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THE MACON TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY IT, 1903
TBE MACON TELEGRAPH
rUBLISHED EVERT flORItlBG AJfD
TWICE A WEEK BT THE KACOK
TELEGRAPH RUBUSHIRG COMPART,
m mulberry street, piacoh, ga.
C. R. PENDLETON,
President and Manager.
C R. PENDLETON
LOUIS PENDLETON ...
B4UMI
Binna and IX8ECT,.
i a plea for the protection of blrrt*.
IxnilBvIllc Herald rentt-
it urn) taken up atatlittca. which
ve not only interenting but trnport-
tnt. It nnyn:
What eu..et.aful huntera of Inaccta
are the biril* In clearly ahown! The
ntomaeh 'of a itngle quail, for inntahee,
contained 101 potato bugs; that of
another COO Chinch huge. A cuckoo
nhot In the early morning contained
43 caterpillar,; another 217 web worms;
a robin, 175 caterpillar*. Four chlolc-
adeen held 1,028 egga of canker worm*
should be invited, and discuss the pro
visions of the Felder bill. Once before
we were slmost rendy tn have a greater
Macon, committee* were appointed,
boundary line* drawn and map*
printed, when )o and behold somebody
had fixed the law r<» that It was Im
possible to annex anybody. Faithfully
yours, GKO. A. SMITH.
A ffC9»AND*g DASTARDLY CHIME.
He Bests Ills Wife's lies* to s Jelly
With nn Ase.
KASTMAN', Feb. 16.—Last Saturday
morning Mr*. Fiank Cook of Appbnk
county, near Hasiehurst, wh6 found
dead In the yard at her home, her head
being crushed fearfully by some blunt
Instrument. The verdict of the coro*
four other chickadees, 600 egg* and 103 ner's jury was that she came to h<
TIFTON DEBATERS
WIN OVER NORMAL
Joys and Girls Participate on Both
Sides—A %'ery Interesting Affair.
NKGMO AHVAJft RMENT.
The Telegrapn Inn received from the
editor of the Norfolk News—& negro
paper—a letter calling attention to an
enclosed editorial clipping from bis pa
per. He desires us to read, comment
and send marked copy.
It seems that tho editor of the paper
recently printed an editorial with h
left the beaten piths of "Afro-Ameri
can’* Journalism, and aJvoi ated n
more friendly relation with the white*,
made an acknowledgement that thin
U "a white man's country," and that
the negroes should concede this And
consent to work their way up slowly
and patiently.
Tire second editorial mailed to us in
forms us that the former one w as sent
broadcast over the country by a press
agency and was "printed slmultaneouB-
ly In 5,000* newspapers." This fact,
says the editor, convinces him that he
is "no ordinary negro," and ho pro
ceeds In two columns to go on into the
race saving business. Many of the
things he says are good and true, but
be queers It all with his conceit. His
style and manner is so toplofty that
it shoots over the heads of tho more
Illiterate of his race, and It will excite
envy, if not the outright antagonism
of the more oducnled. Ho is likely to
find himself without a following. Ho
says however, that his paper is read by
"all nationalities," and ho often# his
subscription books to prove it. lla
sums up his platform us follows;
l»t. To a<
feeling be tv
2d. To promote uy every pnssiDio na ans
tho legitimate advancement of the n< i;ro;
principally along tho Iln** of India trial
schools and tnpralUy,
3d. To guln n circulation among the
Whits peopla. that th« rapes may be
brought In donor contact and communion
to their better mutual understanding.
4th. To encourage active Christianity
among the race, which includes roapect
for the church and civil authority.
6th. To advocate a code of discipline
and training for children, dealing with the
subject of homo lifo and pnrentnl an*
thorlty.
6th. To suggest and foster more healthy
mature insects. A single chickadee tviU
ca t 5,000 eggs of the • anker worm In
a single day. Ham swallows will de
stroy from 5.000 to 10,000 flies and other
Insects every week. The young of u
pair of Jays required half a million cat-
rmiliars in one season. In the space
of four hours and thirty-seven minute*
a mother wren made 110 visits to her
little on^s, feeding them 111 Insects and
spiders. A pair of chirping sparrows
fed their young 200 times a day. From
st of barn owls 675 pellets were
collected, which upon investigation
showed the remains of 1,119 common
meadow mice, a destructive enemy of
young fruit tree* and crops generally.
