Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, November 20, 1908, Image 4

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t V THE MAOON DAILY TELEGRAPH: FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 20, 19TO The Macon Telegraph Publish** Every Morning by THE MACON TELEGRAPH PUR CO. 64* Mulberry Street, Macon, Cm. 0. R. Pendleton, President. TH« TELBQRAPH IN ATLANTA. Th# Telegraph oar, b« found on sal* et th* KimbMI Houee and Piedmont Hotel in Atlanta. Linotype For Sale. Medal No. I, two years aid. two-let- fr Morgen thaler Linotype machine, in pf$ prior; IMM, f.o.b. Macon. Ad- real The Telegraph. Macon. Oa. HE CAN SMILE. Mr. Roosevelt's Uttar declaring that .he would favor a Catholic or Jewish President, !( need be, let alone a Unl- tnrien discreetly published after the r <otlon—has gtlrred up several t-ranetae* of the Protestant ohuroh and thrrn have baan passing resolutions v Mi great unanimity. But Mr. Hoooa- n can afford to smile, being reason i ably wall aatlatlod with the develop- . im*nt of the events. Prom the outset ■ the p» opts supported hla every whim nnd ha baa always had his way. | has got everything he really wanted. He i ns failed only In eomo of grandstand plays, such as his loud t elk about revising the tariff and bust ing the trusts; and he did not loee any alrep over thee*, for he knew that l.ls party could not afford to either. There la not a man In the country who has a better right to feel satisfied with himself. 8TANDARD8 OP ORATORY. Th** Telegraph recently printed tho address of the American ambassador to England, White law R* id. at tho un veiling of a tablet at Bath. England, t» Edmund Burke, in the course of which Mr. Reid spoke of Burke as “the greatest orator of his country.” Com- i imttng oa Mr. Reid’s estimate of Burke, the New York Evening Poet gays: “Mr. Reid must have had In mind an unusual feet of great or atory. Iturke’a speeches are un doubtedly among the most won derful productions of the human Intellect. The* can Mill be read with delight and prolit; while no man willingly disturbs the dust under Which the orations of hla . faeat famous contemporaries . find Immediate favor. Fux and Hherldan far outshone Mm. He wa* cant'd “the dinner bell of the House of Commons’—to so beg- Goldamlth'e well known lines de scribe tha way In which Burks wart on ’r*flnlng* while hla hear ers thought only of Mining.’ Now, a speech which fails flat with Its aodience oan be said to be groat oratory only by straining tho or dinary definitions” This Issue made by the brilliant If sometimes bilious Post with tha abla odltor of Its eon temporary, tha Trt buna, at present representing this eeontrr at the court of Bt James, reteeo the question as te what are the true testa of great oratory. It may be aaM, in passing, (bat notwithstanding Ruths*» delivery ordinarily might havo been tiresome to the average hearer, that on occasions which mended it he could exert himself to a pitch and exercise an Immediate spell ever Ms auditors equal to the best dtriatmera, whether Sheridan. Pox or Ohatnajn. Either this Is true or Me- rau'ay drew on hla Imagination for hla famous description of the scene at the Impeachment of Warren Hastings during iturke’a peroration when the UdUw fainted and the distinguished defendant himself said ha sat under a epelJ and for the time regarded him. self a* the most guilty soul alive. But to reduce the teat of oratory te a mere question of entertainment Is to our mind a fallacy on Its face. TM# I# on a par with the Judgment that would pronounce the “Merry Widow” a more entertaining production to rnodorn* than the “Merry Wive* of Winder” and therefore a superior work it la on a par with the Judg ment mat would question