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THE MURRAY NEWS
Published weekly at ftprlpg Place, Georg a,by
the Murray News Publ'shiBg Company, and de¬
voted to the interests of Murray County,
Entered at the post office at Issued Spring Place, Friday, eta.,
at. hecond-eiass matter, and every
Official Organ of City and County
_____
Subscription, <1.00 per year; six months, 60c;
three mouths, 26c
Charles U. Davis, Editor.
The New Jersey legisla¬
ture in eight weeks passed
but six laws.
Only thirty-two days till
the primary. Oct in youi an¬
nouncements.
Says Dinkelspiel, “Be sure
you arc right, then go ahead
and ask your wife about it.”
We don’t object to the
President receiving- $75,000
a year, provided he is not a
$900 man.
An Indiana schoolma’am
recently whipped thirty-two
pupils in one day. Let’s hear
from Murray now.
The senate investigation of
the Reed Smoot case indi¬
cates that mormonism needs
a little investigating itself.
After mature considera¬
tion we have concluded, if
Mr. Hearst wants the Demo¬
cratic nomination, to let him
have it.___
If a candidate, soliciting
your vote, offers you whisky,
you know exactly how high
an estimate he places upon
your manhood.
Ninety thousand for the
President’s new stables; yet
Thomas Jefferson hitched his
horse to a post when he went
in to be inaugurated.
More trouble is brewing
in Kentucky. One father
there has named his four sons
Grover Cleveland, Theodore
Roosevelt, Mark Ilanna and
William Bryan.
“Rui.e or ruin.’’ Mr. Bry
an will learn at the July con¬
vention that he is an exceed
ingly diminutive potato, and
only one of him in the entire
patch. _
A splendid set of men are
announcing for office in the
grand old county of Murray,
and whomsoever may be
chosen, the county will be
well served.
< WoKK,” says a Chicago
professor, “is the true path
to joy,’ ’ which the Atlanta
Journal supplements by add¬
ing, “especially when you
can work the other fellow.’’
The governor of Mississip¬
pi calls out troops to prevent
a lynching; the governor of
Ohio calls them out after the
lynching has been accom¬
plished. That, in brief, is
the difference.—Chattanooga
News.
_
The News trusts that no
whisky will be used in the
present county campaign, and
it doesn’t believe there will
be; for the citizenry of Mur¬
ray stands today upon too el¬
evated a plane to sell its suf¬
frage for a drink of liquor.
For monumental nerve the
state executive committee is
entitled to the banner. It as¬
sessed each state house can¬
didate fifty dollars for the
committee’s expenses, while
the county candidates are ex¬
pected to pay the balance of
the costs, such as printing
tickets, holding election, etc.
ENDORSES MR. HEARST.
j Quite a number of papers
seem inclined to throw ridi
cule upon William Randolph
Ilearst as a presidential pos¬
sibility, which calls forth the
following strong article in the
Cincinnati Enquirer, Ohio’s
greatest newspaper:
“Mr. Hearst is unquestion¬
ably a man of mark, and
many sober-minded men are
writing him in their book of
estimation as a man of des*
tiny. No one of his years
has had a more remarkable
career in this special period
of grand development. In
his private affairs he is so far
above petty personal assaults
that there need be no dwell¬
ing on that point. He is of
the stuff that honest people
make heroes of. Starting in
his business life with a hand¬
some inheritance, he has n<«t
been a drone or a drawback
in society. With every temp¬
tation to a life of ease and
uselessness, he has not been a
sluggard, but has multiplied
his holdings in enterprises re¬
quiring ability and courage of
a high order to insure their
success.
“Every dollar that William
R. Hearst has added to his
fortune has helped other peo¬
ple in a thousand ways.
“Nobody has ever been
ground down for his material
promotion. He has lifted
men up with himself and has
put no one below. No man’s
right to be a candidate for
President of the United States
is better than that of William
R. Hearst. It would be silly
to talk of his lack of fitness
in the face of the following
lie has. Men do not reach
the position he- now occupies
without having proved quali¬
fies and equipment of a high
order. Success in life like
his is not an accident, espe¬
cially since probity, next to
inborn ability, has been a
chief instrument in his prog¬
ress.”
Henry Marr, of Colum¬
bus, Ind., lives exactly in the
middle of this great country.
A stone in his barn} ard marks
the spot.
Virginia has passed a law
permitting the victim of a ne¬
gro’s assault to give her tes¬
timony by deposition, and not
compel her to go into court
and be subjected to cross-ex¬
amination. It is a good law,
and we recommend its con¬
sideration to the legislature
of Georgia.
The Influence of The Yotuh's Companion 'j
The gospel of good of The cheer Youth’s bright-J
ens every page
Comp anion. Although the paper
is nearly seventy-seven years of^
age, it does not look back on the
past as a better period than the
present.
