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Fall and Winter Dry Goods and Shoes,
The FaH opening was very gratifying. '1 he
Fall Fair week was a rush and
Carter Dry Goods& Shoe Co V
J. A. Carter, Proprietor, Dalton, Ga.
are to the front with their
SECOND STOCK of Fall anil
Winter Dry Goods and Shoos
and are ready to meet the demand for their con¬
stantly increasing trade.
Cotton and Produce has advanced. You may
expect a corresponding advance in goods later on.
Money is plenteous and a CASH HOUSE like ours
commends itself to the public since it enables, us to
Sell the same Goods for less money or better Goods for the same money.
Don’t overlook our Cloak, Fur and Trunk de¬
pp.rtment on the second ll oor
If you want the best and latest style shoes made
call for the celebrated Krippendorf Dittmann Co.
or the best cheap kid shoes with solid leather in¬
sole and heel stay and double toe vamp, call for
The Southland Bell, $i./r.
When in need of goods do not fail to inspect
ours
Mammoth Stuck tn Select From.
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Silks, Krinkledown,
Teaseldown Flannelettes, Outings, Laces, Em¬
broideries, Underwear, |Cloaks, Jackets, Dress
Skirts, Rain Coats, Petticoats, Corsets, Shawls,
Hosiery, Gloves, Furs, Lace Curtains, Lace Door
Panels and all kinds of Fancy Goods, Ribbons
and Notions, Umbrellas, Trunks and Shoes
At prices that only a cash house can afford
Mrs. Trevitt, Misses Maysia Hamilton, Susie
Carter and Messrs. Sam Shields and Albert Car¬
ter join us in a cordial invitation to make our
store your headquarters for the purpose of a rest,
a warming or getting goods at right prices.
Very Respectfully,
Cartel Dry Gnods & Shoe Co.
Singing Convention.
There will be an all day sing
ing at Spring Place on the 4th
Sunday in October, All the
singing classes of Murray c unty
are requested to be present for
the purpose of organizing a sing¬
ing convention. We hope there
will be many classes present on
that day. Everybody invited to
come and bring well filled
k -ts. Bring your books.
Vir/ likely Prof. J. B.
an will be with us. If l.e
present on that day you will do
well to hear him sing. Do
Georgia’s sweetest singer.
Let each class come prepared
to represent a big delegation.
There will be one dozen song
1 moks given to the best singing
class. This will put the people
of Mui ray county to a test,
er they are interested in the
grand cause or not.
Let everybody cotne who wants
to hear some fine music.
Yours respectfully,
A. L. Wkavkr.
Gan you win? You realize that
to win in anything these
requires strength, with mind ami
body in tune. A man or woman
with disordered digestive organs work
is not in shape for a day’s
or a day’s play. How can they
expect to win? Kodol bor Dy s
pepsia contains the digestive
juices of a healthy stomach and
will put your stomach in shape to
pel form its important function of
supplying the body and brain
with strength building blood.
Digests what you eat, relieves
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour
Stomach,Palpitation of the Heart
and Constipation. Sold by S. H.
Kelly.
Ordinary’s Citation.
a-iil 1 will pa*®- u P° n saul t!l ,L T.'
Jlomiay Monday in I-’eccniUcr. IW. This October 15.
inoe g M GCDGBR. Ordinary.
BERMUDA
Corn pulling is the order of the
d iy here.
W. J. White and daughters,
M sses Belle and Bernice attend¬
ed the singing at Pleasant Valley
Sunday.
Misses Ora and Myrtle Ellis
went shopping to Eton Satutday,
Miss Htrline Ellis is having a
sjege of the chi ij gi
Chester and Miss Alma Hill
spent Sunday at Dawnville.
R. L. Bates and family w n
to Dalton Monday.
J- U. and E. M. Ellis spent
several days of last, week in
lanta.
