Newspaper Page Text
HIE I),\DE COUNTY TIMES.
-T * T',l TTY TTT 1 • I ■— .
R. F. Tatum, Editor.
VOL. XVI.
The i ll y ou Jluve Always Bought, and which has bee®
“ Z° fOT OTCP 30 >'<' ars - borne the signature of
'sfi S£?7Tr~~ ?„ , has been made Ull< ler his per
(&ffrM%&v.l AiiowZf. rv^ io :, 1 slnce its ****.
. Allow no one to deceive von in tfiie
Ail Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Jnst-as-good ” are bS
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment,
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Wire
gorie, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant Tt
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms
:I ‘ l ' s Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
folic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
line. Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
“; 1, 1 a,Hl ,Bawds, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
.Bears the Signature of
The KM You Hare A ipys Bought
In Use For Over SO ? ...rs,
THC CENTAUW company, TT MUHHAV STREET. NEW .
SH IANTED-A RIDES ftfiERT”””
imple Latest Model "Ranger” bicycle furnished by us. Our agents everywhere are
lakmg money fast. Write for full particulars and special offer at once.
NO MONEY REQUIRED until you receive and appro’ e of your bicycle. We ship
to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. without a cent deposit m advance, prepay freight, and
allow TEN DAYS’ FREE TRIAL dunngr which time you may ride the bicycle and
put it to any test you wish. If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to
keep the bicycle snip it back to us at our expense and yon will not be met one cent.
We furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make
i. ftvSvn* rliSwLd at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save $lO
to $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturer’s guar
antee behind your bicycle. DO NOT BUY a bicycle or a pair of tires romaw
at any price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard ot Jactory
prices and remarkable special offers to rider agents.
uau ini 2 S DZT A£>VftSJi£ijJi£f| when you receive our beautiful catalogue ana
t VW b£$LL 2study our superb models at the wonderfully
Icnv 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 lactory cost.
BICYCLE DEALERS, you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at
ur prices. Orders filled the day received. , . ~ . . . ,
D HAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but
a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores, i hese we clear out
nces ranging from S3 to S8 or SSIO. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free,
or V"EC single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, parts, repairs and
tVNJ nn*D!: ; .MftCd| equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices.
HEDGETHORN®PURCTURE-PROOF 'R U
A SELF-HEALING TIRES fo mimwifoE, only u
r. ■ r retail price of these tires is
to introduce we -will ~~ ~
OUBLE FROM PUNCTURES % ? / / /'
‘ ••'••* or Glass "'HI not let tlie jgli
" 1 '■’ ousand pairs sold last year, a i . >.>: r§&!
'■ thousand pairs now in use.
DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively fea ?- - /
; vdurahleand lir.edinsklew:i:i y/jg,Xj? - : —X.^v J
.ity of rubber, vjhich never becomes
i h closes up small punctures without allow- J| Sgl jf o tico tho thick rubber tread
ape. We have hundreds of letters from satis- £ ||jjl and puncture strips “ii”
r ting that their tires haveonly been pumped am j. •!>,” also rim strip “II”
in a whole season. They weigh no more than to prevent rim cutting. This
.\ the puncture resisting qualities being given tiro will outlast any other
rs of thin, specially prepared fabric on the ssLjp' make —SOFT, FLASTIC and
ular price of these tires is $8.50 per pair,but for EASY HIDING.
eposes we are making a special factory price to . . . . r 0 on
! .1 pSo per pair. All orders shipped same day letter We s.up C. O T).©
i • , ho not pav a cent until you have examined and found them strictly ~s represent a.
