Newspaper Page Text
SOER BULLETS BRING BLOOD
Krugir’s Forces Are Credited With the First
Victory of the War.
TRAIN BLOWN UP.
Report Has St That Fifteen En
i glishmen Fell In the
First Onslaught.
The London Evening News of Fri
day published the following dispatch
from Cape Town:
“An armored train has been de
stroyed south of Mafeking. Fifteen
British troops were killed. The Boers
shelled the wreckage after the train
was derailed.”
An official dispatch received at the
eolouial office says:
“The armored train was deatroyed
near Kraipan station while on its way
to Mafeking with guns.”
This disposes of the fear that many
: 'omen and children were involved in
the disaster.
It was reported in Cape Town,
though as yet rumor was not confirm
ed, that a collision had taken place
between trains bearing refugees, near
Victoria West, Cape Colony, nine per
sons being killed and many others in
jured. Boer forces, with artillery,
The ac
cording to a dispatch just received
from Standerton, broke camp at Sand
spruit yesterday morning, moving in
the direction of Natal. The war office
^as received the following dispatch
from the general commanding the
Cape forces:
“An armored train from Mafeking,
escorting two seven-guns sent from
here ,o Mafeking, was attacked last
night at Kraipan. Apparently a rail
had been removed. The train left the
track, and the Boers fired into into it
with artillery for a half hour, and cap
tured it. Telegraphic communica
tion with Mafeking is interrupted at
Kraipan. The women and children
have been sent to Cape Town. The
guns referred to belonged to the col
ony. They are light and of old pat
tern. We have no details as to casu
alties.”
First Gun Fired.
The first act of the war was the
swarming of the Boers across the bor
der of Natal and the occupation of
Laings Nek. An advance in th« direc
tion of New Castle is also reported,
ish (jit field is not fully confirmed. The Brit
force in Natal under Generals
White and Symons remains on the de
fensive.
The main body of troops in Cape
Colony is also stationary, but a strong
force has moved out from Mafeking in
Bechuanaland toward the Transvaal
border, taking guns and ambulance
equipment, This force consists chief
ly of rough riders and crack marks
men from Buluwayo, and is stiffened
with the Northumberland Fusileers,
or the “Fighting Fifth,” regarded by
Kitchener as his best regiment. The
cavalry is commanded by Colonel
Baden-Powell and the infantry by
Colonel Plummer. These two officers
were the best on the British side dur
ing the Matabele rebellion.
Joubert Caution a Hig Troops.
Advices from Pretoria state that
Commandant General Joubert’s com
kiand is now at Volksrust. Several
Capo Colonists have been sworn in as
Burghers. The town is quiet. Postal
communication with the surrounding
colonies has been suspended, but that
between the Transvaal and the Orange
Free State is maintained.
Commandant General Joubert has
issued a circular from the chief laager
in consequence of the report that some
of the Burghers had misbehaved them
selves on their journey to the borders,
plundering offenses,the a number of stores. Such
| commandant general says,
'ffilJ be severely punished.
> ‘‘When we are unwillingly com
pelled to cross the boundary line of
our country,” says General Joubert,
‘‘let it not be thought that we are a
band of robbers, and with that in
tiew, remain as far as possible from
private dwellings and from places
where no enemy is stationed. When
food or forage for the cattle is needed,
let certain officers acquire such goods
ENGLAND IS DENOUNCED.
Russians and German* Condemn South
African Policy.
A cable dispatch from London sayR:
The formation of a British fly squad
ron has created considerable bewilder
ment. It is purely a defensive measure
and inspired by the bitter hostility to
yEngland displayed by the continental
press.
The Russian official organs are fore
moat in their threats and incitements
to join the action against Great Bri
tain, though official Germany pro
claims itself neutral, the German press
is second only to the Russian in its
denunciation of England’s South Afri
°an policy.
WILL BUILD PULP MILL.
Establishment Will Be Located In Bris
tol, Tenn., By Northern Men.
The Columbia Paper company, of
Bristol, Philadelphia, has bought ground in
will Tenn., for a pulp mill and
invest $350,000 in a plant. The mill
sixty e mploy 150 laborers and consume
cords of poplar daily.. Thomas
Bonham, of Philadelphia, is president
the company and S. H. Egalp gen
eral manager.
from the owner, and let a receipt be
given with promise of recompense by
the government.”
Mucruin Now Hritlsli Acnnt.
