Newspaper Page Text
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THE MACON NEWS.
ESTABLISHED 1884.
NEWS PRINTING COMPANY,
PUBLISHERS.
R. L. McKENNEY. Business Mngr.
TOM W. LOYLESS, Editor.
THE EVENING NEWS will t>*delivered
by carrier or moll. P*r y*w> I so ®- P® r
week, 10 cents. THE NEWS wiH be for
oa trains- Correspondence on Hve
subjects soil cited. Real name of writer
should accompany same. Subscriptions
payable In advenes. Failure to receive
paper should be reported to the business
office. Address all * communications to
THE NEW’S.
Offices: 412 Cherry Street.
The halt back has the bulge on the
Rough Rider these days. He has a kick
coming.
Speaking editorially the Savannah Press
says: “We don’t think." That's not Pleas
an L
Monroe Advertiser: The hog and hominy
raisers are not worried over the low price
of cotton.
The man who presents his political opin
ions to hta political friends only, confers a
great favor on his other friends.
Americus Herald: Macon did well to have
its corn 1 v'al before the possibility of pro
hibition was put to the voters.
Reynolds New South: "Despite hie mod
esty Daisy Price was the hub around which
the Macon Diamond Jubilee revolved.
Alfred Henry Lewis, the well known
newspaper writer, predicts the election of
Governor Van Wyck, of New York to the
presidency in 1900.
Waycross Herald: The Queen of England
and the Empress of China rule half the
world, and the balance of the women rule
the other half.
Monroe Advertiser: Macon is a hustling
city. The carnival was a grand success
and Macon proved that she was able to
handle the crowd.
The New York Journal has completed a
poll of the state of New York, and de
clares that Van Wyck would be elected by
36,000 majority, should the election occur
today.
'‘General Graham may now relinquish
his apprehensions of yellow fever in the
southern camps,” the Augusta Chronicle
remarks, “and guard against pneumonia
■where he la.”
John L. Sullivan was given an enthu
siastic welcome by the inmates "of a luna
tic asylum at Matteawan, N. Y. It might
■eem invidious to institute comparisons
with John's usual audiences.
If is true that more bales of hay arc
imported Into Georgia than bales of cot
ton are exported from the state, that is one
reason why prosperity is a little slow
about, making a date with us.—Americus
Herald. ' j
I The Republican party professes a great
deal of friendship for the laboring man
just before election, but its love for him
vanishes Just as soon as the votes are cast.
The Democratic party is a workingman's
party -all the year round and tho -records
prove it.
■General Joe Wheeler was -born on Ellis
afreet in 'Augusta, Ga. His father married,
ft Miss Hull, daughter of Commodore Hull.
Edward F. Campbell married another
daughter of the commodore. Mr. Camp
bell’s daughter is now Mrs. W. IW. Mont
gomery, of Savannah, widow of the late
lamented judge.
The Sparta Ishmaelite says: There ought
to be a reform of the pension system in
Georgia. No one not absolutely indigent
should draw a pension. The tendency is
to pension every man who was in the Con
federate service. The motive back of it
may be all right, but the taxes are already
far too high. The pension and school funds
should both be reduced.
An English rural clergymen says that
one day a bride startled him by promis
ing, in what she supposed to be the lan
guage of the prayer book, to take her hus
band “to 'ave and to ’old from this day
forni’t for betterer horse, for richerer pow
er, in slggerness health, to love cherries
and to bay.” What meaning the extraor
dinary vow conveyed to the woman’s own
mtnd. the incumbent said, baffled him to
conjecture. ~ .
IPennslyvania Presbyterians have deci
ded that the use of tobacco is so sinful
that aid must be refused to any theological
student whb loves the weed. Brethren old
in the faith, who are confirmed in the
habit, will be looked upon as chained
elaves to the vice, but will be allowed to
remain in the clergy. The day of tolerance
in small things seems to -be still distant in
some action. Coffee drinking may next
come under the ban.
The Chicago Times-Herald declares that
Kipling's new poem, “The Truce of the
Bear." has no relation to Russia or the
czar's disarmament proposition, and we
confess that intrinsically there is nothing
whatever in the poem to sustain the claim
of the relation. It is an animal story with
a wholesome moral, and is. besides, a good
piece of poetry; but there is nothing -in it
to show that it is meant as a political alle
gory, although it has been accepted by
the public as such.