' iw a cash discount of 5Vr cent (thereby making Pp ce^ 4^-fi P ai s Siend on"
' CASH WITH OKDfiii and enclose this advertisement, wc adl aLo sena on,
1: lirass hand pump Tires to be returned at OUR experse if for any; reason t.ie\ a. .
l , :y on examination., We are perfectly reliable and money sent to usms as safe asjn a
order a pair of these tires, you will find they *- n ’ -price We
v ’ t longer and look finer than any tire you have eyei used or seen at■ anv pnc< - and
a will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle >ouwih give u, jour ore.
v - .to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire ofl.r f
IF k VJ NEB > tires SJTSSSfi
eductory price quoted above; or write for our big ii e * - *
all makes and kinds ot tires half THINK Oh’BUYING a bicycle
DO NOT WAIT o b r U apa"r of tires from anyone until you know tlienevv and woi.aeiful
taking. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it A o v •
l L MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL
law to
"turn limit 2.i'' | rect Memphis
and stop-overs al- to the Southwest. The
A K nth rrrvin rr JHHkIWTJW Cotton Belt K the .° nly lm *
' 4 S operating two daily trains, carry
i returning. ing through cars without change—■
eludes sleepers, chair cars and
make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton
||b Bjgy Ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticket via Memphis
•£ w K Ilia Write for Texas or Arkansas book whichever section you are
interested in. These books are just ° ff . thc Ebv'farme s cic
X fact* and examples of what is actually being done A g vc .
H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent,
"
Official Organ of Dade County.
TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18.1908.
OF POLITICAL INTEREST.
William H. "Taft and William J.
Uivan, rival candidates for the presi
oency °f the United States, will meet
SL Chl u a§o . october 7 > at a banquet
5, en by the Chicago Association of
Commerce.
Eugene W. Chafin, prohibition can
didate for president, spoke to a large
audience at Portland, Ore., during the
course of his address, of which® pi o?
hi jmon formed only a part, Mr. Cha
fin declared that never in the history
the country were there so manv
great questions to be settled, and de
clared that neither the republican nor
the democratic party were able to
grasp the situation.
fnJ h iQnJ e u Ubli^. an cam P al sn textbook
nnir" as . een issued by the re
publican national committee. It is a
volume of five hundred and thirty-six
Pages and contains in detail an ex
£L a i lat 1?! 1 of , the . Quesitons that are
under discussion in the present presi
dential campaign and the attitude of
the republican candidate thereto con
trasted in some cases with the’pres
ent or past attitude of their democrat
ic opponents.
Aiming to become at once a factor
in Minnesota politics, the indepen
dence party has selected a state tick
et to be placed before Minnesota vo
ters. William W. Allen of St. Paul
nas been named for governor and
Roscoe B. Higbee of St. Paul for lieu
tenant governor.
Invading the Foraker stronghold,
Judge Taft addressed two meetings
at Sandusky, Ohio. The first was at
the Soldiers’ home, and the second
at the opera house, where a large au
dience assembled. Taft’s visit is ex
pected to heal the break of the two
factions in Ohio politics. Both speech
es were extemporaneous.
It now appears that Admiral Cer
v era thought he was talking about the
late General Shatter when he an
nounced his hearty support of Taft for
the presidency.
William Jennings when ask
ed if he had read the Labor day
speech of William R. Hearst replied
that he had not but he understood
that Mr. Hearst had made some crit
icism of him. “I am fighting Mr.
Taft,” said Mr. Bryan. “Either Mr.
Taft or I will be elected. If Mr.
\, n ir,
representative of republican ideas and
Mr. Hearst’s ‘methods of campaigning
I will answer Mr. Hearst, otherwise
I do not feel called upon to do so.”
With the rival political forces en
gaged all along the line on land, nav
al warfare began at Chicago when the
cruiser Theodore Roosevelt, which in
times of peace is a huge excursion
steamer, left the Chicago ,man
ned by republican speakers and some
four hundred members of the Mar
quette club, a republican .organization
of that city. Four states will be
touched by the boat during the cruise.
Mr Bryan has informed the nation
al ifcmmiUee that he desires that
traveling men’s bureaus be establish
ed at state headquarters in all debat
able states.
Congressman Lilley of Connecticut
who brought about the congressional
inquiry into the Electric Boat com
pany’s method of getting government
contracts, has' been nominated for
governor of Connecticut.
