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Page Six
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Beltnnlan PERCA RO SOMO = -0 _ g 0 o~ NEW YORK.
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T bt e b s o i e e
| DD |
AVegetable PreparationforAs.
similating the Food anil Reguia
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
b}
ISNRS A T |
PromtesDig;stbnfiurfl
ness and Rest. Contains neither
Opium Morphine nor Mioeral.
Not NArcoTIC. |
Becipe of Old leSHMUELPITORR
ey -
i+
tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea
Worms Convulsions. Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
FacSimile Signature of |
NR LT ()lci
B 3 Doses -35 CENTS
DL s, 4 BN
t—_——_wmf nieed under the Foodag
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
PHONE 19 26 NORTH SIDE PARK SQUARKE
W. M. BELISLE
JEWELER
An Up-To-Date Place to Buy Silverware (Best Quality), Cut
w... Glass, Jewelry of All Kinds, Watches, Clocks, Etc.}
Repairs Promptly {as it is possible) any and All Kinds of Jewel
ry, Watches Clocks, Ete. All Work Guaranteed Twelve
Months that Quality Will Permit. One Debt I
OWE to My Many Custorers is a Continuance
of Good, Honest Work and Reasonable Charges.
Call at my Store—l am in-at AUI Hours.
~———Courteous Treatment to All.————
W. M. BELISLE
THE JEWELER
PHONE 49 26 NORTH SI.E SQUARE
A Country Store For Those
Who Want The BEST.
. TALLEY
At the Crossing of the Hiram and Ten
nessee Roads, six miles from Marietta.
Lost Mountain Telephone.
Fancy Croceries of All Kinds.
I have opened this store because there is a need for it <lt
will serve the convenience of the neighborhood. My stock
is first-class, my prices reasonable and I solicit® patronage
on that basis. A+ H: TALLEY:
Saving Useless Tri
L - N 20 ANN | T
g el N 4
< ¥
| - _‘“\/ /0
*1 terget to tell you to bring some sugar.” “Alright, lam in the stere Dow.”
You can afford to forget things if you have
a telephone in your home. To telephone saves
hundreds of useless trips every day for those who
live in the country. You can have this service in
your home at small cost. It will save you money
and add to the pleasure of your family.
Our free booklet tells all about this won
derful service. Write for it today. A postal
will do. Address
' Farmers Line Department S
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE (
& TELEGRAPH COMPANY R S
o South Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga. s
GASTORIA
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the E; ¥
Signature
of
&){ In
- Use
For Over
Thirty Years
GASTORIA
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL ANDCOURIER
Invincible Legie.
Donald (who is seeing his more pros
perous cousin off by the train)—Ye
micht like tae leave me a bob or twa
tae drink ye a safe journey, Wullie.
Wullie (feigning regret)—Man, I canna.
A’ my spare shullin’s I gie tae my auld
mither. Donald—That's strange, be
cause yer mither told me ye never gie
her onything. Wullie—Weel, if I dinna
gie my auld mither onything, what
sort o’ chance dae ye think you've got?
—London Pynch.
g A Great Relief.
“Gee, ain’t .it a great relief when
you’ve been suffering from a toothache
to summon up your courage and go to
‘a dentist and have it over with?"
“l guess so. Did the dentist relieve
yw?'l
“You bet! He wasn’'t in!"—Toledo
Blade.
Too Low Down.
“Why don’t you name your mule,
Uncle Jackson?"’
“Aln’t no name ornery ’nough to fit
dis mewl, suh.”—Buffalo Express. .
. T
Dangerous Moonlight.
Moonlight most intense sometimes
causes sore eyes in Cubé, and the mna
tives navigate and perambulate with
umbrella and paraluna.
Von Lenbach, the Painter.
Franz von Lenbach, the great por
trait painter, painted three portraits of
the poet Adolph Wilbrandt. On one
occasion the sitting lasted through the
whole day. The afternoon passed, and
dusk came on, but still Lenbach work
ed away without appearing to uotice
the falling light. At last It grew so
dark that Wilbrandt could scarcely see
him. He called his attention to this,
saying that it seemed impossible for
him to paint any more, but Lenbach
begged him, unless he was tired, to
continue sitting. “But what can you
see of me?” asked the puzzled poet.
“Quite the best of all. Excellent. Sit
still, please.” And the sitting only
evded with the last glimmer of light.
He Was on Time.
Sir Charles Dilke once spoke with
admiration of an American he had
met in San Francisco. The American
told him he would be coming to Eng
land in a year. Dilke invited him to
lunch and gave him a day fourteen
months later, assuring him he would
give him a distinetively English lunch,
begging him at the same time to be
punctual. *“lf you will give me an
hour I'll be on hand,” replied the
American. Dilke gave 1 o'clock. As
the clock struck 1 on the day in ques
tion fourteen months afterward Dilke
walked downstairs to the dining
room, which was on the ground floor
of his house, just as the American
walked in.
