Newspaper Page Text
THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 11, 1908
3 ^
Wave Top, Patent Calf
Blucher, with dull upper, only-
one of many pattern*, $3.50 to
$5.00.
Wave Top, Button Boot,
Patent Colt Vamp, with dull
Kid, or black Cloth top,
$4.00.
A semi-dress' Shoe, Blucher
cut, Patent Colt Vamp and
dull upper, plain toe, $4.00.
For the Woman of fashion,
Patent Calf, light welted soles,
beautifully arched last, $5.00.
Patent Vamp, Button Boot,
with brown or corn color cloth
top, snappy last, $5.00.
Patent Vamp and Dull Top
Blucher, with wave Top, but
one of many ,patterns, $3.00 to
$4.00.
LEADERS IN
SMART
FOOTWEAR
An Array of Footwear that Maintains Our Usual Standard of Excellence.
Our Autumn Styles of High Class Shoes is now practically complete. The ensemble is an exposition of
critically correct Footwear styles, and will be appreciated by all lovers of correct Dress.
Our new styles proclaim distinctly their superior features—in variety offered, value, and especially as con
cerns Quality of Materials used, Workmanship and Finish throughout—and each style is so priced as to
make its purchase most agreeable.
Make it a Point to See Our Display Before Purchasing
FASHIONABLE
FOOTWEAR
Properly Priced
OXFORDS
Good ones—all proper leath
ers; this season’s smartest cuts,
sizes and in izes to fit all feet,
$3.60 and $4.00.
PUMPS
The fit and style they all
talk abont, for street or dress,
all lcathors, all Dolors, $100 to
$5.00. i
MAINLY ABOUT PEOPLE.
I | tli” 1 Lord*God wfl/wtJS dw.y'lear.'from'' h .ln d ""u fci'hil'nj!
A c*bl«SEBm was received yesterday by; v' U T C ,*’? Tl?ev ta hav«'. U— “r*"', »“■*■/. 1,1 Auimu, ....
th. family, saylns that Mr. Jewett WJI- J.S^ndiSlVl’bl
Mr*, s. Forder Creclllu* has returned
to her hortie In Louisville, Ky., after a
pleasant visit to her sister, Mrs. Howard
«t— -*
Williams will i
scholarship course
Miss Harriotts Winchester has returned returned ^tt^thelr^home ^Atlanta after
home after a delightful summer spent i D endlng a week with Mr. and Mr*. A.
Jn Virginia with relatives and friends. SF Sewell * #
and Is Delna warmly welcomed In Macon. ‘
by her many friends after her long ab-| Mr p H# Ke amohd an d Mr. and Mrs.
,en f* | Michael Redmond bave returned to Arner-
Vialt to Mrs.
Red-
Dr. and Mrs. James T. Ross and family. n»Sa“ fter
who have been enjoying a dollghful and v ■ ■ .
extended trip through California and the Mra n * Harris of Atlanta, will
J , **L - W i* 1 J eturn ^ om ® n ^ ternot ^ spend* the* winter In Macon with her als-
4:30 o clock. ter. Mrs. Sj * H. Singleton, at the Ne-
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Minton leave f^bout' varr0, ’ —'
for Houston. Tex., wheie •ftl
reside in future. They hi
vapn friends In Macon, who
great very much to have them leave.
the 21st for Houston. Tex., wheie rtheyj Hanson and Mr. Chas. C.
~ J a r ? s V“n n jS%» wcek-.nd ..
Mrs. A. O. Bacon will be w|th Mrs.
Read at The Leon this winter.
Mr. and Mrs. George
receiving congratulate..-. _
at their home on Napier Heights Sat
urday of little Master and Miss McAr
thur.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crawford Stevens,
Mr. 'nnd Mr«. Jordan Masses, Mr. and
Mrs. • Richard ‘ Hines and Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Duro leave today for New York.
to Macon for
..adding, which
esting event of the 2lst
Mr/s. S. Dunlap Is being delightfully
-*=**•-*■* S? 1 .“SRSSSff."SUP'SKr iTf'JSS
morning at 10 o'clock. Reading room, success or failure, as the world look*
on the second floor of the same building,' at it. and the novelists work It out
In th«lr atari es. But In the cuentlaln
wrvle™ “ the chS iid to vf.lt tbi of llr ° - llnd character, which make the
reading room.
