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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1909
The Macon Telegraph
PvkHthU e<nry Momma by
TIE MACON TELEGRAPH FIB. CO.
Mb Mulberry Uriel. Moron, Co.
0. R. Pendleton, Preeident
THE TELEGRAPH IH ATLANTA.
TAo Toloflroph eon bo found on Ml.
at tha Kimba'I Houaa and Piedmont
Hotel In Atlanta.
Linotype For Sale.
Mod* *4 Kft. 1. tiro years old. two-lat-
tar Mergtnthalsr Linotype machine; in
good order; $2,200, fob. Macon. Ad*
dregs The Telegraph, Macon. Oa.
SORRY FLINO AT THE SOUTH.
Tha New York Wvenlng Post eel***
on tho Coopar*Carmack tragedy to
make a mean and ungenerous fling at
the South* Tha Post aaya:
Tha rourdar of #*-««nator Car
mack baoauaa of adltorlal utter,
ancra displeasing to the murderer
and kla father, la but another Il
lustration of tha lawlaaa South,
and af that latolaranre of criti
cism, fra* thought and frea speech,
mt'.ich remains a stunting and
dreadful heritage of slavery. U
la just five years since Mr. (Ion-
gales. lha editor of tha Columbia
6. C. State, was similarly butch
ered by Lieutenant Governor Till
man; aad sinus then, there have
been a number of other cases, in
which the principals were of leaser
political or nodal importance. Let
no one make the mistake of think
ing that lynch law in fh« South
appliaa only to the negro. You
must not disagree with tha exist-
lag order of things, for If you do,
your position Is In danger, partic
ularly If w>u happen to be a col
lege professor. If you ara too
personal In your criticisms, why.
tho ravolver will be tour fata and
jour egacutloner will quits as
often ha a "member of one of the
oldest families." as a poaching
night rider. The whole Houtn
must come to * realisation of fha
injury auch crimes do to its good
name, for Ha progreaslve minority
la already awake to the facts.
This Impertinent preaching comas
from a paper representing a section
whir* murders of the most shocking
character ara cf dally occurrence;
where men of the Harry Thaw and
Peter Halns type debauch and abuaa
women for their pleasure, and when
this la satiated go out deliberately to
gratify tftelr other evil passions by
shooting down their unarmed and un
warned rivals. The Telegraph deploret
lha reign of bloodshed In whatever
quarter It may prevail and deplores it
especially In the Routh, hut It Is a
survival of tha aavaga Instinct which
H not peculiar to this section as every
frank and Intelligent peraop will ac
knowledge. Bloodshed la hloodkhed
and murder murder, no matter what
may ba tha nature of the provoca
tion or of the excuse. But If we were
called on to ohoosa between tha class
of murders most charactarlstlo of tho
Routh and that most charartarlatle of
tha North wa certainly about® prefer
the northern sort There ta surely
something more manly and generous
In a political quarrel, where men meet
on something approaching equal terms
and shoot It out than where they seek
out an unarmed vlptlm. elajr him
without a deg'a chance for hie life
and then hide behind a woman's
skirts and a woman's shame to aave
themselves from punishment. Tet
the Poet singles out the former elasa
as peculiarly abhorrent to Ita tec-
ttonally prejudiced nerves, because It
ts more characteristic of the Routh.
Tt Is only Just to say that Southern
newspapers almost with one ac
cord condemn nudh murders as
that of rartnack, and call loudly
for the puntahment of t<h# criminal.
Rut the trouble In that the protest
la not sufficiently loud or prolong
ed to grouse the public opinion
which will compel tha vindication
which outraged society deserves.—
New York American.
If ere remember correctly the Amer
ican. in Ita news columns, at alt
events, took the view thai Harry K.
T>aw was Justified In his cowardly
assassination of Stanford White, hut
AMERICAN 8NOB0CRACV.
la our American society and Its so-
called aristocracy a pure anobocracy.
Inspired by no higher instinct thin,
shame of its origin and the desire to
dlsgutee It? Read the following
striking editorial from the Milwaukee
Journal on the subject, tf-.en give a
little original thought to the matter
and see If It 1* attended with any
revelations. The Journal saya:
“Alma Servine Is a daughter of
reasonably well-to-do Nebraskan peo
ple, who eent her to Omaha to study
musle, for which aha hed talent. She
grew In musical skill, and was In
vited to the homes of her fellow-
students. until It was discovered that
she was tiding over a scarcity of
fund* by working for wages and the
u*e of a piano In 11 private family In
Omaha.
