The Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1905, December 12, 1904, Image 2

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THE.MACON TELEGRAPH: MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER I2 , v^.- Silk Suspenders For Gift-Qivers A complote collection from which to select. The latest designs in solid German and Sterling silver buckles, with a neat center-plate for engra ving tho initials or mono gram which we’ll have done without cost to you. Elegant quality of silks in fancy designs and genuine Persian effects. These are sold singly, one to a box and each box an or nament within itself. Any lady who wishes to make an inexpensive but handsome present should'see these sus penders. $1.00 to $4.60 ONE PRICE TO EVERYBODY. SPECIAL NOTICES FUNERAL NOTICE. * RAULSmmY.— Died In Macon Dec. 11. 1904, Robert Rmlth fUulabuiy, aged W years. Funernl in»rvlcm will occur at Iris residence No. *06 Mulberry atract tlila, Jritndiy. sftern«io,i lit 3 o'clock. Friends aril Invlisd. Interment, Koao Hilt. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. A dividend of (12.60; two dmmrtt and fifty cc-nl* par share on the cnpllal *t«<'k r.f the rimith western llallroud Company will he paid on and aft*r January• ». 19»n. to ■t«K , khold«‘tn of record ort the hooka of the company at the clAPt of business !>*- eentl^r IS. 19«4. Dividend* payable at the office of the company In Macon,.tJa.. tint] at the nttarnri Hank of Savannah, «a. The hooka of the company will ho closed from Deremher 1*. 19«>4. to January S, 1901. By order of tha board. UNPRECEDENTED RIOT Contlnuad from Paoa One. The police have forbidden tha as- r*mhlsg* of cmwda on Tuesday, when an other demonstration la threatened on tho orcanlon of the opening of the trial of ' “ murder of the minister CHADWICK CASE Continued from Page Ona. “Red Boys" In Paris. I’ATllrt, Dec. II.— Several hundred red lw>ye and school students assembled to day with the object of making a demon- etration at the grave of Deputy Ryveton, who died last week. The police broke up the groups, prevented a procession and rinsed the cemetery. Many persons were arrested but released later. , SUITE FOR BUSINESS. To get busy, yon need them In your bus. Suita so cheap you don't feel that you are paying for tnem iloette The Tailor, makes them at n price from $22.50 tn IXS.ftO. Artistically designed and made In the latsat fad.. Trousers always a apo- dalty. from 14.00 up to 112.00. Us Cotton A vs., tarns old stand. Thone 914—stlU In tha ring. CITY OR FARM L0AN8. City real sstste loans placed at from to 64 per cent., according to sscurlty. Form loans at » par csul Security Loan and Abstract Co* Commercial Dank Building. FIELD SEEDS Texas R. P. Oats, Tennessee Burt Goats, Tennessee narley, Leed Wheat. | Tannetaee Rya, Sou. Qa. Rye, North Qa. Ryo. I Cow Paaa. V. C. Hies. Guy Armstrong. RIES A ARMSTRONG, Jewelers 315 Third Street. 1'hono SIS. 95y*a tasted free. Fine Repairing. Reliable goods only. LOANS. On Improved farm lands or eity prop arty negotiated at lowest market rates, business of fifteen years' standing. Facilities unsurpassed. L II. BURGHARD, FUNERAL DIRECTOR •53*155 Cotton Avenue. WHITE PATRONAGE EXCLUSIVELY JESSE B. IIART, FUNIRAL DIRECTOR. tbt Mulberry street. l>reanal attention given to all business, -ady aaelstcnt Office ’Phene 407. Night ’Phone 7*0. OPEN DAY AND NIQHT. CLAY’S COFFIN STORE tad Telephone Orders promptly Elled. tJceneeJ embalm era. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT* Premier Assaulted. LONDON, Dec. 11—'The Vienna corre spondent of the Htsndard telegrupha: "News hen been received from Budapest that Premier Tints, who was going to a political meeting, waa attacked by a has- tire crowd and that hie carriage wln- d broken.” Social Labor Proclamation. Following la the text of the proclama tion of the Roclat Democratic labor party, drew out a laborious existence, a condi tlon worse than convicts, while they con vert million* Into nmoko and ancrlflro thousands of workmen'.