Positions Are Easily Secured by Our Students
We Cannot Supply the Demand, Because
Business Men Recognize the Superior
Merits of our sohool.
Stanley’s Business College
MACON, GA.
READ THESE TESTIMONIALS
Dawson, Ga., May 6, 1908.
Prof. G. W. H. Stanley,
Stanley's Business College, Macon, Ga.
Dear Mr. Stanloy:—
Miss Georgia Smith has been in my employ ns
stenographer and typewriter for some time. During the
past ten years I have had quite a number of stenog
raphers and typewriters, nnd am familiar with the work
done by the best in Georgia, Miss Smith is one of the
best I have ever known. She is fast and accurate, pains
taking and particular. Hor work is eminently satisfac
tory, in every particular. With regards, I am,
_ Yours truly,
M. J. Yocmans, (Lawyer).
Prof. G. W. II. Stanley,
Stanley’s Business College, Macon, Ga.
Dear Sir:—
With reference to your inquiry of Aug. 11th, for a
young man stenographer. On Aug. 15th, Mr. J. C. Mc
Clelland reported to us from you, and has been in our
office since that date.
You will remember that in our letter to you of the
11th wo substituted a list of requirements for the posi
tion in question, and you will undoubtedly be pleased to
know that this gentleman dlls them all satisfactorily.
He is gentlemanly, willing and cheerfully ready at all
times to do work for which ho is called upon.
This is, therefore, to express to yon our thanks for
the very prompt and satisfactory manner in which you
have attended to our wants and to say that from this
experience of yonr methods and selection of yonng men
yon send out, we shall be most happy at any time to
answer favorably any inquiry that may bo made of us
concerning you. Yours very truly,
MiHtown Lumber Company.
If Interested, Address:—
Stanley’s Business College
MACON, GEORGIA,
turr, at “The Cedars. 1
Mrs. J. H. Shorter, who has been en
joying a delightful trip north, is now In
Boston, and will return home about the
first or November.
Mr. and Mr*. Ireland who are taking
a delightful carriage trip from N
lenn., to their homo at Palm .
Fla.,^stopped over In the city recently
friends, air. nnd Mrs. A. M. Bewell. They
friends, Mr. anl Mrs. A. M. Bewell. They
have a lovely Jiome at Palm Beach and
fruUs. P n ° aPP 0 * roVM an,S other ttoP* 611 !
Mr. .and Mrs. G. P. Postell, who have
been spending the summer In the moun
tains of North Georgia, have returned to
Macon to live, nnd are at home to thalr
friends at 253 Washington avenue,
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Belbels, of Co-
lu:nl)l:i. S. <\, Mias Elnanor Fries and
Miss Elleir Norfleet, of Winston, N. C.,
will arrive on Friday to be hero until
after the WllUngham-Norfleet wedding,
and will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. B.
Willingham, Sr., on College street.
Mrs. M. M. Arnold. Mrs. Georgo Hulme
and Miss Kathleen Hulme arrive from
Athens Tuesday evening to attend the
MltchrlLAbnoy wedding on Wednesday,
the 14th.
pleasant
stay In Macon ’
iemi., u
noil, Jr.
. pi _______
her slater. Mrs. Mr-
Krnxvli!*,
Mrs.. J. II. Evans and children have
returned to the city after a pleasant trip
extending through Washington, D. C.,
Richmond. Va., Wilmington, N. C., and
other points of Interest In the state.
Th* One Best Vanilla "*
Is tho Blue Ribbon brand, the favorlto
with all Routhern housekeepers, hotels
and restaurants.
UNITED CONFEDERATE
VETERANS' REUNION
Atlanta, Ga., Ootobsr 22-23, 1908. Ex
tremely Low Rates Vi* Central of
Georgia Railway.
On account of the above occasion
tickets will bo sold October 22nd and
for morning trains 23<1, Anal limit Oc
tober 2Sth, at rate of one cent per
mile, plus 25 cents, for round trip;
rato from Macon $205. Five dally
trains Macon to Atlanta on conven
ient Ffh^dulps. Special coaches for
veterans will be provided on train
leaving Macon T:£5 a. m. October 22:
this train carries parlor car. For full
Information call at City Ticket Office,
dorner Second land Cherry etreet*
telephone 305, or address Jno. W.
