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/“_._x\ A A R AR
e Kind You Flave Always Bought, and which has been
", use for ever 30 years, has borne the signature of
i / and has been made under his per
m sonal supervision since its infancy.
Al Allow no one to deccive you in this,
] Coumterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex
serizients thag trifle with and endanger the health of
ufaats and C{mdrnn—Experience arain't Pxverimens.
hat is CASTORIA
What is © Aot
CastoTia i 3 A substitute for Castor 011, Paregorte, Drops
aad Soctlng Syruns, -1t is Hovmless and Pleasant. It
contains neilher Opinm, Jorphine nor other Narcotie
sabstance. Jts age is its guarantee. It desiroys Worms
sl allays Feverishness, It eures Diarrlica and Wind
folic. It velieves Teetling Troubles, cures Constipatior
and Platulesey, it assimilates the Wood, resulates tho
stomach ana Sowels, giving acalthy and natural sleep.
e Children’s Panacea--The Mother's Fric:ned.
s B) ST g :
wengipe LA™ )RéA
. X :,MJ*i.v ko \.:fgn“l ,"J 5 i‘\ A ALWAYS
> Hears the Signature of ’
. .f’:._y )
f; f ~<ij
.',' S%y L B %
AT thfiw
i b 2 = . "’ e ‘
" T
The Kind You Have Always Bought
8 o
In Use For Over 30 Years.
. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY CTREST, NEW YORK CITY. .
ANDERSON BROTHERS,
-~ _COTTON BUYERS, -~
Wholesale and Retail Merchants,
ARD DEALERS IN
Fertilizers oo and Je General Merchandise,
A. C. Ladd’s Lime, Cement and Plastering Hair.
ALL KINDS OF
STOCK FEED, HAY, BRAN, CORN, OATS, SHORTS
COTTON SEED MEAL, SEED RYE, &c.
M. R. L. YOIV,
~ . ; e
aroceries, Vegetables, Fruits,
and all Kinds ot Country Produce.
Thankful fox: past patronage, ask a continuance of the same, and will ever try
to give satisfaction. Can be found at my new buildiug on LAWRENCE
STREET, M. R. LYON.
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A ‘ e AcE] :.3”
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‘L"jb‘éfi ',",'_' 5 o {/;:"{‘l_“
BARRELS OF GOOD THINGS
tme into and leave the store
daly. The large volume of bus
s we do keeps the stock of
GROCERIES
“erLew. There’s not an ounce
anything that has a- chance to
age.
What we sell is fresh, good and
Mioiesome, and our customers are
Werand richer through their
use,
} These are just, ordinary prices,
"W they are” samples of how we
___A.B. GILBERT
Job Printing
—cdone—
NEATLY,
PROMPTLY,
CHEAPLY,
—at the—
Marietta « Journa
+ -« STEAM . .
PRINTING HOUSE
The Wants
\ 4
Of Life.
You want Groceries—we want to
to sell them to you. You want
low prices-—=We want prompt pay
ing customers. You wané the best
and freshest goods—we want your
money for them. You want goods
delivered promptly—we have a
delivery wagon for that purpose.
We have studied your wants and
are prepared to fill them. We
have a complete line of freshest
Groceries, Canned
Gaods, Fine Syrups,
Cuban Molasses, Sugar,
Coffee, Flour, Meal,
Meat, Tobacco, Cigars,
Arabian Stock Food, &c.
Our prices are the lowest and
we will treat you right. Your
trade solicited.
R“ l |
East Side Square, |
Marietta, Ga.
ni CURED with vegetatie
DRO PSY Remedies. Have cured
many thousand cases
called hopeless. In ten
iays at least two-thirds of all symptoms remov
ad. Testimonials and TEN DAYg treatment free.
DR. H. K. GREEN’S SORS, B__n}iAtlnnm. Qs
2 and Whiskey cabi®
?’-’ Plu M cured at home with
i3 4 out pain Book of par
§ CR 2 ® jculars sent FRE.E.
