The Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1905, December 04, 1904, Image 11

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~ 1 mam THE MACON TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 4. 1904. ..COME.. INVESTIGATE and KNOW the TRUTH — IT IS TRUE — My Dental Offices here and in At lanta are the largest and best equip ped Dentar apartments in America. SENATOR BACON TO MR. HARDWICK Continued from Page One. — IT IS TRUE — I was elected by the Georgia Dental Association to represent Georgia in National Convention in New York. — IT IS TRUE — I was appointed by the President of the Southern Dental Convention to represent Georgia in a clinic in Texas — IT IS TRUE — I am free to act as I please and charge what I think best. — IT IS TRUE — I do a spot cash business and work for fifty per cent less than regular prices. — IT IS TRUE — Expert Crown and Bridge work men are associated with me in all my offices. — IT IS TRUE — I do the largest practice South and will save the people of Georgia $12,000 this year by working at Live and Let Live Prices. — IT IS TRUE — I give SOMNOFORME and ex tract Teeth without the slight; >1 pain. — IT IS TRUE T- I practice for many of the ablest physicians in Georgia and they in dorse SOMNOFORME. COME If you want the best and most ar tistic Crown and Bridge work that human hands can make. COME If you want a set of Artificial Teeth on a Rubber or Gold Plate. We have a marvelou* and rapidly Increasing material prosperity, the ©roduct of the diligent and peaceful industry of our people. And this in creasing wealth la. in its production through all of our varied industries, made practicable because the white people of the state, acting through the Democratic party, by the maintenance of good and honest government, make it certain that investments are safe in Georgia, and that every man is protected In the fruits of his labor either of his head or his hand; and, further, that the value of no man's property is to be practically confls- cated either through the burden and waste, or the plundering of dishonest and Incapable government. It is because or the fact that the Democratic party, through white su premacy, maintains in Georgia honest, capable and economical government, both white and colored are, speaking generally, peaceful, contented, pros perous and happy. And it is a fact, equally incapable of successful de nial. that If the Democratic party were to lose power In Georgia, and if the Republican party should, with those who would necessarily compose its majority, gain control of the state, we would have in Georgia neither honest, rior economical nor capable gov ment, nor would there be among our people, white or black, either peace or contentment or prosperity or happl ness. It is well to note present conditions and to recur to the struggles of the past, in order that we may recall the remembrance of the utter ruin and desolation from which the Democratic party saved the South, and that we may realize the abyss of social degra dation and material desolation and governmental ruin in which we would b« today plunged If it had not been for the work of the undivided white men of the state organized as the Democratic party which has saved us from all these calamities In the past, and were it not now for the same work through the same organization which guards and protects us from these ca lam I ties at the present time. There never whs in all history t blacker nor a more infamous crime attempted against civilization than the effort which the Republican party made in the years succeeding the civil war to overthrow the rule and power of the Intelligence and virtue of the South, and to place them under the en forced domination of the utterly ignor ant and debased in their midst. It was ] crime against society and oiviilzatlon unsurpassed, unequnled and unprece dented in all the ages to endeavor by legislative enactment to take millions of black men, the lowest and most In ferior in blood and development of the hiinumlracf^.lgnorant and utterly wantr lng in each and every mofal and men tal equipment for governing them selves or others, and to nlaco them in governmental power and control of the white people of the South—-a people of education, culture and refinement—a people who nor only by their own character, attainments and achieve ments, hut by the attainments and achievements of an ancestry of n thousand ''ears. Justly ranked as a not inferior part of the foremost and most illustrious race of all the earth. And as there was never a greater crime attempted against civilization, so there was never a greater service rendered to civilization than in the work of the united white men of the South, who defeated