Shakes- pear*’* greet ness as a poet and play wright because the modern audience Aada. mora entertainment and pleasure In comic opera or vaudeville. But Park* will be studied and read as Phakaep^are will b* read and played eSea their iJlMIIWl contemporaries, rredeccaaore and successors are for gotten For ** Grenville said. “Burke U to politics what Shakespeare Is to ATLANTA’8 MAYORALTY MUDDLE. When James O. Woodward, the nominee for a third term for mayor of Atlanta, won out In thq white pri mary. ho went out, thfy say, and cel ebrated his victory by drinking “too much whisky” as he ronfefpel, dad be l« -aid to have otherwise^ actfd 41a* gracefully His conduct raised a atuna, and a committee of one hun- drtd mri end put an Independent can- didate. Mr. R. F s Maddox. In the field. Th* three newspapers of the city got igoroualy behind Maddox. Meanwhile Mr. Woodward being at home sick and under the care of doctors, concluded, doubtless, t ’at lie "nil In." as they as- In the at red. and bn wrote n letter withdrawing ont the rue*. Then ih»: Atlanta papers iM-gan to pnUa<‘ Woodward, and t* say that, nil, nolwithstanding his weak- lie whs a \er> *xrriient man end n patriot. They showered ly»u- tuet* upon tits met fallen foretop. doubtb km convincing the ex-mayor flint tie need hot feel so badly about It nfter all 1t tended nlso to reaa- • Woodwards friends, who serin to have deserted him, as th« pub* had be«*n assured, and who are numbered. It appears, by the thous ands. A meeting was called, and our Me ouoht to know. Mr, Taft u quoted ae Buying that the consumers of thle country -should take etepo et once to secure tlon of their views on the tariff to the Committee on Way* and Means.* If Mr. Tjift gnd the Government will not rep/esent the consumers—the people—and' stand off fie wolves of special .privilege that are descending en Washington determined to secure higher schedules than ever, who la to do it? The party of free trad# la de feated, and outside of thy newspapers there ere no representatives of tariff reform In a position to make them selves beard. There are some eighty million consumers scattered through out fj* four quarters of tie country end the vast majority of th»*m havu been made too poor by paying two price* under the Dinghy tariff for nearly ayarythlng they buy to he abla o leave their business and take an 'Xpenslvc trip to Washington. Tho manufacturers, on the ©tbra* bund, are relatively few. ere organised, and each has a direct personal Interest In get ting certain schedules raised or In preventing others from being low ered. Naturally it Is the second class thee I* represented it those farcical “tariff hearings” at Washington. After considering one by one the “The burden of our foreign patches.” eaya the Memphis News- ffclmltar, “la that the de Rigan* tlnue to be happy, though on the verge of separation for good and sufficient reasons; that the Abrussl-Elklns match has been broken off because of the chilly business methods of lady’s father, who wanted the title at the marked-down price; and that tha Duehesa de Chaulnae, daughter of our Theodore flhonts, has procured her self a baby to hair the title of its °ead father to certain vaevoug pnrog. stive* and empty forms wblob alone remain to the despoiled French no bility^' Foreign gossip la evidently not behind In ’’gingering” the news with a little malice here and there. n porta say S.oeo packed the house und jdemands made at the “hearings” by l.ooo war* turned away. Enthusiasm |r»rr*#*ntatlv*s of the protected Inter ior Woodward was unbound*!. The|**te, th* New York Evening post mention of hls name provoked d*-af- !say«; The Norfolk Virginian-Pilot not agree with the objection made to giving Mr. Bryan the title of ’The Moses of Democracy." Nothing think* could be more appropriate. Bryan "has led hls party into sight of (ha Promised Land.” says the ginlan-Pilot, "and himself has caught a distant glimpse from the mountain top of the fair fields of Canaan. Got there hls mission ends. Next Is the need for a Joshua to take up the leadership, to amlte the Amelfkltea and the Philistines hip and thlffh and to bring the people of hls political Israel Into full possession of their heritage. 