The purpose of the republican cam
paign booh, it is stated, is to furnish
in concise form for reference such
information as is likely lo be requir
ed by speakers, writers and others
participating in the campaign. bu>
iects likely to receive special atten
tion in the campaign, such as control
of corporations, the money panic aptl
the relief afforded by the treasury de
partment, wages and prices tariff the
Philippines and the work of the aimy
and navy are presented as fully as
practicable.
Judge Alton B. Parker, d ®“° crat ' a
candidate tor president m 1904, lias
declined to accept the nomination -
governor of New York, Judge Parker
in declining stated that it was his de
sire never again to hold public office.
Chairman Hitchcock of the repub
lican national committee nas been no
tified cf the withdrawal of Judge
Wright, the nominee for governor of
one of the republican factions m Ten
nessee This leaves a cloai fiffid foi
Tillman, the nominee of the other le
publican faction. It was said at na
tional headquarters that the wn
drawal of Judge Wright would unit
the requblicans of Tennessee, and that
a determined effort to carry the state
would be made.
Giving a detailed statement of the
amount® of property ;w.eOy ■
which he placed at sloo,ooo at in
outside William J. Bryan, democratic
candidate for president, in a speech at
Qlnev IB declared as false the acc
Nation of Speaker Joseph G. Cannon
that° he was worth a millian dollars
and called upon the speaker to he as
and caucu t 0 the world
the amou” o k f hi3 own earthly posses
sions. „
Professor Aaron S. Watkins of Ohm
nomSee for the presidency
bearers for an> pa y e tQ that.
played, a dasn ana g their cam
shown by these two on
paigin Both seem to be equally until
Tentative proposals for a joint de
bate between WllUam H W and
William been received at
September -3 ha\ lee plan s are
both camps. The ® re ®® tha P t date in
for a Bryan meeting on tuat
Cincinnati. Jaft
chances a a re cl to re
oorts, Bryan win accept the defi.
Indiana is to be the pivotal ground
around which the democratic cam
paign in the middle west is to swing
and from now until election all the
forces that the national committee can
summon will be brought into play to
carry the Hoosier state for the dem
ocrats.
in Winston-Salem, N. C., on October 7,
when the state fair will be in progress.
The vice presidential candidate has
also been urged to make speeches in
Georgia and Tennessee. Senator Gore
of Oklahoma and George Fred Wil-
Democraey’s invasion of Taft ter
ritory began when William J. Bryan
swept across Ohio en route to West
Virginia. Twenty-five thousand peo
. pie greeted the Commoner at Evans
ville, Ind.
John W. Kern, democratic vice pres
idential candidate, will make a speak
ing trip in the south in October and
the national candidate is now arrang
ing the itinerary. Mr. Kern will speak 1
E. D. Smith was nominated for the
United States senate from South Car
olina, receiving 69,308 votes, his op
ponent, John Gary Evans, received
39,650 votes.
' PROMINENT PEOPLE.
•T. P. Morgan returned from a va
cation in Europe.
Colonel Nevins, of Red Bank, N. J.,
was elected Commander-in-Chief of
the G. A. R.
S? 1 * Vincent Corbett, the. British
Minister to Venezuela, has arrived at*
Port of Spain.
Emanuel Mandel, a wealthy mer
chant of Chicago, was killed by a fall
from a train at Basle. Switzerland.
.)ohn A. Hall, president of the Mas
sacausects Mutual Life Insurance
Company, died suddenly in London. I
Bishop Hanna, of Pueblo, Mexico,
has been offered the Archbishopric of
Mexico by the Pope and will accept.
Professor Karr-y Thurston Peck, of
Columbia University, New York City,
was divorced by his wife in South Da
kota.
Nathan Straus, of New York City,
returned from Europe,- where he es
tablished many new pasteurized milk
England, aged eighty-one.
Count Zeppelin completed arrange
ments for building an immense air
ship, leasing land for fifty years for a
factory at Berlin, Germany.
The Duke of the Abruzzi is coming
to America, the Rome Tribuna says,
to arrange to marry Miss Katherine
Elkins in spite of Queen Margherita’s
opposition.