the Infamous at tempt. And so in the years which are to come will Impartial history write it down. If there were nothing else of which to boast, if this were.the sole f ichievement of the Democratic pariy ri the South, this great work which It accomplished in rescuing the South from a fate worse than anarchy would earn for It and entitle it to the undying gratitude and appreciation of nil those in the world who value and prize civ ilization and all Its attendant bless ings. And there are none who should be more grateful to the Democratic party for this than the Republican par ty In the North, because the Demo cratic in thus saving the civilization of the South at the same time also saved the Republican party from "the deep damnation" which would have been adjudged against them through all the ages, if they had succeeded in the effort which they made to convert this whole Southland into the desola tion of another Haiti. Nor is this simply ancient history with which the men of this day have no practical Interest. For while the Immediate effort to Africanize the South was thus defeated many years ago, the end It not yet. The fifteenth amendment, which waa for this purpose addtd to the constitution, presents a continuing menace to our civilization and our social order, which can only be guarded against in the future as It has been In the past by the union of all white men In the maintenance of white supremacy as superior to all other public questions. Our people In the presence of this menace have been thus united for nearly 40 years, snd I doubt not they will so remain If they continue to re alise the gravity of the Issues which make such union essential to our safe ty. I speak generally, for there are some few white men In the state who do not stand politically with their fel lows. 1 doubt not the majority of these white Republicans In their hearts fav or white supremacy, and that they plished and negro government wns' closed, beet set up in each one of the reconstructed is opposed Southern states, and in each one or. South and them there was an era of lawlessness I negro offlci and plunder and corruption and die* I aideratloi honesty such as has never been known under any professedly civilized gov ernment in modern times. Although those governments were overthrown and white supremacy established m the Southern states, the Republican party, while In control of the ,Federal government has, to the extent of the opportunity thus offered, endeavored to impose and fasten negro rule upon us—and at no period has this effort been more marked and determined than at present. The two most Important offices In Georgia under the executive depart ment of the Federal government are the collector of the port at Savannah and the collector of internal revenue In the state. Each of these offices Is held by a negro. The most important office In an executive department In Washington held by any one appointed from Geor gia Is that of register of the treasury, and that office Is held by a negro. In a recent Issue of the Augusta Chronicle l saw the following state ment of the number of negro Federal office holders in three cities: 8avan* nah. 42; Atlanta. 94; New Orleans. 10*. Doubtless they are represented In the offices in the other cities In the South in similar proportion. And so evi dences without number could be given that the Republican party seeks to put the negro In posltons of authority over the white man. and the so doing Is the practical essence of the overthrow of white supremacy and the establish ment of negro rule. The case of Crum in the Charleston custom house Is too notorious to require comment. The same Is true of the Indlanola postoffice In Mississippi, where the postofflcs was closed for months in order to force u white community to take a ne gro woman as postmaster. The In dlanola case had a counterpart in Hogansville in this state, where In or der lo compel a respectable and re fined white community to mall their letters In the Hogansville postoffice. and thus to do business with an of fensive and objectionable negro as postmaster, all the railway postoffices were instructed to receive no letters on cars when passing Hogansville. In each of these Instances absolutely vio lating the law in order to force upon white people a negro ns an office hold er. And these acts of the executive department and hundreds of others which could be mentioned, forcing the negro office holders on the white peo ple of the South, have recently had the emphatic endorsement and approval of the Republican party in the decla ration In the Republican platform in favor of reducing the representation of the Southern states In congress un less the negroes are allowed, provided