Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, November 01, 1908, Image 13

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THE MACON" DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1, 1908 Is an ordeal which all women fVFfWMTIUfi'X approach with dread, for 1TM 1 11 Vi nothing compares to thc'pain nothing..... FZ -w t . of child-birth. The thought JL IVl A*PU|P^ of the suffering in store for A l~ll I ■ r_jlr£ her robs the expectant mother • ■“‘.A- m 0 f pi M s a nt t anticipations. Thousands of women have found the use of Mother’s Friend robs confinement of much pain and insures safety to life of mother and child. This liniment is a God-send to women at the critical time. Not only does Mother’s Friend carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but it prepares "UT JJTfpS.'SHA'S. the system for the coming m ™ “™ “ ** event, relieves “morning sickness,” vand other dis- rrtmFnrfc Boldly draggltts ft $140. comroris. jjook of vtlatbla Informs. tlon nailed free. DARSEY of W a 9° n F ame Has moved Into hla new factory, op posite Wilder's on Third street. He !■ to continue making the best wagon and dray values on earth. Darsey makes plenty of wagons and plenty of money, so he coin afford to treat hit custom ers, right. J. W. Darsey NOT ON WALL STREET. A Little Talk ■ Over Lumber with us may save you both money and annoyance. We can prove that it paya to buy good lumber even for a chicken house. We can prove our lumber Is good either by vhowlng It to you If you are an expert or by re ferring you to previous buyers from us, If you are not. When we have proved both these propositions the rest Is up to you. Cabinet Mantels, Painters' and Build ers' Supplies. . wimmhm sASH & door co„ 457 Tlifrd St„ Macon, Ga. Special Invitation • We extend to all of our customers and friends, and aa well in terested parties, who attend the Great Georgia State Fair, In our beautiful city, a most cordial Invitation to visit one of tho largest Etiglne, Boiler and Foundry plants In the South. You will find us Just on the Boundary Line, at Central Railroad junction, and by tak ing a South Macon car the conductor will put you off at the proper { dace, If you will tell him where you want to go. Qur machinery s sold throughout all the Southern States and we would like to de monstrate to Interested parties the running of our engines and boil ers. You will find our exhibit on the fair grounds, whloh we will be glad for you to see. Address: Schofield Iron Works Macon, Ga. BEDINGFIELD & CO. (Incorporated) EDWARD LOH, President. Formerly of Macon, Ga. The names imply that everything bought hero is the highest grade of all standard whiskies, at lowest prices. Send ns your orders which will receive prompt at tention. Write for Catalog 29 W. Forsyth St. P.O. Box 1098 Jacksonville, Florida GEORGIA SOCIAL NEWS AT FESTIVE BOARD FORMER "CRACKERS" LIVING I NEW YORK CITY TOAST OLD RED HILLS. her brother, Mr. M. S. NEW YORK. Oct SI.—Loyal eons of old Georgia. with guests from various other parts of tbs country, gathered to gether here tonight at the Waldorf- Astoria In a convention of good fellow ship and a conclave of congeniality. Georgians wers present from almost every portion of the state, from Rabun Gap to ThomasviUe; and It was a time when frafcrant memories of the home land were revived, when friendships wero more firmly cemented and state's broth erhood was put upon a stronger, surer footing, and above all elso It was a time when thoughts of Georgia were In every heart and a toast to Georgia was op - every pair of lips. The occasion was the first social affair; of the season of the Georgia Bodoty of the city of New York.. X; was designated as a smoker and la to be followed by tnroe iccepuona unit dances on