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THE MAOON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 18, 1908
The Macon Telegraph
PwMIahed Every . Morning by
WE MACON TOEfiRAPH PLY. CO.
M. Mulberry M.c.n, Oa.
0. R. PENDLETON,
PR.BIDENT AND MANAGER.
TH* TELEQRARH IN ATLANTA.
TKa Talagrubh hr ba found an aala
tAa Klrnba I Mouaa and Piedmont
' ha Atlanta.
at t*»
fftaM
• BRYAN CAMPAION FUND.
Mtravlouoly reported HW.00
ft. A. sike# 1.00
ttN. Ha w. Weaver 1.00
m. L. Knight . — - 1.00
im c. D*v»o 100
CueWy ...» 1.00
©r. M. A. Olarfc 1*00
Ifehn W. Robert# 1.00
Ouncan Iwwn 1*00
VtebL P. O'Neil 100
Patrick Olevln 1*00
9. B. Meyer ....# 1*0
€)eth 1*00
With a.a. ■•••• 1-00
La»t call. Cam* qutekly. T>»o
•f th# campaign la natr.
' ANNOUNCEMENT.
X hwe thla day aold to Mr. Tf.
Itademm • Mock of the etdek of Th#
3V.rgra*d» Publishing Company. Thla
l|a new at oak, which adds materially
/to th* 1 oapltal Invested. A large
4Rf uble-«l#Ck proa# and other additional
loquiproenta have alraady been pur-
cl aar<1 and will b# tnatallad aeon. We
;«r* , simply letting out a tuelc with
aeon's growth.
Mr. Aaderam haa long been .
4oiectod with Th* Telegraph and other
i tuelnaaa enterprlaea In Macon, and
/needs 4io Introduction. Ho will have
*• neral char** of th* affairs of Th*
r T*iegras>h. Mr. P. II. Gambrcll will,
howovor, continue aa bualr.csa man
•grr.
There wlU b* no chang* In th* edl
todal and business policy of the pa
;prr. I that!, under thla arrangement.'
reach a life-long coveted goal—that
ef an editor uncoupled with the bual<
'fine* end of a newspaper.
\ C. R. PENDLETON.
'. Oot. 17, Slot.
A DEMOCRATIC HOUSE.
7b Me epfVH-h in Nebraoka on Wed
Leader Mr. Ilryan •‘invariably began
|by eajing that b* waa more Inter-
rated in tlio election of the candidate
for Comer* e* than was the candidate
*1ilrosflf " He la further quoted: "
•hanild fowl mighty loneanm* In WaPh
'tngtom tf both th* Senate and the
fieuw worn against me, but If you will
tghro me the House, 1 am aura we
whan make the Senate feel loneaoma."
i We may add that the Southern
tftatei are even more Interested than
hfr. Bryan because of the throat held
rover them by the Rpubllcan party
j«nd Its candidate of a reduction of
their representation In Congress un
less they repeal their franohle* amend
manta. The Republican platform of
•|*04 rrad: %
”W» favor such congressional
ertlnn as ehall determine whether
by special discrimination* the
elective franchise In any State has
bran unconstitutionally limited,
end if such ts the case we demand
that representation In Congreaa
and tl>a electoral college shall be
proportionately reduced as direct*
ad Mr th# constitution of rh*
Vnlted 8101*8.“
And thr Republican platform of
IIP* added:
•We declare onoe more and
e It "mot reservation for the *n-
r-urcemont In letter snd spirit of
the thirteenth, fourteenth and *»f-
tcouth amendment* to the Conetl-
lotion, which were designed for the
protection and advancement of the
n egret and we condemn all do-
v! rs that have for their real atm
hu dtnfranchlacmmt for reaoona
<»r - ilor alone as unfair. un-Amrri-
can and rapugnant to the aupremo
law of the land.*
In reference to the above Mr. Taft
•aid in hla speech of acceptance: *T
etend with my party squarely on that
plank In tha platform." No doubt he
also Bland* "squarely* on the similar
\ lank In the Republican platform of
Ohio ae to which he was d)uttle«s
previously consulted, and which
■reads
• neMevbig In the clvtl and po
litics l rights of the American ne
gro In every State, and believing
as we do that hie marvelous pro
gress in intelligence Industry and
nbd — —
nehip haa earned the
ncouragement of the
hat those legislative
enartmentR that have for their
reoi elm hie dlafranchlaement for
renaenc «f color alone are unfair,
un-An ^rlesa III ttpigtUAl to the
eupre-ne ' >v ,-f tV ’ i: 1 «* fu.T
t e r. * • m ■ f r - !m
Ongraas snd the el* 'Moral college
In *11 state, ©f this Union, wheth
er white or oolored clttaens ere
dlsfran-'ilWd, to thO SO* that th*
ff'iirte-nth amendment to the coq-
elltntlon ef rh* Vnlted Ft*?*, me*
be enfonwd ecccrdtng to Its let
ter and spirit.*
Ail tbte may be lit We mere than an
•ant te Offset "Brewaevtno* and held
Rs segts voters tn line, but ft ts beet
. be be ea the safe side, and a Demo-
era tic Reuse te, moreover, desirable
fee many reasons.
