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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22, I90S
JUST RECEIVED
Another shipment of those
nobby celebrated
STETSON HATS
We have them in all the new
shapes and styles.
Call and inspect them for they
are sure winners.
STAR CLOTHING CO.
DAVE WACHTEL
200,000 Free Dinners to Go
to Poor on Thanks
giving Day.
FOR METROPOLITAN TABLE
CMJton*f. OmlOrm.
nna kwwi t* wall.
of OmlwAe *i»4
CTaj&wijjjvo.
' foMrrkaoo. sW«t, while*
sSSsarvwsi
H. J. LAMAR A CO., 612
Ch wry of.. Marcoo. or by moll from 7rv#
Tarrant Co. 44 Dudaon at.. Now York.
ARCHITECTS
Brown Souse
Cppoolta Union Dapot—MACON, CA.
American
Plan
r. BARTOW STUBBS. Proprietor.
F. W. ARMSTRONG M.n.g.r,
* ALBERT MoKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothes,
Cherry St., Macon, Ga.
Monej lo Lend on
Real Estate
Well rated commercial psjp
and very low rates on Mi
kctitble neonritiee.
Macon Sayings Bank
WANTED
For oaah two medium prlcad realdei
FOR SALE
BOAT Mseon; vary condition; would
. madia arand country home. Yunna in
various localities, lumber I an da, vacant
lota In different parte of dtp. flararal
improved city lota that pay wall aa In
vestments.
JONES REAL ESTATE
AQENOY
8oh,dal, .n.ctlv. 5»pt. SO, IMS.
M.&B.
i. r. PARROTT, Receiver.
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM
RAILWAY.
Trains leave Macon for Llaal-
1». CnUoden. Yatesvtlle. Thomas,
ton. Woodbury. Columbua, liar-
rU. La Grange and intermedtata
points aa fcittftws;
No. 41 at 4:26 p. m. dally and
No. M at 7:M a. m. Turaday,
Thursday and Saturday.
K«. 41 tnakea direct connec
tion with Southern Railway at
Woodbury for Warm Nprlnga
sad Columbus, arriving at Warm
Bprtan 1:17 p. m. and Colum
bus 10:00 p. ra.
Trains arrive Macon aa fol-
bwt: 42. 11:26 a. m. dally;
wo. It, 6:40 p. m.. Mondays,
Wednradaya and Fridays.
Trains laav# from M. and B.
Jr dapot. Fifth and Pina alt.
C. B. RHODES, Gan. Pais. Aol.
Phone 1100.
I-H
CURRAN R. ELLIS
ARCHITECT
Offlco Thone 219. Residence Phone 2611.
Offices--Ellla Hldf.
Cherry St. and Cotton Ava.
MACON. OA.
To Be Accompanied by Half a Million
Quarts of Cranborrloo—Tho Poor of
Gotham Who Nevar Gat a Square
Maal Any Oth%r Time Look Anx-
louaJy Forward to This, Thair Feast
Day—Father Knickerbocker Boasts
That Nobody Goes Hungry Withiw
Hit Gates on This Oecaaion.
deuuate one.’ In It
hr horae show. the
i circus, the larger
9 greatest
FRANK R. HAPP,
Architect.
Offlcet Rooms 22 and 26 Fourth Na
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Phone 7L
•76 CHERRY ST.
Raaldance Phone 1471,
MACON, OA.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON (LOCK. Room li-ll.
Water supply, water power, sewer-
1« and municipal engineering. Ra*
. >rta, plana, spaclflcatlona, estimate*
and auparlntandanca. Office Phone 1142.
MACON. D^.UN^JAVANNA RAIL-
Effective Marsh ts, 1901.
essar ssa Trasttgr 5
f Paaeencar Agent
Arrival
dally ifTfTi
Oeperti
a ».Na 1
d*fly I
. % ft** i
W. W. HARDWICK, a. A,.
** T. ' V — VJ « .
•OS Cherry St.
P. B. DENNIS. Ar-.hltact.
Rooma 703-4-6-6 American Natlona
Dank Oldg. Phone M2{ Rtaldanca
phone 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET,
Architect.
Offlca rhona 469. Residence 141.
