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ihe Mlarietta Journal,
- ——ESTABLISHED IN 1866.—
W 8. N. NEAL. — J. A. MABBEY.
NEAL & MASSEY,
Forrors, PROPRIETORS AND PUBLISHERS
Entered at the Post Office, Marietta, Ga.. as
Second Class Matter.
AP A A A A A ALA AN NPT
Terms of Subscription :
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tions intended to promote the private or po
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porations, will be charged as advertisements.
Advertising Rates Reasonable and made
known on application.
Official Jotu:rnal of Cobb County.
Official Journal of Mari etta.
MARIETTA, GA-
TaurspAYy MorNiNag, Fee. 7, 1901.
e ——————————————————————
The ship subsidy bill soems to
be stuck in ‘‘Clay.”
Sheriff Passmore of Valdosta,
killed a hog 34 months old which
weighed, net, 9565 pounds.
There are in Chicago 6,871 sa
loons which during the last annual
period yielded in revenues to the
city $8,162,170.
A recent report made to congress
on the navy of the United States
shows that the government now
has a total of 254 vessels.
The Augusta Herald 1s authority
for the statement that Georgia has
42,000 square miles of standing
timber.
Brobston acts on the idea that
he is willing to build up Bruns
wick regardless of the means em
ployed. The ship subsidy bill is
wrong in principle.
In Georgia the age of consent is
ten years, and the last session of
the legislature defeated a bill rais
ing it to twelve years. In Ten
nessee the age of consent is sixteen
years, and the Tennessee legisla
ture is now petitioned to enact a
law making it eighteen or twenty
years.
Mrs. Nation and Mrs. Sheriff
out in the state of Kansas, with
hatchets have been smashing whis
key saloons, breaking bar fixtures
and emptying whiskey out in the
gutter. Kansas has a prohibition
law, but it seems the officers do
hot enforce it. Mrs. Nation has
concluded to enforce the law by
wrecking the whiskey-sellers’ prop
erty. If the sworn officers weould
do their duty; then Mrs. Nation
and others would have no excuse
for their work.
Milk has long been considered
an almost perfect food. It strength
ens the whole body; the cream
gives fat, the whey contains the
salts and phosphates that are so
necessary for the brain, bones and
other vital orgaus; the curd is the
nitrogerecus part of the milk, and
therefore the muscle-making sub
stance. Kggs, aleo, are rich in
nitrogen, fat and sulphur for
muscles brain and nerve.
Eighteen years ago the Prohibi
tionists won in Kansas in a gen
eral state election. The large 4
towns voted against it, but the
Prohibitionists had a majority in
the total vote of the etate. The
legislature, accordingly, passed
stringent prohibition laws, among
other things providing that it
shoald be a misdemeanor to even
rent a house for liquor selling pur
poses. In the cities and large
towns the drug stores took to dis
pensing liquors ‘‘on prescriptions”
and blind tigers made their ap
pearance. Finally the dealers be
cane bold and opened up regular
saloons, submitting to being fined
$25 to $5O per month for violating
the law. These fines, as a matter
of fact, amount to about what a
license would cost. In Leaven
worth, where there are 117 saloons,
the monthly fine is $25, while in
Wichita, where there are sixteen
saloons, the fine is $5O per month,
Notwithstanding the business is
outlawed, it is conducted openly.
The fact that it has no standing
in law accounts for Mrs. Nation’s
immunity from punishment for
'smashing things in the saloons.
THE HOME NEWSPAPER.
I The loeal newspaper should be
found in every home. No chil
dren should grow up in ignorance
whbo can be taught to appreciate
‘the home press, says the Kensing
ton (Pa.) Dispatch. It is said to
;be the stepping stone of intelli
gence in all those matters not to
‘be learned in books. Give your
children a foreign paper, which
concains not one word about any
person, place or thing which they
ever saw, or perhaps ever heard of,
and how could you expect them to
be interested! But let them have
the home paper, and read of peo
ple whom they meet ard of places
with which they are familiar, and
soon an interest is awakened which
increases with every weekly arrival
of the local paper. Thus a habit
of reading is formed, and those
children will read the papers all
their lives, and become intelligent
men and women, a credit to their
ancestors, strong in the knowledge
or the world as it is today.
PENSIONS. .
