Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, October 06, 1908, Image 4

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i I THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 6, 190* The Macon Telegraph Published Every Morning by THE MACON TELEGRAPH PIB. CO. M9 Mulberry Street* Macon, Ga. i *v«-n If exposure had $ot over- **n the flmt. It la htd anoth'T of of the weakness of th^fUpuhll- Q. R, PENDLETON, PRESIDENT AND MANAGE*. YMft TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA. Tho Telegraph can ba found on aala at the Kimball House and Pladmont I fatal In Atlanta. y THE ELECTION TOMORROW. Vita eta to ejection, occurs tomorrow, fit la to be hoped and expected that 1 n fun rote wt!1 ba polled. Joseph M Brown, tha Democratic nominee for I Oars mar, la being apposed by Toaeey Cartet, an tndajmdeeit. There Its a free-for-all tots for Pension - Comrntmtor.tr. Tha fra neb fra amend meat la bo ba voted on. Bvory man who voted la (ba State i primary In June should ooraa out and pell Ma vote for tha straight Demo cratic ticket and bury Independent lam deep. 6E8T JOKE OP THE CAMPAIGN. Tha brat joke of the national polit ical campaign, an far. la on Editor yietor Rosewater, of the Omaha Bao, who Is also a member of the Repub lican Executive Committee and head of the Ri-publiran IJurtau In Fri day's Issue <>f the Roc appeared an editorial purporting to quote from a speech by Mr. lir-yun on the tertIT and tearing to shreds tae passage quoted. | The following was tha quoted: "* ° RESUME OF THE HISTORY of the Cleveland forgery SOME GOOD IN SOCIETY. It Is reported that Mrs. W. E. Co- i rey, pea Mabella Oilman, the actress, ( to marry whom tha etrel multi-mil- ' llnnair#, W. EL Corey, divorced his faith! :1 wife, 1s ta have a private theatre for tar own diversion to coat ! 11,000.000, near Parla Bhe ta also ed I ueating twanty-flva ohlldren In Parta. she aaya who are to ha great authors and p<»ela asms day. Doubtlaws they will 1»e anfflclently qualtned to sing their benefactress* praise And the 'beauties of tha American tartfT ays •tern which taxna tlie American* to build toy theatres and educate other people’s children In Franca. Judging from ona paragraph In an Interview in Which the as-actrees.alra her views to a Chicago correspondent of the Haw York World, there Is ona thing that Mrs. Mabelto Gilman Corey has ^not yat accomplished, with all her ill wedded m!1Hins—sha baa not yat suc ceeded In breaking Into society. Tho World Interview says: Pressed to glvs her vlawa on aoclety, lira. Corey *Ald: "All this talk about aoclety la so tiresome. I am not In aoclety and do nht want to be. From what I have seen nf society women their life* Is tires onto fp tfwim- pftvaa and to others. They have no object In Ufa They have no Idea of art or tho real things that are worth while. All they think of la making a show. Hocl.ty wo men seldom have what you men ball bratna 1 could not be happy In aoelaty, and will never*try to break Into Ua circles. I want to see tha whole world amused and -mads happy, and my effort* will ba dlrectsd ■long that line." If It were worth apeonlatlng on any thing the former Mlaa Mabelle (HI m«n might nay. we might wonder If the abandoned wife whoae husband she lured from bar la Included In "the whole world” she wlrtea to make "happy." "In i abroad, profit to "Johnnie, bow fa It you Joined Sun day school and then stopped coming so abruptly 7* ■l fought 'twaa header GhrUtmas * h . when I Joined.*'—Houston Post. We r *l /rtnt tWi tbornlng from tha ———- ; New York papers so much of tha World # best record for around tho j story of the forged Cleveland letter aa globe Journey la forty days and nine-* has home to the surface. It makes In teen and one-half hours, held by; __.* Ur,ut..Col Hyrrilo;' CUupfeaU. an En«- “ r ” t,n * 4t **® ** m ® ‘J 1 "® *“*' ** gcatJv* reading. The JJght in which It leaves Mr. Adolph B. Ochs, (be edi tor of New York Times, and Mr. Richard V. Oulahan, chief of tho bu nau of publicity In the national re publican campaign 4»KJ roll tee. is un enviable. That the forged le:ter was the off spring of a conspiracy originating In tha publicity bureau of the republican campaign committee, of which »liter Mill) There la still a controversy over the pronunciation of Kalotne. Most peo ple however, pronounce her wicked. j ‘Brasil's external debt Is $677,0*0,009. , In 1*91 It was only 1230.000,000. I Englishman tin British museum)— | This book. rir. was once owned by i Cicero. * American Tourist—Paha '/thing. Wny. In He,in Industries." ANOTHER DE8PERATE SCHEME. Now that Mrs. daveland and tha axscutcr of tha ex-Prealdant’s aatata pronounce the alleged Cleveland ar ticle a forgery, the Republicans are driven to another expedient In order to employ tha name of the dead statesman In behalf of Taft. They quote from a letter criticising Bryan wh!o*i ho la alleged to have written to a friend In Washington at a date In the past which ta variously stated. The New York Hun aaya it was writ ten "last spring." but the Now York Timas dlanissee the letter In It* issue of October J under the beading. "Cleveland In IM4 Condemned ftryan.