The Macon news. (Macon, Ga.) 189?-1930, January 04, 1898, Page 2, Image 2

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2 THE MACON NEWS. ESTABLISHED 188-4-. NEWS PRINTING COMPANY, PUBLISHERS. R. L. MoKSNNEY. Business Mgr TOM W. LOYLESS, Editor. THE EVENING NEWS will be delivered carrier or mail, per year, 15.00; per week. 10 cents. THE NEWS will be for aala on trains. Correspondence on live •abject* solicited. Real name of writer should accompany «ame. Subscriptions payable in advance. Failure to receive paper should be reported to the business stfice. Address all communications to THE NEWS. CUitea: Corner Second and Cherry Streets. ■' r 11,; "'‘ x " ' ' Sc ': -- The News on the New Year. The present management of The News has long •.:>•<. < .ÜblUhul its ability to k< < p abr<«t of the times, and U> give Macon a n ally first-class afternoon news paper. and this will continue to be its policy. The News hrs every reason to feel satis fy ,1 v. tii the year just closed. During that time. <■< .u>ove mated, it has "kept up wlti.‘t tlie procession" in newspaper prog i. Within that rime we improved our HP .laaical t u ilities by adding a now M< r;:» nthal.T typi setting machine, giving us now a battery of three machines; a new folding m,:< nine, by which the paper is neatly folded for delivery to subscri bes; a new electric motor, by which the power of till- mechanical department is greatly improved; new type, which has made a corresponding improvement in Lhe .tyipographi'-aJ appearance of the paper, ami several now pieces of machinery in the job printing department, whereby its facilities have been conaiderably increas ed. Tiie News has also added a complete bindery to its plant, has taken in another cntlrt floor of the building 'which it now occupies. Itid has added live new people to its already large force. The improve ment of th'' paper itself has kept pace ■with th' thms. Our motto, "All the news all the time." has been followed with fi •lelit.y. and no afternoon paper published in a city of Macon’s size has given more news to Ils readers. '1 hi lo il field here in Macon is put iblKin daily record completely and exhaust ively. In point of fact, we are giving to iM.icon a paper which would be of the fii.it class in a city double her size. Ne wspaper men of other cities frequently cypi- . surprint at the excellence of The News, considering the size of L'he city in which it is published. The point is here: We are making a metropolitan dally In stead of one measured by the population of the city, as is so ofttu the rule with other papers. The public realize this fact, and the substantial growth of The News in circu lation and In advertising patronage shows it in a most atisfactory way. ’l’he closing y< ir finds us with a. permanent daily cir culation of nearly 1,000 more than tihat. of one year ago. an t with a much larger volume of advertising. The News enters ini <<n iihe new year with cheerful confi dence. determined thait it shall be better, brighter, and in all things to make an ad vance up< n what it has been in the past. The Waycross Herald, in view of the fact that several people froze to death in the northwest, cheerfully invites everybody who is going to be frozen to death to come south. Harmonized Politics. The toll wing editorial from the St. I,ou It.-public is ; fearful arraignment of Hannah nt. hut, at. the same time, it gives an insight into the methods that have been, and are being used to secure the "boss' ” election to ,he United States Senate by the Ohio Legislature. The IL pit' <!■.• calls it Hannaized politics - -commercial; < d politics, and says: "The <lr< i.' in Which Hanna is held by mien at one time high in the councils of tin It publican party is exemplified by the remark or former Governor and Secretary of the Tr< usury Foster. In an interview at New York Mr. Foster said: 'The Repub lic.lit im tub, rs of the Ohio Legislature who >ppose Mr. Hanna's re-eleotion will come pretty near committing political suicide.' "Like most of those timorous individ uals who have been forced to acknowledge Hanna's right, to recognition by his party, Mr. Foster commits the mistake of speak ing of his ‘re-elt'otiion.’ The people of Ohio have not yet disgraced themselves by electing Hanna to the Senate or any Other office. His proseuit struggle there fore is not for re-election, but for his first election. "if Hanna's methods win in the initial application of Hannaism undeflled, then the inference front Foster's premises is that no member of the Ohio Legislature will commit political suicide. "To protect them from themselves. Han na is having the footsteps of all doubtful Republican members dogged by govern ment detectives. The men who are doing his spy work are employed by the govern ment. They draw salaries from the treas ury in Washington to perform certain pub lic duties. The Republican view of public duty at the .present time is subserviency to Hanna. Even the vice president has warned a senator of the United States that unless he exerts vigorous efforts to secure Hanna's election the vengeance of the jKHverful influences back of Hanna will be visited upon him. The same senator is being shadowed by government detectives as if he were a common thief. They invade his home at unseemly hours and worm from his servants information as to his movements and callers. Personal and po litical friends of the senator are being similarly spied upon. Not a movement is made by one of them that is not fully and prornjly reported to Hanna by these "retched creatures, who are living off the taxes of the \erican people. This is Hannaism. This is syndicate I'olitics, The citizens of the United States hate never seen its like before. It is not pro a fie .hat they will endure the spec tacle much longer." The wages of fully one thousand men are to be cut in New England right in the 1,11 c ' business season and with prosper.tj returned, remarks an exchange. A New Market for Our Cotton. The rapid growth of the cotton manu facturing industry in Japan has opened a market for the staple crop of the Jxnita. anu one that promises to be very n the nMr fUtUre ' The Cotton and Wool Reporter has this to say of 'he increase of the exportations of Southern cotton to Japan: "The exports of cotton from Tevas alone to Japan for November were more than 100 per cent, in ex cess of those for November. 1596. being for November. 1897. over 7.639.C00 pounds, against 3.264.000 in.round numbers for the corresponding period last year. For the three months ending with November, 1896, the exports of raw cotton from this coun try to Japan were 4,864,834 pounds, and for the corresponding time this year 13,843.621 pounds. The Transpacific steamship com panies are "rushed” with the business, and, it is said, rhe transcontinental rail way lines could easily load extra vesesls could the Utter be had at satisfactory rates.” When there was an annual deficit of J 15,000,000 the Hon. Nels Dingley was in despair. Now that his tariff has reduced the deficit to $50,000,000 in five months, he has hopes. Nels is a peach, remarks the Memphis Commercial-Appeal. Defending the StLth. The Americus Time-Recorder thanks j Mr. B. A. Denmark, of Savannaa, for Lis ■ timely and vigorous defense of the South j against the vicious attacks recently made ! by certain Southern men in the Maculae- j curers’ Record, our so-called iniquitous laws and spurious buaiaess methods. Mr. Denmark’s article was published in the Savannah Prc-ess of December 27th and la a paper teeming with truths and facts. j Mr. Denmark proves that our laws, while not perfect, are equally as good as those of the boasted Eastern states where dwell the bondholders and great insurance magnates, who have for years fattened and grown richer because of the South’s pov erty and misfortunes. Mr. Denmark takes up the demoralized political picture to ■ graphically distorted by me -Manufactu- ! rers' Record and eloquently compares our i righteous and peaceful citizensnip with the Homestead rioters and the Hazleton troubles. The Manufacturers' Record refused to i publish Mr. Denmark’s . letter, says the Tlmes-Recorder, but gave publication to • letters from Major J. F. Hanson, of Macon, ! and President Samuel Spencer, of the j Southern railroad, and other Southern men ' who, it seems, on -their way to fame and I fortune, have found it necessary to de- I dare against the old state which gave I them birth and the people who have hon- ! ored and trusted them. Havanna dispatches state that over j 200,000 pacificos have died or hunger in Cuba and that 200,000 will surely die of it. I Kathryn Kidder. Referring to the prostration of Miss Kathryn Kidder, the actress, the St. Louis Mirror says: “Miss Kathryn Kidder has been prostrated by harsh criticisms of her I play, 'Love at War,’ at the hands of the iocal critics. I am told that the local critics damned the play because a news paper woman was represented in the story as taking a SSO bill from a woman in so ciety whose reception she was to write up. Not having seen the play, I cannot pass upon the merits of the case, but if the cause for harsh criticism be assigned properly, it is remarkable. The humiliat ing representations of various professions, nationalities and creeds even have not killed any of the great plays of the world. Lawyers have been reviled and caricatured by Shakespear, yet Dogberry lives. The Jews, devoted theater-goers, have not re sented the picture of Shylock. That there are venal newspaper persons, male and fe male, is as certain as that there is a news paper profession. That they exist is ex cuse for their portrayal on the stage. The resentment of the local critics, even if just, cannot kill the play. If the public likes it, critics may fume in vain, and it is more than probable if the public would take to the play at all it would do so the more kindly for a dash of bitter caricature of a profession that seems at liberty to caricature everybody else. Journalism is critical and resents criticism. The more reason that it should be criticised. A drunken and venal society reporter on the stage will not injure the newspaper pro fession, for the public does not generalize from the individual to the type. Miss Kid der should take heart and not succumb to the critics like Keats, whose 'fiery parti cle’ was 'snuffed out by an article.’ ” A Polish physiologist, Dr. Jasiewiez, has gathered together some statistics which seem to sho wthat the immunity from vaccination in infancy last a much short er time than is supposed, in the case of twenty-three children under six years of age vaccination was successfully perfor-m --in seven—3s per cent. Jasiewiez, there fore, recommends more frequent vaccina tion in childhood and especially in early childhood. He believes that it protects from other infectious diseases as well as variola. Says the Rome Tribune: "There is-some talk of the Georgia State Agricultural So ciety holding a state fair in Macon at the Central 'City park next October. There has not been a state fair in Georgia in several years. Under the terms of the contract existing between the mayor and council of Macon and the Georgia Agri cultural 'Society, if a state fair is held anywhere in Georgia next year, it will have to be held at 'Macon, unless the may or and council give the society the right to hold it at some other place.” The factory operatives of the New Eng land States are being taught a wholesome lesson about Republican high tariffs. Ten or more per cent, reductions in their wages, instead of the rise they were prom ised by the party of trusts, will open their eyes at last to the fact that the benefits of high protection are hard to discover, says an exclange. The hauling down of the American flag by (Mexicans and their raising in its place of their own flag will not constitute a casus belt; for no authority existed, given to anyone by our government, to take pos session of Clipperton Island and raise our flag upon it as a token of ownership. The New York Journal offered a prize for the best deffinition of a mugwump and the following won it: "A mugwump is like a ferry boat —he wears out his life by passing from one side to the other.” The Ohio Democrats who are helping to defeat Hanna for Bushnell, are