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I 'WESTERN.aNo ATLANTIC RiFg,
TTAee Sy Wi e S |
. owWN RAILS, WITH Tl_-leUcH TRAIN SERVICE TO
posiE, CHATTANOOGA, NASHVILLE AND MEMPHIS.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS AND FIRST- CLASS DAY COACH T¢
st. Louis and All Paints West.
QUICKEST SCHEDULES TO
CHICA GO % NOR'THWRES "
Excellent Service to Louisville, Cincinna:;
.=~ Ohio, Indiana and Michigan Poipis.
A ALL 'I.?AIL AND S"TE'AMSHIP LINES TO
NEW YORK =anND' THE EAST.
TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS.
(heap Emigeapt Rales fo Arkansas anc Texas.
For schedules, maps, or any rallroad Information, call apen or wrii¢ io
J. W. THOMAS, JR. H. F. SMITH, CHARLES E. HARMAN,
‘GENERAL MANAGER, - TRAFFIC MANAGER, CEN. PASS. AGENT,
NASHVILLE,TENN. @ NASHVILLE.TENN. ATLANTA. QA
ANDERSON BROTHERS,
~ ~_COTTON BUYERS, »
Wholesale and Retail Merchants,
AND DEALERS IN . ;
Fertilizers o 0& and o& 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. IL,.YON,
Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits,
and all Kinds ot Country Produce.
Thankful for past patronage, 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.
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17 INEEERSN
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BARRELS OF GOOD THINGE.
come into and « leave the store
daily. The large volume of bus
hess we do keeps the stock of
GROCERIES |
éver rew. There’s not an ouncel
oTanything that has a chance to
age,
What we sell is fresh, good and
“'hwlf'some, and our customers are
better and richer through their
use, e
These are just ordinary prices,
but they are samples of how we
sell,
___A.B. GILBERT |
Job Printing
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NEATLY,
PROMPTLY,
CHEAPLY,
—at the—
Marietta. ¥ Journal;
.%
. .STEAM . . ;
PRINTING HOUSE
The Wants
v .
Of Life. |
You want Groceries—we ‘want to
to sell them to you. You want
low prices-—We want prompt pay
ing customers. You want the hest
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 complets line of freshest
Groceries, Canned
Goods, 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. ¥ |
East Side Square, :
Marietta, Ga. }
R CURED with vegetable
D OPSY Remedies. Have cured l
many thousand cases
called hopeless. In ten
days at least two-thirds of all symptoms remov
ed. Testimonials and TEN DAY;?mtmem free.
DR. H. H. GREEN’'S SOBS, Box K, Atianta. G»
A 9 and Whiskey Hadi®
o p cured at home with-
APIUM i s
h AR R bW, WOOLLE GO,
, W, Uflice. 104 North Pryor 8t 1
. |
IRON CLAD NOTES
We have for sale ironclad notes waiviug
all the exemptions,with other binding fear
tures %repared by the Solicitor Generm
of the Blue Ridge Cirénit, which is pro
nounced the strongest and bestnnte in ex»
ietence.’ It leaves no loophole fora dishon
est man to escape from paying his obliges
tion, while itis approved by honest m en,
We send a book ot one hundred notes, with
stub, post Daid to any address on recei p‘of
BOcts, or & book of fitty mnotes for 28cts.
Address Marietta (Ga.) Journal. :
The Eminent Kidney
and Bladder Specialist.
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The Discoverer of l!n-)-lt at Work in
His Laboratory.
There is a disease prevailing in this
country most dangerous because so decep
tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by
it—heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure
or apoplexy are often the result of kidney
diseass. If kidney trouble is allowed to ad
vance the kidney-poisoned blood wiil attack
the vital organs, or the kidneys themselves
‘break down and waste away cell by cell.
Then the richness of the blood—the albumen
—leaks out and the sufferer has Bright's
Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble.
