Newspaper Page Text
will save the dyspeptic from many
dayc of misery, and enable him to eat
whatever he wishes. They prevent
SICK HEADACHE,
cause thefood to assimilate and nour
ish the body, give keen appetite,
DEVEL CP FLESH
and solid muscfe. Elegantly sugar
coated. e,
Take No Substitute.
®, ' : 4 l
Che Mavietta Fourna
e
—ESTABLISHED IN 1866.--
WWMWWMN,M. -
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
Boiered at the Post Office, Marietta, (u aF
’ Second Class Matrer.
vertising Rates Reasonable and made
known on application.
W. 8. N. NEAL, - - - ---J, A, MASSEY
NEAL & MASSEY,
EDITORS., PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS
~—TERMS OF, SUBSCRIPTION t—
OB YBAR. . iiicors :¢ioo. ONEDOTLAR.
BIX M0NTH58.........:.....F1FTY OENTS.
THREE MONTHS.....TWENTY-FIVE OENTSH.
Ofticial Journal of Cobb County
Official Journal of Marietta.
NN OO N D O O OO ISR DO DO6
MARIETTA GA-
TrURBDAY MorNING, Skrr. 24, 1908,
The drought in Pennsylvania
and parts of West Virginia is said
to have done already not less than
$20,000,000 damage to the crops.
Thirty thousand equare miles of
territory are affected by the lack
of moieture.
Judge Parker says President
Roosevelt’sadministration created
99,000 additional Federal office
holders at an additional expense
of $70,000,000. This was about
ten times as many new officehold
ers as were created under Cleve
land and McKinley at over eleven
times the additional expenditure.
Ie it any wonder Teddy is popular
-——with the officeholders?—Macon
Telegraph,
Orville Wright ard Lieutenant
Selfridge, of the signal corps,
during a flight of Mr. Wright's
aeroplane at Fort Myer, Thursday
afterneon, met with an accident,
The blade on one of the propellers
broke on the trip around the field
and the machine overturned seven
ty-five feet in the air, landing on
both the men. Mr. Wright’s thigh
and several ribs were broken, and
he may be internally injured.
Lieutenant Selfridge was injured
about the head, and died. The
machine was wrecked.
Considerable portions of South
west Mississipi have become 8o in
fested with the Mexican cotton
boll weevil that the farmors are
preparing to practically abandon
cotton as » next year’s crop aud
devote their lands to corn, hay,
oats, truck and such other crops
as are immune to weevil attacks.
By a rotation of crops it is believ
ed the weevil can he destroyed and
the lands ouce again brought into
cotton. Experts have declared
that rotation of crops 1s impera
tive as one of the measures for the
suppression of the pest.
Mere college education does not
fit one to earn a living, except as
a teacher; and it'sagreat mistake
to keep a boy in school and then
in coliege until he reaches man
hood, withcut letting him work at
some trade or learn a profession
Mere literary education will not
fit him for any business, and the
man who is given fair education
and then is put through a thor
ough business training, will out.
distance every time the man who
epends his years in college. A de
gree is a fine thing to have, but
but business training and experi
ence i 8 a much finer thing: 1t will
earn you a living and the college
degree won't.—Cordele Rambler,
The best way to extend charity
to persons who are in need is to
give them work. Don’t give any
able-bodied man a penny or a
mouthful unless he works for it,
By this, the man retains his self
respact, and the profession of the
tramp is not encouraged. If a
man needs help and is able to
work, and you ere tempted to give
him something, don’t you do it.
_But instead, give him work. odd
jobs can alwaye be found, snd put
him at these. We do not advice
refusing to relieve hunger, but we
do advise that it be done in a man
ner that will not breed dependence
inmen. If everyone would do this
all over the land, this ccuntry
would soon cease to be the paradise
for tramps that it has been.
ee e I et
It does us good to read the Macon
Telegraph.
THE MAN WHO PAYS.
If there is any particular indi
vidual in thie world who should
have an extra star in his crown
when he shuffles cff this mortal
coil and takes his seat with the
saints above we bhelieve it ig the
man who, while toiliug here below,
paid hie debts as they came due,
or at least made an honeet effort
to do so. Realiy, we believe that
debt-paying is going to ba one of
the requisites necessary to pass St.
