Newspaper Page Text
SOUTH*** RAILWAY.
Wlf 4T ARB W8 f
We belong to a nation of "groat rend
er*." W# devour popular novel* with
an unfailing appetite and a literary
range which extend* from the known
to the unknown and doe* not necaaanrl-
jreatly between Mr*,
lortha M. Clay.
Ing an out-of-door*
ir heroine* and he
ir "real folk*" *!gh
Nature, to
ir to be approach-
thick *ho«e, a no
to be propitiated with
to be en-
NORFOLK. Vu.. Ji
ly discriminate
Ward and * w
We are fast beco
people. Not only 1
roe* of Action but
continually for "the open,
many of u». I* a diet
ed with bared head,
rolled-up sleet .
golf club* and Ashing rod*;
tertalned with athletic sport*
tng kind* an! degrees; and t
for our devotion »ho bestow*
hearty appetite for beefate
lend* Increaeed *e*t to a *00tl
In hour* of meditation or *tupor.
We are a practical people, much In
clined to believe that there are few
thing* In heaven or earth which cannot
be reduced to a scientific formula.
Yet outside this world of superficial
ity and robustness and "common sense"
there Is another universe whose mean*
tng* no formula* . can ever express,
whose bounds can never be measured
by tea or star or space, a world of Im
mortalities that differs from the other
a* "the consecration and the poet's
dream" differ from the multiplication
table, gnd It is as true of this world
a* of the other that "to him that hath
•hall be given."—Mr*. Martha Baker
Dunn, in the May Atlantic.
BOUTHr.RN RAILWAY.
M MMBR IX THE LAND OF TI1R SKY
Is the title of a beautifully illustrated
pamphlet Issued by the Southern Railway,
ghlng list of hotels and boarding house*
at «U of the summer retorts In North end
South Carolina, Virginia, Tennesee and
Georgia. Call on or write to
JA8 FREEMAN. T. P. A.
10 Cherry 8t.. Macon, Ga.
Oxfords
and
Sandals
BARIBX'S COHM!"MO\KltS.
ATLANTA, June 6-Ooverr.or Terrel!
ha* arrotnted a board of commissioner*
for the city of Darttn The board con
stats of R R. Knox, B. F. Sullivan. S
A. Dsan. Harvey Thong, ami T. A. Bai
ley.. Their commissions «tll last for two
year*. One of the number will act a/
mayor and the other as councilman. They
are appointed upon the recommendation
of the grand jury of McIntosh county.
Our Strap Sandals in patent and plain
Kid $1.50 to $3.00—Something nice.
Our $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 Oxford
can’t be matched.
C. A. EDCARTON MFC,
TliK MACON TELEGRAPH: SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 6, 1905
New
everybody
pric*
Panamas
Of the artistic negligee
shapo, in all their natural,
unproved, “swagger”
beauty,—so floxiblo that you
may shapo them as you will.
Wo aro snowing a very
modish one at
.50
CENTRAL’S TREASURY
RECEIVES $558,000
onnt Paid for the Ten Acres Ite-
to the Atlanta Terminal
SAVANNAH, Ga-, Jun. J.
F. Htnim, chairman of th. bo«ril of
the Central of Georgia railway, an
nounced today that the truit companle.
had made all th. neceaaary releaaen of
the ten acre* of land told by the Cen
tral to the Atlanta Terminal Company
and that the purchaae price, $-11,000,
had been paid Into the treaaury of the
Central railway.
SPECIAL NOTICES
Miss Henrietta J)avis
Theme »«. Commercial Bank Bldg.
MACON, lit.
Hair Dr#>«»lns, U . Villa*ton. Hair CM*
fifing. Shampooing, Hc.xlp Treatment, Fa
cial MihH*i Mnnl I'hoc. H ill *'.» ■■■
Shell Omani (inis. Toilet Articles, Chiro
pody. Prompt attention to calls at resi
dences.
5weet Potatoes
I wriiI ■ Ifw ihuuimid ihccI l>«
Into ellpe or ('ulllnse* Artdrree
C. T. Bailey,
DEATHS.
