Newspaper Page Text
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A torpid liver deranges the whole
system, and produces
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, R!leu—
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
T is for these
T e ok LTS
LIVER PILLS, asa trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.
A ———————
The Marietta Fournal
—ESTABLISHED IN 1866.--
'me\mw-~
W. 8. NANEAL,- - ----J. A. MASSEY
NEAL & MASSEY,
EDITORS. PUBLISBHERS AND PROPRIETORS
Entered at the Post Ovmwce: Marietts, (:l. av
Second Class Matter.
dvertising Rates Reasonable and made
known on application. ‘
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
; ~——TERMS OF SUBSORIPTION t=——
ONE YEAR......c...0000....00NE DOLLAR,
BIX MONTHB.....cOOOOOOO..FIFTY OENTS.
THREE MONTHB,,....TWENTY-FIVE OENTS.
Official Journal of Marietta.
MOCOOCOCCDOCOCORCOCROOL N 0 CoL0000?
MARIETTA" GA.-
TrUurspDAY MorNiNG, JurLy 29, 1909.
e I —
The annual reunion of the Thir
tieth Georgia Regiment will be
held at Douglasville, Ga., on Fri
day, July 30th, 1909,
———— eR~ - A
When the New Orleans judge
fixed Banker Ingram’s bond at
$75,000 he must have been labor
ing under the balief that Ingram
etill had the money he stole from
the bank.
Messrs. McConnell and Simp
son, of Gwinnett, have introduced
a bill to make it a penal offense
to draw a check on any bank, for
any sum, when there are not suffi
cient sums to meet it within ten
daye of the aate cf the check.
Senator Harrell’s bill, increas
ing the peunalty of bigamy from
four to twenty years, wae brought
before the senate Wednesday aund
passed by a vote of 81 to 28, though
the committee it was taken up by
defeated it on Tuesday.
Three hundred and fourteen di
vorces were granted in Rhode Is
land during the first six months
of the present year. And Rhode
Island is the smallest state in the
Union; so small that it amounte
to but two countiee at low water
ard one county when the tide is
iD,
A railroad tunnel under the
Hudson river, one mile in length
and costing $70,000,000, was
opened for traffic last week be
tween Jersey City and New York. i
Wilham G. McAdoo, a Georgian,
was the originator aud constructor
of this the greatest engineering
accomplishment of modern times.
Railroads all over the country
are placing orders for more cars,
engineg and better equipment gen
erally, and thoughtful observers
see in these movements more hope
ful conditions for the future.
With a smaller yield of cotton and
the prospect of a higher price this
fall, the South is going to come
into her own 1n the general pros
perity of vhe country.
Prevent a friend from doing you
good, imprese him with the idea
that he is of no use to you, and his
affecvion willcool. Butask a man
for little eervices he is ready to
render, let him know and keep lin
his mind that he has conferred a
bepefit upon you, and he will like
you all the more for it, become in
terested in your welfare, and feel
real devotior for you. I have
pever known this experiment to
fail.—Selected. |
An express clerk was arrested in
Chicago the other day charged
with theft. He admitted having
stolen £lO,OOO from the packages
entrusted to his care. He 1s twenty
years old. His pay was $55 a
month. He was & clerk in the
““out money’’ office of the com
pany. He was on duty eleven to
thirteen hours each day during
365 days of the year—at the rate
of a fraction over $l.BO per day.
It ie eaid that he handled never
lees than $500,000 and frequently
as much $1,500,000 a day. When
he saw a chance to ‘‘hold out’’ a
$lO,OOO package of cash he did it,
and went on about his work. But
later he was suspected and ar
reated, and then confessed. Is it
fair, honest or just to work a man
for such beggarly pay, and then
place him iln & position to be
tempted to eteal a fortune at a
single effort?
"HOW MEN AND WOMEN FACE GRIN
r MONSTER.
~ How do men and women face
death when the sentence is pro
nounced by the doctor? A medi
cal man tells us of his experience.
