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’WSfefiSDAY, SEWEMBER 25, 1924.
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Copyright Metropolitan Newapsper Service
T
I’or the fcSKfcieht he watched her to
'VSently—Impassively. The* gradually
“his slanting, mocking entfte grew once
* again upon his face.
“Of course," he said, “if you -wish
1 to have him here—I WH make uo ob
jection. He Is a member of the tam
; ily, we Bright say. But this is
?a sur
prise to me. I bad supposed,” beaaid,
“you did not want him.” «md a
crooked smile <wme m his lips again
as he looked at her.
“Want him!" she answered, -stam
mering at the turn the thing hafi
taken ta his bands.
“Why, yes," he »aM suavety.
V “What him—.no!” she cried Impul
sively.
"Your actions,” toe returned, “woutd
scarcely indicate ‘that. You sent -for
him I And W, at any time again, -you
wish Mm as a corapanion-Jdhat ls very
simple Indeed.”
“Y< agreed,” dhe ertofl. nt was
our understanding that be—that‘man
—sh^ufcd nearmeil”
"Why. •flreiC'he asked'her, * c *d you
call Mm here?”
Wing <oouId she -say wltheut * be
trayal •Of the 'thing she 'was ‘now're
solved toe should not bnow-—eoncer.t
tog the naan she had'believed she‘was
sending for 'When iButheffisnd •-• ap
peared?
“Yen eetild -scarcely expect’ me' Vdtr
tertwe with arrangements of ’TMs
kind,” toe said-cynically. “A: husband
wishes too visit tils wife. Who can re
fuse 7 Why should’beinot otwe,
If stoeaenfisifertohn-mven-if itos'-wife
Is toSKse?”
He -smiled ms the-saM lt, * snfHe of
quiet entdl ^triumph Which -sent a
shutoder -over her. What move -could
she matoe, -or what ’ tarn, wtthout find
ing this adroit mind anticipating It—
outwitting and tricking her, using her
own oats as the Instruments ef'Vher
own -destruction. .He had known her
movements to this imatter, she feared
now, finom the first, and hafi used them
to trap her more and more thoroughly.
That night in her room Adelaide
Rutherford wrote and fastened her
message insifie the-collar-®f her -mall
carrier. Rags, to be ready for the next
morning.
“Tonight, she wrote, 4< at ’8:30
o’clock tn the-study!”
She would send the dqg out'-with
this in the morning.
CHAPTER XI
The nstod <*f an old and long-experi
enced lawyer, for years 'busied in con
structing and avoiding ’legal atflfeus
cades, a creator trusts;and other de
vious creatures offhe law, is a strange
ly subtle thing,-often a very dangeoous
one. ConsMer, as riie basis of a .pos
sible theory of a case, the na»ind <ftmne
of these, ambitious beyond measureof
great standing in a greet -comnunSty,
determined upon assuming and hoWfaig
the immense poweraf sixty TBillllon dol
lars of money anfi its acoornpanytog
corporate Interests, And then suppose
i hls ambition to be as great-that lie'has
r’gone through actual crime to carry nit
• out And let us assume again that be
■is confronted suddenly with the very
•lively chance of discovery anti-exposure.
“I see,” said Jasper Haig to the
,-etem-faced woman, dressed like a
-lady’s maid, who appeared late that
night In great haste nf his house. Tf
he was surprised, Ms face did not
shew It. He read the note and asked
her for a more detailed description of
the young man she thought she had
seen that morning, and previous days,
with the dog la the park. Finally he
,seemed satisfied with what she -told
him. . a* You found It," he eMd. t* Very
well! Put It back where It came from
—under the collar of the dog. Watch
her continually, mo/e than ever, and
keep continually In touch with me to
morrow over the telephone. That wtfl
rbe all. Oood-nlght.”
Haig was nervous, after ^she bad
®one, over the Inferences which he
.gathered from this note and her obser
vations. And yot It seemed to him,
upon consideration, that the situation,
desperate as K might seem to be, still
offered certain possibilities for a mind
fertile in expedients, not merely to
avert ruin and utter personal disgrace,
but even to turn a great disaster Into
a great personal gain.
