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The RAlarietta
be #lartetta Journal.
: ESTABLISHED IN! 1866,
Official Journal of City and Ceunty.
W. S. N. NEAL. —— J. A. MASSEY.
Editors and Proprietors.
Etered at the Post Office, Marietta, a,. as Sec
ond Class Matter.
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mothl cotw will be uved. | : Te
MARIETTA GA.,
THURSDAY MORNING JULY 25. 1889.
TEERE is just one way to make children
lovely —that is surround thea by day sand
night with an atmosphere of love. Re
straint and reproof may be miogied with
love, but love must be & constant element.
I found my littie giri was growing unam
iable and plain,’’ said & mother to us the
other day, ‘‘and reflecting on it sadly, 1
could accuse myself as the cause thereof
So I changed my management, and im
proved every opportunity to praise an en.
courage her : to assure her of my uubound
ed affection for her and my earnest desire
that she should grow up to lovely and har
monious womanhood. As arose tothe sun
shine so the child’s heart opened with the
warmth of constant aflection and caresses
1 showered upon her ; her peevishness
passed away, her face grew beautiful and
pow one look from me will bring her to
my side obedient tomy will and happiest
when she is nesrest me.”’
sl ——— }
PAPER CLOTHING.—*‘If the clothmak
ers don’t get that man up in the northwest
who has invented paper clothing into a
trust by next winter he'll makea big for
tune, and millions overcoats will stay in the
pawnshops, where they ave now ,’’said
Harry Parker. ‘‘He has’t the idea worked
out yet as far as he will probably go, but
he made enough vests and underclothes
Isst winter to create something ofa panic
among the St. Paul clothiers, where he
made his first experiment on a big scale. |
The paper is prepared so that it is as soft
as cloth and the cold cannot penetrate,
it. My father is engaged in an open air
occupation. and likes to experiment, so
80 he got one of these vests and woreit
with an overcoat all last winter with great
comfort. Next winter he intends to come
out on the streets in a full suitof it.”’
There ie a remarkable specimen
of deformed humanity at Paradise,
in the porthern part of Clay coun
ty, Missouri. His name is Joseph
Jess. He weighs 200 pounds, has
n> hands, feet, elbow joints or
ghoulder blades; but notwithstand
ing these drawbacks, he enjoys life]
immensely, walking about on his
chair, talking well, writing with a
pen in his mouth, singing, crowing,
barking, and in fact constituting an
entire museum in himself. He has
a wonderfully developed chest, and
can hold his breath for three min
utes without any apparent incon
venience.
“Laura,” said the old man, “will
you have some taters?”
“It you refer to the farinacious
tubers which pertain to the solanum
tuberosum and which are commonly
known as potatoes,” replied the
sweet girl graduate, “I would be
pleased to be helped to a modicum
of the same. But taters? taters? I'm
quite sure, papa, that they are
something of which I never had the |
pleasure of hearing.” |
The old man pounded on the ta
ble until the pepper caster lay down
for a rest, and then remarked in a
voice of icy calmess: ‘“Laura will
you have sowme of the taters?”’
“Yes papa.”
Is our boasted high school system
a failure, or is it not.
The agricultural interests gener
ally are in fairly good financial con
dition, better than for many years,
snd another season of large crops
would bring an immense amount of
surplus money into the hands of the
most progressive farmers. Early
crops promise well, and whether
the yield of cotton should be large
or small, it would bring a large
revenue to thefarmers. The world’s
consumption of this staple is now so
great that an extremely large yield
would be absorbed at profitable fig
ures, while a short crop would force
prices to a point to yield big returns
to the planters.
One of Dr. J. H. .’t{:mans Little Liver
and Kidney Pillets, taken at night before
going to bed, will move the bowels; the efs
fect will astonish you.
