Newspaper Page Text
GETTING RID OF A SON-IN-LAW.
A St. Louis Story of Which a New
~York Man is the Unenviable Hero.
About eighteen months ago the
daughter of one of the most promi
nent citizens of St. Louis was mar
ried while on a visit to New York.
The parents were not consultedl
about the matter, and knew nothing
about it until after the ceremony
had been performed and the young
couple asked for their blessing.
The bridegroom was young, hand
some, apparentl® wealthy, of unob
jectionable: - character, so far as
could be learned. The bride was
beautiful, well educated, a leader
in the upper social circle. To all
appearances it was a splendid match, |
and when the couple arrived here,
after an extended tour, society re
ceived them with open arms and
congratulations were generally
showered upon them. The father
and mother of the bride seemed to
be well pleased with her choice, and
pardon for her secret marriage was
freely given. i ‘
¥or a short time matters went on
smoothly, and then it was discover
ed that the bridegroom was practi
cally penniless. The father made
generous coutributions from his own |
purse to help the young man along,
but as he showed no desire to help
himself this source of revenue was
eventually cut off. The young wite
then went to a city official and with
tears in her eyes asked for a posi
tion for her husband. Her petition
was granted, and for three months
their domestic life again ran on
smoothly, a daughter being born to
them during this period. But the
hushand was not inclined to be in- i
dustrious. He avoided work, did
not attend to his duties, and was
absent from the office for days at a
time. As a result, his services were
dispensed with, and he was again
obliged to appeal to the generosity
of his father-in-law. From this
time on he passed the larger part
of his time in “pool alley,” spend
ing his allowance foolishly and mak
ing no attempt to improve his con
dition.
When patience ceased to be a
virtue the father-in-law decided to
resort to extieme measures and get
rid of the obnoxious young husband.
Accordingly he got his daughter in
% a room in the upper story of his
residence and Jocked her up. When
his son-in-law inquired for her he
was_told that she had taken her
child and gone to New York. Two
days later the young man was fur
nished with a ticket to the metro
polis, but no money, and he started,
a 8 he supposed, to join his wife. As
soon as he was out of sight the
daughter was set free, andis now
living as happy as possicle under
the circumstances at her father’s
house. The young man thus turn
ed fadrift reached New York, and
his wite’s family are coutldent he
will never be able to earn enough
inoney to buy a return ticket, and
tondly believe they are rid of him,
for a while at least.—St. Louis
(Globe-Democrst.
Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud
‘den change of temperature, and the least
rehust are usually t}l)xe easiest victims. Dr.
J. H. McLean’s Sarsaparilla will give
tone, vitality and strength to the entire
body.
IRON CLAD NOTES,
We have for sale roncladnotes waiving
all the exemptions, with other binding fea
urés, prepared by he Solicitor General
of the Blue Ridge Circnit, which is pro
nounced the strongest and best note in ex
istence. It leaves no loophole for a dishon
est man to escape f om paying his obliga
tion, while it is approved by honest men.
We send abook of one hundred notes, with
stub, post paid to any address onreceipt of
60 cts., or a book of fifty notes for 36 cts
Address Marietta (Ga.) Joprnel
WHERE TO GET JOB PRINTING.
Attention is directed to the jobbing de
partment of the MARIETTA JOURNAL which
is provided with Steam Power, New Job
Presses, New and Latest Styles of Job
Type and most approved and exten
sive facilities for the execution of job
" printing of all kindsfrom the smallest label
to the largest poster, in black or colored
inks, at prices as low as can be had else
where for an equal grade of work, We are
prepared to printat short notice,pamphlets
posters, programmes, circulars,letter heads,
checks, envelopes, bill heads, blanks of all
kinds, catalogues, business cards,and every
hirg in the line of printing used inthe con
duct of every day business. We will du
plicate Atlanta prices. Give us a trial
and see.
Young Ones and Old Oncs.