Suppose, for example, a man of un
usual mind and will-power, possessed
an accomp—a co-operator, let us say,
entirely under his Influence, mentally
as well as financially, a man generally
inert, unimaginative, dull, yet singu
larly emotional and open to suggestions
along one line—an old and continually
traveled line of thought along which
he could be propelled with the absolute
certainty of direction and result of a
’ freight train sent rolling down a
• grade I
Listen, „ said „ Jasper , Haig „ , over the,
18 8er * oa8 - Some one
Is following ns. I
N WhoZ2 ■«k*A Hswhrnnck Bntlrnk
foul liven over the’wire one eiKui ‘ted'
that he had been drinking.
"Who?" he demanded again when he
hud reached the house of Jasper Haig.
And he cursed without restraint when
he was told of the other man’s conclu
sions from the maid’s observations.
“Again r he said. His memory of all
the unpleasant occurrences fn his life
brought about by Stanford Gorgam,
from the days at Yale down through
his marriage tHl today, rolled back
over him. That was one thing always
that would stand out clear and red be
fore his usually somewhat jumbled
mind.
“What shall we do to him?” he
asked, dully. -Suggested ^
“Stt down," Jasper Haig.
“Have a drink.” An Invitation not re
fused, leading always to a certain
sfttaftrtation of memory and Old anger
— J flte pet personal hatred «f a hard
drinking man!
“Again!" repeated Hash -Rutherford,
hoarsely. “For fifty cents I'd kill him
•on general principles."
No—mol Hardly that !’’ said Jasper
Haig, depvecatlngly.
II I Would 1" stoutly asserted Has
tirouck Rutherford. There are certain
times and seasons, as every successful
lawyer knows, when opposition of a
certain type provokes rather than pre
sents the thing that it Is directed
against.
"No," repeated Jasper Haig, "no!
'You would not do that! But we must
•do -something--that is certain. Or
1 he’s got us 1"
^Ie! Got me?’’ said Rutherford, his
veins starting in Ms thick neck. “No!
'Net again !” His hearer thought that
1 her sensed already a certain tone of de
rision in Ms voice.
"But What can we do—besides your
ipleasing thought of killing him?" in
■Xftflred his "quiet-voiced companion,
thinking “out loud. “I think we
■can assume,’" he added, watching him
‘ quite cloMtjr, ’’that idea to b« anfioaa
*4bleT*
“Not tor me r said Hasbrouck Ruth
erford firmly—and taking a tight hold
upon the neck of the decanter. *Td
kill him an a minute. Td Uke nothing
better,” toe asserted again, “o« general
principles."
But Jasper Haig smiled that oblique
smile of his—considering the sngges
tlon apparently from aa tagsl
standpdkit.
“What Is there to tough atT to
manded’ Hasbrbuck Rutherford, rough
ly breaking to on his amusing medttn
tlons. 'And It seemed to Jasper -Etoig.
as he-taoked up, that he bad never-seen
him la an uglier or more redkless
mood.
“Oh/ nothing,” he answered, “to par
ticulate”
“WeK—what in general7“ the -other
man insisted.
“I was merely thinking of what you
said—^your little humorous suggestion
of mnrtler,” he replied, “from
liumomis angle.”
“Let me laugh, too,” demanded his
companion.
“Oh, -nothing,” repeated the (lawyer,
“hut the_ legal end of snch an episode
—the probable evidence which might
be produced in such a case.”
"Wlm; is it? Spit it out,” his com
panion-directed him. And fin ally, re
luctantly, the lawyer developed to hie
talk another theory of a supposititious
case, smiling with cold intellectual
amusement as he did so. —---------
Suppose,” he said, “a jwng mar
ffed woman, very attractive, -even
beautiful, let us say, is found late in
the evening in a room where she has
stolen away from her attendants. For
unfortunately she is hopelessly insane
insane, at seems, for affection, for
love, which an unfortunate
has not accorded her.” And aft
statement his companion cursed aStttle
under his breath, but made no further
contradiction or Interruption.
"She Is there alone,” the speaker
went on, *%n this room, with a revolver
still warm mpon the floor; and near It
is the body of a rich young clubman—
a cousin, tanown often to have visited
her in the -.past, and subjected, it is
said, of haring been her admirer, 35o
one else is, or has been, to the room”
"Yes,” snto Hasbrouck
his prominent,'bloodshot eyes fixed
the speaker.