Dr, Kilmer's Swamp=Rooot the new dis
covery is the true specific fdr kidney, bladder
and urinary troubles. It has cured thousands.
of apparently hopeless.cases, after all other
efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent
and dollar sizes. A sample bottle sent free
by mail, also a book telling about Swamp-
Root and its wonderful cures, Address
Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, N. Y. and
mention this paper.
Hardage. :
Mrs Lou Guess and son, Henry,
of Doraville, Ga., are visiting rel
atives here. & s
W P Hardage made a business
trip to Rockmart Monday.
The musical entertainment at
R. H. Ridgeway’s last Saturday
night was much enjoyed.
J M Brown and wife have moved
near Kennesaw. CARNATION,
Mt. Bethel.
Miss Johney May Smith, of
Sardis, visited her sister, Mrs C
M Bishop, of this place.
Mrs Glenn Power, of Chatta
nooga, Tenn., is on an extended
visit with relatives here.
Rev J Beck filled his regularap
pointment at Chattahoochee last
Saturday. There will be a singing
at this place next Sunday after
noon. Everyhody invited.
| SUNFLOWER.,
CURES BLOOD POISON.
SororurA, Urnoers, Ornp Sorks, BoNge
ParNs—TRIAL TrREATMENT FREE.
First, second or third stages positive
ly cured by taking B. B. B. (Botanie
Blood Balm). Blood Balm kills or de
stroys the syphilitic poisons in the
blood ard 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, itching 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 nné’ rich and give
the rich glow of health’ to the skin.
Over 3000 testMmonials of cures. B. B.
B. thoroughly tested for 30 years. Drug
stores $l. Trial treatment of B. B, B.
free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlan
ta, Ga. Describe trouble and free
medical advice given. Don’t despair
of a cure as B. B. B. cures when all
else fails.
o — . R~ I e
The ways of widows, like those
of Providence, are inscrutable.
S e
A PROMINENT CHICAGO WOMAN
SPEAKS.
Prof. Roxa Tyler, of Chicago, Vice
President Illinois Woman’s Alliance,
in speaking of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy, says s *‘l suffered 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 1
found it was pleasant to take and it re
lieved me at once. I am now entirely
recovered, saved a doctor’s bill, time
and suffering, and I will never be with
out this spl‘sndid medicine again.” For
sale by J. W. Legg.
00 SOVOPIOOD 00000000 POOODOOO GO ©GO
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The Marietta Journal
Job Office.
() 000 G OOPDIEOODI 0D HOGIIOGOD Ot
THE DEMORALIZATION OF DEBT.'
- Debt! There isno more demor
alization of character. The sad
records of defaulting artd dishon
est failure which we meet with in
daily press, are often, indeed most
frevuently the demoralization of
debt, and consequent desperate
efiorts at extrication. The finan
cial props have given away. The
little debt which was as small as
a grain of mustard seed, like the
rolling snow ball has gathered
weight and multiplied itself a
thousand fold. Andstill it grows
‘and like the fabulous Hydra which
Hercules was sent to kill, you no
sooner strike off one . head than
two shoot up in ite place.. The
lstmggle is severe, but in the end
decisive; either confession is made
of a hopeless bankruptey which
might and should havegeen avoid
ed, or integrity is sacrificed to the
moment. Debt ruins as} many|
households, and destroys as many
fine characters as rum; it is the
devil’s mortgage on the soul, and |
he is always ready to foreclose.
Pay all your bills. Look every
man in the "face, congeious that
you owe the world no more than’
it owes you. Be indebted for
nothing but love, and, even that
be sure you pay in kind, and that
your payments are frequent.—
Talmage. ;
The tallest living man is said to
be Lewis Wilkins, who is now
arousing great interest in the
scientific circles of Europe. Wil
kins was born on a farm near St.
Paul, Minn., in 1874. When he
was but 10 years bld he measured
six feet in height, and now has
grown to the sensational height of
8 feet 11} inches and weighs 864
pounds.
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.
Patieunce is virtuous only when
it is full of proper self-respect.
It takes only one to end a quar
rel.
