The Marietta journal. (Marietta, Ga.) 1866-1909, September 24, 1908, Image 8
GREEN & SESSIONS PROPE RTINS 46 acres very fine land; 35 acres in cultivation, 5 acres pasture, balance in woods. Plenty running water on place. 5-room dwelling, large 8-stall barn and other out-buildings Fine home or chard of good variety of fruits. This is one of the best small farms in Cobb county, and the price asked is not much more than the improvements are worth, Located 9 miles from Marietta, 13 miles from Atlanta, near a macama mized road into Atlanta. Price $l,BOO. Very fine river farm of 400 acres; 200 acres fine river bottom 1n cultivavion; several tenant houses. FPlace in easy reach of Marietta and 13 miles from At lanta; fine road into Atlanta. This place can be bought at a bargain. 10 acres, 114 miles out Roswell road; new 5-room house, 4-stall barn, wood and coal house. Nice, practically level land, good Bermuda pasture with run ning water. Priee $2,100. 8-room house in good condition, with large lot, on one of the best resident streets in town, reasonably close in. Lot 179 by 220 feet. Bargain at’s2,soo. SEE US SOON FOR 2ARTICULARS. 30 acres good Lf:fi. with peach orch ard, located oo railroad, !4 mile from side tragk, Price $1,650. "We Have Some Fine Business Property in Marietta. (GREEN & SESSIONS, ‘ REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND ABSTRACTS, IMIARIE'IVINA, - - - - - - - - G EORGIA. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. Mr. Clarence Dobbe, of Fernandina, Fla., was a recent visitor to the city. He is attending a medical college in Atlanta. Men’s 50-cent¢ wash shivts now 39 .cents, H A Ward & Bro. The election, to issue $BO,OOO worth of bonds for a system of water works and $30,000 worth of bonds for sewerage in Marietta, will be held November 16th. Go and register now. See our dollar overalls at 89 cents, H A Ward & Bro, Mr. Daily Wallace, of the Dalton Argus, and his mother, Mrs. W. S. Wal lace, are spending the week here with Mr. F. S. Wallace and family, on Lo cust street. We bought out a laca factory. See us about lace. H A Ward & Bro. " The nights and mornings are cool, telling us plainly that the summer ice will not be needed much longer, and that the coal house will be levied on to furnish heat. 7,200 yards lace, worth up to 25 cents, going at 2)¢ and 5 cents yard. H A ward & Bro. Born, about ten days ago, to Mr. and Mre. T. J. Smith, of Ailanta, a son. Mrs. Smith was formerly Miss Ina Gar trell, of Marietta. Her friends will re gret to hear of the death of the little one. We bought a big lot of Nunnally’s engineer oyeralls, worth $l.OO a pair. We sell them at 69 cents. ik H A Ward & Bro. The ladiez of St. James’ Guild will give a parlor concert, at the home of Mrs. Morgan McNeel, on Cherokee gtreet, Thursday, September 24th, at 8 p. m. A choice program has been ar _ranged. The Methodist Woman’s Home Mis sion Society will give a Book Reception at Mrs. M. R. Lyon’s residence, on Polk street, Wednesdsy afternoon, Septem ber 50th, at 3:30. All the ladies of the church are cordially invited to come and bring a book. It will be a source of gratification to the many friends of Ralph Joyner, youngest son of Mayor W. R. Joyner, of Atlanta, to learn that he has success fully undergone an operation at the Atlants Hospital for appendicitis. The young man will probaoly be able to be out during the next few weeks. Jor PrintiNG' —According to quality of paper and neatness of printing, the Marietta Journal will duplicate any fair and legitimate price offered in Marietta 1 or Atlants. 9-room brick house, with 21 acres of fine truck and dairy land. Plenty run ning water on place, !4 mile outside city limits Marietta. $2,500, 5-room house, on good street; lot 75x250. Price $1,250, 4-room house, lot 90x250, on car line. Price $1,200. Good 3-room house and lot in Vin ings. Price $325. 100 acres, exceptionally good farm, in fine state of cultivation, fine orchard of 4 acres, which paid $4OO this year. Good new dwelling, in first-class con dition ; large barn, chicken houses and tenant house. Located on one of the best county roads, 2 miles from Mari etta. Everything about the place in fine condition, and s beautiful home site. Investigate. ¢ 941 acres, 4 miles south of Marietta. 60 acres inscultivation, 34 acres timber and pasture ; new 6-room dwelling ; new ¢ 6-stall barn; Igood tenant house. Place watered by sprm(f branches. Good farm and well located, within ‘4 mile of church and school house, and within a few hundred yards of gin, grist mill and saw mill. 15 acres, 8-room bouse in nice oak grove; wood house, barn, hen house, and a variety of fruits. 