Hello, Misr Free Hope! That’s
all right-; we will get our iitera
ture anyway without any of your
pennies. We never have called
on you for any help yet,but when
we do we will let you know.
Dr. John Green, of Atlanta,
spent Sunday night at the home
of W. J. White.
Misses Lula and Nettie Glad
den spent one night last week
with Miss Alma Hill,
Mrs. Harvey is very sick, but
hope she will able to be out
aga 111 soon.
Webbie Colley and Horace
Moore passed through our burg
afternoon,
Dixik and Trixik.
Last Monday morning while
ginning cotton at the Pendley
gin, the engine blew up, com¬
pletely demolishing it and neces¬
sitating the installment of a new
which has been put in and
work has been resumed. No one
happened to be near the engine
when the explosion occurred and
no other damage was done.
OeWitt’s Witch Salve
Hazel
For Piles, Burns. Sores,
■M. XxX'j 1U URKAY .NEWS FRIDAY OCTOBER 19, 1306
SEE THE DERBY ONCE.
The Horne Race Incident In hy
OitdK the Loa*t of It.
It is a matter of twenty odd , miles „
from London to Kpsoin, in whose vi
clnity the historic race course lies, and
samples of almost every curious thing
there Is in old England are to he seen
along th» various roadways. If there
were hut one road to Epsom, half of
the procession that starts from Lon¬
don on the morning of Derby day
would he left struggling in the out¬
skirts of the city long after the great
race had been run. Hut there are
many, though none too many, since
each is packed to the point of discom¬
fort from early dawn until far into the
night.
The Derby is a Hung for the foreign¬
er to see once and ever afterward to
hold in grateful memory, because it is
an experience that could never repeat
itself to the satisfaction of tlm mere
onlooker. Primarily it i, of i-mrse.
a horse race, but the ra.-e, which occu¬
pies such a fleeting breath of (hue, I
by long odds the least of it. Other
wise It is an expression of Britishism
such as may not he witnessed upon
any oilier occasion. It is the oue day
in the year, 1 believe, on which Eng¬
lish society levels itself out upon the
first principle of the brotherhood of
man. "Well man. poor man, beggar
man, thief, doctor, lawyer, merchant,
chief,” without disUnction and with
perfect camaraderie, come together
with the evident if unconscious pur¬
pose of proving that to be merely Brit¬
ish Is nil that any true Briton can tea
Bonahly desire.
The foreigners are the only specta¬
tors. Everybody else is "in the east,"
as It were, and It is difficult to Judge
whether the king, with lii.i nobles nail
their bevy of brilliantly attired tidies,
or the coster ia his donkey cart, with
"the missus and the kids." is'the Icud
ing actor. Perhaps it would be bet
ter to call it n variety show and to fit;
cide that each In bis "turn" is a star
in his own particular performance.
Leslie's Weekly.
MOHAMMED’S BLOODY HAND
lliMtory of the Imprint on a Pillar I>»
the Church of St. Sophia.
Iu the course of our exploration In
Constantinople we visited a building
In an obscure and poor quarter of
Stamboul Inhabited solely by Moham
mednns.
It Is called the Mosque Kabrio, bill
It Is or was a church dedicated to the
Blessed Virgin. The beauty of the
mosque celling and walls not even cen¬
turies of neglect have been able to ob¬
literate.
When we returned to the great
Church of St. Sophia, now' a mosque,
nud saw again the print of the bloody
baud of Mohammed, which Is pointed
out high up on the wall of that once
Christian church, we understand its
significance better than we had at first
sight.
Mohammed II. after advancing his
outposts gradually and stealthily had
finally, as if iu a night, crossed the
Bosporus from Asia and raised his
forts on the European side of the
stream. Just the day before, on a
trip up tlie Bosporus, we had seen the
rulus of those fortifications.
The rulers of the city had protested
In vain again A tills eucr^ichmefit.
When the Moslems finally attacked
the city the Christians tied tn terror to
St. Sophia, An ancient legend, firmly
believed, promised that this sanctuary
was absolutely safe.
