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ZZEAMARIRINIITHERARTRERRRRR R .S
The Kind Yon Have Always Bdilght, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made under his per-
M sonal supervision since its infancy.
LA Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex- -
periments that trifie with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
&
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing S;yruns. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains nedher Onium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
aud allays Teverishiness. 1t cnres Diarrhoea and Wind
Colie. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Coustipation
and Flatuleney. It assimilates the ¥Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—-The Mother's Friend.
=nume SASTORIA
QENUINE ) 1A ALWAYS
Y g g 'O
- Bears the Sl,,naturewof
T E ‘e
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years. '
'l'b'!t CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 WIILST!(I?. NEW YORR CITY,
ANDERSON BROS.
T RS S . B ONIR SR S T S LR TTSD T KA A TSRS
BEST FEED ~ at the = LOWEST PRICES
Just Received a Car__« :
No. 1 White Milling Corn,
; No. 1 Timothy Hay, il
M " Pure Wheat Bran,
Best Feed Oats
Best German Millet Clover and Orchard
. . Qrass Seed For Sale |
M. R. IL.YOIN,
Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits,
and all Kinds of Country Produce.
Thankful for past fiatronage, ask a continuance of the same, and will ever try
to give satisfaction. Can be found at my new building on LAWRENCE
STREET. M. R. LYON.
%
NEW STORE!
/ VY . ' [
NEW GOODS!
COME TO THE WHITE FRONT FOR YOUR
(rocerie, Vegetables, (fanned ~(yoods,
TOBACCOS, SNUFFS, &c., in. fact everything kept in a first cilass grocery
store. I will keep the very best gr~7= and strive to please, both in qunality and
prices. I will keep besides fancy groos.rtes, CONFECTIONERIES, STOCK
FEED, HAY, BRAN, CORN, OATS, FLOUR, MEAL and MEAT. !
X@=Promt delivery and gourteous treatment.
Come tosee me whether you want to trade any or not. Store, corner
Washington and Atlanta streets, opposite Court House, Marietta.
: GEORGE 'l FLEMING.
General Blacksmith Shop,
Horseshoeing.
New Work and General Repairs
in all sorts of Steel and Iron
Work, also maker of the
KING COTTON PLANTERS.
The Anderson Shop Powder .
Springs. street, Marietta.
‘H, E,Langle
. ey,
LADIES’ Sh
ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING NEATLY EXECUTED.
- Please call and give me a trial. All
work guaranteed. .. 105 Washington
Avenue, opposite Court House.
Lo s .
Attentien is directed to the jobbing do
partment of the MARIRTTA JOURNAL wtic!:
18 proviced with &'eam Power, New Job
Presses, New and Latest Styles o 1 Job
Type aud most aiproved and exten
sive facilities for the execution of joo
vrinting of all kindsfrom the smallest labe;
tothel gest poster, in black or colorea
luks, at ricesas low as can be had else
wueret anequal grade of work. Weare
prepare < to printat short notice, pamphlet
posters, 1 rogrammes, circulars,letter heade
checks, envelopes, bill heads, blanks of all
kinds, catalogues, businese cards,and every
hing in the line ot printing used inthe con
duct of every duy business. We will du.
plicate Atlanta prices. Give us s trial
and gee. | ,
: TE E
v Rackety,
v Store ®
Second Door, Church Street,
A nice h:egf '
NOTIONS, GROCERIES
TINWARE,
HARDWARE, &c.
Will be glad to have the
patronage of all. To the coun
try people: I will take your
Chickens, Eggs, and Produce.
Call and see me when you
come to-town.
IRVINE W.SMITH.
AS IT HAPPENED,
Culled and Condensed from
our Exchanges.
ITEMS OF PITH AND POINT
The Fort Valléy Leader, pub
lished in the heart of the best
fruit growing section of the south,
says: “‘The opinion of some of
our best fruit growers is to the
effect that Tuesday’s extreme cold
has not materially hurt the pros
pect for a fruit crop. The esti
mate that about a third of the
buds were killed is the general
opinion.
