Newspaper Page Text
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THE MACON NLWS.
ESTABLISHED 1884.
NEWS PRINTING COMPANY,
PUBLISHERS.
R L. MCKENNEY, Business Mngr.
TOM W. LOYLESS, Editor.
THE EVENING NEWS will be delivered
by carrier or mall, per year, $5.00; per
week, 10 centa. THE NEWS will be for
on trains. Correspondence on live
subjects solicited. Real name of writer
should accompany same. Subscriptions
payable in advance. Failure to receive
paper should be reported to the business
office. Address all communications to
THE NEWS.
Offices: 412 Cherry Street
_ - ' - 1 ; ..-X" - '
11
£ JNIO N LA BED
Reunited Forever.
The history of these United States is a
remarkable one in every way. It has been
eiifh from the outaet. The conception of
such an ideal government was wonderful
in itself, and the genius which has guided
its destinies has been no less remarkable.
For a century and a quarter it has ful
filled its mission of fostering freedom and
spreading civilization, and its influence
upon the other nations of the earth has
been demonstrated in the gradual exten
sion of self government, until today mon
archial institutions are such in name only.
It performed a wonderful achievement
when a little handful of oppressed colonists
threw off the yoke which one of the
mightest nations of the earth had fas
tened upon them. No less remarkable was
its settlement of the internal differences
that thirty-odd years ago forced our peo
ple to resort to arms; a conflict which
gave to the world the most impressive ex
amples of bravery and devotion to princi
ple ever recorded in history. And a fitting
sequel to this conflict was the remarkable
action of General Grant in refusing to ac
cept the sword of Dee at Appomattox; nor
even yet the hdrses of his conquered foes,
which might be needed, he said, to make
the next year’s crops.
Remarkable again was. this nation in
going to the relief of a war-wasted people,
and still more so was the genius and hu
manity displayed in prosecuting the war
■which resulted, during which we received
the enemies’ surrendered troops with dis
tinguished honors and cared for their dead
and wounded as if they were our own—a
war in which veterans of our own civil
struggle, and their sons and grandsons
fought and suffered side by side.
NtCt> there be any surprise, therefore,
when the head Os this nation, in his first
address following a -formal declaration of
■peace, gives voice to such remarkable
utterances as fell from the lips of XV illiam ,
McKinley under the dome of Georgia’s
ca-pitol yesterday:
•‘Sectional lines no longer mar the map
of the United States. Sectional feeling no
longer holds’ hack the love we bear each
other. Fraternity is the national anthem,
sung by a chorus of forty-five states and
territories at home and beyond the seas.
The union is once more the common altar :
of our love and loyalty, our devotion and
sacrifice. The old flag again waves over
us in peace, with new glories which your
sons and our sons have this year added to
its sacred folds. What cause we have for
rejoicing, saddened only by the fact that
so many of our /brave men fell on field or
sickened and died from hardship and ex
posure, and others returning bring wounds
and disease from which they will long
suffer. The memory of the dead will be a
precious legacy, and the disabled will be
the nation’s -care.
“A nation which cares for its disabled
soldiers, as we have always done, will
never lack defenders. The national ceme
teries for those who fell in battle are
proof that the dead as well as the living
have our love. What an army of silent
sentinels we have, and with -what loving
care their graves are Kept! Every sol
dier’s grave made during our unfortunate
civil war is a tribute to American valor.
And while when those graves were made
we differed widely about the future of this
government, these differences were long
ago settled by the arbitrament of arms —
AND THE TIME HAS NOW COME IN
THE EVOLUTION OF SENTIMENT AND
FEELING UNDER THE PROVIDENCE
OF GOD. WHEN IN THE SPIRIT OF
FRATERNITY WE SHOULD SHARE
WITH YOU IN THE CARE OF THE
GRAVES OF THE CONFEDERATE SOL
DIERS.
“THE CORDIAL FEELING NOW HAP
PILY EXISTING BETWEEN THE NORTH
AND SOUTH PROMPTS THIS GRA
CIOUS ACT, AND IF IT NEEDED FUR
THER JUSTIFICATION, IT IS FOUND
IN THE GALLANT LOYALTY TO THE
UNION AND THE FLAG SO CONSPICU
OUSLY SHOWN IN THE YEAR JUST
PASSED BY THE SONS AND GRAND
SONS OF THESE HEROIC DEAD.