For “weye that are dark and tricks
Chat are vain." the Republican party
Is “peculiar," say# Bryan. "Out wait
they present Mr. Taft as fhe pocket
adit n of Mr. Roosevelt. Down East
they are assuring the people that be
won't be like Mr. Roosevelt If ha la
alerted. That's their two-sided cam
paign. At the head af their ticket
they place e raf-'rr.ar and at the tall
a aland-pattsr. and try to make that
combination work. Tt won’t
TAFTS 80PHI8TRY AND INSULT.
“With the material interests of
tho South dependent upon th# eon-
tinusnee of the Republican poli
cies, with nothing but historio tra
dition demanding its people te vote
the Democratic ticket—praying
meanwhile for the success of the
Republicans—with Southern Dem
ocracy nothing but a tall to North
ern Democracy's kite, then .why
not new take the first political
cold plunge, go politically where
the material intereste of tho coun
try demrnd and vot# th* Republi
can ticket."
The above Is the polltloat syllogism
with which Republican Candidate Taft
Invade* the South with a view to
fracturing Ita solidity In aome futura
election, * ,
If this la a fair aampls of Judge
Taft'* political argument ae ad dr eased
to the people pf other sections he haa
veiled, ae ore now prepared to un
derstand hla motive In deciding to
wests some portion of fife limited
time remaining to him of the cam
paign In a fruitless quest of the
South. If# will at least save himself
votes tn places where they may count
by staying away. Not only Is his syl
logism—If It may be called such-
false In each detail and false In the
whole, but It Is In every proposition,
It. detalf and In toto, an Insult to the
people of the South. Let us dissect
this remarkably stupid utterance, and
weigh earfh part of It.
“With the material interests of th#
South dependent upon th* continuance
of th* Republican policies—”
Tha material Interests of the South
have been bled by the Republican pol
Idea to th* point where we have paid
tribute to every Interest of #
other section the most onerous fhe
world has ever aeon, and we have seen
every article of production and con
aumptlen soar to unheard of prices
under the operation of the tariff and
of tha tariff-bred trufta with the sols
exception of the South's great staple
—cotton. Olvrn by nature a mo
nopoly of a world-wide necessity, the
products and manufactures of evory
other section have been manipulated
and forced up to artificial values while
the floyth's staple, cotton, alone has
been held down to the barely living
prices of less "prosperous" days.
“With nothing but historio tradition
demanding its people to vote the
Demoeratlo ticket—" • «/
la Reconstruction a "historio tradi
tion?"
Is th* Fifteenth Amendment a "his
toric tradition?"
la mixed schools and negro office
holders a historic trudltlon?"
Praying meanwhile for the sue-
oess of th* Republicans—"
Do we "pray for the success of th#
Republicans?"
"With Southern Domoeraoy nothing
but a tail . to Northern Domoofac/e
kite—" y \
True, but not through Democracy’s
fault, but through the degrading ne
ceaslty put upon us by the cowardly
"bloody shirt" Cry the Republicans
stand ready and eager to raise against
us because of a war fought oyer forty
years ago.
"Than why not now take th# flret
po'itieal eetd plunge, go politically
where th* material interests of tho
country demand and vot* th* Repub
lican ticket?"
We are suffering sufficiently at tha
present moment from the "material 1
"cold plunge" the Republicans have
treated us to. A "political coM
plunge" on top of thla would give ua
a chill from whloh we would naver
recover. We have been going, will we
or nil w*. where “the material Inter-
eels of the country" which Mr. Taft
has In mind, "demand." and tf wa go
it;v further In that direction, with or
without odr voting to go that way,
we people of tho South. In eommon
with the rank and file of th* people of
the entire country, will be reduced to
a condition of taxation without rep
reeentatton under Cannon*# rule, be
aid* which the condition* of Cteorge
I1I,'a rule were both magnanimous and
beneficent—w# and they, in fact, will
be reduced to a state of material
bondage and alavery more galling and
hopelroa than that of tha negroea bo-
fore tho war.
Tho Inferences of Mr. Taft’s syllo
gism. however, qro more false and tn
suiting than his express^ statements.
He assumes that th* Bouthern people
vot# against the dictates of their eon-
science, their principles, their judg
ment and thotr material Interests from
cowardfow The unbroken fldottty of
ear people for over ono hundred years
to the Demoeratlo prinotplea of home
rule; to etrtet construction of th* Fed
eral Constitution: to tho aoveeelgn
righto of tho States to govern them
selves In all except the expressly del
egated powers of the Union: tho agi
tation verging on war of nulllScattoa
against the privileged Interests tn
their Inriplenoy that th# Republicans
have now festered until they threaten
the life blood of the people;
n four year** war with th# sacrifice
of hundreds of thousand*, of lives and
billions of property: forty yoars of
poverty and hardship, ah suffered
without the phodow of a turning for
th# aako of their principle*—all go for
naught In the eyes of our amiable but
fatuous srveot who asks ui to apoeta-
tlao. to sell out tn fact to the material
"atandpat" Interests wt.lch ho ropre-
»nt*—for whatfv *
For a few officer, nerhapa.
