Newspaper Page Text
Is one where heaith abouads.
With impure blood there can
not be good health.
Withadisordered LIVER there
cannot be good blood.
j’mlvfly thetorpid LIVER andrestore
" its natural action.
Lt A heaithy LIVER means pure
blood. e
Pare blood means health.
Health means happiness.
Take ne Substitute. All Druggists.
e ——————————
The Barietts Fourual
~ESTABLISHED IN 1868.-~
MRS OOBOLLLDLOO2OB
Entered at the Post Office, Marietta, Ga., 88
Second Class Matter,
Advertising Rates Reasonable and made
known on application.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
—TERKS OF BUBSORIPTION {=—
ONE YEAR......0c0.0000...0NE DOLLAR.
BIX M0NTH5.....0.000-44...F1FTY OENTS.
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’WMM‘\'\AMWM
Official Journal of Marietta.
20000OOOECTECOCOCOPROCICOCT DI OCPe
MARIEBETTA GA.-
Tevrspay MorNixe, Ava. 19, 1909,
Factional politice in Georgia is
to continue. The next elections
will be fought on about the same
lines as were those of last year.
A Pennsylvania dentist has re
tired, after sixty-six years of prac
tice, at the age of 92, What nu
meroug cavernous depths he must
have explored in his time!
A scientist says 1u 70,000,000
years the sun will dry up and the
earth will vanish. If something
doesn’t happen to the suu, we are
afraid we will vanish,
A Western bridegroom lost the
wedding fing on the way to the
altar, The bride was equal to the
occasion. Pulling out a hairpin
she bent it into a ring and was
married with it.
A Washington young woman
asked Orville Wright if sailing
through the air didn’t sometimes
make his hair stand on end. Or
ville raised his hat and bowed po
litely, and the lady saw her an
swer in the glint of his polished
poll.
. Y - R —sni
One who rides about Cobb coun
ty and sees the stuff growing for
the consumption of man and beast,
lies down to rest believing that
with the world shut out and the
world forgot, there would be no
famine here. A country that pro
duces such things as people have
to have, can wiggle its finger at
localities where they have but one
source of revenue to depend upon.
A Philadelphia woman is suing
a man for four thousand dol
lars damages for attempting
to kiss her. This causes the ques
tion to arise: How much would
she have sued for if he had kissed
her? Or is she offended because
he didn’t, and suing because he
raised hopes that were dashed to
the ground, as it were?
In New York a boy was arrested
by an active and lynx-eyed police
man on a charge of having de
franded a chewing gum machine
out of two cente. He was locked
up in jail, where he remained for
two weeks without preliminary
hearing or trial. Eventually he
was released on $2OO bond, to
stand trial later. In New York
they will not etand for an invasion
of preperty rights in amounts less
than $l. When the invasion rune
into tens of thousands or millions,
it’s different.
The battleship Alabama was
commissioned eight years ago—
three years aftex the Spangish-
American war—at a cost of&‘.’,-
€50,000 for couvstruction alone
Already she has become practically
obsolate and has been ordered
the navy yard in Brooklyn tn&
rebuilt, at a cost of $1,000,000 or
more. The ship must have new
enginee, new hoilers and new guns,
and the armor must be strength
ened. Ten years hence, the vessel
will probably be sent to the scrap
heap. That 18 the way modern
navy enlargement goes.
Paying compliments sometimes
puts money in & man’s pockets.
With hogs selling at $8 a hun
dred pounds, we can’t call some
men what we'd like to without
first apologizing to the porkers.
POYERTY A SPUR TO EDUCATION.
The story of Arthur N. Sheriff,
a Chicago messenger boy, who will
go to Yale as an honor student,
illustrates the obstacles a boy
truly inspired with the desire and
ambition to learn, wili overcome
in the purpose to obtaiu an educa~
tion,
““When Sheriff was 14 years
old,’’ as the Memphis Commercisl
Appeal tells it, ‘‘be left high
school and went to work in a news
‘paper office, carrying messages.
