Newspaper Page Text
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Friday, September 30
VYOLUME 4.
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Next Time You
Drive Into Town
you’ll be wanting during >
: your stay a real good drink.
Something to quench your
thirst to stay quenched.
Drink
' 8 No matter how thirsty you are, or how tired
S vou are or how particular you are, you’ll
M 8 like Coca-Cola because it hits that dry spot
O —rclieves fatigue and tickles the palate all
Wi the way down.
WA DELICIOUS-REFRESHING .
WHOLESOME
e Send for Our Free Booklet
? ““The Truth About Coca-Cola.’® Tells
A all about Coca-Cola, what it is and why it :
18 so delicious, wholesome and beneficial. S
WA THE COCA-COLA CO. 4
Atlanta, Ga. Whenever
{-T you see an
; Arrow think
gr of Coca-Cola
P* )
Leave to Sell. {
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
To All Whom It May Concern: |
Claude W Raberts, administrator nf!
the estate of Edwin D Little, late of |
said county, deceased, has in due form |
applied to the undersigned for leave to {
sell the lands belonging to the said es. |
tate and ihe application wiil be heard
at my office on tha firet Monday in Oe
tober next, 1919, This September 6,
1910, J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
To All Whom 1t May Concern:
D. B. Grist. adminigtrator of the es
tate of C. C. Grist, late of sn d county,
deceased, has in dae form applied to
the undersigned for leave to sell the
lande belonging to said estate and the
application wil! be heard at my office
on the first Monday in O~tcber next,
1910, This September 6, 1910.
: J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
Whereas, J. R. and Lizzie Raker, ad
ministrators of J. D. Baker, late of said
county, deceased, repregent to the
court in their petition, duly filed and
entered on racord. that they have fully
administered said estate. This g,
therefore, to cite all persons caoncerned,
kindred and ereditors. to show eause, if
any they can, why said administrators
should not be discharged from their ad
ministration and receive letters of dis
miggion oo the firsrt Monday in October,
1910 This September 6th, 1910
J. M. GANN,
Ordinary,
Application for Sapport.
QEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
Daisey Wallace having mede ap
plication for twelve months' support
for herseif and two minor children out
of the estate of James H, Wallare, and
appraisers doly appointed to xet apurt
the same having filed their return, all
persone concerned are hereby required
to show cause before the court of ordi
nary of said ecounty on the first Mon
day in October, 1510, why said ap
plication should not be granted. This
September 6 1910.
J M. GANN, Ordinary.
Letters of Administation. |
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY. |
To All Whom it May Ucneern: ‘
Fdward White, Jr. having in due
form applied to me for permanent let.
ters of administration on the estate of |
J. R. King, late of said county, deceas
ed, this is 1o cite all and singu'ar the
ereditors xnd next of kin of J. R King
to be and nppenr at my office on the
first Monday in O:stoher next. and
ghow causs, if any rhey enn, why per
manent adoministration shou!ld not be
granted to Edward Wh'te, Jr | or Some
fit and praper person on ). R, King's
estate. Witness my « flicial signature
of oftice. This Seuiemher g, 1910
J M GANN. Ordinary.
GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY.
To All Whom It May Coueern:
