Newspaper Page Text
• Furniture
Our big stock is now ready for Fall Trade.
We have boughtjieav
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 CO,
DALTON, GEORGIA
WAGONS
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.
Ae.enUot Summer Sebool of Ibe South,
June 19-Jnly 27. Tenet* «iil be sold
trom a!l points, June 17. IS, 19. 2d, 21, •'» 1,
July 7, id, Id L mil fifteen days from
d tte >>f sale. Ti ke s may be eviendrd to
■September JO, 19t:H, be deposit mid pay
ment of fifty cents at time oi dfoo-it.
To Asheville, N. C.
Account Annual Coiderem-c Yom-g IV'
|,|e’s Micsionary Movement, June29 J(|lv
S, J90ti. Ticket« will lie “OlJ fro it ell
points, June 29, 21, 28, with final 'limit
July 10, 19%, and also Cutumetvi <1 J tw
League, July JO, Am/it-t J, 1900. Tb-te s
w |l be soli! front til oyints Ju y 25, 20 27
Limit August ? 19% Tiehets.tiiav
e* (•tilled to Sep 1 , 30, 19 ti, bv d po it
end payment of tiny cents at time of
depotii. '
To Nashville, Tenn.
Account Peabody College .Summer S ho
fof t< a» hr*!8, June ll-Aiiii’S 10. Ti k«!s
will be sold from tib poi its June, 19. ] I
12. IS, 19.20, July .7,8, 7. I.fttiit lift. . u
d tvs front date of sale. I'iekt ts m y be
extended to Seqt. 30. 1900, by deposit
and payment oi fifty cents at time of
tliiposft.
There are many delightful •summer resorts on of and
reached by The Southern Railway in “The Land the
Sky, ‘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, I
Tray. Pass. Ayt., Ill W. Ninth St., ■
Chattanooga - ■
” !
WE Are Here to Give |
- A |
Our patrons what they want. We do not try to induce
them to take something else. If a customer wants Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, he gets Hood’s Sarsaparilla. He is not im
portuned to take our own make. We like to treat our
customers right. It is both pleasant and profitable. We
have built up the largest drug establishment in Dalton by
gratifying our patrous’ wishes. There is no rttas.m why
everybody in Murray County should not trade here. ,We
can give them decidedly the best service and our prices
are fixed altogether according to what things are worth.
• • • Fincher & Nichols
True and tried friends of the
fainilv—DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers. Best for results and best
to take. Rosy cheeks and spark-
To Richmond, Va.
Account biennia! Mee ing (iiaml F. i cit
Oi lei' of Odd Fellows, October 2, ti.
I ieuiits m.iy be xtemled to Augu-u II .
19%, bv be obt and p: yon nt of lit In
cents at lime of deposit.
To Memphis, Tenn.
Account International Convention Broth¬
erhood of St. AmhewH of e|i»* I*iote.-lant
Episcopal chu cli, Oct 1£, 21, 190ti
Tickets will hr* 80 (t from all points Oct
In, H}, 17, 18s 1900. E mil Oct. 10Q
Tu*kfi s may be 1 tq Nqv..JO, 1
by iwp«»*it and payip nt of Hity cents
if me oi deposit.
To Washington, D. C,
Auriimt Negro Young JVepleV Pbiisliao
anil Jvhr\ttional Conti' ss, Ju y.'i, 8,190(1
I’tokets will de sold font all points J tine
29 and July 2. 1900. L mil July II,
1900. Ticketsmhy I o extended to August
19%, bv oepo-it and payment of fifty
!,t nui * 1,1 0 s * t *
Tn 1 « /UllWtIUKee, MiltwmltSP YV/jc WIS.
At count (fraud .17 lie Fraternal Oi dero
Ragles’ August 14, is, ltlo7. Tickets wnl
be sold fiom a.II po uts August 1U, 11, 12
Final limit August 22. 1900.
ling eyes follow the use of these
dependable little pills. They do
not gripe or sicken. Sold by S.
j H. Kelly.
TilK MURRAY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1906
I). W. MITCHELL PASSES AWAY
Fatal Stroke of Paralysis on Wed¬
nesday Night Causing Death.
Mr. David W. Mitchell, a well
known citizen of Whitfield coun¬
ty, was stricken with paralysis
on Wednesday night from which
he never recovered. His death
occurred at seven o’clock Thurs¬
day evening.
Mr. Mitchell had been in his
usual good health and was engag
ed in his duty as mail carrier be¬
tween Dalton and Spring Place
up until. Wednesday afternoon.
He retired Wednesday night, not
having iiiad,e any complaint to
any member of his son’s family,
Mr. Will Mitchell, sphere he was
living. The fatal stroke, came
some time during the night, as
the members of the family heard
him struggle and upon investi¬
gation found him lying on the
floor. He had evidently attempt¬
ed to arise not realizing his crit¬
ical condition.
