Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, October 30, 1908, Image 4

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j — \ 1 * I ——■ 4 THE MACON DAILY TBLEGRAPHt FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 80, 1908 ALBERT McKAY, Maker of Men’s Clothes, Cherry St., Macon, Ga, AflCHfTECTO. CURRAN B. ELLIS, ARCHITECT. Offlee phone 239; residence phone 2819. Offices: 4, 6 and 6 Ellis Building. Cherry St* Cotton Av®. and First St. Macon, Qa. • t FRANK R. HAPP, t Architect. Office:’ Rooms 22 and 23 Fourth Na- < tional Banw Building. Telephone—Rea. 632; Office 990. ALEXANDER BLAIR, Architect. ! Office Phono 71. _ t Residence Phone 1479. 471 CHERRY 8T- MACON, GA. CHARLES A. CALDWELL, Civil Engineer. WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room 1«.1». Water supply, water* power, sewer age and municipal engineering. Re ports. plans, specifications, estimates and superintendence. Office Phono 1142. Residence phone 3288. P. E. DENNIS. Architect. Room# 703-4-5-8 American National ■ Bank Bldg. Phone 962; Residence phone 274/. CARLYLE NISBET, Architect. Office Phone 459. Residence 641. Grand Bldg. Macon. Ca. CONTRACTING ANQ BUILDING. W. W. DeHAVEN. J General Contractor and Builder. Residence phone 698. PROFESSIONAL CARDS ClataWed advert!«emanta under thl# head are Intended strictly for the pro- fesslons. MISS ANNA SMITH; Physical and Voles Culture, and Ex- * pression. Phone 2157. OCULIST. DR. M. M. STAPLER, ^ Eye, Ear, No«e and Throat Doctors’ Floor. American National Bank Bldg. Office Fhone. 2743; residence, llul. , OCULIST AND AURIST. > DR. J. H. SHORTER. -T.'.E.r. Note and Throat . “The Grand” Bldg., next to Court House. ^ Phones: office. 972; residence. 9Sd. ^ OPTICIANS. GS mrES TESTED FREE. Onfluit^Opticiu^tfi Gharry st * EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM, Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat Grand Bldg. OSTEOPATHY. DR, FRANK F. JONfeS, Osteopath. 354 Second *L Phone 920 ana 3635. PHY8ICIAN8 AND SURGEONS. DR, TH08. H. HALL, Eye, Ear. Nos., Throat Specialist, 607-8 Qrand Bldg. OR. MARY E. McKAY. ^ Grand Bul'dlnc. u Phone*: Office, 2554; Residence, 1465. , DR. W. H. WHIPPLE, Office. 571 Mulberry et., roomj 4 and 5. Washington Block. Houra: 9 to 20 a. m.. 1 12 to 1 and 5 to « p. m. Telephone con- 1 neotiona at office and residence. DR. J. J. BUBERS, . Permanently located. In th* special, m ties venereal. Lo*t energy reitored. Female irregularities and poison oak; cure guaranteed. Addrees In confidence, with stamp. 110 fourth st.. Macon, Ga. DENTISTRY. * ORE. J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON, ~ r * Dentists. 354 Second at. Phone 955. r DR. J. E. WALKER. Dentist. Associated with Dr. Johnson. Office Commercial Bank Bldg., Phone 619. \ ‘ ATTORNEYS AT LAW. CLAUD ESTES, „ Attorney-at-Law. 177 Cotton Av*. Phone 820. ■. ROBERT L. BERNER. Attorney at Law, Booma^70«-707 American National Bank . FOR RENT No. 147 Rose Park. 9-r., two ! bsthi 146.00 • No. 107 First St.. 7-r .133.60 1 No. 3t6iB.ll.YU, Av,., 6-r J10.00 ' No. 110 Duncan Av«„ 6-r 118.00 ! Corn.r of Carling nnfl Rcmb.rt, .118.00 . No. Ill RolL 9-r 333.10 - No. 632 kronro., 7-r 320.00 ' No. U71 Ogl.lhorp., 7-r... - >21.00 I 639 Coll.g,. 9-r 337.60 1 741 Coll.*,. 9-r 135.00 . 1053 Oglmorrr. 5-r >14.00 - 1601 S.cond, 5-r >u.eo • >65 Wln.htp, 5-r >31.10 1 M0 TVtnshlp, 4-r >11.00 ! Brecb . B. A. WISE & 00. - WANTED j cloeeTuw** 1 me<5Ium Ftlced residence# t FOR SALE One splendidly Improved plantation ! near Macon: very beat condition: would • make (rand country home. Parma In - iwid*. ▼ scant • lou In different paru of city. Several - Improved city lots that pay wtU aa in- • vestments. . JONES REAL ESTATE AGENCY . ®I A t S Sf GEORGIA, Bibb County^- i Lrdla^ L. Walker vs. Wm. M. Wadter. To Wm. 1C. Walker, th* defendant, you i aro hereby required personally, or by at- t torney. to be afid apassr at the next p Superior Court to be h*!d In and for sold county on the first Monday In November, t next, then and there te answer th® plain tiff's demand® In an action of divorce ac 1 In default thereof t£e court will proceed as to Justice shall appertain. t _ ^tttera the »L>n. w. H Felton Jr., c ra4«o «f *aid court, this 3rd day of Au- IWI IMS. ROBT. A. NISBET. Clerk. The Macon Telegraph Published Evory Morning by THE MACON TELECUn FIB. CO. «pC9 Mulberry Ltrect, Macon, Of. 0. R. Pendleton, President. THE TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA. The Telegraph can'b* found on •■!