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TEE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH:
FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 9, 1008
The Macon Telegraph
Published Every Morning by
THE MACON TELEGRAPH Fl'B. CO.
Ml Mulborry Street, Meoon, Oa.
0. E. PENDLETON,
PRESIDENT AND MANAGER,
THE TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA.
THE GOVERNOR*ELECT.
.It woo a. foregone conclusion that
Jlon. Jtoaejfii U. Brown would
elected Oowrnor without appreciable
f.ppeeltlon a/Ur having wen the
nomination la the June primary.
Hia people of Georgia are a fair*
minded people, and having fought out
the question of the governorship In a
fcetly contested primary the great
mass of thoae who opposed Mr.
Brown bowed graaefuUy ta the will
et the majority, and hie election waa
made euro. As might have been e*
ported, a 2fght rota waa polled, but
• .* ijy thoucands more of votes oould
l avs been rolled If It had seemed nee-
Osatcr.
There am always some who da not
r c lnd seriously party obligations, and
who l*«»It without pretext ar excuse.
There were aome such In this csss,
1 I ut they worn not numerous enough
jto spur the great Democratlo hosts
Wr th i (Rata ia action. The voting
'was light and listtasi becauss there
was no danger to the nominee.
Hon. Joseph M. Brown la now the
Hovernor*sleet. Although some bit*
(ernes* wsa aroused during the pri
mary, those we>o were disappointed In
the result In June will find that the
paw tlovernor, te be, Is a man of
broad culture, business aoumen. anil
endowed with good common hard-
horse sense. He has grown on those
who bsvs known him. and ha will
grow on those who do not as yet know
him well. He will make a good and
acceptable Governor.. The time for
crltlolsms has passed until he hu a
chance to make good by the adminis
tration of hta office. Of course no man
has ever been able to please all men,
but the new Governor, when he Is In
ducted Into office, will measure up
to the best standards for that high
place.
Now, all together for a greater and
bettor Georgia.
"PERNICIOUS ACTIVITY.'*
President Roosevelt's order remov
ing the ot>llector of customs and the
special Treasury agent at Port Huron,
Midi., Tor pernicious activity In pol
itico" la to be commended as just and
aahitary In Itself, while at the tame
time It compels admiration as an ex*
rellssit stroke of politics.
It may not altogether distract at
tention fro® the President's own
"pernicious activity.** particularly If
he should go the length of taking the
stump for Taft, but It will at least
rhow that ha sometimes disapproves
In Mi subordlnatss of what he has
been eo conspicuously guilty himself.
After using the w4>o!e power of Ms
position to forco the nomination of
Ten, he has since made himself the
centre of the campaign-end oven of
the mud-allnglng—In the determined
effort to elect the Republican candi
date. His oourse la not such as be*
comes the President of thb United
Wales but auoh as befits the mere
partisan leader of the Republicans.
The offense with which the collector
at Port Huron waa charged ta de
mending political asseesmenta from
the classified employes at the custom
house, but effort* of thle sort to oom-
paao the nomination and election of
Tart are nothing new. "TYe imag-
in*,” frankly observes the New York
Kverdng Post—which la supporting
Taft—That the collector at Port Hu-
r*n may be astonished to find him*
self brought up with a round turn.
Pr*ceding the Chicago convention, tho
Pedant officeholders throughout tha
country were exceedingly active. The
Federal machine as a whole waa be
ing vigorously operated In behalf of
VIr. Taft, end collectors and *post-
ntggtere asalously rounded up dele-
sates without suffering a word of re
buke from the President or the heads
of the departments. Since the con
vention there has also been some po
litical activity which Mr. Bryan, at
)< s uat. would describe as pernicious.
No leas a parsonage than the Frost-
r*nt hlmrelf has descended Into the
arena and baa taken advantage of hla
position to aeouro a wide hearing for
hla arguments for Mr. Taft and
against Mr. Bryan and Mr. HaakelL
It la not to be wondered at that sub
ordinates have supposed that the rale
against nativity was suspended pro
REDUCTIO AD AB8URDUM.
| "No man with open eyes.** eays ihe
Now Tortr Evening Poet, "can doubt
tha existence of a large body of
voters, In thle pert of the country at
least, who are •irmgly opposed to
President Roosevelt end what he
stands for. Many of them have lost
confidence in Ms morals. More ot
them have been repelled by hta man*
nert. still more of them have been
disgusted and alarmed by his methods.
If ho were himself a candidate, they
would vote against him; and as it la,
great numbers of them would like to
cast their votes eo as to convey the
most earnest protest possible against
Roosevelt Ism, and to erect strongest
lUifcKuarrin against Its recurrence.