{ AN ALABAMA WONDER.
i DeKalb county has a genuine
' wonder in the person of « *“ground
' hog” boy who resides with his par
'ents on Sand mountain, about six
teen miles from Fort Payne. The
lad is now fourteen years of age, and
'those who have seen him say he has
a head, hands and feet similar to a
ground hog. He cannot talk but
makes a noise like an animal. He
amuses himselt almost constantly
by balancing a stick on one of his
hauds, and is very active. The
name of the boy is Lacy and his
parents are very poor. Several
gentlemen have been talking of late
of securing the consent ot the par
ents to place the boy on exhibition
in all the principal cities of the
country, and on account of their
poverty it is said that it wili not be
a hard matter to make a contract
with them. The boy is said to be a
wornder, ani all who have seen him
pronounce him a genuine curiosity
and believe a large fortune could
be oade out of him by placing him
on exhibition.—Fort Payne Herald.
~ ONE of the latest and most re
markable inventions to be seen in
New York is the graphophone,
which is a kind of simplified photo
graph. The graphophone is becom
ing very popular with the business
men of that city, and is employed to
to a surprising extent in offices of
the largest mercantile houses, and‘
wherever there is a heavy fpressure
of the correspondence. In operating
the graphophone, the person who
dictates sits down in front of the ‘
machine, and talks into a small
funnel. The words spoken into this
funnel are recorded on a small com
position cylinder, which may be put
away for years, and then adjusted to
the machine proper, when whatever
has been said into the funnel can be
listened to and heard as distinctly as
if spoken at the moment. Usually
the dictator speaks into ‘he funnel,
which 1 then handed over to a type
writer who applies two small tubes
connected with the machine in each
ear, and has whatever there is there
‘talked off as slow as he or she desires.
One of the beauties of these talking
machines is that whatever has once
been recorded on the cylinder can
be repeated constantly until the im
pression made upon the sensitive
surface of the latter are worn away.
~ Monroe Singer, a 10-year-old mu
latto living in Texas, has one of the
most pronounced cases of big head
yet known. The dimensions of his
head are as foliows: Circumference,
31} inches; from base of skull to top
of frontal bone, 331 inches. He is
torced to remain in a recumbent
position all the time, owing to his
inability to support the weight of
his head. Some dime museum will
probaply put him on exhibition.
Our northern friends love to make
fun of our southern colloquialisms
such as “Youall” and “We all” and
“He’s done had his dinner.” But
these specimens of “English as she
is spoke’” do not begin to compare
with such New Englandisms as
“How be you today!” “Better.”
“Be ? Glad you is!” or this from a
Massachusetts farmer, “Ye ain’t got
a whetstone you ain’t a-goin to use
today, be yet”
OManA Cuier—And when the{
shooting began you ran away from.
the melee?
Proup PoLiceMax—Yes.
0. C.—Did you not know you
would be called a coward all your
lite?
- P. P.—l made a hasty calculation
to that effect, but I thought 1 would
rather be a coward all my life than
a corpse for fifteen minutes. —Oma
ha World.
e ——
An Alleghany young lady was en
gaged to be married to a young
Parisian. The Frenchman came
over to claim his lady-love, contract
‘ed an illness and died in her tather’s
‘house. She accompanied the re
imains to Paris and saw the young
man’s tather, who proposed to and
will soon marry her. He is very
wealthy and 90 years old, and all
the belles in Allegheny City are en
vying Miss Blownlee.
’ Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud
? den change of temperature, and the least
'robust are usually the easiest vietims. Dr.
'J. H. McLean's Sarsaparilla will give
tone, vitality and strength to the entire
body.
! THE MOTIONS OF THE EARTH.
{ From “The World ard Its Wonders.”
| The world revolves on its axis in
| 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds.
| This time is required for one rota
| tion from a star round to the same
star again. Th 2 revolution isthere
fore called a sideral day. While
'the earth has been turning on her
axis she has been advancing in her
orbit, and it will take her 4 minutes
on the average to come to the same
position in regard to the sun; thus
adding 4 minutes to the length of
the sideral day, gives 24 hours for
the solar day. The time of*the
anial rotation has not varied the
hundredth part of a second in 2,000
years. It may, theretore, be consid
ered as invariable, and is conse
quently adopted as a fundamental
unit in astronomical measurement.