swapping the devil for a witch. Someone suggests that if you want to live forever you should get on the pension roll. editoriaTpoKpouri. SNAP SHOTS .. ..easo sFUO db.ri-jaaflp In Tennyson’s beautiful poem. “Locks ley Hall.” in which there are so many gems of thought, occur these lines: "Men. my brothers, men the workers, ever reaping something new: That which they have done but earnest of the things that they shall do.” The sentiment of the last line is an ap propriate one for the New Year. "That which they have done but earnest of the things that they shall do.” And again in the same poem two lines run: “Not in vain the distance beacons: for ward let us range; Let the great world spin forever down the ringing groves of change." The reduction by savings banks all over the country of the interest paid to their depositors denotes but one thing. Lower rates of interest mean practically that there is no demand for money and all kinds of enterprises are at a standstill, at least no new ones are being started. Were this not the case and money were freely demanded by borrowers, the interest rates would harden and in turn bankers could afford to pay more to depositors.—Buffalo Times. About Christmas the Atlanta Journal said: "The man who has most of his Christmas Insurance Agents. By ordinance are requested to make re turns of premiums received for the quar ter ending December 31. 1597. and to pay the tax upon same by January 10. 1898. A. R. TINSLEY, Treasurer. WE HAVE SOO Bottles Roct and Roe For coughs and colds that will close out j > at 40 and 75c per bottle. H. J. UMAR & SONS. I Cherry Street. ■ &AKIHO POWDER Absolutely Pure money in his pocket the day after Christ mas will win his way in the world.” This called forth the following refresh ing paragraph from the Cordele Sentinel: "Why, yes. so he will; but such away! It will be hard and narrow and full of stones and briars, with all the landscape and golden sunrises and glorious sunsets and refreshing breezes cut off by the high walls of grinding routine and callous in difference to nil except the end in view. The man who locks up his pocket at Christmas time must lock up his heart all the time, and attains a so-called success at the expense of ali that makes life worth living.” When a fellow gets a job in the Klondike he generally freezes onto it. Few people realize that the higher a fel low climbs, the more dangerous his posi tion. • The following joke, which did valiant service during the Chino-Janapenese war, has been revived by the Memphis Com mercial-Appeal: "Now that the Chinese ports are filled with foreign gunboats, it must be very painful to the Chinese to recall the fact that they invented gunpowder. The Detroit Free Press says: "That pop ular telephone girl in New York who was fairly showered with presents evidently knew when to tell the dear one at home that she could not get his office.” 0 WIVES We Offer You a Remedy Which Insures SAFETY to LIFE of Both Mother and Child. MOTHERS FRIEND ROBS CONFINEMENT OF ITS PAIN, HORROR AND DANGER, Makes CHiLD-BiKTH Easy. Endorsed and recommended by physi cians, midwives and those who have used it. Beware of substitutes and imitations. Sent by express or mail, on receipt of price. 81.00 per bottle. Book "TO MOTHERS” mailed free, containing voluntary testimonials. BEAD FIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. FRENCH A NSV AFERS These are the Genuine French Tansj Wafers, imported direct from Paris. Ladies can depend upon securing relief rom and cure of Painful and Irregular Periods regardless of cause. EMERSON DRUG CO., Importers and Agents for the United States, San Jose, Cai. C. T. KING, Druggist, sole agent for Macon. Ga Sk la f' r A Toilet Set May be needed in one of your rooms. If so, you will find an elegant line at J. W. Domingos Crockery and Housefurnishing Emporium. How is this for low? An imported toilet set of ten pieces nicely decorated for $1.98. e 1 11 copyright 189? R Culinary Tiiumpfi your Christmas dinner will prove if you select a bird from our stock of selected young beauties. There is no