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THE MACON DAILY TELEGBAPHi TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1908
The Macon Telegraph
Publlehed Every Morning by
THE MACON TELEGRAPH FIR CO.
•M Mulberry •(reel. Macon, Oa.
0. R. Pendleton, President.
THE TeLEOHAPH IN ATLANTA.
The Telegraph can be found on sale
«t the Klinbartl House and Piedmont
Hotel Jn Atlanta.
Linotype For Sale.
Model No. 1, two yeara old, two-let
ter Margenthalcr Linotype machine, tn
J ood order; 11.88#, fob Macon. Ad-
reaa The Telegraph, Macon, Oa.
TILDEN ON TODAY’S ISSUES.
When (he bfotory of our country la
summed up and tho sacrifice* and
•ervloea of our public men ere coolly
.weighed and considered, it will bo
fgreed that among them all there
was no truer er more unselfish pa-
•Hot than SamuH J. THdtn. the man
who oceupfea the unique position of
having been elected to the hlgheat
office tn the world, of having seen that
office stolen from him, and of having
held hla hand rather than resist the
theft at the cost of precipitating hla
country into civil war and fratricidal
bloodahad. Ha foresaw tn 1878. or
rather aaw In that year the evil In Its
earlier stage# that today constitutes
the vital Issues confronting the
American people In ominous and vla-
Ihle shape to thoea who are not wil
fully blind. In hla letter accepting the
Democratic nomination for President already the conditio
arrested, its inevitable result will
be the practical destruction of oue
system, tot tho Federal Govern
ment grasp powers over the great
corporations of our country end
acquire the means of addicting
their interests end their fears;
1st it take jurisdiction of riots
which it is tho duty of the State
to ouppresi; let it find pretexts
for increasing the army—-and soon
those in. possession of the Gov
ernment will have e power with
which no opposition can success
fully compote. The experience of
Franco under the Third Napoleon
•hows that, with elective forme
end universal suffrage, despotism
can be established and main
tained."
If there Is any appreciable relation
between caure and effect there can be
•little doubt that a majority of the
people of this country are today de
sirous of changing the political con
ditions and rulers under which a year
fat with abundant crops and God-
sent prosperity hes been converted
Into a season of panic and widespread
suffering, of business depression and
of financial disaster. Conditions un
der which prices of necessaries have
Increased as the demand for them
has lessened with tho decrease or dis
appearance of wages. This arbitrary
revtrsal of the laws of supply and de
mand hue caueed the murder of more
Innocents than Herod ever alow. There
Is not in this country u father of a
family or a woman familiar with the
affairs of her housoiold who does
not know now that the tariff-fed In
terests and their truly begotten prog
eny, the two hundred and more trusts,
dally, almost hourly, put thc-lr hands
In the family pocket and, without
rhyme or reason, abstract therefrom
heavy tolls /mm the pittance made
for the family provision.
That the people should desire such
conditions changed Is Inevitable, but
have reached
PATIENCE IS EXHAUSTED.
Mr. Howard Russell Butler, a Re
publican correspondent of the New
■f4rk Times, referring to "those voters
vfho ere break ins away from
rptts pf the Republican party flrpplv
because they can no longer stomach
Its tariff poltey/^eaye: •. -)
I heartily agree with them that
I this country has suffered enough
from the consequences of pro-
• Jecllve duties. The original mls-
* sion of the Republican party wq
to remove the .yoke of slavery, but
It has •surely established another
yoke, less heavy, perhaps, but
more widespread. It has raised
price* to artificial levels, obliging
In 1878 Mr. Tllden said:
"Two svils infest the official
•ervioe of the Federal Govern
ment. One is the preva'ent and
demoralising notion that the pub
lic service exists not for the but-
inrse and benfit of the whole peo-
pel but for the interest of the
officeholders, who ere in truth but
the ssrvente of the people.
“Under the influence of this
pernicious error public employ,
ments have hotn multiplied, the
numbers of those gathered into
tho ranks of officeholders have
been stssdily increased beyond
env possible. requirement of the
public business, while Inefficiency,
peculation, fraud and ma'versotlon
of the publio funds, from the
highest places cf power to the
lowest, have overspread the whole
service tike loproey.
