Newspaper Page Text
Misses Hattie and Annie Ever¬
ett and Annie Cooper spent Sun¬
day in Camilla.
Fit your feet at Hand Trading Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell of Tick
cor visited Mrs. W. G. Akridge
several days this week.
Those coats at Everett’s are sim¬
ply lovely.
Mr. W. H. Brim spent Sunday
in Cotton
Sweet Pickles and stuffed pepper
you will find at
H. B. Tucker & Co’s.
Mr. and Mrs. James Bagge and
family of near Branchville visited
Mrs J. W. McClain Sunday and
and Monday.
Two carloads rust proof seed oats
at Hand Trading Co.
Mrs. S M- Murphy and Miss
Kate Murphy of North Carolin
arrived Sunday to visit Mr. and
Mrs O L James
Texas Red Rust Proof Seed Oats
at Hand Trading Co.
Mrs D. \ Spence and children
sp n f vVednesday with friehds in
Cami 'it.
The most up-to-date'ine of ladies
and childrens cloaks ever brought to
Pelham, at Hand Trading Co.
Judge.! H Scaife of Camilla
was in the city Monday.
We ciiitiiiu^ to be headquarters
f<>r choice tea and coffee
H.. B Tucker & Co.
Dr N Baker of Macon was
a prominent visitor to the city
!'ii sday
'* Don’t buy clothes until you see
what they have at Hand Trading
Co.
Messers C W Pidcock and G
E Smith*,officers of the Georgia
fs tie ..iiern Railroad, §]ftnt .Monday
in city.
Latest styles and lowest prices in
clothing at Hand Trading Co.
Mr. R. L Stripling spent
Wednesday night iu Camilla.
Your lucky combination—style
and price—in clothing at Hand’s.
Mrs Josie Palmer left yester¬
day for Cataula, Ga. to visit hoi
sister, Mrs. G. W. Thomas.
Best line of school shoes ever
brought to Pelham at Hand’s
Col. H. H. Merry spent Wed
nesday’ in Moultrie.
Have you seen ’em? What
Those cloak &pd furs at Hand Trac¬
ing Co.
Mrs. C. W. Reid and Mrs. T
C Cleveland spent Monday in
\ Thomasville.
. If Everett has’nt got what you
want just do us the favor to tell us
and we will get it for you.
Col. H. H. Merry spent Tueg
day in Camilla on professional
business
Do you wa nt a 26 piece set of Rogers
silver ware? If you trade at Everett
Mercantile Co. and get one free.
Mr. A B. Crump of Macon was
in the city Tuesday.
Cadet hose? Yes, just plenty of
them at Everett’s, and they have
i linen heel, toe and knee.
Mr. J. F. Mansfield spent Tues¬
day in Camilla.
We can furnish you almost any¬
thing in shoes. Give us a trial.
Everett Mercantile Co.
Mr. I. C. Stubbs and Judge Z.
H Jones attended a Primitive
Baptist association near Moultrie
Saturday.
j Get cloak ready at for Hand’s. cold weather by buy¬
ing a
J. D. Holman likes Pelham and
the people so he is coming again,
With a fresh lot of horses and
mules - Prices right aud terms io
suit you. Barber’s stables Oct.
19 to 24.
1
THE PEEHA^r JOURNAL, FRJPAY, OCT.. ?» 1908
Mr. J. L. Barrow of \VIngham
spent Sunday with friends in Pel¬
ham.
Yes, Holman is coming again,
Oct. 19th to 24th with more
horses and mules. For sale or
swap, cash or credit. See him at
Barbers stables.
Messers D. L and A. A. Turn
er, H. H. Merry, Dr. J. R. Clem¬
ents and Dr. W. S. Hill expect to
leave this afternoon for Atlanta
to see the automobile races to¬
morrow. It is expected one or
more machines will be purchased
by members of the party aud the
entire party will return by auto¬
mobile from Atlanta.
WANTED, Stenographic Work.
Neat, accurate typewritten work
by
Miss DeWolfe,
Office of J. J. Hill.
