Newspaper Page Text
iOiNAJu CAR us.
A\. S. STEWART.
ARCHITECT
Estimates on Plans and Specifi¬
cations cheerfully furnished.
Office No. 8 Hurst Building
PELHAM, GEORGIA.
J. W. McClain, Ni. D.,
PHYiKTAX AND SURGEON.
Office in Piney Woods Drug Co,
building.
Residence on McDonald Street.
C-W REID.
ICTAN AND SURGE ' '
PELHAM, GA
i new City Hal! >i
•e«on fan I \ i .
i. R. CLEMENTS.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
PELHAM, GA.
Office in Turner Building, and can
be fonad at night at residence on
Hand Ave., formerly occupied by
Dr. J. W. McClain.
All calls answered promptly
W. s. Hill, JS/l. jd.
I'einam, Gu.
Office at Drug Store during the day
and residence at night.
Jf. R. O’lVe&l.
DENTIST.
Office in mize building
PELHAM GEORGIA.
DAVIS & MERRY
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Camilla, Ga.
Offices Ga.
Pelham
Practice In All Courts
O. B. BUSH.
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Hurst Block over Mitchell
County Supply Company
Residence on Barrow Ave
Calls answered day or night. Leav^
calls with Piney-Woods Drug Co.,
Mitchell County Supply Company,
or Residence. Residence Phone No.
88 , office No. 44.
REAL ESTATE.
Farm and City property bought
and sold. Rents seen after on rea¬
sonable terms. List your lands for
sale. Let us know your wants.
Pelham Land Loan & Improvement Co.
D. L. Turner, Sec. & Mgr.
Office over Pelham State Bank.
Have you seen the low cut shoes
at Hand Trading Co. They are
snappy.
beet thing tor • growing boy I
Learning to shoot well end
acquiring qualities of ,
✓ SELF-CONTROL, DECISION,LAND
MANLINESS ,
I r -(ff.fr- to STIVERS FIREARMS EDUCATION.
Ask ShatRiAn»™Pi8tols> ytmr Dealer'for"Steven«rRifles— Insist
on our time
bonored Yaske. If you cannot prepaid, obtain,
I receipt we ship 4ir®et, express upon
of Catalog ** rlce -
J. STEVENS ARMS 4 TOOL CO.
P. O. Box 409f AC.
Chlcopeo Fall*, Mom., U. S. A.
THE PELHAM JOURNAL, FRIDAY, SEPT. 11, 1908.
Don’t Make a Mistake
If you are contemplating making
i stenographer or yourself, do not
nake a misrake and attend a schoo'
teaching one of the old systems, such
as Pitman, Graham, and Gregg;
they are too awfully hard to learn,
almost impossible to read accurate¬
ly and are incomplete. The Byrne
Simplified Shorthand, as taught at
the Athens Business <’o lege of Ath¬
ens, Ga., is far superior, more mod¬
ern in every way; ir i.- a system that
is ea~y to Uarn and has often been
mastered b. ynuwster-. of from 9 to
12 years of ige. Where the Pitm i -
ic and ot . >r S' steins nave over 500
rules, al u» son exceptions and
thousands o werd signs to tie coln
mitted to m mory. a .1 o a phonetic
language t master, the Byrne Sim¬
plified wri s the English Language
•vsit is wri i n and -poken m , ver,
lav use, with but the 26 letters of
th • alphabet. 1 " short rules, no e -
coptions and 16 w< rd sums to b
in unor ze 1 r mIus one with a
giant me b e me an expert
stenograph whh the other systems,
wnile with the Byrne' Simplified,
practically anyone has sufficient
memory to hand'e it successfully.
The illegibility of the old systems
is due to the student’s unfainiliaritv
with the phonetic anguage, his ina¬
bility to remember and write acur
ately the thousands of word signs,
his failure to apply the 500 rules or
some of the many exceptions prop¬
erly, his failure to execute accurate¬
ly the complicated outlines required
in writing words with these systems.
With the Byrne Simplified, reading
is an easy matter, and one who
could read print accurately should
have no trouble in learning to rean
the Byrne with accuracy. In the
first place, he writes the English
language as his mother taught him
to speak it, and not a phonetic lan¬
guage, as hard to learn as Latin.
Next, he uses characters represent¬
ing the 26 letters of the English
alphabet, which together with the
13 short rules and 13 word signs, ena¬
ble him to write anything in th,
English Language. There is not a
word that can be set in type or writ¬
ten in script alphabet that cannot
written with the 26 letters of the
the Byrner-SitiipTified;
its outlines are simple and easily
executed. You are not worried to
death trying to figure out whether
the vowel dot or dasii you put in was
shaded or unshaded or whether it
was put at the beginning of a char¬
acter or in the middle, neither are
you worried trying to figure out
whether that vowel circle was made
large enough for A or small enough
for I or whether it be a loop or what
in the world it might be. There is
absolutely no guess work in the
reading of the Byrne Simplified, as
is the case with the other systems.
The other systems are incomplete
inasmuch as the basic principles are
so deficient and incomplete that the
thousands word signs, hnndreds of
rules and exceptions must be brought
into use to supply the deficiency.
