Newspaper Page Text
Mrs. Sagerser,
of Missouri.
FACIAL NEURALGIA.
Mrs. C. H. Haperser, 1311 Woodland
Avo„ Kan»a* Oily, Mo., write*:
“I feel it a fluty duo to you and to I
other* that may h« aillteted like my»elf, .
to ft]>cak for Poruna.
‘•My troubleflr*tcame after la grippe '
light or nine year* ago, a gathering In
my head and neuralgia. X suffered
most all the timo, My nose, ears and
eye* were badly affected for the last two
years, I think from your description of
internal catarrh that I must havo had
that also. I sufTorod very severely.
“Nothing ever relieved me like Po
runa. It keeps “me from taking cold.
“With the exception of some deaf
ness X am feeling perfectly cured. 1
am forty-six years old.
“X feel that words are Inadequate to
oxpress my praise for Pertina.”
Stomach Trouble Seven Years.
Mrs. T. Freeh, U. K. 1, Hickory Point,
Tcnn., writes:
“Having lieen afflicted with catarrh
and stomach trouble for seven years,
and after having tried four different
do'.tors they only relieved ine for a lulls
Yhile. I was induoed to try Peruna,
and I am now entirely well.”
Man-a-lin an Ideal Laxative.
Dressed In “Black And Yellow”
. Not ‘'Football Colors" but the
•
color of the carton containing Foley’s
Honey and Tar the best and safest
cough remedy for ail coughs and
oolds. Do not accept a substitute
but see that you get the genuine
Foley’s Honey and Tar in a yellow
carton with black letters --Warthen’s
Drug Store.
Look •TVhat Your Money Will Do .A.t
MILLER-MITCHELL COMPANY’S
*. v . • •
Men’s and Boys’ Clothing at Irresistible Prices Stupendous Bargains in Ladies’ Ready=to=Wear
. The latest creations and designs from New York and Paris Salons are here for
One lot Men s Fall suits, grey mixtures, Men’s Cravenette Raincoats all colors and your inspection, and every garment bears the Loom-End Tag.
solid brown Melton’s, worsteds, cheviot es- blacks, worth sl(s 50 to aq ’ T - . • ,v, u i.u
facts, worth anywhere from $7.60 n f\n $lB 00 Ladies's22.so New Fall suits in fancy Ladies 64-inch black cloth coats nqq
to $lO, very spec al Z.ifO One lot $4.00 and $4.50 extra «> AO stripe worsted, blues, greys, greens, blacks, $5 values jti.OO
One lot Men’s Fall and winter suits, con- fine drees psnts, new snappy p*U. Z. 98 Strictiy satin lined with All wooU - A
sisting of pure worsted and woolen fabrics. Men a fine pants, $5.00 to OQQ satin collars and four »g -14 AO uiade worth 800 to 400 I*so
These suits were bought from manufacturer s76ovaluee 0.30 tons in front-skirts pleated..... 1**.30 m gs md Woe brilliantihe}' AA
at an extraordinary bargain and will gc on Roys Good School OQO $27.50 to s3i .50 Suits, in every con- B kj r t 8 all sizes worth 2.0 J 1.00
saleatfar less than the wholesale n4Q ® l,liS d.*/0 ceivable weave and color, man tailored Ladies’all wool skirts new fall designs
cost Worth sl”’s(t Will sell for / _ . „ throughout, with black satin lined collars, . f leß . * . ~’ . . ’
cost. «orui fi» . w ill sell lor I .to Boys* Suits and Pants air.hnttnn aronn etfect Verv r»o m variety of fabrics, nicelv trimmed, OAQ
Men’s new fall styles medium ami heavy Boys’ School suits, with bloomer pants, handsome bargain at. 22.50 all colors, 5.00 and 600 values £*• afO
weight suits in blue and black serges, fancy black and mixtures, worth 1 /\n ‘ ... Ladies’ $5 silk petticoats, high grade
worsteds and casaimeres and other qqq $3 00 l.a/O 02 inch Broadcloth Capes, Militarv trim- taffetta silk, colors, blue, black, grey, green,
popular fabrics, price #ls to $lB Boys’ blue serge and fancy mixture school mings, all colors and blacks, brass military lavender, etc., made lull *y QQ
Men’s strictly high grade fall suits, in this suits, with bloomer pants, this OQQ £ utt .°° 8 : worth $7 5 °- Loora ' A Qfi extra special L.UO
season’s cuts and fabrics wide ranee of season s patterns, $4.50 values End Price ‘f.IFO Ladies black near-silk underskirts, with
classy styles worth $22-50 to wj no Boys'fine suits, worth $6.50 to if 8 00, Indies’ 54 inch Coats, best quality Broad- embroidered ruffle, 150 QQ
• *l*7 SO nrwvd.l in thi. MX all new patterns and styles. * AO cloth, handsomely trimmed 1 colors black, values