Messers D. L. Turner aud A. A
Turner closed a contract today
for the sole agency in this terri
tory of the Maxwell Automobiles
Mrs J. W. Parker returnee
last week from Thotnasville where
she has been spending severa
weeks
Do you want a nice horse or
mule? Then you want to set
1. D. HOLMAN who will be at
Barber’s stables with a fine lot ol
stock Oct. 19 to 24.
A Healthy Family.
“Our whole family has enjoyed
good health since we began usin^
Dr. King’s New Life Pills, threi
years ago,’’ says L. A. Bartlet, ol
Rural Route 1, Guilford, Maine
They cleanse and tone the system in
i gentle way that does you good.
25c. at Hill & King’s drug store.
DIARRHOEA. DYSENTERY
Hemorrhoids and other bowel and stomach
troubles are most successfully treated with
Wilkinson’s Matchless Mineral Water. It
relieves promptly and permanently, heals
and is antiseptic in the highest degree.
As an appetizer it is without a peer, in¬
suring the proper digestion and fullest
assimilation for of f ood, constituting an invalu¬
able tonic all convalescents. and
Relieves promptly Heartburn. Sour
Full Stomach after meals.
Dose, tea to tablespoonful. diluted.
Cheapest water known, one gallon
goes further than a barrel of any
ather water. 1 pint SI; 1 gallon SS.
MATCHLESS MINERAL WATER CO.
Offices, Andalusia, Ala. Well, Greenville, Ala.
Piney-Woods Drug Co.
They Take The Kinks Out.
“I have used Dr. King’s New Lif<
Pills for many years, with increasing
satisfaction. They take the kinks
out of stomach, liver and bowels,
without fuss or friction,” says N. H.
Brown, of Pittsfield, Vt. Guaran¬
teed satisfactory at Hill & King’s
drug store. 25c.
Wood’s Liver Medicine in liquid
form for malaria, chills and fever,
regulates the liver, kidneys and blad¬
der, brings quick relief to bilious¬
ness, sick-headache, constipation
Pleasant to take. The $i.CK) bottle
contains 2 / l z times the quantity of
the 50c. size. First dose brings re¬
lief. Sold by Consolidated Clothing
& Drug Co.
Gutta percha is procured from the
sap of the isonandra gutta, a forest
tree which grows in the Malay penin¬
sula and adjacent islands.
Perkins (at midnight as he seeB bur¬
glar climbing up ladder to second story
window)—Hey, there! Look out for
the paint!—Life.
The kilt is the national dress of the
Albanians, the Massalian shepherds
and the mountaineers of Tibet and As¬
sam as well as of the Scots.
“Love Is the wine of life,” exclaimed
the poet.
“And marriage Is the morning after,”
added the cynic.
Quite 75 per cent of the human body
is pure water. A man weighing 160
pounds is therefore at least 115 pounds
water.
The weaving of flax has been car¬
ried on in Belgium from remote times.
Flax cloth was woven in certain parts
of Belgium in the time of Caesar.
A Deal In Gum.
Some of these little newsboys are re
sonrceful little mites. A day or two
ago a business man dropped a silver
mounted fountain pen through the
grating in front of a building on West.
Third street. They told him in the
store that there was no access to the
hole from the inside. lie seemed to
be up against it. Two newsies saw
him peering down into the grating and
rot interested.
“I’ll git it out fer you, mister.” spoke
up one of them, “if you'll stand tire ex¬
pense. It’ll take about a nickel’s
worth o’ chewin’ gum.”
The man said he would finance the
gum scheme, whatever it might be.
A minute or tuvo later the boy had
dashed into a store and got a yard
tick. He was chewing hard on an
•ntire 5 cents’ worth of gum. As soon
is this was properly softened by the
process of mastication he placed it on
the end of -the yardstick, stuck the
stick through the grating until the gum
met the pen and brought the pen up
with the utmost dispatch.—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Sand Fish.
At low tide in midsummer on ccr
aln parts of the Breton, coast men and
)oys with baskets aud hoes descend
he white beach to the sea’s edge
They are anglers, but the fish they
reek live on dry land. With his hoe
ach fisherman makes swiftly in the
'acked sand shallow parallel trenches,
ery olo:*e together and about a yard
ong. If the luck he good every scratch
>f the hoe uncovers three or four sll
ery fish, the size of sardines, that
eap up glittering Into the air. They
must be seized quickly or at once they
bury themselves In the sand again.