"Allowing twenty-five insects a day
as the average diet of a bird and esti
mating one bird to the aero for Ken
tucky, we have a total of 25,612,480 birds
for this state alone. This great army
of birds would require 642.312,000 In
sects every day. Allowing 120,000 In
sects to All a bushel measure, Ken
tucky would have to supply 5,377 bush
els of Insects every day to fpod her
birds. This estimate is very low. It
should, however, serve to show the
value of birds as pest destroyers ;:n<3
as savers of crops ami trees. It in i
public duty which every man and wo
man In Kentucky should take part In
fulfilling to preserve* und protect our
birds."
h by the hands of some unknown ;
party, but many of the people In the
neighborhood of the tragedy believed
the woman -was killed by her husband,
and so Informed their sheriff, lie ad
vised that no warrant be issued then,
but wait until th* meeting of the grand
Jury, soon to convene. This suggestion
did not meet with general approval and
accordingly a leading citizen, represent
ing the others, sent a telegram to Sher
iff J. C. Rogers of Eastman to go down
and arrest Cook. Our sheriff found th 1 --
bervftvsi husband attending divine ser
vices, like a good Christian, nt Oak
Grove church, near Haxley. lie ex
pressed great surprise when the sheriff
advised him that he was under arrest,
charged with the murder of hi* wife.
The sheriff took him to Baxley yester
day evening. About night auch a mob
b*gnn collecting about the hotel that it
became evident that a lynching was im
minent. and Hhorl/r Rogers had to resort
to strategy in order to prevent it.
promising the crowd that he would have
the man there Monday morning and let
them know If he got positive evidence
against them. This quieted the crowd,
as Sheriff Rogers had never been known
to tell a lie. However, th- sheriff
brought his prisoner up on the next
northbound trail), and he is in Kastman
Jail now, awaiting the order of Judge
Parker.
Took confessed to the sheriff and an
other that ho killed his wife with an
axe; that he struck her three blows,
first, thinking It was enough, but after
times more to
TIFTON, Oa., Feb. 16.—One of the
most interesting debates that has ever
occurred in this section of the state
was that between the Norman Insti
tute of obe and the Tilton public
schools last Friday evening at Obe,
eight pupils, two boys and two girls
being chostn to represent each school.
The subject of the debate was:
‘Resolved, Which Is the most Inju
rious to man.'intoxlcarit* or war?'*
Tlfton was given the affirmative and
Obe the negative.
The debaters for Norman Institute
were Minxes Mary Overby, Mary Lu*
cas, Messre. W. M. Spells and Walter
Sun
er.
The debaters for Tlfton were Misses
Ethel Futch, Kffle Kent. Messrs.
Haines Hargrett and MervJn Garrett.
The debate came off at 5 o'clock
xharp. with Messrs. Buchanan of Obe.
Farley of Moutrie and Kelly of Tlfton
as* judge*.
The debaters rpnke as follows:
MJsh Ethel Futch. affirmative.
Miss Mary Overby, negative.
Haines Hargrett, affirmative.
\V. M. Spells, negative. %
Kffle Kent, affirmative.
Mary Lucas, negative.
Marvin Garrett, affirmative.
Walter Sumner, negative.
The decision was awarded to TIftofl.
LETTERS SWAMP
SENATOR CULL0M
Bill to
Business,
1 rge Hint to !
lain Original
npport
Package
ing Mir:
vlth it. His hi a
made
his
•rife’s
jhlilies Inherent In
Till To lend every
WE HAVE BEES EXPECTING THIS.
What is politely called n race riot has
occurred In Coffee county, Ga. Two
white men went to a negro dance, and,
becoming involved in nn altercation
with the negroes, locked the doors of
the building and began firing into the
crowd. Two negroes were killed and
nine wounded, three of whom were
women. Of course, the accounts do
record the arrest
flans. They were. *
white supremacy n
kind of a protest i
Ity.—Buffalo Expre
We have been expecting this, and will
see more of it in other Northern publi
cations. Tho Dally Press, of Newport
Nows, Vn., makes this apt rejoinder;
:se whit
ipposedly, enforcing
id illustrating some
gainst social equal-
•c who laugh i
vnlk verj
that the
r.ked
rslght.'
poin
> In this policy.
