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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1909
The Macon Telegraph
Fnbll.heg (vary Naming by
THE MACON TELEGRAPH FIR CO.
333 Mulbarry btraat, Maean, 0>.
C. R. Pendleton, President.
THB TELIORAPH IN ATLANTA.
The Talagraph aan ba found an alia
at tha Klmba-I Hauaa and Piedmont
Hatal In Atlanta.
Linotype For Sale.
Mode| No. 1. two ywri old. two-tat-
ter Jdergenthaler Linotype machine; in
good ord«r; 92,100, fob. Macon. Ad
dress Tha Telegraph. Macon. Ga.
THB POPULAR DI8TRUGT OF
BRYAN.
That hi MM u4 aval* In MM
Try an IhaiM have frightened tha
mora oonaanrathra elements In all
ranks of Amaikaa aaalaty fa anally
understood. bat why ha ahould bnva
-YOU ALL- AGAIN.
A porreapondent of the Knoxville
8*ntlnel nays:
Tha ftnuth western Presbyte-
plan anys that Harper's Weekly
mentions I'm fort that In parta of
tha ffouifi “you all" In hoard. In
raply tha Southwestern nay* that
* Also, In
that
lltarar/ Journals
- - . thay
passing, mention that. In that
'•well of English tindeftled," tha
Authorised version of tha Holy
__ __ Holy
Bcrlpturaa ena will find tha aama
expression Is used thirty times,
not to speak of the many In-
ataneea In tha same volume of
“we all," “us all." and “they aU."
Wa had formerly bran Inclined to
think truthfully of the rather
entering raferanra of Harper's
Weekly to tha Fouth having
caused this expression, but on
perusing the sacred inn*, we find
rs epiat
expression Is frequently used,
for Instance, Romans 16’24. I Cor.
ie:24. II Cor. 12:14. Philippian*
1:4, are these words: "Always
In every prayer of mine for 'you
air" Also Phil. 1:7, "Even as It
Is meat for m* to think this of
•you all.*" Also tha same chap
ter and 2fith verse, "And having
this confidence I know that 1 shall
abide, and oontlnua with 'you
the
all.*
Bvary giving of tha afostolle
benediction. In Its proper form,
from every pulpit reneat* the
tame expression.** says the South
western. "snd It Is therefore not a
Southern provincialism."
(f th« editor of tha Southwestern
rngblanad th. Kn. alamant. In 1»-»« „ rMhyUrl>n ,, corrccl | y nu ot,d. h ,
la leas susceptible to reasonable •*' j misapprehends altogether the point of
planatlon. The trouble In tbe tw> the criticism. Nobody eoptenda that
former campaign, wa, MIMrt.m, gg.jlhar* la not a perfectly proper uaa of
nation ngalnat monopoly. and ecr- »• «P«““ I "» ln " rn ^ T
tain olhar leaning. .h.t war. da. | oonnodlon and with tho accent on
nouneed a. radical. nf nn '' y0 "" Fuch “
in spot th. alluatlon had. „ r | -mploym.nt of the form I. to b.
amm.d lo have, .really changed. 811- !'"»"* thmughm,' all marnlnra.
v.rl.m wra dead and burled. Room- j "*'•»« '• ^ "
„lt had Ion. tak.n up and oat.nt. j "»■» addro..ed to two tenon. In
tlou.ly carried on the nght agalrtat ">• !>'«• »• " boM ’ T°*L What I*
farther orltlelaed (bp Northerner.),
monopollea. Tho Prcaldent had »l»,
popularlwd radical lain of a certain !•"« unju.tly I. "you all" oddreaaed
aort. thus Inducing many lo revl«i»° «"• pccon-unju.lly becaua. auclt
their opinion of Bryan and decid. » nt '* fmm ' 1 no '
that, after all. ho wo. not dull, tbs » h "» ln «"* *«Md. When tho Norlh-
fearaouio creature they had auppoaed. I *«»«' *»W "yd
Ron,evelt. In fort, brought th" couo- f0 "<* "•»»« “">« »° «« h »
try to Bryan*, ori.lnat poaltlon In >'™ and your family, or you and yonr
certain particular., and thin wv. I T‘ r 'F nt "~ nS ’- " n1 •" who OY "-
lorgelv th. tru. baala of tho charge!*™'' th« apeoch no Interpret It. When
made, by people of abort mcmorloa <»« Southerner aay. to a alngle pe-
that Rryan had '‘ehanged" In order to‘ , ' M ’. "T 0 " nl1 c ' ,m * ,0 Me “•*"
»in popular aupport. I"' <" m *" n ' r 10u