they have the numerical majority In any states, to take the dominion and control of such states. Such a propo sition could have no other purpose and design than to establish negro rule over white people In the South. It is true that there are many white Federal office holders in the South, but most of them are in charge of postofftces where It would be imprac ticable for one reason or another to place negroes. It is also true that In all the Republican administrations there have been special instances where In response to urgent appeals whites have been appointed In the place of negroes. But a modification of the practice of negro office holding does not deny the principle of negro rule, and It is only a question of time when the practice may he made again well nigh universal. And the prac* tire of negro office holding Is negro rule. In this connection the possibil ity Is not to be overlooked that the bestowal of office upon a few favored white men may be adroitly and skill fully used as a consideration by which our people may be conciliated into an abandonment of their opposition to the party practicing negro rule. But although much remain much remains un said. time and space will not permit me to further elaborate the proposi tion that the Republican party la not the place for one who favors white supremacy, and who opposes negro office holding and negro rule. Those who desire to divide the whites say that there is no negro question and that therefore the whites can safely divide. The negro question Is not now actively In evidence In our local politics simply because the whites are united. A division among the white people means the negro with one part of the whites fighting the other part of the whites, or the two divisions of the whites fighting between themselves for the control of the negro vote. In either case disaster must follow. Equality in political association tends, however slowly, nevertheless certainly, to social equality; nnd social equality leads in the end Inevitably to misce genation and amalgamation. While there are many differences, the one plank in the Routhern Dem ocratic platform to which till South- ern Democrats agree la white suprem acy, and In this there la no opportunity for equality of political association, the progenitor of social equality. While I may have been somewhat lengthy In my reply, the whole dis cussion may be summed up In the single sentence; Shall we above all other things stand for white suprem acy? If there are any who will en deavor to conciliate Georgians In their opposition to the Republican party and to persuade them that their interest lies in the advancement of that party In the state, the Issue to be deter mined will be a very narrow one If not confused or disguised. It la slm- S ly this. Doe* the Republican party elieve In and advocate white suprem acy, and la it opposed to negro rule so if the Republican party b white fupremaoy In the loos favor negro rule and holding, there are no enfl- .vhlrh should be sufficient to Induce the white men of Georgia to support that party. Of course there call be but ott# fttt- awer to those questions by any candid Republican \\ ho docs not seek to evade or becloud the Issue. For in the prac tice of social equality by many prom inent In Its ranks, in the ridicule and Jeers now frequently directed at the protests of the South against the prae. tice by certain persons of social equal ity, In the forcing of negro office hold ers on the Southern people, and in the utterance of the Iasi Chicago platform, there Is no room for possible doubt ns to the attitude of the Republican par ty on the negro question. It la prob able. now that the election is past, that the Indignation and resentment of the South may cause an abatement of the zeal with which negroes have been heretofore put in office. For this we will, of course, be duly apprecia tive, but nothing short of the recogni tion by the dominant party of white supremacy and the avowed renuncia tion of hegfo rule and negro office holding will Justify the relaxation of their vigilance by the white men of the South; for so long as the principle of negro rule and ilegro office holding is recognized, there is no security as to the time when the ac tive practice of each may be resumed. The fact is not to be ignored that we are a peculiar people, and thnt in consequence we must be a law unto ourselves. This Is not as wo wish, but we are subject to conditions beyond our control. Wi are peculiar In the fact that we face conditions such ns confront no other people, such ns have confronted no other people since the dawn of history. Where the negro Is In small numbers, his presence from »t political or eveh a social standpoint la