The earth revolves in her orbit
around the sun in 365.26 days, giv
ing another standard measure of
time, the length of the year. The
velocity of the earth in her orbit is
almost incomprehensible, for the
huge sphere spins salong at the av
erage rate of eighteen miles in a
’ second. 'The earth’s orbital revolu
tion and the inclination of her axis
‘to the plane of the ecliptic cause
the changes of the seasons and the
varying length of the day and night.
The earth has a more complicat
ed motion known as the procession
of the equinoxes. It consists of a
wabbling motion of the pole of the
heavens around the pole of the
ecliptic in a small circle requiring
25,000 years to complete. It is
caused by the attraction of the sun
aud moon upon the earth at the
equator. Consequently ecliptic
and equator do not cross at the
same point, but the equinoctal falls
back each year fifty seconds of a
degree. One eftect of this move- |
ment is to change the polar star, |
for whatever part of the heavens
the pole points, the nearest star to
that point is the polar star. The
present polar star will no longer
enjoy the distinction 3,000 years
hence, and the brilliant Yega will
‘be to the polar star 12,000 years
hence. The earth is moving through
space. The sun, carrying with him ‘
the planets, satellites, comets and
meteoriec bodies following in his
train, is hastening toward a point
in the constellation Hercules at a
rapid pace ot 20,000 miles an hour.
1t might seem that, traveling at this
rate, the goal must soon be reached.
Such, however, is the inconceivable
distance of the stars that more than
a million years must pass before our
sun and his family, at the present
rate of travel, have spanned the
depth of space that intervene be-‘
| tween the shining sun of Hercules.
No liniment is in better rcgute o 1 more
widely known than Dr. J. H. MeLean's
Voleanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonderful
remedy.
Shellman Herald: We learn
that two neighbors not tar from
Shellman had a slugging mateh one
day this week, and when one of
them was knocked out the other
carried him to his house, dressed
his wounds and then invited bim
to supper, whose invitation was ac
cepted, and now they are as good
friends as ever._ |
|
It you teel urable to do your work, and
~_ave that tired feeling, take Dr.J. H. Me-
Lean's Sarsaparilla; it will make you
bright, active and vigorous.
Love is blina, and that's why
lovers think lighting the gas un
necessary.
Pimples, boils and other h:nnors, are
liable to appear when the blood gets heat
ed. The best remedy isDr. J. H. Mec-
Lean’s Sarsaparialla.
Liquor keeps a man’s stomach
and his bills constantly in an un
settled state.
et~ e et
Many people habitually endure a feeling
of lassitude, because they think th!e?' have
to. If they would take Dr. J. H. Mec-
Lean’s Sarsaparilla this feeling of weari
ness would give to place to vigor and vi
tality.
——e D QG
The man who registers at a hotel
at night can be said to be on the
“retired list.”
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick
headache, and indigestion are cured by
Dr. J. H. McLean's Liver and Kidney
Pillets (little pills.)
| —— A C— e
. Some persons never go farther
‘out ot their own little circle than
| the wooden horses in a merry-go
i round.
! Sick headache is the bane of many lives
The annoying complaint may be cured and
orevented by the occasional use of Dr, J,
h. McLean's Liver and Kidney Pillets
(little pills.)
RHEUMATISM avo NEURALGIA
These twin diseases cause untold suffering.
Doctors admit that they are difficult to cure—
Sodo their patients. Paine’s
i s"'!'ly Celery Compound has per
\\ manently cured the worst
: cases of rheumatism and
/\- neuralgia—so say those who
have used it
o “Having been troubled
)/ e s
[eosas | e oy gatied
| ew":: tlmg.wlmnonw”m
w 4 _tie Of Palne’s Ce Com
/ \ cured’ I can now jump
\ Trm MU E i
Eureka, Nevada.
$l.OO. Stx for $5.00. Druggists.
Mammoth testimonial paper free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & C 9., Props., Buriington, Vt.
DIANOND DYES G, oien orey siiee D, | BABIES V 45022900 Lacloied, Food are Eiegithy.
A N RN RN AR RIR
Machinerv. Castinos.
Machinery, Lastings,
{ Sorghum & Feed Mills,
NEW WORK AND REPAIRS,
MANFR’S AGENT FOR
WATERTOWN STEAM ENGINES.