Permission to Itck.^he fi**h pots In
is govern meet's Kitchen.
Privilege to gatt/-r up th* crumbs
that fall from thV groaning table# of
the predatory rlii.
tuted to understand or appreclato tho
nature of the cold-blooded Insult he
offers ua. i" *
They oar. t west both sides of tb# Th# only txcuM that Con be offered
gaaaat tut way-" if or Mr. Tail la lilt t« la net const!-
18 ROOSEVELT THE ISSUE?
Breaking In Lot Angeles a few days
since, Benator Dolllver, of Iowa* re
marked that those who oem* with the
expectation of hearing him denounce
the Demoeratlo party and “Its great
leader," would go away disappointed
II* then stated that the paramount
Issue In the oampalgn Is not tb*
tariff, or guarantee of bank deposits,
or any other proposed policy, but "the
preservation and perpetuation of those
Ideals of privets honesty and public
Integrity which had made tho admin
istration ef Roosevelt famous."
It mfffH be rejoined that no man
has a copyright of "private honesty,"
and that Ilryan. for example, has an
admirable record In that particular.
Aa for "public Integrity," the facts
go to show that Bryan was the pion
eer and Roosevelt but the follower In
several of the pollolea for whloh the
tatter's administration la famous. As
the Philadelphia Record observes, Mr.
Roosevelt's corporation policy fa but
"a tardy Imitation of Mr. Bryan’s,
with this qualification, that Mr. Bry
an would rely upon law for reform
and Mr. Roosevelt urges the highly
dangerous device of Increased power
for the President."
BAt let all that pass. Benator Dol-
IIvor's point seems to be that the retil
and paramount Issue is, not any pol
icy, not th* unfitness of Aryan or the
fitness of Taft, but Roosevelt, the
man. In other wards, the. country
tfbould sleet Roosevelt's chosen suc
cessor ss a vote of confidence In snd
sn expression of admiration for
Roosevelt himself.
NoW, If anything Is dear Just now
It Is that this enthusiasm la for less
Association With on Object.
Oreenaborw Herald-Journal: Aa
‘association of southern democrats In
New York" has bo<*n organised. Mr.
J. O. Rossman, formerly of Greens
boro, is a member of the executive
oommRtoo- The special object of the
association Is to support the democratic
ticket.
What It 8ays Goes.
Waycrosa Herald: Ware county
people want good roads. Let Ware
county have good roads. That's what
the Herald says.
The Mean Thing.
Columbus Ledger: An Alabama pa
per estimates that 1f that state would
raise turkeys for Thanksgiving day
Instead of buying them from Georgia
that stats would save twenty thousand
dollars.
It's Task to Go to Work.
Waycross Herald: Waycrosa can be
one of the most beautiful and prosper
ous cities In the south. Our task Is
to go to work and make it what we
would like to see it.
Of 8outhem Lineage.
Athens Banner: Bryan snd Kern
are ,both near southerners* Bryan's
father wus a Virginian and his mother
a Kentuckian. Kern’s father was a
Virginian and he has a number of rel
atives living In Virginia.
WHAT BECAME OF
THE CONFEDERATE SPECIE'
(By MPford Overlay, Lexington, Ky.)
Very many times since the close of
the Civil War the question has beet*
asked. "What became of the specie, thi
bullion and other articles of v&Ius'th'
Confederate treasury vaults * werr
known to oontaln when Richmond
fell?" but to thla question no satisfac
tory answer has ever been given, and
It Is altogether probable that no oni
person ever knew what became of all
of U.
Writer* and speakers have advanced
many theories and Indulged la much
•peculation In their efforts to convince
themselves and the pubUo generally
that certain high Confederate official*,
both civil and military, profited by
the downfall of their government au l
th* wrecking of her treasury. In this
wa/ much injustice ha* been done
good, honest, patriotic men. who gave
their fortunes and offered their Uvea I’.,
defense of tho IJou.f land and her peo-l
pie. Certainly those who were wltH
tho Confederacy during her last days,
as was President Davis* escort had
much better opportunities of knowing
what took place there and then than
had men hundreds of miles away, and
thers Is not an intelligent survivor of
that organisation who believes that
>fr. Darts got one dollar of the money
or that any member of hla military
family received any part of It. save In
a legitimate way.
At Washington. Ga., Gen. John C.
Breckinridge, who wa* then Confeder
ate Secretary of War. received by or
TH* Grafting Disease.
