Newspaper Page Text
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TH £ MACOM TELEGRAPH: FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25,
1904.
u Dir
f t'BLISHI r» EVERY MORFIHG AND
TWICE A WEEK BY THE MACON
TELEGRAPH PUBLISHING GOMPANT
&6S MULBERRY STREET, PUCON, GA*
C. R. PENDLETON,
President and Nanager*
C.R. PENDLETON. .
LOUIS PENDLETON.
TH6 TELEGRAPH^ IN ATLANTA.
The Telegraph vv ill be found on tala
at the Kimball House and the Plsd*
mont Hotel In Atlanta.
HEAR8TS PAPER AND PARKER’S
SPEECH.
Here It la a«aln!
The Atlanta News.print#* the follow
ing, taking The Telegraph to tusk for
an alleged injustice to Hearat’s Ameri
can—an offence The Telegraph la not
• guilty of:
The Macon Telegraph, which has never
.been overly kind to that great and good
Democrat, William Randolph *
day a good deal of American cotton
goes to Japan and China through the
Pacific porta, but the railroad haul Is
a tremendously long one. This expense
will be ciit down very greatly by the
canal, to the profit of the Southern
producer. We shall eee posted in
avfery city the Pacific ocean schedules
as we now see those of the Atlantic*
The llnera of the forme* will become aa
palatial aa the latter. . The cry of
“westward, ho!” will mean an objective
6n the other aide of the globe.
I lea rat,
perns to find mta-h pleasure In diligently
circulating the atatement that The New
York American did not puhllah Judge
Parker'a speech In anewvr to llooeeyelt.
It la almost inconceivable that an Intel-
ligent editor could seriously believe that
a newa Item of each Importance would
be omitted for eny reason from a great
paper like The New York American. That
kind of Journalism belong** to amailer
organs of partisan caliber printed nearer
home.
It is charitable to suppose that The Tel
egraph got an enrly Issue of The Sunday
•--- ech
American—one printed l»efore the apeerfi
was either delivered or procurable. The
news aectlon of The Hutiday American
goes to pross In three section*. and some-
times In four section*, to cstcl: each out
going train. We happen to know thnt
the American.nut Itself to unusual trouble
and expense to get the speech Into thn
first possible edition of the paper. We
have before ue the flrM page of the sec-
ond edition of The Hunduy American of
November 6. It contains Judge Parker's
speech upon the front page as attractively
and prominently displayed tin by any pn-
per In the United Plate*.
We trust The Telegraph will now dem
onstrate the fact that it la Itself a news
paper and not an organ by correcting a
statement which Is likely to emste
through the sect lone of South Georgia In
which It circulates, a mlsundera' “
of the quality of The N.
IWUHl UTUIBIB III
ilounderstandlng
* York American
champion. Tt Is the on!,
we have for giving to our neighbor the
foots In this connection. They are amln
IffiSii.
boon unfair to a great Democrat and
a greet newspaper.
> misapprehension. It lias already
The Telegraph met In Its Issue of
yesterday it similar statement mads by
the Columbia Htntc, saying:
"Tha Telegraph referred to this mat
ter twice, and both times It elated die-
tlnctly that the edition of the American
•which came to Georgia' did not con
tain Judge Parker’s speech, and that
was a fact. Thinking possibly that a
page, or a section, had been lost out
of ths piper which came to The Tele
graph office, a careful Inspection was
made at the newa stands In Macon,
and it was found thnt none of them
contained the speech. The Telegraph
has since learned, however, from
member of the American staff, that
the Georgia edition went to press be
fore the judge's speech could be oh
talned. Nevertheless, It was printed
In ths other New York papers that
came by the sains mall. We aocept the
statement made that It was printed
In other editions of ths American.”
Wo have only now to add: Mr.
Ihmeen seems to be celling upon the
newspaper friends of ltenrst In Geor
gia and Carolina 1 to make for the
American nn alleged correction, pend
ing to them "the first page of the
eecond edition of The Sunday Ameri
can of November 6th," to convince them
that The Telegraph had been unjust.
One of theee pages found Its way to
The Telegraph office a few days ago
to convince the editor of thla paper
that toe had made a “mla-atatement,'
when yet the accompanying note con
feeeed that there was an early edition
which did not contain the speech.
