for our
‘ THIRD LUDDEN & BATES
Piano Club, just forming, for one hundred New
Scale 8400 Ludden & Bates Pianos to one
hundred club members at $287 cash or $287 on
terws of $lO cash and $8 monthly with inter-'
est Larger payments for quarteriy or yearly |
terms. i
Call at the store or write for membership
blanks and full particulars. This club will soon
be filled. Our two clubs just completed saved
two hundred members in all $22.600 and made us
two hundred more friends. We would like your
friendship also.
Cut out and mail todav.
?nxxn'xummmuxxmmmmxxxxxuxnx
a LUDDEN & BATES S. M. H D. S.S
= Savannah, Ga. "
% Gentiemen: Please send me full particu- J
lars of your third piano club and Free Life a
Insurance plan.
SIS, o o e g
o
xmnxnxmxxmxmmmnxmxunxmxg
Ludden (& BatesS. M. H.
131 Cotton Avenue, Macon, Ga-
A. A. Poindexter, Manager. i
for a man to lose his eyesight. It]
is sadder to see him neglect his op
portunities to preserve it. For
that reason I offer to examine your
eyes free of charge. Not a careless, I
perfunctory examination, either. !
but a scientific and. |
Thorough Eye Test.
You owe it to yourselfto accept this
offer. Kvery day you neglect it
yYou may be progressing toward
sorrow and helplessness. |
SEE DR. SEE. EYE HUTCHASON, .
1
DAVIS EXCHANGE BANK BUILDING. .
Albany, Ga. I
1 3E ;-
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Don’t Compare
McCOLLUM
with the cheap catch.penny
photographers,
BE WISE!
Have him to make
you
something nice.
McCOLLU/M,
OLD AND RELIABLE,
e ———————
-v’vvvvvvvvvvvwv:;;v—vv;
Chairs are now required to je.
commodate our rapidly growine
patronage, which encourages yg
to greater efforts to fulfill oyp
promise of giving the people the
Finest Barbershop
in the State,
We are constantly adding to
our equipment, and already
have every modern appliance
known to the barber’s trade.
ONLY WHITE BARBERS
are employed, and every cus.
tomer is guaranteed courteous
and high-class work.
R. C. Goepp.
THE BARBER.
Ab o bbb bDVVAMDD bbb b
NSNS NSNS NSNS NN SN N NSNS NSNS AP
THURMOND & HOYL.
All dental work. Office central
ly located. Open at 6:30 a. m.
to 5 p. m. Office phone 12
residence phone 76.
DR. CHAS. F. CROUCH,
DENTIST.
Office Hours 8 A. M. to
SP. M., Dean Build
ing. Office Phone 203.
Residenc Phone 125.
DR. S. D. BOWMAN.
Office Adams’ old place, 21-2
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. . Jenninys. Pat
ronage solicited. Work guar
anteed. Office phone No. 30.
}
¢ PHYSICIANS.
E W’MW\WWWV\M
¢ R. E. BOWMAN.
E PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
| Bronwood, Ga.
[é Office next to court house. Al
< calls promptly answered.
0. T. KENYON, M. D.
% Office over Bell Bros. drug store
‘ Calls left at Bell Bros. phone.
| Office hours: 9 toll 2 a. m.
| 2t05 p. m.
J. H. LEWIS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Dawson, Ga.
Office over Bell Bros. Phome
g * 56. Residence phone 169.
i
§ LAWYERS.
1[ PP PP AP IS PSS
{W. H. GURR,
Dawson, Ga.
Office in Dean building. Prompt
} attention will be given to sl
| 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 W
the interests of every client who
may put business in my hands
I make a specialty of preparis
all kinds of legal papers, sueh
as wills, deeds, bonds and cor*
tracts, examining and :11'~t1'.?C1‘
ing titles, also commercial 13¥
and collections. Office in Dea?
g building.
Let The News Job Roo
do your printing.
,/O\/ / f / GuA
- s N 18
Co rdtliniid G
$5,000 V.OO
R. R Fare Paid. Notes
I 500 FREE COURS
RTINS Boardat Cost. Writed
GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Maco®