Lawyers for Ernest Henry Sack
ville West, who says he is “the eldest
and legitimate son of Lord Sackville,”
will contest the baron’s will, which
leaves the estate to his nephew.
Charles M. Schwab gave up his
New York and in future will
reside near his mammoth steel works
at Bethlehem, Pa. It is not known
whether he will dispose his $5,-
000,000 mansion on Riverside Drive,
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Childien.
The Kind You Have Always Bough!
Signature; 1 of (2^^^
r ————— 11 - a * aa^
WE SELL
LEGAL BLANKS [
G, We have recently equipped our office
v/itli 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 pr^es.
C. Our catalog, containing a list of over
' two hundred and fifty forms, furnished
free upon request.
WE SELL
LEGAL BLANKS
jSgsafttnaiteftg ß
pecial notice, without charge, m t
Scientific Hmerican.
Msaws^SgSJgSai
NglSgragglg*
BOOKS^ii^CREOIT
liig Franki n-Turner Cos„ Atlanta, 6a.
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 1-3 percent, on your purchases,
L- S- LYEMANCE
Avenue
Bank
and
Trust
Company
U miwmrrh i s
DURING SUMER iOUTHS
I will give cheaper 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,
Baaks na cRFniT
READ THEM ™fy|f |gj
K WHILE PAYING mis? ||g
FOR THEM
EsShed iB6O THE FBmilH-TUBHEB CO., Atlanta, 6a.
We all know that knowledge is power;
but most of us are unable to buy books to acquire
knowledge from.
However, we have solved the problem,
anl are nowprepared to give you, direct from otirfaefory,
the benefit of our many years of thought and labor.
Every home needs a good library. By
our plan you can buy one, two or three books, or a .arge
collection of books, get them at regular prices, pay a
small amount down, a smell amount each month, and
have the books in your possession ail the time.
)Mark X by tbe book or books you ore interested in.
cut out this advertisement and mai- to us, and we wi
eend you, without further obligation on your part, a full
description of what you want, as wed as ,udy outline
•ur plan. Be sure to mention this paper.
We Do AH Kinds f
/X Plain and Fancy Job Printing
s*Re p Mtmg ShSgun, tbc beat 16 gauge repealing gut: |
IPF fi-y .S^TifoiS “ and ot r i
' Equipped, like the famous Z/Tarf/fi Model 19, with the tAoK/JI *
m _ solid top, and the fflar/tn closed-in breech bolt, which shuts out tne
ng&KMr >33? £, 4 san d rain, sleei and snow from tne action, having the ///ariin side k
T j k ]Bkrj>Z* ejection and the beautiful /TZarlrfi balance, this gua is a standard in g
tvip' JR j&>j£ construction, assembling and quick response to tne touen cl the tugger. |
There’s a full description of all TTFarfin repeaters, rifles and i
shot- guns, and lots of valuable information for all gun-lovers in E
fhe “ 7/?arflfl Hook” jnst
’? IV l! e^a£^^/2^r&ar/ILS Cos,- j
SI.OO A YEAR.
INVITES
YOUR
BUSINESS
FOR
The Bank that puts Safety First.
232 Montgomery AveiT
OHAfTANOOA
branch :*'• -*gav-
ROSSVILLE. GA. J ""*
Old Folks’ Bibles Books for Girls -
S. S. Teachers’ Bibles Books for Boys
....Family Bibles Novels, High Grade g
Red Letter Bibles Young People s Library |
S. S. Bibies Business Guide
Pocket Bibles aodTect’ts Cook Book
’...Child’s Life of Christ Stock Book
Child’s Story of the Bible Doctor Book
I Bible Stories Dictionaries r. co i V
Bible Dictionaries Kings of Platf Pulpit!
Children’s Story Books American Star Speaker I
■’’"..Children’s Histories g...,..'Wdd Beasts, Birds, etc. |
Name— —^
Gity or Town „ 1 -- ■ State___^__ —
Street epd No.. P. O. Bos, or R. ■. ——
NO. 29