A special from Washington says:
The state department was notified
Friday of the withdrawal from Pre
toria of Mr. Conyngbam Greene, the
British diplomatic agent to the South
African republic, and the existence of
a state of war between Great Britain
and that republic. Mr. Macrum, the
American consul at Pretoria, has ac
cordingly been instructed to under
take the care of the British interests
in that section during the war.
The notification came to the state
department in the shape of a note
from Mr. Tower, the charge of the
British embassy in Washington. The
details of the transfer of the inter
ests in case of war has been previously
arranged, so all that was necessary
was the dispatch of a brief cablegram
to Mr. Macrum at Pretoria.
This officer is the superior in rank
to the other consular representatives of
the United States, not only in the
Transvaal, bat in the Orange Free
State, and has been entrusted to give
these officials the necessary directions.
The only consular official beside Mr.
Macrum in the South African republic
is a Mr. Gordon, wLo succeeded Mr.
Mauion as consular agent at Johannes
burg, Mr. Manion having resigned a
few months ago.
In the Orange Free State the United
States is represented by Alfred Elliott,
consular agent at Bloemfontein. He
is an Englishman, and therefore it is
questionable whether or not he will
remain at his post in his capacity as
American agent. If he retires, Mr.
Macrum will probably select some
American to take up the duties of con
sular agent.
There is no present intention at the
state department to issue a proclama
tion of neutrality.
DEWEY LAYS CORNER-STONE.
Admiral Returns Again to His
Alma Hater at Northfield,
Vermont.
The little village of Northfield, Ver
mont, in the very heart of the Green
Mountain State, and the home of Nor
wich university, at which Admiral
Dewey as a cadet was grounded in the
principles of military training, greeted
the famous naval officer Friday morn
ing. laying of the
The occasion was the
corner stone of Dewey hall, a building
made possible by voluntary contribu
tions from prominent alumni of the
university. intro
The exercises began with an
ductory address by Commander Brown,
president of the university, who intro
duced Colonel Henry O. Kent, of Lan
caster, N. H., senior member of the
board of trustees of the university,and
a classmate of the admiral. Colonel
Kent delivered an address of welcome.
Commander Brown also welcomed
Admiral Dewey. The admiral then
stepped forward and laid the corner
stone. As he spread the mortar and
the stone was lowered, he said:
“I now declare this stone duly and
truly laid and according to my wish.”
After the admiral had completed the
laying of the cornerstone, Commander
Brown introduced Chaunoey M. De
pew, United States senator-elect of
New York, the orator of the day.
At the conclusion of Mr. Depew’s
address Admiral Dewey held a brief
reception, after which ho was escorted
back to his train and left for Boston,
where a public reception was given
him
ENLISTED MEN SUMMONED.
They Were Called to Testify Before Board
of Inquiry.
An Atlanta, Ga., dispatch says: The
second session of the military court of
inquiry was held at the capitol Friday
night. members of the Atlanta
Twenty-five summoned to
battalion had been ap
pear before the court to tell what they
knew of the looting of the stores m
North Carolina by the men of that
command.
MILL OPERATIVES STRIKE.
GivU In Knitting Factory Bofnse to Work
With JHegi-oeifa.
The white female operatives of the
Oxford knitting mills, one of the
largest manufactories of Barnesville,
Ga.. eutered into a strike because of
the placing of a negro man at work
among them.
Therejias been and is considerable
feeling over the matter, and the con
sensus of public opinion is that the
factory operatives are in the right.
Sevoral prominent citizens have been
heard to express themselves as wholly
in sympathy with the girl strikers and
have signified their intention to see
them through the matter.
RHODES HAlT NARROW SECAPE.
Boer Spies Were Uncomfortably Near
Him On n Train.
According to the Kimberly corres
pondent of the London Daily Tele
graph, Cecil Rhodes had a narrow
escape from capture while on his way
to England. His train was delayed
and he passed the Modder river three
hours after the expiration of the ulti
matum when the Boers were only five
miles distant and some of their spies
we re actually on the piatform.
c,
BILL ARP’S LETTER
Tells What Little He Knows of
Meteors.
he HE ANSWERS iwcn/rnc A i i/iwcic KANSAS INQUIRER niAiitncn
Falling Aerolites Were Never Known to
Hurt, Anybody—Their
Origin Unknown.