Blount, district passenger agent, Ma
con, Ga.
IN THE CHURCHES
Christ Church.
Walnut street, between Second and
Third. Rev. John 8. Bunting rector, flev-
- - -- Trinity- Holy
East Macon Presbyterian Church.
Sunday school rally day services to be
gin at 10:30 a. m. The congregation and
friends of tho school Invited and urged *
attend. In addition to the Sunday sclu
exercises, there will bs a-short addre. _
on Sunday school work. No preaching at
11 a. m.- Preaching at 7:30 p. m. Brery-
body cordially Invited to both services.
South Macon Presbyterian Mission.
Sabbath school at 8:30 P. m., nnd
preaching at 4:30 p. m. The public In
vited and a cordial wolcomo for nil who
come.
Mable White Baptist Church.
Sunday School promptly at 0:40 a. m.
Preaching by pnstor. A. C. Pyle, at 11 a.
m. and 7 o'clock p. m. Members of tho
church nnd public cordially Invited,to at
tend these services.
enteenth Sunday after Trinity.
7:S0 a. m.; Sunday
morning Prayer and
__ waning prayer and
7:10 p. m.; Friday evening prayer, 5
p. m. Church open dally. Everybody
wsloome.
THE INSISTENT PROBLEM OF
THE RELATION OF THE BEXE8.
Why will people go on asking In
vidious questions? Now It Is a dis
tinguished professor and author wild
ly Inquiring of women in America
what they have flono with tho men
who were given Into their charge.
Tho anawer, which is not slow to
come, wraps all parties In Confusion,
Indeed, It Is a caso ns embarrassing
as the Sunday school catechism left
It when a tow-headed urchin, .naked
by the teacher who made him,
promptly replied, “The devil," and was
saved from tho rod only by his seat-
mate's explanation, “Please, elr, thi
boy that God made has gone home
with the stomach ache; this Is the boy
who was to go about like a roaring
The application may seem a little
extreme, but In view of the profes
sor’s strictures upon both the Ameri
can man nnd the American woman,
the odds of the catechism can hardly
bo misplaced. The “female creature"
seeking whom she may devour might
naturally send any man that Ood made
home Rick of some great ache. Nev
ertheless, will “the most material man
of his most material age," admit that
she made him? Will Adam play
Adam forever? Or will there come i
day when every creature that Ooi
made will stand on his or her own
responsibility and lay strength or
weakness at the Indlvdual's door? For
how many ngcB was It aald that wo
man was what man made her, a Have,
a plaything, a coy, sly, designing ere*-'
turo, winning her way by art* and
deceptions forced upon her by & reign
of brute strength with which she could
not cope. Hut from the hour that she
found herself did she not know bet
ter. and save her soul alive by the In
herent strength that no man gave and
no man could take away from her?
Must Women Be Cuitodlsne?
Now, In the transition stago, of
things, are women and wives to be
come the “custodians of men, not on:y
of their purses but of their *oul«?" Is
womap to be responsible for “the poor
creature, man, who ealltes forth from
his cot. In palace or his hotel apart-
Holy ment, or his steam-heated and child-
hoob less flat, a mere trained energy, drjanm-
Ing great truths and seeing little
ends?” D? no means. "Every man is
8t. Paul's Church,
No services Sunday except Sunday
school at 8:45 a. m.
Tattnall Square Preabyterlan Church.
Regular servteee at 1! r —Ml
_y fUv “
fervFe.
Mulberry Street Methodist Church,
Bundty school. 9:30 a. m.. O. A. Park,
superintendent: praachlng, 11 a. m. by th^
pastor, T. D. Bills; Bp worth League. «:4S
p. m . IT. D. Marshall, first vice president;
preaching at 7:30 by the pastor. Good
music; male quartette. A cordial welcome
to alL
Jnnse, superintendent, Prof. O. F. OH-
phant, teacher of the normal dass and
Mr. R. F. Burden for the new movement
class; 11 a. preaching by pastOr; «:4S
p. m.. Senior League devotional services,
led by Mr. Walter Jones; 7:30 p.; m.,
— • pastor; 4:00 p m. t Junior
a«er
singing.