Now that The Telegraph's side of It
Is made clear, will the News be as Just
as It would have ue be to Hearat,
and gtve Its readers evidence that "It
Is Itself a newspaper and not an organ
by correcting a statement which
likely to create through the sections
of South Georgia in which it circulates
a misunderstanding of the quality or
The Telegraph "as a newspaper and
as a Democratic champion," and more,
aa a fair, dean and truthful enemy of
all kinds of deceit and fawning.
RAPID TRAN8IT.
The inventors and engineers are
making great progress In surface and
underground transportation. Trains
and steamers move more rapidly, and
dangers of travel are minimized. Bat
tleships now move faster than armored
crulaejrs used to do. Torpedo boats go
through the waves with the speed of
old-time express trains. Bixty-miles-
nn-hour is no longer remarkable. The
utilization of "tubes" or ''subways"
in the larger cities has reduced great
ly the time It formerly took for one
to proceed from home to office and
bAck Again.
There la no cessation In the work of
Improvement. The latest thin* has
been the experiment of the New York
Central railroad hrlth nn electric mo
tor. On a branch of the line the motor
was put to a speed test in competition
with three of the fastest steam loco
motives of the company. It made sev
enty miles an hour and won. Bteam
engines have gone more rapidly than
that, but the Impressive feature of the
trial was the complete demonstration
of the motor's utility. It was the sign
of a coming and nearing revolution In
rnllroHd transportation. The motor
cleaved thn nlr, without smoke or cin
ders or swJsh of escaping steam. It
moved noiselessly, almost ns a btsd
moves. Expert* believe that the wa
ter-boiling locomotive is bound to go,
and st no distant date. The whole
tendency of engineering at this time
Is, if may properly he stated, to In
crease action, to reduce noise and tt»
add to comfort. Hence the rubber tire
as ah Incident.
A great sffort has bsen mads In ths
direction of aerlsl navigation, but
nothing practicable or useful has yet
been achieved. The experiments In
!*nrls and 81. Louis have shown noth
ing that Chinese did not know centu
ries ago. They learned there was such
a thing ns dlrlglblllty In the air, pro
vided there was a calm. Hnntns-Du-
mont, Baldwin and the rest have done
nothing more than thnt. The captive
war balloon is another thing alto
gether. There la no Indication yet that
we shall be able to be transported
from one place tu another except by
insane of the road or the wave.
a general under Charlemagne) and
the house occupied a prominent posl-
tlon among the petty princely famlUea
In Bwatila a a early aa the llrat half of
the twelfth century. The houae dlvld-
ed in 1227. Into the Swabian and
Franconian branches, the former of
which again divided at the close of
the sixteenth century in the lines of
Hdhenzollern-Hechlngen and Hohen-
zollern-BIgmarlngen. In 1821 the King
of Prussia, as the head of the Hohen-
zniicrn family, made a covenant with
the princes of each line that In case
of failure of male Issue In either line
possession should go to the other, and
In case of both to the King of Prussia.
In 1818, owing to revolutionary dis
turbances, both princes abdicated In
Prussia's favor Leopold of Hohen-
zollcrn. the prince who waa offered the
crown of Spain in 1870, and who was
the contributing cause of the Franco-
Prussian war, was the eldest son of
ths last ruler of Hohenzollern-Blg-
marlngen. and the second son Is the
present King Charles of Roumanla.
The Franconian line was founded In
1261 by Conrad III., and grew In ter
ritory and importance until Frederick
VI., In 1411, received the margraviate
of Brandenburg as a pledge for a loan
to the Emperor fiiglsmund, and In 1415
U waa granted, with the dignity of
elector, to him as an hereditary pos
session. This may be said to be the
real foundation of the present House
of Hohenzollern. Its history hence
forth is that of Brandenburg, of Prus
sia, and Germany. There were twelve
electors, the last, Frederick III., son of
Frederick William, the Great Elector,
becoming King of Prussia In 1701. The
second King, Frederick William 1. was
the father of Frederick II, or the Great,
tlnce which time there have been six
sovereigns on the throne of Prussia,
Frederick the Great (1740-1786) left
no children, but had three brothers; a
son of the eldest became
Frederick William II. (1786-1707),
who had three daughters and four sons.
The eldest became
Frederick William Ill. (1707-1840).
whose wife was the beautiful Queen
Louise of Mecklcnberg-Htrelltz; he had
four sons and three daughters. Ills
first son became
Frederick William IV. (1840-1861)
and was succeeded by his brother.