He had twenty boeses, and had to
obey them all, Between ranning
errands, he read Macaulay’s hie
tory of England, Dickens’ com
plete works, Thackeray and Ten
nyson. He also learned Spanish,
and did some work in ancient his
tory and astronomy, ‘
“‘Shenff learned Spanish by read
ing an epic poem, with the aid
of a Spanish-English dictionary. J
He studied going to and from
home, and while eating a ten cent
lunch.
‘““‘He went to work at 6 p. m,
and quit work at 2 a. m.; he went
to bed at 2:80 a. m., and arose at
Ba. m. Then he went to school
occasionally from 9 a. m. until 8
p. m. Iu the afternoon he caught
two hours’ sleep.
‘“‘An editor in a newspaper office
saw that Arthur N. Sheriff had
won & scholarship at Yale, and
asked Sheriff who the young man
was, and Sheriff eaid, ‘that isl,’
and he asked for a few minutes
vacation, in order that he miqht
run home and tell his mother.’
In view of such an example as
this, no boy who wishes an educa
tion should be discouraged because
of the lack of advantuges. Fre
quently, no doubt, it is an advan
tage to lack advantages. The pos
session and enjoyment of ease and
riches is more apt to divert the
youthful mind and seduce it from
the exertion and toil indiepensable
to acquirement than poverty. The
latter acts as a spur to endeavor,
while the former too frequently
serves but to destroy all incentive,
A BALE TO EVERY ACRE. ’
The time has come when the
Southern farmer must recognize
the fact that he cannot afford to
plant an acre of ground in cotton
that will not produce a bale (five
hundred pounds) of lint.,
The idea of working three or four
acres of land to get one bale of cot
ton must be abandoned by the
farmer who expects to reach that
plane of succees upon which be
should move.
If you have no land that will
produce a bale of cotton to the
acre, go to work saving your stable
manure, gather all the litter youn
Ban from your fence corners, pine
thickets or oak groves, and scatter
this on your land. Plant the land
in peas, and turn under peas, vines
and all. Twenty loads of stable
manure and twenty loads of trash,
straw, etc., put oo an acre of lard,
reasonably fertilized and planted
in peas, will o improve any land
as to enable. you to grow a bale of
cotton per acre, aspecially after
one or two years’ application, and
there is not a farmer in Georgia,
or in the South, but what had bet
ter work one acre of land to get a
bale, than to work three acres of
land to get a bale and a half.
‘Then how much better for him to
work one acre and get a bale than
to work four acres and ges s bale.—
Farmers’ Union News.
TAKE A VACATION.
Do not think that a vacation is
a loss of time. It is the best kind
of an investmert—an Investment
in fresh brains, in vigorous health,
in increased vitality.
People who seldom or never take
a vacavion get into ruts. Their
minds get stuffy and cloudy, they
lose the power of expansion, of
growth: they lose freshness of
view, the ability to grasp opportu
nities; and finally, they lose then
grip on things and on themselves.
Recreation for those who have
been held cloeely to business for a
long time, is like the turning up
of hard eoil by the plow, letting in
the sunlight and stirring up the
chemical forces that have been
sleeping during the winter. Slum
bering germs start when they feel
the warm sun, the gentle rain, and
the tonic of the dew. There is re
juvenation and growth in recrea
tion in the country; it loosens up
the hard soil of prejudice—mental
yruts—and refreshes and invigor
ates the germs of character,
Fall River cotton mills have
declared a third quarterly dividend
of 1 61 per cent., which 18 the
rate of nearly 64 per centa year,
A dispatch says of the dividend:
““Thie is a fine showing, though
not so goed as 18 expected for the
last quarter of the year,”” The
pew tariff rates will be in forze
duringuthe last quarter and they
are higher than the old obes
Under the circumstances, if the
dividends were .to be diminished
it would be spabrising.
' SAW FISH MILK COW.