The Companion believes that
the time most full of promise is
the time we are living in, and
*>verv week IV issue reflects the'
suirit of looking forward and not
, k
To more than half a million v-'
American families it carries e
ery week its message of cheer.
Its stories picture the true char¬
acteristics of the young men and
women of America. Its articles
bring nearly three million read¬
ers in touch with the best thought
of the most famous of living men
and women.
Annual Announcement Num¬
ber fully describing the principal
features of The Companion for
1904 will be sent to any address
fret'
The mnv subscriber who sends
$1.75 now for a year’s subscrip
t ion to The Companion receives
free The Companion Calendar for
THE MUBIiAY NEWS', FRIDAY, MARCH 18, HKH
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P. 6c O. BUGGIES
1904, lithographed in twelve col¬
ors and gold.
Tuk Youth’s Companion,
144 Berkol,y St., Boston, Mass.
For Corn, Flour, Meat, Mules
or Horses on time see J. W.
Langston, Amzi, Ga.
WE WILL BUY BACK
At full prices anything
purchased of us that
does not turn out as
represented. . . ,
This is our way of doing bus¬
iness. It is a new way and a
novel way, but it protects yon. It
keeps us from recommending
anything to you that we are not
sure of. It means good drugs,
pure drugs, and safety for you.
It means to us your good will,
your confidence, and, with it, a
continually increasing trade.
That is what we are after and
what we expect to get from you
by thus protecting you from any
risk in buying. We would be
glad to have your trade on the
above_ understanding. l>mmpt E vo r y
ulu
j j
HSffhtOWBf-TBUSY 'ihhon MSdlClHS _ CO.
’ Ceor'di Ig ’
__ ___
James R H n Ug h ” es M n u
’ -
“ T'
Patronage of Mirroundmgcotmmimty soite.ted, ,■ , ,
RUdal108118cheerfully answered -
Full ime of Medicines fcept on hand, especial
/T; the d ' vening ,rancr!y occll P ed hy
Col, J. J, Bates.
W. W. SEYMOUR
Attorney-at- Law - Dalton, Ga.
Collections a Specialty*.
Prompt Attention Given to
all Business.
Loans Negotiated.
See Jackson, the Dalton Ban
ber, for a neat haircut, an easy
shave or an electrical massage.
Qj rns an( J bunions removed SO
. * llcxer icturn. Trv In
Jackson for good work.
Mrs. N, A Parsons, of
Place, Ga., writes | ‘T had suf
fered with catarrh of the head for
more than ten years. My head
had been constantly aching and I
could find no relief or rest as a
result of any other remedy. I got '
a bottle of Chief Vann Catarrh
0ure an d ten days after I com-'
menced ‘ taking it the headache
had , entirely* disappeared, , , but , T I
kept up the treatment until I had j
Not a Cure All, But a Positive Cure for Catarrh
j CHIEF VANN
CATARRH CURE
Catarrh is a deep-seated mala-' furors from Catarrh want, how-jtion; and, if permitted to run
dy, and local applications, such as over, is a cure, and not merely a on, leads finally to consumption
inhalations, sprays or salves, can brief respite from the ravages of ;and death,
not reach the seat of the disease.: this health-sapper. If you are afflicted with Ca
Any treatment that will not pen- j Catarrh is an insidious and a , tarrh, act now ! Catarrh needs iminc
etrate below the surface of heal, the | deration, dangerous decay disease. of bones, It causes loss ul- radiate ^jves'you attention! Don p prompt t Delay!
affected parts can never of not on] •O “X elief,
and will at the best afford you appetite, failure of reasoning ] >ut also effects a permanent
but temporary relief. What suf- power; it kills energy and ambi- cure. That remedy is
CHIEF VANN CATARRH CURE
It Is Highly Endorsed, as Follows
used three bottles. I can
fully say that I have no trace of
my old complaint and feel better
every way than I have for ten
years. Words cannot express my
appreciation for the good Chief
\ aim Catarrh Cure has done me.
I can heartily recommend it to all
my friends in Gordon who suffer
with catarrh.”
______
Tliose who have ^ experienced
Put Up in Two Sizes, 50c and $1 Per Bottle
Manufactured By
The Murray Medicine Company
SPRING PLACE, GA.
FOR SALE BY
■ ■ s SAM H. KELLY...
the beneficial effects of Chief
N airn Catarrh (Jure are in a posi
to speak of its merits and give it
their hearty endorsement on all
occasions,
Mr. Wm. Barton, of Everett
Springs, Ga., according to his own
statement, was afflicted for twen
V Y ears wi th catarrh of the head;
and was cured by a few bottles of
I Chief V aim Catarrh Cure. Such
j cases are positive proof of the ef
I ficacy of this remedy.