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NEW
DEPOT SALOON
ATLANTA, 6A. i,
Headquarters for
Pore Liquors
Sells the Best,
CORN WHISKEYS
OLD WILD CAT
I quart 6«c, * quarts «J2.O0, gallon jug |1 86.
BKNNBTTSS#EKT MASH
1 quart 65c 4 quarts (2.60, gallon jug (2.26
BENNETT'S CATAWBA VALLEY
t quart 76c, 4 quarts (2.75, gallon jug (2.50
OLD MOUNTAIN COKw.
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts (2.U0, gallon jug (1.H6
oKNLTNK OLD GEORGIA CORN,
quart 00c, 4 quarts (2,80, gallon jug *2,00
McCARTVS PRIVATE STOCK.
1 quart (1.00, 4 quarts (3,50. gallon jug 8,00
SOUR MASH CORN
1-2 gallon jug 79c gallon jug $1.50
ERUIT BRANDIES
Marytmul Peach: 1 quart (1.00, 4 quarts (8.60,
gallon jug (8.26, Georgia Apple: 1 quart 76c, 4
quarts (2.75, gullou jug (2.60
Corn, Rye or Gin, $2.00 per dozen.short pints.
Send me your orders—sure treat, yon right.
Yours for business and pure liquors,
JIM McCARTY. Proprietor,
No. 28 W. Hunter 8t., ATLANTA, New Depot .Saloon.
Bell Phone 2960; Standard Phone 1801. Write for price list.
DR. B. E. HALL DENTIST
Will be in Spring Place first Tuesdays of each
month for the purpose ol doing Dental Work for
the General Public. Will spend one week or more if
necessary of each month.
Located with Dr. J, R. Hughes
S. C. BROWN
LEGHORNS
Are the greatest lay
ers of all the famous
non-setting breeds of
chickens.
\Ve have thoroughbred
stock and guarantee sat¬
isfaction.
Egg*! setting of
thirteen . . . . . 50c.
Call on or write
J.E. JOHNSON
SPRING PLACE, . GA.
TYNER’S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY
Many Have Dyspepsia and Don’t Know
It. Read Symptoms.
I)o you belch up wind? Do
you taste your food for an hour or
more alter eating? Do you see
bpecks or haze before the eyes?
Are you pale and haggard? Does
your heart flutter? Are you diz¬
zy at times? Do you have pains
in side or back? I)o you have
risings or pimples on the skin?
Are you low spirited? stomach? Is there Is a
sour taste in your
your breath had? If so you have
Dyspepsia, ami it is a dangerous
conditi. n, don’t delay, but take
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy as
directed on label. It is made for
just such troubles and symptom*.
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy re¬
moves acids from the stomach,
strengthens weak stomachs, helps
digest your food, stops all aches
ami pains, stops fluttering of the
heart, (sometimes called heart
disease). By making the food
digest new blood is made and all
pimples disabpear. Tyner’s Dys¬
pepsia Remedy, sold by druggists,
50c a bottle. Money refunded if
it fails to cure. Medical advice
and circular free by writing to
Tyner Dyspepsia Remedy Co.,
Augusta. Ga.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Qui¬
nine Tablets. Druggists refund
money if it fails to cure. E. W.
GROVES’ signature is on each
box. 25c.
RYE WHISKEYS.
01,0 COBWEUB
1 quart (1.25, 4 quarts {4.Ml, gallon jug JAW,
oOI.DKN WEDDING
1 quat t (1.00, 4 quart* £1.50. gallon jug $».».
MOUNTAIN SPRING (Lincoln County)
I qaurt (1.00, 1 quarts P 50, gallon jug ».<«
4 X MONOGRAm
1 quart (fie, 4 quarts $2.75, gnlRui jug $2.60.
GUKK.V BRIAR (.Lincoln County)
1 quart 76c, 4 quarts $2.75, gallon jug $2,50.
m,D MONACH
1 quart 06c, 4 quarts $2.60, ga'loii jug $2.26.
OI.D CAPITOL
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts »1,75, gallon jug at.60.
Genuine Bottlinq Distillery
I. w. Harper Yellow Stone
Re.l Top Green River
Old Wakermin Murray Hill Club
Mark Rogers Yellow Isabel
#1,25 Per Quart.
LEONARD & ALY,
Whole,'*alb Dkalkis in
Country Produce.
Dalton, Ga., June I, 1906.
We make t he following prices F, 0.
B. Dalton:
Hens, each 30 cU. Beeswax, per lb, 20 cts
Cocks, each 20 ets. Washed white wool 33c lb
Fries lar^e each, 20c Corn shelled, per bu. 70c
Fries, medium l&c Coni car. per bo duels
Fries, small, each 10c Peas, white lady, # 1.00
Guineas, eac.i, IFc Peas white, brown eye 1 00
Ducks, each 20c to 2'*> ■ *' ‘* black eyes, l 00
c.eese, each no sale J 00
Turkeys, per lb 12c W)C
Kyys, per dozen 12 l-2c tides, green, sailed 0c
Butter, per lb .0^ Hides, dry. salted lie
Hides, dry, flint. 12 cts
We earnestly solicit your pat¬
ronage and promise you our very
best service.