"The other evil is the organisa
tion of the official class into a
body of political mercenaries gov-
tv, and attsmpting to earry tho
elections of the people by undue
looted from the celeries or fees of
officeholders. The offioial class In
other countries, sometimes by it#
own wslaht, end sometimes in al*
llano* with the army, has boon
able to rule tho unorganised
maim, even under universal suf
frage. Here it het already grown
Into a gigantic power, oepahte of
stifling tho inspirations of a
sound publio opinion and of re
sisting an easy change of admin
istration, until miagovornmont bo-
eivit revolution.'
How emphatically true this picture
Is of the situation today, with a can
didal* for President forced on hi#
party by tho Incumbent of the office
through the agency of tha offlcthold
era and confessedly with a view to
continuing that Incumbent's policies:
with tho President degrading Ms of
ficial dignity to the functions of a
partisan campaign manager; with the
public servants from the Cabinet offl-
cere to ths postoffice janitor all neg
lecting the public business to throw
themselves Into the principal busi
ness of electing the candidates of the
paHy tn power; with the candidate
for tha Presidency actually and In
effect holding out the hope tn an en
tire section of the country of brtng
rewarded with a few offices es an In-
dueement to the people to change
their political principles: with the
treat trust magnates taking aides
openly and pouring nut their money
eecrelly-men who have grown fabu
lously rich on the pollelee of the Gov*
eminent while hosts of able-bodied
men beg for employment In vain and
great numbers of womqn and child
ren In thla bounteously blesssd land
by Providence suffer for want of the
Mr* necessaries of life
Is not the fact thst we hare reached
the culmination of the condition*
which Democracy's leader foresaw and
stated so forcibly over a quarter of a
century ago pressing upon the senses
and the Intelligence of the people to
day tn every particular just a* ha
stated them?
"Though one roe# from the dead
ye would not believe** I* Scriptural,
and It is tru* today of the unbeliever
who shuts his eyes blindly to the con
ditions to which our country has been
reduced—despite Its wonderful God*
gtven natural resources and advan
tage*—by Republican nils.
Samuel J. Tllden was not a prophet.
He merely stated ths obvtous conclu
sions hie senses Indicated to him
from the. objects apparent to them.
And a year after he eras robbed of
the Presidency by th# malign agen
cies ho had so well described, moral
ising on the tendencies of conditions
to n corrupt despotism ha eaM tn n
public speech:
w is:
lM« ♦*•«<» Ol, .1
* *•* I»W|.M'"I elu. with
II, MMru. d.rxnd.ntt. tK.
■nwtll *f th. m.,n, c, Mrrunl
lnffu.net, h«.» veil.nigh H,.
• trdy.d th, btl.nu of , ur com.
pl«» av.l.m. It my I„ d ,.
mont In. 1*74 th.t pub!,. M ml7t.
flamontfirg a ch.ng. ol oOmlnla.
•••!•". n.tdtd »o ombrac, two.
third. *1 lh. poop!, al th. ...
pmnlng o, Iho ponva.o in o-dor to
coat a mo ferity of volot al tho
plootaon. If thig Undo no/ u not
the limit Tllden foresaw and the peo
ple’s opproHHors arc using the people’s
money in the effort to buy the elec
tion and also the army of officeholders
they have created at the people's ex
pense to help them maintain their
hold. As Story eald of the downfall
of Rome. “The hglona were bought
and sold, but the people paid
tribute money.”
The result of today’s election will
he a pretty fair tost as to whether
this country Is and shall continue to
be a free republic or whether It
already In the hands of a despotto
system dominated by a merciless oli
garchy of money.
A BUSINESS MAN ON THE ISSUE.
As the Republicans were afraid to
take Roan’s "dare” and open their
campaign contribution book. It was
not to b« expected that they would
give notice to the charge of Mr. Na
than Straus, brother of Secretary
Straus of the Roosevalt Cabinet, fur
ther than to consign him to the An
anias club Yet Mr. 8traua must
have caused them great uneasiness.
Speaking before the Travelers’ League
on Thursday last, he said:
When l spoke the other day
about Wall •street contftlbutlonn
they raised a great rumpus. I was
out riding with the man who told
me. and hr said: "Wall, they’ve
taxed us $600.” T,o and behold
♦hey jumped up-and called mo a
liar 1 asked them to appoint a
committee of their people, and I
would prove it. I am ready to
prove now that they have not only
levied a tax of 8800. but they have
a sliding scale which runs up to
18.000. I am ready to prove this,
and the newspapers won't dare
print what I say here.
