The Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1905, July 20, 1894, Image 8

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THE MACON TELEGRAPH: FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 20, 1894. R. C. WILDER'S SOUS C0„ MACON, GA. Contractors and Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding, Turned and Scroll Work. liumber, rough and dreused, ahlngtcii, 1 ath*. and dealer. In mixed painty lead, oils, lime, plaster, cement and builders' hardware. 514 TO 612 T HJRD STREET. WHO WILL COME TO THE RESCUE? The Ladiei in Charge of the Horn* For the Friendless Must Have Assistance. THE DEMAND IS URGENT And UnltM the Charitable PsopU of Macon tome to lh« of (ht Good Women tn Charge, the Homo Hut Uo Closed, The a add eat call that has been made upon the charity of the people of M*. oon In a long time oomes now from the Home for the Frlendlesa. It la dis tinctively a plea for humanity—for humanity—(or Christian love's sake— ruid if the people could be made to believe how pressing indeed ie this call upon .them the amah aaeistance asked for would ace be withheld, if it bad to be supplied by one person. The good women in charge of the boms have so often,, thought nut loo frequently, called out in their linancSnl distress in the management of the home that they shrink on this occasion from making putfiio the true condition of things. Enough has been mads plain in the Telegraph, however, to leave no room for doubting the strin gent condition of their finances. Now that this constant c-nbaraao- SIK-ISI forced upon Inc ladies In in nny measure 1 duo to Injudicious .manage* incist of the funds they have hud from time to time, nobody who knows them will over entertain, it la true that ever nine,* the Ionic was established till) ladles have been seriously put to it to make ends meet. Rut why has this boon7 it has been because the current oxponses have ovortuuCbd the meagre support that the home has had. There has ulwuys been from eight Oo thir teen Inmates there. Tnero are now thirteen <0 oure for, and one of 'the ladies said yesterday that they have not one cent in eight for the next week. A number of gentlemen havo done all the burden-bearing' since the home wuu started, and have done nobly by their wived and daughxers in thUr ef forts to care for outcast young women and deserted children who havo come to their attention. Rome of them have now stopped their subscriptionii, reel ing that others who are ss able os they uhoukl do same part. Homebody must now help the home out of ltsuppeaent distress, else the noWeet efforts of good women will fall through, and the most praiseworthy institution of the kind over opened up in iMaoon will havo to Who will be the first to come to the rescue. The tadles In charge must have some contributions right) away. Twenty-live dollars they say cun be made to answer necessary demands upon them for another month, and this they believe tho good ctrlxens. who always have to bear such burdens, will contributo. There is. however, a more Immediate demand. They have nothing In hand now for Che next wees and that this exigency may bo relieved Is what they most warm-ally pray for now. If they ooitfd get a fow dollars weekly from some of their friends the home would be saved nd the poor creatures who are its Inmates saved from being oast out unsheltered and without the honorable living tlwt Is being furnished them unlit employ, •nent on be secured. Those who recognise In this appeal tho urgency of the situation and are willing to given even a mite can call on iMrs. James A. Thomas at her home an Second street. It Is hoped that the necessary amount for expenses Imme diately necessary at the homo at lost can -be raised right srssay. RETURN HD TO THE FOLD. A Prodigal 'Democrat Who Strayed Cornea Rack. The Telegraph received the follow ing letter yesterday from .ui old Demo crat who" striyed off Into the People's jsirty ranks and now comet back Into tho fold: To ahe Editor of the Telegraph: I wsnt you to allow 1110 apace In your valuable paper to announce that Pm no longer a People's party man. I have always bfen a Democrat up to about ten months ago, when I was led off from the party, but after having given it much Thought I cannffl stay away from tho old parly. 