They are called iancons. T!\» smaller
mes are used for mackerel I"if; the
: arger, with their heads cut off, make,
Tied, an excellent dish a good dea!
ike fried smelts. With daylight tides
he Iancons are seldom Jigger than a
nan’s middle finger, hut with the
night tides, when promenaders have
lot disturbed the sand, they run very
urge indeed. Then, their lanterns flash
tig on the beach, the Breton fishermen
often capture Iancons a foot long.
Cut Heads.
The Liverpool Post has been making
observations with regard to the “cut
heads” which are treated at the hos¬
pitals between 12 and 2 a. in. The
Post says that the house surgeons
have noticed a curious difference in
the sexes on different nights. On Sat¬
urday nights the subjects are mostly
men who have received their wages,
redeemed their clothes fronj,turf*0 ?&&
Trunk enough to lead to a brawl. Mon
lay night, however, is “ladies’ night.”
The men have gone to work, and the
wires have taken their husbands’ best
and only suit to the pawnshop, and
then it is their turn to drink the pro¬
ceeds and cut one another’s heads.
The usual answer to the question
‘Who did it?” Is, “Another lady wot
Ives in the same ’ouse.”
Married Paupers and Divorce.
“An odd thing about married paupers
s that they like to live separate,” said
a single pauper.
“You know how almshouses are ar
.mged. There’s a men’s ward, a wom
•n’s ward aud a mixed or married
ard. Well, the mixed ward is always
'.early empty. Not that we lack mar¬
led paupers. Oh, no. But the hus
ands prefer to bachelor it among the
nen and the wives to old maid it
imong the women. The older our mar¬
ried paupers get the more vehement is
heir Insistence on separate living.
“ ‘She’s alius a-naggin’,’ the octogena¬
rian will growl.
“ ‘Nobody can’t sleep o’ nights with
■eeh snorin’ as hisn,’ sniffs the septua¬
genarian female.
“And so they separate—to all intents
livorced.”—Philadelphia Bulletin.
A Great Financier.
A man who occupied a little back
room In a poor quarter of the east end
if Ixmdon was evicted for nonpayment
if rent. He had nothing but a valise
ind a few clothes, and while they were
.hrowlng him and his belongings out
if the house a bulky manuscript fell
>ut of his pocket. Nobody noticed it
■t the time, but after he had gathered
bis clothes and taken his departure
me of the bystanders saw the big roll
of paper, picked it up and on opening
It was surprised and amused to find
! t contained an elaborate scheme for
refunding the national debt of the
British euufire.
The Negro and the Watermelon.
A negro bought a watermelon for 50
cents and sold it a few minutes later
for the same price. The purchaser
changed his mind and sold it back to
the negro for 40 cents. Later the negro
.sold It for 60 cents. How much profit
did he make?—New York World.
Saves Him.
“How did Sniggsley ever get his rep¬
utation for the possession of great wis¬
dom ?”
“His wife talks so much that he nev¬
er gets a chance to expose his ig¬
norance.”—Chicago Record-Herald.
Life without liberty is joyless, but
life without joy may be great. The
greatness of life is sacrifice—Ouida,
> <kh>oo-ooo ooooo-o-oo ooo-ooooooooo o-ooo ooooooooooooO 000-00 I
i Brilliant Cut Glass. !
The kind that glitters and sparkles J
like crystal—that is the kind we sell. b
Remember, there are several grades t
of Cut Glass. In the best grade the ?
> glass is pure, clear and white; so that j
> when the light falls upon the polished «
> surface, it scintillates almost like the ?
> diamond. In the inferior grades the 5
? glass is inclined tu be cloudy and,dead S
) reflects light poorly. c
s We carry the finest display of Cut 5
5 Glass in the city, consisting of the <
> three or four best brands. ?
| Get and Your Get Cut the Glass Best. Here |
>
| W. W. BURNETT, j
? OOOO000000000-000OOOO00000-0-000000000000000000000oooo c
- .Lv. Y’.. I, *
DOCTOR KING
THE OLD RELIABLE DO* 10*. OLDEST IH AGE AND LONGEST LOCATED. REGULAR GRADUATES II MEDICIHE.