# at the Kimb«*l House ond Piedmont Hotel in Atlanta. REMEMBER! L*t Democrat* remember that In Oeorgla Bryan must get * majority over th# vote of Taft Wataon, Wa gon. Chofln and Doha combined, to carry the'Rtato without complication* —those complication* being legal dir ficukle* growing oat of an oatra #*• aioa of tha Legislature. Jy«t Democrat* ala# remember that an of that* hava ©em hired In Gaorfla again at Bryan. Forewarned la forearmed. THE TARIFF TAX. prradlng the. consequences of hit attack on Bryan over th® head of Oompera. the labor leader. Mr. Rooao- \elt, President of the Republican par ty. hits written a letter which I* really an appeal from tha White House to the labor vote, and In tbo course of which ho fast: If Mr. Taft I* not elected, a period of Industrial chaos and bu'/fn*es Lad tlmr« will rnsue, In wnich tho workingmen will euf- /er far more than any other class They are too people who. more than any other, will pay the pen- oltv. fWnue# of their own ma terial interests I believe that they should support Mr. Taft; and, ftyrthernior-. I believe that they MicuJii support him because ho hi* bv hlr notion* over nnd over nun In proved himself lb be a rln- aulnrly fearless *nd effective champion of the rightn of labor. WHY THE BOOKS ARE NOT OPENED. ffhlffy politicians and public offi cer* may prate until doomsday that tho nppey they received wa* for cam paign or other pret|nded logttlmaU purpose*, But the stolen Archbold letters Vx sufficiently establish the fact that for years hie standard OH Com- PM»£ tM>s bT bribery and, other ques tionably 'methods sought to influence legislation. State and Federal, and to secure the appointment of friendly Judge* This I* what Archhold on Mny I, 1901, dared to write to John P. Klkln, Attorney-General of Pennsylvania: “REDUCED OPPORTUNITIES'* * OF SOUTHERN WOMEN. Mr. Editor: A communication der the shove heading appeared In the columns of The Telegraph of the 27th instant, over the signature of one of Macon’s most respected matron*. Is « comment on two lines of a plea for Oeorgla men and womsn. and the writer does herself an Injustice In talcing them out of their context and forcing a misconstruction. I am not on the defensive myself and the evi dence of my loyalty to the south, 1/ VIC* PREDICTS CLOSE BRYAN TORY. Seer s of the Taft newspaper* are rifciir. ng pretty nearly everything Is eight, and aome of the (Bryan nows- PK>er» axe not far behind in similar a Hon * te Jnfluenee tbs voters who want re be on the winning elde. der » rob elroumetancee ft seems eafsr to gtvs ear to Mr. B. R Knott, the "Wall street prophet." who of course wish. - to maintain hi* reputation and who this time predicts a doss elec tion He is thus quoted: * ’n 1192 I predicted a landslide t« Cleveland early In the cans ralgn. In ISM I forecasted a «-trve fight, with the result In fa vor of Mr. MeKInlsy. In 1900 I X -flirted a landslide for Mc Kinley from the start. In 1904 I figured out an overwhelming vlc-r^ orv for Roosevelt from th* nom ination This year I predict a c!n.* Dry an victory. The Stats* I sir* Mr. Bryan are as follows: •’Arkansas. 11: Alabama, 9; Col orado. 6; Delaware. I; Oeorgla. II: Idaho, I; Indiana. IB: Ken tucky 18; Louisiana, 9; Maryland. • Mississippi, 10; Missouri, 11; Montana, I; Nebraska, I; Ne vada. 8: North Carolina, 11; North Dakota, 4: Ohio. 21; Okla- na. 7; Oregon. 