The shrewd and calculating sporting men
of New York, who bet to win. and never
permit their feelings to get the better of
their judgment, are good vanes to show the
direction the political wind is blowing. The
betting on the result of the election start
ed on September 29, with odds of 2 to 1
on Roosevelt. Since then, however, the
odds have been steadily drawn and on
Monday last the Democratic candidate sud
denly forged to the front as the favorite
and a large sum of money was offered at
10 to S on Van Wyck, but very little of
It was taken.
Here is an interesting bit of information
from the Memphis Scimitar: all the more
interesting it true: "The wisdom of bri
gading together volunteers from the North
and South appears in the remarkable
friendship that sprung up in eamp be
tween the First Georgia and the Thirty
first Michigan. So strong did the feeling
became that the Georgia regiment, being
on the eve of disbandment, 250 members
of it have applied for leave to fill vacancies
in the Michigan regiment, which is to re
main in the service.”
No interests in the country received a
larger measure of protection in thl> Ding
, ley bll than those of the wool growers and
the manufacturers of woolen and worsted
goods, but despite this fact tbeee interests
haxe not prospered. On the contrary, they
are in a bad way and are beginning to un
derstand that protection is a failure. The
Boston Herald admits the fact that the
importations of foreign wool have fallen
off tremendously. In place of 360.000,(MX)
pounds of wool imported in the fiscal year
of 1896-97, the importations in the fiscal
year of 1897-98 were only 132,000.000; in
other words, there was a decline in raw
material imported of about 60 per cent or,
if one -takes first and second class wools,
a falling off is shown from 235.000,000
pounds in the former year to 47,000,000 in
Che latter year, or about 80 per cent.
Wheat Raising in Georgia.
Our local contemporary, which does bus
iness on an isolated corner in the residence
portion of the city, evidently has & farmer
at its “helm."
Farmers do not, as a rule, make good
pilots, nor do pilots make good farmers,’
and it w equally true that while In their
own eewmation, editors are farmers, ail
farmers are not editors..
The responsible producer of the wheat
articles that appear ou toe editorial page
of the perverted publication in the suburbs
is a self-confessed farmer. He is proud of
it, too— very properly proud that be was
raised between the plow handles and knows
much about mules.
The ego of the perverted publication, of
course, knows more about the profession
which he forsook than do his non-s-uc
ceraful brethren whom he left between the
plow handles when he assumed the grave
responsibilities of a "progressive weekly"
in the Ml regrass, and received his tithe of
the product of the soil i a returu tor the
chunks of theoretical advice and sweet
stuff that went to make up its pages.
The perverted publication which two
years ago advocated a tariff on sea island
cotton and so laid the foundation for the
Hanson-AV ilkinson fusion fiasco of this
year in the Eleventh district; the alleged
Democratic newspaper that finds no fault
with the only honest Republican principle
of high tariff; the publication that loses
no opportunity to assail the Democratic
platform of today because it is not in ac
cord with the Republican platform; the
only daily newspaper in the South that fa
vors trusts, combinations and the might of
money against the rights of living—now
poses as the chief instructor of the South
ern farmer and the great authority upon
agriculture in Georgia.
As a matter of fact, so far the stuff that
has been written in its columns about
wheat by its agricultural editor, lacks
everything that the student of agriculture
has learned in his first year course.
The Telegraph knows nothing about
wheat growing. It has confessed to its
gross ignorance on the subject in column
after column of foolish and harmful twad
dle, written we must believe in good faith
as -a solution of the agricultural problem.
'As a matter of fact the solution of that
problem has been found many years ago,
but that solution is not wheat raising -with
twenty bushels, worth 65 cents a bushel,
to the acre and costing a minimum of 80
cents a bushel, under fair farming prin
ciples, to raise it. Another fact of -the
matter is that wheat economically raised
and bringing 68 cents a bushel,
is a most expensive crop, and if it it is
raised with commercial fertilizer arid the
land is honestly maintained, it is an ex
travagant crop and flour made for home
use is a luxury.
(We really believe that the farmers of
Georgia would be wise to leave wheat alone
and use only corn meal.
We do not believe that wheat at 70
cents a bushel would pay the Georgia far
mer except in small quantities, perhaps,
and as a crop rotation or fallow on some
peculiar and particular piece of land.
