The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, June 26, 1908, Image 4

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m The place where all good men should stop The Stag Hotel Room Clean and Up-to-Date European, Baths in" Connection Every Modern Convenience STANLEY & BOGENSHOTT, PROP’R 834 MARKET ST. PHONE 2598. CHATTANOOGA CHATTANOOGA MARBLE W’KS. A. W. HASSELL Prop. L i) h a rk Ud - Granite Monuments Ta Seir d V. 1149-51 MARKET ST We have monuments in stock from $8 to $3,000 Call on or write us. rai hit muds w ""' m me For The Same Money? Call on ns for repair work, bridles, collars, oils, whips, or anything in the harness line. Second hand harness bought and sold, work guaranteed, prices right. ANDERSON HARNESS CO. .301 Main st. Chattanooga. W. L, Douglas $3.00 SHOES $3.50 \ .. . Shoes at member of the family. Men, Boys, Women, Misses and Children W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, because they hold their shhpe, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any|other shoes in the world today. _ W.jjL. Douglas $4 aud $5 Gilt Edge -Shoes Cannot Be Equalled at Any Price. caution, : W. L. Douglas’ name and price is stamped on bottom. Take no substitute. Hold by the best shoe dealei-s everywhere. Illustrated catalog free to any address —W. L. Douglas, Brook ton, Mas. Sole Distributor. 14 West 9xh St. 1 lIUUj Chattanooga, Tenn. WHEN IN NEED OF Furniture and General ‘House- Hold Goods see The MONTGOMERY AVENUE FURNITURE COUNTY 257 Montgomery Ave. Chattanooga Tenn They are actually ti e ( H np st aril Test house Furnishers in the City JuMTbink a 6-cytcl stc< 1 range for S2O. Spot Cash—Can * you heat it? Call and See llk in. ST^Vffl ■mt j Wm ON YOUR HUNTING TRIP Be stir* to be properly equipped—©main the STUV HNS and you CANNOT CO WKONO.. We nu'.c BIFLES . . from $2.25 to $150.00 PISTOLS . . . from 2.50 to 60.00 SHOTGUNS . . from 7.60 lo 35.00 A>h youf dealer and insist Sen I f r i t<'-page iibiS nn mjf popular mnl.e. If trnted i.it.tlop. ilintor % ou cannot obtain, v c ship I e .te l In Silt n* dire-t, carriage fhttrges I .vrvl.tt 1 1 \ It. M illrj firreaiit, upon receipt of | f.r f >ur ( rut* in stauijjf t catalog price. I cover |ost.age. Our attr* tive Aluminum Hanger will lie sent anywhere kr 10 tents in stanii*. J. STEVENS AEMS AND TOOL CO., ' P. O. Box 4(196 Chicopee Falls, Mass., U. 5. 4. CHATTANOOGA'S RELIABLE FIHIS WHO APPRECIATE YOUR TRACE Be sure to be properly equipped for your bunting' trip. Usetlie “ STEVKN j " and have the assurance that your choice cannot lie improve 1 upr n, an 1 that there is no possibility cf your game getting away when sighted by our guns. Our line: RIFLES, PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS *3—awert -i!".Jiane igiLJJTMTr ?ilE¥l : N S Ask ycr.r dealer, andl/tONT Fat*. to send for insist* aittrj' < ds. If illustrate i catal. g. Itisa y ut a .:n tc l taimlKm ,ho °’-' “" d } (appeals toallinterestcd in ws v..*l s. p t met, r x-,ti.e gr.md sport < f shout pi S ) r pit it 1 , t;pon ing. Mailed Pr 4 tents in recJj't of 1 r cc. i stamps to 1 ay postage. Hi: m.k viiiiourKiru- rrzzLni This clever iiv.-e*t/ vill 1 e mailed Khlili upon request. J. STZVENS ALMS & TOOL CO., P. o. iiox 4oij. Chicopee Faces, Mass.. U.S.A, f" © v v BURKE & COMPANY TAILORS 825 MARKET STREET, CHATTANOOGA, TENN. “The man with the shears” Who daily appears In advertising our work Is the man who knows What’s best in Clothes — If you doubt it call on BURKE. TUFT IS THE NOMINEE Republicans Chose Him For Their Standard Bearer. AMID GREATEST EUTHUSIASM National Convention, After a Turbu* lent Session, Ballots for the Nomi nation for President, Resulting in an Overwhelming Vote for Taft. Chicago, June 19. —Riding over every obstacle and safely negotiating the picturesque last barrier of the third-term specter, the candidacy of William H. Taft for presidential nom inee of his party has reached its long foreseen successful conclusion. On the first ballot the secretary of war was nominated as the republican party’s etandard-bearei by 702 votes at the Chicago convention on Thurs day. Hughes, governor of New York, re ceived 07 votes, Cannon 58, Fairbanks 40, Knox GB, La Follette 25, Fora ker IQ, and Roosevelt 3. There were 980 delegates in the con* WILLIAM II TAFT. ventlon, but only 978 votes were cast, as one delegate was absent from South Carolina and also one from New York. Such is the record of the republican national convention, effected amid scenes of tumultuous enthusiasm, and after a nerve racking continuous ses sion lasting nearly eight hours. With president named and platform enun ciated, there remained cnly the nomi nation of the vice president. A Tumultuous Scene. The picture within the ualls of the vast amphitheater as the presidential candidate was named was one truiy grandiose in its magnitude. In front, to the right and left, and above, the billowing sea of humanity, rest less after hours of waiting and stirred from one emotion to another, was in a fever of expectancy for the culmin ating vote. The favorite sons of other states had been