The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, November 18, 1909, Image 7

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HINTON & COMPANY. GOODS GETTING HIGHER Not a day but what we get notices from facto ries and wholesale houses advancing the price of good*. At this time we’are selling some goods for less than we can buy them for, but as long as our present stock lasts the prices will not be advanced. Now is the time to buy your goods and we do not know of a better store to buy them from than ours. Ladies Wraps 1-3 Off. On account of the mild weather we have not sold as many as we ought to have done, and from now on will sell them at 1-3 off the former prices. SG.OO ones now $4.00 9 00 ones now 6-00 15 00 ones now . 10,00 And so on. In this line of wraps you will find all the colors and . the prevailing styles. ■———” ———— . 1 ~ Sweater Coats In Blue, red and white for Ladies and Children. We Have Fine Stock Yet. Ladies •• ■ $2.50, $4.00 and $4,50 Children’s $1.50 to $2.50 Underwear For Ladies and Children is a very important stock with us and we carry a very large line of it. Ladies Vest and Pants, heavy ribbed fleeced goods, 25c a garment. Much better ones at 50 cents. Ladies Union Suits, good garment at 50c _Much better ones at -00. Ladies Wool Vests and Pants, each SI.OO Children’s Union Suits, good grade, at 25c Better ones 50c Children’s Vests and Pants 15c to 25c, owing to size. Heavy Cotton Goods. Best grade AAA Sheeting 71c Best grade Sea Island Sheeting 6ic Medium grade Sea Island Sheeting sic Best grade Cotton Checks 7c Medium grade Cotton Checks 6c All Calicos 6c Amoskeog A. C. A. Feather Ticking ... 16R Galatea Clothlsc BLEACHING Fine grade, one yard wide . 10c Fine Cambric, one yard wide ... .... 10c Wide Sheeting Pepperell, bleached. 10 4. . 30c Bleached, 9 4 ... 27ic Unbleached, 2i-c cheaper Pillow Tubing 45 inches 20c Serpentine Crepe, the prettiest goods on the market for Kimonas and fancy work in short lengths, 15c yard, always sells at 20 c. GROCERY DEPARTMENT We have just gotten in several cases of high grade enamel ware —not a flaw in it. as this lot was bosght direct from the factory. Can sell it at about ons-third less than here tofore. You will see it on tables in the Grocery Depart ment. Look at it tad you will buy it for it is cheap. CHEESE. We carry the highest grade cheese that comes to this part of the country. It is firm. 22ic per pound. Malaga Grapes. 15c. Grapes in baskets 30c. Oranges 20c. Irish potatoes 25c peck. Onions 40c peck. Fresh wool rolls 60c Empty Lard Cans 15c, 2 for 25c Terms: Cash. All Ceods Delivered. Hinton & Company THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1909. $ LOCAL NEW' I < Hon. Wesley Shropshire spent Tuesday in Chattanooga. Mrs. A. S. Hinton spent Wednes- I day in Chattanooga. Rev. J. M. Smith, of Lyerly, spent I Wednesday in Summerville. Col. Jesse T. Jolly spent Wednes day in Chattanooga. Col. C. D. Rivers made a busi ness trjp to Rome Wednesday. Rev. B. F. Hunt spent Wednesday in Rome and will return today. Mr. W. B. Townsend of Floyd coun *ty was in town Wednesday. The little child of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hood has been ill, but is im | proving. Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Espy visited ' I Mrs. D. T. Espy in Dry Valley Mon i i day. Mr. G. D. Espy was off duty Tues- I| day and Wednesday on account of ■ j illness. Mrs. N. K. Bitting returned Sat ' | urday from a week’s visit to Deca- I i tur and Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Harper of Chel- I sea spent Monday in town and were guests of Mr and Mrs. J. W. Pitts. I .i Mr. Noble Simmons of Chattanoo i ga spent Sunday here with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Simmons. Miss Kate Bolling left Wednesday i; for Nashville, Tenn., for an extended I visit to relatives in that city. I Mr. Frank Kirby of Lafayette vis i ited relatives at the Hawkins House | Sunday. Mrs. Frank Lee of Lyerly was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. Bryant and family Wednesday. Mrs. J. W. Pitts returned first of the week from an extended visit to relatives in Texas Valley. Col. W. L. Clay, a prominent attor ney of Savannah, was here Monday and Tuesday on legal business. Mr. Will Scruggs returned from Odessa, Texas, Wednesday where he has spent several months. Mr. G. J.