I et OR B, M WOOLLEY CO.
e Othee.. 104 i'(lr_t‘h__}_’_rzor" 8
GEORGIA—Cobb County:
To whom it may concern: H. P Sauls,
administrator of Mrs, JCarrie Sauls has
in due form applied to the undersigned
for leave to sell the lands belonging to
the estate of the said deceased, the said
application will be heard at my offiece on
the first Monday in January next. This
Dec 4th, 1900. J .M. StoNE, Ord’y.
Dr. N. N. Gober, ,
86 GRANT BUILPING.
Atlanta, Ga.
E®~ ECZEMA, ASTHMA AND
RMHEUMATISM.
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble. ‘
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis-
Sourages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
lhn— and cheerfulness soon
‘;' N disappear when the kid-
N neys are out cf order
fl‘,‘_!m or diseased.
'\M"u-i' s, Kidney trouble has
1 ‘\\“&Q become so prevalent
T thatitis not uncommor
0“\ ; yforachildtobebom
74 N ‘\‘ e afflicted with weak kid-
A\ W ‘ == " neys. If the child urin-
Segf = ates too often, if the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, depend upon it the cause of
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased eondition of the
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as
most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made mis
erable with kidney and biadder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. 1t is sold
by .druggists, in fif;y- R —n
cent and one dollar gl LA e
sizes. You may have a B ‘fi‘%fifi@tfi‘
sample bottle by mail ——cilißH S
free, also pamphlettell- Home of Swamp-Root.
ing all about it, including many “of the
thousands of testimonial lstters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and
mention this paper.
It’s a wise infant that goes to
sleep as soon as its mother hegins
to sing.
Heathens are people who do not
waste their time quarreling over
religion.
CURES BLOOD POISON.
Sororvra, Urcers, OLp Sorks, BoNg
PAaINs—TRrIAL TrEATMENT FREE.
First, second or third stages positive
ly cured by taking B. B. B. (Botanic
Blood Balm). Blood Balm kills or de
stroys the syphilitic. poisons in the
blood and expels it from the system,
making a perfect cure. Have you sore
throat, pimples, copper colored spots,
old festering eating sores, ulcers. swell
ings, scrofula, itehing skin, aches and
pains in bones or joints, sore mouth, or
falling hair? Then Botanic Blood Balm
will heal every sore, stop the aches and
make the blood pure and rich and give
the rich glow of health to the skin.
Over 3000 testimonials of cures. B. B.
B. thoroughly tested for 30 years. Drug
stores s§l. Trial treatment of B. B, B.
free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlan
ta, Ga. Deseribe: trouble and free
medical advice given. J)()rz’t despair
of a‘cure as B. B. B. cures when all
else fails.
' Probably Eve never knew that
'she was happy so much of the time
‘becanuse she hadn’t auy neighbors
to talk about.
BEAT OUT OF AN INCREASE OF
HIS PENSION,
A Mexican war veteran and promi
nent editor writes: ‘‘Seeing the adver
tisement of Chamberlin’s Colie, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy, I am re
minded that as a soldier in Mexico in
’47 and 48, I contracted Mexican diar
rhoea and this remedy has kept me
from getting an increase in my pension
for on every renewal a dose of it re
stores me ”’ It is unequalled as a quick
cure for diarrhoea and is pleasant and
safe to take. Sold by J. W. Legg.
e—— @ —— e
The average woman has more
sense of modesty with her family
doctor than she has with her pho
tographer.
e e e e - eee e .
A PROMINENT CHICAGO WOMAN
SPEAKS.
Prof. Roxa Tyler, of Chieago, Vice
President Illinois Woman’s Alliance,
in speaking of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy, says: “‘lsuffered with a se
vere cold this winter which threatened
to run into pneamonia. I tried dif
ferent remedies but I seemed to grow
worse and the medicine upset my
stomach. A friend advised me to try
Chamberlin’s Cough Remedy, and I
found it was pleasant to take and it re
lieved me at once. I am now entirely
recovered, saved a doetor’s bill, time
and suffering, and I will never be with
out this splendid medicine agunin.” For
sale by J. W. Legg.
