Newspaper Page Text
Page Six
THRIFT OF OZARK COUPLE
Took Matter of Presente into Thelr
Own thz:n Silver Wedding
Iversary.
Everyone who has got several gifts
-exactly allke will appreciate the
shrewdness of this Ozark couple-who,
in the matter of presents, took things
into their own hands.
“Speakin’ of being thirsty,” said Hi
Buck, “reckeon Cy Wasson and his
wife, that came here from lowa, about
take the prisef” '
“How's thall” asked the stranger
‘who was waiting in front of the black
smith shop while his horse was being
shod. .
“Well, you se¢ Cy and Mirandy
wanted to celebrate their silver wed.
ding. They had never celebrated any
anniversary before because, ag Miran
dy told my wife, the sllver wedding
was the first one where the presents
would -be worth more than the
victuals. .
“Even then they worried a good deal
for fear everybody would bring pickle
forks or butter kmives. But after a
while they hit on an idea that worked
first rate.
“They wrote at the bottom of the
invitations, asking the folks not to buy
presents until they got there, for the
jeweler from Buckeye Bridge would
be in the yard with a full line of sii
verware, and no two pieces alike.”
“That was clever,” said the stran
ger. “Picked out their own presents,
you might say.”
“Yes,” said Hi, “but that wasn’t the
best part of it. We learned afterward
they dickered with the jeweler and got
him to give them 20 per cent, on all
he sold.”—Youth’s Companion,
AMERICAN DRY FLY FISHING
The Angler Fishes the Water and Not
the Rise as They Do in
England.
American dry fly fishing may be de
fined briefly as the art of displaying
to the trout a single artificial fly
floating upon the surface of the stream
In the exact manner of the natural
insect,
Upon occasions, somewhat rare in
deed, but nevertheless of sufficient fre
quency to render the fact noteworthy,
the American dry fly man casts con
sclously to a rising and feeding treut—
the invariable custom of the English
dry fly “purist.”
On the trout streams of this coun
try, however, the orthodox manner of
fishing and floating fly is to fish all the
water as when wet fly casting.
In America, owing to the fact that
the dry fly engler fishes the water
ADd not the rise, wet and dry fly fish
ing are far more closely related than
is the case in England, where the or
thodox sportsman stalks the trout,
casting exclusively to a rising and
feeding fish.—Outing.
Bishop Blames His Halr.
Father William J. Dalton of the
Annunciation church tells this story
©Of a Catholic bishop well known in
this locality, but at Father Dalton’s re
«juest, nameless here:
“The bishop is a large man .with
bushy back hair,” the priest relates.
“‘He often on his tours through Kan
sas wears a silk hat. His crosier he
carried in a large leather case.
“Recently in a jerkwater Kansas
town where silk hats are scarce ex
cept on the heads of traveling musi
cians, the bishop was just alighting
from his train when the negro porter
Aappeared at the car door waving his
crosier case, 5
“‘Hey, boss!’ the porter called. ‘1
veckon you all had better take yo fid
dle wif you. De company is not
“sponsible fo' packages left in de
seats.’ "—Kansas City Journal,
The Gloom of English Clubs.
Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, at a din
ne€r in New York, was talking about
English clubs.
“There is something very triste,
very depressing,” he said, “about the
really fashionable clubs of Pall Mall,
St. James' street and Piccadilly. The
stiff dignity, the somber quietude of
these clubs, gets on an American’s
nerves,
“Am American visitor to White's
once said that the air of the place
seemed to him to suggest that the
king lay dead upstairs.”
"The Probable Bread Winner.
Representative Henry of Texas was
“¢alking, at a dinner in Washington,
about an impecunious nobleman.
“He is engaged to a Chicago girl,”
sald Mr. Henry. “The girl’'s mother
was boasting about the match at a
tea.
“‘May,’ she said, ‘wiil occupy a very
memarkable soclail position now. I am
~sendleavoring to educate her up to it.’
““Oh, I see,’ said a friend. ‘You are
teaching her, 1 suppose, to wash and
iron, to do plain sewing, address en
‘welopes, or something of that sort?
O st o
r ‘Their True Sphere.
“Wife (reading from 2 headline in a
“Torento paper)—Here's an article on
“Women's Work for :Feeble-Minded.”
‘Husband (with a grunt)—l'd like to
know what women have ever done for
the ferble-minded.