Grand nidg. Macon. Ga.
CONTRACTINO AND BUILDING.
W. W. DsHAVIN,
Otnersl Contractor and Bulldar.
Raaldanco phono 696.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Clatalflsd advertisements under thla
head are Intended strictly for tho pro.
feselona.
OCULIST,
DR. M. M. STAPLER,
Ere. Bar. Note and Throat.
JFlcnr American National Bank
Bldg. Office Phono. *743; reatdanea. 1141.
OCULIST AND AURI6T*
DR. J. H. (HORTtR, *
Eye, gar. Noa* and Threat
"Tha Grand" Bldg . next to Court Honaa.
1 •hones: Office. *71; realdanca, (60.
LYE. BAB, NOSE. THROAT.
OR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Kr,. Ear, N,„. Throat. Grand Bldg.
PHYSICIANS AND SURQEONS.
OR. TH08. H. HALL. Kjr». Bar. Noa^
Throat Rpoclaltat. I0?.| Grand UM(.
DR. MARY E. McKAY.
Grand Building.
Pbonra: Office, 2564; Residence, 1415.
OR. w. H. WHIPPLB,
at., room, 4 and 1.
\Vaahlnatcn Hliyk. flour, • lo JO a. m..
II to i and » to < r ra. Tri.pnona con-
nrrtlnna at omr, and rMtdanc,.
OR. J. J. SUBURB,
Wrraanrnll, locitrd. tn tha apaclal-
ttaa vanrrMl. Lo,t rnrrtr roalorM.
K.mal. IrrrtuUntlr, and polaan oak;
cur; ffuarant.rd Addma In oonltdrnca,
with atamp. IK Fourth at., Macon. Oa
DENTISTRY.
DRSa J. M. A R. HOLMES MASON.
Dentists.
*54 Second at.. Rhona HI.
attorney, at law.
ROEERT L. BERNER.
_ Attorney at Law.
SSiXg! 01 ™ Am * rtc ^ National Rank
NEW YORK, Nov. 21.—One million
Turkeys, ducks nnd other fowl art un
tholr way to supply the Thanksgiving
day requirements of this city, while
half ns many quarts of cranberries
will be needed here to furnish the
essential ncconip;irJment of the great
American feaat day. This, at least, la j
file estimate of wholesale dealers In'
these supplies. Moreover, the good
things to eat will be more evenly di
vided among the wholo population
than they are on any other oecaaion
There are two hundred thousand per
sona In New York who never get a
square meal except opce a year—on
Thanksgiving day -according to
veteran worker for ono of the city'
charitable organisations. Of course
not all this grciyl army Is made up of
unemployed or dependent persons, but
It represents those who are habitually
underfed. Ori Thanksgiving day, how
ever, It Is the proud boast of Father
Knickerbocker that nobody need go
hungry within his gates. Dinners, at
eac*h of which thousands are fed, aro
given by charitable Institutions, by
g uh(le and religious associations nnd
y Tammany politicians like the Sul
livans of the lower East Side who this
years are planning a ‘'feed" fop some
three thousand Floweryltes, regardless
of political affiliation, although that
usually may be taken for granted.
Thn 'dinners of this sort already an
nounced will bo sufficient for fully
7f»,000 persons, while the free basket
meals distributed) to poor families In
the tenements probably will aggregate
an equal number. Asldo from all this
there are thousands of well-to-do men
and woman who make a practice ot
supplying Thanksgiving cheer to a
number of families less fortunately
circumstanced. This form of help
will reach 50.000 more, so that It la
safe to say that practically nobody In
New York will he suffering from hun
ger on Thanksgiving day, a condition
that could not bo duplicated on any
other day In the year. Even the Immi
grants on Kills Island* get their first
Introduction to # the typical American
holiday by a rousing dinner In which
turkey and cranberry sauce figure. IS
h characteristic of New York to pay
special attention to the favor He
Thanksgiving day form of chnrlty, for
lt. be sold and the property cut up Into
building lota It la hard to fljpire bow the
city would be able to find a substitute for.