4; South Caro lina, 9; t*outh Dakota, 4: Ten- if; Texas, 18: Utah, *: Virginia IS: Washington, 8; We»t Virginia, 7; Wyoming, 8. Total. :S1. *1 cloaa California, Kansas and New York as extremely doubt ful with a Bryan trend; Minns* sots and Wisconsin doubtful, with a Taft trend" A rote of I8T for Bryan, or 11 more than necessary, will be good enough to •er\e. but tha addition of New Totit. Kansas and California would be much better. An overwhelming defeat of th* Republican* Is highly desirable horn fie a popular endorsement of the Deeiorrsry and as a rebuke of Roes*. Rut. 1n view of the money power behind the Republican party. Th* Tek *rnph considers It risky to predict even a modest Democratic victory, although the general outlook la dls- tinetiv encouraging. THE QEORQIA STATE FAIR. T-m*n up In alxty-slx days, actual working time, th* shortest on record, rertmps. at least In Oeorgla. the dls- P 1 »v made by tha State Fair at Cen- tr *l city Park !a In many reepecta th* t"-et interesting and entertaining In the history of the State The agrl- ou t !r *d exhibits ahow and ar» shown bsttir advantage than ever before. T v * cereals and other products ex hibited, th* syrups and other manu- factut.-i products of the farm, are all of a finer find Improved character. Th * machinery hall and its overflow • ; k - are crowded with higher grade msch>-ary than has ever before been ’thJbtted at a fair In this State All th* '’-partments are brought up to th* highest .standard and the merits of the displays are only limited by t k o restrictions upon those offering whi.-b would be removed by the erec tion of a few more buildings in which to house them. And in this connection It tnsy be w-, l <♦ suggest that the fair man es- neat should take time by the fore- •ck and prepare by providing greater m this It would appear that Taft has In hi" pocket a sovereign remedy for the present "business bad times,’’ nnd that therefore he is sadly lacking both In gratitude and love of country. For If h* had such a remedy he would have hastened with It to Mr. Roose velt last fall and together they would have staved off the troubles of the past year. It Is quite try*. however, as Mr. Roosevelt says, that workingmen, more than any other class, "pay the penalty" of hard times He might well have added that the people have also paid for the great prosperity which the Dlngley tariff brought to a select few composed chiefly of largo manufacturing trusta. If one did not I Incloso copy of g measure pending. I am not «ure whether In thr. House dr the Senate. Being statute, which » greatly Ilk* unend stated. For reaabna to us potent, wc would to have this proposed amendment killed. Won’t * kindly tell me about It. and advise vhttt you think the chances are 7 ‘ommentlng on this, the Philadel phia Record well sa>s: The trusts know their own; but the people who are despoiled by the trusts should not forever condone the party which fathom the trusts by keeping their obsequious tool* In the public ser vice.” WJjat the Standard Oil has been doing the other powerful trusts have been doing, and If they will bribe In dividual legislator* and judges, will they not seek to bribe ths whole Re publican party (whioh has for so anyone la enough Interested to seek it, will be found In the flics of The Telegraph, and In fifty magaxlne sto- Flew which hav# sympathetically dealt with every phase of southern civillta- know that the eminent statesman; many year* deferred to them In tariff Edmund Burke lived a hundred years ago, one might readily believe that ha referred to the Dlngley tariff when he declared that ”a small wealthy etas* may be even benefited by a pol ley which Is very Injurious to the country at Isrgs." The Dlngley tariff enables th# man ufacturers of Waltham watches to charge ths American public $70 for the asms, article which they chip to Europe and sen there for 881. The Dlngley tariff enable# a Read ing fPa.) manufacturer to charge Americans one dollar for ths earns lock whioh 1* shipped to Europe and sold for fifty conts. The. Dlngley tar iff enables the Baldwin Locomotive Works to charge our railroads 85.000 for locomotives which that eonesrn shlpa to Japan and sella there for $8,000, and the Rteel Trust charges nearly twice a* much In this country as In England for the came steel legislation) by pouring out money to win the election? The people’s eyes are being opened to th« secret Influence of the preda tory rich over legislation, and that Is why the Republican* dare not open their campaign fund book and expose the names of contributing trust mag nates. They dare not imitate the open and honorable course of the Democrats In this partloular. The Telegraph’s correspondent, how- «ver. asks a question that I have no