William 1. (1860) King of Prussia,
and (1871) German Emperor. He had
one dnughter and one son, who be
came
Frederick I. (1888), who reigned only
three months, when he was succeeded
by the eldest of his two sons,
William II., whose brother Henry
was recently the guest of the United
8tates. The present Imperial family*
consists of Prince Frederick William,
helr-appnrent, born May 6. 1882; and
five other sons and one daughter. The
emperor has four sisters, one the
Crown Princess of Greece.
establishment of a force which seems j
to be exactly suited to the needs of , Mf #
\
"WESTWARD, HOI”
When the poet wrote about tho star
of empire westward taking Its way,
and went on to say that the drat four
acts were already past, ths fifth to
dost ths drama with ths day. Time’s
noblest offspring being the last, he for
got that the world waa round, and
that the words “westward,” "east
ward.” "northward” and '‘southward'
art merely relative terms. Pacific ocean
commerce, a dozen years ago* amount
ed to little as compared with that of
ths Atlantic, either In fact or In pros
pectu. What a tremendous change has
occurred In that short space of years'
Today there Is cable communication to
Manila. The Hawaiian Islands have
become neighbors, easily reached. The
Influence of American enterprise,
thought, Inst It ut Iona gradually is dom
fnatlng the Oetotf. Commerce has lol
lowed the flag. Freighters have mul
tipi led. The farmers and manufactur
ers of the Rocky mountain West have
been benefited enormously.
And the development of Pacific
ocean trade has only Just begun. When
the Panama canal shall have bean built
the Increase will be ouch that a look
out at the masthead of a ship will nev
• r lack the view of a sail or the cloud
of a smokestack. Then will be actual
competition of the oceans as cotnmer
dsi waterways and the peoples of the
world wilt get much closer together.
Toda^r most of American cotton goes
to tho Asiatic lands by the eastward
Atlantic route. With the canal opened
It will isrobebly go westward. At In
there wQj bo com petition ocean ratei
and the shipper will have a choice. To-
DI8CONTENT A8 AN A88ET.
The radicals who art rejoicing at
ths defeat of the Democratic*party
make the mistake of Insisting on dis
content as a party asset. When the
historic party of Jefferson. Jackson and
Tllden has nothing else on which to
appeal to the country than the discon
tent of ths calamity wallers that party
falls Indeed to a low estate, and will
deserve to live only ns a memory.
A political party that cannot face
the music in times of prosperity does
not deserve the Impetus that hard times
glvss to the outs.
Ths mlstsks these radicals make Is
assuming that the recent defeat
was caused by a lack of calamity wall
ing and octopus hunting. They pro
ceed upon the theory that to eucceed
the Democrats must make the people
believe that the country la on the brink,
and that misery and want nre at tho
door. The Democratic platform and
the Democratic camlldate went aa far
In that direction aa they could well
afford. They were aa extreme as
good sense would permit. Hut the
radicals are attempting to make a
by-word and reproach out of the
phrase ‘ safe and sune” aa applied by
a great Democrat to Darker and to
the platform. What a kettle of fish
we will have when It shall become
offensive to be known as “aate" and
‘sane!" Hhall It ever come to a pass
that the Democratic party, by Its own
act and proclamation shall make these
tokens of virtue terms of reproachT
If the party la dead (which we deny),
and if It came to Ita death because li
as "safe and sane,' then It died the
death of the righteous, and Its tri
umphant reeurrectlon will ensue be
fore 1108.
There may be those who are called
Democrats that are not “aane," nor
‘eats,** but they have no right to as-
slime that the party should be pattern
ed after their ow*n deformities.
The Republicans declined In 1880,
and also In lift, lo make It unanimous.
That was about all the opposition they
could muster up In those years; and
that Is about all the Democrats cun do
this year.
Mr. Julius Brown's suggestion that
8outhern electors make U unanimous
by voting for Roosevelt Is not original.
Mr. Cortelyou urged it from the be
ginning.
Ths Peace Jubilee!
Northern friend writing to mo
from‘‘Nn pies, N. Y.. says: "What fools
these mortals be!".
*1 rather expected It, hut not by
wholesale. Teddy is a man of destiny.
