Newspaper Page Text
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES.
ft. F. Tatum, Editor.
VOL. xvi
[f9oo Dropsj
- ' . ..' in I Ulh.h.Hlilll
AVege tabic Prep arationfor As
similatiug thCTood and Reg ula-
Eng the Stomachs andßowels of
is Yhildhkn
Promotes PigestioaCheerful
ncss and Rest. Contains neither
Opium .Morphine nor Mineral.
]Sot Narcotic.
—— • • • mrnmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Stupe ofOIdUrSAMULLPIIuHEIi
funpicin Setd^
Mx. Strtrus * 1
fndulle Salts - I
Anise Seed. * I
i\ppermint - )
m Carbonate Soda *
fVonn Seed - I
riarifiad Sugar . f
\fotnyrum ktaran /
Aperfect Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
aess and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of j
fLsffZlSfd
NEW YOHK.
I old
|
UACT COPY"OF WRAPPER.
8 I ANTED-A RIDER /SEITS
lakir.g money fast. IVrite for full particulars and special offer at once.
NO MONEY REQJJIKEJO until you receive and apprc’ eof your bicycle. We ship
to anyone, anywhere m the U. S. without a cent deposit m advance, prepay freight, and
allow TEN DAYS’ FREE TIiIAI. during 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 ship it back to us at our expense and you will not be out one cent.
furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make
6 HVtiViU rniWbO at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save $lO
to $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturers guar
antee behind your bicycle. I>o NOT Bl!¥ 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 rMer ^euts.
vmi iAtlij 3 BE when you receive our beautiful catalogue and
IwU HILL Dfa study our superb models at the wonderfully
low prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for 1 ess money
than any other factory. We are satisfied with #I.OO profit above factory 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. These we clear out
aces ranging from SS3 to ®8 or 3810. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free,
single wheels, imported roller chains ana pedals, parts, repairs and
DilHriLdy equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices.
*A£l KMETMM*roiCTIK-PtOOF £2
21SELF-HEALIH6 TIRES nSnSpwefiSStr
ygiJp !S regular retail price of these tires is
' c 0 per pair, but to introduce zv4 will
5 •'//> pair tors4.Bo(cashwithorders4Jss). ‘JjftajjS. '
MMOkE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES Ri J
' All >. lacks or Class will not let the I
asr Sixty thousand pairs sold last year, difpVic 'Mi!
Over two hundred thousand pairs now in use. 1 m
BESBRIPTIOH: Made in all sizes. It is livel y i g
1 very durable and lined inside with j
1 quality of rubber, which never becomes ..y
\>y -ana which closes up small punctures without Notice the thick rubber tread
• * ;: n to escape. We have hundreds of letters from sattfjgra A " and puactare strips *./’
on trs stating that their tirwhaveonly been and “I?,” also rim Btrio “11"
' 1 a whole season. They weigh no morj*Ti JfeA prevent rim cutting.' This
;■ tire, the puncture resisting qualities tire will outlast any other
- payers of thm specially prepared fab J*£n the W make -SOi'T. ELASTIC and
I 'regular price of these tires issS.so per pair,but for &2 EASY BIDING.
;i : pur poses we are making a special factory price to **
t; : ■of only $4.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C. O. D. on
.val. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented.
Vi v.U alloiv a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price &4..5"> per pair) if you
IT LL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one
:nc : • A ted brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are
,lu: s ut.' factory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a
}f y OU ordßr a p a i r 0 f these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster,
n better, last longer and look finer than any tire vou have ever used or seen at any price. We
; '• th t you will be so well pleased that when you v/ant a bicycle you will give us your order.
•' want you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire oiler .
V> HLSF’se m Pb •n m atr***e* don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair or
'* ■if if nffcfifc!? Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at
■ 'ci al introductory price quoted Above, or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which
0 and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual prices.
r&f- fto/yyjp Bua ygm but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK. OL BLI INv* a bicycle
m<<j t:- c Shta or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful
01lL 'O’ v ire making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW.
I L MEM! CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL
Low Ra^eg^to^Tgrag^^B^^^
1 Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas,
klahoma and New Mex
lQ • Return limit 25 .9 ott ? n B ®L t is ! he
H - j , dmar direct line from Memphis
.rS and stop-overs al- the Southwest. The
W£d t)OtH l£Oini£ Cotion Belt is the only line
] ® operating two daily trains, carry
-1 urning. ing through cars without change —
the only line with a through sleeper
Memphis to Dallas. Equipment in
eludes sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe
cars * Trains from all parts of the Southeast
$S ™f-4 make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton
•I* Ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticketvia Memphis
Write for Texas or Arkansas book whichever section you are
* • ’;interested in. These books arc just off the press, and are full of
'&{■•*£?.> facts at|d examples of what is actually being; done by farmers, truck
' ' ' ffardeners and fruit raisers in this highly-favored section. A five-
V*hv,' Wtiy color man is inserted in each bock Free upon request.
v * <wSm^ r H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent,
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the A, \
Signature /Mm
° f
(\ Jp’ h
(\A se
U' For Over
Thirty Years
GASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
Official Organ of Dade County.
TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23,1908.
HE'S WILLING TO WAIT.
once believed the world was square
Ana that the sun was always moving—
A Tv le Pi r ? r , th ? t few would dare
•mCr t i 1 y nk ust then about disproving.
in A ey . thought the planets made of firo
, wrote no end of books about it
v\ inch common folk would much admire,
tt wasn’t very wise to doubt it.
S a^en Hippocrates
aTi 0 c * us a . about our bodies,
Anci ages since have paid their fees
r r , lo ”hU disciples of these noddles,
iney bled and blistered long ago
a dJ 0 !? 1 sc .arlet fever to the scurvy,
Al }U happily they did not know
Wed turn their science topsy-turvy.
They wasted years and years to learn
how metals base might be transmuted
all their theories in turn
T / lave been successfully refuted.
-*■ lost time in such a way
* ?i now , that 1 should be quite nettled.
-Mints why small knowledge I display—
-1 m waiting till they get things settled.
—Chicago News.
!| fowv reu ms
(SWfiM
K\ <i)M “LApGtl aSd V
uofl the Wof(LE>
< j L\o&ris v/iTriqou’?
“Waiter, one of these oysters is
bad.” “Well, sir, you'll see I’ve given
you two extra.” —The Tatler.
Guest—‘‘l want to send a message
upstairs.” Clerk —‘‘Have to wait, ma
dame, till ‘Front’s’ back.” —Baltimore
American.
“Grandfather,” began Jimmy, as he
gazed thoughtfully at the aged man’s
shining head, “why don’t you tell
yourself a hair-raising story?”—Judge.
“Now, Pat, would you sooner lose
your money or your life?” “Why,
me loife, yer reverence; I want me
money for me old age.”—Philadelphia
Inquirer.
“What is meant by naturalization?”
“Naturalization is the process by
means of which an evicted Irish ten
ant becomes an American policeman.”
—Cleveland Leader.
“Have you ever loved and lost?”
sighed the swain. “Nope,” responded
the maiden, promptly. “I’ve won
every breach of promise suit I ever
brought.”—Cleveland Leader.
“What’s all that cannonading?”
“They are firing the salute of the
States —forty-six guns.” “Wow! Did
you hear that? The gun must have
blown up!” “No, that’s for Okla
homa.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
“I spent some of today.
I think even a map? has the
right to do so.”f*j£ i s&e’s a great deal
to be said subject.” “Well, I
guess be equal to saying
it al Courier-Journal.
remarked the race horse, “all
have been due sim
ply to putting my best foot forward.”
“Yes?” replied the mule. “Now I find
that I accomplish most by putting my
best foot backward.” —Philadelphia
Press.
The McSkinner —““Twa shillin’ to
gang to Holborn! Nay, nay. But —
weel —I’ll toss ye, double or quits.”
Sporting Cabby—“Well —I’m goin’
that way any’ow—so ’ere goes.
’Eads!” The McSkinner—“Heads?
Weel, ye’ve won. So I’ll jist hae to
walk!” —Punch.
Convalescing victim of auto acci
dent—“l woke up and found the hot
Welsh rabbit. I recognized it as my
wife’s cooking, but it was better sea
soned than the average.” Nurse—
“ Merciful saints! we couldn’t imagine
what had become of that other mus
tard plaster.” —Judge.
Theatrical Manager—“So you think
you can stand the arduous duties of a
variety actor? You know in this play
we find occasion to throw you down a
thirty-foot flight of stairs into a barrel
of rain water.” Hungry Applicant—
“Oh, I guess I can stand that, all right.
I was a tax collector for three years.”
—Chicago Daily.
Mr. Cad—“ Can I see that burglar
who was arrested for breaking into my
house last night?” Inspector (hesi
tatingly)—“Well, I don’t know. What
do you want to see him for?” Mr. Cad
“Oh, there’s nothing secret about it.
I just wanted to find out how he man
aged to get into the house without
waking my wife.”—lllustrated Bits.
A Mistaken Situation.
A rather elderly gentleman stepped
on a Fifth avenue car in Pittsburgh
about eleven o’clock the other night
and after giving the conductor ex
plicit directions to wake him when
the car reached Federal street seat
ed himself in a corner and was soon
sound asleep. When he had ridden
about half a dozen blocks beyond
Federal street a sudden lurch of the
car wakened him.
Rubbing his eyes he looked out of
the window and seeing where he was
angrily accosted the conductor thus:
“Conductor, why didn’t you wake me
up as I told you? Here I am half a
mile past my house.”
“I did try, sir,” responded the con
ductor, “but all I could get you to say
was, ‘All right, Mary, get the children
their breakfast and I’ll be down in
a minute.’ ’’—Brooklyn Life.
THE LABOR WORLD.
A Central Labor union has been
organized at Augusta, Ga.
San Francisco Barbers’ Union has
a membership of more than 700.
Albany labor unions have erected
and opened a tuberculosis pavilion.