It For years Madison Square Garden
has been n center for gatherings and ex
hibitions attracting large crowds and of
late years f*-- — * * -* '—* *
take place
automobile
winter uthU
EliiiSi« ...
tbs public eye. Previous to that time It
served aa a railroad station, but for the
last forty-seven years It has been the
largest amusement place In the country.
The present building Is the most noted of
the architectural creations of the late
Stanford White, and it waa on the roof
garden thank curiously enough, that he
waa shot. The garden wa« completed
only In 1610, but has never been a protl
able Investment and for several years ru
mors of the sale of the property have
cropped out from time to time. Borne
seven or eight years ago It was reported
that the ground would be used for the
erection of a mammoth department store,
and later it wns considered as a site for
“»c new postofflre. Should the property
»w be sold Juvenile s*w York would
fohably ithed a good many tears
Iher building In the country haj
itertalned so many children.
Society's Doorkeeper Dead.
Cloaely following the death of his moat
distinguished patron. Mrs. Astor, there
Ifcsscd away In this city u man who In
Ins way waa an equally important per*
•onags In fashionable society, but whose
ualstenca waa practically unknown out*
aide its ranks. This was Frank Johnson
who for many years has had charge ol
the "outside arrangements" for almost
•very wedding or other Important func
tion given by members of the 40#. Ills
particular qualification waa that he knew
by sight every socially prominent man
and woman In the city and waa able to
prevent uninvited Persons from securing
admission to those select afTnlrs without
submitting real guests to the indignity
of abowing their cards. *' ~
wns unique and lie bus
to take his plan* In n r
Inr need Of the socially elect
His profession
't no successor
ing this psntlcu
Benjaman H. Barr,Deserted,
Determined to Save Worn
an He Loves
there Is no city In the country where
good eating and plenty of It la held In
higher esteem.
Real 8pook Worth $10,000,
The latest quotations on ghosts
show tlmt a real spook la worth 610,-
00ft in cash to any <>ne who can pro*
dure him and ‘put him—or hep-
through paces which will absolutely
establish hi* authenticity beyond tho
NEW YORK. Nov. 21—There arriv
ed from Chicago today lo start a new
home In this city, the hero and heroine
of an unusual middle-aged romance—
Benjamin H. Ihtrr. an author, and
Gertrude Iiarr. his beautiful wife.
The trip front the West la a real
honeymoon, though they have been
married for 20 years, for It follows a
reconciliation of a rare sort.
Mrs. Bnrr, on September 22, eloped
with Edwin Churchman, a rich New
York merchant. Her husband vow
ed to devote the rest of hla life. If
necessary, to following and finding
her.
Ho did not want to shoot the man
who had taken her away. He simply
wanted hla wife back. So, witlvmt
friends he started hla search and re
covered her.
"Mother and I are coming home hap.
py." he wired yesterday to his 19-year-
old son, William. "Rent furnished
apartment and be ready to greet us.
"DAD."
The only unhappy flgnfre In the affair
Is Mrs. Edwin Churchman, the wife
of th* man who carried off Mrs. Bn
from her husband. She llviia In
splendidly furnished brtrwn-stone homo i
In Twenty-ninth street J nnd has ben
This Is the dreatest Street by
Long Odds in the
World. • '
THE STREET, LIVES EVERY
HOUR OF TWENTY-FOUR
Legs Than a Century Ago* the Cows
Pasturing on'the Peaceful Acres of
The Old Astor Farm Wars Almost
Its Only Tenant*—Now More Money
Every Day is 8pant in This Great
Thoroughfare for, Food, Drink and
Amusement Than In Any Like Area
In th* Universe—Thirty Million Bus
inesa Transactions During Every 24
Hours.
NEW YORK. Nov. 21—The great
est street In the world la in America.
London may have Its Strand and Pic
cadilly. Paris Its Bola du Boulogne and
Champs Elysets, and Berlin Its Unter
den Linden; but. viewed from any
aspect except that of mere age. Broad
way-New York’s Brand way— la ahead
of any two of them put together."
Bo said the man who had just re
turned from a. trip of several months
through Europe. He <tvas typical of
those who have had the opportunity
of comparing the most celebrated thor-
oughfare in the United States with
others more or leas known to fame
In foreign countries. Even the New
Yorker, who takes for granted almost
all the good and bad qualities of hla
city, grows enthusiastic when Broad
way Is mentioned.