Peter, and that many & ‘‘good cit
izen’’ whose record is full of fla
grant lapees in this respect will
have serious trouble getting in at
the golden gate,
Too many people go through life
on the plan of letting the man they
owe do the worrying. Too many
of us are prone to become careless
‘when our own sordid aims are in
the balance, and we need a whole
some levival of the sacredness of
our obligatious. There is some
thing wrong in the make-up of the
man who does not worry about his
debts. A et | 57
Some individuals with means
amply sufficient to pay that they
owe prefer to invest their mouey
and reap dividends, or store it in
a bank’s strong box, while their
creditors’ noses are held to the
grindstone; others would pay 1f
they had more money than they
need, but feei under no ohligation
to retrench or stint themselves in
order that the men they owe may
be paid; while others still will not
pay at all—they de not contract
debts with the intention of payiug
them. The latter class are unde
sirable in all that the term im
plies.
‘“The poor ye have always with
you,’’ and misfortunes are liable
to befall the man with the bighest,
respect for his obligations, render
ing it impoesible for him to pay
Liig debts, but these form only a
small percentage of the debtor
class, aud an honest debtor’s ina
bility is never taken advantage of
by an equally honest creditor.
What an impetus would be given
to bhusiness, how many sleepless
nights, and how many failures
would be avoided if every man in
Georgia made a firm resolve to
morrow morning to pay what he
owes, as far as lay in his power.
Millions of debt would be dis-‘
charged, credit and confidence re
stored, and we would all be im-‘
measurahly happier and none unyl
pooger. ‘
Almost every business man in
every town and city in the coun-.
try has felt the blight of bad debts ;
it 18 the millstone about the neck
of industrial prosperity. No man
has the right to take his neighbor’s
substance without rendering value
received. In truth, the noblest
work of God is an honest man.—
Dawson News.
THE PASS WORD.
“You are not going to stay in
town iate to-night, are you John?”’
“‘Not very late, dearest; I have
to help put a man through the
third degree at the lodge. I'll
come straight home as soon as it’s
over.”’
(Kindly but firmly)—*“lf you
can repeat the pass word, ‘Six
slim, slick eaplings,” distinctly,
when you come home from the
lodge, John, the servant will ad
mit you; and if you can’t, you
needn’t ring. You’ll stay outside
all night, my dear.”
John came home early.
“I did not think her father
would ever consent to her marry
ing that fellow.”’
‘‘He didn’t; that’s how she
came to marry him.”’ "
WHY WE CALL IT FALL,
Although fall is an cld provin
cial word of the English, it may
be said to be as expresgive ae auy
word we use, for during the three
months we assign to the season—
September, October and Novem
ber—the flowers fall in the garden,
fruits fall in the orchard, nuts fall
in the woods, rain falls from the
clouds, the leaves fall everywhere,
and the mercury begins to fall' in
the tube, while the suu falls away
to the eouthward, and night falls
early. Already, the leaves of vari
ous colors are dotting the lawns,
and the foliage is visibly thinning
on trees and shrubs. The shors
life of the leaf is ended; it has
served its purpose, and now sinks
away to renew the life of the soil
over the roots of the tree orshrub,
In selecting shade trees or shrubs
for the home grounds, it is not
good to choose those that drop
their leaves early. There are many
varieties that contribute to the
gorgeous coloring of the autumn
landscape, with changes from
ghades of bronze to scarlet, from
palest green to lichest yellow, and
among the handsomest are the
American elm, water oak, some
ash trees, the hard maple and the
finer soft ones, the hickories, and
many other native trees that do
well grown from the seed, or trans
planted.
TRAINING THE DOG.
One day as a doctor was driving
into a village he saw a man a lit
tle the worse for liquor amusing a
crowd of spectators with the an
tics of his trick dog. The doctor
watcked him awhile and said:
‘‘Sandy, how do you manage to
train your dog? I can’t teach
mine to do anything.”’
Sandy, with the simple look in
his eyes 8o common in gome rust
ics, said :
““Well, you see, Doc, you have
to know mor’n the dog, or you
can’t learn him anything.”