Job ey
® ® 7\ 5
Printing
P=—oo==—¢€ |
We are prepared to do
all kinds of Commercial
Printing in a neat and
attiactive style; s, ~
Cn First-Clss [Material
nd Workmaishp. |
..Satisfaction Guaranteed..
Come and let us figure with you '
on your Printing. We can save ‘
yon money and tronble. 1
Mail Orders Receive Carefid
...Attention... :
The Marietta Journal |
Jod Office. i
A FAMOUS PLATE.
The First FEngraving Was Printed
on & Laundress' Dundle.
Two groups of tonrists were standing
in the Pitti palace before the large plate
of pure silver upen which Finiguerra,
the great master of early engraving,
had depicted his lovely **Madonna and
Child’' in a treilised arbor covered with
roses. An Italian lady was telling her
friends in an undortone the charming
anecdote of Finiguerra and the lauu
dress.
The artist, it seems, in mastering the
new and difficuit art of engraving upon
metal. had acquired a singnlarly keen
eye and delicate touch, and he also pos
sessed a number of very fine and sharp
instruments, which he used in bis
work. ;
Being a kindly man he sometimes
placed both his sure band and his fine
tools at the service of his friends and
neighbors in performing for them some
of the simpler operations of surgery,
until he acquired quite a reputation for
his skill in doctoring their hurts.
One day a poor lanndress who had
been washing clothes, in wringing out
a garment in which a needle had been
carelessly left, ran it deeply into her
band. Worse yet, it broke off in the
wound and a part remained imbedded
in the flesh. She was. in much pain,
and on h:r way tack from the stream
where she had been washing she stop
ped at the house of the artist and was
admitted.
Entering his studio she hastily set
down her wet and heavy bundle and
held out the injured hand, begging his
assistance. Finiguerra left his work to
help her, and after long and delicate
manipulation extracted the broken nee
dle. The woman thanked bim and
turned to go, lifting her bundle from
its resting place.
Then he saw that she had set it upon
one of his engravings. Like all others
at that time, it was a plate of engraved
metal, complete in itself, and regarded
as a single and sufficient picture, exact
ly as it it had been a painting.
But as the damp bundle was raised
the quick eye of Finiguerra saw that it
had received an impression from the
engraved picture beneath, and his quick
mind seized at once the suggestion of
the possibility of indefinite reproduc
tion from a single original. So that
from the kindness of a great artist to a
poor washerwoman sprang the discov
ery which has placed the beautiful
products of the engraver’'s art within
the reach of all of us today!—Youth’s
Companion.
ENGLISH RED TAPE.
It Took n Brokem Leg to Get the
Chair Repaired.
© It is stated that one morning recent
ly a young fellow who had just secared
a clerkship in a government office was
considerably startled by a little scene
that he witnessed. An elderly man, one
of the senior clerks in the room, sud
denly rose from his desk, dragged the
comfortable chair on which he bad
been sitting into the middle of the
room, seized a poker and attacking the
chair with great vigor succeeded in
breaking one of its legs. When it was
done, the official gave a sigh of relief
and flung the chair into a corner of the
room The budding junior’sfirst thought
was that his senior had suddenly taken
leave of his senses, and he almost ex
pected: that his colleagnes wounld put
him under restraint. But to his aston
ishment the other clerks hardly raised
their eyes while the work of destruction
was in progress. Before the office work
wasover the newcomer sought informa
tion from one of his fellow clerks.
“Can you tell me,’’ said he, ‘‘why
Mr. Dash carried on in that extraordi
nary fashicn? I mean, of course, when
he broke a perfectly sound leg off the
chair in which_he had been sitting.'’
“Oh, that was all right!”’ replied the
other with a meaning laugh. ‘A caster
had come off one of the legs of that
chair, and, you know, ‘my lords’ will
not provide ns with new casters; they
will attend to nothing less than a broken
leg. 8o Dash had to break one of the
legs to get his chair put right at the
public expense.’’--London Standard.
The Dend Irishman.