** The "friend" to whom the letter Is alleged to have been written la repre- rented «a too chivalrous to give (t to tbs public, but ha baa shown It three members of .Roosevelt's Cabinet and baa allowed several correepoit- dents to read It and quota from It! Tha article In tha -New York Tlmea says In parti The am paragraph of tha note relates to personal matters which d- not bear upon any public question. Tha officeholder had written to Mr. Cleveland with r*C- erenca to tha polttlhal trend of the tunes, la hla raply. which was dated at Tamworth. N. ft., in Its summer of ISM. Mr. Cleveland did not hesitate to express hta belief that tha party was going down to defeat again In IMS. He seemed at that time to know Mr. Mr yen waa destined again to ba ta# candidate of his party. Roma of the criticism of Mr. Vtrynn ta not, qualtned. Mr. Cleveland wrote that ha "was dumbfounded by the return .of tha nomocracy to ff*ryant*m." H* went further and acknowledged that ha wa* "mors saddened by the present political situation r-an I ever believed It would ba possible for me to be." Rut the •overeat attack on Mr. Rryan la contained lntheclonlng paragraph of the letter. He aaya: "No platform that can be adopted, however strong, will atone for the past sins of tbs candidate." How* could Mr. Cleveland "tn tha •urnmar of li#i" be "dumbfounded by the return, of the Democracy to liry- anlam" when no such thing had oc curred f Long after that dal. Wafter- eon predicted tha nomination qf Gov ernor Jcfcnson and endeavored to in terest tha Democrats of ihp'jEaat ht that project. - Bryan did not deBnltely announce himself aa a candidate until last spring. This second schema to use the dead lion of tha Democracy In the Interest cr Taft would have excited suspicion because at lu Inherent UnprobxbUt- TJif Her J»l»»|/eij on this proposition and exposed Its fullaclra and claptrap vote catching diameter In an ecstasy of gji-e, "Nothing pratllor," It said editorially. "In the catch-all line has] been offered In this campaign. The most hide-bound standpatter In the country can accept that as satisfac tory and the rankest free trader can And delight In It. The declaration nx-ans slmph nothing, an attempt to legislate along tliut lino would simply open the way to Interuiltiafi]* urrangb- to what constitutes 'n reasonable, li nt.’ for hair splitting on wages In • Industry, price of raw materials another, rebates or drawbacks in u third and so on through tha list nf tfcohssnda of articles that are now on the tariff rerlilon at Itryan’a direction would serve only to l^ntt Industrial and commercial progress and keep business unsettled during hla term of office." rl- Oulahan Is the head, and that it wap • #n museums w *‘ hare th,. lendI pen id I; generally sided and allied by lt« ap- Roosevelt's son at work In * carpet factory! Can you heat It? JraSUSPST A fnSVtt; •*» *"«■ «•* - enmity In the New York. Times, which Mr. Ochs is the head, seems to admit of no dispute, perhaps Mr. Jerome, whose Inter- of in ilk und wum drowned Lemon. Lincoln's Junior law part ner. said lie once charged a cl ent $2*0 and I.lnctiin rnado him return half of It o n th»- ground "the service was not worth the sum.” Then- is n reaper Whosi I Hath. And with his sickle k*cn warded grp In able to fathom minding the nrney should i When J. Hrygn fUrelyed a copy of the Bee with ’this editorial ha en dorsed It* utterances heartily and In detail, with the exception, of course, that ho rocpgnfxetf tho quotation the editorial tore Into tatters ns a pact •f the tariff plank of the Republican platform Instead of being nn utter ance of hla. Rut IOdIt<>r Rosewater was not at all plcarcd when ba read in tha dispatches of ttrynn'ti endorse- ment of tha editorial In hla paper. Its chargtd tha editorial up to a “break" by "ona of my editorial writers** and said In an Injured tone: I do not think Mr. Rryan .should charga ma with personal responsibil ity for everything that appears In my paper, any more than I should charge Mr. Rryan with everything thot.hap pened while ha waa engaged In daily j Journalism." ' t Rryan, however, did not "charga" him with anything. On tho contrary, he spoke with entire ap proval of every point made In tlig editorial. The editorial would have been all right In Kdltar Rosewater’* ayaa but for tha fact t*fcat tha quota tion criticised was from a Republican Instead of a Demncrntle source. Hut this, doe* not change the truth of Its logic. Hi-shics, Kdltnr Rosewater Ik ethlrslfy Incorrect in denying respon alblllty for what appears tn hla edl torfal columns. He inay deny the authorship} of the article but he H fMrk the n«pon»lbllUy Hut this Is where the editor makes a mistake. What waa said the editorial article le aa true of the Republican plank ae It would have been true had It ^een a Demo cratlc plunk. *h»e editor should stand hla guns publicly and apologia# to hla party privately, If necessary, to aave hla face. Nothing