The Telegraph’s agricultural editor, like
all theoretical farmers, has started this
movement for agricultural reform at the
wrong end. He is palpably, lamentably
ignorant as to the first principles of farm
ing and is therefore incapable of giving
advice upon the subject.
We must all smile at the self-executed
picture of its esteemed editor as he follow
ed the mule in his boyhood and tickled the
virgin soil with a bull tongue, some sixty
years ago, but we cannot agree with him
about wheat raising in Georgia, nor do we
believe that he will find a single practical
and intelligent farmer in the world to
agree with him.
The Georgia farmer will not get profit by
raising wheat at 68 cents a bushel, or at
SO cents a bushel. The farmers of the
greatest wheat raising country in the
world, where'the yield per acre is double
what it ever will be in -Georgia, realized
this many years a-go when wheat went
down to below 80 cents, and those farmers
do not use a ton of commercial fertilizer
in a decade.
The Georgia farmer must get down to
practical, economical, diversified farming
before he can become a free man and a
freeholder.
We are well aware that there are some
good and practical farmers in Georgia and
we are confident that they will agree that
wheat at 68 cents a bushel raised on a
farm where no stock is kept and commer
cial fertilizer is used or the land is allowed
to run down, is a most expensive crop, and
■that -the average Georgia farmer who goes
to make up the bulk of the farmers, would
-be wise and more economical if he raised
mce corn, more hogs, more stock, more
hay, more oat straw and more manure be
fore he pajs much if any attention to
wheat.
Newspaper Advertising.
The value of newspaper advertising over
all other kinds has found a new illustra
tion in the city of Cleveland. The shrewd
est and mos-t successful amusement man
ages in that city recently came to the con
clusion that only newspaper advertising
was valuable, and the 'Associated Press re
cently carried out this report of his new
policy.,
Manager Hartz, of the Euclid Aven-ue
opera house, believes he has demonstrated
the superiority of newspaper advertising
over all other forms. Last week he deci
ded to abandon all advertising by means
of bill board posters and window hangers
and to depend upon the newspapers en
tirely. The only posters shown were those
at the entrance of the theater. The result
of the experiment was gratifying. The
other night Julia Marlowe began a week’s
engagement and the house was sold out, it
was said, before the performance began.
Mr. Hartz has decided to put up no more
posters.
This is a remarkable case of the value
of newspaper advertising; for there is
scarcely anything in the line of posters
that is more attractive than those put out
by the theaters. If they have lost ail
power to attract the eye, then certainly
all other posters have, and advertising of
value is confined to the newspaers.
Harold Frederick.
Harold Frederick, who died last week at
Henley, England, was a keen observer of
events and a vigorous and scholarly writer.
He was a journalist of high attainments
and a writer whose field of work included
a wide range of subjects. He understood
English politics thoroughly, and though he
always evinced some bias in treating of
the English political controversies he gave
Americans readers very interesting ac
counts of the leading events in English
public life.
Frederic’s letters to the New York Times
were a notable feature of that journal. His
excursions into the field of fiction writing
won him no little fame, especially a-braod.
“The Damnation of Theron Ware was
much discussed in England upon its .ap
pearance not long ago. An earlier success
in fiction was "Seth's Brother’s Wife.”
He was an honor to his profession and
represented it -well abroad, being popular
with the English people and yet never for
getting his Americanism.
Had Precedents.
The Chicago Times-Herald calls atten
i -tion to the fact that the proposed Anglo-
I American alliance is nothing unique, isn t
I even novel; that a similar though more
r w
[gj
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
, - i .. - ... :
practical proposition was made as early as
1850, when John M. Clayton, secretary of
state, and Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer, min
ister from Great Britain to this country,
got together in an alliance, known as the
Clayton-Bulwer treaty, which alliance is
still in vogue, and which provides that
when any canal is built, whether crossing
-the isthmus at Panama or at any other
place on the narrow neck of land which
connects North and South America, the
’ (United States and Great Britain shall guar
antee its neutrality tor all time, neither
power to have any advantage over the
other in the use of the canal. In view of
the staunch support Great Britain gave the
United States in the recent trouble with
. Spain, the people of this country are not
. likely to kick against the provisions of the
treaty.
We Will Feed the World.