One by one, the Northern news
papers are waking up to the fact
that Congress must be called to
time on the pension question. A
few of the more independent jour
nal’s above Mason and Dixon’s
line have mustered up courage to
begin discussing fthe present dis
graceful state of affairsinthe pen
sion office, but the subject is one
which, for the present, they handle
very gingerly. Here isa sample
from the Philadelphia Record:
‘‘The apparent great advantage of
the United States over the nations
of Europe in that the former have
no large standing army to support
has been partiy ofiset by the in
creasing sum that is annually ap
propriated for military pensions.,
It i 8 now thirty-six yearssince the
close of the civil war, yet the
pending pension appropriation
bill carries $146,245 280—more
than five times the amount paid
for pensions in 1878. The total
number of pensioners (mostly sur
vivors of the civil war) now on
the rolls is 998,5629. Twenty years
ago the number was 250,802, and
ten years ago, 537,944. More than
40,000 new claime were allowed
last year, which exceeds the re
duction occasioned by the death
of old pensioners,”
Sixty car loads of mules were
gold 1n Atlanta one day recently.
COTTON CULTURE.
Yes, ‘“‘whoop 'em up’’ and let it
come, says an exchange. Haul
out the guano and buy all the
mules; you possibly can. Get
some merchant to ‘‘run you.”
Plant cotton all over creation,
between your watermelon rows,
in missing places in the czorn;
plant the garden just as soon as
the vegetables are off. Put it in
the fence corners and around
wherever you can **stick’’ a hill in
your wife’s flower garden, Yes,!
plant cotton “world without end.””
Make it so low that a fellow won’t
pick it if you give him what he
gathers, and furnish him ‘‘free
hash’ while he picks. Go it, boys!
**go it while you are fyoung,’’ for
whep you get old you can’t raise
it. But one consolation—when
you can} no longer ‘‘jine’’ the
boys in keeping on a first-class
case of poverty, debt and bank
ruptey for the country, you ecan
put in your contribution to the
general ruin as a first-class calam
ity howler. Cut this ocut and
keep it for ‘‘ready reference’’ all
through the year. Don’t go to
bed tonight without calling up all
the children, with their méther,
and reading this to them. Then
may be they will dream of cotton
and devise methods for making
more cotton even while they sleep.
And hear, brother, don’t fail to
take this to meeting next Sunday,
and go soon, before the preacher
gets there, so you can call ‘‘the
nabors’’ fand have every fellow
understand plans for the eurrent
year. Then if he dont go our way
and land next December 1n plenty
and peace, and can’t ‘‘jine the
baud’ in the chorus of hunger,
rags and debt, he’ll be without
excuse, and lay the blame of his
condition at our dootf.
ROLL OF HONOR.
For a pupil to be on the roll of honor
he or she must get perfect in deport
ment, excellent in lessons, and must
not be gbsent or tardy for the week.
First Grade—Enoch Faw,Grant
Swartout, Roy Moore, Iverson
McGinnig, Felix Cogburn, Robert
Holland, Jim Setze, Jay O. Hames,
Willie Coker, Pat Mell, Ben Black,
Harry Mclntyre, Ralph Mell,
Charley Gardner, Charley Mell,
Robert Stubinger, Louie Hawkius,
Linton Stephens, Wm. Young
blood, Francis Wright, Laucile
Gober, Edith Northcutt, Maggie
Edwards, Louie Hames, Vasaie
Tidwell, Rosa MecDonald, Ruth
Leake, May Dobbs, Iva May Cov
ington, May Napier, Carrie Belle
Mosher, Hettie Dewald, Lottie
White.
Second Grade—Norma Walling,
Lizzie Dobbins, Callie Campbell,
Florrie Black, Eula Smith, Emma
Moss, Fannie Curry, Nettie Hern
don, Emma May Rambo, Gracie
Bowls, Rosa Austin, Roy Thorn
ton, Jordan Black, Theodore
Fleish, Henry Pratt, Willie Sew
ell, Allie May Simpson, Anna
May Jones, Harold Hawkins, Guy
Northcutt, Fred Wiley, Will 8.
Cox, Lucy Gilbert, Harle Legg.