“What a -glorious future awaits us if
unitedly, wisely and bravely we face the
new -problems now pressing upon us, de
termined to solve them for right and hu
manity!” • '
lx>oking back through the mists of a
hundred yean? succeeding generations
might read with doubt this remarkable
declaration. But with the history of this
most remarkable country before them they
would comprehend and accept it. That
the head of a government should thus
pay tribute to the men who once came so
near overturning that government seems
remarkable even at this day, amid the in
spiring events that prompt, such brotherly
love and magnanimity.
With the scales of prejudice removed
from our eyes we of the South can recog
nize the greatness of Lincoln throughout
hie efforts to avert and then to prosecute
th© struggle between the states, but as
great as were the utterances of the coun
try’s martyred 'president,, they were not
I greater nor more remarkable than the
■ manly, magnanimous, patriotic utterancca
of William McKinley, president of this
i reunited country, the greatest the sun has
j ever shone upon.
Recall □‘‘wey.
i The New York Sun prints a dispatch
I from Manila Bay which is of especial in
' terest to the American people. The cor-
I respondent declares very positively that
the heal Ch of Admiral IDewey is yielding
to the intense nervous strain -to which he
has -been continually E-wbjected since the
j glorious first of May. When in August the
; President practically ordered him to re-
J turn, tihe admiral protested on the ground
i 'that his work was not quite completed.
• Besides he was loath to undergo the ordeal
of receptions and ex’hlbftions that he was
advised would -face him on his arrival in
! the United States. But the Sun’s corree
i pondent now asserts that the admiral
wanst to go home, as he is worn out and
■ is afraid he will succumb to the 'torrid
heat of the next six months.
If there 'be one man In the armies and
navies so the United States who has earn
ed a period of rest, that man is George
Dewey. The American people cannot af
ford to permit him 'io risk his life tn meet
ing duties that others hiay well -fulfill.
Other Admiral* and generals have •been en
joying holidays after their war labors, but
•Dewey has stood gallantly at his post,
waiting patiently for the day to come
when he might he releived. He should not
be allowed to feet that his government has
forgoten him.
Mrs. Myrick, the talented editor of the
Americans Times-Recor'der, can write ten
der lines -as well as caustic ones, if we
may judge by a poem that appeared in the
last edition of her bright paper. This
poem proves that Ella Wheeler Wilcox is
not the only one of the sex who can sing
of Che grand passion. We do not know the
object of Mrs. IMyrick’s tender lines,
whether he be soldier or civilian, but who
ever he may 'be, he ought to be ‘able to ap
preciate the following confession, which
the ‘talented Lady writes under the title,
“Because fl Love You:”
Forever ’neath the journalistic care
And crosses that -I constant bear
There is a love, sweet, soothing, sound.
That helps the hands to glide around—
Al things seem easy in my s!gbt
From early mom till late at night—
Because —«I love you.
Above the composing room’s busy throng
I hear the soulful mockibitd's song.
Throughout the day’s distracting din
The 'breath of flowers comes creeping .in,
An through man’s speech of studied sting
Full oft a jeweled thought finds wing—•
Because —I love you.
The St. iLouis Republic says the Kan
sas girl who has been left a legacy of
$500,000 wherewith to cultivate her voice
is reminded that iMns. Mary Lease’s voice
appears to be standing around disused
somewhere in the effete East with a “for
rent” sign hung around its trottie valve.
She might lease -Mary’s wellkin-ringer for
a good deal less than the legacy and use
the money left over in hiring halls to
operate in.
It llxas been decided to institute a public
investigation of the charges of co Wardice
recently preferred against certain officers
of the 71st New York volunteers. Inci
dentally this investigation will also estab
lish ‘the fact 'whether or not the New York
World can tell the truth.
The statement that only one ball out of
every eighty-five fired in battle hits any
body would b© much more comforting if
the soldier could have some kind of mark
put on that eighty-fifth one so that he
could dodge it, thinks the .Montgomery Ad
vertiser.
