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Furniture
Qiir big stock is now ready for Fall Trade.
We have bought heav¬
ier than usual for this
Fall and will give our
customers good de¬
pendable goods at less
prices than any other
concern in the country
“Goods well bought are
half sold.”
COME AND SEE
FOR YOURSELF
LEONARD, McGHEE FURNITURE GO.
DALTON, GEORGIA
Are The Best wagons in this Section.
If you need a good wagon and want it very
cheap, be sure and see me bgfore buyine.
THOMAS J. BRYANT,
DALTON, GEORGIA.
Low Rate Excursions
VIA
Southern Railway
To Knoxville, Tenn.
Account Summer School of the South,
June 19-July 27. Tickets will be sold
from all points, June 17,18.19,13,24,58),
July 7, 14, 15. Limit fifteen days from
date of sale. Tickets may be extended to
September 30, 1906, bv deposit and pay
ment of fifty cents at time of deposit.
To Asheville, N. C.
account. Annus! Conference Young Pe >
p|#’s Missionary Movement, .ltiue29,Julv
8, 1906. Tickets will be sold from ell
pptuts, June 26, 27, 28, with final limit
July 10, 1906, and also Commend <1 Law
League, July 30, AoiiUst 4, 1906. Tickeis
will be sold from «11 points Ju’y 25, 26,27.
Limit August 8 1906. Tickets mar be
ex ended to Sept, 30, 1906, by deposit
and payment of fifty cents at time of
depotit.
To Nashville, Tenn.
Account Peabody College Summer School
fof re&chets, June 11-Auausi 10. Tickets
will be Hold from all points June, 10, 11,
12, 18, 19, 20, Juiy 5, 6, 7. Lfniit fifteeu
days from date of sale. Tickets may by
extended and payment tp Scot. Of fifty 30, 158)6, cents by limp (jeposil of
at
deposit,
There are many delightful summer resorts on and
reached by The Southern Railway in “The Land of the
Sky, M “The Sapphire Country,” East Tennessee, West¬
ern North Carolina and Virginia.
For further information about rates, Sleeping Car res¬
ervations, etc., call on or write any agent of the company.
R. L. BAYLOR,
Trav. Pass. Agt., Ilf W. Ninth St.,
Chattanooga Tenn.
*
WE Are Here to Give
Qlff payrolls what something tfyey want- We do not try to induce
them iArsaparilL, to take he Hood’s else. Sarsaparilla. If a customer He wants Hood’s iml
gets is not
portnned customers to right. take It our is own both make, pleasant We and like profitable, to treat We our
have built np the largest drug establishment in Dalton by
gratifying everybody in our Murray patrous’ County wishes, should There nut is trade no reason here. why We
oan give them decidedly the best service and our prices
are fixed altogether according to what thing® are worth
• •• Fincher & Nichols
When you have a cold it is well
rs to ho De very verv e&rpfiil c&reiui about anout uainy using
anything that will cause consti
pation. Be particularly careful
COTTON PICKERS
RIDE IN STYLE
So Scarce Is Labor that Many
Are Transported to and
From Fields.
Columbus, Ga., Sept. 16.—So
scarce is labor in Georgia that in
some instances cotton pickers are
being hauled miles to the field.
A Columbus traveling man re
lates an instance in a county
north of Muscogee county where
a lot of pickers are transported to
the fields, five miles away every
morning, paid 50 cents per bun
dred for picking, and hauled back
home in style late in the after
noon. Of course such cases are
rare, but they illustiate the great
demand for labor in the agricult
ural districts. Forty and fifty
cents per hundred is being paid
for cotton picking through West
Georgia and East Alabama.
Traveling men going out from
Oolumbus say that the cotton
crop in their territory is the
poorest in years.
TYNER’S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY
Many Have Dyspepsia and Don’t Know It.
Do you belch up wind? Taste
your food after eating? See
specks before your eyes? Are
pale and haggard? Does your
heart flutter? Are you dizzy?