comparatively unimportant. But It Is different when he comprises a large proportloh of the population. The man who says there is no negro problem Ih the South, either is uncandld or ho Is not thoughtful. In 1865 the negroes in the United States numbered 4,000,000. In 1905 they will number more than 10.000.000. There are those who may read these lines who will live to see them number more than 20,000,000. And there. are children now borh who will In their day see more than 30.000,000 of them here. How, in view of these facts, cun It be said by nny one. after thoughtful consideration, that there is no negro problem. The mere presence of the negro In the South necessarily presents n tre mendous problem—hew two peoples In nearly equal numbers, the extremes of the human race can live together, nnd , yet separate nnd in pence. But that problem haa been Intensified an hun- j dred fold by the enfrancisement of the hegro. In fact this feature so overshadows all others thnt It may be said, now (gt least, to constitute the negro prob lem. If the people of the North are sincere in the oft expressed desire to lenve the people of the South to deni with the nego problem, their first step should be to repeal the Fifteenth Amendment. Thnt would leave each state free to deni with the question as It saw fit. Until It Is repenled. the South is not left free to rlenl with it, The Routhern states with thnt amend ment repealed would undoubtedly dis franchise the negro, and the necessity for the solidarity of the Routh would Immediately disappear. To requite the Southern states to surrender a portion of tffelr represen tation ns the price- to be paid for the repeal of the Fifteenth Amendment would be a gross Injustice, because tho universal rule has been thnt represen tation is based on population nnd not on the number of Voters. The pro vision In the Constitution which gave three-fifths representation to the Slave population was no- exception to this rule, ns the reduction was n comprom ise made with those who denied the right of any representation to that population, on the ground thnt they were not citizens but only property. But while It would be such gross in justice. nnd while tho North ought to he too magnanimous to exact It, still If the repeal of the Fifteenth Amendment can be secured In no oth er way, It would, In my opinion, be bet ter for the Routhern states to pay the price of a loss of n part of Its repre sentation, rather than that this eternal controversy over the negro and the In evitable sectional differences and ani mosities resulting therefrom should continue during nil the indefinite fail ure. The loss of any part of our Juat representation In congress would be a costly sacrifice, one to be consented to only in rase of absolute necessity, to between the two races. But with this cause of conflict removed and the threat of negro nr mongrel domination forever .Withdrawn, the magnanimous and kindly white men of the South Would Instantly recognize and nppre elate the changed relation and act ac cordingly. The eternal Interference of misguided zealots at the North would then largely abate, and the proper re lations between the races would be promptly and fairly adjusted.wlth full est consideration for all the rights of the weaker race. Until this amendment Is repealed the menace which must ever accompa ny It will require that the white men of the South should stand together upon the Issue of white supremacy, and oppoaltlon to negro rule and negro office holding. It is within the power of the Republican party if It desire to do so, to repeal the fifteenth amend ment within the next three months by securing the necessary action by con gress nnd the ratification by tho requi site number of state legislatures. When they refuse to do so. it can only be be cause they desire the continuance of the opportunity for negro rule and ne gro office holding. And If, while thus still beleaguering our stronghold, they approach with soft words and prom Isos of the favor of those who sit In the seats of power, I would cry to the de fenders of white supremacy, "Bewaret The Greeks are at the gates bearing gifts!" * O. BACON. Should not fail to pay ns a visit before making their purchases, as we are showing the largest and most complete lino of arti cles necessary to man or boy— and useful also. Sporting CUopld Following are the scores made Thursday last by the Columbus bowl ers In their match Against Macon: Totals. Crowell 149 134 190 473 Euetlgs 143 16U K.fl 474 Key * 113 117 117 446 Dixon 127 124 126 887 Joy 173 103 163 504 On Thursday night next Macon meets Atlanta in the second match of thq .season. A boys' match will be played oh the local alleys Friday even ing. All rollers