objection to answering. Who did limit the opportunities of a southern woman? First let us clear up the situation: Reference to my “Address to the Individual Georgian" will reveal that it Is an appeal for the Independ ence of the individual; especially tho young men and young women. My questioner, of course, wishes me to say that the Republican party la guilty because of the war and Its result*. Jut thl. i» not an of history and hardly fair to the much abused re publicans, for tho party would have been In the minority if the democrat* had not divided at Charleston in 1880. and let In the republicans' at that time, political Infants. And this, la turn. J* m.t eitogether fair to tho southern democrats, for It was the skipping away r/ th& northern - domo- cruts from the Charleston convention that let loose the dogs of war—and bequeathed us through their succes sor*, Bryan. Ho. apparently, we have! It. at last; the northern democrats' who ran away were the fellows who ' limited the opportunities of a south ern womsn by letting in the repub* j Heap minority, and these proceeded to brook up the old order of things. 1 fair statement, but BIGHT SHOES AT RIGHT PRICES Benson Clothing Company J perhaps there should bs added the hlstor cal fact that the republican minority broke up the old order of minoruy orotte up the old order of things with an army, the majority of whom were democrats—Including tho fellows who ran away from Charlea- to th Now Is the Time, Fifty-Nine We have just received a large shipment of books that are slightly damaged, some are as good as new, all' written by the most popular authors. If you are wise you will call TODAY and se$ them, for they will not last long at 59 cents each. MACON BOOK CO. Telephone 382. 615 Cherry St. r»ll». W« *11 h«1p to pay for thr*. FRIENDS NO MORE. Th, l-tt-rn reprnfluc,<l In the reply of tha rhlaf officer of the American Federation of Labor to tho Pretld.nt •how that Ina than a yaar ago Mr. Roonv.1t wai aa Intimate with Mr. Compare aa ha waa with Mr. Hurt, man ju«t before tho eleotlon of 1904. Thl. I. not .aid by way of reproach, for tho aecond Intimacy la decidedly more creditable than th« Unit. In tha tlret ran thr object wa« a huge elec enorntotie and uoneeeeaary profile whenerej wa get on a train, for tho railroad., of couraa. baa. thtlr rataa on their npfflni. it all comae out of tha people at leaf. Now aa to tho l.rlff-lt... on torn, of tha thlnga absolutely nacanary to Ufa; Food! Bnf, II par cent duty: mut ton, Id per cent: bacon and hama, II per rent; butter, Id per cent: clime, 4d per cant: oatmeal, II per cent: macaroni and vermlcllll, II per cent: fl.lb it par rent: fruits, 40 per cent; auger. TO per cent, and ..It, 41 par cont. Table cloth, and napklni. 41 per rant: knlvn and forka. Id par cant; mip, and aaueeri and plataa. Is par oent; tinplate for kitchen utenalla, 41 per cent. • Clothing: Woolen clothe, Idd par c«nt: blanket., too par rant: flannel., tdd par cent: underwear of wool, 100 per cant; dree. good, for women and children, upward of tdd par cant: cot- ton clothe, from 40 to Id per cant Carpet, of wool, IB per cent, and cerpeta ot cotton, Id per can't. Medicine,: Calomel, is p*r cent; chloroform, 40 par cont; morphia, II per ounce; Infante' food, Id per cent: phenncltn and Ilka coal-tar medl- clnoa, II per rent; chicory. II per cent The working prepl. hnvo been told for yaara that tha tariff anablaa men- ufarturera to pay higher wage, than •re paid In Europe. It alee enable. •om» of them to beromo multi-mil- llonalns In a vary abort tlmo. And there I. a good deal of a hollow mock, •ry about higher waa,, twh.n they lion fund t? ha employed In doubtful waya: In the aecond, the object Win to limit the writ of Injunction to huch in f«t«nt an would prevent Injuatlco to atrlklng laboring men. Mr. Rooaa veil wan ao much In .ympathy with thla object In January ot thla year that ha called Mr Compere’ atten tion to a book by George A. Altar on tha labor quoetlon entitled "Moral Ovaralraln,” from whiea tho following la fluotefl: "Rioted at concretely aa poaal- hi,.' tha principal difference be tween the working people ond the rourta Ilea tn the markad tend ency of the courta to guarantee