“Than those daughter* of West
ern "Republicans" and "Democrats"
dropped her from their visiting lists.
Thay cut hor wit* all tDe cruelty of
gill barbarism. They objected to her
contaminating presence In the studio,
and the music master for self, protec
tion asked hor to rome at times when
they were not there.
"The poor girl went mad—actually
Insane—and between spells of de
stroying the music. Improvising on the
piano, declaring that she was a mu
sician. 'not a 'Hired girl.' ah* raved
and babbled, and Anally went to the
Klate Inrane asylum, pronounced in
curable.
"Thua goea the atopy of a Ilfs ruined
by the consciousness of crime—the
crime of being useful
'There Is not one American family
In a million which Is even one gener
ation removed from shirt sleeve* and
kitchen apron, save among Southern-
era, am! they are returning to the re
galia of Ichor. We arc a people de-
accnded from the poorest of European
peasantry. The li no of toll is In our
bone*, the welg* t of in hor In our fists,
and the common n ine of labor should
be In mir brains. It Is n«t artsto-
cratlc blood that makes us auch
snoha. ft is the consciousness of our
own peasant origin which shames us
nd drives us to a hostility against,
social equality that prople of descent
from real gentility* would not feel.
We have no capital In ‘society* save
what wc ourselves have scraped to
gether In one generation, add If we
lose that hy association with 'aervant
girls* we lose nil. in 'descent' we arc
so near bankrupt that wc must be
•egcluslve* or the world will aua-
pe.t
"Suspect? Why. the world knows
that those Omaha girls and the same
Is true tn anv other Atnerlcdfi city—
are themselves fhe daughters or
granddaughters of women who worked
In kitchens and scrubbed and moppad
and washed and did It for wagaa If
they got the rhanre.
"It la said that even In ths demo
cratic West tha virus of snobbsry
seems lo have gone so deep. Par every
step along this aristocratic mad will
have to be retraced In coming to the
day when all will serve, and when
the one* who refuse to sen*® will ha
Pie outcast and despised.**
THE PANAMA INCIDENT RE
CALLED.
Near the end of October, while en
mule to Rome, Archbishop Arboleda,
of Colombia, South America, srent a
few daya In this country, and while
In Baltimore was thus quoted by the
Muu of fiat city:
"Wa
much, but your Pm
pic do not Ilka They think he
Interferes too much. When Pan-
ama took up arms against the gov
ernment of Colombia. It being at
that time a part of CcJomMn,
Roosevelt took sides with the
revolutionists, and our people
have never forgotten tt. We tike
the Untied Rtates, but Roosevelt—
no."
And th* archbishop made a wrv
face.
Archbishop Arboleda expressed him
self with the mildness that becomes a
churchman, lie might have said
much mom. HA might have added
that President Roosavelt <has caused
It faala equal to tha teak of lecturing i our neighbor republics of t<atln Amer-
Routhem newspaper editors who were i lea to regard us as a menace, and
brought up on the THoalogu* and that they refvr to us as “el pellgro
naver have departed from It In their del Norte**—tfcr northern peril. Whet
teeaklnge on the subject of murder. 1 he did say Is an Interesting confirms-
T. httftMM ttat’iM tj? "" * c ° num ' ,^0n, 0,h "
r. v, ,TZ sr* ir b *: »>■ ««• <*<»> <■»*»«. M
proposed treaty for the canal atrip
posed arrangement wlt*» Colombia.
Second, that he “trampled under foot
the principle for the maintenance pf
which we aecriQcfd In four year* of
bloody civil War. nearly a million hu
man lives and many thousands of mil
lions of dollars—namely, that princi
ple llmt under a Federal constitution
like ours—and the exlatfng constitu
tion of Colombia la Id tfiia respect very
much like *>ur«, perhaps even a little
stronger—a State this no right to se
cede from the Union." Third, that he
not only recognised the right of se
cession, but that he also recognised
the Independence of the seceded State
without g/ting the Colombia federal
government the slightest cfrance to
enforce It* lawful authority In the re
bellious community—that. In fact, he
sent American soldier* to prevent It
from doing so, "thus committing what
wa* practically an act of war against
Colombia." And. fourth, that Presi
dent Roosevelt did all this In flagrant
violation of our treaty of 1*4® with
Colombia, by one of the provision of
whldH the United States of America
“guaranteed tha rights of sovereignty
and property pos*essed by Colombia
over the territory of Panama."
The man who did all this was the
name man who some years before
wrote a brutal letter to Jefferson Da-
vIk when the latter called h!s atten
tion to nn error of fact In. a histori
cal sketch of which he was the author.