under 16 years of age are eligible to this contest. Neckwear, Fancy Hosiery, Suspenders, House Jackets, Bath Robes, Umbrellas, The announcement made In The Telegraph yesterday morhlng to tho effect that the BoHton Nationals would come to Macon to work out Winter kinks In their salary members wns received with Joy by local devotees of baseball. The arrival of the greatest swatsmen of the world In Macon hna ever been an event of Interest. The dally practice of the players Is watch ed by crowds. Believing thnt it Is a good thing to let well enough alone Manager Jim Collins of the Boston American World beater*, will bring to Macon with him every player who helped to win the American League championship. This means hn will take Lachance and Freemen, the two players discussed ho freely during the past season, when the world heaters were experiencing one of the worst slumps In baseball and whon the prospects for the pen nant seemed black Indeed. "Collins is always alow to act. Hu is most conservative and as he said the other day new men must 'show him.' before they gain a Job on his team." A few days ago Freddy Parent and Hobe Ferris arrived in Boston and signed contracts for the coming sea son. Other members of the club have signed. Collins will bring Bouth about* 23 men and among the number are several promising youngsters. Of course this number will be rapidly cut down after a couple of weeks at work. Rain Coats, Suits, Overcoats, Hats, Any of which will ho appreciated and be of service. Our Prices are moderate, our Goods are of THE BEST. The Dannenberg Co. s The Bowen school of Tennessee by defeating the Gordon cadet eleven of Barnesvllle at Atlanta yesterday won the prep, school championship for the two states. Gordon's team was game hut lost by a score of 38 to 0. The snow under of the Georgia boys proved a surprise to all. The defeat was greatly due to the speed of the Bowen backs. Their rushes around their attacks at the line nmy B nil nr ui.nomt* n«ce«»ny to ■ p r „ V ml *oo<l for but mnnll (din,. aecompIlKh n yront.r KttOd. Th. lo*, I , h „ , r ‘ m „„ of a corresponding vote In the electoral college would he of less consequence, for unless there Is a material change in the disposition and temper of tho North It Is a matter of little practical consequence whether the electoral Vote of the Bouth he groat or small. There lining up the youngsters'from across the border gained advantages and at times were under way before the Barnesvllle men were in their places. WARRINGTON. Dec. T-JThis whs a would regret to see its overthrow; and | and to negro office holding In the COME pprl I will examine vmir mnu*l. tell you what you need and tell you the exact cost without charge. Phone 627 for Dr. Lanier or Dr. Meldrim. yet no man can escape hia own per sonal responsibility In such a vital malter, for there can be no question that if a sufficient number of white meh could he secured In Georgia by the Republican party to add to the negro vote and make a majority, the Republican party would again be In power In the State, and white suprem acy would be overthrown. We would again have piebald conventions, pie bald legislatures, and a repetlon of the scenes of corruption and the debauch ery of the reconstruction days. How ever honest their purposes, these men are playing with fire, and they are do ing so with Impunity to the public In terests only because there are enough white men In the state who see their polttlcai duty In pursuing the opposite course, and thus prevent a conflagra tion as the result of this action. And the fact ir not to be questioned that South? If yes. then the Democratic party In the South will ground Its arms so far as concerns that issue. Rut if no, then the argument with us Is will be no political peace and harmony get-away flay at Henning and marked between the South nnd the North so !•»»*• «• I*** 1 n« «**•* racing season In the Ion* nn tho right of the negro to vot, : | J: Tj.'",urirt"Vv2St'"thi ^rw rC< i-i#/ )0n »h 1# Am r>U a*" mun> < thro** miles on the flat with of the Fifteenth Amendment, leaving | jarno* F.. cite second choice, and the t to to each state the power to regulnte for U favorite. Short Hone, third. Ivan, with Itself the negro question would des- a light Impost trailed the field In tho troy the sectional barrier which the | handicap steeplechase to the hesd of the Bouth no greatly rteploreg, nnd for the •«*•£'»*•"•. p i£’LE5,_"^ r removal of which It know, no other ;^ or ^.o h riwilfd fn foll^Ir.' ium met non, | ^nry: No fears need arise In thf minds of First rneo. 3-year-olds and up, one ml!