A. for tha .recant campalri. In gen-! V"Ur family, or you and your party of
oral Bryan acquitted hlmaolf .My.nd frlonda, and or ary Southerner who
well. Me developed better cap.eltle.! overhear, ao Interpret, th. .peach,
of leaderahlp then he had ever before j <»• »l>ltlng Northerner who ovo>-
dl.pl.yod. In our opinion ho ahould hear, poralat. In bellevln. that only
have devoted hlmaolf mora to tariff on » l’ er, " n ■* hecgua# only one
relornt and lean to the labor qneatlon, iproaont, and ha .oa. homo and
but big poaltlon on the latter* waa. h* 1 *™ lo bl * Ndlculoua conooptloo
hnnoat and Juat. and If he went "down i nf matter,
on hla bneaa to labor,** aa aorn. ofj Title Ig tha whole gtory,
the New TnrX Journal, chanted. on|
did Taft and ao did no.,.evelt. For; PURELY ACADEMIC,
that matter, all three of them oOlle.l i ln the following comment on n
heaven and north to wltnea. thatthavj elat.ment mode by Tho Telograoh
bad olwaya been tha friend of labor, the Btvanrah Prooo* taboo academic
and Bryan nlona waa entirely .Ineere 1-vie with ua. hut nogleeta to quote
In vlaw of tho changed condition.
In 1101, In vlaw of lha general Demo,
rratio pn.ttlnn oat forth In tha pin*
form, and In view of tha general
tenor of nryan'a utlerancea during
the campaign, It la not clear why he
ahould have celled the aamo dl.lru.t
aa formerly-ageept, of rouraa, In
tariff-fed Intel clrclea. And yol It I.
plain from the reautt of the election
fhnt ha did egclte auOh dl.tniat. Tho
people ore ahort of memory where
faeta are concerned, but are tena-
clou, of early Impreaetona. What
ever the can a, of lha dlatrual. whether
Juat or unjuat, Ita re.ulta are mant*
feat. The New York Keening Poet,
which eupported Cleveland andatanda
for leading Democratic potlctaa auch
ta tariff reform, pointedly obaarvra:
Demo,-rote can elect tlovernora,
but can not In the eaine Nl.tea,
give their Proaldentl.l candidate
—when hla name la William J.
Bryan—aa many votei by 10,009
or ino.oeo. The election of Dam-
©erotic tlovernora in Ohio and In
diana, aa In Mlnnranta. ehnwa
accurately lha propoaltlon which It
rombala. The Preaa eaye:
The Macon Talagraph la prob
ably inletakco In thinking that
no great oratoro have been Pr.-a-
Idcnta. Wc have before ua the
Bat of Prealdenta of the United
Staten. Both nf tho A,lam.ee were
fine .poaIters, a. were Munroa
ami Van nunm, John Tyler and
Franklin Plrrca were noted or»-
tnnt and Jnmea K. Polk waa a
vlgoroua speaker of that day.
coin had not only the rugged
trail, of n frontier apeakar, hut
there waa tanderneaa end a pa-
thetlo euallty to hla Imagination
which lifted Mm head anti ahoul-
den nbnve tha public apoakara of
that day. Jameo A. Oarfleld was
■» in .Aimursoin. snows
hoar **sy It la to got vote* which
ars o«t of nryan’a rrach. Rvrn
Adlal Hlrvrnaon In Illinois, though
ha did not drfoat flov»*mor Da-
nasn. ran about llO.OOO voles
ahead of Rryan. Oovrrnor John
son In Minnesota again demon
strated hla remark able power* aa
a vote-getter, running some IRO..
0M votes ahead of ltryan. Rut.
of eourae, the party could L.,„.
have Johnson or Judson Harmon
aa a Presidential candidate. ■■
causa either of them might have
been elected and ao hn>kcn the
Rryan monopoly.
Although Tha Talagraph had mod
ified It* early opinion of Mr. Bryan
and reapectad him for hi* ability anl
patriotism, it aevarthaleas feared tha
raauHa of tM« popular distrust, and
thla year, as always, opposed hi*
nomination with all Its strength. Tha
Talagraph even went ao far a« to fit*,
dirt that “throe beating* under Bry
an" would ba necessary before th*
party would learn Ita lesson ao far
as Ms leadership waa concerned. Tat
this newspaper consistently did Ita
ba#t to aid In bringing about tha ale*.
Ron of th* Democratic ticket with
Mr. Bryan at its hand.
