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UJ
DEPOT SALOON ® \
ATLANTA, 6A. A
I,
Headquarters for
Pure Liquors
Sells the Best.
CORN WHISKEYS
ODD WII.D CAT
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts i$2.0«, gallon jug 11 85.
BENNETT'S SWEET MASH
1 quart 05c 4 quarts 12,80, gallon jug 12.26
BENNETT'S CATAWBA VAM.HV
1 quart 76c, 4 quarts $2,76, gallon jug $2.60
ODD MOUNTAIN CORN.
1 quart 60c, 4 quart* $2.»o, gallon jug $1.85
uKNt'INK OI.D GEORGIA CORN,
quart 80c, 4 quarts $2.80, gallon jug *2.00
McCAHTv’S PRIVATE STOCK.
1 quart $1.00, 4 quarts $3.50, gallon jug 11,00
SOUR MASH CORN
1-2gallon jug 76c gallon jug $l,m
BRUIT BRANDIES
Maryland Peach : I quart $122), 4 quarts $S,fiO,
gallon jog $8.25, Georgia Apple: 1 quart 75c, 4
quarts $2,75, gallon jug $2,741
Corn, Rye or Gin, $2.00 per dozen short pints.
Send me your orders—sure treat you right.
Yours for business and pure liquors,
JIM McCARTY, Proprietor,
No. 28 W. Hunter St., ATLANTA, New Depot Saloon.
Bell Rhone 2960: Standard Rhone 3801. Write for price list.
A sweet breath adds to the
joys of a kiss. You wouldn’t
want to kiss your wife, mother or
s^eet heart with a had breath
You can’t have a sweet breath
without a healthy stomach. \ ou
can’t have a healthy stomach
without perfect digestion. There
is only one remedy that digests
what you eat and makes the
breath as sweet as a rose—and
that remedy is Kodol for
sia. It is a relief for sour stem
»«h, palpitation of the heart,and
as S'arjCTJriiff:
tion. Take a little Kodol after
your meals and see what it will
do for you. Sold by 8. H. Kelly.
l^hpraateed ________
WBSM m Cure for Plies
’ T trudiiig JKBT Piles. Blind, Druggists Bleeding, I’io
are
authorized to refund money Jure if
RAZO OINTMENT fails to
ill (I tO 14 days, 50c.
w Sli: mi
v
£M V! : ( I!! */ -i_j a * i i SUPERB
!
m At * Si 5 fit* 5’S' m
>1 t I f, R 1 m
;W J i A ! s I
•y.: : M k . i 1 CLOTHES
:
'’■j
1 T 4.
m m 1 m is the most pop=
m ll ill E i brand and
# Ajm m ular
I I ii fj tin
II ii-fl we have them
Pi m 8 * ■ “ : in all of the lat=
mm ; M
?.c» pi .1 f 3“ =• Rt s ll i» S est styles. Yoir
a ■; IS IS o M s is bSS ‘ . f| 5 M. should wear a
y
% \ Aim : . 5
i i a ■t suit of “Su =
\ IK
i \ m |l v Ti I ll perb” to be “in
\ the swim.”
s \ \ \ \
£
Our line of Dry Goods Is complete and
we can furnish you with anything you
need.
Dalton prices paid for
all kinds of produce.
Yours truly.
J. L. ROBINSON.
RYE WHISKEYS.
01,1) COBWKBB
I quart 11 25 ,4 quart* 14,50, gallon jug $4.(X>,
oOl.DKN WEDDING
1 quart $1.00. 4 quarts JJ1.&0, gallon jug fi.W
MOUNTAIN SPRING (Lincoln County)
lqaurt $1.00, 4 quarts fStO, gallon jug »M
4 X MONOGKAm
1 quart 7 *c, I quart* $2,75, gallon jug $4.00.
GREEN i BRIAR (I.incoln County)
I quart 76c. quarts $2.75, gallon jug $2.50.
OI.D MO.kACH
1 quart 85c, 4 quarts $2,51), gallon jug $2.15.
oi.d CAprroi,
1 quart 60c?4 quart* *1.75, gallon jug *1.50.
Genuine Bottlinq Distillery
t. W. Harper Yellow Stone
Red Top Green River
Old Wakemail Murray Hill Glut,
Mark Rogers Yellow
*1.25 Per Quart.
