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Page Eight
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' Pain
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\ '2\ ‘ pleas-
A ure in
A‘ 2 writing
to you
that I had a neuralgia pain in
my arm for five years, and I
used your Liniment for one
week and was completely
cured, I recommend your
Liniment very hi%hl‘y."-—-st.
J. McGraw, 1216 Mandeville
St., New Orleans, La. .
Cured Quinsy Sore Throat
Mr. Henry L. CAuLK, of
1242 Wilson St., Wilmington,
. Del., writes :—“I bought a bot
tle of Sloan’s Liniment for the
quinsy sore throat and it cured
me. I.shall.always keep a
bottle in the house.”
: !!‘i | .)' : I(’ r!| 5‘ ° 5
N >t 1§ JAd Ty A
gives instant relief from rheu.
matism, lumba
go,sciatica, neu- [
ralgia, croup,
sore throat, ton- =
silitis, hoarse- (RN
ness and chest [RNEIIGE
pains. <
Prioss, 25¢.,60¢. & $l.OO
uow;:u?:".'i.:: ;
and poultry seut YIRS e
freo. Address e
Dr. Earl 8. Bloan, Bbacl
Boston, Mass., U, 8. A, s
%&K ; / B‘l
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:“, ‘ LN 100 2 v:-,
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Some are planned. There is noth
ing accidental abhout our stock of
Slale 00d Fancy Groceries
Nor the prices at which wa gell, All
that has been thought outlong ago,
and the ovest goods sought and
bought. Now we feel that ihe
finest line of
.is hare almost for the asking. You’ll
Jlike the goods as well as we do.
AB.GILBERT
PHONE 150.
Cement Blocks, Sidewalk Tiles,Cement,
Plaster Paris andJßeady Roofing....
Contractors for all kinds of Cement and Roof
ing{Work, Our Tile and Blocks are the best that
First Class Material and Workmanship
« Can_ Possibly *Produce. : : : : .
Conetete Blocks are cheaper than brick and as
durable a 8 &tone. Our Roofing is the best that
money can buy, and is guaranteed. for ton years.
R. H. Cox & Company
Successors to W, P, STEPHENS, CHURCH ST., Phone 170,
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer,
Catriage Trimming and Painting.
The Best Rubber Tires Put On
REPAIRING HQRSE SHOEING
done in a satisfactory manner. Satisfaction Guaranteed
Phone No. 67, Washington Avenue. Marietta, Georoig
The Baginning and End.
Fond Mother—lt was at this point in
the entrancing landscape that my
daughter received a declaration and
accepted. Friend—And tell us the rest
of the romance. Fond Mother—Un
fortunately that 1s all there was.—Meg
gendorfer Blatter,
Hit Back.
Mr. Youngwed (complacently)—l sup
pose you know there were a number
of young ladies disappointed when 1
married you.
Mrs. Youngwed—Yes; my girl friends
had prophesied a brilliant future for
me.—Boston Transcript.
Rice in China.
Many nersons fancy that the entire
Chinese people depend on rice as the
mdain article of diet, but there are mil
lions in central and north China that
have never tasted rice, and to other
millions it is more of a luxury than
wheat,
Besing the World.
A new light on the servant question
in England {s shed by Miss Loane in
her book, “The Common Growth.” *“I
asked.” she says, “one capable, steady
servant of five or six and twenty why
she changed places every year and by
what curjous chance her mistresses all
lived so far from one another. She re
plied frankly, ‘I love to see the world,
and it's the only way [ can afford to
travel.’” .
Meard to Move In Russia.
“An Americah wished to move from
the prineipal hotel in St. Petersburg fo
& smaller hotel around the corner. He
came down with his bag packed ready
to go. “Sorry,” said the manager, “but
you cannot leave this hotel or register
at another hotel until we get your pass
port from the police, and that will take
a day and a night. You must go
through exactly the same procedure as
if you were leaving the country.”
l Skipping the Schedule.
“My dear,” says the husband, inter
( rupting the wife in the midst of her
remarks about his latest peccadillo,
“may I ask one favor of you?"
“What is it?”
“You are now in the scolding stage.
Can't you shorten it and get right into
the tearful stage? I'd be glad to go
through the usual program this morn
ing, but I've got to catch an earlier
train than usual, and unless you can
favor me | shall have to leave before
you have wept and we have made up.”
