Newspaper Page Text
I
V
the MACON TKI.ECRAPH : FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER
TBK MACON TELKGRAP11
BEFORE DAY CLUBS."
Al-
FUBLISHED EVERY MORNING AND
TWICE A WEEK BY THB MACON
TELEGRAPH PUBLISHING GOMPAHY
56* KUIBLRRT STREET, MACON, GA.
elution that the
an* a myth.
It may b<
i arrival
"Before
Day Cluba"
0. R. TENDLLTON,
President and Manager.
C. R. PENDLETON . .
LOUIS PENDLETON.
upon the patriotic parentage of Geor
gla the duty of regarding Weeleyai
with espe* 0 favor. Tho*r of then
who have daughters to Mftonfo in th-
higher branches of female accomplish
manta can acarcely hope to End to
lhai the testimony aa to ' tham a eafer,.better and roc
thfM* •||(K<>(] organizations, obtained, ial college environment thi
from negro Aritnesv-s, It unrell ib.e. , by famous old Wesleyan. Hon-
uiid that the situation has been exag- orad In ita own city, officered by men
gerated, but let ua not go to the ex- and women of the highest character*
treme of lulling to sleep those on guard | and abilities, supported by a great
po«-
THE TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA.
The Telet'sph vtlH be found on sale
■t the Kimball House and the Pied
mont Hotel In Atlanta.
PARKER AND ROOSEVELT.
The Telegraph aald a few days ago
that "it la hard to understand the
mental Integrity of the man who, In
the present condition of politics, aayj
he m. m small reasons for cholca be
tween Roosevelt and Parker." And
thAt "one who can not im plentiful
r^AAona for making a wide difference
between them Is surely possessed of
loose political convictions." We did not
have the Augusta Tribune In mind at
the time, but our contemporary, which
!<« nothing if not ridiculous all the
time, fits the cap to Its own bead, and
then mokes thn Impossible effort to
«l,.iw n picture of Democratic and Re
publican twins This was always the
Populists’ game, but It linn teen tooted
nut of tune* no much It is scarcely
worth the effort now of a horse-laugh.
But n« strange ns It may seem there
ore Homo profra.-. d Democratic news
papers that are tooting scandalously
near the mime jangle: and It Is touted
that a em.tll feline will bolt from the
jne.fl tub In the fullness of Its time,
Jf not prematurely.
Nevertheless we print In another
• olumn Ur. Henry Watterson’e Im-
1 reunions of both the Democratic and
the Republican candidates, which we
submit as an addendum to our own
efforts to draw the contrast It wan
written (aa In our own case) after a
visit to Kaopus, and a personal, close-
range inspection of the great Ameri
can who stands for the rule of the
written constitution as ugalnst the
uncertain and Imperious will of a
Rough Rider with a " Big Stick."
But the Democrats of the country
have no serious cause for complaint
nt the few people who call see no dif
ference between Parker and RooHovtlL
There ought to be n cave of AduUain-
the
ort
abode
pollt
A DEMOCRATIC OPPORTUNITY.
of the Re -
publlrar
llatt fn
and It
publl
at expoccd places.
There was a Before Dsy Club—call
It by whatever name—that conspired
to massacre and bum the Hodges
family, Just as the Indians in ‘36 mas
sacred (without burning) the Wildes
family in Ware county near where
Waycross now stands. In the latter
case, however, several of the family
escaped in the darkness, and the neigh
bors got out their guns.
There was a Before Day Club In
Virginia, or a Rough Rider Club, as
they were pleased to call their organ
isation, which robbed and burned.
There has been a club of some sort
recently wrecking and trying to wreck
railroad tralna in thla state.
We cannot shut our eyes to these
facts.
