Newspaper Page Text
J. D. GRAHAM
Has the Electric Welded PITS**
BURG Perfect Fencing=-thG
fence for hard usage.
The Crystalite Mineral As
phalt Roofing Guaranteed
three to five years.
J. D. GRAHAM
39 Hamilton St., Bata, Georgia,
HOLLY
the crops in this section are
corning out considerable since
the recent rains.
Road commissioner D. T.
ITifehett was down in lower
Murray on legal business
day.
Quite a lot of sickness in our
community now. Branch Tu elv¬
ers little baby is very sick with
croup and little Miss Maggie
Pritchett is confined to her room
wit h fever, But we are glad to
note that they are improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lowery
buried their little infant at
Prospect cemetery last Sunday
evening, We extend our sym¬
pathy to the bereaved.
Mrs. Ike Blankinship is im¬
proving of her recent sickness.
Mr. Moreland, of Dalton, was
here on business Thursday.
Mr, and Mrs. John Ingle visited
relatives in Gordon county last
Sunday and Monday.
Tim road hands have done some
good work on the roads here this
week.
Mrs. 0. E. Morris and Miss Re¬
becca Rutledge were in town on
business Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom West re¬
turned to their home in Dalton
Tuesday after a short visit to
relatives in lower Murray.
Wright Bishop, of Gilmer
county, was here a short while
Monday shaking hands with
friends.
Miss Mary Banders spent Sat¬
urday night with her sister, Mrs.
Pickering of near Spring Place.
Holly merchants J. N. Burks
audJ.il. Pouch made a busi¬
ness trip to Chattanooga last
week.
Noise Baker, of Fidelks was
lmie on business Monday.
\Y, W. Bnlfman graced our
streets here Saturday.
Unico Bright, of Cincinnati,
are visiting his parents on Tilton
Route 2, this week.
Mr. and Mrs. <). P. Hallow,
were in town shopping Tuesday.
II, R. James left last week for
a trip to Louisiana to look him
out a location there.
Several of the Holly people
attended meeting at Ball Ground
last week.
G. G. Burks and sister, Miss
Ora, and Miss Delia Pritchett
wont to Dalton lust Wednesday.
Will Holland was in town on
business Saturday.
Aaron Elrod and sisters, of
Spring Place, visited relatives
here last week.
Hoi.i.vbkkkv.
CHATS WORTH l
Well, Ghatsworth is still on a !
Ixxxm. The bank is nearing;
completion ami another livery ;
stable is liejng planned for our
tow n.
School here is in a flourishing]
condition underthe management
of Misses Gladden and Carney,
Up to date 120 pupils have been
enrolled.
r l\ li. Davis and daughters,
Misses May and Ella and
Vick Moreland have returned
from a week’s visit to relatives
in Adairsvillo.
Will and Miss May Carney
visited Ju. Zion friends Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Boopor, of Dalton. is
spending apme time, in the city,
the guest of relatives.
Misses Sal lie Holland and Bid¬
dle Gainey called on Mrs. R. O.
Keith Monday afternoon.
Miss Bula Gladden visited
homefolks Saturday and Sun¬
day.
Tom Moreland is making
preparations to finish his dwell¬
ing house on Fort street.
Marion H. Williams was in the
city a few hours Monday.
J. Mack Sanders was over from
Dalton several days past..
V. N. Cash, of Tennga, was a
(‘hatsworth visitor recently.
Mrs. Mattie Etheridge and
daughter, \ Miss Ida, visited
Ghatsworth friend’s one day last
week.
Jim Wilson, wife and daugh¬
ter, Miss Lela, of North Carolina,
were prominent visitors here
Tuesday.
Mrs. It. M. Gudger, of Spring
Place, and Mrs. Frank Holder,
of Jefferson, Ga., were in Ohats
worth one afternoon of this
week.
Mrs. Will S. Cox left Sunday
for a visit to relatives at Smyrna,
< Ui. Juan Yai. ,!kan.
• ETON
The farmers’ Union will hold a
rally in Eton on the first Satur¬
day in September.
Last Sunday was August meet¬
ing at Sumach and a number of
our citizens attended.
A large Stock-Company ware- j
house is to be built here right 1
awav !
'• ‘
Mr. Albert Gwens, of Summer
our,s' who has been very sick of
fever is much better.
I was in Crandall yesterday.
That thrifty burg is doing well. 1
They have greatly ‘ needed a i
crossing there and arrangements j
has been made to have one put]
in i
soon.
Agent J. F. Kil by is moving j
to the house of Albert Owens. j
Gohutta Springs has a very
efficient postal clerk and store-;
keeper in the person of Miss
Myrtle <hvens.
