Newspaper Page Text
12
There is One Soda Cracker
and One.
You do not know M Soda
Cracker until you Know
Uneeda Biscuit
To taste Uneeda Biscuit is 10
fall in love with them. You
never forget that first taste, and
you renew it every time you eat
Uneeda Biscuit
5¢ In a dust tight,
moisture proof package.
NATIONAL BISCUIT-COMPANY
R,
KENDRICK’S
' DRUG STORE
' Kendrick (& Jennings,
Proprietors. Phone 70
>~—_—
WE WANT 1
Y 0 LUR T 3
BUSINESS. '
GOOD ;
ACCOUNTS 1§
SOLICIIED. ‘
' PAYABLE |
1N.% ’
‘ THE FALL |
> KENDRICK’S
DRUG STORE,
Kendrick (® Jennings,
"_ Proprietors. Phone 70
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@ Pliable, :
& Shapely, &
& Comfortable &
No. 640, Sold Everywhere,
Price, g
| MAD AMB DB AN:S FRENCH FEMALE
PILLS.
A Sare, CerTaiy RELgr for SUPPRESSED MENSTRUATION,
AEYER RNOWN T 8 SALL Set! S| Byt
for $l.OO _'per Box. Will ;e{.fleiht»l;x‘z:'?'r'fil,L;}; ,‘J,‘}fi
T o e T it Sons St
UNITED I!olct C0.,80x 74, LancasrTen, Pa,
Sold in Dawson by Davidson & Baldwin.
SENATOR BACON'S SOUND VIEWS
Georgia Statesman’s Strong Reason
Against Annexing Cuba.
Senator Bacon is opposed to the
annexation of Cuba, and backs his
position with some very strong rea
sons. In a recent interview in
Washington he said: .
“Generally speaking, social as well
as political equality exists among all
classes in Cuba. The negroes there
are a prominent, self-assertive and
aggressive force in matters civil and
military, insolent of political place,
and leaders in revolutionary enter
prises of the past and present. To
introduce such a community into
our federal system would seriously
enlarge and intensify the racial
problem. With the development of
the sugar and tobacco interests in
Cuba, which would certainly and
speedily follow annexation, those in
terests in the United States ' would
soon be destroyed. Certain kinds of
tobacco production might be ex
pected, but generally speaking this
would be the result.” :
Senator Bacon also pointed out
the immense loss of revenue which
would ensue if Cuban sugar and to
bacco were admittea free,
l A Real Marriage Lottery.
Marriage is a real lottery at
iSmolensk, Russia.’ Four times a
jyear a lottery is held, the capital
prize being a young country girl,
isr)metimes with a good dowry in
{sheep. The.price of a ticket is about
I"’"~’ cents. At a single drawing 5,000
i tickets are sold. He who is fortu
tnatc enotugh to draw the lucky tick
let has his alternative—he may mar
ry the girl if she pleases him, also
gaining thereby $4,000 in addition
“to whatever the girl brings with her
‘as dowry, or if the ‘‘prize’” in ques
"lion does not please him he can turn
i the ticket over to a friend.
| B
? ‘Makes the Weak Strong.
| A run down condition of the ner
;vous system thoroughly rendering
,defective the energies of the mu-
Icous, venal, gland and nerve struct
jure, is why so many people have
ivarious diseases. Haggard’s Specific
| Tablets rectify all these deficiencies
]and assures good, bouyant health.
. TThey are an absolute specific for
]indigestion, constipation, kidney and
i bladder troubles, lost vitality and all
lkindred diseases. They never fail
|to benefit. Send for book of partic
julars. Price per box, 50 cents. Ad
idress Haggard Specific Co., Atlanta,
i Ga.
! She Thoroughly Enjoyed It.
; “1 suppose it was a perfectly love
ly wedding.”
“Yes. The bhride's mother wept
all through the ceremony, the table
with the presents on it upset, break
ing all the cut glass things, and Joe
Wayton stepped on Sue Madison’s
train, nearly.tearing it off. I never
enjoved a wedding more in my life,
‘and I just knew when Gertie chose
Sue instead of me for her maid of
honor some such things would hap
pen.”’ !
That the roots of many native
plants, growing wild in our Ameri
can forests, possess remarkable
‘px'operties for the cure of human
maladies is well proven. Even the
juntutored Indian had learned the
icm‘atl\'e value of some of these and
taught the early settlers their uses.
The Indian never liked to work, so
he wanted his squaw to get well as
soon as possible that she might do
the work and let him hunt. There
fore, he dug ‘‘papoose root’ for her,
for that was their great remedy for
female weakness Dr. Pilerce uses
the same root—called Blue Cohosh
—in his ‘“Favorite Prescription,”
skillfully combined with other agents
that make it more effective than any
other medicine in curing all the
|various weaknesses and painful de
’ rangements peculiar to women.