THE ORIGINAL
_ IVITIlfP flflilfUi (PVfiRQ
I.AXA I IVt llUlluH OlKUl
wpeiiin* Por a „ ^ cold* and from ass)#u th. .y»- )n M ^ ggwWg;
bowel., a certain §»***£•
whoo P in*-cou f h.
fc$J''fa contai l nirfgOp‘mieW* L l ^A^r ^fe ^|T^
rmoYSi 2m
|fCMMCDY Q um I IVITUir iVE
||flS||j¥ nllnL V | 1 Mil ID
UVI,h 1 - 1 1,11
PJ*SPARED AT THK LABORATORY OP
«• °* ° oW,TT * co " CM,OAQO - u -
' (,r m i (> i )y « L it r u> n y
’ ’ ‘
™*oriqihallaxative cough „.. au , svkup WM „
KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE HQNEY W »TAR
Bui Clover HloMora and done; B«i on Every Battle
THE MURRAY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1006
"Boneless Turkey."
“Observer,” in New York Times.
Years ago when I lived in Chi¬
cago there occurred an unusual
blizzard all over the plains coun¬
try. Rain had fallen for some
hours when a sudden drop of 40
degrees in temperature occurred.
Thousands of j a c k rabbits
throughout Kansas, Nebraska,
Minnesota and the Dakotas and
Colorado were sitting in theii
forms with their fur wet from
the rain, and before they Knew
it were frozen fast so they could
not get out. They were frozen
to death, and during the next
few days the homesteaders and
stock men gathered them in and
shipped them to Chicago in car¬
load lots. One of the packing
houses, which has recently been
“getting it in the neck” for put¬
ting out dirty and fraudulent
meat products, sent a man into
South Water street, with instruc¬
tions to buy,Jand deliver at the
packing house 50,000 of these
jack rabbits, ami he performed
his commission in one day.
The jacks were canned, labeled
"Boneless Turkey” and put on
the market.
They were good enough to oat,
but the packers paid only about
H cents a pound for them, where¬
as tuskeys would have cost a!
that time 12 cents a pound. The
long-eared birds were sold at the
same rate as if they had been
rea ® leathered birds. The net
weight of these 50,0(1(1 jack rab
bits was probably 250,0(10 pounds.
Sold to tlie trade at 17 cents a
pound, the transaction netted the
packers probably $42,500.
was only , one of , the ., many fraud , ,
nlent games they have beei
workine g on the innocent and eul
Lble public during these manj
yours. They can afford to lose a
r« .......... a.,,,,
agitation and still have plenty ol
" 10l,ej l^fi l eft
’
^nnedy’s Laxative Honey and
lar is tne original laxative cougli
svrup and combines the qualities
necessary to relieve the cough
t pijrg0 the system of cold.
U 0 .vta.ns no opiates. Sold by S.
H. Kelly.
Id Trouble
“I beg your pardon, but I'm
in trouble,” said a man who was
well dressed and plainly excited,
to Sergeant Temperly, at No. B
police station, Artnourdale, yes¬
terday, says a Chicago paper.
“Can you help me out?”
“I’ll do my best,” answered
the obliging sergeant, “Sit
down and tell me about ic.”
“No, I simply can’t sit down,”
said the man, nervously.
“Must be serious to affect you
like that,” said the sergeant.
“What is it?”
“You see, it is this way,” said
the man. “I came in on an
early train from the west; and
as 1 got up late, when the train
was but a few minutes from the
Union depot,I dressed m all haste.
1 had some business to attend
in Armordale right away, and 1
paid my street car fare from some
change 1 had in my overcoat
pocket. But when I was stand¬
ing at the corner of Fifth and
Kansas a moment ago, for the
lirst time I unbuttoned my over
coat and looked inside, and
found—”
“That you had been robbed
while on the train?” broke in
sergeant interestedly.
“No,” said the man. “I found
that 1 had put my trousers pit
backwards, and 1 can’t sit down.
What I want is a private place to
change ’em.”
lie got it.
Does evil still,your whole life fill?
Does woe lietide?
Your thoughts abide on suicide?
Tou need a pill!
Now for prose and facts—De
Witt’s Little Early Risers are tin
uost pleasant and reliable pills
Known today. They never gripe.
Sold by 8. H. Kelly.
The Word "None.”
Correspondence Philadelphia
Ledger.
Grammatical principles, as af¬
fecting words, ure not established
solely by derivation, but by usage
as well. Language grows, and ii
growing makes changes, and thus
words often seem to forget theii
origin and take on a form and
use that give little indication of
r he source from which they came.
“None” is singular orplural in
sense precisely according to it>
application, “How much bread
was eaten? None.” Here “none”
means “no bread,” and is singu
lar. “No quantity” is the idea.
"How many passengers weri
■meed? None.” Here “none”
means “no passengers,” and is
olural. “No number” is the
i nplication—“not even one.”
The principle is: “None,” re¬
ferring to quantity, is singular;
“none,” referring to number, is
olural.
“The proof of correctness!’ is
not to be found invariably in the
assumption that what seems log¬
ically correct is therefore correct
necessarily.
In evolution heredity alone is
not to be considered, but also
variation, which is always a pow
erfi 1 foce.