Hon shall they do IIT*
Now. It would seem to the average
normal and Intelligent man that the
way to renounce Roosevelt and all his
works is to vote the Democratic ticket
In the coming national election, but
the New York Evening Poet, with all
Ha professed dislike and dread of
Roosevelt, Is unable to arrive at that
simple solution of the problem.
The Evening Post actually figures
it out that the way to rebuke end put
en end to Rooseveltlsm le to vote for
the men whom Roosevelt rfbose to
carry on "my policies" until he him-
•If resumes the reins of government
at a later duy! The trouble with
Hryan, says our extraordinary New
York contemporary. Is that "If elected
lie promises to he more Roosevelt la n
then Rvjscvelt,** end therefore, In or
der to have an end of Roosevelt I am
we must fall In with the scheme of
th* father of that "Urn" to keep It
alive for all time.
In order to be guile fair, let us
quote. Discussing "the plan to bring
Roosevelt back to the Presidency
after an interval," the Evening Post
stye:
Thera Is really no concealment
of this. It hsa king been, not only
tha dream, hut the avowed pur
pose of the President's Inti
mates . . . The Idea Is that
any administration must appear
despicable compared to the glo
ries of Roosevelt; that any sue*
reason will make a mess of ||;
and that the people will rise up
four yeara from now to demand
that the country plaoa Itself
again In the hands of Its one
really great man. . . .
Thle raises a serious question
for those who wish to make their
votes count to the utmost against
Roosavelt and Rooseveltlsm. Who
would ba tha mors likely, Taft or
Bryan. to pave the way for Roose
velt's re-entry . Into the Presi
dency f Which one would be the
more apt to disappoint the coun
try, and to give apparent weight
to the demand for eight pears
more of Roosevelt? . . Grant
ing to .Itryan unsuspected and
unproved qualities as an adminis
trator. ho Is plainly not the man
to unite his party end put able
men at Its head. In this sense,
he would almost surely "msko a
mesa of It." and promote thereby
the hopes and projects of those
who look for n Roosevelt return
from Elba. Mr. Taft, on the
other hand, would almost as cer
tainly so enamour the country of
gentlemanly manners, and steady,
sure-footed methods. In the White
House that Its being turned back
Into a shooting-gallery would be
highly Improbable. it {« a rtfrft
perception of this truth which
makes some people think that the
President really deslrse the elec
tion of Rryan. as furnishing more
water for Ms mill I
As the astute reader will observe,
the gist ot this remarkable argument
l« that as Rryan Is merely another
pea out of tho Roosevelt pod—"mors
Roosevelt Isn than Roosevelt—ha would
still rurther disgust the country with
Rootsvaltlstfl, and thus "pave the
way*' for the return to power of
Roosevelt himself! Therefore U Is
the solemn duty of all haters of Rooee.
veltlem to vote for Roosevelt's gen
tlemanly mannered and easily man
aged tool, Taft.
All this flno-apun nonsense shows
that when people are determined to
do a fbolfalk thing It Is easy to invent
epecloue reasonings In favor of thatr
courts, and that evsn the Inevitable
descent to the reductio ad absurdum
has no tarrora for them. It ahould be
plain to the dullest comprehension
that the overwhelming election oi
Rryan or any other Democratlo can
didate would Inflict upon Rooseveltlsm
a blew from which It could never re
cover. even If Bryan, or any other
successful Democratic candidate,
should not give general satisfaction
and should therefore fall of re-elec
tion.
Tt Is slrnlflcant that Nlok Long-
worth kept silent for three days be
fore he repudiated the report that he
had nominated Roosvelt for two more
tens* But the boomerang cams back
too hard and strong and he had to
Tsddy Roosevelt Isn't giving tha
hoys of Ala generation a "Square deal"
when he coaeplree to form a trust to
monopolise tha Presl deucy for sixteen
I *ar* to come.
foetal seem to mind it half as
much as be thought he did.—Al-
* bony Herald.
Just naturally fell into it.
Well may Bryan ask whether ha te
running against one man or two, and
add: T believe H la degradation of
th# office of President to make that
office which belongs to all the peopfe.
a party asset tn the hands of one
party for one man who represents
part of that party and 1 Insist that
tht American people ought to have a
right to elect their officials without
dictation from Washington, and I ash
the President that after he haa nom
inated Mr. Taft that he stand aatda
and let us tight It out before tho
American people on •«? platforms.**
campaign managers _
pressed by the fact that Chauncey
Dep«w Isn’t making any speeches
—Savannah Press
Poeeltdy Chauncey** absence from
the stump ta due to the fact that ha
prefers hie eggs on toast rather than
am-ed In Impromptu and malodorous
omelette.
‘A single phrnoe cent Blaine tho
Presidency," ears tho Washington
Foot "Another phrase might work
aim liar havoc tn thin does contest."