COL. .10tip in .11
ORIZABA, Mix., June
quin Jiinlncz, well know
n* well Me In B'*!ftl clr
During the Tuxtcpeo r
commanded the rural fori
the ostabliHiii.fi govornm
IIJTBX.
8.—Col. Jon -
i In military
lea. Is deni,
ivolutlon he
■s, sustaining
nt.
im. w.
TjUTLIJH, Oo..
Bateman, a pr <,
this pinee. dli-U h
after a Jong Min*
born and reared
A Call for Dlrccto:
Form It Shall Take
RICHMOND, Va., June l.—A call was
Issued tonight for a meeting of the
board of directors of the Davis Monu
ment Association, to be held here June
10, to consider what form the memorial
to Jefferson Davis, to be erected In this
city, shall take. This is the result of
the inability of the executive commit
tee to erect an arch with the $80,000
available .
Q. C. CONNER,
FIRE INSURANCE.
loom 32, iominprrUl Hank Build-
BUGGY UMBRELLAS,
S. s. PARHELEE
Polished Plate Glass
w* ere «h«* Southern dlslrlhutlnia
•■•nt* of th* I'nn-Anirrlmit l’lutr
<«!»*• t o. Wf rarrr nt «ur Allsnin
WINDOW (It.AMS. lnt« of it. ull *i*c».
slngl” end rt >i u 111 *. ut "ur warehouses b-)tli
in Savannah nn-1 in Atlanta.
|>..w»l 1’lnH, Ullnd Si.ipitiH. (llsslers' T>l»
L A Birghard J. Fabian Minion
L.H. Burghard&Co.
Funeral Directors
153*155 Cotton ave.
ARCH >f. TI.'IIXKIt.
ATLANTA. June $.--Arch M. Turner,
who has lived In Atlanta slnrn dm. died
at his homo on Curren street yesterday
nt tho age of 70. He was n member of
Vie H« venth Georgia regiment. He leaves
a wife and seven children.
First trip of tho "Soashoro
Spocial” to Tyboo via Cen
tral of Coorgia Railway Sun
day, Juno 7th. Round trip
$2.25. Loavo Union Station
at Macon 4: 40 n, m.
DEt'Tftt III. A NO IN HBS< I F.n
A CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE
6T. PETERSBURG, May 23.-(Cor
respondence of the Associated Press.)—
There Is virtual unanimity of opinion
In th# press, barring the nntl-semltlc
papers, that the author of the strained
relations and of the ritual murder cal
umnies, was the newspaper Bessaraba-
bets. A petition of the JeWlsh commu
nity Of Klschlneff to the director of
the department of police, Lopoukhlm, In
pointing this out, says:
"In Uesaarabla* generally and In Kls
chlneff particularly, ther* were no
strained relations between Jews and
Christians until a very recent date."
The Jewish society named the Bessara-
bets was the direct Instigator of the
trouble. "This newspaper was «*taV
ilshed five years ago," the report stated.
In Us second year the Bessarabeta be
an a regular and systematic baiting of
the Jewish population. In fact, Jew
baiting became Its recognised spe
cialty."
We could quote articles," th* report
continued, "which amounted to almple
call for the extirpation of the Jews en
masae."
The Jewish community went on to
say that tht local censorship adminis
tered by the vice-governor, evidently
approved the course of the Bessara-
bets. The BessarabeU continued
preaching "death to the Jews, or
Jews should be killed off" until the
massacre, its attacks culminating In
the accusation of rltunl murder. Tne
Jewish community established these
facts and then related that leaflets were
handed about the streets and posted In
the chenp restaurants aryl tea houses,
stating that "the egar had decided to
kill the Jews during the first three days
of Easter."
HOW THE WORLD WILL
COME TO AN END
tcmnrkahe Addrrsa by Prof. Sir
William Crooks# the Eminent
Chemist—Dissolution of 3(atter.
BERLIN, Jun# 5.—Professor Sir Wil
liam Crookes, before the International
Chemical Congress today, dealt with
the possibility of reducing all the ele
ments of matter to a one and ultimate,
by finding that each and every element
la resolvable into a single /orm of en
ergy.