PeTvlcc* “ere held ' on the second flnSr
of the Macon Public Library building,
opposite the Grand. Sun ley morning at
11 n>|neV. flohteet "Are Bln. IMsea-e
an heaven mede him. and sometimes a
great deal worse," but that worse Is
of hie own doing. No outside party
can put Into a man what Is not there,
nor make him what he does not make
himself.
The strong and notable book, which
has been perverted to all manner of
senastfonal ends by garbed passages,
cannot safely stand for more than the
comp'.lctty of both man and woman
In the crass materialism of the hour,
though primarily designed, no doubt
to show .the wife’s part In It The
calmer notices of the press are fain
to read through It atill that "the
stronger men havo prevailed through
all the moral abandon by force of their
strength," which directly Implies the
weakness In the man himself which
sent others to the wall. The real mor
al of the plcturn presented, fWhlch has
th* background of married life, knd Its
tremendous Influences and Agencies for
good or evlt to go upon, would be
rather the opnoalte of the one com
monly draWn from It. The men mein
ly go under In the rase, to be sure.
the game Is In his own hands,
and tho moat ambitious and seductive
Cleopatra In the Held cannot steal it
from him.
Ruined by^ HI* Weakness.
It was the weakness of Mark An
tony that ruined him, and not the
dark eyes of Egypt's queen. The mnn
who can be turned from the nobler
paths of life by any woman Is not tho
man he ought to be-^-no, nor the one
who Is safe to trust with the matri
monial barif In life's rude or serene
seas. When the professor asks so ro-
f iroachfully, “Women of America, what
ittvo you done with the men who were
given Into your charge?" It lu fair for
the women to ask in return, "What
did they do with themselves before wo
ever saw them?” This might bring
out the facts in the caso and show
matrimony a test and not a trans
former of the parties therto. A terrj-
ble test, no doubt, as Carlyle declared,
which the majority of mankind In
man'* unregenerate state should be
slower to rush Into.
It's storm and stress much of the
way, for the men. to say nothing of
women, nnd the mortal who does not
know himself as Milton palnti-d him.
"with strength to stand, though freo
to fall," should bo on his knees pray
ing, "Lead ua not Into temptation."
when Cupid'and the parson Incline to
come his wav. Gne honest mnn, whom
the professor with his lantern seoms
to have missed, presents tho situation
wjth' scientific exactness. "M stria go,"
he says, "leaves tho man unchanged."
And to shdw how "hot-headed and
foolhardy," as well as sinfully “pre
sumptuous/ it I* In most cases, he
Argues the matter to a conclusion with
his brother man. "For yearn, let us
suppose, you have been making the
moat indifferent business of your ca
reer," ho says. "Your experience hss
not, wo may dare to say, been more
encouraging than Paul's or Horace's;
like them you have seen and desired
the good you havb not been able to
accomplish; like thorn, you have done
tho evil that you loathed. You linvo
waked at night In a ro’d or hot sweat,
remembering with dismal surprise your
unpardonablo acts and sayings.
"You have fallen back upon i,,.,
thought that you yourself most sharply
wn^rted for your misdemeanors, or. In
the old plaintive phrase, that you were
nobody's enemy hut your own, and you
have tried to turn to what was yet beau
tiful and amiable, wise and kind, In thf
other part of your behavior. !.at us no
eept your apologies; let us agree thst you
are nobody's enemy but your *“
agree that you are a sort of
pie, and let ua regard you with the
mingled pity due to such a fate,
there Is one thing to which on
terms we enn never agree. Wo
never agree to have you marry.”
Man Must Bs Responslbl*.
This Is a large remove certainty from
4he pjan of agreeing to the marriage of
the moral cripple and then ending the
woman to account far Idm when the In
evitable wreck comes, whatever her com
plicity In the "moral abandon" of the
hour. The reckoning of the gods accepts
ho scapegoat for any creature's sins or
failures. The captaincy of the soul al
low* no surrender In either man or wo
man. In the depths of Ids being man
knows that not God himself ran relieve
or rob him of the freedom and responsi
bility of the sovereign will. To admit
that some otr
to gdmlt thn. . ..
own. A fact that
hsrdly seem to eon
Unqualifiedly dhclnr*.