An attempt to close Son-In-Law
Nick's mouth after ha "put hts foot
In ft"
The trouble with Theodore Rooee-
vett la that being moat fallible ha be*
, Ueva* himself Infallibly
A CURIOUS CA8E.
Mary Johnson, who has lived fifteen
years la mala attire as Frank Wood
hull, and w’hoss aax waa discovered
when she was held up oa Ellis Island
after landing from tha American liner
New York, has been discharged and
allowed to go out Into tha world to
esrri her living in trousers.* "The
board of special Inquiry cams to the
conclusion that Miss Johnson was a
desirable Immigrant and ahould ba al
lowed to win her livelihood as she
saw fit.”
Mlse Johnson, who Is en rout# for
New Orleans In male attire, and will
go to work there as Frank Woodholl,
is aided In her disguise by "a mua.
tache of proper proportions," and <!•■
dares that aha has no fear of detec
tion from adults but that experience
has taught her to beware of children,
who often seem to have an Intuitive
recognition of her eex.
Bite defends her course on the
ground that she has more freedom,
ran drees more cheaply, and can more
readily obtain remunerative employ
ment. Doubtless this Is all true, and
the wonder Is not that she should de
sire to resume her life of disguise but
that the authorities should have con
sented.
Ordinarily a woman in* male attire
Is arrested as a disorderly person,
and most people are under the Impres
sion that In most countries there are
statutes forbidding the praotlce, based
on the Mosaic law which reads: "The
woman shall not wear that which
pertalneth unto a man, neither shall
a man put on a woman's garment: for
all that do to ara abomination unto the
Lord thy God.">
A NEGRO DOLL FACTORY.
At the convention of the Colored
National Rapist Association In Lex
ington, Ky-. last week the question of
the desirability of negro dolls for ne
gro ehildren was favorably dismissed,
and th* ban was put upon the popular
French doll with Ita blue eye*, whlte-
and-red cheeks, and flaxen hair. It
was announced that the negro (Bap
tist publishing house, at Naahvllle,
Tenn., at the request of tha church
authorities, had already undertaken
the manufacture of black dolls. The
convention at Lexington, which Is said
to have Included prominent negroes
from every part of the country,
adopted th* following resolution!
Whereas our people for half a
century, because of the uncomely
and deformed feature* of negro
dolls, have spent! thousands of
dollars on white dolls for Christ
mas, etc., therefore be It
Resolved, That do here and
now give our endorsement and
hearty approval of the negro doll
factory and not only urge th*
patronage of the people of our
churches as Baptists, but of the
race at large throughout tha
United State*.
As a means of promoting race dis
tinctiveness and cultivating a proper
race pride, this must be commended
as a movement (n the right direction.
But unless Mere has been a greater
change of attitude among the masses
of tho negroes In recent yeara than
haa appeared, the promoters of the
negro doll factory would eeera to be
likely to lose their money.
The sad experience of the enter
prising oltlsen who tried to sell Bibles
with pictures of negro angels comes
to mind. Believing that hie was a
great idea and that a fortune was
easily within his grasp, this man
caused an edition of the hlble to be
printed In which all the Illustration*
represented th* angels with black
face* and woolly hair. Taking a largo
supply to a negro camp meeting, he
delivered an eloquent address deelar
Ing that justice was done at last and
that Jim Crow Blblea were a thing of'
th* past., The negroes fell over each
other to get a look at the new Bible
that "gave them a square deal," but
as soon as they eaw the pictures they
hurried away, and not a copy was
•old. Anxiously Inquiring the oause
of their displeasure, the disappointed
and ruined author of the new idea
learned that colored angels were not in
favor among people who confidently
hoped to be white In another world.
Negro dolls would of course not
Involve the sacrifice of this pleasing
expectation of a post-mortem meta
morphosis, but aatuta observers will
not be surprised to learn that the
black doll factory Is encountering a
simitar prejudice.
"Mr. Ksrn and Col. J. Hamilton
Lewis, who went hungry through
South Carolina, can appreciate keenly
the significance of the 'full dinner
pall* campaign cry," says the Charles
ton Post. Yes, but what Is the mat
ter with the proverbial Carolina hos
pitality?
It ahould not be necessary, tn Ma
con. at least, to surround with police
men the sheath-gowned young ladles
who will ba on exhibition at the State
Fair. The gallant Georgians who will
attend will no doubt oonfine them
selves to looking.
There Is an element of danger In
herent tn the Democratic primary
that should not be overlooked. It
tends to make the people dUregmrdful
of their obligation to vote In the gen
eral State election.