2 miles south of Marietta, one-half mile from car line. Price $2,500. Miss Mattie Grist has returned from a visit to Dalton, Ga. For Rent—-Five-room house on Tram mell street. C. A. GuYToN, | Mrs. Frank R. Stanley, of Cineinnati, Ohio, visited her uncle, Jerome Gor ham, last week. For RexT,—Six-room house; large; grounds, garden, fruits, etc. Apply at 500 Powder Springs street. : Mr. J. P. Jolly and son, Mr. W, H.‘ Jolly, have gone to their farm in Gor don county, to remain nearly all thei fall. | The Womans Missionary Union of all ‘ the churches will hold their next meet- ‘ ing at the Episcopal echurch, Wednes-“ day afternoon, Sept. 30th, at 3 o’clock. In connection with this meeting, there will algo be a social feature. Rev. W. L, Pierce began a series of 1 meetings at the Methodist echurch Sun day. Services are held twice a day— -9:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. The public are cordially invited to attend these meetings. They are conducted for the benefit of the people of Marietta. The town needs a stirring revival that will reach the unsaved and reclaim the back- ‘ slidden The meetings will do you good. iße sure and attend. \ ~ Little Katherine, daughter of Mr.and ’ Mrs. George Griffin, was quite severely hurt last Sunday by falling from a wagon, She was visiting in the coun try, and was playing with several com panions when the accident Lappened, There was a bruise on the head and a contusion above one eye, but she is do ing well, with prospect of speedy re covery. Mayor W. R. Joyner is having exten give improvements made at ‘Fair Oaks,”” looking to the estab]iehment‘)f lan amusement park. Already excavae tions have been made for a large and beautiful lake. *‘Cap” is just the man to engineer such an enterprise as this. The park, lying as it does alongside of carline, no doubt will be liberally pa | tronized by Atlanta people. ~ There appears to be a mania in Mari etta at present for the improvement and beautifying of lawns and yards. In several places can be noticed cart loads of dirt for filling-in purposes; old-time fences are being removed and are re placed by low copings of granite, con crete or marble; Mrs. Newt Heggie is having her yard extensively improved, also the Episcopal rectory grounds are having very substantial changes made; many places on Powder Springs street have undergone such changes as to be scarcely recognizable, Miss Maud Yarbrough again takes a position as milliner with Mrs. Irish. Miss Gussie Barnes had as her guest Miss Montgomery, of Tennessee. Mrs Walter Brakefield, of Etowah, Tenn, is visiting relatives here. Mr. Morgan McNeel and family had to call in doctor Monday night to coun teract ice cream poison. We are glad to learn the family is out of danger, Mrs. Schoenthal, who has been very gick for several weeks, is some better, we are glad to state. Mr. and Mre. A. A. Gates, of Green ville, 8. C., were in our city the past week. We are headquarters for all kinds of rough and dressed lumber, flooring, ceiling, weatherboardinf, etc. Re member, we carry a full stock at our office and city yard and at our mills at Buatler’s. J. J. Black Lumber Co. Mr. and Mrs. Donegan Towers and little son, of Por)erdale. Ga.,are here for this week, visiting his aunts, the Misses Towers, and his sister, Miss Mary Dean Towers. There will be no preaching at the Presbyterian church next Sunday. Dr. Patton will assist in the inscallation of Rey. E. D. Patton as pastor of the Pres byterian churches at Acworth and Mars Hill next Sunday. Great quantities of home-made coun try cider is being brought to town. Now-a-days, when pure vinegar is so hard to obtain, it is a matter qf safety a 8 well as economy to buy sweet cider from the country and allow it to be come vinegar. Then you have an arti cle free from chemicals and other dele terious ingredients. The many friends of Mrs. R. T. Nes bitt will regret to learn that she has been suffering from a severe accident. A few days ago while at work with her flowers, she got a splinter in her hand For a time there were serious apprehen sions of blood poisoning, but the lateat information is that Mre. Neshitt is rest ing comfortably and sll fears dissipated .~ Mrs. Ed Daniell, on Atlanta street, ‘met with a severe accident last Sunday 'morning. Mrs. Daniell is able to walk only on crutches, and becoming exeited at an exploding lamp, jumped un 'thoughtedly out of bed and fell to the floor, injuring her already erippled limb. AxNvAL SiNciNG.