Wife (sweetly)—They usually mar
ry them, dear-—Canadian Courfer.,
The Way of Portraits.
He—Why is Caroline ‘having her
portrait painted?
She—Well, she has reuched tha}
age when she doesn’t look well in a
photograph.
DISPELLED DREAM OF WEALTH
Danish Woman Finally Convinced as
to the Value of Note Pecullarly
Marked.
The woman handed her friend a $5
bill. “See the number of small fives
engraved on it?” she asked. “When
I was in Denmark a few years ago
such a bill as that caused me a great
deal of amusgement, and I had to sur
render one before I could prove myself
clear of a false belief gregarding my
finances. An aunt whom I was visit
ing saw in my purse one day a num
ber of these bilis, and she asked to
examine one, as it was so different
from any of the Danish money. She
studied it attentively a few minutes,
and then asked me how much it was.
I told her it was $6, and, to my sur
prise, I saw she did not believe me.
‘lt 1t i{s only that amount,’ she said,
‘why has it so many litle figures nn
1t?" I tried to explain, but I made lit
tle impression on her. Later I heard
ghe had told our relatives that I was
‘worth thousands and thousands of dol
lars’ and was trying to conceal the fact
from the family lest they should ex
pect some things of me that they
would not otherwise. When I heard
that T was visiting in another part of
the country and could not very well
defend myself, so I hit on the expe
dient of sending my aunt a present of
a $5 bill. When she went to have it
changed into the money of the country
she was at last convinced, though at
the price of having her dream of
wealth rudely shattered.”
QUEER CASE OF SMUGGLING
Stolen Partridge Eggs Brought Into
Vienna by Means of a Dummy
Baby.
A singular case of smuggling by
means of a dummy baby was brought
to light by the city customs officials at
the Northwestern station recently.
Partridge eggs have for long past
been extensively stolen from preserved
estates in Hungary, smuggled into Vi
enna and sold to poultry dealers, who
hatched the eggs in incubators, brought
up the birds by hand, and sold them
below the prices asked by more hon
est dealers. A special lookout for
smugglers has resulted in the arrest of
two peasant women.
Arriving in Vienna in the national
Slavonian costume, each of them car
ried a baby, tled according to thein
variable national custom, to a cushion,
and so closely “packed” that only the
face was visiblee The women were
noticed to be a little agitated as they
passed the customs, and they were fol
lowed home. It was then discovered
that while one baby was a living child,
the other was a dummy. It consisted
of a wax head, partly hidden by a
shawl and a cap, while the cushion was
filled with more than 600 partridge
eggs.—Vienna Correspondence London
Daily Mail. ; .
Regulus a Roman Hero.
Regulus is counted as one of the
great heroes of the old Roman empire.
He was in command of an army that
made an unsuccessful attempt to cap
ture Carthage in Africa. The Car
thaginians killed many of the Romans
and took the rest prisoners. Among
the captives was Regulus, the com
mander.
Now it happened that the Romans
held several Carthaginians in captivity
as well, so the leaders in Carthage of
fered to give Regulus his freedom if
Rome would free their generals. The
Romans were willing, but Regulus, the
one for whom the trade was being
made, counseled otherwise. He ad
vised his people to hold fast to the
Carthaginians and let Carthage do its
worst to him, because the Carthagin
ian captives Rome held, Regulus said,
were worth more than he was. He
died a brave man’'s death.
Cat Fond of Eggs.
The owner of a clever cat writes to
Our Dumb Animals that the pet, “a
great, fat, lazy, good natured fellow,”
has a fondness for eggs. Sir Tom was
detected in the kitchen recently on a
table watching an unopened bag of
eges. “Stepping back noiselessly,”
writes the owner, “"we saw him cau
tiously tear the bag with his teeth
and claws, stopping every little bit to
listen. Finally the opening was large
enough for him to get out an egg by
gentle little pats. He held the egg
in his mouth, jumped to the floor,
rolled his prize about gently until he
got it into position, and then bumped
it against the table leg until it broke.
Then he enjoyed his feast.” The writer
wonders where Tom got the taste, as
he is and “his ancestors for genera
tions back were city bred.”
Nature's Wise Provisions.
Many Scandinavians have a decid
edly different anatomical construction
from less hyperborean people. In
these hardy northmen the layer .of
fat under the skin, panniculus adipo
sus, {8 somewhat seal-like and blub
bery, something like in those cold sea
animals, the whale, seal and walrus.