Many afflicted women have been
saved from the operating table and
the surgeon’s knife by the timely
use of Doctor Pierce’'s Favorite Pre
seription., Tenderness over the lower
"region, with backache, spells of diz
ziness, faintness, bearing down pains
'ol' distress should not go unheeded.
l;\ course of “Favorite Prescription”
will work marvelous benefit in all
such cases, and generally effect a
permanent cure if persisted in for a
reasonable length of time.
For constipation the true, scienti
{fic cure is Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel
‘lets. Mild, harmless, yet sure.
The Dawson News. Wednesday, October 24, 1906.
REAL LAND OF THE PHARAOHS
WILL SOON BE OF THE PAST.
’ The Screech of the Locomotive Whis
' tle Now Echoes Through the
i Valley of the Nile,
l If one wishes to see Egypt, the
| real Egypt of the Pharaohs and the
Khalifs, one must do so soomn, says
a writer, for today the land of mys
tic charms and templed wonders 1n
| which the history of the worlil was
cradled uncounted ages ago is un
dergoing a transformation so won
derful and so swift that another de
cade of the present feverish march
of “progress’ will surely spoil the
| splendid picture for all time.
Seven thousand years of a won
drous ancient civilization which
knew no equal in all the world have
left a chain of titantic temples all
the way from ancient Heliopolis to
the mysterious land of the Soudan,
far to the southward of Wady Halfa,
like a peerless string of mighty
pearls a thonsand miles in length,
set in the glorious emerald of the
Valley of the Nile. But ruined tem
ples and tombs alone remain to tell
of the pristine glories of the ancient
land of Khem. Gone are the mighty
cities of this wondrous valley. Gone
are the great caravans of stately
| camels with their swaying burdens
of priceless oriental freight. . The
screech of the locomotive now ech
oes through the Nile valley. Tele
graph poles stalk in endless proces
sion, along the crest of the Libyan
mountains, ever in sight from our
Nile boat as we journey from Cairo
to the First Cataract. Electric
lights shine across the rippling wa
ters of the historic stream as we an
chor at night opposite some third
rate Arab town of Upper Egypt; and
| even the tombs of the Kings, those
stupendous sepulchers of Egypt’s
mighty pharaohs of thirty centuries
ago, have been strung with wires
and are now lighted with electricity.
Thebes, the great city of Amon,
has vanished from the earth. Stu
pendous ruins alone today mark the
gite of this wondrous ‘‘city of a hun-}
dred gates, which even the Greek
‘Homer described with amazement.
‘The desert sands sweep over the
broken ruins of temples, tombs and
splendid palaces of that far distant‘
age of the Pharaohs. Yellow lizards
crawl among the broken stones. The]
crested hoopoe flits among the lone
ly ruins, and monstrous bats inhabitl
them by night. The primitive mud
huts of the fellahin are huddled un
der the shadows of the most splen
did of these ancient temples, while
about their stately gateways play
broods of coffee-colored children, the
‘destined future citizens of this “dead
‘lnation in a dying land.”
| At the first cataract of the Nile,
'the highest engineering skill of the
' 20th century has accomplished a
}work so stupendous as to deserve a
‘high place among the wonders of
‘the modern world; but the great
Barage of Assouan, although a won
‘derful example of modern engineer
!ing, and destined to reclaim mil
lions of fertile acres from the desert
Ilands, is vet a potent factor in the |
' sad but sure transformation of the
'Nile valley. The templed Isle of
| Philae, loveliest gem of all this his
‘t(n‘ic land, is doomed to destruction
‘by the increased overflow at the time
I()f the annual inundation; the water
rises since the completion of the
}great dam almost to the top of the
| superb temple of Isis, and that love
]liost of Egyptian shrines known as
“pharaoh’s Bed.” During the period
lof the inundation one may now pad
[dle about in a boat among the
| carved lotus capitals of that splendid
| colonnade where, last in all this land
|of Khem, the gods of ancient Egypt
' were revered. Below the cataract
|a great tourist hotel has been built,
land at night the electric lights from
|its windows shine across the waters
}of the ancient stream, even to the
{ historic Isle of Elephantine.
| The same touch of the 20th cen
| tury is felt throughout the Valley of
the Nile. Thebes and Memphis, the
mighty capitals of the ancient Egyp
| tlans, gz{ve way in time to *Alexan
| dria, the capital of the Greeks, whose
olory waned in turn with the as
cendency of the crescent, and Cairo,
| the city of the Khalifs, became the
Arab capital. |
' HARVII'S LATEST SPEIL. |
: e |
' Thinks He Sees Conspiracy Ag’uinstl
| Cotton of Atlantic States.
