Newspaper Page Text
4
r— J ~l I * J
FT \ mi =h= b
/
\frv /VwOb ■
; iTW
1 ■ /ffl 1-I I
O-:J 1 jM p
« Wm
■«■; Vo/
LJ—^-^_ : < , . _.-_-± -—j
[FRENCH GOWN OF DOTTED VEILING FROM HARPER S BAZAR
\mong .he n< .v imported goods in rfum
ni< r in ■un>'.' h a novel gown of voile
with shirri-I wuist and skirt, the front of
the .kirt forming a slender apron. These
charming voib s are made up over taffeta
linings, usually varying in color from
poppy ri d to pale rose, ami from Wilhel
mina oraii'/.e to dull yellow. The coloring
of tin model is paliest heliotrope pat
t. tie d with tiny silk lots in light yellow,
ovi t a foundation kirt of deeper tint. The
apton n of ;.ta s linen in the natural ecru
color, .nd contrasts prettily with the veil
ing. while ,tn additional harmony is its
trimming tiny tivelvi t tiblions in grad
uated si ide of old yellow and brown.
Tin plain -leevia ot unlined linen are
banded at the wrisi with the same velvet.
Tin skirt I- hirred in several lines about
the hips, with the fulness hanging to the
ground, andground and gathered closely to
The News Printing Co.
Printers and Pubishers.
WILL PRINT
BRIEFS, BOOKS,
FOLDERS, STATEMENTS,
PAMPHLETS, CIRCULARS,
CARDS, CHECKS, ENVELOPES,
LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS
AND
Aifiiiiu iii lit Primer's Lint
NEWS PRINTING CO
City Baggage Transfer Co
Prompt c.eliveiv of baggape to ami from all depots.
Office next door Southern Express Co.
W. H. ARNOLD, Manager.
518 Fourth St. Phone 20.
.gs An Attractive Shoe.
jHh ■■ the deh 'e >/ ■'
Hand turned, French heel, vamp
an( f heel of navy blue, top red, white
trimmings, lace of colored ribbon in
national colors. Light and airy in l
make up. Just the thing for patriotic young ladies.
1.2, 3.
A few pairs of those small sizes in Ladies’ Oxfords
that we arc closing out At SI.OO
CLISBY <&, M’KAY,
Phone 29.
the back at the waist line, producing the
sweeping folds now in vogue. Its width is
four and a half yards.
The grass linen part at the back of the
waist is open in the centre and trimmed
vertically with clusters of the narrow yel
low velvet ribbons. The high collar is
slightly draped.
The proper cut of this gown can be ob
tained only from the cut paper patent!
published by Harpers Bazar, where it ap
pears.
The hat worn with this gown is of open
work straw braid. It has a moderate brim
under which, at the back, is a hald wreath
of wall flowers in shaders of yellow and
brown. Long curling ostrich plumes form
an effective decoration around the crown.
Approximate quantity of material for
gown—-voile, 6% yards; grass linen, 2Vi
y cards.
REDUCTION IN
WATER BIOS,
Aiderman Meyer Thinks that
the Citizens Should Not
be Mude to Pav.
WILL STICK TO MIMI
In the Laying of the Foundation for
the Paving of Cherry Street-
Councils Regular Meeting,
Aidermen Gibson, Pearson, Winship and
Wilder were absent from council meeting
last evening.
Among the petitions presented was one
from sundry citizens* of Oak street, be
tween Second and Third, and Spring street,
between Cherry and Mulberry, asking that
their streets be curbed and Improved.
J. A. Randall asked to have a portion of
his barroom license refunded on the
grqund that he was not allowed to run
more than half the year.
Mrs. M. tM. Edge asked to have repaired
damage to her property on New street
caused by recent rains.
The usual batch of petitions for correc
tion of assessments were read.
During the call of the committees, when
the mayor reached streets, he said he de
sired to recommend to council that the
original specifications for paving Cherry
street be strictly adhered to by the con
tractors. It was true, he said, that the
city engineer had recommended shell con
crete as a foundation, considering it su
perior to cement a* a foundation, and he
urged fully with the engineer, believing it
to be everything that was claimed for it,
but objection had been raised as there
would be if gold were ordered used, and
for this reason he thought best for council
to order the contractors to follow the
specifications and use concrete. The re
commendation was adopted.
Second and Third streets, between Mul
berry and Walnut, were included, by res
olution, in the district known as the pav
ing district.