Reason for this Is easily understood
by those who know the long. Irregular
thoroughfare which runs from tip to
tip of Manhattan Island. It is not
merely that Broadway Is the most Im
portant street In town. Other streets
and sections have made more or less
fleeting bids for popularity, but as the
FOR WEDDING AND ANNIVERSARY GIFTS,
FOR DECORATING THE HOME,
FOR SOMETHING OF PERMANENT VALUE.
Sterling Silver, Rich Cut Glass and Fine China Have
Always Been and Always Will be the Recognised
Standard.
THE PLAGE TO GET IT IS /
L. 0. STEVENS JEWELRY STORE
366 Second Street.
Draying Darsey Drays
■ng
Ia a comfort. When Dareey*s dray leavea
with a load It will not come back via the
repair shop. Darsey builds three styles
and sizes of drays. They are all good—
6100, 6106 and 6110. We’ll show you tho
difference when you calL
J. W. Darsey
651 THIRD ST, S
lay them, for a hammer and nails is all that is necessary.
Drop In and See Them.
CENTRAL GEORGIA PLUMBING AND HEATING CO.
—165 COTTON AVE.—
growth of the city has __
northward the famous old street has i crowd? which, further
maintained Its supremacy.
Fifth Avenue Not in It
It ta significant that one never hears
actor singing. "Take Me Back to
products of every part of tho world.
...... ..... ... ... lct The
consisted
majority
Fourteenth street la
ment stores, whlcl
succeeded the wholesale establish
: chiefly of i
of women i
ten about the avenue, Its fame Is trans
itory. Even In Its palmiest days Fifth
nvanfflT represented nothing charac
teristic except wealth. Now business
la rapidly driving olut tho costly resi
dences. forcing Ihcm Into side streets
and to the newer fashionable sections
further updown. Almost the entire
length of the thoroughfare below On-
ments, ale thronged with smartly dressed
shoppers.
The ....
been moving rapidly uptown, and has
shopping section of Broadwny has
moving rapidly uptown, and has
crowded out a number of hotels and the
aters. Its northern limit
Here at Thirty-fourth street, too. is the
moat crowded spot In the world. By care
ful computation, more than 1.500,000 per-
pasa here every day, and this num
ber will be still greater when the
Pennsylvania terminal Is completed, ana
the tunncla under the North and East
rivers meet near by.
Region of Hotels and Theaters.
Above Thirty-fourth atreet extends "the
Rialto," "the Great White Way." "Cam
pagne Alley"—to quote a few of the pet
region of hotels, restaurants and theaters,
i Tomes Square la the capital of this gay
aum for .. ,
twenty. All that n ghojit has to do
to get this money for the medium by
whom he Is controlled—for n ghost
obviously cannot couldn’t use the
money—la to h* successful In one
'simple teat. This test consists In
enabling the medium to tell how tunny
trill Park I. already Riven over to hue
Inca, the kind that keeps dovllaht
hours—office bulldlnga. wholesale sales
room*, and retail shops. After night
fall It Is comparatively silent and de
serted .
When Electrics Begin to Glow.
Broadway, on the other hand, lives
. _ . . „ „ every moment of every twenty-four hours. ■ principality. Leas than a century ago the
who carried off Mrs. Barr ..... Hnvilcht fades the electrics begin cows pasturing on the peaceful acres of
usband. She llvis In a , , th( , worM ar0 the old Astor farm were almost Its only
umlshed brft-wn-stone homo j *° * ,nw - pre , ,, -M. th n „Mnor« a! tenants. Now th« great mass of brick
m l wrmv-ninth street • nnd has he.m 1 many millions of IKhts outdoors, as HtI(1 *tone which forma the new Hotel
much hltil? OnanHsllv thnn thn i "1°™ «hat two-mlle stretch of Broadway, Alltor itaBdj , on thft *| te of the old farnt-
much better off flnanHall> y 1nn between Madison Square and* Columhua • h0UM . twenty theaters are within a
Harrs. But she hna[ ndrheard ai word n rc i r . which ha* come to be known as tone's throw, and famous restaurants
from her husband since* he left her. I the "Great White Way.*’ And before the are grouped all about.