' Hon. Harvie Jordan, president of
"t,he Southern Cotton Association, has
arrived in Atlanta from a visit to
;\\'ashingmn. It is understood that
'he stands for the statement that
“Wall street speculators are in acon
spiracy to injure the cotton planters
|by exaggerating the extent of the
'damage done by the recent storm,
'and that Texas cotton is being un
| fairly favored at the expense of the
| Atlantic states,” and believes that
'the present advance in prices will be
followed by a severe slump unless
' speculation is checked at onse. He
'says that while the crop will not be
las large as anticipated on August
Ist, it will be the second largest in
the history of the south. |
Danger from the Plague. !
| There's grave danger from the
| plague of coughs aqd colds that are
|so prevalent, unless you take Dr.
| King’s New Discovery for consump
'tion, coughs and colds. Mrs. Geo.
i Walls, of Forest City, Me., writes:l
' “It's a Godsend to people living inl
| climates where coughs and colds pre
ivall. 1 find it quickly ends them.”
|lt prevents pneumonia, cures la
| grippe, gives ~ wonderful relief in
'asthma and hay fever, coughs and
| colds. 50c and $l.OO. Guaranteed]
lby Dawson Drug Co. Trial bottle’
free. :
Has Just Received a Full
and Complete Line of .
Dry Coods, Clothing, Shaes,
Hats and Notions.
BELOW WE QUOTE A FEW OF OUR PRICES
Ladies’ rain coats, tan and
oxford, full fashion, of genu
ine cravenette, worth $12.50;
our priow .o SERS
Also have better grades worth
SIT ourprice. . .. 948
Have a beatuiful line of
skirts; prices range from
Ao i e 0 SASB
36-in. guaranteed taffeta silk;
reg. price $1.25, our price 98¢
Ho-inch broadcloth, garnet,
blue, tan and "gray, reg. $1.25
grade, our price. . ... 9%c
Ladies’ long coats, black, $2.48
o
Ladies’ 50-inch long coats, a
better grade, worth $6, for 4.23
Ladies’ $7.50 coat for . . 4.98
Ladies’ $lO.OO coats . . 7.48
PAY US A VISIT
AND WE WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT WE
CAN SAVE YOU FROM 10 to 258 PER CENT,
,f‘?. ! .“""” .
The Bee Hive.
LEADERS OF LOW PRICES.
Main . treet. - - - - - - Dawson, QGa.
Majestic Baking Demonstration
OCT. 2th TO NOV. sth.
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gf e 15 gallons of water : Where pressure water is used e
5 s g : iron pin-extension | 3
p i=D to the point of this malleable ir :
[ ated to : B |
[ S g:ning, while breakfast #: water front, which ha:nmore o
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‘_./\‘ is cooking. When W?'er i heating surl'ace thandange emanre/ . 3
§ | moaon [BN gets too hot reservoir . other, supplies abun Nzl oy (G
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Come any day. You are welcome, whether you intend to buy or not.
Dawson Hardware Co.
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; - e R ee,WS ST T ASAR L DA, »;v".:;" T, Jr" 5 ,"’ ) - "
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic .
has stood the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One and a Half Mm‘::
bottles. Does this record of merit appeal to you? No Cure, No Pay. 3
! Enclosed with every boe is a Ten Cen package of Grove’s Black Root, uvl’m& 4
:-__—::‘»':'s
Blank Labor Contracts, Rent Notes, Plain Notes, Mortgages, etc.. for
sale by The News Job Rooms.
We will give to
every customer
who will pur
chase a bhill to
the amount of
ten dollars a
beautiful fram
ed picture 16
by 20 inches.
Just received a com
plete line of the (lel
ebrated Douglass
Shoes in all the lat
est styles and leath
ers: also a nice and
up-to-date line of la
dies’ shoes in viel
and patent leathers.
We have a big line of ladiey
trimmed and ready-to-wear
hats. Come in and examine
these goods and hear our
prices, and we will convince
you that we can save you
from $1 to $2 on a hat. Our
prices range from 25c¢ to $6.98
e e e
Good calicoes, per yard 3¢
10-4 sheeting i . s
e e s T
10-4 unbleached sheeting 23c
Bleached table damask, 70-
inch, worth everywhere $l,
ourdprioe ... . 4 . . 58
Cotton checks, per yard 5¢
Good apron ginghams . 5¢
Sea Island, per yard . . 5¢
Good outing, per vard . 5¢
\