, The bureau of statistics has compiled its
report of the exports of breadstuffe, provis
ions, cotton and mineral oils for nine
months of the current year. The figures
must prove surprisingly satisfavtory.
It apears that the total exports of these
products for nine months amount to nearly
the figures for either 1896 or 1897, for the
whole twelve months. The following com
• parative table must prove of special inter
- est:
i Articles. 1898. 1797.
, Breadstuffss22s,s26,993 $159,317,747
Cattle and hogs... 25,606,852 29,641,779
Provisions 120,564,992 -102,949,090
' -Cotton 122,452,132 198,436,395
‘ Mineral oils 39,216,393 44,267,295
Total nine m0nth5.5533,367,342 $444,612,306
Increase 88,755,056
The increase in breadstuffs ($66,209,246)
is certainly a remarkable and gratifying
showing—almost phenomenal, when it is
considered that for about four months of
that time we had a war on our hands..
October 18th might with propriety be
made “flag day” in this country, if more
holidays are needed. On that day of this
year Porto Rico was formally transferred
to the sovereignty of the United States
and the American flag was hoisted with
due ceremony on the former public 'build
ings of Spain. Thirty-one years before-,
on October 18, 1867, our flag’ was raised in
Sitka, terminating the Russian control of
Alaska. Ninety-five years ago, on Octo
ber 18, 1803, he treaty with France by
which the great territory of Louisiana was
ceded to the United States was transmit
ted to the senate by (President Jefferson.
The day is certainly one -made memorable
by historic events of the first importance.
JAPANESE
(J 3 LU©
CURE
A New anil Complete Treatment, consisting of
SUPPOSITORIES, Capsules of Ointment and two
Boxes of Ointment. A never failing cure for Piles
. f every nature and degree. It makes an operation
wjth the knife, which is painful, and often results
iii death, unnecessary. Why endure this terrible
cisease? We pack a Written Guarantee in each
H Eox. No Cure, No Pay. 50c.and $1 a box, 6 for
15. Sent by mail. Samples free
OINTMENT, 25c. and 50c.
/'ANCTIPATIPN Cured. Piles Prevented, by
Uvllui D nl I Vi's Japanese Liver Pellets, the
great LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR and
BLOOD PURIFIER. Small, mild and pleasant
to take: especially adapted for children’s use. 50
doses 25 cents. ,
FREE-A vial of these famous little Pellets will
be given with a $t box or more of Pile Cure.
XoTicE — The genuine fresh Japanese Pili
Cure for sale only by
For Sale at Goodwyn’a Drug Store and
Brown House Pharmacy.
Notice.
Notice is hereby given that at a meeting
of the stockholders of the Macon and In
dian Spring Electric Sltreet Railway Com
pany, to be held at the office on the lOta
day of November, 1898, a resolution will
be offered calling for an increase of the
stock to the amount of four hundred shares
and calling for -the issuance of bonds to
the amount of one hundred thousand dol
lars. Macon and Indian Spring Electric
Street Railway Company.
October 15, 1898.
To the Honorable Secretary of the State
of the State of Georgia:
The petition of the Macon and Indian
Spring Electric -Street Railway Company
shows: 1
1. That the name of the petitioner is the
•'‘Macon and Indian Spring Electric Street
-Railway Company.”
2. The character of the corporation is an
electric street railway corporation.
3. The date of its original charter is July
29. 1893.
4. There are no amendments to said
charter.
5. It desires an amendment to its charter
changing its corporate name so that here
after its corporate name shall be “Tbe Ma
con Electric Light and Railway Company.”
Macon and Indian Spring Electric Street
Railway Company.
October 15, 1898.
GEORGIA, Bibb County—Nora Smith,
having made application to me in due form
to be appointed permanent administratrix
upon the estate of Crawford Smith, late of
said county, notice is hereby given that
said application will be heard at the regu
lar term of the Court of Ordinary for said
county, to be held on the first Monday in
November, 1898.
Witness my hand and official signature,
this 7th day of October, 1898.
C. M. WILEY, Ordinary.
□aeon and New York
Short Line.
Via Georgia Railroad and Atlantic Coast
Line. Through Pullman cars between
Macon and New York, effective August
4th, 1898.