1 love my old party and 1 expeot to live and die a Democrat. I want the FMm parly to a'.rfke my nocne from their list. Yount truly. • 3. W. Strong, Ralls Church. a*., July IT, 1594. FATHER O'CAU-AOHAN. Jit Win Lecture at St. Joseph's Church Sunday Mbrnlng. The Rev. Father O'Callaghan. 8.. J.. pastor of the Church of Sacred Heart In Augueta. wtU deliver a lecture mi ••Temperance" «Jt 10:30 o'clock next Sun day morning in St. Joseph's Catholic church under the atwieau of the St. Jo seph'* branch bf the Cathedral Temper ance Union of America. All the friend* of the good cause are invited to omte and beer the illatln- aulsbed epeaker. Hi* ability l* revog- nlroit *11 over the etaic and the ptopis .a Macon. caPMcuUrly lho.,<* tutares.ed SIDLE SILVER SPOONS. Richard Coleman, Atlae Sen Butler, In TrouCle. Richard Coleman, alias Ben Butler, was arrested by Offlcer John Davis yeoterday on the charge of eteallng edver spoons. The charge was preferred against Coleman by V. A. Garrison, who al leges thaa oClemn entered his house and took a targe number of silver spoons. The evidence wae dead against Cole man and Recorder Freeman committed him to the city court on the charge of larceny. 'Recorder Freeman minks enough sliver spoons have been stolen In this section of country. PROMISCUOUS SHOOTING. Residents of Huguenin Heights Aro Complaining. Residents of Huguenin Heights are complaining about promiscuous shoot ing in 'that otherwise peaceable su burb. Tho shbotlng Is done at night and the residents are afraid to nit on their front porches for fear of being struck by the random bullets, which fre quently strike houses. The county authorities should keep a lookout for the offenders and put a stop to the shooting. use bt Mil be . of tin* opportunity :•' pear him. The Has choir of t>t. Joseph'* church will give A line MomBne of «*cr*l mu* . and no doubt a l:ins* crowd will come out on this parlcularly Interacting occasion at Bt. Jmpb’i church. WAITBK8 Vfk W1AITISKS. Drown an*l Lanier House Nlura Will Cm--* I kits TVvl.iy. *n ami La- lu a ba**ball vny. and will have out at tho park tfab* afternoon (The c une will tie * ailed at 4 o'clock, will be a vigorous flirt t, and will bo iu>.uc in the extreme. POINTS ABOUT PEOPLE. Dr. A. Mathis left yesterday for a trtp to Toronto, Camdu, and other points. He win be absent from the city for two or three weeks. Mrs. Cord ole Johnson of New York is visiting Mrs. Andoulne on Second street. Mlnses Laura and May Bertow are on a visit to their brother in Ten nessee.. (Miss Laura Kupferman la on a de lightful visit to St. 8imons Itslar.d. •Mr. P. M. Walker, secretary of the CattiM Iron Works of Chattanooga, is In tho city for a few days. THE SQUARE USE OF ENGLISH WORDS When the advertising atmosphere is heavily charged with exaggeration—that is sometimes prevarication—it is well for you to remember who are the trustworthy advertisers. For many years we have labored to make our store news plain. Always strong as facts demand, but never overstated. Opera tions develop from present conditions very remarkable bar gains. We tell of them clearly, truthfully. *Tbat’s the point we wish to emphasize. We give you a perfect basis for belief. Our fucts und your faith are the creators of business. 