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Y S A T M KPS
The Marletta Journal
Boresed at the Post Office, Mtrletm.-v(—;:.—.—n:
3econd Class Matter.
—ESTABLISHED IN 1866.—
PUBRLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
W. S. N. NEAL - -~ - J A MASSEY
NEAL & MASSEY,
€niToßs, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS
~——TERMS OF BUBBORIPTION t——
ONEBEYEBAR .......... «5+....0NE DOLLAR.
SIX M0NTH8.....:... 4s.+...FIFTY CENTS.
PH BERE MONTHS... ..TWENTY-FIVE OENTS
Advertising Rates Heasonable and made
known on application.
Otticial Journal of Cobb County.
Ofticial Journal of Marietta.
MARIETTA GA-
TaurspAy MorNiNg, JaN, 30, 1908.
SRR IR T RAT T IR ORI R KRNBT DR
Content gives charm to every
circumstance.
He who works in faith will work
faithfully.
Life is early blighted if it knows
no clouds,
Arith_metic for the fortune found
er: Give the ratio of the squan
dered dime to the saved dollar.
~ The trouble with an ideal is
that after we attain it we are al
ways looking around for another.
Generosity, like charity, should
have a home start. It 1s neither
generous nor thrifty to spend lav
ishly others at the cost of probable
dependence on others lin later
years.
The 2-cent rate law now in force
in Pennsylvania was declared un
constitutional by the State Su
preme court, which handed down
an opinion an opinien affirming
the opinion of the Common Plaas
court of Philadelphia, rendered
last September.
The Memphis Commercial Ap
peal has this: “Opportunity
knocked loudly at the man’s door,
but the man was discousing on
panics, their habits and habitants
80 Opportunity grinned and am
bled along.”
It is easy to sit down, read a
newspaper and criticise it, and
throw it aside, but there are fow
that have any conception of the
amoutt of physical and mental
energy expended in getting the pa
per out in the shape they find it.
The idea that any old sort of
man will do for candidate for vice-
Eresident should be wiped out for
eeps, not only because of his fre
quently becoming president, but
becanse the position is one of hon
or and dignity, which no man is
too big to fill.
We are sure that there has been
more real happiness in Athens
since the dyspensary went out
than there has ever been. Bread,
meat, luxuries, clothing and shoes
now take the place of booze. What
a delightful transposition.—Ath
ens Courier.
‘T'wenty-three years ago a Paris,
Texas, woman was keeping a board
ing house, and a railroad man
went away owing her $12.50. The
landlady never saw or heard of
the man again until last week,
when she was surprised to receive
a check from him to cover the
amount of her bill. He eaid that
he had quit railrcading and was
now preaching the gospel.
If the merchants of Mariatta will go
after the country trade in the right way,
their business will be greater than it
has ever been. “A word to the wise is
sufficient.”” Advertising is the word
Advertising creates a desire for things,
and in many instances the degire cre
ates the demand, and this spring the
country people have the money. See?
Thomas K. Glenn, vice president and
manager of the railway department of
the Georgia Railway and Electrie Com
pany, has resigned to accept the presi
dency of the Atlanta Steel Hoop Com
pany, and his brother, W. H. Glenn,
now superintendent of construction of
the Georgia Railway and Electric Com
pany, wifi succeed him.
,' A SPLENDID RESULT.
The Dawson News gives this re
cord of some Terrell county farm
ing~ *“On a five-horse farm, du
ring the season just closed, Mr.
Bridges made 106 bales of cotton,
besides theynecessary amount of
corn, meat, etc.
“With one of these plows in par
ticular, however, Mr. Bridges
made a record-breaking crop. He
cultivated 42 acres of land, 87 of
which were planted in cotton and
from which he gathered 87 bales,
weighing more than 500 pounds
each—a bale to the acre. . On the
!other five acres he made 100 bush
els of corn, 150 bushels of pota
toes, and other usual by-products.