TYNER’S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY
A Guaranteed Cure. Many Have D yspep -
sia and Don’t Know It.
The purchase price (50c) of
Tyner’s Dysrepsia Remedy will
I be returned if it fails to cure or
relieve dyspepsia or indigestion
in any form. Take as directed
on label. Many people have flut¬
tering of the heart, risings or
pimples on the skin, dizzy feel¬
ings, aches and pains in the side
ur back, weak kidneys, constipa¬
tion, belching of wind, blurred
eyesight, tainted bad breath,
j hawking and spitting, headaches,
j acid stomach, pale skin and don’t
i know it’s dyspepsia. If you have
i any or all of these symptoms take
! Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy and a
1 cure is certain, sure and lasting,
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy
strengthens weak stomachs,helps
digest your food, stops aches and
pains, (stops colic immediately).
It tastes good and warms your
stcmach from the first dose.
Cures where all else fails. Try
it. Druggists, 50c a bottle. Oir
and medical advice free
writing Tyner’s Dyspepsia Rein
Co., Augusta, Ga.
FOLEYSHONEY'TAS
Tor children; tafr, sure- Ai« oplatr*
Big Reduction
Men’s and Ladies Oxfords
IN
SUMMER DRESS GOODS
AND CLOTHING.
In order to reduce our
immense stock of sum¬
mer goods, we will
name you prices that
can’t fail to interest
»
you.
Space forbids us going
into detail about prices
but if you’ll come in
and see us we will con¬
vince you that we
mean what we say.
Yours to serve,
£
DALTON, GA.
Jennie Had Arrived.
A West End avenue man un¬
dertook to meet his unknown girl
cousin at the station on Tuesday,
says the New York Sun. This is
how he did it. He approached a
Young woman in blue and asked :
“Are you Miss Blake?”
i » No,” said the young woman,
“I am not.”
“1 hope you’ll excuse me,” he
explained. “I am here to meet
i Miss Blake. She is my cousin.
1 have never seen her. My sister
Kate is the only member of our
family who knows her, and she
couldn’t come. She told me 1
would know her because she is
pretty. ‘Just pick out the pret
tiest girl in the station and you'll
be sure strike Jennie,’ she said.
The young woman blushed, the
young man sighed.
“I don’t know who to ask next,
he said. “There doesn’t seem
to be anybody else in the whole
shooting match that come up to
the description. I guess Jennie
didn’t come.”
A tall girl in brown sat beside
the girl in blue. She got up and
glared at the young man. “She
did, said the girl in brown.
“Oh, Lord,” said he, “are
you—”
“1 am,’’said the girl in brown.
And of course nobody could ex¬
pect a girl to be friends with a
man after that.
Sitting Bull’s Letter.
If Maj. Gen. Ewell 8. Otis,
now on the retired list of the
United States army, still owns a
written communication once sent
to him by the Sioux chief, Sit¬
ting Bull, he has a missive Mich
would probably bring a high price
at an autograph sale, says the
Chicago Post. The letter was
sent to Gen. Otis when he was
lieutenant colonel , , of ,,, the ,,, Twenty- .
second Infantry, which was in
tlie field in pursuit of the Sioux
immediately following the Cus¬
ter massacre. Here is Sitting
Bull’s letter:
Yellowstone—I want to know
what you are doing traveling on
this road. You scare all the buf
faloes away. I want you to turn
back from here. If you don’t I
will fight you again. I want you
to leave what you have got here
and turn back from here. I am
your friend.
Sitting Bull.
I mean all the rations you have
got and some powder. Wish you
would write as soon as you can.
There was some humor in this
communication of Sitting Bull.
He asked the doughty old war¬
rior, Otis, to retreat and to leave
all the rations and a part of his
powder, in order that the Sioux
might have forage and ammuni¬
tion enough to put them in con¬
dition to make another Ouster
massacre possible. Inasmuch as
Otii and his command, a day or
two earlier, had thrashed Sitting
Bull out of his moefcasins, the
humor of the communication be¬
comes the more saliant.
Vast Difference.
There is a certajn bishop whose
sense of smell is extremely acute
and who, as is usual in such
cases, dislikes extremely any
oder whatever, says Harper’s
Weekly. It happens that his
son, a young college man, has
what his father regards as an ex¬
tremely vulgar liking for extracts
and scented soaps, and not long
ago there was a little tilt be¬
tween them upon the subject.
The young man appeared glow¬
ing healthily from a bath, but
with an unmistabable scant of
violets hanging about him.
“I see you have been indulg¬
ing in your taste for perfume,
Harold,” the bishop remarked
coldly.
“Oh, no, that’s only soap,”
the young fellow replied easily:
“and yon know cleanliness is
next to godliness.”
“Possibly,” the bishop replied;
“but you may be sure that
scented soap is a long way from
the odor of sauctity.”