The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, June 19, 1908, Image 1

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f : V' TAT CM, Editor. VOL- XVI DD&IN6 1908 WILL SELL ONLY FOB CASH OR ITS EQUIVALENT In order to do this successfully we realize that we must sell at great,reduction, so you will hud us at same old place at surprisingly low prices during this year. This is neceessary to our buiness and we must stay by it. Cash or barter and good prices will be our motto ing 1908. J. C. ROBERTSON I|E RAGMT ™ imple Latest Model Bllneei* bicycle furnished by us. Our agents everywhere are iC /hsrtsasltsrs and special offer at once. NO MONEY REQUIRE!) until you receive and approv eof your bicycle. We ship SSS put it to any test you .wish. If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the bicycle ship it tack to us at our expense and you will not be out one cent. FACTORY PRICES ~ c furnish ., the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make ' * .jj, " , °** e toall profit above actual factory cost. You save *lO to J 25 middlenwi s profits by buy mgr direct of us and have the manufacturer's gruar antee behind yotx bicycle. 1)0 NOT BUY a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone at any price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory prices and remarkable special offers to rider agent*. YAH Vflit RE ACTftI ICUCBI when you receive our beautiful catalogue and ■Pb ftwlVnlgllbw study our superb models at the wonderfully low Prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money are satisfied with SI.OO profit above factory cost. BIcYCLE UkALERSt you can sell our bicycles wider your own name plate at ur prices. Orders filled the day received. D HAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycler, but > a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear out rices ranging from R3 to R 8 or RIO. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. misYCD DDAKFS single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, parts, repairs and CvASICN'DHRnbS! equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices. (|SO HEBfiETHORR.PUICTURE-PROOF *S 80 If SELF-HEALING PRES TO?NTM3tWGE+QNLY JtKL The regular retail price ot these tires is “ar SS.SO per pair , but to introduce we will A** ‘ ~ "“•‘"j ' ' BP NOMMETROmE FROMPRBTMES < Tricks or Glass will not let the •>: xt%• thousand pairs sold last year. i_r.tr two hundred thousand pairs now in use. v 1 m j ' lHM y—ggg/ DESCRIPTION! Made in all sixes. It is lively A . ■: ,hii£ veiy durable and lined inside with a .pecial quality of rubber, which never Lecomcs porous and which closes up small P r r *s witliout all ow- Igg Notlce the thlok obiter tread log the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satis- llfl „ A .. and puncture strips ‘ it” fcedcustomers stating that their tireshaveouly been pumped NLSp aiM i also rim stria “ il" up once or t wiee in a whole season. They weigh nomore than ML prev 4nt rim cutting. This au ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given ML tlr * wlll out i aßt any other by several layers of thin specuilly prepared fabric on the ma ke-SOFT, ELASTIC and tread The regular price of these tires lif&.so per pair,but for Is BIDING, advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the ndtr of only $4.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C. O. D. on approval. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. Wc will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 4.6 per pair) if you Mod FILL AHH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisemeut. We will also send one nickel plated brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are sot satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. If vou order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look, finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at ally price. AVe know that vou will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. We want you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer. , r 1 a ox mm T | nrc > don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair of ir YOU NmUIU TiHK.