The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, September 25, 1908, Image 1

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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. ]> # F. Tatum, Editor. vol. xvr. f9 00 Drops ) "T\ >getablcPreparatiottforAs similating UteTood andßcg ula~ Jpg the Stomachs andßowels of Ti^vvNrs/CniumLN: Promotes Difcshon,Cheerful ness and fiest.Contains neither opium .Morphine nor Mineral. Narcotic. o/oidnrSV'fflLPmma }\unpkin Settl* .Hr. Senna * ] tfodulU Salts - I dulse Seed. * l Jhfptrmmt / ffl j •donate Saf* * 1 ItfrmSced- 1 fionfied Sagttr . I vAtte’vreon rlawfi / Apcrfect Remedy for Constipa tion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms Convulsions Feverish ness and I/OSS OF SLEEP. facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Atb months old 15 Poses -33 Cents exact COPrCTF WBAPPEB. VANTEPrA RIDER AGENTS! ample Latest Model Kftnffer bicycle furnished by us. Our agents everywhere are naking’ money fast. Write for fuliparticulars and special offer at once. NO A&DNJSY REQUIRICD until you receive and appro’e of your bicycle. Weship to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. ‘without a cent deposit in advance, prepay freight, and allow IEN DA\ S’ FKKE TiiiAL during which'tinio you may t ide 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 ship it back to us at our expense and you will not be out one cent. PAftTARY We.furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make ■ *’’* , * ‘ "Iwfcw 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 any price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory Prices and remarkable special offers to rider agents. YASj Ufll 1 DC when you receive our beautiful catalogue and lU*> If ILL ul iklvßonCll study our superb models at the wonderfully 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 #I.OO profit above factory cost. BIC YCLE-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. These we clear out rices ranging from @3 to $8 or 810. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. Single wheels, imported roller chains and rcdals, parts, repairs and .VKvibr. equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices. BHO8 HO HEDGETHOBN.P9NCTORE-PROOF *IBO | SB.F-HEAUR6 TIRES to fiHttmiiniEWNLY M MORETROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES If , V 1,1 ' : ' ' *’ r Blass will not let the S1 air ..at. si :ty thousand pairs sold last year. mndred thousand pairs now in use. DESCRIPTION: M-■ 1 in all sizes. It islively • / •. durableand lined inside with ITT* 7 i " yg_j7 a special quality of rubber, which never becomes K the fir S T ll r^ CtU /f S^ itl V OUt i l! Notice the thick rubber tread fi V " Ultuesoa P e * We have hundreds of letters from satis- 11® an<l ..>> 8 their tir^haveonlybeen pumped IJi a n d and/ also ritn strip “II” aaordinarv: s eas °n. They weigh no more than J% to prev ont rim cutting. This b t‘ : r •:^:i h W cturer e s ifmg q U ahtiesteinggiven ML tlr * Vllll outlast any other tread 7her*7 °l . thin i prepared fabric on the Vj? raa ke-SOFT, ELASTIC and -1. " J .'. ne re P r ular price of these tires issß.so per pair, but for mnivri ” V in P-purposes we are making a special factory price to ; ff^ T . nly $4.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C. O. D. on ‘t P / al. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. ,\ e allov/ a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 84.55 per pair) if you ; HLL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one : Ktl platen brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are ory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as 111 a !!,/ ,** - vou order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, '-i r .^t!' er l° n f?er and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We v ' ,V aat - ou w ih be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. , t you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer. . IF YfhSß &2BCE 1 n ViraSFe* don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair or ♦l .C BikiLSjl M iriSLAP Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at ■ • vedal introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual P r SO NfST MIX IT but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK OI ( BUYING a bicycle q(t sfV/i*# or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful ' sWe ar< ! snaking. It ouly costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. 