A friend living in Arkansas writes
me about the recent fall of a meteor
near his home, and he compliments
me by asking some questions that I
cannot answer. The origin of meteors
and their flight and fall is yet the un
solved problem of the ages.
He says that on the 2Gth of last
month, at 8 o'clock in the morning,
when there was a clear sky and not a
cloud to be seen, there was a rumbling
sound of thv.n ler, so weird and unnat
ural that it was alarming. It was like
the rolling of heavy trucks over an un
even platform, only immensely louder.
It was heard in all the neighboring
towns, and they all telegraphed each
other to know if a mill had not blown
up or a magazine exploded. Suddenly
there was an explosion in the air and
a dark oloud formed and meteoric
fragments fell at different places in
this vicinity. A small piece that
weighed one aud a half pounds fell in
a field near by and was brought to
town while it was yet hot. It was
powder-blackened on the outside, but
inside was a grayish color, and its par
tides , shone , „ like gold n dust. , , TT Under _
the microscope they resembled quick
si * ver -
It was full minute from the , begin- .
a
ning of the rumbling thunder till the
explosion came, and the course of the
sound was from east to west. The
event was so unexpected and so like
the mythology of Jupiter tonans
throwing a bomb from Mt. Olympus
that the white people were spellbound
and the negroes declared it a warning
and went to prayer.
Philosophers and astronomers have
been studying these phenomena for
2,51)0 years, and have not yet agreed
upon a solution. The archives of the
Chinese empire record the fall of six
teen great aerolites from 300 to 600
years before Christ. The Greeks and
Romans record a number, and Aristo
tle and Diogenes commented upon
them. So did Livy, Plutarch and
Pliny. They have been seen so large
that the estimated of the frag
ments after the explosion was
30,000 pounds, and the light was
so brilliant ns to pale the sun by day
and obscure the moon by night.
There is now in the Yale college cabi
net a fragment that weighs 1,635
pounds. This came from near the Red
river in Arkansas. Many of the west
ern states have furnished specimens
for the museums of colleges, and all
of them are composed of the same
mineral ingredients—principally iron
—and include copper, tin, sulphur,
carbon and other metals known to our
own earth. Not a single new sub
stance has ever been discovered, and
for this reason the theory obtained
that they were thrown up from our
own volcanoes with such force as to
wander for a time in the outer atmos
phere of the earth, and to revolve with
the earth.
But this theory has long since been
abandoned, for they seem to have an or
bit of their own from west to east. Then
came a theory that they eame from
the moon, and were of voleanic origin,
and were thrown out with such terrific
force as to get beyond the moon's in
fluence and within that of our earth.
But this was discredited because these
fragments have been falling, no doubt,
for thousands of years on the land
and on the sea, aud on all countries,
and would have by this time materially
diminished the size and weight of the
moon. La Place and Humbolt favored
this moon theory for a time. But our
modern astronomers, such as a Pro
fessors Arago and Almsted and Bow
ditch declare that . meteors , are simply .,
clouds or nebulae of meteoric planets
that have a motion and orbit of their
own, and that orbit sometimes comes
within range of the earth’s and pro
duces a commotion—a disturbance
that causes the fall of some of their
own nebulae. Some of the children
far . from „ their ,, . mother, _ I
got too away
reckon.
Sometimes meteors are simply In
ruinous and have no body to explode
or strike the earth. These have peri
odic vibrations of thirty-four years,
They come in showers as thick as
snowflakes and fall as gently to within
a few feet of the earth and are extin
gnished. They fell in 1799 1833 and
1867, and each fall wan on the 13th of
November. But irregular there have intervals been mi- j
nor displays at — j
generally about the 10th of August. I
am old enough to remember well the
“falling of the stars” in 1833. My
father held me in his arms as he stood
™ K Uj°Z
and shouting so it scared all of us chil
dren. George Lester lived on the oppo
site side of the street, aud his mother
held him in her arms, flnmo+i'mps
in these later days I would get with
my old-time friends, Dr. Jim Alexan
der or his brother Tom, or George
Adair, and we could boast of the won
derful era in which we had lived, and
the advent of steamboats and railroads
aud cotton gins and sewing machines
and telegraphs, and wo never neglect
ed to say, “and we saw the stars fall
in 1833.'” Dewey never saw a night
like that—but I reckou the Spaniards
at Manila thought they did on the 1st
of May.