- Three boys named, Griffin and
Causey went to the southern states
gold mine at Villa Rica Sunday
and went down into the shaft and
found a loaded hole left there by
the miners the day before. Grif
fin.took up a large hammer used
in driving steel and struck the
dynamite a heavy blow, causing
an explosion. Griffin’s hands are
almost torn off and his eyes put
out. Sewell’s face lis full of
pieces of rock. The hoys are
alive and the chances are good for
their recovery.
$lOO Reward, $lOO. ~
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages, and
that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a
constitutional disease, requires a con
stitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the digease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors have
so much faith in its curative ;])owers,
that they offer one hundred dollars for
any case that it fails to eure. Send for
testimonials. Address,
F. J. Onexey & Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by dru%gists, 75¢.
" Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
~ The pale, sallow, sunken-cheeked,
‘distressed-looking people you so often
meet are afflicted with “Kidney Com
plexion.”
Their kidneys are turning tc a par
snip color. So is their complexion
1 They may falso have indigestion, or
‘suffer from sleeplessness, rheumatism,
neuralgia, brain trouble, nervous ex
haustion, and sometimes the heart
acts badly. The cause is week, un
healthy kidneys.
Usually the sufferer from kidney dis
ease does not find out what the trouble
is until it is almost too late, beeause
the first symptoms are so like mild
sickness that they do not think they
need a medicine or a doctor until they
find themselves sick in bed.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Roeot will build
up and strengthen their weak and dis
eased kidneys, purify their diseased,
kidney -poisoned bloog , clear their com
plexion and soon they will enjoy better
health. ,
You can get the regular sizes at the
drug store, at fifty cents and one dollar
or you may first prove for yourself the
wonderful virtues of this grent diseov
ery, Swamp-Root, by sending your ad
dress to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle and a
book that tells all about it, both sent
to you absolutely free by mail. When
writing ki_ndlg mention that yau read(
thils liberal offer in the Marietta Jom'-1
nal.
Sacrifice
- dacrificed to
I *
l
I .
- Blood Poison.
l Those whohave never had Blood Pof.
| son cannot know what a desperate con
dition it can produce. This. terrible
disease which the doctors are totally
unable to cure, is communicated from
one generation to another, inflicting its
taint upon countless innocent ones,
Some years ago 1 was inoculated with poison
by a nurse who infected my babe with blood
S
u y
and its life wae yicided 5
}p to the fesrful poison. P
'or six lons years | suf
fered untold misery. I .y
weas covered with sores OBy
and ulcers from heedto (7 b
lfoot. and no hng]ugo
oan express my feelings S
.of woe d"""% those long .2 B
. years, I had the best X
. medical treatment, Sev- 3 ' -
eral physiciang succes- A : p
sively treated me, but all™ *45 7
to no gn?ou The mer- |
‘eu% nd potagh seemed to add fuel to the
awful flame which was devouring me. 1 was
~advised by friends whe had seen wonderful
_cures madeg it, to tey Swift's B?ecmc. ~We
- got two bottles, and 1 félt hngo again revive in
my - breast—hope for health and happiness
| -,nu. limproved from the start, and a com-
P ete and perfect cure was the result. 8.8. 8.
18 the only blood remedy which reaéhes des
perate cases. Mgrs. T. W. LEE
Montgomery, Ala.
Of the many blood remedies, 8. 8. 8.
is the only one which can reach deep
‘sested, violent cases, ‘lt never fails to
eure ({nrfectly and permanently the
most desperate cages which are beyond
the reach of other remedies.
‘ s-s. s. 'fl;o BM
is PURELY VEGETABLE, and is the only
‘blood remedly guaranteed o contain no
l m%r:lury, potash, or o:her mineral.