1 ning cheer* whltn last'd for mlnut**. immllte* was s«-nt after him und he was taken out of a sick-bed and brought bafore the meeting. He made them a little speech and pledged them to stand by him, agreeing to re-enter the race. Now It le none of our funeral, but one cannot help admiring the man who, under such a train of circum stance* and In view of hie weakness, ran command such a following and coats such enthusiasm among so large a number of hls fellow-ciUsenw There must h* more In the man than those of uk at n distance have hern led to .believe. Another thing that has aroused our curiosity: We have heard a great deni r-'ccntly In connection with the Maddux movement about tte arouse- meat of “the Atlanta spirit;*' that at the meeting of the 100 select clttxene It wae poured out In such moving quantities that It made men get their chair-backs end do miraculous stunts end feats which the reporters confessed they could not describe In thfc English language. It was a sort •f second Pentecost—according to the reporters who witnessed It win bated breath. Now. we would like to bo In formed whether this, or the Wood ward 5,000-enthusiasm was the real hot stuff known, or supposed to known, ea “the Atlanta spirit?” The settlement of this question Is really the Iseue Involved in the mayoralty campaign. If he has not been smitten speech lees by the enormity of the situation, or muxsled by "Me people” we shall look for Dr. Lon Broughton to throw some light on questions here raised. Button, button, who has the but ton? Who has “the Atlanta spirit”— Jim Woowdard or Bob Maddox? night one measure the ' such oratory by Its tm- lit*. The policy of the 1 dorcimuit at the ttme sustained tng* end Burke, Sbtrldaa. Fax thetr co-manager* of the (ra iment felled to obtain a verdict Mt Mm. but their respective ex- of Hastings* administration (p India wtll remain monuments of eloquence «nd moral grandeur to be ea*4 and pondered for all time whl’.q tha apcer+iM In opposition have t forgotten Mr. Rockefeller *s gf doing the verv wl I** * good snub than any one *>**“ the most effective R< He systematically u petltor* until he ran geld and nee he used THE UPLIFT OF THE FARMERS. According to a Washington dispatch to the New York Bun, “an Indifference more or lees disquieting to President Roosevelt and the member* Country ^.tfe commission, bee been observed among the farmers of country. It le true that a good many letters have been received by the President, not only from farmers but from sociologists, publicists, settle mont worker* end city dwellers, rep resenting many walks of life, all com mending hls efforts for th* uplift. Yet there ere eigne that whole communi ties are either Indifferent to the work which Mr. Roosevelt haa cut out for the country Life Commission or posi tively opposed to being uplifted et all.” Perhapa this unwillingness to be “Uplifted* t* pertly due to resentment on the pert of self-respecting farmers at the prospect of being Investigated somewhat after th# manner of the ”$oor problem” In the city slums. And some or them may think that the movement is not as genuine might he. Certainly the reasons for and tho objects of tha Country Life Comm lesion have not been made very dear. At a recent meeting of the