What Is dsngerous Is this: Teddy has
such a striking personality that his
Irregularities, his Illegalities, his un-
ronstltutlonalltles, nil go—nnd go with
a rush: but they are dangerous prece
dents for llttlo or weak men. Toddy's
Influence In the Bouth Is nil bad. He
Is a disturber of the status quo, snd
a power for III. I found last night a
sentence In his Cromwell that shows
hta true position. Ho Is drawing
comparison between the great rebellion
of 1680 nnd our civil wnr. He says:
‘The Northern Democrats were anx
ious, after the war. to combine with the
defeated Southerners, and to reinstate,
ns nearly as might be. the old ante
helium conditions. I. e. to prepare for
another civil war.*
"Now Is not that sentence deadly
'rot* to come from a man who tries u>
write history In these days? Hume has
nothing more erroneous, or half so
malicious. A great wrong to Northern
Democrats nnd to the South which
Joined the only ones North thnt ex
tended the olive brttnoh in the Interest
of restoration and peace. Teddy be
longs to the school of Thnd 8tevens.
That kind of writing shows a vicious
mlnd> a bad heart. The South does
not need a flre-brandl"
This Northern man, one will rend,
a close observer, and who owns some
property In Georgia, evidently does not
take much stock In Teddy's recent tit
tcranes thnt he "lovea the South!"
Lincoln’s programme was for the
seceding states to be restored to full
fellowship ns speedily ns possible. He
said to Judge Campbell In Richmond,
utter Its fall, that he preferred that the
ery men In the respective states who
passed the ordinance of secession
should meet nnd rescind the ordinance.
Lincoln wanted union living states,
not simply conquered provinces. Ac
cording to the quotation from his
Cromwell, dtoosevelt endorses recon
struction nnd Us fatal policy.
The recent election shout declared
the South out of the union, snd the
Roosevelt platform foreshadows an
other Invasion of the Bouth—more
reconstruction."
Yet. In face of all this. When the
end la not yet. and peace afar off, our
white women prisoners snd denied the
freedom of the highways,—a condition
slating nowhere else where the Christ-
tlsn religion prevails—amid these cir
cumstances here conies Chattanooga
rylng out for a "Peace Jubilee Expo
sition” to mark ths passing of seettomi!
discord and to say "the was Is over"
snd the South Is nn ssme footing with
the other states of the union.
The proposition Is so gmting on the
nerves thnt It sets the teeth of every
Southern man on edge! As the South-
people ere so under the ban. only
certain ones (mostly of color) eligible
to hold a federal office; let Chatta
nooga hold awhile so we msy see about
the New Pandora's box before having
a Jubilee celebrating good will, good
feeling and brotherly love.
JAMES CALLAWAY.
In ths olden days in Qeorgta "hair,
hide and the ground tore up" meant
wolf algn. Now it simply means a foot,
ball scrimmage.
It Is a lucky turkey that can gobble
today. He Is thankful that he was not
cobbled up yesterday.
FREDERICK THE GREAT.
To the Editor of The Telegraph: —
Will you kindly inform me as to the
kinship of the present Emperor
Germany to Frederick the Great
STUDENT
Frederick the Great la the greet
great-great-grand uncle of the pres
ent emperor of Germany.
Hohenxollem Is the family nan
the royal house of Prussia. In which
since January 18. 1871. has been vested
the dignity of Emperor of Oermany.
The name la derived from the ancti
tral Castle Zollfrn. or llohensollen
In Swabia. It occurs aa early as th
eleventh century (some tradition
claim one of the earlier members waa
the country. The Telegraph's corres
pondent writes:
"The 'Rurales,' ax they are called,
comprise, some 2,000 picked horsemen,
and • are separated into companies of
seventy-five each. The men are paid
a stipend of 50 cents per diero (which
equals about 22 cents gold), and live
in the most frugal manner, their chief
diet being the native beans, which cost
next to nothing. They are hardy fel
lows and can stand anything. They
have been known to go days without
eating or sleeping, and to be little tho
worse for their experience. They are
uniformed In gray packets, with tight
gold-braided trousers and enormous
sumbreros bearing in silver braid the
number of the company to which they
belong. They are provided with hardy
Mexican ponies (whose endurance is
incomparable) and armed with Mauser
rifles, broad sword and two pistols
each. They are all handsome, well-
built men, wlih keen fearless eyes, and
remind me considerably of the famous
‘MousquetaJres* of King Louis XIV.
Each morning they report at the head
quarters of their districts and are as
signed territory to patrol. Some
twenty men are held at the station in
case of emergenc y, and if news of a
crime Is brought in this 'piquets' Jc
immediately dispatched in hot pursuit
of the offenders. The patrol who
merely watch the country sometimes
leave their horses nnd take trains from
station to station, always reporting
back at headquarters every night."