1ALLARY BIOS. & CO. 1 MACON, GA. 351 to 353 CHERRY STREET . Engines, Boilers, Gins SAW MILLS, Machinery All Kinds. ! WmiiW PBrBSBSNTd I 3 niilJUIl'iu ,N i nnnmmn NO the 3 ® B PROFITS DENTISTRY. Dr. A. 8. Moore, who bee for tbt last eight yean been reasonable In bis charge* for dental work, and who is better prepared to do bridge, crown and til kinds of dental work, baring taken a poet graduate course In pros thetic dentistry, owing to the stringen cy of tho times. Is willing to bo even more reasonable in bis charges. Come, let him examine your teeth and sc* bow reasonable you can baro your dental work done. Teeth extracted without palu. 121 Wnshlngtou ave nue, near First Baptist Church. Vino- villa and belt lino of stTcet cars pass his office door. Macon. Go. A QUEER NAME. Ezekiel Godbcprnlsod 'Register, at a Philadelphia Hotel. Tho register of a> Philadelphia hotel recently recorded the arrlvill of Thom as Godbeprvkied of Barrow-ln-iPur- ness, England. Being flpprondhed by <i Times reporter ou the aubject of the oddity of lilt surname. Mr. Godbe- prabfc-d said: "Yes, I suppose the name doen sound very odd to American*, although) such unmeu «re not altogether unuxunl In Knglmd, and especially In Lanenator, which woe ti stronghold of the round- heads or puritans In Cromw-eU'e time. My home la In Bn rrow-ili-Fu mess, which la In Lancashire. "My ancestor* prior to Cromwell's time ware all royalists. The family tlsmo was Elliott. A younger son rc- liujlced tho religious faith mid polit ical oplnloue of his foiWViUn-r* and be eline a puritan. As was uminl In such ca»es. he abjured the carnal name of t'horlo* Elliott and took She Inspired one of Ezekiel Godbepralied. "Tliere 1* quite a romance connected wHh this nn.fwtnr of mine. He fell In tow with the only daughter of it Col. Fielding In the cavalier's army. Ni being able to obtain her father', con- cl^t°3 w.d for *"M to their marriage, Eseklel abduot- S**®^*”" lh cUUnanl 1r ed her and for two yesrt* kept h*?r lild. den In n dreary house that stood near the llttl* town of Formby, where a son was bom. After u tattle n little to the south of the rlwr Mersey between the cavaliers and the reundhctOs her brothers discovered her mid carried her off to old Flimess abbey. In the hurry the child wtw left behind, but as the nwill of the mother's pleading one of the brolh.su relumed to Formby after It. "In tho meantime Eseklel had dis covered ht* hie* nnd removed the child. Then tie followed hi* brother* huek to Film.** abbey, bur arrived too hie. the brother nnd «Utor had sail'd from Uirrow beach for the T»l* of Mun. A storm tame up. nnd Ezekiel arrive.) In time to see the boat founder. He re turned to hla child more bitter than cwr against the roynllst*. nnd brought the chlht up with The same sentiment*. "At the elo*e of the war Ezekiel adopted the trade of e weaver and tle<l at Itnrronr-ln-Furness. Thus the name traa perpetuate.t. th > stern eom- mand of the ftwher forbidding the sen to teirow off the ftinatloat nickname when the heat of puritanical seal had given away." noon one from Florida. A dispatch from Ocala, Fit, to the SuiUalMTO Slur »iys: “A queer ftwik of nature t* reported hy CV L. Carter of Rpgrr. He mvs tStiaa« was born near Ifa place a few d«ys a«v> a halt buuun coif. From hind to ntivel H la u porfcW humau be- ln«. while the other liatf Is that of a ftilf It Is cstlll altw aud trill tie tymicht -to the Oc-ita Zoo for exhibi tion." HHAT WARPED TUB Miri-K. The following from the Dalton Argtut la not Jccumpxnliat by an uffidavt), but there cau be no .loulit of its truth all the same; “The m.v* of tie sun were to hot on \V«*ln"sdiv that they wwp»! the Wde on Unas Cannkdi-iot't route rothet Ills hint feet were lift,at • tout oil the ground. By pour>u£ wld tvaba on the mule for two or thna* hour* Ross *noa>«h*l In getting his uvt on terra finua ones more." KIND HEARTED TH.VD PARKER T. C. Parker, the grest Southern newsmtn. was In the city yestenley Mr. Parker 1*'somewhat cgVSEK thronlsh for h, give, empto^i m bof* ant) where he ftmU one de serving he Axin secure* him a f'-lthwi more profWable than that of railway newaboy. H *has former omptoy** that maveualble poaiUon*.