Hut altogether aside from the ques
tion of the right of neocflMlon, there
la no cHcape from the fact that Presi
dent Rnesevelt, In order to secure the
cntial rirlp on hit own term*. enuaed
thl* country to take active part In a
revolution which, because of and only
Iwt-nui* of that active outside aid,
brought about the dismemberment of
a friendly republic.
This Panama affair, now recalled by
th* visit of Archbishop Arboleda, Is
one of the few Incidents In our his
tory which the future American his
torian will not be proud to put on
record.
clpally g Southern Interest now. and
thought of tha flmithern voters who
wsre weg over to Ttft an tha mat*
Hal IntercM plea should rravatl upon
them ta “spar* the tree." which hap
and (holding cut for better terras, but
any aoveralgn. state t» likely to do
tha same under the same eltvum-
” ''"V **T AT. ""AT “" r ” stances. Colombia's only real mistake
AA AY" •«!-» m Mam!* «.... wMk m.
• nvkln UnM "•» »“•< ** v»rr tlwmif-i In 4«*l.
*■ wltk » ,tron,. Th, rM.lt w.
™ ““•"""'"'on,. »u, nr, whol. r ml,n o.
-Uh Itrm? XV, —r. ' R. nun . u w.lL
Tha eaarta have decide that M WM common, y **l*«*4 •* the
the American Tobacco Company itlraa that th* sudden revolt of tha
is a trust.—Savannah Press. ! prince of Panama was *vooked up"
Some of the rett of us came to that; *t XTaahlngton. aid th* amusing olr-
decision long ago, but what of tt? The cum stance waa noted that, through a
tame courts decided soma years ago j miscalculation of time, the revolution-
that th* beef pachsns war* tn a truat.; (B is wart actually recognteed before
aad we have th* beet of reason for tb*i T ee oalled revolution had oe-
WHERE ARE THEY?
In the report* of the results of the
Presidential election we have looked
l». viiIn for th** mysteriously missing
names of # Watson and Hl«gen and
Chafln and Debs and of the fellow
who waa In Jail—wCioae name wa have
forgotten—who wore running for the
presidency. Is It possible that out
of 4*3 electoral vole* not one of these
or nil of them together diverted a
single electoral vole from Bryan or
Taft to themselves? Before ths elec
tion we were confidently Informed
by themselves or fielr friends that
eneh of them respectively represented
the true party In opposition. We
were told what wonderful headway
socialism, teetotallam, populism an
the other* Isms were respectively mak
ing and whlch^the result of the elec
tion would demonstrate to a startled
world. But now that the returns are
I t we see two names only In the elec
toral column*—Bryan and Taft. Ap
parently all—or practically nil—of the
ofitceholder*. all of the spectal Inter
est*. all of tho laboring men that
these Utter could reach and Influ
ence, all of the Republicans from
principle, prejudice or praetlc*. and
all of the floating voters carried along
on the tide of the corruption fund,
voted for Taft; and all—or practically
all—of the voters who sincerely de-
alred lo see tde control of the Gov
ernment restored to th* people voted
for Bryan. Of course thl* does not
Include the Indifferent man.
If the school of “small fry" candi
date* cut any figure or had any effect
on the result at all It waa In drawing
off some Inconsiderable number of
voter* from the true opposition candi
date nnd thus dividing and weakening
to that extent the opposition force* to
which ghey affected to belong. The
course of most of these candidates
during the campaign Indicated that
•uch wa* their real object and the
only excuse they had for running for
the presidency.
'If these gentlemen who are Inves
tigating the tariff schedules are not
careful they may discover a rata which
needs changing In the Inter*** of the
consumer," observes the Milwaukee
Journal. That would be terribly em
barrassing. both for the Investigators
and for the Mg manufacturer* whom
they are trying to help.
The Ravannah Pree* thinks that the
Billy Boat will aucceed the Teddy
Beer.
believing they are there atilt
Weak-kneed Democrats are earn-
mended the example of an old cltlren
of Norwich. Conn, fl years of age.
wbo cast hie twentieth ballot for
Preeident 00 November t and has
voted for every Democratic candidate
for Preeident from Andrww
to W. J. Bryan.
The heartfelt sympathies of the
csentry will go out to the gallant
and brtntaat Wattereon la the tragic
death of his son.
curved. But Preeident Roosevelt waa
at the height of ht* popularity aad
except among Democrat* th* public
generally passed tha Incident over with
a sly wink, as It war*.