PROMPTNESS, FAIR-DEALING,
GOOD WORK.
GEOS. BURNAP,
Phoenix Foundry & Machine Works, Marietta, Ga
S. .MANNI.\'G. T 1 JOHN L. MANNING.
MANNING BROS
PROVISIONS.STOCK FEED.
Tobacco, Hardware, Harness,
Shoes, Leather, Saddles, Road Carts,
Cheap & Fine Buggies and the Celebrated
Tennessee Wagon, One and Two Horse,
Warranted to be as good as thé best and for less meney.
North-East Corner Public Square, Marietta, Ga.
= 6’A A e, .- B g
/ ; : : --A. : {
o ; X s “{-fi {“« “~.
- EeE o
» |
|
9
Marietta, ceorgia.
#vg v ‘
lour, Rran, Yeal, Qtock Teed.
»———OUR BRANDS OF FLOUR ARE—
Capital City, (Finest Baker's Patent,) _
ERennesaw Cranulated Pateat, (Fancy Patent))
Georgia Lily. (Patent,)
Cheels’s Choice, (Faucy Straight,)
Bennesaw Mills Extra Family.
‘ Cem City Family.
~ The quality of our Flour and Meal is unsurpassed. Our Stock Feed is
made of Corn, Oats and Bran and is excellent feed for all kinds of stock.
Can furnish at any time fresh ground Graham Fiour. Oders solicited.
| The following named firms handle our goods in Marietta :
B R Legg & Bro, Hunt & Co, A Y Leake,
' C C Kiser, J W Hardeman, H D McCutcheor,
McKenzie & Warren, J I Chamberlain, F B Wellons,
A M Neese, T W Glover & Co. R J T Agricola,
Anderson Bros, H S Anderson, P T Hamby & Co,
bJ A Manget, A B Gilbert, Manning lgros,
Wade White, Stephens Bros. R L Northcutt,
J P Groover, D F McClatchey .
Buy your Flour, Bran, etc., from home producers, and so encourage tome indus
try and keep more money at home.
Address KENNESAW MILLS CO.,
1 Marietta, Ga.
| MINING AND
|
TREATING MACHINERY.
| Hoisting engines, Crushers, Feeders, Stamp Batteries, 1
| Copper Plates, Concentrators,
ENGINES & BOILERS.
1 Mecklenburg Iron Works,
JOHN WILKES, Manager.
| CHARLOTTE, - - - 0. o
| “ Paine’s Celery Compound has been a God
send to me. For the past two years I have suf
fered with neuralgia of the heart, doctor after
doctor tamn%‘)to curé me. I have now taken
rearly four bottles of the Compound, and am
free from the coz?flamn I feel very grateful
to you.” CHaSs H.LEWIS, Central Viilage, Ct.
| 9
Cel P%"e pound
«I have been greatly afflicted with acute
‘rheumanm},sud could find ng rellef un“gl 1
SX bottles of this Dedicing T &l now cured o
rheumatic troubles.”
| SAMUEL HUTCHINSON, SO. Cornish, N. H.
Effects Lasting Cures.
'8 Celery Compound hag performed many
}o;‘:n&m a 8 marvelous as thesa,-——coples of
letters sent t 0 any address. Pleasant to take,
does not disturb, but aids digestion, and entire
‘Lv vegetable; a child can take it. What's the
use of suffering longer with rheumatism or
'neuraigia?
Ceneral Advertisements.
J. A MANGET,
Ea:t Side Square,.........Marietta, Georgial
DEALER IN
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fruits
AND CONFECTIONERIES.
Books of all Kinds ordered
on one day’s netice.
Thanking my friends for past favors,and
soliciting a share of your trade,l am:
Very Respectfully.
J. A. MANGET.
GEURGIA—COBB COUNTY:
Biynvirtue of an order from the court of
Ordinary of said county, will be sold be
fore the court house door of said county
on the first Tuesday in August next,
within the legal hours of sele, the follow
ing property to wit: Lots of land number
'lo7o7and number 1090, in the 16th dis~
trict and 2d scction of said county. Sold
8s the property of William Willmoth,
late of said county, deceased, for the bene
fit of the heirs and creditors of said
deceased. Terms cash.