'rigInal
If he
rry out these reforms, or
can ninka n good start on them, he
will do a great deal of good. But. an
we have paid, ho has made n mistake
In permitting hlmrclf to tuvetl up over
the notoriety to which ho seems to
feel that he has attained. The Tele
graph wishes him success, however. In
Ms undertaking, and it wishes auccess
of th«
The Expr
th
o his
vhlte
ot In
but
opln
it to the
on par
allel lines within the distinctive social
sphere in which God created them.
The negro Is entitled to protection on
the natural human rights of life, liber
ty and property, and the pursuit of
happiness; but it was a mistake to at
tempt to make nn American sovereign,
with the right to govern when in the
majority, out of n freed slave, ns soon
os he wan freed. Tho experiment nun
harmful In the extreme to both races.
It was a political blunder which his
ost thli
If thoi
at deni.
slhlo for it,
it, it is a hop.
great many n
real sentiment of the Hoot
than the bullet of cxo’gonx represent
the sentiment of the people of Buffi
and It 1* no nearer the truth to hold thes«
men up ns typical of the Houth than It
would he to hold the anarchistic assassin
uii ns a type of the average citizen of
Buffalo.
"If the Kxprrss would get r!* f Its pro-
WASHtNGTON,
I Cullom of llllnoli
mall during the p
during his tw
CrnfforV'hndV'r^nt?y midHhhn^hi! 1 ** fttor ° f lh * Unlted
d of his wife that she almost exclusively to th
y him, mid so he confesses terently
de tip his mind about two j resontnt
o kill his wife, to whom he
had been married only about five
months. The murdered woman is not
quite 16 year s old. The husband Is about
22 yttiri old. Roth husband and wife
ore of good families.
ABSTRACT COMPANIES.
Proposition tn Merge Twelve
Them with lteialq«Hrter» In
• he Clty of Macon.
CARROLLTON. Gn.. Feh. 16—Tin
Oonruhi Guaranty. Title nr i Tru*'t
Company la the i.ro,>....rrt nain» for n
Dow nbMrnot an.) ronl elate mmpir.v
•"'Inn nnrnnlzrrl lo .ever lh!» uni
twelve other rounlloa. The he dqn t .
! ha
j. IS.—Senator
had n heavier
ek than at unv
ty years as a son*
It pert?
Hepburn bill
eported to the house of r?p
itlves, providing for the app’l-
of the state laws in the various
to liquor* in the original paek-
* soon as they enter the sta'.es.
owed object of the bill is to ruin
Tiginal package business, which
successfully In pro
THE OLD RELIABLE
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
WERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
C\TY MARSHAL'S SALES,
win be told before the oourt hour, floor
1 the city Of Macon. Bibb county, . Ga..
' {he first Tuesday In Marah. 1909. at 10 a .
“ the following described properly, to.
^Al’so at the same time and place, part
of l£t‘ No. 6. square .Vo. 77; bounded on
one side by Pine street, on another side
bv wheeler, on another aide by an alley,
andon another side by an.alley.Levied
on as the property of B. M. Hilliard tor
curbing to satisfy a fl. fa. In favor of the
tavor and council of the city of Macon
« S tt Hilliard for curbing on Pl na
ireet CrUblng tax, 315.00 and costa.
Also, at the name time anti place, part
Vo- » and 10. S. V,. Range; bound-
efl on ‘one Side by Oglethorpe street, on
another side by an alley, on another side
by Harris (self), and on another sl4e by
Harris (self). Levied on as the property
or Mrs Peter Harris for curbing, to sat
isfy a fl. fa. in favor of the mayor ana
council of the city of Macon va. Mrs.
Peter Harris for curbing on Oglethorpe
street. Curbing tax. 8o2.l>7 and costs.
Al«o at the same time and place, part
of lot Nos. 9 and 10. S. W. Range; bounded
on one side by Oglthorpe street, on anoth.
er side by Harris, on another side by Har
ris and on another side by Frink (self).
Levied on as the property of Mrs. J. B.
Frink for curbing, to satisfy a 11. fa. in
favor of the mayor and council of th.
city of Macon vs. Mrs. J. B. Frink for
curbing on Oglethorpe street. Curbing.
$00.10 and* costs.
’ W. 13. CHAPMAN. Marshal.
GERMAN INTERESTS •
IN CHINESE PORTS
Increase of Business Honse. .
Example of .be X»««-"*«
,,,,—Capital Invested Abroad.