Also the blood vessels in this fat are
somewhat overdeveloped as in sea
mammals. All this comes about from
exposure to the severities of disease
and climate. It is no unusual thing
for Norwegians nad Swedes to stay
in icy cold water for hours hunting
sea weed without suffering sickness
or discomfort.
The Upper Class.
“Aviation is quite an aristocratic
sort of sport, isn't it?"
“Certainly, since all who pursue it
may properly be described as beiong
ing to the upper class.”
MAKIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER
iIT IS NOT TO LAUGH AT
Playwright Has Wholesome Fear of
Ridicule, Most Powerful of
intellectual Weapons.
The playwright’s eleventh command.
ment i{s, “Thou shalt not get thyself
laughed at.” Ridicule has always been
a most powerful intellectual weapon
and one against which, when skilfully
used, it is difficult to offer an effective
defense. But the playwright’s fear ot
getting himself laughed at is not a
personal one at all. At least, it is
from a purely professional point of
view that ridicule appears to him
most perilous.
Once I wrote a novel. 1 never did
80 much work betore or since for
$135.75, and yet I sometimes envy
the novelist. At all events, he is mas
ter of his own pages. No cat can
walk into the middle of page 168 with
out his consent. No blundering tly
man can ruin the climax of his “big
act” by lowering the curtain too soon
or too late. The pet comedy scene of
his book is never spoiled and blurred
by the arrival in the midst of it of
some bibulous party, just from a very
gay dinner, falling over every one'’s
feet on the way to their seats in the
middle of a row. Fire engines never
shriek past the doorway of his pages
just as the hero is saying plaintively
to the sympathetic heroine, “But why
do I tell you all this?” Nobody in the
front row ever falls in a fit and has
to be carried out by the ushers right
in the middle of his funniest para
graph, All his doors close when he
closes them and stay closed till he
opens them. His actors always say
what he tells them to say.—A. L.
Thomas in the New York Tribune.
TWAIN AND THE OFFICE BOY
How the Late Humorist Rebuked by
His Wit an Officious
Youth, .
Mark Twain did not cherish a fond
ness for the average office boy. He
had an idea that the genius was in
sufferable, and invariably when the
humorist sallied forth into some busi
ness office there was immediate
armed hostility between him and the
boy.
One day Mark went to see a friend
at his office, and the office boy on
guard, in icy tones, said:
“Whom do you wish to see?”
Mark mentioned his friend’s name.
“What do you want to see him
about?”’ came next from the boy.
Mark Twain immediately froze up
and then with a genial smile he said:
“Tell him, please, I want to ask his
hand in holy matrimony.”
Change for the Better.
The care of the African population
in the Belgian Kongo in the past has
been so murderously indifferent that
it is a pleasure to note a change for
the better. An order has gome intc
effect to prevent hereafter the impor
tation, manufacture and transporta
tion of saccharine gweets in the Bel
gian African territory. Saccharine
products and products sweetened with
substances other than cane sugar,
beet sugar, milk sugar and glucose
sugar—particularly those sweetened
with glycerine—shall not be imported.
It is specified in the order that it is
meant to include in general all syn
thetic chemical sweetening which
does not possess food value. We wish
we could believe that this tariff anx
iety to protect the Kongo population
against deleterious sweets was some
thing more than an exhibition of the
usual protective philanthropy which
bars a competitive product to make
sure the sale of something else.
The Future Woman.
“Woman is {oday a parasite. But
the woman of the future will work.”
The speaker, Lady Warwick, was
narrating her views of the suffrage
question to a New York reporter. She
continued:
“The parasifical woman will be ex
tinct in a generation or two. Then
a certain witticism of Lord Saye and
Sele’s will be unintelligible.
“Lord Saye and Sele attended re
cently a book dinner. At this dinner
everybody had to represent some book
title. Well, Lord Saye and Sele just
carried on his arm a petticoat.
“He was representing, you sce, Kip
ling’s ‘Life’s Handicap’.”
Sl e
Pampered Too Much.
“You are always worrying,” re.
marked the baseball magnate.
“I have to be careful not to produce
anything too heavy,” explained the
theatrical manager. “You know, I
have to cater to the tired business
man.”
“I don’t let the tired business man
worry me. He roots with the others
when he gets to the ball park.”—
Washington Herald.
e
A Converse Proposition.