W. R. MORTGOMERY,
July 2, 1889. Administrator.
For Fence or Stock Law.
OrDINARY'S OFFICE, CoBB CoO, }
Marietta, Ga., July 2, 1889,
Notice is hereby given to all whom it
may concern that a Eetition of fifteen
freeholders of the 898th district, G. M.,
(Marietta) of said county, has bLeen filed
in this office asking for an election on the
vuestion
“FOR FENCE OR STOCK LAW”
In said 898th district, as authorized under
and by virtue of the law in such cases
made and provided, and that}said election
will be ordered on the 20th day of July
next, if no good cause is shown. Witness
my hard officially.
J. M. STONE,
Odinary.
GEORGIA--COBB COUNTY:
To all whom it may concern, A. C.
Dcnehoo having in proper form applied
to me for permanent letters of administra~
tion on the estate of Elizabeth Clackum,
late of said county, this is to cite all
and singular the creditors and next of kin
of Elizabeth Clackum to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed by law
and show cause it any they can, why per
manent administration should not be
granted. to A. C. Donehoo on Elizabeth
Clackum’s estate. Witness my hand and
official signature, this Sth dav of June
1889, J M. STONE, Ord'y.
GEORGIA--COBB COUNTY:
To all whom it may concern, J. O.
Carpenter having in proper form applied
to me for permanent letters of administra
tion on the estat >of I. H. Burney. late ot
said county, this is cite all and singuiar
the crediturs and next of kin of I. H.
Burney to be and appear at my office
within in the time allowed by !'w and
show cause if any they can why :perma.
nent administration should not be grant~
ed to J. O. Carpenter on 1. H. Burney’s
estate. Witness my hand and official
signature, this 10th daly of June 1889,
J. M. STUNE, Ord’y.
Sildagaaid el Y e
GEORGIA—COBB COUNTY:
Whereas, R. E. Lawhon, administra
tor of Samuel R. Lawhon, represent to the
court in his petition; duly fled and ens
tered on record, that he has fully admins
istered Samuel R.Lawhon's estate. This is
therofore to cite all persoms concerned.
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administrator
should notbe discharged from his admin
istration, and receive letters of dismission
on the first Monday in August, 1889,
JoHN M. STONE, Ordinary
i s RT A gP g
GEORGIA—COBB COUNTY:
To all whom it may concern: Margar
et A. Morris, administratrix of N. M.
Morris, deceased, has in due form applied
to the undersigned for leave to sell the
lands belonging to the estate of said de
ceased, and said application will be heard
on the first Monday in August next.
i J. M. STOXE,
This July 2, 1889, Ordinary.
WALL PAPER.
W. S. McNEIL, 114 WHITEHALL ST.
Atlanta, Ga., selis all styles of WALL
PAPER, and contracts to do work in all
parts of the State. Experienced work
men, low rates and prompt execution.
S N NS
@ G
| ; S
I N &
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' ‘—'i,;’.'—/,. R e
Reduced Prices.
In rear of the Post Ofiee.
{MAR[ETTA, : : GEORGIA,
®
Y
J.Spilman & Son,
,(:. WE HAVE OPENED A
R i first class Livervy Stable,
i where the public can be
o accommodated with . fine
horsesand elegant bt;ggies
at reduced prices. Can always be found
ready to respond to any call in supplying
the needs of local or transient patrons.
J. SPILMAN & SON
Marietta, Oct. 1, 1880.
ot i et L
5-Ton Cotfon Gin Scales, $6O
= BEAM BOX :
BRASS TARE BEAM.
R - Warmspted fox ¢ Your
Sl /) ACENTIO‘.M!:'.!D-"’Q‘
**JONES HE PAYS THE FREIGHT. 4
For Free Price List, Address
JONES of BINGHAMTON, Binghamton, N, ¥,
s~ All kinds ot legal blanks ard
ironclad waiver notes for sale at the
Journal Office.