It is said that some of these men
were formerly outlaws and that Pres
ident Dlax has found it the best way to
reform them from their lawless
courses to place them in the ranks of
the rural police, where under nome
discipline they fight on the Aide of
order with as much engerness ns they
before followed crime.
Those who nre inf ‘rented in the up
building of the state of Georgia should
study with care such statements ns
the one quoted from. Two things
which must precede thorough order in
our state nre good schools nnd good
roads. But of the agencies that will
bring about n feeling of confidence
and peace, we believe that the most
direct anti most immediately needed
are the rural police and the extension
of the telephone system. The latter
work should he encouraged always ns
one of the greatest of civilizing pow
ers ns well ns of conveniences; and
wo believe that the former should be
established.
In view of the absolute necessity of
defending our women and our homes,
we think that the people of the South
ern states should be w*illng to submit
to some near approach to a military
system. To sit still and complain of
our troubles, without nn attempt to
overcome them, *» unmanly. It is our
duty not to fret over the restraints
that nre upon us. but accepting con
ditions ns they nre to And the way of
escape which we must believe to ex-
Wo believe that the awful shadow
thnt moves over our state enn be
driven nwny, and we believe thnt one
of the methods of doing this is in the
establishment of a force of military
police.
Our country districts need protec
tion. almost for the first time In our
blrtoiy, nnd rur state needs an ex
tended military system. The volun
teor system *t present used is an ad
nurttbie one and must never be inter
fered with: but we believe thnt It wll
gain immensely in efficiency if leav
ened by n small number of profession
ally drilled fren. If a rural constabu
lary were ea'nb'dHhed w« believe that It
could he ured to advantage In keeping
up military discipline in the state
troops. Thus such nn organization
would be of beneflt In several ways. It
would primarily excite n feeling of fear
among evil doers, who could never feel
sure that a constantly moving and
watchful force might not be at hand
st the very moment of an outrage,
while they could, certainly be quickly
called as nvergers; It would of cours«i
be at the service of county peacj
cere for the execution of orders; and It
would form a nucleus for great Im
provament lu our militia system. The
great thing to ha guarded against In
such nn organization would be th
scattering of such a force In small
companies, end Independent of the
other. ** would he the case If each
county controlled Its own force, one
man. or boar 1. should be responsible
for tlie safety of the whole state nnd
sould have full power to preserv
such safety.
We hope to see the return of days
when peaceful men anl helpless
men are as safe on the roads of Geor
gia as at horn* and st home as in a
fortress; but there are too many signs
thnt such days nre passing, to retain
them we believe that it will Ik* neces
sury to take action and not palter wit!)
facta
POINTS ABOUT PEOPLE.
The !a«t mu,teal prodigy In .Berlin
l» Mlscha Elmnn. a H-yeor-oIiJ Rus
sian boy, a violinist.
Theodore Hitmen, flr«t secretary of
the Russian embauy at Washington,
la an accomplished musician, being
devoted especially to the piano.
Lord Milner announces that he will
remain at Johannesburg until the fin
ishing touches Have been put to bis
native and Inter-colonial policy.
Judge Barratt of Philadelphia has
decided that persons who are unable
to keep sober for more than three or
four days at a time have no business
to become Jurors.
M. Fowler, the wealthy lumber
man. who has Just died at his home
In Pasadena, Cal., leaving an estate
worth }35,000,000. started as a Ip-
borer in the woods of Michigan.
Paul de Cassagnac, who died re
cently, was a prominent Bonapartist
deputy and Jouma-iat. and one# the
most notorious duelist In France. He
was 61 years old, and began his Jour
nalistic career at the age of l».
Frank W. Higgins, the newly-elected
governor of New York, owns half of
the town of Olean, In which he lives.
He owns oil wells In Pennsylvania,
timber lands in Wisconsin, iron mines
of the Mesaba range and owns n
number of steamers that ply along the
Atlantic coast and on the Great Lakes.
Andrew Carnegie’s early ambition
was to be a newspaper man, and he
confesses that even today his youth
ful yearning takes hold of him. Not
long ago he was chatting with Ohaun-
ccy M. Depew regarding boyhood as
pirations and said: ,‘T once hoped to
be an editor, but, alas' It was not to
he.” "Allow me to congratulate you
upon your misfortune," said the sen
ator genially.