Vf* heartily wish that there were
a anl table Held open ta Mr. ltryan
wherein hta admirable qualities of
mlad and heart ooald find their beat
expression, but for reason* that
Mould now ba plate to all that proper
Bel# la not the Democratic leadership
In the race for tha ProaMancy. Mr.
Dryan'S announcement that ha will
not again be a candidate ahould ba a
•ourca of congratulation ta all Dame-
•rats.
Mr. Roosevelt nays It waa a trl-
tmph over "react ternary conaerva-
turn" and "extrema radicalism." Tha?
tsaaaa a triumph for mooter# K, for
U a tea* among mortal man thinks ha
k»owa preclaely where It tha gulden
••an between the two "lama" ha
one of tiha moat scholarly and
ona of tha moat finished orator*
of hla ttma. Benjamin Harrlam
made the best short speeches of
any man In modern American
history. A booh containing hla
occasional addressee shows won
derful research and versatility.
Tha Macon Telegraph thinks
that Wshatsr and Clay * and
Blaine failed to be elected Presi
dent because they wera great
public speakers and talked too
muc*i. Wehatar waa a wonderful
man with a measured and senten
tious style, hut not a magnet lo
orator. Calhoun waa too radical
ami Clay waa too vacillating.
Clay and Blaine waro tha earn*
atrlpe of men. They draw people
to them very closely, but neither
one seemed to Inspire the public
with the degree of confidence
necessary for a Presidential can
didate. The oratorical tempera
ment. the artistic temperament U
not always th# most raltshte, al
though It la tha moat fascinating.
But aom# of our Presidents have
been really great orators. They
wets not all like Jefferson and
Grant, on* of whom would not
make a speech and fha other
could noL
Tha pfopnstttan. a« stated by Tha
Talagraph. Is In thaaa words:
It la a familiar experience tn tha
history of tha United State* that no
great orator, as such, aver reached
the Presidency."
Th* Pres# for conyanlcnce, appar
ently, In making Ita argument etlml
nates th* t»* qualifying phras-w
and "aa auch." Tha quality
ot graatnass la 4 definite Indefinite
quantity that ta not l*«s spactftc and
real, because its measurements can
precItaly stated Thera are
great orator* and minor orators Just
tare are great and minor poets,
It Is * curious principle running
through every department of creation
that tha distinctly great object* In
nature are limited in number. Tha
great mountains, the great rivers, tha
great statesman, th# great orator* and
great paeta can well-nigh ba counted
on tha finger* of one** hand*.
To ba dieted aa ’great** la any
particular tutallectual department an#
must hav# achieved and left in that
department In durable and parmA-
sent farm tha vtalbla evidence of hit
wortt by which h* may ha measured.
"Beth of tha Adamaeg Ware Bna
speakers."*’aays tha Pfaag Rut tMI
bag* tha question. Ware they -great
( orator* T" John Adams waa dubbei
tha "cotaaau* of 4*bata" tn tha Con
tinental Congress that daclarad Inde
pendence, but wa have no »ufricla«*t
data of his speeches behind tha closed
door* of that body by which to pro-
claim him great a* an orator. On
the 'contrary, hi* fame aa an Int#*-
lectual controversialist rest* upon hW
•Maya and other writings. Posterity
Is not generally fnmlllar with tka text
of any great oration accredited to
him. except in Imaginary speech put
In his mouth by Dsnlcl Webstar
which Is ususlly quoted In books on
oratory aa th# specimen of John Ad
ame* oratory. John Adams belongs
to tha aahool of great statesmen
rather than that of great orfltors, an I
the same may tus said nf John
Quincy Adame, who wrote a number
of works, which ara now of little
Importance.
Practically the same thing may he
said of tha other President* as men
tioned by the Pres*, down to RenJ*.
min Harrison, with the elngta excep
tion of Lincoln. The Press Itself roc-
ognlxes the fact that while Munroe
and Van Jluren end Tyler and Plaree
and Polk and Buchanan and Garfield
and Benjamin Harrison ware "fine
epeakere" or "accompllehcg orators"
or "noted orator*" and auch like, they
were not “great" In this school, since
It does not contend they ware "great
orators."