- urimn CiIL SUPREME COURT OP GEORG The following decisions were rendered Monday, July 16, Snarp vs. Hicks. Before Judge Clark. Newton superior court. L Wbc-re a husband und wife filed a joint claim to land which nod been levied upon, and tne court thereat ter allowed c.ioh to tile an amendment alleging own ership ot an undivided half of the hum, untlp asetAl on order reciUng that these amendments were ullowred "so am to stand as separate- claims, each for one undi vided half interest In the property, * ami no exceptions pendente Mte were filed nnd allowed, it was too late, twelve months afterwurds, to move to dismiss the origi nal claim affidavits or the amendments to the same, i uo appearing ahat the mo tion to dismiss was bused upon any legal Inapplicability or Insufficiency of the claim bond relatively to tne claim as amended. 2. In view of the above recited order, .there was no error in ordering, oyer tne o&jfctlon of plaintiff’s counsel, a trial of the husbunl separately from that of tho wlfo. 3. There was no error In rejecting evi dence of declarations alleged to have been made by the grantor, before conveying to the claimant and his wife the land in Ulnpute, to tho effect that the grantor had given one half of the land to hie daughter, the claimant's wife, it. being strongly Inferential from the evidence as a whole that at the times tutye al leged declarations were made the claim ant and his wife were In possession of tho pryperty, and that the grantpr was not; and there being no clear and posi tive evideneo that the hatter vms in pos session at uny of the time* when the ui- leged declarations were made, arid the conveyance reciting a valuable conSldcra tlon and not purporting to be founded In whole or In part upon uny other. 4. A deceased wlincus, whose * testi mony was taken in a former trial and is produced through andtooh witness who heard It, and Is thus before the pdry cn a present trial of the same case, cannot bb impeached by contradictory etato- ments made by the deceased witness be- Core he testified, no foundation for such Impeachment having been laid by Inter rogating him as to such statements. 6. Where one honestly and In good faith pm*UuuvJ property from another who was at the time In failing circumstances, the mere fact that the consideration paid far tile property was Inadequate, would not authorise a creditor of the vendor, who afterwards obtained Judgment against the 'atter, to subject the property to the Ha tissue tlon of Ms judgment by tendering, after a levy upon the whole, nd pending the trial of an ordinary claim by reason of poverty, to restore the money. It is only where the fraud is hoi discovered, or the menal disability con Cinues, as the case may be, until after the money has been expended or other wise put beyond the power and control of the plaintiff, 'lb use and appropriate the money wlthk nowledge or the im position would be a ratification of the settlement. Judgment affirmed. M. E. Lofton and George 8. Thomas, for plaintiff In error; A. H. Cox, contra. the property. 6. Whnra & conveyance Is attacked by a creditor oKthe grantor as fraudulent, and tho claimant, his sondn-iaw, stands upon a conveyanio purporting to be made to him as a purchaser for value, evidence tenvllng to show that tho grantor was liable, at the date of the conveyance, «a surety upon a a tax collector's bond, and that un execution for a huge amount was, after tht conveyance, tesuod tneyeon by the comptroller general against him altogether with his principal uid co-ee- curlty, Is mat*Hal; and th# execution Is admissible as prim* facie evidence of the liability. 