Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
$lOO Reward, $lOO
The readers of this paper will be
pleaged to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages and
‘that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly
fnfluenced by constitutional conditions
requires constitutional treatment. Hal!s
Catarrh Medicine is taken internaliy and
acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Sur
faces of the System thereby destroying
the foundation of the disease, giving the
patient strength by building ap the con
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much
faith in the curative powers of Hall’s
Catarrh Medicine that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails
tu cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo.
Obio. Sold by all Pruggist, Tbc.
ot R
LABOR CHIEFS MUST
“SIT ON THE LID”
& R
Washington, Aug. 11—Nine-tenths
of the energies of labor leaders are
given to the job of sitting on the lid,
Austin B. Garretson, former head of
the Order of Railway Conductors,
testified today before the house inter
state commerce committee, which is
seeking to solve the problem of how
best to handle the railroads after the
war-time period of federal control.
Sporadic strikes throughout the
country, Garretson said with great
earnestness, merely are straws which
show how the wind is blowing over a
sea of industrial unrest. Rumblings
heard in many quarters do not mean,
he said, that laboring people want
to overthrow the government, but in
dicate a demand that the government
function.
°
This Waman., Rzcommends
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound—Her
Personal Experience.
McLean, Neb.—‘‘l want to recom
mend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound to all
women who suffer
‘;‘_\“;w from any functional
® " aal||||| disturbance, as it
e has done me more
LS 08 o good than all the
octor’s medicine.
'l Since taking it I
Y have a fine healthy
i L baby f{ll‘l and have
i R ||| gainedin health and
-§¥ 7% "%\ || strength. My hus
aront | praise your med
' ' icine to all suffering
women.”—Mrs. JOHN KOPPELMANN, R.
No. 1, McLean, Nebraska.
This famous root and herb remedy,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, has been restoring women of
America to health for more than forty
years and it will well pay any woman
who suffers from displacements, in
flammation, ulceration, irregularities,
backache, headaches, nervousness or
‘““‘the blues’’ to give this successful
remedy a trial.
For special suggestions in regard to
i;)ur ailment write Lydia E. Pinkham
edicine Co., I.ynn, Mass. The result
of its long experience is at your service,
NOTICE
I have received blanks under the
new pension law. All of the class of
Ex-Confederate Soldiers who have
been barred from receiving pensions
‘on account of the property qualifica
tions are now eligible, and all widows
of soldiers who were married previous
to January 1, 1881, may now apply.
All applicants must have been resi
dents of Georgia on Nov. 4, 1908,
must prove six months service in Con
federate or State Troops, and show
an honorable discharge. This can be
proven by one witness, when he knows
all the facts. When you come to
make your application, come pre
pared to complete the same. All ap
plications must be completed and in
my office not later than Oct. 25, next
to participate in 1920 pension.
Don’t wait until the last.
This August 12th, 1919.
s Tel Biw J. M. Gann.
A T &b
And Simil; Troubles Helped by Ziron lron
Toalo, Says Alabamian,
=1 got a bottle of Ziron™, writes
Marshall Rhordes, of Eufsula, Ala,
“and took it for indigestion, nervous
ness, losa of appetite and similar trou
bles. It helped me very much. My
motherinlaw suffered with the same
troubles, so I gave her & dose or two
of Ziron, and she says it helped her
greatly. 1 will always keep a bottle
of Ziron in the house and will sg:ak
a good word for it whenever I have
the epportunity.”
Ziron is a new combination of Iron,
with the hypophosphites of lime and
soda, and other valuable tomic ingre
diepts, which have been found to
puild up the enemic, weak, worn-out
systesa. Ziron puts irom imto your
blood when you need it. If you are
pale, wéak, nervous, depressed, have no
wp. it is probably a sign that your
yd needs Iron. Take Ziron.
Your druggist sells it, on a guaran
tee. BSee him adout it
- ZNS
Your Blood Needs
Subseribe for The Marietta Journal.
Seasonable Suggestions
The average farmer doesn’t make
himself as comfortable in summer as
he might easily do. It doesn’t cost
much to put in a hammock or two, a
swing, some rocking chairs for the
porch, and a rustic seat or two in the
shade of the trees. Such things add
immensely to one’s comfort during
summer time rest periods, either on
week days or Sundays. Then if Mr.
Farmer has provided an ample water
melon and cantaloupe patch, and a
good garden and orchard, he can live
like a.king,
But Mr. Farmer’s conscience will
be easier if he has also provided Mrs.
Farmer with a fireless cooker, and
plenty of kitchen and household con
veniences together with*an unfailing
supply of well-seasoned stovewood.