1 don't blame these people for
contributing to the Republican
rnmpnlgn fund, for they are de
pendent upon the trusts and cor
porations. and If they don't do ao
they will he Injured In business.
. . . They know they are rais
ing th* fund for bribery. They
are using verv unfair meant to
defeat Bryan. T defy them. T
defy the Republican party. They
have the largest corruption fund
this year that they ever had, and
I can prova It
Home further remarks of Mr. Straus
should Interest those buslnase men
who cry peace, arguing In affect that
It Is better not to disturb the robbsra
In high places who prey upon the
public than to go to the trouble and
expense of bringing them to justice.
He said: "I think 1 have aoma right
to apeak as a business man. I am
connected with two large business en
terprisee. No eane man who has
gone through the arduous process of
building up a great business would
deliberately do anything to tear It
down. You will give mo credit for
being at anxious to promot# the bus
tness prosperity of the country as any
Republican of them all. ! have a good
deal at stake, more than moat men
who will vote the Republican ticket,
and I can aav that the only sure way
to business revival (a to rid ourselves
ths dominance of Its methods,
which are mainly responsible for tho
business depression. Special privi
leges to a few and oppression and ex
tortion for the many aft not the kind
of principle# which go to moke n peo
ple prosperous and happy."
Oompera having retorted with In
terest on Teddy, now putt it all over
Taft, who Friday so far yielded to the
exigencies of the Republican situa
tion as to declare that John Mttohell
and James Duncan, promlnsnt labor
leaders, had fallen away from Gom-
per* tn hie advocacy of Bryan. Oom
pera received and made publle tele-
grama from these and other labor
leaders denying Mr Taft's atatsmant
11c has b«^*n exploited
benefit of the favored few. If the
Government may thus Inflate
value*, why not Wall street? The
prolific tree of modern high
finance hae borne some baneful
fruit of late—no wonder—.fop it is
grafted on • the tap-root of pro
tection.
Roosevelt has been pruning the
tree somewhat In the last two
years, but not tho root. Now,
there Is no doubt about the dis
ease. * The question Is as to the
femHy. Shall we rush to Bryan?
Then this correspondent, after
making all these wholesome admit
slons as to the hopelessly diseased
condition of his own party, jgqe§ on to
argue that the diseased party should
be kept In power because Bryan, llko
McKinley, once advocated the free
coinage of silver . He says:
Tnft— well tried as Judge and
statesman — Inspires confidence,
even If his attitude on the tariff
question In disappointing. Let us
vote for him In the hope that tho
coming promised revision will,
under th* pressure of an Awak
ened public conscience, be, at
least. In the right direction. Let
us hope that Tnft’e continuous
am lie will grow still broader when
ho listens to tho appeals for “In
fant Industries." He will certain
ly. nt that time, be confronted by
an Imposing array of sturdy prlso
babies.
Let the Repuhlleans have one
more ctmnce. If the tariff is re
vised for the benefit of the na
tion. well and good. If rqgjsed for
continued plunder, then let us
pray for an honest tariff rqformer. •
We hardly think that such an argu
ment will stop the movement of those
who "are breaking away from the Re
publican party because they can no
longer stomach Its tariff policy." The
Republican party has had tan chances
out of the twelve since 1880, and hav
ing failed to do anything but raise the
tariff higher and higher each time,
has forfeited every reasonable right
to even "one more chance." There
comes a time in the experience of ths
most forbearing and long-suffering
when patience Is exhausted.
John tx Atvhboid. tt appears, al
ways did talk with dollar mart's.
John D. Rockefeller tells of the first
time be met Archbold. At * hotel he
saw written large on the register.)
"John D. Arehbetd. 84 00 * kbl." This
attracted Rockefeller to him. Hla eer-1 Rttcheoek aaya be will stand er fan
tit cates of deposit, expressed In four by bis prediction of 888 electoral vote*
and five figure*. Have attracted many fee Taft. No one doubt* It In t*e
another to Archbold sine* iUoat*
CYNICAL REPUBLICAN CONFES*
SION.