Academy of Political and Social Sci ence. where this uplift movement we* supposed to be discussed, the speaker*, some of whom w#r* Federal office holder*. teemed chiefly Interested In praising President Roosevelt end In contending that there wa* nothing In the chargee of executive usurpation that have been brought against him. In Tho Telegraph’* opinion a very good way to help “uplift” a large clast of farmers Is to revise th* tariff so that thry can pay less for thqfr doth * farming Implements, From this brief recital It la clear that when the < xtrn session In (Ailed, any proposal to make ma terial reductions will meet with atout opposition. Rome of tho men who are asking for more are merety maneuvering for posi tion; whet they mean Is that they will not take lass chan they now receive. Hence, we may expeot to see the *ame sickening spectacle that characterised the passage of th** McKinley end Dlngley bills. Then the manufacturers who rely upon i rejection rather than their «wn skill descended upon Wo sh in rt on In a body, and by threat ening end promising, bulbing and wheedling—to My nothing of bribery, direct'and Indirect—se cured the ennetinent of the two most flagrantly unjust laws ttat this rountrv haa known. Every representative was Importuned to secure a fa( slice of pork for lbs manufacturers In Ms district, either because they hnd helped pay hls campaign bills or because they threatened to defect him next time. And above ell these con tending end plotting special Inter- esta were the steel manufacturers nnd other powerful combinations wrieh continued the Republican leaders, manipulated the ecu- cuaea, end In the sacred name of party regularity were able to write into the statute* such rates n* they pleased. It I* for a similar orgy of enr- rui'tlon (net the omtected rnanu- faotur.'r* and their alllae among the “standpatter*” seem to be now preparing. We have qniy. to add that If Mr. Taft wants to know what are th* de mands of *th« consumers—or rather their wishes, for they are hopelessly aware that It te useless to demand anything—let them ask Mr. Roosevelt who was ones a member of a free trade club; let him reed the newspa pers end the publicists th*t have agi tated the question of tariff reform; let him cast hls ey* over a recant ad- dress of President Eliott, of Hervnrd, on* head of * great university who aeem* In some miraculous way to have escaped the manacles of pecu niary Indebtedness to tbs Urtff-fod trust* There ere a thousand ways In whldi Mr. Taft may become ac quainted with the wishes of the ood- turners, end he really ought to be suf ficiently well acquainted with them already. And he ought to know that the Government Itself should repre sent the oonsumera—th# people—and seek to stand off the wolves of priv ilege In the Internet* of the former. The National Prosperity Association, describing Its achievements, say*: “Among the most Important of thee# was the visit to President Roosevelt, which rcxultcd In hi* not sending any mors messages to Congrea* or doing anything that had the appearance of being an attack upon railroads otter largo corporations.” TVrhcpstt* next most Important achievement will be a tariff higher than either the no torious McKinley or Dlngley. “Whet e wonderful thing It hoe been, the growth of the burinee*,” re marked Mr. Rockefeller In reminis cent mood. Yes, too wonderful to have Just growed end swallowed every competitor In the Innocent way Mr. Rockefeller would have the public be lieve. "Chicago la bragging of a policeman who In a raid discovered a faro layout and did not know what it was." If It had been a crap game he would have i “on” all right. That promisee to be a nasty fight In Atlanta after all. Will #ome one touch Jeffries