A few Republicans of hURt • land
ing spoke their minds, but were dis
regarded. Cart Bchura. .for example,
tn an open letter published October,
ltd4. made th* Indictment against Mr.
Roosevelt tn four chargee. First, that
he violated the law directing Mm to
negotiate for the Nicaragua routs tn
the event af the failure af the mu-
Little of Everything.
An h<t M th, T.«nl. bur, th.
hatchrt th.y ..hum. Ihrlr Winch...
trr*.
Turkf.h wiat<ra ra.r . tut. «t
th. csvwtimrnt ht. ordrrra
Ml.
pound, of chtraco r.nnrd
■John, you adroent. th. Umptnuir.
mnv.m.nt d"n‘t trout*
"O.H.Inly I do."
"W.ll. h«r»'« a buck*!, yo out and
d«monnr.i« your «»ll»f « th, pump -
Th. lump .um of nU th* oampaKn
argument, I. that nn an«my of th,
Ubortn* mao U «oln, to bo moettd.
-Ml. Oir drf.nt.J onndld.t. -Ill tw
Juitly rrbuked by th. tabortnc oIoum
to urhoM Int.rr.u h. U to taunlcol.
A motor >totm,r for th. Wocho*.
Ntnnln* trod* ban Juot mad. It, trial
In th. Hon* Kona harbor. It I, own.
od by motor .nnlaMn of Hou Kou.
who or* rond.clink tho OUncal: trodo
botwoM tko «»o Wwt rttror porta. Tb«
▼root! It a ahonoir draft motor «toam>
or. M fooMoat. with 0 U-foot boom,
aad trtik hollow morn. sc. ,m oorar
HI ml lot oa hrr trot trip, from Host
Knap to Wuchow. and thorMttrr mutt
oo«or about i^Od muo, a raootb.
BEIT PRETTY NURSE
IS JEALOUS RAGE
MR*. RUTTER WHIP® NURSE AND
GET® WARRANT FOR HER
HUSBAND.
NEW YORK. Nov. ll.-Allegfng that
her husband had left her to follow Rosallo
Wilbert, a professional nurse, who bed
attended her daughter. Mrs. Frank 8.
Rutter, of No. 411A Lafayette avenue.
Brooklyn, has sworn out a warrant for
his arrest.
Rutter disappeared three weeks ago.
Every effort has been made to keep th*
name and address of th* pretty nura*
secret, but with the application for the
warrant not only win* her identity made
pubii.t t a it became known that Mrs.
Atutto-: 11..J gone m the hoarding house.
Nos. 1C3 and 170 Hicks street. Brooklyn
Heights, and had there beaten Miss WII-
f>eri so severely that she waa unable to
leave the house for five days.
Actor Shot the Nurts.
Miss Wilbert come prominently Into the
public eye two years ago. when William
Mrs. ltuttcr alleged In court when ap
plying for the warrant that after her
husband had discharged Miss Wllhcrt as
nurse to their Invalid daughter and sent
his family to HucksporL Me., for the
summer, he and Miss Wilbert took ad
joining rooms In the Hicks street board-
V
Ills family.
Both or Miss Wilbert’s eyes were black
ened. her face was cut and scratched
and her clothes were torn. After recov
ering from her injuries she disappeared
from the hoarding house.
Didn't Find Husband There.
Mrs. Rutter, after beating Miss Wil
bert. insisted that her husband was In
the house. £ho was told that he had OC7
nipled tho room adjoining Miss Wilbert's.
Agency 1
looking last night for Miss
"Mr. Rutter and Miss Wilbert came
here separately and engaged board. W
"When Mrs. Rutter called a month ago
to see Miss Wilbert no one supposed
there was any reason why the caller
would not go to the boarder's room.
Honn we henrrf rounds of a terrific strug-
fie- * .believe Mr*. Rtitter would have
killed Miss Wilbert If she had not been
drugged away. Mr. Rutter was last In
this house a week hefors Mrs. Rutter
called, nnd has not been heard from by
any of us since. Miss Wilbert left the
houso ns soon as she was able to get out
of bed. They boarded here for about
three months."
A Tall, Handsome Blonde.
Rornlle Wilbert Is a tall, handsome
woman with a wealth of blonde. hair.
The actor. Davldge. was leaving her at
her hoarding house when they quarreled
nnd he shot her. When she recovered
ftoni the wound she wanted to withdraw
the complaint against him. but the court
would — —-*
prison
*Tlss
'"burg, N. V.
vould not agree and he was sent to
Tlson.
Mist Wilbert’s parents live at Nar-
BUSINESS LOONS UP
OARNBSVILLB MILLS RESUME OPER
ATIONS ON FULL TIME AFTER
THE PANIC.