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE.
If your subscription is a year be
hind or nearly so, let us hear from you
at once or we will be compelled, un
der the postal regulations, to discon
tinue mailing the paper. The matter
is beyond our control. It is the law
and we must obey it. Look at the la
bel, see your date and remit this
week,
Thrashing Machines.
The flail i{s the most ancient instru
ment for thrashing grain, although it
is possibie that the tramping of the
straw under the feet of horses, oxen
and men is a close second. The Ro
mans used a machine called the *tri
bulum,” a sledge loaded with stones or
iron and drawn over the grain sheaves
by horses or oxen. The first machine
attempted in modern times for the
work of thrashing was invented by
one Michael Mengies of Edinburgh
about 1732. Some thirty years later
Andrew Meikle built a similar ma.
chine. It was not until the latter half
of the nineteenth century, however,
that the thrashing machipe reached
anything like its present perfection.
LIFE'S FIELD.
Is it not just as we take it,
This mystical world of ours?
Life's field will yield, as we make it,
A harwest of thorns or flowers.
—A. Carey.
That's What is Said of Stomach
Prescription Guaranteed by
Wikle-Hodges Drug Co.
Stephen Waite, of Lansing, Michi
gan, writes :
““Far over three years I suffered much
pain and annoyanee from stomach dis
ease., I had no help from my digestive
organs, my food would stay in my
stomnach and ferment, causing gas, I
doctored, and used every remedy that
I heard of, but it remained for MI-O-N A
to cure me entirely, and before I had
used three boxes, my appetite and di
gestive organs became all right. It is
a wonderful remedy.”’
MI-O-NA stomach tablets are small
and easy to swallow. They stop the
most painful stomach distress in five
minutes. They drive out sourness and
gas and make the stomach clean and
sweet., ; |
They are sold by Wikle-Hodges Drug
Co. for 50 cents a box under a positive
j il Ul o P AR
Old Wordsworth.
Owen Wister, the novelist, was talk
ing in Philadelphia about a poet
whose works sold poorly.
“Poets are usually without honor,™
he said “Remember Wardsworth's
case. The great Wordsworth was in
the habit of spouting his poetry aloud
as he took his lonely walks. Thus he
polished and elaborated his lines,
Thus, too, he got the reputation among
the Rydal lake folks of being a bit
daft.
“Well, John, what's the news?” Hart
ley Coleridge once asked an old stone
breaker by the lake shore.
“Why, nowt varra partic’lar,” the
stonebreaker replied. “only oid Words
worth’s broken loose agin.”
Janos Made a Record.
Suicide is more prevalent In Ger
many than anywhere else, the most
depressing feature of the vital statis
tics of that country being the number
of children who destroy themselves.
But Hungary holds the record for old
age in attempted suicides. In 1888
Janos Meryessi, who was eighty-four
years old, jumped off the suspension
bridge at Budapest into the Danube.
He was rescued and explaimed that he
wished to end his life, as he was be
coming too decrepit to support his
father and mother. This extraordinary
statement proved to be true, Meryessi's
parents being aged 115 and 110 re
gpectively, and a public subscription
was organized to set them all three
above want.
Lightning Kills Few.
In 1906 lightning killed only 169
people in this whole country. One’s
chances of death by lightning are less
than two in a million. The chances
of death from liver, kidney or stom
ach trouble is vastly greater, but not if
Electric Bitters be used, as Robert
Madsen. of West Burlington, la,
proved. Four Doctors gave him up
after eight months of suffering from}
virulent liver trouble and yellow
jaundice. He was then completely
cured by Electric Bitters. They’re
the best stomach, liver, nerve and
kidney remedy and blood purifyer on |
earth. Only 50c at W. A Sams’ Drug
Store.
Laziness Leads to Invention.
Laziness has been at the back of
many an invention, and it was a lazy
pointsman who hit on the idea that
made the distance signal possible. Ac
cording to Sir George Finlay, it was
in 1846 that a pointsman who had to
attend to two station signals some dis
tance apart decided to save himself the
trouble of walking to and fro between
them by fastening the two levers to
gether by a long piece of wire. A bro
ken iron chair served as counterweight.
The wire ran on into his hut, and
there he sat nightly and worked the
two signals without setting foot out
side till he was found out and repri
manded and promoted.—London Chron
icle.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S |
CASTORIA
i o I
At His Fingers’ Ends. |
“Oh, father! See the funny man!” i
“Yes, child; is he not funny?” ¢ ‘
“Indeed, he is not. And why does
he wave his hands and make strange
motions?"” |
“He is a deaf mute, my child.” |
“How interesting! But why does he
snap his fingers?”