IV. 1). R.
TENNGA
Charlie Henry, the little I j
twenty-one months-old baby of
Mr. amt Mrs. C. H. Pace died
yesterday morning. We extend
sympathy to the bereaved par
ents.
lias returned I
Henry Epperson
home from a visit to Fetzerton,
accompanied by Robert Russell
and Albert Rimer.
Little Esther Cavlor has been
I'Gin.
been ^ visiting
Rav Moss has
Miss Lula Brown, of Knoxville, |
•
has been visiting Mrs. \\ eeber, I
this place.. i
Nrs. D. G. Gordon visited bet j
THE MURE AT NEWS FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1907
j si-iter, Mr--. S. A. Graves Sun
da.y
John Dunn has his new dwel¬
ling very near completed.
Nr. Brownlee and wife paid
Mr. arid- Mrs. Nallett a pleasant
cal! Sunday.
Cj.oe and Joe.
--
Death of Infant.
The little infant of Mr. and
Mis. J. D. Kemp, who lias been
seriously ill for several days,
died Thursday morning. It was
taken with cholera-infantum
several weeks ago and all hope
of its recovery was given up for
several days when it made a
change for the better, and since
that time, good hope of its re
covery has been entertained un
til Wednesday, when it began to
grow worse again, continuing t<>
grow worse until it died* Thurs¬
day morning. We extend sym¬
pathy to the bereaved parents.
Arthur Sherrell and George
Cummings, two negro convicts,
who liavo been working at the
Bibb Brick company, Macon,
made their escape. Sherrell is
ten-year man and (Ju(timings
wis sent up for ten. These es
( a >es hi Big the total up to three
for the past two weeks. Bocey
Givens is still at large, despite
the reward of $50 that has been
offered for his arrest.
Jim Ingram, who was shot by
Charles Linton on un incoming
passenger train, died in a hos¬
pital at Waycross. Both are
negroes and Ingram provoked
the latter named and made a
motion as though he intended to
draw a gun on him. Linton is
now held in pierce county jail
and will be'tried in that county,
as the shooting oecured within
its limits.
----- ~~ -
Henry and George Brown,
aged ! I and 12 years, respectively
sons of It. It. Brown, a prom I
playing nent farmer in near when Bi^honia, they were
a tree came
in contact with a live wire of the
I’amlo Light and Bower company.
Henry was thrown to the ground
and liis neck broken, causing in
stunt death. George was badly
burned on the hands and arms.
Dr. W. J. Brown, of Rome,
was bound over, charged with
selling cocaine to a negro woman
of the city. His arrest grew out
of the arrest of Derby Wood, a
negro, who was caught with a
largo quantity of the drug on his
person, and who told the officers
that Dr. Brown had been fur
niahitig it to him to sell for sev
«»1 months.
Ten Years In Ikd.
“For ten years I was confined
to my bed with disease of my
kidneys,” writes R. A, Gray, J.
B. u f Oakville, Ind. "It-vas so
severe that 1 could not move part
"f the time. 1 consulted the
1 ' H s / "u dual skill .i\ailabli.,
Roieyis Kidney (Tire'wa* recoin
mended to me. It has been a
Godsend , . . to ..
me. i
Rouse A Rouse.
—---
If you can’t do something
today—go back ami sit down and
let someiuuly on the line that
can. Those who wait for tumor
row never amounts to much
any way.
Keep clean the pores open and the
skin when you have a cut,
burn, bruise or scratch. Dg
Witt’s Carbolized lYitch Hazel
^ l '’® V,’) 6 a 'iV
Ruin.
Borne more rain.
Very much rain.
Watennellnns — yum, yum.
jam.
Tel! us all the good things—
the rest we don’t care to know.
—----—--——
Washington ° will VaiAO S75 ' __ 000
subscription 4 Vo the and
1 common
preferred stock of the Savannah,
Augusta and i\orthern rail man
to insure that road coming
; COUNTIES WET
BY PROHI BILL
Senator Stephens Declares
There Will be 126 Locker
Counties,
Savannah, Ga., August 20.—
Senator W. B, Stephens today
:
“The State prohibition bill
has really made locker
out of' the one hundred
twenty-six dry counties of
state. The lull is just that weak.
Any number of men can get to¬
gether, organize themselves
without the formality of a char¬
ter from any court and on the
payment of five hundred dollars
to the tax collector will lie issued
a license to open a locker club.