The subject was "Modem Views on
Matter—the Realization of a Dream."
Sir William said: "Probably maaaes
of molecules dissolve tbemselvea 'nto
the ether waves of the universe or Into
electrical energy. Thua we stand on
the border line where matter and force
pass into each other. In thla border
land lie the greatest scientific problems
of th# future. Here He the final reali
ties wide reaching and marvelous.
"The nineteenth century saw the birth
of new views regarding the nature of
atome, electricity and ether. While our
views about tha composition of matter
are generally satisfactory today, will
that be the case at the end of the twen
tieth century? Will we be content to
see matter dissolving Into a multitude
of revolving electrodes? Such n, mys
terious dissolution of atoms appears to
bo universal. Although the whole range
of human experience la too short to
form a parallax whereby we can
foretell the disappearance of mat
ter; nevertheless it is possible that
formless nebulae will ngaltr prevail
when the .hourglass of eternity has run
out."
r delay, and those
out to the tugboat
or the latest news,
i -1 th* Ir f.\i < r D
1’ItIXT CLOTH MARKET
FALL RIVER. June 8.-The sales In
the print cloth market for the week
will reach about 250.000 pieces, both
wide and narrow* odds, deliveries ex
tending up to September. There have
been no tales of regulars during the
week, prices for these goods continuing
unchanged at 3 1-11
The tone of the market Is somewhat
firmer than last week. The unsatisfac
tory condition of the cotton mnrket is
still the principal obstacle, and while
prices for the raw material remnlns at
their present high basis, mnnufactur
era will continue to be slow sellers un
less conditions In the doth market
change materially In their favor.
JESSE B. HART,
Funeral
Director
559 Mulberry bt.
’ Sot to Hotel
oat.. >hon. out.
Roald.me '|ihnn, a lot.
ut'ia nil ami SIGHT.
Fromm FIIOM JI ATICB.
ATLANTA, Juno l—Or»t M. Walk, a
former rn.mb.r of tho potto, fore, of
Iirlatol. T.nn . I. want*) br th. author-
IttM of that oily to amw.r th* ohar#.
of murd«r. It .-om. that In February
| loot ho .hot and klllrj ltou.ton Chtldnra.
• nothw mamber of th. fore. Walk waa
|,rr»l»d and platmd In Jail, but .acup.d
r.» - and than with a ml tiny , in ,v«y Rat. it l. b.K,r«I by th. author-
•Itnri to move und *11 frt .• at in., of Urt.tol that h, li In hldln# mo
Throo wiiolo flays in Jack
sonville for $3.60, St. Au
gustine, $4.00 nrnl Pablo
Beach $1.00, Excursion via
G. S. it F, Ry., Juno 10.
WILL TIB-ft* million CRAFT
First trip of tho “Soashoro
Special” to Tybeo via Con-
trnl of Georgia Railway on
Sunday, Juno 7th. Round
OUR PRESIDENTS
AS SPORTSMEN
Mr. Rooirvelt Ti Xo« the Only One.
Former Lover* of tho Field*
Interested in the big gam*
hunting trips and the d^iiy athletlo ex
ercises of President Roosevelt need only
of former Pres
idents to learn that ha Is by no mesins
the first Chief Executive to spend his
nd leisure hours In the pur
suance of sports.
arduous fisherman ani duck
shooter could be Imagined than Presi
dent Cleveland. At his home near Bus*
zard’s Bay he spent every moment of
his leisure time In his favorite pastime
with th# rod and reel. It was a com
mon thing to see Mr. Cleveland out to
tch the proper tide even before dawn,
and his skill is said to have been equal
to that of any of the old shellbacks In
the neighborhood when it came to play
ing a bass.