7. After the loss of account books in which tho claimant kept accounts against his vendor of the land in controversy evidence that the accounts were still open on tho books until the present controversy had risen was relevunt evidence upon the question whether the land was paid for In whole or In part by extinguishing the accounts; and the fact whether the accounts remained open or were closed or credited, not appearing from an abstract of the book* preserved and put in evi dence, It was error to exclude the offered testimony of the actual condition of the accounts on the books In this respect. A The requests to charge, so far as legal and pertinent, were covered by the general charge of the court; the charge excepted to was substantially correct; and there was no Impropriety In the con duct of the court or counsel, of which ccmtdatat Is made In the motion for a new trial. Javlgint.ru Q. W. Gleaton and Capers Dickson, for plaintiff In error; J. 8. Boynton and E. F. Edwards, contra. St redder vs. Swithern Granite Company. Before Judge Clark. Detvalb superior court. Where an accord and satisfaction fully executed, the party receiving money from the other cannot rescind on the ground of fraud or of his own mental taeompateaoy to make a Unding contract without refunding or offering to refund the money which was the fruit of the acoord and satftsflaetton. If any exception to this gereral rule results from inability. HE-NO ItUao'th looking Into, and the op* porumdy 1' now at hnnd. llotrto get * good cop of tea. Scud us your sd- ■ dress, and we wilt mall you a five tam* ’ pie of Hs-No Tern. We take all the * ri>k. Offer no prizes nor pnenduma Simply n very One tea at a moderate . cost* Your grocer can get lu 4 MARTIN G1LLRT & CO, ^ (Estsbfts&ed mu> Baltimore, MJ. A HORSE'S EVIDENCE. It Was of Great Moment In a Ten nessee Murder Case. The horse has been known to act in the capacity of a detective. Thus, in Sneiby county, Tenn., a shocking mur der was ooramiued and tho trial of che murderer came off In a discr.ct which was divided from one of another Juris diction by the highway on which the deed was committed. The body was found a few rods from the road, from wnich it had evidently been dragged, and the doubt arose as to which civil district the murder had been commit ted In, which gave rise to the proba bility that the murderer would escape conviction. Several mouths passed away before the trial w^is commenced, wnen one of the witnesses, -mourned on the horse of the deceased, and- accompanied by a large number of persons, was riding toward the court house. * When the nurse reached tho vicinity of ‘the scene of tne (murder he began to show symptoms of -alarm, wnich conduct greatly surprised ail who witnessed it, for tne other -horses of the company betrayed no indications of fear. As the party proceeded onward the agitation of *tne horse Increased, and wnen he reached a point in tne road opposite where the body was found his excite ment was so great that ho became unmanageable altogether. Jn$ gentler men present came to a halt and looked on in perfect astonishment. His flesh quivered, his nostrils dilated, and his eyes glancing In the woods nearby, he stood snorting and neighing, a picture of the wildest excitement. One of tne gentlemen present, sus pecting the cause of the horse's agi tation, suggested that he should have a loose rein, which, being granted, the noble animal rushed into the thfeket, and, coming to a certain tree, com menced pawing at Its roots. Then making his way further into the'forest he clratxi round and returned to Che same upot, where he stood trembling with agitation and pawing until he was violently forced away, and whenever abler ward he passed that same spot his conduct was Invariably the same. No blood had ever been seen upon the road and no tuppearance of any unusual struggle had ever been dis covered. If the murder took place in the highway the horse would v . have known notning or the tree In uie rieign- boring thicket; if it was committed where the body was found, then the court had no jurisdiction and the mur derer wouS-d go scot free. Upon this trial the testimony of (he dumb animal against the prisoner proved niosi startling. His sagacity was proverbial in the neighborhood where he belonged, and his attachment to his master was such that he fol lowed him around like a dog. In un mistakable pantomime -he enacted the committal of the murder, pictured the decoy into che ngood, the ass&fant's demand for gold and the death strug gle under