America* Times-Recorder: Th* re
publican candidate for congre** in tho
flr*t district ha* been arrested for
stealing postoffh-e funds. Btrango how .. w .....
the grafting disease spreads in the;der of Aotlng Secretu'ry of the Trcn -
rank* of the (1. 'O. P. jury John Regan money sufflrieu-1<» «!*••
_ . , fray fils expenses to a forelrn country j
Fccte ve. Abus*. he having decided t** k<> abroad uft' 1
Columbus Enquirer Bun: Judge Par- ' the fall * f the Confederacy Bo r n aft*
ker dot * not Jnriulff" In abuse, but tlu* t h.s departure, however, for some T9»-\
cold facts he u«es In hla speochfa.aiv son be a mt part of this money il4.uoi. <
more cutting than • two-edged sword, back to VVashlngtyn by hts son. Ut ,
I for# he and Mr. Pavl* separated he re |
Men They Please. j quetsed the latter to,have aome of th* 5
Columbus Lodg'-r: "Do women dressjepede;* distributed among tho mm:
to please men?” Inquire* * megsslue composing hie escort, stating^ that a
writer. A* a rule tney dress to picatn I large number of tin
tho men who *o!l tho good*. ! Ians: that they wr
Wldrtr »hnr,d amonit UepuWi™.., Toa Commcn in Mteon .
than formerly. The Chicago Tnter-
Kcntuck-
A’cd, and If
i return to their home* all
to pay their
i rlvcr.i
IP^B _ .. August.*4 Chronicle: If there la any pon.es. The order was made accord-
Own, for Olaniple, thouch • faithful " r *»« , f r In tho rest of tlw j JJJw nmlth- antrlbotlwtook
„ ... . . .. world than that wh'Wi Augusta is now place while the then w<re camped on
Republican newspaper. In a leading —*— — m - . .
editorial on October 6, urgently ex
pressing th« hope that "for th»* wel
fare of Mr. Tnft. of the Republican
party and df tie country, and for the
dignity of the presidential office," Mr.
Roosevelt would not take tho stump,
made bold to say:
"Tho President hrt* become so
exasperated with nit those Repub
licans who have not endorsed hie
personal pollcle* that he can not
•peak of them without vitupera
tion.
"In hla recent manifestoes the
President hn* mor« than Insinuat
ed that all In the party who op-
posed the nomination of Mr. Taft
wor* corrupted by the Htnndnrd
Oil Company, or aome other great
corporation.
"Tho President may bolloye *neb
falsehood*. He may regard them
n* truth. We do not know. But
this belief doe* not make them
any the le*s false.
"That he should make such
Insinuation* and vent such slan
ders. no matter what kls personnt
opinions, proves Mr. Roosevelt'*
Incnrsvffy to deal WMth tha po
litical situation oe It
"Hla anger convinces no one. It
morely rouse* those assailed to
sullen and obstinate wrath. It
drives them away and turns them
against what Mr. Roosevelt Is for
-—Including the election of Mr.
Taft.
"This la no.time to road 1,00®,000
Republicans out of the party, to
drive them from the polls or to
Chafln. or Mr. Bryan on Novem
ber S. Mr. Roosevelt may feel
In his fury that he can do with
out three Republicans, but Mr.
Taft can not do without them.
Their mere Indlfferonce would
tpoon Mb defeat.
The editor of the Inter-Ocean would
hardly permit himself to apeak thus
openly If he did not feel that even
the tamporay defeat of his party ta
better than the triumphant consum
mation of the desires of suefe a fu
rious partlaon and unbalanced auto
crat •• Mr. Roosevelt.
If Senator Dolltver ta right, and Mr.
Roosevelt le the real Issue, then the
united Republican party can not be
depended on, and Bryan’a election ta
certain.
Tom Watson colls Mr. Bryan
and Mr. Taft "th* fat twins" and
•ays Standard Oil ta for one and
thfi steel trust for tho other. Hon
ors therefore seeming to be even,
the question Is aa to men.—Chat
tanooga Time*.
And Debs says the Democratic and
Republican parties are "tho two wings
of th* earns bird of prey." Emma
Goldman's opinion has net yot arrlv-
but we may rest assured It ta
something sulphurous—and equally
Impartial.
People Made Ne Mistake.
Savannah News.
One of the reasons why Mr. Brown
w*i so successful In his candidacy was
that the people recognised hi* sin
cerity. They were satisfied that f»*
didn't seek the office of governor aa a
stepping atone to another position and
they were certain that tf. elected, ho
wouldn't use hla office to favor one
close os against another or promote
one Interest to th* Injury of another.
And the people are rotng to find
they made no mletske In choosing him
as thetr chief executive He Is one of
them and le in sympathy with them.
For that reason he will take deeper
hold on thotr confidence and affections
so the character ef hi# administration
te revealed. If there ore any who
think he will permit himself to be used
by designing politician* or that he will
soon lose hie popularity they will find
themselves mistaken. The contrary tv
and will be stronger politically at the
•ltd of hie torm than he la now. 1 The
people will bo loyul to him If he la
loyal to thorn, and there ta plenty of
evidence that he will be loyal to them.