Whatever a man wishes to get in
time these days, he had better order
early. Right now therefore is none
too soon to order clover, rye, vetch,
alfalfa, wheat and oat seed. Esti
mate what acreage you wish to plant
in each crop and then make up your
order for the quantity of seed you
wish. For alfalfa, sow 20 to 25
pounds per acre; crimson clover, 12
to 20 pounds; bur clover, 4 to 8
bushels; vetch 20 to 50 pounds; oats,
2 to 3 bushels; rye, 1 to 1% bush
els. And of course you will not for
get a liberal planting of turnips.
Fruit trees, shrubs, grapes, etc.;
should also be ordered before many
weeks, and now is a good time to
decide where you will put them, what
varieties you will order, and how
many of each. Your county agent
or state experiment station will glad
ly advise you as to varieties suited
to your locality.
And don’t forget to ask Mrs. Far
mer to aid you in making up an or
der for some flowering bulbs and
shrubs to go along with the fruit
tree order. If you will take a few
postal cards and ask a few nursery
men and seedmen for their fall cat
alogues, you will get much helpful
free information about farm seeds,
fruits and flowers.
As usual, many a man will die of
typhoid fever this season and his fam
ily will blame it on the Lord, when
the truth of the matter is that the
Lord, by giving man brains to discov
er typhoid vaccine, offers every hu
man being an easy way of escape
from all the terrors and perils of
this typhoid scourge. ,Now is.a good
time, too, to have the teeth of each
member of the family looked after.
In no other respect perhaps does the
average farm family so sin against
the laws of health as in the neglect
of the teeth.—Progressive Farmer.
DISTINGUISHED MEN
AND THEIR EDUCATION
With no schooling, of five million
men, only 31 attained distinction.
With elementary schooling, of thir
ty-three million men, 808 attained
distinction.
With high school education, of two
million men, 1,245 attained distinc
tion.
With college education, of one mil
lion men, 5, 768 attained distinction.
The child with no schooling has one
chance in 150,000 of performing dis
tinguished setvice; with elementary
schooling, he has four times the
chance; with high school education,
37 times the chance; with college ed
ucation, he has 800 times the chance.
Less than one per cent of the men
in the United States are college grad
uates, yet this one per cent has fur
nished 55 per cent of our Presidents;
38 per cent of the members of Con
zress; 47 per cent of ®he Speakers of
the House; 54 per cent o four Vice-
Presidents; 62 per cent of the Secre
taries of State; 50 per cent of the
Attorneys General; 69 per cent of the
Justices of the Supreme Court.
Fifty per cent of the men compos
ing the Constitutional Convention
were college bred. At the present
time, less than two per cent of the
American youth go to college, yet
from this relatively small number
come 90 per cent of the leaders in
the professions and industries of our
nation. It pays to be one of the two
per cent of American men.—Monroe
Advertiser.
THE
Little Kennesaw
Cigar
° MILD AND SWEET - -
; 6¢
At All First-Class Places
Marietta Cigar Factory
UNDERGROUND STREAMS
In many places of Florida and
Southern Georgia, are underground
streams of water, easily reached by
boring a short distance through rock
near the surface of the earth, There
are also smaller streams much lower
down, which when tapped flow up
through the earth and make the ar
tesian wells.
In Decatur county, Ga., there is a
cave with a hqgle in the rock bot
tom from which a strong current of
air is blowing a part of each day,
while the air is drawn into the hole
during the other part of the day, in
dicating that it is in some way con
nected by an underground passage
with the tide of the Gulf of Mexico,
which is more than 40 miles away.
On the line between the counties
of Brooks and Thomas, is a lake more
than two miles long and a half mile
wide, and thirty feet deep, from which
the water is suddenly drawn off
through a fissure in the ground every
few years. Some small streams emp
ty into this lake and when it goes
dry the flow from these streams run
into the open fissure in the lake bot
tom. It usually stays dry for a pe
riod of three to six weeks, and there
is dispute as to whether the fissure
becomes stopped and the streams
and rain refill the lake, or whether
the water comes back into the lake
through the fissure, but the sudden
refilling of the lake would indicate
the latter.
- A large creek in this section flows
into a small lake and is carried away
through a hole in the bottom of the
lake which at times also disappears
for a season.
In Albany, Ga., some years ago a
chimney to a dwelling in a low sec
tion, dropped instantly out of sight
one night, leaving a hole in the
ground like a well, which filled with
water within a few feet of the sur
face.
At Quitman, Ga.,, a pond was
drained by boring a well in it, and
it was then proposed to dispose of
sewerage in the same way, until a
test of a large quantity of salt poured
into the well was found to have af
fected the water in some neighboring
towns.