“And suppose, then,” said the law
yer, “as would -seem natural in the
Circumstances, rthe servants in the
'house, after breaking into the room.
should telephone for advice and tn
stcuctions, where—to -whom would they
naturally turn first-?*’
“I5ie great figure opposite him sat
stating, scarcely breathing, his promi
nent «yes now almost bulging from his
face, with the sinoerity .of his atten
tlop.
‘"Anf. then suppose; ■he went
“upon ‘his arrival, this guardian of the
woman, who we will say had ibeen first
notified 'by the servants, should hear
a® improbable and highly irrational
story of .the presence of a third person
in the room, a man whom she Incoher
ently claimed to be the actual «nur
derer : ; a ma* whom the woman claims
she thinks, hat Is not sure, may be her
husband, or the husband of a dead
woman whom tn her insanity «he be
lieve* She represents—an Indlvkluiri
who has to some way, by some secret
passageway, escaped.
“What would he the natural conclu
sion of such an episode—from the pres
ence of the young clubman In the house
at night, alone with a beautiful woman
whose mind la hopelessly gone, and
whom he had been forbidden to seo?
What would he the natural attitude
toward the woman’s incoherent state
ments, especially If It could be proven
that the man who, In her confused
mind, she believes, but is not sure, may
be her husband, Is at the very time of
the crime found to be elsewhere—tn
confidence, to fact, with the woman’s
li
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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U My
God!” cried
Hasbrouck Rutherford
suddenly. up.
guardian, by the testimony of the
guardian himself, when and before the
telephoned information of the tragedy
reaches him!”
“My God!” cried Hasbrouck Ruther
ford suddenly, standing tfp, the great
veins beating visibly faster in his
neck. i
"But of course,” the Mwyer went on,
“such things aa she suggested—as you
yourself suggested just now—do not
occur to real life. Murder of this kind
would scarcely l*e conceivable, for In
real life tire husband—In case the
woman’s fantastic story of her substi
tution for smother woman, and the
dead man's ■discovery of this were true
—would mat hftVe killed this man. He
would not have dared to!"
The-great bulk opposite him stiffened
•gain wNh -red-faced anger; the heunw
-vice raised itself Into a roar <*wro
gust.
“Dared l" 1 he called hoarsely. It was
too simple. The strings of his emotion
lay ‘to -too‘plain sight—easy to play
upon as a ! harp.
If he dared. If It happened^’ the
speaker went on then, continuing Ills
oaowslrion' of his theory, "there would
'be » curious situation." And then he
•went «n to outline it to its various
'ramifications.
"■“A' very, very unpleasant ■situation,”
'be 1 pointed out “You would scarcely ex
ipect. In fact, to see a case like that—
•especially all within one 'influential
tfemtly—to go further than the most
fformal preliminary legal processes.”
And he showed still more at length
l *£he i logic of his case—-the Interest of
sail sides concerned in this distressing
t: ragedy—the friends and'family of the
wnan as well as of the woman—to pull
"together and to focus dll of their not
inconsiderable influence to hush and
a keep from general publicity such a dis
tressing and deplorable scandal as the
death of this young man, whose body
might be f«cmd at riig!rt, in the room
where fie had been in secret associa
tion with this lovely madwoman, his
near relative. ,
The lawyer worked <cut In great de
tail this interesting -legal supiwsltion
he had conjured up—'-talking far into
theseafly morn. .......________________________
“But there unrst h< no accidents!”
said Jasper Haig to final warning,
“Not too much drmktng now t"
“You’ll be safe," replied Hask Ruth
-erford with a heavy laugh. “I know
that—In any case !”—ta statement that
was probably •feme, though ordinarily he
would no* have said«. He had never
thefore in the history <of their relations
theen quite so independent, But don’t
'
-worry,” he asserted, “I’ll do my side
v.?»f it I'd de It anyhow," he asserted
Tor the third time, “imi general prinri
f ry les.”
> The other man, at seems, at
* was
fheart not quite so -confident—of him
j -or of circumstances. He always saw
•t#o far and tow -deafly for his own
’ fort. But
■-Ob m It was. a choice be
rtween two dangers,-either one bad.
jA*d this wa* dearly-the less extreme.