J£
BARNK8VTLL& Qa.. Nov. 13.—Busi
ness conditions are Improving here and
the people generally are more encour
aged over the outlook for the future. It
has been a hard year up to the present,
but better times are now looked for.
The Aldora cotton mlllf. which have been
Idle, are now running, the Qem. Georgia
and Oxford knitting mills are again run
ning on full time, Smith's and Rummers'
buggy factories pave recently Increased
their force and several contracts have
I nst l*een let for new buildings, namely,
Ira. J. W. Adams, three brick stores. J.
W. Garland, big livery stables. Mayor T.
W. Cochran, big cotton and grain and
supply warehouse end a number of build
ings and Improvements of minor Im
portance.
Congregatlonallsts Meet.
BAUNE8VILLE. Oa.. Nov. 13.—The
state conference of the Congregational
Church, representing the denomination
throughout Georgia, t* tn session at FTe-
donia church, six miles south of Romas-
villa. There ere cloa* to one hundred
delegatee In attendance, representing
something more than fifty churches, and
quite a number of visitors from other
states, a number of them distinguished
men representing denominational enter
prises of the church.
Th# churches represented by the con
ference are scattered throughout Geor
gia. much of the atrengtbaof the church
betng In south Oeorfla, Atlanta however
being headquarters for th# stats Tha
people of Fredonta community are royally
entertaining the conference end the
meeting In every way will be successful,
the tine weather contributing to tW> at
tendance and the pleasure of the Vca-
Among the distinguished visitor* pres
ent and who are participating in the ex
ercise* are Dr. Hubert C. Herring, of
New York city, national secretary of mis
sions; Dr. William Ewing and Dr. u. W.
Cooper, of Boston, secretaries of the Bun-
('harlcs F. Allen, of Piedmont College,
the denominational state school at” De-
morest Da.: President K Lyman Hood,
of the seminary of Atlanta: Dr. George
Rave*, at Birmingham. Ala.: Rev A. F.
Shertil. of Atlanta ts the host of the
conference, being th# pastor of Fre-
donia.
In addition to the shove, who are on
the regular program, the following hare
also been Assigned to dlscusa various
subjects during th* session of the con-
»: Rev. Owen A. Griffin. Way-
Robinson.' Columbus’.
E Newton. I.Indale: Rev. J. T. Parr. Co
lumbus. Pr J. W Blester. Atlanta. Rev.
It L. Lock*. Baxley. Rev. Frank K. Jen*
ktn*. secretary Home Mission Foctety for
Tbs conference srtlt com* to a doe*
with a sermon Sunday evening by Dr.
William Ewing, of Boston.
BOY’S LEG IS BROKEN BY
ROWDY BUNCH HAZERS
croea.
Rev. .
E Ne
A COMPLETE FOOD
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erv Highest Awards in
•J vy Europe and America
ReaUtexed
u.8. m. office
A medical writer says:
Baker’s pure cocoa acts as
a gentle stimulant, invigorat
ing and correcting the action
of the digestive organs, fur
nishing the body with some
of the purest elements of
nutrition.'
Walter Baker & Co., Ltd.
F.jubinhM 1780. DORCHESTER, MASS.
GEORGIA, Bibb County—To the Sup«'
rlor Court of said County*
The petition of th* Bibb Manufacturing
Company showclh: That It la a corpora
tion created pursuant to the law* of
Georgia under a charter granted by the
superior court of the county of Bibb on
the «th day of September. 1307, and peti
tioner desires an amendment to It* said
charter ns hereinafter set out.
Petitioner asks that Its charter may be
amended as to give petitioner the
to reduc
er and authority to Increase Its capital
stork at any time to two million five
hundred thousand dollars (fr.^OO.COO), par
’alue, as a maximum, and that It may
_rom time to time Increase or reduce Its
capital stork, hut at no time shall the
from time to time Increase or reduce Its
capital atoek. but at no time shell
par value of said stock be lest than
million five hundred thousand do
(tl.MO.OOO). or more than* two million
five hundred thousand dollars ($3,640,000).
Petitioner further asks that Ita charter
vote of stockholders representing a ma
jority of the stock of said corporation,
change the legal residence of said corpo
ration to any county In the state of
Georgia in which It conduct* any busi
ness authorised by Its charter, hut before
such change of residence shall be effect
ive the Bibb Manufacturing Company
shall publish once a week for four weeks
In the newspaper in which th* sheriff of
Bibb county publishes his sales, its In
tention to remove * J
other county, stat...^ — -
county to which It proposes to move, nnd
R ubllsh one time In like paper published
\ such county, and shall cause a copy of
said* publication, sworn to by the presi
dent or secretary of said company, to
gether with a certified copy of the origi
nal charter and any amendment thereto,
to be filed with the clork of th* superior
court of the county Into which It moves
Its residence.
