Newspaper Page Text
CONDENSED STORIES.
U lieu
True
Farr
minis or wh s« famn
h s been fcu'dt up by p cachirg
to the hoa.'t* and c >ns< i nce<
; h <X, he.
\L V.
Version of
Order at Manila Bay.
Did Admiral !><wey ever give
lUO\v hi*tori'.al oi h r, “You may lire • men rather than to th
'when you are ready, (1 rid ley ?” In-
tere-t.d special or* of ti.e engage
ment r av thm Ihr*' . ; rfh v.-rc r.':v- ; t*-11 fig f oA in o.y falls 1
«• fpok' il, but the eiilincc V.T.a ar- j i{i ^ j
nngof iifn r the'Mgbt \va» over. The [
Inside facts regarding the great May jihavv • and wli it d .stingui r>hed
•day battle of 1W8 put a new light :
vnn the incident, find one who talked
with the admiral f-oon after that
interviews
i,a.
r ng!egat'ons In
flattie is authorily for the following
p Ofi'e c me tt/di- ar h rn, am
si's for Ills pi tore, it haa l>eer
notiei <1 ti at ft oil i the time suel
j <•< ihiar it it s are developed Ik
usual y faJirt into various
inhcb.ing met finds, and Jos**6
in :eu. if* not al ! , of lii.s evan-
Admiral J)ewey never gave the
-ertler, in those words at least. That
'.utterance was put in his mouth by
- .others and agreed upon as an appro
priate one to hand down to poster
ity along with the other famous say
ings of history. Soon after the last Jicj 1 power. It ih an impressive
—ahot had been tired and the Spanish . . . ~
'power in the Pacific was a thing of j f‘ict I hat Hits is the until I effect,
the past the newspaper correspond- { whatever the den<
-ents gathered about the admiral, as
..Am the custom on such occasions, to | which such men
f ;t the facts for their dispatches. ‘ .. . ,, t . ,
he admiral told briefly everything ! a, *° th lt suJden fillls m P°P u ’ ar
that lmd taken idace, and when he Iesteem and confidence are liable
had finished his recital the group |
.fell to discussing ttic events of the It® ensue.
•day. Finally one of them remind- i _
mita’ion to
be’ong, and
-■d the admiral that it was custom.
a<aiy for some famous utterance to bo
-rfcanded down from every important
-'lanpngemcnt in history; some terse,
tfancf expression characteristic of
■ tjlie man who led his forces to vic-
-4ory. "Didn’t you mako some ut-
^terance or give some order during
' lithe fight that we can use in this
-oBCmnection f” asked one of the news-
•rjeper men. “No,” replied the com-
.ainnndcr in chief; “nothing in par-
■Uticulnr that I recollect.”
“Well, didn’t you give some dlrcc-
..tion of some sort that can be used
" in that way?” “No,” replied Dew-
»jey; “nothing that’s noteworthy."
-’■'well, what did you say when you
. .-ordered the fray .to begin?” asked
-the correspondent. “Simply order-
•d Captain flridley to go ahead."
*iAh!” ejaculated the correspond-
-■*nts, breathing sighs of relief. And
• ^thereupon the famous order, couch-
aed in the words' wliich have become
*-known everywhere, wns suggested
.stand agreed upon generally. The
subsequent dispatches were featured
by the words then arranged nnd put
£ Into the shape in which the order
■’s'jwill appear in histories for erntu-
—.firs to come.
Moses Had Changed.
Visitors to Washington will recall
the bronze statue of Abraham I.in-
- "Coin in the center of Lincoln park.
'It was purcliascd with a fund raised
by former slaves to commemorate
their lilieralor. Tliere is a replica
•*iof tliu statue in Boston, reareu hv
.♦■the liberality of Moses Kimball.
— ifigstonums tell a story concerning
tblhe remark of Oliver Wendell
'- Holmes when he was finit sliftwn the
Jffnc'oln.stntuo in Boston. Beneath
•Hat statue and on the granite base
$100— Dr. K. Decthon's Antis
Diuretic may be worth to yon
moro than $100 if you have a
child who soils bedding from in-
continence of waterduring sleep.
Cures old and young alike. It
arrests the trouble at once. $1.
Sold by the Gem Pharmacy, Way-
cross, Ua
Itch cured in 110 minutes by
Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion.
Never tails. Sold by Gem Phar
macy, Waycross, Ga.
Suitill Blaze This Afternoon
A bla/.e in a small negro house
nsnr Ttbeau nnd Mary streets
at 1 o’clock ‘.his afternoon, called
out the flte def arlment. Th<f tire
w as extinguished before the tiro-
men arrived, and the damage
was very small.
TI oroasville is fairly Will filled
w th northern visitors.
A WONDERFUL SAVING.
The largest Methodist Church
in tiumi-in, ca culatcd lo u.-e
nc hundred gallons of the
"usual k nd of mix <1 joint in
painting t 1 eir church.