to tho workman an academic and theorallo liberty which ho doea not want, by denying him Induatrlal rtghte to which ha thlnka ha la ethically entitled. Hit grievance la, that In a multlpllcltv of In- atancoa the courta give What •earn, to him counterfeit liberty In tha place of Ita reality." tn hta latter to Mr. Campers on January S7 Mr, Rooaev.lt aald: "Tou may ha amuaed to know that I have •ent roplea of tha 'Moral Overstrain' to Juattcas Day and McKenna" Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Compera aoem then to have been working together toward a common ond worthy aud, and tha reply' relished by tha lattar on Tuea. day ahowa him to bo Just such a highly Intalllgant and widely Informrfl man at tha President would Ilka to bo Aisoelat«d with In such a cause. Mr Compere la the tame man now that ha waa In January, and holds the •amt vlewa, yet tha other day Mr, Rooaavtlt denounced him and hli vlewa In wry aavere term. The • rouble Is that Mr.. Compera publicly announced that the rights ot labor would be aafar under Bryan than un really are higher) unfler a tariff thatjdsr Taft, the latter, while a lodsral rala^a prices so htrh that the pur-1 judge, having Issued writs t»f Injunc- pow,r *' • m ' T *• "to** tlon which Clampers and ths other legdera regard as unjust Hav- lf the Democrat, are voted tntojtng believed that he had won the Rower njxt week efforts toward the,labor vote. It wa* hut natural for a ccommodatlona for the lucres^ de- I ****■ trom the man of Mr. Roosevelt's temperament msr.i that has been demonstrated by J h * ho made poa- to regard this as base Ingratitude and ynyor and Council of Macon.; * n th * urt * •• *»ug1. be! the first time that Mr Roosevelt hat *' Uk eo*operatlon of the local rev,Md ’* u «* of down, it la:sacrificed a friend and virtually re- c, »t# Fair Association and the Bute ( Jr**J htt th * lifting of the tax from'versed htmsolf when the occasion re- An {cultural Society, should at once j X ** of ,h * heopl* will Involve , qulred. The occasion this time ts his un* looking to providing add!- ■ nutting down of the enormous ( presidential candidate's tnrwntntent tional buildings te meet the needs of. of the princes of privilege, and Injunction record, futur* fairs. The splendid success j not th V thta la the "tndua- the fstr. has so far met with, despite j c **o* M that Mr. Roosevelt the uapropttloua skies of the opening j of Brytn’a election, days, warrants the step and demon-j — strata* It# necessity. | "Doe* Mr. Roosevelt not know that t there is nothing In which the Amert A candidate for office In Rhode Is land, tn enumerating hta elatma upon the support of voters and his quail flcatlons tor tha publto service, era phaslsea hi* deaoent from a signer ot the 'Declarations of Independence. That's all right ta Itself, ton. Nobody will think any the lean of you for that and perhaps a few will think Rut If you are going out after e fatal defect of all thla la southern woman though not )>* necessity, had ono chance for personal independence in 1880 to five In 1908. limited aa are her oppor-. tunlflcs. Thus we seem to have In-! dulged In much talk about nothing, un- jr-ss It Is something to have demon strated a proposition in advance. If my gentle questioner win got the original article she will ha _ _ perceive that (^discusses a eondl tlon. not a causa; a defect In our methods, not the origin of methods. Any other discussion Is as profitless «s being "queens of the grandest country on earth” without a queen’s proper revenue. The opportunities of a southern woman are limited by the same con ditions that limit tho state’s develop ment, for development means diver sity of occupation at remunerative wages. Moreover development neces- esaarllv Infers capital and Increase of wealth, and In tho sunshine of wealth the higher occupation* open to woman are nourished. Today. In our cities, the woman typewriter, bookseper. pub s rule, what tho business and profes sion they assist will permit. The con ditions that limit the incomes of these limit the opportunities of southern woman. Theae opportunities relate, teaching excepted, almost entirely to office and store. Rut what of the higher occu pations? Of what use, commercially, la the finished education of the woman who passes Into the world from our colleges? Where Is the market for ths noble acquirements of th* Wesleyan, the Lucy Cobb knd Agnes Beott girls? Who Is there here to buy the work of their hands and brains at their real IS THE TIME TO . open an account with the American National Bank of Macon The Largest Bank in Middle Georgia! Capital and Surplus - $800,000.00 Our loyal customers will tell you how we treat them. R. J. TAYLOR. President L. P. HILLYER. Vice-Proa. R. W. JOHNSTON. V.