- —Life.
' MothersandFathers
WITH TEETHING BABIES
m
Should re- Contains
member " 2
that Dr.LAW'S DR' LAw S o
TEETHING It makes
POWDERS re-| [ *-.‘.“' ™ 4 |teething
lieves all v: ; ‘i%v i easy, pro-
Infant “)“ (% 4 ;:- / motes
troubles. \l\ ey 7
Gialia 1o ik cheerful
oovo | INFANTILE [ =
Colic, Sour produces
Stomach, innEßs natural
I Thrash, —FOR— sleep.
Hives,Skin
; Chickes eo« | Druggist
‘ Pox, Con- Price, 25 Cts. for them.
stipation & Manufactured by : it
all troubles C. M. LAW CO. i
abboma- MARIETTA, GA. upon
l nyingteeth-| Serial No. 9395, ]receiptof
ing. ORIGINAL SIZ€ price, 25¢
C. M. LAW CO., Marietta, Ga.
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL ANDCOURIER
Wild Chase Through the Streets
In the Heart of London.
A DETECTIVE’S QUICK WORK.
The Polics Officer Was Not Only
Rapid Himself, but Compelled an
Unsuspecting Bystander to Join In
the Mad Fiight and Capture.
In defending the London police from
charges of incompetence a contributor
to Blackwood's Maguzine narrates an
incident in which he figured a few
years ago, when he accompanied his
wife to a Bond street jeweler's, where
she went in to match some pearls and
have some gems reset, he awaiting
her on the ‘street, where he smoked
his cigar. He says:
“l noticed three weil dressed men
go into the shop and several women.
when suddenly one of the well dress
ed men came out through the gluss
doors of the shop and pushed rapidiy
past me as he turned up the stree’.
At the same moment | was seized
violently by the arm by a milkman
who had been arranging his cans on
his handcart just in front of the shop.
* ‘Quick, governor” he shouted. ‘Aft
er him or we lose him! Look; he's pass
ed the bag to a pal!’
“Now, for the life of me I ecannot
tell you what impetled me. I'm not
the kind of man that you can picture
tearing up Boud street in the wake
of an agitated milkman. But there
was something in the grip that man
took of my arm that impeélled me, so
that 1 threw away my cigar and ran
after the man with the bag neck and
neck with the milkman, who exhorted
me to continue in my efforts by shout
ing:
“*‘Throw a leg, governor! If we
lose him we lose him forever!’
*“We tore up Conduit street. I don't
know what the passersby thought. 1
had no time to think of them. When
we reached Regent street our quarry
dived into the traffic like a frog into
a mill race. We went in after him.
How 1 missed being knocked down 1
don't know. The milkman took the
same risks. We were across almost
as soon as the man and sped after
him. 1 don't know what streets we
doubled down. [ know that at this
period it flashed across my mind that
I was making a conspicuous ass of
myself. Here I was racing down the
slums of Soho at the bidding of a
strange milkman, who never stopped
in his exhortations to me.
**Keep it up and we'll get him!
*Our quarry doubled and tacked, but
we stuck to him till just as we were
pacing down the very worst looking
street of the lot he suddenly slipped
into a low house, of which the door
was open. My milkman never lost a
second. He whispered hoarsely in iy
ear:
**Stop here, governor, and grab the
first person as comes out of that
house, no matter who he is! 1 know
the way behind.’
“In a flash he was gone. He had
nipped down an alleyway and disap
peared. I felt a real fool, and the
whole folly of my action rushed in
upon me. 1 had left my wife strand
ed in a shop in Bond street. 1 had
lost my hat and my stick, and here I
was in an almost deserted street,
standing outside a door waiting with
orders from a strange man to grab
the first person that came out of it.
In two seconds more I would have
left the place and gone to the nearest
hatter, a wiser and chastened man.
But just at that moment a boy of
about fifteen came out of the door.
My milkman must have left his spell
upon me, for I immediately threw my
arms around him.
" ‘Lemme go, governor! he shouted.
‘I ain’t done nuffin’ to you!" ,
“He struggled hard. and the more he
struggled the more 1 felt impelled to
hold him. And then suddenly, as if
by magic, two policemen appeared on
the scene and seized my boy for me.