“He doubtless is cracking a joke.'—
Toledo Blade.
Clubbing Offers. -
For the convenience of our sub
scribers we have arranged the follow
ing clubbing propositions:
The Marietta Journal and Courier
and the Atlanta Semi-weekly Journal
PRI OnS vear vokST RD
The Marietta Journal and Courier,
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal and
Home and Farm one year......... . $1.75
The Marietta Journal and Courier,
Atlanta Semi-weekly Journal and the
Southern Cu1tivat0r................... $1.75
The Marietta Journal and Courier
and the Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitu
tion, and Southern Cultivator cne
PERL L caaßninai el L BLTD
For $1.75 we can send the Journal
and Courier, the Tri-Weeklv Constitu
tion and can substitute in place of the
Southern Cultivator one of the follow
ing publications, so that the sub
scriber will receive for $1.75, .the
Marietta Journal and Courier and the
Tri-Weekly Constitution and either
the Uncle Remus Monthly Magazine,
or Human Life Magazine, or McUall’s
Magazine, or the Southern Ruralist, or
the Southern Poultry Journal, of
Dallas, Texas,
The Marietta Journal and Courier
and the Farmer’s Union]News ... $1.50
The Marietta Journal and Courier
and the] Atlanta Georgian 'Weekly
News Brashe ..o o 20 S 5
- The Marietta Journal and Courier
and the Uncle Remus Monthly Magsa
0@ ee §L 25
_ These offers are made to oid sub
cribers who pay up and to new
SO IR RAR e e e 7"“1%»»
What Ails You?
Do you feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequent head- '-2 '
aches, coated tongie, bitter or bad taste in morning,
“‘heart-burn,’” belching of gas, acid risings in throat after 5 p
eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, -
goor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred %=~
sympioms ? T
¥i you have any considerable number of the el o
above symptoms you are suffering from bilious
nazss, torpid liver with indigestion, or dyspepsia. -
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medica! Discovery is made o
up of the most valuable medicinal principles
known to medical science for the permanent r
cure of snch chnormal conditions. It is a most
efficient liver invigorator, stomach tomic, bowel
regulator cad nerve strengthener.
The ““Goiden Medical Discovery’’ is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum,
a full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested
under oath., A glance at these will show that it contains no aleohol, or harm
ful habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined
glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American mediecal,
forest piants. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
WEBER and COLUMBUS
[ have just réceived two car-loads of the
above high-class wagons. I have also
two car-loads of buggies and surreys in
stock. If you should need a one-horse
wagon or a two horse wagon, buggy or
surrey, come to see me. I can give you
something first-class. '
As to my HARNESS, you know I
Have the besttobe had. . . .
C. T.WEBB,
106 ATLANTA ST. PHONE 262 MARIETTA, GA
RR R S BRI
S R S O SN T T
We need not dwell on the importance
attached to wearing apparel. Everyone
knows that clean linen and clean outer
garments stamp the wearer as a clean
character. Our laundry work is still the
best that can be produced. Our dry
cleaning is recognized as up to the high
est standand. To be blest with “Clothes
Happiness,” let us do your work., . . .
Guthman Laundry & Dry Cleaning (o.
waes J. W Petty ™
PUBLIC TRANSFER
The Haverty Furniture Co.,
will pack ship, store or trans
fer your household goods.
If you are going to move see
us before »placing - contract,
We have competent help and (‘)m:
terms are reasonable. ‘Phone 198,
Toric Invisible one-piece Bifocals. N k —'— _- %]
Toric Invisible two-piece Bifocals. ".‘ .\\ o 2
Every Bifocal offered for sale can .‘-\‘\:‘-' %
be bought from us. We carry in 3 (/&A \,
stock every patent nose piece made. I : ch
With our facilities, frame adjust- [\ 2
ing aud fair dealing, you can get the G\(
hest service obtainable, i "
. ’." ‘((\t(\'z\.\
A Gomplle Lne of Opera Glo S
0 L 0 000 Glsss | s
WALTER BALLARD OPTIGAL (0. ™ fomemeree Stree
o Atlanta, Ga.
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF.
In ancic. times the wise men of the East based all their
business a: rs and calculations on the positions and move
ments of t.. stars. And now in 1911 the wise men here pat
ronize the STAR PRESSING CLUB and TRIOQ LAUNDRY,
HMonl»-Gr.TH WISE. M Ph 254
arry navmnes, Mgr one
June 9, 1911,