Is to be gained by repudiating good logic under such circumstances. the mystery yet sur- ise. The district at- •t limit ^ils rcfi~nrehca calls himself Hrough- t<m Brandenburg, an obvious alias bavin* a cockney twang to It. w-tio {appear* from tt>«- testimony of Mr. . {(Jumper# In another scandal ease, to ntme ( t„. u general f* tch-ntid-carry for tho i national republican committee. Hav ing l»e<-n put forward to bribe the lg- bor h-ader. he Just the man to fake the Cleveland letter. Forgery, bribery, perjury, stolen gutxl*. including private correspond ence and nfflclal copy books, tltt- black mailing of the protected manufac turer# and tv.e predatory corporation#, their "subscriptions" to he made pub lic "after" the election, are constitu ent iurts of the organise.] secret ner- viee on which tie rcnublicans rely as t>fi!ementar.v to tlie self-righteous reaming of th»- president and the ' preaching of the candidate. Investigation shows *xat the hublt |s growing In New York city drug, lucre* are 6,whj whits*'persons ad-; 10 eyaa'of the mnssrs of the dlct-Hl jrtta.uw-. people, whilst the cut-purse and cut- • - i -h . ! i ri’Ht work prbt-eed* to cheat Ui In # gram of street mud. equal to nj voter*.and to'ktnrt the dynastic prln eylsi pf.earth with sides of nbout u quar-i-flP*© •• a ne.fr,’feature of our jmlitlcnl ter of /o/ ffl»,^a. there are enough luieteria.i life. if jplaAel in line, side by side, to rover, According to tlu- New York World, the man. Broughton Brandenburg, enme with his forged letter to the Golden Dome. It had already been output i>f Ifea, and more than thr»* itm*: P uM,, *'J nnH - »> orm says, that of 11(7. fc».7l fee*. North t’arollna ha* Just acquired Its; Aaaoolatloi Mount Cameron, on the west coast of Africa, long regarded as #n i-xtlnct vol cano. was found to l*e still alive and In dinger of eruption by a party of German explorer* recently* Mme. Dsrdelln. who rerentlv died at tlrnune 'nt the ne* of inj. hud been n vearm.- and tier she hud hud. According t oglst. snakes our Hart ban appeared at Manila and no doubt wtll Increase tbs respect the natives for tha distant nation which emancipated them from the thrall of Rpttln only to make them subject to Itself. only the patent f»ct that Taft had dropped completely out nf sight could have petsuadfd the victim of logo- mania In the Whif# House to ghut off hla flood gats*. AlUutd Clavaland Lattar. v Harper’s Weekly. The authenticity of the article on urrent politics ascribed to Mr. Clew- land. and lately printed In the Now York Times, has been a good deal ahak- n. The point that ta Important In In- sstlgatlng It Is the character of the agent who told tt to the Times. The letter la Interesting, but Is not of transcendent Importance one way or the other. It sound# like Mr. Cleveland and contains nothing that i» surprising as coming from him Rut If there la reasonable doubt that Mr. daveland wrote all of the latter and authorised Its publication, and that It was pub lished absolutely os he wrote, revised, and signed It. the letter should withdrawn. That la due to Mr. ci< land, and what la due to him Is comparably the moat Important c alderutlon. Pennsylvania’s Ftut* aooi ire farmers 1 friends. Re i collection a cup- „ _.JPE system of whirl Wns tilled with locust*. The Deutsche Meiltrlnlsrhe Wochcn achrift doe* not endorse the current no tJon that Indulgent-* In athlatle snorts Increase* the tendency to nnpsndlctls. Quite tha contrary, but It ndmtta that * hn«1 an attack must tlma. those Who have c. avoid violent exercise for Appl# Trees Are Lena Livsre. Up* old can au apple tree grow ? I have a few of the trees planted by Noonmdosh. the Oneida chief, with Dotolne Kirkland, the missionary, m «... ■»- l | trrt .„ now oon^tder^bty hundred year# of age. still bear sn sbundanca of frdult. Tho hM Is in good condition, notwith standing, many .ware of neglect. Tha average age an orchard, aa generally Planted and eared for, rarely exceeds fifty year*. I am Incline! to think that the mor# sturdy sorts can he mads to exceed on# hundred and titty years. In order to attain any such age there must be a selection of v*rt*»t#a, and they must be grafted high un »>n tough stock. Our father’s apple trees were grafted In the tops; but the applea planted In then- days are grafbsd In root#. However, one must not long to an old tree. 1 love per tally ah apple cbng t any fine ojd tree. . . . tree, but when beyond ... .. is « sin to let It cumbcb t&o ground. Jesus laid down a great horticultural he cursed the barren fig Anti-Injunction Ltgislation. llcnry Harrison Lewis contributes nn article tu the October number of The North American Review on "The Peril of Ant!