The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965, November 13, 1908, Image 1

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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. j> F. Tatum, Editor. VOL X VI. 'CASTORIA (The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has beex in use for over 30 years, has home the signature of— and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. vi/tTYf, 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 CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie 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 You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 THE CENTRUM COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW ' tC ... t. aaking money fast. Write forfull particulars and special oficr at once. NO MONEY BEQDIBi £l9 until you receive and appro* e of your bicycle. We ship to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. -without a cent deposit in advance, prepay freight, and allow TEN DAYS* FREE TRIAL 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 sliip it back to us at our expense and you will tiot be out one cent. CAOTADV PSirPQ We furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make nVIVnI I nivfaw at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save s>io to s2 s middlemen’s profits by buying direct cf 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. Vfill mil | BIT ACTASiCIISn when you receive our beautiful catalogue and SLy RILL "L HdiWRIvHiU study our superb models at the wotiderfully low Pmces we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles foress money T than any other factory. We are satisfied with sz.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 v.c clear out rices ranging from @3 to ®8 or &10. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. MftQTFD ROAIfFG single wheels, imported roller chiuns and pedals, parts, repairs and VvH]Et,il CilMiiL), equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail Prices . s ffeU KNGETMNH.NKTNRE-fHOGF *3 £0 If SELF-HEALING TIRES TO O, regular retail Price of these tires is “““jpg iio HOLEnoiIBLE inm PDRCnBES' NAU.'. Tacks or Ghiss will not let the air out. S:\t\ thousand pairs sold last year. Over two hundred thousand pairs now in use-. / DESCRIPTION: Madeinall si'r - It islivc ’ v t * ’ ’ ‘y: K: -i vdutableand linetlinsidewith f/ a special quality of rubber, which never becomes ■■■' “ Ml 'A pot jus: id which closes up small punctures without allow- J S| Notico the thick rubber tread L n V to escape. We have hundreds of letters from sa*s- iAH „ A ., and puncturo strips ‘ ii" hedcustmers stating that their tires haveonly been pur ,ed Wp and D> . also rJm fitri , u uponc r twice inla whole season. They weigh nomorf than to prevent rim cutting. This an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given J4SL tire will outlast any other Dyseve:! layers of tlnnspecially prepared fabric onthe make-SOFT, ELASTIC and ueaa. c. regular price of these tires issb.so per pair,but for [g EASY BIDING, advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider of only 14.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C. O. D. on approval. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. We will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 4.55 per pair) it you FILL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send cue m> ke ; hi-! brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as 111 a hank, if you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, tv<. ir bt;: r , last longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. ' e "ant you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer . . IF Virtue* don’t buy any Kind at any price until you send for a pair of f r BvJU N9E.K.13 Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at - -pt'ciai introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which eicn!;t s ai id quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the US '^J T P™: C ®* T7V¥%rir , .. DO 64FVT VJLFA IT but write us a postal today. DO NOT THIN KOF BUYING a bicycle JVC# § ww/ti M or a pair of tires from anyone until yem know the new and wonderful oilers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NOW. AL. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL Low Rates to T exas^jj£2iiif|k tne first and third Tuesdays of ill 1 n month exceptionally low-rate th U t * c^ets w be so^ ;c°. Return limit 25 i, 3 , Tu ! !: ' and stop-overs al- to the*Southwest.^The I: >wed both (roin e Cotton Belt is the only line jp n H reruming° operating two daily trains, carry eludes sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe cars. Trains from al! parts of the Southeast 3BM make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton Ask the ticket agent to sell you a ticket via Memphis U ’-, jt ffm Write for Texas or Arkansas book whichever section you are t , *WEf W& interested in. These books are just off the press, and are full of S';*;;' ■ a| facta and examples of what is actually being done by farmers, truck v".' •'■^.