But the negroes as a whole are not
by any means to be charged with
these crimes. There are a great many
of them who are ready and willing to
help to put down criminals. At
Valdosta the other day several leading
men of that race put themselves pub
licly on record by offering their ser
vices to expose and apprehend mem
bers of Bofore Day Clubs If there were
any auch In Lowndes county. In Leon
county, Florida, a meeting was held
a few days ago, participated In by both
whites and blacka, for the purpoae of
pacifying the community and averting
a threatened race war. It resulted in
an agreement to unite in arresting all
criminal* This action was commend
able In the highest degree. An under
standing of this sort In every Houthern
community would break up the nefa
rious Before Day Clubs, If there are
many such, and reduce crime.
There is an element of the negro
population, desirous of peace and op
portunity to labor, respectful and re
spected, which needs protection from
the malevolent and incendiary of their
own color, and from bad white men
also. They are, themselves. Intimi
dated often by their own race. Let
them bs allowed to join the whites ac
cording to the Leon county plan, and
let them be made to feel that their
liomee and property will bo made se
cure. Then they will see to it speedily
that the criminal class moves on, either
beyond the boundary line or Into the
penitentiaries. There are enough of
the "old-tline" und better cla^H negroes
left to accomplish this. They are ready
and willing to break tip any secret
malevolent organisations that hold ses
sions Ilk** the Voodoos in the night and
In the forest recesses.
The wcll-dlsposcd negro living in his
lonely cabin Is often pln>
compulsion and under a ban. and sub
ject'd to a terror that could be
Moved It he knew that in helplu
do htn duty os a member of the <
muntty he would not put hla own
In Jco|>ardy. A union of force* on
line would be of the greatest be
because primarily It would brenl
the prnctlco of harboring nnd con
lug fugitives from Justice. The '
pVa and the Industrious, tax-p.
rocs have a common cnU«'* and be
en them they can make the high-
IIgfotts element, and safeguarded at all
points ’of discipline and protection, the
Institution deserves the first consider
ation of those to whose patronage Its
history, organization and good repute
appeal.
The Telegraph hopes that the ensu
ing year may find the college taxed to
Us fullest teaching power and Its suc
cess pronounced beyond any record of
Its past career.
The esteemed Atlanta News con
fesses that it Is too polite to biff Tom
Watson while he is plastering billings
gate muck all over the Democratic
party and leaders. That’s being fas
tidious—some!
able
tiro st night with
undo
*111
nt bi
•mines Invaded,
N.
Und a man so ac-
rnta. that full ad-
ten of the breach
enemy, and whoee
every Democratic
rt-
placcd
THE STATESBORO COURT
MARTIAL.
rd before
He has U
that
the
■ •w Mm
to hln (bill* or to town In thn day-
i Mir • I M, .1 hit hm.M.'hnM
m disturbed. What a bom
I hr! What a tremendous
would It give to the devein
rb'ulture In the South! What an
nee advantage It would pi
legToee of the better clan*
deal
THE LENA INCIDENT.
This government will douhtta
with the case of the I*na the R«m
warship that has entered the i«»rt
Han Franclco, with proper dignity «
In harmony with our declaration
neutrality. The president. In thla pr
Identtal campaign year, le leas liable
than at some other time, to go off into
apectacular Jingoism. It will serve hla
present purposes best tn give sue!
direction to the Incident e* will not of
fend elth< r Russia or Japan and teav
our action beyond criticism from an
Return to the Plantation Sys
tern?
srtlcl**;
the Interest i
farment will
plantation ny»
Prof. Phillip
artln V. Calvin,
tun-e Review. July, 1904,
;n irtlcle by Prof. Ulrich B.
nlverslty of Wisconsin, on
tat Ion Ah a Civilizer.” It
bly the first of a series of
e purpose of which 1h to
in th*lr own Interest, and In
it of the negro, Southern
ill probably return to the
the legislative
chine
Interest of the Ma-
int
id its
head
In
of the
Ilfl
not inv
ent.
declares that the vital
How can Improvement
be made in lnduetrial condition*; how
Utilization be preserved to the
negro arid he be given the further and
higher development be needs?