The Intention Is attributed to Sir
Alfred Harmswortli of building a na
tional opera house In London at a cost
of gl.250.ft00, England is one of the
few European nntlons lacking such an
Institution. King Edward makes no
secret of his personal view that the
millionaire who supplies this want will
be conferring a great benefit upon his
country, and there Is no doubt that
Harmsworth will get n peerage if he
provides money for the work.
What Shall We
Have for Dessert?
fit K
TOPICS OF THE TIMES.
* . «
wdSKiisaeSaisisaie
A Rural Police.
From tho Romo Herald.
A corrooponrtent of tho Macon Tele
graph hos. recently written from Mex
ico. describing the conditions which
xtal there since the eetebUshment of
* system of rural police, used to rid
the country of troops of bandits erhlch
formerly Infested It end to chock tho
inwleeanees engendered by the dim
culty or redress when crimes were
committed. Southern and middle
Mexico being largely given over to cat
traxing, each termor requires large
fields for pasture, and the derelllnge
or haciendas err often miles
-ech other snd dependent on such
force eo each man could keep near
Mm for defense. The necessity of
rmplnylng laborers who could In nn
mergency art as soldiers seems to
hare had the effect of Introducing s
langerous element Into the lives of
such men. es uprisings of Is borers
were feared like the raids of outlaws.
The unhappy conditions of affairs In
whbh men were forced to protect
themselves from attack In every move
ment that they made has been greatly
■ alleviated. If not entirety cured, by ths
Go to Florid? via Southern Rail
way. Double daily service. Leave
Macon 2:15 a. m., arrive Jackson
ville 9:25 a. m.
Leave Macon 9 x>5 a. m., arrive
Jacksonville 7:40 p. m.
JAS. FREEMAN,
Trav. Pass. Agt.
GO TO ATLANTA
via Southern Railway.
Morning train—Leave Macon
130 a. m., arrive Atlanta 11:10
Nice Coaches and Parlor
Car.
NOON TRAIN.
Leave Macon 1135 p. m., arrive
Atlanta 4:10 p. m. Nice Coaches
and Parlor Car.
NIGHT TRAIN.
Leave Macon 7130 p. m., arrive
Atlanta 10:30 p. m. Vestibuled
Day Coaches.
EARLY MORNING TRAIN.
Leave Macon 3:05 a. m., arrive
Atlanta 5:20 a. m.
JAS. FREEMAN,
Trav. Pass. Agt.
The European Hotel
American and
European Plan
Cuisine up-to-date. Careful atten
tion given to guests.
Reasonable rates.
n. O’Hara, Prop.
MACON, GA.
No. 562-564 Mulberry Street.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
A dam I* being built In Oregon In con
dition with tho plans for Irrigating 20,0W)
acre** of In ml. which will require 3.000,000
tf*}\ of lumber.
In a dairy near San Francisco the other
day an overloaded hayloft collapsed upon
sixty ..
nnd either crushed
nil of them.
There arc said to he Indications that
Kalnull. the Moor who held 1’erdlcarls In
captivity, will shortly attempt another
Tho Innumerable varieties of potatoes
nre produced by repeatedly plant In*
small potatoes raised from the seed,
selecting from them the varieties best
adapted for cultivation.
The French government emplov* 17.148
people In Its state tobacco factories.
Fifteen thousand seven hundred of theso
are women. There are also 714 direct!
foremen nnd overseers.
to enter the Naval Academy have failed
in tho phyfdcal test, nnd the failure was
largely due to the use of tobacco.
In view of tho notorious laziness of
the ItUMHlan peasant, writes a 8t. Peters
burg correspondent. It will be Interesting
to watch the effect of the new law per
mitting labor on ttundny* and festival*.
Some New York doctors are now rec
ommendlng a medical supervision
Hotel Lamer
American and European Plan
Cafe Open Until
12 Midnight.
Your Patronage Solicited
J. A. Newcomb,
Proprietor.
The Plaza Hote
- MACON, GEORGIA.
European Plan—
Csfe and Buffet Unexcelled
A New Hote], w'th Spacious Sam
pie Rooms. All modern conveniences.
CAFE CATERS ESPECIALLY
TO BANQUETS AND
WEDDING PARTIES.
ED. LOH & CO., Proprietors.
Turkish baths. The docth of I«awyer E.
M. friend from heart disease fhortly after
emerging from the hot room and the
plunge ha* started the agitation.
An apparatus called the telcorypto-
gruph, which telegraph* and records lu
print mcraage* over ordinary telephone
line*, without Interfering with the tele
phony, I* said to havo been Invented by
Hlgnor Melcdttl. nn Italian electrician.