The great orator must needs . be
Identified In the role of an orator
With some Important epoch In Ms
country's history and he must stand
pre-oniinently for some great prin
ciple or Imus of hla day, If he
longs to the political school of ora
tory. Clay wa* th# father of tha
American system and wa* tha "great
Compromiser,** but tha fatal pltfa'I
that beset* the path of tha orator
the White House betrayed him In
hi* stand on Texas annexation. Cal
houn stood for fltntes rights, hut. hh
mil I Iflcrit ion doctrine clipped hi* eagle
wings of ability to make the Prcsl
dentlal flight. Webster stood for tho
Union, but hi* •seventh of March
speech destroyed hit hope and broke
hla heart. Bryan will go down Into
hlatory is tha popular champion of
the pcopl# against the predatory In
terests, whose free silver and Govern
ment ownership mistake* defeated
his aspiration* for tha Presidency.
These were all great orators, warm
blooded and Impulsive m e n—men who
•poke much—who felt deeply—who
•aid what they believed at tha time
to ba tha truth and whoaa passionate
temperament would permit of no
quibbling or compromise In their
course.
It wilt ba found In every Instnnee In
American history where a man pe
culiarly pre-eminent a* nn orator as
pired to tha Presidency ha was de
feated by lila rival, of less or no not*
In thla respect. Tha only seeming
exception to thla rule ta that of Abra
ham Lincoln which, howavar, prop
arly viewed, confirmed the rule. Lin
coln was n great orator In the tru*«t
and widest aense of tha term. Rut
hla reputation as such came aft
nomination for tho Presidency mth»r
than before. It waa his rival, Doug
lass. who had tha record of pre
eminence as an orator and whoae fa
ta! drawbacks, as auoh, defeated him
In tha pending contact for the Presi
dency, find directly contributed
giving Lincoln the prise a* tha "daric
horse" of tha day. Lincoln wa* prae
tlcally unknown before the Douglass-
Ltncoln debates, and though he waa
defeated In that contaet by tha "LttMa
Giant" for a minor office, he earns
Into the Presidency later through tks
defeat of the Democracy because of
the "split" that occurred In hla party
over Douglass* record.
Ro marked Is the feature of our po.
lltlcsl history tinder consideration that
It has given rise to the ex
praeslon of tho "dark horae" It
our political contests. Hut tV draw
back of pre-eminence In oratory to
the highest political success la not
peculiar to tha American republic.
The American ambassador, White-
law Reid. In * recant speech at Bath,
England, on the occasion of tha un
veiling of a memorial tablet to Ed
mund Burke, tha greatest ot English
orators, said:
Where yon want II—
When you waul 11—
Ko smoke—bo smell—no lronble.
Often you wjnl heal in a hurry
in some room in the house the fur
nace does not reach. It's so easy to
pick up and carry a
PERFECTION Oil EeaSer
(Equipped wllb Smokeless Device)
to the room you want to heat—suitable (or any room in the
house. It has a real smokeless device absolutely preventing
smoke or smell—turn the wick as high as you can or
as low as you like—brafit (onl holds 4 quarts ol oil
that gives out glowing heal for 9 hours. Fin
ished in japan and nickel—an ornament
anywhere Every heater warranted.
The/25a^S>Lamp
lh# fhsJetrt w
e» a Wilitnt, steady Ii«M
jr a p!u*uft. Made «l brass akbd plated asd fi|wp?M
improved central draft burner. Every lamp warranted.
i eliuin the Perfection Oil Heater #r Rays Lamp Iran
la the lasts Iw lha atadent #r *
reader. II ftvea a briliaat, ajady liqM
that wialtea t’udy a pfeaaur
with the Lteal improved c ..
li yau rannfi abuin tbe Perfection Oil Heater or Raya Lamp I
yasr dealer wri»a ta our scare* a*cney far deacriptive circular,
BTA NDAB»OIl,yOWPA?<V
Mr. Rooncvalt aay* ha Is not tha
author either of "frassla" or "molly
coddle;" tho ona "Is a Southern ex
pression," end tho other ha 'heard
used when a boy In Now York. Such
unexpected modesty from auch a
source Is overwhelming.
Roosevnlt'a Bequest to Taft.
Now York World.
On Novombrr 20 Mr. Roosevelt’s
secretary of the* treasury hns to moot
114.000.000 of 2 per cent bonds Is
sued Inst year et the time of the panic.
nnd another I50.00G.000 Issue of Pnnn-
focturlng powe
tha fullest poarihle extant, nnd f think
the railrrad commission and the officers
of the rsllro.'.dn should hsvo parsons!
knowlndgn of these thin?:# and should
take a live and per*r>n!ll Interest |n them
I think the cummlsslrm should see to *
that the roa.d« become the partners, in
ceiu««. of t — —* ‘ —*
•h Int
w n*
uslne:
— -annuls
the people of the
htisincs:; n* their p«
nke In their
and I rjiink further that
commission should ktep Itself and
fully Informed. *
■BpmHHSBHRgSiayHHBHH
believe the ill-semination of such knowl-
ortge Is etisentlal to right-thinking and
Intelligent action on the part of all
cernod, and I believe ter more reason*
that tho dissemination of such
ought to he nnd will be of
time.