»f. Phillips contends that the ne-
i need to become “well-developed
and women, not half faked echol-
The professor regard* the South-
m plantation, with its product of
Washington. Jefferson, the Pinckneys,
rndes. Calhoun, Troups and Yancey,
the perfection of skilful Industrial
development and management, and ar
gues that, "under modern conditions,
with the negroes possessing their free
dom, the plantation should prove a
school for black men as well as white.”
The professor does not regard the
‘exceptional negro." for example, per-
change, the negro who blooms out
Wo now understand why things are
getting warm at the New York Dem
ocratic headquarters. Governor Jim
Hogg ha* arrived there with his "By
Gatlings" mouth In full working order.
The new fall bonnets are louder than
the presidential campaign and one of
them Is calculated to make the price
of a bole of cotton look like those thirty
cents you have heard about!
The ajfttlng of Cortelyou for post
master general In a new Teddy regime
la probably intended aa a hint to the
railroads to dig up for the campaign
fund.
The Republican managers now claim
that Teddy la "a safe man" because
they have succeeded in locking him
up!
The coming of that Russian cruiser
gave the "assistant and acting" secre
taries at Washington a taste of the
real thing!
Will the valued Republican cam
paign committee please put Its eat
the ground and hear the October rever
berations from Old Georgia!
Atlanta footpads are real considerate.
They take a man out cloae to the Home
for the Friendless to waylay and rob
him.
Put it in your pipe and amoke it—
that there will be no red-hesdedness
about the governor of Georgia to be
elected two years hence.
We hope some fifty thousand or more
forglnns will suspend rending cam
pntgn literature long enough to visit
State Fair dally next month.
"Keep It dark” may be as fatal to
Mldy'a campaign as "Burn this letter"
to Jim Blaine's ruce for the pres
ldsaey.
Tho fool-killer missed that New York
oman who could buy a 9X0.000 Pari
an trousseau and then tried to smug-
glo past Uncle Sam’s eagle eye.
That was a blistering old tight the
•eorgla soldier boys had up yonder at
ilnmiAiMS. It Is too bad that blisters
re not pensionable.
'•Irbanks must bs out In Nebraski
a heavy frost is reported to have
uck the atate.
The American "yellow peril” arrives
vlth the Thankaglvlng Day pumpkin
i* would not be surprised to hear
Teddy Is noweufferlng from "writ
Vt »
POINTS ABOUT PEOPLE.
*S *
from Booker Washington’s school, as
the best source of guidance and en*
llghtment for the average negro In the
American system.” To thus hold would
be "to argue that the reflected light of
the moon Is brighter and more effect
Ive than the direct rays of the nun.”
learned professor's suggestion
is that a “conviction of the short-com
ings of the present system of renting
and cropping must be brought home to
the South ns a whole or at least to the
cotton belt which Is the heart of the
modern agricultural South, and.
truth, this conviction Is already pre
valent with a large proportion
thinking Southerners.”
The writer Is not reviewing Prof.
Phillips article, but calling attention
to It that those who nre Interested
/nay follow the professor through
the entire series of articles In which
he will discuss the general subject.
The writer !h persuaded that thp
bulk of the negroes will leave this
county Just os a very large number
have deliberately determined to quit
working In field and garden, small
farm and plantation.
But aside from that view of the case,
the tendency Is stronger today, and the
Initiative was taken In Georgia in Jan
uary of this good year of grace, toward
smaller farms, a reduced acreage to
leading crop*, belter preparation of
tho soil, better method* of cultivation
and higher fertilisation with a view
to larger and better results from each
ncre under cultivation. And this means
In n majority of Instances the farm
cultivated by its owner. This means,
as a rule, white labor—native born
white labor for the present nt least.
An interrogation point must needs
• placed after every sentence which
proceeds upon tho Idea that the plan
tation system will ever agsln become
the prevailing system at the Bouth. It li
ibmbtfiiJ if i* u 111 - v.-r !•••
• "tnr -III .X- In ?>'.■• g - ‘ I; r: 11 iutr
Bouth.