~ “Tell the man of higher type and
greater intelligence, he says, that
\ he is facing death and he begins to
fight, demands a consultation,
}talks about going to specialists,
‘and fights grimly to the finish.
Tell a womah the same fazte and
she lies back to await her fate. All
women are fatalists.
On the other hard, tell a man
he has one chance in a thousand
to recover if he will undergo an
operation and he will trust to his
own strength and endurance rather
than acdergo the knife. The wo
man will choose the thousandth
chance and submit to the opera
tion with undying calmness,
The dying woman thinks first of
her children and her future. |
The dying man thinks first of
his wife, then of his children.
And most remarkable of all, no
matter how destitute a man has
been, no matter how untrue he
may have been to his wife, in that
supreme hour of facing death he
seems anxicus to right every wrong
he has done her. She is tha object
of his solicitude. Hers is the face
‘he wants to look upon.
- The man thinks days of the ma
terial welfare of hie family.
He wants to make sure that his
business, his insurance papers and
everything is prepared for their
care and protection. The woman
thicks less of the money she may
have to leave her loved ones than
of their care after she has gone,
The property, she thinks, can take
care of itself, but who will keep
the babies together, and whoe will
make a home for them and their
father?
Unselfishness, strength of char
acter and calmness, these are the
unquestionable traits of nearly
every man or woman face to face
with death. Their last hours,
whether seven to one, are given
over unreservedly to thoee they
love.—Plano Star-Courier.
WHY ADVERTISE?
If a member of your family died,
would you print the resolutions on
a bill board?
If your wife entertained, would
you send an account of it to the
theatre program man?
If yon were going to enlarge
your business, would you advertise
1t in & hotel register?
If you were going to have a wed
ding in your family, would you get
out a handbill?
You would send such items to a
pewspaper, wouldn’t you?
Then why don’t you put your
advertisement in & newspaper?
The newspapers build your town.
Why not help build up your news
papers? There 18 no better adver
tisement in the world for a town
than a good newspaper. A news
paper 18 the barometer of the
town’s induetry. Show us a good
newspaper full of advertising, and
we will show you a good town full
of live merchants.
Newspapers are town builders,
town advertisers, fortune makers,
news disseminators, sermon deliv
erers, prosperity forecasters. They
are a uecessity, not a luxury.
They must be maintained. With
out them we would retrograde to
the mediaeval days.
- Don’t patronize them from sa
charitable standpoint. Patronize
them because they deliver the
goods—that is if they are the right
kind.
Cut out the foolishness and work
for the upbuilding of your town
and state by upbuilding your news
paper.
BIG MINING COMPANY. |
A half million dollar mining
ccmpany has been organized in
Atlanta for the purpose of working
extensive iron ore fields in North
Georgia near the Tennessee line.
It is said there are 60,000,000 tons
of exceilent ore available. J. C.
Haas, of Montgomery, is presi
dent; K. E. Watson, of Atlanta,
is vice-president, and Edwin R.
Haas, of Avlanta, is secretary and
treasurer. The board of directers
includes many prominent Atlan
tans.
VICTIM OF FARMER’S KNIFE.
Rome, Ga., July 238.--Jack Da
vis, road overseer in Floyd county,
was killed this morning in a
kloody cutting affray on the pub
lic road, eight miles from town,
by Micajah Landrum, a well.
known farmer.
The fight was the result of a feud
of long standing between the two
men.
Landrum is more than 60 years
of age, and claime self-defense.
‘There were no eye-witnesses.
& The sherift arrested Landrum,
who made uo attempt to escape.
A woman curling her hair ig
about as engaging and courteous
as & man shaving his face.
s THEY ÜBJECT.