~Don't forget to at tend the annual singing the fourth Sun day at Bethlehem. Bring both tooks— Harp and Harmony. This will proba bly be the last request 1 will ever make, and hope to meet all friends and singers at this meeting. W. 8. DopGeN. 240gcres fine farming land ; 115 acres in cul‘vmion : 35 acres fine bottom land in pasture; 5-room dwelling; 8-stall barn. twdo 4-room tenant houses and home orchard ; 90 acres in original for est vimber, This is a splendid farm 5!4 miles from Maristta, on main thoroughfare. There are few such farms as<his on the mar ket. Price $B,OOO. 40 acres fine land, which lies unusu ally well ; 25 acres in cultivation, 5 acres pasture, balance woods ; spring branches on place ; 4-room dwelling aad splendid new 4-stall barn. Located 4!¢ miles from Marietta and 11¢ miles from ear station. Price right, 43 acres, 5 miles south of Marietta; 3-room house and outbuildings; land lies well. Price $1,250. 18 acres, 7-room house, good barn and large orchard, in city limits of Marietta. Bargain at $4,000. 117 acres, 3% miles from Marietta, on main public thoroughfare ; 4-room house and barn; 35 acres in cultivation, 30 acres pazture, balance woods. Nice farm, and very cheap at $2,300. b acres, with new 4-room house, just cutside city limits of Marietta. Land very fine and level. Price $2,500. 67 acres, fronting on car line; east front with grove. Will sell as whole, or tracts of any size from 2 acres up. Radically Changed in Its Features~-A Synopsis of the New Law. The Georgia legislature, after an ex tra session of several weeks, passed the convict lease bill Saturday and ad journed. Under the terms of the new conviet law adopted by the general assembly, the 2,400 misdemeanor convicts and the 2,000 felony convicts which the State has to handle are disposed of as follows: The counties are forced to maintain and work the misdemeanor convicts, each county taking the number it con victs. The counties are allowed to buy or lease farms upon which both the misdemeanor and felony convicts may be worked in order to raise supplies for the road work it may be engaged upon. Counties desiring to work their quota of felony convicts upon the roads must notify the prison commission not later than February 10th, 1909, and annually thereafter before that date. After this first distribation is made to counties desiring to work their quota, then coun ties desiring more may apply to the commission and shall have them with out cost, except that an equal amount of convict labor is to be returned to counties furnishing the convicts when those counties are ready to work their roads. Two or more counties may combine into districts and work their convicts together, alternating in the use of the gangs. The prison commission, when in funds, is to organize and equip road gangs for working roads in ecounties not able to maintain their own gangs. Municipalities are to be allowed to hire any number of convicts they de sire at $lOO per year each. The prison commission may, with the consent of the'Governor, buy or lease for five years additional farms upon which to work conviets. Each State institution may have the use of fifty convicts when it desires them. If any feiony conviets remain after these plans have been exhausted, the Governor and the commission may dis pose of them (felony convicts only) as they think the best interest of the State demands, for a period of not more 68 acres, new 4-room house and barn, good red land; located convenient to school ; five miles from Acworth. Price $l,BOO 51 acres, 5 miles from Marietta, three miles from Smyrna; one 4-room house and one 3-room house. Good farm, good pasture, and two spring branches Farm in good state of cultivation Price $1,750. 140 acres, 50 acres in cultivation, 20 adres pasture, 70 acres forest. One 3- room house and onB 2-room house, lo cated 4 miles trom Marietta, near rail road. Price $4,200, 123 acres, improved, 11 miles from Marietta, 4 miles from Roswell, near Morgan Falls. Good land and some good timber. $1,500. 8 acres, 7-room house, large barn, good orchard, on Atlanta rcad, half mile south of city limits of Marietta; front car line. Bargain Price $2,750. 