My milkman, wreathed in smiles, ap
peared in the doorway from which the
boy had just come, saying blithely and
quite respectfully: :
" ‘You've done that very well, sir.
We've got the other two inside’ He
then added, ‘l'll just put my hands
over this young feller. :
“He took off the boy's battered hat.
and out of the llzlnt came a roll of
£BO in Bank of Kngland notes. He
then went through the boy's clothes
and produced out of his socks a pair of
ruby and diamond earrings which, to
my astonishment, I saw were the very
gewgaws that my wife had taken with
her to have reset. The detective, for
my milkman was nothing less, then
pinched the boy’s ear and said:
* ‘Where's the lady's bag?
“‘ln the yard, sir,’ he answered sulk
ily enough.
“The milkman retrieved it, and, sure
enough, It was my wife's bag.
“‘But,’ 1 said to the detective, ‘how
did you know that 'I. was connected
with the lady who owns this bag?
“‘lt's our business to know a few
things,’ he said. ‘But if you hadn’t
been game to run we should have lost
the lot. We were only just in time.’
“We left the boy and the two men
in the house in the custody of con
stables and took a cab back to Bond
street, and here the strangest part of
the story come® in, We found my wife
still discussing her pearis with the
jeweler, quite unconscious of the fact
that her bag was gone.”
The Feminine Barometer. %,
The late Francis Galton was in the
habit of writing scientific papers for
various socleties, but as he was ex
tremely deaf he usually got a friend
to read them for him while he himself
sat among the audience. But he al
ways knew whether his paper was a
success by watching the demeanor of
the ladies present. We would explain
that when ladies are interested they
fidget about twice in five minutes, but
when they are not interested they
fidget twice a minute. Thus be always
knew whether his audience was enter
tained or bored.—Argonaut.
FOR SALE—New four room
bungalow, with bath room, lar:ge
lot. Small cash payment, with
monthly or quarterly payments.
Or will build to suit, if this is
not what you want. j
Moultrie M. Sessions.
Very Vivid. ki
“In descriptive writing,” said Wiliam
Dean Howells at a dinner at the Au
thors’ ctub in New York. “a vivid
phrase is always better than a half
dozen paragraphs. The vivid phrase is
what every writer should seek—a
phrase, I mean, something like that of
the baby that shouted to fts mother,
‘Oh, mamma, tum as’ see the man
a-butterin’ bricks!'” :
FOR SALE—A few first-class sec
ond-hand sewing machines ; will sell
cheap or exchange for wood or any
thing of value.
MRS.}J. O. GAINES,
Roswell St., near city limits.
June 2-tf
His Inspivation.
“Gerald, dear, how did you ever sum
mon up courage enough to' speak to
papa?’
“It was this way, Flessie: We were
in the smoking room at the club and
his cigar had just gone out. ‘Grig
gins,’ he said, ‘have you a match?
And I answered him, quick as a flash,
‘Y-yer, sir, I have one—in mind; I want
to marry your daughter,’ just like
that!”—Chicago Tribune.
Broke Up the Show.
Most people of the present day find
theater going a tame if not altogether
innocuous pastime, but there were
times when it was exciting, and ip
this country as well as England. Dur
ing the Revolution a drama, ‘““The
Blockade of Boston,” was being per
formed by British soldiers in a theater
of that city. In the course of one of
the acts a sergeant rushed on the
stage without his hat and shouted:
“The rebels! The rebels! They're at
tacking the neck.” The audience ap
plauded the actor's fervor, not realiz
ing until a few minutes after, when
they beard the sound of drums, that
he was warning them of an actual
happening. The actors had to run off
to their duty.
9 N ’
TAX RECEIVER’S NOTICE.
NOTICE is hereby given that the Books will be open for the purpose of
receiving Tax Returns for the County of Cobb on Monday, April 3d, 1911.
The Law provides that all property and effects, held on February Ist, 1911, shall
oe returned at its market value. Please make your returns early, and avoid
the rush later on. 1 will be at all the places named below on the day and dates
mentioned, and at Marietta on all other days, for the purpose of receiving Tax
Returns of Cobb County for the year 1911.