It must be borne In irlnd that the
good conduct nnd the good qualities
often nnd so properly mentioned
praise of the negroes during the wnr
e stnteH. were more a re
sult of discipline than contact with the
hit© master.. Discipline made possi
ble that confident relationship which
subsisted between, master; nnd slave.
nnd the absolute absence of injury In
any form nt the hands of the negro.
A plantation system, with negro In
bor. would bo Impossible—would I
not? Would not the absence of dls
clpllne—I mean whipping—together
with the absence of white people, make
Impossible a plantation system?
The subject opens up in broad
avenues, but I hava not time to pursue
will be
‘■•f'tigate. He will bring
ulls. meant to deceive
whilst playing Into the
hands of the trusts. He will restore
lost balance of power, equally to
the people and the co-ordinate
branches of the government. He will
keep a civil tongue In his head not
merely during election times, but all
the time. He will respect the venera
ble In years and service, not prance
through the corridors of the executive
mansion and the departments to dis
play hla prowess now for the edifica
tion of princes and embassadors, and
again for the humiliation of vet
eran generals and admirals. He will
not require old women and old men
to stand uncovered in the presence of
hla family and himself. He will not
convert the presidential abode into a
hospital for disabled newspaper hacks
and a hostelry for moon-struck literary
scrubs, called to kneel at the throne of
grace and go off and write up the war
lord. In a word, he will be a Demo
cratic president, the latchstring on the
outside uf the door, when the door Is
not open wide; a Jurist among men of
action, a man of action among Jurists;
everything that the bronco-buster is
not, nothing that the bronco-buster is.
except that he hails from New York
and eats three meals a day! ,
He belongs to none of the factions.
He is a Democrat That is all. He la
a Democrat as Tilden was a Democrat
He Is a Democrat as all of us are Dem
ocrats who love truth (Or truth’s sake
and hate hypocrisy, lying and cant.
He is no man's man. Under his wise,
benignant and Just rule the humblest of
Democrats will require no chalkmark.
Though twenty yenra *. Justice on the
bench he Is up to date on every politi
cal Issue of the time. Though living
apart from the busier haunts of men,
ho la In close touch with all the cur
rents of life and thought. He is a
healthy-minded man, a wholesome-
bodied man, a right-hearted, sensible,
matter-of-fact man, nothing spectacu-
eccentrlc about him; the best
man we have seen at the front In thirty
years, and exactly the kind of leader
wanted to take the helm of state and
steer the ship away from treacherous
waters, to go Into the Augean stables
and to clean them out.
Judge Parker does not sport a big
stick, nor wear a ruffle to hia shirt—
which Is clean—nor ape the had man
ner* of the fdur hundred, whilst gently
chiding their morals and keeping their
company. Not a dollar of honest ac
cumulation will suffer by his election;
not a poor lnborer striving for his live
lihood but will be the gnlner by It. Wo
shall remain n World Power, hut a
World Power maintaining Itself by
peaceful arts Instead of bullying mani
festoes and the ceaseless, costly display
of force. The one-man power jrlll be
scotched. The one-pnrty power will bo
checked. The written law will be re
stored to its proper place In the public
nutonomy. The statutes will be en
forced nnd obeyed. The country can go
to bed suro that It will not get up to
And any burglarious enterprise against
eaker nations consummated over
night. It can go to sleep sure of wak
ing up In the morning on no precipi
tated foreign complications, artfully
contrived to exploit the president nnd
glorify the administration. The mills
will whirr again, the fields will bloom
anew, for the rascals will bo driven out
and the would-be man on horseback
will have taken himself ofT to n*k the*
reason why of Dlax, or to find his
consolntlon In the congenial society of
the Kaiser and the Cxar.