Still, there U good reason why Ed
itor Victor Rosewater, head of the
Republican bureau, did not recognise
the Republican platform when tt met
him In the road. Why should he since
Candidate Taft is not standing on tt?
W. Yancey Carter urns "done
Brown."
- it ever be with the bolter.
A contemporary spoaka of the mis
take that inferior actors make in un
dertaking the "rqli" of Hamlet. Yes,
indeed. They can neither eat It nor
•wap their share of tha box office re-
eeli-ta for one they can eat
Governor Brown's majority Is not as
big as It should bare been, but "It
will serve," as Mercntlo said when
bloody Tybalt punctured him.
Pendleton's Lift of Stephens.
London Baturday Review.
Alexander H. Stephens was one of
the most Interesting personalities of
the American ClvJl War. He was vice
president of the short-lived southern
Confederacy. A remarkable mau In
many respects, his gift of eloquence
gave him an almost unique position as
a lawyer, and his constitutional views
lend a certain piquancy to the record
of his public life. He was not so
much concerned In the retention or
abolition of slavery when he assisted
to fight the north os in the assertion
of state rights. He was their moat
powerful advocate, and he supported
the war In so far as It was Intended to
uphold the right to secede. When the
result of the war showed that might
and his theory of right wer* on oppo
site sides he accepted the event, how
ever unwelcome, as conclusive. It is
not easy for us today to understand
all that was Involved In the triumph
of the north and the placing ot the
whites of the south at the political
mercy of their former slaves. We get
an Idea from this biography. "A great
life full of tragedy both public and
private, yet also full of triumph and
of usefulness" Is Mr. Pendleton's sum
ming up. A scholar, « man of deep
political learning, of profound knowl
edge of constitutional history, of mod
erate opinions and temperate spirit"
the Haturday Review called him some
forty years ago when noticing his
"Constitutional View of tho Late War
Between the States." This life Is worth
reading first as a study of the man,
secondly for the light It throws on the
struggle between north and south.
• Col. W. F. Stewart's Crime,
New York Sun.
It is now clear that Coi. William F.
Stewart of the artillery corps has no
defence to the charge of remaining In
the service contrary to the wishes of
President Roosevelt. Tho heart dis
ease of which Coi. Stewart has been
accusncd by two army specialists 1»
by no means new; h« was afflicted as
long ago an the day in July 1877, when
liu won his captain's brevet for gal
lantry in a stubborn battle with the
N**z Perce Indians at Clearwater, Ida-
ho * *hc rules ot tho medical
code Col, Htewsrt was a condemned
and disabled man when he went Into
action. He has disregarded the warn
ing and persisted In his obduracy ever
since, truculently drawing active pay
and* adding Insult to injury by thwart
ing the president.
In view of the following diagnosis
of the retiring board doctors It la dif
ficult to see how Col. Stewart can
continue his Imposture any longer:
"A careful repeated examination as
to the heart shows that the apex Is
diffuse, extondlng over an area about
two Inches square, and Is displaced
downward and to the left of Its natural
position. The sounds are distant and
lack normal force, there Is no arrhyth
mia. There is a murmur, systolic In
time, heard very distantly over tho dif
fuse apex area; not heard so well at
the base and transmitted horizontally
around the chest wall, principally to
tho right. Thle murmur gives unmis
takable evidence of nn Incompetent
mitral valve, which when the heart
contracts doe* not completely dose,
allowing tho blood to recirculate Into
the left oraclq and pulmonary veins."
The doctors also find that Col. Stew-
art'e right ey# Is "practically blind."
It !> now evident that he saw with hU
left eye the eight rattlesnakes which
he killed at Fort Grant during th* aura-
mer.
The Georgia Editors
Envys Bailey's Touch.
Columbus Enquirer: Hcarst'a charge
against Joe Bailey Is that he borrowed
18.000 from the Standard Oil Co. Won-
der how many other men would make
•uch a loan If they, could.
Getting Their Eye* Open.
Athens Banner: Rome people of this
country had come to believe that Theo.
dor* Roosevelt waa made of better
clay than any one else and that It was
Impossible for him to do wrong. They
wilt have their eyes opened thoroughly
If they live a little while longer.
Train the Roosters to Crow.
Augusta Herald: It Is none too early
to begin training the democratlo roos
ter* to crow victory. We should have
a well-trained rooster chorus ready by
the time wo need it. which will be on
November 4.
Can Trust Hie Son with Trusts,
Rome Tribune-Herald: Theodor*
Roosevelt. Jr.. Is going to work in a
carpet factory, if he beats ths car
pets as Industriously as Ms fathsr
beats the air, he will be a great suc
cess—Macon Telegraph.
Our Information Is that the factory
he ta working for. belongs to the car
pet trust. Strange that such * trust
A Work of Art.