-Injunction Legislation." Mr. La wig explains the nature and pur pose of an Injunction. He contents thut the facts show that no such In justice h«s been done to laboring tu«n by Injunctlona Issued during strikes #m bus boon clulnu-d In some quartern, and that the anti-injunction legliUntlon proposed b>®. some profasoed friend# of Inbor would Ih» class legislation of the most pronounced description. Il«* says: "The purpose aimed at In the at- tempt to restrict the lasuance of In junctions has. usually speaking, been expressed In general terms, but In the Heverldgr bill, for example, the re-, qiitrement* of notice and hearing ap plied only to case* Involving contro versies between employer and em ploye. Tho mere statement of the proposition Involved refutes It. Such n iiirnsure would declare to tho courts of the Pulled State#; ’We do not ques tion your right or duty to tgsue an injunction for a* protection of prop erty rights against Irreparable dam age in tlu- absence of an adequate remedy at-law: but w« d<> My to you that 1 the same property riphts are «H»t mn b. iquully prot.-. ted by tbn sama irt against all forms of uttArk.* Thu*, if property or property rights threatened in u dispute over a patent, by unfair competition, by the negotiation of securities fgrauduiently obtained, an Injunction must Issue. If the stability of vour wall* la threaten ed. If on* asserting title ta a portion of their support undcr-mlne# them. If a nulMnce threuten* your health. Im pairs or obstructs the highways, the writ must Issue; but If tha manufac ture of your patent, the same building, the same-business, the tame property right elaewhsre protected he in tha course of sn Industrial dispute, threat ened with damage and destruction by men who declare that you may not opflrat# your factory, execute your boa- incsg or exercise your rlxhts unlc** you first accent the Industrial conditions under which thev demand you shall operathen these Identical property rights, protected against every other form of attack by every court of the United fttate*. shall nqt be protected until the parties manuring attacking and destroying your property and pre venting the exercise of your rtghtk. shall flrst have notle# of your Inten tlon to demand the protection of t court." __ „ htch. wb»-n the fake wna broujf-it to flret worrnn dentist, Mr* T>. Z.'McGutfa.] It. promptly turned It down. It hap of Asheville, having obtained s llcen** tolprned that the World possessed some prortlre from the North (Mroltna Dental J information of Ita own. nnd this at first hand On the 17th of last March tt had published a guarded noto from Mr. Cleveland. Next day. that la, on the 1*th of March. It had sent a re^ porter to the Hotel I^ikewood, at LakewiMid. N. J.. where the ex-preaf- dent was sojourning, and thla porter. Mr. Maloney, an old friend, had n long talk with Mr. Cleveland. From Mr. Maloney’s narrative, which la both vivid and pathetic, and whose accuracy shows for Itself, because one can almost see Mr- Cleveland nnd bear the tone* of hla voice u rends, we tako the following: " ’Malone)*.' Mid he In the beginning and with a-smile. ‘I hav«< gotten to the age where one doesn’t want or doesn’t care to make any niorn trouble for him self than 1# absolutely necessary, am acventy-one today, and lt'a about time that I began to think of not try Ing to force my political views oi others. I have really never felt be fore today thot I was an old man/ and here there waa a choke in hla voice. ‘Now, you won't print anything about politics, will vou? ! suppose that shall drift off Into a dl*eusslnn of men and events which would make a good political yarn, but don’t print It. It will Juat be between us. I simply want to avoid controversy, and yon know how they would pile down on me If you should print that I said this or that about Home of them—the mnga* tinea. They have been after me for months to writ* Just what I Imagine you want. Really, 1 haven’t been able to write anything even If I had been no well Inclined. I haven't writ ten a line on politic# In nlna months, and I don’t think that 1 shall ever go beyond what I said In the World yesterday morning. That letter aums up my views. 1 didn't mention any names, but I didn’t think It wu* nec essary. You know. I have n great deal \f faith—all my faith la fixed In the American people—in the people. They understand.’ "’Rut, Mr. Cleveland, said the re porter.' It Is believed by everybody that you owe It to the people to come out now nnd say the thing which should bo-asld.' " ‘Yes, I know: but, honestly. Ma loney, I have'made up my mind to atoer dear of every political entanglement and to avoid saying anything which will enable anybody to draw my fire. My hands will he kept off the campaign which Is ahead of us. I am going to keep my mouth shut. Yes. I know I could say torn* things nbout Bryan, but 1 would he misunderstood. I could y a great many things about Roose- ..It, biit It wouldn't b* right. It Is hard for one to give to. a reader, or to a person who di»e* not hear you talk, the right angle, the right tono of your meaning.'" Naturally, with this direct knowl edge In Us possession, the manage ment of the World wa* quite prepar ed to show Mr. lfreughton Branden burg the door when he called with « type-written "last word of Grover Cleveland to hla countrymen." which he declared he hart received from Mr. Cleveland the 5th