know. Joe Mulhattan, or Munchau
sen, made up a big lake a few years
ago while I was in Texas and tele
graphed the fall of a meteor near
Brown wood that was as big as a meet
ing house and had buried itself tliirly
feet in tIie eartb - 1 " as nt Brown
wood a few days after and the post
master was as mad as a hornet with
Joe, for telegrams came to him from
all over the United States and England
wanting to know about it and want
ing to buy it at any cost. Joe had to
leave there and hide out for a month
or two. The postmaster answered a
few and then swore off. There is one
good thing about meteors. They never
hurt anybody. The books say it is
remarkable and perhaps providential
lhat in all the earth there is no record
of one having fallen on anybody or
destroyed a habitation. Terrestrial
lightning gets us sometimes, but ce
lestial flies are not dangerous.
And now the next inquiry is from a
young farmer who wants to know if it
is good farming to follow grain with
grain. He does not say what kind of
grain,, but I will tell him that fifteen
years ago The Courier-Journal of
Kentucky, offered a prize of $1,000 for
the best essay on practical agriculture
essay tz r, that got the prize a detailed ,*?, s* the
wnter s plan of tanning in Kentucky,
It was brief, very brief. He laid off
his corn rows seven feet apart, drilled
his corn eighteen inches apart, culti
vated the ground thoroughly and bar
rowed it;, sowed wheat earlv and bar
rowed rou ea it it in. in When When the the onm'vraa corn was ready
to gather he drove the wagon in every
sixth row and loaded from three rows
each side. After the corn was all
gathered he went over the cornstocks
crossways with a heavy roller and
rol i e d it all down flat on the wheat
Tbe s t oc ks alM j the blades covered it
like a blanket. When the first good
st)OW fe]1 be sowed elover ou the snow,
When it rained or thawed the clover
seed fell into the ground and took
root, and so he had corn and wheat
and clover following in rotation aud
made a line crop of each.
But in this region our farmers have
learned the value of peas as a fertilizer
and stock food, aud the harvest of hav
this year will no doubt double all pre
vious records. Oue of my friends has
a small farm near town and last year
harvested a fair crop of wheat from a
twenty acre field. After the wheat
was off he sowed! ten acres of the
ground in cow peas. Last fall he
sowed it all down in wheat and this
spring you could tell just Avhere the
line of peas came to. There was no
difference in the quality of the laud’.
It was all level and alike and yet he
harvested this year ten bushels per
acre on one-half and eighteen on the
other. Now, what caused this great
difference? It was the shade of the
pea vines, the shade that produces ni
trogen, and nitrogen is the best of all
plant food.
The denser the shade the more nitro
gen goes down into the soil. A cane
brake, a briar patch,a clover covering ami
an old house in a field—remove it
plant the ground that was under it
and see how luxuriant vegetation
grows. Plant a grape vine near your
house and the roots will all run under
the house to feed—to feed on nitrogen.
My wife has,a wisteria vine at the end
of the veranda, and in three years’'
time its roots bad traveled underneath
the floor and sent up sprouts twenty
feet away, and for a time we did not
know where they came- from. A good
farmer will shade everything he can..
He will cover the thin and galded
spots in his field with wheat straw.
There is no virtue in wheat straw, but
it makes shade, and that makes nitro
gen. There is no virtue in a stone or
in rocks, but they make shade, and
notice how plants will grow near to
rocks o-r a rock wall.
My long lamented friend, Dr.
Berckman told me tbnt “rocks were
God's blessing to the land,” and he
purchased ten acres of very stony land
for his vineyard aud his flower garden.
It rejoices me to- see how our mid
dle Georgia farmers are looming up ou
wheat culture. Forty bushels to the
acre. Ten years ago it would have
been declared impossible. This re
mjuds me of J oM E !ipb ncigbbor>
John Allan, who asserted that, his
father was never content in old Heng
laud with less than sixty bushels of
wheat to the acre, and sometimes ho
made seventy. “Sow wheat in dust
and rye in mortar,” was his motto.
Good old John Allan. I shot his cow
_ n my cornfield> {o , it was ber third
offense and the old man was grieved.
He never got mad, but only said: “I
know me coow worried ye, but—but—
major, I wouldeut have shot your
I love you too well for that.”
How true it is that “kind words
take away wrath.”—B ill App, in At
j aa ta Constitution.
----
FRENCH MURDER RRIT0N.