The various central bodies of Or
ange County, New York, have joined
a county labor union.
A reorganization of the building
trades unions has been brought about
in Buffalo, N. Y., after many years
of warfare.
It has been decided by the leather
workers to make a universal demand
for the eight-hour day within the
next two years..
In Liverpool, England, 10,000
longshoremen are idle, and the docks
are filled with idle sailors and officers
looking for berths.
The accident report of the Illinois
Bureau of Labor shows a list of 100
miners killed and 287 injured in Il
linois from July 1, 1907, to July 1,
1908.
The strike of the operatives in the
textile industries of India has ended.
Low wages and bad conditions of em
ployment were the cause of the
strike.
International Cotton Spinners’
Union has presented Samuel Ross,
of New Bedford, Mass., its veteran
secretary, with a silver service of
fifty pieces.
The paper mills of the Interna
tional Paper Company in Franklin,
N. H., started on full time, all the
men having voted to accept the five
per cent, cut down.
The spinners and cardroom work
ers in Manchester, England, adjusted
their differences with the manufac
turers, agreeing, temporarily, to ac
cept a five per cent, reduction.
It was announced that workmen
at the Brooklyn Navy Yard had won
their point and would be paid weekly.
Church of Many Colors.
The Vicar of Merrow, Surrey, in
the current issu o of the parish maga
zine states that while the pews of
the church are of a uniform type there
is a great “variety in colors, pat
terns and s'hades of hassock, carpet
and cushion.” He adds that he would
like to make a bonfire of them all,
and suggests that in future the church
wardens should be consulted before
any upholstering is carried out.—-
London Daily Mail.
BEAU IDEAL.
“He has everything to make 9
woman happy.”
“On the contrary, he has nothing
but wealth.”
“Dear me! What more can a wom
an ask of her husband than that
he have wealth?”
“That he have brains, beauty,
bravery!”
“But—”
“Or, failing these, heart disease!”—
Life.
If a dollar reigns, is it because
the cloud has a silver lining?
Is a man of woes a wo-man?
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bough!
Bears the .
Signature of fz'SrCCt/Cfr'fa
WE SELL
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.
J
G. 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
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions striotiy confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents
lent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Cos. receive
pedal notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific journal. Terms, fa a
year: four months, $L Sold by ail newsdealers.
MUNN & Cos. 36,Broadway 'New York.
Branch Office. C 25 F St.. Washington. D. C.
BOOKS S CREDIT
Til? Franklin-Turner Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
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 givecheaper 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.
DnoK $CR EDIT
§PH*i WHILE PAYING '
pi J Wjw FOR THEM
iSlr EstebHshw 1860 THE FRANKLIN-TURNER CO., Atlanta, Ga.
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 n w prepared to give you,direct from our factory,
the benefit of our many years of thought and iaoor
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.
)Mark X by the book or books you are interested in.
cut out this advertisement and tnai- to us, and we will
send you, without further obligation on your port. a full
description of what you want, as well as fully oufiiue
•ur plan. Be sure to mention this paper.
We Do AH Kinds of
Plain and Fancy Job Printing
€
yKo© V £, T < IV. field gun, light, strong, hard hilling, true, that’s the JTlcirl'n gj
JPa. Model 16 Repeating Shotgun, (be bat 16 gauge repeating gen G
Wgfr .& For quail ar.d pheasant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits aad other 8
WT> J field game you’ll find the fllarfin Model 16 without a pt-cr. n f
Equipped, like tbs famous Z3szrt£* Model 19, with the 7/lrzrt/n |
/*• J 0 top,
Jr‘%f~ T ! sand, rain, sleet and snow from the actios, having the 77lcwfjl side j
HSBk pjjf A ejection and the beautiful fflaf/i.n balance, lids gun is a standard in!
’ construction, assembling and quick response to the touch of the iegger. I
There's a full description of ail 772ar/?n repea'ern, r'des and S
eliot-guns, and lots of valuable inf or,nation for all eu:i-lorer= in I
tlie “.-53 TtZstf/i Boole’’ issued. 136 pagea with a handsome art S
% 77w7/?ar/m/fr&izrr/LsG?.^
SI.OO A YEAR.
INVITES
YOUR
BUSINESS
FOR
1908
The Bank that puts Safety First.
232 Montgomery Avenue
OHAHANOOA
BRANCH:
ROSSVILLE- GA-
Old Folks’ Bibles Books for Girls
S. S. Teachers’ Bibles Books for Boys
Family Bibles Novels, High Grade
Red Letter Bi'oles Young People’s Library
S. S. Bibles Business Guide
Pocket Bib'es andTest’ts Cook Book
Child 3 Life of Christ Stock Book
Child’s Story of the Bible Doctor Book
Bible Stories Dictionaries
Bible Dictionaries Kings of Platf'cn & Pulpit!
Children’s Story Books American Star Speaker I
Children’s Histories W,ld Beasts, Birds, etc. I
Name
City or Town State
Street mp<3 No.. K O. Bos, or R. B 9 ■
NO. 34.