* lives tinder In competent generals. We are aheddlng our blood for our torturers, while they ere en tering into a shstnelesa bargain with wealthy landlord* and semstvolst*. Enough—we cannot endure It longer. We must arise and boldly proclaim that we want an end of war and a government by presents five* of the'people. '%ong live the Bocial Democracy—down with the wnr—down with autocracy— “All who are reedy to tight for our de- nund*^a**emhle^lnj||vnnt of the Kaaean An official statement Issued tonight, with reference to the rioting today, aay*: . “During the confusion and Jostling the demonstrator* freely used cudgel* and the police were compelled to txuit back the rlotcra with the Sat of their awords. Tho rioting naturally waa not suppressed without oaeualtlea. but none waa oerloua." Revolution Imminent. A sure sign of approaching revolt and aerlotia trouble (n your ayatem I* nervousness, sleeplessness, nr atomnch upaeta. Electric lllttera will quickly dismember tho troublesome cause*. It never falls to tone the stomach, regu late the Kidneys and Ilowels, stimulate the Liver, and clarify the blood. Hun down systems benefit particularly mid all the usual attending aches vanish under Its searching and thorough ef fectiveness. Klectrlc lllttera t« only 50c.. and that Is relumed If It don't E lve perfect satisfaction, Guaranteed y all druggists. BUFFALO BANK TROUOLE. Affaire of the German American Being . IUTFFAT.O, N. TV?pec. 11—The follow ing statement was Issued tonight by ft. M. Elements, chairman of the Huffs to bank s clearing house committee, on the affairs of the (irrmnn-Americsn Rank: “At a meeting this evening of the dlrec tors of the Herman-American Hank. Ed ward A. Wccpner was elected cashier, to resume his duties In the capacity at once, end Michael Neilany was elected a direc tor In place of the Man. John O. Wlckaer resigned. "1 his action on the part of the hoard has been taken at the suggestion of the Buffalo clearing house committee and has Its unanimous approval aa a part of the committees plan for the reorganisation of the henk * There had been some opposition to re turn of Cashier Weepner. hut the men be- hind It acquiesced finally In hit selection. Very Cold in Pittsburg. PITTSBURG, l*o. 11.—Pittsburg was the coldest spot on today's gov ernment weather map, bu^ ttnlght at S o'clock the thermometer has risen to 33. FV>r the first time this season Ice closed the local river* at many pinto. Interview With Dr. Chadwick. NEW YORK, Dec. 11—The World tomorrow will aay that Dr. I-eRoy 8. Chadwick, huaband of Mra. Caaale U Chadwick, waa Interviewed by It* - cor- respondent In a Parle hotel today (Bun- day). The Interview, according to the World, Includes the following: "Did you leave America because you knew the transactions charged agaln.t your wife were about to be ventilated?” "No, I had not the slightest Intima tion that my wife had any such busi ness connections,” replied Mr. Chad wick. "All these accusations came as a hor rible shock. But. after all, I know only what I read In the newspapers." ’Have you any Idea why your wife ueed Andrew Carnegie's name Instead of that of other Immensely wealthy men, such aa Rockefeller or Morgan? Does aha know Mr, Carnegie?” ”Ar far aa I know she doea not know the famous Carnegie and has never met him. But I believe she simply ne gotiated papers whlcn she believed to be good. I notice that the Paris news papers are trying to draw nn analogy between Mn. Chadwlo and Mme. Hum bert. That la Impossible. The Hum bert women deliberately defrauded people." Dr. Chadwick said he eaw his wife ,(uet prior to'November IS and ahe gave no sign of being engaged In any unusual or large business transactions. He said he was absolutely without an Inkling of such doings as his wife la accused of. "Did your daughter last month cable Irl Reynolds, the Cleveland banker, asking for money?” he waa asked. "That la something I will nol deny nr affirm.” answered Dr. Chadwick. ”!f Reynolds wtahe, to talk nbout the In cident he cr.n." Dr. Chadwick and his daughter are now going to the Riviera, the World will eay. The correepondent describes Dr. Chadwick as a young looking man. whom he eaw by appointment. The doetor, according to