Petitioner prays that thla honorable
court will pasa an order or judgment
amending Its charter as hereinabove set
out.
GEORGIA. Bibb County—I. Robert A.
Nlsbet. clerk of the superior eourt.of said
county, do hereby certify that the forego
ing contains a true copy of the original
petition to amend charter of the Bibb
Manufacturing Company, this day filed.
In witness wnereof I have hereunto set
my hand and seal of office thla th* $th
day of November, inns. _______
ROBT. A. NISBET.
Clerk 8up*rlor Court Bibb County.
Georgia.
GEORGIA, Bibb County—To th* Supe
rior Court of aatd county: _ „ .
Th* petition of Ralph B. Small, of Bibb
county, and Charles G. Peeler, of Berrien
county, both cltlscns of Georgia, respect
fully shows:
First They desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns,
to be created a body politic and corpo
rate under the name end style of Rural
Advertising Company for the period of
twenty years, with the privilege of re
newing their charter at the expiration of
that time upon a majority votfr'of
capital stock; and by said name
■tyle to have all the power*, rights, privi
leges nnd immunities with which similar
corporations are Invested by Jaw. and
which may be Incident to the accom
plishment of the purpose and objects of
M 8oromf° r Th# n capltal stock ot said cor
poration ahall be twenty-five thousand
dollar#, divided Into share* of the par
value of on* hundred dollar* each, with
privilege to said corporation of In
line Its capital atock at any Ui
1 major!-.
to any amount
$6.95 to Savannah and rttnm
Nov 21 to 25 inclusive, via
Central of Georgia Railway, for
Automobile Races. Reserve
sleeping car berth in advance,
at ticket office, 603 Cherry st.i
—b caul
from time to time, upon a
of the outstanding atock. I-—, -----
not exceeding on* hundred thousand dol
lars; of which minimum .capital stock ten
per cent haa been paid In.
Third. Th# principal office and place
of business of amid corporation ahall be
In said eounty of Blbbi with the privilege
to said corporation of establishing branch
offices, and conducting Us business at
any and aa many other Places within
and without the state of Georgia as It
"Kurth!" {Subject of the proposed
corporation la pecuniary gain to Its
stockholders.
Fifth. Th# said corporation dealrta th#
ssf* jfjsGin.v.tSitTs
and. to that end. that tt ahall have the
right power and authority to contract
for and handle, for Itself and any other
persons or corporations, any and all kinds
of advertising matter, and advertising
devices, and to advertise good*, wares,
merchandise, real estate, and w other
thing* whatsoever for sal# or purchase or
any other lawful purpose tn newspapers
and mags tinea, and by card*, hand bins
and all other devices and mediums,
which (nay now and hereafter ba uaad
for advertising, and that tt may have
the right to make all contracts neces
sary for such purposes..
Sixth. Said corporation desires the
right to secure, own. buy.and sett patent
rights and copyright*, and the use there
of: for advertise menu and advertising
device* af all kinds, and to act aa agent
for any persons or corporations; and. for
Itself and others, te borrow and lend
money, and buy aad sell stocks, bonds,
note* end any other property, real, per-
IWiidLttb corporation desires the
right by authority at a majority vote of
Ita stock, to Issue bonds In any amount
not exceeding the par value of Its capital
stock, and also to issue income bonds,
and to secure the payment of such bend*
K JSSSS’A s
in* tu Income, upon any terms or condi
tions to which tt may agree.
Eighth. Bald corporatieu d"t!re* the
right to commence business and enjoy all
the power* and Immunities of a corpora
tion aa soon aa there ere bona fide sub
scriptions to fifty per cent ot Ita capital
**—' ‘“tiegert pray that said
* Company be made a
nd corporate, for the terra
__ aad with ail the rights.
jd pHylles** hereinbefore eet
forth, and which are granted and secur
ed to like corporations by the laws of
th* n»m« of Chwlra W«b«r. Jr., I»t« of
lurnmor, .tit. of Jtonrlhnd. decUMd.
letter, uitumnuir upon th; e*»t« of
>,M fuuM h.vlnr been duly l<«ue<1
kw anawB
LOWbB WKBEH, Executrix.
Dated October 32nd. 1363.
ARCHITECT*.