"Yes, I suppose thrvwre happy," she last lamp has winked Itself out; as the More money Is spent every day. within
said when tohl of the return oT tb*»' stragglers of the n!l-n , ~* , t crowd turn tho apace of these half-doben blocks, for
Barra "? would he hatmv ‘oo. if mv! thalr atepa homeward-or more likely food, drink, and amusement than In any
LZl llJl .. P™* • 00 * ,r ra> hotehvard-dawh la bright again In the |, ke area ln th «. universe. The old Square
husband Were back. e# „ t !* the core of the evening life of the
Other Man's Wife Resentful. It Is a long street, extending from the Metropolis, where the lights flash brlght-
Utnsr man a wife ttesenvvui. -outhernmost tip of Manhattan to l»s ex-1 ra , where the crowds of p1eaaure^ ft ek-
"Would you take him back and for- treme northern point, when tho Harlem, crg are thickets, and where all that Is
i v * him as Mr. Barr forgave his »tw! the Hudson Join to It ofT from, typical of the gay. careless, fashionable
jorgave "is . fhe roi||n , anilf fourteen or fifteen mile*.. ,, f * u mft st In evidence.
J.« -v. , As a matter of fact, the street retains Following Broadwny’" untown course,
months nan nark University offered 1. 1 .*° u, f ln *• ?f c,ar £? C0 J}* 11»* rnmo and Identity all the-way along, ond p> „„ block aft<T block , n t h e re*
iS Aflft e™ (n. «?rvt..f « nSki «hna» trarHy. , "I’m to proud." Mrs. Church- the eastern bank of the Hudson to Al- j about the lower end of Central Park
SKUih S?r m "h h, »Liea Mrs. Bnrr for the loss of bony. 140 miles away. Alone ‘ given over almost entlrei y to the auto-
Now the Mettwpnlltnn Psychical Bo- b(ir bUBbnn( j j us » a ft “'Barr blames . within the boundaries of the Island .It. mobile Industry. "Gasoline Alley," it Ii
..(»».. u »k^ h clty has offered nn equal 4-i,„ rr hinnn J exemplifies every activity of the clt> nnd ca ped In the local vernacular.
ghost that can count tip to i. /»;.«, <o nn.i the »n. > nation nr which It foimis a part. More, g t ill further north Is tho region of
* Churchman Is o\er 40 tand the wo- , , hnn 1B oft,ono people live along It and I ereat anartmrnt hotels, the homes of
man In her Into 30a, though she Is ■. t 0 non oo.i trln* a-dnv are made on «o°t; those residents of 4,ho city who are among
striking looking. " **' and In vehicles nlong nnd below Its *ur- j nelthe- the richest nor the poorest, ex-
Mr. Barr, from letlers nnd W«ipi-!fnce. j „ , tending block nfter Mock In structures of
Inga of u few friends, learned of the Giddy Business. towering height for several miles. Where
friendship of the two. He suggested Tlilrt ymllllon business transactions, in- the street begins to mount the heights
-- 4 - . i — **— *unf» from a pennq tl many that: form tho northern part of Mnnhat-
effected along It In enco; tnn.lt enter* upon another phase, paring
a l'urines*., creat Institutions, the lofty arches of
d rerldenc*, the Cathedrnl of St. John, the halls of
thoroughfare boro a succession of appel
lations. First It wns oallM simply the
•’main road." Later. It became the pub
lic road, the Ifoog Weg. or highway. It
waa also called the Heoron Straat. or
Street of the Masters. From about 1640
on. however, it became generally known
as Broadway, although Its identity wa>
established much onrllpr. Perhaps In
named thoroughfare.
On Broadway It wl_
gyman preached regularly, in a little
that the first cler-
little
Pearl
Pine
. . . _ built
what was described as a "palatial three-
dwelling mansion." Forty-four
later, in 1739. a public market
‘ ■* ’ * middle of
story dwelling mansion.
R ears later, in 1739. a pi
ouse was erected In th<
Broadwny. opposite Liberty street,
was a gigantic'structure, forty-two feet
long and twenty-five feet wide, but for
some reason it was never popular.