Lady Warwick, at a dinner at Sher
ry's in New York, said, apropos of art:
“Art is the pursuit of beauty.”
Bhe smiled and added:
“And from what they tell me of the
goings-on in your Great White Way
here, the pursuit of beauty is also an
art with some people.”
i
A New Deal.
“If you remember, Wombat was
married just a year ago.”
“I remember.”
“We ought to remember the -anni
versary in some way. Yes, just a year
ago the wedding cards were out.”
“Forget it. The wedding cards are
bedng shuffled for a new deal.”
DESERVED TO MAKE A SALE
Book Agent at Least Showed That He
Had the Valuable Quality of
Perseverance.
The book agent who walked into
Peter Steffen’'s office’ looked like an
ingenious fellow, but Steffens, glanc
ing up in a hurry, spied his trade
in a minute and muttered to him
self:
“Confound that boy. Now, how did
that fellow get in?” <
Aloud, he said: “You're wasting
your time here. I won't buy anything
today.”
“If you'll only let me show you—"
“No,” shouted Steffens.
“It won’t take a minute—"
“But, really, my dear sir, this is
something out of the common—"
“No use. I can’t read,’ sald Stef
fens,
“But your family, sir, would you de
prive them—"
“T would,” said Steffens, “if I had
any. I'm an orphan.”
“Well, you might want something to
throw at the cat,” suggested the book
agent,
“Do you think,” demanded Steffens,
“that I would demean my cat by
throwing your miserable publication at
her?”
The book agent was only dashed a
second.
“What about me,” he asked, insinu
atingly. “Don’t you want something
to throw at me the next time I come?”
MANNERS WAIT ON LEISURE
Modern Day Discourtesy Seemingly
the Result of the Universal
“Rush.”
The young lady who described a
burglar the other day as a “perfect
gentleman,” wasn’t very far wrong.
For burglars are among the few per
sons who can afford the time to be
perfect gentlemen.
Gentle manners have had their high
est development in periods when time
was of smallest importance. The
elaborate code of the French courts
was the substance of ease. It was
bred with the care whick only leisure
can provide. The, gallantry of the
ante-bellum South was as famous as
the ante-bellum hospitality. The one
cost nothing of time as the other cost
nothing in effort. While people have
been struggling and bumping and
shoving in “L” and subway trains in
New York, the people who rode in the
crosstown horse cars—relics of an eas
fer decade—have been practicing a
politeness which, by contrast with the
boorishness so painfully evident else
where, was touching and exquisite.
The patrons of the horse cars were
those with time to spare.
The rush of modern American life is
not an excuse for bad manners. But
it is an explanation. We cannot preach
economy of time .without forcing
economies in other things—and among
these are thoughtfulness and consider
ation.
Mistake Cost $20,000,000.
The temporary loss of an important
paper once cost this country nearly
$20,000,000. This was in connection
with the famous Alabama incident in
the American Civil war,
The vessel was quietly constructed
at Birkenhead, and launched on May
15, 1862. Then, and not till then,
suspicion of its true character was
aroused, and a case was prepared for
the law officers’ opinion. But the mes
senger entrusted with the papers put
them in the wrong letter box. Two
days passed before the mistake was
learned, and when orders were tele
graphed to stop the vessel the Ala
bama had steamed from the Mersey on
a voyage of destruction for which we
had to pay something more than the
price of a telegram.—London Chroni
cle.
S ————————————
Much Like Modern Audience.
The tricks of theater audiences have
been remarkably similar in all ages.
Alciphron, who wrote of the later At
tic comedy, shows that the claque was
known then, and also “young men of
the town” who took a malicious de
light in hissing a play off the stage.
Theophrastus, who died in 288 B. C.,
sketches among his ‘“characters” the
man of superior taste, whose pride it
was to hiss when everybody else ap
plauded, and to clap when the rest
were silent; and the annoying person
who would hum or whistle an accom
paniment to every tune that pleased
him. And Aristotle himself refers to
spectators who brought out provisions
during the dull parts of the perform
ance.~London Chronicle.
Fiil Mines With Sand.
The owners of many mines in Eur
ope and Australia fill the abandoned
workings with sand, so that the mines
may become once more a part of the
solid crust of the earth. Old, worked
out mines are often a menace to build
ings or communities above them; and
protection by timbering, which is the
American method, affords security for
no great length of time. Sand filling
has been practiced in the mines of
western Australia for the last four
teen years. W. H. Storms, writing
in the Engineering and Mining Jour
nal, says that the cost in Australia is
about 20 cents for each ton of ore ex
tracted.