Tuesday. November -t; Friday. January 29. und “ "* rch 9. and by another amok* .. i:3<Po’clock that this •'band of southerners in a strange land" assem bled in the main tonquet lull of tjie palatini hostelry of Manhattan. Count ing Georgians and their guests, there were some 400 persons present. An ele gant collation was served and when the time for coffee nnd cigars arrived, the entertainment features of tho occasion were announced. A number of selected features from the different theaters of the city were presented on the stage of, the banquet hall, dividing time with pleasant conversation of the members, n-nst of which had ••home" for Its theme while fanciful pictures of "the old red hills* framed themselves In tho upward curling smhke. Thomas McGuire, formerly of Atlanta, la president of the Georgia Society, and presided. A happy feature of the occa sion wia when he Introduced James F. Allen, formerly of Warren, who. In a neat \ * * * *-> Bedell Par Continued From Page Fosr I . —-— > i .. • 'Mr. and Mrs. Fred 8. Singer an- »■ ■ i nounco the engagement . of their . , . • . ; . w i. . i daughter. Fredol •. to Mr- Frank H. baskets of nuts from the woodland, j Turpen, the wedding to take place on Miss Tallulah Jenkins attended tho; the morning of November if. at 10:30 "Merry Widow" performance -in At* j o’clock at their home on :jropd street lanta Friday, spendlnng the week-end I . On account of tho illness of Mrs. with relatives. ; Singer, who Is now in the west, the Mr. and Mrs. Heck Bullard, of Ma- wedding will be a quiet affair, only tho chen, were recent guests of Mr. and. immediate relatives being in attend- Mrs. Percy Ezell. ance. Mrs. James B. Nlsbet has .returned j Miss Singer Is one of tho most at- from an extended visit to relatives in; tractive young women in this .section, Aj^nnta. ^ " * f - whlle Mr.-Turpen Is the proprietor of nent In hotel circlet nnd Mrs. James Lawrence re- truend to Asheville Monday. Miss Emio Lancaster left this week to accept a school at Dexter. Ga. 'I — Cm ~ N rd the week-end nt home. j Sparta, announces the engagement of Mias Bess:# Lawrence, of Ash- her daughter. Emilia Rebecca, to Mr. burn. Is visiting Mrs. N. W. Rainey. | Lovlck Christopher MMlcr. the wed- Mr. Join Dejarnetto Turner enter- j ding to take place January 6. 19.09. tained Mr. nnd Mrs. John W. Walter son mid their gurst. Miss Mary Gale Watterson, of Rogersvlllc. Tenn. at a I ' Jck TIMBER FAMINE FACEUMERICA In 30 ‘ Yegrs All Remaining Virgin Forest- Will Be Ruined WASinNOtON. D. ft. Oct. *».-“Wt delightful <5 o’clock dinner Wednesday, Cempoelt' evening. ‘ ' Troops. 4 Bliss Nina Julia Wingfield returned j In view of the cunultlon of affairs in home Saturday after several wgeks* the-Balkans tho lurkuii army Is u sub- stay with Dr. annd Mrs. Milner j ££££!:_ f LEn Bg|g whoj Nizam iajr. Marc i Friday. ..... ... three years lu tho aCtlvc army, then for six rears 111 the Intlat. or reserve oi tho active army: after which ito passes for mno veins Into the Itcrtlf, or>rs*ivo army, niul. finally, lor five years luto tlio Mus- landsturn. years Shiv Mrs. Charles M. Ledbetter, with her daughters hsr spent summer months In Eatonton, left on Monday for Haclehurat, Oa.. where she will spend tbc winter. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Fergu-on. of iw ..... Manila. P. I.. have announced th*hM U *;afls for birth of a son. Mrs. Ferguson was I ti»e uro for Mm in service, formerly Miss Louise Jones, sister of however Mtumllx service Is Mrs. •&. R. Beck. Miss Fannie . Lou Denham has re turned from a visit to Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Camp* of Atlnnta. Mrs. Robert Preston Brooks re- turned to Athens Saturday, after A weeks' stay with her parents. My, A. hotel lu Macon, and promt- *re now ciittlng timber from the forest; circles. of the United States at the rate of 60C feet board meisurs a year for every men. woman und .qhlld. In Europe they use only CO hoard feet" Few statements could be made which would bettpr -oonvlncs tho average man that this country leads the world In the demand for timber. It Is’made by Treadwell Cleveland. Jr., in a clrculat which treats of tha conservation of the forests, soil, water, and ell the othoi grout natural resources, which has just been published by ths United States forest service. In speaking further of the consumption of timber In this coun try. Mr. Cleveland .says: ™At this rets, in less than thirty years all our remaining virgin Umber will be cut. Meantime, the foreata. which have been cut over ers generally In a bad way for want of cars; they wiu produce only inferior second growth. Wo are clearly THE TURKISH ARMY. alor. wia when Allen, formerly o. ...nr.., speech, presented a gavel .— ker. eg-president of the society and orl glnally a citizen of Hamilton. Ga. Th< ravel Y/ns made of Georgia pine. Among those present, and their former homes, now residents of tig; city of New York, were: James F.' Allen. Wnrrrnton. M. J. Breltenmch. Albany. Pntrlck Cnlhoun. Atlanta. Gray hill James Edward < Macon. Dr. John A. Harris*. Macon. Charles H. Jones, Atigusta. L. H. Mercer. Savannah. M. J. O'Brien, Augusta. Bedell Parker. Hamilton. Dr. Jemes H- Parker. Savannah. Geo. Foster Pesbody. Columbus. Royal C* Penbcdy. Columbus. Samuel R. Pea body. Columbus. Morton F. Plant Savannnh. Oscar S. Strauss. Talhotton. David Wyatt Aiken. Brunswick. Arthur A. Alexander Atlanta. Chester Alexander. Columbus. Geo. 8. Alexander. Savannah. J. C. Alexander. Atlanta. Paul W. Alexander, Savannah. A. P. Allgood. Rome. Chantps B. Andrews. Washington. Geo. Cook Atkinson. Atlanta. E. 1j. Austell. Atlanta. 1 Isidore Berg. Savannah. Ashley I>e Bledler. Atlanta. J. M. Billups. Jr.. Athens. Wm. Ilarman Biaek. Atlanta. James O. Boone, Ms con. Chas. D. Brady. Bnlnbrldge. T,. R. Brooks. Atlanta. Herbert H, Brawn. Atlanta. Reginald M. Bryan. Darien. Edward F. Bucnannn. Atlanta, Jos. 8. Buhler. Atlanta. . H. K. Burras. Columbus. - Dr. Thou. H. Cherry. LaGrangs. E. C. Chisholm. Savannah. A. M. Clegg. 8avannah. Dr. Warren Coleman. Macon, Floyd 8. Corbin. Thomaston. Charles E. Culpeper. Atlanta. Wm. L. Dennis. Eatonton. Walter E. Dixon. Macon. O. Clifton Driver. Hartwell. C. J. Dunn. Savannah. J. A. Dunn, Atlanta. B. F. Einstein, Savannah, w. E. Evans. Covington. Garrard Glenn. Atlnnta. gk Dr. Thos. Merritt Grace, Waycrozs. James A. Gray. Atlanta. Frank T. Harrlr*ion. West Point Geo. N. Hartman. Columbus. Robt. Lee Hatch. Atlanta. Herman Behwed ITertwIg, Macon. Martin J. Hoban. Atlanta. Joseph Johnson, Jr.. Atlanta. Harry L Jones, Macon. Horace Lanier, West Point Wm. B. Lowe. Atlanta. Percy K. Marshall. Roma. Pugh Martin, .Atlanta. David Mayer. Savannah. — Oscar Mavsr. Savannah. Raphael Moses. Columbus. SEND YOUR ORDERS TO Sam Weichselbaum & Mack P. O. Box 163 Jacksonville, Fla. The Mnck JBoys will give them prompt nnd careful attention. Note tho following. All express prepaid: XXX Superior Rye. $2.50 gall, jug, 4-quarts 11.00 Six year old Corn. IJ.00 gall. Jug, 4 quarts $$.B0 Mount Vernon Rye. $4.00 gall, jug, 4 quarts I4.S0 Our Choice Rye, $$ oc gall, jug 4 quarts Anderson Co. Bourbon, four quarts White MUU bottled In bond, four quarts $450 Lewis' 66, four quarti ...tltO Black Label, four quarts 8 year old Corn, fout quarts..... 1 These are only a few of our many good things. Send ns a trial order. All the standard brands of BEER at lowest prices. Write for price list SAM WEICHSELBAUM & MACE, Jacksonville, Fla. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO. DEPART FOR— Savsnnah and Augusta * 1:35am Savannah, Augusta Covington and Eatonton •11:55am Eatonton and Miiiadgevlile..f 7:oOpm Athens end Madison 7:40am Athens and Madls< Savannah, Augu Athens and Madison...., Athens end Madison... 1 Atlanta. Chicago, St. Loula..•I2;0’.am V. us Flyer) • Sassmli _ - Atlanta and Grlfftn * 4:30am!Atlanta and Griffin.. Atlanta and Qrlffin • 7:25am' At anta and Qnffln. Atlanta and Qrlffin i v ..« 1;3*pnlAt ant* and Qr.ftin Atlanta and Qrlffin...* 4:4Cpm Atlanta and Qrlffin ■ Columbus and _ _• jra^am 1 BirmiPrina-n arj Coiun-bus Columbus and Birmingham..•11:25am Birmingham and Columbua..< Albany and Montnemayy • S;00am: Montgomery and Albany ' Albany and Montgomery....•11:40am Montsomery and Albany 1 Americas ...* 7:5&pm|Americas 1 •DAILY. 1 EXCEPT SUNDAY. JOHN W. BLOUNT, Current schedules coi ‘ ‘ - • 2:80am * 1:15pm *11:0Cam 7.4 . f) . n > date. District Passenger Agent. 601 Cherry gL James Neill. Rome. Robert Scott Newcomb. Savannah. James F. O'Neill, Atlanta. Chas, M. Parker, Hamilton. P. N. Pendleton. Atlanta. W. M. Pendleton. Atlanta, Ralph Peters. Atlanta. Ernest Pope. Washington. De. R. K. Pou. Columbus. H. H. Raymond. Savannah. ' Wm. B. Reeve*. Griffin. J. Charlton Rivers. Atlanta. E. B. Robinson. Atlanta, ' * Lamar Ross. Macon. Jarvis A. Root. Atlanta. Dr. Julian P. Thomas. Columbus. Frank D. Thompson. Atlanta. Preston Brooks Tnhln. Augusts. M. L. Towns. Newnnn. I. * go re Walker. Macou. John W. W#ed Savannah. Cha*. C. Wh'teker, Je.. MflledgovIllA James M Wilkes Atlanta. C. H. WillisAtlanta. Goo. Bernard William* Marietta. Thos J. wntiam, Atlanta. eni»f» bghter Tdnlee. and Mr. I Photo Jeme«. of Tlfton, Ga, The weddlnl Is to take piset on the morning of WeJnesdey. Deeemher 2. at 10:10 o’clock, at the Methodist church, Irwlnton, Gs, What If your stronger brother go Before you uo the hill. To stake his elalip above the enow. Where ell the crags are atilt? H*s found a fortun* In the sands QUALITY MAKES DEMAND Jackson Square Coffee Is sold on its merits, and each can wo guarantee to please you. Now 25c per pound at yonr grocer. IMPORTERS COFFEE CO., Ltd., New Orleans, La. A. B. SMALL CO., Macon, Wholesale Agents. and Mrs. A. Hamilton Reid. Miss Florrle Belle Rnssoe, of the O. N. annd I. C. at Mllledgevllle, spent the week-end with her parents jiere. Mrs. Henrietta McDade, of Willnrd. nnd Mrs. John B. Davis, of Dalto.i, were guests thlf week of Eatonton relatives. . Miss Willie Moore .!• visiting Ms- con friends and relatives. Miss Mamie Moore has returned to Snvanpah for the winter months. Mrs. Charles I. Robinson hss re turned from Atlanta. Mrs. Dodge Hearn and daughter, Marthido, and Miss Ida May Myers, have returned home froth Atlrgita. Mr. Ambrose Paschal and Miss Luda Paschal were recent Eatonton visitors. Mrs. A. J. Bonner and MIm Gussl* Mosely, of Godfrey, visited Eatonton recently. talbotton! A quiet and beautiful wedding took place Wednesday at noon In the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Caspar Jameson. wh$n they gave in marrlnge their youngest daughter. Annie, to Mr. Harris Colin McRae, of Rochelle. Ferns and giant chrysanthemums were lavishly used In the artistic deco rations. Rov. Francis McCullough performed the ceremony. Tho bride was lovely In a golng-away gown-of blue with becoming hat. Mrs. McRae Is descended from an Illustrious family' and loved for hrr brightness, wit and originality. Mr. McRae is n popular and pro gressive citizen of McRae. He has a host of friends to rejoice with him upon his good fortune. After a-slalnty luncheon the happy couple left for Rochelle, their future home. Many romcmbrances wero re ceived. The out-of-town guests were: Judge and Mrs. C. “ ‘ Dr. and Mra. chelle; Dr. McAllister, of Rochelle: Miss eJsa elj andp cmfwyp crafwy