ma bonds Is expecteq shortly. Having j I do not rub crllie to tho d-.rtrlne that
to face a dally deficit In the United
fltntes treasury on account of tho ex
cess of government expenditure* over
receipts, tho administration plans to
borrow mora money In order to pay Its
bill*. A pleasant condition of affairs
Mr. Roosevalt has prepared for hla
successor.
lata them.
, Tha Beginning of the Work.
first step In carrying out this
general Idea; a part of tha eotnmlsaloi
Little of Everything'.
the puhlle
r trotis of th# road the largest
Intelligent service. Among
other things of Interest to others than
tho*e who live along the line of the At
lanta A West Point, tha commission
learned that tha shipment of cotton fac
tory products over the Atlanta A West
Point and the Western of Alabama, which
Is simply two names for one road,
amounted during the month of August.
Mrs. Mika Donlln (Mabel Hite) sings
nn Italian song In th* vaudeville skit
aha and her husband are appearing
In. Ain't U awful. Mabel?
With ball players marrying so rapid
ly. la It appropriate to call tha base
• lal - *
line* matrimonial paths?
Naturally Mr. Rurka never
reached high office Ila was a
party man, and moat useful and
highly prised aa auch. but not
what tha managers called a *»fa
C rtv man: and he had tha da
is of hla oratorical tempera
ment..
So It waa tha asm* one hundred and
fifty year* ago In England aa ft It In
the United States today that "tha da-
ft*cta (ao called) of the oratorical
temperament" stood between the
great orator and tha highest political
preferment.
The Republicans rejotaa to think
that tha Democratic party ta "dead"
an effective apposition being tha last
thing In tha world they w!*i to sea.
although tha country's welfare de
mand* It It ta quit# plain, however,
that there are at 111 more Democrat*
In this country than would Appear
from the Presidential vote, for they
elected their State tickets In half a
doaen State*, and In New York anl
Illinois ttietr candidate* for Governor,
though defeated, ran very much ahead
of Rryan. The Democrats also gained
•arerat seats tn tha Ifous# of Rep
resentative*. and they will aacur* a
few Senatershlr*.
Hungry Hindus, 2.000 strong, ara be
ing fed by Canadian government. Are
not the Hindus the folk who preach
the mind over matter theory?
In an antl-nolse crusade In New
York, leaders of tho movement say
most of city's sickness la caused by
the din. Isn’t this Philadelphia's
chance to glrgla?
trip over the Atlanta
t week made _
A West Pnlnt railroad. The general pur
pose of such a trip was to nut the
mhulun in a position to render “
and the " “
_ Ing .
1908, to only 20 per cent of what that
movement was In Augn-t. 1907; that the
movement of these products for Septem
ber. iffig, was only 29 ner cent of what
that movement waa In September. 1907.
Some Statistics.
Th* exact-movement of cotton piece
bjima. In the two month* named compared
with the aamr —*- J
1907, pounds.
with the same period of 1907,
Aunist. September.
.. ..2,459.279 S.49S.S8S
1901, pounds 1,025,114 1,013.407
"Noise Is a sound that Is not mu
sic," said an antl-nolse advocate In
New York. Sort of a Georgia Cohan
product, oh?
King Alfonso 1s so popular tn hla
own country that the taxpayer* don’t
have to support a secret service fore*
to protect him.
An angry wife may be n mere rib,
but delinquent husbands know she Is
capabls of dispensing a hot roast.
I tried all romedlea. new and old.
And very few were frea.
Until at isat I broke my cold
And my cold,-alas, broke me.
Twentv-on* wom-n out of every onq
hundred in th# United fltatea are
ployed.
Many a man who doe# not know
what wsrd ha lives In thinks h» could
run a national campaign successfully.
Economic Questions
(Continued from Page one)
one. buggies, plow stock#, barrel*, kegs,
trackat*. tub*, chairs, tables, shew eoees,
mantels, desks, and the like, and Innu
merable other articles of wood which be
usee every day?
the Georgia Cotton Industry.