the story, naked the correspondent not In give the name of the hotel at which he was stopping. "It I. not I relieved that a decision wl.l be reached that day. Indeed. It la very possible that It will he some time before the matter le definitely decided. In ease Mrs. Chadwick la held for the federal grand jury It la not at till un likely that one of the greatoet legal battles fought in New York will fol low." Dr. Chadwlch'e Position. For aeverul days it has been rumor cd that Dr. I.cRoy B. Chadwick wai cither In Parla. Merlin nr Bruaeaela. but an Investigation by tha Associated Press, representatives In those places failed tn reveal his presence, although mnny letters are awaiting the phyal- clnn at the hotel Metropole. Brussels, where he It a regular patron. Philip Carpanter. Mn. Chadwlck'a couneel. was uaked concerning the whereabouts of the huebsnd of his client, but he declined to aay. A lawyer, who hna been connected with the recent financial dlfficultlea of Mra. Chadwick, as' dtoday In reference tn (he report thut steps might event ually be take* lo compel the return of Mr. Chadwick to this country: “Any person who says that Dr. Chad wick can be brought buck to the United Rlatea against, his will because he gave Herbert D. Newton checks which wrra raturned marked 'Without Fund*,' knows nothing of tho low. Had the doctor bought a coat and Riven worthless check, ho could have been held for obtaining money under false pretenses, but In this case thera waa no value received. Ho le aald lo have given two checks aggregating 150,000 aa a part payment nf his wife's In debtedness. Tha checks were value less. but nn crime was commuted, for Dr. Chadwick received nothing. Newton received nothing. In other wo.de. thorn waa no value received and therefore no crime committed. Word In Woman's Behalf. It has been autd that Mrs. Chadwlrk Battled It,000,000 nf the money ahe borrowed on her husband three years ago. That will be it difficult thing tn prove. It mull first he shown that aha borrowed that amount of money, and then that It waa borrowed fraudu lenlly. It would seem reasonable that If the woman ceuld borrow auch a large earn or money shr nmut have had some ex cellent securities. It must be borne in mind thet the first alleged Carnegie note, which plgya the moat Important role In this tragedy nf finance, la much leas than four ycura old. while It was over three yews ago that two and ona half millions tf dollars were aald to have bean sallied on Dr. Chadwick. Aa It would have been Impossible In so short a lima to aegollate such a large loan on tha strength of that note, It la hlgly probable thut. If ahe did give her husband that money, the had bona fids securities. ”I believe It moat unlikely that any attempt will over be made to bring Pr. Chadwlrk back on any such hypothe sis, Thoee who know him best be. llev* that whntever wealth he has. he acquired honestly.” The prison physician found Mra. Chadwick In excellent health today, and raid that probably he would not need to call on her again. been taken up at maturity. Of course, aa an officer of the bonk. I could not accept auch a present, and remain in the Institution. I waa compelled either to resign or decline the present of the notes, and ‘X declined the notes.” The directors of the Wade Park Bank have to . a man determined to stand by Secretary Reynolds, and In sist that he remain with the bank. The federal and elate authorities have united In the determination to keep Mrs. Chadwick behind prison bars until ahe la brought before either the federal grand Jury or the grand Jury of this county to answer to the chargee against her. District Attorney Bulllvan today wire! tha. New York officials suggesting that If bondsmen appeared for Mrs. Chadwick tomorrow that the amount of bond In which ahe Is now: held be Increased to 125.000, and S50.000 If necessary, to keep her In Jail. | Nothing More Useful I ,N £ Christmas Presents <F Tiian a pair of our fancy Shoos for Children, jr Wo have them in Blacks and Tana, also Choc- ^ oUto Tops With Patent Vamps, and White Tops Button or Laco. Anything have them. with Patent Vampa in Children Shoea, wc The Macon Shoe Co. Phone 7 lo 408 Third St. Reynolds Believed Her. CLEVELAND. O. Dec. 11.