CURRAN R. ELLIS
ARCHITECT
Office Phone 219. Residence Phone 2819.
OfTlces—Ellis Bldg. •
Cherry SL and Cottou Ava.
MACON. GA.
FRANK R.HAPP, 1;
Architect.
omo.1 Room. 22 and 2) Fourth Nl>
tlonal Banw Building.
Telephone—Res. 632; Office 990.
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Phone 71. ^ ^
Residence Phone 1479.
678 CHERRY 8T. MACON. GA.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room IHI.
Water supply, water power, sewer
age and municipal engineering. Re
ports, plans, specifications, estimates
and superintendence. Office Phone 1142.
Residence phone 32S8.
p. E. DENNIS. Architect.
Rooms 703-4-6-6 American National
Bank Bldg. Phone 962; Rtsldence
phono 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET, 1
Architect.
Office Phone 489. Residence 441.
Grand Bldg. Macon. Ga.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
W. W. DeHAVEN.
General Contractor and Builder.
Residence phone 699.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
OCULIST.
DR. M. M. STAPLER.
Eye. Ear, Nose and ThroaL
Doctor#* Fleer. American National Bank
Bldg. Office Phone. 3742; residence. lfciS.
OCULIST AND AURI5T.
DR. J. H. SHORTER.
"The OraSS” %Sg.?n#xt*te Court*Hou#e.
Phones: Office, 972; residence. 950.
EYE, EAR. NOSE, THROAT.
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat. Grand Bldg.
OSTEOPATHY.
DR. FRANK F. JONES, Osteopath.
314 Second at. Phone 930 ana 8635.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DR. THOS. H. HALL, Eye. Ear. Nose.
Throat Specialist, 507-8 Grand Bldg.
DR. MARY E. McKAY.
Grand Building,
Phones: Office, 2854; Residence, 1465.
DR. W. H. WHIPPLE,
Office, 571 Mulberry ct.. rooms 4 and 5,
Washington Block. Hours: 9 to 10 a. m.,
12 to 1 and i to 6 p. m. Telephone con
nection! at offlca and residence.
D Permanentiy*loeited: In the special
ties venereal. Lost energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison oak;
cure guaranteed. Address In confidence,
with stamp, 610 Fourth tt., Macon. Ga.
DENTISTRY.
DR®. J. M. A R. HOLMES MA80N,
Dentists.
354 Second at.. Phone 155.
ATTORNEY® AT LAW.
CLAUD ESTES,
Attorney-st-Lsw.
177 Cotton Ave. Phone 820.
ROBERT L. BERNER.
Attorney at Law.
Rooms 706-707 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 cnll on ns
HOWARD M. SMITH & CO.
Stt Mulb.rry SL. MACON. QA
$2,000,000.00 SAFELY LOANED.
During the last 16 years we have loan
ed $2,600,000.00 on Real Estate for home
and foreign Investors. Safest and most
profitable Investment Those desiring to
borrow or haring money to Invest will
find It to their Interest to see us.
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.,
Cemmerelal Bank Building.
Thomas B. West. Secretary and Attorney.
ALBERT McKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothe!,
Cherry St., Macon, Ga.
Brown House
Opposite Union Dapot—MACON, QA.
American
Plan
f. BARTOW STUBBS, ProprUlor.
P. W. ARMSTRONG M.n.g.r,
JOHN P. ROSS.
Attorney far Petitioner,
rued tu office. (Ms 4th day of Novara*
1 ROBT. A. NISBET.
Cleric Bibb Superior Court,
The enderetimed hereby gives notice
pursuant to r^ragrsrh IQS of the Civil
Cede at Georg*.*. 1W, of her Intention
to transfer eight (t» shares of the first
preferie»1 stock of the Georgia Southern
m Florida Railway Company. * loading la
Monej Is Lend sn
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
and very low rate* on Mar
ketable lecnritiM. . „
Macon Savings Bank
For Sale
Tho substantial and well located two*
story tyrlek bulldln®. Noa. 807 find
609 Mulberry street. It !■ well ar
ranged for'bualnesa purposes on flret
floor and rooms with modem conven
iences above for a family dwelling.
Lot 10x210 to alley In rear. This Is
very desirable property and offered
at a BARGAIN for QUICK sale.
Suburban acreage and farms a spe
cialty. Home funds on long time at
7 per cent.
Geo. W. Duncan
Manager
For Rent
STORES.