Traveling men have more points of re
semblance to actors than any other class
that T know of. Maybe it is because life
on the road throws.them largely into the
company of Thespians with whom they
fraternize and exchange mnotes wherever
the contact is made. This likeness breaks
out even on & man’s first trip. Young
actors and young commercial travelers
alike glory in all the paraphernalia of a
conquering blood. Shiny silk hats, pat
ent leather boots, flashing jewelry some
times, and at any rate clothing enough
for a trip to Europe, which they calculate
will at once bring provincial admiration
down to a point described as the *“hyp
notic” state wherein the subject, be
wildered by a powerful display of brill
iancy, allows himself to be acted upon at
the magnetic will. The Booths, Barretts
and Irvings of the profession, if I may be
allowed the simile, prepare hemselves
for a long and hard tussle with the prac
flc&l ' ” aship .‘:‘E zb‘ X t&t l"
thementiot ot N the humblo
ants upon the glory 8f their wares |
as thepozole sposttories o "évefithing
worth admiring among their employer’s
belonfing_s.--lnwrview in Clothier and
Furnisher. .
German Etiquette.
Perhaps the best criterion of the mi
nuteness of Germau etiquette is the little
unwritten code on pocket manners. Ger
wd form is m by the helter
8 condition of the American pocket.
A well bred German never allows his
keys and his jackknife, his small change,
his shoe buttoner and his cigar cutter to
jingle about loosely in his trousers
pocket. The greatest offense against
German pocket mannersisto carry small
silver coins loose in the pocket. A Ger
man lieutenant may have only half a
dollar to his name, but he carries as big
a purse as if he owned all the notes of the
Imperial Reichsbank. In paying for 5
cents’ worth of beer he goes down into
histrousers and draws out his flabby
pocketbook with a dignity, thanking
heaven that he is a mannerly, high born
Prussian, and not a vulgar tradesman
like the American at his side, who has
just slapped down on the table a mess of
gold, silver, keys and manicure appara
tus. The smali German schoolboy is not
even allowed to carry his car fare with
out a purse.—Detroit Free Press.
Pugilism and Insani®y.
The Neurogical society lately held a
seance in New York, in which several
pugilists were exhibited to cstablish
marked similarity between their ears
and those of the incurably insane. It is
a well known fact among physicians
that a swollen prominence of the upper
part of the ear occurs often in crazy
people, and is an invariable indication
of hopeless lunacy. Among prize fight
ers. the same peculiar mark is seen, re
sultihg from frequent pummeling of the
head. The swelled ear of a fighter is
prized by him as a distinction second
only to a broken nose, and in time be
comes an established trade mark; but
the individuals who came forward to
illustrate ‘‘Heematonia,” or tumorous
ears, were somewhat chagrined to find
that their professional sign also belongs
to the worst cases of the mad house,
investigation might lead to the discow
of a more intimate kinship between %
two classes of people who bear the bran
of swelled ears,—Cosmopolitan,
The Organ Won.
Down on Main street the other day two
beggars ran opposition hand or,
gea.ls for charity. Omne wore a kign ¢
is breast tamnmt_ he was _
other had lost bfo‘}:gs ;
knees. The blind man, however, towx
the public heart, and but few
dropped small coins for him had
charity left for the legless man onfi
other side. The latter stood it for a
while, looking glumly at his more fort
unate fellow mendicant and playing the
“Star Spangled Banner.” Suddenly an
idea struck him and he ceased his patri
otic tune and changed his music roll.
Out of the organ came blithely ‘‘Pull
Down the Blind.” The crowd caught
on and for fifteen minutes the legless
man got a big share of the dimes and
quarters.—Kansas City Globe.
Why the Sky Is Blue.
Professor Hartley, of London, has been
trying to find out why the sky is blue.
His experiments show that the color
arises from the action of ozone upon the
rays of light. The results of his exami
nation of ozonized air go to prove that it
is impossible for rays of light to pass
through so little as five miles of air with
out the rays being colored sky blue by
the ozone commonly present, and ‘‘that
the blue of objects viewed on a clear day
at greater distancea up to thirty-five to
fifty miles must be almost entirely the
blueness of ozone in the air.” In his
laboratory experiments he observed that
the quantity of ozone giving a full sky
blue in a tube only two feet in length is
2,500,000 milligrammes in each square
centimetre of sectional area in the tube.
