Newspaper Page Text
Page Eight
$250 to $25000 on
reasonable terms.
: &\
W. W. WATKINS
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer.
Carriage Trimming and Painting,
The Best Rubber Tires Put On
REPAIRING HORSE SHOEING
done in a satisfactory manner. Satisfaction Guaranteec
Phone No. 67, Washington Averue Marietta, (Geor g
To Build or Buy a Home
And Not Insure It,
Is to
| _Eié i ,\,.).@ ' Hook and Land
: S ‘3’ f ’
— .i A : An Eel
§ , ;%‘/éfi % And Not Secure It!
i —— A
L 3,\ == =~ L THE HOME
3;6,‘ | \"/\ ,| vl | q May as quickly Slip away
' ek i -~ By Fire By Night,
s By Fire Ty Day.
Representing the It Has Happened, It Might
strongest American s
o BE PREPARED
and knglish Com- When it Does Hap
panies. pen!
JAMES H. GROVES,
100 Whitlock Avenue Marietta, Georgia
—_—_—
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Sold Hogs by Telephone
A South Carolina farmer had a large number
of hogs which were ready to kill. The weather
was so warin that killing was out of the question.
‘ He went to his telephone, called a dealer in
; Columbia over Long Distance and sold his hogs
at a good price. He then called the local freight
office and arranged for shipment.
The telephone is now a necessity on the farm.
You can have one on your farm at small cost.
See the nearest Bell Telephone Manager or
send a postal for our free booklet.
o FARMERS'’ LINE DEPARTMENT
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE 4a9
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY ‘\ &
.8. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga. g/
Indian Runner Ducks, eggs, $l.OO
for 15. White Leghorn eggs 50c.
for 15. Wild Malland Duck eggs,
$l.OO for 15. Rhode Island Reds,
$1.50 for 15. Phone 209. C. W.
DuPre.
FOR RENT—(or for sale),—Five
room house in Smyrna. comparatively
new, screened and in good neighbor
hood. $12.50 per month. Mrs. J. C.
Moore, Smyrna, Ga. MayB-8t
T THE MARIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER.
“Dinner Pail Man" to Lecture
During the Chautauqua Here
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REV. GEORGE L M'NUTT WORKING ON A DAM AT THE FOOOT
OF FREDERICK'S PEAK.
HE morning of Labor day, 1910, Rev. George I. McNutt (“the dinner
pail man™), who is to lecture at our Chautauqua this season, appeared
at the foot of Frederick's peak, where the Mennecheduza's waters
swiftly flow to join the nearby Niobrara. Here a huge dam and lake
are being constructed for power and pleasure. **Need any help?” the stranger
asked. *“Can you handle a wheelbarrow 7" the boss replied. The stranger de
clared he could do anything any other laborer could do. *All rizht; go ahead,”
said the boss. The stranger took his place at the concrete mixer., wheelbarrow
in hand, along with pure blooded Americans, Sioux Indians and mixed Ameri
cans like himself. There were winter floaters looking for enough to feed on
as blind baggage to Denver, Deadwood or Kansas City and homesteaders
badly in need of spare change to help hold down their 640 acres of sand hills.
The Indians were picturesque; the Macedonians were intensely interesting.
One had been fourteen years in a Turkish prison. The floaters were mostly
wrecks. All were human documents whose hieroglyphics are so confusing to
social onlookers who have escaped manual labor. The stranger was MeNutt,
“the dinner pail man,” who had just filled sixty Chautauqua dates. He was
now at school again, ten hours a day, with aching muscles, oven eyes and ears
and heart, sounding the depths of the life of the other half and deciphering
the deeply grooved human hieroglyphics. Compulsory enlistment in the army
of industry, as Professor James remarks, knocks out the foolishness and
makes room for sane, sober ideas about social, economic and religious ques
tions. This yearly renewed fellowship with those who labor gives the
“stranger” his peculiar pathos and power before the men and women of the
Lyceums, the Chautauqua, the clubs and the churches. McNutt knows the
game. He is a living voice. For six weeks he continued his studies and then
started out lecturing again with another interesting chapter added to his long
list of experiences.
T'he Bolander Orchestra, a Feature
L
of Qur Forthcoming Chau
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HE Bolander Orchestra will soon begin its fifth year as a musical or
ganization. The members of this company are all born wusicians.
Their father, John A. Bolander, is a violin maker. While mere chil
dren, they all began to play musieal instroments. Adeline Bolander,
at the age of seven years, used a half sized violin to nlay in public at recitals.