Mohammed proved the fallacy of
their trust by breaking down the dears,
murdering those who had sought safe¬
ty there, men. women and children—
so many of them that finally, forcing
his horse over the great idle of dead
bodies, away up on the side of a pillar
he planted his Moody hand on the
clear wall in token of Ids victory over
the Christians. That gory hand still
overshadows the fairest portion of
southeastern Europe.—Rosary Maga¬
zine.
Warning Him.
"1 am sorry.” said the poet, “but 1
ftl „ obliged to call your attention to
tUe fact that « line in one of my re¬
cent compositions was entirely pervert¬
ed and the meaning painfully distorted
by the compositor."
“Young man," replied the editor,
"that compositor Uas gone through
more poems than you ever wrote or
even rend. He Inis put in ills life set¬
ting up poetry of all kiuds, spring and
autumn styles and heavier goods for
winter. He may have changed your
poem, but when yon say' be harmed it
you presume. When a man of his ex¬
perience makes up his mind to change
a piece of poetry oi person in your po¬
sition should not attempt to criticise.”
The Art of Glove Cutting;,
The cutters of the great glove houses
la Brussels and In France earn even
higher wages than the cutters of the
most fashionable tailors in Iauidon-nnC
New York. - So difficult Is this art of
cutting gloves that most of the prin¬
cipal cutters are known to the trade
by name and bv fume, and the peculiar
knives which they use in the business
are so highly p,,zod tuat they-are
hauded down from generation to gen
eration as heirlooms.
The Poultry Bnslnes.M.
BlMfuz*--See that sharp looking man
over there? He has made a fortune
out of the poultry business, Jubb— Is
that so? He doesn’t look like a man
who raised chickens. BUifuzz—Raise
chickens? Of course he doesn't. He
writes books telling other people how
much they <-a.-! make by raising them.
Never risk a joke, even the least of
fenslve tn its nature and the most com
moil, wfth a person who Is not weii
bred and possessed cf sense to compre¬
hend it. Bn; ye re.
FREE! HOPE
Sam Sane and wifc^ol Bnl!?*■ ,
visited S, F. Moss ami fa.i.il,
bind _ a V
Marvin Bond passed tl rough
OI|r ' j )(ir „ Sunday afternoon,
ill One© attended toe •
G sii.f,
Jog at Pleasant Vail* y
at ern >or.
Pule Whitecottou was out walk
ing Sunday morning.
The Farmer*’ Union at Bernm
t da went oil' lightly—only two ad¬
ditions.
Bermuda is low-spirited. They
need some aid.
Everybody is invited to attend
the singing convention at bpring
Place the fourth Sunday in this
month.
i If there is anybody who wants
j to pick cotton let him come to
E re e Hope or Bermuda. I will
assure him a job.
Hay cutting is over, as old Jack
got everything green. Bat.
State News
Charles T. Do Ison has been ap¬
pointed postmaster at Shack,
Chattahoochee county, vice C. C
Bayfield, resigned.
Col. Jim P. Cooley, a promi¬
nent young lawyer and one of the
county’s most inlluentiol men,
purchased T h e Enterprise, a
weekly newspaper published at
Covington.
At a negro frolic at Birmii g
ham, a negro settlement between
Covington and Oxford, Son Ed
dlemate s h o t a u d seriously
wounded Dave Blalock. Both
ire negroes.
John Tinnis, a sign painter,fell
forty feet from the top of a build
ing at Americus, sustaining seri¬
ous, is not fs t d tnjuries, Tinnis
was about to descend when his
foot slipped.
tit. Itllvul l::<-.