the tree, and thus the doom of the prisoner was sealed. JOHNSON’S MAGNETIC OIL, liutint Kilter of PaIr. Internal And Cxterncf. Curoe HHEGMAITHM, SKI/HA I OIA, Uma g-u-k, Suiawn, Urui v "w»mnE*, SUfl 1 oliAs COLlC at JK AMj% UwUhtij. Cholera Mo !.rEX , .,v o ^'s;irfe£^r K<1 ' HE HORSE BRAND, Mte herarwt Powerful and Fecetrettaf I.tnunontfor Mr •rlleAbt In existence. Lat(« n 76c., COc. &Uo iC• 1 JOHNSON'S ORIENTAL 80AP. Medicated nr.d Toilet. The Great 8Wln Oure ar ‘.toe Heautlfler. Ladies will mid n the mo Uioate and highly perfumed Toilet Heap o a# market. It la absolutely pure. Makes t! kin soft Mtd velvety and it-tore* the lock corr r lexlonj i« a Brian U •* Oath for Infant. ;t slays lichlru. r ** - in ruul promo* •w* HV GOODWYN ft SMALL. Sole Agents, Cherry Street and Cotton Avenue. Macon. Qo. Paints, Oils, Glass, Sash, Doors, Blinds, LIME, CEMENT and BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES. T. C. BURKE. Write for n "" l - liy "' 0 —— Before Placing Your Orders. 0. P. & B. E WILLINGHAM, MACON, GA. SASH, DOORS, LUMBER, HOULDIH-35. PAINTS, LIME AND' AT LOWEST -MARKET PRICES. LEADIHG WHOLE.BAI1B HOUSES. G. Bernd & Co. MACON, OA, JlantthwtOrers sail D'Nuer4.« BAfism SADDLERY. LEATflEB AND DHOBFIDINa^ 4ft\ 452, 454 an-^ 456 Chorry Streat L. Cohen & Co., ••ilanola”—fieefc 60* Cigar ia AUcoo, J. L MACK. Manager. Distillers sad WhoJeesle Dealers its 451 Cherry Street, Mscoe, Qtu LIQUORS, TOBACCO aud OIOASl Prices always tho lowest. Psricular attention paid to Orders. MACOH SASH, DOOR & LUMBER CQ„ ' INCORPORATED CAPITAL, $60,000. CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS, AND MANUF ACTURERS OF Sash, Doors and Blinds, Scroll and Turned Work. Dealers in Paints, Glass, Cdment, Putty, Lime, Piaster, Hair. BUILDERS’ HARD WAE, Etc. | WANTS TO SEE THE CHIOAGO. London, July 19. —The admiralty learning -that the emperor of Germany had expressed a desire to» see the United" States cruiser Chicago, have sent an invifiaafon to Admiral lteubmn to bo present with his fla< ship on the occasion of the Cowes regatta, which the kaiser will attend in tlte'.'inpcrial, yacht Hukenzollera. A CARELESS YOUNG LADY. El Paso, Ill., July 19.—The careless handling of a lighted match by a young lady, while she was heating a curling Iron in tho basement of Schaefer's dry goods store this morning, cost a num ber of residents of this city on aggregate of 4166,000. The total Insurance Is only about half that sum. <¥ RRUN’S-*'~^ Ja.’sw WH*” w thoMdiMssnofihfltiuilto-UrlosryOr. —B ■ II |." ■ fT>nx. rrtquIrM Do ckan«« or ii«t or iiaatncuv, raercurial or poUonou* mod- leincsto U token laUraiUy. When °*AS A PREVENTIVE by either mx It It Irapoeeib!et0dO(itnet wijr rectreal discete; but in the cm# of thoto alremilT Uxrorm»«tv Amum Madison Avenue Dadtson Ave. and 5SU1 st.,' NEW YORK. Sst" tty and «A 9 American Plan, Two blocks from the Third and Siith Avenue Elevated railroads. The Madison and 4th Ave. and Belt Line cars pass the door. * H. M. CLARK, Poor. Passenger Elevator runs all night. ——- with OonorrhrrA end Meet, we guar.*. B" TT PWoebymsIl.poetefSpel**, U .CU JCfl 51 per l«r. or 0 hL* GOODWYN’S dbug store. Sole Avents, Macon, Ga. Queen of the Mountains. PORTER SPRINGS, so universally and so favorably known for years as 0,ueen pt the Mountains, Is open • under the same management (Its owner) an hereto fore, with same unsurpassed table • fare and low rates. Board by month $1 per day; by week, |L60 per day; lees than week, 42 per day. New hack line contractor, with new hacks nnd new teams, leaving depot, Gainesville, Ga., on arrival of morning train from Atlanta every Tuesday, Thurs. day and Saturday, going through in seven hours. Fare |2; trunks, 41 per 100 pounds; valises, 23 cents. Altitude 3,000 feet above sea level; 2.000 feet above Atlanta, 1,500 feet "above Ma rietta and Gainesville. 