1L MEM CYCLE COMPARY, CHICAGO, ILL \ H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent, GASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A % Signature /Am * w Jt’’ ln se vA For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. Official Organ of Dade County. TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1908. THE DEMOCRATIC TICKET Official State Ticket for October Issued from Headquarters. ONLY ONE CONTESTED PUCE Seven Candidates Are in the Race for Pension Commissioner—Election October 7, 1908. Atlanta, Ga. —The official democratic ticket for the state election on Octo* her 7 has been sent out from the dem ocratic headquarters in Atlanta. The ticket carries the names of all the state house officers nominated at the recent white primary of June 4; the superior court judges of the sev eral judicial circuits, to be elected; the solicitors general nominated, and leaves blank spaces for the city court officials and county officers to be sup plied. in each county. There is only one contested place on the ticket, and that is the office of pension commissioner, made elective by the last legislature, since the pri- Yaary, v Official Democratic Ticket—Election October 7, 1908. For Governor —Joseph M. Brown. For Secretary of State Philfjl Cook. For Comptroller General—William A. Wright. For Treasurer —Robert E. Park. For Attorney General —John C, Hart. For Commissioner of Agriculture— T. G. Hudson. For State School Commissioner —J }A. Pound. For Prison Commissioner —Wiley WtFiams. For Pension Commissioner (Vote A>r One) —W. W. Wilson, B. L. Hearn* W\ A. Buchannon, J. W. Lindsey, T. J. Lumkin, A. J. Mcßride, Adin B. Stansell. For Railroad Commissioner (for unexpired term beginning December 1, 19087 and ending December 1, 1913) —Fuller E. Callaway. For Railroad Commissioner (for un expired term beginning December 1, 1908, and ending December 1, IMl) George Hillyer, For Railroad Commissioner (for full term beginning December 1, 1909) —H. W T arner Hill. For Associate Justice Supreme Court (for unexpired term ending Jan uary 1, 1909)—Horace M. Holden. For Associate Justice Supreme Court (for full term of six years be ginning January 1, 1909) —Beverly D. Evans. For Associate Justice Supreme Court (for full term of six ye. rs be ginning January 1, 1909) —Horace M. Holden. Fur Judge of Court of Appeals— Richard B. Russell. •3** WILKES COUNTY SUFFERS. Prevalence of Sharpshooters Is Com plained of in Sections of County. Washington, Ga. —E. L. Foreman, recently displayed a stalk of cotton heavily fruited, but the bolls of which had commenced to rot and wither as the result of “sharpshooters,” as many of the farmers called the dis ease. In several sections of Wilkes and adjoining counties the cotton planters complain of a growing pre valence of this dread disease. The bolls are generally affected at the point, and from there the rot spreads until the entire boll has been eaten away. In appearance the bohc thus afflicted look something like an thracnose cotton, but cotton expeits here declare that they are not the same Mr Foreman has forwarded his specimen to the state entomologist in Atlanta lor a diagnosis of the case The movement of cotton at tms point is very sluggish, and the crop is about two weeks behind. Not more than three-fourths of an average ci op will be made in this county. S9,46{TGIVEN FOR MISSIONS. This Was Raised By Negro Metho dists During Year. Albany, Ga.— Doubtless it will be of interest to Georgians to know what fortv-elglit thousand colored Metho dists have done for missions this year In a missionary convention now be ing held in this city there are present about three hundred delegates, mostly women, with a sprinkling of minis ters. The meeting is known as the Woman’s Interconference Missionarj convention, representing t*° , Georgia and Florida—and five annua* C °The Convention reports having rais ed in actual, cold cash $9,466.20 since last December. At one session of the convention, after a sermon Preached hv Rev. R. A. Carter of Atlanta sllb was raised to help educate three na tive African boys who are now in Payne college, Augusta, and who wilJ retvU t" AM N a* missionaries. condemnslmight riders. farmers' Union of Bulloch County Dfc Clares Against Such Action Statesboro, Ga.—The Farmers Un *on of Bulloch county held a rousing meeting here, at which about three hundred members were in a.ttemSauce; The meeting was held at the Agi cultural College. . , , A committee was appointed to see about the building of the union w - house, and it was decided that work d-.mild begin at once. It is hoped 10 have the warehouse completed within a few weeks, and in time for the hous ing of a part of this seasons ciop o °7he union took cognizance of■“ reports of night riders in county, and condemned such PROMINENT TEOrLE. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., attained his majority. He has net chosen his profession in life. James J. Hill, returning from the West, refused to repudiate the state ment of Harriman that all was peace between them. Keir Hardie told the Central Fed erated Union in New York City that the working class would rule the na tion and make the laws. Baron Sackville, former British Minister to the United States, who was dismissed by President Cleveland, died at Sevenoaks, England. Lord Wolseley, who lias passed his seventy-fifth birthday, has probably had more narrow escapes from death than any other living British officer. Percy W T illiam Buntting, editor of the Contemporary Review, London, Who has reached the age of seventy two, was made a knight on the King’s recent birthday anniversary. The celebration of the seventy eighth anniversary of birth of Emperor Francis Joseph was the oc