--Beers tary Irl RsynoMs nf the Wade Park flank declares! tonight that hl» Implicit belief In the statements made to him by Mrs. Chadwick In which ehe dared herself to be the daughter of Andrew Carnegie wae the Impelling cause of hla financial dealing with her. “She told me, aald Mr. Reynolds, “thet she was the Illegitimate dsugh ter of Andrew Carnegie, and !■ He red her. I never doubted her story until on the occasion of my last visit to New York, when Mr. Squire came to me and declared that all the aecurt tie* ahe had given me a* the notea of Andrew Carnegie were worthless, waa only then that l doubted her. When she told me the story of being the daughter of Andrew Carnegie, hei husband. I*. Chadwick. wraa present, and he believed the story a* I did. The atortea of her giving large sums of money to her husband are false. He t« now In Europe, and Is penniless. “Just tn show the methods of Mrs. Chadwick, 1 will tell of what ahe of fered to do for me about one year ago. Jthe came to me In my office here, and aald that she was grateful for all that l had done for her. and that ahe wish ed me to accept a present from her. 8he then offered me tISS.SSS tn four notes of 325,009 each. The notea were drawn by her and she declared that they were as good as gold. They must have been, fer I knew that her noise for amount* bad “Tomorrow” Says Mr*. Chadwick. NEW YORK. Dec. It— United Staten District Attorney Burnett I* quoted tonight a* saying that should bonde- men now appear to give ball for Mrs. Chadwick he would use hi* influence with United States Commissioner Shield* to have the ball Increased from 115.000, the amount now fixed. An Incident which may have some significance occurred today when a number of reporters at the Tomb* ad dressed a note to Mrs. Chadwick asking her If she would make a statement and also when ahe expected to be rleased. To this she returned the word, “To morrow.” The newspaper men were puzsled as to this answer. Relieving that she had finally decided to waive examination and go to Cleveland they attempted to clear up this point through the medium of another note, but the officers at the Tombs would not permit It to be taken to Mrs. Chadwick. Andrey Carnegie declined to talk to day regarding hla possible appearance as a witness In the case or as to other developments In which his name had been mentioned. TH0MA8 W. LAWSON’8 DRAMA. 3tory the Boston Man is Tolling Is Full of 'Thrills” and “Situations.” From the Chicago Tribune. Whether or not Mr. Lawson makes good his agreement to expose the system” and to give a remedy for Its abuses, the magazine story he is un folding hn« the merit of being one of tho beat dramas baaed on American lifo written in the *ast few years. In the current Issue *11 the principal characters apepar again. The stugo settings are effective and the orches tra plays the right kind of music to give the “psychological moment” 'Its fullest possible force. The story of passing of the Whitney bill through the Massachusetts legislature, the veto of the governor, the conster nation which followed the wild flight of Towle and Patch, their tragic death all these incidents are told with the art of the romancer, the verve of the dramatist, and the . charm of tho story-teller. Whether they are true In toto or in part, or not at all, they have h merit which cannot be de nied. They upset the theory that there Is no material for romance In th|* Gauntry because thero In not enough Ivy. and lichens and ruins. The characters ore assuming form and rounding out. Addlcks Is present, a vllllan without moral sense, and up to the present moment quite Immune from the punishment which Shakes* peare meted out to hla vtlltans In their dreams. Is more dire, more cold* blooded tlpio ever. At the scene In Mr. Pnrker Chandlers home, whither the financiers of Boston Oaa had with drawn to concoct their nefarious schemes, Mr. Lawson la seised with a terrific pain us the cheese Is servedd. He Is put to bed. and doctors are