Wa #hlp out^ of ( G«on:ta an avenge of
i end a half million bales ot raw cot-
and ■
Thera art aom# who hold that It
waa a Rockefeller rather than a Roose
velt victory, and that except aa a
flrure-head. Taft did not ready aster
Into it In aay
._ xcture an av
•bout ona-haif million bole*. Wi _
sand out this ona-helf million bu'.e* In
ntsnufscturad form. A* a matter of feet,
million* of pound* of *ur au-caiied man
ufactured cotton hna only reached the
rnd simplest stag* or manufacture,
skiri'’-t but aa yarn, and even ln
ryde iVm It h*« fwrnlebed employ-
to thousand* who were necessary
rotiswmer* not only of cotton from the
nrar-by farm*, but ware i’
of cthar products of tftoea
farms. Georgia ship* out
nf pounds of e
e# yarn, but It — -
small amount of manufactured cotton
good* randy for use. Tho farther the
manufacture »* carried In the dlreettou
of the finished pradnet. the more In Mr
employed. The mi* snd ene-hstf mutton
twice of cotton w* rail saw would, at ten
cent# r*r pound, brine Into the state
•?a oes.coo; the nre-bntf minion bates
which we set! f n numtfnctured form on
the same br'ste ef coat for the
other mlllinn*
I (ha ttagel
•veeadtnclr
cotton beyond tha etaae
terfal wauH hrine tntn th# atata net
tees fhs.n fdceaa.fiaf. If tbe process of
msRWftctnr# *t*e me-hslf minion Mira
carried stiff further. It t« safe t'
that thla
g back K -.
money as th* one and a half mBMon halaa
that ara raid In manufactured form.
Railroads to Hat* Manufactories
I believe the railroads, through their
prapab truffle offtcem. aheuld taka a di
rect Interest tn every mannfarturlnc
riant, no matter hew email, along theh
ritory tntra-etatu and Interstate
eat with a Just and reasonable rata ad-
Z baLava it# slate’s xsaan-
OecTeasa In pounds. .2.574.221 2,422.2’
Decretive In percentage 70 71
These figures mean that the mills pt
Into manufactured form In August, 190
5.148 hairs of cotton lees than were mar.
ufactured In August, 1907. They mean
that for the month of September, 1901.
the mills along thla road manufactured
4.9C4 bales of cotton lees than they man
ufactured In September, 1907. Here wai
a net falling off of 10,114 bales of cotton.
If tho mills manufactured aa much In
1901 for. these two months as they manu
factured for the same period of IWIj they
have tha manufactured output oi this
numhar of bales of raw cotton on band
and unsold and unshipped. If they did
not buy or manuficture this cotton, then
they ara not hardened with unsold good*
The fact I*, none of thee# thing* hap
pened In full, but each of them happened
in part. Nece*#nrlly when sales of msnu-
factored goods bernn *.o fall off. tha pur
chase of rsw cotton bad likewise to fall
off. The prudent manufacturer will not
continue to pile up manufactured goods
when ha cannot' sell them. He must stop
manufacturing, of conrea, must stop buy
ing not because he is nn enemv to tne
itton producer, but because the very
enemv to ti
on producer, but because the ve .
.... of lit* tn.’ftlness and his limitations of
capital and credit nut upon him the ne
cessity of yielding to conditions which tn
cannot control.
CommlfSkn Proposes to Help.
What Is true of conditions along the
line of the Atlanta A West Point railroad
may ba accepted as Indicative of the gen
eral situation In the manufacturing dis
trict* of the south. I believe our mills
ha\e bought and manufactured cotton
Just ns long as prudence would Justify,
and. If Spinners are to be condemned si
the enemies of the Producer, I think out
own people at least ought not to visit
any blame unon our own manufacturers.
These conditions, of course, will pa##
away with the return qt normal eoi
JPg -Brn of normal condi
tion#. 1 give them to the puhlle at this
time because I think they nre food for
thought. The cnmmlralon prepose# to
help every town In the ----- * iji
fullest extent consistent
gard to the right* of other towns and
proposes to help In ercry way that It can
... . . ay 1 . ._
every Industry In the state to reach the
widest possible market#.
8. O. MeLENDON.
SALE OF UNCLAIMED FREIGHT.
0. M. ••!*, Southern Express Company
Unless previously called for an<
charges paid, or otherwise disposed of.
the Southern Express Company will
sell to tho highest bidder for cash, at
ubllc auction, at 453 Fourth street
Macon. Ga.. Fridav and Saturday, No
vember 20th end Slat, 190S, commenc
ing nt 9:00 a. m., the nrt>cle# de
scribed on the Hat which Is posted In
front of the Southern Express C<
place* tn the city af Macon.
THOS. GRIFR. Agent.