A Tragedy In FavIs May Cause Interna
tional Muddle.
dispatch to The New York , rimes
P aris fla ys:
“A tfreat sensation has been caused
S–t r'i E d?^”“
^ Dieppe. Derrick was so shocking
ly injured that an unusual surgical
operation had to be performed upon
him, with the result that he died.
“The British consul is a*e.mpting
to bring the murderers of Derrick to
justice. English feeling is intensely
excited about the incident, which is
likely to have important international
consequences.”
Wanted t© Iltdoase Derrick.
Much excitement prevailed at Se
v i erv iU e , Tenn., Saturday from a re
p or ^ that wbitecaps would attempt to
releaHe Cal Derrick, one of the would
be robbers of the Sevierville bank.
/
georgia–Alabama railway
PASSENGER SCHEDULES,
Effective Feb 20, 1899.
Nx>. 19* No. 17* MAIN LINE. No. 18* No, 20*
7 30 p m 7 25 a ni Savannah 8 25 p m 8 40 a m.
816pm 55pm 8 08am . Cuyler.. 7 42 p m 7 57 a m
9 »4 am .Collins.., 6 09 p m 6 30 a m
1155ptn 1145 am .Helena.. 4 05 p m 4 30 am
12 3ft p m Ar .Abbeville.. Lv 3 15 p m
HI 40 p m Ar S ..Cordele 1 Lv 1)2 10 p m
112 10 p m Lv .. | Ar HI 40 p m
3 10 p m Ar . .Americus.. Lv 12 34 p m
4 04 p m Ar ..Richland.. Lv 11 35 a m
5 58 p m Ar . Hurtaboro.. Lv 9 37 a ra.
7 55 p m Ar.. Montgomery Lv 7 45 a m
No, 3.f No. 1.* Columbus and Albany Division. No. 2.* No. 4. t
5 20 p m 10 00 am v.............Columbus...........Ar 5 20 pm 100 pm
3 25 p m II 35 am r---------------Richland...........Lv 4 04 p m 10 50 am
p ni 12 34 pm r........ Dawson.............Lv 3 03 pm 8 25 am
U 1S» p m 1 25 p m r............Albany............Lv 215 pm 7 00 a m
Trains Nos. 1 and 2 carry through coaches between Atlanta and Albany In
connection with Southern Railway.
________
No. 11.? No. 9 * No. 7,f Fitzgerald Branch No. 8 * No. 10. t No. 12.J
8 45 a m 3 20 pm 7 00 a m Lv Abbeville Ar 12 10 p m 8 15 p m 6 35 p m
9 40 a m 4 20 pm 9 05 am Ar Fitzgerald Lv 11 10 a m 0 45 pm 6 35 p m
1015 a m 4 50 p m 10 00 a m Ar... Ccilla... Lv 10 45 a m 5 15 pm 510pm
~* Daily! t Daily, except Sunday. 3 Sunday only. (t Meal Station.
^,-o-rvmTi
*
West and Southwest, carrying Through Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars be
tween Savannah and Atlanta
sleeper Passengers for Atlanta can remain in sleeper until 7 a. m.— East-bound
will be open for p assengers in A tlanta depot, at 9 p. m .
Trains CONNECTIONS
19 and 20 make connections at Savannah with Plant System, F. O – P, rail
read and Steamers. Connects with other lines at Cuyler, Collins, and Helena,
Trains 17 and 18 make connections at Savannah with Plant System, F. C. – P.
railroad lul d Steamers. Connecting with other lines at Cuvier, Collins, Helena, Au
beville, Cordele, Kichland. and toontgo merv. '
Elegant Buffet Parlor Cars on Trains Nos. \1 and 10.
Pullman Bullet Sleeping Cars on Trains N<*. 19 and 20,
K. E. ANDKRSON. A. 1'OPE,
AssU GenM Pass. Agent, General Passenger Agent.
CECIL GABBETT, Vlce-Pres*t and Gen’l Mgr.
:
Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Co.
Time Tables—In Effect January 22d, 1899.
E’-iToJact to Clia. 2 a.g-e 'WJ.tls.e-u.t XToti.ee.
N O. 5 NO. 3 NO. 1 SOUTHBOUND NO. 2 NO. 4 NO. 6
7:25 1:20 1:47 :08 * 2:20 8:05
p m a m p m Lv .Cordele. Ar p m a m a m
7:47 “ 2:08 “ t. .Arabi.. n fai - “ 7:44
.