Where They Don’t Drink Jamaica Rum.
A. W. Rogers has just returned from
a two months’ sojourn in Jamaica, and
is rejoicing in what is to him compara
tively coo: weather. He said: “They
don’t make molasses for export in Ja
maica any more. Everything they can
get forsthe purpose is put into rum. Rum
brings more than sugar, and anything
that will decay or ferment is put into it.
If you knew the stuff they put into rum
you would confine your drink—if you
drink—to potato whisky. Why, sticks,
straw, any decayed vegetable substance
seems good enough in the eyes of the
planters of Jamaica to put into their
rum. The natives of the island and the
operatives in the mill don't drink it.
Their chief drink is sugar and water,”—
Rochester Post-Express.
To keep eggs for use during the year
dip them when perfectly fresh in boiling
water for one second, place in a box, or
basket, and set in a cool place, Be sure
the water is boiling hot when the eggs
are dipped. A film forms on the inside
of the shell, making the contents air
tight. They will keep fresh any length
of time.
DRESSING THE WINDOWS.
ELABORATE DISPLAYS FOR CATCH
; ING THE PUBLIC EYE.
How the Custom First Came About—Men
Who Make a Business of It—The Way
Some of Them Do It—Windows to At
tract Men as Well as Women.
Window dressing is something of a fine |
art nowadays. The timescause it to be
s5O. He who has the most attractive
window is making the most sales. Each
merchant attempts to outdisplay the
other, and in the great retail empormums .l
the position of window dresser is among™
the best in the house. For the expert in
this sort of work is rarely to be met with.
He must be an artist, a mechanic, and
well versed in colors and stuffs.
* Art window dressing in. this country
never had a beg ‘& is nmgy a
€l"z ‘V ""‘lfl‘wjv v’, v a : «t“
i higeton, A o Jolin neighbgr Bl
Plpentor. A 10w yelira ago there were
in New York city but three or four large
dry goods houses. These had the name,
the fame and the trade. Then there
were hundreds of small stores and shops.
For the advancement of any one of these
the public eye must be attracted to it.
And it was very largely window display
that accomplished this, that built up
rivals-tp%tldm‘nu, who had
attempted little of that sort of thing. At
first in these small shor it was some
clever and artistically inclined man from
behind the counter who spent a part of
his time in arranging the window.
* As the business grew the window be
came the more important, and in the
newer and larger stores of the new con
cerns entering with success into compe
tition with the old establishments, win
dows were built specifically for show
purposes, and window dressing became
a department of itself. Window dress
ers began to be sent for from London
and Paris, but the most of them com
menced behind the counter, and in all
their window work have kept pace in
their ideas with the growing demands
of their concerns. Some say that there
are only a dozen first class window
dressers both in New York and Brook
lIyn; others claim that there are not half
that number. Just what constitutes
good window dressing it is difficult to
find out, unless it is simply the power of
attracting the public eye. Professional
jealousy seems to be largely in existence
about another man’s possession of that
power.
“I can’t explain how I dress a win
dow,” said one of the best of the craft
the other day; ‘“‘my experience tells me
how to display goods and get certain
effects, and that is all there is of it.
There are norules about it, although a
a window dresser told me once you could
learn it all out of a book. But you can’t.
It is a matter of long experience. By
study and practice you gain ideas to be
followed out. Of course, you must know
how to put colors and stuffs together.
All the really good men at it have been
in the business fifteen or twenty years,
abroad and here; a man must have it in
him at the start, and then he must begin
a boy. He should have been behind
cognter, and know just how to han
anxJ d.iai)lay goods. But there’s no
e abowgit. Every man in the busi
ness goes to work differently.”
| In most of the large stores the win
dow dresser is autocrat in his depart
t, and ha,his own private room for
Elfeepingo is framework and mate
; In Br this is especially the
There stores are newer, the
windows larger, and the display in gen
more«.rgh.bt;n'oee< In the window
s room of a store which displays
designs as well as goods, there is
much to beseen. A carpenter’s bench
—for he is his own carpenter—frame
work of wood, pasteboard and brass
everywhere, standards for the draping
of dress goods, drawers and cabinets full
of stuffs, men’s clothing and wax heads.