GEORGIA. Bibb County.—Notice of ap
plication for leave to sell personal prop-
Notlce Is hereby given that the under-
sicn*d has applied 'to the ordinary of said
county for leave to sell certain personal
property belonging to the estate of James
b Hough for the payment of debts and
for distribution, to-wlt: 250 shares of Man-
Chester Manufacturing Company stock; 25
shares of Union Compress & Warehouse
Company stock, and .3 promissory notes
made by th>' Manchester Manufacturing
Company. Said application will be heard
at the regular term of the court of ordi
nary for said county, to be held on the
fir«t Monday Jn March. 1903.
nm »»» naNNIE F. HOUGH.
Administratrix of J. D. Hough, Deceased.
ClosnJAed advertisement* under
this head are Intended strictly
for the profe*»fen*.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
rkf d i
he in Mac
twelve local i
Oa..
an i tho
r<e with
i already
•t rompnnle
propo «it’on
submit!#' I to C!
er-
vlnclnt i
uloiis m
!’»« It
Just In l’i
M b i lei
(Hr i
rldlc
matters pertaining to the South. The
people of the United State arc too en
lightened to accept blind bigotry and In-
frowing prejudice for argument and even
Buffalo la not so devoid of disreputable
characters that she run play the part of
the guilt lo™ thrower of stones ut other
sections.
Wo hftvt long since doubted whether
or not It was worth the candle to notice
these criticisms, so manifestly unfair,
ndt to say malicious. If the Buffalo
Express had tnkon the pains to look
Into the columns of the Georgia papers
It would have seen that till* affair was
thoroughly ventilated and condemn'd nt
In exist
ger has lust bee
Henry.Barron of
courts of this county, who owns a
trolling interest in the interstate
ittvict Company of Carrollton,
was Incorporated sevenri v<*arn ;\g
considerable stock sold uni n
number of Improved abstract re
purchased and made out. The «
holders of the local company are
sidering the proposition of ccn-i
(Inn. and With the several Ijvk
panics prop -sing m enter the new
pony. It la believed that mutual In
would be advance! hv the nrgi
tlon. and it is prob.ihle that the
III be accomplished.
M l.TAN OF MOROCCO.
Progressive Meg* Make People Op
pose Holer of the Cnnntry.
Feb. 14— The principal
ultnn of Morocco, so far
been
| hlbltinn states and in small towns
j where local option bars the disposal of
of liquors op nly.
J It dc\eiop.s that last Sunday the
Christian pastors of the state of Illi
nois uffrer-d to preach sermons In which
they would urge the passage by eon-
gre s of the hill, which would In thli
way extend the cause of t* mperance
from their point or view. The one re
sult of these sermons hag been an aver
age of 2^0 lettc* in each mail addressed
to Senutor Cullom. asking him to sup
port the measure In the senate. He- has
found it a physical impossibility to gi»«
a personal answer to these hundreds
of letters, so expects to have a circular
letter prepared which will acknowledge
them.
WARREN I>. NOTTINGHAM,
Attorney-»t-Lsw.
arts Third street, Mncon, Gn.
Will practice In the several courts,
Federal ami State.
WM. R. BIRCH,
Attorney-at-Law. Special attention to
deeds and abstracts.
American National Bank.
nlnatlor
Judge Pnrktu’r .1
let presidential or other poll
buiz and bother him at the
creditable to himself and p*
judiciary has never yet rui
presidential candidate lor a
but tbs remembrance of Abiw
nlshed n
ny party
date Jus-
mo
and lb
people
• hapj
vlth r
them alone t
among the
denee hag put them
them out of the Afri
out their
with whe
s TO
the
tllAKIM
Central C
nd currtCi
uu
Cfcr
at their
IN ot it miok.H.
:v K.iuaUy opposed
off the 8tate Fair,
fed. but w* should
s would shako In
own temerity.—Au-
Macon had not aik.Ml for the State
Fair since last It wmg held here. She
did not really feel that she was acting
v lth "temerity*' tn entering into a con
test with Atlanta for it. Her eucceaa
shows that she did not presume too
lice McLean In UU and Chief Justice
Chase In 186? should be a warning to
J Judges who dabble in politics while on
J the bench.
1 Mr. Carnegie never tires of telling of
the days when he was a telegraph op
erator nt |2o u month. He should now
tell us why lie left such u position
when he was happy.
UltktTKH MACON.