George Kencivy hwving in due form
applied to me for permanent letters of
sdministration on the estate of J. R
Kendiey, late of wnid connte, decepged
hit i 8 0 ¢ivk wi) wod reinznlee the
‘diwn and next of kinof J. . Kend-
The Morietta Journal
ley to be snd appear at my offce on
the firet Monday in Ottober next, and
ghow cause.if any they can. why per
manent adininistration shoonid not he
granted to petitioner or same fit and
proper person on J. R. Kenaiey’s es
tate. Witness my official signature of
office, This 6th day of September, 1510,
J. M. GANN, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA, Cobb Connty.
By virtue of an order pussed by the
rourt ‘of ordicury of Cobb ecunr'y,
Georgia, at the September term, 1910,
the undersigred, W. A, Foster, as ad
ministrator upon the estate of Mrs,
M. W, Dempsey, deceased, late of C)bb
county. Georgia. will sell on the premi
ses in Smyrna, Cobb county, Georgia,
on the firet Tuesday in October, 1910,
between the usual hourg of sale. at
publie outery, to the highest bidder for
cash, the equity in the foliowing de
scribed property, to-wit: :
All that tract of land situated lying
and being in Cobb ecounty, Georgin, in
the 17th district and 2nd gection, being
part of land lot No. 584, and more fully
described as follows: Commencing at
Copeland’s corner and running thence
North to Dempsey’s corner; thence
west to Dempsey’s corner; thence
sputh to W, & A R R ; thence east to
gtarting point, being the same property
conveyed to said Mrs. M. W Demperey
by A. C Dempsey November 26, 1888,
and recorded in deed book L, page 489,
Cobb County records, containing seven
acres of land, more or less,
Aigo. all that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in land lot No. 594 of
the 17th distriect and 2nd section of
Cobb county, Georgia, bounded as fol
lows: Commencing at northwest cor
rer of lands of W. B Cohpeland ; thence
rinning wast along the original land
lot line to branch ; thence south along
the first old ditch to line of R P
Dempsey ; thence east to line of W R,
Dempsey ; thence rorth along the Jine
of W K. Copeland, the ecommencing
point bounded on the north by a street;
west by lands of M. M. and [.C Demp
sey : Routh by R. P. Dempeey and Mrs,
M. W. Dempsey : east by W. R. Cope
land. containing reven scres of land,
more or less. Sale cominenres at 12:30
p.m Termes cach
W_ A FOSTER.
As Administrator of Estate of Mrs M.
W Dempsey Deceased.
Service By Publication.
- A amp, :
Jflneetlulc, s ) Petition for Re
ve. moval of FExecu-
Richard H Field, ) tor Cobb Court of
Executor of prdmar_v, October
Geo. H. Camp, Term, 1910.
Deceased
To the Defendant:
You are hereby required to show
cause before me on the Ist Monday in
October, 1910, why vour letters of ex
ecutorship on the estate of George H
Camp, deceased, should not be revoked,
and why you should not be removed
from your sa‘'d executorship, or in de
fault thereof, the court will proceed as
to justice may appertain. Witness my
hand and official signature on this the
loth day of September, Iglo.
J. M. GANN,
Ordipary of Cobb Countv and Ex-Officio
Clerk of the Court of Ordinary, Cobb
- County, Georgia. sepl6-2w
AND COURIER.
County Mews Dots
LOST MOUNTAIN.
E. W. Kemp went to Cartersville
last week and bought a nice pair of
mules.
Well, well, Rnby, that’s too bad
to have Lost Mountain just dried
up on account of Mac Land’s rapid
growth. We are proud to see your
sillage thrive and grow and the Ag
ricultural School will give Mac Land
a substantial growth. We have no
desire to see our village grow into a
large city, but we would be glad to
see 1t grow to be a more thriving
community, with well improved
farms, nice dwe'lings and good
barns, good roads, nice and com
fortable school buildings, with an
electric car line direct to the capi
tal city to haul off our produce.
Now, there is room for both villages
to grow, and jus' let ’em grow. A
city that is set on a hill cannot be
hid.
We are glad to see the farmers of
Powder Springs organizing a club.
Every community should have oae.
The farmers should organize and
study farming interests.
ALLEN.
Ladies’ undervests with pants
to match at 20 cts—H. A. WARD.
THE ANGLE OF REPOSE.
Depends Wholly on the Friction of the
Materials In Contact.
The angle of repose is a well known
term in the science of mechanics, but,
besides being used in purely theoret
lcal problems, is takenginto account by
railroad and other engineers. Suppose
that we take a brick and lay it on a
board and then gradually raise one
end of the board. There will be a cer
tain angle reached in time where the
brick will not remain at vest on the
board, but will start to slide down.
This is termed the angle of repose of
the brick on the board. It is at that
point where the component of force
due to gravity overcomes the resist
ance due to friction between the two
surfaces. Therefore the angle de
pends entirely on the friction. Fric
tion varies with the materials in con
tact. So the angle of repose of a brick
on a pine board would be different
than its angle of repose on ap iron
board, say.
Now for the application of this in
ordinary life. When a railroad cut has
to be made the sides have to be suft
ciently slanting to keep the earth or
clay from caving in. The same ap
plies when a ditch is dug or when for
tifications are built in time of war.