Davis end see if be le still alive? Little of Everything “Pity It not natural to man,” re marked Dr. Johnson to BoewelL “Sav. ageg are always cruel. Pity la ac qulred and Improved by the cultiva tion of reason. We may hav* uneasy sensations from eeetlng a creature In distress, without pity; for we have not pity unless we wish to relieve (ftem. When I am on my way to din* with a friend, and. finding tt late, have bid th* coachman to make haste. If I happen to attend when he whips hie hortes. I may feel unpleasantly that the animals ere put to pain, but I do not wish him to deelst. No, sir, I wish him to drive on." Thl» Is prob ably the secret why owners uf horse* lashed nt every step by, merciless drivers appear to give no attention or ears to the matter. Rambler; Th# solid south must remain solid, but not as the tall *nd of northsrn democracy. , Ons-Tenth to Charity. Albany Herald: Win. J. Hr van, accord ing to on* who Is very close to him. gives one-tenth of every dollar he makes to charity. Putting It en the Women. Bruns*li k Journal: Why don’t men go to church? Because they g*t crick* In their necks dodging around th* women's big hats In an effort to see tbs preacher. Politic* Saw It fflret. Columbus, Enquirer-Onn: It I* said au& b ” n T,rT MotiltHa Obrarwr?'' In'Y«tiln«"J.m», O. Woodward to retire from th* mayor- el* come.! In Atlanta. It ie«mi that a fey.h';yri,r n ' M ” lln F - _ , W»li, Mor, Chlek.n., ft Colllmklla l.lwr: Cotton ptuit.ra ouM rmU. more ehleken, nnd «,rs. :. Il.m.od, ,re tniTon.ln, while the •rallnbl, auptil, npoetra to kn relttn. Clearly Ralph Waldo Kmernon for*, •hadnnrad Wrodor, Rooa«v*lt nnd th, period upon whleh we «r» about to •ntor when h, Midi "Beware when th* front Ood let, !o«m t thinker on this rl.net. Thou >n thine nr* nt rink. It I, nn when n oonflntnilon bn. krohrn out In n front city, nnd no mnn know, whnt U onto or whrr* U will tnd. Th.re la not n pleco of oct- oaco hut Its Rnnkn mny bo turnod to* ite, nnd imorrow; thorn 1, not nny Winn' thu, hnr, mor* to .pond on newnpn- , iwputntlon, not tho .o-enllod Moran) porn, book., nnd roflnlny tnmrtoo Thl, pnrtteulnr motkod et "uplift" would hr npprortntnd by un nil It I. nnnounrod In n dtnpntrh from Hot Hprtnfn Vn.. tknt nt n rontorantn ppreldod orrr by Preoldrnl-oloct Tift It wnn dorlded tknt Mlku Root thonld nnroood Tom INnit In «k. Cnltod Rtnton bran to. TM* wilt not only mnk* tho Now Took XVortd tntrr. but frinnd Ohnunm P*p*« nn Chnnnony donn mt nmnt th. nnmra nt fnmn, thnt mny not bn ro- ytnnd nnd condnmnod. Thn v.ry hr poo or mnn, tho ttionfktn of hi. honrt. tho reltflon ot nation*, th* mnnnkrn nnd moral* at mankind nr* nil nt th* marry ot * now ton.rnttutton." ro k. li *n kod thlnf of aril, nt n lower prior Thl. wa, ono of j ker'-Bermothodn. j habit of aotlllaf thnot oMMtorta! mat* idoroiild hi* oom* tat*, nt r on fere nr eo tn wkloh ho dan* them ont of thi. jr.nf panJrlpnt* to ff»w Bui Oman. iUrt.t,. *t hi* |noy will hav* to walk th* plank an wall ,i n 1 th* prtc of o* tor lbo world., no Pi.it. Fancy Rooanrttt foln, to th* l-nttod *1*10* Sonata nnd mibmlttlnf for nr. ml inn to com* t* bo muuted by th. padlock ot -8*011 -l>l rourtmy- wtmn ho ran hmnndk Vy bloom out tftor Mnroh «lh tnlo a full-ttodfod mack-rnkar at IM.M* * ynar. Wolf, bet our manor Ban TIUmaa ka* a hat tuH of rack* randy (or tha hall to open at Waaklnftoa. ’ItaM. We allowed he would eenitrk! hut that doeon't rhanft tha notunl condi tion. In tho tenet. .'f.r: Tho inrynt crowd -—the red tn Otlnthorp* Minty wan them yeetordnv tn mo and hear tloo.-etoet «h*wn. It l-ln* the tint time .lure th. ndmlnl.tmtion of Oor. Ollmer thnt a for* otnor ha. vlelted Oatetkorpo connty. . ..?