The finance committee introduced an
ordinance Imposing a license of SSO per
annum on dealers In lubricating oils.
Alderman Mayer introduced- the follow
ing resolution, which was unanimously
adopted, requiring the Maeon Gas Light
and Water Company to make an adequate
reduction in June bills for water used by
the citizens;
Whereas, During the past month the
citizens of Macon were .deprived of a suf
ficient quantity of water, far below the
amount usually used and necessary for
domestic purposes, seine being without
any water at all, and for the greater por
tion of the month the water being so
muddy as to be wholly unfit for use; and
Whereas, The contract between the
mayor and council and the Macon Gas
Light and Water Company requires the
said company to furnish a sufficient
amount, as well as clear water, to our
citizens, therefore be it
Resolved, That the said Macon Gas Light
and Water Company in thus failing to
keep faith with its contract, be and is
hereby required, in rendering bills for
water during the month of June, to make
adequate reduction to our citizens for such
loss and unfit condition of the water fur
nished by them in that month, the per
cent, of reduction to be adjudged by the
mayor and committee on water supply.
Rears the Y° u Have Always Bought
Notes Taken
On the Run.
Mr. Clarence Morgan, of the Exchange
bank, left yesterday for Washington, New
Yprk, Boston and Canada.
Drs. W. R. Holmes and Mason, dentists,
556 Mulberry, opposite Hotel Lanier. Try
a bottle of Holmes’ 'Mouth Wash for pre
serving teeth, purifying the breath, bleed
ing gums, ulcers, sore mouth, sore throat,
etc. For sale by all druggists.
Sergeant W. H. Bracken, who enlisted
from Macon with the Macon Hussars, has
been transferred to the Third Georgia regi
ment and will soon go into camp at Grif
fin.
Music Lessons—Piano and violin in
struction at reasonable prices. Miss Nellie
Reynolds, 252 Washington avenue.
Hon. W. A. Charters, of Dahlonega, who
is a candidate for solicitor general in the
Northeastern circuit, is in the city , Mr.
Charters represented Lumpkin county la
the last legislature.
Dr. Charles Lanier Tooie, dentist. Of
flee comer Second and Poplar streets.
Mr. Dan Rountree, a prominent lawyer
of Atlanta, is in the city stopping at the
Hotel Lanier.
Mr. Frank F. Rogers, of Griffin, is in
the city today a guest of the Hotel Lanier.
Mr. B. H. Pearson, a prominent citizen
of Newnan, is a guest of the Hotel Lanier.
Mr. W. W, Colquitt, of Atlanta. Is at
the Park Hotel today.
I Mrs. F. H. Warlick left today to visit
j friends in Marietta and North Georgia.
Mr James A. Williams, a prominent citi
zen of Pinehurst, is a guest of the Brown
House.
Mr. O. G. Rogers, of Milledgeville, is
registered at the Brown House.
Dr. W. L. Smith, dentist, 353 Second
-‘reer, wer Beeland's jewelry store, office
telephone 452.
j Mr. B. Z. Holmes, of Atlanta, is stopping
i at the Brown House.
Mr. A. Barnett, of Savannah, is regis
tered at the Brown House.
Mr. John M. Edge will leave for Savan
nah Saturday, where he will spend several
weeks
Mr Thad E. Murphey is spending the
week at Indian Spring.
Miss Maude Edge has returned from
Montezuma.
CHEAP EXCURSION.
Macon to Tybee, $2.75 Round Trip. July
16th.
On July 16 the Central of Georgia Rail
way Company will run the largest excur
sion of the season, Macon to Tyhee. only
$2.75 round trip, under auspices of Macon
Post D. T. P. A. Tickets good on all regu
lar trains returning up to and including
train leaving Savannah 9:00 p. m. Mon
day.
J. G. CARLISLE. T. P. A.
E. P. BONNER, U. T A.—
Housekeepers’ novelties in
great variety at the sale of
the Domingos stock.
MACON NEWS WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 13 1898.
AMERICA AND HER WOMEN.
Delicate Things About Them Written by Ad
miral Ccrvera.