Amerlcus Tlmes-Recorder: Lewis'
pink whiskers and variegated vests
seems to have entranced Vice Preelden
Hal Candidate Kern. He has Jim
Ham as a steady traveling companion.
Kern doubtless loves to feast his eyes
upon a genuine work of unadulterat
ed art.
Who Wlll They "Dor
Brunewlck Journal: There's plenty
for everyone to do In Brunswick. If
they are really In earnest about do
ing. Get busy and you'll be happy.
Gain to Politic*.
Rome Tribune-Herald: Former Ren.
ator McLaurin says he Is out of politics
forever, and there seems to be a an*,
rdclon abroad that politics has left him
forever.
Receiver of Stolen Good*.
Marietta Journal: Hearst has In Ms
possession stolen letters, and used
them to damage hie political enemies.
If a man buy* stolen property, know.
Ing It to be stolen. Isn't he as guilty
as the thief?
8t. Petersburg's Disgrace.
A twentieth century cholera epidemic
In one of th* gTeat European capitals
ta a glaring anachronism unless our mod
em theories of pathology are radically
wrong. In Its Inception at least cholera
»* essentially a ftlth disease, a product
ef overcrowding sisM foul eun-eundlnga
The fact that tha St Petersburg's au
thorities have not been able to stay the
CWMNttMI. I. th.lr oily.
No *rwt munMiw'.ty cu crtUnly
NMlf onUut tho ooaulon.1 *».
other hand, a city outride the tropics
that rennet assure It Inhabitants against
the growth Into epidemic proportions ef
»fgH an infection ta. from a sanitary
Mint af vfegf, Us a state ef primitive
foibarUra la exact a science as ta mod
em medietas. Ita disrorertee of tha mat
gfty years hare trade ImpoeeiMe a repe
tition of the cholera epidemic* which
ravaetd Europe end America In the nine
teenth eoaiury.—New York Glebe,
GEORGIA RAILROAD,
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STANDARD Oil. COMPANY
(IuNTHWed)
dtttttitmmtmtmtutmmmmtmmimmmwwnmutuuuV
Certificate of Authority
Commercial National
Bank
MACON, GA.
Opened August 5tli, 1908
Office of Controller of tha Currency,
Waehlngton, P. C.. Aug. I. 1908..
Whereas,’ by satisfactory evidence pre
sented to the undersigned It has been
made to appear that "Tho Commercial
National Bank of Macon." In the City
of Macon, in the County of Bibb, and
fltate of Georgia; has compiled with all
nf the provisions of th* Statutes of the
United States, required to be compiled
with before an association shall be au
thorised to commence the business of
II “no\v‘'tHBR15POIIB. T. Thonuu. P.
Kane. Deputy and Acting Comptroller of
the Currency, do hereby certify that
"The Commercial National Bank of Ma
con." In the City of Mnrnn, In the County
of Blhb. and Rtnt* of Georgia, Is author?
Ized to commence the business of Banking
.... *— « *•-- «*• htm-
as provided by flection Fifty —..
dred and sixtv-nin© of the Revised 8tat<
lee of th* United Btetee.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF witness
my bend end Seal of this office, this
first dny of August, 1908.
T. P KANE
Deputy and Acting Comptroller of the
Currency.
_ BEAL:
Currency Bureau
Real
of the
Comptroller
of the
Currency
Treasure Depart-
NOTICB of First Meeting cf Creditor*.
In the District Court of the United
State* for the Western Divirion of the
Bankrupt. In Bankruptcy.
trlct aforesaid. a
I Notice le hereby given that on the Ith
day of October. A. D. 1908. the said R.i
I A. 8mlth wm duly adjudicated bankrupt,!
nnd that tho first meeting of hi* credit
or* will be held at Macon. In Bibb Coun
ty Georgia, In the Grand Opera Houm
Building, on the 19th day of October, i
A. D. 1909, at 9 o’clock In the forenoon, 1
at which time the *ald creditors may at
tend, prove their claim*, appoint a trus-
'tee. examine the bankrupt, and transact
aitch other burinees aa mny properly come
I before said meeting. The bankrupt la
required to be preaent on that day for
\iipilnutl<>n h
ALEXANDER PROUDFIT.
Referee In Bankruptcy.
Thle October *. 1901.
SALE OF LAND UNDBR DEED TO SE<
CURE DEBT.
•aid property good and sufficient titles
In res simple.
This tho 9th day of October, 1908.
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK OF
MACON,
Wadley Investment Co.
Real Estate, Insurance, Loans,
Grand Building, Phone 627.
FOR RENT *
Store. 414 Poplar St., three floors
and cellar. 888.50.