gray whiskers on any of our fat, tempting and luscious birds. Our display of fine meats and game this week is worthy of your inspection, and from which you can prepare a feast worthy of Xerzes. Georgia Packing Conw’y. i Wiltiam’s Kidney Pills ’ lla-= no equal in diseases of the | ’ I ’ Kidneys and Urinary Organs. Have > I you neglected your Kidneys? Have * ’ you overworked your nervous sys-11 II tern and caused trouble with your » Kidneys and Bladder? Have I pains in *ha loins, side, back, groins < 1 j I and bladder? Have you a flabby ap- . pearance of the face, especially < ’ I under the eyes ? Too frequent de-. | . > sire pass urine ? William’s Kidnev ’ Pills will impart new life to the dis-1 ’ Ceased organs, tone up the system j >and make a new man of you. Bv mail 50 cents per box. ' D I ► W itj.iams MFG. Co.. Props.. Cleveland. O. > For Sale by H. J. Lamar &. Sons, Wholesale Agents. MACON NEWS TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 4 1898. 5 and 10c COUNTERS AT THE - FAIR, J /?. F. SMITH. Exclusive and only owner. khA-’e °° D EFFECTS AT THEN CATON'S 'S2TTALIZER Cures genera! or special debility, wwketul ness, spermatorhma, emissions, isnpotency naresis, eic. Corrects Junctional disorder?, caused by error? or excesses, quickly restoritu Lost Manhood in old or young, giving v!go.- a-.. Strength where formV weakness prev? ; d. Cor vement p'ck. go, simple, eti'ectu I, and t.m Cunc is Quicf ano Thoß’C-'&H.* P>on't be deceived by iHiitetdns: tpst.-i CATON’S Vitalizers. sealed J yt ": g'.bt d>®s not have it. I'rice 4> i J«-r pkge, for 45. with written guarantee cl complete cure. Information, references, etc., ft-e and confidential Send US statement of cast and 25 cts. for a •week’s trial treatment. One on y sent to each person. GATON MeC. CO.. BOSTON, MASS Dr A7B7HINKLE Physician and Surgeon. (Does general practice.) Diseases of the Lungs, Eye, Ear, Nose and Threat Specialties. Office 370% Second street, In new build ing next to Mallory Taylor's drug store. Residence at Mrs. A. G. Butts’, 571 Or ange street. Residence phone 917. Office ) z ozz Cant Lose Us. We are not ruuuing any Dissolution or Closing Out Sale but we are selling the cheap est picture frames. If you want first class work go to headquarters. Lamar Williams, Picture Franies and Hr! Goods, 116 Second Street. A ® Ww Style and Fit is a man’s first consideration when he is about to buy a suit. Price is the next. We have studied both very close, and we are prepared to make you a first-class stylish suit for $22.50. You couldn’t do better with a clothier. Bicycles and Typewriters. New and second hand for sale or rent. Factory man in charge of repair department. • J. W. Shinholser, Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street, (blsolA \ONS 1 1 " FCF.y | bsT I WILy /BLY NO I V poo</cl.othin&l I rPO 3 I Starting With New Resolutions. At New Year’s men generally resolve to be economical. Sometimes they will even wear ready-made clothing, thinking it is a saving of money. But it is merely sacri ficing appearances. We give the best goods the mills produce, cut in the most ap proved style and tailored in the best fash ion at the lowest price possible. GEO. P. BURDICK & CO.. Importing Tailors. HmlEB 314 Second St., Macon, Ga. Loans negotiated upon improved real esra-e at lowest market rates el>is <> is a non-poisonous •eraedy for fSoDorrhtea, ?leet. Spermatorrhoea, Vhitee, unnatural dis hargen. or any inflamma ion, irritation or ulcera tion of mucous mem branes. Nou-astringent. Sold by brnwinu. or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for 11.00. or 3 bottlea. $2.75. Circular sent uu fl Dollar saved Is a Dollar jnatle This is a business maxim that cannot be gainsaid. It applies to the purchase of Whiskies as to everything else. If we ean save you a dollar on a $2 pur chase, you want to see us, don’t you? If we could not do this it would not pay us to advertise the fact, would it? This is a straight business proposition; we quote prices to prove what we say. Read the list below, compare the prices for these goods, and see if you cannot save at least 50 per cent, by buying from us. Don't imagine now, because we make this REMARKABLE REDUCTION, that these goods differ in the slightest from those for which you pay one-third and one half more. They are standard goods, and nobody can offer you better. Everything sold by us is guaranteed. Don’t Throw Your Money Away, Save a Dollar if You Can We are headquarters for the best whisk kies, wines, etc., by the bottle, gallon or barrel. HERE ARE OUR PRICES.