-P. OSCAR E. DOOLY.Cashier The Georgia Editors Deeds Better Than Word*. Columbus Enquirer-Sun: Governor Patterson, of Tennejuse, in. cancelling hla speaking engagements m order to make a personal Investigation of night rider outngea, la showing the. people I HEAL ESTATE LOANS j $100 and Upwards. No Delay Loans Closed Within 24 Hours. HARROLD BANKING & SAVINGS CO. 607 Cherry Street. value? Wherp can their vocalists sell J of his state what sort of governor he their voices dr their Instrumentalists j#, « n d that Is a great deal better their skill? Where da tho market for their inspiration? Who stands willing and able to buy their stories, their poems and essays? Where are th# great publishing houses to give them outlets for their genius If there is a refined, highly educat ed woman possessed of * talent or a profession that represents many dol lars and year* of toll who desires per sonal Independence In Georgia let her attempt to exchange her best efforts for thslr true value in money, 'and see how difficult It Is to find a buyer. There are many who have tried; their testimony 1* accessible. With but f»w exceptions the highly trained Georgia woman ?!)! tell thst their opportunities are limited, not by the unwillingness of our pro- pie. hut by the conditions that sur round u*. The young men can go away to the republican states, the technological schools, strangely enough boast that they are In demand outside of tho south—and market their skill, but the southern woman must remain and make the best of It. Let no one accuse me of attempting to cast a slur on our civilisation. It la not a question of queena and chiv alry at\d boiling blood. It Is a ques tion of' meat and bread; of develop ment; of mental and moral expansion, it Is a chance to do something and to he somethin*; *a factor, a worker. The young woman who labors for her self and her family, facing life In the open vfllh faith In the men around. and the God above her. giving the beat that is within her for the love she hears them is' greater than anv queen who ever wore a crown. She gets my vote and aa long aa my hand can hold a pen she will get my service. I know hsr and meet her day by day In the streets of Macon. She la In the office and the store and the work than merely telling thtm. graph la worried because society there prefer* the Merry Widow to Shake- _ that the Merry Widow la better advertised,” says the Rome Tribune. Another presumption in thslr favor 18 that Hit least aome of them are not as old as th* immortal William.— Griffin New*. The Press ha* seen the^Msrry Wid ow” and the “Merry Wive* of Wind sor" and prefer* the former aa an attractive layout. LOANS Negotiated promptly on im proved farms and city proper ty on easy terms and at lowest market rates. If you need money call on ns HOWARD M. SMITH & 00. >83 Mulb.rry St. MACON. QA. Looks Lika Bryan to Him* Orlfflrt News: Im the last week of the campaign, the editor of thfa pa per tees no occasion to change his prophecy'of August B. that this is a democratic year and will witness the election of Mr. Bryan next Tuesday despite all the money thst the re- nubilean* have raised to throw Into the doubtful state* A Republican Mass. Columbus Ledger: That Graves af fair In Atlanta last night turned out to be a regular republican mess. False in One, Falsa In Alt. Perry Home Journal: In a public statement Ust week W. R. Hearst denied that John Temple Graves la an editor of Hearst'* New York paper. He also said Mr. Graves is editor of an Atlanta paper. An Atlanta cor- la untrue. If Hearat is untruthful In one statement, why not untrue In an other—or all—political statements? Marietta Journal: The Carnegie shop, iho hurtle* along the streets j here fund oommisaton hos voted a In the early morning knd back tn the' hronse medal and 81.000 to William evening shadow. 