Washington. July 13—Admiral Cervera.
whose fleet Admiral Sampson destroyed,
is noted as an admirer of the American
women. Several years ago. while at -Wash
ington, fie wrote an article on Ajnerica
and. its women, of which the following is
an extract:
A nation which, like the American, in
less than a century obtains its independ
ence, affirms its union, secures territorial
conquests, civilizes savage reginos, crosses
a continent with enormous nets of rail
ways. and pierces space with wires which
convey instantaneously human thought; a
nation which launches immense fleets to
all the seas, gives birth to Washington,
Lincoln, Prescott. Grant, Sherman, Edi
son and, Fulton, a new home to Draper,
and which increases its industrious and
intelligent population to 50,000,000 of in
habitants, which welcomes the ostracized
of all nations, and adopts the good of every
country and honors all merit, thus placing
itself at the head of power and human pro
gress, must, without doubt, contain in its
womb rich and inextinguishable sources of
life and health, of kindness, of intelli
gence and of courage.
More cultured, as a general rule, than
men of equal station, with encyclopedic
lie opinion, which recognize her merits;
educated with a healthful idea of liberty
and independence; taking part in labors
which, in other countries, are reserved for
men struggling for a living, she exercises
professions, knows the world, cultivates
arts and sciences, in a word, she lives.
She is not compelled to vegetate as a
plant, whose roots are confined to her
home, as is the case with women of other
countries, and to suffer unconsciously and
resignedly the tides of fortune, like a help
less passenger in a sinking vessel, whose
helm only a man could safely guide. In
these new conditions her character is
strengthened without losing the delicate
qualities which constitute her greatest
eharm; because irresistible forces of na
ture have endowed her with an organiza
tion whose results, whatever should be the
conditions of life in which she lives, must
produce delicacy, self-abnegation and ten
derest love.
The immortal English poet, inspired,
doubtless, by the living models which he
had before him in English women, from
whom the Americans have inherited so
much, was able to produce those types of
feminine creations which constitute the
geratest title to the merit of his works.
Only one living among women of such a
race could feel and express the chaste, un
conditional and fervent love of wife—of
Desdemona—sacrificed without a protest,
without cause, and adoring, even when
wounded and dying, the man who was her
master, however unjust and blinded by
passion.
To an Englishman it was reserved to
give to the world, in the immortal Juliet,
the complete model of candor, of insatia
ble love, of infinite tenderness; to con
dense. In the scarcely-sketched character
of Ophelia, all the idealism, all the poetry
which human minds can imagine. Such
creations are not produced without living
models. You have served as such to the
immortal Shakespeare.
To conclude, confiding in only one of
your many good qualities—that of benev
olence—the author has made bold enough
to write this poor expression of the ad
miration which he professes toward you,
and it only remains for me to bestow,
since it is of women that I am speaking,
a grateful souvenir to the women of 'Spain,
who, though not able, as you are, on ac
count’of vicissitudes through which all
countries must pass, to live in a powerful
and rich land, have yet known how to serve
their mother country by giving her heroes
and illustrious sons, Eiave known how to
fight and die at Sagunta and Numancia,
and to combat and conquer in Saragossa.
To the lofty spirit of one of them, Isabella
the- Catholic, you owe the discovery of the
rich land which is your home, and further,
if you will pardon me for mentioning it,
wh’Tjh I trust you will if you consider it
weh, it is to one of them that the bold
author of these lines is indebted for his
being.
CA.STOn.TA.,
Bears the >yThß Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature S/V# V?
WORK OF THE SESSION.
Enormous Appropriations Passed and War
Declared.
Washington,
interest is concerned, war legislation was
the most important enacted during the
ent session of Congress, although the sen
ate devoted more than three months to
-the Cuban, Hawaiian and other questions
before hostilities were actually declared,
and subsequently both branches worked
diligently in passing the various measures
for the equipment of the regular and vol
unteer forces, the purchase of supplies,
ammunition, war vessels, 'transports and
the like. Not since our own civil war has
there been such activity in legislation and
the voting of so many millions of dollars
for the public service.
The war revenue bill that recently went
.into effect required care and thought, and
its operations are understood -to be the
most satisfactory to the prominent sena
tors and representatives charged with its
preparation.
Considering how much there was to do,
congress has practically finished its labors
with wonderful rapidity.
Among other bills of interest to the en
tire country that were passed is the bank
ruptcy bill. That measure had been hang
ing fire for a number of years, owing to
the wide difference of opinion as to the
kind of law that would be effective, and
at the same time not bear too havily upon
the debtor classes.
Another important item contained in one
of the big appropriation bills is a plan for
rhe settlement of the Central Pacific Rail
road indebtedness.