To the Editor of The Telegraph:
Just want to soy that you are giving
vis tho beat paper now that was -
piloted in Macon. In my opinion it is
the best paper thnt comes to my offlte.
1 had rather read it. Its editorials arc
strong , its Oketinokee stones urv good
some of them pathetic, it there are
•ugh of them they ought to be Pi±b-
Interstn
plainly
LONDON,
fault of the
us his subjects it)
lie In the ruler's progressive aplr
cording to J. IV. Lnngermnn. wl
Just returned from his special n
to invite the sultan to partklp
the St, Louis Exposition ‘
Lanier-
"Th»
pretender Is •» nobody. There
always have beep internal troubles In
Morocco, and this Is only* a new phase
of It. Th*- sultan sold: *It in said that I
am going too fast-that I am a white
washed Europe fin. and that f. in fnct.
dress In European garb.'
tul-
I was console ed again today
nate committee on interstate
Representatives of the
revving Association and the
Liquor Dealers’ Association
against the bill, while the nt-
r the Antl-Snloon League ar
ils adoption The aYgumtnbt
along «*onstltutlonaJ lines, the
tnd liquor dealera vu4Uag
wps without power to prohibit
> commerce and that the bill
lolated the express provision
of the constitution to that effect. The
temperance advocates, on the other
bund, urged the passage of the bill on
the ground that It w-as In line with the
power given the states by the consti
tution to exorcise police Jurisdiction
over mutters affecting the health of Its
citizens.
Senator Tillman, a member of the
committee, urged the p«ss-.g*» or th*
bill, affirming tts constitutionality nnl
cuing the decision of the supreme court
in tho South Carolina dispensary e
i under which that state was seising
! packages of liquor which came Into Us
I boundaries from other states.
The committee will vote upon the bill
at the meeting next Friday.
PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 16.—The Lod-
corwtpondtnt at Frankfort-on-
the-Maln eays: The Herman is, of all
foreign nationalities, by fai the most
successful salesman in the world The PROFESSIONAL
dt,Integrated state of Germany as a na
tlon, which existed previous to 1871, »
the r.anon Germany, in point of po
litical Influence and commercial power,
fell behind England, France, Austria
and the comparatively younger nations.
Russia and the United States.
But the progress made by Germany
within the last thirty years in manu
facturing and invention, the extension
and increase ot her marine inter- t
and foreign trade and her prominence
as a political power, all these ahow'the
vigor and strength of German Hie. Now
since Germany has begun to be a nation
Jn reality, her people and her govern
ment discern how far in the rear of oth
er countries they have fallen, and con
sequently there is a desire to push for
ward with all power, so as to make up
for lost opportunities, to gain working
■pace and colonies and to overtake the
more fortunate nations.
“When one bear* In mind that more j
has been accomplished in the march of
progtesslveness within the last thirty
years than in the country’s hlstory.from
the time of Charlemagne pp to the last
Franco-German war, then one must ao-
mit thnt the results of these Inst thirty
years of German effort have been mar
velous indeed.
In no line of activity 15 Germany’s ad
vance more marked than In her foreign
trade. Next to the English flag, the
blaek-white-red pennnnt of the Father-
land Is he«t known In the harbors of the
world, and most frequently seen on the
ocean highways. Oermnny’s commercial |
travelers are in every foreign market.
They penetrate Into barbaric regions of j
Africa and Asia, and open business con- !
nations in places neglected os dVsdaln- j
e*J by the British. Grent German pom-
merc'.al Arm* ore located In the chief j
business centres of Central and South t
America.. South Africa and. Southern \
and Eastern Asia. German shipping •
lines are extending in all direction:
Within the jpst yevAbo
in
CARDS
FRED B. MARTIN. Un Office,
Over Macon Savings Bank.
ABSTRACTS.
GEORGIA TITLE A GUARANTY CO.
DENTISTRY
Dn. II. W. WALKER, Dentist.
Office over Clem Phillips’, Cherry st.
’Phone No 2086.
i horoughly
slshes Mo
Mo
ho
other
pectnlty In building rati
Ing up trade. Hr trl*
from on*> pnlnce to nno
torn up by n mob. Th
n fear-nothing charact
go on relaying the lino till he cn... v -
hls point.