The Fletcher family held a reunion
in Tremont Temple, Boston, on August
91. They are the descendants of Robert
Fb • h* - u no Uve ! m r -n erd Mass-
la 1630. and among their number are
Senator Redfleld Proctor, of Vermont.
Grateful to the United States for the
friendship that exists between this
country and China and for the protec
tion this county has given the Celes
tial Empire In a diplomatic way.
Chang Yow Tong, former secretary to
the Chinese Imperial Commission to
the World's Fair, has published a vol
ume of poems that is a tribute to
American generosity.
Gen. Herman Elaupt, now in his 88th
year. Is the oldest living graduate of
West Point, having been appointed at
the age of 13 by Andrew Jackson. He
had entire charge of all the military
railroads of the Federal government in
the civil war. and in twelve hours was
promoted by Stanton from plain Mr.
Haupt to Brig. Gen. Haupt, beating all
records. He has thirty-two grandchil
dren and hla family connections num
ber sixty-one.
Macon. Ga.
The mayoralty mud-batteries are
getting into actlou’wlth a rush In At-
The shorter the farmers keep the eot.
on market the longer will be their
Mirssa In the end.
The beef strike will now whirl around
and strike the poor consumer a few
extra Jolts.
Secretary Wilson ought to look after
the buck alleys of hie esteemed statis
tical department.
Uunscll Has© la alx years older than
Uncle Hen Davis, and yet nobody
count* Uncle Ruse as *’a dead one."
The United
>sd unln-
vlth Rus.
si* fc
feet i
of the
Neither pnrty has offered
of where lion. Web
her
with the plucky and heroic Japanese;
end while Rum la did not squarely keep
her engagements with our state de
partment concerning the evacuation of
Manchuria and our "open door** treaty
with China; yet the national status
between the two powers haa been dl
l'. atlcally maintained on a friendly
level Whatever Russia can ask for
the Lena that la allowable will be read
ily accorded, but nothing will be per
mitted to which Japan could reaeona-
objecL
to Ru‘«'t tn
for
riot, Insur
4 her public
u If that re
Mivlnctag it
first place
npleasant-
Into a matter
temporary aey-
THE WESLEYAN OPENING.
In this
city for
f world's first and old
he higher education of
omj with distinguished
atxty-eight years,
ire Issued many tboea
who have Utuatrsted
i national life the lofty
rtcan womanhood and
urtty and dignities
domestic standards
* . ..I *i. »» u* *
The boll weevil will »*
when hla Guatemalan
a-vleUtng him.
i finish
comes
'Possum au jus Is nearly due on the
Georgia menu.
That RuHslan cruiser was lucky In
finding no lock on the Golden Gate.
The arrival of the oyster means the
revival of the church fair.
Memphis wants a subway. She al
ready has taverns, by the solid Mock.
Bet you tho Lena beat some Jap
pu'»a**rt to the gate!
The "paraflne wad" made Its deadly
lebut at tha Third Battle of Manassas.
Georgia Day at the World's Fair
ought to be a Cracker-Jack occasion.
The Atlanta water la reported better,
rhapo It will soon be well water.
Now, Judge Parker, hit him where
he bulges the moat!
Tte Pass 1* a s-'-rv! pi* e fo
patktn to moke a stand-off.
Attraction for i
QuMraan Advertiser.
The State Fair at M
teoslvety advertised n
an October attract toe
that wiu not be *x< ee
fit. Louie E \- lion.
Alton Brooks Parker,
Henry Walters©?).
The Democrat* of the ITnltcd States
may know—for sure—that, In Alton
Brooks Parker, they hove a nominee
for president to tie to; to stand by;
to fight for, through thick add thin,
from start to finish!
No one of tho five hundred Demo
cratic editors who went to Ksopus but
came away invigorated and refreshed.