• L * *•_*"( Matthew Arnold, mill mor* R, I. s. it l. related II when merenmi waa told of the death Metthew Arnold ho wau^d; th.e .. duhio-tjlr^^'lf* won’t Itk* Oodr—Har. 200 MINERS FACE DEATH WHEN GA6ES COLLAPSE EDWARDSVm,E. in*.. Nor. It Two tended raf*a tn th* Korent-non- newalj coal tnlno oollapard thl, *ft«r- noon. earn In* with thtm to Iho bot tom of tho min# th* entlr* holntln, apparatua and top worka. THE SHTVmtHY evening Post Has a larger paid circula tion than any other weekly publication in America. The edition for this weeK is COPIES This is, by far, the largest circulation ever attained by any weekly magazine in America. This edition requires the printing of more than ioo copies every minute of every hour of the twenty-four,’six days a week. The Saturday Evening Post was founded by Benjamin Franklin ini728. It has been issued every week for the past one hundred and eighty years, save only when the British army held Philadelphia and patriotic printers went temporarily into exile. By paid-up, cash circulation we mean that a million people every week pay cash for The Saturday Evening Post. Our subscribers are not bribed to read it by the inducements of premiums, prizes, cut-rates, free copies; nor do we hold to the policy of once-a-subscribcr- always-a-subscriber and continue to send the magazine after the subscription has expired. GEORGE HORACE L0RIMER, Editor-m-Chief Five cents the copy: $1.50 by the year Our Boys Are Everywhere Tub Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia, Pa. Delivered to any address on request to ' WILCOX ANDERSON 203 Cotton Avenue. ill iHs •on , Uon *® olther ot th. und.n1.Tio3; mid Pare* E contain, about It acre*. Ilea Two hundred men war* In tha min. i real eitato contain!., m *u about i.aw! north of th. Central retimed In land lot «h« Urn*, but all aaoapod Injury — ‘ * nnd mada thtlr way ont throufh th. air ahatt. Th* aeddont la bellcrad to hart .Imon caurad by th, o.erloadlnt of th, c,sm. Only nominal damac* wan don. to th, mtn, proporty. te tenant house and barn. y**._q*.??f** *** U M known u 'th. How.r'j irt IliaLkll a. lol.owa, to-wit. Plam. it ha, themon on, tenant house, ately north of rami I* and la th, north. 5,.”&’M,n“£;;d , !S i n’SFSa # ‘ wh * 1 '• Lcralne, Uvortto. known sa tho Ntatet .No. 2«7. and Is that w»rt rf “lit •»! Ail rf i. p Jk argil3s?Psaa5a5yfns.t! ^ )b County.—Undor sad by » obtained in th# superior wunty. 8 tfecose .nt GEORGIA U bb virtue et rrd#r» dSVISiPSPSBP^^.. H tf w«itF.-*jSe55ir.l» r ? v 'V ft rid #t al. v». tho Exchange 1 ggSggiSa rounding It. end fee else teei 1 J-Sik kbmra SSUS JS SSS | r*rc#l If ceeuins about us nci##, ll«s ex I I* contains sb^ut HI sores, il#o i et tbs Central rallrosdr’- ■ IIS. nnd 1- known n» t.. s Plane. This parcel has ..... .. one Urge subitnntlal reside*** I it house*. T barns, and Stber out- a good gin bouse, and a cotton- iwiween mm notr*, m IM event the i ij&nxrs vfcsS is® r^AdJr2-..ri , ?rd.*“’ rti sPtfffew*rfraBar3 tleht tn Iwrtst upon a coaflrtr ^nnTist.on bo. j rorth iho Central rail rood tn Und lets ^.-gj-P^lelNoa. rso and til and is known as th# deeCTtbed rooi.x^vkott TUcr It Bis thtrecn twp sot- >'■ , tiemer.to ef tenant house*. ■ * sod r«rc#| n f-TMIri 111 ■ 1 r r.tr'.h -f t‘ » ->p.i-*I r* :tv»k l 1 •.(*!• iyir.r iwnly m r Ulljr n:r 1-n a plot tn th* posu iinj.nbmeo. -hwhma Vo kee., • kwa si*i wu t* m:.*i wp«* *. p.u*.- 0 f l#t two __ __ ame. tie# raUrnsd tn Und Ut — —a* as th* Isuvr has thoxeo* twe ootUomoats 5 l im vP^SL 01 * a C#n,p * 1 In land lots h. S nn f nd . 245 c ftnd *• eeutbotn *“•TT vi 1 1 *• known as the Bowman MJ»JL_bS; naeo. It has thereon on* two-story beside# outhous** and one tenant house and settlement »>srcri r contains shout UT serss, 11m north of the Central rellmsd in Und lets No#. Ml and 14t. snd Is s part ot th* Bnwwisn Ptsce lying Immediately north Barrel H. It has thereon < n# settle- went of tenant houses. Barrel J contain* about IN sores, lies tn Und !