8h* la poorly paid., N. Williams, of Alpharetta. Ga.. for but she I* able and honest; and over; saving the life ot Lillian M. Tram- hcr brow is written for thoae who oan: moll, last March, rescuing tho child - Don't Understand It! position. We are poor because we Wsvcross Herald: % do not use the ballot for what it Is; The Macon‘Telegraph ts doing more provided—to express our business for Brvnn and Kern In Georgia than needs. The north la full of crowded, any other state ©aner. W# do not communities because of Industrial op- - understand the indifference of the At- portunltie* there. The** communlt'e# • isnta Journal.—Moultrie Observer. . are wealthy because the industries! fuff you ever find a man that did draw wealth. And they pay to hear, understand the Atlanta Journal. woman atng. what her voice worth. In concert, church and th# so cial circle. They buy her oil paint ing*. her water color*, drawings, min iatures. statuary, modeling and commercial art work. They give her manuscripts to correct and proofs to read. They buy her stories and poems They cross with gold her palms when At a meeting of the Methodist min- <**n eltlsea 1* more seneltlve'than an feters tn Philadelphia th# otlier day attempt by a htgh public official to M. C. Harris, of Kona. said. the glamour and prestige of his “Thank God for Brother Bryan. 1 office to influence the electorate*” ing M. tour around th, worM. ufl h. Urea -he ».» .cuxl.lti.4 wh.n th,:—. , 9m , wm or * n trp, of «h. tru. ChrlMInn." Th, Pre.ia.nt oMcntntlcuilr left Mr. T»n ' with gold—ronll hnraTo orotre 1" r—«•» th. wm,. hoc roriz zxz * .top JUrrl, g, follow,: “Wjilt. • whol. flay. Th. u»« I, thit Mr ^ ehnracUr, ability «Tl .tirty •onvnrelrg on religion. to r icn Mr Roorev.lt know, thl, ,M n lot more, i Brv.n turn* t, in, nnfl reUL with a but a (while -oue, feolUhly tone o: ‘ ' t, Irv o In !:!. ,v., 'My wlf, ,nfl chill- Mm tllowM him to fl.fy precd.nt Mr. Ty Cobb, of harebell renown, ren re. M.tboCIit., bat n, you know, j law ,nfl th, Con.tllutlcn without » wntttM II.1M.M to .how hi. f.e, at l , Pr.jbM.rUn.* *why tM.4tf-r.huk, for re long thnth. Imagine, tho grew mir. Threw are lot, at I »lre «n<t drenrr. Mre'cre in.vjrni- f-renr.r t Mkcfl. -wa. you ren* that h. re. follow M. own Impnrioo.!cob. down ,t t»-*tnlr gronnu. wlto 2.V wo* re JES? aHZM Apartments For Rent The meat destraMe apartments tn the Nty win ba these la r — h'-us# building now N Frailer cn Coi e! r.an I h.-r Angers draw music fmm the violin, th# organ and the plane. They buy her talent* wherever they 'can be used. They can and do pay good eat. arles and they give employment of some kind to alt. And. at last, will any sane man fault with the proposition that time has com* when we should treat th* ballot with rCsprct for Its proper, —. it to the Interest l lafctag will tw superior to any ranted M and good 1 «*•?<«» «n t^ity ^RMrerntlon out be 12,600,000.00 SAFELY LOANED. During, the last 14 years we have loan- 1 12.500.000.00 on Real Estate for horns •no foreign investors. Safest nnd most profitable Investment Those desiring to borrow or having money to Invest* will find It to’their’Interest J io see us. SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO., Commercial Bank Building. Thomas B. West. Secretary and Attorney. Leon S. Dure Banking and Investments. Stocks, Bonds. Real Estate. Mortgage* Macon. Ga. - Wadiey Investment Co. Real i^tate. Insurance, Loans, Grand Building, Phone 627. FOR RENT Immediate Possession. Two-story brick store, corner Fourth and express office alley, next to union depot. 27800. 278 Orange street: very desirable two-story house, nine rooms and bath, toilet each floor and servant's house In rear. This house has Just been newly painted; plumbing thoroughly repaired, and Is In perfect condition. 