Augusfl I
getting, It J* probably beyond human the.Georgia, side t
appreciation and don’t count. ,«omo miles from Washington. i
——. j The escort conslsttd cf the rem-
NO BLACK PARTY IN PARAGUAY, hints of five brigades ot mourned In-’
• fantry—DibrclPs. Vaughan’s. Hreckln-
What th* Word "Colorado" Means— • ridge**, Ferguson's and Duke's—about!
Elements of ths Population. i 2.000 in all. The men received $-5
There l» a mistake In the cable dla- Chch, officers and privates sharing
patch* s from Booth America reporting. “like In the distribution. Tfils shows
political disturbance* in Asuncion, tho where $50,000 of tho specie went and
capital of tho republic of Pataguay, i by whose authority. The writer of
where 'the United Btutcs. people and this was present and received a twen
Institutions, are so highly esteemed ty-doilar gold coin and Are silver dol-
thnf n who!© district Is called Villa His aon, Charles li. Overjey, of
Hayes. In memory of the friendly at- | this city, yet has one of the dollars,
lltudc toward Paraguay of an Amerl- "jJhtlin 1
n president In'an arbitration case. \new nothin? ahoutTt "fnl!
m dispatches say that the Asuncion whwe from 1250,090 to*S2.M0,000?’ i\\*%
was deposited In 6no of th# trearxy
vaults at Richmond n box of Jewell —
dtstnon.lv pearls, gia watches and etti*T
valuable nrUrlr-^n.nfrlhufo'l by the pa-
trlutlc ladle* of lle.trria to be sold ard
tlu- prAcseds used In the defense of their
Btrto and their homes,
He. The mistake doubtless arose from
tho use of the Bpnnlnh word "Colorado"
which does not have the significance
of the word "colored” In. American or
English parlance regarding races. In
most I^itln-American countries there
are in politics Colorado, Blanco and
other parties. Colorado being most of
At the Lexington Fair I met an oil!
eomritfo—sll Confederate comrade* Are
old now—from another countjr wbdm' 1
seldom see. wnd of course w* tAlkeH
nh'iut the war. During the ccnVersatlni
slbR? SS! x
the^tlme lh« equivalent Of the Red 1 Confederate specie that I had never br-,
on heard and which cleariy ahows what
atltuttonal, hut so "Negiu pailj.
The Inhabitants of thlt small Inland
republic, sometimes called, on account
of Ita climate tnd beautiful scenery*
the "Bwltserland of America." descend
from three races—th* white or Cau
casian. the nutochtonea and the Afri
can. From their medley two different
types have been produced—th# mestl-
so. who Is white and well formed, com
ing from the alliance of the Cauca
sian with the Indigenous races, and tha
mulatto, whp ha* almost disappear
ed. The population of Paraguay In
U«7 was returned at 1,117,419. In 117$
after thn five years’ war against the
triple alliance of iBraslal, Uruguay and
Argentina, the returns showed only
Is* difficult to determine whether li w*u-
a espturo or s sTsal. However, I'll tci:
ths story ae It was told to me and the
• ' -r!i
d Hy
rl "vu*
a Trosldcnt Davis’ escort \
. _ . r bolt-
the Secretary of IVar and the
■MR commanders Informed that they
and their men could pa of no farther
service to Mr. Davie; that thev wen
surrounded by ovrrwhclm'n* numbers of
thrir* enemies— Osnsrsl*. Wilson’s cavalp-
com* 4n the front, with Generals Palnirv
and RU
MSML- ttielr right and In their
renp^-and that the v could proceed little
farther as %n '■'rganlxed body: and he
■A ' * her to surrender or dl»
band thetr men, thst they might return
advised them either m surrem
‘ ‘ . that they ml
to their homes. All decided to »urrendo_-
Before th* Kentuckians of Color.r
Breckinridge’* brigade h*d given up the!
-- • artns and been paroled half a dosen or
thn rest being children. Tit* others more of them boarded a railroad train
hud iwrl.h.a by battl. and dlaaaaa. an,—ant Jo Auini.fn. Oil. thlnkt—
Th. c.nau. far HIT ,m «5S.M1 pop. %>»* i”!rjfgjaa ttara. fan
“n 1 ,*."^ nssft&PsssiFxxi saSSwj'LSss.ssa ° 0 f -
nla. In • which could easily ©tty. As th© Kentuckians nttemp!
feed 7.000.000. and still leave much of enter the rear car of the train nd ...
the territory uncultivated. The pop- 1 countered guards with guns crowed at
Ulatlon of Paraguay la now between tho door who refused them admittance:
150,000 and 910.000 Inhabitants, com- • W*L PU*hlnc the weapons aside, they
posed almoat entirely of pure whites, C?"fjL , !L l |I!lL! 0 J!f 1 \ JSS
who ar. mo»t|r Immfaajtt. or d«wrn- J! .fo S^m.d ™ b. In rh.rA of «“rar
and ItB contents and wbo protested
against tho tntru«|nn. stating that he had
In tho car I40.M0 In sperlo snd bullion
which he had orders to convey to Aurus-
ta to be distributed nmonr General Jnhn-
roled soldiers ns they returned to
Right Stylo
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The Schwabs of St. Louis
Makers of Hone*! Clothes
dnnta of Immlgrantr settled In the re
public In th* last thirty years; pure
Indians and a few negroes who were
Introduced Into the country after the
days of thn Bpantsh rule. There was
a revolution In Paraguay last July,
the outcome of which seemed to have
bo*n quite satisfactory to thn people,
and It Is likely that th# latest revo
lutionary attempt ta due only to aome
disappointed politicians.