The Sun Francisco election commts-
* loner* have received petition* Higncd by
10,517 registered voter* nuking that an or
dinance be *uhinltte«l to the elector* on
November 8 fixing the retail liquor li
cense at 1126 a quarter. Instead of 821, aa
at present.
The l«ord Mayor of Igmdon, who has
to nttend some public dinner on almort
every night during hi* term of office, ha*
at every banquet a special little dinner
cooked and served to him, nnd he ha* any
simple food he may wish to order, whllo
the re*t of the guest* eat the mushroom*
and truffles.
A representative of the Rhinelander
family th© other day at New York paid
$1,600 (or $30 per day) for a stall In Grace
church. Broadway and Eleventh street-
probably the record price—though a Phil
adelphia gentleman pays $26 each nnd
every Bunday for n sitting for himself
nnd wife lu his home church. U‘MldcH
other liberal contributions to the
church.
Brown House,
MACON, GA.
Stubbs & Etheridge
Proprietors.
Opp. Union Station.
Curran R. Ellis,
Offices: 4, 5 and 6 Ellis Bldg.,
Cherry st.. Cotton ave. and First st
Phone :39 . Macon. Ga.
ARCHITECTS.
P. E. DENNIS, Architect.
568 Cherry st., Macon, Ga.
Twenty years experience and suc
cessful practice.
Night Nursing a Specialty.
MRS. S. R. RUSSELL. Trained Nur*^.
Phono 3535; residence. 669 Mulberry a
OCULIST AND AURIST.
DR. MAURY M. STAPLER,
Oculist and Aurist.
Office. 556 Cherry Street,
Day 'Phone, 2271. Night 'Phone 8058.
DR- J. H. SHORTER.
Eye, Ear. Nose, Throat.
Cherry and Second Street*.
•Phone 972, office. Residence, 3078.
Alexander Blair
& Kern ....
Architects,
678 CHERRY ST MACON. GA
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Classified advertisements under
this head are Intended strictly tor
tho professions.
OSTEOPATHY
DR. F. F. JONES, Osteopath
354* Second St.’ ’Phone* 9^0-3019.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
GABRIEL R. SOLOMON,
Civil Engineer, • *
Plans, Estimates, Surveys,
568 Cherry Stroet, Macon, Ga.
Office Phone 962—Residence Phone 169
DENTISTRY.
DR. ADD1EL M. JACKSON. Dentist.
Office on second floor Commercial
Bank Building. Triangular Block. Tel
ephone 536.
Kno.vn throughout the South
for the excellence of ita ac
commodations and service.
Careful attention paid Every
Guest. Cuisins Unsurpassed.
Rates Reasonable.
DR. H. W. WALKER. Oentlst.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DR. MARY E. McKAY,
Special attention to Obstetrics and
Diseases of Women.
Commercial Bank Building.
Fhonen: Office, 2554; Residence. 3572.
DR. W. H. WHIPPLE.
Office. 572 Mulberry 8t., rooms 4 and 5,
•Washington Block. Hooret 9 to 10 a. m.,
12 to 1. and K to 6 p. m. Telephone con
nections at office and residence.
This is an important daily question. Lei
America’# most popular drasert. Rocetvrd
Award, Gold Medal, Wnrld’a Fair.
add
jouKIDIH. Everything laths package j
boiling water and set to coot Flavors:
Lemon, Orange, Rarpbernr, Strawberry,
Chocolate and Cherry. Order a package ot
each flavor (mm your grocer to-day. 10c.
J. Pterpont Morgan relumed Ihe «auaeer it hMUy^T^
aacoll cope. Well, he hna given * up
something.—Houston Chronicle.
It Is an hard to kill off Gen. Kurokl
as it Is to bring about the fail of Port
Arthur.—New York Evening Sun.
Mr. Folk will go Into office with the
expectation of showing Missouri Just
what can be done.—Washington Star.
Chicago’s assertion that it* subway
la to be bigger than that of New York
we* only to be expected.—Washington
Star.
We Infer from the accounts of the
Horae Show In the New York papers
that IF* the same old clotheshonie.—
Boston Herald.
The South would rather be under a
landslide with Judge Parker than have
a cabin seat on Roosevelt's “General
Slocum."—Wilmington Star.