Do you have pains in side or
hack? Risings on the skin? Are
you low spirited? Is there a 6our
taste? Breath bad? If so, you
have Dyspepsia, and it is a dan
gerou* condition. Dsm’t delay,
but take Tyner’s Dyspepsia Rem
edy. It is made for just such
troubles and symptoms. Tyner s
Dyspeosia Remedy removes acids
from the stomach, strengthens
weak stomachs, helps digest your
food. 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., Augus
ta, Ga,
MUSICIAN HELD ON
10 WILDCAT’S TAIL,
Decatur, Ala., Sept. lfi.-Gas
per First, a well-known musician
and a member of the New Deca¬
tur orchestra, had a most desper¬
ate encounter with a wild cat in
which his arms and hands were
badlv torn and scratched up.
Mr. First owns a farm at Gar¬
den City, and has been down
there for a few days on a vaca¬
tion. The country around Gar¬
den City is rough and rocky,with
extensive woods and deep ra¬
vines. Mr. First was going
through the woods on his farm in
search of muscadines, and in his
search he discovered some fine
ones near by a large hollow log.
He went to the log and was pick
ing the muscadines when he
heard something growl in the log
and saw something move. Think¬
ing this was a ’possum, and being
a lover of ’possum meat, Mu
First ran his arm info the and
grabbed the animal by the tail.
When he did this the animal
growled the louder, and it was
not long before he discoveied
that he had a wildcat by the fail,
The cat plowed and kmkod and
scratched terribly, and although
Mr, First was getting his hands
almost torn to pieces, he held on
to the cat’s tail, being afraid
that if he turned it loose i.t would
claw his eyes out. Finally the cat
pulled loose from him and with
one terrific squall it made a
bound into the woods and Wfts
soon lost from vjeiy,
Mr, T'ifgt, in r-eiaMng the story
fa hi 8 friends, says that he hopes
that it will b,p his iast experience
with 4 wild cat.
to Death.
Because her stomach was so
weakened by useless drugging
that she could not eat, Mrs.Mary
H. Walters, of 8t. Olair St„ Co¬
lumbus, O., was literally starving
to death- Kim writes > “My stom¬
ach was so weak from useless
drugs that I could not eat, and
my nerves so wrecked that I could
not sleep; and not before I was
given up to die was I induced to
jtry Electric Bitters; with the
| wonderful ment began result at that and improve¬
; once, a com
plete cure followed.” Best health
Tonic on earth. 50c, Guaranteed
! by C. C. Cole, grocer,
To Richmond, Va.
Account Biennial Meeting tirami United
Oi ler of Odd Fellows, October 2, 6.
Tickets may be extended to August 11,
1000, by deposit and payment of titty
Cents at time of deposit.
To Memphis, Tenn.
Account International Convention Broth¬
erhood of St. Andiews of the Protestant
Episcopal chuteli, Oct. 18, 21, 1908
Tickets will be soil! from all points Oct
la, 16, 17, 18, 1906. Limit Oct. 30, 190‘
Tieke s may be extended to Nov .30,15)06,
by deposit and paym mt of fifty cents at
time of deposit.
To Washington, D. C.
Account Negro Young People’s Christian
and Educational Collar ss, July 3, 8,1900
Tickets will desold from all points June
29 and July 2. 3, 1900, Limit July 11,
1900. Tickets may lie extended to August
II, 1900, bv deposit and payment of fifty
cents at time of deposit.
To Milwaukee, W»s.
Account Grant) ,lv i8,1907. je Fraternal Oidero.
Eaglps’ sold ftotp August all 14, Tickets will
be points August 10, 11, 12.
Final limit August 22, 1900.
about preparations containing
opiates. Use Kenndy’s Laxative
Honey and T „ which stops the
cough and moves the bowels.
Sold by S. H. Kelly.
THE MURRAY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1006
CORN COBS YIELD
ALCOHOL FREELY, AS
DO CORN
Washington, September
In the manufacture of alcohol
from corn cobe and corn stalks at
small cost, the department
agriculture is developing a new
industry.