Listen, people! This is fiom
Vermont, which was a hot-bed of
abolition before and during the
war, and which has, time in and
time out, professed a belief in the
equality of the black man with the
white, politically and otherwise,
Fort Ethan Allen is situated in
Vermont, three miles from Bur
lington and a short distance from
Winooski. The War Department
has determined to quarter 1,200
negro cavairymen there, in addi
tion to a few hundred negro sol
diers who are there already. Both
Burlington and Winooeki are up
in arms about it. The whites are
refusing to ride in the street cars
or to eat in restaurants with ne
groes., Says the Burlington Free
Press: ‘“This is the first time ne
gro troopse have been quartered in
New England—the first time, in
fact, that soldiers of color have
been sent to any post east of the
Misgiesippi. If the government
officials, after their trouble with
Brownsville and other posts,
thought the extreme North would
make no objection to the presence
of 8o large a body of negroes, they
were in error, A Southern town
could hardly be more up in arms
than this city and Winooski are‘
to-day.’”” If the colored troopers
are not wanted in New Englaud,[
of all secticns on the map, what 1s
to be done with them? ‘
Colorado may send a woman to
congress two years hence. A wo
man politician has already begun
her campaign for the place, and
the suffragettes of the state are
rallying around her banner. The
candidate represents nothing in
particular, except her sex, and she
would do nothing more in con
gress.
SHE ENDORSED IT.
“l 1 want to get this check cash
ed,”’ said the fair young matron,
appearing at the window of the
paying teller, says the Chicago
Post.
““Yes, madam. You must en
dorse it, though,’” explained the
teller.
““Why, my huskand sent it to
me. Heis away on bueinees,’’ she
said.
““Yes, madam. Justeudorseit;
sign it on the back, so we will
know your husband will know we
paid it toyou.”’
She went to the desk againet the
wall, and in a few moments pre
sented the check triumphant, hav
ing written on its back: ‘“‘Your
loving wife, Edith.”’ |
Delay in commencing treatment for a
slight irregularity that could have been
cured quickly by Foley’s Kidney Remedy
may result in a serious kidney disease.
Foley's Kidney Remedy builds up the
worn out tissues and strengthens these or
gans. Sold by all Druggists.
eet eet e
A Wisconsin judge lost his mem
ory and went to work in a lumber
yard. As soon as he recovered his
memory, he went back to his job
as judge. '
A HORRIBLE HOLD-UP.
‘‘About ten years ago my brother was
“held up” in his work, health and hap
{)iness by what was believed to be hope
less Consumption,” writes W. R. Lips
comb, of Washington, D. C, ‘“He took
all kinds of remedies and treatment from
several doctors, but found no help till he
used Dr. King’s New Discovery, and was
wholly cured by six bottles, He is a well
man to-day.” It’s quick to relieve, and
the surest cure for weak or sore lungs,
Hemorrhages, Coughs and Colds, Bron
chitis, LaGrippe, Asthma, and all Bron
chial affections. 50c and $l. Trial bot
tle free. Guaranteed by W. A, Sams &
Co.
— ———D - I—— e
[f you are pot satisfied with
your lot, trade it for a better one.
Women, worn and tired from overwork, need a
tonic. That feeling of weakness or helplessness will
not leave you of itself, You should take Wine of
Cardui, that effectual remedy for the ailments and
weaknesses of women. Thousands of women have
tried Cardui and write enthusiastically of the great
benefit it has been to them. Try it—don’t experiment
—use this reliable, oft-tried medicine.
: 15
The Woman’s Tonic
Mrs. Rena Hare, of Pierce, Fla., tried Cardui and afterward
wrote: “I was a sufferer from all sorts of female troulle, had
pain in my side and legs, could not sleep, had shortness of breath.
“I suffered for years, until my husband insisted on my trying
Cardui. The first bottle gave me relief and now lam almost well.”
Try Cardgi. *Twill help you..
AT ALL DRUG STORES
THE POLITEST NEGRO.
The politest and most consider
ate negro lives in Woodberry, N,
J. The other day he accidentally
got into the way of an automobile,
and it knocked him down and ran
over him., The radiator came in
contact with the negro’s head.
and the machine was put out of
business. Picking himself up ont
of the dust and brushing clothes,
the negro hastened to apologize for
having injured the car. *‘Deed,
boes, you must ’scuse me,’’ he
seid, hat in hand; ‘I didn’t mean
to do it. I never heard you comin’
at al, or I sho’ would have got vut
of the way.”” The driver reluc
tantly forgave the negro and the
incident was closed.