Women are mainly If not wholly respon-
$27.50
$2.50 Down and Then $1.00 a Week.
When you consider that the
average person spends one-third
of their life in bed you will
realize that
Comfortable Bed
can do much to make life’s sleep easy. We’ll show
you something to make you comfortable in body,
peaceful in mind, and happy. Will you come in
and see this massive plain design Colonial Brass
Bed, 2-inch pillars and is 60 inches high.
SANDERS FURNITURE CO.
464
Second Street
464
’ moral crip-
Ith tli
fats.
for the moral or Immoral condl
on* they lament.
In fset, the pitiful condition of more
...an In nil this outcry of the Adamites
against sinful Eve Is the crowning fea
ture of the whole hiielness. Tennyson’s
call for s man In a blatant land seem*
thor* to the point than the professor's
call for*a womnn. No one can deny, of
M ~ ce of the human he-
•ng of either sex. Who shnll set hounds
mischief
a kiss doe* not liter Ids character,
man who inn he unworthll
the womnn who huvs him h
:her rer..^
"ihT’ix" ^ a v "
question of strenrth or *
ft Is curious that the
"Churchc* In femme” In
under the sun ||SS not hinyirm mail to
recruit enough strength on his own nc-
rount to withstand "la femme.” or
'nough pride to blush for the weakness
that must "hunt the woman"
"aunt for hi" fall,
feature In th
one which l»
masters to hi. „ ...
Dumas, "the same womnn Inspire*
meal . .. geest things and prevents -ur *
That Is the exact truth of It, as an romplUidn; th*m.’ r Aye, thei
zw. attest* It The old counsel which the
ini rQn »' "Don’t marry a man to reform part.
Tt i ■£??■ —" * >n ■ aad t^e him." could with equal truth and wle-
tili tS* spread ovsr all naUoos. He dom add, "Don't marry a man to de-J Many a Charlotte hae Inspired Weather
hut It I* because th* utmost dlarlpM
of dire matrimony could not change
them from weak natures fo strong,
which leaves the legitimate ronclus’on
that neither could its kindliest Indul
gencea
"*av enter Heaven has *»»t bounds to It.
Only so far and no farther ran one Hu
nan being go In his power over another.
To betmy a man or to buy a roan with
* kiss does not alter his character. Tho
man who can be unworthily bought and
the warns.
to choose In tlie hlljhi
bought’ In
SIX YEAR OLD
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KSHRX COMPANY, Sycamore and Canal, CINCINNATI^OHIO
to a vision of th* "eternal and Inflnlts."
When did *h# ever make him a Socrates
to explore them at fell will? Xantlppe
seemed to asrve a bett«r nurposo than
Charlotte in that respect. Tst some day
there may-be a less sorrowing and Pin
ing Wetthsr, who can be a BocroUa •*
well; for love will liberate Instead of bind
Its subjects, and all creatures stand upon
their own merits. Wives as "the custo
dian* of men's souls" will have outlived
their usefulnoss-and ' the poor creature,
man. who flghts for hla queen" (heaven
bless him, despite thla awful charge)
will perceive that to make the moat and
klngflest of himself Is th# best service
ho can render her,
It may ho that if either man or woman
could bring the "potential self” to It*
highest fulfillment, the whole reo* would
bo uplifted by It, for certainly onA-half
could not linger long behind the other
without a worn cataclysm'than the gar
den of Eden ever knew. Borne Ingenious
■ * of poor Adi— **-
defender of poor Adam recently outs him
at the head of the nobler type ofauloldea
who die for others, since seeing that fair
Kve had oaten the apole and . *wou*ht
death upon her head, ne took the fatal
hlto himself to stnnd by her In her doom,
death upon her
hlto himself to • .... K -
That may be fine and heroic, but since
WDrJ( j WM concerned In the
ft would certainly have been
.. Adam had held his ground, even
If he had had to sacrifice another rib to
secure A better mother for the race.
rt»la Ignoble natures and ignoble loves
that keep this world In Shadow, Aft* of
addpet
•ays
however. Is
V, ,. r ..v.