case of en»or- to servo in the before reaching lev. la Aelu. ‘ only for two ears nt tho .ml of tnc soldier’s Re: If l film ting exemptions ami ifilleally Unfit, about 100.000 tlUMeWIHHRIHIliil young Moslems comn up for conscription every year, nnd of tide number about .70.000 are taken for the colors, while the bnlanre of 50.t»00 pats straight sway Into piled some numerical tgbles of street! which niav be tuken aa n basis for esti mates. The numbers of available fight ing men under the present system OL service may t»e given as follows: Nlxam tronpu. tr.0.000; Ihtlat* 150.000; first class Redlf. 270.000; second clffss Hedlf. 360 • 000; MustnfTX 90.000; total.' UOO.OOO. ** these the second rlass Redlf rnen be Ignored for practical fighting ___ poses, as only a small proportion are even partially trained. The other men are. or ought to be. fully trained sol diers. The force available ^for Instant service In Europe la probably about 150, 000 men. whlelv In the course of a few weeka could be Inrreased to 376.000 men. A military correspondent of the Lon don Times, writing from Adrlanople. says that the "great wnnt In .the Turkish army Is education—education, first of all. of the rank and file, and then of the of ficers on mora practical lines then at present The material both of officers and men la excellent—es good fighting material as any in Europe—but the training la far behind date. Eighty per cent of Jhe conscripts are illiterates. With Its existing organisation and pres ent methods, the Turkish army Is the weakest In Europe. Courage, endurance, patience—high military qualities with which the Turkish soldier Is richly en •lowed—are useless without that aden title training which la necessary to In sure success on a modern field of battle. Happily Turkish officers are aware their defects, and are determined remedy them. In their effort* to recover ground lost through the deplorable Inep titude of their late rulers, thsy will have the sympathy and encouragement of their former allies and the good will of the British people. A strong Turkey Is necessary for tho balance of power In Europe, and Turkey can only be strong with the help of a regenerated national Miss Jessie Jameson, of Thomaston. GLENNVILLE. Mrs. Mary Easterling, of Smiley, was a pleased visitor here the past Miss Lillie Smiley, of Smiley, visited friends hero this week. Miss Freddie Geiger hfig returned to her home at Tusculum after spend ing some time with her sister, Mrs. F. L. Knight. Mrs. Dave Love, of Lew, visited friends hero the past week. Mr. J. M. Folsom Is visiting In Mt- con this week. Dr. C. J. DeLoach. of Lumber City, Is In town visiting home folks. Miss Lizzie Secklnger and Janette Godwin visited friends at Jones Creek this week. Dr. Fred L. Hines, of Vldalla, visited friend* here this week. Mrs. W. R. Conner, of Sylvanla. Is visiting her sister. Mrs. <?. R. Bwaln. Mrs. S. T. Larlscey, of Sylvanla, Is Birds on Migration. London Dally Mall. The great autumnal exodus of birds is nearly over. For week*. past It has been going on. ouckoos. swifts, fly catchers and nightingales leading the way, followed by swallows, martins, _ nightjars and a score of others, while Oliver, of Blakely; the rear will be brought up In about D. McRae, of Ro- a fortnight’s time by the chlff chaff. which is always the first to come and the last to go. One very curious feature In this an nual migration Is the fact that the birds never fly straight from this country to their destination In Egypt or Arabia. They follow a xlgzng course. First of all, croaslng tho Channel gt certain specified points, they make for northern Germany, where the great gathering of tho feathered clans takes place. There tho vast host breaks up Into four dlvIsloHa, tho first flying