--.l^VYjaj)Rfenßrj<£r £pMß gardeners and fruit raisers in this highly-favored section. A five color map is inserted in each book —Free upon request. H. H. Sutton, District Passenger Agent, "* ' **" nwiwu riwuiinwi-iwii Official Organ of Dade County. TRENTON, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1908. ILECTION ECHOES. Official returns give Taft 317,714 votes in Missouri and Eryan 312,889, a plurality for Taft of 4,235. Hadley’s plurality for governor is 16,992. Maryland’s electoral vote will be divided, Bryan getting seven and Taft one. With nothing to hinder the formula tion of plans for th approaching ses sion of congress and the extra session which the new administration is pledged to convene, party leaders are now giving serious consideration to a plan to rush tariff revision through at the earliest possible moment. It is admitted on all sides that uncertain ty will prevail in certain lines of in dustry until the tariff has been re vised. Representative Charles W. Fowler of New Jersey chairman of the com mittee on banking and currency, has announced that he would be a candi date for speaker of the house in oppo sition to Joseph G. Cannon. Mr. Fowl er was elected to represent the Fifth New Jersey district for the eighth successive time Tuesday. A monster petition to be circulated among the women of America, and then submitted to President-elect Taft is the immediate plan of the National American Woman’s Suffragist associa tion. Announcement of this fact was made by the Rev. Anna Howard, pres ident of the association. “Mr. Taft has often said he was willing the women of America should have the right of franchise if they desired it,” the president said. “Now is the time to give him an opportunity to show what he meant by that statement.” The republican party in New York is about to be plunged into a second battle over the question of the suc cessor of Thomas Collier Platt, his term expiring March 3. It has develop ed that nine candidates were ready to accept the senatorship. Chicago business men have resum ed the march to prosperity. Careful estimates by members of the Chicago Association .of Commerce indicate that moje than 18,000 workers have found places for full work in the two days since the election. These same men predicted that before January 1, 40,000 additional wage-earners would be given employment. All doubt as to the election of John Johnson has been wept away by the returns received. His majority over his republican opponent in the state now promises to be twenty thousand. Returns show that Taft has at least 85,000 majority over Bryan, and later returns may show 100,000. Roosevelt had 176,000 four years ago. Interest in the result of the elec tion in Manila was great. The Phil ippines are wild over the election of Taft and a prospective change in the administration has alreadyiSParoused the agitators to indepen dence. Practically complete election returns were published in all Manilla papers. When William Howard Taft goes in to the white house on March 4 next he will probably have the following cab inet: Secretary of state, Elihu Root of New York; secretary of the treas ury, George Von L. Meyer of Mass* chusetts; secretary of war, Luke E. Wright of Tennessee; secretary of the navy, William Loeb, Jr., of New York; secretary of the interior, James R. Garfield of Ohio; attorney general, Frank B. Kellogg of Minnesota; post master general, F. H. Hitchcock of Massachusetts; secretary of agricul ture, James Wilson of Iowa; secre tary of commerce and labor, Oscar S. Straus of New York; Fred W. Carpen ter of California, will be the private secretary to the president. Charles C. Duble, a locksmith of New Orleans sent to President-elect Taft a telegram congratulating him upon his victory and reminding him that when they attended school to gether as boys in Cincinnati young Taft had whipped him in “a square stand-up fight.” Last night Duble was overjoyed when he received a tele gram signed “W. H. Taft,” which thanked him for his congratulations and his reminder of an incident of their boyhood days. “The Taft landslide pulled Hughes through,” was the explanation of Charles F. Murphy, Tammany hall leader, of the failure of the democrat ic candidate to win the contest for governor. “The election is over,” con tinued Mr. Murphy, “and we are start ing to carry the city next fall in the election.” Asked regarding a report ed movement to repose him from lead ership, the Tammany chieftain re plied; “Yes, there’s always been such a movement— among a few.” With Bryan apparently removed as a presidential factor, Governor John son of Minnesota is the logical candi date for president in 1912, according to party leaders in that state. The victory of Governor Johnson will make him a potent factor in the next campaign. Republicans in Washington believe that Senator Foraker’s name will not figure in the re-election of his suc cessor by the Ohio legislature, and the latest name to be sprung is that of Charles P. Taft, the brother of the next president, and the man who financed the campaign leading up to the nomination. This report, how ever does not take into account Rep resentative Theodore Burton, who is the best all-round equipped man m the Buckeye state for the senatorship, and one whose services entitle him to the position. Notice has been posted in the cotton mills of the James Chadwick & Broth er company. limited, of Jersey City, N J That