CATARRH UANNOT BE CURED
with local applications, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh
is a blood or constitutional disease,
and order to cure it you must take
internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
is taken interrally, and acts direetly on
the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s
Cdtarrh Cure is not a quack medicine.
It was preseribed by one of the best
physicians in this country for years,
and is a regular prescription. It is
comgused of the best tonies known,
combined with the best blood purifiers,
acting directly on the blood and mu
cous surfaces. The dpert‘ect combina
tion of the two ingredients is what pro
duces suchr wonderful results in curing
cutarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props , Tolado, O.
Sold by druggiste, price 7be.
Hall’s Famidy Pills are the best.
The least one can do after com
mitting an I{discreti(m is to hide
it, for the public good.
If troubled with a weak digestion,
belching, sour stomach, or if you feel
dull after eating tr{’ Chamberlain’g
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Price 25c¢.
Samples free at J. W. Legg’s drugstore.
I Unless one be mated, better not
| he married.
Quality and not quantity makes De
l Witts Litele Early Risers suth valuable
little liver pills. C. M. Crosby.
’ A great deal of wit 18 spoiled by
a lack of proper polish.
BEAT OUT OF AN INCREASE OF
, HIS PENSION.
A Mexiean war veteran and promi
nent editor writes: ‘“‘Seeing the adver
tisement of Chamberlin’s Colic, Ch#l
era and Diarrhoea Remedy, I am re
minded that as a soldier in Mexico in
’47 and ’4B, 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 unegualled as a quick
cure for diarrhoea and is pleasant and
safe to take. Sold by J. W. Legg.
A clever woman never shows her
feelings ; a callous one has none to
show. .
} 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 interded es(Yeciully 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 in{g’urious
drug and may be given as confidently
to a babe as to an adult. For sale by
J. W. Legg.
T S O A——
No one is so eloquent as he who
flatters his hearers—just suffi
ciently.} :
Persons who suffer from indigestion
cannotexpect to live long, because thef
cannot eat the food required to nouarish
the body and the products of the undi
gested foeds they do eat poison the
lood. It js important to cure indiges
tion as 200 l 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. gf Crosby.
SUGAR CANE CULTURE,
Information Glven by the State Ag
ricultural Department,
QUESTION. —Some time since I saw it
stated that good cane could be grown
from the top third of came. Pleas¢
write me if this theory can be relied on.
Any other information touching cant
culture will interest south Georgis
planters.
ANSWER.—It has been demomnstrated
by Dr. W. C. Stubbs, of the Louisians
Sugar Experiment Station, as well as
other directors, that the top third of the
cane stalk is not as good, but superiot
for seed purposes. Dr. Stubbs recom
mends that only this portion of the
plant be used for seed. The tops, how
ever, should not be banked, as is thu
custom where the whole cane is used fot
seed purposes. The land upon which
cane is to be grown another season
should e thoroughly prepared, and the
-Tows opened before grinding talkes place.
*The top third of the cane,’’ says Dr.
Stubbs, “should be cut off and planted
in the rows in the usual manner, but
without stripping. The tops are then
covered by means of a turning plow and
the middles opened to allow drainage.
To prevent freezing the cate tops should
be covered from 3 to 6 inches deep, Thij
‘method of seed saving is the practice of
many fargmers in Louisiana, and is ne
longer an experiment.’’
The Southern Farm Magazine says
that Dr. Stubbs, after six years of expo
riments with a great variety of canes,
has developed a sugar cane whioch is
capable of yielding 80 per cent more of
sugar than the cane now grown in the
state of Louisiana. He claims that this
variety of cane will produce 38 tons to
the acre. The juice yields 16 per cent
of sugar, while the old cane gives an
acreage of 80 to 85 tons, with a 13 per
cent yield in the juice.
Small bundles of this cane will be
furnished to planters of Louisiana free.
Would it not be a good plan for a few
of our Georgia farmers to interest them
selves in this new variety of sugar cane,
which promises so much for our sister
state? Dr. Stubbs’ address is Audubon
Park, New Orleans, La.—State Agci
cultural Department.
