The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, October 30, 1908, Image 1

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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. II ]i\ Tatum, Editor. VOL. XVI. CASTOR 1A The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of , —and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy. *** * Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good.” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Casloria 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 CASTOR IA ALWAYS The Kind You Hays Always Bought In Use For Over 30 ..r*. THE CENTAUH COMPANY, T 7 MURRAY STREET, NEW < /• /WWANTEILfI RIDER AGENTS™ U [•* $ --ik. sample Latest iViodel bicycle nimished by us. Our agents everywhere are f! making money fast. /Frife /or full particulars and special offer at once. ™ nlj*. KO MONEIf REQUIKfciI) until yeu receive and appro* eof your bicycle. Weship g-fWk iijrm to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. without a cent deposit in a avarice, prepay freight , and Ml I&t Pit '\w allow TEN DAYS’ FREE TRIAL during which time you may ride the bicycle and £ :7 M £’> |1 Put it to any test you wish. If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to Ft f &T lit ■ yti keep the bicycle ship it rack to us at our expense and yowwiu not 0%. out one cent. 1/ & FA|*TftaY We furnish the highest'grade bicycles it is possible to make B\ i %\\ r. 1 *jt 0 Htti/ai I eilVbV at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save #lO I/ . ’V y Sto $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturer's guar r | . '.e behind your bicycle. DO NOT HUY a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone |i ■ J : * * Rt an y price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard cf factory ■ i’ , Jj prices and remarkable special offers to rider agsnts. 0/* - y f- VAH ufga | nr A6TOMI6USR when you receive our beautiful catalogue and i ‘ | ; , /b, m v - 4 Y>* * is 5C heiVnlduCV study our superb models at the wonderfully | 1 ff fjp -■:/ low Prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money a | j $:!Tp than any other factorv. We are satisfied with fi.co profit above tactory cost. H , , m , BICYCLE DEALERS, you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at & I *n do* Me * our prices. Orders filled the day received. % i ij SECONDHAND BICYCLES. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but w.jip • a number cn hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These we clear out ngr pi i t prices ranging from @8 to @8 cr 810. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. pftIKTCD BSi'IICC single wheels, imported roller chains and pedals, parts, repairs and ■ equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail prices. §ll EDtfTMMraCTNE-PMOF % SI ■ SELF-HEALING TIRES ; •il price of these tires is i C2** , - r pc.tr , but to introduce we zuill . t. BO (cashwithorders4fS). r~~^**---* — -* d< 7 fC * SETBOOTLE FROM PUNCTURES ; -Jm. ' * ! ’or Class will not let tho reA and pairs sold last year. isand pairs now in use. ™‘ sfrs 11 DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively i 'fi'ifff:-., u , .ir. 1 able and lined inside wit h Jrgr j ( 1 tt;’ oi rubber, which never becomes !s ® Ea ~~ ' } ' ' • :h do f.f P small punctures without Notiee t ho thick rubber tread ' h- W eh avch u nd r eds o t l eUersfromsagF||| <4A ., and c turo6tr!>s--i ’ umg that their tires haveonly been put V# and D,” also rim Btrip “Li” 1 • t.vicc m a whole season. They weigh no more than Jh&L * 0 *, re vont r | meu f t’a *v;.;r l: Me puncture resisting-qualitiesbeing given i M tirt * wlil outiu it aYT other ; s of thin specially prepared fabric on the \W make _SOFT, ELASTIC and . -in \r price of these tiresissS.soper pair,but for ff bSk KIDIYG, ?y . ; -scs we are making a special factory price to ■" /' A ’ . ; cily t; so per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C. O. T>. on •, : do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. * v a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price @4.55 per pair) if you ' \ IA i ash WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one : Li ass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are if., ", Yon examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a . M Jll order a pair of these tires, 3*oll will find that they will ride easier, run faster, f ! --t longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. \Ve v> ! 