In the making up of ‘‘dummies” used
only the heads are bought, and a stock
of those are accumulated.
The bodies unclothed are curious af
fairs—a wooden frame 2x14 feet square
and a couple of inches thick, slightly
stuffed and covered with white cloth,
with two sticks to serve as lower limbs
awd entirely without upper ones; a short
piece of wood upon which the waxen
head and neck is placed. Upon this
framework is the figure, by a judicious
stuffing. built. “We fit the man to the
clothies,” remarked afdoer of it, ‘‘not the
clothes to the man,” In making up a
woman's figure no actually made dresses
are used. A consultation with the head
of the dressmaking department deter
mines just what patterns ghall be shown.
Dress lengths of these are cut out and
draped upon the forms. Thus even the
goods worn by the lay figures may be
sold directly from the window, and it
oftenn happens that a bugper will want
just exactly what she had seen there.
~ There ure twoschools of window dress
ing. One believes its object merely the
displaying of the goods themselves, the
other the attracting of attention to the
concern. The latter class are those who
make use of picture designs and wax
figures. “A dainty display of goods,”
they say, “‘a clever blending of colors,
will quickly catch a woman’s eye. But
the average man will never garive it a mo
ment’s look. Now our windows are to
attract everybody. Putin ita group, a
figure, an odd design, and the men will
t:fi:le immediate notice of it. The goods
will be disglayed all the same. Now, a
man going home from hisbusinesscatches
a glimpse of our store front. As he sits
down to the tea table he says to his wife,
¥*Have you seen that new group in ——’g
window? It is so and so.’
There are no doubt a good many mar
ried women about the city who haven’t
seen that window., Some of these, we
calculate, will come to the store the next
morning. Had there been mereli an ar
rangement of silks or ribbons, the man
wovfid hardly have given it a glance and
never a second thought.
| It is not good,” say the experts, *‘to
ticket—that is, price mark—goods in the
window. It is too common, they say.
The arrangement there is calculated to
be sov attra‘txilve that should any
thing s;ge the #ancy of the pass'mg wWo
man, she is bound to come in and ask
the mlesman,y “How much is that a
yardr’=-New York Mail and Express.
A RUINED HOME.
Qur Liocuse ison fire! Qur home is burning up il
What cry so piercing to the soul! Fire, indecd, is
terrible when it destroys inanimate things we love,
but Low much more terrible when it destroys the
living tissucs of the flesh! Fire in the blood, how
cruel in its eflect! Covering the fair skin with spots
and blemishes. Twinging the limbs and joints with
aches and pains, creating ulcers anc. running sores. ‘
Singeing the very roots of the hair and causing it
to fall dead away. Cramping theafunctions of the
liver and kidneys with internal swellings and sores.
Disfigurisg form and feature. Thank lic-ven,in
the midst of such fear~
QU ICK CUR E contemplation a
CURE, safe, sure and
QUICK in its effect, comes to mind. It is Botani¢
Blood Balm, made in the beautiful city of Atlanta,
Ga. Anillustrated “Book of Wonders” sent free by |
the Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., is filled with |
most convincing proof of its remarkable merit.
8~ Robert Ward, Mazxey, Ga., writes: “For
twelve or fourteen years I have been @ great suffer
exfroma tersible form of blood poisop. My head,
face and shouldess became almost & mass of corrup
my sku ';_'.g : 9°.., % pulsive that
for three years I absolutely refused to let people see
~me. lused large quantities of most noted hlood
remedies and applied to nearly all physicians near
me, but my condition con-
BAD BLOQOD tinued to grow worse, and
all said that I must surely
die. My bones became the seat of excruciating
aches and pains; my nights were passed in misery; [
was reduced in flesh and strength; my kigys were
terribly deranged, and life becanie a burden to me.
I chanced to see an advertisement of Botanic Blood
Balm, (B. B. B.) and wheneight or ten bottles had
been used I was pronounced sound and well. Hun
dreds of scars can now be seen on me, looking Kk
a man who had been burned and then restored. M
case was well known in the county.”
