The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, September 11, 1908, Image 1

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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. {>. F, Tatum, Editor. voj,. xvn. ft) o Drops' , - “' -=r=r- t -ftfcc table Preparatioufor As slmiiatirig theToodandßegula & the stomachs amlßowels of Imams . < hii.ki:\ Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Rest. Con tains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. tfOT NAHCOTIC. jtoapeofOldlk SAMI2LH7LMB PumfJcui Set/“ AlxJenna * 1 PorAiUe Salts -f Anut Seed * I flpptrmint - / Pi Carbonate Sod* * i }Ymr, Seed - 1 Clarified Sup g. I \\ei#ynxn Flarm f Aperfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions,Feverish- Q ess and LOSS OF SLEEP. •Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Atb months old J5 Boses -J5 Gents EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. I ANTED-ApER AGENT” taking money fast. Write /or full particulars and special offer at once. NO MONEY KEQULKED until you receive and appro* eof your bicycle. We ship :o anyone, anywhere in the U. S. without a cent deposit in advance, prepay freight, and allow TEN DAYS’ FREE TRIAL, during which time you may ride the bicycle and put it to any test you wish. It you are then noc perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the bicycle ship it back to us at our expense and you will not be aid one cent. FACTORV DDIfiCC We furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make sHw IVIII rniysw at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save $lO to $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturer's guar antee behind your bicycle. DO NOT BUY a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone at a?iy price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory prices and remarkable special offers to rider agents. VAII lAfll I DC AOTAUICUCn when you receive our beautiful catalogue and < y lELD£ Hv 1 vHIwsICSI study our superb models at the woTiderfully low prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money than any other factory. We are satisfied with SI.OO profit above factory cost. BICYCLE DEALERS, you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at ar prices. Orders filled the day received. D HAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycle?, but a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear out rices ranging from S3 to S8 or SIO. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. RHIUTFD RDAIIFC Single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, parts, repairs and vWHJiLII DnHfVLO, equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices. BBIS8 BIS HEBGETHORR.PIIRCTURE-PROOF S M £J> SELF-HJULIII6 TIRES L.nnirror' jjM l’acks or Glass will not let the DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively E t ‘ I . H|pecial quality ol rubber, which never Che a Jr n? sl ? all without allow- j |1 Notlce the thlck rubber tread ing tne air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satis- ■ 1H Ktrinn ‘•it’' fiedci! omers stating that their tires haveonly been pumped ‘. j i> • also rim t-io “II” SSrti e n 0 /r t T- Cei t n v, awhOl i SeaSOn - They weigh no more than S to prevent rim This \ bvseve be puncture resistmgquaiUies being given fg tire will outlast any other 'rSigsytaf SII& EUSTI,! “* ad'ertising purposes we are making a special factory price to m lie rider 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. h e will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (therebv making the price *54.55 per pair) if you srud IT’LL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one n ckel plated brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination. “We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. If you order a pair of these tires, you w'ill find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look finer than anv tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. u e want you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer . _ IF V'/lff don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair or •r yUu S*t.t.D lIHES Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at “? special introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which :,cn s quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual prices. . . . DO MY but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK Of BUYING a bicycle . ** I S VwAiT or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful wers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. J. L MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL - " ; ~ T Low Rates ‘ | Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, and New Mex jCo • Return limit 25 The 9 ott ? n l* 18 l h . e ~ i . \ A direct line from Memphis I Y s an d stop-overs al- to the Southwest. The lo vved both eoi jq pr Cotton Belt is the only line and retlirnino- 6 operating two daily trains, carry u filing. ing through cars without change — the only line with a through sleeper Memphis to Dallas. Equipment m -1^ eludes sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe cars. Trains from all parts of the Southeast £ 1 'fl make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton Mg Belt trains for the Southwest. M’' | Ask the ticket agent to sell you a rickety ia Memphis JMI flm and the Cotton Belt. BB Write for Texas or Arkansas book whichever section you are 151st Mm interested in. These books are just off the press, and are full of 1 B facts and examples of what is actually being done by farmers, truck hardeners and fruit raisers in this highly-favored section. A hve color map is inserted in each book Free upon request. H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent, 109 • W. Ninth Street, Chattanooga. Tenn. ICASTORIA Forlnfants and Children. The Kind Have Always Bought Bears the Signature /Am w L Jp* In (\ff se V/ For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. Official Organ of Dade County* TREN TON, GA„ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11. 