The Byrne Simplified is the most
complete system in use, inasmuch as
it is more like the 26 letters of the
printed or script alphabet, we write
any word in the English language;
the same is true with the 26 letters
of the alphabet in the Byrne Sim¬
plified Shorthand. Many of the
most rapid writers in America today
write fhe Byrne; this proves its won¬
derful speed possibilities. For in¬
dorsements from those who have
mastered the other systems, then
abandoned them and made a success
of the Byrne, write for our 168 page
catalog; it contains hundreds of in
dorsments that are sufficiently strong
to convince the most skeptical of
the wonderful superiority of the
Byrne over all other systems. We
have the exclusive control of this
system and no other in this section
is permitted to teach it. You can
better understand why the Athens
Business College is the largest school
of Bookkeeping, Business Training,
Shorthand and Typewriting in the
state, when you have read our cata¬
log. Ever statement made therein
is true and correct and backed
by a cash gauranty of $100. Don’t
delay; write at once for it.
Residence For Sale.
Five room house: large rooms,
extra large hall clear through the
building, plenty of closets, 4 fire
places, good well of water, fine
neighborhood. Liberal Term.
Apply to Pelham Journal, t. t.
&
In Telling You That Our Stock
Ot Boy’s Fall Clothes
is ready for your want is to say some
things for you to weigh carefully before
makir g a purchase anywhere else.
'
__• if a’ly knew ..... that ^ represent the _ .......... leading maker of boy’s cloth¬ „
yo we one
ing, and bad > illy learned the difference between X TRAGOO D and other brands,—it
wouldn’t be mpessary for us to use a single line of printed matter to tell the merits
of our goods. You would never think of getting any clothes for your boys but
ExtragooD; and we could count on your coming here when ready to buy.
The best tailors that ever lived work in the Ederheimer-Stein shops. This
firm uses more high class materials and less of the poorer kind than any house in
the boys clothes business. They manufacture on a greater scale. That means a
bigger purchasing power to our money, and to yours,—decreased cost and lower
prices all along the line.
This is the only store in town selling XtragooD clothes. The only
store that can get them. We’re out to please and satisfy you; we've
selected the makers best able to help in this. Its one grand effort on
the part of both the makers and this store to see how much we can
give you for your money.
Boys’ clothes partake of the general richness of fabric and color; browns, grays, bine;
fancy and plain weaves,
V ITTLE fellows styles; Russian, sailor and junior models, nattily trimmed serges and
mixed materials. Trimmings follow the Parisian fashions. $5 to $7.50.
r> OYS’ Norfolk suits, in new patterns, yoke and plain, double-breasted styles and full
cut Knickerbockers. Size 6 to 17. $ 6.50 to $ 12 . 50 .
VfOUNG men—big boys—get men’s styles, youthfully designed with a lot of smart “catchy”
* ideas that older men don’t want. $15 to $ 30 .
Consolidated Clothing
' & Drug Co. ■'
k '
A Paying Investment.
Mr. John White, of 38 Highland
Ave., Houlton, Maine, says: “Have
been troubled with a cough every
winter and spring. Last winter I
tried many advertised remedies, but
the continued until I bought a bottle
of Dr. King’s New Discovery; before
that was half gone, the cough was all
gone. This winter the same happy
result has followed; a few doses
once more banished the annual
cough. I am now convinced that Dr.
King’s New Discovery is the best of j
all cough and lung remedies.” Sold
under guarantee at Hill & King’s
drug store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial
bottle free.
BULBS
BbCLKF.E’S BULBS SUCCEED!'
SPECIAL OFFER 1
:
J Made to baild New Hus hies*. A \
w trial will ror.ko you a permanent cus- ^
/ tosicr. Satisfaction guaranteed or your
money refunded.
,, Spanun m», Iparajis, 1
___________ w , i.Chinnudnit, Aneoi jon#. Daffodil,
—• Eye HareUsua, D*r»iu Tulip, Parr** Tuli lip, r ,-------- V• r legated
I Foliage Tulip, Oxalie, French, Roman aud Dutch Hyacinth*, >
I sarlr mid Ut« Tulips, etc., etc, V
€>UAKANT£E2> TO PLEA*!?
Write to-day Mansion this Paper i
w > -V -www-w» ! ;
StS.NO 26 CENTS i
to eovarpoatsge and packing a:id receive tr.ls valuable collection
\ . ot Bulba jibs Postpaid, Postpaid, together together with with n.y big Illustrated, Ins'.nictlT*.
■ varieties y^rifft*_ leautiful jtiful ot Seed, Seed, *__HnlU Se-ds. Bulb Bulb Bulbs and and >.i< and Flout Plant Plants. Pla.t. B Book. Toll* all about the Best I j
In Commemoration or a continuous, successful business
L eitiM Jl71,1 vi'l present free of charge with this Collection 1 i
k k Babylonian Horn'd Tulip Il ilh The greatest floral wouder *
of the age. This Bulb alone is worth a $ tier ter.
iH.W.Bcolta U ?,KS£
3
It Very la Serious
a very serious matter to ask
for one medicine have the
wrong; one given you. For this
reason we urge you In buying
to be careful to get the genuine—
BUck-BghT Liver Medicine
The reputation of this old, relia¬
ble medicine, for constipation, in¬
digestion ly and liver trouble, is firm¬
established. It does not imi^
other medicines. It is better
others, or it would not be the fa¬
vorite liver powder, with a larger
sale than all others combined.
SOLD m TOWM n