Lv Macon.... 9 00 ami 4 20 pm| 7 40 pm
Lv Mill’gfev’le 10 10 am 5 24 pm| 9 24 pm
Lv Camak.... 11 40 am 6 47 pmi 3 33 am
Lv Camak.... 11 40 am 6 47 pm|lo 31 pm
Ar Aug’taC.T. 1 20 pm 8 25 pml 5 15 pm
Lv Aug'taE.T. 2 30 pm
Ar Florence.. 815 pm
Lv Fayettev’le 10 15 pm
Ar Petersburg 3 14 am
Ar Richmond. 4 00 am
Ar Wash’ton.. 7 41 am .
Ar Baltimore.' 9 05 am
Ar Phila’phia.*ll 25 am
Ar New York 2 03 pmi
Ar N Y, W 23d st! 2 15 pm||_
Trains arrive from Augusta and points
on main line 6:45 a. m. and 11:15 a. m.
From Camak and way stations 5:30 p. m.
A. G. JACKSON.
General Passenger Agent,
JOE W. WHITE. T. P. A.
W. W. HARDWICK, S. A., 454 Cherry St
Macon. Ga.
FRENCH
TANSY
WAFERS
These are the genuine French Tansy
Wafers, imported direct from Paris. La-
- dies can depend upon securing relief from
and cure of Painful and Irregular Periods
regardless of cause.
EMERSON DRUG CO.,
Importers and agents for the United States
San Jose, Cal.
C. T. KING,
Druggist, sole agent for Macon. Go.
MACON NEWS MONDAY EVENIKtv, OCTOBER 24
fc. Y. MALLARY, E. N. J ELKS,
President Vice-President
J. J. COBB, Cashier.
Commercial and Savings Bank,
MACON, GA.
General Banking Business Transacted.
$5.00 wil rent a. box in our safety de
posit vault* an absolutely safe plan in
which to deposit jewelry, silverware and
'securities of all kinds.
UNION SAVINGS BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY
MACON, GEORGIA.
Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent
J. W. Cabaniss, President; S. S. Dunlay,
Vice-President; C. M. Orr, Cashier,
bapital, $200,000. Surplus, $30,000.
Interest paid on deposit!. Deposit your
savings and they will be increased by in
terest compounded semi-annually.
THE EXCHANGE BANK
of Macon, Ga.
Capital $500,000
Surplus 150,000
J. W. Cabaniss, President.
S. S. Dunlap, Vice-President
C. M. Orr, Cashier.
Libetal to its customers, accommodating
to the public, and prudent in its manage
ment, this bank solicits deposits and other
business in its line.
DIRECTORS.
J. W. Cabaniss, W. R. Rogers, R. E.
Park, H. J. Lamar, N. B. Corbin, S. S.
punlap, L. W. Hunt, Sam Meyer, W. A.
Doody, J. H. Williams, A. D. Schofield.
ESTABLISHED 1868.
K. M. PLANT. CHAS. D. HCki
Caahlsr
I. C. PLANT’S SON,
BANKER,
MACON, GA.
A general banking business transacted
find all consistent corteales cheerfully ex
landed to patrona. Certificates es fiepeai
Issued bearing Interest.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of MACON, GA.
The accounts of banks, corporations
firms and individuals received upon th»
most favorable terms consistent with «s»k
servativo banking. A share of year Oss
luess respectfully solicited.
JL H. PLANT.
President
George H. Plant, Vice-Preside
W. W. Wrigley, Cashier.
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
Real Estate Loans
♦
We have large quantities of money sub
ject to sight draft for loans on city, farm
OF subur’- 'i’' ni-npnrtv.
Straight interest loans.
Annual payjnent loans.
Monthly payment loans.
Security Loan and flUstract Co.
370 Second St., Phone 82.
T. B. WEST,
Secretary and Attorney.
PHYSICIANS.
DR. C, B. PEETE,
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat,
270 Second street.
'Phone 462.
DR. MAURY M. STAPI EK,
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
506 Mulberry street. 'Phone 121.
1872. DR. J. J. SUBERS. 1897.
Permanently located.
In the specialties venereal; lost energy
restored; female Iregularities and poison
oak. Cure guaranteed.
Address in confidence, with stamp, 519
Fourth street, Macon, Ga.
BRBBIS, THBJUBS & GLRWSON,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law.
Macon. Ga
“THE HIAWASSEE ROUTE.”