1 hey used only .’IS gallons (f
thcKngman & Martinez Faint
mixed w.tli 21 gallons of linseed
oil. Actual ci st i f paint made
was 1 s« than M 20 per gal on
IrnVfcd ov r e’ghty ($so 00)
d 11 rs in ptint, un<i got a big
donation bos’drs. n
Evdiy church will bi given
a liberal quantity whenever tiny
t.
Mu y houses are we’l puiuted
with (oil gallons oft. & M. and
three va ions of Unsaid oil
mixed there* z-jt.-
. Wears and covers like cohl.
•p These ceobraiid Paints are
so'd by P. N. Harley Hards are
Omppmy
Gems of Thought
An ounce of originality is
worth a ton of imitation.-—Unit
ed Presbyterian.
The man who stands for some
thing has a.place and a f Tee in
the world.—Ram’s Iiorn,
Gratitude is the hemag’e tlie
heatt renders to God fur lbs good-
n-ss; Christian cheerfulness is
the external manifestation of the
homage.—Christiafi Work.
Childhood is the time of danger
as well as time of hope. The
corn that is frest-smit en in (he
spring brings no gold *n ears to
l be day of gathering.—United
Presbyterian.
The judgment of Jesus is
simply showing a man what he
is in the light of tvhat he ought
to bo. The outer darkness is the
shadow love casts when one re
fuses to let it shiue through
him.—Wm. De Witt Hyde.
When I found that it was
Christ’s nature to lift men out
of weakness to strength, out of
impurity to goodness, out of
everything low and debasing to
superiority, I felt that 1 had
indeed found a God.—Henry
Ward Beecher.
There is no mystery whatever
about happiness. Put in the
right ingredients and it must
come out. “He that abideth in
Me * * * bringeth forth
much fruit,” and bringing forth
much fruit is happiness. The in
fallible rcceipe for happiness,
tnen, is to do good, and the in.
fallible receipt for doing good is
to abide in Christ.—Drummond.
More trouble with the students
at Moscow. "
cp 7CII s rat], nanti. oio sum tt«.
n./ralA cm it cubed it imu cost.
nioKc«i»vCo.,Ctic«o.
(J«!rrt«»»f»g»cla,..| fin.! one .lolhr In nnv Inr
nnmlini botil. of EC ZIN1! «nd,;e™i.lor Ec-rma
Soon, t lM«o u.o.1 nearly «ll III. hail* >011 mint
W.l'l In
mill.
L). L.
FXANDRR
4 -araa an inscription telling the his-
* tory of the memorial. The name of
vUoscs Kimball appeared in letters | n "" ’’
af very large size—ui fact, five or six ”
times as large as were the letters in
the name of Lincoln. Dr. Holmes
glame.l at the monument and,
catching sight of the nautc of the
giver iu big letters, dryly remarked:
“Well, well! llow Moses Kimball
has changed!” — Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
An Editor’s Hint.
“When you report yourself as be-
Jng on the sick list as late in the
v rWek as Thursday or Friday, vou
’'UtfMuld, in justice to the editor,’re-
4-?|mnin sick at least until the papers
in the post office. It it terribly
,*4Mafiamuing to say that Mr. or Mri.
f'TBeeirhilikens is dangeroualv tick as
f*4»e go to press and then while lug-
the paper* to the poet office
V acet the said party on the street
^ looking quite cheerful.—Millington
V^ptich^ Oaxette.
sao. U^wnrd " 'I ^ P-ri.l f.-r any t ft--
ECZE3U. FILES. BIOJD
*.. w! rh tl.em’A- Radiu.P tom-«»y -EC-74 *>'F.
til nf« f’lre* ptomptlv- t.wlav l<-t n mi£li
TilE LC-ZINE COMPANY
M. KrPKRMEtKR. Sal-
Chi.
:n. 111.
Syrup Barrels
The Oak, Cypress
and Gum
Barrels, Halves and Kegs
— OF —
The Cannon Company
of C*iro tod Quiunan, Oft tod
Monticellat Fla.
Be rMMeg Co.
Agents, Waycross, Ga.
Stanley’s
Business '
College.
MACON, GEORGIA-
TO PARENTS:
You, no doubt, are deeply
interested about the future
prosperity of your children.
Yon cau insure their inde
pendence by giving them a
thorough, practical business
education. With a well-
rounded know ledge of modern
j business methods, no matter
] what financial reverses may
come, your children will be
prepared to make their wav
in the world.
Our business is to give
just this kind of an edu
cation. A common school
education is not sufficient.
if you can’t pay-in full
we will wait on you, se
cure your son or daughter
a position and let them
pay us. |
To get the benefit of this
offer, address at once.
G. W. H. Stanley*
President.
Stanley's Business College,
Pytbian Castle Building,
Macon, Georgia.
Newbro's Herpicjde
The Original Remedy that '‘Kills the Dandruff Germ.”
SCHOOL CHILDREN.