Very truly yours,
LEONARD & ALY.
Soup
Stomach
No appetite, loss of strength, nervoua- breath,
ness, headache, constipation, bad
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh
of the stomach are all due to indigestion. discov¬
Kodol relieves indigestion. This new
ery represents the natural juices of diges¬
tion as they exist tn a healthy stomach,
combined with the greatest known tonio
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for
dyspepsia does not only relieve indigestion
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy
helps all stomach troubles by cleansing,
purifying, sweetening and strengthening
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood. W . Va., says.—
" I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.
Kodol cured me and we are now using it in milk
tor baby."
Kodol Digests What You Eat.
Bottles only. Relieves indigestion, sour stomach,
beichin*oi sas. etc.
Prepared by E. C. DeWITT A CO., CHItjAQO.
For sale by S. H. Kelly.
In Sell Defense
Major Hamm, editor and manag¬
er of the Constitutionalist, Emi¬
nence, Ivy., when he was attack¬
ed, four years ago, by Piles,
bought a box of Bueklen’s Arnica
Salve, of which he says; “It
cured me in ten days and no
trouble since.” Quickest healer
of Burns, Sores, Cuts, Wounds.
2oe at 0. 0. Cole’s store.
K i LL^ COUCH?
and CURE the LUNGS
WITH Dr. King’s
New Discovery
«=> B f W 0NSUMPT10N 0UGHS OLDS and 60c Frs* Prie* &$1.00 Trial.
Sureat and Quickest Cure for all
THROAT and LUNG TROUB¬
LES, or MONEY BACK.
Lfl
THE MURRAY NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1006
FROM A VISITOR TO MURRAY.
To the Editor Murray News,
Spring Place, Da.
Dkak Mr. Johnson :
Having visited your place, I
was impressed very much with
the history and hind people. Our
jolly party was the guest of Mr.
Marion Williams, who is a most
THE TWO VOICES.
The voices of the muse, so still, came
And in common they had something the same
The one out of the past spoke as a sage ;
The other from life of this surging age,
For in the history of the one the living:
In the love of the other is ever entertaining.
Friends, listen to the one from the hoary age,
Speaking of the do and dare of heroes
Who, now immortal, although under the foes,
Have given to man the advantage
Of the struggle—so mighty—for the higher, the better light
Even in the boil of the battle or of the light.
The name of DeSoto reverently is spoken,
Telling of his fort in the story handed down
Until now it is passed from city to town,
Is it the truth kept in mind as a token
Of what life, primeval, was then
As in the light of today or this modern ken?
And clearly, too, was heard the name
Of Van, so esteemed as the chief of the tribe,
In peace, with rule supreme, he resides,
And known so well, for wide is his fame,
As a man, smoking at last the pipe of peace
To bring to his tribe the unwilling relief.
^
Now listen! and the other voice is heard—
It tells, us the first, the story of life,
But as dilferent in volume as drum and fife,
And yet its charm is in the power to surge
From the dark to light in the cycles of time
Evolution is a fact as truth must shine.
Unspoken was the name of DeSoto or that of Chief Van,
’Tis the song of a happy woman and a jolly man,
As*in comfort they moved from valley and hill
In quest of nature’s beauty or the song of the rill,
And each, like Sir Lannfol, found at last
The thing, most loved, is not in the past.
Is this the Holy Grail—the love of life
That makes the womanly search, the manly strife?
Rut as yet ’tis unheard, whether or not true,
The joy found by all or only by few.
I fancy, however, ’tis love divine
Awakened in the souls the guest sublime.
State News
, appointed: Bristol, t
Postmaster
Pierce county, George Rhoden
berry, vice, II. R. \. Iuten, re
signed.
The trustees of the Cuthbert
public school have elected Prof.
O. II. Dukes, of Newnan,as their
superintendent, and he has ao
the place.
S wia
r.ey, daughter of I)r, Harvey,
Friendship district.
Spivey Wilson, the 11-year-old
of Mr. F. B. Wilson, of For¬
was badly bitten by a .mad
The dog first attacked some
goats and in trying to defend
his goats the dug bit him.
William Avers killed a large
rattlesnake on a shelter attached
the barn of H. M. Childs at
Clarkesville. The snake was
about three and a half feet long
and six inches around. It had
twelve rattles and a button.
Georgia will be represented at
the'Jamestown exposition to be
, held ,, at Hampton „ , ,, Roads. , Such a.
, has been , made , possible , . by ,,
b y t he Senate of the
house resolution of Mr. Russell,
of Muscogee, to appropriate $30,
000 for a state exhibit.
The of , r \ aldosta ,, , and ,
negroes
section are busily engaged in
laying plans for the colored state
fair to be held from the 2nd to
tl,e D th of October Re v. T.
‘ 1111 on ® *, ie tai
spirits, says that the fair f will
draw from 5,000 to 10,000 colored
people to the city during
week.