428 Carling Ave., 5 rooms. $88.00. •
Two-story brick store, oofner ex
press office alley and Fourth 8t., next
to union depot, immediate possession,
$75.00.
Possession October 1st
Very desirable two-story bouse, 878
Orange street, nine rooms and bath.
Toilet each floor and servant's house
in roar, $60.00 per month.
FOR SALE
Six room residence on Hardeman
avenue. Vinevllle, for sale to party for
home—$4,000.00.
Lot 70x210 on best section of Sum
mit avenue, North Highlands, shady
ride of street. Price $1,100.00. Can
arrange terms on this lot
WADLEY INVESTMENT CO.
Grand Brulding, Phone 627
no., th. und«rntrn«d, to.wtt: fh, Amer
loan National Bank of Meoon. a national
banking corporation under the laws of
tho United States, and tht Homs Sav
ing* Bank, a corporation under and by
virtue of the laws of Georgia, will sell
at public outcry to the highest bidder
for cash before th* courthouse door In
the county of Blhb, on th* first Tuesday
in November, 1948, the following described
lots *or parcels of land situate,
lying and being, tn th* East Macon dis
trict of Bibb county, Georgia, being a
8 a at of what Is known as ths Cornelius
Connell property, particularly described
as lots four €4) nnd flv* (I), In bloek
A. lots nine (9), seventeen (17). twenty-
-nd twenty-elx (111. m block
. (4), ten (10), eleven Ol>
thtrty*nlx (14). thirty-seven (17). forty-
one (41). forty-llv* (45), and forty-six
1(44), In block C. lots eleven (11), twelve
(12), and thirteen (11), In block to, with
a perpetual eaeement in tho street* and
alley* shewn on th* plot of the Cornelius'
O’Connell property made by II. D. Cut
ter. C. E.. for tho purpose of IngTeea end
erreoa to and from eaid lots. All of said
lots having teen act apart to Mid Daniel
O'Connell on the division of tht estate
of Cornelius O'Connett. and being shown
hr the told plat of H. D. Cutter, C. E..
which U attached to the report of the
ccmmtsefonera who divided said lands.
The debt secured by said deed with
G wcr of eat# being fourteen (14) gtrem-!
wry notes for the aggregate principal
sum of eleven hundred and elxty dollars
(fl.164.44), and the Interest on ratd four
teen note* up to th* first Tuesday In No-
ber. 194*. aggregating the gum of
.... hundred and thirty-four and 11-10#
dollars ($114.11), the total amount of
irtnrlpal and Interest being the sum of
vrrive hundred and ninety-four and 11-100
Jollars ($1.191.SI).
Twelve of Said promissory notes are for
the sum of twenty-Avn (fK.40) ddDaxw,
dated May 1, 19*4. and due on the
third day of each *uccoaalve month there
after, beetnntng with June *. IW4. and
ending May S. 190T. and one of eald
note* Is for tho principal t”.m cf three
hundred and ten dollar# ($119.00)7 dated
May 8. I9C*. and due May 2 IlOT; the
eald thirteen note* ore payable to the
order of the Unton Barings Bank A Trust
Company, and ar* now owned by the
American National Bank of Macon. The
other note Is for the rrlnclr*) sum of firs
hundred and fifty deltars (IS54.P4V dated
January 28th. I9CS. and due ninety (90)
nil a flop date, pi'shl* fo the tfome
Faring* Bank, and all of eald notea bear
interest from maturity at the rate of
debt per cent per annum. The afore
said deed to secure sold nctee ft exc-
cMtcd hv the salt Dan ffOswO In favor
of the said American National Bank of
scon, ahd the said Home Aavlnr* Bsnk
•d I* recorded In the r!erVa c*TVe of
Blhb superior court In hook 144, folt 0 14
The proceed* of said *alr are to he
eppltefi fo tho payment of said debt, the
iMrrert thereon, and to the expenses of
this proceetlng. tncVidlne ten per cent
upon eald principal and Interest os fee#
for attorney* a* provided tn ssld deed.
*h? nf
T V'
FOR RRNT.
Storage space. 99x207 and 79x89
witn Southern Railroad track facilities
In English Compress building; also
space 175x175 under shed suitably for
lumber storage or mill purposes.
„ Immediate Possession,
No. 451 Cherry street.
No. 541 Mulberry street
Store. Newman bldg.. First st
F ° urth street, with R. R.
track facilities; very desirable for any
class of builneas. J
Ground floor office. Fourth, near Chsr-
ry street.
Possession October 1.
The old "74" corner, 5th and Oemulgee.
Three email stores. Fifth street, near
Oemulgee.
Office of Postal Telegraph Company:
very desirable office location. J
DWELLINGS.
•-room dwelling. 457 New St.