He used only 600 pounds of fertil
izers to the acre in making this
crop, which was worked by Will
Shingles, a negro. '’
ASR i v
SOTHING NEW.
Bocker Washington, i an ad
dress at Cambridge recently, spoke
of the fact that we have come toa
time when there is very little that
is new to be eaid by a speaker or
minister; the doctrines of love, of
punishment, of reward, and of the
future life, are well known, As
an illustration of the fact that
there are those who demand some
thing new, he related this anec
dote:
‘I am reminded of an old negro
whom I met in the hilis down
South at a church where I was be
seeching the audience to stand by
their pastor and pay him a salary.
I spoke as eloquently as I could.
1 watched my audience and saw
that I had every one with me but
this old fellow in the rear, who
kept mumbling to himself when
ever I finished an argument. Fi
nally I called out to him, and
asked why he opposed paying a
salary to his hard-working minis
ster.
‘“‘No, suh; no, suh; we sha’n’t
pay him no more salary this year.
He’s giving us the same sermons
he gave last year,”” he said.
THE BLESSING OF CHEERFULNESS.
God bless the cheerful people—
man, woman, or child, old or
young, illiterate or educated,
handsome or homely = What the
sun i 8 to nature, what God is to
the etricken heart, are cheorful
persons in the house and by the
wayside. They go unobtrusively,
unconsciously, about their mis
gion, happiness heaming from their
faces. We love to sit near them.
We love the nature of their eye,
the tone of their voice. Little
children find them out quickly,
amid the densest crowd, and pass
ing by the knitted brow, and com
pressed lip, glide near, laying a
;confiding hand on their knee, and
lift their clear young eyes to those
loving faces.—A. A, Willits.
~ The entrance of Gov. Hughes,
of New York, into the race for the
rapublican nomination for the
presidency, is evidently pestering
President Roosevelt and his candi
date, Secretary of War Taft. From
the president down the Taft boom
ers at the national capital are said
to be whizzing around in a state of
alarm,
Every cell door of the Atlanta
police headquarters stood wide
open last Friday morniug, for the
first sime since the establishment
of that house of detention. The
Atlanta Journal, editorializing on
this unprecedented sitnation,
which is attributed to prohibition,
philosophically, if not piously, ex
presses the hope that this is but
the beginning of a long reign of
peace ard order, but, with charac
teristic thriftiness, casts about for
something to make good to the
city the loss that it is sustaining
in having all revenue from crime
cut off.
Paragraphs.
Many a man who acts smart is
made to smart for it.
Some people are so rich they
don’t have to keep a dog.
Things that are better left un
said are sure to be heard.
A man’s love for his wife doesn’t
necesearily include her chin music.
Most men would rather help
with the anvil chorus than play!
second fiddle. |
- If the office sought the man
there would be fewer men running
after office.
You can’t transform & woman
into a hat, but a hat frequently
becomes a woman,
Fortunately fof the married
man, the advice his wife hands
out doesn’t cost anything.
It's & fortunate thing for man
kind that the fool-killer is about
three-score-and-ten years behind
with his work.
High school graduates who start
out to set the world on fire socn
discover that there are a lot of fire
exgines on duty.
PHYSICIAN BECAME MANIAC.
Dr. George H, Harris, a Virgin
ian by birth, and son of Federal
Judge Harris, of Ivyland, Burks
county, Pennsylvania, is in the
Ardmore, Okla., jail charged with
the most frightful murder that has
ever been committed in that pars
of the country. He is a veritable
Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde = In a
sudden Insane frenzy he murdered
Daniel Dirgin, a one-armed man,
while the latter lay asleep. Dirgin
came into Harris’ room intoxica
ted and fell agleep.” After admin
istering chloroforrn to him the
doctor decided to operate on the
sleeping man, and calling in two
men to assist him went to work.