St. Valentine, presbyter mid martyr,
milks many mints who live specially
reuietiibored. tliil uothtng which caul !
have suggested the manner in which
his day Is celebrated. It was ills for
tune to suffer martyrdom (he was
beaten witii a club and thou beheaded i
at a time when the heathens of south¬
ern Europe were accustomed to observe
the return of spring. The quid; eyes of
those dependent upon sunlight for
waruth learned to note ami welcome
every indication of t,he approaching
season. They watched the birds, and
when they saw them mating and mak¬
ing love they were minded to do the
same, and so strong was the habit
that, as with Christmas day. tiie good
fathers did not attempt to root out the
custom, but to connect It with some
holy name, and St. Valentine’s day of
martyrdom fitted very nearly to that
time.
Hunted and Tarred.
An English custom of not so loug ago
was to hang smugglers on gibbets ar¬
ranged along the coasts and then tar
the bodies that they might be preserved
a loug while as a wuruiug to other cul¬
prits. As late as 1822 three men thus
varnished could have been seeu hang¬
ing before Dover castle. Sometimes
the process was extended to robbers,
assassins, incendiaries and other Crimi¬
nals. John Painter, who fired the dock¬
yard at PbrtsmdTith. was first h.iugcd
and then tarred in 17Tii. From time to
time he was given a fresh coat of var¬
nish au was made to last nearly
fourteen ye ns. The weird custom did
not stop suing, ling or other crime, I,at
no doubt !! worked some iotiuer.ee as
\ preventive.
-J ,.,ic!.t..,-r Woo.!."
Can :u;y reader explain the origin oi
toue’.-in;; i.;. xl after boasiii)/ of one'.-.
.'XcmptiiKi Iran ii! fortune- a Slavics
if abslt omen pr.u-tiae.i Iu Sbr spsiiire
rad CluMLira e.iai p.-abal.ly in mauj
>t!;cr part.-! of E::;riaml. Tl.e p:\nx\lw
Is of this kind. "I'm thankful to sa;
! never broke a bone or even hail t.
bad sprain in my life- well. I'd hettci
touch wind." ami n chair or tistde or
.aythUisr near that is wooden Is ta;n-h
•si. Can the custom caaie from some
.iageri’vt memory cf C e veneration at
taehed to relies of the true crass';—
London Xote.4 and Queries.
Tot:*.-!:l*-itv a B’JtlOR,
Wife—I've just been reading an nr
j| t -Io on electricity, John, anil it np
tU:U before long we shall be
able to get pretty well everything we
want by just touching n button. Hus
band—You'd never tic able to get any
thing that way. Wife—Why not, John?
Husband—Because nothing on earth
w0;1 ]d <jyer make you touch a button,
Look at my shirt:
A man should never be ashamed to
own be has been in the wrong. It is
bnt saying In other words that be is I
wiser today than yesterday.
-
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HOKEY-TAR
8rd CIotm Hcjsoai aai Hoary Bee oa Every Bottla
Furnituro
Hattresses
«
Art Squares
RUGS
Picture Framing
Mattings
Gaskets, Coffins
105 Piiones; anti 202 Baker & Buchanan GEORGIA DALTON,
Bids for Locations.
To the people of the Seventh
Congressional District:
Notice is hereby given that.
until noon, the 2oth day OS Octo
ber ’ 1906, I will receive at my *
office, at the Capitol, . sealed
uv 1 * pro
Dosals * for the location of the
. .
Industrial . and Agricultural
School in the Seventh Congress*
ional District, authorized ... by
as
the Act approved August io 18, llKK) ,
ent itlcd A An Act to provide for
the establishment and , inamten- .
i ,
of SchoOH , AgnClllf
a nee Ol UTC
and the Mechanic art* in the re¬
spective Congressional Districts
of this State.”
On the 26th day of October,
1906, at Rome, Georgia, 1 will
present the proposals so received
to the Trustees of said School, at
which time and place the same
will be duly and carefully con¬
sidered.
The right is referved to reject
any and all proposals, or to call
for new offers, or to prescribe
conditions that may render any
proposal already made accepts
able. J. M. Tkkkkll,
Governor of Georgia.