While placing cars on the
die Georgia mills side tracks at
Eatonton a Central
freight train ran through the
building doing considerable dam
age. A largh purt of the brick
wall was torn away and consider
able damage done to the mam
shafting and other machinery,
Fortunately no lives were lost.
genial host, IIis type of a per¬
fect gentleman and big, warm
heart so wen all of our hearts
that I—with the common con
sent of the party— do gratefully
dedicate this* poem to him.
Very truly yours,
David M. Aubml-b.
Georgia Soldiers Use Real
Bullets Against Regulars.
Ohattancoga, Tenn., Aug. 10.—
R ea j bullets were used today by
ft First Georgia regiment in its
with the Seventeenth
Infantry regulars, and as a result
one private was wounded.
Col. Gordon’s regiment was
the main body of the “Blue”
army,
The Seventeenth regulars form¬
ed the main body of the “Brown”
The *......
.
ade ensued. During the heat of
the fight, bullets began to sing
above the heads and in the ranks
of the regulars A rush was
made by the latter for cover.
They sprang behind trees; they
lav flat upon the ground; they
did everything but turn their
back and run. One private,
whose name was not given by the
hospital authorities, was slightly
wounded.
Two companies of Col. Gor¬
don’s regiment was ordered off
the field and the maneuvers ab¬
ruptly ended. Mystery seems to
surround the situation. An in
vestugation may place , the
re¬
SPOHS1UIlitV ...... r
.
The End of the World
(>f t . rou5 , es thiit robhed H
Wolfe, of Bear Grove, la., of all
usefulness, came when he began
taking Electric Bitters. He
write6 . »‘ Two yeara ag0 Kidney
trouble caused me great suffer
ing, which I would never have
survived had I not taken Electric
Bitters. JMS;,™,*;.
all Stomach, Liver and Kid
ne y complaints. Blood diseases,
Headache, Dizziness and Weak
or bodily decline. Price 50c.
Guaranteed by 0. O. Cole, mer¬
chant.
The Columbian silver pieces
that were gotten out by the gov
eminent during the Chicago ex
position have caused a good deal
of confusion in the Valdosta sec
tion recently, due to the fact
that so many people thought they
were counterfeit, of obsolete,aud
would not take them.
Big Reduction
IN
Men’s and Ladies Oxfords
in
SUMMER DRESS GOODS
AND CLOTHING.
Ill 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,
Caylor & Yates
DALTON, GA.
New Idea in Envelopes.
“A new idea in envelopes,”
said the stationer. “I think it
ought to go.”
The envelope was made like
any other, save that the flap was
not gummed. The necessary
gum was on the envelope’s back,
in a V-shaped strip to correspond
with the flap’s edges.
“You see,” said the stationer,
“this new idea does away with
gum-eating. When you apply
your tongue to this flap, you
don’t lick up a lot of gum, to
give you a bad taste in your
mouth for the next half hour,
but you simply lick the plain
white paper edge flap, then press
it down as usual, and it attaches
itself to the dry gum, and it is
firmly icaled.
“It's the same idea as that of
licking the cornsr of the envel¬
ope, thus escaping a gum lunch¬
eon, when you want to apply a
postage stamp.”
A MysterySolved.
“Ilow to keep off periodic at¬
tacks of biliousness and habitual
con'stiDation was a mystery that
Dr. King’s New Life Fills solved
for me,” writes John N. Pleasant,
of Magnolia., Ind. The only pills
that are guaranteed to give per¬
fect satisfaction to everybody or
money refunded. Only 25c at 0.
0. Cole’s store.
Nol His Fault, Though.
“It is a very fine thing to be
brave and generous and noble,”
^ ^ ^ ^ ed ,
tor and Harvard teacher, accord
in . ® *° an exchange; but some
times we are generous and noble
against our will. Then, of
course, we deserve no credit.
“Of this type was a young
married man whose father-in-law*,
a reputed millionaire, buist in
on him one day and groaned:
. “All is lost! I am utterly
ruined!”
fci 4 Ahem,’ said the son-in-law.
‘Then I married for love after
all.’ ”
World's Most Famous Saying.
“What is the most famous
saying ever made by man?” un
editor asked.
Some thought that Caesar,
some thought Socrates, some that
Lincoln, some that Nelson, had
said the most memorial tiling;
but finally the palm was awarded
to Euclid the mathematician.
Euclid went to Alexandria to
tea'ch Petolamy Soter, the King
of Egypt, mathematics. Peto
lemey plodded at his problems a
week nr two, and then asked
Euclid impatiently if tlmre was
not some special, shorter way by
which he could he taught.
“Sire.” Euclid auswered,
"there i * no royal road to learn¬
ing.’
DeWiit’s Witch Hazel Salve
For Piles, Burns, Sores.
LOOKING!
If you are looking f®r loca¬
tion, business or school write,
Beal Estate Co.,
FAIKMOUNT, GA.
Need fifty stores to care
for the trade that has
been going to Cartersville
and Rome.
COST YOU ONLY ONE GENT
to ask for map and other
information.
MAUD ERWIN,
Secretary.
Fairmount, Ga.