'V l .at -° u w dl be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your oraer. war* you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer. . . If YfiiS nrinirg* don’t buy any kind at any price until you send fer a pair or * ! bits'aJr §ifcaLdii Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and triat at ; ' 1 ; iuctory price quoted above, or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue waua _M rit)< -' a : notes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual prices. . . . HO ‘'■Sfe'T' MV but write us a postal today. DO NOT THINK. OF BUYING a oicy’cle -tt “ili 8 I TvJQSm or a pair of tires from anyone until you know tne new aud wonderiUl '■' lS v making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. J. L. HUB CYCLE COMPAKY, CSICMC, ILL Louisiana,Texas, nia and New Mex - I ,c° c °- Return limit 2S The Cotton Belt is the davs Qnn cl- i ' direct line from Memphis U StOp-OVerS al- to the Southwest. The both poinu Cotton Belt is the only line an d retnmi*nr> & operating two daily trains, carry * “&• jAgSr ing through cars without change the on, y line witil a thro vs h slee P er Memphis to Dallas. Equipment in clude 9 sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe A cars. Trains from all parts of the Southeast : makedirectco ) nnection atMcm : jhis with Cotton |v . Ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticketyia Memphis life V;-;* S& fnll Write for Texas or Arkansas book whichever section you are W#' ' ‘ interested in. There books are just off the press, and are full or facta and examples of what is actually being done by^farmers^truac jy color aap is inserted in each book Free upon request. h- . H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent, Chattanooga. Tenn. Official Organ of Dade County. TRENTON, GA., Fill DAY, OCTOBER 30, 1908. THBOUGHGUT Tffr '"’"•’p Oocd roads for Georgia will be the keynote of Governor-elect Joseph >l. Brown’s first message to the general assembly, next June, as indicated by him. in his first public speech in At lanta at the “Good Roads Day” ex ercises at the state fair, when he stated that it was practically certain that the legislature, next year, would enact legislation looking toward good roads for Georgia. It was a keynote statement, and one which met with instant favor by the crowd which had gathered to see the practical side and hear the theoretical side of good road building in Georgia. As the direct result of the investi gation made at the state farm by Col onel Calvin M. Hitch, executive sec retary, and George Tumlin, which was ordered by Governor Smith, four cas es were acted upon favorably and sent to the governor bv the prison com mission. Levi Copeland, sent up from Greene county in 1885* on a murder charge, for life, has his sentence com muted to present service; Mattie Vin son, who has been in the penitentiary since 1875 on a murder charge, is par doned; Jane Chapman, sent up for life from Wilkes county in 1880, for mur der, is pardoned, and another pardon is granted to Joseph Way, who has been in stripes since 1879 for murder. Most of those cases recommended by Colonel Hitch and Mr. Tumlin were those of convicts who had been in the penitentiary many years, and who had neither money nor influence to get any one to work in their behalf. Through the explosion of a soda water bottle, which badly injured bis eye, John G. Copeland, of Bremen, proprietor of the Bremen Bottling Works, has lost one eye entirely, as it was found necessary by doctors in Atlanta to remove the eye. After a trip thrpugh a greater part of. Georgia, distributing fish at the ex pense of the government, a-car oper -aWd under the direction of the bureau of fisheries at Washington and in charge of E. K . Burnham, passed through Atlanta on the return trip for more supplies. The fish brought to Georgia came from the government hatchery at LaCrcsse, Wis., and in cluded * black bass, catfish, bream, perch and crappie. The car carried more than one hundred cans, amount ing to about twenty-five thousand fish. “The government has sent many thousands of fish into Georgia recent ly,” said Mr. Burnham. “This is the fourth car that has visited Georgia during the past few weeks, and enough fish have been brought in to stock nearly every mill pond in the