<>•# No*. 1JS and JM. » n d Is a bert of the Bowntn Place lying Immt- °l*tejy awtlj ef Parcel I. It has thereon shout in teres, end lot No ;«? sM the whst is known os It hMt thereon one "fcanc'sa. b th* north half of th# H r:«.v teoM(t h«u#K end bam. I about III s-res. and dlat^y north ef P* 1 K. and ! i-J of the Jlwgueaia Flaoe, It has ttisrssn S^#AW#aajraaaA CITY MARSHAL SALES. Will be sold before the court bouse door during tho legal hours of sales, the first Tuesday In December. l»0t, the fol lowing described property; Fart of V. 41; bounded on one side by Third sts., on snothsr side by Eliza Mad dox, on another side by Ben Jackson, and on another side by lot. Levied on as the property of Maria Alexander to satisfy a fl. fa.- In favor o fth* mayor and council of the city of Macon vs. Marla Alexander for K city tax. IMS. Tax. IB.II and costs. Also, at the same time and place, nart of S. W. C. 45; bounded on one side by Maple at, on another side by Cole at, oa another side by T. H. Boone, for mother, and on another side by McKay. Levied on os the property of J. H. Becker to sat isfy a fl. fa. In favor of th* mayor and council of tb* city of Macon vs. J. h* Becker for fc city tax, 1903. Tax HI.91 and costs. Also, at tha same time and place, part of V. S?; bounded on one side by Second ave.. on another side by Louis Herley. on another tilde by 8. A. Lockhart, and on another side by Collins. Levied on as the property of Jos. Woodworth to satisfy s fl. fa. tn favor of tho mayor and ooun- cil of the city of Macon vs. Jos. Brood- worth for % city tax, 1908. Tax 85.41 and costs. Also, at tha same time and place, nart of N. W. C. 10; bounded on one side by Monroe at, on another side by 8. S. Dun lap, on another aids by Mrs. C. 22. Me nard. and on another side by Mrs. W. L. Ellis. Levied on as tbs property of W, B Borura to satisfy a fl. fa. in favor ol a s mayor and council of ths city of scon re. W, B. Borum for % city tax, 1903. Tax 39.85 and oosts. Also, at ths asms time and place, pari of 8. w. C. 47; bounded on one side by Calhoun St., on another side by Sutton, on another old* by Georgs Schall. guar dian; and on another slat by Will Mc Creary. Levied on os the property ol Zack Brunson to sitlsfy a fl. fa. In fa- of ths mayor and council of the city Jncon vs. Zack Brunson for % city 1908. Tax H.OO and costs. Also, at the same time and place, pari of V. St; tounJeJ oa on, aid. by S«c?nd ave., on another side by Mary Abrahams on another side by G. L. Hawes, and on another side by Kate Clowers. Levied on oa the property of Carrie Burfey to satis fy a fl. fa. In favor of the mayor and council of the city of Macon vs. Carrie Burley for % city tax, 1908. Tax 14.74 and oosts. Also, st ths asms tlms and plaoe, pari Of V. 40; bounded on one n'.de by Third ave., on another side by 8arah Thomi — *»-— -*•- •— — tdy, on another side by D unwo dy, and on a other side by B. A. Carwln. Levied i__ as ths property of J. L. Carwln to satisfy a fl. fa. in favor of the mayor and coun cil of tn* city of Macon vs. J. L. Carwln for \ city tax, 1908. Tax 318.13 and costs. Alet^_ of H. H. 3; bounded on one side by Co lumbus road, on another side by alley, another side by W. B. Wood, and on ther side by H. Parker. Levied on as the property of E. L. Chambliss to sat isfy a fl. fiu In favor of tho Also, st ths same time and place, pari council of the city of Macon 3Vp Chambliss for % city tax, 1901. Tax 35.