* m, special in inis sate it. w wy ext j; 7 4.“0 blue, tan and red. Tailored effect, QQQ Good Saline Underskirts OQ
100 pairs Men’s pants, worth £Q Boys’good knee pants, 3to 9 years |r* worth $16.50 to SIB.OO for ... 01/C
up to $1 50, very special O«fC size, 50c values, a pair IDC Ladies’Raincoats, waterproof, 4*oo 5 dozen 500 white waists, as long OC_
Men's fine dress pants, new fall patterns Men’s “Slip-On" Gossamer Raincoats, variety of patterns, $7.50 vals.... t.«/ oas they last, each «JC
and styles, $3 00 and $3.5 J i AO tans and browns, $7.50 OAC Ladies’s4-iuch cloth coats, brown, QQQ 30 dozen white waists, worth |-Q
values l.Jfo values tans, black, $6 values from $1 to 2 50, choice dUI
The Great Hisey Loom-End Sale at
The Miller - Mitchell Co. Dep. Store
Corner Main and Market Sts. - - Chattanooga, Tennessee
LOCAL CEMETERY
IS POORLY KEPT
Something Ought To Bo Dofae,
Thinks This Writer To
Remedy Conditions .
Ed. Messenger:
As there is no column in the paper
set apart for “letters from the peo
pie," I will just ask ihe editor to
please print this anyway, as it is
from one of the people, addressed to
all the test of the people in this
township. I Lope, too, that the
editor wil not put this off in a cor
ner, but where a'l may see if, even
‘‘he that runs inay read,” and I hope
he will stop running long enough
to read this and ponder over it,
too.
Friends, nob'es, countrymen, lis
ten. I want to ask you, have you
I paid a visit to our town cemetery
| lately, and oo you know anything
'about the pitiable condition it.is in.
Instead of a neat, well-kept ‘ city of
the dead” it is in a dreadful condi
tion! Weeds, briars, blackberry
vines growing rampant in some
, places over the sacred dead, and the
, whole place, especially the newly
added part, a wiid waste, a field of
| broom-sedge thick enough in which
an inva ling army might hide
More than one lot surrounded by an
iron fence has weeds and brambles
highe than the fence, and so thick,
60 impenetrable that a rabbit, though
born and bred in a briar patch,
would have difficulty in getting
' through.
Seriously though, fellow towns
people, this is a sad state of affaire.
What you suppose strangers, visitors,
think of the town? Da we so soon
forget our dead friends that we leave
their last resting place in such
shape? We had better leave the
water and lights, about which we
are so pulled up; we bad better I
IhiDk drop everything else and if
we can’t do any belter, like they do
in some neighborhoods, appoint a
day and all hands go to work and
Walker ( onnty Mesaepger, November 4, 1910
clean that cemetery which silently
shames the community.
Os course, it does not matter much
what beoomes of our bodies after
death, but let us not emulate the
example of a certain sect of Sbahen,
who take pride in the fact that they
never visit or care {or the graves of
their dead.
Friends, if you have not been to
our cemetery lately, please go,
meditate among the tombs, if you
can see the tombs for the splendid
crop of broom sedge, and after you
have meditated awhile, see if you
don’t th nk something should be |
done. Visit other towns, to say l
i nothing of the cities, and you will
n#t find their “Garden of Sleep” in
such pathetic neglect as is ours.
Yes, there are some well kept graves,
where the sweet “stars of earth," the
i lonely iltwers, whisper and no.l to
each other, and seem to rob the
place of some of its mourafulness,
but there are few such. In justice
to the town council, or something,
it must bo said that some work was
done there last year or the year be
fore, but it should be cared for
every year, for weeds will grow. A
ministar a short time ago from the
pulpit called the attention of the
town to the cemetery’s need, and if
this too does not stir you up, I shall
feel indignant, disappointed, for not
to speak irreverently of Scripture,
I hope it will make your ears tingle
as did the ears of the people of Eli’s
house as the Lord gave the message
to the little Samuel, when He called
him in the night. There is a pas
sage which often comes to mind
when I cut down weeds—“ Asa
bowing wall shall ye be, and as a
tottering fence.”