Bach of them found there not a caat-
iron magnetic man, showing three
rows of front teeth—"and nary tooth
alike"—and exclaiming with every
third word “de-llght-ed" as If he
were saying.. "Vote for me. damn yer,
or I’ll break every bone In your body.”
but n gentleman: a simple, unaffected
country gentleman: bluc-eytd. red-
haired. brainy and brawny: not quite
so tall as Jefferson, nor so short as
Tilden; but enough of both to give
Democracy assurance of a man. If ev-
voter In the United States could
meet Judge Parker, g he would get
three-fourtha of them. Emphatically,
he Is the man we have been looking
for, decidedly the man wanted in the
White House.
In the first place, there la no stuff
and nonsense about him. lie is
plain and unpretending as an old shoo;
nnd ho fits like one and wears like
An eminent Jurist undoubtedly—the
chief Justice of the supreme court of
the Empire 8tate of New York could
be none other—veraed In the law; mo
rally a bed-rock of sober counsels, in
tellectually a very light-house of lu
cidity and learning. Yea, and a Demo
crat; a Democrat of the school of Jef-
feraon and Jackson and Tilden. If the
people want to get the government
out of the hand* of the mountebanks
and wreckers who now poose«a it. and
back Into their own hands, they <
not find an agent better suited to their
purpoae than this splendid type of
American manhood.
When be take* the oath of office as
president of the United States, even
as modestly as he laid down the office
of chief justice of the state of New
York, he may be relied on to do no tri
vial or foolish thing for the sake of
the supposed effect. He will not race
over the country about Washington
after a pack of hounds chasing a pa
per fox. He will not cause hurdles to
be erected on the plateau adjacent to
the monument to show his agility aa a
horseman and exploit himself aa a
rough rider.
He will not make civic righteousness
speeches from the front portico of the
White House, with the spoilsmen
laughing and Joking the while as they
wait for him to return to the hack
office there to finish the Job of chesting
little Delaware out of her patrimony,
or holding Pennsylvania fast to the
Idolatrous worship of steel and Iron,
or the raising up in Ohio, Indiana. 1111-
nota and Iowa, of the painted Harlot
of Bobbery and Jobbery. In the charac
ter of a Supreme Being to dupe the
Manufacturer, to cheat the farmer, and
to pillage the workman alike tn field
*nd mlU. He will not make common
midfUc-nd-'w
$5,000 fS?" #w
iuitl;n. BEST
and cheapest cn earth. Den t delay. Wrl'e to-day.
QLOnCIA-A'.ABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE.Macon,Qa.
VAN HOOSE SCHOOL OF MUSIC.
525 College Street.
Fall term begins September 14th.
For terms, addrrrs Mrs. E. V. H.
Glover, ’phone 3102.
School of Music! i
Miss Marianne Jones, Graduate
American Conservatory of Music, Chi
cago. Studio 671 Mulberry.
architects.
Plus X Is Introducing many econo
mies In the church administration,
comes largely from his Ideas basqd on
his personal experience when he was
a cardinal. At that time. In Venice,
he'ltved on $200 a month and had free
use of a house and a gondola. He
proposes to reduce the Incomes of the
cardinals in Rome, allowing them by
way of compensation free residences In
papal palaces. The cardinals do not
take kindly to the suggestion.
A young Londoner named Stopford
haa won quite a reputation in that city
for his marvelous skill In organizing
fashionable charitable bazars. His
management is sought In all quarters
and when he talkes hold of an enter
prise It Is certain to achieve success.
Btopford devotes his entire time to
work nnd Is In constant demand
bi' the fashionable women of the Eng
lish metropolis. The novel occupation
brings him an enormous revenue.
Major R. W. McClaughry, warden
of the United States penitentiary at
Leavenworth, has Just celebrated the
thirtieth anniversary of his manage
ment of prisons. He was first appoint
ed warden of a penitentiary in August,
1874. In the last thirty years he has
been warden of three different peniten
tiaries and two reformatories. Ho was
Vardan of the Joliet (Ill.) penitentiary
longor than any other. In the thirty
years service he has had about 24.000
prisoners under him. Maj. McClaugh
ry has aided In the building of two pri
sons, and the work on the big new
United States penitentiary at Leaven
worth Is being done under his super
vision.