It is not satisfactory to all sections of
the country interested, but it is a big step
forward and will put an and to the long
controversy.
Among the measures that failed to pass
are: The Nicaragua canal bill; the railroad
pooling bill and an overhauling of the en
tire interstate commerce laws; the anti
scalping bill, so persistently demanded by
the railroad companies; that national
quarantine bill; the naval personnel bill
and numerous measures relating to reser
vations in the far west; free homes, etc.
Most of these will be pressed vigorously
during the winter or short session.
Cannon, chairman of the committee on
appropriations, read a statement in the
house showing what Congress had appro
priated at this session. The total reached
1892,000,000. Os this $361,000,000 was for
war expenditures and $412,000,000 for ordi
nary expenses, which was only
more than appropriations for last session
of the last congress. There were no appro
priations for rivers and harbors, but the
sundry civil act made provisions for some
of these improvements, nor was there -any
new public building provided for.
CHEAP RATES.
Bapfict Youncr P-op!e's Union, Buffalo, N.
Y., Jnlv 14 to 17, 1898.
Account of the above occasion the
round trip tickets to Buffalo at one fare,
half rate, tickets on sale July 11, 12 and
13, with final limit July 20, 1898. An ex
tension of the final limit may be obtained
to have Buffalo not later than August 3,
provided tickets are deposited with joint
agent at Buffalo between July 17 and 19th
and on payment of 50 cents.
C. S. White. T. P. A.
Burr Brown. C. T. A.
Gents’ $5 and $6 shoes:
Johnson & Murphy, Evans or
Keith’s; now 2 00, 2.85 and
3.00. Fire Sale.
LARCENY FROM
COMRADES' TENT
Soldier of the Third Was Ar
rested at Carnp Price
th s Morning.
MEANS A COORT MARTIAL
After the Civil Authorities Have Dis
posed of Him—Pawned a Pair
of Shoes for Fifty Cents.
Mitchell Morgan, a private in company
E, Third regiment United States volun
teers stationed at Camp Price, was arrest
ed this morning on the charge of “larceny
from tent.”
It is claimed that Morgan stole a pair
of shoes from another private of the same
company whose name is P. J. Winn.
Winn says that Morgan stole his shoes
while he was away from camp and that he
carried them to pawnshop and
sold them for 40 cents.
■Winn values his shoes at $4 and says
that he is determined to prosecute Mor
gan.
Morgan was arrested by Constables Ford
and Burkett. The officers say that they
had to go through many different forms
before they could secure the man. Mor
gan is now in jail. He will be brought be
fore Judge Balkcom today.
OA.OTOn.TA.
Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought
Sie "r
BRIGHT PROSPECTS.
TheZTextile School Gets a Handsome Pres
ent from Pittsburg.
The prospects of the Textile department
of the Georgia School of Technology are
now brighter than ever before since the
textile bill was pushed throtigh the legis
lature and the full amount of SIO,OOO
which the bill requires the trustees to
raise before the state will pay its dona
tions, will soon be in the hands of the
board.
Mr. Aaron French, of Pittsburg, Pa.,
who takes a great interest in technical ed
ucation, and who gave one of the first do
nations to the textile department of 'the
Technological school, has presented the
board of trustees with a check of $2,500
unconditionally, and has presented them
with another check for $3,000 on condition
that a similar amount be raised in Atlanta
and Georgia. The total amount of his do
nations, if the conditions are complied with
will be $5,500, and if the conditions are not
complied with will be $2,500.
Before Mr. French had made his very
liberal donations the trustees had raised
$1,600 in cash and $12,000 in machinery,
and 'they made a requisition on Governor
Atkinson for the money provided for in the
textile bill, claiming that they had com—
plied with the conditions. On consulting
with the attorney general the governor re
fused to turn the money over 'to the trus
tees, holding that he had been given no
guarantee 'that the money was actually the
property of the school.
A meeting of the trustees was necessary
to make the guarantee, and while no
■alarm was felt as to the outcome, recent
events made a wonderful development in
the textile department of the school.