It is true that with all our boasted
science and progress, man is just get
ting acquainted with the surface of
the earth and just a little under it.
Sergeant School For Camp Benning
A school for candidates for ap
pointment as sergeant-instructors of
the national guard will be established
at Camp Benning, Ga., the war de
partment announced today, the first
class beginning July 15. Enlisted
men of all the army branches are
eligible, but the class is to be limited
to 150 members.
HOME-MADE DEVICES
TO COOL KITCHENS
It is cooler in 10,345 Southern
kitchens this summer, for that many
housekeepers in the South have made
fireless cookers and iceless refrigera
tors with the aid of the home demon
stration agents during the past year.
This number includes only those
taught directly by the extension
workers. It is impossible to esti
mate how many more learned from
their neighbérs how to make and use
these hot weather comforts.
| LOOK EOR
THE BALL
TRADL_MARK ¢
«"' ‘l m " i
Fitearins 8 Ammunition &
o; or, ® Jnzs
Shooting Right &
O\ L T G (LD
RPN\ 50| RelA LR
o >'=’EE“°§3W%
Vi —o! g 5 G
el : PRk LT
FOR SALE
Thirty-four acres Marietta car
line. Station in front. Fine home,
8 rooms, all conveniences. Plenty
fruit, good pasture. $13,500. Some
terms. Holland Realty Co.
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
Southern women in home clubs dur
ing 1918 made and installed alto
gether 58,394 devices for saving la
bor and improving saditary condi
tions. Of this number, 6,837 were
fireless cookers, 3,508 iceless refrig
erators, 15,703 ffy traps, 14,342
screens, 1,764 improved ironing
boards, 411 wheel serving trays, 187
shower baths, 864 kitchen cabinets,
% .'!','h v.':"’;f;'.:.’,»':*n ..';":_ ) ._.";‘ ‘:; ‘
T O NI L S AT A(P T T T - S
il N s TA T r‘:x’?f*"’-}‘r% TAmInEU R R SSR
SR Sir eo O R U g(oo BT TBT SLT Sl AR YW S
40, 4, % o ety e M Ab o e e s¥'ae . oS et 2's L N s
e %—g’{}} SR 715 TS 2 e e »f’?"-:fcr"""l’-?r‘-'*fl" R e fifli’:—."
et ry o 3 P : S 3455 $e557
SR EE S I R - anli el S
S sy iG L e &8 e N RN
n A TN RN eNN R R T,
228 M =ty o a 8 R . y e
bR pedyey 5 i = i N e < N
i) ey e A A BGI Bl G - 5l
e s v AN A o Pl o A 70 : v ST
57 .‘_:-‘/.__af-fl ‘.."':a:z‘ :.';‘ % » "',:."'." ‘- e- R QRIS e 5 B4y et “'"""!Q
Tl gl L LE o A oy . B ~ >Yy o
A Ve 2 Tyl
K N S P : con : S el
i“'"‘::’.;:,; ; s .":5 o ' “ b ; . }",‘3:
S 0 L# ke U Y, ;n__'- 0 8 < X
LD R . " "":‘?,t. ?
K ~ — ‘...A:,w
e DAY
{?".?A . : » p_’;‘.‘;‘--';j
o .‘s_s' AMELS supply cigarette contentment beyond anything i
1A Fplon-4, e AL :
;2:1‘;"..- you ever experienced! You never tasted such full- Yoo s
*2TEr e - : L N
STy bodied mellow-mildness; such refreshing, appetizing ;fl;‘.”‘
e » R
‘:‘ I flavor and coolness. The more Camels you smoke the SN
5A3 =2 greater becomes your delight—Camels are such a cida- A
' . Ty
E 23 3 g rette revelation! ~?3,;_&_;
T W 7/ : Sl LT
- g:’: \-‘?,g Everything. about Camels you find so fascinating is due to .fi.;,.:_;;
e ) : . S 2
e their quality—to the expert blend of choice Turkish and s
tgv"““-‘-' [ . o - ,'p'-,‘w
= é\@ —~X choice Domestic tobaccos. S
TP . s
—7l &IGHA You'll say Camels are in a class by themselves—they seem 525
(L = — % ¥ i Ve
{‘::ft::g;f;—;g | made to meet your own personal taste in so many ways! :";;4:
S;," L ? " 3|\ : n.‘-:‘ :o.“‘
T\‘ ; Freedom from any unpleasant cigaretty after-taste or un- };_\F“J
. . . =l Qo
W =1 pleasant cigaretty odor makes Camels particularly desirable Q‘:(,?f_',;:'
— - 1 S as e