Architest
Willis F. Denny
Curran R. Ellis
Offices C 6. 7, Amn. Nat. Bank Bldg.
P. E. DENNIS, Architect.
568 Cherry st., Macon, Ga.
Twenty years experience and suc
cessful practice.
OCULIST AND AURIST.
DR. MAURY M. STAPLER,
Oculist and Aurist.
Office. 556 Cherry Street,
Day ’Phone. 2271. Night 'PhOiyj 3053.
TOPICS OF THE TIMES.
Physicians insist that copper is a
germ destroyer, although Tow Lawson
declares that the speculative germ fat
tens on a copper diet.—Washington
Post.
"Maine went hell bent for Governor
Kent.” and thousands of politicians
since then have been sorry that she
didn’t follow her bent to the end.—New
York Herald.
With an Asiatic wnr and an election
In progresa It will be hard to convince
the average school boy that the claMlcs
nre aa Interesting as the newspapers.
—Washington Evening Star.
Coffee's Primary,
DOUOLAS, Gn.. Sept. 15.—Coffee's
primary passed off very quietly yes
terday, with the following results: C.
A. Ward, for representative, 985 ma
jority; W. W. Sutherland, present in
cumbent, for sheriff. 315 majority; W.
P. Ward, for ordinary, 200 majority;
D. W. Gaskin, present incumbent,
clerk superior court. 260 majority: Wil
lie Vickers, treasurer, 60 majority; E.
M. Paulk, for tax collector. 95 major
ity; C. W. Corbett, for tax recelv
18 majority; W. B. Mills, for surveyor,
small majority, exact figures not
known: Eugene Merrlen, for coroner,
700 majority. Each candidate worked
hard. There was only one fight in
Douglas, which resulted from one of
the belligerents being overloaded.
Death of a Babe.
FORT VALLEY. Ga.. Sept. 15.—On
last Wednesday night at 10 o’clock
James Kinney, the little 16-months-old
son of Dr. nnd Mrs. J. R. Kinney, died
nt the home of his parents here after
a ten day’s Illness from dysentery. The
funeral services were held nt tho house
and the Interment took plnce this af
ternoon nt Oak Lawn cemetery.
and Mrs. Kinney's host of friends and
relatives deeply sympathize with them
In tho loss of their only child.
Make Your Own
Ice Cream.
DR. J. H. SHORTER.
Eye. Ear. Nose, Throat.
Cherry and Second Strefica
'Phono 972, office. Residence, 3073. .
Alexander Blair
& Kern ....
Architects,
673 CHERRY ST MACON. GA.
PROFESSIOlNAL cards
Classified advertisements under
this head are intended strictly for
the professions.
MISS ANNA SMITH, Teacher.
OSTEOPATHY
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
GABRIEL R. SOLOMON,
Civil Engineer,
Plans, Estimates, Surveys,
For Water Power Development, Sew-
era, nnd Water Works. Deed Lines Re
established. Land Divided. Maps.
563 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga.
Office Phono 962—Residence Phone 169
ATTO R N E YS • AT - LAW.
1L Birch. BenJ. J. Dasher.
KIRCH & DASHER,
Attorneys at Law.
MATT IT. FREEMAN. Attorney.
Room 2€, Washington llloch, residence
1-3 Second street.
SPECIAL ATTENTION.
Commercial Ijiw. Municipal Law.
iBufterclal Law. Mm.iclpu
Ileal Estate Investments loen! and for-
Corruspor.dont Wood. Harmon “
ark City.
Co., N't
DENTISTRY.
Wheat I* going up, corn Is going up,
cotton is going up; everything one
eats, drinks, wears, or wants Is ^olnff
up. But, thank heaven, the fresh* au
tumn air Is still free to all.—Columbia
State.
