Newspaper Page Text
THE CITY.
Miss Caro Trippe, of Taylorsville,
spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
John Trippe.
Miss Mary Wells spent Christmas
with home folks.
M’ss Emma Johnsey, of Carters
ville, spent Monday with her cjusin,
Miss Prudy Johnsey.
Mrs. Bell Davis spent several days
last week in Cedartown.
Messrs. Jud Tidwell and Charlie
Keown, Misses Nora Tidwell and
Bertha Spriggs spent Christmas in
Lindale, the guests of Mrs. Ida Tid
well.
Mrs Zubert, of Cutljert, is spend
ing Christmas with the Misses Stan
ford.
Mrs. R. N. Bruce, and little daugh
ter, of Emerson, spent Christmas
with her mother, Mrs. Moon.
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ross returned,
to their home in Eatonton, Tuesday
Miss Lucile Randall, of Rockiuart,
spent Monday with Miss Gena Moon.
Mr Geo P. Fugerson, of Rockmart,
spent a few days in town this week.
Miss Burt Cobb spent Sunday in
Kingston.
Miss Dot Bilbro left Friday evening
to attend the wedding of her cousin,
Mr. Bobbie Williams, at the first
Methodist church,-Rome, Ga.
Miss Mildred Thompson, of Mari
etta, is the attractive guest of Mrs. J.
W. L. Brown.
Capt. F. T. Boone, of Marietta,
spent a short while during the holi
days with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. L.
Brown, at their lovely and hospitable
home near the city.
Judge and Mr;. James Brown are
the guests this week of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. L. Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A Freeman and
baby daughter, Jessie, came up from
Atlanta and spent two days the past
week with Mrs. D. B. Freeman.
For Sale —Five Room Dwelling
and large lot. No boom prices.
Call on Walter K. Burton.
No man is a good citizen who
hoards up his wealth and refuses
aid to public improvements for the
benefit of the community in which
he lives. Such a man is a moss
back and a millstone about the
neck of any town, a barnacle on
the community and a wart on the
body politic Adairsvilie Banne>.
Some time the south will pro
duce enough wheat, corn and meat
for home consumption and just
enough cotton to supply the world’s
demauds. Then the south will sell
its cotton whenever it gets ready,
and there’ll be no more prices. -Ex
No Coal burns better and cleaner
than Red Ash. At williams
Phone 199. 4t
Said the critic: “You're all out of
metre.
Your rhyme doesn’t rythm nortetre
1 believe on my soul
A man who heaves coal
Oould dash off a poem far swet re.”
You cannot refottn a man by
throwing rocks at him.
KINGSTON.
Mrs. J. H. Hall, of Atlanta, spent a
a few days last week with her par
ents.
Mr. Norman Kitchens, of Aeworth,
was the guest of Mr. an* Wrs. W. Y.
Bailey, Sunday and Monday
Mr. and Mrs. W. C Bailey spent
Sunday with relatives.
Dr. and Mrs. Mcßryde, of Rock
| mart, Mr. George Ferguson, of the
! same city, and Miss Burton Cobb, of
! Cartersville, were the guests of Mr.
an®Wrs. J. D. Rogers Sunday.
Mrs. W. *D. Rolwand and children,
| of Cartersville, spent Sunday with
Dr. and Mrs. C. N. Mayson.
Misses Jessie and Leila Hargis and
Mr. Frank Hargis spent Sunday in
Adairsvilie with Mrs. E N. Oney
Mr. and Mrs. 8. L. Bayless and Miss
Belle Bayless arrived home from
Illinois last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Hargis and
son are expected to arrive Wednesday
night from Illinois.
Mrs. M. B. Rogers is spending
Christmas in Cartersville with Mrs.
John Cobb.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Henderson and
Mrs. Henderson, of Stilesboro, were
the guestsof Mrs. W. H. Griffin Sun
day.
Mr. Jack Hill spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. S. I. Slieats.
Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Ware and Thvr/.a
are visiting relatives in our city.
Tabloid Philosophy.
Dodging work keeps a many fel
low busy.
Lots oi people feel puffed up
without the aid of a press agent,
The dentist can draw teeth with
out being much wf an artist.
When a man stands on his dig
nity he ought to be well heeled.
The man who pays his debts is
not the one who borrows trouble.
An opportunity to do the wrong
thing is general!) taken advantage
of.
Charity may cover a multitude
of sins, but a lot more will spring
up.
Does the young father who
wheels a baby coach feel that he is
in the push?
The hands of a clock are al vays
in from, yet they may be behind
time.
Many a man has won a girl’s
hand, only to find that he hasn’t
won her heart
Some people are too much afraid
of freckles to make hay while the
sun shines.