southwest through France and Spain to the Straits of Gibraltar: the second duo south to the Quit of Genoa, and thence across Cor sica and Sardinia to Tunis; tho third a little more to the east, so as to pass down Italy and through Sicily to Tripoli, while the fourth goes south east through Austria nnd Greece, and so by way of Crete to Alexandria. Then, on reaching the African coast, they all turn due eaat and fly straight lor i lover the verge of a timber "This Is not due to necessity, for the forests are on* of the renewable re- source*. Rightly used, ttffjo on pro ducing crop after crop indefinitely. Th. ••ountrlea of Europe know this, and Ja pan knows It; and their foreata are be coming with time not less, but more, productive. Wo probably atlll possess sufficient land to grow wood enough at homo to supply our own needs. If we I are not blind, or willfully wasteful, we may yet preserve our forest Independence nml. with It. the fourth of our great In- duetrles. Waite* Are Enormous. "Present waste* In lumber production are enormous. Take the case of yellow pine, which now heads the Hat In the volume of annual cut. In 1907 It la mated that only one-half of all the Jlow pine cut during tha season was s max nnd that th* other half, amounting Mg' 18,000,000 cords, was wasted. Such waste is typical. Mr. R. A Lang. In hie ed- dress on 'Forest Conservation' at the conference of governor* last spring, pointed out that 10 per cent of th* yellow^ pine was simply left In the wooda—a waste which represents the timber grow ing on 300.000 acres. L "The rest of the waste takes place at the mill. Of course. It would never do to speak of the material rejected at the. mill as waste’unless this material could [be turned to use by some better and B Bore thorough form of utilization. But many cases we know, and In many ghe^asesij^sv^xcenent reasoi^M many case* ; ..her cases, wa L-.- believe, that moat. If not all, of this ma* terlal could be Uzed with profit It Is simply a question of Intelligent Investi gation and. moro than all. of having th* will to economize. Efforts at Conservation, "But there ere other ways to conzerve tho forests besides cutting In half the present waite of forest products. Tho foreata Can be made to produce three or four times as rapidly as they do nt present This Is true of both the virgin forests find the cut-over lands. Virgin L-r-'-tK nr r of ton fully *»"< UM with ni-t class timber, but this stock has been laid in very alowly, on account of the waste ful competition which Is carried on con stantly between the wal trees. Then, too. In the virgin forests there are very many trees which havo reached maturity and stopped growing, and th«io occupy space which. If held by younger trees, would be laying (n a new stock constant ly. Aa regards the cut-over mAmmi cutting, followed by lire, h growth an seriously that In Ikying in* rui-nvai has chocked „ ... .n most esses reproduction Is both poor am! alow, while In many other cases there Is no true forest reproduction at all at prae cut. nnd future." i Is but little hope for tho Miss Cook, the Cornell co-ed, who has gone Into the stock and bond busi ness. after having won honors ns a speaker In her college, Is described »e n small, pale girl, young looking and plainly dressed. She Is ambitious to become a bank president, and thinks that women have made a success of that business, more than a thousand having entered It. She made a study at college of financial subjects, and will not speak In an oratorical way for soirie time to come. though it may be very much longer. And their greet Idea Is to make the passage of both the EnglIsh Channel and ths Mediterranean Sea at the nar. rowest points. So they willingly fly an extra thousand miles or so by land, both In