•No accidents this time!” said Jas
iper Haig to himself, alter he had per
sonally dismissed his-visitor frqm his
'frost room in the -early morning. He
stood thinking, shook Jris smooth gray
head ever so slightly, turned the last
light*; out and went toted. However,
he-WEs too restless for sleep!’ "
’But is there, after all, *uch an illogl
cality jib an accident in this scheme of
ahe iprwer, whatever we may choose
te call-it, which directs the progress
this web of Interwoven action
wtoich we call the universe? Many of
Dhe greatest intelligences have an
swered no. To the mind Adelaide
Rutherford, the‘absence of her per
sonal m ! and attendant Xfaut next
evening, <for an evening out, seemed
on it* face a very fortunate accident,
and yet -was it entirely that? Was
there not arery likely, If gj; were
known, a purpose behind that action?
Whether -there was or not, tt gave
to Adelaide fflutherford the exact op
portunity that ahe had wished,.to be
entirely tree in her-own house, at least
—and to he, «t a illttle before half-past
eight. In the gne.pt study of the d«ad
Daniel Gorgam without the question
Ing glance* of an,wee following her.
She was dressed la a dark, rather
quiet gown which would have seemed
equally suited to todoor or street
wear. 8he was alone when she eu
tered the great room, her usual com
pnnlon, Rags, having by a strange
awkwardness been allowed to go out
of the house following her maid. There
was nothing to be done, then, hut go
alone Into the room and to the Inter
view that she expected and at the
same time dreaded and wished for.
She was afraid, until the hour It
self cane. that ah® would ha nn.hu
get Into' the room unseen. She did
however, and turned on the lignt
closed the door behind her. There
an inside bolt on the door—of the
that turns with a little knob. She
it. There would be no one now
would enter the room to disturb 1
It was now eight-thirty by her
but she listened several min
In vain for any slightest sound
the room or from behind the
on the farther wall by which she
knew her visitor and accuser would
enter. |
ISeveral minutes passed, which
seemed at)her more like hours. She looked
watch again. It might be that
h4r message by her accepted messen
ger that morning had miscarried— (
even though she had believed that she j
herself had seen It taken from tht
dog’s collar and knew for a fact
the dog had returned without it. I(
might even, she rejected, have corn*
into other hands! She stirred uneasily
and got up. «
It was now eight-forts. She turned
coward the 16hg" Doofc sftel ves at one
side of the room, took out a book a'
random and sat down again, making a
pretense of reading but with her eyes
upon the wall of the room where tha)
door was to open. And as she sal
there—still with no sign of the sound
she was listening for—a feeling cams
over her that no^ infrequently attacks
one alone at night in a great dark-cor
nered room, that some one else was
there watching her. Dismissed at first
the idea returned and even grew
Gradually she had the fancy tha:
there was some one breathing heavily
in the stillness.
Behind her, at the farther extremltj
of the room, two tall, heavily cur
tained windows looked out upon ai
toner garden laid out at one aide ol
the house. It waa possible, of course
that some one might be concealet
there. Try as she could to resist It
the impression grew upon her mint
that there was some one t*»»re. Sht
was determined about one thing: shi
"would not leave the room for any
mere Imagining. 8o, rising suddenly,
she moved quickly toward the long
velvet draperies to convince herself of
her foolishness. She reached ont her
band—and when she did so, felt
through the softness -the terrifying
solidity of a man’s body. >
“Keep still, if you know what’s £2
for youl” said a thick voi<
stepping backward, Adelaide uther
ford saw appear the great figure of
the man whom she believed to be her
husband.
He had- evidently—only too evident
ly—been drinking. His breath, his
bloodshot eyes, his stiff but carefully
controlled walk—all showed «. But
beside®, there was a thing more ter
rible ho her than this, she thought-—
the light of a curious and Inflamed
anger, ft seemed to her, to -hite eyes.
He smiled, or pretended —a surly
smile. “Sit down!" he MS her thick
ly, and forced her into a chair. He
turned away then, and gring back to
the floor where she had entered, tried
it and assured himsrif that it was
toe’uefi. Thou coming Hack and firaw
ta;- up another chair, he sat down be
•sifle her, bofci facing Ay this arrange
tnont. she deserved now, the door in
tli ‘ hack wall of the room which she
expet-fefl at any time to open—eto open
and admit the man who was To have
-rescued tier. ~
‘Tou’re*clever, aren’t you?” the man
wastr on. “Now, v?ou sit down and
shat up ! And if -you make the first
attempt st warning, It will be the last
■exercise you’ll ev«r take to'your little
•crooked life."