Our "big stick" ha* already stopped
one revolution in Central America, to
wit, the one that wa* planned to take
place this month in Panama.—Mobile
Regtster,
One of the lessons taught by Sun
day’s storm is that the quickest and
surest way to ««t the country hack a
hundred year* would be to abolish the
telegraph —PhlUielphta Inquirer.
The president ha* set the fashion of
entertaining labor and capital at din
ner. It Is strange that no one ever
seems to think about giving a dinner
to the consumer.—Washington Post.
Whenever the president need* an'
extra man for a Job he pick* out I
an old-time Democrat— auch aa Luke
E. Wright for governor of the Phlltp- j
pine* and John C. Black for pension
agent.—Bristol (Vo.) Courier.
House-dranlng In Alaska by the
president ts the newa, together with
the dismissal of a naval officer and of
postal clerks, all for the good of the
•ervlce. It looks very much as if the
civil service reformer were going to 1
“run amuck."—Philadelphia Ledger. '
DR. J. J. 8UBER8.
I Permanently located. In the special-
, ties venereal. Lost energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison *?nk;
cure guaranteed. Address in confi
dence, with stamp, 610 Fourth street,
Macon. Ga.
The Fair Store,
Dr. Chas. H. Hall. Or. Thos. H. Hall
Office. 610 Mulberry *t.
Residence. 507 College at.
Telephones: Office. 922; residence. 69.
Office hours: 8:30 to 9; 12 to 1:30; 5 to 6.
507 Cherry St.
If you want fine dolls, we have them.
If you want fine glass, we have them.
If you want best English ware made.
we have it
If you want good tumblers, water
pitchers, etc., we have them.
Go carts, revolving musical chime.
Iron toys. Drum*, etc.
Fine dolls, balls, etc.
We do not keep any one cent toy*.
Boys' Caps. Mens’ Cape, Baby Capo,
and are not too stingy to claim your
own soul, we can suit you.
If you want tho worth of your money
and not too stingy to claim your own
soul we can suit you.
BIBB COUNTY COURT OF ORDINARY.
November, 1904.—To Florence Bartlett
and Oecsr Pettey. helre-at-Uw of John
A. Bartlett, late of Bibb county. Os..
deceased
McCoy, who Is the othei* heir-at-
law of said deceased, having mode appli
cation to this court to require the admin
latrator of estate of deceased to make him
a deed to a certain tract of land, described
In a bond for titles attached to his appli
cation. and alleged to have been signed
by sold John A. Bartlett, and alleging also
In his application that said land has been
fully paid for. This i* to notify you and
all persons Interested that said applica
tion will be heard at my office at li
o’clock a. m.. on the first Monday in
December, 1944^ M w|Lev , ^
GEORGIA. Bibb County.—Mre. T. J.
Chlpley having applied to this court to
be appointed administratrix of the estate
of Thomas Ellison, lata of aaid county,
deceased. This la. therefor*, to not'-fy afl
persona concerned.
led. that her application
on the first Monday iu
C. M. WILEY. Ordinary.
OPTICIANS.
U. U. wUrrT,
Graduate Optician. 653 Cherry st.
OCULISTS.
ABSTRACTS.
GEORGIA TITLE & GUARANTY CO.
I R ENGLISH. Pres. J. J. COBB. Sec.
T. a WEST. Atty.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE.
Will l(* sold, before the court house
door. In Macon. Bibb county. Ga.. on th*
first Tuesday In December. 1904. between
the legal hours of sole.
scribed real estate, belonging to the
blowing de
late of George W. L. Ke
eighth
„ vlth a
four-room house thereon, and situated
and being in the VlnevtUe district. Bibb
county, o*., and In VlnevtUe; bounded on
the west by Ward street, on north and
east by property of estate Judge C- T.
Ward property, and on the south by
lands of R. V. Smith, and known as th*
residence of said deceased. Bald property
■old for the purpose ef paying debts and
for distribution. Terms of sale, cash.
WM. J. LITTUE.
Administrator Estate of Geo. W. L Neal,
Deceased.
Smith,
estate of^ y
vtna sppiUd to thls court ^or leav* u
n all the reel estate belonging to said
C. M. WILEY. Ordinary.
\
iLb
real estate 1
estate.
countie „
notify all persons concerned to file ob
jections. If ear they have, on or before
the first Monday in Decent * ‘— —
te. situated In Bibb and Baldwin
.tie*. Georgia- This la. therefore, to
fy all persons ct
the first Monday In December. 1964. or
eMe jeaye^to sell win then be granted