"If the sultan only practiced the cru
elties of his predecessors he would be
inTe popular In Fex. Yet he dispenses
Justice according to the old fashioned
will
$1,000,000 BEQUEATHED
TO POOR OF ST. PAUL
Mr*. Applehr Rgra Politician* from
Having llsnd in It* AdmlnUirn-
tlon •
Moo
*h tr
offender* or the worst class are
whipped round the to\xn till they die.
The sultan told me he would not be
head the pretender if the latter is
caught, hut would exhibit him In a cage
through the country. The pretender ts
If Europe will
nothing but
lished tn book
In my scrup book.
re «tuple
11
Its relia
It* locals
of interest
! the city al«
It ts true thii
showed Its di:««t
day morning i*.
Tight. She is j
tells
about. 1
thejnove
t peaking
minds me of what 1
Just as soon a;
started off goo
, .. . , that other old
WWU. Macon will Uttfln." Evvryl
Fair, and Atlanta to get the sul*
nix with Georgians I * **'*t**- er>
,k 7 ought to know
tne tnousanUi. I hy nn t having
J h part of us. I
States, discussing t* not even do
t Atlanta Joumat
tment In Its Run-
tint ta la sil I
ave a hors- |
aeon will gn I
. but
tg to
» fur.
» that help
mg; the "Barber Shop Chut'’
the people think und valk
» Barber Shop Chat started
•nt tor the State Fair. And
( the Barber Shop Chat r*-
rted
ut to
Fat
In th*
way It will he as much a n
Lee as though hi*-marble
the sp*- e. Then when the
the capitol fch.v',1 p;vu>r b**f
cant nl 'he and Inquire the
emptiness, he will learn a «
tlonal intolerance and of S<
nd In that
nument to
sure filled
irangrr at
e this va-
USe of lt«
i?fore the last
* have missed
i i>g neigh, hoj »
li of the bonk*
oil lee of th '
^oetoffp-e re-
manufacture*
mil tie h* r t'<
A great many
'bluff.
alone, matte..
be settled.”
Mr LAWgrrmnn euloclt^ th, coura*,
of the sultan, saying
•Wh.ri hnfl new, |, brought In h, r.-
cel\es tt with a quiet decision to reme
dy the defect. He has held his life by
a thread all through this trouble."
While nt Fe*. Mr. Langerman sold,
the populace spat nt him whenever he
appeared tn public. He added:
"No European can *t!r out without a
strong bodyguard. *n rabid Is the fanat
ical hatred of Chrtattans.’’
ST. PAUL. Minn.. Feb. t«.—The will
of Mr* Cornelia Day Wilder Appleby,
only daughter of the late Amherst It
Wilder, a well known railway contrac
tor, was made public today. Uffdet
the termg of her father's will she hat!
rcce ved nn Income from two-thirds o!
hi* estate, the whole being valued at
more than 13,000.000. One-third of the
entire estate came to her on her mar
rlnge six year* ago. so that the amount
*1 by the present will probabl
TFTgllsh rompanlM
changed hand* and went over to their
more pushing German rival*.
Official report* give the following re
garding German Interests in some of
the Chinese treaty ports. No mention
Is made of Tslngtau nnd Hong Kong.
In the latter place German houses of
prominence and much German capital
is located.
In Amboy there are two firms. Six
pieces of real estate, valued nt 10^,000
marks, are in German hands nnd th*
Invested capital in Industrial enter
prise* represents 300,000 mark*.
In Canton there are twelve business
houses whose Imports are valued nt
40.000.000 marks a year, nnd their
ports at 65.000.000 marks. One
manufactures tin cans for petrol
The value of real estate owned by Ger
mans amounts to 1,200,000 marks.
Thirty German vessels are engaged In
coasting trade, and six vessels in
river traffic. The place is also the
headquarters of four German mission
ary societies, which have seventy-one
branch missions in the interior and
neighboring districts.
In Foochow there is one Arm largely
engaged In the tea trade, one Arm Mfo
employs lighters (transporting freight)
and has an active tnterest In nn ostab-
ment for cleaning nnd exporting bed
feathers. Real estate owned by Ger
mans: Four dwelling houses nnd two
warehouses.
In Hankow there are nine German
business firms nnd a branch of th*
German-Aslatlc Bank. Capital invested.
6.500.000 marks. Value of Import* und
exports transacted by Oerman*. 3.500,-
*^0 nnd 12.000.000 mark* respectively, I
rilYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DUS. DIRHAM A JONES,
Osteopath*.
American National Bank Building.