IMr. McKinley’s expansion policy seems
to embrace a bona-fide proposition to take
the ex-Confederate states back into the
Union. This is a great country, anyway,
and McKinley is its prophet.
With Macon wining and dining General
Wilson, and a Republican president de
claring that the government should care
for Confederate graves, it begins to look
like the war-before-last is over.
Secretary of State IPhil Cook must have
felt like he had been run over by an ice
wagon when President McKinley made
Appeal Coin IHarvey has so far collected
his speech yesterday.
The ‘‘Campania,” the 'Pullman car in
which the President wll Itravel. is said to
be the most magnificent and lavishly ap
pointed in the world.
The Hon. Joe Chamberlain thinks the
exchange of English titles for American
heiresses is, after all, as good as an in
ternational alliance.
The only thing Spain has left to show for
her discovery of the 'Western Continent is
a little metal box containing the ashes of
Columbus.
Someone suggests that if Tom Reed keeps
on trying to sweep back the expansion tidal
wave he will yet find himself cast up by
the beach.
Chicago’s threat to lynch her /boodle ai
dermen caused them to rescind their ac
tion. And now the people half regret it.
Tom Platt hasn't been able to take his
mind off Teddy long enough to form any
conclusions as to the expansion policy.
Colonel Bryan was willing to fight for
his country, but he was not willing to do
police duty.
Sectarianism is dead and President Mc-
Kinley buried it too deep for resurrection
by his speech in Atlanta yesterday.
According to the Memphis Commercial-
Appeal. Cain Harvey has so far collected
$000,000,156.
If you haven’t anything else to decorate,
wear a flag in your hat ‘Monday.
At §lO a plate Atlanta ought to net about
out of her Peace Jubilee.
President McKinley eveidently has de
signs cn the solid South.
The Worm Turned.
From the Albany Herald.
Those ministers who presume too much
on the license of the pulpit often seem to
forget that there is also such a thing as
rhe freedom of the press. Such forgetful
ness sometimes proves disastrous, as has
just been demonstrated up in Macon. Rev.
J. L. White, a minister of that city, took
Editor Tom Loyless, of the Evening News,
| to task in a card published in that paper
j for having called Rev. J. L. Broughton, of
MACON NEWS THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 15 1898.
Atlanta, a firebrand and having stated
that he had met a just fate in being re
buked by his own flock. The editor of
The News comes back at the Rev. Mr.
White just the same as if he wasn’t a
preacher, and winds up his remarks with
the following breezy paragraph: “As :o
Dr. White’s admiration for Dr. Broughton,
we have nothing to say, except that we do
not envy him that, distinction. We frank
ly confess our inability to admire any man
who would prefer to see his own daughter
in hell (or worse, as he stated it) than an
inmate of a certain religious institution,
merely because that institution differs
with him in creed. We are not, however,
surprised that Dr. White differs with us
in this particular.”
STATE NEWS AND VIEWS.
There is a man in Atlanta who has the
entire alphabet traced in the iris of his
eye. There are probably more queer
things “in the eye” of Atlanta people than
any people in the country, the Savannnah
News rises to remark,
About noon on Monday, the sth instant,
fire totally destroyed the home and almost
the entire household effects of Mr. Robert
Freeman, of Talbot county. Mr. Freeman
was insured to the amount of S4OO. which
will not half cover his loss. He has many
friends who sympathize with him.
Miss Berta Mae Crisp, daughter of the
late Hon. Charles F. Crisp, was married
yesterday to Mr. C. S. Glover, both of
Americus. -
At last accounts Santa Claus was study
ing the maps of Cuba, Porto Rico and the
Philippines.—Waycross Herald.
Charles Tolson, the actor who fillc 1 a
several weeks’ engagement at Crump's
park this summer, is now playing in Daw
son.