%* Hedgethom Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at the special introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which describes and quotes si: makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual Prices. nA 2 inemrr but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK OF BUYING a bicyvA (JO NOT wwAiT or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful offers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. J. L MEAD CYCLE COMFAHY, CHICAGO, ILL HER PREDICTION hrtILEU. Worr.an Who Said She WotdJ pie On Sunday Still Living. Fas p.ic, N. J., June 15— -Mr?. Ann IClsrce’cia, who had predicted that she wou.d die at C o'clock Sunday morn ing fctill llv* s. With the passing of the hour which sne hai declared would be her last on earth, the woman who has been under guard of physicians at the gen ial hospital, became sullen and de fiant and absolutely refused to take food, which had to be forced down her throat. When Mrs. Kiselcia awoke thin day morning at 5:80 o'clock she appeared bright and happy and then lade the physicians and nurses good by. Six o'clock came and the woman began to show signs of nervousness, which disappeared with a sedative. She then became silent and efforts to make her talk were futile. DYNAMITE BOMB THROWN. Attempt to Kill Hawaiian Official and HU Wife. Honolulu, June 15. —An attempt to asrassinate Chief of Detectives Tay lor and his wife was made Saturday. A dynamite bomb was exploded out side the window of their bed room. There is no clew to the perpetrators of the outrage, though Taylor’s life has often been threatened by Chinese gamblers. The force of the explosion shatter ed a large tank, throwing the heavy timbers a distance of 50 feet and de stroying the back porch under the out side stairs of the house. The main building, however, was not damaged, a n<i neither of its occupants injured. i-- i-i Mrs. Margaret Taylor Dead. Louisville, K f-, 15—<MrB. Mar garet 8. Taylor, of Pine Bluff, Ar kansas, died Monday at the Deacon hess hospital, where she has been for past two months. She was a daughter of the late John M. Taylor, a Prominent lawyer, of Pine Bluff, who *as a relative of General Zachary ■ a ylor, a prominent lawyer, of Pine Lluff ."who was a relative of General Zachary Taylor and a descendant, of Uncial James liobtrtson. the first ttlv.r of Nashville, Tenn. Killed by Lit* tning Bolt. Union town, Ala., June 15- —On L. O. Davidson’s plantation, a shower came up, and eighteen negroes sought shel ter in a small cabin, the house being so full tl at Tavldson did not go in, and thereby saved his life, as light ning struck the house, killing Beaure gard Slaton, a n*gro, and seriously injuring a women, besides injuring several others. A n*grj John Hen ry, was also killed by lightning neai Faundsdale. South Carolina Dentists Meet. Columbia, S. C.. June 15. —Tne meeting of the SoiuTi Carolina Oental association adjourned with the elec tion of the following officers: E. J. Etn eridge, Deesville, president; E. N. Kelly, Prosperity; first vice presi dent; W. W. Chisholm, Anderson, second vice president; P. H. Shealey. Batesburg, corresponding secretary; R A. Smith, Charleston, recording secretary. Rifle Shoot Begins. Mobile, Ala., June 15.—The Ala bama national guard rifle shoot began Monday at Mongomery and will con tinue until Saturday. Two hundred men are in camp at Pickett Springs and are in command of Colonel C. K. Bricken, of the second infantry. The purpose of the contests is to provide a selection of the best marksmen of the militia of the state to represent the guard at the national shcot. Money to Entertain Fleet. Manila, June 15.—The government has appropriated one hundred thou sand pesos for the entertainment of the Atlantic fleet during its visit here. Some opposition is anticipated in the assembly, but it has not developed yet. The assembly has unanimously passed a compromise appropriation bill. The only salary reduction is the per ’diem of the assemblymen which has been reduced from 30 to 20 pesos. ban Francisco, June 13- —a private cable from Nome, received in this city, says that the whaling steamer William Baylis has been lost in .the ice pack in Anadyr bay, Siberia. It is believed her crew was rescued by the whaler Eowhead and are now on —, . *v _ T.r>, a!' l — Till BADE COUNT? TIMES TRENTON, GA. FRIDAY JUNE 19 CALEB POWthS FREE Former Kentucky Secretary of Stale Is ParJoned. PARDON FOR HOWARD ALSO Governor Willson Grants Freedom tc Two of the Leading Actors Convict ed of Complicity in th Famous Goo bel Assassination. Frankfort, Ky., June 13.