{ y» 2ac-* Night phone 24M
R. MAK\ K. MoKAY
Commercial Bank Bhllding
Office hourj; 8:30 to J1 a. m.; 4 to 8 p. m.
DH. W. II. WHIPPLE,
Office. 672 Mulberry St., room* 4 and
t. Washington Block. Hours: 9 to 10 a.
m.. 12 to 1 and 6 to 8 p. m Telephone con
nections at office ana residence.
DR. J. II. BRADLEY.
Cor. 2d end Poplar. ’Ph
DU. J. J. SL’BERS.
Permanently located. In the specialties
venereal. Lost energy restored. Female
irregularities and poison oak; cure guar-
ex- j anteed. Address In confidence, with stamp.
Arm 510 Fourth St., Macon, Ga.
DRS. HANNA AND THOMPSON,
Commercial Bank Building. X-Ray work
a specialty.
ARCHITECTS
ALEXANDER BLAIR.
Architect.
673 Cherry Street. Macon, Oa.
Dn. C. II. PRF.TK. Oenllat.
Office ’phone 3551; residence 'phone 171
EYE. EAR, NOSE AND THROAT,
Cherry and Second Street*.
Four million marks are invested in real
mining In Plngslang. 100.000 marks In
albumen manufacturing. German own
ership of reat estate amounts to
Odo marks. Five German steamers run
. A .. , 1 o Shanghai, one to Itchnng nnd one to
exceed $1.0"O.000. J Bwatow. There Is also a German teV-
i After making a number of mln.^r be- ’ phone plant.
| quests. It is provided that the bulk of In Shanghai there are sixty-eight
the large estate be invested for tho German business firms. The headquar*
benefit of th* worthy poor of the city j ters of the German-Aslatlc Bank doing
nr Sf Paul vllhnut rA t n onlnr a* — ,....1- ... j . . , ... ... ■*
t.KT THVST Al.ONK. HAT, ,aqr.
A«.fl rlnanrl.r fVcr, Thk, l.r«.'.ra
tio. WIM Do 11 firm.
NKW YOHK. r.h IS—Rua.oll
.!ri-| H r«s1 to.lny thfit It I, y*t too »»rlv
to J»«t with trust, by l.giilatlon. "Th,
tru.t propo.uton h.n not ranched i
ntOK, wh.ro tho evil, hflvo prerantoj
thomoolvo. plntnly nnfl In n fl.nnile
of St. Paul, without regard
religious belief, and Independently of
any organised charUB*. hospitals or
other Institution, with a central or ad
ministration building for what Is to
be known as the "Amherst H. Wilder
Charity." Trained nurses are to
regularly employed for tha benefit of
the worthy poor. It ta specifically pro
vided that no politician shall ever have
anything to do with the administration
of the charity.
FOOD VALVE OF ALCOHOL.
color or a yearly trade of 126.000.000 marka. vre
* n Shanghai. Two German Joint
stock companies, employing 2.000,000
marks capital, are engaged In spinning
cotton and silk. German capital 1* also
invested in four cotton splnm-rlcs. six
silk working factories, three wharfs,
one flour mill, ohe gas plant. German
interest* amounting to 8,000.000 mnrks
capital are represented in the various
banking, real estate, towing and trans
portation companies Real estate
owned by Germans: One hundred ami
seventy acres valued at 6,000.000 mat ks.
“Ltglslatln
rid.
this tin
writs, for
vill only
DR. M. M. STAPLER.
Ey«, Ear, Note. Throat 866 Cherry St
Phone 2271.
OPTICIANS
EYES TESTED FREE.
Ci. G. COFFY,
Graduate OpUclan.
563 Cherry Street.
about trtirts
and say the
! think they
the evils ha'
th.it
tribute to Ia
ctripta. bank clearings
and population would
hen I r»*»k In the 50.000 class
people never hear of Macon, never come
In Macon and never do any bustn**s
In Macon, because of the ruling he
I get* In the »ensu*. It Is too late to get
I Iff the last census of course: but tt is
j not too late to get In the suburb*, and
t*» get some advertisement from a
larger population. Let u* get the
suburb* to come In (of their own ac
cord of courae) ami then let us bava
* r-)llc* census taken and send the re
sult out to the world, with our pos:-
off»i .• receipts, bank clearing*, end
amount of trade to prove it In order
to do this we mttht hav» a big love
feast, to which the people of th»
•ubutba and the ciUsrnti of Macon
"*n the danger «*m^ts. Half
nnd representatives talk
tnd th** harmful results
must be regulated now*,
re talking buncombe, for
not presented thrmseb es
shape that they can be rcin-
euiea.