Third Grade—Warren Dobbs,
Stuart Milam, Edgar Nichols,
Mattie Campbell,Josephine Dobbs,
Adalene Dolbs, Ethie Bowls, Eu
nice Bishop, Trudie Dewberry,
May Belle Moore, Florine Mell,
Irene Northcutt, Willie Grace
Waters, Rosa Willingham.
Fourth Grade—Henry Banks,
Joe Brown, Nathan Bussey, Ry
burn Clay, Albert Dobbins, Lloyd
Graves, Andrew King, H. V. Rey
nolds, Frank Thornton, R. H.
Wellons, Joe Lumpkin, Willie
May Blair, Henrietta Black, Ber
tha Bénnett, Lillie May Delaney,
Sadie Gober, May McKinney,
Pearl Mell, Lena May Parks, Eliz
abeth Reynolds,g§ Ethel Ruther
ford, Mary Squiers, Edna Varnon.
Fifth Grade—Rachel Broznack,
Ethel Moss, Merritt Lyon, Agnes
Gober, Fanny Hight, Lucy Gat
lin, Mipnie Sanges, Julia May
Stubinger, Lula Bowles, Frances
Bailey. |
Sixth Grade—Matt Black, Starr‘
Bradley, Leslie Blair, Bessie Bar
rett, Selina Couper, Daisy Cox,
Allene Fielde, Nina Gignilliatt,
Clyde Lovinggood, Marie Massey,
Irma Neal, Annie Nichols, Reginal
Rambo, Julia Schilling, Annie
Waddell, Edna Wallace, Jenniel
Wellons, Stanley Welsh.
Seventh Grade—Lee Belk, Mary
Belk, Frank Clay, Laura Milam,
Leila Moon, Fannie Moss, Mary
Allen Henderson, Mayes Gober,
Cliff Saule, Percy Legg, Flay Law
hon, Lola Brewer.
Second High School—Lucy
Fields.
| First High School—Guyton Par
mer Reynolds, Viola Baker, Ber
tha Banks, Zelina Smith.
A woman in Oshkosh, Wis., has
secured a divorce on the ground
that her husband is a cigarette
fiend.
is destruction of lung by a
growing germ, precisely as
moldy cheese is destruction
of cheese by a growing germ.
If you kill the germ, you
stop the consumption. You
can or can’t, according to
when you begin.
Take Scott’s Emulsion of
Cod Liver Oil: take a little
at first.
[Qoss=a=] It acts -as a
- ¥ { food; it is the
\ {&F. ° X -
; r]f(‘ easiest food.
1 £ i Seems not to be
7 ? m food ; makes you
~% = .hungry;f eaté?g
|.._~. 3 L _‘l ~
Con LI Y ou grow strong
'he genune has
this picture on it, er. Take more;
take no other,
not too much ; enough is as
much as you like and agrees
with' you. Satisfy hunger
with usual food; whatever
i}\m like and agrees with you.
| When you are strong
again, have recovered your
strength---the germs are
(= o
dead ; you have killed them.
_lf you have not tried it, send
for free sample, its agreeable
taste will surprise you.
SCOTT & BOWNE,
Chemists,
409 Pearl St., New York.
50c¢. and $1.00; all druggists.
| s :
+JEWEL STOVES..
MADE BY
‘ THE LARGEST STOVE PLANT]}
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TTTEEED, Se— eel e——
| soLp aBy F. E.A. SCHILLING.
_—
P. T'. HAMEBY .
_—_— DBALRR IN——
.b F °
General Merchandise, -:- Farming Implements,
..SHOES, EATS, JEANS, PANTS, TOBACCO,...
| CIGARS, PIPES, SNUFF, ETC. l
AGENT FOR HANCOCK'S ROTARY DISC PLOW
A OMO A I ST S AVR TR AR IS
B B B A A TRV BA P G 02504 PNT BT SASTRANA T BAst
Our Prices are Rock Bottom. Try Us Before Buying
a
C. E. HENDERSON,
CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, AND
Rough and Dressed Lumber, Shingles, Laths
Ainos o BUILDING MATERIAL
. Cheap as the Cheapest.
.~undertaker and Licensed Embalmer...
AND KEEP A FULL STOCK OF
Wooden and Metallic Burial Cases, Robes, &c.
Calls promptly sttended day or night. Office on Church St., Marietta.