Just think of Solomon with all
his wives trying to keep track of
his various wedding anniversaries.
Newly-acquired wealth causes
the average woman to be near
sighted when she meets her old
friends.
Pugilists are generally at logger
heads, in spite of the fact that they
are hand and glove with each
other. —Philadelphia Record.
'The “.best society” does not al
ways wear the finest clothes.
How We May Remake Ourselves
MILLER HAND GILRRATH, SR.
I have been practicing physical
culture along down to date lines
for the past year or two. Allow a
personal reference.
I had always led an acttve life
until some years ago my health
became bad, I lost energy and my
thoughts dwelt on gloomy things.
After trying everything (except
the right thine, viz., thought
force) I decided I would have to
die in spite of faith. But faith
saved tne, and I am now' very much
alive indeed.
Physical culture, in connection
with spiritual culture or thought
development, will work wonders.
It will deliver from the fear of
death, restore the body to health
and make the person happy and
contented.
The sectet of life is to be found
in the proper exercise of thought,
in having it lead us into the realm
of the health and hap
piness dw'ell, w'here possibilities of
pow'er and knowledge open as vis
tas to our astonished conscious
ness and where there is increased
facility in outward expression.
Spiritual culture should attend
or precede physical culture. Stirred
by the spiritual (not the sensual),
the body feels buoyant and strong.
We told in the Bible that the
whole creation groans and travails
in pain together, waiting for the
redemption of the body.
Physical culture will stir the life
within —if there be any life—and
the dead—the living dead—may be
brought to life. The process is
spiritual.
We die because we do not keep
alive. No one will die who is
alive and using the means ever at
hand to sustain life. Passing from
the body is not death to the person
who is alive One can do no good,
reap no satisfactory results, exer
cising the body, without using the
mind in connection witjj it Think
what you want, expect it and go
on to results. Create them. Faith
and works remove mountains.
If the brain were puf to proper
use there would be no necessity for
the body to be laid in the grave for I
putrefaction. When we get to
thinking rightly we will he strong
enough to conquer all difficulties,
and to rise above the low plain in
which dwell gloom, pain, disease
and death. Possibly we are not
prepared to go so far as to believe
that even death may be conouererl !
• - -
by developing the God-power
within us; but that, too, is coming;
the dawn-light of that day is
streaming faintly in upon us. We !
can hasten it by believing in it,
hoping for it, striving for it
If the world would stop its mad
struggle after the falsely styled
almighty dollar, and turn its at
tention to almighty God, He would
point them to a way out of all
complications and show them what
wonderful things they may do for
themselves.
As physical culture, taken to
gether with spiritual culture, made
a sound, happy man of me, so it
may do the same good to every
one. It will do much tor the body,
reducing or creating flesh, giving
the proper medium, each person
being of a size and weight suited
to his own individual ( needs and
his mission in life. This cannot
be brought about in a few months;
it may require years, hut the result
will repay the effort tenfold.
Now let us not get the cart be
fore the horse, as some do, but let
your thoughts regulate the man,
the woman, and physical culture
will take care of itself; for the
thought makes the man physical
as well as the man mental and the
niau spiritual.
THREE MILLION TREES
Were Planted in Georgia Between April 1,
and November 1.
Three million fruit trees will be
planted in Georgia between Novem
ber Ist and April Ist, according to the
statement of Entomologist Wilmon
Newell.
The planting Season is now on,
and numbers of new orchards are be
ng set oat in the different parts of
the stare. The fruit industry is on a
big boom, and from all sections come
the reports that thousands of trees
are being planted daily.
A majority of the fruit trees are of
the peach variety, and will be ready
to bear within the next two or three
years.
Mr. Newell has just completed the
inspection of the nurseries in Georgia,
and reports that he found a large
majority of them in splendid condi
| tion.
One hundred and seventy-nine of
the nurseries hah no vestige of dis
eased stock, while in nineteen of the
nurseries evidences of San Jose scale
'were found.
From the infested nurseries no
trees can he shipped under a heavv
penalty. The department of entomol
ogy is always on the lookout for in
fested stock and great care is taken
to see that none of it is sold or slap
ped into Georgia, and that none of
the infested nurseries sell any.
Arthur C. Lewis, the newly elected
assistant entomologist, will begin
work on January Ist. He comes from
College Station, Texas, where he has
been at work for several years. He
has had a great deal of experience
with insects that live on the cotton
plant.
With the department in charge of
Mr. Newell, who is acknowledged to
be one of the best entomologist in the
country, and with R. I. Smith and A
C. Lewis as assistants, the state will
be well equipped to flight all diseases
to which plants and trees are subject.
Try a ton of williams’ Red Ash
Coal aud you will want no other.
Phone 199.