&&2z ¢ 5 8
Specific Gouaphny, RAlAnta, Copia
- KENNESAW, ;
Mr. Joltn Brimer and Miss Lu
nar Dobbs, of Shilo, were married
at the home of B. H. Carrie, Sun
day evening, Feb.l9, B. F. Carrie
performing the"ceremony.
The types made us say last week
that John Brantley had bought
Mrs. Shumway’s brick mill. It
was John Brauley. .
Griffin Hill has hought some
land from G. R. Gibson and will
probably build sometime during
the year and move to Kennesaw.
G. R Durham has moved his
saw mill from the Hardage stand
back to Mars Hill. 1. S. Morgan,
we learn, will move his cotton gin
back to the Pyron stand.
Humphries Owen returned home
Monday, after a visit of two
months to relatives in Anniston.
Alabama.
Mrs. Graham, who lives near
here, we learn, is sick.
Kennesaw can boast of not a
single vacant store house, and but
two vacant dwellings. There are
quite a number of houses that
have two families in a house.
The Mayor and Couucil have
had some needed work done on
the calaboose, but Kennesaw has
but few even to hoose. Grpsy.
: ANTIOCH. ‘
Mrs. Bessie Carpenter’s address
is 52 Burrene avenue, Atlanta, in
stead of 22, as the Jour~arn made
us say last week. :
Some of our young men went to
see their best girls Sunday and
got waterbound and did not get
home till Monday.
Mrs. Sarah Hendricks, of near
Roswell, is visiting her son. :
Remember the literary society
next Saturday night. Come one,
come all.
John MecGarity and M. Dunn
got mired down Monday in their
wagons almost on top of Black
Jack mountain. )
Out of a roll of 67 pupils en
rolled at Union Academy for Feh
raary, the following are on roll
of honor: Lottie Bishop, Ida
Haygood, Pearl Bishop, Emma
Bishop, Fannie Lou Manning,
Aiice " Bishop, Bertha Dodgen,
Wm. Kemp, Maud Kemp, Leamon
Lassiter, Olive Kemp, Chas Man
ning, Gracie Groover, Leila Sew
ell, Harvey Tritt, Ralph Donnhoo
and Clarence Donehoo. Lrvr.
UPSHAW,
-~ We are glad to see the sun
.shinc one time more,
Mre. J W Rollins has returned
from Roswell where she spent
several weeks with her mother,
Mrs. Drake.
" Paul Rice, Emanuel Davis and
Joel Wolf visitedd Cedartown last
‘week,
. We 2egret to learn that Thomas
Clay and wife are very sick.
- S JBcott, of Cedartown, visited
this community last week.
- Alex Mable and Charlie Frey,
of Mableton, gave us a pleasant
call one day last week while passs
ing through this community..
No Sunday school here last
Sunday on account of rain.
We are sorry to learn that Mrs.
Johnson, who has been gick for
quite a” while, is: net imvroving
very much.
The Sehool at this place is well
attended. Runy.
RED ROCK.:
Mrs. Martha Graham is very
low of pneumonia.
Some cotton still going every
day to Acworth. ‘
The autumn sowing of oats is
very nearly all killed.
The wheat is thinned to a half
crop in some fields by the late in
tense cold wave.
The early onion crop was killed,
especially eschalots. ‘
Judging from what we can see,
the peach erop will be a failure.
* The rose bushes, evergreens and
japonnicas are dead above ground.
Having heard of several cases
rheumatism, I give a eure o sim
ple: fresh gingsang roots in a pure
article of corn whisky, enred when
Hot Springs, Arkansas, failed.
We think Amor’s sitting rooster
would equal the Irishman’s goose :
he would be a ‘‘stoad den up a
sottin,”’ boh
Dewey thinks best $o try an in
cubator, so all the gorrespondents,
as well as editors can eujoy the
luxury -of spring chicken. * -
What kin is your uncie’s broth
er and not your your unele?
Dewey.
A big’ head doesn’t always pre
vent a man from coming out at
the little end of the horn.