No. 320 Second St
No. 414 Fourth 8t
No. 453 Second St
No. 666 Poplar St
No. 403 .Mulberry St
No.. 616 Poplar St
...160.00
...*60.00
...956.00
...950.00
.. .$30.00
...950.00
$15,000
To Loan
Geo. B. Turpin Sons
For Rent
buildings and tenant houses sufficient to
run it; well * -* “ w ‘*' ““
from good
nearest rail.— —
running through the center. Th# place
contains 1,750 acres, and haa plenty of
running water on It. Will leaee to a re
sponsible party for five years at a rent
of IS bales of cotton per year. The place
A 50-acre farm on Columbus road with
good Improvements. Including a two-story
dwelling; running water and most of place
under fence.. Improvement# could not be
placed for $3.00ft.00. Price, 13.250.00. Can
30S4i acrea^ In Crawford county. Ga..
has 7-room dwelling and two small tenant
hourea; about 200 acres In large second
growth pine ready to saw. which should.
If properly handled, yield enough to more
Georgia Loan & Trust Co.
565 Mulberry Street
For Sale
We .are offering for quick sale a
very desirable piece of property locat
ed on Forsyth street, near Monroe
street, and now occupied by negroes,
but will no doubt rapidly enhance In
value «a the property on the opposite
aide of Forsyth street la occupied by
white people. The lot fronts 67 feet
on Forsyth street and runs back 905.
feet to an Alley in the rear. On the
lot Is one 4-room huse. three 2-room
houses, one 1-raom house, and rents for
nearly 1300.00 a year. Price 92,000.
JORDAN REALTY CO.
Real Estate, insurance ahd Loans.
Phone 1136. Fourth Nat. Bank Bldg.
H. Horne
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE AND
LOAN®,
Grand Building. • Phone 4M.
road track, facilities.
Second and Third floor Evening Newa
Building.
Storage space at English Compress
Building. Southern Railroad track facili
ties.
DWELLING®.
7-r. dwelling near Whittle Bohool.
7-r. dwelling, 210 First street.
l’ T ‘ 3 W *i!! n|r * 4 , & rl £* d .. 4W NeW ,tTMt -
5- r. dwelling, 243 Carling avenue.
6- r. cottage South College attest.
6-r. cottage. Lynn ave. VlnevUI# (new),
6-r. cottage, 406 and 40$ Ross street
6-r. In dwelling. 641 Orange street.
Elegant apartments in Dr. Frasier’S
new apartment house of 6, 6. 9 or 1?
rooms. Steam heat watsr and Janitor
service furnished.
Money to lend on Improved real estate
at 4 end 7 per rent, according tolocatien.
fi. S. S F. RY.
Schedule Effective Oct 13, 190®.
DEPARTURE®!
'InSSoXL ‘STfcJiBr ciS.
wa
4:06 p. m.. no. 6, "#hoo-Fly," Ma-
ooo to Valdosta and aiJ Inter
mediate points.
12:26 a. m.. No. 3, "Georgia South*
Ewaw Aai?* 3 ® 1 *
12:16 a. m., No. 93, "Dixie Flyer,»»
coach## and Pullman sleepers,
Macon to Tlftoa. en routs from
Et Louis and Chicago to Jack
sonville.
ARRIVALS!
4:13 a. m., No. 4, "Georgia South'
— Suwanee Limited.” from
sonvill# and FaJatke
ales par Jacksonville to
Jacksonville .and 2'alatka. local
sleeper Jacksonville to Macou:
passengers can remain In local
sleaser in Uu«on Depot at Macon
3:2? a 1 . m„ No.”##, "Dixie Flyer,»•
coaches and Pullman nepers
Ttfton to Macon, en rout# from
Jacksonville te Bt Louis and
11:10 aTm., No. 6, "Shoo-Fly." from
4l2S p. m.. No. 2. from Patatka.
Jacksonville sad all intermediate
KS^avfi^ p:
MACON, DUBLIN « SAVANNA RAIL-
ROAO COMPANY.
Arrival ar.d Departure of Pataenger
_ Train* at Maeerv.
Effective March 16, noa
Leave. Arrive.
*4*. 13 TrOOera! No. 19 11:06am
*(*» » 3:30pm No. 17....*. 4:40pm
670 MULBERRY STREET.
_Trains arrive eng gepert fram Oouthern
Railway Depot J. A. STREYE*\
Guerra Feeeencer Ap-nC .
GEORGIA. *• a; LAO AO.
Arrive! ^ Depart!
:?5:
VW ** 69P; a *” r
y/. W. HARDWICK. Q.' A.,
40® Cherry M,
pm.70. dally.,*,,,*, 140
•• _ _ p m.
4:49