of March, nearly two weeks before Mr. -Cleveland'* long and confidential talk with Mr. Maloney. The World did not need to go Into that "higher criticism" which seems to have eo moved the risible# of the Tri bune In order to mark the spurious — nay. the preposterous—quality of the Brandenburg screed: It# characteristic uuiiars. Mr. nasungs accepica uu> offer. Inspecting nothing. He <u&not even mak to see the letter—perhaps having no familiarity with public af fairs or political conditions ha would not have been Any the wiser If he had aeen It—contenting hlmaelf with veri fying what h* thought Mr. Claveland’s signature. It la here that Mr. Oulahan's depart ment of the national republican cam paign committee comes in: for the man, B rough ton Brandenburg, aa dis closed by the Gompers business. Is In Its employ; one of Its secret service agents; Its Plgott, playing the part In this matter which the Dublin Informer played in the famous and infamous forgeries twenty years ago. Jf not of the republican campaign fund, where Eld Brandenburg get the five hundred ! dollars to pay Mr. Hastings for the j fake Cleveland letter? And here comes “ in a querry which recurs to Mr. Ochs ! It Is given out thnt the New York Time* has not even yet paid Branden burg the price of his crime. If this be true, why not? Could It have been a keen plan to avoid prosecution be cause of the non-completion of the The affected Indignation of the Times forced st length to a show-down, counts for nothing. To save the far • of It and itself from, utter dlrgrac*- the Time* could do no less. It claim* to be a "victim.'’ Kvery thief caugb* with the goods claims that: but. av we said In a former article. If a "vie Time* proved to bo a ver* willing ‘‘victim.’’ It set out this campaign upon tonloftl- cnl "moral"p1ane adopted by the Ronsc- 1 of It. ItH attitude was that '> the calmn philosopher and the tn»n null patriot, pursing Its lips grave',- and “on the whole" .and "upon reflex tlon." concluding that It should be Toft and not Rryan. As Fox said of Thurlow. this "showed It a hypocrite- jl since nobody could be as wise as tt 1 looked to be." It likewise proved It a hypocrite on another side, for no news paper could be as good as the lime# pretended to ‘be. We do not yet ac It. however, of conscloua and tn- tentlom-d turpitude. The republican campaign manage ment holds flr«t place in the detestable business. There It waa planned Thence It was launched. The man Brandenburg was to execute the forg ery. He wa#'to find reputable news paper to assume sponsorship and give It publicity. Whether he bought one. Arrow COLLAR that will try neither tie, thumb nor temper I5c.—2 for 25c. CVim, rtsbody A Co., Trey. tewXctt fffr«rrmvrmmmmmmmamam LOANS Negotiated promptly on to proved farms and city proper ty on easy terms and at loweai market rates. If yon need mone'r call bn na HOWARD M. SMITH** CO M3 Mulberry 8t- MACON. OA What do yon pay tor roof pafnta? Too many Eastern concerns are charging tho Southern trade TWICE what their paint* arc worth! We ut« you merry on tho pur. ebMo price, ruerentcrinr every gallon, and save you repairing for yaani to come, because they are manufactured rUfht here in the Booth tor the Southern climate. Don t doubt us. try itl We manufacture Ready Roofings. Iron llnof.nga. Roof Paints and all Materials. SOUTHERN ROOFING CO., Mfft Atlanta. Ga* •2,600,000.00 SAFELY LOANED. During the last II yaara we have loan ed $2.M0.0a0.00 on Real Estata for bom# and foreign Investor*. 8afeat and moat profitable Investment. Those deelrlng to borrow or Jmvlng money to Invest will find It to their Interest to see, ««. SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO., Commercial Bank Building. Thomas B. W«t, Secretary and Attorney. Leon S. Dure Banking and Investments. Stocka. Bonds, Real EuUte. Mortgage* Macon, Ga^ Money lo Lend on Real Estate Well rated commercial paper und very low rates on Mar ketable securities. Macon Savings Bank 570 MULBERRY STREET. For Rent foolod otie. was no mntter. Wo shall not even Intimate that he bought Mr. Ochs. Often money makes no Impression where partisan malignity may—where the credulity of the parti san who has made up hla mind Is only ton easily over-reached—where a dull fellow, hpneat enough, as times go. but not Very squeamish, may be duped Into becoming the accomplice even of very clumsy crimes. A hlgh-tnlnded, falr-lntentloned man, with a sense of responsibility, would have looked thrice where Mr. C seems not <o have looked nt nil; o he did look, had not the wit to what was plain tq the naked eye—that by no possibility could Mr. Cleveland have written fho matter offered traffic In hla name by something w than ft doubtful "literary agent"—and he would have turned It do-vn as the Herald did and. ns the World aavs. "six others," Including Itself, did. Hut —and this la a point If not a pointer for Mr. Jerome—why has not Mr. Ochs paid Mr. Brandenburg In case Vie haa not paid him. for hla dirty work? All of which leave# Mr. Och* the al- 5 creative of taking his place in the lock with Mr. Oulahan aa a party to the making and the uttering of a forg ery by the republican campaign com mittee. or elae of asking Immunity by confessing himself as now and forever th»* Village Idiot of American Journal- lam! Wadiey Investment Co. Real Estate. Insurance, Loans, Grand Building, Phone 627. ' FOR RENT u, ,*. Store; 414 Poplar St./ thrae'"floors' and cellar $38.60. 