DISTRICTS FIRST ROUND I; SECOND ROUND THIRD Round
T e R i :
SERETRR ... oo API € Mot May 3 morn ' June 7 morn
8.. e e X U “ 3éve M e
TR .. i aed LR e . lew f “ 7 eve
R, .. .. ilisa Y o * . Aoy “ 5 eve
N . i Y S uan ® . A mom "ok et
B iY T “ 8 morn ’“ 12 morn
Powder Springs ....... | “ 7eve “ 8 eve 1 “ t2eve
ST ob e aeid E e “ 9 morn | ‘ 13 morn
BL. S ceanssd "to BN “ 9 morn }“ 13 morn
‘Lost Moauntain.........| * 10 morn “ geve “ 13eve
Red chk; “ 11 eve “ 10 eve | ¢ -fhew
BOWOrtl g iucva v vea. .| * 1L piok “ 10 morn [ * 206 all day
ORBOSEN .y, s . oo 11 BRE “ 10 eve | “ 14 morn
Blackwells ... ......... “ 12 morn “ 12 morn ST R 2f il
LRO R B : “15 morn [l5 eve
LR R e T “15 morn Wl (o .
BNk, vt v vevil ot RS eve | %1 ave | “ 16 morn
DL, Towers. . ....... .0 " sk eve “ 17eve » IR
DI . e ausoia] Y SR den “ 18 morn ' “ 19 all day
oe S A | “. s merm “ 21 morn
DR ... .o adieidih 2 8E Mo “ 2% lhotn “ 3t eve
BRBINRL O, inviinh sst P Y I 8 MO “ 23 morn - | “ 22 morn
BETvres Storl. 00l a 0 Y 18 eve “ 23eve [ % Sa S 0
SR DR, ol YAI e “ 24 morn % cax iiOe
BEIEV S Btore, 0.. .. " AR e “ 24 morn | % 23 ele
W: W. Trimers.ci.....o . 20 eve “ 24 eve i - 23 eve
S. R. McCleskey’s......| “* 25 morn “ 12 eve | “ 26 motn
Jo'R. Beatley's: . 1000 " a 5 mern “ 12 morn “ 26 morn
Benson’s School House. “ 25 eve l “ 12 eve | “ 26 eve
Wesley Chape1.........| “ 25 eve . “ 12 eve % 26 eve
p 5 Shnsseaten oL EE L (UONG SR GRS RO S
Books will close promptly on July Ist. .
i 3 Pt b
GEO. S. OWEN,
Receiver of Tax Returns Cobb County.
r - & ~‘.‘v PR D D sy § i - — A ;
" ‘ i LGI i ]
RTE ) ?,f «-k e G
4 “ \:-A.E‘ s b
/8 Here’s (% w 4
MR toYourGood Health and Pleasure A¥SN BCSW
AR E .. CARETE PR
74y Come—follow the arrow ’til you join TAERIE &Bl
§EWolaly the merrythrong of palate pleased men 82 |
‘%f and women-who have quit seeking for [idBe{ & ’ IR
the one best beverage because they’ve ;fi B PHER:
£ found it— . :‘.,J_'L, Ny \ 5
Y 4 24, / il
\ Real satisfaction in gvél;y glass—snap and sparkle—vim
F w, and go. Quenchey the thirst—cools like a breeze.
‘ L Delicious—Refreshing—Wholesome ™
] 3 Q 5 £ o A
s e O¢ Everywhere , & &
AT . THE COCA-COLA CO.
booklet, ALL you sce an
Hl‘!"!\e Treulzh ek Atlanst;. Ga. g Arrow think
About‘ Coca-Cola" el of Coca-Cola
; 34 i 3 ;N . . . i 3 8
B ¢ | sl & eat.s ory RESCHAS TR IR B WG
MAYES BROTHERS
(SUCCESSORS TO J. J. HARDAGE)
Staple and Fancy Gro
ceries & Feed Stuf
: + COres eed Stuff
We have purchased the stock of goods of Mr.J. J,
Hardage. and will continue the business in the old
stand. We expect to run a live, progressive grocery,
catering strictly to the wants of the people. We will
appreciate your trade, and promise the same fair
treatment vou received with the old firm.
We expect to carry a first-class line of goods and
we are going to meet the other fellows prices. Call
and see us or t2lephone your wants.
Mayes Brothers
Phone 118 MARIETTA, GA.
RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO-DAY
If in arrear, the Postal Laws yvill not allow us to continue paper.
June 9, 1911,