Newspaper Page Text
BWE PAY THE These good 3 are
“FRA'IE” FfW ipW JWR made at our big
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amounts.
SflW' ihjHi Co.
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iSfejl ®SSi II Top 2C by 40 inches «y |jv ||| N 0 422 SIDEBOAED "ZZZZ d jp. .... if. >
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INI Plain Mirror Plain Mirror Bevel Mirror ® J —E_XI ‘~ : I z
Price $12.00 12x20 16x20 16x21 Gte 14by24inches cs3M
—— Price $16.50 V
a These goods are all /’ .'. .■--=: ■■* *' .11—z= P —'- —Al|
made of oak well made =1 = 1 We show on our floors
and nicely finished. gg V tifty other styles of IF’' 1
■ ■■■ ...... .... • .‘-‘I Sideboards up to Sloe, '-L
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No. 36 No. 24 No. 22 JLy ‘L f X/ lEL
N - 412 SIDEEOAED 70 inches high 64 inches high 56 inches high NO. 425 SIDEBOARD
|yg|ggggjsi|||-§3iL| || Top 22 by 42 inches S6OO $5.00 $425 Extra Value Large—
f~~V f g Bevel Glass 14 by 24 Noll Foot Roil Foot Roll Foot French Bevel 16 by 28 In | I
KiM Price $14.50 fflfsn, Price $19.75 gaEm
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_ You can simply order, (tLXLJj| JL Rome furniture is sold
giving numbers, and the in nearly every state in
eirict thing will be j the union. Why? Be-
j sent ' -’1 - ■ w r ‘-. cause its good stuff. J
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feWy NO. 415 SIDEBOARD jy— jj y« U y NO. 526 SIDEBOARD I V \ j|gl
ag Top 22 by 42 inches Very Handsome and large— i (
GIaSS bevel 16 by 28 015 B N(> - 15 A r/ 0 . la. B Glass 18 by 30
I Bevel Glass Bevel Mirror Bevel Mirror >\4<zz4A l X|Pv r /W r
tosfcg Price SIB.OO ?."» Price $24.75 ’gggW;
MCDONALD FURNITURE CO. fegM
PHOENIX, ARIZ.
Editor News: Enclosed find $2.00
to advance my subcsription to The
News. I could not get along without
the dear old News.
As I promised to let my friends in
Georgia hear from me will pen
them a few lines.
As I have been here aone year will
give them a few valuable hints con
cerning life in the far west.
My wife and I left Chattanooga,
Tenn., on Nov., 24, 1908, and it was
apparently the dead of winter through
the middle west and landed in Phoenix
on Nov. 28 just one year ago today.
There we were met by some friends
and started out through the salt riv
er valley to their home four miles
away.
There we found everything green
and fresh. The alfalfa fields were
green as in June. It was on this
drive through the country that we
saw our first orange grove with its
delicious yellow fruit. That scene
was somewhat attractive to people
from North Georgia where they have
to pay such prices for oranges and
then get inferior grades. We get
the very best fruit here. Oranges
generally ripen in Arizonia earlier
than anywhere else in the United
States.
This is a fine country in many re
spects. It is far ahead of Georgia,
especially for a young man to get a
start in the world. He has many
more opportunities here than there.
Everybody seems to be doing well.
There is more money in circulation.
Wages are higher, ranging from $1.75
to $2.00 for common w’ork. It costs
little more to live here. Most gro
ceries are a little higher than there.
The summers are pretty hot here.
The temperature runs to about 115
to 120 degrees, but it is so dry any
one can stand that much heat about
as well as they can 95 degrees back
there. The winters are fine here. I
am sure they cannot be beaten any
where in the United States. The
very worst weather we have is just
like October back there. The nights
are cool, the days warm and pleasant
We hardly ever have any rain. Oc
casionally it will come a shower of
rain at night and by the next even
ing it is all gone and everything
dry. We had a rain the night of the
26th inst, and while it was raining
here the large mountains 50 miles
away, north of us, were putting on
their snow caps which we can see
plainly. While we can look at these
snowcapped mountains we can look
around us and see the lovely green
palms and trees and the the rose in
full bloom. The garden full of nice
vegetables growing faster than they
dare grow there in summer. And al
falfa and grain fields dotted with
cattle and horses that are rolling fat.
And one can hear the birds singing
as sweetly as if it was May time.
Arizonia has a territorial fair at
Phoenix every fall. We attended the
fair this fall. They had some fine
farm products and fine stock of all
kinds. They had very fine exhibits
of mine products, such as gold, sil
ver, copper, etc. But horse racing
was the main feature of the fair. The
famous Dan Patch, the fastest pacer
in the world was here. His record is
one mile in one minute and 55 sec
onds.
This is indeed the land of milk
and honey, for almost every farm
has a nice dairy heard on it. Every
few miles you can see a bee yard
of from 50 to 200 stands of bees.
Dairying is a profitable business here
For fear this finds its way to the
waste basket I will close for this
time. With best wishes for the The
News and its many readers.
C. C. JUNKINS.
P. S. Just a word for Uncle Jim
Fowler’s Boy. He had better come
out here where we have pure air to
breathe and good, pure milk to drink
what has no tubercular germs in it.