Lew Johnson, Bel:aont Station, Miss., writes
[ “My ears and scalp were ccvered with sores and all
- my hair came out. [ lost my appetite and became
‘ a mere skeleton. lam now taking B. B. B.,andthe
| sores are going away and my strength is som.ng
back.” 18)
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES
N e WEAK
Lo T
MGHE ; fi’ifim XY »;-""' & ;¢,.~ 5 EYESI
MITCHELL'’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe, and Effective Remedy for ‘
SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, ‘
Froducing Long-Sightedness, & Restor
ing the Sight of the 0/d. |
Cures Tear Drops, Granulations, Stye |
Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes,
AXD PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF AXD PERMANENT CURE.
Also, equally efficacious when used in other
maladies, such as Ulcers. Fever Sores,
Tumors, Salt Rheam, Burns, Piles, or
wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL S
SALVEnay be used to advantage.
Seold by ail Druggists at 25 Ce-u._ S
Mozey for Farmers.
I am prepared to pegotiate Loans of
$3OO and upwards for Farmers, on 3or 5
years time. It costs nothing to find out
all about it.
ENOCH FAW,
Attorney at Law,
Marietta, Ga.
L.Black= S
=
.DI4ACK =XO
Estimates Furnished Promptly
We keep constantly on hand a large as
sortment of all kinds of
Building Material,
which we propose to sell
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST
Sash,Doors= Blinds
We are making a SPECIAL DISCOUNT,
competing with Western market. In ad
dition to the above we have a large assort
ment of
WOOD, CLOTH AND METALLIC
BURIAL CASES
ANIS ROBES.
Calls promptly attended to. Thanking
our puatrons for past favors and asking a
continuance of same, we are yours truly,
Marietta Ga. L. BLACK & SON.
T E BLEIN
.
FOR 1889
And for the Democracy.
The SuN believes that the campaign for the
election of a Democratic Congress in 1800 and a
Democratic President in 1892 should hegin on or
about the fourth of next March, THE Sux will
be on hand at the beginning and until the end of
the most interesting and important political con
flict since the war, doing its honest utmost, as
ever, to secure the trinmph of the Democratic
party and the permanent supremac&' of the prin
ciples held bF Jefferson, Jackson and Tilden.
The great fact of the year is the return to abso
lute power of the common enemy of all good
Democrats—the polical organization for whose
overthrow THE SUN fought at the front for fifteen
vears, the memorable years of Grant and the
Fraud Hayes, and Garfield and Arthur,
It is the same old enemy that Democrats now
confrout, and he will be intrenched in vhe same
strong position. It has been carried once by
brave and hopeful fighting. Do you not believe
with Tue SUN that the thing can be done again?
Wait and see !
The hope of the Democracy is in the loyal
efforts of a united press, cherishing no memories
of past differences in non-essentials, forgetting
everything but the lessons of experience, and
thatj victory is a duty.
Prehably you know The SuN already as a
newspaper whichgets all the news and prints it
in incomparably interesting shape; which
chronicles facts as they occur and tells the truth
about men and events with absolute fearlessness,
making the completest and miost entertaining
journal published anywhere on earth; and which
sells ,its opinions only to its subscribersand pur
chasers at two cents per copy—--on Sundayvs four
cents. 1f you do not know the SuN, send for it
and learn what 2 wonderful thing it is to be in the
sunshine.
BRI MONO B
l)ail(i’, BIRE YERY caiisoiissinnsmsiintiasssisninsinies 8 0O
Sunday, Yer FOREL (iviv. srassnsssianmmrvonsvbscinronroniisns 3 OO
Dailv and Sunday, per year........... 0............ 8 00
Daily and Sunday, per in0nth........c.............. 0 70
WOORLY BOD, DIO YOI, oo coiiiinnisiiicimibiivins 1 00
Address THE SUN, New York.
Business Cards.
SAT ———. s
EYNOL)g
gt .“ ‘S, .7‘\
» ¢ A
&
SO BTI ga
Office, McClatehy Building.