But That’s Nothing te What Eappen
ed in South Georgia-
A Richmond dispatch to the
Washington Post says: ‘‘Timo
thy Sullivan of the Osborne turn
pike has been wuoticing for some
time that one of hi¢ cows did not
give any ' milk. Suspecting that
some one was milking the cow he
instructed his son to watch, Yes
terday the cow weut iutn the
creek in the afternoon, wading in
until her udder touched the water.
In a moment or two, the lad said,
he saw something fluttering around
the udder, He thought at first
it was & snake, but upon going
closer he alleges that he saw two
large fish hang to the udder of the
gow until she had been milked
ry.
That’s pretty good, but it is
not in the same class with the
experience of a former citizen of
Dawson when he lived in Berrien
county and his cows grazed in the
pine woode and ponds of that sec
tion. One of his milch cows was
coming up ‘‘dry’’ every night, and
he decided to watch and see what
the trouble was.
His surprise can hardly be im
agined when he saw fish swinging
to her teats as she moved about
in the water eating the tender
growth of the pond. He was
equal to the occasion, too. What
he did for the finny milk thieves
was a plenty. Next morbing be
fore turning the cow out for the
day, he securely fastened a fish
hook to each of her teats, and
when she returned at night she
broughs back with her suspended
from them four fish,
They were big ones, too, and
made enough for breakfast and
eupper for the gentleman and his
family.—Dawson Mews,
An English judge has decided
that it is the duty of a motorist
to get out of a dog’s way when the
dog is on the highway. Probably
they haven’t got as many mangy
curs in England in proportion to
population as in Georgia.
And now the paper currency of
the country is to be tinkered with.
Secretary MacVeagh doesn’t like
the present designs, and is going
to change them. Moreover, he
thinks the present bills are too
large and that they could be cut
down at least one one-quarter to
good advantage and st a large
saving te the government in the
cost of the paper.
REVOLTS'AT COLD STEEL.
“Your only hope,” said three doctors
to Mrs, M, E. Fisher, Detroit, Mich,,
suffering from severe rectal trouble, lies
in an operation;” ‘‘then 1 used Dr. King's
New Life Pills,"” she writes, “ti)l whelly
cured.” They prevent Appendicitis, cure
Constipation, Headache. 25c., at W. A. J
Bams & Co.’s, Marietta,
Many a man leads the simple
life—behind the bars.
——— R+ G~ I .
There i# no hope for the old
bachelor who can’t induce even a
widow to marry him,
el e e e
THESECRET OF LONG LIFE,
A French scientist'has discovered one
secret of lggg life. His method deals
‘with the blood. But long ago millions
of Americans had proved Electric Bitters
rolongs life and makes it worth living,
{.t purifies, enriches and vitalizes the
blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, im
parts life and tone to theé entire system.
It's a godsend to weak, sick and debili
tatodrgeople. ‘Kidney trouble had
blighted my life for months,”’ writes W.
M. Sherman, of Cusking, Me., ‘but
Electric Bitters cured me enticely.”
Only 50c. at W, A, Sams & Co.'s, Mari
etta,
A quick way to learn how to
waste money 18 to get hold of it.
W S B
omans bean
Some women retain their beauty to an advanced
age. But women, who regularly endure pain, age
rapidly, for sufferimg~Teaves lasting marks on
them. 77 .
Nearl;;;flk women suffegagpre ortess with some
form of femdle/troublef It fhould nofibe neglected.
Avoid the pain—tredtkyouskelf At hote by taking
Cardui, as thpusandg other/ women have done,
Begin at once and giYe€arduia fair tfis
TAK[ l ‘ |' ‘ v ‘;:.;.I ’ l u l
J s
It Will Help You
Mre. Katie Burlison, Goreville, TIL, tried Cardui and writes:
“T suffered with female troubles, and was so sick I could not stand
on my feet. Finally I began to take Cardui, and soon bégan to
mend. Now lam able to do all my housework and am in much
better health than I was before.” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES '
For Using County Con
victs to Promote Their
Own Interests.
GRrIFrIN, GA., August 11,—The
grand jury has returned true bills
against County Commissioners R.