WE OFFER YOU THE URGE AND VALUABLE EXPERIENCE OF THE LONGEST
ESTABLISHED AND MOST RELIABLE SPECIALISTS IN THE SOUTH
Authorized by Hie state to treat CHRONIC, NERVOUS AND SPECIAL
DISEASES. W. guarantee to refund money if not cured. All medi¬
cines furnished ready for use—no mercury or injurious medicines
used. No detention from business. Patients at a distance
treated by mail and express, Medlsiaes sent everywhere free
from gaze or breakage. No medicine sent C. O. D. unless in
A structed. Charges low. Thousands of oases cured. State your
case and send for terms. Consultation FREE and confidential, in
DU.K1MJ bn. hi.\o and arut Staff staff of of 8 Specialists ptnan*i* person, pWtSUU* Ul or by UJ letter. ICWr, V>a>lA Call OI or write VvXlV“ today. wOURkjf , Don’t DWU VUtiiaj. delay.
jgf L! ||0^ ou# the iekUlt*T>r > ouihful folly and exc< Treatment, stricture No p»in and No r. new cau»ticb use Home of
J uent. no exposure.
urine, pimples and blotches on the face, rushes of cutting g, bougies or sounds. No detention from buai
I blood to the head, pains in the back, confused Ideas ness. Thousands cured. We guarantee to refund
|andforgetfulness,bashfulueas, aversion to society, money if not permanently cured. d. Hy 1 book fully ' ex¬
gloss of vital forces, loss of manhood, etc-, cured for plains this disease. veins In the
Ife. We can stop night looses, restore lost viiality, Ifaviaaaala V 3 lIGOC 810 Enlarged debility, scrotum—
evdopand mature younjr or middle aged who are causing nervous weakness
■weakly and wrecks and make them fit for marriage. of the nervous system, etc., permanently cured with¬
thatterriable disease,in aii its forms out pain. »» #ured
y I#IIC119a and stages, cured for life. Blood H y d r o o • I • ,orotttm
■Poisoning, IGonorrhoea, Skin Diseases, all Ulcers, Swellings, diseases, Sores. Phimosis *'*■ hook—cured Is few day.
iGonorrhoea, loured Gleet Gleet and and all forms rorms of of private private diseases, pain. a
te stay Cured. We guarantee to refund your without
■ (Kidney money if not permanently cured. BAnV FREE TO MEM upon appllctlons dlseue
Bladder and Prostatle with description of above
the effect* and cure, ^n^UTo^t^n eent seeled in plain wrapper.
InicsaeAA BUl»vaSt?d successfully ly cured riLES treated and and RUPTURK permanent- Free Museum
led cur¬ nothing.
by painless and bloodlee* methods- in the city. 7 Very instructive. Cor. Marietta Costs aid you Piacbtrei fits*
DR. if KING a ski me fcEDICAL n ni a js | CO., No. lUriitta,
ATLANTA. GA.
(Thoroughly < otponelbie. Legally Incorporated under r the the lawe law. of c Georgia.)
LOOK OUT FOR
HOLMAN
He Wilt Be in Pelham Again
OCT. 19 TO 24.
With another lot of HORSES AND MULES
hat will be ahead of anything yet brought to this
section. FRESH STOCK and the kind best suited to
chis locality. The kind you need for all round farm
vork=-Mules that are well broke and ready for the
Mow, wagon, cane mill, buggy or anywhere you
,vant to work them. Horses that look well, drive
.veil and have sense. On this trip we will have
plenty of brood mares and will not run short during
the week.
Our long experience in the business enables us to
know just what the people want and that is what
we buy==and the fact that we operate four large
sales stables puts us in position to buy in very large
quantities and of course, this means a saving in
price, of which our customers always get the benefit.
Don’t Fail to See Us
At Barbers Stables.
OCT. 19 TO 24.