named, save Knox and LaFolletto, and now on the roll call came Ohio. As the Buckeye State was reached the tall, gaunt form of Theodore E. Burton, with student-like face and severe black, clerical garb, advanced to tlip platform to nominate Ohio's candidate. He spoke—fervently, vith the singing voice of an e’angclist, FRffiDMAN Sole distributor of SHWABS’ ST LOUIS HONEST MADE CLCThING $lO 00 to $25 0C a suit. Successor to S. J. KLAUS, 830 Market St. Tenn. | witch went ringing through the great building. The close of his speech of nomination was the signal for loos ing the long pent-up feeling of the Taft legions. Instantly the Ohio del egates were on their feet, other states following, while the convention hosts, In gallery and on floor, broke into mad demonstration. “Taft —Taft—W. H. Taft!” came in & roar from the Ohioans. Maelstrom of Gesticulating Men. All semblance of order had been abandoned, and the delegates’ arena was a maelstrom of gesticulating men; the guidons of the states were snatch ed up by the Taft enthusiasms or borne under by the storm of disorder. The band was inaudible—a mere whisper above the deafening volume of sound. For ten. fifteen, then twenty minutes, this uproad continued. It was a rep etition of the scene when the name of Roosevelt threw the convention into a frenzy, repeated in Intensity and almost In duration. But there is a limit to the physical resources of throat and lung,'and at last th* tire'* voices died down to a horase shout, and finally subsided, and the conven tion then proceeded with the legiti mate business of the day. Four Hours Over Platform. It was not until four hours had been spent over the platform that the con vention was ready to proceed with the nominating speeches for president. INJUNCTION PLANK In Republican Platform Is Adopted by the Convention. Chicago. June 19. —‘The platform submitted to the republican convention by the committee on resolutions, and which was adapted, differs in few and unimportant features from the tenta tive draft. The Injunction plank asserts that the republican party always has an 1 always will uphold the processes an 1 proceedings of the court and has ab solute faith in their integrity and up rightness; nevertheless, it believes that the injunction practices should K e so modified as to provide that only where irreparable damage V> property Is imminent, the courts may grant in junctions without notice It is al>> specified that due notice shall be giv en of impending injunction proceed ings. The platform began with a highly laudatory indorsement of President Roosevelt’s administration, copying precisely the language used in the tentative draft. It further declare? unequivocally for tariff revision at a special session of congress immediate ly after inauguration Among the new features injected by the committee on resolutions is a declaration that native citizens of Torto Rien should be collectively made citizens of the United States. It also favors admission of New Mexico and Arizona as separate states. It declares with respect to the negro, without reservation for enforcement of the thirteenth... fourteenth and fif teenth amendments to the constitu tion . Convention Civil Engineers. Chicago, June 24. Delegates from Chicago and eastern cities to the an nual convention of tho American Soci ety of Civil Engineers, which is to held at Denver, C* 10., left Chicago on a special train over the Burlington railroad. The seven cars carried 12G X of the leading engineers of the .coun try, Including President Charles Mc ’Do’'aid and Scretary Charles Warren '-Hunt. RIVERSIDE CAFE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. THE FINEST IN THE SOUTH WE SERVE THE BEST FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. Popular Prices and Polite Attention. Next to Stag Hotl 832 MARKET ST., CHATTANOOGA Telephone No. 274. Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers EVERYTHING THAT MEN WEAR EXCEPT SHOES The genial John B. Hughes, a Dade County boy, to wan, on you. Cali and see your friends. 821 MARKET ST, CHATTANOOGA, TENN- FOR FURNITURE go to the old reliable linn ot Gottschaik & Company They will give you bargains. 732 MARKET SI FEET ICHATTANOOGA office Phone 1498 Kics and. nct. Phone 13 * 11. B. HEY WOOD \<r~ j Dentist | * IIMM H 1 —LM SU'KCA/ ENGAGEMENTS MADE IN ADVANCE 71112 M\mT $ U ET THE, CENTRAL LUNCH ROOM COS MARKET ST., CHATTANOOGA. (NEAR CENTUM. REPOT.) Open Every Day and Night. Come to See Ds IT A v IB A GREAT SALE! In order to elope out the fjlowing goods, we will for the next. 30 days, or till Mimes :odo make less than one* half the customary price on— -4 S *eon<3 hand Cook Stoves 2 Second-hand .Ranges C Dressers 0 Wash Stands 8 Oak I>eis 10 Red Spring 12 Chairs 3 Rockers 1 Second-hand Bed Room Suit r l lih greater part of these goods are comparatively new iii.d in first class condition. Should you desire anything in ih hove kindly give tHc your immediate attention, as tin y will not stay at the prices we are making. CLOSE BROTHERS 535 Market Street, Second Loor from 6th. Opposite Light Hotel. Chattanooga.