But, pshaw, I just happened to think
there is not a possum in the whole
territory, and that would spoil it all
with him. Mars. Taft came over here
the 13th ult., and when he found
there were no possums here he only
stayed two hours. CCJ.
Looking One's Best.
It’s a woman’s delight to look her
best but pimples, skin eruptions,
sores and boils rob life of joy. Listen
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cures them;
makes the skin soft and velvety.
It glorifies the face. Cures Pimples,
Sore Eyes, Cold Sores, Cracked Lips,
Chapped Hands. Try it. Infallible for
Piles. 25c at Summerville Drug Co.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER’S
CASTORIA
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1909.
ITASCA, TEXAS
Mr. Editor: Enclosed find one
dollar. Let The News come on to
our address. We get it every week
and comes right to our door.
Most everybody is done gathering
Cotton turned out very well. We
made nearly half bale to the acre.
There has been a right smart of
wheat sowed and a good deal of oats.
It is raining here today and it is sure
muddy. We have not had any cold
weather yet, but would like to see
some so we could kill some hogs.
We are breaking land for another
crop. I am about half done turning
and have 18 acres of cotton land
ready to plant and have got our
winter wood and coal. We have
to haul our wood ten miles. It costs
us two dollars a cord and haul it.
Everything is high here. Corn 75c,
hay sls ton, though the most of us
have got corn and hay to do us. cot
ton 14c.
Some one wanted to know how I
liked the Lone Star State. I like'
fine and think this the best farming
country in the west. I know it beats
the old country. I have been here
14 months and this is the rainest day
that I have seen, though we hope to
see a right smart of rain this win
ter. We had vrey little rain last
summer. The ground is wetter now
than it has been since I have been
here.
Well, wish I had a new copy of
The News to read while it is raining
I like to hear from the old country.
I will say to the many readers of
The News that if some of you will
come out to see me I will feed you
on pork and turnips. Some one
wants to know about the health of
this country. I have been here 14
months and have not had a doctor
but one time in my house.
Luck to the News and its many
readers. W. T. GRAY.
If you are suffering from bilousness,
constipation, indigestion, chronic h ad
ache, invest one cent in a postal card
send to Chamberlain Medicine Co.,
Des Moines, lowa, with your name
and address plainly on the back, and
they will forward you a free sample
of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets. Sold by Summerville Drug
Co.
The first horse railroad was built
in 1826.
Says Will Cure Consumption.
We clip the following from a recent
issue of the Atlanta Constitution:
Editor Constitution: A simple
remedy for tuberculosis, and one de
clared to be a sure cure, is announc
ed by a Texas Methodist preacher.
Rev. L. G. Grimes, of Copperas Cove,
He is now living in that little town
with his second wife, his first one
having died with consumption.
Shortly after the death of his first
wife, he himself was stricken with
the white plague, and the disease de
veloped so rapidly that he was forced
to give up his work. He had frequent
hemorrhages from the lungs, and the
only exercise he could take was horse
back riding.
One day he rode over to the black
smith shop to have his horse shod
and while the smith was doing the
work he got on the forge to warm,
and accidentally inhaled the smoke
from the stone coal. It seemed to
give instant relief, and he inhaled it
for some time. He returned home,
feeling better than he had felt for
months, and determined to contin
ue the experiment. Rev. Mr. Grimes
says that he never had another hemor
rhage; that six treatments cured
him; and that he has never had a
symptom of consumption since. He
had a lady friend who was in the
last stage of consumption. She had
given up all hopes and was confined
to her bed, which she never expect
ed to leave. Mr. Grimes told her
how he was cured, and as she could
not set up, her husband had a little
furnace made and with pipes convey
ed the fumes of the stone coal into
her lungs. Her physician forbade the
treatment, but the husband refused
to desist and In a few weeks the lady
was able to leave her bed, and has
never had a symptom of the disease
since.
Mr. Grimes wants the world to
know of this simple and inexpensive
remedy, and hope all sufferers with
consumption will give it a fair trial.
READER.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the ./*/» /?**"
Signature of
J. fl. COOK, liYERIiY, GA,
— Dealer in ’
; Fresh Meats and Fancy Groceries \
I Buy Turkeys and Pay Cash
Bring your Chickens and :
: . Turkeys and sell for Cash •
i J. M. COOK, liYERhY, GA. ]
-•M-H-W-H-H-H-1-1-I-1-H-H--I--H-I-I-I-HH-1-1-H-1-I-H-I-I-H-I-DI 1 | [ |.|+
“CHRISTMAS®
Write TO DAY, mention name of this paper, and I’ll send
you a check which will be accepted as $14.00 part payment on
our combined scholarship, or $9 00 on our single scholarship
on or before December 28, 1909. Our BIG catalog FREE by
mail. It will pay you tocome hundreds of miles to our At
lanta college because Atlanta offers better opportunities to
young people than any other city in the South,
and in our Model Office Department advanced students
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN
at the rate of SI.OO to $2.00 a day. No other business col
lege offers you any such opportunity as this. We also
teach by mail: Write TO-DAY for check and full particulars
ARTHUR C, MINTER, Manager.
DRAUGHON’S BUSINESS COL!,EGE
ATLANTA, GEORGIA