In "the classiest audlenoe that ever
attended a political meeting in .Car
negie Hall” which was held Friday
night. In New York to endorse Taft
for the Presidency, Frank S. Black,
a supporter of Taft, uttered the fol
lowing cynical sentiments to hla In
telligent and discriminating kld-
gloved hearers before committing
himself and them to Roosevelt's can
didate for President:
"These things at least are obvious:
ths unparalleled prosperity, so lats'y
hers, has taken wing. Ths demand for
laborers which a year ago could not
be mat now finds them by thousands
Idle on the streets. Luxuries which
seemed within easy reach last year
have been exchanged for ths bare
canities of thla. The dlsoussion Is
no longsr whether existing plants
shall be enlarged, but whether they
shall run at all. Capital, for years
possessed of courage to enter any
promising expedition, now deems It
self unsafe unless every night || ©in
return to the vault.
see
"What has so rudely altered ths
conditions of American Ilfs? It is ths
abrupt and violent departure of the*
quality without udtlch no business
will every be freely dons, without
whtoh civilisation would stand still
In Its tracks—ths confidence which
men have toward each other. Confi
denee never leave* without etlllng in
a substitute to take Its ptsos. That
substitute Is suspicion, ths hangdog
of all the human traits. With that
on guard no worthy human motlvo
svfr stood a chance.
see
"W# should have Son* far bettor
for the welfare of our people and ths
fame of ths country If ws had framed
true aoeusatlona and pursued them to
the end. (Laughter and applause)
'I believe In punishing the guilty,
but I do not believe in pursuing ths
oulprlt by firing into ths crowd.
(Laughter).
"We have belabored wealth until
there Is no phrase known te ineonti-
nsnt speech ws have not applied t* it
Reaction has bscoms a hardly less
ferocious word than treason. But our
reforms have ell been oral; we have
punished no one. And during this
pretractsd carnival the pries of many
•f the necessities of our deity Ilf* has
meuntsd higher end higher. (Ap
plause).
"Capital lives far years, but labor
only far e day. When th* sun goes
dawn it sets forever en that day'e
opportunities. Ths value of your rail
road* will some beck. Your houses
wifi continue to fulfill their uses, but
tha unperformed labor of today It at
th* rain thot did not fall and Is worth
no mere."
NO ANSWER.
We have seen one of the great
est of the trusts obtaining exec
utive perm lesion to absorb a rival.
Is this to be continued as * set
tled policy,of the Republican par
ty?—William J. Bryan.
After quoting th« above the New J mentioning.
York Tlme( submits the following Jong as he ;
ficlent and crushing gnawer:
Th# United States Steel Cor
poration hoe ordered $1,000,000
worth of new machinery for the
new blast furnaces in the Ena-
ley plant of the Tennessee Coal
and Iron Company.
A hug* monopoly without even a
smokestack left to dispute with It the
possession of the earth may please
Mr. Carnegie, Mr. Roosevelt and the
New York Times, but not the people
of the United States. The Steel Trust
(many now spell It steal) Is more than
ever in a position to Insist on selling
Its product tn this country at double
the price it profitably sells Its vast
shipments to foreign lands, thus col
lecting tribute from every man,
man or child In the United States
who rides on a railroad train, or <
conveyance depending on the Steel
Trust’s manufactures.
j "Temple graves says that)If the In-
I dependence) ijedgue goes fade on its
'principle# bp,will turn hi* hook on It.
Terrifying- .threat 4 ,” says tfaj hforfalk
Virglnlan-PllU. r • "In the * Rzkt * place,
I the league hasn't any principles worth
ANTICIPATES ROOSEVELT ROOR
BACK.
The Washington Herald anticipates
a roorback from President Roosevelt
at the last moment. In Its "Political
Gossip” the Herald expresses Its ap
prehensions as follows:
has not fired Ills last shot.
Look out for It!
Somethlngr more than mere
Be prepared for It!
Four years ago. you will recall,
Theodore Roosevelt charged upon
Alton Brooke Parker In a man
ner that stirred the blood of the
country and gave a whirl and six-
ale to the close of the campaign
that nobody will ever forget.
Looking bark to that camplgn, it
Is easy to believo that Parker
never stood tho ghost of a show
of election, and that his candi
dacy was not worth the powder
used to blow It up with, but a
theory has since been widely, if
not generally, entertained that
that spectacular attack upon Par
ker changed hundreds of thous
ands of votes, and so rallied the
militant Republicanism of the land
that. If it did not snatch victory
from defeat—which, of course it
did not—at any rate made an al
ready won victory doubly sure.