casion of patriotic festivals in Vienna and throughout Austria and Hungary. Dr. James Augustus Henry Mur ray, one of the great scholars of Eng land, and famous as editor of the “Oxford New English Dictionary,” has been made a kniglit by King Ed ward. When Edwin A. Abbey, R. A., who left England for his home in Pennsyl vania, first went to Great Britain, he had a commission for a great many drawings and went to Stratford-on- Avon. Representative Bartholdt will in troduce two resolutions at the Inter parliamentary Conference at Berlin, Germany, regarding the sovereignty of nations and the holding of future peace conferences. Suit was brought to break the will of Etienne Givernaud, the Hoboken (N. J.) millionaire silk manufacturer. Ingenious Swindle in Cnrios. The craze for antiques and curios is responsible flsr some ingenious swin dles, but it is doubtful if many could surpass that which victimized ail American woman traveling abroad, w’ho wiiile in Holland purchased some al leged Dutch pottery wffiicii proved on close examination to be common gran ite ward made in America in odd shapes and decorated in Dutch fash ion to be sold in Holland as antique cooking utensils. American enterprise is frequently encountered in various ways in Eu rope, as, for instance, the experience of an American gentleman in London wffio bought a pair of rubber overshoes in a Loudon shoe shop w T hich were unusually satisfactory. On -examining them preparatory to buying another pair, lie made the discovery that they were manufactured in Providence, R. 1., by an American firm, although they w T ere sold as English rubbers or “gums.” The fact is well known that there is a considerable industry in the manu facture of so-called Egyptian scarabs in America, which are sent to Egypt to be sold to unsuspecting tourists as genuine antiques.—Boston Transcript. GASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the <// -jf 2 - Signature of C-pLafy/, f'&CC/Ufa VVE SELL LEGAL BLANKS CL 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 to a thousand copies, at the low r est prices. CL Our catalog, containing a list of over two hundred and fifty forms, furnished free upon request. WE SELL| LEGAL BLANKS j Anyone sending a sketch and description may nuickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents jent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Cos. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Ingest cir- MUNN & Cos. 36,Br<>ad * ay ' New York Branch Office. 635 F St.. Washington. D. C. BOOKS CREDIT The Frank! n-Turnsr Go., Atlanta, 6a. '"HZ* 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 CHEAPEST PRICES DURING SUMMER MONTHS I will give cheaper prices than usual during the Summer, for cash or its equivalent on all Drugs, gents furnishings and QhnPQ G W M TATUM Ice Cold Drinks Regular, iB6O THE 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, and are nowprepared to give you,direct from our factory, 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 large collection of books, get them at regular prices, pay a small amount down, a small amount each month, and have the books in your possession all the time. i Mark X by the book or books you are interested in, cut out this advertisement and mail to us, and we will send you, without further obligation on your part, a full description of what you want, as well as fully outline •ur plan. Be sure to mention this paper. We Do All Kinds of Plain and Fancy Job Printing lb. field gun, light, strong. Hard hitting, true, that’s the TTlorfi/l § Model 16 Repeating Shotgun, the best 16 gauge repeating gun H For quail and pheasant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits and other Bj T field game youU find the fflar/i/y Model 16 without a peer. ESjfft)- jfi -'Ota* ‘ |||| Equipped, like the famous fflartifi Mcde! 19, with the 7/ItZFUn y j S o!id top, and the fflarfi/i dosed-ia breech belt, which shuts out the | W/tC sand, rain, sleet and snow from the action, having the ?y?aff/n side tj /§■„ ejection and the beautiful jffZezr/i.n balance, this gun is a standard in 3 - ' assembUng and quick response to the touch cf the tiig£er. S Q There’s a full description of all ffiar/vi repeaters, rifles and B {7*^ shot-guns, end lots of valuable information for all gun-lovers in n { the '' .7/Far//n Book” just issued. 136 pages with a handsome art S cover. It's FREE for 3 6tamps postage. 7r . 77ieTHar/in c I 'mini SI.OO A YEAR. INVITES YOUR BUSINESS FOR . The Bank that puts Safety First. 232 Montgomery Avenue CHATTANOOA branch: ROSSVILLE. GA- Old Folks’ Bibles Books for Girls S. S. Teachers’ Bibles Books for Boys Family libles I Novels, High Grade Red Letter Bibles Young People’s Library S. S. Bibles Business Guide Pocket Bibles andTest’ta Cook Book Child’s Life of Christ Stock Book Child’s Story of the Bible Doctor Book Bible Stories Dictionaries • O Bible Dictionaries Kings of Platf’m & Pulpitl Children’s Story Books American Star Speaker I Children’s Histories Wild Beasts, Birds, etc. I Name— ■■ ■— ~ City or Town , ■ B State Strut apd No.. P. O. Box, or R. E W , NO. 30.