ATI. %NT % TO M4RIETTA.
A Line tn Be Ballt t niter Name nf
« bnttahnoehee Terminal.
ATLANTA, Feb 16 Secietary of
State r.'.»k today Issued a charter to
th* Chattahoochee Terminal Company
of Atlanta. The petitioners to the ap
plication are Thoa. A. Grantllng. Newt
A. Morris. John W. Glover, and John
Awtry o? r 0 bb county: aril H. L. Col-
llngsworth. W. F. Spalding. Alex C.
King Jack Spalding. Charles D. Fuller
and B. W Fowler of Fulton The peti
tioner* announce that It s their purpose
to build a railroad, twenty mile* In
length, running from Atlanta to Mari
etta. The capital stock of the company
la placed at 8256.060
French Expert Name* Dally Allenr-
ance He Think* Harwleu,
LONDON. Feb. 16.—The Time* prints
the following from Pari*:
Saturday's Revue contains inter
views with several eminent Parts med
ical spe ialistw an 1 chemists respect
ing aJcohols alimentary value. The
consensus of oplnlo'n is that It is a
food or poison according to the quan
tity and manner in which It is con- i
sumed. The steady Increase of drunk-
nine** In France and the accompany-'
Ing disease* has aroused anxiety In
public health circle*. The general In
terest In the subject was revived when
the Academy of Medicine waa recently
Intrusted by the Ministry of the In
terior with the preparation of a list
•»f poisonous e--v. ln jn man
ufacture of liquor*.
Simultaneously M. Duclaux. Director
of the Pasteur Institute, publiahed a
striking article favoring the aiimentary
propertiea of alcohol. M. Duclaux ■
opinion was baaed upon the experi
ments of the American physiologist*.
Atwater and Benedict. The practical
question is the quantity of wine or
spirits that are useful or Innocuous for
the average constitution. M. Du-
•riaux consider* that a litre of wtna
and from twelve to fifteen liquor
gla**e« of *rdrlt* dally to be harmless.
M „ a ill aay.4«fl8*
CARROLL’S VETERANS.
Ity have held
Imously indors
3 In the
p McDaniel Eadaraea the Rill
lo Grant ex.Slave* Pensions.
x , C £ n! ™LLTn>;. G,.. Feh. 16,-Camp
MoDnnlel Conr, .(er.ite Veteran, of thl,
” * consultation and unxn-
; the bill lately intro-
tlonal congress by Sen-
tor Marcus A. Hanna of Ohio to pay
enslons to the ex-slaves. Their U.
•rcsslon was that it wa* * worthv
movement and that the ex-slaves rDhiy
deserved the petvtkm suggested U
would be gratifying to this camp to
witness the passage of the bill.
GLYNN COUNTY'S DEPOSITS
ATLANTA. Feb. 15 — An order was is
sue.. by Governor Terrell today, in
structing the tax collector of Glynn
county «« h.» to,, i, „ ith 'X
Bank of W aycro,,. which Ir.itkutlon la
one of the atate depositories.
SPECIAL NOTICES.
CITY OR FARM LOANS.
. c Jly real estate loans placed *t from I
t0 per cent., according to aocurlty.
Farm loans at 7 oer cent.
Secnrlty Loan and Abstract Co*
Commercial Bank Building.
J. J. COBB, THOS. B. WEST.
President. flee. A Attoraef*
The Georgia Loan & Trust Co
Incorporated 1S83.
Negotiates loans. 1200.00 and upwar-b
°n lands in Georgia, Alabama *nd
nesa*e.
Investments made for private P ar “v
and corporations. Mortgagee co.!*ct ea *
Farms rented and sold.
O. A. t'OLK.MAN, G«*»l. Manager.
ROS Mulberry St. MACON,
LOANS.
Oa' Improved farm taada er c*^
property ergot la ted at lewest ® ,r ^
ket rates. Baalaeaa of fffteea year*
•taadlag. Facilities ggaarpassed*
HOWARD M. IMITHi
814 leeoad St, Mscoa.
G**
For prompt delivery order your
Coal and Wood
from The Empire Coal Co.