Roosevelt did that on his own
account. Would he do less for
Taff? No;'‘he would do more.
Therefore, keep your eyes and
open. Theodore Roosevelt Is
man behind the Republican
ear*
the r
out a climax—a gingery, sizzling
climax.
What It will be. no one under
feeaven knows; but the knowing
ones are awaiting it—some In fear
and trembling.
Th# Herald falls to allow for the
difference between now and four yeara
ago In glylng voice to the above ob
servations. Four years ago the pub
lic did not kpow the President's real
charaoter; today it la pretty thor
oughly familiar with it. Four yeara
ago it believed him Incapable of de
liberately perpetrating a roorback. To
day It knows that he la quite capable
under certain conditions of believing
Anything he wants to believe and of
stating it to the public as fact, no
matter how false It may ba or how
much and g<k>d reason he may
h&v* to know that it la false. Just
becauso four yeara ago he charged
Judge Parker with falsehood when
he stated the truth—Just as he has
charged dozens of men elnce with
falsehood when they stated th* truth
—anything that President Roosevelt
might say at the last moment to af
fect the election would be received
with many ffralns of allowance and
fall far short the effect of his 1904
roorback. And this difference of con
ditions lessen* the likelihood of the
President attempting any auch per
formance. Besides, the President's
gun haa "kicked" every time he has
discharged It sf> far In this campaign,
doing more damage in the rear than
In front, and there are signs apparent
to observing people that he Is grow
ing sore against his own shooting
Iron.
"I warn you," eald Mr. Bryan
Syracuse, N. T., "that the crusade
have commenced for honest poll!
will go on until we have a law t
will compel Republican leaders
be even remotely possible until
Democratic President end Congress
are elected..
They are off. Let the best man and
the best principles win.
republican. The Standard Oil Com
pany was organized in a republican
state. It has fattened off republican
government. It la a triumphant ex
ample of. the republican policy of priv
ilege, protection and plutocracy.
Mr. Rockefeller has had a long and
Intimate acquaintance*wl)h the Repub
lican party, with the republican or
ganlzatlon and with the republican sya
tern. He knows that whatever Mr.
Roosevelt’s attitude may be toward the
Standard OH Company, or whatever
Mr. Taft’s attitude may be. the Stand
ard Oil Company in the long run will
profit most^from republican adminis
tration. Presidents may coma and go,
but republican government means the
republican system, and It is the sys
tem ‘that Mr. Rockefeller hi uphold
ing.
In supporting Mr. lkft Mr. Rocke-
fellar reflects the ,s<ntlraent of his
class. Whether oil trust, eteel trust,
beef trust, coal trust, sugar trust, pa
per trust, railroad trust or national
banking trust, they all know that the
Republican party can be relied on to
protect their special interests. The
system Is bigger than Roosevelt who Is
obliged to work in harmony with the
republican organization.
Mr. Rockefeller’s statement la su
perfluous. On the Issue of democracy
versus plutocracy there could not be
the faintest shndow of doubt as to
whore the president of the Standard
OH Comoany would stand.
Cleveland’s Relations In Georgia.
To The Telegraph: In speaking of
the presidents and their wives’ moth
ers, I want to tell you about Presi
dent Cleveland. His grandfather and
married Rev. Richard Falley Cleve
land. father of the president. And his
grandfather. Abner Neel, was my
grandmother’s brother, and my moth
er’s first cousin. My grandmother was
Olive Neal, of North Carolina, former
ly. and of Scotch and Welsh descent;
moved to Washington county. Georgia,
later. My grandmother married Ab
ner Dillard: moved to Macon, Ga., and
she and husband both died tn Macon
years ngo. Abner Neal had two sis
ters that married two brothers by the
name of Rountree, living In Emanuel
county, Ga., and some of the families
ore there yet. So you see we ought
to be proud of President Cleveland as
most of his ancestors are southern,
and mostly Georgia people. Ann Neal,
died at Holland Pattent. N. Y., July
19. 1882. Tho majority of Georgians
do not know anything about the Geor
gia ancestors and I thought I would
write you. nnd do as you please with
Respectfully,
MRS. A. E. MOFFETT
Walden. Ga., Nov. 1.
ALBERT McKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothes,
,cherry St., Macon, Ga.