1 m- 42$ Carling Ave., 6 rooms, f R.Otf. Two-story brick atore.: co'rprfr'.'ex- presa office alley and Fourth. St.. :nexf. to union depot. Immediate possession, $75.00. Possession October 1#t Vary dealrabla two-story house. $78 Orange street, nine rooms and bkth. Toilet each floor and servant’s house in rear, $40.00 per month. FOR SALE Six room residence on Hardeman avenue. VInevlUe, for sale to party for home—$4,000.00. Lot 70x210 on best section of Sum mit avenue. North Highlands, shady side of street. Price $1,100.00. Can arrange terms on this lot. WADLEY INVESTMENT 00. Grand Building, Phone 627 Don’t put off ordering your clothes ANOTITRR DAY; come right TN. A1 bert McKay. Unas ta **Mr. DooUy. Tk* following linas to Ftnl Dunne i"Ur. RoftJev’’) ware * ■Mlcbanl klonahon. of ’The Papyrus are reproduced la the American Mags- for this month—the periodical Tor Pater a •’Mr. ley*® now writes axclu ■arrow, too, acquaint The only art I boast !# thte- 1 too have laughed with all he crowd. When the rich wonder of your wit Challenged their plaudits loud; And* then, the Jester's role aside. A liner spirit have I I man with sorrow A h»othere-y*a. mb A look Into the merry eyes Lo! there are teere unshed That do not a*k a kindred soul To leave their fountain head wr you have mere than Pklsfsff’e mirth. Nor lees than Itomlefs teen: "Wilt we*p for Itemihn"—nnd than With laughter shake the senna One of GedTa player** nToytag out With tret a wrarr part: Teaching the sfd world how t* Bmt?e Ry strokes of genial art; launching the seven that blasts the tree. <L e. condemned It to being cut doa-n). There Is no room for aaro’hj. fLareh an. Much on. dear wit tnte stuff in tha orchard —K. P. Pow-1 roaring erowds above: Ml ta Ike outing Max«vine. Yet keeo*far*ronr ov The Poet of their torn. sale invested lu the undersigned In a doe«i made and delivered “ ’ ita r - - r iw f ..J, In the office of clerk of Bibb superior court, the undersigned win sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash at th# courthouse door In Bibb count'* Georgia, between the usual hours of sher iff’s sales, on the 3rd day of November. HOI. the followin'® described property, to-wlt: All that tract or parcel of land situate, and lying In the City of Macon, Count yof B(bb nnd State of Georgia, and being tn block six <fi). northwest commons of said city, and marked ns lots numbers eleven (!1> nnd twelve (IS) on tho map of J. C. Wheeler, city surveyor. In April. 1SW. The said lot* eleven and twelve, together fronting on the alley running from College atreet to Madlnon street ninety-seven feet and extending back an equal width one hundred and eighteen feet. To he eold as the property of Lueettn Rievens, Peyton Stevens and Andrew Stevena for th# purpose of pavtng an In debtedness secured hy said deed. The amount due of principal and Inter est on the day of said being $161.36. be sides the expense* of this proceeding. Th# said lAieotta Btevens. Peyton Ste ven# and Andrew Stevens having mads default In ths payment of the notea fkl- Ing due June <th. July fth and August Ctn, IMS. respectIveljr. the power of ■ale tn said deed haa become operative and said Indebtedness has become dus. The proceed* of said eaJe will ho ap propriated to the payment of anld In debtedness. and the balance. If any to the said Lneetta Stevena. Peyton Ste vena and Andrew Stevena. , Fea simple title will be made IW pure ehaaer. Thla 8th day of October. l*ht. WILLINGHAM LOAN ft TRUST CO. FOR RENT. Storage apace. 98x207 and 79x89 wltn Southern Railroad track facilities in Eflgllah Compress building; also apace 274x174 under ahed suitable for lumbar storage or mill purposes. Store*. Immediate Possession. No. 151 Cherry .street. No. 661 Mulberry atreet Store. Newman bldg. First at 604 and 604 Fourth street with R. R, rack facilities; i — — class of business. Ground “ ry street track facilities; very desirable for any -’ass of busineaa Ground floor office. Fourth, near Cher Possession October 1. Ocmulgee. Office of very desirable office location. Office of Postal Telegraph Company; w-iuv.Mii i-jiiii »>(•„ vjneviiio. For list of every class of real estate or sale, or Information about loanr ~ nd to be made on real estate, call s phone to office Grand Building. $20,000 to loan on Improved Real Estate at 4 to 7 per cent, according to amount and location. H. HORNE, FOR SALE ■ ' « — ■ 1 'G: iC i.o A Weil located plece .pf 'nftAWty con sisting of 7 houses rentlnsTTof, $48.00 per month, at $4,600.00. Can carry a loan of $$.000.00 on It for three years at 7 per cent. Will ba glad to have you call at our office for on# of our rent Hits. B. A. WISE 358 Second St. j., iv unllkrnrv. to I he mirihod and «>■!» of i* r , .ViudlMto'SLTwn.’ «■ •tutt.or: It. .ntlelpauon of; ^ ^rSSri NOTICK of First Meeting of Creditors. In the District Court of the United Staten for the Western Division of the Southern District of Georgia. Tn Bank ruptcy. In the Matter of M. T. Lowry, Bankrupt. In Bankruptcy. To th* creditor* of M. T. I«osrry. of th# County of Putaakl. and district aforesaid, a bankrupt: Notice 1* hereby given that on the Bth day of October. A. P. IH8. the “ hawking around of such a paper by an Irresponsible and very auspicious "lit entry agent." Not so with Mr. Adolph 8. Ochs, of the Tlmea He took the halt. line, hook anil rod. and swallowed them as mullet might swallow a minnow. l__ descanted upon the offering, albeit In the raw. as a sweet morsel, making a savory feast. He actually said graca over It. And then. Invited to what to another might have been a pointer. If not a realising sense, he folded hla hand*, lay back In his chair and went placidly to aleep. Gently, the Courier-Journal tried to awaken him. It whispered Its doubts; but into a dull, cold ear. It tugged his sleeve, which did not prove a raveled sleeve of care, but a eleeve of Indiffer ence. Not until a giant cracker ex ploded beneath him did ha arouse him self and ask for particulars. Mr, Frank 8. Hastings. Mr Cleve land's executor. Is a young man and purely a man of business. He had been easy fruit for a stick regue like Brandenburg, who began hi* Amflrtence game hv an offer of Are hundred dol lars rank lb# Cleveland estate for a letter which ha aald he had—-one of three purposed by the ex-president— and 41 per rent of whatever ha got .... the ISth day of October. .. D. l*t>*. at 11 o’elock In the forenoon, at which ttm* the nil creditors may at tend. prove thetr claim*, appoint a trus tee. examine the bankrupt, and transact such other busts ess as may preferlv com# before said meeting. The bankrupt Is resulted to be present on that day for examination. ALEXANDER PROTOFIT. Referee tn Bankruptcy. Thla October 8. IMS. NOTICK of First Meeting at Creditors In the District Court ef the DnlteL Ft a tee tar the Western Dbrislon of the Southern District of Georg!*- Tn Bank' ruptcy. . In the Matter of J. J. Hill. < p, r * — To the creditors of J. J. TTTY1. of Mc Rae. In the Countv of Telfair, eng dis trict atbremtd. a bankrupt: Notice 1* hereby riven that on the 6th day of October, A. D. 1»M. the mid J. J. Hlb woe duly adjudicated bankrupt and the first meeting of bis eredttgta win he held at Macon, tn Bfbh Cminfr. Geor gia. In the Grand Gr«va House BulbBor. os tha 16th gay of October. A. D 1t«g. at TO o'cfcvk In the forenoon, at which time the nil creditors may attend, peeve thetr elehnir. areefnt a trustee, eramtoe the bankrupt, and transact such othor Ihustneea as may properly come her or* wtd meeting. The bankrupt I* required to be preseat eg that day fur examina tion. September, l*ot. STATE OR GEORGIA, Bibb County.—To G. U Nelson; Mrs. Jimmie Nelson va. Geo. I* Nelson. Divorce. You. Goo. L. Nelson, the defendant, are hereby required personally, or by at torney, to be and appear at tha next superior court to ba held In and for said county on the flmt Monday In February naxt, then and there to answer the plaintiff's demands In an action of di vorce, ns in default thereof tha court will proceed aa to Justice shall appertain. Witness the Honorable W. H. Felton. Judge of *^1 ooart ® 28th day of ROBT A. NIBBET, Clerk. Immediate Possession. 11 Hill Pabk St., 7-r $27.50 210 Duncan Ave., 6-r $15.00 180 Highland Ave.. 6-r $20.00 688 Columbus Road. 9-r $15.00 108 First St.. 6-r $25.00 First and Arch Sts,. 8-r $50.00 Cleveland Ave., 6-r $18.00 530 Washington Ave., 4-r .$20.00 101 Clayton St.. 5-r $18 00 221 Duncan Ave.. 6-r $20.00 406 Ross St., 6-r ..$25.00 *08fJfc>#e Ft. *-r. v .,.,.$22.50 116VCleveland Avel 8-3*.!. $20.00 309 7 Carling Avg„ft6-iC*.i. J..$20.00 128 Rembert Ave.. Vr.7........$2500 45 White St., 6-r $12.50 Lilac St.. 6-r $ 8.50 120 Grace Ave.. 6-rO.lINA.v..$12.50 •135 Piedmont Ave., 5-r/.. $14.00 JORDAN REALTY CO. Real Estata, Insurance and Loans. Phono 1130. Fourth Nat. Bank Bldg. For Sale I have a "Jamb-up" seven-room house, with all conveniences, and close In, for $5,000.00. located! on the car line. This Is good value. FOR RENT—A FEW LEFT. Beach ave., 6 rooms, large lot....$24.00 210 Carling ave., 6-r., new cottage- 22.60 742 Collego at.. 8-r 40.00 lia Duncan ave., 6-r., new .22.60 419 Duncan ave., 6-r and'stable.... 20.00 4(7 Duncan., 4-r. and stable 20.00 «w4 Elm st.. 8-r 25.00 114 Lynn nv#., 7-r 22.50 761 Plum, 8-r 85.0.) 406 Ross, 7-r 25.00 408 Ross, 7-r 25.00 Frank B. West Real Estate and Insurance, S. S. Parmelee % Company, Carriages. Bugglre, Wagons. Carta Harness. Sadd Jos, Blcjrclaa. Baby Car riages, accessories. • Largest stock In th* South to select from. A pleasure to serve you. 8. 8. PARMELEE CO. Macon, Ga. ALBERT MoKAY, • Maker of Men’s Clothes, Cherry St., Macon, Ga. (KE WINSHIP HERBERT SMA^T WINSHIP & SMART, INSURANCE. ACCIDENT. HEAX/TH. FIRE- Washington Block. ARCHFTECTO. GURRAN R. ELLIS, ARCHITECT. Office phono 239; residence phone 2819. Offices: 4. 