The man who doesn’t talk has
less repenting to do than the gar-,
rulous individual. :
et ot
~ For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Hae Alvays Bought
The Kind ys Bought
b e BT,
Signature of y 4
KENNESAW, .
Rev. J S Reynolds has been very
sick with grip, but is improving.
* Miss Jessie Heard is visiting Dr.
C H Field and Mrs. Lula Lovin
good of this place.
Mrs. Stephens and daughter, of
Smyrna, visited Dr. Gault last
week. :
Mrs. Willie Silvers has return
ed home, after spend ng a few
days with her mot{xer, Mrs. Cole
near. Toonigh.
Mrs. Graham, near this place,
we regret to learn, is very sick.
Mrs. Weston, of Marietta, was
here one day last week.
The candy pulling at R S Eid
son’s Monday night was highly
enjoyed by all present, and es
pecially by the Mayor and his
partner, for they took long dish.
Not long since two girls were
talking as girls talk. One was of
the impetuous, impulsive type,
whose blood flies to the cheek,
whose eyes snap and whose tongue
is as sharpe as a razor. The other
was as placid as the ocean; pro
found, solemn, silent, billowing
deep far out from shore, and com
ing in upon the silent sands as
noisless as the dew falls upon the
flower at night. They were talk
ing about men and their’ ways, a
subject of unceasing interest to
women, in their teens or heyond.
The face of the impetuous one was
flushed and there was the unmis
takable evidence of indignation in
her manner. *“Well,”” she ex
claimed, with a warning and a
threat in her tone, “I'd like to
see o man kiss me!” The eyes of
the other one closed softly against
the dazzling flash f those of her
companion, and a gentle glow
came to her face. ‘‘Yes!’ she
answered dreamily. “Well, 1
don’t care whether I see the man
or not. It is so perfectly lovely
any way that I never think about
the condition.”’ Birpig.
BETHEL.
N A Dempsey has been on the
sick list for the past week, but is
some better at this writing.
C R Irelan moved to Vinings
last Monday.
Joe Keheley is abie to be out on
crutches.
Little Bessic Keheley has been
quite sick, but is some hetter at
this writing.
John Cochran says his nearest
neighbor has two mules that he
thinks should be on the pension
list, as they served full terms in
the civil war, from their appear
ance. :
What about Surday for a rainy
davy? Harry Jack.
- WOODSTOOK.
Prof. W. H. Mincey gave an en
tertainment at the academy last
Friday afternoon, which was
highly enjoyed by all present.
- Mrs. Maggie McAfee, who has
heen very low for several months,
is no better. s
L M Reeves, our new and pepu
lar young merchant, has recently
made a large addition to his store
house and is now doing a rushing
business.
Prof. Mincey, principal of the
‘Woodstock school, has recently
added four hundred dollars worth
of books to the school library,
which is now ono of the best
equipped schools in this part of
the state:
Mr. Gatling, the telegraph op
erator at this place, is almost run
ning a telegraphic school, as he
has three students with him now
and is expecting others soon.
RICHARD SAUNDERE, JR.
OLIVE SPRINGS.
An enjoyabte singing Saturday
night at Wily Eidson’s,
Will White has built a new
barn. $ :
George Worley got a dispatch
giving the intelligence of the
death of his mother at Canton.
Birr Arp.
Charles F. Robertson of Hart
ford, Conn., with pneumonia,
temperature, 107, pulse weaken
ing, wrapped in snow by Dr, J. B.
Boucher for forty-five minutes,
until his temperature went down
to 101, then the doetor moved the
snow, placed his finger on the
closed eyelids, slapped the man’s
face and he revived and is getting
well. * Tt was a desperate remedy
in otherwise hopeless case.
Why should the United States
diseriminate between the Cubans
and the Filipinos? If the Cubans
who were fighting for their inde
pendenee were patriots why should
we not regard the Filipinos whom
we found fighting the same battle
and against the same fce, as pa
triots too?~—Albany Herald.