180.00. FOR SALE. We have for sale a beautiful tract of flrteen acres of land, lying within on* mile of city limits and tni tour hundred yards from end of car line. This Is an Ideal site for a dairy; ts close enough to city and car lint to be sub-divided Into residence tots. Price 22.000.00. Let us show you this place and tell you mora about it. We have a nice Urge place, with new dwelling house of five rooms, pro vlded with city water and roomy barn, and has brick store desirably located and now rented, just on tdge of city with ample ground room for two more houses. See us regarding this property the new apartment —“aw by Dr. full? oFT* « C Va£t\ I | raiwr* ifth^Jvert j wo^ * toryT Vi x - room residence : inclm renre»t«re l, «nS2 fc h2!! h ware? H.M.man av.au, VUuvlll.. for . r.cTnl"rre?iV5rht™u!?C vVrer ,n4 tojtom. ownreon auy t.rttre, (4. I ire»t Mtuattre trenrearerei. Convrelreit t» * proper: «re»t rere. reboot, red enurchre. Ftn- Th.t w, aw It tn th. Intnref — — of good reprerenutton nnfl good gov Th, remth flow not reff-r in th, nation.I council from Atocrtml nation re much n, from Itnmnc* .nd nr.iret, Th, rwult t, ttmttefl nppre- tunllln fop our r®ung pcopl, who 4»- •Fir. 1 am la ftnr at • - trill to th, ,ad—whl nwa, t< not tre off. |th, gram on them, that re* worth th. bwt or llmHW opportmMo* moro to Orergtn. I Krerectfultv. KARKY STHJ.trgT.T, KDWAJtDS. H. HORNE Rwl E.ut*. In.ur.n-, and Lcwn, Oread BuCdUw. Khwd At Vacant lot TCiUS on Laurel nvreiuc. North Highlands: thl. 1. v-ry hot lot oh Laurel nvenu, and I, b.twMn two of th. prettlnt tenant In thta Vary popular ,uburb. IHM4, Just lifted with u. on North High land. a hlco Urgo lot on Laurel av, r.u». naar North avanu. that wo can •oil for 1450.00. This ts an txcsllont bargain and will b« on the market at this prtco only n ft ‘ WADLXY INVESTMENT CO. Grand Building, Ptaccfl S27 S. S. Pa^melee Company, Largest stock In the South to select tom. A pleasure to serve you. 8. 8. PARMELEE CO„ Macon. Q«. For Rent 118 • acres, six miles fmm courthouse n Howard Road, near Sumrnerfleld. Good icw dwelling and entire place fenced In: unnlng water and directly on publja oad: a fine road all the way to Macon FOR SALE. A_50-aere farra nn Columbus Road with v-acro twin on uoiumous Road With Improvements Including a two-story water and most of — cou!(1 22.000.00. Vrlcf. replaced ,w,. ,., w . w . I’drelred n “’“ r ** tona bl® term. t0S\ acre. In Crawford county. On. ta, 7-room dw.Dlng nnd two reiufil t.n- int houses; .bout 2M acre. In largo i.c- mil ernwfh tv ... Georgia Loan & Trust Co. 565 Mulberry Street, Brown Bouse Opposite Union Depot—MACON, GA- American Plan F. BARTOW 8TUBBS, Proprietor. MA00N, GA. Table excellent at Popular, Prices., Everything New, but the Name. ford. Manager. Stores For Rent ...260.00 ... 90.00 .. 55.00 ro. 402 Mulberry at, 30.00 Money to loan of various turn*. Money’s here—no waiting If your Geo. B. Turpin Sons Real Estate, Insurance, Loans. >.*353 Third St. Phone 77. Money lo Lend on Real Estate Macon Savings Bank 570 MULBERRY STREET. MACON, DUBLIN & SAVANNA RAIL- ROAD COMPANY, and Departure of Paeaenger Trains at Macon. Effective March 15, 1908. Arrive. MU' 18 Z‘PS*m| No. 1» 11106am No- 2® 3:30pml No. 17 4:40pm Train, srrlv. and depart from Couth.rn ul wiv Dcnnt- I a cthbubs. 0. S. fi F. RY. Schedule Effective Oct. 18, 1908. DEPARTURES: • m " No * 1* Through Train to Iflorida. carries Observation For- lor car and coaches. Macon to Jacksonville via Valdosta; ooa- nection made for White Bpr&A Cit 7t -Palaikiu 4 *^re p, . rn \»-^’ *• "Shoo-Fly,” Ma- gPP.. t 9,T9l-B»«U and all lnter- . * n *dl*t* points. a. m.. No. 3, "Georgia South- %rs. B »L?rSSihftj!: res 2S f d t0 &,'ciUK 12?. •dnvUle. ARRIVALS* , No. 4, "Georgia Booth W.M ureWOO Jaokeonvi.le sleeper m.. no. e, -aeorgu South- Buw&nee Limited.” from onville and Palatka, local sr Jacksonville to Macon; pore can ramoln la ,local ..re, Uu * 0I » Depot at Macon until 7:09 a. ro. 3^8 «. m„ N«. 64, "Dt.t, Fly.r,* ooeohet and Pullman siepen Tiftoa to Macon, en route frort Tifton to Macon, * u ... Chicago' V,U * *° 8t- 1x51114 fPd m ** No. 6, "Shoo-Fly,” from 'Valdosta. 4:25 p. rn.. No. 2. from Falatka, Jacksonville to Macon. C. B. RHODES. Gen. Riu, Agent. Macon, <f». ?ureua»a io paragraph 35:s of the Clvi A‘ ?5 ’v° f Intentloi a T- qa ?-<l mraf teen duly laeuei iflh-m of Baltlmon 4iwd n aute. where aald decedent tn . ItT.nrR. Executri*. Dated October 2,'nd, isos. >