Nor waa President Cleveland the first
to dignify this ground which Is popu
larly called* the "Presidential Hunting
Preserve*." President Harrison went
duck shooting along the shores of these
waterways, and hunted every foot of
them clear to the sea. All aorta of wild
duck abound In this district, among
them canvasbacks. and besides these,
quail, pheasant, snipe and wild turkey
are to be found. President Harrison
was a fairly good shot with a gun. but
his first venture proved slightly disap
pointing, for he mistook a black pig
belonging to a negro for a raccoon. He
oftcred at once to settle for the pig, but
the patriotic owner declined, on
ground that he had been highly hon
ored by a President of the United
fitatesa shooting his pig. and that the
proud distinction would be handed
down one generation to another In hie
family. President Harrlzon never took
much to horseback rldli.g nor to field
■porta, but with shooting he feel more
and more In love as he became older.
He even shot duck from a "sneakbox."
an achievement of which any tluek
Development* ni
Further lonreeelone.
PHILADELPHIA. June 8.—There
were no Important developments today
In the textile strike. Several hundred
workers who wen on strike Monday
and who were not organised, returned
|to their work In the Maunchunk dls-
trlct. Several mills shut down today I hunter may well be proud
and the executive board of the mill | jirfore George • Washington became
workers announced that tha hosiery | General Washington he hunted all over
thla aame ground. After he b
General he had little time for hunting
and cloth manufacturers had granted
th* flfty-flva-hour week to their am*
iloyes.
THE FIFTH RF.filMEXT.
ATLANTA. June 5—The officers ot
the Fifth regiment have practically de
cided to take that regiment Into camp
near Rome this year. The date of the
encampment Is July 11. Major Patton
of the Fifth Is now quite 111 with ap
pendicitis and as soon as he Improve*
all matters connected with tha encamp
ment will ha closed up. ’
GKOIiaP W. LACKEY.
ATLANTA, June 8—Geo. W. Lack
ey. an Inmate of the Soldiers' Home,
died at that Institution last night about
12 o’clock. The deceased entered th#
Home from Walton county. He wae M
years of age. The remains will he bu
rled in Westvlew cemetery tomorrow
and a detachment of tht old veterans
will attend the funeral.
YRLLOl
Ml \ : 1 .»
ver is previ
hove died nt
• JACK IX YUCAT^X.
ITY. June I.—Yellow fe-
fMt and eoms foreigner*
ltnn.
II17-ELECTED
SBXATOR JM
RICHMOND.
John W. Daniel wae today declared by
the Democratic primary re-elected to
succeed himself as United States sena
tor. Ho had no opposition under the
party primary law, and the state
chairman. J. Taylor Ellison, today de
clared him the nominee. Ills name *as
the only one presented under the law.
Senator Daniel Is now serving his third
term In th* senate.
FROP. I'ARXfV saw PLACE.
SAVANNAH. Go., June 8.—Professor
M. M. Parka, who for three or four
years has been professor of sden
the high school, has resigned. He will
All the chslr of pedagogy at tht Geor
gia Normal and Industrial College at
Milled?* vtlle.
trip
Leave U nion
Station Macon 4: 40 a. in.
UEItMAY WAItltltP rAXTIIF.lt
NEWPORT NEWS. June 8.—Th#
German gunboat l'nnth*r arrived hers
from southern water* today, and will
go Into dry dock for repairs.
DBACTIFIL Oil**'. It VAT Itlfi PARLOR
and shooting, but he was passionately
fond of horseback riding, and waa con
sidered an excellent horseman even
during the days when lumbering stage
coaches were responsible for much rid
ing In the saddle and when horsemen
were plentiful.
Curious to say, fond as Presidents
Cleveland and Ifarrtson were of the
water front, neither of them ever found
pleasure In swimming. President John
Quincy Adams was by all odds the
swimmer President of the White House.
Next to Benjamin Franklin,
best swimmer of any. pu
Washington. President Adams wae al
so a remarkable walker, and frequently
he combined his two hobbles. Often he
arose long before dawn, walked
is Georgetown, where he had a seclud
ed noqk. and, stripping, plunged Into
the Potomac. Then, after a long, re
freshing swim, he would drei
back to hia home, where he arrived by
break of day, ready for whatever came.
President Arthur waa always espec
tally fond of camping and huntln
fishing, and on one occasion wr
mile* from where he might have been
reached by telegraph wire. B&i
trout were Mr. Arthur's favorlt
is said to have been reroarkab
pert at casting the fly, and once,
on a visit south, the Fishing Club o!