* the genuine friends of the hegro any where that this repenl would mean III results to him. In fact It would he to the Interest of the negro no less than of the white man. An unavoidable Irri tation nnd antagonism must Inevitably nrlse when an Inferior race endeavors through the ballot to gain the ascen dency over a superior and naturally dominant rare, or even to share In the governmental powek To this effort on the part of the negro In the Routh haa been due nine-tenths of the friction AVOID THE RUSH. REBATE Save You Money. TICKETS WINES AND LIQUORS fill nil the requirements of those who quire excellent goods at prices which our list hi All ••II have rich flavor, and can be highly re mended for family nnd medicinal You need a Tonic. Old Joe Mercer Corn gallon Ju*. 62.75, dellv- Four full quarts, |3.<>0. delivered. Bartlett Pure Bye one gallon J»i Four full ■ix-year-oIJ. ered. <3.35, * ye quarts, genuine hit Pure Malt, Wllw Cocktail. Hehlltt a us for price list. 1 sale quantities. Lewie* '46; Duffy'; Sarn & Ed Weichselbaum, •PHONE 414 - 361 THIRD 8T., MACON. OA. Architects, Contractors and Builders. Your attention Is called to the fact that. In addition to our Concrot Building Blocks, we ere manufacturing 6", I", 12" and 18’* Hexagonal Tliin for Interior and extenor work; Window and Door Sills; Lintels, Skew-hack- Key-stones, Column Bases nnd Caps, Buttress-raps, steps of any length. *an nil other work of this kind. We ore also prepared to execute promptly or dere for ornamental work of any design. Your patronage t* solicited. —Poseur (11 to 5) won; Cannon Hall ( to 2> second; Orfeo (10 to 1) third. Time 1:42 3-6. Hrcond rare, selling. 2-year-olds, flv furlongs--Tarpon (• to 1) won; Calmness (6 to 1) second; Critical (3 to 1> third. Time. 1:03 1-5. . _ Third rare. handicap, steeplechase, fiirolds nnd upward, about three mlleH . onn . van (6 to 1) won; Woden *6 to 1> |J2 Bibb Stone Sc Tiling Company. Time. " Fifth" rue. maiden l-r,«r-oM, and up, .even furlong,—Itul.y llempmead Hi) lo II woo: Frank I.. Perlry fit In ll ,er. nnd; Old Olory (« to l) »lilrd. Tlm.j " I 1 fitglb MM. hAndlrgp, S-year-old, and up. one mile mid folly y»rd»—Prm-eed, - (7 to 1 > won; jane Ilolly (g to I) MCjndJ *4: second; Imperialist (5 to 2> third. Time, 6:24. Fourth race, the Maximum, for 3-year g . olds nnd up. three miles lien Croockett Armh Oowan (13 to 1) third * — g (12 to I) won; James F. (I to 2) sec- We Will Buy ronlTngent took four nut of the gig rare. Indgy. The fern ore of the rgrd waa thg new m. Chart,, Hotel etgkee for I-yegr. Old,, worth »l.r.40 to th. winner. I.ucy Young made a ,how of her Held, ruihlng A 50c Bottle of Llquozone and Give it to You to Try. Women'e Diseases American Dental Parlors £l8 Cherry St. Macon, Ca. We want you to know about Llquo- i a germicide no certain that we publish zone, and tne product Itself con tell , on every bottle an offer of $1,000 for a vou more than we. So we ask you to l disease germ It cannot kill. The pea- let us buy you a bottle—a full-sized | son la that germs arc vegetables; and bottle—to try. let it prove that It Llquozone like an excess of oxygen- does whAt medicine cannot do. See ! Is deadlv to vegetal matter. u’JSfc whflt R tonic 11 *"• that It does! There lies the great value of Llquo- 232L With Rennhlh-a^nlrw kul *«rms. Then you will use It al- xone. It Is the only way known to kill _.|,W ww t-t, - , Anvil yuu Will Ufie ll ill- . II |g UH "'V Repuhl***".f» r, y »M | wgyg, ng w* do. gml ug million, of germ. In the body without killing the Indebted to the rule of the white 1 ot h,rg do ??[S y .Jr.._*£• i Thlg offer Itself should convince you : / i.- .l.i. * »i»in niier nwu unouiq convince you Sm?and of KSr^rooertv^*aa wallas thpt Li, l uotone does as we claim. We would certainly not buy a bottle and for the peace of their homes and the «, #,» V r*i» ir ...... «... for the peace of their homes nnd the prosperity nnd success of their busi ness enterprises. It cannot be successfully disputed that the Republican party tavora ne gro rule In the South—certainly to the extent that it seeks to establish It In sonie instances, and is willing for It to be established in all lnstancea—In the South. The enfranchisement of the negro could not have been other than a de sign to establish negro domination in the states of the South. When the enfranchising laws were paased It was known that in some of the states the negro far outnumbered the whites. There can be no doubt that It waa the Intention and expectation to establish the negro rule in each of those states. In most of the other Southern states the negro so nearly approached the whites In number, that with the many whites then disfranchised by the same laws, jmd with the aid of the carpet baggers and the military, there was every reason to anticipate that negro rule would be established in each