Mr. Mitchell had served Whit¬
field county as tax collector for
three terms and w’as a justice of
the peace for several years. He
leaves a family of seven children,
George, Charlie, Will John and
Sam Mitchell and Mrs. Marvin
Broadrick and Mrs. Andrew
Miller.
Mr. Mitchell was 72 years of
age at the time of his death.
The burial will take place at the
family burying ground Saturday.
— Dalton Argus.
Keep the bowels open when
you have a cold and use a good
remedy toallay the inflammation
of the mucous membranes. The
best is Kennedy’s Laxative Hon¬
ey and Tar. It contains no opi¬
ates, moves the bowels, drives
out the cold. Is- reliable and
tastes good. Sold by S. H. Kelly.
The Haunted Ship.
Capt. L. 11. W. Beavis of the
steamship Eagle Point has sailed
his staunch vessel eighty-eight
times between Philadelphia and
Loudon, covering in all 808,000
miles, says the Washington Star.
Capt. Beavis, at a dinner at
the Philadelphia Art Club, told
a sjory of a haunted ship. It
was a frightening—a dreadful—
story, and at its end the honest
mariner hastened to add that it
was of doubtful truth.
“You know how it is with
ghost stories,” said he. “They
seem true on their face, but
when you come to investigate
them its another matter.
4 4 A cousin of mine entertained
a week-end party last fall in an
old Elizabethan house in the
country,
“One of my cousin’s guests, a
young lady, awoke in the middle
of the night with a strange fore¬
boding in her heart, As she lay
in inexplicable terror in the
great old-fashioned bed the door
of her room opened noiselessly
and a figure, white from head to.
foot, appeared. She tried to
scream, but fear held her voice¬
less. She could not move. She
could not breathe, and the
thumping of her heart sounded
in lier ears like a great hammer.
“The white figure glided noise¬
lessly toward her. U reached
the bed- The bed" clothes were
suddenly whisked oil' her and
tiie awful visitant vanished as
silently and us mysteriously as it
A Tbr™kt„t the
ing the young lady was pale and
thoughtful. She wanted to tell
her strange experience, Gut she
feared that no one would believe
her. As she hesitated an aged
and rosy clergymen bustled into
the breakfast room and said with
merry laugh to his host;
“ ‘Wasn’t it cold last night? 1
woke nearly frozen, and, know¬
ing that the room next me was
; unoccupied, 1 took the liberty of
i going in there and stealing the
I bed clothes.’ ” .
I
A Guaranteed Cure for Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding,-Fro
truding Biles. Druggists are
authorized to refund money if
, BAZO OINTMENT fails to cure
in (t to 14 days. 50c.
Me L'isappofntcJ Her.
Capt. Wondrulf oi the Atlantic
CMv police hud been congratu¬
lated by a Chicagoan on Atlantic
City’s remarkable freedom from
crooks, pickpockets and confi¬
dence men, says an exchange.
“You must have adopted ex¬
traordinary methods,” said the
Chicagoan, “to have had such
success with these gentry.”
“No, my methods are common¬
place,” said Capt. Woodruff.
“They involve in the main the
commonplace qualities of thor¬
oughness and perseverance. Most
things in life^ you’ll tind, are
commonplace, sir. They who'
look for romance and strangeness
are apt to be disappointed as one
of our young ladies back here on
Pacific avenue. This young lady,
a year-round resident, sat in the
parlor in the dark the other night
when her father, very late, came
home.
“The old man, surprised at
seeing the girl up at that hour,
exclaimed:
4 4 4 Hello, what doing
are you
out of bed?’
“Going solemnly to her father,
she laid her head on his shoulder
and said in a low voice:
4 4 4 Papa, Mr. Readier
young
offered me Ins hand tonight and
I refused him. And oh, papa, 1
am afraid his heart is broken.’
4 4 4 He told about it,’ said
me
the old man.
“ ‘Why, have you seen him?’
4 4 4 I just left him. He’s down
on the pier bowling foi cigars. 1 V
A cold is much more easily
cured when the bowels are open.
Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and
Tar opens the bowels and drives
the cold out of the system m
young or’old. Sold by S.H. Kelly.
Too Humble a Husband.
A woman looked up' with a
laugh from a heavy volume she
was reading.
“Now 1 know,” she said, “why
Queen Victoria was so fond of
the Prince Consort. This hus¬
band did not merely regard his
wife as his equal; lie regarded
her as Immeasurably hfs supe¬
rior, saying that it was bis duty
to sink his own individual exist¬
ence in her. Listen to this letter
that Prince Albert wrote to the
Duke of Wellington. Here is a
champion of woman’s rights,
indeed. Don’t you think, though
it is going too far for a man to
humble himself so low as this?”