hur riedly summoned. After an Interval of unconsciousness he awakens. The room was dimly lit; the two doctors were at the foot of the bed; Addlcks, standing beside them, wa* looking flxtdly at me. I caught hla eye; doped ns. I was with opiates, saw the cold, calculating expression of his face, which told me as plainly ns words that he felt It was all up with me, that my usefulness to him was nt an end. and that, without a thought for my Interests or a scintilla of re gret, he was calculating how to turn my death to hla advantage. Then pnased out Into the land of dreams. Mr. H. H. Rogers, the arch conspira tor. whose “fine “Italian hand” Is dis cernible In all the baser villainy, la here again and In one of his beef moods. He takes Lawson Into an t by 10 room. Tho room waa small. Suddenly It be came full of arm*, and legs, and hands waving and gesticulating, und lists banging and brandishing; gnashing teeth and a convulsed face In which the eyes actually burned and rained •*. Rogers waa expressing his opinion of Addlcks. Another Incident for the great third act; The governor has vetoed the Whit ney bill and It Is Impossible to brlba, the rest nf the legislature to paaa the corrupt measure over hla head. It hr all up with Towle and Patch. Whit ney's emissaries. The mob of angry legislators Is without demanding their money. They are clamoring at the door, and probably will soon employ crowbar to batter It .down. Terrified. Towls and Patch fly to Lawson and cash a check fbr $10,000. They get gold. Then, as the ominous mutter ing* are heard In Ihe distance, they bid him farewell and disappear. Mr. Lawson has. in a sense, made distinct Improvement upon bla former articles. He haa made definite charges of bribery against Mr. Henry M. Whit ney, and has specified the time, place, and circumstances. The Use end Supply of Radium. Mr William Ramsay tn 8deotiflc Ameri can. it a far cry at present to discuss the nae of radium or radium salts, for Ilium!- sating or heating rarpeeee. I do not sup pose there la one-tenth of on ounce of radium in the who;* world. If you con Imagine getting that amount of radium sw who talk about radium and its compon enta real*— - — •rial experiments that 'have -Orta. It is itm*»iM. to ray wh.i furor. .ubjIv of raw material Is to f™**- I rall.r, th., in Xm.rlc* e III 1 J®®* 1 protnl.lna aa a basts for II CJrayltr . min,ml fount! in Norway. Is supply 0 ** 4 UPO " “ * fanrU * «* D.ip.r.tc. Front the Philadelphia Press. "Hello! What u* you mutilating that dictionary for?” a.krd th« R* publican. “I «u»ra I can do what I rime* with my own dictionary, cant I?” aaragaly replied th. Democrat. "When 1 get ati'k and ttrad of haulnc a word and mrtng tt In print I can cut tt out "M** 1 Wkat word ts UT - Landslide,' * THE YANKEE HEAD LOSING ITS SHAPE Growing Broader and Shorter Under Influence of Immigration—Practical Heads Rather Than Idealistic Be coming the RuIe| # According to Rob ert Hunter* After years of observation In the crowded tenements of Mew York and Chicago, .Robert Hunter, the young sociologist who married Anson Phelps Stokes' daughter, declares that con tinued immigration from Southern Europe will make the American skull shorter and broader. When it ia remembered that more than 20,000,000 immigrants have come to the United States since 1820, and that our immigration—which at pres ent amounts to about 1;000,000 persons a year—has largely changed from Northern European* to Southern and Eastern Europeans—It^lans, Hungar ians, Lithuanians, Croatian*, and Pol ish, Roumanian and Russian Jews— this prophecy regarding the shape of the future American’s head la preg nant with suggestions of coming changes In our national characteris tics. The broad-and-ahort-headed man is practical but unimaginative. The man with the high and narrow head Is the Idealist. One can execute, but cannot invent. The other is a dreamer, without force or mental disposition to carry his Ideas Into effect least Friday 4,SOB Immigrants were landed In the port of New York. The next day 4.949 more were landed. This made 9.854 Immigrants In t owdayt.s made 9,854. Immigrants