Louisville presented him with an
qulelte rod. suitably engraved, and of
thla the President aver felt especially
proud.
President Garfield was another of our
Presidents given to tha pursuit
sports. He did not care for Aching,
however. Hunting waa his pet diver
sion. But aside from this he took
lively Interest In all aorta of field sports
eepedally In the national game, base
ball. At no time wae there a more en
thualaatlc baseball "crank" In Wash
Ington than was the President. He was
looted an honorary member of the
National Base Ball Club, and he fro
quently attended the games played by
this team, and followed Ita victories
with a jealous ays In tha morning
papers. Billiards was another favor-
version with President Garflel
During his administration a new btl-
■ table was placed In ths basement
of the Whit* House, and here he play-
almost regularly every afternoon.
iTestdent Garfield also was fond of
back riding: Taking him all In
all, he waa probably the moat all-round
sporting President# for no matter what
th* sport, he felt at least a mild In
terest in It.—Philadelphia Public Ledg-
eh.
of vary-
In return
bestows on us a
beefsteak, and
soothing pipe
In*
Free Medical
Advice to Women*
AH
JFreJfricL
Confident!
Every tick and ailing woman,
Every young girl who suffers monthly,
Every woman who is approaching maternity.
Every woman who feels that life is a burden,
Every woman who has tried all other means to regain health without success,
Every woman who it going through that critical time — the change of life—-
la fnvited to write to Mrs. Piokhara, Lynn, Mass., in regard to her trouble, and
ibe most expert advice telling exactly bow to obtain a CURE will be scat abso
lutely free of cost.
Tho one thins that qualifies a person to give advice on any subject
Is experience —experience creates knowledge.
No other person has so wide an experience with female ills nor such
a record of success as Mrs. Pinkham has hid.
Over a hundred thousand cases come before her each year. Some
personally, others by mail. And this has been going on for twenty years,
day after day* and day after day.
Twenty years of constant success—think of tho knowledge thus
gained l Surely women are wise In seeking advice from a woman with
such an experience, especially when it Is free.
Mrs. Hayes, of Iloston, wrote to Mrs. Pinkham when she was
In great trouble. Ilcr letter shows tlie result. There nro actually
thousands of such letters In Mrs. Pinkham** possession.
" Dear Mrs. Pinkham : — I have been under doctors’ treatment for female
troubles for some time, but without any relief. They now tell me I have a
fibroid tumor. I cannot sit down without great pain, and the soreness extends
up my spine. I have bearing down painsl»oth back and front. My abdomen
ia swollen, I cannot wear my clothes with any comfort. Womb la dreadfully
swollen, and I havo bad flowing spells for three years My appctlto is not
good. 1 cannot walk or bo on my feet for any length of time.
"The symptoms of Fibroid Tumor, given in your little book, accurately
describe my case, so I write to you for advice. —Mbs. E. F. Hayxs, 253
Dudley St. (Boston), Hoxbury, Maas.
“Dear Mrs. Pjxkdam:—I wrote to you describing my symptoms, and
adcfd your advice. You replied, and I followed all your directions carefully
for several months, and to-dav I am a well woman.
. "Theusoof l.jcliu E. Pinkhaiu'a Vegetable Compound, together
with your advice*car«^^ully followed, entirely expelled the tumor, and strength
ened tho whole system. I can walk miles now.
"Your Vegetable Compound is worth five dollars a drop. I advise all
women who are afflicted with tumors, or any female trouble, to write you tor
advice, and give it a faithful trial."—Mrs. E. F. IIayls, 252 Dudley St.
(Boston), Uoxtrary, Mass.
Mrs. Hayefi will gladly answer any and all letters that may bo
addrcN-cd to her asking about her illness, and how Mrs. Pinkham
helped her.
JJOOO^T ,f
n*l lot ter and a!(nxtar« of
Pnrla Fad of Shortntf Them Adopted
l.y Xew York Smart Set.