"We must gfve the executive a
stronger arm and perhaps create
more bureaus." says Taft, but his tup-
porter, the Now York Sun, balks at
the proposal. "Mbre power for the
executive," exclaims the Sun, "when
the Instant need and duty Is to bring
the power of the executive back to its
constitutional bounds! Mora bureaus
for Federal meddling and Intermed
dling, more swelling of the monstrous
dropsy of Federal office? This is not
Taft, but 'Roosevelt." There Is no
other Taft but Taft-Roosevelt. We are
naked to elect tha body of Taft and
the soul of Roosevelt—a hitherto un
heard of combination that It an Inedit
to a free people.
HUftlAN HANDS
DO NOT TOUCH IT.
Prom ths time ths raw materials resell oar
factory they are handled entirely by me-
chanc7$or t * P * »«u pel wily clem. No
Jen-o ICE CBE8JH Powder
to become contaminated. It U strictly
Per* end whnU.nme. Our factory la m
clean m your kitchen.
ICE CREAM la Easy to Make.
1 quart milk,
him pie, lam'tlt t
Thla makes two qnarta of smooth, vel
vety icecream, dellelouily flavored, la 10
minutea at coat of about 1 oeat a plate.
. Floner n CkoceUte, Vanilla, Straw*
terry, Leman anJ Unjlavorei.
does set keep It.
^ Tha Genesee Pure Food Co., Is Boy, N. Y. A
ouely displayed in the country's
history oa by Roosevelt end Me
administration, la auperadd*d the
fmmenee weight of the tariff-bred
trust* that are preying upon the
American people. Such are the
forces that are combining to over
come the popular will In this
great contest—Philadelphia Rec
ord.
And theee evil forces can he driven
back only by a veritable landslide fnr
the Democratic ticket Anything leee
hae been wiped ont by coercion on
tka part of the lords and master* and
bribery oa the part of their agents be
fore the easting of a vote.
Carnegie eaye the election of Bryan
oold be a "tragedy." ©ut tragedy
for the trust brigands meant blessing
for the despoiled people.
Twenty-fear hours win teH the
ta!% v ~
Roof Paint
What yoa pa y f or
painta? Too many East.m
concern* are charging tho
Southern trado TWICE
what their painta are worth!
tluwr.
years to come, became they era
issM.28L*3Jk B
VV?«LSa'£ liZiVnooflnri,
SOUTHERN BO0FIN6 CO, Ufa.
Atlanta. Ga>
•TATE OR GEORGIA, B!bb C«unty.-To
LVS3Lu“K,SK"* K ’ u “ ’*•
art °her#V’J°requtred*pereon£?y. d <?r *by*?t!
tornev. to be end appear at th* next
superior court to be held In and far said
county on the flret Monday in February
■•*t- **»d there to answer th#
plaintiff 5 demands tn on action of dU
voree. oa in default thereof the eoart
wot proceed a* to Justice shall appertain.
lud.e S’ JSS ™ ,C! \
ItOBT A. N1FBET. Clerk.
Southern Railway Schedules.
matloe only, and not guaranteed.
njewm vwif, awe
No. Arrtv* from
18 Jacksonville^ £
m-l’N <
• '• •
8-8818
No. Depart te:
Jacksonville. J.C|
!i t Lumlu. CUT-m8
attaau^... aajl Atluita...„W,‘™ '
v ,
ARCHITECT*.
OUTRAN R. ELLIS,
ARCHITECT.
Office phone 239; residence phone 2819
' Offices: 4, 5 end 8 Ellis Building.
Cherry St„ Cotton Ave. and First St,
Macon, Ga.
FRANK E. HAPP,
Architect.
Office: Rooms 22 and 28 Fourth Na
tional Banw Building.
Telephone—Rea. 832; Office *90.
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Phono 71.
Residence Phone 1479.
87J CHERRY 8T. MACON. GA.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room 1»*19
■ Water supply, water power, aewer-
age’ and municipal engineering. Re
ports. plans, specifications, estimates
and superintendence. Office Phone 1142.
Residence phone 3288.
P. E. DENNIS. Architect.
Rooms 703-4-5*6 American National
Bank Bldg. Phone 962; Residence
phone 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET,
Architect.
Office Phone 489. Residence 64L
Grand Bldg. Macon, Oa.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
W. W. DeHAVEN,
General Contractor and Builder.