About one month ago my child, which is
fifteen months old, had an atack of diar
rhoea accompanied by vomiting. I gave
if spch remedies as gre usually given in
such cases, but ais nothing gave relief, we
sent for a physician and it was under his
■oare for a week. At this time the child
been sick for about ten days and was
having about twenty-five operations of tha
bowels every twelve hours, and we were
convinced that unless it soon obtained re
lief it would not live. Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was
recommended, and I decided to try it. I
soon noticed a change for the better; by
its continued use a complete cure was
brought about and it is now perfectly
healthy.—iC. L. Boggs, Stumntown, Gil
mer Co., W. Va. For sale by H. J. Lamer
& Sons, druggists.
Ladies’ house slippers sl,
worth $2.50. Best made. Fire
Sale.
SPIRIT FACE IN CLOUDS.
How George Washington Watched Trans
ports Safe to Cuba's Shore.
On 'Board the Olivette, June 19—<A face
in the clouds.
On board this ship and under the pres
ent conditions it created widespread com
ment.
It was seen last night. What is more,
some of those who saw it claim that it
resembled the profile of George Washing
ton.
It was just at sunset when a bank of
clouds to the extreme west began to surge
and boil and finally break. They drifted
apart in three different directions. Two
parts floated away in the distant twilight,
but the third hung over the fleet awhile.
All the time they were churning and
rolling. Finally one end began to form a
face. First came the chin, then the nose;
a break in the clouds formed a pretty re
spectable eye, and then came the fore
head.
For five minutes the strangely-forjned
cloud hung over the fleet. Many gazed at
it and good imaginations made the profile
look like that qf George Washington.
An old sailor who stood near by said:
“That is luck, boys. The Father of our
Country is protecting and watching over
us. He is looking down upon us. We
shall take Cuba without much of a strug
gle. Washington will be near us all the
time.”
The old salt's speech had hardly been
finished when a gust of wind struck the
floating face and tore it asunder.
Fruit Jars and Jelly glasses
at the sale of the Domingos
stock.
CALL FUR TICKETS.
Subscribers who* are entitled to tickets
on the prizes which are to be given away
by The News can obtain them on Wednes
day Thursday of Friday of each week by
calling or sending to the office of the sub
scription department. Office hours 8:30
a. m. to 6:30 p. m. Remember that sub
scription must be paid when due to secure
Tickets. G. W. TIDWELL, -
Manager City Circulation.
Beats the Klondyke.
Mr. A. C. Thomas, of Marysville, Texas,
has found a more valuable discovery than
has yet been made in the Klondyke. For
years he suffered untold agony from con
sumption, accompanied by hemorrhages;
and was absolutely cured by Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colds. He declares that gold is of lit
tle value in comparison with this mar
vellous ere—would have it, even if it cost
a hundred dollars a bottle. Asthma, Bron
chitis and all throat and lung affections
are positively cured by Dr. King's New
Discovery for Consumption. Trial bottles
free at H. J. Lamar & Sons’ Drug Store.
Regular size 50 cents and sl. Guaranteed
to cure or price refunded.
FOOT BALL THIS SEASON,*
Macon Will be Represented on the Gridiron
by Strong Team.
Mr. Holt Virgin has organized a fottball
team which will represent Macon on the
gridiron this-season. ..
As Mercer will not be allowed to play
this year the boys of the city have organ
ized a team themselves and elected Mr.
Holt Virgin manager.
The team will play a game for the ben
efit of the Carnival Association during the
carnival. The manager has arranged a
schedule of game which will give the Ma
con people the opportunity to see football
played about twice a month.
The first game of the season will be with
Columbus on October 14. Then will come
the games with Athens, Barnesville. At
lanta and Augusta. This is a splendid
schedule and the manager says that if the
people will patronize the games, his
team will give them the best exhibition of
football ever seen in Macon.
The following men will probably phay on
the team: Virgin. Taylor, Mansfield. ‘Me
nard, Winn Nisbet, Jones, Corbin. Ruan,
Simmons. Morris and others.
The team will need no coach as all of
the members were coached by Mr. Gordon
Saussy, of Cornell last year.
Ladies’ house slippers sl,
worth $2.50; best made. Fire
Sale.
A FRENCH HARNESS.
Information For a J.v’ge Who Was Xa
Search of an Easy Patent Case.
When st judge has once had to deal with
a case involving patent rights, he is apt. to
retain forever thereafter a firm disinclina
tion to hear any more of the sort. It hap
pened that several p. u e n eases were on the
docket of a New Jersey court, and the
judge managed to defer e.u‘h one us it
came up and slide it down the list. When
the end of the term was well within reach,
the patent practitioners began to demur a
little at, this pror.rastim.ilon, and finally
She leader of their bar w.-is <i oputed io ask
the judge to sot some of these eases for
hearing. He carried with him a list of
the cases, with a side memorandum to in
dicate wliat cl.tsa of mauLiimtv vv;.s in
vol-.od.