He cut open Dirgin’s scalp from
the back of the head almost to the
forehead and tore away the ecalp
from the skull with his hands. He
then took his probe and hammer
ed it about the skull, trying tc find
the imagined fracture. Becoming
tired, he sat down and emoked a
cigarette.
His two helpers at this juncture
suspected the doctor’s insanity and
were not able to longer endure the
spectacle. Leaving the room they
raised the alarm and another doc
tér was seut for, but he arrived too
late to save Dirgin’s life. He had
bled to death. When searched at
the jail letters were found ou Har
ris’ persan which had been receiv
ed a month ago and which were
unopened, icdicating that he had
not been in gound mind. Other
letters were found on him from
Judge Harris, of Ivyland, Penn.
Congress is considering the pass
age of a bill prohibiting the pres
idents of banks borrowing funds
from their own banks. Most of
the collossal bank failures have
heen caused by the officials bor
rowing heavily and making invest
ments which proved uneatisfac
tory. A bank is a people’s insti
tution, and ought to be run for
them. It ought not to be a pri
vate sub-treasury for the sole use
of the officials.
IS CONSUMPTION INHERITED?
Opinion of a Prominent Baeteriologist
Given at a Recent Leeture at
i Harvard College.
Prof. H C. Ernest, in a recent lecture
before Harvard Medical school, dis
cussed this theory at length. He claims
that consumption is not an inherited
disesse, and that the children of pa
rents who have had tuberculosis are as
likely to grow up strong and healthy as
children of parents who have not. Dr.
Ernest further claims that the cardinal
means for curing this dread disesase are
plenty of fresh air, sufficiens nutritious
food, rest and exercise. i
For centuries physicians everywhere |
have recognized the value of cod liverl
oil in the treatment of consumption’
and =!l wasting diseases, but, unforiu
nately, few could take it on account of
the indigestible oil. |
Vinol has solved this problem. Itis
the modern ond liver preparation with
out cil, made by a scientific, extractive
and concentrating process from fresh
cuds’ livers, combining with peptonate
of iron all the medicinal, healing and
bodg-building elements of cod liver oil,
but no oil or grease. As a specific for
all throat and lung troubles. and as a
strength-creator and body-builder, Vi
nol is unexcelled. Try it on our offer
to return your mono(g i it fails to give
satisfaction. C. M. Crosby & Co.,drug
gists, Marietta, Ga.
e e et et
A HEARTY EATER.
At Sault Ste Marie, Mich., Joe
Sheets, a farm h.aud, won $lO on
a wager by eating a% one meal
three pounds of sauer kraut, fol
lowed by two 10-cent loaves of
bread, two pounds of potatoes, and
one and oue-half pounds of steak,
drinking three cups of tea, two
glasses of beer and six cups of wa
ter, and topping off with three
dozen fried eggs in less than fifteen
minutes.—Ex.
“In a Breath of Air.”
Health Comes From Knowing How and
What to Breathe,
Both health and disease come “ina
breath of air.”
‘ Dust laden with the germs of con
sumption or other disease it inkaled on
every street, but disease does not de
velop unless the germs find conditions
suitable for growth.
In the eatarrhal condition there is an
ideal culture medium fur these germs,
as the weakened tissues are like a hot
bed where the germs thrive and multi
ply until dangerously active.
If you have catarrh, use the easiest,
simplest and quickst cure, the direnrt
method of Hyomei, whose wonderfu:
medicated air destroys germs und
makes catarrh and germ infection im
possible.
~ You do not risk a cent in testing
Hyomei’s healing virtues, for with
every $l.OO outfit C. M. Crosby & Co.
give u%uurantee to refund the money
if it fails to cure.
It's mighty seldom that the sex
of the baby disappoiuts both pa
rents.
LAME SHOULDER CURED.
Lame shoulder is usually caused by
rheumatism of the muscles andqulckly
yields to a few applications of Chamber
lain’s Pain Balm. Mrs. F. H. McElwee,
of Boistown, New Brunswick, writes:
‘““Having been troubled for some time
with a pain in my left shoulder, I de
cided to give Chamberlain’s Pain Balm
a trial, with the result that I got
'prompt relief.”” For ssle by C. M.