—Caleb Powers and Jira Howard, who were convicted of complicity in the assas sination of Senator William Goebel, were pardoned by Governor Willson Friday. Powers was tried four times, the last trial resulting in a disagreement. Caleb Powers was released from jail at 10 o’clock and went at once to a Y'AIiF.B POWEHfI. hotel. He will Issue a statement soon. The application for the pardon ot Powers and Howard was supported by petitions signed by nearly 500,000 persons, some 240,000 Kentuckians, and a large proportion ar| democrats. Story of the Case. The campaign that ended in the de feat of Goebel at the polls, the strug gle Incident to his legislative contest whereby he snatched the governorship from Taylor, his asssasination and the campaign of prosecution waged by his partisans after his death, were replete with dramatic situaUons and crowded thd stage with actors who played important parts, but of all the participants, none, not even Goebel himself, focured public attention more clearly than Caleb Powers, the repub lican secretary of state. Powers has been fighting with a hal ter around his neck for eight years. •During all that time he has lain large ly in the power of his political oppo nents, the majority of those who were engaged in prosecuting him being partisans of Goebel. These oppo nents were surrounded by a horde of witnesses and detectives and backe' 1 by the $50,000 reward fund which the Goebel democrats in the legislature voted from the public treasury to se cure the conviction of the murderers. Tried for Life Four Times. Four times has Powers been tried for his life, the last trial resulting in a hung jury. At the hour Goebel was assassinated in Frankfort Powers was some 200 miles away on a train bound for west ern Kentucky where he intended rais ing a second “peaceful ramy” or “peti tion in boots” to protest against what seemed would be the certain course of the legislature in proceedings to oust Governor Taylor and seat Goebel on contest proceedings. He returned -to Frankfort and remained there during the stormy days that culminated in the installment of Goebel as governor upon his deathbed. Attempted to Leave the Capital. Soon after, seeing the trend of events, Powers and a Frankfort po liceman attempted to leave the capi tal by stealth. They were caught and when given a preliminary ar raignment produced pardons signed by Taylor and dated prior to Goebel’s in stallation as governor. Although such pardons issue'd in advance of trial had been upheld by the Kentucky court of appeals as legal, those produced by Powers and his companion were held to be of no effect and were cited by Goebel men as additional evidence of the guilt erf the accused. Legal Battle of Eight Years. Then followed during the course of eight years four legal battles which served to reveal the intensity of the hatreds aroused by the memorable struggle for the governorship. James B. Howard ,is alleged to be the man who fired the shot that killed Goebel and he was under a life sen tence. Official Organ of Dade County. High license *-~.. * Legislature Kills EII Providing for State-Wide Prohibition. Baton Rouge, La.. June 17. —Touts iana will nut become a prohibition state during the term of the present assembly. This was decided by the house of representatives when tha’ body, by a vote of 58 te 47, imlef initely postponed consideration of the Doussan bill providing for a referen dum vote on state-wide prohibition. The action of the house means com plete defeat for the Doussan bill in both branches cf the assembly. The Sbattuck high license bill, mak ing the minimum local license SSOO and the minimum state license S2OO. was passed by the house by a * r ote of 82 to 25. The effect of this bill will be to Increase the state revenues be tween $250,000 and $300,000 annually. The Shattuck bill is now practical ly certain to be passed by the senate, with few, if any, modifications. Among its most stringent provisions are the following: No license shall be issued, to a wo man. No woman, girl or minors shall be permitted to drink in saloons, not even in special rooms set apart for them. Women are not permitted to serve as bar maids. Liquor shall not be sold to whites and blacks in the same building. The prohibition fight in Louisiana has been- devoid of the popular cru sade features participated in by wo men and children, which have occur red recently in ether states. The vote which defeated the Doussan bill was a measure of the strength of the pro hibitionists. Many of the latter voted for the Shattuck bill as being the next beet alternative. EVELYN TRUE TO THAW. She Again Visits Her Husband in Jail at Poughkeepsie. New York, June 17. —Evelyn Thaw and her husband have become recon ciled and will not be separated, ac cording to a statement made Monday by Daniel O’Reilly, Evelyn Thaw’s counsel. Mr. O’Reilly added that “despite the attitude of Mrs. Thaw ar.d ether members of the Thaw fami ly who have been opposed to Mrs. Evelyn Thaw she will retain her po sition as the wife of Harry K. Thaw." Mr. O’Reilly said Evelyn Thaw will remain in New York so as to be in communication with her husband. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 17. — Evelyn. Thaw will 'remf.ln in New York so as to be in communication with hc-r husband in Jail here. She took dinner with her husband iu Sheriff Chanler’s room In the court house. At Thaw’s request the jail of ficials attempted to keep the news of her visit from becoming public. ONLY WOMAN DELEGATE. It Is Said Mrs. Clark Will Have Vote In Convention. Chicago, June 17. —'The only wo man to have a seat on the floor 01 the republican convention as a regu lar delegate, came to Chicago Mon day. She is Mrs. Lucy'A. Clark, or Brigham City, Utah, and it is declar ed that she also will be the only wo man whoever had a vote in a republic an convention. Mrs. Clark came to the city merely as an alternate delegate. Three hours after her arrival, however, the Utah delegates went into caucus. Then it was found that one of the regular delegates, C. E. Loose, of Provo City, would not come to the convention. Thereupon the vacant position was al lotted to Mrs. Clark as a regular dele gate. Mrs. Clark is the daughter of one of the early Mormoi! pioneers, and is an ardent woman "suffragist. Patrick Again Lose*. New York, June 17. —The applica tion of Albert T. Patrick, who is serv ing a life sentence in Sing Sing prison for the piurder of William Marsh Rice, an aged Texas millionaire, for a writ of habeas corpus, was denied by Judge LaComle, in the United States circuit court. Patrick set up the claim that his conviction and sentence to death, which has been commuted to life im prisonment, was a result of a conspir acy to plunder the Rice millions. The motive, he asserts, was to prevent him from enforcing will, leaving the greater part of the Rice fortune to him. Blind Tom’s Relatives. Columbus, Ga., June 17. —The sur viving relatives of “Blind Tom,” the world-famous negro musical prodigy, desired that his funeral take place in Columbus, the city of his birth, and his burial in New Jersey is a keen disappointment to them. He was one of twenty-three children, of whom only four are now living. His aged mother died in Birmingham a year or two ago. None of “Blind Tom’s” brothers or sitters are endow ed with musical talent and all of them havs filled ordinary positions. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been, in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of ■_>? —and has been made under his per- Bonal supervision since its infancy* /J&cC+UA/* Allow no one to deceive you in this* All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Expcrience against Experiment* What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea aud Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep* The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMt CENTAUR OOMHNV, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Avenue Bank and ,5 11U . Trust Company PUBLIC NOTICE We wish to notify the readers of this paper that there are a number of unscrupulous spectacle peddlers traveling in Georgia and Tennessee claiming to be agents of our firm. Such claims are FALSE and we denounce these parties as FAKIRS and IMPOSTERS and[ will prosecute any offend er of the above If we ean secure evidence against him. Broken Lenses Duplicated on Short Notice HARRIS & JOHNSON Mfg. Opticians 13 E Eighth st. Chattanooga, Tenn. PHONE, MAIN 676 DnO KSCRE DIT il 1 FOR THEM WtF Established iB6O THE FRAHKLINTIIRNER CO., Atlanti, 6i. ■ We all know that knowledge ia power; Old Folks' Bibles Books for Girls but most of us sre unable to buy books to scquire S. S. Toschsrs Btbles Books for Boys knowledge from. W, Bibles • G^ K !. r , However, we have solved the problem. • s s Bible , Business Guide sod ere now prepared to give Pocket Bibles and Test'ts Cook Book the benefit of our many years of thought and labor Child’s Life of Christ Stock Book Every home needs a good library. By Child's Story of the Bible doctor Book •or plan you can buy one. two or three books, or a large Bible Stories Dictionaries collection of books, get them at regular prices, pay a Bible Dictionaries Kings of Platf’m & Polpil small amount down, a arngll amount each month, and Chihb’en'j Story Books American Star Speaker have the books in your possession all the time. Children’* Hiatorioa Wild Beasts. Birds, etc, )Mark Xby the book or books you are interested in. ■■■maManauMßUMansmMamai cut out this advertisement and mail to us. and we will Fita* , -■ ■■ - •end you. without further obligation on your part, ( U B Si-te u description of what you want, as well aa fully outline - - „ oE Mr plan. Be aura to mention this paper. S*~t ead No P. O. Boa, or R. * **. 4. I :iNVITES' I your BUSINESS I The Bank that puts Safety First. I 232 Montgomery Avenue CHATTANOOA BRANCH: ROSSVILLE. GA. SI.OO A YEAR NUMBER 17