=1 c@’]l to the most fastidious smokers. And, you sreoke Camels as LAY
et 5 . ! . . - Wl -
mgxl_SgL‘g?quf .Y liberally as meets your own wishes, for they never tire your !;,‘2.:,,::
3. 2 ®T 'y s~ et
LEIohS : taste! You are always keen for the %2i%%
AL ® . . . Y ‘fl"fzq
vand cigarette satisfaction that makes z=&>
=.x. 18c. a package g : s
wfl g Camels so attractive. Smokers real- g 3
% Lomy 0 i S 5 s
AR ize that the value is in the cigarettes :?;:." s
: ' - ‘ :V" ‘ X V, - - .‘; ".1
TE A .‘:w; £ and do not expect premiums or cou- ‘;-,:,
N .'-\.{;'_'.' 1, Ay At Y, ' e
WAy 2 Tl gl :;,;’.-% o pons ! MR
'r‘ b A k,.,' f\ 5 1"&),\- B 05Ty ‘ -{;’-'3,. - ZON ith 2 ;;_l\v?: i
R T TPR Compare Camels with any ciga- %77,
BT aA L =3B SIB o 0 XL ,' B 5 . “ . = 4 - )
i 'fl"i,;-)‘?‘;‘ N 83, ¥ ",}lfgjv" P) \ rette in the world at any price! Lo ply
N 2 DY TR B STR PN ey e SRS i
2 o gi' % u@t LB e . Camels are sold everywhere in scientifically . -j‘.;,‘,',*'_'
AL - '-;'.‘,.:%‘ F ¢ 021 \ sealed packages of 20 cigarettes or ten pack- -.sq, q_.;-’::
w 7 2 s --"""""._:b‘- ’ g ages (200 cigarettes) in a glassine-paper- RSOy
@.\ SR, ‘M 4 ;j 190 covered carton. ,We strongly recommend Sady S
it s .18 this carton for the home or office supply i R
“:q*.:’;_-? ; 2 “ K or when you travel. et .’;{:';
Y 4 ; S Foo
AT €] RJREYNOLDSTOBACCOCOMPANY 3<%
{‘:?:“_. | 9} - Winston-Salem, N. C. i‘:"fi“."i
% 55 A A iing
aliws el ‘ o Sk o SR P e O me ™iy T RN SN SW i 41;:"" 4
. iy ~ 4 o E S e & e .y - 5 ? e P _.—‘,7.
o P A ATS e Y T RS e eN S e
TF TS P3N S Ty e ~'..‘v set jj.;;:n.‘» Rot X T e
R T‘: = < 1 -.. 5 "‘. * s . sol g»4 :-_:: S !'_"v.‘- w‘“- “'.,' v',.'-..;, "'.;-.s . ".,::f ..-fi'-‘('; v.‘,A
“'“!g oA SG A e
i ‘?’ _ 3¢ i
7% - = -
M<GRAW TIRES-
To the Trade:
We are pleased to state that the necessity for mileage
adjustments on “NEW McGRAW QUALITY TIRES”
is so small and that the mileage records exceed the
former adjustment basis to such an extent, that we are
amply warranted in announcing to the trade that users
of the “NEW McGRAW QUALITY TIRES” are to
benefit in the enconomy of a longer mileage adjustment.
When placing the “NEW McGRAW QUALITY TIRE”
on the market, we were confident that the trade would
very soon discover that there was more mileage in the
“NEW McGRAW QUALITY TIRES” than in any
other tire. This fact is now so well established by actual
results that we are pleased to confirm the experience of
our users, by authorizing a mileage adjustment basis,
under usual conditions, on the new “NEW McGRAW
QUALITY TIRES” in stock, or in service, as follows:
FABRICS . . . 6,000 MILES
CORDS . . . . 8000 MILES
- SOLIDS . . . . 10,000 MILES
Bt Yours for the Best Tire Service, ‘
e SOLE AGENTS
E'-_-————__—-——-__——-—— e —————
M<GRAW TIRES
985 water/ systems installed, 615
triers for home use, and 14,178 other
labor-saving devices. There were 28,-
620 more women who bought labor
saving devices, because. they had
learned through demonstrations of
their value. This number included
water canners, steam pressure cook
ers, lighting plants, and various other
articles which make for the comfort
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1919
and health of the home. The clubs
organized through the efforts of the
United States Department of Agri
culture, and the State colleges are
schools of instruction in family bi
terment and community welfare,
clearing houses of neighborhood
knowledge, and public ' exchanges
where patterns, magazines, recipes,
and ideas are given and taken.