Crosby & Co., Marietta, Ga,
. THE SUSPICIOUS INDIVIDUAL.
There is 1n every community &
set of men who are suspicions of
all their friends and neighbors.
They think that the office-holder
is aiways grafting, the merchants
always cheating in weights, the
lawyer ever ready to turn a nim
ble penny, the preacher prone to
wink at evil if a good contribution
ie put in the hat, the deacon to
drink if there is no chance of he
ing seen, the steward to ‘‘cass’’ if
his preacher is not in sight, and
the elder to look with leniency on
little acte of indiscretion. .
Somebody has said that the man
or woman always suspicious of
others wil! bear watching. This
may or may not be true, but we do
know that the suspicious man in
jures himeelf more than any one
else. His littie inuendoes, flings,
suggestions, etc., rarely injure the
other man. People lcok beyond
his words to the motive, and usual
ly find a sore apon the top of his
head.
The most objectionable fowl in
the barn-yard 1e the rooster or hen
with the sore-head, and one of the
most obnoxious jof individuals is
the man who lives in the shadow
and sees nothing but corruption
and decay all around him.—Dub
lin Courier-Dispatch.
WHERE TO LEARN HUMAN NATURE.
If a man wants to get acquaint
ed with human nature, let him
edit a newspaper awhile., Until
he has served in shat capacity, he
knows nothing of the ups and
downs in life. He may be a preach
er, a banker, a merchant, a horse
trader or a farmer, or he may
have practiced law, sawed wood,
heen a road overseer or a member
of the'school board, but he needs
a brief experience as editor to
complete his knowledge of the ec
centricities ot human nature.—
Fort Worth Star.
Some of us descend from our
ancestors and some of us rise
above them.
|
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We Have the Exclusive
Agency for
Chase & Sanborn’s i
|
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BOSTON GOFFEES A 0 TEAS
In the Coffee We Handle Four
Grades as Follows:
*‘Choice Rio,”’ in bulk at 20¢ a Ib.
or@ibellor. ... .. - . .G 100
‘‘Rosada,” in 1 Ib. psekageJ, ab. . 25
Old Gov. and Mocha, in 11b pack
ages atBdcerdfor ...... ..... 1.0
‘‘Seal’” brand, in 2-Ib. tins, at. .. 75
All scientifically roasted.
You can’t mateh any of the above
grades at the price,
In Tea we are prepared to suit the
tastew of the moas fastidious at very at
tractive prices. If you have nodecided
preference, we would suggest that you
try ''Orange Pekoe.”
Y@ You will find the best of every
thing, at reasonable prices, at
Faw & Rogers,
-~ THE FANCY GROCERS,
}Pllflfles Bon 20. MARIETTA, &A
. ‘
7~ S i £
(72
::."Q_.’ ,’ 3 j
S .‘ \?}' ’:’, {' :"’; A 7
PR e L T 2 ¥ 3
[ :"\ J,J Ll p
SIS RE
0855 Madicin®
Cures Coustinatiag, Dizrrhoea, Convulsions
Co -~ waormeoh, ek, It Destroys Worms
A ays Teverislie S s Colds., It Aids Diges
tiot. 4t Makes VxrrnrNG 2asy, Promotes Chees
i:fi: *s3 and I 1708 Narura! Sleep.
