The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, October 16, 1908, Image 1

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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. }. F. Tatum, Editor, \ Oi,. XVI. rjuo Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has beem in use for over 30 years, has born© the signature of T —and has been made under his per f sonal supervision since its infancy. V Mery/, '<XrCCSU/K, Allow no one to deceive you in this. AH Counterfeits, Imitations andJust-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA 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 age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and 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 Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 THE CENTAU H COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW ' St. ,^. /wuffiMWmMßnszs _ga cl y?A making money fast. Ivrite for full particulars and special offer q,t once. " KU MON iSY REQfJlfiiljlO uutil you receive anu aopro’ e of your bicycle. We ship Ml!'. k’j* jffWk to anyone, anywhere in the b. S. iviikoui a cent deposit m advance, prepay freight , and aft I vi\ fi/rAVci a " ow TEN DAIS’ JERMiI TRIAL, during which lime you may ride the bicycle and ff/l f Vir P ut il t 0 at, y test >’ ou WIS “- h y°u are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to ■/ 1 ’sl' iff* jhlff keep the bicycle ship it back to us at our expense and you will not he out one cent. ft/ / /$* lit! ; d2 PMTABY burnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make / •• It sol vto 1 t ' lW 4 at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save sio m 1 < t\lto $25 middlemen’s profits bv buying direct of us and have the manufacturer’s guar- S A antee behind your bicycle. IM) NOT HUY a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone i*' ?x nny t rice UTltll you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory H 7 ■ ' 1 M prices and remarkable special offers to ridur a£<nnfc. rn J VitE l riv P VftSl M?iy I RLT M w - ien you receive our beautiful catalogue and f . ■ /t; WILL CtE, 6 study cur superb models at the -wonderfully ■ Et S&>~ d-/ l J ' v prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money ST 1 tjf lhan any other factory. We are satisfied with £i.oo profit above, factory cost.. fa ;; ■ u bicycle dealers, you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at mil faff double prices. Orders filled the clay received. % Id SECOND HAND BICYCLES.. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycle?, but luy usually have a number on hand taken In trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear out promptly at prices ranging from ££3 to feS or $lO, Descriptive bargain lists mailed tree. PA/KT£R.?i??AKP<i Single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, parts, reoairs and kUHxDiLK-CnHR&d, equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail Prices. BHJ KNETMMeKIKTNE-PMOF 80 SELF-HEALING TIKES foHtFRGKyGE / he regular retail price of these tires is vjpjSSjsrmr',.. jQfiagmjMnr > SO per pair, but to introduce ivc will • •t.— .p£ " ... ' 'rpairfvrs4.uQ(ca:fi7vithorders4£s). f Cly/ r* HO MG&E TROUBLE FROM PiMCTBRD i; , v / N \lacks or Glass will not let the ~ v ) fW|l Sixty thousand pairs sold last year. ' ! I MfjJji ) hundred thousand pairs now in use. V^^ f^iaaaa,Sßa fi DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively mL:- v r ' ' * / • ’,.r. very durableand lined inside with j nlity of rubber, which never becomes gox ---cglOsp t y ; i which doses up small punctures without allow- JUMP# t > th thJck rubhor tt We have hundreds of letters from „ A „ nnd puucture . trips **B” -ta u’gthac them tires haveonly been d „ D „‘ also ri .„ ir . eiawhole season, they weigh no moreJPi M, to prevent rim cur,ting. This AW tir * wll , oati:is t cu:y other layers of thm, specially prepared fabric on the XrT y nair-soPT pi AV*'rt3 -tj ! i- regular price of these tires per pair,but for Jrts Y KISiG Bc. purposes we are making a special factory price to ™ if only per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. \Ve ship C. O. D. on a . ’ Von do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 5 4.55 per pair) if you ' ' ■ LL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one tf I brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are J > . factory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a a: 4 fi you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, }■ ir fi .\ter, last longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We ;7: ; "' v : you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. ’ 'ranr. you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer Sr \7mtts L'3'™‘[rrrk •camera* don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair of ■* " BVISLIiLILS E SKkltS> Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at V ! ntroductory 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 prices. . Htf i but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK Ol BUYING a bicycle snipE WASS or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful f are making. It only costs a oostal to learn everything. Write it NOW. J. L MEAD SYCLE 60MPANY, CfiKASO, ILL )w Rates fek Arkansas, Louisiana, Tex lahoma and New Mex °* Return limit 25 The Cotton Belt is the j . i direct line from Memphis 1 stop-overs a1 ~ to the Southwest. The ow ed both *w!c) Cotton Belt is the only line Tfnrnino ' :£OjMW operating two daily trains, carry u-.iiug. ing through cars without change — the only line with a through sleeper Memphis to Dallas. Equipment in '• eludes sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe B'smw cars. T rains from all parts of the Southeast make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton ■''Ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticket via Memphis Write for Texas or Arkansas bock whichever section you are interested in. These books are just off the press, and are full of " .’