Only Through Sleeping Car Line Between
Atlanta and Knoxville.
Beginning June 19th the Atlanta, Knox
ville and Northern Railway, in connection
with the Western and Atlantic railway,
will establish a through line of sleepers
between Atlanta and Knoxville.
Trains will leave Atlanta from Union
depot at 8:30 p. m. and arrive in Knoxville
at 7 a. m. Good connections made at
Knoxville for all points north, including
Tate Springs and other summer resorts.
Tickets on sale and diagram at W. &
A. city ticket office, No. 1 North Pryor
street, Atlanta. Also at Union depot.
J. E. W. FIELDS, G. P. A.,
Marietta, Ga.
J. H. MCWILLIAMS, T. P. A,
Knoxville, Tenn.
We have received
the
English Lawn
Grass Seed
for winter lawns.
H. J. Lamar & sons
416 Second Street, next
to Old Curiosity Shop. ,
For Sale.
Johnson & Harris store building,
corner Fourth and Cherry
streets.
The GloVer place on Hugucnin
Heights, a good five room house.
The Ghapman property, No. 1020
Ocmulgee street, two four room
: tenant houses and large lot.
Tenant house on Jackson street, in
rear of Hawes’ store.
Two 2-room tenant houses on
Tindall property
Large vacant lots at Crump’s park.
20 lots on the Gray propertv.
Mclnvale plantation in Houston
county.
M. P. CALLAWAY, Receiver
Progress Loan, Improvement
and Manufacturing Company,
Macon, Ga.
Picture.
Frames
TO THE PUBLIC:
You can find our work in the mansion,
the cottage and the cabin. All are unani-
I mous in their verdict, “that we are head
and shoulders above all competition,” es
pecially in a business sense.
Call and see our beautiful pictures and
frames. Best work and lowest prices,
W. Lamar Williams,
422 Second St.
NEW YORK WORLD
Th rlce-a-Week Edition
18 Pages a Week...
...156 Papers a Year
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Published every alternate day except Sun
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complete, accurate and Impartial, as all
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It prints the news of the world, having
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stories by breat authors, a capital humor
ous page, complete markets, a depart
ment of the household and women’s work
and other special departments of unusual
Interest.
We offer this unequalled newspaper and
Tho News together for one year for 36.00
The News
Printing Co.
Does Binding and Job
Printing of every de
scription. Ask for
estimates. High class
work.
5 <Soofula -
Mill Ji
RYSIPELAS
Two Diseases That Cause Their
Victims to Be Shunned by
Their Fellow-Man.
Spring fdcld, Mo.
Grntt.emkn : I commenced taking P.
P. P_, Lippman’s Great Remedy, last
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pletely covered with the disease; I took
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market, and for those who need a gen
eral-tonic to build u£ the system and
Improve the appetite I consider that it
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ARTHUR WOOD,
Springfield, Mo.
Erysipelas and Scrofula cured by P.
P. P., Lippman’s Great Remedy, surely
and without fail.
SpRINGFIKT.n, Mo.
Grntt.emrn : JLiist .June I had a
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tended from my ankle to my knee. I
got one bottle of your P. P. P., Lipp
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taken almost every medicine recom
mended for scrofula and catarrh, and
vour P. P. P. is th© best I have ever
triad. It cannot be recommended too
highly for blood poison, etc.
Yours very truly,
W. P. HUNTER.
P. P. P. cures all blood and skin dis
ease, both in men and women.
Rheumatism, which makes man's Tife
a hell upon earth, can be relieved at
once by P. P. P., Lippman’s Great Rem
edy. It makes a PERMANENT cure.
P. P. P. is the great and only remedy
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breathing when lying down, P. P. P.
relieves at once.
P. P. P. cures blood poisoning in all
its various stages, old ulcers, sores and
kidney complaints.
Sjfd hy ,tli druggists.
LIPPMAN BROS., A,othecaries. Sole Prap’rs,
Uppaiso's 31o:k, Savannah, Qa.
J William’s Kidney Pills
\ Has no equal in diseases of thep
Kidneys and Urinary Organs. Have l
\ you neglected your Kidneys? Have '
you overworked your nervous sys-(>
6 tern and caused trouble with your ,
\ Kidneys and Bladder? Have you<’
T pains in the loins, side, back groins. ?