The judge looked down tim list, not at
all anxious to hear any pafeiit ease, hrs
recognized that he would have to do w
in the end, and therefore prepared to yiclt
as graciously as possible. Ho noted tha*
this ease involved an ore separator, that
the next had to do with some electric ap
paratus, that almost all of them promised
to involve hiju in the deepest physics and
the most complicated mechanics. At lust
his eye rested on case 5287, against which
was made the memorandum ‘‘French har
ness. ’ ’
“There, I’ll take up that ease,” he said.
“There isn’t much time lelt in this term,
but you cannot spin that thing out very
long. I was brought up with horses, ami
I have had thorn "all my life. 1 know all
about a harness to begin with, and it
won’t be any trouble to pick up the Frencl
twist to it. We’ll got that case out of th'
way in short order.”
The trial opened at. the time appointed
The opposing briefs were volumes crowd
ed with working drawings of the most
complicated sort, the letterpress was tilled
with equations and mathematics In gener
al, all necessary to elucidate some of the
most intricate processes in the arts. Ir
addition the courtroom was filled with
working models until it took on the ap
pearance of a factory or an industrial ex
hibition, and this was but the beginning
The counsel cited a host of decisions in
conflict upon every essential point,. At
last the case was submitted. After the re
cess some one congratulated the judge od
having but one case unfinished.
“Don’t speak to use,” ho groaned. “I
told those patent, lawyers that I knew all
about harness and selected that case be
cause it was easy. It knocked blazes out,
of my vacation. It took up two months
before I could make head or tail of it, ami
then I was six weeks writing the deci
sion.”
A French harness is an appliance in
connection with the weaving of figured
cloths, the intricate ingenuity of which
has made it possible to employ the loom in
the reproduction of any design. In com
parison with it ordinary machinery is aS
simple as a grindstone.—New* York Sun
HALF CENT fl WORU
ADVERTISEMENTS of Wants, for Sale
For Kent, I.ost, Found, Eto,, are insertecl
in THIS COLUMN at Half Cent a Word
each insertion. No Advertisement taken
for less than 15 cents.
Miscellaneous.
WANTED—To rent. Nicely furnished
large room, with two beds and. having
hot and cold bath convenient. Must be
within five blocks of the court house.
'Address “Hurry,” care News.
W. A. GOODYEAR, carriage, buggy and
wagon shop. Horse shoeing, fine paint
lug. Repairing of scales a specialty
458, 455 Poplar street.
WANTED—One pair mules, horses or po
nies for a couple of weeks. The work
I have requires three or four hours
per day. Will feed and care for them
well. Call at Ivey & Dash’s Oak street
woodyard for W. R. Ivey.
FOR SALE—Hand picked selected fancy
Elberta peaches, % bushel baskets 50c.
'Phone 132, Roush Produce Company.
NICE single and double 'teams for hire.
Special attention given to boarding
. horses. (Carload horses jqst received.
Give us a call. Phone 36. Hicks,
Warfield & Minton.
GET our prices on iron or steel fence. The
latest and most up-to-date patterns.
A postal card will get our illustrated
catalogue.. Central City Marble and
Granite Works.
'ALL of my furniture and household goods
for sale —carpets, furniture and one
small steel range; also one buggy and
harness and gentle mare. Call at once,
417 Forsyth street.
CUCUMBER pickles, 10c quart. Flournoy.
IF in need of a horse of any kind call und
see our horses and get prices. We can
save you money. Hicks, Warfield &
Minton. phone 346,
FOR RENT—Nice six room house head of
Cherry street, 110 Nisbet Place. Will
rent for sl6 per month. Will rent
three rooms if preferred. Apply News.
I WILL give music lessons for one year
free to the first two girls who will
get me six music'pupils each. A grad
uate with honor and medal from the
most conservatory south. Charges rea
sonable. Address or come to 229 Tatt
nail street, Macon.
FOR SALE—One car load of well broke
horses, among which are several fam
ily horses and ponies for the boys.
Prices to suit the times. Hicks. War
field & Minton.
NOW is the time to have your lace cur
tains laundered. Mrs. Ryder, near
Crump’s park, does the very best work.