Foolish women with pet docs have
adopted the Paris fad of shoeing them
with leather boots to such an extent
that they may be ordered and made to
a regular last at special saddlers m
New York. A set of four shoes mane
of pigskin, with corrugated rubber
soles, and thongs to lace about the
ingle, will cost the dear pug's mistress
only 13; for half a dollar less black
calfskins with heavy leather soles may
be made, which Is the price of morocco
ahoef.
When Pug goes to have his shoes or
dered ha stands on a jrece of paper to
have the shape of hit foot drawn on
it, and the measurements are carefully
noted in a book entered under hie
name, and hie last is as carefully pre
served by his bootmaker as bis mis-
< I. by he:>.
PRESIDENT
SUSPENDERS
THE STORY OP A SOXC^
Death of Ardltl Recall* an Interest*
Inn Incident.
The death of Luigi Ardltl, the fa
mous composer of "21 Bacfo." at Hove,
England, recalls the st^ry of that not
ed vocal waits. It was Ardlti's wife
who rescued the manuscript of the
rough Idea of "It Baclo," which had
been, scribbled down at the request of
Piceolomtnl, the great soprano, on th*
back of an envelope.
With three other tongs this was
to a rub' :>her for 1234
proved such a rage that
who acquired the French
a magnlfl r.it chateau
eeede.
Ardltl was a great favorite with
lata Queen Victoria, and composed
ode on the occasion of the death
the prince consort. As a boy he
a prodigy violinist, and toured with the
great Bottestnl, the double-bats play-
A GARMENT FOR THE Oil.
BuPlnees was quiet In the shop
so when the young person to cap
apron entered, the tradesman was
smiles and attention.
"What can I do for you, madam?"
Ik* qucrrled, polletly.
1 eee," she said, with a rich brogue,
"that ye are afther eelito* them new
fangled things they do be burnfn* on
the gas."
"Yes. madam, we have a very large
assortment of the very best incandes
cent fitting!. You can have the com
plete set—fittings, chimney and mantle
—aa low as half a crown."
"Oh." waa the reply, "sure it's not
the complete set that Tm afther want
ing. I'va got the brass i<irt and the
chlmley as right as can be* But the
little white shir?* all brok** to am
ereena; an* it'* another wan m*
want, II ye piaze."—Answers.
nr.I.IKt Eli IN ADVERTISING.
Mrs. Stubl^—"Let • us atop at this
hotel, John." Mr. Stubb--"The one
down the beach Is Just as large." Mr*.
Stubb—HTes, but thla one has a picture
of the hotel on the stationery that
covers half the envelope. Chicago
Dally Newa.
We Misrepresent Nothing
The Cheapest anti
Most Reliable Whist;
House in Georgia
6-yv.r-o'.J Chm .1 tlM .yllon IfC.
The celebrated ^Daniel Boon*
Kentucky Whisky at SI.to a gallon, ex*
press said to any point to. Georgia..
four full quarts of our elegant
LETT RYE for only O.E. MPtM. t>»>f_.
Three are only a few of
things Full line of Cb
Crrdisls. Brandies, etc.
I line of Champagnes. Wines.
^jy
goods from tl.TS- a
ordsr Is noi lei
inri
Sam & Ed Weichselbaum
The eight thirty morning
train on the Southern is the
only morning train out of
Macon carrying a parlor car
to Atlanta. This is the Pull
man Observation car for
Washington and Baltimore,
Philadelphia and New York
and is handled out of Atlan
ta on tho fatuous “Washing
ton and Southwestern Litni-
Union Pacific R. R, Co.
Cheap Colonists Tickets to
California and the North
west from Feby. 15 to June
Solid Vestibuled trains.
Through Service. For par
ticulars, address
J. F. Vax Renssel.er,
General Agent, 13 Peachtrea
St., Atlanta, Ga,
R. 0. Bean, T. P. A.
Go down to Tybee nest
Sunday and get a whiff of
the salt air. Round trip for
$3.35 on Central of Georgia’s
“Seashore Special.” Leaves
Union Station at 4:40 a. ni.
IX TO ATLANTA
Zar la S 10 a m train ca
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.