Of no other spot In the world are so
many men able to any. "If I had only
bought that property thirty years ago for
a song. I’d be a millionaire." The story
of Broadway is one of unnumbered for
tunes made by those who did Invest, and
as the city moves northward, it still ap
plies. Back In 1692 lots on the street
were sold as far as Fulton street for
about 120 each. Today those same lots
ar« worth, a hundred thousand times (the
original cost Purchasers were required
. buildings not less than two sto
ries In height, and In some cases to cover
the entire front of the lot. Today
‘ ' lid i
ever, lie In the plvtureeuuo
LOANS
Negotiated promptly on im-
proved farms and city proper
ty on easy terms and at lowest
market rates.
If yon need monev call on ns
HOWARD M. SMITH & 00
tu Mulb.rry St. MACON. QA
•AMMO 0 . 00 SAricv LOANEO.
^ ** h * v * ku-
^1 M
Investment. Those <
dlum not lo look at the tnhle. So
far tho net result* show that lemon*
should have been ch6*on. for such
fatuous mediums as "Bright Eyes."
'Princess" and "Big Chief* have not
been able to Interest their ghostly
ndorern In the matter. The psychical
society, however. I* perfectly serious
In Its offer. •• Is Clark University .In
President Htsnley Hall of the lat
ter Institution Is apparently a hit a
skeptic In this matter however. If one
may Judge from an nHIcle on spook*
which he contribute* to Anpleton's
magazine. In It he cites his test the
reading of a scaled and hidden'Idler,
snfl asserts that after long invrrilgn- ,
lion he find* the alleged sets of such ! Ids “O'*
•rooks no he has ben «Ne to 1«rn i hoSflend start
shout are (oo unimportant ond color- j h, n -«f r
less to make them worth considering. *• ~
But If there Is a real ghost wandering
around loose he now has a fine opoor-
(unity to earn 610.000- All that is
nscessary Is for him to undergo sue-
cess fully the test* prescribed. Mean
while the air Is full of psychical and
telepathic terms strange to the cor of
the layman such is tolckelnslselonaa*
tlon. levitation ami other equally
ghostly words.
to his wife quietly that It would
better for her If her friendship with ...... ntv
th* merchant were less ostentatious, j . borl ,i r
Min agreed to seo Mr. Churchman street,
lesa frequently nnd there, tho malt*
But when M
an absence of i
toinber 22. his v»
■William,
hours. It
theater, hotel
owner of Broadway property who die
do more than this voluntarily would no
considered Insane, so great are rental
values.
Mind Your Business. 9
If you don’t nobody will. It Is your
business to keen out of all the trou
ble you can and you can and will
keep out of liver and bowel trouble if
you take Dr. King’s New Life Pills.
They keep biliousness, malaria and
Jaundice out of your system. 25c, at
all drugv stores.
One of Duma's Sentences.
The prize of the longest sentence eref
written may fairly be awarded to the
elder Dumea, who probably holds a fur
ther record for fertility of production.
In the seventh of the twenty-nine vol-
* ‘ the "Impressions d*
^enience describing
Jh fills three pages,
or 10S lines, averaging forty-five fetters
umes which compoi
Voyage" there Is
Benvenuto Cellini which nils three
ir bus discovered. .. ■- r ,
, .....i almost every conceivable means or
Harr return,,) nfter! i >" 11 «t»n<' | n« "">ney within He
day hr two. on Set;-1 B.itinnlnc at llowllna Green, where the
Je was missing. Their. burcbers of New Amsterdam
Id aho had gone out! smoked evening nine* nnd snlffeJ snlt
mnny a rongrmed Rr««d- 1 Uoiumhla Unlverelty. and. further up, the
covered. It Is poHrih’e to College of the City of New York.
son. William, asm ane nno gone mu smoked evening mwi «*nu ......