UNCLE SAM, M.D.
fTha cholera situation hts become more
unfavorable Calc), it) per rent of thn pop
ulation ere afflicted with Inteatlnal para
sites. Mortality In thn leper colony ta
high. Few have anrll-d tn be cured of
a par*
their nomea.
Our boye. 1
1 of whom waa my Infor-
satPflM thst It was Indeed them: but
111* «'t*'cr r*rt of the «fo r v -tMt If
for distribution among Johnson’s return
ing tot<ua>a ■ wa* too much for thotr
credulity, .Vnowlnk as thaw did that moat
of Johnson’s men
and that Augusta. MIMMMHMBMMPI
emi Upton, and his division of Federal
troop". whP© other .llvp'ona of \Y!l"'n’"
scouring the country
th# opium habit, riant are ready for a)^nftaa < ime ^5*
general crusade awntnst the hookworm cf 9io«oo<) rffered for the
disease.—Latest Philippines Health Re- of , pre 1 * , i* nt . ,,
Philippine# Health Re-
port.1
"Now. Little Brown Brother, Just stlek
out your logon.
I fear you’re too partial to pepper*
Condition* anemic from hookworms have
T «jm .pot. may prove you’re a
The cholera scare, aa you’re surely aware,
Dv drinking boiled water’s averted:
IH smash It. for fair. If yon’R trust te
my car*.
No ward have I ever deserted l
"By testing your pals* sores sugvstlons
I V* gf*
You’re fond cf tnp dope. T am thinking;
Mv an-day cure for ths opium fiend
Take, nulck, there’s no reason for
ihriukT
Wk f »»>•••* facte It was suggested
to the malor that the car containing ths
and the "money be divided among
who had be«n ranstcktnr the
arch of it end other qyq>'.|
who stood by
than tho*© who deprived her of existence.
Brow n In Sevennth.
Savannah Preaa
The governor-elect created a greet
deal of enthusiasm. After the eaiutt
of seventeen guns was over the crowd
red him to the echo, and Savannah
la not always demonstrative even over
governors. The crowds which rtsited
the grourfd* were something immense
A day ffko resterdsy for tho auto-
mobUc races Would Insure the success
of thla winter meeting beyond all
shrinking.
The YeMow Jack die*, if mosquitoes end
files
Ar* kept from your skin and your pot
tage.
mently. declaring that he could nst for a
single momeM entertain the thought ef
robbing tb* peer, dying Confedsracy:
that'to do so wonld be to put a sum
upon hla name that time could never
erase. Poor fellow! hie sens# of honaety
and! ~ ‘ ' ' '
Surrounding your hut or your cottage."
Put the Little Brown Brother, dismayed
by the hreath
Of Selene© and language and learning.
To ttve W« ewe life and to die hla own
death
It filled with a ri'lcnt yearr.tnr:
Hs dlav for the htfla,
Mhari received S dreadful shock,
and nothing mors wa* said about rob
bing the “dying Confederacy."
In due time and without mishap ef
any kind tha train arrived at Ita destt-
nation and my friend and comrade went
directly to Federal headauartera. where
soon after, the Cen federate major put
in hta appearance and reported tojOsn•
oral Upton that the
at the dapot. That efneer
ordered a guard to so tn
and take poo^ysstoa of the
quite escaping the l_ Now. who wav the Confederate msfot
j Ry whose authority did he v take
th«
yon’rs hot
■ like to ]
He**
Discharged Soldiero In Enqland.
•“Th© Nhtlona! Aincwloe for the
Employment of Bsaerro and Dta-
charged BoMtera" te a title that read*
well, but bshe'd! In England It haa
Incited to m’rth an! Jeatlnr. tn that
fV» bo hs* hold era ere rscomn* ended to
follow the example of a certain lady
Of Surrey wbc gi'carded her cook.
housrmoM and pariomatd and filled
tsrir r’ace* with sx-eoldlert And la
♦s* ©•to.-isttcn’s literature mrb h©M-
Training VswTowriSir VsNL* -Vew
Uses for SeMIrog and Sallorm* "Botv
in t tbs Domestic Servant Trouble. -
Ti-MlRen aa Domestke— Better
Ebon Molds." eta.
rnstated their country, destroying ettlea
towudtmd private proreriv to the value
of mirttoas of 9M1tn an.1 making home-
lees *•'•1 deeritnn thousands of women
end Children to whom that rrensy wvtd
have been a blearing? Did It fioal’y go
tnto the.United Flats* treasure or dll tt
go to sw ell the hrtfits ef thqss who
hufiit for
ameng the l
tri-Hie men '
Unk*n were
Urlo*. for
ef tV leno
Thai
th*
for a# ctheg pur-
flted by the dewoiall ef the Confederacy.