8:11 “ 2:30 “ u Asliburn i. it M :30 4ft 1:36 “ 7:20
9 :00 “ li 44- 3:05 “■ 4 4- . .Tilton.. *4 44 li 4t 1:00 “ 6:35
9:42 “ M (4- 3:54 “ u Spark*, 4t a ra 11:54 “ 12:11 “ 5:52
.
10:35 “ It 4:50 ” u .... Valdosta ....** “ 11:05 pm 11:30 " 5:00
LN u 5:51 “ X .. Jasper...... u « 10:00 “ 10:30
W« u 6:23 “ “ .White Springs.. : t. 0:25 4* 9:41
.
o; it 6:45 14 u .Lake City.... : H 9:00 •* 9:18
.
.. 8:18 “ it Hampton.... 1 fa. 7-.15 H 7:52
.
X b. 4k it ...Palatka_____ : M 6:00 it 6 35
.
Connects at l'alatka with Florida East Coast Railway, J. T. – K. W., and Plane
System, and with St. J ohns and Ocklawaha KIvor steamers.
__^
NO. 6 NO-. 4 NO. 2 NORTHBOUND NO. 1 NO. 3 NO. 5
8 a m 2:20 a m m Lv.... Cordele.... r pm 1:80 am 1:20 Pi,” —4 issue's
g u- 2:34 “■ 55 4 .... Vienna .... « 1:12 “ 1.-62 d
9 44 54 4 ...Pinehurst... “ 12:57 *4 Oi
44 2:55- “ 45 2 Uhadilla.... “ 12:49 “ 12:42 45 Ci
....
45 • 5 5 ...Grovania.... “ 12:81 “ 44 C5
.
^0 45 3r.V> ^ 3: 55 2 .Sol' kee a m 1) :4l p m 11:45 4. rfk
....
11 4-5 4:15 11 <H Ar*. .Macon.....Lv “ 11:20 “ 11:25 4ft
10% .Lv 7:50 7:50 12:0G
3 :30' m I: am 7:35pm Ar....Atlanta ... a ni 3:05 p m m
-5 p m 1:00 a m ” ..Chattanooga.. ” ” ” 2:55
0 55 ” 6:40 >’ •” ...Nashville.... ** p m 9:30 am 9:10
7:16 am 7:82pm ” ... .St Louis.... ” ” 3:55 » 8:46
Trains 1 and 2. and trains 3 and 4 carry Pullman Buffet Sleeping oars between
St. Louis and Jacksonville, Fla. Trains 3 and 4 also carry looal sleeper between
Mac on and Palatka. Trains 5 and 6 are shoo-fty trains,
*>• G. n*. C. B. RHODES,
^
R ' K BARTON K«"**°*. General Agent, G. A. MACDONALD, Gen’l Pass. Agt.,
' ^^^ckley Vice-President^' Ga
4 01 '" '
SHAW,
Albany – Northern Railway.
To Take Effect 5 A. M. Monday, June 19, 1899.
Central Time Standard.
Between Albany and Cordele.
South Bound North Bound
.
T<Tr3t Class First Glass
21 11 17 Stations. 18 12 I 22
Daily Sun- Sun- Daily Kxo'p*
exc’nt day- Daily Daily Only day ; Bund'y
Sund'y only. Pas. Pas. Pas. Pas. Mxd.
Mxd.
A. M. A. M.- . M. Arrive Leave ' M. M. .
10 80 9 40 20 20 Albany . tN M 00 CO
.
9 58 9 19 1C 58 .. Beloit . N 22 21
9 40 9 04 12) 41 . Philema (N 39 36
9 27 8 O to 34 . Oakfield Jl. £N 46 44 rfk
9 07 8 TT LO 22 Warwick CT 54 Ol
8 43 8 BV to 08 . Raines . H >-* O Ol
8 15 8 50 Lv .Cordele Ar H CC G
I
J. S. CREWS, Gen’l. Manager.
You are invited to visit
THE BEST EQUIPPED IN THE SOUTH.
Leaders in High-Class
•* Dentistry
And Low Prices.
Gold Crowns and Bridges, 00 per Tooth .
Gold Fillings, $1.50. Silver Fillings, 75 Cents.
Set of Teeth on Rose Pearl Plate , $8.00.
Set of Teeth on Rubber Plate -- $5.00.
Dr-s. Young – Lanier.
410 Second St., Corner Cberry St., Macon, Ga.
Teeth Extracted Without Charge and Without Pain.