Economy in 1908,
Pure Linseed Oil costs much less sold
trom the barrel than it does put up in
Tin Cans a 8 Mixed Paint. In the first
instance you pay 60 cents per gallon—
in the second, $1 60. Now mix 3 gallons
of guge lingeed oil with 4 gallons L. &
M. Paint and you have, ready for use, 7
gallons of the pest paint made, costing
only $1.20 per gallon. Done in 2 min
utes. Ganrr & Hopges, L. &M. Paint
Agents.
e
CRUEL PETITION.
The little girl was very fond of
pleasant days, and at the close of
a heavy rainstorm petitioned in
her prayer for fine weather. When,
the next morning the sun shone
bright and clear, she became jubi
lant and told her prayer to her
grandmother, who said, ‘““Well,
dear, why can’t you pray to-night
that it may be warmer to-morrow,
go grandma’s rheumatiem may he
better?”’
‘““All right, I will,”” was the
quick response, and that night as
she kaelt she said, ‘‘Oh, Lord,
please make it hot for grandma.”
Call at Chuck Anderson’s livery stable
and get your buggy and wagon harness
repaired, cheap.
Stant the yean night says
e diltle house- maid
{ES )| dont potish the ofd ones
M/; | M N \W ones
}f‘? 3:\‘, r‘-.i",y‘. 4 [1.‘7%?;
AN ©2R - Ao
== 1"‘
\ ™ URNIT ÜBES 5. ZafYN 4
(T 3
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b ‘?‘i:? e f;; Sl s y
FRADE MARK Yy /?_FO“""““/’;&
. homelover: |
these Cong winler nighls 1o eome
your fam@ and fzwndd will ofiefn
gather logether 1o pass a f}flma/nl
you believe in gelling new elothes
for yowwelf for fall, and don’t
you think it is aboul time your home
were gellting some new elothes?
we dresd the home.
yourd huty,
You cannot make a school-boy
believe that history repeats iteelf.
Rings
Round
Eyes
CHA Qy - NS
SO L A
B ATS (@5 R
j | gw ?. ‘i [.)xJ! ' "')l‘ :"‘3 )\
) h/( AARA )_m,a LLTOR
i g o)
/"\\W/\
M
A few doses of this remedy will in
variably cure an ordinary attack of
diarrhoea.
It can always be depended upon,
even in the more sgvere\attacks of
cramp colic and cholera morbus.
It is equally successful for summer
diarrhoea and cholera infantum in
children, and is the means of saving
the lives of many children each year.
When reduced with water and
sweetened it is pleasant to take.
Every man of a family should keep
this remedy in his home. Buyitnow.
PRICE, 25¢C. LARGE SIiZE, 50cC.
wn | |
ARRIVING TIME AT MARIETTA, GA.
SOUTH BOUND.
No 2 from Chattanooga and Nashville ar 6.20 am
' Mo 73 from Rome arrives 9.00 am
No 93 from Chattanooga and Nashville ar 10.53 am
No 1 from Chattanooga ar.d Nashville ar 6.48 pm
No 95 from Chicago arrives B.olpm
NORTH BOUND.
No 94 for Chicago arrives 7.27 am
No 2 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 9.22 am
No 92 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 5.32 pm
No 72 for Rome arrives 5.57 pm
No 4 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 9.34 pm
oo i st Lil
F. R. SWEENEY,
. -
| Civil Engineer,
SMYRNA, - - GEORGIA.
~ Surveying work of all classes
’accurately done.
ol L e R L
e
I .
| If you would be happy live on
an optimistic diet
Charity means love—love of hu
manity, not of display.
The ills peculiar to women, take different forms,
Some ladies suffer, every month, from dark rings round their eyes, blotches on thelr skin and tired
feeling. Others suffer agonies of pain, that words can hardly express.
Whatever the symptoms, remember there is one medicine that will go beyond mere symptoms, and
act on the cause of their troubles, the weakened womanly organs.