In two days; the vast majority being of the short-, qnd-broad-headed type of Southern and Eastern Europe. In those two days less than six hun dred persons were born In whole of New York. It Is said that Americans were be coming less sentimental and more practical, and this criticism Is applied more frequently as the Industrial su premacy of America becomes more ap parent. It is also asserted that the birth rate among native Americana la de creasing In communities where the in rush of aliens has increased Industrial competition and forced tho standard of living downward. That suggestive fact la shown In Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont, where In 1900 the yearly death-rate of white persons of native parentage exceeded the birth-rate by more than one In a thousand, but the birth-rate among fhlte persona of foreign parentage ex ceeded the death-rate by more than fortyfour In a thousand. The change In economic conditions being better for the Immigrant and worse for the native, explains this cu | rlous and startling tendency which leads many who arc atudying the situa tion to prophesy the rapid submergence and final extinction of the original white stock of the country. If the American of the future la to have a short* and brlad skull—and I glance at any average audience In the crowded neighborhoods of New York tends to confirm the theory—It Is in teresting to know what science reveals concerning the subject. While the so-called science of phre ftology is not seriously accepted, there are certain average characteristic* of the skull, as to size and shape, which the scientific world takes aa Indica tions of mental power and type. Men like Broca, the criminologist, have, by Investigating the skulls and mental characteristics of thousands of humnn beings, proved a relationship between the two to which there are few ex ceptions. The moral and Imaginative faculties lie on the top of the brain. The prac tical faculties nt the base. The per ceptive^ brain Is In front. The attrib utes of domesticity are behind. Among the early Immigrants America was a large number of persons whose devotion to political Ideals tn duced them to cross the Atlantic. The Irish. German. English and French whose love of Individual liberty drove them from their native soil had high- top heads. They brought with them minds strongly disposed to Idealism. These pioneers with high skulls drew after them those whom poverty and drudgery Impelled to seek new homes for purely material reasone. The Im migrant with the broad, abort head was seen more frequently. Today the great bulk of our immi gration comes from the countries In which the peasantry have fore genera tions been coerced from the Ideal to the practical and material. The few artists among them have high skulls, but the'masse* have short heads wid ened at the base by the struggle for existence which has called for the al most exclusive exercise of that part of the brain which deals with the vital and practical. . Wideness Just over the ears Is taken to Indicate destructiveness and com- batttlveness. Wideness a little higher up means cautiousness. A full, over hanging backhead. such aa one sees tn the German typo, represents domes ticity. A famous authority Illustrates the point by an examination of the head of a cat. “If It is a domestic cat it will be largely developed In the poeterlor re gion and the back of the head will pro trude. but If It la nverae to being petted It will ahow no particular development in this region.. If it Is a very cautious cat the aide development will be fully represented and cautiousness win be large and active. If It la an observing eat, and * good mouser, It will be de veloped over the eyes.” A study of the Immigrants pouring Into New York Just now seems to con firm the Ides that the typical American of the future will be more practical and domestic, but lees Imaginative, less benevolent and lea* reverent Another fact not without grave Im plications Is the expenditure of about $50,000,000 In ten years for the cure of the foreign-born Insane in the United SUtee. not to speak of the of- flckti statement that, of something like 24.000 Insane persons in New York state, one-half are foreign-bom, al though the aliens In the state only amount to one-fourth of the whole population.