state. The fish are delivered fj;ee of charge to any person who has a place to keep them and they can be secured by notifying the proper department at Washington.” Rev. Henry Wilmier. at Rome charged after trust and has decided to occupy Ivfejffiyaie writing sermons next January, when his come off. States department of at Washington has donat 3rto the First District Agricultural college at Statesboro, seven hundred volumes of books, bulletins and publi cations of different kinds. Some of the works are very valuable. The gift was secured by Professor O. T. Harper, of the agricultural department. Postmasters appointed for Georgia: Galloway, Fannin county, Joel T. Queen, vice 11. Galloway, resigned; Union, Green county, Benjamin L. Brya, vice J. H, Barnes, resigned. Aaron Parks was appointed regulai, and Johnnie Ethridge substitute rural carriers on Route 3, at ly fy. Ordinary S. L. Moore of Bullock county, has received a letter from the prison commission stating that Bul loch county may have a number of rrtisdemeanor convicts from now until the Ist of April without any cost ex cept that of their transportation. The offer has been accepted. The county will take about fifteen convicts under this offer. The convicts will not be available until the Ist of November, •at which time steps will be taken to secure them. An election for the issuance of $15,- 000 bends, to install an elect lie light plant, has been ordered by the city council cf Howkinsville. Efforts of sisters and a brother f p T. Foye, late department store mer chant of Savannah who, in his will, were cut off with $1 each, to nave Miss Susie Keane, an employe of the Foye company, who receive! $20,000 in the will, and James Daly, removed from their position as executors, rail ed when Judge Henry McAlpin, ordi nary asserted his inability to see where the executors had mismanages the estate. On account of “general inefficiency in the present organization all the way from tep to bottom,” as Adjutant General \ J Scott expressed it, it has been determined to completely re organize the Georgia naval mu-a, whose two and only divisions are 1 caied in Savannah, under command of Commander Robert D. Gelding Ac cording to statements given out at ihe office of the adjutant general, tin. re-organization will be most sweeping Floyd county will use her quoin of tV , ; .. t ...iv, r po felony convicts and win oc-’k for fifty to one hundred additicn- The allotment will be made after fi'/ e Ist of March, and the request will come from the new board ot county omnic-Ncners, who take office tne Jcf Of January. D is understood tnat „ ttmH bp used in tin- n } e°e convicts v>Ui e u -.. nrovif- ihe roads cf the county, it bclni proposed by the board of com . , c ? OT lprs to give that county one m f h f toest systems of public roads in Georgia. PROMINENT people. , T’Ucn Fish resigned as Assist ant , of the United States at New Yovks. Frank P. Saigtnt, Commissioner- General of Immigration, died in Washington, D. C. A rousing reception w r as given to Cardinal Gibbons on his arrival in Baltimore from Rome. The Rev. Dr. Alexander Mann, of Boston, declined the office of Prot estant Episcopal Bishop of Washing ton, D. C., to which he was recently elected. Denman Thompson is seventy-five years old. He created the character of Uncle Josh in “The Old Home stead” thirty-three years ago, and since that time has played no other part. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, of Philadel phia, has been elected a foreign FeU low of the Royal Society of England, the oldest and most distinguished scientific society in the English-speak ing world. The Rev. Francis J. McConnell, pastor of the New Y r ork Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, of Brooklyn, has accepted the Presiden cy of De Pauw University, at Green castle, Ind. The Rev. John P. Peters in a ser mon at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City, declared labor unions, next to the public schools, were the greatest force in educating the masses. Rear-Admiral Evans, in a magazine article asserted that President Roose velt told him the Atlantic fleet would circle the globe—a statement which Mr. Loeb, the President’s Secretary, promptly denied at the time. The father of President Castro, of Venezuela, is still living in the Andes at the age of eighty-four and has liv ing twenty-five sons and