In the morning end hud not returned, j breeze* from the bay. for the Urst naif
The author found that hi* rich rl\*al 1 nd'« of it* length. Broadway la tha street
we- •»•© n)l**lnr of big business, t.ie nf
"Will. 1 haven’t much ready roonev. Almost at It# |ow-er _end No. -6. is the
end 1 don’t kn-iw where,>i\ir mother |* - Ptnndsrri oil building. Ita tirenty floore
he snld to his boy. "But I’m going to, devoted entfrelv to the •'ftlvltfe of the
raise nmney end go -fler her. nnd I’ll find srent eomblnatlon and sulrsMlnrirs
her and bring her Vonie If It take* the. Near ere the olfiew of gmjto ntmn-
rest of mv ll*e." nhlp comosntea,- the Steel Oorpoiatb
The Bnrr nuottment* were luxuriously 1 Bn»*‘
fitted ur. He snc-ie—i Id# belongings ngg’
net fund* Immediately. Then be saw dre^-hank* lnsur
• • |4 anrnlnr bu c- u, terspersed with, theaa ere nanus, msur
■listed:'** s entofuts’d.
» out 1 FTe b'sVnel tin
'mrehmsn had gene it
the
...... ....... of’other oroat
itlon* of capital, represenflng hun-
•f mini- * *
lh„, AM U. — —
..e* RiPP and brokers'
Tires, and all t»«e varied maehlnen* rc-
dret »n «he operation of great ftnnnclal
WH. M. ...idertsklngs.
Har Wife Arrested. j In tha Whelaaale.
... _ *1,1. a-uv •« 1 Further up. between city hall park and
l?o Wtote to * a *n»q in nls clt>. ' t*nton Hquare. the thoroughfare runs
plaining the sit rat Ion. *nd n*klnr. the • r.irough the heart of the wholesale dts-
friend to addre*- a lette- in Mrs. Barr.trlct. For two mil**
In t'hli'sco. lie learned from the t*nstal Ar^a*
authorities when this l-l*or would
Taft's Favorite Gama Under Ban.
Golf, the ancient and royal paatlme. Is
In a fair way soon to be ranked In the
category of "undesirable" or even crbnt-
• "* pnetlmee here hecauae *»f Us alleged
Influence on the vouths who act as
raddle*. At any rate Police Oaptaln
Mathot threatens to appeal to a police
•url to take drestle notion
...Pi millionaire golf
noted local club and "wealthy
may soon t*ecome a* unpopular
"wealthy malefactor*" »»«
course that It* use
The evil Influences
golfer*’’
term as
provided ,»f
1 b»» reconciled
With the Mthlrilc ptvprnsltle* of the pres-
HmwNhkiil-dBtaPPMiMBiMM
olf
1
which they. hear.
bibulous tab tea e ■ |
Uathar It I* foutid In Ihe manner
which this game obatrucu youthful edu
Mathot. wh
. ^langiiage
bibulous uVte* of some of Us patron*.
t In ihe
cation a^vordtng to ibipAtn Mathot, who
explains hi* position when he aava: "We
hava been trying to keep the boy* In
cchool. but the rich and Influential golfers
come along in their automobile* on«l
whigk the school bore off to the links
where they pay them high fea# to act
as caddie*." in other words young
America hereabouts And# the opportunity
lo earn a dollar or a half dollar prefera
ble to lit* unrwmunerwtlve education of
the metVOM room. The 4**l€h of coddles
** eo«» le
K^w W w , h^ia^* n iionee l0 r? j ^g*T*l* ***** VnAUirt to local mdfet^
flndlt w,,, I which 1* now mode worse than aver hy
———^ nna 11 *° *■•** tnteraal ta sea u*. j ('tituin Mstho, * ihreat to hav- —— -
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.. | "'"-'p' If
Southern Railway Schedules. It»««J ff»* hated in
Then. Ie*t Ulturehman might be with th<
Woman and nmke a scene B*rr asked
the detective department of Chicago to
let him have n courle of men at the
poetoffice who would place his wife under
nominal arrest and bring her in head
quarter*, lie decided to keep away from
the poetoffice ltlm*elf and await hla wife
at police headquarter*.
Yesterday Mrs. Barr appeared alone
and asked for mall. a Site oraa arrested
J went quietly .
Her Uueland metely htoked at her
Mr*. Fair tried to »poa‘ - -
Then *he nobbed.
headquarters.
* ‘ * d a
and broke
deep.
"Benny. 1 want to go home! I wont
you tu take me back! Forgive me."