Mrs. M. C. Austin, of Memphis, Tenn., writes: “For five (5) years | suffered with every symptom
of female disease, but after using the well-known Cardul Home Treatment, | was entirely well,”
: Wmetednyfotafmcovydvdubh&mmm%khw«nn. If you meed Med-
WRITE US A LETTER 58 ey sttt o, ot
5 e e e - Y L DATIANOOR S
We Have the Exclusive
Agency for
s
Chase & Sanborn’s
. FAMOUS
In the Coffee We Handle Four
Grades as Follows:
*‘“Choice Rio,”” in bulk at 20c a Ib.
arginnter. ... . . .0 a 1 00
‘*Rosada,”” in 1 Ib. packages, at.. ¥
oOld Gov. and Mochs, in 11b pack
agesatBboorBidr............ 100
‘‘Seal”” brand, in 2-Ilb. tins, at... 75
All scientifically roasted.
You can’t match any of the above
grades at the price,
In Tea we are prepared to suit the
tasteg of the most 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,
Plones Boln 20, MARIETTA, GA
—OFFERS—
For information, apply to
PROFESSOR ALFRED AKERMAK,
Athens, Georgia.
COAL!
—:——___—:
We can fill your orders with the following brands
of Coal : '
The Kramer Block The Warren Block
The Rex Block The Jellico Block
The Jellico Nut
All orders will receive prompt attention,
Give us a trial. Phone No. 365
— e
W.J. CAMP & CO
Ballard Bifocal
‘e °
aliar Ifoca Nl o
% “;. v K ol
Ground on a deep curve, giving the largest :'\ T '
visual field both for reading and walking sy .
of all the advertised invisible bifocals, a L <6 - >
revelation to glass wearers, does away TN N
with two pairs of glasses. Our plant for e \
grinding glasses is the most perfect system ‘ i
ever inaugurated in this country, Refer- . \sk ‘
ence our former patrons and the leading o 8 4|\ oV
oculists of our eity. Our Opera Glass gficp. ‘ "
stock is the most eomplete in the South. s / 4,". :
’ Ij:."
J ey !
WALIER BALLARD OPTICAL (0. -7~ :
.’ " 3
. \g . i
N A
75 Peachtree st., Atlanta, Ga| &g
IF YOU HAVE
Real Estate,
Stocks or Bonds
FOR SALE
List them with me for quick re
sults and intelligent information.
A]l correspondence confidential.
A. S. J. GARDNER,
5 Edgewood Avenue, ATLANTA, Ga., or
Phone 121 Marietta, Ga.
It 18 usually the ‘‘high flyer”
who drops the hardest.
People who do not care much
whether they win or lose, usually
win
—ALL KINDS OF—
Vamithi .
- Biacksmiing, Horseshoeing
| : i
i Stamenion Tols and General Repar W(Nl&
| WOOD WORK.
o Bom s e e
! lSr;fi)pfi ::tliic :.;:ss z,%:cfv:n% l?\:(v?ry Etable:
*‘ MALIETTA, GEORGIA.
- FOLEY’S
, wWiLIL. CUREYOU
fof any case of Kidney or
'Bladder disease that is not
'beyond the reach of medi
cine. Take it atonce. Do
‘notriskhaving Bright’s Dis
’ease or Diabetes. There is
‘nothing gained by delay.
50c. and $l.OO Bottles.
REFUSEK SUBSTITUTES.
For Sale by all Druggsts.
|
HIGRY IVERY: TABL
al 3 |
J. H. HICKS & SON, Proprietors,
‘ Gentle Horses and Nice Rigs.
| —TELEPHONE 285.—-
| 103 Powder Springs street
| AILROAD
LOUISWILLE & NASHILLE RAILRORD.
| Arriving and Departing Time at
} Marietta, Ga.
| RLL TRAINS DAILY.
; Leave, Arrive.
{ Cincinnati and Louisville 4:44 pm 11:58am
| Knoxville via Blue Ridge 9:4oam 415 pm
l Tate Accommodation 547 pm 733 am
| Knoxville via Cartersville 444 pm 11:58am
| Atlanta 11:58 a m 44 pm
Atianta 420 pm 9:40 a m
l Atlanta 7:37am 545 pm
Effective Sunday, June 28, 1908,
g e e .
Fr ley’s Kidney Cure
| makes &:dnevs and bladder right.
e ———
' Charge for the advice you hand
out and people will gladly take it.
A fool and his morey have plen
ty of affinities,