H. Drake, N. G. Barfield and C.
W. Hammond, aleo againet J. W.
Gresham, growing out of the work
done by convicts on Gresham
Heights, & newly acquired piece
of property vwned by H. W.J.
Gresham, who is preparing to
place it on the market. Drake is
president of the City National
Bank, while the other commission
ers are farmers.
In a glowing tribute to Robert
E, Lee, the Baltimore Sun says:
He typifies all that was best of
the old South and is the inspira
tion of all that is finest in the
new. His great genius as a mili
tary commander 18 at last univer
vally ackuowledged, but it has
been eclipsed by his personality
as the knigktliest man of his time.
A woman never gets old egough
not to think it ien’t a shame fer a
woman who ie a 8 old as somehody
else to drees the youthful way she
does
WASHINGTON ONCE GAVE UP
to three doctors; was kept in bed for
five weeks, Blood Soison from a spider’s
bite caused large, deep sores to cover his
leg. The doctors failed, then ,‘‘Buck
len’s Arnica Salve completely cured me,’’
writes John Washington, of Bosqueville,
Texas. For eczema, boils, burns and
piles, it's supreme. 25c., at W, A, Sams
& Co.’s, Marietta.
A man puts money in the col
lection plate just the way he pays
taxes—with a deep feeling of
grievance,
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Think cnly of yourself, and oth
ers will forget you.
Does the Work
Is & Great Blood Purifier. It cures
any troub"l‘eflp-ne&fi%e\ blood,
such s
Syphilis Cance 3
Ggnorrhea _Catarrh \
croful Common Tfeh
Old Sofes D c Q:Bnrber’s I
Blood {Poi nake Bite
Whitd Swelling Spider Bite
Rheumatism Ring Worm,
Kidney Trouble zema
hese tv(m’c ged by impure
or hoisoned or by cessive
germs\ J.exie purifles the_#lood, and
kills the g
The regular price of Lexie is $5 00 per
bottle. In order to get it introduced,
the price will be reduced to $2.50 per
bottle for the next six months.
| —FOR SALE BY—
~ GANTT DRUG CO., Marietta. Ga.
l DURHAM BROS., Aceworth, Ga.
QLEHERERERREERER RN RRRA TR ER RN RRNSRNN RN RN SN2
& Vi ,
. s 7
V 4 B Vs
4 3 v
Y/ - :
77 Z
ry =
PSRNI SRR S LR RS R RLR Ll
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
: and has been made under his per-
W _sonal supervision since its infancy.
- Allow no one todeceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢ Just-as-good * are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
*® -y
- CASJTORIA
petoria iy’ a hgpfmless substitute fog Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Dyops ghd Sogthing Syrups. §t is Pleasant. It
i containg’ neitfer Opifim, Morphine nbr other Narcotic
substagce. I{s age I 8 its guarantee. Jt destroys Worms
and aljays FevVesigliness cures Dfarrhoea and Wind
Colic. jlt relieves A'dgth .’, oubliesyfcures Constipation
and Fjatulency. A ;F" dated the food, regulates the
Stomafh and BbHwg piving healtly and natural sleep.
The AreEPanacea—The Motlier’s Friend,
cenulng CA ORIA ALways
/7 géars the Signature of
/. 2. B
P ’ 5 : ; ¢ 4
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Lot THS SENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREEY, NEW YORR CITY.
W. M. BELISLE,
-—THE JEWELER———
m
lAM now th ly ipped nish your jewelry jusr
a 8 NEw—Saflin, Ro, Green, Rell or Rose. All kinds of
jewelry work exec ickly, frogptly, and in up-to-date
style, and at reasogblefharg tches and clocks repair- -
ed and guaranteed fo 8. lappreciate your pa
tronage, and can §lways be fo at my place of business.
s W, M. BELISLE =
Park Square 8 ® JEWELER
Toric Invisible one-piece Bifocals. W S »
Toric Invisible ieag Bifocals. [, . i R
Every Bjfp#til offerad for sile can .‘-\:‘:"- /&“ :
be boug fr@m Es.be cafry in iL %
stock evgry patenf nofe piece dmade. ' Q\m ;
With qur facileses, fram djust- B\, -~ -
ing and fajr déaling, yop€an get the AN
best service yrrable, oP i
g ’,"A&.@\
N Coml Lof O lss | i |
WALTER BALLARD OPTICAL O, ™ “ychree Streer
o Atlanta, Ga.