■ ■ * v sp facte and examples of what is actually being done by farmers, truck ■ S * s VvV^r : gardeners and fruit raisers in this highly-favored section. A fivc ••■■ • uHHr colot map is inserted in each book Free upon request. *j H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent, 1091 W. Ninth Street, t Chattanooga. Tenn. Official Organ of Dade County. TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16.1908. Far m Topics SUGAR AS A FINISHING FEED. A herd of fifteen Black Angus cat tle which was awarded first prize at the Chicago International Stock Show, and which was sold at sl7 per 100 pounds live weight, was fattened on a ration which included molasses. Besides pasture feed, corn and oats, the owner fed during the last month a mixture of oil, meal and oats, to which was added a sprinkling of mo lasses. It was found that the mo lasses added glossiness to the hides, and improved the appearance of the animals in every way.—American Cultivator. VALUE OF MANURE PRODUCT. The manure product from a sin gle cow, according to figures of the Department of Agriculture, ranged in value from S3O to S4O a year. The corresponding figures for horse ma nure are not presented, but it is pre sumed that the value would be equal ly as great if not greater, since horse manure is heating, and if kept from ftre-fanging has an additional value beyond its own fertility, in causing bacterial fermentation and rotting of bedding and other waste material. This estimate of the value of cow manure alone, however, indicates how very important it is to the farmer to finish his live stock on his own farm and thus build up his soil.—American Cultivator. DON’T QUIT BUSINESS. DoriW cut out your advertisement Just bjftause the egg season is over. If this’ is the last time you expect to sell eggs and you have no surplus stock for sale this fall, in other words, if you are going to quit, then discontinue it. But you will regret it if you want to sell stock next fall or eggs next spring, for as sure as you let your advertisement go you will find yourself down at the bottom of the ladder, exactly where you first started, when you insert it next time. The buying public forgets you in a few issues, and it is expensive getting acquainted again, much more expen sive than keeping your advertismect going all through the year. If you can’t afford to run as much space as you have been using, cut it down, but don’t discontinue it entirely. THE VINE BLIGHT.^ Several inquiries Eng land were recently ragfijjpßTat the De partment of asking for remedies tem or cure the blight thaiypfftroys cucumber, melon and nes, and referring to the disease very prevalent in of late years, and which Pauses apparently vigorous vines to suddenly wither and die within a few days from the beginning of the at tack. According to Dr. E. T. Galloway, of the Bureau of Plant Industry, the blight is prevalent all along the Pa cific Coast. The germs of the blight are carried by an insect. He recom mends that the vines should make a steady rather than a rapid growth and should be planted on ground con taining a large amount of organic matter, adding also nitrogen in the form of nitrate of soda. Spraying the plants with Paris green and Bor deaux mixtures such as is used for po tatoes kills the insect which carries the blight and prevents its punctur ing the leaves and admitting the fungus of the disease. Asa means jf prevention it is recommended that the crops be grown on fresh ground each year. THE APPLE ORCHARD. A good average distance to plant apple trees is thirty-three feet, or two reds. This gives them room enough to develop and they are not crowded, and I prefer having them a little wide apart than too thick, as they must have sunshine to develop good marketable apples. Plant the trees in perfect line both ways, not only because it looks bet ter, but ic makes the cultivation eas ier and better. I find it most conve nient co run a double furrow both ways the proper distanca apart; it is* easier to plant the trees in line as it is already in checks and it is much more convenient where there is more than one bunch of hands at work. For the first few years after plant ing it is better to plow the land rath er deep with the plow, and it can be planted to any crop that has .to be cultivated and that will not injure the trees, but no small grain or grass crop should be allowed to mature. When planting a commercial apple orchard the different varieties should be kept in as near solid blocks as pos sible for convenience in gathering, but those blocks had better not be over four or five rows wide. From American Cultivator. The marine insurance companies of Netf York State carry risks aggre gating $300,000,000. The delivery of London’s milk re quires 45 00 horses. SPORTING BREVITIES. Pennsylvania defeated West Vir ginia at football by a score of 6 to 0. Harvard’s football team defeated Bowdoin by five points to nothing in the Stadium. Spanish Queen won the Buckeye trotting stake of SSOOO at the Colum bus Grand Circuit meeting. Yale defeated V r esleyan by sixteen points to nothing in her opening football game at New Haven, Conn. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler prom ised the students of Columbia more than SIOOO for their crew next sea son. American lawn tennis experts de feated their British rivals, and will go to Australia to play for the Davis Cup. Spanish Queen won the SIO,OOO Bankers’ and Brokers’ Purse at the Columbus Grand Circuit trotting meeting. Beals C. Wright defeated F. B. Alexander in the final round of the tournament for the national lawn tennis championship. Steffen, the Chicago quarter back and captain, is said by many experts to be as good as the famous Ecker sall was two years ago. Balgowan, aged twenty-one years, famous years ago as a race horse, and since then as a sire, is dead at the breeding farm of Barney Schreiber, near W T oodlands, St. Louis County, Mo. Charles W. Murphy, the owner of the Chicago National League base ball team, offered $60,000 for “Christy” Mathewson, the Giants’ crack pitcher, and the offer was re fused. Tackle seems to he the favorite po sition for captain. Out of seventy seven college teams playing football the leader of eighteen of them is in that place on his eleven. Only three guards act as field generals. Greatest of All Shots* President Roosevelt is a good shot, yet he never aims without his eye glasses. Nearly all the leading ocu lists in the world have sent him aids to sight. It is said he has received in the last six or seven years as many as 300 pairs of spectacles, from the. aristocratic rimless pincenez to the. old-fashioned green goggle and the smoked glass eye-fenders, from sym pathetic opticians. He is rarely seen without his glasses. In fact, they seem to have grown upon his broad, rather short and somewhat bulbous nose. :pt even his fence-taking horse can shiUie Vnem off. He always wears them shooting, a most unusual thing, and it is a matter of history that there isn’t a quicker or better shot in Amer ica with a rifle. A Rough Rider once said: “The president, though almost blind without his glasses, is the great est shot in the world— considering that handicap.” —New York Press. Dead From Burns. Mrs. John D. Northrop, wife of a New York City diamond broker, died at Long Branch, N. .T,, from minis caused uy the explosion of an alconoi lamp. CASTORS A Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough! Bears the Signature of ! WE SELL i LEGAL BLANKS G, 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. 4 G, 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 quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably Patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent* lent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & 00. receive pedal notice, without charge, in the Scientific Jfmerican, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir '•illation of any scientific journal. Terms. a year: four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MHNN & Cos. 36,8r0ad -' ay - New York Branch Office. e?A F St.. Washington. D. C. BOOKS Tiis Franklin-Tinner Cos., Atlanta, 6a , lr>Gt 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 DICING SUMMER MONTHS 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 Gold Drinks Regular. 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, an i are nywprepared to give you,direct from ourfaetcry, the benefit of our many years ol 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 ail the time. fMark X by the book or books you are interested in. cut out this advertisement and mai : to us. and we wdl send you, without further obligation on your part, a tun description of what you want, as well as fully outline •ur plan. Be sure to mention tnis paper. We Do aii Kinds of Plain and Fancy Job Printing 'V V 6Kio.fi eld sr-ft, light, 3ireng, bard hitting, trie, that’s the ?72&rfe.n f Model i 6 Repeating Snoigutr, she best 16 gauge repeating gun SolT - p or q, j3 jl and plfraant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits cad Othci' jjf J field game you’ll find the /72ar/cr Model 1 6 without a peer. E sJfl Equipped. like the famous TT&zrfilt Model 19, with toe tVitzn/n | i rekV -• solid top', and the j7?ar/in dc-cd-in breech bed, whch dm!s cut the M —’*' ■*' * id' sand, rain, sleet and mow from the action, having the t/Z?rSi/x s:de L /A ejection and the beautiful ?7/a?fm balance, this son is a standard :a I ■* & vwjj* CORStruct ’ assembling and quick response ta the touch ci the tacs. There’s a full description of all HZtzr/cii rifles and ehot-gnns, and. lots of valuable information lor all gan-lovevs iu j the " F/Tar&n Hoolc” just issued. 13d with, a hauduonaa art , cover. It's I'll UK tor 3 stamps postage. IJlar/m /irearmn Cos ., 42 WillrjoSL, Nets Haven, ConruK SI.OO A YEAR. INVITES YOUR BUSINESS FOR The Bank that puts Safety First. 232 Montgomery Avenue OHAriANOOA BRANCH: ROSSVILLE. GA- Old Folks’ Bibles Books for Girls S. S. T eachers’ Bibles Books for Boys 3 Family Bibles Novels, High Grade S Red Letter Bibles Young People’s Library [j S. S. Bibles *— Business Guide II Pocket Bibles ar.dTest’ta Cook Book J Child’s Life of Christ Stock Book Child’s Story of the Bible Doctor Book ..... Bible Stories Dictionaries Bible Dictionaries Kings of Platf’m & Pulpits Children's Story Books American Star Speaker I Children’s Histories \V!d Beasts. Birds, etc. I Name City or Town ® State , Street epd No.. K O. Boa, or R. *’ - NO. 33.