A Legal Mind.
“No use whispering soft nothings to
that girl—she’s a law student.”
“She’s very happy. How does being
a law student affect her case?”
“Well, she’s quick to detect the in
competent, the irrelevant, and the im
material.”
ASTHMA! ASTHMA!
Popham’s Asthma Remedy gives
nstant relief and an absolute cure in
all cases of Asthma, Bronchitis, and
Hay Fever. Sold by Wikle Hodges
Drug Co.; mail on receipt of price $l.OO
Trial package by mail 10 cents
Williams Manufacturing Co, pro
prietors Cleveland, Ohio.
Tree Defends the Censor,
Sir Herbert Tree defends the dra
matic censorship in a letter to the
Times. While admitting that mis
takes may have been made, he says:
“I cannot help thinking that it would
be lamentable for the stage to substi
tute for the autocracy of the censor
ship an appeal to the public through
the police, and so to establish in its
stead the chaotic tyranny of munici
pal bodies and irresponsibile ‘'isms.
By all means let the censorship be
strengtuened by reference to a court
of appeal, which may still be open to
public criticism.
Swat the Fly.
The Washington board of health has
issued an appeal which seems to have
more than local application. “Swat
the fly early!” it urges, and though
the sentiment might be more elegant
ly expressed, it nevertheless has the
merit of clearly conveying its mean
ing. By way of explanation, it is
added that one female fly, making her
appearance as late as April 10, may
by the middle of September have be
come the ancestress of nine genera
tions, totaling 7,600,000 descendants.
To entertain all these would em
barrass the most ho:pitable family.
Almost Paradise on Earth.
Mrs. Mary Gaunt, an Englishwom
an who recently penetrated to the in
terior of West Africa, reports that she
found something in the nature of para
dise in that supposedly benighted re
gion. For example, she states that
cruelty to children is unknown among
the natives and that poverty, as we
know it, is nonexistent. Even the
women, chronic malcontents for the
most part in the countries that call
themselves civilized, find nothing to
complain of in this African paradise.
Every woman, says Mrs. Gaunt, may
be described as leading a comfortable
and happy life. '
Only A Fire Here
but the crowd cheered, as, with burned
hands, he held up a small round box,
‘“Fellows!’’ he shouted, *‘this Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve I hold, has everything
beat for burns.”” Right! also for boils,
ulcers, sores, pimples, eczema, cuts,
sprains, bruises. Surest pile cure, It
subdues inflammation, kills pain.
Only 25 cents at W, A, Samsdrug Stor
No Classics for Shank.
A few days ago a man of dignified
appearance waited for more than an
hour for an opportunity to see Mayor
Shank. His patience was finally re
‘'warded when the mayor’s secretary
told the stranger he was next, “Mr.
Shank,” began the stranger, “I would
like to interest you in a beautiful set
of classics—" “Say.,” interrupted the
mayor, “what would I do with a set of
classics? I am going to spend my
money on politics.” And the stranger
fled.—lndianapolis News.
Testimonial,
A grocer enjoys the unenviable no
toriety of selling the worst goods in
the district, but he has not recovered
from the shock he got the other day
when a little girl came into the shop
and said: “My ma sent me for two
pounds of your best tea to Kkill rats
with, and a pound of tinest ham, and
mind and cut it in good thick slices,
for it is to sole and heel my dad’s
boots.” ]
m
FOR SALE,
One of the largest and most com
plete stores in Marietta, now occu
pied by the Rhodes-Haverty Furni
ture company, north side public
square. Also five dwellings. One
two-story house on Church street, one
cottage on Maple avenue, two small
cottages back of }\.laple avenue, one
concrete cottage on Session street.
For terms -and-information apply to
D. W, BLAIR’
w
NOTICE.
FARMS FOR SALE.
For prices and terms
apply to
J. A. BASWELL,
Marietta, Ga.
DecB-tf
m
B. F. REED & CO.
SMYRNA, GEORGIA.
T, I
Twenty'acres on the Buckhead road
just outside the city limits, $2,500.
Three-room house and barn on same.
Twenty acres on Green street, fine
proposition forsub-dividing, for $2,500.