OPPOSITE KENNESAW HOUSE,
CHuck ANDERsON, Proprietor
ThebegEßTvaliTclen, the safest of dn
verf and/fhg fastest of hduges are always
ready, ghnd day for hilq. No mab,
womaglf or Whild hag ever glven me a
call infghe giqt, who/has been} nor shall
any eyé ,J‘ ufure, be dissatisfied
with iy Tonisig} Ahe men i my em
ploy.i Everything ‘;‘- everylody about
me at® a number goe} /
I haye cheapenell m'y chaplres propor
tionaté\to the striigency #f the times.
For retésgnce as to thesffuth of what I
say, as to the.turnetts and charges, go
to my friends, which means the people
generally, |
Parties hiring are strictlr regponsible
for the safety of themselves, vehicles
and horses J A. G. ANDERSON.
AGENTS FOR JOURNAL.
The following persons will take sub
scriptions for the Marietta Journal:
Mrs. Belle Wright—Powder Springs
Miss Mattie Mitchell—Aeworth.
A, A. Griggs—Macland.
Postmistress—Smyrna
T.J. Hardage and Mrs. l.ou Trippe—
Kennesaw.
Postmistress—Mableton.
Monto Shaw—Blackwell,
- W. B. Griggs, Due West.
A. N. Mayes, Lost Monntain,
bl NNt iS S s b s
OUR CLUBBING OFFER.
We will send the Marietta J ournal,
the Atlanta Semi-Weekl{ Journal and
the Home and Farm, ail three papers
for one year, for $1.75.
We will send the Marietta Journal,
the Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal and
the Southern Cultivator, all three pa
pers one“year. for $1.75,
The Marietta Journal, the Atlanta
Semi-Weekly Journal and a wall map
of the states of Georgia and Alabama
:}lxenUnited States and the world for
l "I‘h;e Marietta Journal is an eight
paper of 48 columns and it makes tge
elubbing offer a very fine one.
J. H, HACKS y Rroprietors,
Geftle Hfbrse Nfee Rigs.
— RELEPHOMNE 285.—
103 Powder" Springs street
e IR
Arriving and Departing Time at
---Marietta, Ga.
ALY TRAINS DAILY.
Leave, Arrive,”
Cincinfiati uisville *6:s7am *9:sBpm
Cincinheti an uisvi s:sopm 11:13am
Knoxdille v lue 9: m 480 pm
Blue mm 4 m 910 am,
Atlants w p=
Atlanta 4:30 p . &y
Atlanta, Potgts be;ond only “g:56 pm ¥6:s7am
" ¢ : “ 1:18am 6:50 pm
Trains mark * will stop only to take on
or let off passengers xville and be Oflddu~‘
for and from noints beyond A 1 an
from points between Mvarietu and Blue Ridge.
Effective Snnday, June 6th, 1909,
‘“———-——_——
o i
ARRIVING TiME AT MARIETTA, GA. i
SOUTH BOURD. \*
No 3from Chattanooga and Nashville ar 6.20 am
No 78 from Rome arrives 9.00 a
m 93 frora Chattancoga and N&hville ar 10.532 m
No 1 from Chattanooga acd Nashville ar 6.48 pm
No 95 from Chicago arrives B.olpm
NORTH BOUND,
No 94 for Chicago arrives 7.87 am
No 2for ( hattanooga and NMechville ar 9.2%am
No 92 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 5.32 pm
No 72 for Rome arrives 5.67 pm
No 4 for Chattanooga and Nashville ar 9.34 pm
o s dimmmsais el o e i
DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY
Will Surely Stop That Cough.
y
Frley’s Kidney Cure
makes Lidoevs end bladder rigiht