«he shrank away from tom, but for
Titoe moment he made no -offer of vio
flenee ta her beside his treating her
and -caationing ter to keep still, So
she sat for the 'time being, thinking—
trying to realtor the full meaning of
ibis words, just'What he was planning
*nd What she-her,serf joins' do.
And then silently, wUh a certain
«tupid bravado, ;he drew out an old
revolver from toe pocket of his coat
andilifid it upon ’his lap. And now she
aaw, -or thought «he saw, with terrify
ing ’fllstinctnees, what his purpose
was. He was • Offering-no violence to
her yet! PrOhtibly he would not un
#11—.until after her visitor arrived.
For vves-y cleaf Jy in some way he must
Isnow tlie other «nan was coming. She
*at ■still silent, wondering what she
-should do, waWhingihlna furtively
toe sat beside ter. ----------- ^
Nlie was very near -to him indeed;
•She -oeuld fed the warmth of his
fhrearih—almost -of Ids great body. She
oould see the beating.of his pulse in
lb* thick red neck, anti she could see,
always more and more fflstinetly, that
/flint in his eye—*fhat gltot in the eye
of a roan w’ho has heen drinking, drink
tog all day long for a purpose I Her
parienoe -outlived ids.
"When did you expect him?” he
•ktoed 'her finally—after -several min
ute* of iBcstlessne** anfi growing Irri
tation -on this part.
“Expect whom?” she returned With
a calmness she did not feel.
“None of that 1” he said, and took
the coraer her shoulder to his great
hairy hand. “When?”
.j.-ri'r.r
Sisrrz,
from her lips. It seemed as tf her,
shoulder would be crushed. |
Her first Instinct was to keep on
screaming, but the look to his face
cMariy^w". rfearly now, a little different ^ from ?! the
,
drink perhaps, and b, »n,e,hl«
by hatred, <0|e Impression grew
her—an old, violent hatred, studl- .
self-inflamed.
And again they sat there waiting. Tt i
be, she thought, like this that
sit hunttoxanlmal* bv a. runway
wooJBi. "She”sat now, «? stilt asTte,
now to all
her mind was never clearer
accurate, or her senses keener,
were probably, she thought now,
perhaps to a
of hysteria, to something she
fight,
For now a stilt more singnlar Im
came over her. The Idea had
and was growing on her, that
was a third person In the room I
had come first—so far as her ex
mind recalled—at the time when
man beside her had hurt her and
made her scream. It had seemed to
that at that Instant, she had seen
a movement, a sudden twitching, of
the velvet curtains 'n the window upon
the other side of the room from where
(die had discovered this man beside
h£r.
Since then she had cast continual
guarded glances at the window—try
ing to satisfy her mlnfi whether she
had been mistake^ Could It have been
that this man whom she had been ex
-had arrived before time,
had ccJncealSd *Yifillseif’WerS^- 1 jJdsSilfiy
suspecting the other man to be in the
room—and waited; if so, he was cer
tainly a strangely constituted man to
let her sit there under the threats
and compulsion of this drunken brut®
—or madman, whichever he might be
i —without aiding her. And yet, on re
cohslderatlon, what else could ,he do
’ now but wait his chance—If lie was
i there. For one thing at least was cer
tain In her mind: appearance now
must mean certain death to him.
"What are you looking at f' de
manded the sudden voice of the man
beside her.
"Looking at!” she exclaimed in a
voice that seemed even to her to be
'speaking | from a great distance. "be
"I believe,” he said, starting up,
is here already. I believe you've get
him bidden away feert fomewhere
nOTr.” , '. '
I He was certainly not a rnbre drunk
Jen man now. He was certainly not
(To be continued)
POSITIVE PROOF
She: When we enter the hetel
we mustn’t let them see we nrb
newly married! bet-1
He: No, Look here, you had
ter carry my bag, stick and my
umbrella.—Ruy Bias (Parts.i,
One of the most -cwrioua fish <
foand in European waters is the red
gurnard, which emits a sound like
a crow.
S. G. BAILEY
REAL ESTATE AND
INSURANCE
r /F-•
FOR SALE
Three choice lots on South
street. V
The ftttracii vft Royster Immm,.