The Savannah Morning News has the
following that is pertinent to some things
in Georgia just at this time:
• “The most opinionated and intolerant
persons are the religious bigots. An in
stance in illustration is noted by the
Louisville Courier-Journal:. ‘The Atlanta
pastor who rebuked his congregation, say
ing that of one thing he was sure, and that
was his religion, turns out to be noted for
his attacks upon other creeds. People who
are most doubtful of the righteousness of
other people are the most confident of
their own.’ ”
PEOPLE’S FORUM.
THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
Editor cf The Evening News: The ques
tion as to whether ;we shall maintain our
public schols at the present status, is one
of the questions of the hour in Georgia. It
has been discussed in and out of the legis
lature. The matter has not yet been fi
nally settled, so I trust w'hat I shall gay
will not be inopportune.
I am unconditionally and unhesitatingly
in favor of a complete system of public
schools. I am certainly not satisfied with
the system as it is at present. ‘lt is very
inefficient, but it is doing great good, and
is certainly worth maintaining so as to
form a nucleus of a better anti more com
plete system.
At present the country districts are fa
vored with a .six months scbool. These six
months' are divided up sb as to .be most
convenient to 'the country children. That
the present system is a blessing no one can
doubt. Let any one take a trip through
the country districts of Georgia today and
he will see more general inteligence among
the children, more interest shown in edu
cational affairs, than fifteen years ago. At
that time, and until recently we had a
■three months’ school. These schools were
taught in the summer months, usually
July, August and September. They were
were well attended, but were of such a
short duration that in many neighborhoods
teachers could not afford to teach 'them.
The present system of six months has pro
duced a much better class of teachers than
we formerly had. Formerly 'a well edu
cated teacher could not afford to teach a
country school of three months. Now the
country schools are being 'taught by edu
cated men and women. So the improved
condition of the schools 'has had a direct
and beneficial effect upon the state.
If by taxing the people a few cents on a
feiw dollars can give to our state a citizen
ship moral, educated and capable of pur
suing its lifework in a better and happier
manner. I say put the tax on. Don't stop
to calculate the costs when you are rearing
and training a Child for citizenship in
Georgia.
Did you ever think who paid the funds
upon which the children of Georgia are
educated? Very little comes out of the
pockets of the people. The school fund is
paid as follows:
Poll tax,’ special tax on shows and exhi
bitions, all taxes on the sales of spirituous
and malt liquors, one half of the retals of
the W. and A. railroad, the net amount
arising for the inspection of oils and fetil
izers and the net amount arising from the
hire of convicts.
So what is tihe use of bld Dives writhing
and groaning. He pays no more of the
school tax than the man who is worth
much less. I am in favor of a more com
plete system of public schools. I shall
never be satisfied until I see such counties
as Houston, Monroe, Butts, Pulaski, &c.,
have a nine months’ school with well sal
aried teachers. By a system of local tax
ation eabh community can do it. A bill
•was passed in 1893 to allow each county
in Georgia to do this. Suppose our sister
county, Houston, which is now considered
about the best county in Georgia, had a
system as complete as Bibb. In five years
her lands would double in price and value
and she would be an ideal community.
What is true so Houston county is true of
Georgia. There never was a better invest
ment than Georgia makes in the public
school funds. She is way behind her sis
ters of the South on this question. Yet
she justly boasts of being the “Empire”
Southern state. What would she >be if she
had in every county a complete system of
schools, taught by good teachers and run
during nine months in the- year. She
would not then have to get down on her
knees and beg foreign capital and foreign
enterprises to come. But at her gates cap
ital would be knocking and enterprise
would be entreating for entrance. Out
lands would increase in value and the de
mands be so great that the whole state
would turn, for a eeason, into real estate
dealers, selling to the welcomed visitors
of the North and West our farms, which
would soon blossom as the rose.
One of our great troubles is the tendency
of the people from the country to move
to the cities. There is now an overflowing
of the cities and depopulation of the coun
try. This is almost solely due to a want
of educational advantages in the country
districts. Bibb county has a very imper
fect system of public schools, yet I am
sure she has about the best in the state.
And see what schols have done for her.
RoVal
Baking Powder
Made from pure
cream of tartar.
Safeguards the food
against alum.
Alum baking powders are the greatest
menacers to health of the present day,
ROYAL BAKING POWOER CO., NEW YORK.