autumn nnd again In aprlnr. in order to avoid a flight of fifty or sixty mllew across ths water. And nbthlnr will turn them from these old ascestral ''fly lines." which seem to | on till they reach their winter haunts, 'date back to the time when the Mtdl- The reason why the birds adopt these terranean was a series of lakes and THE LAST* STAND MR8. T. O.’ROAN. Nervousness Completely Cured Mrs. Roan, of Rolling Fork, Misa., Tells of tho Wonderful Restoration to Health of Her Husband and Herself— Mr. Roan Had Consumption and Mrs. Roan Ner vousness end Constipation. Mrs. T. C. Roan was a chron ic sufferer from constipation : nd nervousness for over 10 years. She says she tried everything that she could think ■of and was treated by several doctors, but nothing seemed to relieve or help her until at Imst she employed Dr. Shivers, of Greenville, Miss., who prescrib ed Duffy’8 Pure Malt Whiskey, to bo taken regularly three times a day—dessertspoonful in a glass of milk—and a few bottles made a complete cure. Mrs. Roan writes that hen health is better than it has been for yenrs, and she heartily rec-- ommends Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskoy ns tho greatest family medicine nnd tonio stimulant, ns it has cured her. She also states that her husband, who had consumption, was completely cured after tnking one and half dozen bottles of Duffy’s Puro Malt Whiskoy. Any doctor who has ever treated lung trouble and tuberculosis or anyone who has ever had a tonch of it can realize what a wonderful thing this was; for a case to bo cured witli one and a half dozen bottles of Duffy’s' Puro Malt Whiskey, taken ns ordered by n doctor. Mr. and Airs. Roan nro anxious to havo their statement published broadcast, so that others who are suffering as they havo may road it and be benefited and they will be only, wo glad to nnsrer any letters of inquiry they may receive in regard to their cure. ^ ^ Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey is nn absolutely pure distillation of malted grain; great care being used to hnve overy kcrnol thoroughly mnlted, thus de stroying tho germ nnd producing a predigested liquid food in tho form of a malt essence, which is tho most effective tonio stimulant nnd invigorator known to science; softened by warmth and moisturo its palnt- nbility nnd freedom from in jurious substances render it so tliut it can bo retained by tho most sonsitivo stomach.. It is invaluable for over worked mon, dclicato women nnd sickly children. It strengthens and Rustnins tho system, is a promoter of health and longevity, makes tho old young and keeps tho young strong. The . Welcome Glow of the Electric Light Is hospitality in itself. Tfvonr residence is. not wired let us show you how small the ex- penso rgally is. Its conven ience will repair you in short time, and when once installed yon will wonder how you ever managed to do without it. Macon Railway & Light Co. Sam and Ed. Weichselbaum P. 0. Box No. 55. 610 Market St. Chattanooga, Tenn Phone No. 820. Our stock Is complete with the finest and best brands of Wines, Whiskies, Brandies, etc. 1 Gal. I 0.1 t O.l. OI4 Virgin)* Com Whl.k.y 11.80 l«.JI 18 00 K.prtM Prep.14. * - ,r. Bottles In Bond (Ily. ,nd -Bourbon) - < not. S Bot, 13 Bot. Sylvan Orovo tj.80 I , L 1 } ™ B.II. of I.«xlngton 8.00 J-J{£ Atherton IKwkttaVjyt).... - - ■ - - »•»» _ 10 - 7S 1800 EXPRESS PREPAID. BEER ^ ~ ■’ ... S I nr ctaMB Rohm. ..... Blue Ribbon ITudwelser nine Grass PI EL'S.... 11.66 Per egsk Per Cask JJ-' Per Cask * 5 60 Per Cask F. O. B. Chattanooga. BEND FOR PRICE LIST—LET US KNOW YOUR WANTS. 11.80 Ttt TIT that* I'harA T« flfronm SOUTHERN ELECTRIC r SUPPLY & MFG. CO. , * Machinery, Electric and Combination Fixtures ; WIRING MILL WORKS A SPECIALTY a - m...* 010