More Pure-Breed Cattle For Georgla,
In our last monthly talk mention wasg
made of the instrumentality of the De
partment of Agriculture in connection
with other parties in bringing into
Georgia 100 short-horns and Herefords
for the purpose of improving the breeds
of beef cattle. Since that time two morae
carloads of pure‘ breeds have been
shipped into the state and sold at fair
prices. All of these, like the first lot,
are young cattle. A short wiile ago
the prison commissioners purchased
from Mr. Murray Babecock of Vir
ginia, a 12-months-old Hereford bull
for the prison farm. The animal,
which is one of the handsomest
ever brought into the state, cost $2OO.
Judge Turner is negotiating for a herd
of Hereford heifers for the purpose of
raising on the prison farm pure stock to
sell to Georgia farmers for breeding
purposes.
It must be borne in mind that Here
fords are raised for beef and not for
milk. The cows of this breed furnish
only enough miilk to sustain a calf. One
needs only to look at a Hereford, with
his short legs and long body, to know
that he will furnish abundance of the
best beef, They are a well-marked
breed, easily distinguished from other
cattle by their white heads, legs, bellies
and tails and red sides. The bulls are
very docile and easily managed,
The live stock department is one of
the best features of the State farmy It is
the intention of the commisfiouer to
raise on the farm not only all the meat
needed for the convicts, but also the best
breeds of cattle and hogsto sell to the
farmers.and stock raisers of Georgia af
the lowest possible price.—State Agri
cultural Department.
Kattening With Corn.
QuEsTION. — What food is best for fat.
tening? :
ANSWER.— We know of no better an
swer to this than the following, which
appeared in one of our daily papers:
“For furnishing food for market no
food substance known equals corn. Al
falfa, clover, Bermuda, sorghum, arti
chokes, sweej potatoes and peanuts-are
all go;)d food to promote growth and
make lean meat; but corn for adding
the plumpness that makes porkers sell,
cannot be improved upon, as far as is at
present known. We can raise more corn
than all the hogs in the world can eat,
and raise-hogs enough to eat all the corn
we -can grow. This is a fact; not a
paradox,”’
The best way to use this corn is to
grind it into meal before feeding, for
then it is more digestiple.
Raising Hogs.
QUEsTION, —By a correspondent from
another state—l. Is it profitable to raise
hogs in North Georgia? 2. Wijll they
fatten if allowed to range through the
woods? '
ANSWER.—I. A great many hogs are
raised in North Georgia and, like the
beef of that section, find a ready market.
2. During at least seven months of the
year they range the woods and grow fat
on acorns, chestnuts, hickery nuts and
such other food as they can pick up.
But of course, like any other stock, hogs
need the attention and care of man to
produce the best results.—State Agri
cultural Department,
Utiltzing Cattle Blood.” g
Hon. O. B. Stevens, Atlantaf3a.:
Deiß Sir—l have cbarge of a plants
tion where we e{ntt»n cattle on cotton
seed dulls, meal and bran. We kill
three beeves a week. [sthere any way
that I can save the blood and fresh litter
from the Lukcher pen without its smell-’
ing too bad when placed .in barrels?
Want to use it for fersilizer next spring,
aud I would like to know what to mix
with it If you can give me any advice
it will be appreciated. ;
ANswEß.—Your letter of the fiftesnth
insr., received and noted. As you are
not running a regular’ slaughter house
it would not be practicable fof ‘you to
save your blood and other animal waste
in the way in which the large slaughter
houses do it. They evaporate their
blood down to dryness, and also thor
oixghly dry out with steam heat all of
their other waste, which they grind and
call tankage. Probably the best thing
yotu could do would be to buy some very
d¥y Acid Phosphate, stipulating in’ tho
purchase that the acid shall not contain
more than 5 to 6 per cent of water.