H. M. SMITH, Superintendent
GREENE JESSUP va. AVAR JESSUP—
In Bibb Superior Court. February
Term. f#r Ptvorce.
STATE OF OECROIA. Bibb County.—Te
Avar Jesvup. Greeting:
▼ou are hereby commanded to be and
appear at th# suparlot wort to fc* held
In and fir raid county on tha fint Mon-
a y in February next, then and there to
«wer to the plaintiff’s demand' In an
aetkm for • diverca. ae In default thereof
the eourt will proceed as to Justice shall
appertain.
Wltn*M tha Honorable W. H. Felton
Jr.. Judge cf aatd court, thie 7th day cl
October. IMS. It HUNTER/
Deputy Clerk. Bibb Superior Court.
The Traitor
Is Coming
Leon S. Dure
Banking and Investments.
Stock,, Bold!, JU*J Eiutt. Mortgigtl
" Macon. Ga.
ALBEBT MoKAY,
Mnfcm- Of Men’s Clothe*,
Cherry St., Macon, Ga.
ARCHITECT®.
CUBEAN R. ELLIS,
ARCHITECT. 1
Offlra o-ont 2»i rtrtdgniM ohont ,11,.
Off lull «. • i"d • BH't iuldtna.
Cherry 6t. Cotton Av#. god Flrlt 6t.
Macon, Ga.
FRANK E. HAPP
Architect.
Office! Room* 22 and 22 Fourth Na
tional Banw Building.
Telephone—Rea. 512; Office S90.
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect. [
Office Phena 71.
Residence Phone 1479.
873 CHERRY ST. MACON, GA.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room 19-19.
Water aupp-'y. v/ater-power. eewer- c
me end municipal engineering. Re
port*. pl#rt. specifications, estimates
and auperlntendance. Office Phone 1142.
Residence phone 3228.
P. E. OENNIS. Arthlteet. »
Roome 703-4-5-9 Abierlean National y
Bank Bid?. Phono 982; Residence » f
phone 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET,
' " i Architect. 1
offlce Phone 459. Residence 441.
Grand P’dg. Macon. Oa.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDINQ.
W. W. DeHAVEN. 0
General Contractor and Builder.
Residence phone 696. o
1 n
PROFESSIONAL CARDS b
Cleeslfled advertleemente under thla f
bead are Intended atrictiy for the pro- 11
feaalons. 7
’ 7
OCULIST* . J
0
DR. M. M. STAPLER, *
Eye, Ear, Note and Throat 5
Doctor#’ FI nor. American National Bank ■
Bldg. Gfflco Thona. 2745; reeldonce, lilt. B
r
OCULIST AND AURI8T. ■
* a
DR. J. H. SHORTER,
Eye, Ear, Noae and Throat
"The Grand” Bidg.. next to Court House.
Phones: Office, 172; residence, 950.
EYE. EAR. NOSH. THROAT. >
2
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM, >
Bye, Ear, Note, Threat Grand Bldg.
OSTEOPATHY.
DR, FRANK F. JONES, Oltecp.th. *
254 Second sL Phone 129 ana lltl.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DR. THOS. H. HALL, Bye, E»r, No.o, N
Throat Specialist, 607-8 Grand Bldg. ^
DR. MARY E. McKAY.
Grand Building. fc.
Phones: Office. 2554; ltesldence. 1485.
« & I'KVZr'-f:.. room, 4 !
Washington Block. Hour*: 9 to 10 a. rm, •
12 to 1 and 1 to 1 p. m. Telepnona con- *
nactlona at office and residence. *
DR. J. J. 6UBER8,
Permanently located. In tha special- •
tlea venereal. Lot* energy restored. •
Female irregularities and poison oak; •
cure guaranteed. Address In oonfidenca, •
with stamp. 519 Fourth at., Maoon, Oa. ’
DENTISTRY.
DR8, J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON,
Dentists.
134 Second sL, Phone 95S. •
DR. J. E. WALKER, Dentist.
Associated with Dr. Johnson. Office *'
Commercial Bank Bldg., Phone 119.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
CLAUD ESTES,
Attcrney-at-Law. • ■
177 Cotton Ave. Phone 220.
ROBERT L. BERNER,
Attorney at Law. '
Rooms^70«-?07 American Nation*} Bank \\
loans ::
Negotiated promptly on im-
proved farms and city proper- ,
ty on en*y terms and at lowest :
market rates.
If yon need money call on ns •
HOWARD M. SMITH & CO "
M3 Muibarry SL. MACON. QA I
12,508,000.00 SAFELY LOANED.