There is hardly an acre of land of the poor
est sori and In the poorest neighborhood
that would not sell for $lO per acre. Many
large farms will bring ax present SIOO per
acre. I challenge any one to dispute the
facts I have related above. If these facts
bo true, then can any one say that we
should fail to work for a system of
schools that will be an honor to our state 7
'lt is true that Georgia Washington had
no educational advantages. A graduate of
the Gresham High school probably gets
about as complete an education as had
Daniel Webster when he left Dartmouth
College. Lord Bacon left college in dis
gust and pursued his studies according to
his own ideas and plans. Yet still, as Ma-
Caulay says, these were playmates of Mil
ton that were probably as great and per
haps greater than Milton, 'while they were
children, .but Milton was educated and his
genius was developed to the delight of the
civilized world. While ‘his playmates were
brighter during the “doodle-hole blowing”
period, were permitted to grow up unde
veloped and died unknown, unhonored and
unsung. The red old hills of Georgia have
produced many great men. Genius is in
digenous to her soil. The little brown
hands of the country lads will one day
hold the pen of statesmen.
Let's all join hands to aid in the devel
opment of the public schools of Georgia.
Very truly, Civis.
f,. ~ What a man
\\ /Ta /7 /Stains to seems
for a little time
//J b e le high
// / est rur| g in the
/ lad<ler, and dur-
H —that brief pe
ll Kr ft ft J r ’ o< t tie may be
\\ w x ft[ ///content, but when
Vwvj/ 1. jj he discovers that
XX V .wW ft //ttt ere are other
f -iK ft ft / rungs, still higher
\ U P> ambition gives
\ /1/a.nd he begins once
\4/ I / raore to climb. To
fjpj X v/'V // I climb is really man’s
I v htef end. It isn’t in
I attainment, but in
v T /' / wor L.that man finds his
k 1 /// rea t happiness, conse
zV/a ] ! quently it is not strange
,we find men working
un til they break down
''' when there is no real
necessity for it.
If men only knew it, they could work to
almost any extent on through middle life
and into old age, if they would only take a
little common sense care of their health.
The trouble is that they do not take the lit
tle stitches here and there that are neces
sary to preserve health. They pay no at
tention to the signs of on-coruing ill-health.
A little biliousness, a little indigestion, a
little loss of sleep and appetite, a little
nervousness, a little headache, a Little
shakiness in the morning, and a little dull
ness all day, a little this and a little that —
all these little things they neglect. Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery makes
the appetite keen, digestion and assimila
tion perfect, the liver active, the blood pure
and the nerves steady. It is the great
blood-maker and flesh-builder. It is the
great liver iuvigorator and nerve tonic. It
fits a man to work and work and work.
Medicine dealers sell it and have nothing
else “just as good.”
“I was a sufferer five or six years from indi
gestion,” writes B. F. Holmes, of Gaffney,
Spartanburg Co., S. C., “ also from sore stomach
and constant headache. I then used Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery and ‘ Pleasant Pel
lets,’ which in a few days gave me permanent
relief.”
A man or woman who neglects constipa
tion suffers from slow poisoning. Doctor
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipa
tion. One little “ Pellet ”is a gentle laxa
tive, and two a mild cathartic. All medi
cine dealers sell them.
SPECIAL NOTICES.
QB Til Nita.
Tax payers are notified that the fourth
installment of the city tax is now due.
Pay and save tax execution.
A. R. TINSLEY, Treasurer.
Dec. 1, I*9B.
Tailor Made
SUITS
at home.
$20.00 ANO UP.
F. W. GOETTE,
153 Cotton Ave.
Academy of Music.
THURSDAY, DEC. 15.
DIRECTION OF JACOB BLITT
Marie Wainwright.
In the Big New York and London
Success.
SHALL WE FORGIVE HER.
Two Years at the Adelphi Theatre, Lon
don, England. Regular Prices*
For Asthma use CHE
NEY’S EXPECTOR-
ANT.
F~ I N A N O I A L.
You Don’t Have to
Wait for yoar money when you get loans
from us. We have it always on band.
GEO. A. SMITH, Gen. Man.