* Wilson left Tuesday for Tass, Ala., to visit his daughter, Mrs. Mary Beauford Hill. The many friends of Miss Kate Mc- Whorter are pleased to know that she is rapidly recovering from a re cent illness. Judge J. M. Bellah, Col. John D. Taylor and Hon. Wesley Shropshire attended the Lawyers’ Banquet in Rome Tuesday night. The many friends here of Miss Min nie Henry wih be pleased to know that she is expected to return this week from Birmingham, Ala., where she has been visiting for several weeks. Mrs. Haep is here representing the Alkehest Lyceum Bureau of At lanta. She comes highly recommend ed as a lady and is making vigorous efforts to interest our people in a ly ceum course and it is hoped that she will be successful in putting on the I course here. Rev. and Mrs. .’esse O. Brand and little Lois Brand left Tuesday morn : ing to attend the annual meeting of the North Georgia conference in At • lanta. They leave here many loyal I friends who regret their departure, and wish for them happiness and suc cess in their new field of labor. The people to whom they go are to be' congratulated. Please notice the label on your | paper and see how much you are lin arrears. This is the time I when we expect our subscribers to pay us, so when you are in I town drop in and settle with the I News. ,_ All notes and accounts that are i due will be put out for collection I if not paid at once. TAYLOR & ESPY. I Mrs. W. B. Hinton charmingly en ’ tertained a large number of guests j Tuesday afternoon from 2 to 4 o’clock I at her lovely home on Washington street. The parlor and dining room I were beautifully decorated and elab- I oYate refreshments Were served. Mrs. ! John L. Pollock of Lyerly was the out-of-town guest. LYCEUM COURSE. Mrs. Haep, representing the Alka hest Lyceum System, of Atlanta, is v here interesting our citizens in a series of attractions to take place at the court house during the next four months under the capable man agement of Prof. Rogers. Jas. G. Camp —lecturer, “The Or ator of the South’’ in Truth and Shams. The Boston Ladies Quartet.' Walden —The Premier Deceptionist. Hererly—The Handcuff King. Mrs. | Wm. Calvin Chilton —Monodramists j Southern Stories from Southern writ ers by a Southern Woman. All these high grade entertain ments for 3; 1-2 cents each, by buy ing a double ticket for $3.00, same ' admitting two persons to the entire - course. Single admission 50 cents. , Its seldom that such a high grade ' of entertainments can be secured - here at such moderate prices. It is I hoped our citizens will come forward ; and help bring these attractions to 1 the town by their liberal subscrip- ! tions. Mrs. Haep has come up from Rome ■ at which place she has done most . efficient work and won a host of J friends. Mrs. Haep goes from here to Trion I in the interest of the Alkahest Ly- J ceum System expecting to put on a ; course there. < Judge Bellah spent Wednesday In ' 1 Chattanooga. NOTICE. All voters in Summerville will 1 please register for the next city elec- , jtion with Reuben Clark, Marshal, be- ' fore 6 o’clock p. m. Dec. Ist, 1909. ' C. D. RIVERS, Mayor. SALE NOTICE—I will sell at pub- ' I lie outcry to the highest bidder at ! Imy residence near Menlo on Satur- J i urday, December 4th, 1909, all my ; ' Stock, Farming Tools, Household and • I Kitchen Furniture. Terms of sale: I j All amounts over $5.00, note with ; I approved securety. All amounts un- • der $5.00, cash.—T. H. Holbrook. i The people we owe are pushing us. j All notes and accounts due must be <1 paid at once. ' TAYLOR & ESPY. 1— J The ladies of the Baptist mission J society here had a very profitable meeting Thursday. The contribution ; was $15.00, and was divided between < missions and local work. . < < A rather peculiar instance of rapid • transit for Uncle Sam’s postal ser- , vice was brought to light when Mrs. J Sam Jones found in her postoffice < box at Cartersville a letter that had . been mailed in Atlanta October 15, ! 