This orchestra presents both vocal and instrmmental music. The instru
mental work, however, is emphasized most strongly. In their program the
members of this company arrange themselves first into a bLrass and string
orchestra and later into an all string orchestra.
They render such selections as the Sextette from “Luc.a.” the “Poet and
Peasant” by Verdi, “Orpbeus” from Offenbach, “The Bobemian Girl” by Balfe
and a string number “Humoresque” by Dvorak. A feature of each pro
gram is the work of the drummer, Miss Alice Bolander. In addition to the
drum, she operates the sleigh bells, canary whistle, jocomotive whistle, a
school bell, a Chinese block, a triangle, castanets, crash cymbal, orchestra
bells, rackette, sliding steamboat whistle, a cyclone whistle, a duck quack, a
roovster crow and a tambourine.
| u
; Money Doesn’t Always
Z -
: Buy Happiness,
|
| HOWEVER....
| The man who has money in the banl
| doesn’tlook upon the sordid side of life |
| as does the man who is broke. Money |
| in the bank represents credit—the '
| power of accomplishment. It creates 3
| coufidence. It gives one standing and |
| prestige in the community. §
| No matter how small vour start you
| have the fulladvantage of our facilities i
| for increasing your accouni when Tou |
| bank at the é
B s e ne e
| 3
]‘ THE MARIETTA TRUST & |
{
T «;
| BANKING CO. {
SvR R |
4 Per Cent Paid on Savings Deposits. |
J. D. MALONE, A. H. GILBERT G£o. H. SESSIONS i
President. Vice-President. Cashier. ‘
i
DIRECTORS : §
D. W. BLAIR W. A. DUPRE J. D. MALONE
S D. RAMBO T.M. BRUMBY A. H. GILBERT
2. H. NORTHCUTIT J. T. ANDERSON T. A. GRAMLING !
| b GE g Bssm B
' . 7
| Capital and surpius over $lOO,OOO |
_____—_____—__—_-!
e
m
IJ. W. Hardeman F. Hardeman J. A. Hardeman i
| J. W. HARDEMAN & SONS |
| Stock Feed of All Kinds i
|
i Pure Wheat Shorts, Choice Timothy Hay, International Sugared
l Horse and Mule Feed, the beit one on the market, Burt Oats.
} See Those Beautiful Presents we are Giving Away
‘
| :&mmmmmxss\quz
¢ J.F.Petty, Smyrna, Ga. §
{ e. S S S s
| WILL BUY %
l Cotton, Cotton Seed, and all Farm Produce at the
| HIGHEST MARKET PRICE.
i YOU NEED NOT GO ELSEWHERE TO SELL.
i YOU NEED NOT GO ELSEWHERE TO BUY.
E § Well selected stockjof Dry Gooas, Groceries and General Merchandise
| WOOD, COAL AND FERTILIZERS,
‘.& 03
I V2T VAVVVTVAVUVVV VDV VLUV VNS
| :———_——:——::::'—____:—_____—_:
|
| it o
|
| HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF.
| In ancient times the wise men of the East based all
'l their business affairs and calculations on the positions and
Il movements of the stars. And now in 1914 the wise men
S here patronize the STAR PRESSING CLUB and TRIO
|| LAUNDRY,
g MORAL—GET WISE.
|
| Harry Haynes, Mgr., Phone 254
i Over Grogan’s Barber Shop.
_______—_—___‘__‘___—_____—____—__‘_._‘
R [HISMANT
fi —is the Editor-in-Chief of the National Farmers’
-\ @ Union Magazine, T'ux NATIONAL FIELD, which is
" L% B published weekly at Atlanta and OWNED by the
o L Farmers’ Union. He wants every farmer in Amer
ica to be a subscriber, It is the only paper in the
'é{{%m world owned entirely by Farmers themselves. Co
operate with the Farmers’ Union in its gieat uplift work by subscribing
now.
FILL OUT THE COUPON BELOW AND SEND IN
YOUR SUBSCRIPTION RIGHT NOW — TODAY!
MR, CHAS. S. BARRETT, Editor,
. THE NATIONAL FIELD, Atlanta, Ga.
‘f Enclosed find one dollar for one year’s subscription to the NATIONAL FIELD,
for:
PRV et b omo A iit SO T L
B o Tt i ee R S
lCounty i s e s
1,5tate....................... sxbd bl sttt S R e e
iSPACE FOR THIS AD DONATED TO THE FARMERS’' UNION
friday, May 22, 194