7-room dwelling, Ross, near Ash at
4-room Cottage, Lynn av*.. Vinevllle.
For list of every class of real estate
for sale, or Information about loans on
and to be made on real estate, call at or
phone to office Grand Building.
$20,000 to loan on Improved Real
Estate fit 6 to 7 per cent, according to
amount and location.
H. HORNE,
Real Estate, Insurance and Loans.
Phons 454.
For Rent
Dwellings,
No. 87* Orange *t. 10-r ..,$40.00
No. ISO Second st.. 4-r 35.00
No. 8*1 Duncan ave., 5*r 80.00
No. 110 Duncan ave.. B-r........... ll.OO
No. 971 Oglethorpe St, 5-r..... 15.00
No. 293 Cedar st. 5-r..... 11.00
No. 0 Montpella ave., S-r 11.00
•torea.
No. 820 Second St... 140.00
No. 414 Fourth St 60.00
No. 458 Second at 55.00
No. 446 Poplar St 50.0
No. 40* Mulberry st •••••••••••••.. 30.0
Geo. B. Turpin Sons
Rea! Estate fnevrancet
No. 3B3 Third *t
Leans.
Phene 77.
FOR SALE
▲ well located plea# ot property oon-
ftfating of 7 houses renting for 144.00
per month, at $4,500.00. Can carry *
loan of $1,000.00 on it for three years
fit 7 per tent.
Wlfl be glad te have you call at
our office far oae ef our vent lists.
B. A* WISE
358 Second St.
WANTED
ilifflu* **• 1 "** > * 111 P n °** mHimn
VOX BALK 4
One eptendMbr lawotri plantation
afceonj very foot condition; would
mono grand country home. Forma In
9amdm. vacant
tota in different parti of etty. Several
Improved city lots that pay writ oa to-
veetmonta .
JONES REAL ESTATE
AGENCY
MAOON, DUBLIN A SAVANNA RAIL*
•40. 14 7:OOam| No. 19 11:09am
NO, 20...... iiOOpml No, 17 4:40pm
J. A. STREYER,
General Passenger Agent.
LOANS
Negotiated promptly on im
proved farms and city proper
ty on eaBy terms and at lowest
market rates.
If you need money call on ua
HOWARD M. SMITH & CO,
563 Mulberry 8L. MACON. GA.
62,800.000,00 SAFELY LOANED.
luring the last 16 years we have loan
ed $3,600,000.00 on Real Estate for home
and foreign Investors. Safest and most
profitable Investment.- Those desiring to
borrow or having money to Invest will
find tt to their Interest to see us.
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.,
Leon S. Dure
Banking and Investments.
Stocks, Bo ads. Real Estate, Mortgages
Macon. Ga.
Honey lo Lend on'
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
and very low rates on Mar
ketable securities.
Macon Savings Bank
VTO MULBERRY STREET.
Fot Rent
Immediate Possession.
11 Hill Park St, 7-r
210 Duncan Ave* 5-r
180 Highland Ave., 6-r
688 Columbus Road, 9-r
108 First St,. 6-r
First, and Arch Sts., 8-r
Cleveland Ave., 6-r
630 Washington Ave., 4-r....
101 Clayton St., 5-r
221 Duncan Ave., 6-r.
406 Ross St., 6-r
408 Ross St., 6-r..
Ill Cleveland Ave., 8-r
209 Carling Ave., 5-r
128 Rembert Av©.. 8-r..
45 White St., 6-r
Lilac St.. 5-r..
120 Grace Avo.,
135 Piedmont Ave.,
5-r...
..$27.50
..$16.00
..$20.00
..$15.00
..$2500
..$50,00
.$18.00
.$20.00
.118.00
.$20.U0
.$25.00
.$22.60
.$20.00
.$20.00
.$25.00
.$12.50
.$ 8.50
. $18.80
.$14.00
JORDAN REALTY CO.
Real Estate, Ineuranee and Loans.
Phone 1130. Fourth Nat. Bank Bldg,
For Sale
I have & "jamb-up" seven-room house,
with all conveniences, and close In, for
$6,000.00, located on the car line. This
Reach ave., 6 rooms, largs lot....$14.00
SIC Carling ave., 4-r., new cottage. 22.50
743 College at., 8-r 40.00
110 Duncan av#., 6-r., new..,,..,,. 22.50
419 Duncan ave., 4-r.. and stable.... 20.00
417 Duncan., C-r. and stable 20.00
«j* Kim st., 8-r 25.00
114 Lynn av#., 7-r,.., 22.50
753 Plum, s-r *5.00
406 Ross, 7-r 25.00
408 Rosa, 7-r..... 25.00
Frank B. West
For Sale
560-acre farm n^ar B&rneavllle, Pike
county, Ga. High state cultivation,
with plenty wood and running water.