Some Irish body snatchers had rifled
a grave and hid their booty in a corner
of the churchyard, when it occurred te
a half tipsy fe!llow, who had been watch
ing them unobserved, that it would be
pleasanter to be driven back to the near
est town than to walk. He accordingly
secreted the dead man under a hedge
and lay down in his place. He war duly
transferred to a cart, but when about
haif the journey was over one of the
men who had touched his hand scream
ed to his friend, ““Good heavens, the
body is warm!’’
Hereupon, in a deep voice, the sup
posed dead man remarked, ‘‘lf you had
been where I've been for the last two
days, you'd be warm too!”’ |
In a moment he was. left in full pos
session of the vehicle!—Sir M. E. Grant
Duft’s Diary.
A Bloodthirsty Editor.
A down east editor has drawn up
some new game laws which he wants
adopted. The following is a summary:
“Book agents may be killed from
Oct. 1 to Sept. 1; spring poets, from
March 1 to June 1; scandalmongers
from April 1 to Feb. 1; umbrella bor
rowers, from Aug. 1 to Nov. 1 aad
Feb. 1 to May 1, while every man who
accepts a newspaper two years, and,
upen being presented with his bill, says,
‘I never ordered it!’ may be killed on
the spot, withont reserve or relief.”’—
Christian Register. 5
Next Thing to It.
He-—-Oh, by the way, the doctor ad
vised e to eat a water cracker before
going to bed; said it would prevent my
insomnia. Are there any in the house:
She—The only thing in the honsa
approaching a water cracker is the ice
pick.—lndianapolis Journal.
COUNCIL ?ROCEEDINGS.
Marietta. Ga. Jan. 7th, 1901.
Regular nieeting of Counecil. Pres
ent. Mayor Brumby and full Counecil.
Minutes of last meeting read and ap
proved.
The following reports were read and
approved :
Clerk’s Report, .
Received of—
W W Watkins, on shop rent, § 322
Simp Liudley, to peddle weiners, 250
Marietta Transfer Co, new bus. 10 00
o ¥ ** bal, 2h. hack 500
Dog Checks sold, 3 50
Street tax collected, 22712
Property tax collected, 7370 75
J J Black, Yal. on opera house
~ and bill posting license, 26 50
$7648 73
I hold city treasurer’s receipt for
$56200.32, and school board treasurer’s
receipt for $2548.41—57648.73.
Talso hold city treasurer’s receipt
for tax fi fas amounting to $540,92.
R. E. Lawhon, Clerk.
I'reasurer’s Report.
To Balance on hand, $2271 42
Amt from R E Lawhon,eity funds 5200 32
i ‘** W M Hawkins, fines 125 50
$7597 24
By amount paid Voucher No.—
180 FK A Schilling, £ 1106
IR s 1178
B ww s 5 99
.-).-)5 5 A 8 . 3 45
THy t 65 48 i 8 OR
An Lt 5 6 03
237 Marietta Electrie Co. 154 11
238 J A (¢ Anderson, 20 00
239 W W Watkins, 322
240 Marietta Journal, 120 64
241 L Black & Son, 32 58
242 Harry Humphries. 25
243 H C Dobbs ll{nrdwure Co., 176
244 F E A Schilling, 14l
245 W M Hawkins, 60 80
246 C M Hicks, 25 00
247 S M Bruce, 20 00
248 C M Mayfield, 20 00
249 K McDonald, 416
250 John Kemp, 100
221 Fred Morris, Tr. 124 21
252 Fred Morris, Tr. 510 00
253 Fred Morris, Tr., 100000
254 Jas W Legg, 60
2566 Cobb county, 9 00
510 J A Baswell, 150
To Balance on hand, 5440 55
$7507 24
Received of R I Lawhon, Clerk, tax
fi fas for year 1900 amounting to $549 92.
IFred Morris Treasurer.
Marshal’s Report.—l made 25 cases
during December. 24 were fined
$169 00, and 1 cost only. 23 paid in
cash $123 00, 1 worked out $lO 00, bal
ance pending $356 00, balance served in
calaboose $1 00—5169 00. 1 have col
lected on pending cases $250 cash.