} MAN IS A LITTLE CUSS.
~ Man is a little cuss and hasn’t
long to stay. He flies around and
‘makes & fuss and then he hikes
away. Some men imagine they
are great and try to tear up jack,
but each one meets the same old
fate, and trots the same old track.
Great Cewesar’s dead and turned to
clay, and so is Cicero. Alexander
has gone the way the rest of us
must go. The sages, poets, heroes,
all the men of the world, into an
open grave must fall and crumble
back to earth. Then let’s not join
in the affray, and struggle like the
deuce, and agonize our lives away,
for really what’s tho use? ILet’s
live and love and sing the while,
and work some now and then, and
give to every one a smile that
cheers the hearts of men. And
whether we are crowned with flow
ers or chilled with winter snows,
with happiness let’s fill the hours
ere we turn up our toes.
Why Go Elsewhere ?
Our agency will show convincing evi
idence of 35 years’ extensive sale and
highly satisfied users of the L. & M.
Paint. All dealers in other paints com
‘bined eannot furnish equal evidence.
When painting with L. & M., you are
painting with Metal Zipne Oxide com
bined with White I.ead. Zine is imper
ishable and makes the L. & M. wear and
cover like gold. Its covers remain
bright and lasting. Don’t need repaint
for 10 to 15 years. Besides it cost !5
legs for paint. Sold by Gantt Drug Co.,
Marietta,
Barking dogs may not hite, but
you can’t always tell just when
they will quit barking.
DON'T GET A DIVORCE.
A western judge granted a divorce on
account of ill-temper and bad health.
Dr, King’s New Life Pills would have
prevented it. They cure Constipation,
causing bad bieath and Liver Trouble,
the ill-temper, dispel colds, banish head
aches, conquer chills. 25¢c. at W. A,
Sams & Co.’s.
FOR AUGUST.
ORDINARY’S NOTICES.
GEORGIA—Cobb County,
Partitioners’ sale of the W, E. Shelver
ton estate. Will be sold on the first
Tuesday in August, lot in Austell, on
Mulberry street, 1321; feet, G. B. Gann,
M. A. Morris and T. E. Latimer, com
missioners.
J. M. Dobbs, administrator, asks leave
to sell lands of D. W. Dobbs’ estate, to
be heard first Monday in August.
Sharper Reynolds asks for guardian.
ship of the property of Virgil Reynolds,
a person non compus mentus, tc be heard
first Monday in August.
Fannie Bowden, petition to have R.
N. Holland, as executor of the estate of
Caroline S. Underwood, to make title to
certain land desciibed in bond for title,
J. M. GanN, Ordinary,
L. B:. NORRIS & CO.,
i . —DEALERS IN—
REAL ESTATE,
' MARIETTA, GA.
western judge granted a divorce on
int of ill-temper and bad health. 14 E. Side M R F I | QI F
Kino’a Naw 3fa Pille ewnield haewa el i S cat a
CASTORI
U e VIR
= ————
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. :
A\’egetablePreparationbrAs—
similating the Food and Reguia
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
—‘
| S N RS T ‘
R ——
| Promotes Digestion Cheerfd
ness and Rest. Contains neither
| Opium Morphine nor Miveral.
NoT NARCOTIC. :
Becipeaf Ol BeSAMUELPITOEER
Plnphin S:l‘ :
Licedle Salts~ :
Anise Seed + ;
m.r&‘ } i
Aperfect Reme forConsfip&:'
tio‘x'l » Sour Stogzch.msdpu
‘Worms Convalsions.Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
FacSimile Signarure of |
NEW YORK.