Residence phone 696. y
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Classified advertisements under this
head are Intended strictly for the pro*
feeelons.
MISS ANNA SMITH.
Physical and Voice Culture, and Ex
pression. Phone 2157.
OCULIST,
DR. M. M. STAPLER,
^ * . E £2' Ear ’ No,e and Throat.
Doctors’ lHacr Amrrlcan National Bank
Bldg. Office Phone. 2745; residence. 1U8.
OCULI8T AND AURI8T.
DR. J. H. SHORTER,
^ Eye .’.. Ear .’ No,a and Throat.
“The Grand” Bldg., next to Court Houee.
Phones: Office, 972; residence. 150.
OPTICIANS. f
Dk ETEB TESTED FREE.
* 6© o- a COFFY,
Graduate Optician, etl Cherry a*
EYE, EAR, NOSE. THROAT.
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Eye, Eer, Nose, Throat Grand Bldg.
OSTEOPATHY.
DR, FRANK F. J0NE8, Osteopath,
854 Becond at Phone 920 ana fetSS.
PHYSICIANS AND 8URQEQN8.
DR. TH09. H. HALL, Eye. Ear. Noae,
Throat Specialist, 507-8 Grand Bldg.
DR. MARY E. McKAY.
Grand Building.
Phones: Office. 2554; Residence. 1465.
OR. W. H. WHIPPLE,
Office, 572 Mulberry *t., rooms 4 and 5.
Washington Block. Hours: 9 to 10 a. m..
12 to 1 and 5 to 1 p. m. Telephone con-
nectlone at offiee and residence.
DR. J. J. SUBER8.
Permanently located. In the special-
ties venereal. Lost energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison oak;
cure guaranteed. Address in confidence,
with stomp, 510 Fourth «t„ Macon, Ga. V
DENTISTRY.
DR8. J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON,
Dentists.
854 Second et, Phone 985.
DR. J. H. WALKER. Dentist.
Associated with Dr. Johnson. Office
Commercial Bank Bldg., # Phone 111.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
CLAUD ESTES,
Attorney-it-Law.
1T7 Cotton Are. Phona 820.
ROBERT L. BERNER,
Attorney at Law. •
Rooms 704*707 American Nations: Bank
Building.
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 u&
HOWARD M. SMITH & CO.
583 Mulb.rry SL. MACON. OA.
82.100,000.00 SAFELY LOANED.
Uf J** 4 7«K! ** have loan*
ed 12.600.000.00 on Real Estate for home
and foreign Investors. Safest and moat
profitable Investment. Those desiring to
barrow or having money to Invest wlu
And It to their interest to aee us.
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.,
Commercial Bank Blinding.
Thomas B. Weat. Secretary and Attorney,
Leon S. Dure
Banking and Investments.
Stock* Boa!., RmI Xatau. UcrtncM
Macon. Qa.
S70 MULBERRY STREET.
GEORGIA RAILROAD.
Arrive: Depart!
No. am. No. *.«,
71, dAfly. 11:14 71. deny 8 44
«*.. ra*
V&aV-*“*• ‘.‘ft 1 " llr Ta
W. W. HARDWICK. O. A.,
oo« Cherry St.
MACON, DUBLIN A SAVANNA RAIL
ROAD COMPANY.
Arrival an# Depart«r« 0 f Passenger
t Trains at Macon.
Effective March 18, 1900.
Leave. Arrive.
ft If* 7:00am[ No. 19 11:06am
mo. 20...... sjopmi no. 17.:::.: irecSS
Brown Bouse
Opposite Union Dopot— MACON, GA,
American
Plan
F. BARTOW 8TUBB8, Proprietors
F. W. ARMSTRONG. Manager.
European Hotel
MACON, GA.
Booms, Restaurant and Cafe-
Table excellent at Popular
PriceB.
Everything New, but the
Name.
M. O’Hara, Prop. L D, Craw,
ford. Manager. ,
S. S. Parmelee
Company,
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Carte.
Harness, Saddles, Bicycles, Baby Car
riages, Accessorial.
Largest stock In the South to select
ftrom. A pleasure to serve you.
S. 8. PARMELEE CO* Macon, Ga.
Money to Lend on
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
and very loW rates on Mar
ketable securities.
Macon Savings Bank
General Fastener Afloat*
0. S. S F. RY.
Schedule Effective Oet, 18, 1908.