1,200 feet above ML Airy, Clarksville and Tallulah Falls; 1,000 feet above Lookout Mountain and Ashevllle—affording the greatest change of climate possible south of the Mltcliel. Chalybeate water, the strongest in the state. Baths, billiards and ten pins free. Music for dancing every evening. Physician al ways in attendance. Dally mall. Refer ence confidently made to all visitors of the past ten years. For further informa tion address HENRY P. FARROW. Porter Springs, Lumpkin County, Ga. MACON SAVINGS BANK 578, Mulberry Street, Macon, Go. Capital and Surplus 4158,000.00 Pays 5 per cent interest on deposits of |1 and upward. Real estate loons on the monthly installment plan, ur.d loans on good securities at low rates. Legal de pository for trust funds. Will act as administrator, executor, guardian, receiver and trustee. H. T. POWELL....'. President H. G. CUTTER...•••••••••...Vice-President J. W. CANNON Cashier Directors—Geo. B. Jewett, A. E. Board* man, H. C. Tindall, H. G. Cutter, F. & Bruhl, H. 1. Powell, Samuol Alt mayor. EXCHANGE BANK, OF MACON,-'GX. . H. J. l«tnar. 0.0. B. Turpin. President. Vice-President ). W. Catania*, Caahler. We eollclt the business o( mwebant* planter* and tanka, offering them courtesy, promptness, safety and liber ality. Tbe largest capital and surplus of any bank in Middle Georgia. HACOS. -OEOHOIA. H. J. launax. President; Geo. B. Tur pin. Vice-President: J. w. cTbanl.a Cashier; D. M. Nelllgan. Accountant. CAPITAL, LWOOe. SURPLUS, SO.000 Interest paid on deposits ■ per cent per annum. Economy la the road t. wealth. Deposit your saving, any they will be increased by Interest. Com pounded eetr.Lannually. WARM SPRINGS. MERIWETHER COUNTY. GEORGIA On a spur of Fine Mountain, 1,200 fee abovo sea level; delightfully cool ell mate; no malaria, dust or mosquitos The finest bathing on the continent swimming pools 15 by 40 feet, and In dividual baths for ladles and gentlo men. . Temperature of water 90 do grees—a cure for dyspepsia, rheuma tlsm and diseases of the kidneys. Nev hotel, with all modern Improvements, Dtreo't connection made via train leaving Macbn at 4:25 p. m. and 4:15 a m. on the Central. Terms moderate. For.-Information apply for clrculsn at C. R. R. office or to CHA3. I*. DAVIS, Proprietor, send Six 2 Cent Stamp; . For . The NEW SOUTH COOKBOOK ISO First Class Receipts, lb.W. WgENN. O. P. a T. A.. Knoxville. T.n^ V. T. Joukrrog, w. A, Davis. Preaul.nl. Vice Prmldenh Hqwaxd M. b*UT*. Be ere tor; and Trexsorzi The Guarantee Co of Georgia. —5S| jxacutors. guardian.,' ra, tauatnua. ““ **" “ dduclary Offlc# 8*4 Sacond .trMt,' PROFESSIONAL CARDS. 11 DR. J. J. SUBERS, Permanently located. Ia th, sp« dallies venereal. Lost energy re •tored. Female Irregularities ant poison oak. Core guaranteed. Address In confidence, with etamn 610 Fourth street. Macon. Ga. DR. Cl H. PEETE, EYE, EAR, THROAT AND NOSE. * *° 1 * n <l * t® *• Telephom »4. Office, 572 Mulberry, corner Second •treet. Macon. Q*. DR. J. a SHORTER. ETB, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. Office 568 Cherry St. Maooo. Ga. u PR- J. M. MOORE. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offloe with Dr. K. P. Moore. 115 Waahi lngton Avenue. Macon. G*. Office Hbura—7 to 9a.-n.ltolp.rn I to 8 d. in. B. W. WRENN, JR. Attorney-at-Law, 8«ojavto‘ w Atlanta, Georgia, GEORGIA, Bibb County—E. O. Fen guson having appf.iod to «ne for letter) of administration on the estate of M, L. Munger, late of said county, de, ceased, this Is to notify all parllei concerned to file objections. If anj they hove, on or before the. first Mon. day In August, 1894, why letters shoult not be issued as asked for. C. M. WILEY, Ordinary. XM. Johnston, President J, D, Stetson. Vic* President L. P. Hlllyer. Chief. Tne American national Bank, MACON, GA OF MACON, GA. CAP1TAL1SURPLUS, $260,000 R. H. PLANT, PRESIDENT. W. W. WRIGLEY, CASHIER. I- G. PLANT'S SON, BANKER KAC0& GEORGIA. ESTABLISHED 1353 Banking in all its branches. Interest allowed on Time Deposits V'e handle foreign exchange and arrange travellers credits on Messrs. Rothschild oi London for all European points.