1014 acres, 9-room house, on one of highest points near Marietta, located in grove of fine oaks. House has bath room, closets and fine cellar Two room servant’s house, barn, woodshed, private waterworks, variety very fine fruoits. House and grounds in good condition and well kept. Price $5,000. than one year after March 3let, and to no individual or corporation interested in the amount of labor a convict may perform per day. The commission is made a bureau of information for road building, and four road supervisors are provided to aid the counties in road work. C. B. Willingham Talks of Possibilities in High- Grade Canning. There is one important feature of the peach industry that was overlooked in the discussions had at the recent meet ings in Atlanta, according to C. B, Wil. lingham, of Marietta, and that is high grade canning. The question of canning came in for considerable discussion, but only as a means of disposing of the over-ripe and imperfect fruit, such as would not do to ship. On the other hand, it is Mr, Willingham’s view that a large percent age of the best fruit of the crop ean be put up and marketed at a splendid profit. Mr. Willingham undertook a test of this view during the recent fruit sea son, and is satisfied that, if properly conducted, high-grade canning will prove an abundantly paying invest ment. Those who have tried some of the El. bertas which Mr, Willingham has put up, compared them with the California fruit, which has won a reputation, had no hesitancy in pronouncing the Geor gia product far superior, both in flavor and quality of syrup. . ‘I have had canned this year some of the finest fruit from my orchard,” Mr. Willingham said, “and I am satisfied that, for flavor and excellence, the Cal ifornia canned fruit cannot compare with it. ‘ Bat the California fruit has the rep utation ; therefore, it sells. Take, for instance, the Ouslifornia No. 2 can, which brings 25 cents at retail. I have gone far enough to know thatv the Georgia grower, if he will put up the best qual ity of fruit, can offer a product guperior to the California article at the whole sale price of 12)¢ cents, and at that get $2 a bashel for his perches, besides pay ing all the expenses of canning. This Some of Our City Property, 9.r00m house, barn, ete., with 5 acres land, 6n Dixie avenue and e_xtendmg through to Clay street. This is valua ble property. About 400 feet from sta tion on car line. House and all im rovements in good condition. Frice 56,500. g-room cottage, double floors and walls, bath—hot and cold water-—and electric lights. Large lot. $3,250. 4-room: cottage, on good street, near car line. $1,350, 9.r00m house, with bath—hot and cold water—and electric lights; on one of best streets. $4,500. 5-room house, on good street. $1,650. We have on our list a large number of good farms and acreage property on car line, suburban homes, good cot tages and some of the finest homes in Marietta, g Call to see our lists. ineludes the use of what we ecall a 25 per cent. syrup, or, spproximately, nine pounds of sugar to the gallon. *“There is no finer peach grown for high-grade canning than the Georgia Elberta, and I believe there iz a field here for a profitable disposition of all the fruit that can be grown. At any rate, such canneries would greatly re lieve the market, preventing any glut, and would, at the same time, bring as satisfactory returns as could be expect ed from shipping to markets where the demand is good. **California has profited by this in dustry. and there is absolutely no rea son why we should not do it here.”’— Atlanta Constitution. e il MAKES PREDICTION, A Marietta man predicts that in ten years, or perhaps in five from to-day, that Marietta folks will be owning and operating their own aeroplanes or fly ing machines, and tLey will be no more of a wonder than autos are now. “Why shouldn’t it be s 0?” he exclaimed ; “their development 1s £oing on more rapidly than the auto’s did. Whenever the air machine aclieves & certain tray eling capacity, with a reagonable degree of safety, the world will have them, and of course what the world has, Marietta bas. To my way of thinking, the aero. plane will be an improvement over the auto. No dust to be encountered, and the machines will not be 80 injured with bad roads. Then, too, only think of the scenery to be viewed! Hail to the new mode of transportation! She’s comin’ a-flyin’, and don’’t you forget it e Local [tems. .S — ————————— There are over a half dozen cangdi dates for pension commissioner, It ‘must be as lucrative an office as that of | bailiff of the Marietta distriet, We have lsix candidatee for that office, we learn ‘ Atlanta has over 17,000 children at. ‘tending public schools there., Marietta ‘has 900. We are making a creditable showing for a population of 7,000, . ALY LBGAL, advertisements, to insure insertion, must be paid in advance, ""‘M For Bailiff. To the Voters of the Marietta District: I hereby announce myself a candidate for bailiff for 898th District G. M. Elec tion first Saturday in December. Your votes solicited. C. M. MayrrzLp,