By the Governor;
Bkxjamis M, Black iu'io:.
Secretary
Executive Department.
When a horse is so overworked
it lies down and in other
declares its inability to go furtli
er, you would consider it
nat to use force, Many a man of
humane impulses, who would not
willingly harm a kitten, is guilty
of crueity where his own stomach
is concerned. Overdriven, over
worked, when what it needs is
something that will digest the
food eateu and help the stomach
to recuperate. Something like
Kodol For Dyspepsia that is sold
by S. H. Kelly.
FOR SALK
To head of mares and mules.
Positively the finest ever brought
to this market, and will be sold
on one, two and three years’ time
for good notes.
J. B. & O. B. Brows.
R. F. D. No. J, Dalton, Ga.
KILLthe COUCH
*wp CURE THE LUPgCS
WiTH Dr. King’s
New Dsseo¥>ir¥
c ONSUMPTiON ” Price ~
C3 BC 0UGHS OLDS and SOc Free xSt.OC Trial.
Surest and Quickest Cur© for ai.
THKOAT and LUNG TROUB¬
LES, or MONEY BACK.
FOLEYSHONEY Pneumoot* ^TAR
Cures Colds: Prevents
Legal Notices
Nolice of Sale.
r.HORCU, Murray County
Uy virtue of au order from the Court of Ordi
nary of said county will be sold at public outcry
Oil the first Tuesday ill November, 1106, at the
court house in said county, lietween the usual
hoursof sale, the following rear estate in Mur-ay
county, (a) to-wit: One parcel of land described
as follows: -0 acres, more or less, being part of
lot of land No. D’J. 10th District, 3rd section of
said county. Beginning at the northwest corner
of said lot, running south of 80 rods to a stake
thence east to me right wav of the l. & n.
railroad; thence north with the right of way to
the sewer p pe; thcnc*- west to a rock; thence
north with the the fence to the original line; thence
west Also to the beginning:corner. time ami place another
<$?1 at same par¬
of ?ame lot, described as follows: One acre,
more or less, beginning feet ditch; at northeast corner in siffith- rmi
K >0 tr> a thence a
er\y direction with tne dit*.h to a n>ck; thence
east to the old Federal road: thence north to the
beginning corner. Terms cash
JOHN T BREWER. Guardian,
for Geo and Joseph Brewer
i
A concise resume ot the leading
Enterprises In Spring Place
Physician: . MY rROPKSKIOKAI, service*
are offered the people night of this
section. Day or < alls will
be cheerfully answered. W. W, ANDERSON
General Merchant! sSh
Shoes, Hardware,Groceries. J. E. ROBINSON.
I, . K V K R vr HING to be fou nd
uFOOBFIBS! in stock at my store. Very
low prices. SAM II. KELLY.
Millinery, Tobaccos, l.RT Cpons, Groceries, l.ive and
etc- at
specialty. I.et J.fyc prices. T}ie Prpdpcp a
Store on tlje portter. A| f VJN JPNF.g, Prop,
public I AM with still serving reliable the
Re¬
pairs and Blacksraithing stand
at the same old
Horses shod a t 00 cl*. J. A, DICKSON.
Undertaking! lin I X AVK of Coffins, a cemipl
v Cask
I and Burial Robes. My
offered >public. services are THOMPSON. respectfui
lv the I.. W.
** . Chief Van” • WISDOM and ‘ Ft
Mountain.” made by
■ the Murray County
* Millingco., the purest
Flours manufactured in North Georgia, Best
mill in this seetion. Your custom grinding
4 CHIP T OWENS Proprietor,
S. C. BROWN
LEGHORNS
Are the greatest lay¬
ers of all the famous
non-setting breeds of
chickens.
We have thoroughbred
stock and guarantee sat¬
isfaction.
Eggs, per setting of
thirteen.....50c.
Call on or write
J.E. J0NNS0N
SPRING PLACE, . GA.