| KILL 7« COUCH
iamo CURE vve LUNGS
WITH n K. , :
-
New Discovery
] v PRICE ;
FOR COLSES . midia,
ARD ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES. &
RGUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
A OR MONEY REFUNDED. ;
It 8o PeCHSVR QO SR SL 50 OO baTla L‘:T:Q ~/;_;—T
a Absolutely s/" ‘.‘QJ
d Pure UL |
: Pl .f\‘\(@. :
| & 5%9@90 ;%‘
1Y From Grapes, QLA [
4457 rom Grapes, RIS F
3 - the most healthfal &389*
fi;f of fruits, comes the %. L)\
B chief ingredient of <\§ ) |
WROYAL Fowoer,
T\EEvaL ks STy The only baking powder
) ur;,\\“\———-__,—""—-( made from Royal 4B
v N 4 Grape Cream o N
'IQ\@YA 2'% of Tartar :E'
l ; S ‘53 p ":{
BAk M [R Costs a lttle movethen the injoriows alus |8
Ul ey
\\} RA e AAT s ;__\:l
Each time the spending microbe
18 successfully fought, ‘‘salt down’’
the equivalent
A bank account is a nerve tonic
hard to beat for the girl who must
face the future.
Attractive Printing
Is what you get when you patronize the Marietta
Journal Job Department. Our prices will please you.
WARNINC!
Winter 18 now here, and if your coal house
is not well supplied, you had better phone us
your order and avoid a rush. We can fill
your orders promptly with the .
Block l
Best Block Coal.
Office and yard at Butler’s.
W. J. CAMP & CO.,
Phone 365. ‘
. T
Ballard Bifoca* .< ag gy, |
‘ 4 N b OTVNES > i
Ground on a deep curve, giving the lar g N ; e« ‘
visual fleld both for reading and walk -* At 7 .
of all the advertized invisible bifocals. / ' K\\\
revelation to glass wearers, does awa R \\ A
with two pairs of glasses. Our plant fe / ‘ :
grinding glasses is the most perfect systen /t[ \B il '
ever inaugurated,in this eountry. Refer i\\ o O :
enee our former patrons and the leading | T ‘ \
oculists of our city. Our Opera Glass } 7N aRT
stock is the most complete in the South. ol aan
i 3 ‘u ‘_ g
WALTER BALLARD OPTIGAL €O, ¢. =
R e 9
9 | ooreet
75 Peachtree st, Atlanta,Ga '. _ . & _._
_IF YOU HAVE
Real Estate,
HO6KS or Bonds
FOR SALE
List them with me for quick re- :
sults and intelligent information.
All correspondence confidential,
A. S. J. GARDNER,
5 Edgewood Avenue, ATLANTA, GaA., or
Fhone 121 Marietta, Ga.
Vs oo R M 9 LS
bofds §
'SR maw d
fifji‘ ! TR
HONEY
iad e G
o Loy
2 Y
&) Bnginal
3 ‘\.g’{'!‘;“? ey ‘] o
LAGATIVE et rgmeny,
Jor coughs, colds, throat and lung
troxlaesa. NNo opiates. Non-aleoholie,
Good foreverybody. Sold everywhere,
The getuine
FOLEY'S HONZY and TAR isin
aYellow package. Refusesubstitutes,
Prepared only by
Foley & Company, Ohlonng'
For Sale hy all Druggists.
A year with fifty-three pay-days
in it cannot be so worse—if we can
only manags to keep employed.
The fear of being called mean
has many & time paved the way to
the poor-house,
Arriving and Departing Time at
Marietta, Ga. .
(a Dally; b Daily Except Sunday )
g Leave. Arrive.
| Cincinnati and Louisville a 4:#4 pm all:sBam
Knoxville via Blue Ridge a 9:4oam a 4:lspm
Tate Accommodation b&47pm b 7:3Bam
' Knoxville via Cartereville a 4:44pm all:sBam
| Atlanta all:s3Bam a 444 pm
| Atlanta a42opm a9%4amnm
| Atlanta b7:37am bs4spm
| Effective SBunday, January 19, 1908.
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! C—— |—— —————————— ——————— ——
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| £65 f@’%‘: .
! ‘;‘._ " — > io
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| FRIEND TO, FRIEND.
The personal recommendations of peo
ple who have been cured of coughs and
colds by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
! have done more than all else to make it 8
staple article of trade and commerce oves
'; a large part of the civilized world.