During the last 11 years w# have loan- • •
ed I7.5oo.ooo.oa on Real Rstata for home • *
and foreign investors. Safest and moat * •
prafltable Investment These desiring tn ••
rntTrow or having money to Invest will ••
find It to their Interest to tea us.
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.. 11
Commercial Bank Bulldlm.
Thamaa B. Wait. Secretary and Attorney, ..
For Sale ;!
The rabtttnttal tn, well loetiei] two. •
at Try brick building. No,. SOT and )
S0» Mulberry ,tre«,. It | a wen ar- • ■
ranged for butlneea purpo.e, on flrat !
Moor and room, with modern conven- - -
Nneea abort for a family dwelling. 1 1
Lot 13x113 to alley In rear. Thla !• ''
very de.ir.ble ,r«perty and off wed II
at a BARGAIN for QUICK aalt.
Suburban acreage and farm, a tpe- !
clalty. Hama fund, ot, long time at ''
T p»r cent. \
Geo. IV. Duncan;;
Manager
Brown House
American A
Plan
P. BARTOW STUBBS, Proprietor.
Company,
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons. Carta
Largest stock In the South to select
Dm. A pleasure to aervo you.
3. 8. PARMELEE CO.. Macon, Qa.
Money lo Lend on
Real Estate
ted commercial pspor
y low rates on Mar-
securities.
Macon Savings Bank
WANTED
FOB SALE !F»i
Ona _ splendidly Jmprove^plantation
try home. FSrma 1q
■oarit
rersl
Iota tn different parta of olty.
JONES BEAL ESTATE
AGENCY
H. Horne
Phono 454.
LOANS,
I.
FOR RENT.
___ ... rry street.
Store, 504 and 501 Fourth street; rail
road track facilities,
Second and Third noor Evening Newt
Building.
Storaga apace at English Comp re ■■
Building, Southern Railroad track facUl-
DWELLINGS.
near^Vhtttlo SehoeL
210 F1r#t street.
457 and 459 New street.
_ ... 243 Carling avenua.
B-r. cottage South College street
- ■ v ?^\ lr,vl11 .* <”•*>'
408 Rosa street
Orange street
5-r. in dwelling. Ml •
ijfttfc.’Es.’.’lifl
gglWa
and Departure of Faaeonaag
Trains at Maoon.
Effective March 15, 190*.
Train* arrive and depart frem I
jr a. ' tfWgTty***
General Pa»#anc-r Agent
hHj
Schedule affeetlva 8opL *0, 1008.
M.&B.
8. F. PARROTT. Reoalvar^
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM
RAILWAY.
Trains leAve Macon tor Maol-
lo, Culloden. Yateavllle, Thomoa-
ton, Woodbury, Columbus, Har
ris, La Granga and lntermadlata
points aa follows:
No. 41 at 4:25 p. m. dally and
No. 65 at 7:00 a. m. Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday.
No. 41 makes direct connec
tion with Southern Railway at
Woodbury for Warm Springs
and Columbus, arriving at Warm
Springs 8:17 p. m. and Colum
bus 10:00 p. m.
Trains arrive Macon aa fol
lows: 42. 11:25 a. m. dally;
???•- M? .1*40 p. m., Monday#,
Wednesday* and Fridays.
Trains leave from M. and
Ry depot. Fifth and Pine ata.
C. B. RHODES, Gen. Paaa Agt
Phone 1800,
6.S. & F. RY.
Schedule Effective Oct 18,1904.
DEPARTURES!
Florida, carries Observauoa Far-
&rc.s* d wa,? nu ’ w
Ydldosu and all later-
medial# point*.
1»;*S a. m., No, 2, "Georgia teutti-
am Buwane'e LlmLed." MaconJ*
Jacksonville via ValdoeU. Sat Id
... points .
*» *• «•. No "Dixi, ,|ran,
S.*Jfn"«o*”T 4 .rtr^?n“ n """"
St Louis and Chicago
•onvine.
ARRIVALSi
route BJS
■ »• Jack-
sleeper Jacksonville ta Maean:
remain in local
Un.or “—* -- ** —
• i»r !
ta N
Depot at ]
Ilf ton to Macon, en route
Jacksonville to Bt i»ula and
Chicago.
. »»u. No. 4. “Shoe-Fly," from
Valdosta.
1:25 p. n.,
ackior.vlIJe
palate, rag Hi
i an Intermediate
p—arraisa otp
JackscnvO to Maean.
. B. RHODES. Gen. Past, Agant