The department says it is likely
to be a large commercial value,
Investigations which the depart
ment is making at Hoopeston,
HI*., have proved that the large
quantities of corn cobs, which
every year heretofore have gone
to waste, can be converted into
alcohol in lufiicient quantities to
justify the erection of a distill
ing plant in connection with a
corn cannery. The department
of agricultural sent two chemists
to Hoopeston to make experi
ments at a large cannery there.
They have succeeded by simple
methods of fermentation, in get
ting a yield of eleven gallons of
alcohol from a ton of green cobs,
and by similar methods in get
tmg six gallons of alcohol from
a ton of green corn stalks. A
statement concerning the expe
riments by one of the scientists
of the department reads:
“At different times during the
past twenty-five years, the de
partment has conducted experi
meats along the same line, but
with common field corn stalks.
These tests . , show . that , there ,, are
240 pounds of fermentable sub
stance in a ton of green field corn
g^aikg, which will yield about
half of their weight in absolute
alcohol. In round number.,a . ton
of stalks will produce 100 pounds
of alcohol or 200 pounds of proof
,pj r jts. As a gallon of alcohol
weighs nearly seven pounds,
there would .... be ten gallons „ of , al- ,
oohol in a ton of stalks,
,‘iNot only are the oobs a
product, but the irregular
spoiled ears of corn are as well.
Hand labor is as yet employed in
the husking and all others are
put in as the wage is based upon
a measure full. As the measures
of ears are emptied upon the
conveyors, the ears unfit for use
are culled out. The culled ears
also are waste. The expense of
bringing them to the plant where
they are cast aside is quite as
much as the perfect ears. The
addition of the corn on the cobs
adds further to the possibilities
of the alcohol obtainable from a
ton of stalks and cob,”
In those days of rush and hurry
courtesy is often forgotten. In
the mad, pell mell rush of our
life little things are done to of¬
fend that we rather remained
undone. A hastily weal
and its resultant headache may
cause us social or financial loss.
Thp wise man or woman is the
one who relieves little ills of this
sort by a little dose of Kodol For
Dyspepsia. It digests what you
eat and puts your stomach baok
into shape. Sold by H, Kelly.
His Throat from Ear to Ear.
Lexington, Ga., Sept. 14,—This
morning at 2 a. in. Alex H. Paul,
45 years old, a prominent young
farmer near Sandy Cross, 7 miles
east of here, became despondent
over his crop, which ha* bothered
him some time,
He deliberately arose from his
bed thi* mwmuig, went to a near¬
by grindstone* pulled out his
knife, opened it, sharpened it on
the grindstone, then went to the
front door, rat on the steps and
wrote in the sand these words:
“Goodby. God bless you, 1
did it myself.” Then he out his
throat from ear to ear,
Alex Paul was a good fellow,
well liked and leaves a wife and
aeyen children. He had a large
family connection in the county.
“To Cure a Felon"
soys Sam Kendall, “just of Phillips
burg, Kans., cover it over
with Bueklen’s Arnica Salve and
the Salve will do the rest.”
Quickest cure for Burns, Boils
Sores, Scalds, Wounds, Piles, Ec|
zema, Salt Rheum, Chapped
Hands, So* 1 * Feet and Sore Eyes,
(inly 26c at O, C. Cole’s store.
Guaranteed.
New Store in
DALTON
best and lar=
gest in Georgia.
Bring me your
trade produce
barter and get
spot cash or
groceries.
Especially-
Oats and Cora.
S. E, CARTER,
GROCER.
Old M en
Young Men
Our Fall stock of Clothing, Shoes
and Hats have arrived and if you’ll
come to see us you’ll find just what
you want, and you don’t take a
chance when you buy a Suit of
Clothes, a pair of Shoes or a Hat
from us. Our motto is to “make
’em good” if they are not as we
tell you. Come in and look at our
splendid stock, the pleasure is ours.
The pleasure will be yours if you
buy and wear one of our “S. M. &
S. Suits, a pair of “Peters” Shoes or
a “Liberty Brand” Hat.
Yours to serve,
Caylor & Yates
“ON THE CORNER’’