- Can you get others to even duplicate them? We think not: Monongahela Pure Rye (original bottling) at 50 cents per quart Baker’s AAAA Rye (original bottling) at 65 cents per quart Canadian Rye (original bottling) at 75 cents per quart Hoffman House Old Rye (original bottling) at SO cents per quart Old Oscar Pepper Rye (original bottling) at $1 per quart Mount Vernon Rye (original bottling) at $1 per quart Park & Tilford Old Cabinet Rye (orginal bottling) at $1.25 per quart California wines from 60 cents a gallon and upwards. Imported wines from $1 a gallon and upwards. Cognac Brandy from $2.50 a gallon and Martell & Hennesy Brandy (orginal bot tling) $1 a bottle. Clarets by the case of one dozen quarts four dollars. Rhine Wine by the case of one dozen quarts $4. Sole agents for the selebrated Georgia brands of Ciders and Nectars, the best and cheapest goods in the market. We make a specialty of the Jug trade, and all orders by mail or telegraph will have our prompt attention. Special in ducements offered. Send for price list and 506 and 508 Fourth street. Near Union information. ’Phone 265. The flltmauer & Flatau Liquor Co. 506 and 508 Fourth Street. Near Union Passenger Dept. D. A. KRATING. o 7 <? - 1 Ueneral VnderUker a.u<! Embalmer, OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Caskets,'-' cases, coffins and burial obes; hearse ar. 1 carriages furnished o all funerals in and out of the city. Undertaker’s telephone 467. Rest lence telephone 468 522 Mulbarrv CLAY’S COFFIN STORE. Oldest exclusive undertaking house in Macon. Orders by telegraph promptly, at tended to. Nos. 511 and 513 Mulberry street. Store 'phone 425. Residence ’phone 426. PUTZELS VAUDEVILLE. Every Night. The best artists of the Vaudeville stage in new songs dances and comic sketches. THE RESTAURANT Is now prepared to serve all the season’s delicacies. LICENSES For doing business in the City of Macon MUST BE PAID BY January 15th. Tax Returns Must be made before FEBRUARY ist. Dog Badges Must be taken out before FEBRUARY ist. BRIDGES SMITH, Clerk of Council. MASSAGE J. G. Darby, Professional Masseur, Office and residence the Corbett House. Gentlemen suffering from nervous troubles, insomnia, rheumatism, paralysis or lameness caused by either sprain or fracture, will derive great benefit from “Scientific Massage.” Treatment given at your home, or hotel, or at my office. Con sultation free. Office hours 9 to 11 and 4 to 6 . Patients out of the city cared for at rea sonable rates during treatment. Finest city reference. J. G, DARBY, WONDERFUL INVENTION By Which Heartbeats May be Heard Over Wires. Connersville, Ind., Jan. 4—Dr. D. D. Mc- Dougall. formerly a (physician of the Queen City, but now a resident of Connersville, has invented a wonderful device. It con sists of a transmitter that can be attached to or detached from any telephone, and a receiver that can 'be likewise readily at tached. The device magnifies and transmits suc cessfully 'the sound-waves produced by a heartbeat, and those produced 'by an ab normal condition of the lungs. A physician having the receiver attach ed to his telephone—the patient though I, miles away, having transmitter—will be enabled to not only count the pulsa tions of his patient’s heart, but judge the character of its action as well. Dr. McDougall has named this wonder ful apparatus, which will certainly be a revelation to medical men—the cardiphone. UNION SAVINGS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY MACON, GA. Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent. J. W. Cabaniss, President; S. S. Dunlai vice-president; C. M. Orr, cashier; D. M Nelligan, accountant. Capital, $200,000. Surplus, $30,(Ml interest paid on deposits. Deposit you savings and they will be increased b v in terest compounded semi-annually. THE EXCHANGE BANK Os Macon, Ga. Capital $500,000.0 Surplus 150,000. - J. W. Cabaniss, President. S. S. Dunlap, Vice-President. C. M. Orr, Cashier. Liberal to its customers, accommodatin f to the public, and prudent in its manage ment, this bank solicits deposits am other business in its line. DIRECTORS. W. R. Rogers, L. W. Hunt, Joseph Dan □ enberg, R. E. Park, S. S. Dunlap, J. Vi Cabaniss, H. J. Lamar, Jr., A. D. Scb» fleld, W. M. Gordon. ESTABLISHED I»«». R. H PLANT. CHAS. D. HUR? Cashier. I. C. MAm SON, HANKER, MACON, GA. A general banking business transacted ind all consistent cortesies cheerfully ex tended to patrons. Certificates of deposi issued bearing interest. FIRST NATION AL BANK of MACON, GA. The accounts of banks, corporation* firms and individuals received upon th» most favorable terms consistent with con servative banking. A share of your bur Iness respectfully solicited. R. H. PLANT, President George H. Plant, Vice-President. W. W. Wrigley, Cashier. E. Y. MALLARY, J. J. COBB, President. Cashier. Commercial and Savings Bank, 370 Second. Street. A general banking business transacted. Courteous and liberal treatment to all. Interest paid on accounts in savings de partment. compounded semi-annuallv. Safety deposit boxes in our new hurglar probf vault for rent, $5 and upward per year. Southern Loan and Trust Company of Georgia. MACON - GEORGIA. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, 5C0,000.00 J. S. SCOFIELD, Pres. Jos. W. PALMER, Vice-Pres. F. O. SCHOFIELD, Treasurer. STEED & WIMBERLY, Attorney* Offers investors carefully selected Firs; Mortgage Bonds, yielding 6 and 7 per cent interest, payable semi annually. These mortgage loans are legal invest ment for the funds of Trustees, Guardians and others desiring a security which ii non-fluctuating in value, and which yieldi the greatest income consistent with Ab solute safety. Acts as Executor, Trustee, Guardian Transacts a General Trust Business. LAWYERS. NOTTINGHAM & LUNDY Attorneys at Law, 260 Second Street. M. tELION HAICHER, Attorney at Law, 105 Cotton Avenue. HIEE, HABRIS& BIRCH, Attorneys at Law, Masonic Building 566 Mulberry Street, Macon, Ga. Will do general practice in state and fed eral courts. PHYSICIANS. DR. A. MOODY BURT. Office over Sol Hoge’s drug etore, 572 Mul berry street. 'Phen 60. Hours: 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 and 4:30 to 5:30 p. m. Residence 452 College street. ’Phone 728. DR. J. H SHORTER, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, over Sol Hoge’s, corner Mulberry and Second streets. DR, C. H. PEETE, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, 370 Second St Phone 462 DR. STAPLER, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 506 Mulberry street, ground floor. DR. F. G. HUCKABAY, Office 566% Cherry Street. Phone 401 Over Clem Phillips. Calls promptly answered. E. G. Ferguson, M. D Physician and Surgeon, Office and residence 256 Second street, opposite Pierpont Ho- 1872 DR J J SUBERS 1897 Permanently Located. In the specialties venereal, Lost En ergy restored, Female Irregularities and Poison Oak. Cure guaranteed. Address, in confidence, with stamp, 51* Fourth Street, Macon. Ga. Dr. M. Marion Apfel, Physician and Surgeon. John C. Eads & Co. Building. Phone 811. 8188 MANUFACTURING < O Spinners, Wrapping Twine, Hosiery, Yarn and Carpet Warps. Largest package—greatest economy. Made only by THE X. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago. St. Lou. ;. New York. Boston. Philadelphia. A Phone 73. $3.50 Per Ton. $3-50 -d'A T S</ Per Ton. wUAaJLI Eureka. Red vl SUV from me i C Ash, jeiico. • and get what vou 8 ...pa/ for 3 Per Ton HOLMES JOHNSON. $3.50 Per Ton. Phone 73. AMERICAN @ QUEEN A Is the monopQh of oil bottled fjeeps. Fop q pope, tDhole= so(ne, the flmepi(jan Queen o? . “ Victoria/" @ © ASK FOR “QUEEN” OR "VICTORIA.” »x« ’ @ @ ■IIIMHHHHuSKsSZKiIESEISHHHHHHi F.A. GUTTENBERGER & CO