•Often,'
.nrplre*
us from
. — ... — r ..nRRB „ — Biers’* the run.
life attests It. Tho old counsel which th** point where lover and lady meat
experiment In bringing. Ignoble creatures
together hav# demonstrated lie torrtb e
folly. It Is no worse now than It al
ways has been, either, although an
equalising of the victims may render It
more noticeable. Bringing the Individual
up to *ome etsndard of nobility In him-
I self, rather than requiring his ^possi
ble reformation
Si:
hand,.
np.nl.nl err, : An, my l
., .....hi I not hara mad. of thy
world had I but loved thy highest crea-
tore her*."—Vernon Murray, In Bt. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Th* TXnaka (Tenn.) Tanning Com
pany will erect a large electric plant
for Industrial power. A dam will be
put In and the fall of Pigeon River
utilised to run tho dynamo*.
those "Mulligan letters."
Archbold Correspondence Recall# In
oident in Blaine’s Campaign.
The Archbold-Foraker corronpan
dene* 1* not the only time 'ptptMltb
letters havo figured in presidential
campaigns. Tho famous MulllgatMta
ters wero among the factors thnt
trlbuted to the defeat of James G.
Blaine In 1884, says tho New Yofk
Herald.
Tboy v/ere brought to the *urface
when niulne was speaker of the house
of representative** but they served ef
fectively In tho national campaign. The
democratic managers scattered copies
of thorn nil over tiic country, with the
purpose of allowing that Blaine hod
used his Influence In tho house of rep
resentatives In favor of corporations
and had profited largely In conae
quence. On the strength of these let<
road company for services rendered.
They were brought to the surfneo
when based on documentary evidence,
that he whs interested In tne Credlt-
Mobller company. Th* charges against
him were In effect, like those .brought
against Garfield In 1888. arid now
against Senator Koraker. The Ator.v
of the Mulligan letters was brought
out In 1876» when the democratic house
of representatives passed a resolution
providing for th* Investigation of an
alleged purchase of certain railroad
bonds by the Union Pacific company.
It waa evidont that the Investigation
was directed against Blaine. At tho
sreond or third meeting of the com
mittee, many of Blalns’s lettera to
Warren Fisher. Jr., of Boston, were
produced by James Mulligan, who had
collected and Indexed * h *J*J. ** p *2? , ! sr *
Before they were read pubUely r-
secured control of the letters. »
wsr* supposed to show tMt the
which
against him was well
on June 5. 1878. ha rr
defense In the hous* <
tlve* bv reading sotrr <
His defense was art»«f
M: and
i dramatic
epre.-enta-
ropubllcans of his own state. A month
later he was appointed by the gover
nor of Maine as a member of the
United States senate, to fill the va
cancy caused by the appointment of
Senator Lot Morrill as secretary of
the United States treasury, and was
elected for a full senatorial term In
1813.
In every attempt ho made to secure
tho presidential nomination, however
tho Mulligan lettera wore brought up
against him. They figured In the re
publican national convention of m«
and 1180 and 1834. In all of which he
was a prominent candidate. When he
Anally secured the nomination in 1884.
the Mulligan letters would not lown.
They caused tho los* of thousands of
republican and Independent votes. He
might have boon elected, even with
this loss, but for the Burohard Inci
dent.
ELECTRIC FLASHED.
The tree* of Central Europe ere pro
tected from tho ravages of the Russian
moth by new moth traps. Two large
and powerful reflectors are placed
over a deep receptacle nd a powerful
exhaust fan. The beams of light are
thrown on the distant mountain aides
and it Is said that three ton* of moth*
were caught the first night.
Germany posse**** a large number
of small wnter power developments. (
|In Prussia alone In the year 1898 no /
less than 20.000 plant* were reported.
Tho number of tel*graph message*
*F-nt In th* T T aftjd ntatea in th* year
1904 win 04.000.600. The number of
•ago* sent In this county for the
year by the Western Union alone
led 71,000.000 not counting those
t over leased wires or under rail
road contracts.
Preliminary survey* for the proposed
dam at Copper Fell* ar* being made*
and ft f* po**Ihi« that power front
these fall9 will be furnished to