—New York World. Special Inducements for the Holidays. Send in Your Orders now and Avoid the Rush. Express Prepaj'd 4 full quarts of our famous Old Glory Rye $3 25 One Gallon jug $3 00 (Express Prepaid.) 4 full quarts Old Kentucky Choice Ry« $3 00 One gallon jug $2 75 (Express Prepaid.) 4 full quarts Kentucky Belle Rye.$2 75 One gallon jug $2 60 (Express Prepaid.) 4 ful quarts Daus Special $3 25 One gallon jug $3 DO (Express Prepaid.) One gallon Defiance Rye $2 45 (Express Prepaid.) One gallon jug Maryland Rye....)3 00 (Express Prepaid.) . One gallon jug two stamp Corni.$2 15 (Express Prepaid.) One gallon Jug two stamp Gin....$2 25 We also pay express charges on all goods from $1.75 a gallon up (in jugs), providing order calls for no loss than two gallons to one address. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. KENTUCKY WHISKEY CO. A. DAUS & OO., Props. 520 Fourth Street. Macon, Ga. Next to Uunion Passenger DepoL “QUEEN OF SEA ROUTES." MERCHANTS AND MINERS TRANSPORTATION CO STEAMSHIP LINES. SAVANNAH TO BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA AND EASTERN CITIES. NORFOLK TO BOSTON, PROVIDENCE AND ALL NEW ENGLAND RESORTS, Through tickets to all points. Meals and stateroom berth included. Send for Illustrated folder. H. D. RAY, Commercial Agont, 1111 Empire Build' ing, Atlanta, Ga. A Popular Favorite Is old Santa.* Be cause he is always making people happy. You can be your own Santa Claus If you wish. Make yourself a present of - A BANK ACCOUNT. All that is nec essary Is a dollar and a call at the Equitable Bank, which la ready to start your account at any time. It will be a very service able present, which you will appreci- at more every day. Equitable Banking & Loan Co., 370 Second Street, Macon, Ga. Hotel Lanier American and European Plan Cafe Open Until 12 Midnight. Your Patronage Solicited J. A. Newcomb, Proprietor. 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. The Plaza Hotel MACON, GEORGIA. European Plan— Cafe and Buffet Unexcelled A New Hotel, w'th Spacious Sam ple Rooms. All modern conveniences. CAFE CATERS ESPECIALLY TO BANQUETS AND WEDDING PARTIES. ED. LOH & CO. Proprietors. Brown House, MACON, GA. Stubbs & Etheridge Proprietors. Opp. Union Station. Knos%*n throughout tho South for the sxosirence of its ac commodations and servics. Careful attention paid Every Guest. Cuisine Unsurpassed, a, Rates Reasonable. Bank Robbers Nabbed. PKROIA. HU Dec. 11 —With $1,810 tn currency In their pockets the two men accused of robbing the Peoria National Bank Saturday noon were captured at Toulon today. One of them haa bftfn Identified aa Edward O'Regan alias Jam*#. William*, who. it Is said, haa dons time In a Ohio**© Jail' for robbery- The Identity of hi* partner has net been detertt^ceij. GOING WEST? If to, be sure and tee that your ticket reads via...*, "4 The Missouri Pacific Railway or Iron Mountain Route The Best Line to ARKANSAS. ARIZONA, CALIFORNIA, COLORADO, INDIAN TERRITORY, ' LOUISIANA, MISSOURI. NEBRASKA, NEW MEXICO, NEVADA, KANSAS, OREGON. OKLAHOMA, OLD MEXICO, TEXAS, UTAH, WASHINGTON, AND WYOMING. Oklahoma and IndianTerritory LOW RATES TO TEXAS DECEMBER 13th AND 27th If you want to go writs me NOWI 3 Trains Daily 8:50 A. M. From 8:00 P. M. MEMPHIS 11sIS P. M. I. E. REHLANDER, Traveling Passenger Agent, CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. Holiday Excursion Rates Via Central of Georgia Railway One and one-third fare for the round trip. Tickets on sale to teachers and students of schools and colleges, holding certificates, De cember 17th to 24th, inclusive; final limit January 8th, 1905. To the general public December 23rd, 24th, 25th, and 31st, 1904, and January 1st, 1905; final limit January 4th, 1905. For rates, schedules, and further particulars, call at City Ticket Office, 352 Second street, or address C. A. Dewberry, City Ticket and Pass. Agt. Jno. W. Blount, Traveling Pass. Agt.