«\\§\ Marietta, G L ///)
4££ t\"w
WORK WA““b )
U= - )
DR E. M. ALLEN,
m RESIDENT DENTIST,
HAVING eniloyed the confi
dence and patronage of the community for
lwenty-five years, is in active practice with
all necessary improvements and material,
at prices reasonable enough to suit the
‘most economical. Office, at Residence on
Atlanta street, second house North of the
Methodist Church, Marietta, Ga.
Dr. P. R. CORTELYOU,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
MABIETTA, GEORGIA. OFFICE
North-side Public Square, over R. H.
Northcutt's Millinery store. Coasultation
Hours, 93 a. m. to 12—3 to 5,p. m., unless
otherwise engaged. Telephone No. 15.
Residence nearly opposite Presjyterian
Chuich, on Church street
| : DR. Eo Jo SETZE,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ‘
TENDERS HIS PROFESSIONAL
services in the practice of Medicine in
all its branches to the citizens of Marietta
and surrounding country. Office at Dr
E. J. Setze's Drugstore. All calls prompt
ly attended to.
DR. H. V. REYNOLDS,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
WHEN NOT ENGAGED ELSE
where may be found during the da
at his office, up stairs, in McClatchy Buil({
ing, South-west corner of Public Square,
and at night at his residence on Powder
Springs street, two doors above the Metho
dist parsonage, Marietta, Ga. Telephone
No. 17.
DR. J. D. MALONE,
POYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA.
Ol"l’ICli south side of Public Square,
at Malone's Drug Store. Residence
on the corner of Atlanta and Anderson
streets. Callsin city or country answered
promptly day and night.
DR. N. N. GOBER,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
ENDERS HIS PROFESSIONAL
services to the citizens of Marietta and
surrounding country. Office, West-side of
Square, Up-Stairs 1n Nichols’ Hall. Res
idence at the Laneau house, one block
from Cherokee street, Marietta, Ga.
DR. G. TENNENT,
Office Up Stairs in Masonic Building.
O OUTH-SIDE PUBLIC SQUARE, MA
| b rietta, Ga. Has removed residence on
Cemetery street. All calls promptly at
tended. Jaly 4th, 1883. ‘
G. A. VINSON, M. D. A. P. KEMP, M, D.
Drs. YINSON & KEMP,
GENERAL PRACTITIONERS,
M’ARIETTA, GA. OFFICE OVER
A¥3 McKenzie & Warren's store. Resi
dence opposite Episcopal Church on
Church street.
R. N. HOLLAND,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
\1 ARIETTA, GEORGIA. WILL DE-
Y 1 vote his entire attention to the prac
tice of law in the Blue Ridge and adjacent
circuits. Office, South side of f’ublic
Square in Masonic Building first room on
the right.
A. 5. CLAY D. W. BLAIR.
L AY & BLAIR,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
h ] ARIETTA, GEORGIA. ROOMS 1
and 2 on the left over Wade White's
store. We give our entire attention to the
practice oflaw. Promptness is our motto.
Collection a specialty.
GEORGE F. GOBER, JOE B. ALEXANDER.
GOBER & ALEXANDER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA. Practicein
AYL all the Courts, both State and Fed
eral.
J. J. NORTHCUTT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
é CWORTH, GEORGIA. WILL
practice in the counties of Cobb,
Paulding, Cherokee, Bartow and others.
Immediate attention given to collections
GEO. N. LESTER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
hdARIETTA, GA. Will continue to
practice in all the Courts of the
Blue Ridge Circuit, and in Douglas county
of the Stone Mountain circuit, and else
where by agreement. He is ahle and will
ing to give prompt attention to all business
confided to him. Office over Anderson
Bros’ store, South-west corner of the Pub
lic Square.
Mattress-Maker
e AN P
REPAIRER.
Having served an apprenticeship for a
number of years with afirst-class French
workman at Columbus, Ga., 1 guarantee
periect satisfaction in making or repairing
maitresses. Shop in rear of Post Office:
Work solicited. G. L. JOHNSON.
Marietta, Oct. 16th, 1888. A
Bridge Contract.