This can lie done in any county
in the State and there will
none to say they shall not do
I suggested to prohibition
voeates the advisability of giv¬
ing Hie ordinaries or the judges
of the superior court the right to
say to whom these license should
be Issued, but they could not
bring themselves hi believe
the honesty and good faith
the suggest ion. did not
adopt it. If a member of
branch of the general assembly
made a suggestion and was
an out and out prohibitionist
was at once killed, no matter
how meritorious it might have
Ofcfctt Of / t- IlOW *n»•»/.V* Ul Ui II ST-J sinif ouger 1t
would have made their bill. ThiA 11
passage of the locker club bill
simply emphasizes the fact that
the bill does not apply to social
clubs.”—Atlanta constitution.
A traveling showman, the
“handcuff king,” made a propo
sition to Chief Dampler, of Val
dosta, t.0 allow himself to be tied
ami locked in one of the strongest
cells of the prison, promising to
escape unaided. A committee
tied the man's hands behind lm
hack with M-iiioh hemp rope,
and then pinioned his body to
the bars of the cell, after tying
Bis feet. The ceil was locked
ami the keyhole sealed. In less
than six minutes the man walked
into another door of the station
house a free man. The door of
the cell was locked as the
had left it.
__
Two 0 ;i companies are
ning the erection of plants m
Mae6n in opposition to the Stan
dard 0 U company. One com
p an y ( an Augusta concern, has
a representative here now
has been allowed space in the
city re8 e r ve for the plant. The
otlwr company has headquarters
in Pittsburg and wants to build
at the corner of Pine and Sixth
streets, but cannot, as that site
within the fire limits. An
other site will he picked out at
once.
Gov. Smith mi 1 hursday morn
>'»« approved the lull passed by
the recent legislature create a
» bureau oi P 1 oanKs , aiwi j ] oaiuving, ■ W% er f
which the state treasurer is to be
tne examiner, at , an auumoiiai | *; • i
salary of $2,500 per annum. 1 he
bill thoroughly revises tin 1
ing laws of the state, provides
for the conduct <*t receiverships
of banks, the conduct of the bus
iness and the making of frequent
reports to Hie bank examiner.
Macon f.iends of Hon. J. Pope
Brow 11 rGglt't loiiin tlmt lie
ha8 deciiue.I to accept the »P
pointment as railroad commis
sioner tendered him by Gov.
Hoke Smith, record while a
member of the commission and
it was he who brought up the
question of the 2-eent railroad
rate and which has since resulted
in the commission adopting a
lower passenger rate on nearly
all the railroads.
do out..tbe ..the,- feiimv
von would have him do unto you.
v
side . , t .
If YOU ‘ get one Ot your ace
slapped, turn the other and lii-i let it
...
be pasted also, then tear loose
and Imminer tliG neau # naii °ii
the fellow who did it.
after & Buchanan
For AH Kinds
i s 4, T
'
Come and see what we are
giving;
Come and price
You will stay to buy
BAKER & BUCHANAN
Dalton, Georgia.
Legal Notices
Call For Flection.
GEORGIA. Nf«trra he y County. in the sheriff's
0 »* a «oi u ”rV«y vacancy «s«..«.««*! by the death
Election will Y>e hem as Elections tor other
c{lUnlv offices are held and under the same rules
ami regulations after the same has been adver
tised for twenty days as the law requires said
' ' ordinary
r. m. gcuokk.
_
To Be Appointed Administrator.
OEOKGIA Murray County.
To whom it may Concerts:
in’due J. XV Martin having appointed made administrator application to me
time to be upon
$ t * heardou ,he Sm * muiay i* «ept««t*r
**
K UJaCIM,*, Ordinary.
_ _
Nolice of Sale.
.a" t i r‘^Jl l fhec.n,r-..or ordinary
*’oaS{* , uW ,B y »n"
r iw. 7 «
^
S^^SSSm ISSm
^w("-.t1.l : i<uws:'' 0 u e n '9 c'9'.l
j! T1
uay oFa u°i u iu ,< iiHa lle tHc Admi fatr " s
" * lor
,-,f
Petition to Open Road.
gEORgIA Hemphill Murray County. having made applica¬
T. M. et. al.
tion for the opening and establishing of a new
WSM
spH^Sfean? W r<Md bei ** yar,te
f«t“ " B
,,0 ^S^r^r h,5wu co ” trarv '
S'm«iu,
ciSSSw*.
Petition to Open Road,
u.-oruia .vurrayconm>.
!
■ k. 1
^xi'i rL99,'T', Att*
‘ nl l i's'hwebv i
N 0 n« that saw application
if
This August 0, IBC7.
C. C. Keith.
T. m, Hemphill,
C. T, Owens,
C Commissioners.
Application For Charier
maton for corv>oratioii of the l. n. Kicii!