Splendid new Improvement*. 'Write
for particulars. Map In office.
1080 acres in BtiTke and Jenklna
counties, Ga. Best cotton section In
state. Land will produce 1 bale cot
ton to acre. Well watered and wood
ed. Good Improvements. Investigate
this.
The Varner Hotel and three acres
of old historic ground at Indian!
Spring, Ga. A SURE WINNER. Come
to see me.
825 acres near Forsyth, Go. IT'S
ALL RIGHT.
10 acres and T-r. dwelling near city.
Can make it 25 acres. To have the
deed to this "In your Inside pocket"
•wouM make you feel at "home, sweet
Geo. W. Duncan, Manager
European Hotel
MAOON, GA.
Rooms, Restaurant and Cafe
Table excellent at Popular
Prices.
Everything New, but the
Name.
M. O'Hara, Prop. L D. Craw
ford. Manager.
Brown House
Oppeelte Union Depot—MACON, GA.
American
Plan.....
F. BARTOW eTUBBS. Proprietor.
V. W. ARMSTRONG, Mannawi
S. S. Parmelee
Company,
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Carta,
Harness. Saddles. Bicycles, Baby Car
riages. accessories.
Largest stock in the South to sslsot
from. A pleasure to serve you.
a 8. PARMELEE CO« Meoon. Go.
ALBERT MoKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothes,
Oherry St., Macon, Ga.
(KE WINSHIP HERBERT SMART
WINSHIP & SMART,
INSURANCE.
ACCIDENT. HEALTH. FIRS.
Washington Block.
ARCHITECT*.
CURRAN R. ELLIS,
Office phone 239; residence phone 2*19.
FRANK R. HAPP, ,
Architect.
Office: Rooms 22 and 23 Fourth Na
tional Banw Building.
Telephone—Re*. 532; Office 990.
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Phons 7L
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room
Water supply, water power, sewer
age and municipal engineering. Re
ports, plans, specifications, estimates
Residence phone 3288.
P. E. DENNIS. Architect.
CARLYLE NISBET,
a Architect,
Office Phone 459.
Grand Bldg.
Residence 441.
Macon, Oa.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
W. W. DeHAVEN,
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. M. M. STAPLER,
Eye, Ear, Note and Throat.
Doctors* Floor. Amortran National Bank
Bldg. Office Phone. 2745; residence, 1348.
OCULIST AND AURIST.
DR. J. H. SHORTER,
. . Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
"The Grand" Blag., next to Court Hou
Phones: Office, 972; residence, 950.
m
_ MTEfl TESTED FilEtt.
$$ „ Q. Q. COFFY,
Graduate Optician. §51 Cherry cl
EYK, EAR, NOSE, THROAT.
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat. Grand Bldg
OSTEOPATHY.
DR ’.F. R £ NK f* JONES, Osteopath.
>54 Second at Phone 920 and 8415.
PHYSICIANS AND SURQEONS,
DR. MARY E. McKAY, "
Commercial Bank Building.
Phones: Office, 2554; Residence, 1465.
DR. W. H. WHIPPLE,
Office, 672 Mulberry st., roomj 4 and 5,
Washington Block. Ilours: 9 to 10 a. hi..
12 to 1 and 5 to 6 p. m. Telephone con
nections at office and residence.
DR. J. J. 8UBRRS,
Permanently located. In the special
ties venereal. Lost energy restored.
“ u * iju.i energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison oak;
oure guaranteed. Address In confidence
with stamp, 510 Fourth sL, Macon, Ga.
OR8. J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON,'
Dentists.
154 Second at., Phone 15
DR. J. E. WALKER. Dentist
Associated with Dr. Johnson. Offl
Commercial Bank Bldg., Phon# 619.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
ROBERT L. BERNER,
Attorney at Law.
BiTmi* J 0 ** 707 American National Bar
<i. S. & F. RY.
Schedule Effective June 7, 1908,
DEPARTURES*
[ 11,M *• No. 1, Through Train to
Florida Cttrles Observation Par-
., 3 » rtn «
► 4;05 p, m.. No. 4, *'6hoo*Ffy t " Ms*
^ 12: 11 o m " No. 8, “Georgia South*
in* Hoorn Bl..puw cSr” romn
< sJnei&p
( ARRIVALS:
► *• 4, "Georgia South*
► ern Suwonee Limited.” from
► Jacksonville and PaUtka. local
► sleeper Jacksonville I# M#cor
► Pfieeengera cm remain In local
"" N# - *> -Woi *ly,» trem
► Jacksonville to Macon. w
[ C» B * RHODES, Gtn. Past. Ageri
► Macon. Qa.