thirty-four daughters, by six successive wives. The youngest child is four years old. WHY SHE WANTS DIVORCE. Woman Objects to Changing Home After Having Done So 39 Times. Fort Wayne, Ind. —Because she was forced to change her home thirty-nine times in her married life, Mrs. Jen nie E. V. Jarrett has asked for a di vorce from James E. Jarrett. The couple were married in 1891. Mrs. Jarrett said the family had been ejected for non-payment of rent from sixteen houses, and had moved out of others to avoid process. Detectives arrested at Toledo, 0., Broughton Brandenburg, who sold an article, purporting to have been writ ten by the late Grover Cleveland, to a New York newspaper. It is said that the article and signature of the ex-president are forgeries. Mr. Bryan having heard that Presi dent Roosevelt indorsed Treasurer Sheldon, charged in twenty speeches in Illinois that the republicans are trying to buy the election and said that notwithstanding this he expected to be elected. among honest producers. There is no need of pure food laws CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. lbs Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /IX // Signature of WE SELL LEGAL BLANKS j fit awwb— ggaaßMiiiw~"iru ■"** j—gap l "-*- I — lJ ft Q, We have recently equipped our office witli 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 ! j LEGAL BLANKS j / Anvone sending a sketch and description rnay nnickly ascertain our opinion free wuetner au invention is probably nn Patents tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK jent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & CO. receive pedal notice , without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly, largest cir- MUNN & Cos. 36,Broadwa> ’ New York ’Branch Office, 635 F St., Washington. D. C. BOOKS hg" CREDIT ]rq Ffgnk!n-Tumer Cos., Atlant), 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. US- LYEMANCE Avenue Bank and Trust Company CHEAPEST PRICES DURING SlfflHEß MONTHS I will give cheaper prices than usual during the Summer, for cash or its equivalent on all Drugs, gents furnishings and Qhnpc G W M. TATUM Ice Cold Drinks Regular, WH J TT IHF Established 1360 THE FRAHXIIN-TUiiNER CO., Atlanta, 6a. Si We all know that knowledge is power; but most of us are unabie to buy books to acquire knowledge from. However, we have solved the problem, an I are mwprepared to give you,direct from on-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 hooks, or a large collection of books, get them at regular prices, pay a small amount down, a smc-11 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 ntai' 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 plaa. Be sure to mention this paper. We Do All Kinds or Plain and Fancy Job Printing Model 15 Reperbr.s Shotgun, the best 16 gauge repeating gun tf ‘ For quail and pheasant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits an;: other g Sg2£.* / S.-U game vou"d find the /£&&&•* Model /6 without a peer. _ p fefc. jL :( Ecuip-trd. like the famous 7j?srr/zn Model 19, with th e 7/2crrT/.fl r soEd top, and the ///ar&S /.cssd-h breech belt, which shuts cut the l 8 rand, rain, sleet and snow rrom trie action, ( haring the fl/artUl sde v J&? ejection and the beautiful jffiat&n balance, this gun i a standard u> fe construction, jjMl quick response to the touch of the trigger. | There’s a fall description of all Tflarfisi renea f r.ro, rides and u 4 thot-gmis. and Jots of valuable information. for all gun-lovers in y aHlitiP'-jisS?® the *‘ 77?ezrffn lioofc’* ju t issued. 136 pages with a handsome art 1 cover. It's I-TtKIl for 3 stamps postage. fSt ifmt* SKsI '7iie ?Mar/m firearms Co s, l S 42 V/ilhvo Si., Idea Haven, Conn. J SI.OO A YEAR. INVITES YOUR BUSINESS FOR The Bank that puts Safety First. 232 Montgomery Avenue OHAITANOOA BRANCH: ROSSVILLE. GA. Old Folks' Bibles S. S. Teachers’ Bibles Family Bibles Red Letter Bibles j S. S. Bibles j Pocket Bib'es andTcst'ts J Child's Life of Christ !* Child’s Story of the Bible Bible Stories Bible Dictionaries Children’s Story Books Chi! Iren's Histories Name . •■ City or Town , . Stmt* Street pd No.. H. O. Box, or R. ® 9 L NO. 35. Books for Girls Books for Boys Novels, High Grade | Young People’s Library I Business Guide Cook Book Stock Book ...... Doctor Book Dictionaries , Kings of Platf’m & Pulpitj American Star Speaker I Wi'd Beasts, Birds, etc. I