Houses, farms and all kinds of real
estate on car line,. 1
|
Phone 34L,, Smyrna, Ga.]
J. T. Rutledge, Salesman. Phoue 271,
Friday, May 31, 1912
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
D. W. BLAIR,
LAWYER,
North Side Fublic Squars,
MarigrTa, Ga.
THOS. E. LATIMER,
- ATTORNEY AT Law,
MARIETTA. o v - GEORGIA.
Office up stairs over Sams’ drug store
B. T. FREY,
ATTORNEY AT Law. .
MARIETTA, GA. Office over H. A. Ward’s
store, Public Square. Collectious a specialiv.
Monev loaned.
GEORGE F. GOBER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Uffice up-stairs, on Atlanta Street,
MARIETTA, GA,
CLAY & MORRIS.
LAWYERS.
Office over Sams’ Drug Stcre.
GORDON B. GANN,
| ATTORNEY AT LLAW AND
RrarL EsTATE AGENT.
'MARIETTA., : : GEORGIA.
~ Office up stairs over Sam’s drug store
%_._fi____._______*___fi_
- WM. W. FUTRELL
| ATTORNEY AT LAW,
. CANTON, : GBORGIA.
General Practice in All the Courts.
| C. M. DOBBS,
| ATTORNEY AT LAW, .
MARIETTA, .’ . . .GEORGIA
J
| Gilice over,W. A. Sams.
"IN® T. DORSEY
} ATTORNEY ATLAW
MARIETTAY GEORGIA.
Office over Marietta Book Store,
J,GLENN GILES
Atttorney-At-Law
MARIETTA., . . . GBHORGIA;
Office Over Marietta Restaurant
in building next to Court House.
WARREN E. BEN'SON, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
MARIETTA, GA.
Office over Merchants and Farmers
Bank, Northeast Corner Public Square.
Residence 117 Kennesaw Avenue.
Office Phone 248; residence phone
1. jne3o-11
Dr. C. DURHAM ELDER,
GENERAL PRACTICE AND SURGERY,
Office over Store of DuPre & Wallace
Phone 181.
Residence: Miss Towers’, "Lawrence
Street, Phone 128.
DR. W. M. KEMP,
GENERAL PACTITIONER
MARIETTA. GA, Office, in Gober butli
ing over Ward Bios. store, Residence allep Winn
place, Lawrence street.
residence Phone 78. Officy lthoney
J. D. MALONE, M. D.,
PracticiNG PHYSICIAN
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Residesce 415 Kenuesaw Avenue. Office up
stairs in Malone Building, North-east corner
public Square. Rooms 1 and 2,
W. HOWARD PERKINSON. MD.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Marietta, Ga.
" Office over Book Store, west side of
Public Square. Residence 302 Ken
nesaw Avenue. Office- phone No. 23.
Residence Phone No Igl.
J.A. HH EDWARDS
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
| \MABLETON, GA,
- Offers his professional services to
‘the people of the Southwestern portion
of Cobb County. Will do a general
practice. Night calls promptly re
sponded to. iun3o-Iyr,
WILL H. MALONE, M. D.
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
MARIETTA, GA
Tenders his ptofessional services to
the people of Marietta and surround
ing country, All calls answered
promptly day or night, Office over
Merchants and Farmars Bank. Resi
dence at Miss Sutton’s, 204 Cherokee
street. Residence phone 395-J.
JOHN R. GREER. M. 0. D.D. §
SURGEON DENTIST.
Office south side publlelsquare., Over Mayes
Bros. store.
MARIZETTA, GEORGIA
JOHN H. BOSTON, JR.
ATTORNEY AT EAW
Real Estate, Loans and Title Work
: Handled Especially.
MARIETTA . . ... CRONGIA
Office with D' 'W. Bikir,
et e ee e e e
JAMES H. GROVES
‘{Bucceasor to John T. Grove#))
V.Y
INSURANCE.
Re ti { th a
n America. bpecial sttention giren 0 mapehles
arm property and cotton gins.
1 have the most attractive Accident Polioy ever
put on the market,
Office, 100 Whitlock Ivenue, in rear First Na
tionalßank.
H. (G. CORYELL,
Fire and Life Insuraace,
UFFICE on North side Public Bquare, ovar F
hilling’s stora, Marietta, i »
?rcom fl&iin?. tow.;:;r::m gl‘y -uffl&“fi" 5