‘Yes Mi furtive you." *ald Mr.. Barr,
"and 1II lake you back h one—that’s
what 1 came out here for to do. That’s
why I’ve bean hunting you for a month.
\\a haven t much of a home left now,
but we can start It again."
Rorr told the police he didn’t care
kbput the other man. All he wanted was
his wife. The couple left headquarters
arm In arm They had a little luncheon
celebration right away, and then they
wired theie son.
’Tha owly^ttdnk I’m sorry about." said
the lad. *1a that they didn’t arrest the
man that took mother away."
•tate of <
, City of Toledo,
Ohio. L
Lucas County.
FYank J. Cheney make* oath that he ta
—u. ^—tnor 0 f tr-
, ’do4cg huilne** 1 ??
County and State
tb it said firm will _
HUNURKH D01.IJS
,\Y:s
rih i
and
d«p*rurt ct -
.. •
and eel guaranteed.
tint at Mason. Oa., ter infer.
i"i I-®od S. Dure
J! 2Im1« Jarfconnvllle. 2 0« _ , ,
'U' ,“cw: j: ‘I ta Bunking and Invcitmc.
14 AUanfa liQlif HruanrMi .tiiila.^. - .... ^ .
AUiewtr. J tbc catcgEwy tf legal effretre
Maq.aoa Square Tnreate-ad.
that cannot be
- -M’s Catarrh Our
- J .. FRANK j. chrnky.
Rworn to before me and asbecrlbed In
'presence, this (th day of ivcem^er.
A. W. GI.EABON
ivm*! fftocka. Bend
Lust her City # aa.
M6.16 A (kata
Aiacon. Go.
manufactured
ment houses.
the lordly H'
the Jersey shore, nnd along t’ol« nrt of
It* course, from the upper t *-
the northf.-n end of the Islend
apiece. The sentence is broken by six*
ty-elght commas and nlxty semicolons,
but ns It contains 195 verbs and 122 nropef
names, the reader Is somewhat bewildered
before the end Is reached.—London
$6.95 to Savannah and return
SDUV ' Nov. 21 to 25, inclusive, via
Oontral of Georgia Railway, for
Automobile Races. Reserve
sleeping car berth in advance,
at ticket office, 603 Cherry st.
. n .DtiyvtT will it«M tn ttie future. In
"i| orobobiutv. the flne*t and costliest of
New York’s homes.
Extremes that Are Worthy.
Broadwny has two advantages which
many other famous streets lack—a
worthy beginning and ending. At Its
lower end Is Battery Turk, a spot of
greenery looking but upon the busy wa
ters of the harbor, and at Its upper term- _ . ...
inus Is to he placed the beautiful Hud- Trusting,
sbn memorial bi-hlite. which will form a From the New \ork Timer
fitting gateway to the dtv from tho land- The only thing Jhtrt puzzle*
ward side. Broadway will always be tho «}y return to
street of spectacle* and processions, the I* why the n
national parade, and playground.
Even In the matter of age. the atreet
has no mean record, in the early days
of the city it was the hatqral highway
from the lower to the upper part of th#
Island, since the ground on both sl<
id Mrs. Wynn.
- _ loulti have had
tie crinkled tl ntops—Jnmes says
tuch l -
those are milk bottle top*- ... g
changed back to the large paper ones for
Jair H Aa -
In summer i
_ paper one*
•me; says that this Is the us
ual custom In New York, but It does seem
.... ildea. odd. He said not to speak to the milk-
now occupied by skyscrapers, was then man about it or he would think me
only mareh land. Down to 1442, the greep.”
The United States Government guar
antee—could you get a better one?
Clarke’s Pure Rye is aged and bottled by
the Government; the green stamp over
lapping the cork of each bottle guaran
tees the age, strength and purity. What
more could you ask?
4 Full Quarts, $ 5.00 Delivered
12 Full Quarts, 12.00 Delivered
For sale by most dealers throughout the world and all dealers
in Chattanooga, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla. If yours refuses to
supply you write us. ■
I .
Clarke Bros. & Co.
PEORIA, ILL. *
. . ... • 9 A
The Largest DisHUtrs in th* World •