She then read from her book
in a sarcastic voice :
“My Hear Duke : In the ques¬
tion whether it is advisable that
1 should take the command of
the aVmy I have come to the con¬
clusion that my decision ought
entirely to he guided bv the
consideration whether it would
interfere with or assist my posi¬
tion of consort to the sovereign.
This position is a most peculiar
and delicate one. Whilst a fe
male sovereign lta« a great many
disadvantages in comparison
with a king, yet if she is married,
and her husband understands
and does his duty, her position,
on the other hand, has many
compensatory advantages, and in
the long run will he found to be
stronger even than that of the
male sovereign. But ' this re¬
quires that the husband should
entirely sink his own individual
existence in that of his wife, and
that he should aim at no power
by himself or for himself, being
content to be the husband of the
Queen, the private secretary
the sovereign, and the tutor of
the royal children.”
A Youn2 Mother at 70,
“My mother has suddenly been
made young at TO. Twenty
of intense suffering from dyspep¬
sia had entirely disabled her,
until six months ago, when
began taking Electric Bitters,
which have completely cured
and restored the strengtn and
tivity she had in the prime
life,” writes Mrs. W. L.
rick, of Danforth, Me. Greatest
restorative medicingon the
Sets Stomach, Liver and
right, purifies the blood,
cures Malaria, Biliousness
Weaknesses. Wonderful
Tonic. Price 50c.
by G. H. Arrowood, grocer.
Cayfor & Yates
In the next two months
you will want to buy
your Fall and Winter
goods, and you will
hud no better place'
to buy than from
Caylor Yates,
Dalto<n, Ga.
w
We are fixed to give you
bargains in anything you
want in the way of
Shoes, Hats, Clothing,
Dress Goods, Etc.,
In fact anything
you wear. We
. invite you to
come to see us
Yours to serve,
Caylor “ON & CORNER’’ Yates
THE
1 I
m *
DEPOT SALOON t.
ATLANTA, GA. l#\
i,
Headquarters for
Pure Liquors
Sells the Best.
r
CORN WHISKEYS
OI*D WILD CAT
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts '$2.(Ml, gallon jug $1 85.
BKNNK'l'T'.-iSWBKT MASH
1 quart 55c 4 quarts $2.60, gallon jug $2.25
BKNNETT S CATAWBA VALLEY*
1 quart 75c. 4 quarts $2.75, gallon jug $2.50
01*1) MOUNTAIN COHN,
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts $2.00, gallon jug $1.S5
tiKNClNK OLDgEOROIA corn.*
quart 60c. 4 quarts $2.30, gallon jug $2.00
McCARTy’S PRIVATE STOCK.
1 quart $ 1 . 00 , 4 quarts $3.50, gallon jug 3,00
SOUR MASH CORN
1-2 gallon jug 75c gallon jug $1*60
FRUIT BRANDIES
Maryland Peach : 1 quart $1.00, 4 quarts $ !.50,
gallon jug $3.26, ’Georgia Apple: 1 quart 75c, 4
pmrts $$.75, gallon jug $2.50
Com, Rye or Gin, $2.00 per dozen short pints.*
Send me your orders—sure treat you right.
jYours'for business and pure liquors,
JIM McCARTY, Proprietor,
No. 28 W. Hunter St., ATLANTA, New Depot Saloon.
Bell I’hone 2909; Standard Phone 1861. Write for price list.
Livery Stable
Good rigs, gentle horses,
trusty drivers, prompt ser¬
vice, reasonable rates.
r
i
DUNN BROS., Proprietors
Chattsworth, Ga.
i RYE
WHISKEYS.
(>L1> COBWBBB
1 quart $1 26, 4 quarts $4.60, gallon jag$4.00.
aOI*DKN WEDDING
1 quart $1.00, 4 quarts $0.50, gallon jug $3.00.
MOUNTAIN .SPRING (Lincoln County)
lqaurt $1.00, 4 quarts $3 60, gallon jug 3.00
4 X MONOGKAm
1 quart 76 c, 4 quarts $2.75, gallon jug $2.50.
GREEN BRIAR (Lincoln County)
1 quart 75c, 4 quarts $2.75, gal! 6 u jug $2.50.
• OI*D MONACH
1 quart 65c, 4 quarts $2.50,* gallon jug $2.26.
OLD CAPITOL.
1 quart 50c, 4 quarts *1.75, gallon jug *1,50.
Genuine Bottling Distillery
l. W. Harper Yellow Stone
Red Top Green River
Old Wakeman Murray Hill Club
Mark Rogers Yellow I*nbel
*1.25 Per Quart.