Every school child should know that baldness is a conta-
ious di»e se. caused by microbes Prof. Unnit, of Hamburg,
Jermany* discovered thatdsndruft. itebiue scalp, falling hair
and final baldness are produced by a germ or microbe tha-
passes from one he-td to another, where i» burrows into the
scalp and by multiplying ahd extending deeper and deeper in
to the hair follicles, sape the life of the hair r>ot and produces
baldness.
IT TAKES YE \RS
of the dandruff
is governed by
.... ,.ivironmen*. but
particularly by the endeavor made to combat the growth apd
development of the dan Iruff microbe*, wiii?h ca 1 only be des'
trored with Newbro’s Herplcide.
This new antiseptic scalp germicide is
past the exper mental stage It was made
to destroy the germ that causes dandruff
and falling hair, and by coaxing energy
back in;o the inpoverished bulbs, it ena*
Id s the hair to grow naturally and luxur
iantly. Thousands «»f letters from physi-
c ans, eler ymen and layme i tell the same
story of its wonderful success
to produce compl t3 baldnsis. f»r the act! y
microbe is not constant infevery case
predisposition, by ths state of health by
AN IDEAL HAIR DRESSING.
It is fortunate for those who understand the new rnles for
sc dp cleanliness that the antiseptic qualities of Newbro’s Her*
picide make it the most delightful and refreshing hairdjess-
ng imaginable. Chronic baldness is incurable;
hair, while you have hair t
CGS6r\NT USER OF HERPI IDE
“I am a Constant user of yp: r He*pi-
cide and am r etting a fine head of hair;
was almost bald when I began to use it,
I think there is nothing like it; have
used many others but with no results.
(Signed) M. J. Trnlett.
BJ u ff Springs, Fia.
HEARTY APPRE I ATI ON.
•'I conzratulate you on the excellence
of your hair tonic and assure j on of my
appreciation of same.” (Signed)
Daytona. Fla. Mrs. L. Bellas Jr.
you:
Ail Unhealthy Hair.
A Healthy Hair.
Cherokee Pharmacy,
At Drug Stern $1.00. Send 10c. in sta > to THE HERPICIOE*CO., Oitroit, llleh., for simple.
(“Destroy the Cause—You Remove the Effect.
SPECIAL AG
ft
■<?
Genuine Primitive Method Whiskey"^
I
COBB COUNTY COHN (N«w)
Gallon v- $2.00
ROSE’S BLUE RIDGE CORN
2 Years Old
Fnll quart 65c. 4qts. $2.50. Gallon (jug) $2.20
ROSE’S OLD GEORGIA CORN
4 Years Old
Full quart 80c. 4 qts. $3.00. Gallon (Jug) $2.70
ROSE'S OLD RESERVE STOCK CORN
Full quart $1.' 4 qts. $3.75. Gallon (Jug) $3.50
ROSE’S OLD CABINET RYE
Fall quart 75o* Gallon (Jug) $2.70
ROSE’S PURITY RYE
Absolutely Pure, for Medicinal Use
Full quart $1. 4 qts. $3.75. Gallon (Jux) $3.50
ROSE'S PERFECT RYE
A Smooth, Perfect Whiskey
Full quart $1.25. 4 qts. $4.50. Gallon 0 u k) $4.00
ROSE’S CONSTITUTION RYE
Very Fine Old Whishey
Fall quart $1.50* 4 qts. $5.50* Gallon (Jug)$5.00
Special prices in 5 gallon hogs, or In oases of
one dozen quarts of one brand. 'Write for
complete price-list. Parties living outside of
Georgia should write for prices, charges prepaid.
Nothing like the old fashioned honest
Whiskey our forefathers made in copper
stills over open wood fires.
R. M. Rose Co.’s U. S. Distillery No. 9 is the finest old
fashioned fire copper plant ih the country.
Only the finest sele&ed grain is used in the distillation,
boiled and doubled in copper, over open wood fires, the way
our forefathers made it. During the process tlfc whiskey is
filtered twice, perfe&ly purifying it. Aged in U.
Warehouses.
- We own more old Georgia “Primitive Method” .
Whiskey, from one to six years old, than all the other dealers
and distillers combined. The records prove it. Just uK the
Revenue Officers. * —
FOR LUNG TROUBLE
The discovery that old Corn \Vhiskey made by
the “Primitive Method” has the best ingredients for
staying the inroads of Consumption and Tubercular'
troubles and can be retained on the stomach, when
even French brandy fails, has resulted in a tremen
dous demand on our stock by physicians. More of
Rose’s Whiskies are prescribed than all other brands
combined. Yonr doctor will tell yon why.
WE SELL TO THE CONSUMER DIRECT
Over 37 years of experience and reputation are
behind every bottle. We are not in competition
It tells you
Ask any bank, mercantile house or*proyiinent
citizen of Atlanta al>out us. Every bottle tells of
honest business methods; which means honest deal
ing with all. It has been that way for the past 37
years and our business has grown with every year.
Remember, nil goods are guaranteed to be
exa&ly as represented or they can be returned to us at
our expense and money will be refunded.
I
!
I
■
I
I
R. M. ROSE CO.,
The “Old Reliable* 1
Distillers,