The angle necessary for this is of
course the angle of repose of the par
ticular kind of material through which
the cut is made as measured by itself
on itself, as it contains millions of in
dividual particles in contact.. The an
gle in this instance is determined with
utmost ease and simplicity. A pile of
the material is put into an open ¢ylin
der, packed down slightly, and tbe cyi
inder is then removed. Of course the
pile Immediately slumps down into a
mound with slanting sides. the angle
of which is the one wanted. This an
gle is somewhat smaller than the one
that would be taken by compact earth
and therefore allows a good margin of
safety.
There are tables got out for the en
gineer to refer to, but it is always
wiser to make a trial for every par
ticular condition of the soil, for there
are hardly two cuts made through ex
actly the same kinds of material in
exactly the same condition.—Chicago
Record-Herald.
Deaf as an Adder.
The expression “deaf as an adder” is
from the Fmalms of David, where it
appears in the following form: *‘Their
poison is like the poison of serpents.
They are like the deaf adder that stop
peth her ear, which will not bearken
to the voice of charmers, charming ever
80 wisely.” East Indian travelers tell
‘us that there is a widely prevailing su
perstition in the east to the effect that
'both the viper and the asp stop their
‘ears when the charmer is uttering bhis
incantations or playing his music by
turning one ear to the ground and
twisting the point of the tail into the
other.
i e e
Service by Publication.
i Ruby Mae Richard- ) Libel for Divoree.
| son vs. William A. | Cobb Superior Court
' Richardson } November Term, 1910,
The defendant, Willians A, Richard
son. is hereby citel and required, per
sonally or by attorney. to be st the
Sujetive court, held in and for said
| county on the third Monday of Novem.
| her, 1010, 10 make answer to plaintiff'.
| libe! for divores, or in default thereot
the Court will proceed neeording to the
statutes wmade and providad in osuen
eases, Witness the Hon N A Ml.
| judge of said ccurt This the 17ih dny
| of September, 1010
‘ J.M AUSTIN.
l Oterk Superior Coury
st P 23 twice mo for 2 mos
KENNESAW.
Mrs. W. R. Camp, of Marietta,
returned home last Saturday after
a week’s visit to her sister, Mrs. W.
B. Griges.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Camp, of Mari
etta. spent last Sunday with Mr.
W. B. Griggs and family. -
Mr. J. E. Cagle’s left arm was
caught in the belting of his gin
machinery Saturday morning and
painfully, but pot seriously hurt.
Dr J. W. Ellis gave the necessary
attention.
Miss Melissie Scoot and niece,
Miss Scoot, of Lost Mountain, spent
Sunday with Mrs. W. P. Giles.
Mrs. Gus Robberson, of Danville,
is vieiting her sister, Mrs. J. H.
Owen.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. McGee and
Miss Wissie Mcßea spent Wednes
day in Atlanta.
Miss Sallie Giles and Miss Ollie
Mae Morgan have gone to Lowndes
county and are teaching near
Valdosta.
Rev. J. A. Spinks has been called
to the pastorate of the Baptist
chuarch for another year.
Miss BKertha Brinkley spent Satur
day and Sunday with relatives at
Smyrna.
Mrs. Wiil Dobbs, of Atlanta, was
a recent visitor to her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Gresham.
Mr. and Mrs J. W. Eidson spent
last week with relatives in Etowah.
Tenn.
Messrs. Joe Dawson, Austin Me
(leskey and Nin Knight, of Black
well, and Mr. Newt McCleskey, of
Acworth, visited their cousin, Miss
Hettie Mae McCleskey Sunday.
GIPSY.
} Men's heavy fleecelined
‘drawers at 42 cents—H. A.
WARD.
|
Changed Her Opinion.
“What is the mauseleum, dear?”
asked the wife.
“It is one of the most beautiful tombs
in the world.” explained the husband.
“It was erected by King Mausolus in
honor of his wife.” |
“How perfectly lovely of him!"
“Yes. He had it built while she was
alive.” |
“The wretch!"—Chicago Post. |
The Lamps of the Sea. 1
Many kinds of jellyfish are phos- |
phorescent at night and present a '
wonderfully beautiful appearance
when slowly moving through the wa
ter, and it<is this phosphoreseence
which has given them the poetic title
of “the lamps of the sea.” .They are '
not less beautiful in the daytime, for '
most of the species are striped or tint- ;
ed, some being melon shaped, with '
rows of fringes dividing the sections.