Two of the cases fined were also bound
over to the Superior court. [ hold city
treasurer’s receipt for $125 50 on fines.
W M Hawkins, Marshal,
Sexton’s Report —lnterments, resi
denrs—whites 1; colored 2. Non-resi
dents—whites 5, colored 1.
S M Bruece, Sexton.
On motion, the matter of requiring
the water works company to give
stronger pressure from the pumping
station for fire purposes, was referred
to the fire committee.
The proposition from the Eleetrie Co.
to make a new contract with the city,
was referred to the light committee,
with instruetions to confer with said
company and report at next meeting.
The election of a night-watchman
being in order, council elected by bal
lot, R.S. Lindley, at a salary of $25 00
per month.
The following Tax Ordinance by Al
derman Blair was unanimously adopt
ed:
Be it enacted, that for the year 1901
the following annual licenses shall be
levied and collected for the city of Ma
rietta, payable in advance, as follows:
For each life Insurance company do
ing or soliciting business in said city
for year, $25.00
For each fire insurance company doing
or soliciting business in said city for
year, 'H()(n%.
For each performance of each circus
in said city, $50.00.
For each performance of all other
shows exhibiting under a tent, $25.00
For each circus cr other show adver
tising by posting bills, pictures, and
sueh, in said city, its performance to
take place out of said city, $25.00
For each express cempany doing bus
iness in said city $50.00
For each telegraph company doing
business in said city, $25.00
Any person violating said ordinance
or any part thereof, shall be fined not
‘cheeding fifty dollars for each viola
tion.
~ Be it enacted, that for the year 1901
the following licenses shall be levied
and collected in the city of Marietta,
payable quarterly in advance as fol
lows:
For each billiard, poel or other like
table, kept for public use, $25.00
For each ten pin or other pin alley,
$25.00
For each shooting gallery, $25.00
‘For each place where domestic wines
are kept for gale, $1,000.00 |
No license to be issued for less than
quarter, }
The folowing licenses, payable semi- ‘
annually, in advance, no license to be
issued for less than six months: 1
Two horse dray or hack, $20.00
One horse dray or hack, $lO.OO
Any person violatirg this ordinance
or any part thereof, shall be fined not
more than $50.00.
The following accounts were approv
ed and vonchers ordered issued for
same :
Marietta Electrie Co. lights I'ec $169 77
Marietta Water Wks Co, water, 381 25
J A G Anderson, board mules, 20 00
Reid & Neal, rent eng. house, 50 00
F E A Schilling, sew. pipe hardwr. 3 95
L Black & Son, lumber, 25 99
C E Henderson, lumber, nails, 901
Jas [ Anderson, brick, 400
J W Legg, oil and drugs, 205
D F MecClatehey, pest h. [supplies, 8 07
M T Grist’ work on harness 45
J H Bate & Co. rent of shop to
Jan 1. 1901, 24 00
Dr J H Simpson, vaccinating parties
exposed to small pox, 375
W W Watkins, blacksmith bill, 228
W T Mason, nursing small pox, 11 87
Dr G Tennent, visiting sma;\)i)pox, 17 20
Board of Edueation, their part of
fi fas of 1899 collected, 229 05
Legg Bros.hauling reels,and h. & 1. 11 00
T M Brumby 4th qrs. salary, 12500
D W Blair, J H Bate, A M Dobbs, 2
C A Guyton, J P Legg, J E
Mozley, $5 each, 4th qr salary, 30 00
W E Gramling, 4th qr salary, 25 O
Fred Morris, 4th qr salary, 12 50
R E Lawhon, salary and comsns, 311 42
Fred Morris, I'r. street certif 139 41
W M Hawkins, sal. $3O, prisoners’