(3 and costa. Also, at the same time and *- of 8. fa. C. 39; bounded t . . Elm st, on another side Church, on another side by Lucas, and another side by Plunketto. Levied on _ ths property of F. R. Christian to sat isfy s fl fa In favor of the mayor and nnd costa. Also, at ths asms time end place, part of a Q. S3; bounded on on* side by Pop lar st, on another side by T. C. Burke, on another aide by W. W. Brown, and on another aide by E. C. Coibetta. Levied > as the property of M. L Corbett* to _jtlsfr a fl. fa. in favor of the mayor and council of th* city of Macon va. M. L. Corbett* for % dty tax. 1M8. Tax 124.07 and costa. Alao, at the tame time and placs, port of 8. Q. II; bounded on one aid* by wkJ- nut at, on another side by Reia, on an other aide by Mra. Ida Kennlt, and on another side by Mrs. Dora Burke. Levied as the property of J. L. Davis to sat- —y a fl. ra. In favor of the mayor and council of the ciur of Macon to. J. L. —.s *— ^ — .— 3*0.47 end costs. A'f 0 ’*,? 1tlra * “»* Place, part of N. W. R. 15; bounded on one side by • College st, on another side by C. T. King, on another side by W. E. Martin, Jr. and on another side by Mrs. Lula 3alkoom. Levied on as the property of 8. C Daria to satisfy a fl. a In favor of the mayor and council of the city of Maoon vs. 8. C. Davis for R city tax, 1108. Tax 817.1* and costs. Also, at the same time and pises, part of V. 85; bounded on one side by Middle st, on another side by W. G, Johnson another side ny Cornelia Lewis, ««r side by Victoria Haynes. , ■ the property of Ann C. satisfy a fl. fa. In favor of the mayor and council of the city of Macon va. Ann C. Faulkner for % city t*x. 1M8. Tax 89.1(7 and costa. Also, at the same time and place,_part of V. 43; bounded on on* aids by Third ‘'"v another aide by L. .A. Mitchell, ither side by V. Douglaaa. and on ¥ —r-j r ride by Beasley or Smith, sgt. Levied on as th# property of WllUa Flewellen to satisfy a fl. fa. In favor of the mayor and council of the city of Ms- S»\ r \k? , S*., n J5’JSL ,or ‘‘ dtr S.T'w' c!'«^*boundeil ones st; on another aide by Mrs. M. J. rotpMQ* Oft^eaptber side *>7 8. S^Dunlap of Annle^OTb^ fsror ot the elty of Macon dty tax. 1908. ,«w er side by L Dun wood?’ ^■ried^on’ the property of Sarah Griffin to sat- — r **» favor of the mayor and 1 # of *i)® S ,ty 01 Mac °n Sarah and^oosuT * C ty JWS - TtkX H I4 J*»pe .time.and place, part £L M r> w -. 8 - *5 bounded on ons side >T Lea Reed, on another side by Lea rid# by Lea Reed and on another side by alley. Levied on ss olTtoVkSTn P-_« and on onothsr aid Levied on ss the “Lulkner to and on another aid Levied on as th* p son to satisfy a fl mayor and council va. Annie Gibson Tax $7.04 and coat Alto, at the sami of V. 60; bounded ave., on another si another side by C. ether *”• *- * as f Ilfv cour, .. . Griffin for mayor — 35.07 and coats'. Also.^st the some time and place, part »; bounded on on* side by *• - O. of Oa. Tar Q. 1 Fifth el. on another side by C. of ( 1 s “ % pst?l 117n Sr ; Zl.Vll 2*yor *md council of the city of Mscon va. F. W. Haslehurat & Co. f^r City tu. mi. Hu ki ll and ccli 'ti- ttjn. tltn. and plan, put of N w. C. 5; bounded on on* s'de by Madison st. on another rid* by R. R Tsrior. on another side by Mrs. E. Wtn- fKStir. T°L(«y iolh ® r by Fannie E« i £s r ctT tarATAsrftw !? d ® by "®® p FouitkT oS ?! d f. by^ alley and on another side *1 of the rt&ssL? " sr ^ Sa4t R E. Bowman at Lxsreia*. Georgia, win enew the prop- ertv^to^anr proepwrilv* bidder upon ap- Tkt# .Vowaber Ifth. 10*8. R T T " I OR, HfflF _ _ ... T. O. AAAriea: Maoon. Georgia, % dty tax. 1908. Tax I Also, at the same time and place, part - Mi bounded on one £4* by Tnlrd of-P.au. Howard to aat- "t-tti. major and wssur ■*««'«« jbs nUthSr Lon «- ®n :?5St2S’., h /, b* r L ,&A T A'TtioS? Ijevied on es the Property^ MraW ?iYiv S&sr f0 ”‘ mi t «