‘ ‘ l n"" : ‘pUTuoifoYi..* o. Rka ami h'd Rich of;
u . t ., Mictiigau’ rcspectnoiy shows: 1
1 • That ihev des re for themselves, their as
SOC uitcs, smv^ssors and assigns, to become in
p'kk-hrnmiiinRami for which Lcveioi-emcni company, a»k to he
2. The term petitioners j
i., cor porate«i is uventy years, with the privilege
” of corporation isto
T h c capital stock the
Jfj'ncaoiiaTeaci B"'"'' ' lL K 1 " 11
b<.-cii”i' ui 1
a
,^,,,‘aVV'vroBtami^aiu *£«£££ il’ I it^-'tock^Wcrs?” ^
ta r r ;»ann)lSu r t ^ K ^
Iness, purehasmp and sale of real estate and
general merchandise.
wiK tefore, petitioners pray to he made a l>ody
to the liab.t.nes fi^ed by law,^^
A,torney '
G1 , ORtUA . Murray
,,ng *“ alpe '
nu? e y ha " d aad s ' al of office ’ th,s
m:
J D, Gallman.
Clerk Superior court, said county.
—
Administrator’s Sale
By virtue of ati order from the Court of
nnrv of Bart,>,y comity. Ua. the umiersiyiird !
.m"hTii'r”t^ in
House door at spring - Placv, Murray county. !
r,a , within ieg.it sale hours, the following: de
' All that tract parcel of land coutaininx
Wt or
fortv-fivt district acres more and Srdsect&moi or less, lyi-ig Murray and being m
the i»tb conn
tv Ga., said tract bound-d o.t the north by lauds
,.r Renfro n.tggm-, on the Hast and south-east
by lands of J. B. Brown, on the South and south
, vt -t :>y connesausa river andion the west by
tract berig valuable
tenant 2nd. during present year by Bud Bishop.
Also, all that certa n tract of laud con¬
taining three hundred and thirty (35K*) acres,
more or less, now rented by J. L. Carroll from
the undersigned for present year, said tract ly¬
ing in tud one body, of land ami being all of land lot four No
167, all lot No. 108, except (-i)
acres of said lot lying west of Cotmesauga river,
said two land lots being in the 8th district and
3rd section of Murray county Georgia, and teii
(10) acres of land lots. Nos, On and 01 its the 13th
district and 3rd section of said county, the whole
tract being bounded on the North by lands of J.
B. Brown, South on by the lands East of b> lands of J. B. and Brown,
on the J . I*. Carroll on the
West by Connesanga river, there being one hun¬
dred {iwj acres more or less of said tract cleared ,
most of which is valuable river bottom land, amt
the balance of the tract well timbered and com¬
paratively level. of
The terms sale will be cash, payable on day
of sale, Administrator,s deed to be deliverd to
pui chaser on payment of purchase price.
The rents of each of said tracts of laud for the
present year will be excepted and reserved by
the purchaser undersigned, the end and possession of land giv»u
at of present year.
K. S. Bradley, and W. T. Stephens,
Achninistraturs of W. A. K Stephens, deceased.
J. H. GARDNER,
03 CD CT3 ec I
BICYCLES. Sundries and Re¬
pairs. Prices reasonable as is
consistent with quality.
GUNS and PISTOLS of all kinds
repaired by an experienced man.
SEWING MACHINES. Best makes
of new ones, and all kinds of
second-hand ones for sale at very
reasonable prices and on easy
terms.
PIPE titting, valves, &c., used
by saw mill and gin people. It
will be worth your while to see
me before making purchases of
any of these or similar goods.
Your Trade is Respectfully Solicited,
SHEET IRON, VALLEY TIN,
STOVE PIPE, &C.
MONUMENTS
Georgia MafbiS Is Ouf Specialty.
---------
ror the convenience of
our customers we will
send one or our represent
atives to show our designs
and quote prices. Best ma
terial and workmanship
EATON & COFFEY CO.,
Shop and Yard Dalton, Ga.
Sour
Stomach
No appetite, loss of strength, nervous¬
ness, headache, constipation, bad breath,
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh
of the stomach are all due to indigestion.
Kodol relieves indigestion. This newdiscov
ery represents the natural juices of diges
tion as they exist in a healthy stomach,
combined with the greatest known tonic
&ri ,i reconstructive prooerties. Kodol for
and ^yspeps dyspepsia, 1 * does not but ®n*y this w«« famous v « indigestion remed]|
fxelps ail stomach troubles bv cleansing,
BS2S.S3G2LSS,«?S!53 S. W, Va..
Mr. S. Ball of Ravenswood, says:—
" ] ms troubled with sour stomach for twenty yeara
Kodol cored me and we are now using It Is ml*
for baby,"
fok back*che--weak kidneys
TRY
DeVVITrs kidney and bladder Pius-iw«M<sato
Prepared by e. c. d«witt & co., Chicago
For sale by S H. Kelly.