All curtains laundered at only 25 cents
per window.
WANTED —'For a family of four, board
with a private family, or three fur
nished rooms close in, suitable for
light housekeeping. Address A. 464
Plum street.
Hurrah for Dewey. Have his or any other
picture you want framed or enlarged
Ur st class, but mighty cheap. Do you
want a beautiful hall, dining room or
parlor picture? I have ’em. Also
scarf or hair pins, rings, cuff and col
lar buttons. If so remember Migrath’s,
558 Mulberry street, opposite Hotel
NOTICE —The Oak street wood yard has
reduced the price of their wood to 59
cents per cord. Ivey & Dash. Phone
213.
AGENTS WANTED —For war in Cuba bj
Senor Quesada, Cuban representative
at Washington. Endorsed by Cuban
patriots In tremendous demand. A
bonanza for agents. Only $1.50. Big
book .big commissions. Everybody
wants the only endorsed, reliable book
Outfits sent free. Credit given. Freight
paid. Drop all rtash and make S3OO
a month with War in Cuba. .Addrear
today. THE NATIONAL BOOK CON
'CERN, 852-856 Dearbora »t: .31, Chi
oag», lIL
JOSEPHSON'S ENTERRISE
Great Cut-Price Sale.
These Are Tie Kind of Bargains
IVe Give.
Commencing today we will inaugurate a grand clearance
sale of all summer light-weight stuff. We start this won
derful sale early in the season so as to give the purchaser
ample time to get solid wear from the goods before fall sea
son. We make a general cut on all kinds of seasonable
goods. These goods are all perfect and of this season’s
purchase. No old shop-worn goods, no seconds nor rotton
salt water damaged goods, but clean, first-class, up-to-date
stylish goods.
It would be impossible to give quotations on all of our
bargains, so will not attempt to do so, but below can be
found certain leaders in different departments that will in
terest any shrewd buyer.
Worth . .
Reading.
3 Ladies’ gauze vests for.. 10c
10 yards Chailie for2Bc
10 yds dress calico for3sc
10 yds check Nainsook49c
10 yds 8-cent India lawn..49c
10 yds 10-ceut white dim-
ity 50c
Our g-Cent Counter.
Just as you enter the door you will find on our center
bargain counter 10,000 yards figured dimity, organdies, lap
pet lawns and grenadine lawns in the latest designs and
colorings; also, second mourning; not a piece in the lot
worth less than 10 cents a yard. If you want a thin dress
bargain be the first to examine these goods.
M us tin
Underwear
We have got the stock and
the right kind of stuff, just as
fine as you want. Below we
quote prices on each kind of
garment of the cheapest that
we carrj:
75c gowns at49c
40c umbrella ruffle draw-
ers 25c
65c skirt at49c
40c chemise at2sc
Bxtra good qtfality corset
covers at 15c
Children’s drawers atloc
Great Snap.
10 yds soft finish yard-wide bleaching for 49c
20c bleached tape edge ladies’ vests at . 10c
Infants sleeveless vests at 10c
50c ventilated corsets at 33c
Boys’ pants 10c
Children’s corset waists 25c
$2.50 boys’ linen colored suits $1.49
25c white organdy at 15c
75c toilet quilts 49c
SI.OO hemmed toilet quilts 75c
40c linen table damask 25c
$1.50 figured brilliautine skirt 99c
That Shirt i
Bargain
on bargain counter No. 6.
We have displayed 420
men’s laundered colored
shirts; worth SI.OO and
$1.25. These shirts
from now on will go at 49c
J
I
Josephson’s-:-Enterprise.
PHONE 249. 553 CHERRY ST.
/1 onderful
Bargains.
: j 6 yds crash skirting f0r...49c
‘ 10 yds crash toweling44c
: 10 sds figured organdy ...39c
■ 10 yds apron check ging
ham for39c
40-in. fig. 12%c organdy.. 7c
20 yds 7c Sea Islandß9c
Shirt Waists.
■ 1,000 ladies’ shirt waists
50c and 60c to go at
this sale for 39c
Umbrella
Bargains.
300 twilled silk gloria um
brellas, steel rod, para
gon frame, Dresden
handles. Worth $1.50
$2.00. Take pick at
this sale at 98c
I
Trunks.
I
We have got them from
the cheapest to the finest at
this sale. Cost price will
take any of them.
* '