►quitable Building' and Loan Association,
Macon, Ga.< 461 Third Strest.
B. Y. MALLARY, B. N. JELKS,
President Vice-President
J. J. COBB, Cashier.
Commercial and Savings Bank,
MACON. GA.
General Banking Business Transacted.
$5.90 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.
VISION 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.
Capital, $200,000. Surplus, $30,000.
Interest paid on deposits. Deposit your
savings and they will be increased by in
terest compounded semi-annually.
THIS EXCHANGE BANK
of Macon, Ga.
Capital $500,000
Surplus 150,000
J. AV. 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.
Dunlap, L. W. Hunt, Sam Meyer, W. A.
Doody, J. H. Williams, A. D. Schofield.
ESTABLISHED 1368.
0L BL FL ANT. C2IAS. D. HURI
Cashier.
I. C. PLANTS SON,
BANKEB,
MACON, GA.
A general banking builaoa* traoMet**
and all consistent cortexie* cheerfully «
tended to patron*. Certificate* of
Issued bearing interest.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of MACON, GA.
Th* account* of bank*, eerperatlen*
firm* and individual* received upon th*
most favorable terms consistent with eas
servatlva banking. A chare of ysur bus
Ince* respectfully selieltcd.
B. E. PLANT,
President.
George H. Plant, Vlce-Prosideat
W. W. Wrigley, Cashier.
We will have at our disposal during
November $75,000 to loan on Georgia farms
or city property. We are offering money at
low rates.
THE GEORGIA LOAN AND TRUST CO.,
O. A. Coleman, General Manager,
355 Second. Street.
HEADQUARTERS
FOR
Real Estate Loans
We have large quantities of money sub
ject to sight draft for loans on city, farm
or suburban property.
Straight Interest loan*.
Annual payment loam*.
Monthly payment loans.
Security Loan and Rfcstiact co.
‘370 Second St,, Phone 82.
T. B. WEST,
Secretary and Attorney.
Money.
Loans negotiated on Improved city prop
erty, on farms, at lowest market rates,
business of fifteen years standing. Faolli
tles unsurpassed.
HOWARD M. SMITH
Second St., Macon, Ga.
MILCE LLANE OUS.
An« lO‘
'Qg |jl®
u IT
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 Vecunaa. We make up very hand
some top coats from these at very moder
ate prices.
GEO. P. BURDICK & CO.,
Importing Tailors.
flacon’s Only
Picture Frame Store.
That is what we are. We guarantee you
that we can show you four times the as
sortment and four times the amount of
stock shown by any other firm in Macon.
And Our
Frames Are Made
Not thrown together. Call and see ua.
W. Lamar Williams,
422 Second St.
We have received
the
English Lawn
Grass Seed
for winter lawns.
R. J. Lamar 8 Sons
416 Second Street, next
to Old Curiosity Shop.
C. A. Harrjs. W. J. Hopper.
JUecftanics'CoaiCo
Phone 122.
Red Ash, Jellico
Always on hand.
We meet all competition and
take Periodical Tickets.
D. A. KEATING.
Genoral Undertaker and Embalmer.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Caskets, cases, coffins and burial robes;
hearse and carriages furnished to ail
funerals in and out of the city,
telephone 46&. 322 Mulberry street, Macon,
Ga.
[Racon Screen Co.
Manufacturers of the best adjustable 1
wire window screens and screen doors.
Your patronage respectfully solicited. Es
timates furnished free of charge. J. D.
Newbank*, manager, 215 Cotton aveaus,
Macon. Ga.
Henry Stevens, Sons &
Company.
11. STEVENS' SONS CO., Macon, Ga.,
Manufacturers of sewer and railroad cul
vert pipe, Actings, fire brick, elay, etc.
Wall tubing that will last forever.
Macon Refrigerators.
MUCKE’S Improved Dry Air Refriger Jj
a tors. he beet refrigerators made. Manu
factured right here in Macon, any size and
of any materiai deeired. It has qualities **
which no other refrigerator on the market fi
possesses. Come and see then; at the sac- ]a
tory on New street
For Whooping Con**’
use CHENEY? '’ l "
PECTORANT.