AMERICAN MAN IS
tho romance she wants?
There's plenty of It lying arou
at her very feet—If ahe’d only <
to look for It.
The truth le. Prince Troubeta]
American man Is the romance
■ i>;i not th- American woman.
Men have three times the sen
of women, anyway. Do you kne
bo that he wouldn’t part with for un
told gold. Just beoause he waa
happy in them?
Who keeps th* looks of hair an
old photographs?
Tho man.
Who shows the old letters to the new
sweetheart?
The woman.
Who will live In an old heir
love* till the roof falls In before
move to a new one. no matter
fins, which has no sentimental
elation* ?
The man..
Who believes In the home and the
flrertdo and children the moat?
my heart I believe It N In this da?
and generation and In this country, the
Who marries for money?
Ths woman.
For place? For po»Ut«n? For epite?
For vanity? Fcr eonvenlenc
family reason*?
The woman.
Half the women X know nr* prmid
of the fact that they do r^t !rv» their
husbands and do net even pretend to
lore them.
American women atervlnr
trance! Ton aro wro’^g Prim
Itlanta. Oa., Oetobec ?2-?l 19W Ex
tremely Low D *t-- V|, of
Georgia Railway.
On account of thr abev# occasion
fcketa will br Ocf 11 11 and
or nv.—.'ng trxln* SJd. final 1
o**»r Si th. rt rMe of on* c«*nt per
rjlle. p*0* ceM* for r- -> 1 trlr>
*’»• ftvm V"< >n IHI Ftvr daJll
sa’nv Macon* to A’ ••'■.Ia an. exmv-r.
IrVirmatlon call at CRy Ticket Gffica.
.! BEAL ESTATE LOANS
3100 and Upwards. No Delay
loans Closed Within 24 Hours.
HARROLD BANKING A
SAVINGS CO.
607 Cherry Street.
LOANS
Negotiated promptly on im-
j proved farms and city proper-
! >y on easy terms and at lowest
. narket rates.
! If you need money call on us
TOWARD M. SMITH & 00
iS3 Mulberry 8L. MACON. GA
$2,500,000.00 8AFELY LOANED.
- During the lost K years we have loan
ed $2,600,000.00 on Real Estate for home
i.: 1 foreign li.vw' r r.-. Saf -at unri inoat
j-r >tttab!r lnv-*r. M Ttni* .J-«1rlng to
borrow or having money to Invest will
find it to their Interest to see us.
| SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.,
Commercial Bank Byltdlno.
j Thomas B. West. Secretary and Attorney.
jLeon S. Dure
Banking and- Investments.
Rooks, Bonds, Real Estate, Mortgagti
MacoD. Ga.
ALBERT McKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothes,
crtierry St., Macon, Ga.
S. S. Parmelee
Company,
COrrlage*. Duggles, Wagons, Carts
arness. Baddies, Bicycles. Baby Car-
tffca, «»*ot:«sorics.
Twirgeot stock Itj the South, to aelccr
m. A measure Jo serve you.
3. S. FARP.4FLCF r.O Macon. Ga.
E WINSHIP HERBERT SMART
WINSHIP & SMART,
INSURANCE.
ACCIDENT. HEALTH. FIRE.
Washington R.ock.
ARDHITZCTB.
OURRAH R. ELLIS,
ARCHITECT. Y
'files phone 239; restatnes phone 28t*.
Offices: 4, 5 and 0 LMla Building,
t.erry 6t., Cotton Ava. and First 8L
IV.aaon, Qa.
x FRANK R.HAPP, v
Architect.
Offloet Rooma 22 and 23 Feurth Na-
■rnal Banw BulUUng.
Telephone—Raa, 632; Office 990.
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
’ri- Architect. , #
llflw Phon. 71.
" Rea Me nee Phene Mh
173 CHERRY ST. MACON, «A
3 EARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room **
Water supply, water power, sewer-
10* and municipal onginearlno. Re*
sort a, plana, seeclfiaatlens, eatlmatee
ind -eupsrlntendanc*. Offlo* Phene 114A
tealdence phone 3286.
E. DENNIS, Architect.
-Reema 703-4-B-9 American National
Bank Bldg. Phone 99tf Residence
phone 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET,
Architect.
Office Phene 456 Residence ItL
Grand Bldg. Maeen, Oa.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
MJSS ANNA SMITH.
Phyoieal and Vole* Culture! and Kx-
preesien. Phone 2167.
OCULIST.