1908. PAWNEE BILL COMING Famous Indian Fighter Will Be At the State Fair. ATLANTA’S FINE ATTRACTIONS The Farmers’ Union Is Co-Operating and Will Show Georgia’s Best Farm Products. Atlanta, Ga. —Pawnee Bill, who is coming to the state fair, Atlanta, in October, with a band of Indians and a company of cowboys, is one oi the few picturesque old Indian fighters left. He is chief of the Pawnee Indians, president of a bank and the head of a large wild west circus. He has a bullet in his neck, fired by a horse thief and a deep scar left on his head by an Indian’s tomahawk. Years ago, Pawnee Bill was the ter ror of the bad men in his part of the west. He had nerve, a clear eye, Major Gordon W. Lillie, “Pawnee Bill.” a quick finger and a good pistol. When he got in action, there was something doing. Chasing horse thieves and (bank rob bers and fighting Indians were sport for him. Since he settled down to business, he has been very successful. It is said that he cleared SIOO,OOO last year with his circus.’ Atlanta has engaged his show and will have it give a free performance every afternoon during the fair in front of the grand stand. Among the features of this year’s fair, which will be undOr the auspices of the Farmers’ Union, will be cotton with upwards of 1,000 bolls to the stalk, hay that made five ton* to the acre, oats six feet high, $1,750 hog, fine cattle, poultry and a great ex hibit of farm machinery, trained dogs and lions, a cotton seed oil mill in operation and a model dairy. There will be a big military day, an# General Luke Wright of Tennes see, secretary of war, will be invited to review the troops. Hon. E. W. Chapin, candidate for (president, will speak at the fair on prohibition day, Saturday, October 10. The temperance people say they will hold the largest rally that day ever seen in Georgia. That same day there w T ill be the greatest baby show ever held in the state. Babies from all over Georgia are expected. A fox hunt is planned for another day inside the fair grounds, and on still another day there will ibe an imi tation robbery, flight of the burglars and pursuit by bloodhounds. PROTECTED HOME FOR BIRDS. Plans of* Audubon Societies to Pre vent Slaughter. New York City.—Three hundred square miles of the favorite hunting grounds for the water fouls in this country will soon be converted by the National Association of Audubon Soci eties into a protected home for the various breeds gradually undergoing extermination for commercial purpos es, according to information given out at’headquarters here. The two tracts presented by the government for this purpose are in Oregon and California, about the Klamath, Malheur and Har ney lakes. ..Whole races of the wild fowl, per secuted by seekers after plumes and food for the market, will be restored, say the officers of the Audubon soc iety, if the people of the country will do their share in the great work of preserving these natural scavangers, whose taste for foed is one of the chief preventatives of plagues and pestilence in the section they inhab it. An exhaustive study of conditions has been made by men who, for three years, have bsen exploring the wild places where the birds live, braving the danger of semi-savage bands of poachers us w r ell as the difficulties of the counti y to secure the information wanted. FARMING IN ALASKA. Watermelons Grown in Open—Corn Seven Feet High. Seattle. Wash.—Professor C. C. Georgeson, head of the agricultural experimental station in Alaska, who arrived on-the Victoria from Nome, says that he ate watermelon grown in the open at Manley tiot Spring* in the Tanama valley on August IS; was served with tomatoes grown in the open; had his picture taken in a corn field where the stalks stood sev en feet high, and traveled through farms on the 'lanana and Yukon where where wheat, 'barley, oats an rye were maturing. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Senator Scott, of West Virginia, was bruised in a fist fight at Wheeling with a local politician whom he had called a liar. At Cincinnati Dr. C. A. L. Reed formally launched his boom as can didate for the Senate to succeed Sen ator Foraker at'a dollar dinner. President Roosevelt congratulated and slapped on the hack individually sixty-eight members of the Olympic team who visited him at Oyster Bay, N. Y. King Edward entertained M. Clem enceau, the French Premier, and M. d’lswolsky, the Russian Foreign Min ister, at luncheon at Maiienbad, Bo hemia. Not only did King Edward coax Kaiser Franz Josef of Austria into a motor car during the Ischl but the report is that the old Emperor greatly enjoyed the new experience. James E. Hughes, eighty-seven years old, former member of the Mis souri Legislature, who