6 and 6 Elfls Building. Cherry St., Cotton Ave. and Flrat 8L Macon, Os. FRANK R. HAPP, Architect. ' 1 Office: Rooms 22 and 23 Fourth Na tional Banw Dulldlnd- Telephone—Raa. 632; Office 990. ALEXANDER BLAIR, Architect. Office Phone 71. CHARLES A. CALDWELL, Civil Engineer. WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room Water supply, water power, sewer- je and municipal engineering. Re ports. plans, specifications, estimates and superintendence. Office Phone 1142. Reeldence phOne 3288. P. E. DENNIS. Architect. Rooms 703-4-5-6 American National Bank Bldg. Phone 962; Residence phone 2747. ~ CARLYLE NISBET, •Architect. oiric. Then. <Si. Grand Bldg. Residence 441. Macon, Ga. CONTRACTING AND BUILDING. W. W. DeHAVEN, General Co Residence phone 696. General Contractor and Builder* professi6nal cards For Sale 650-acre farm near Barncsvllle, Pike county, Ga. High state cultivation, with plenty wood and running water. 1080 acren In iBtirke and Jenkins counties. Ga. Best cotton section In state. Land will produce 1 bale cot ton to acre. Well watered and wood ed. Good Improvements. Investigate thla. Tho Vameqp Hotel and three acres of old historic ground at Indian Spring, Qa. A SURE WINNER. Come to aee ma SI’S acrea near Forsyth, Ga. IT'S ALL RIGHT. 10 acres and 7-r. dwelling near city. Can make It “ ** deed to^thla would make yotr home." Home funds cent. 25. acres. To have *Mn Knur Inside poe •otrKfel at *‘home, a 1 l’cfl Ms flmje at 7 Geo. W. Duncan, Manager DR. M. M. STAPLER, Eye, Ear, Non and Throat Doctors’ Fleor. American National Bonk Bldg, Office Phone. 2712; residence, 1843. OCULIST AND AURIST. DR. J. H. SHORTER, Kye, Kar, Nose and Throat "The Grand’’ Bldg., next to Court Hou Phqncs: Office, 972; residence, 950. _ »*. m. vurri. Graduate Optician. <81 Cherry at. EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat. DR. FRANK F. JONES. Osteopath. 854 Second at. Phone 920 and 8688. PHYSICIANS ANO SURGEONS. Phones: Office, 2554; Residence, ’ 1468. NOTICE Of First Meeting of Creditor*. In the Dtetrlct Court of the United States for the Western Division of the Southern District of Georgia. In Bank ruptcy. In the matter of William Ben- at* Arnold. Bankrupt. In Bankruptcy. To th# creditors of William Senate frooldj of Pulaski County, OeorgU, and district aforesaid, a bankrupt: Notice U hereby given that on tha 6th day of October. A. D. 1908. the said William Senate Arnold waa duly adju dicated bankrupt, and the flrat meeting duly sdJu r ___ — —“st meetlnL of hta creditors wilt be hetd at Macon, la Bibb County, C ~ House aunty, Georgia, tn the Grand Opera — Build!ne, on the 15th day of Oo- tober. A. D. 1909, at 9 o'clock In the fore noon. at which time tlie said creditors may attend, prove their elafiftx, appoint a trustee, examine the bankrupt, and transact such other business os may property come before sold meeting. The bankrupt Is required to be present on ml day tor examination. ALEXANDER PROUDFTT, TM. October ftS? h This OrtotMT L IN*. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Subscribers changing their residence, please send orders for change of address to the office or phone 76. Changes will be made at once. In order to receive paper promptly next day, changes should be in by 5 o'clock. A. TILL JONES, Manager Circulation. European Hotel MACON, GA. Rooms, Restaurant and Cafe Table excellent at Popular Prices. Everything New, but tho Name. M. O’Hara, Prop. L D. Craw ford, Manager. Brown House Opposite Union Depot—MACON, GA. American Plan F. BARTOW STUBBS, Froprt.Lr. F. W. ARMBTRONO, M.n.g.r, aioaaiARAiuRSAD. ArrtV " °* Mrt ' dally. tl:16|Ti dally Jf. Sun. only.. ?:n» * <Sa,ljr *®»**** I6 X d’l/ex. 8un. dally W. W. HARDWICK. Q. A., 001 Cherry it. MACON, DUBLIN A UAVANNA RAIL- __ Trams at Mseon. Effective March 16» 190*. Leave. ... Ho. 20 Washington Block. Hour#: 9 to 10 kTHC 12 to l and 6 to 6 p. m. Telephone con- nectlony at office and residence. DR. J. J. SUQF.RS, Permanently located. In the special- Ues venereal. Lost, energy restored. Female Irregularities and poison oak. Address in confidence. DR8. J. M. ft B. HOLMES MASON, OR. J. E. WALKER. Dentist. -Associated with Dr. Johnson. Oi Commercial Bank Bldg., Phone 619. ATTORNEY* AT LAW. ROBERT L. BERNER, Attorney at Law. Arn ' r "* n N»Uod,i Bank Tralna arflv. and depart from Southern "**■* • A. STREYEn. fi. S. & F. RY. Schcdula Effectlv. Jim. 7, 1M*. DEPARTURES! UilO a. m. No, Thro.flh Train to El 0 ’!?* °¥ Tl ®* Dbaervatlsn Bar- v c r%d.iir o coj’. bite b’nrlxurs. ’ 4 *®«\ *"•!*?• ®* "Shoe-Fly,•• Ma- wFWag’AJagHiJyj; Jacksonville via Val.iosta. 8uUd {% ^°S. H."g5*u c pKi Makes conneuUon at JadtaonSSi - in norldo. -fflj • £SiWvS' , T.?U l S'd‘*A.Vt lc - ARRIVALS: N#> ^ "Georgia South- f 'InJ L S!£ui l£3 r ,Ksn : # u “'« t *> ' vSniati.' *' rnrn ♦ 4^ p. m.. No. 2, from Pslatka * I '«5tann\1,te rt to &“'* t '* r RHOOES. Gen. Peat. AgenL Macon. Ga. ♦ Jacl t