J. W. HARDEMAN,
Dealer In
SHOES, HAT S, STAFLE AN FNCY
GROCERIES, CONFECTIONERIES, CROCKERY,
HARDWARE. FRUITS & COUNTRY PRODUCF
~—————EAST SIDE PUBLIC SQUARE, MARIETTA.— ~——-
I LEAD IN LOW PRICES and let those follow who can. My motto
is live and let live. I sell some of the leading brands of
~—7a——— N BRANE SRR LILICERS -
And think it wili be to your interest to see me before buying, as the
longest pole geth the persimmon. Call and see me. :
‘ Jd W. EEARDEMAN.
NEW TYPE 1n the Marietta Journal’s Job Department enables us
to dc printing equal in neatness to the best city priuting. We ask
you to see samples of our work and get our prices
: ‘ |
D ia G
Digests what you eat.
Itartificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gans. Itisthelatestdiscovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relicves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps and
allotherresults of imperfect digestion.
Price 50c. and §l. Large size contains ‘2’% times
amallsize, Book all aboutdyspepsia malled free
Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO., Chicago.
C. M. Croshy.
Atlanta, Xnomville and Northers
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
Effective December 18th, 1898, the fol
lowing change in sehedule will take ef
fect on the A. K. & N. Ry:
Passenger trains going south will leave
Knoxville at 8:45 a. m.. arriving Mariet
taat 6:15 p. m. Leave Atlanta, going
north, at 8:30 a, m., Marietta 9:15 a. m.,
arriving at Knoxville 6:50 p. m,
Train leaving Blue Ridge at 10:00 a.m.
arriving at Knoxville 7 p. m., returning
leaving Knoxville at 9 a. m., arriving at
‘ Blue Ridge at 7:30 p. m., will be aban
‘doned. Train .leaving Marietta at 10:00
& arrivingi at Blue Ridge at 1:20 p.
‘m,, returning leave Blue Ridge at 2 p. m.
‘arriving at Marietta 5:30 p. m will be
‘abandoned. J. H, MCWILLIAMS,
| TP ACA K. &N Ry
| 60 YEARS'
| EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DesiGns
COPYRIGHTS &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and deocflgtlon may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether ao
invention is probably mwnmble. Communics
:L%‘i':'r‘.".mofi?..‘t‘gg':‘:cy :3“»«.“““,.:%'?&%‘&"
Patents tak h
special moticé, without Charge. In the ""0
Scientific American,
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific *ourm.l. Terms, $3 8
ear ; four months, $l. Sold by all newsdealers.
NN & Go,2s arsivs. N Yor
Branch Office, 625 F St. Washington, D.C. _
o °
Give Us a Trial
John L. & Jas, I'l. Taylor
The Shoe Makers,
Twenty Years Experience. The Best
Hemlock and White-Oak used. Allxips
neatly sewed with the improved Singer,
Satisfaction guaranteed. Promptness i
our motto. Shop five doors above rail
road crossing, near depot, Anderson
block, Marietta. '
GLOVER
®
Machine Works,
J. W. GI.OVER, Proprietor
CASTINGS—Iron, Brass, Brouze
FORGINGS—Heavy, Light.
MACHIN ERY—Built, Repaire
MARIETTA, - - GEORGIA
JOURNAL FOR $l.
Owing to the stringency of money mé
ers, and with a view to increase our sul
cription list, we wili serd the Maretls,
Journal for cash one year fcr one dolls!
Bix months for fifty cents, and three_monf-“
or 25cisin the county. All credit sul
pecriptions at the old rate, §l5O Vo
into the Journal office and leave vour #ub
erirtton with the eaitare, ‘
LIVERY STABLE.
(OPPOSITE KENNESAW HOUSE.)
Chuck ANDERsON, Proprietor
THE best of Vehicles, the safest of dr
vers and the fastest of horses are Ellwaji
ready, night and day for hire. No mab
or woman or child ever has givenme?
call in the past, who has been, nor.sh'ali
any ever in the future be dissatistiel
'with my teams or the men in my emplu}:
'Everything and every body about me ar
'a number one.
} I have cheapened my charges proper
tionate to the stringency of the txmesi
For references as te the truth of what
say, as to the turnouts and charges, &°
to my friends, which means the pt"»'}'l'L
generally, ;
Parties hiring are strictly responsfl#j
for the safety of t hemselves, vehicles &
horses ;
. A. G. ANDERSON.