MARIETTA, GA., July 10, 1889,
Sealed bids will be received until 5.30
o'clock p. m., Saturday the 10th day of
Au¥ust next,*for turnishing material and
building bridge across Soaps creek at
Marietta paper mills. Said bridge to be
one gpan 68 feet long, to be built of red
beart pine, free from imperfections. Plans
and specifications and particulars can be
seen at thi office. . J. M. STONE, Ord’y.
Business Cards &c.
W. S. CHENEY,
i ATTORNEY AT LAW,
\A:ARIETTA, GEORGIA OFFICE
|IV "with J. E. Mozley, South-side of Pub
lic Square. All legal business promptly
attended to. Collections special{iy solicit
2d. Real estate bought and sold for par
ties, ana movey loaned to and tor parties
on good security.
J. Z. FOSTER,
ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW,
h]ABIETTA, GEORGIA. PROMPT
attention given to all legal business,
Office in McClatchy’'s Building,
H. G. CORYELL,
Fire and Life Insurance.
REAL ESTATE BOUGHT, SOLD AND
| EXCHANGED.
OFFICE on North-side Public Square
over R. Hirsch & Son’s store, Mariet
ta, Ga. Ap]plicat.ions from neighboring
towns promptly attended to
b g e e P
GROVES BROTHERS,
REAIL ESTATE
—AND—
Insurance Agents,
Are back at thair old stand where they will
be pleased to see all their customers old or
new. They have some of the best proper.
ty in the city and some of the best farms
in the county. Give them a call if you
wish to buy or sell or have your Life or
Property Insured.
OF MARIETTA.
'R. W. BOONE, JNO. R. WINTERS
| President. IVice-President
C. S McCANDLISH, Cashier.
Capital Stock, $50,000.00.
COLLECTIONS, LOANS AND DISCOUNTS MADE A
‘ REASONABLE RATES,
DEPOSITS RETCEIVEL
EXCHANGE BOUGHY AND SOLD.
All the courtesies and accommodations
consistent with safe, legitimate Banking
business extended
n
W. E. Gilbert
DTEALER IN
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
Marietta, Georgia,
Cash Customers Solicited,
Goods Sold on Time
At r.asonable advances above cash prices to
Prompt Paying Customers
It will be to the interest of close buging par
ties to examine my stock. Good Goods and
Shor Profits, is wiat I guarantee. 4 lurge
stock of
DRY GOODS.
BOOTS, BHOES aund HATS,
CROCKERY,
FUORNITURE,
dec., &c., are always on hand. S.cck of
CLOTHING
of the latest styles and best make and fabric.
W. E. GILBERT.
REMOVED.
— Ll
JOHN R. SANGES
Harness-Making,
CARRIAGE TRIMMING AND
REPAIRING.
Buggy and Wagon Whips and collars of
kinds, Saddles, Bridles, &c.
Shop Up Stsirs, over Hardeman’s Store
MAR1ETTA,........ ............ GEORGIA.
_-—.fiß_-““—.——;]_m_—_fl_—~
A. B. Gilbert.
East Side Public Square,
Dealer in
* o
Family Groceries
CANNIED COoOoDS
Cash customers solicited. Barter of all kinds
bought and sold.
4. B. GILBERT.
Marietta, Jan Ist, 1885,
-
MARIETTA
) L g oo
oo "\»;:.' . 5 \u g
D / \R':\ \ e “ie 0o
b '/,- N \,4\’ T &
B £
Y XK :
(Opposite the Kennesaw House. )
CHUCK ANDERSON, Propnetor..
HE BEST OF VEHICLES, THE
T safest of drivers and the fastest of
horses are always® ready, night and day
for hire. Ne man or woma: or child ever
has given me a call in the pasf, who has
been, nor shall any everin the future be,
dissatisfied with my teams or the men in
my employ. Everything and every body
about me are a No. 1.
I have cheapened my charges propor.
tionate to the stringency of the times,
For references as (o the iruth of what I
say, as to the turn.. _.. and charges, go
to my friends, which means the public
generally.
Parties hiriag are strietly responsible
for thesafety joo themeelves. vehicles
‘horses 1. A. G. ANDERSON