board $15.30, insolv. cost $2.50, 47 80
C M Hicks, salary, 25 00
C M Mayfield, salary, 25 00
S M Bruce, salary, 20 00
H G Dobbs Hardware Co. lumber, 1 80
¥red Morris, Tr. pd for work at
pest house, gunrds, ete. 925
Fred Morris, Tr. notes at Marietta
Trust and Banking Co., 2500 00
Legg Bros. blankets, ete for pest h. 1 72
Chas Pailee, keeping clock to
Janl, 1901, . 475
W E Gramling, blacksmith bill, .14 32
P M Hirston,2shede trees for finrk, 1.00
Legg Bros. 2 sutsclothes, marshals,27 80
On motion council adjourned. -
R. E. Lawnox, Clerk.
LaMaß's Lewon L
: Hon.G. M.Davis Macon,Ga., :
. Chairman of the Bibb County
: Commissioners, says:*‘Aftera :
¢ careful trial, T am free to say :
¢ that Lamar’s Lemon Laxative :
¢ is all you elaim for it.” s
A purely vegetable Liver Tonlc and
Bowel Regulatos for
Constipation, Dyspepsia, Indi
gestion, Headache, Malarial
Troubles.
Use no other. :
L.L.L Sold by all druggists.
Nothing becomes evil by expos
ure. The evil was greatest in the
dark.
Quality and not quantity makes De-
Witts Litele Early Riserssuch valuable
little liver pills. C. M. Crosby.
“‘ls the boes in,” asked the
stranger, entering the drug store.
“No,” replied the absent-minded
clerk, “‘but we have something
just as good.” .
THE MOTHER’S FAVORITE.
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is the
mother’s favorite. It is pleasant and
safe for children to take and always
cures. It is intended especially for
coughs, colds, croup, and whooping
cough, and is the best medicine made
for these diseases. There is not the
least danger in giving it to children for
it contains no opium or other injurious
drug and may be given as confidently
to a babe as to an adult. For sale by
J. W. Legg.
Magistrate (severely): ““How
could you be €0 mean asto swindle
people who put confidence in you?”’
Prisoner: “Well, yer Honor, I'll
make it worth something to ye if
you'll tell me how to work them
as don’t.”’
Persons who suffer from indigestion
cannotexpect to live long, because ther
cannot eat the food required to nourish
the body and the produets of the undi
gested foods they do eat poison the
blood. It isimportant to cure indiges
tion as goon as possible, and the best
method of doing that is to use the pre
paration known as Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure. It digests what you eat and re
stores all the digestive organs to per
fect health. C. M. Crosby.
Never be insulted. The person
who would insult vou is beneath
your notice.
If troubled with a weak digestion,
belching, sour stomach, or if {ou feel
dull after eating try Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Price 25¢.
Samples free at J. W. Legg’s drug store.
e e - G A— =
No man can really injure an
other. All real injury comes from
a man’s own acts.
e D A ..
If a thing is right concealed, it
does not, become wrong by being
revealed.
o —— @ O — e
CATARRH CANNOT BE CURED
with local applieations, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh
is o blood or constitutional disease,
and order to cure it you must take
internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
is taken internally, and actsdirectly on
the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine.
It was prescribed by one of the best
physicians in this country for years,
and is a regular prescription. It is
composed of the best tonies known,
combined with the best blood purifiers,
acting directly on the blood and mu
cous surfaces. The dperfect combina
tion of the two ingredients is what pro
duces such wonderful results in curing
cutarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
K. J. Cheney & Co., Props , Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, price Tse.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Father: ‘‘How.isit' Johnnie,
that you get so many bad marks
at school?”” Johnnie (aged 6);
“Well I guess the teacher has to
mark somebody or folks wouldn’t
think he was tending to his buei
ness,’’ ' :
Cut this out and take it to J. W.
Legg’s drug store and get a free sam
ple of Chamberlain’s Liver and Stom
ach Tablets, the best pl vsic. They al
so cure disorders of the :tomach, bil
liousness and headache. :
The angels probably blush when
they see two women that hate ench
otherand know it kiss when they
meet where nobody else can see
them.
| T eAR ——
CASTORIA.
Bears the The Kind You Have Buught
Signature |
of . ol