DR. M. M. STAPLER,
Eye, Ear. Note and Throat
Doetore’ FIror. AmrrJran Nations] Beak
Bldg. Office Phone. 2743; residence, l»*l.
OCULIST AND AURIST.
DR. J. H. SHORTER,
Eye, Ear. Note and Threat.
"The Gran.!’’ Bldg., next to Court House.
Phones: Office, 972; residence, 910.
OPTICIANS.
(T-V . MTE8 TESTED IRBli
^ Q. a COFPY,
•radsate Osuelaa. *41 Cbervy M
BYE, EAR. NOSE. THROAT.
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Eye, Ear, Note, Throat Grand Bldg.
"osteopathy.
DR. PRANK P. JONES. Osteopath.
4(4 Second *L Phone 920 and 4441.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DR. MARY f. McKAY.
Grand Building
rhones: Office. 24*4; Residency 1496.
DR. W. H., WHIPPLE,
Offtr*. 511 Mulbenr at., rooms 4 and 6.
Washtngtea Block, ({ours: 9 te 1* a. tn,
12 te 1 sad 5 to t p. m. Telaphooe con-
nvctkma at of?tc* anj resldance.
DR. J. J. 8UBEPS.
Parmanantly located, tn the cpecUI-
ties venereal. Last energy rvetorrdJ
Female trreguleritlea and poison oak;.,
cure gnarantr^l Addreep In confidence,
with Stamp. 610 Faurth *C. Macon, aa. j
DENTISTRY. |
DR*. J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON.
Oartiata.
3S« Stccnd aL. Phone 90S.)
Money to Lend on
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
and very low rate* on Mar
ketable iconritiea.
Macon Sayings Bank
670 MULBERRY STREET.
WANTED
For cash two medlam priced reetdeaeo*
sloae in.
FOR SALE
JONES REAL ESTATE
AGENCY
For Quick Sale
Fbr $500.00 cash and balance In easy
payments you can buy one of tho
nicest homes on Madison street. Tho
purchase price of this place la $1,200.00
and we can carry's permanent loan
of $3,250.00 on It. The hops# has 7
rooms and la In good condition
throughout. Thla place will only be
on th© market a few days at this pries
—If not sold other disposition will be
mode of It. .....
Mnrphey & Taylor
Real Estate, Loans and
Insurance
PHONE 267
Citizen's Nat’l Bank Building
Revised Rent List
17 Arlington Plaoe.
Btaeb Aw, 5-r.......
110 Carting Ava,
741 Coltcga *L. t-r
$10 Duncan Ava, 5-r
4*7 Duncan Ava.,
114 Lynn av*.. ?•#...«.
751 Fium, l-r
40* Rosa,
40$ Ross St., 7-r
For Sale '
I have six negro houeee renting at
$48.00 per month that I eon make
a quick trade at
$4,000.00.
These houses are not subject to dlty
taxes. Figure on it and »e* what an
InroeUeoat It makes.
Frank B. West
M lnj|nnA
For Rent
DweNtfito
No. 17$ Orange sL. U*?..«
N*. $55 Seoena et,
Me. 211 Duncan are.,
No. lie Dvnean ae*.. U.... M
Me. 171 Oftethor#* St. 6-g.
No. Ml Cedar at. S-r..
No. • Meat pel la ava., S-r.
•torea.
Ne. 9tt Second St..
No. 414 Fourth «...
No. 461 fleoond «t ..
No. ««* Poplar 8t
No. 401 Mulberry at
Geo. B. Turpin Sons
For Sale
560-acre form near Baraesville, Pike
~ vaUon,
water,
Writ*
>t parucuiars. Map in emco
1010 acrea In Burk* and Jenkins
suntlee. Go. Beat cotton section in
state. Land will produce 1 bale cot
ton to aoge. Well watered and wood-
Good bnprovemesrta. InveeMgata
e Varner Hotel and throe a^res
id historic ground at Indian
Spring. Ga. A BURE WINNER. Come
*> eee me.
$96 scree near Forsyth, Oa. IT'S
.LL RIGHT.
10 acres and 7-r. dwelling near otty.
an make It 21 sores. To have the
rrd to thla “In your lnalde pocket"
ould make you feel at "heme, sweet
ome.”
Home funds on long Mm# at T per
MIL
Geo. W Duncan. Manager,
For Sale
$1,800
Will buy a handsome six (f) room
;>Menc« In Bellevue, newly papered
OIL i. B. WAlKgfi. Dei
‘ »d with Dr. Jehai
"U Bank BMg.. Pno
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
CLAUD ~ESTEST
Attcrrcy-at-Law.
ROBERT L. BERNER.
ar *
R©orr.a TO
BuUdtog.
Burchaaer can get coseceaton la thlr-
# ty (If) days. NOW Is your chance
„ to get a nice home at a GREAT BAR-
j GAIN. Terms if desired.
. JORDAN REALTY CO.
Real Estate. Ifieuranee and Loons.
11 Phan. 111*. FmirtJi H—L Ink