$ and bladder? Have you a flabby ap- .
. pearance of the face, especially<
x* under the eytj ? Too frequent de- , |
3 sire pass urine ? William's Kidney'
X Pills will impart new life to the dis-1 ’
F eased organs, tone up the system A
A and make anew man of you By
1 mail 50 cen+s per box. ~ f
> r Wtumams Mrc. Co., Props., Cleveland,O. X
For sale by H. J. Lamar & Son, Whole-
Axenta.
Book Binding.
High class w’ork. Prices
the lowest. Get our
estimates.
News Printing Co
“Queen of Sea Routes.’
Herchants
and Miners
T ransportation Co
Steamship Lines
Between Savannah and
Baltimore, Norfolk,
Boston and Prov
dence.
Low rates and excellent service.
Accommodations and cuisine unsurpassed
Best way to travel and ship your goods.
For advertising matter and particulars
address
J. J. CAROLAN, Agent, Savannah, Ga.
R. H. WRIGHT, Agent, Norfolk, Va.
J. W. SMITH, Agent, 10 Kimball House,
Atlanta, Ga.
J. C. WHITNEY, Traffic Manager.
W. P. TURNER, General Pass. Agent
General offices, Baltimore, Md.
[Tlacon Screen Co.
Manufacturers of the best adjustable
wire window screens and screen doors.
Your patronage respectfully solicited. Es
timates furnished free of charge. J. D.
Newbanks, manager, 215 Cotton avenue,
Macon. Ga.
Money.
Loans negotiated on Improved city prop
erty, on farms, at lowest market rates,
business of fifteen years standing. Facili
ties unsurpassed.
HOWARD M. SMITH
Second St., Macon, Ga.
Hudson River Du Dauiignt
The most charming inland water trip on
the American continent.
The Palace Iron Steamers,
“New York” and “Albany”
Os the
Hudson River Dau Line
Daily except Sunday.
Leave New York, Desbrosses 5t..8:40 a.m.
Lv New York, West 22d st, N. R. 9:00 a.m
Leave Albany, Hamilton st, 8:30 a.m.
Landing at Yonkers, West Point, New
burgh, Poughkeepsie, Kingston Point,
Catskill and Hudson.
The attractive tourist route to the Catskill
Mountains, Saratoga and the Adiron
dack®, Hotel Champlain and the
North, Niagara Falls and ths
West.
Through tickets sold to all points.
Restaurants on main deck. Orchestra on
each steamer. Send six cents in stamps
for “Summer Excursion Book.”
F. B. Hibbard, Gen. Pass. Agent.
E. E. Olcott, Gen, Manager.
Desbrosses st. pier, New York.
D. A. KEATING.
'yW
Bspsw
General Undertaker and Embalmer.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Caskets, cases, coffins and burial robes;
hearse and carriages furnished to all
funerals in and out of the city,
telephone 468. 322 Mulberry street, Macon,
G*.
Montevallo
I
O CJ) . jAI, lu
ROUSH COAL CO.
Agents, Macon, Ga.
Phone 245.
gtfsnrmnninnuinnniiuiuuiiiuitiiuuiiuuuiuKiHiuuiiiu*
|A COLLEGE EDUCATION BY MAIL
B Thorough Instruction
in book-keeping ’and
business, shorthand,sci
ence, journalism, lan
guages, architecture,
Burveying,drawing;civ
-11, mechanical, steam,
electrical, hydraulic,
municipal, sanitary,
railroad and structural
engineering. Expert in
structors. Fifth year.
Fees moderate.
Illustrated catalog free.
State subject in which
interested. f ■
■ATtoNM, cosßssroMDENcx iNSTrrm,
Nation! Bank Bnlldlag, D. C.
'HiUMmatnnnuMumunuumiuiuumiiuiuntrvnixn.uuuJ
Ate
■ y->
zzzl
Men’s Top Coats.
The road to style leads right through
our shop. From here a man can start out
correctly appareled. Our methods of meas
uring, fitting and furnishing are pains
taking and the goods are of extra good
value. .
Look at the line of Covert Cloths, Black
Cheviots, Black Unfinished Worsteds and
Oxford Vecunas. We make up very hand
some top coats from these at very moder
ate prices.
GEO. P. BURDICK & CO.,
Importing Tailors.