J&U-O
Ice Cream
i It COAblei
The crop report Issued by the gov
ernment weather bureau reads all right
once more, but Jack Frost threatens
an early visit If he postpones It «
short time the corn crop Is assured.—
New York Commercial.
POWDER
which Is meeting with great favor, i
cvervono to nuke Ico cnvnn In their own homo with
yeryllule trouble, tramhiagtatte pa* kage for mak-
If yoor grocer
• | .p. t y rn.vii
DR8. J. M. & R. HOLME8 MASCN,
Dentists.
254 Second st.... Phone 724.
OR. ADDIEL M. JACKSON. Dsntiat.
Office on second floor Commercial
Bank Building, Triangular Block. Tel
ephone 536.
tag two quarts of del
By an Imperial ukase the czar has
ordered prayers throughout the empire
for the success of the Russian army.
Some one should remind Nicholas that
the Lord Is on the side of the heaviest
battalions.—Memphis Scimitar,
Was It really worth while for the
anxious Republican leaders to Insist
on mutating the Rough Rider, keeping
a hundred unmade epeeches bubbling
and sizzling in him. and' then to let all
tty In his letter of acceptance?—Phil
adelphia Record.
The mere tact that men of affairs,
of Intelligence and of high character
are often peremptorily challenged when
they present themselves for jury ser
vice demonstrates that there is some
thing wrong with the system of crim
inal procedure.—Birmingham News.
There la no good In demanding that
work begin on the Panama canal. There
Is already a deficit In the treasury and |
It is crowing. When It gets big enough 1
to demand a bond iasue, the Republl- I
cans expect to make good by Issuing
enough bonds to build the canal and
fill the deficit and call It statesman- *
ship.—Birmingham Ledger.
TV International Press Congress,
which meets at Boston In October, has
announced that one of Us subjects for
discussion will be "The Mutual Rela
tions of Races," We would suggest
that all Boston discussions of race
questions are usually very much more
provocative of war then they are of
beace.—Charleston New* and Courier.
can't tupplj you lead -
Lla,Chocouta, Straw t *
The U etc sco Pure L\x
YOUR
M
0
N
E
MAKES
MONEY
maiuz 07
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
MF PAY 4P£R-
cr/vr o/zeyfRY
DOLL/U?/N YOUR
Will Hav. Publl. School,.
8WA1K8BORO. Ol. Sept. II.—An
election wu held tod»y for the pur-
P«-e of determining whether or not
there ahould be « public orhool ayotem
In 8w.ln.boro, which resulted In 1(1
In f.vor of the ijntero .nd 5 .u.tn.L
Very tittle tntereot wu nuwUt.ted in
the election.
Hotel Lanier
MACON. GA.
and Eu
. Ele
al in
'pean i
Qant new cafe, the most pal
South. .Cuisine unsurpassed. .Servi
good as the beet.
J. A. Newcomb,
PROPRIETOR
DR. J. J. SUBERS.
Permanently located. In th® special
ties venereal. Lost energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison oak;
cure guaranteed. Address in confi
dence. with stamp. 510 Fourth street,
Macon. Ga.
Or. Chas. H. Hall. Dr. Thoe. H. Hall
Office. 610 Mulberry «L
Residence. 507 College at.
Telephones: Office. 922; residence, 69.
Office houra: 1:30 to' •; li to 1:30; 5 to 6.’
OPTICIANS.
EYES TESTED FREE.
G. G. COFFY,
Graduate Optician. 553 Cherry *L
ABSTRACTS.
GEORGIA TITLE & GUARANTY CO.
L B. ENGLISH. Pre?. J. J. COBB, Sec.
T. B. WEST. Ally.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
Brown House, t
MACON, GA. i
LOWRY & STUBBS, ♦
Proprietor*. ^
Opp. Union Station. *
vn throughout the South ♦
for the exceiience of it* ac- ♦
com.-nodaticn* and service. J