1906. Just a little more than three ; years from Atlanta to Cartersville, < forty-eight miles. No one seems to ! be able to explain the delay of over three years in delivering the missive. Among the visitors here Monday I were Messrs V. Hammond of Teloga; I G. L. Groover of Chelsea; John W. I Gilreath of Lookout mountain; Joe I Hammond of Haywood and Adolphus I Barker of Holland. Miss Allie Bryant, of Summerville, I Ga., will arrive this wetek to visit I Mrs. T. E. Abernathy at her home I on Cedar street. —Chattanooga Times. | NOTICE. ' All accounts are now due and if I not paid at once will be put out for | collection. —Pitts & Espy. Mr. and Mrs. Harper Henry have a r charming addition to their home cir g cle. She is charming because she is E a girl, and will be known and loved I by the sweet name "Frances.” SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be I pleased, to learn that there is at least g one dreaded disease that science has -J been able to cure in ail its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now g known to the medical fraternity. ■ Catarrh being a constitutional disease 1 requires a constitutional treatment. I Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood I and mucus surfaces of the system, 11 thereby destroying the foundation of E the disease, and giving the patient j strength by building up the constitu ■ and assisting nature in doing its I work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they | offer One Hundred Dollars for any csae that it fails to cure. Send tor list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constl- | pation. g WOOL WANTED We will pay the highest mar- | ket price for all the wool brought | us.—Hinton & Co. It isn’t charity to give unless the i giving entails a little bit of sacrifice. 1 r |Does Not i Ayer’s Sarsaparilla does not stimulate. It does not make you feel better one day, then as bad as ever the next. It I is not a strong drink. No reaction after you stop using it. I [There is not a drop of alcohol in it. ou have the steady, f even gain that comes from a strong tonic and alterative, | We wish you would ask your doctor about this He knows. Trust him. Do as he says. J. C. AgerCoJLou'ell.MaM.; \\4^n^\TeT^■'i , .'•"•' l ■ l Li l vc , r , Pills. How long have they been sold? Nearly *ixt> ytars. Do doctors recommend them? Ask your own ductor and find out ?• A t t j TAKE CARE OF YOUR STOCK i * £ t b T £ Do not wait until your horse, milts, cows, hogs, f £ and sheep get sick to care for them. Feed them a lit- < ’ tie International Stock Food along with the other J £ Foods and nine times out of ten they will not get * sick. But if they do happen to get sick, remember, f £ we sell the best Vetinary Remedies on the marke t* £ The kind that cure. The following list is some of | the remedies we carry: $ £ Dr. Daniels’ Vetinary Colic Drops This we guarantee to cure any + case of Colic in horse. We do X not charge one cent if it fails. We have known of many cures $ and no failures. Dr. Daniels’ Cough, Cold and Fever Drops. * Dr. Daniels’ Blister for Curbs, X Splints, etc. £ International Heave Cure. J International Worm Powders. ■?> The Powder that gets the worms J every time. £ International Gall Cure. Sloan’s Gall Cure. •t Sloan’s Wart Cure. * International Poultry Powders, I*" the kind that keeps your poultry healthy. We also prepare for you on short notice the Powders known as the Harve Strain or Wesley Shrop shire formula. Call on us and tell us your .troubles and we will do the rest. Yours for Business, ’SUMMERVILLE DRUG CO. H. D. MALLICOAT Dealer In FRESH AND CURED MEATS Soft Drinks, Tobacco and Cigars. J. M. GOOh Lyerly,, Ga. -DEALER IN- Fresh Meats and Fancy Groceries I am going to sell bananas cheaper than aver before. First clrss meats always. Erssh fish on Baturday. J. M. COOK, Lyerly, Ga. LINIMENT. Sloan’s Nerve and Bone Lini ment. Mexican Mustang Liniment. Dr. Daniel’s Oster Cocgus Lin iment. Dr. Daniel’s Wonder Worker Liniment. International's Silver Plae Heal ing Oil. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil Mansfield’s Magic Liniment. Gunboat Caustic Balsam. Planters’ Cuban Oil. “DISINFECTANT." Pearson’s Creolin, non-poison ous. Black Draught. Stock and Poultry Powders.