the mills would resume op erations on a full time schedule im mediately. Mastodon Image in Cave. While exploring Boone’s cave in the cliffs of the Kentucky River, above High Bridge, a party of Cin cinnati traveling men discovered the image of a mastodon carved in a solid mass of rock, which was the idol of the cave dwellers of prehis toric ages. They also discovered and are carrying home with them petri fied bones of human beings or ani mals that inhabited the cave thous ands of years ago, and these will be turned over to the museums when they reach Cincinnati. What they call the Chamber of Needles was also entered. Hanging from the roof and sides are thous ands of sharp-pointed scones from one to three feet in length, and the largest not more than an inch in diameter. They also discovered a river in the cave flowing through the ledges of rock as crooked as a serpent and not more than three or four feet in width. The bottom of the river was not found. —'Special to Chicago Inter- Ocean. An Intelligent Juror. “The common practice of lawyers in addressing a jury to single out one member who seems to them the most intelligent, and, therefore, the one most likely to be influenced by their appeals,” observes a Chicago attorney, “does not always work out advantageously. “All the testimony in a case re cently tried in Ohio had been taken, the lawyers for both sides had sum med up, and the judge had charged the jury, when up rose the intelli gent juror against whom both coun sel had thundered their impassion ed appeals. He wanted the Court to give him some information. “I have been bothered a good deal by two words the lawyers use here all the time,” said the intelligent Juror. “What are they?” asked the Court, expecting, no doubt, to be called upon to expound res inter alios acta or a fortiori, or some other abstruse term. “ ‘Plaintiff’ and ‘defendant,’ ” said the juror. “I don’t know just what they mean.” —Harper’s Weekly The** Amazing Students of Missouri. At a mass meeting at Columbia, Mo., the students of the University of Mis souri petitioned the faculty to serve them only two meals a day instead of three. The petition states that experi ments recently conducted by six of the dormitory students proved that when eating only two meals a day a student is in better health and spirits and bet ter prepared for hard mental work. It was demonstrated that the luncheon was the least essential, and the petition requests that the noon meal be eliminated.—New York Sun. The man who knows most usually has the least to say. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought 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. G. Our catalog, containing a list of over two birred and fifty forms, furnished free upon request. WE SELL LEGAL BLANKS Anyone sending a sketch and description may miickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably tions strictly confidential HANDBOOK onPatent* lent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Cos. recelvs jpecial notice , without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illnstrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. l er ”?®’ ® year: four months, fL Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Cos. 36,8r0ad * ay ' New York Branch Office. 635 F St., Washington. D. C. BOOKS ££S3 CREDIT Ths Frank! n-Turner Cos., Atlanti, 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 38 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 Shoes. G W M TATUM Ice Cold Drinks Regular. B 1860 THE Atlanta, B*r ll 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 1 are n iw prepared 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 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. )Mark X by the book or books you are interested in, cut out this advertisement and mai : 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 AH Kinds of Plain and Fancy Job Printing 6K lb. field gun, light, strong, hard hitting, true, that's the II Jj A* Model 16 Repeating Shotgun, lb: bat! 6 gangs repeating gun H r~*~' For quail and pheasant shooting, woodcock, squirrels, rabbits and other ■ tjgy* T f .Kiffifagreliy field game you’ll find the ZflarStn Model / 6 without a peer. SIS Equipped, like the famous 77/arfdr2 Model 19, with th e Tuaru/t jg >' /, i w. solid top, and the fflar/tn dcsed-in breech belt, which shuts out the B JjSKsP' I sand, rain, sleet and snow from the action, having the /7lnr/ln side 3 ejection and the beautiful /7Zar/{JI balance, thi3 gun is a standard in S assembling and quick response to the touch of the trigger. H . There’s a full description of all fflarftji repeaters, rifles and ■ shot-guns, and lots of valuable information for all gun-lovers in ■ the *‘ 77larfin issued. 136 pages with a handsome art I *ZAe 77Zar/ifi SI.OO A YEAR. INVITES YOUR BUSINESS FOR The Bank that puts Safety First. 232 Montgomery Avenue CHATTANOOA branch: ROSSVILLE. GA- Old Folks’ Bibles S. Teachers’ Bibles Family Bibles Red Letter Bibles S. S. Bibles Pocket Eib'es andTest’ts Child s Life of Christ Child’s Story of the Bible Bible Stories Bible Dictionaries Children's Story Books Children’s Histories Name— —. City or Town.. . . - . State Street eps No,, P. 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