of them. That design was :r. tact ac give It to you If there was any doubt of results.. Y04 want those results; you want to be well and to keep well. And you can't do that—nobody can— without Llquozone. We Paid $100,000 For the American rights to Llquo- zone. We did this aft**r testing the product for two years, through physi cians and hospiuis, after proving, in thousands of /Afferent cases, that tissue, too. Any drug that kills gems la a poison, nnd it cannot ho taken In ternally. Every physician knows that medicine In almost helpl• m« in ^ny germ disease. Germ Diseases. These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles Is to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indi rect and uncertain. Llquozone attacks the germs, wherever they are. And Gonorrhea—Gleet All diseases that begin with fevers—all Inflammation—all caturrh—all contagious dlveasea—all the results of Impure or poi soned blood. < In nervoun debility Llquozone acts as a vltallzer, accomplishing wnat no drugs can do. 50c. Bottle Free. Asthma Abscess—Anaemia Llquozone destihys the cause of any germ disease. Llquozone hag, for more than twenty j Bronchitis' years, been the. constant subject of ; Blood Pol«on scientific and chemical research It Is Bright s Disease •lion when the germs which cause a disens* are destrdyed, the dieease must end, and forever. That la Inevitable. Klon^r Diseases ’ • • 1 with alcohol. Its 'vlt tuea*are derived I nolety from gaa—largely oxygen gas— by a process requiring Immense appa ratus and fourteen days* time. The result is a Liquid that does what oxy Joes, food—the world to rating, vitaiiti la a nerfe food and blood moat helpful thing in the T^eta are exhlla- Jfyir.g. Yit U U jonMumption □Mia —Owp Constipation .Catarrh—C (.eucof Liver Troubles B Me larfa —Neuralgia HsnyGfeart Trouble Ijles—Pneumonia Pleurisy--Quinsy Rheumatism gcrofula- gyfcllls Mraentery DiarrheaVaU\ D1 Dundrug—Dropsy gtomn.-h Trouble Dyspepsia Wflst Tro ibtes Eczema- Erysipelas Tuberculosis Fevers—Gall Btooee Turners-Glee Goitre—Gout V»r icocau If you need Llquozone, and have never tried It. please send wet «Ma coupon. We will then mall you an or der On a local druggist for a full-size bottle, and we will pay the druggist ourselves for It. This Is our free gift, made to convince you; to show you what Llquozone Is. nnd what It can do. In Justice to yourself, pleaae. ac cept It today, for It places you under no obligation whatever. Llquozone costa 60c. and 61. Jut the blanks ami mall ItiUTtho Liquid Ozone Co., 456-464 Wabash Ave., Chicago. My disease la,... I have never tried T.lquozont,' but If you will supply me a 56c. bottle free *44 Give full addn winning easily by two lengths. retrace, six furlongs-—Astarita (• to 16) won; Mizion (4 to llaeoond: Floral Wreath (12 to 1) third. Time, 1:111-1. ftecond race. 2-year-o’.d fillies, five Mr. longs—Brush tip (8 to 6> won; Bisque <60 lo l) Days (10 to 1) to l) second; llalcyt third. Time. 1:05 1-5. ■ - Third race, one mile—Garnish (1* to 1) „on; Plautus <2«> to 1) second; Forehand (I to It third. Tima. JU4t. quested to be present, nn subject will be "Balvntlor he baptizing at the evenln will he special music r* *- the quartette and 3 also sing at both _ __ la invited and welcome nrui Mies Lnul Mulberry Street Chu of the pastor. Rev. W nil the pulpit at th« In the eveiUnj>*t- 7: 1 (auger of -MD-nourt Knights^ar ti.o iw-n ■ jn •■TO untor Epwortk I nex; morning •'r Mrs. Well Class meeting 1 sirs. *veue n tatlve WT C. T. 8 . m., addr.«H n U1 •e by 1 Invlta S'fs Fourth no*. n,w Ht. Churl,, Hot.l *kn. J-vw-oM,. nv, (Brians,—Lucy (4 to I) won; Halsflln <3 to 1.) ■cconS:' York,hir»~ Lid <* to 1). third. Time 1:05 2-6. Fifth race, handicap, one mile and an eighth—Spencerian (8 to 6) won; Rankin <2 to l) second; Lural Lighter (16 to 6) third. Time. 2:021-6. Sixth race, selling, one mile and a quarter—Little Elkin J to 10) won- Brooklyn (I to 1) second; Burke Cock ran (• to I) third. Time. 1:22. M I . . second ceiel evening pra Christ Church.—Wain ffetfond arvd Third. R» ker. rector, fteoond 8 Morning prayer, 7:*0 The Redmond Fuel Co. Coal. Massee IN THE CHURCHES. First Baptist Church—Rev. J. L. White, D.. pest or, will preach at both hours. Morning. 11 o'clock, subject. "Heaven; The Father's House;," night, 7:20 o'clock, subject, "Christ the Truth. Sunday school at 1:10 a. m.; Young People's Un ion at 4:46 p. m. The public cordially Invited to all services. Tattnalf Squi Harrison, D D . pastor at 11 a. m. am public cordially invited. Baptist.—-Re p«(.—Third street, be- ir.d Haze Rev Jas. .ir«« Holy Pommun- A Costly Mistake Blunder* pensive. C price of a Baptist.—Preach in* nt 11 and the morning ho The Redmond - Masseo Fuel Co. Coal.