DEPARTURE*!
No * Through Train to
Florida, carries Observation Paur-
10 /a£oa*?A. oil.
4: £L p ’, m ’Lty’ 6 ’ “8hoo-Ply,” Ms*;
* VWoasta and ail inter-,
ra®di*te point*.
12:25 a. m.. No. 3, "Georgia South*,
J®?!}* Tw*lv« ’ eSuon ltr 5raS-!
“?Sl % n t n nf. U |°n n Florid" 0 ™ 110 '
12:15 a. m.. No. 95, "Dixie Flyer," !
coache# and Pullman sleepers, ,
Macon to Tifton, en route from .
St. Louis and Chicago to Jack- .
aonvllle.
ARRIVALS:
4:15 a. m„ No. 4, “Georgia South* «
•rn Huwansa Llmiu.fi..
passengers can tart
‘{J Union Depot at Macon
_ until 7:S9 a. id,
3:25 a. m., No. 84, “Dixie Flyer,"
coaches and Pullman sldpers
Tifton to Macon, en route from
Jacksonville to 8t Louis and
Chicago.
1 VaMwta.’ N °’ *’ " Sh00 ’ Fly '" ,rom
4:25 p. m.,, No. 2. from Palatke,
Jacksonvni# and all Intermediate
points. Parlor Observation Car
Jacksonville to Macon.
O, Q. RHODES, Gen. Pass. Agent. 11
Macon, Qa.
Schedule effective 8«pt, 20, 1908.
M.&B.
8. F. PARROTT, Receiver.
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM
RAILWAY.
Trains leave Macon for Llzel-
la, Culloden. Yatesvllle, Thomae-
ton, Woodbury. Columbue, Har
ris, La Grange and intermediate
points as follows:
No. 41 at 4:25 p. m. dally and
No. 55 at 7:00 a. m. Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday.
No. 41 makes direct connec
tion with Southern Railway at
Woodbury for Warm Springe
«nd Columbus, arriving at Worm
Springs 8:17 p. m. and Colum
bus 10:00 p. m.
Trains arrive Macon os fol
low#: 48. 11:88 a. m. dally;
No. 18, 5:40 p. tn., Mondays,
Wednesday# and Fridays.
Trains leave from M. and B.
Ry depot. Fifth and Pine ete.
C. B. RHODES, Gen. Paee. Agt.
Phone 1800.
GEORGIA, Bibb County.—To the Supe
rior Court of eald county:
The Macon Telegraph Publishing Com-*
pany shows to the court:
1. That It was chartered by the eupe-.
rlor court of said wunty on the flret dayt
of March. 1891. and that it has Its prinJ
clpal offlca in eald county.
J. Petitioners' capital stoek by th*
original incorporation was 140.090.00.
..Afterwaids. to-wtt, on September 25,
1999. the charter was amended by an or
der of the superior eourt of isuf county,
allowing the Issuonee of twanty-flv*
thousand (118,880.8#) dollars of preferred
stock. In shares of ($100) one hundred
dollar* each.
8. Petitioners desire an amendment
le the charter of the corporation. Axing
the total capital stock of the same, both
common and preferred, at an amount no!
to exceed one hundred thousand (I100,*
0*0.<k» dollars. In shares of one hundred
(8104) dollars each, par value, the in
creased stoek over and above the pree«
ent outstanding Issue, to be Issued In the
discretion of tn# board of directors frorxj
time to time, and In each quantities as
mar be desired.
The preferred stoek may be Issued m
. jmmen stock If dertred and in no evenl
shall the amount of preferred stock exf
'in.iOthM>* dollars. twtotr ‘ 0rt «wu*ond
4.' Ten thousand dollars of the proposed
Increase has actually been paid in.
" Annexed and filed herewith Is *
— -»4 abstract from the tnlnutee of tbl
corporation, showing that this application
for amendment has been authorized by
SBFmacSn ' t TT?LEGRAPH PUB. CO*
*. r £ £ KS*
Attorney* for Petition era.
Office Superior Court, Dlbfi
" v - above and forexclng is a
- , #f tb* petition of The Mo*
ccn Triumph Publishing Compenv fo*
amending the charter cf said company
In this office rvrtVer 1*. 19M.
fSeelt ROBT A. NIB BET
Clerk Superior Court, Bibb County, Go. |