To take the long end of the leveri
against love is to pry ourselves
out of existence as human beings.
e .
- COBB COUNTY ROADS.
The following was read in the
city high school : An
No one who does not travel over.
Cobb county roads in all kinds of
weather can be a good judge of
them. ok, .
I good weather no one ecould
desire hetter roads. * They are al
most like asphalt pavement, 80,
hard and smooth. Many people
are seen, at all times. of the day,
riding wheels along the count
roads, and at dusk many, bog
young and old, are seen taking an
evening stroll.
But when the rains set in, no
worse roads could possibly exist.,
Great holes are to be found all
along; the mud is hub deep; the
poor horses can hardly move the
lightest load. There is a place
between town and my home, about
two hundred yards long, and as
the horses pull through the mud
here, they can scarcely go half of
their length before they are com-
Rletely exhausted and have to wait
a few minutes before they ean:
get breath enough to go on.
I know if the road commission
ers could have driven only a few,
miles out Canton road, the week
before last, they would have im
mediately ordered it to he ma
cadamized. If this were done,
real estate would increase 50 per
cent. To prove this, I will take
one of the Northern states for ex
ample: viz, New Jersey.*
The macadamized roads lead
g cut from every city in New
Jersey have doubled the value of
real estate along which they lead ;
for now rich people of the cities
go out fifteen or twenty miles and
buy them small places and build
splendid country residences; and
now large numbers of auto-mobiles
and electric carriages are running
out and in every day. A farmer
can draw seven or eight tons now
when one and a half tons was con
sidered a good load before the
reads were built of McAdam. The
state pays one-half, the city one
fourth and the township in which
the city is situated, one-fourth of
the total expense. New York state
appropriated $9,000,000 for canals
and it was stolen. If that had
been devoted iu magadamizing
roads, New York would be in the
lead. Georgia must take hold of
it
Since this state has the chain
gang system for its convicts, it
would be an excellent idea to use
them on the roads. The main
roads could be called state roads;
the state furnish one-half and the
county through which "the road
run and the city into which they
run could each pay one-fourth of
the expense,
But to return to the roads as
they now are. In the place,
which I before mentioned, gome
person, meaning well, no doubt,
has put eight or nine loads of
marble chunks of various sizes.
These pieces stick out of the mud
about a foot, and as you ride
along you are almost jostled to
death as the carriage goes bump
ity-bump over them. A stranger
would doubtless think he had dis
covered a marble quarry or else a
recent volganic eruption had tak
en place,
A few days ago we were coming
to school and as we bhounded over
a huge boulder we rose into the air
as if shot from a gnun, and coming
down again with great force, we
broke the bottom of the seat. The
county ought to pay for it, but if
it had to pay for all of the acci
dents, both great and' small, caus
ed in this way. T am afraid it
would be bankrupt, soI think it
would pe vastly cheaper to put in
McAdamized roads immediately.
See the advantage coming- to
the farmer of good roads. The
time which is now consumed ine
carrying a5O cents load of wood
to market would bhe sufficient to
carry four times that amount, and
the same amount of labor would
do it.
I should think Mr. Gramling
‘would be in favor of a good goads
law, for the farmers instead of
driving rude lumber-wagons would
then havée fine carriages. The
harness man would be henefitted,
for when the carriage is substitut
ed for the lumber-wagon, a mnice
harness would take the place of
the rope, chain and strap affair
which is now so commonly s2en.
The grocer would be benefitted
also, because country produce
could be delivered ‘cheaper, and
| through him the whole community
would be benefitted, So it is very
evident that every one should he
in favor of good roads -~ * ,
Ep~Nxa A. BAKER,
2nd High School Grade.
Most of us are as good as our
badness will permit—and vice
versa. s
A single epigram may ountlive a
volume of machine made philoso
£ Iyn order to mount the ladder of
fame, the orator must win round
after round of applause. =~