The tentacles are often plumed, and.
while waving about in graceful curves,
attract or gather in the food of the
animal. The ‘Portueguese man-of- |
war” is probably the best known, as :
well as most attractive in form, of the
whole family. ‘
- Appropriate. |
The professor of painting has just
entered the class room, where smoking
is strictly prohibited. Here he finds
an art student holding in his hand a
newly filled cherry wood pipe. |
Professor (ironically)—What a queer |
paint brush you havc got there! What f
are you going to do with it? '
Studeny — Oh, I'm going to make
clouds with it! l
Brass. |
Brass is an alloy of tin and copper,
and analysis of the earliest existingl
specimens demonstrates that it was |
formerly manpufactured in the profior-'
tions of one part of tin to nine of cop- |
per. A notice in Genesis fixes the dis- |
covery and use of both these metals, |
according to the Bible, at between
4,004 and 1.635 years before the Chris- l
tian era. i
! 7 Might and Mane.
| “And." satd the narrator of hunting
istorios, “the explorer ran with all his
l might and.the liou with all his mane.”
! Supreme Powers.
Tommy Tinkle—Dl’a, who are the su
’ preme powers? Mr. Tinkle—Your moth
{ er and her mother.
! A Scotch Superstition,
In Scotland bringing a flowering
‘huwtlmrn into the house foretells a
i death in the family.
Of Two Evils,
He—You're getting your hat ruined,
She-Well, it's an oid hat, and 1 do
bate o wet wmy uew umbrella,
Avoid Danger
.. When you are sick, or suffering from any of the
troubles peculiar to women, don’t delay—take Car
/dui, that well-known and successful remedy for wo
men. Thousands of women have used Cardui and
been benefited. Why not you? Don’t take any
chances. Get Cardui, the old, reliable, oft-tried
remedy, for women of all ages. :
i g BB O
esoiß BN B i
e I : : {-2 N 5
e Y o) B
: , o
it Will Help You
Wrs. Tmzania Morgan, Sneedville, Tenn., writes: %For ten
years I suffered with the turn of life, and tried many remedies
without relief. I had pains all over my body and at times I could
not sit up. At last I took Cardui and now I ean do my housework.
I have told many ladies about Cardui and rccommend it to all sick
women.,” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
LS 5
W. J. BIAUK,
UNDERTARER EMBALIER nd FNERRL DIREGOR
e, 4 Mouin B G, s, T
-CALLS ATTENDED DAY OR N_El-_ll
m ¢ OFficE S6asS" { MARIETTA, GA.
J. W. Hardeman F. Hardeman J. A. Hardeman
Hardeman & Sons
m
Polite and courteous treatment, good honest goods and full
weight. We carry a full line of Shoes, Hats and Pants. A full
line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hardware and High Grade
Fertilizers. Come to see us when in town.
All Kinds of Stock Reed,
BUGCIES
See my Line Before
You Buy, —
C.T.WEBB, ‘
106 ATLANTA ST. PHONé 262 MARIETTA, GA
W. W. WATKINS
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer,
Carriage Trimming and Painting,
The Best Rubber Tires Put On
REPAIRING HORSE SHOEING
done in a satisfactory manner, Satvisfaction Guaranteed
Phone No. 67. Washington Avenue, Marietta, (Feorgia
Dr. Johnson's Fruit Appetite.
No man ever welcomed the return of [
the fruit season more hearti[y than did |
Dr. Johnson. Of strawberries’ and'|
cream he declared that he could never I
have enough, though in his later years |
he devoured enormous quantities of |
them. A voracious eater at any time, |
Johnson’s appetite for fruit was limit- '
less. Mrs. Thrale says that he used to
eat seven or eight peaches before hel
began his breakfast, Lucy Porter, at
Litebfield, used always to keep the
best gooseberries on the bushes in her
garden until Johnson came down to |
pick them, !
MARIETTA, GEORGIA,
Friday, Sept. 30, 1910.
ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM
T e ———————
First and Foremost.
“My wife has a great deal to say to
me about ber first husband.”
“Nonsense! Your wife was never
married before.”
“I know it. That's what makes her
reflections so painful.”—Puck.
T o AR MPSTBN AT A
passenger service wniCn MmArgs toe
age of retirement. There is honor in
the title. It does not descend to his
children. He gives half his life to the
gaining of it, and it means that his
activities and powers are at an end.—
Chicago Tribune.