I p—
At 6 months old
35 DosEks -35C£ms
P 1]
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
W. M. BELISLE,
\
\
l AM now thoroughly equipped to finish your jewelry Jusr
a 8 NEw—Satin, Roman, Green, Red or Rose. All kinds of
jewelry work executed quiekly, promptly, and in up-to-date
style, and at reasonable charges. Watches and elocks repair
ed and guaranteed for twelve months. I appreciate your pa
tronage, and can always be found at my place of business.
———— e ———
e W, M. BELISLE .=
Park Square v . JEWELER
M_
e — ——
m_
Toric Invisible one-piece Bifocals. ONT L g
Toric Invisible two-piece Bifocals. i 5 “.;"‘: & R\
Every Bifocal offered for sale can BV @- \
be bought from us. We carry in ““ : \\
stock every patent nose piece made. 4 v\m
With our facilities, frame adjust- S\ ad
ing and fair dealing, you can get the ) \“1
best service obtainable, o
: ','_ ‘&\((\;\\\ »
NS e
A GOmDel Le of Onerm Glosses | ‘wicsiad
WALTER BALLARD OPTIGAL 0, ™ “sacmeees,street
o Atlanta, Ga.
OPPOSITE KENNESAW HOUSE.
CHuck ANDERsON, Proprietor
The best of vehicles, the safest of dn
vers and the fastest of horses are always
ready, night and day for hire, No man,
woman or child has ever given me a
call in the past, who has been, nor shall
any ever in the future, be dissatisfied
with my teams or the men in my em
ploy. Everything and everybody about
me are a number ore.
I have cheapened my charges propor
tionate to the stringency of the times.
For reference as to the truth of what I
say, a 8 to the turnouts and charges, go
to my friends, which means the people
generally.
Parties hiring are amctlf responsible
for the eafety of themselves, vehicles
and hoises J A. G. ANDERSON.
1% 7
! B
.
M B
i M
¥ r NEY
o AND
\;‘F‘:
MU
LAXATIVE cough remedy,
For coughs, colds, throat and Ming
troubles. No opiates. Nomn-alcoholic.
Good foreverybody. Sold everywhere.
The genuine
FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR isin
aYellow package. Refuse substitutes.
Prepared only by
Foley & Company, Chicage.
or sale by R. E. Butler & Sons.
LECTRIC ,]REEET roR
E BITTERS A D kiDNEYa
LASTORIA
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of W
J In
: Use
For Over
Thirty Years
GASTORIA
J. H. HICKS & SON, Proprietors,
Gentle Horses and Nice Rigs.
—-TELEPHONE 285, —.
103 Powder Springs street
Sl i i e e R
Arriving and Departing Time at
Marietta, Ga. 1
ALL TRAINS DAILY.
Leave, Arrive.
Cincinnati and Louisville “6:57am +9:58 pm
Cincinnati and Louisville 5:50 pm 11:13am
Knoxville via Blue Ridge 9:40a m 4:30 p m
Blue Ridge Accommodation 4:50 pm g:108 m
Atlanta 9:15a m 4:50 pm
Atlauta 4:30 p m 9:40 a m
Atlanta. Points beyond only “9:58 pwm *6:57a m
o 2 ’ “ I:l3am 550 pm
Trains marked with = wil stop only to take on
or let off passengers from Knoxville and beyond
for and from noints bfiyond Atlants avd to and
from points between Marietts and Blue Ridge.
Effective Snnday, June 6th, 1909,
*\————“
* .
ARRIVING TiME AT MARIETTA, GA.
SOUTH BOUND.
No 3from Chattanooga and Nashville ar 6.20 am
No 73 from Rome arrives 9.00 am
No 93 from Chattanooga and Nashville ar 10.63 am
No 1 from Chattanooga ard 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 C hattanooga and Nashville ar 9.2%am
No 92 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 5.82 pm
No 72 for Rome arrives 5.57 pm
No 4 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 9.34 pm
e b s
»
DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY
Will Surely Stop That Gough.
v
Frley's Kigney Cure
makes Lidoevs end bladder ight