So let’s send workmen to our
Mr. Otto Paul, Milwaukee, Wis.,
says Foley’s Honey and Tar is still
more than the best. He writes us,
“all those that bought it think it is
the best for coughs and colds they
ever had and I think it is still more
than the best. Our baby had a bad
cold and it cured him in one day.
Please accept thanks.”—Warthen’s
Drug Store.
cemetery and make those weeds bow |
and totter, or quit calling this the,
“City of LaFayette."
Having had th ; a say, one feels
better, whether these words which
are truth and soberness have any
effect or not in bettering the condi
tion of that quiet spot where the
“rude forefathers of the hamlet
sleep."
After The above was written
a week ago and while it waited pub
lication, King Frost has taken a
hand killed those offending weeds
and brambles, but that does not help
matters much, for their dead ghosts
remain for the winter winds to whis
tie through, an i broom-sedge, you
know, shows no sign of the frost s
finger, and there the matter rests.
ONE OF THE PEOPLE.
Road Notice
State o r Georgia, Walker County.
Whereas the reviewers appointed to
mark out and make report upon the
establishment of a change in the C at
tanooga Va ley road between Cooper
Heights and High Point, in said county,
to wit; Beginning at the north end of
W. A. Hixoo’s land and going through
Hixou's laud 50 yards thence eastward
through Mrs. Eliza Henry’s laud and
intersecting the old road at the bridge
south ol Virs. Eliza Henry’s house, and
also the following change: Beginning at
the foot of the Massey hill and running
in a westward direction about 700 ya'ds
through Mrs Eliza Henry’s land enter
iag W. U. Kuta’ land and running
i through W. C. Ruts' land about 100
' yards and intersecting the Chattanooga
i Valley road at the branch, have reported
that the establishment of seid change
in said road will be of‘great prblic
1 utility and convenience. It is therefore
I ordered that citatiou be published at the
' court house door and in the Walker
j County Messenger for thirty days as re
, quired by law, notifying all persons that
lau order will be granted establishing
said chauge in said road on the first
Tuesday in December, next, if no good
cause is shown to the contrary. This
Ist day of November, lfllO.
John B. Henderson,
Robt B Shaw.
John O Young,
John M. Rau-oin,
Thos. J. Bandy,
Board Commissioners Roads and Reve
nue, Walker Countv, Georgia.
A Household Medicine
To be really valuable must show
equally good results from each mem
ber of the family using it. Foley’s
Honey and Tar does just this. Whe
• ther for children or grown persons
Foley’s Honey and Tar is best and
safest for all coughs and colds. —
Warthen’s Drug Store.
This is the Headquarters For the
best bargains
in Chattanooga, Tennessee
MAX BRENER
218 E. JVlain Street
Fall buying starts with a, rush today. The
goods are first-class, the stock is compete with
the most up-to-date Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats,
Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s ready-to-wear goods,
and I guarantee you that my prices are lowest
of the lowest. I cordially invite you to call and
see my prices and I thank you in advance for do
ing so.
I will give you an idea below
of a few of my prices:
Shoes from 19 cents a pair up to $ 5.00
Suits from 1.48 up to 22 50
Ladies waists from 48c up to 2.98
Ladies’ Tailor-made Suits 7.90 to 15.00
Calicoes from , 4c up
Women's Shoes 98° U P
Coats and Cloaks : 1.98 up
Ladies’ Hats 98c to 6.90
Underwear 19c up
Ladies’ and GeDt'scoat sweaters 48c up
Suspenders 19° U P
Fall stock Brogan shoes 100
Men's 12.50 Worsted Suits 7.50
The best and heaviest fleece lined shirts and drawers 88c
Men’s Fine Hats, 1,00 and 1.25 values, at 50c
Men’s Fur and Corduroy 50c Caps 25c
Dress Goods from 10cup
When yon are coming and ready to buy
your fall goods we want to show you what we
consider the best values on earth for the money
at
MAX BRENER
218 E. Main Street
Chattanooga : : Tennessee