Acid Phosphate made some six or seven
months ago ought to fulfill these con
ditions. Then mix your blood with
this dry Acid Paosphate. It will
soon absorb the blood, and then
later on you can pulvenize and have
a most exvellent ammoniated fertilizer.
You can also take the offal and other
waste matter and cover it over with the
acid phosphate 1n a pile, putting layers
of offal and layers of acid phogphate,
‘one upon the other. The acid phosphate
will prevent the loss of ammania, and
will absorb the extra water. Thisis the
most practical receipt I can give you for
saving your waste animal matter. Of
course, your pile of acid and blood, etc.,
should be protected-by shelter from the
weather. —(Georgia State Chemist.
: Shredded Corn.
It may be a iittle late to discuss this
question, but in confirmation of what
was said in an address to the dairymen
of Georgia by Mt. Redding to the effect
that by the use of shredded corn 40 per
cent of the value of the corncrop is
saved we quote from The Farm and
Ranch, published at Dallas, Tex.:
It is claimed by some farmers that
cornstalks cannot be saved in the south
west as in the north and west; that they
become too dry and woody, and even if
shredded will not be eaten by cattle.
They tell us that unless the corn stands
1 the field until the corn is hard that
there will be grear loss in grain. They
have, or at least many of them have, the
idea that the corn must be gathered and
the stalks cat afterwards, because the
universal custom has been to gather the
corn from the stalks as they ‘stand in
the field. If they will wait until the
kernels are wel{ glazed, and then cus
and shock the corn closely, the subp
stance remaining in the stalks will
be sufficient to mature the corn
and the stalks themselves will not
dry out as they would standing
in the field.. The corn may then
be pulled from the stalks and the stalks
hauled to the shreddes and' made
into a nutritious hay, or ghey may be
put through a cutter and made into
silage, and if mixed with peavinas will
make a feed about equal in value to the
whole gorn silage. It is an engrmous
waste of feed to let the cornstalks dry
up in the field. .
Wood Compressed by Water,
““Have you ever seen a bit 'of wood
that you couldn’t burn?’’ said anm old
sea captain to me the other day.
“Why, lots,”” I replied, ‘‘the brier
root, for instance—at least, if it’s good
—ironwood, tco,and one or two others.”’
*‘l don’t mean those,’’ he said. ‘‘But
have you ever seen a lot of common
deal that fire had no effect on?’ He
pulled from his pocket a inorsel of what
looked like white Norwegian deal and
handed it to me. I was surprised at the
weight. ‘““Put it in the gas flame,’’ he
said. 5
I did so, but beyond a blackening of
the surface there was no effect. :
‘‘That bit of wood,”” went on the
skipper, ‘‘was part of the gunwale of
one of my boats. We were whaling in
the South seas and harpeoned a big
right whale off the Cape of Good Hope.
The creature sounded, the rope fculed
and the boat was carried down. Proba
bly it was taken, half a mile or'more
below the surface. The whale rose
again and was killed, and a portion of
the boat was recovered from the lins
which still hung to it. It was the pres
sure cf the water hardened it Jike that.’
~—Baltimore Herald. .
. Best Crop (n the Peach Orchard.
What are the best crops that can be
grown in a peach orcha.r\g without mate
rial injury to the trees’ .
Ans. Cotton, cahtelonpes, sweet pota
toes and peas. Itis notdesirdble to plant
ocorn or any grain crop in an orchard.
Cotton is, perhaps, by far the best crop
to grow in an orehard. It practically
insures a good cultivation for the trees
almost thrgughout the season, just what
they need. No good farmer will fail to
cultivate hig' cotton crop, but he may
neglect his trees. sl -
When peas are planted in an orchard
thay should be planted im drills and
cultivated so that the trees will' not
suffer for cultivation. Never sow peas
broadcast in an orchard and thus pre
vent cultivation.
‘These crops may be profitably ‘grown
with the trees only for the fitst two or
three* years. No crop should be grown
in an orchard after the third year.=e
Georgia Department of Butomology.
~ The price of a camel varies ig
l Arabia from $l5 to $1,00.. 1