was impris oned during the reconstruction days in Missouri for preaching, died at Osborn, Mo. Gabriel d’Annunzio, the Italian poet and dramatist, takes more pride in his fame as a Beau Brummel than as an author. His greatest achieve ment is the carrying of deep violet tinted umbrellas. Lawrence Parsons, fourth Earl of Rosse, who was born Nov. 17, 1840, has died in London. He was a repre sentative Peer for Ireland since 1868, and was Chancellor of the University of Dublin since 18S5. FEMININE NEWS NOTES. Six of the largest colleges in Switz erland have 2193 female students. Evelyn Thaw denied that she had spent more than half of $54,000 in the past two years. Italia Garibaldi, a granddaughter of the Italian patriot and a Methodist, is at the head of the Methodist Girls' School at Rome. Mrs. Elizabeth Hunt, 108 years old, of Brooklyn, N. Y., received many birthday visitors and was in remark ably good health. Mrs. Esther Davis celebrated her 114th birthday at the Home of the Daughters of Jacob, in East Broad way, New York City. There are seven women physicians in New Orleans, and all of them are struggling to be admitted to mem bership in the Orleans Parish Medi cal Society. The Alicq-Freeman Palmer chimes were dedicated at the University of Chicago during the recent meeting. Mrs. Palmer was the first dean of women for that university. After granting women the parlia mentary suffrage Norway has gone a step further and voted to give all women employed in the postal serv ice the same pay as the men. Mrs. Ellen Tompkins won the Cur rins prize for oratory at the State Presbyterian College, Hastings, Neb. The junior essay prize and the Greek essay prize were both won by Miss Ingalls. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought • Bears the S-ff g/Sf-y-ffS’. Signature of /'ttrCC+U/Zt WE SELL LEGAL BLANKS We have recently equipped our office with a complete stock of Legal Blanks, which we will furnish you in any quanti ty, from a single copy to a thousand copies, at the lowest prices. CL Our catalog, containing a list of over two hundred and fifty forms, furnished free upon request. WE SELL LEGAL BLANKS Anyone sending a sketch and description may auickly ascertain our opinion free wnetuer an invention is P r °hably Cornmunicr^ tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on f jent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & co. receive necial notice , without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. MUNN &Cos. 36, " y ’New York Branch Office. 635 F St.. Washington. D. C CREDIT Tlw Franklin-Turner Ce., Atlanta, Ga. “ 1860 QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS will be our motto for the year 1908. A big line of everything new and substantial for men, women and children. Shoes for everybody. Come to the “South Side” merchant and save from 25 to 33 I*3 percent, on your purchases. > L- S LYEM ANCE Avenue Bank and Trust Company CHEAPEST PRICES DURING SUMMER MUHTHS I will givecheaper prices than usual during the Summer, for cash or its equivalent on all Drugs, gents furnishings and Shoes. G W M TATUM Ice Cold Drinks Regular, Kinds o n \ .“EDIT Established iB6O THE FRAHKUNTUBNER CO., Atlanta, 6a. ■ We all know that knowledge is power; Old Folks’ Bibles Books for Girls but most of us are unable to buy books to acquire S. S. Teachers’ Bibles Books for Boys knowledge from. Family Bibles Novels. High Grade However, we have solved the problem, Bibles Young People s Library and are nowprepared to give you,direct from ourfactory, n i‘ n-u it r' ,US, |!' , R * L U 6 *h* •*~ — ' ' _ rzßfeuSScZS? K Every home needs a good library. By Child’s Story of the Bdde Doctor Book our plan you can buy one, two or three books, or a large Bible s, ories Dictionaries , collection of books, get them at regular prices, pay a BWe D; ctionar i es Kings of Platf'm & Pulpifl small amount down, a small amount each month, and Children’s Story Books American Star Speaker I have the books in your possession all the tirae. Children's Histories Wild Beasts, Birds, etc. I A Mark X by the book or books you are interested in, cut out this advertisement and mail to us, and we will N ame send you, without further obligation op your part, a full _ „ • C.-.- description of what you want, as well as fully outline „ _ “ •ur plan. Be sure to mention this paper. Street eptf No., r. O. Bos, or K. * - —, We Do All Kinds of Plain and Fancy Job Printing , , 1 ■" ■— ■ 1 ■ - '■jpi- '■ ~ w WLfTflarfi'n Htfi " uS# Y 6 T < lb. field gun, light, strong, hard hitting, true, that* the flkzr&fl Model / & Repeating Shotgun, ike best 16 gauge repeating gun For quail and pheasant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits and other T field game you’ll find the flZar/c/i Model i 6 without a peer. ! J|| Equipped, like the famous fiTar/11l Model 19, with the 77Zarien _ ! /r solid top, and the fflar/i/i closed-in breech bolt, which shuts out the f§R£& /Jv ejection and the beautiful /7Zar//n balance, thus gun is a standard ir, p&viy assembling and quick response to the touch of the trigger. There’s a full description of all fflar/ut repeaters, Tiflea and I egy- shot-guns, and lota of valuable information for all gun-lovers in t^ie ‘‘ i:!;*V k ’ ius t o wu 2/Zar/tn SI.OO A YEAR. INVITES YOUR BUSINESS FOR 1908 The Bank that puts Safety First. 232 Montgomery Avenue CHATIANOOA BRANCH: ROSSVILLE. GA- NO. 28.