12*h -street.
n
FOR RENT
"Offices. 114 West Solomon
Will im prove to suit tenant.
S. BAILEY
» Real ■ w. estate . and . Insurance
114 R. Sdlomswt St.
Dt II5CS-. atom 1/lIiOC n 2. Res.
|*
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f.ExPE3nr Il'BKrraoN
1
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L is
lta ** ly nec e*»ary to have a good
ajtork in order to explode the
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**** ® dj “ t them ’ Wheth er you
operate on battery or magneto we
“ mpte ^ Iy snipped to handle
^ ****** repair work in a most
nwuiner »”«» **t the same
time aave you considerable time
^ ^ ^ wbm "" it 1*
STALLINGS GARAGE
Eighth ft Griffin, Gg.
t®*!
PAGE SEVEN
^ i “^"" ,l "'? l * , “ l! ® M "”!^^
I itflffp 1,u IjirPrtftrV ' /VW * J
WARREN LODGE
No. 20, I. 0. O. F., meets every
Monday night at 7:80 at Warren
Lodge Hall. Visiting brothers cor
dially Invited.
R. A. PEEL, Secretary.
W. T. ATKINSON. N. G.
MERIDIAN SUN LODGE
No. 26, F. & A. M.
Regular meeting Tuesday night,
October 7th, 7 o’clock. Note change
in hour. Visitors welcome.
C. H. Scales, W. M. Bill Wells. Sec.
W. 0. w.
Meets every Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Sovereigns, your camp needs your
presence. You will find your Clerk
gll times at Slaton Powell Clo. Co.
Sovereigns welcome. Come.
L. J. SAULEY, C. C.
C. C. STANLEY, Clerk.
Pythagoras No. Chapter,
10, R. A M.
Regular meeting, Second and Fourth
Thursday, 7:80 p. m. Visitors wel
come. WM. T. ATKINSON, H. P.
BILL WELLS, Secretary.
Ben Barroj^ P?& Lodge
No. 587 A. M.
East Griffin, meets first-and third
Thursday nights , , in each , month at 7
o'clock. Visiting brothers welcome,
L. B. GUEST, W. M.
CLIFFORD GRUBBS, Secty.
Funeral Directory *
BROS. CO.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS , 4 A
AND EMBALMERS
and Senoia, Georgia
® 6 ® Phone 67B< Res. Phone M
FRANK S. PITTMAN
Funeral Director * i
and Embalmer
Office Pbona 822. "" Res, Pfione
E. D. FLETCHER'
Embalmer and Funeral 'Director /
With ^
Griffin Mercaintile Co. ’
Office Phone 474 Res. Phone 4£ l
P. E. ASJVALL G. N. MURRAY
P. E. Arnall & Co.
Insurance of All Kinds
We Would Appreciate
Your Business
J. C. BROOKS O. S. TYUS
i
— •/ft WW-v
Railroad Schedule
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY.
Arrival and Departure of Passenger
I__ Tra,ns Griffin, Ga.
(The schedules are published as infer.
mation and are not guaranteed; id
North South
2:29 p.m. Altanta-Sav’h 11:06 p.m.
4:30 a.m. Atlanta-SavTi 9:07 a.m.
5:47 a.m. Chigo-Cin-J ax 11 : 55 p m
6:53 . .
a.ra. Chigo-St. L.-Jax 8:42 p.m.
9:01 a.m. Atlanta-Macon 5;20 p.m*
12:25 p.m. Atlanta-Macon 2:17 p.m.
5:57 p.m. Atlanta-Albany 12:19 a.m.
Chattanooga Division
From: Fori
2:30 p.m. Chattanooga 9:4B -
8:15 a.m. Cedartown a.m,
6:25 p.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
From: For:
Atlanta points_
- e "‘~ w « 10:02
» m. CoJ7)us-Ft.Valley a-m,
5:53 P-na,
FOR SALE
two g*? buimne S
r n „l Hi,1 0n Hill ^ Street, et with
1 AD-rOOm house Gn Q tXJIl
Street. This OHe of tho Dn- fl
efst^rW Pfif St ^ r °Dt. 10 Gnffin * ^th
„
® houses On Ra aymond t
I hOUSe th 8
OH sou Eighth i st*
Phone 303 and 1028
T > EZRA MANN
lWi«J 8. Hill St m
*1 -