SYPH I LleFi
Primary, secondary or tertiary, no mat
ter how long standing, cured for life under
absolute guarantee in from 15 to 60 days.
I have used this wonderful remedy In my
private practice for over 20 years and have
never failed.. A patient once treated by
me is free from outbreaks forever. I use
no mercury or potash. I will pay SSOO for
any case that I fail to cure within 60 days.
Write at once.
DR. GRAHAM,
Suite 1109, 114 Dearborn st., Chicago, HL
WATCHES. JEWELRY.
Right Prices.
Honest Goods.
BEELAND, the Jeweler,
Triangular Block.
DIHjnONDS. CUT-GLHSS.
We fire Better Prepared Than Ever
To take care of the building trade of Macon
and tributary points. Our facilities for prompt
ly filling orders are unexcelled. If you are go
ing to build a house it will eave you money to
see us before buying your material. If you
desire to build by contract, we are contractors
and builders and take any house, large or small
by contract.
Macon, Sash, Door and Lumber Co.
Office, Fourth Street, Phone 416.
Factory Enterprise, South Macon, Phone 404
for rent.
DWELLINGS.
202 Cole street.
612 Oglethorpe street.
719 Arch st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
863 Arch st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
858 New St., 8 rooms and double kitchen.
855 Arch St., corner New, 12 rooms and
double kitchen.
135 Park Place, 6 rooms.
814 Cherry St., 5 rooms, 2 servants’ rooms
Walker house, Cleveland avenue, 6 rooms
and kitchen.
966 Elm St., 7 rooms and kitchen.
758 Second st., 8 rooms and kitchen.
459 New St., 5 rooms and kitchen.
457 New st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
136 Cole st., 5 rooms and kitchen.
1363 Oglethorpe st., 9 rooms and kitchen,
with stables.
417 Forsyth st., 6 rooms and kitchen.
664 Plum st., 7 rooms and kitchen.
765 Spring st., 4 rooms and kitchen.
317 College st., 10 rooms and kitchen.
913 Walnut street, 10 rooms and kitehen.
917 Walnut st., 9 rooms and kitchen.
12 room house on Cherry street suitable
for boarding, one block from business
portion of city.
Dr. Shorter’s residence on Orange street.
H. HORNE,
315 Third Street.
c _ l
I.A
O I A_
C L
(Illi
That raises it in the estimation of the con
sumer. Our specialties are
Best Grades:
Montevallo,
Jellico,
Alabama,
Anthracite.
Cheapest Prices,
Prompt Delivery.
The Empire Coal and Ice Co
«
Phone 136.
Yard Cherry and Sixth Streets.
C. H. & D. TO MICHIGAN.
3 Trains Daily.
Finest Trains in Ohio.
Fastest Trains in Ohio.
Michigan and the Great Lakes constantly growing in popularity
Everybody will be there this summer. For information inquire
of your nearest ticket agent.
D. G. EDWARDS, Passenger Traffic Manager, Cincinnati, O. I
*s* reHable Female PILL
AjV for DB. MOTT 3 PZmHEOW. PILLS and take no other.
Send for circular. Price SI.OO per box, 6 boxes for $5.00.
DR. MOTT’S CHEMICAL CO m - Cleveland. Ohio. 4
For sale by H. J. LAMAR & SONS, Wholesale Agents. " i
Harris house, Vinevllle, Cleveland avenue.
Elegant 10 room dwelling of CapU Park’s
on College atreet.
Irvine house, 7 rooms and kitchen, second
door from, car line on Rogers avenue.
STORES.
416-18 Third street.
Garden’s old stand, No. 173 Cotton avenue.
Mix s old stand, 107 Cotton avenue.
A desirable suburban store and dwelling
combined, on Columbus road, for rent
or sale, in thickly populated locality.
TO2-704 Fourth St., corner Pine.
417 Cherry.' •
419 Cherry.
421 Cherry.
125 Cotton avenue.
469 Cotton avenue.
465 Cotton avenue.
431 Mulberry.
359 Second.
357 and 369 Seooid, will veat portion or all.
Elkan’s old store, rear Exchange bank,
Wolff & Happ building, half or al!, will ar
range suitable for tenants.
Stables near Cox & Chappell’s.
Walker house, Vineville, 6 rooms and
kitchen.
No. 415 street.