Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, November 23, 1908, Image 4
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THE MACON .DAILY TELEGRAPH: MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 23, 1908
The Macon Telegraph
Published Evsry Msrnlng by
THE MACON TELEGRAPH PUB. CO.
669 Mulberry Street, Macon, Oa.
0. R. Pendleton, President.
THE TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA.
* The Telegraph can be found on sale
et the Kimba I House and Piedmont
Hotel in Atlanta.
Linotype For Sale.
Model No. 1, two year a old. two-let-
t#r Merjenthaler linotype machine; ifi
•» r,d order; $2,100. fob Macon. Ad-
'crrea The Telegraph. Macon. Oa.
**l AW A TARIFF THIEF.
Atirrrd up by Prealdent-aleet Toffa
gmbllrfbeff oxpreoflon that the con
tinuers should are to It that they a*
Represented In tha tariff revision haor-
( fnyn at Washington, Chailea PraneW
of Boeton, has nddreaeM an
r r>*ii letter to Congressman Samuel
nv MV'Calt on tha subject, lfr. A4«
r to this letter •’calls a apad* a
,Oi h 'Y* and oomea as near tailing the
i.tin truth about the blgh tariff
iniquity M any. on# t»aa ew dona
ill, letter la In part •» follow*:
" r Vy Dear Mr. MeCaU: I sea In
the Iloston Herald of this morn
ing that the President-eleat la
enxt'tti that those who desire a
revision of the tarlfT In the direc
tion of reduced schedule* should
■ ... jjtfca tharaaahraa heard In Waah-
Irrt 1 . U la daliMd that th«*s
asking that foe tarllf aohedulea
■ luiu'd remain aa they sre, or
ahould h* changed only in tbe
way of Increase, are much In evi
dence at the hearings now In
' i r■•rrea*. «nd Chat !»• tariff re-
: form«r, so called, does not arbeaf
*rr Is allant ,
You. my dear Mr. McCall, know
re rfectly well the reason of this.
Thoaet first referred to are directly
m-<i i-cunlarny Interested: and.
es such, naturally divided Into
two Classes. Speaking after the
fashion of tnen. tfiey are either
, thieves or hogs. I myself belong
to th* former class. I am a tariff
thief: and 1 hart a license to
,t,nli It bear* tho broad seal nf
tha United States, and la what
. In known aa tha "Dlngley tariff.**
1 stole under It yeitarday. 1 am
i stealing under It today: I pro pot#
yn steal under It tomorrow. The
government has forced me Into
. tt»ls position, and 1 l*oth do and
mall take full advantage of It
I am. therefore, a tariff thief—
wftsr a license to steal! And—
wl*at ar# you going to do about
Til* other nines com* undar the
hog cnt'Koryt that to. they rush
toiurillng and atruggllng to (he
great Washington Protection
trouflL Snfl. with all four feef In
it there proceed to gobble tho
twill Well acquainted with those
of this class, yon know foelr at-
titudt and thalr utterances. it la
. oaeleaa for mo to dilate upon
either. To thla class I do not be-
long. 1 em simply a tariff thief:
but, *» 1 hare said, with a license
to steal .
But. on tho other hand, 1 am
also a tariff reformer. I would
' like to #*• ovary protective sched
ule swept out of existence; my
own Included. Meanwhile, wha«
Inducement have I to go to Wash-
lust n on a ottbllr mission of this
sort? A mere cltlsen. I represent
nr. one: H f went I would receive
from the commute# scarcely a re
spectful bearing. If hearing
st ah: and T would have to gu «i
s considerable expense both of
.my money.and tny time, the tost
.of which I can least afford.
Ml J..'.I'1'M In these reapr U >.
exactly tha position of myriad* of
others. And then they say we do
. not exist.
Continuing, Mr. Adame eaye that
torn every occasion In which be has
yefrrrM to “protection run mad** In a
public Speech recently ho has been
more generally and apontaneoualy ap-
rtandr.t than for any other utterance
be could make. **Thle feeling
nbnead." ha eaya, “becoming stronger
and wQl certainly, soon or latb bo
In ovldence at the polls. Meanwhile
«hs tons of thousands of persona who
fed m that way, like tnyttlf. cannot
afford cither the time, or, mors fre
quently, ‘the money, to go to Wafih
toaten to ask to t*» heard before a
^remittee which they know In ad'
J eance (a bath prejudiced and packed
• gainst them."
It Is refreshing, If only occasion
oily, to have soma on* apeak out In
masting aa well qualified to do tho
subject Justice aa Mr.. A4*to*> At the
eame time far all tho practical good
It will do. II amounts to just eo much
“Idle wind" which “passes bj
tariff revise re upward and fffckfii
they “respect not." It to a curious
fact that the people and the newi-
tapers raising tb* loudest howls
just now at Qte way the tariff re-
iMonlst* are doing their work are
among those that labored ment stren
uously to continue (he rotten fotanfi-
(•T Republican regime In the
campaign Jaat dosed, wen know-
lag that Mr. Tatra election would
be taken aa the people** war
rant to oonttnue the htgkanded rob
bery. How etlly then. It aeei
Vf. Adame and others who declined to
> in hands with tho Democrats at the
p*\m to being about real taiflf re
vision In tU only practical way It
r uld be done to be emitting gia
(ntiM walla now that they are toe
bite to affect anything.
THE VOICE OF THE GERMAN
PEOPLE.
Wlinl wf* In that intervOgei prfrh
KaUar WJdiup which caused •# h4o*
found a disturbance In Germany and
led practically to n revolution? It
wum supplied before It aavrftfi*
light in thla country, by the judicious
employment ef $40,000, It l« asserted.
But after publlaatlon In Bagland, apd
presumably In Germany also, wttat
real gain could there be through eup-
preeelon In' tfie United itateiT The
Incident, taken altogether, la a moat
remarkable one, particularly la view
of the eporh.making results In tha
Fatherland which are expected to
make the Germans an absolutely fry*
people.
Concerning the happy turn of af
fair* In Germany, contributing to*
• «rd whin Hi** Kaiser's Interview
con not reasonably be regarded aa
m«re than the Iasi straw In a series
of provocations from the lni|*rtal
throne, the Washington Post aaya:
William nf Germany, emperor
by divine right and the grace of
pelty kings, has been compelled tq
yield lo the votes of hi* people aa
probably no German sovereign
ever yielded before. He baa been
told that henceforth the govern
ment of tha Fatherland la to be
responsible to the people, and that
the crown can no longer act for
tha nation without the nation**
<-on»<nl. William has heard; And
he, long looked upon aa the n|>oth-
•oils of Imperial t ower. *hus beef,
forced to surrender.
When regarded In Its entirety
(he Import of the situation la*mo-
mentous. The Kaiser opened hVs
Imperial mouth and tpoko hi* Im
perial will, ffls people did not
merely rebuke him; they ordered
“Blleae*!—save when w* give you
leave (o apeak," and In n twink
ling the leveretgu .of an empire;
became the servant of a people.
The Kaiser could not do otherwise
than obey. Ha has seen the hand
writing on tha wall, and It .tells
him that Germany will be free.
That day la not far off, and It la
hastening rapidly, when Germany
will be a republic and hee people
will call none muter save them-
selvae.
It to curious that there should ho
such a movement In Imperial Ger
many, apparently moving steadily to
ward stress, at a time when thero
i seeming retrogression In the
Unttpd Btnte* from government by
the people and by law toward gov
ernment by tnen, and even by one
man backed by an oligarchy of multi
millionaire*. That It la %lgh time for
the Inauguration of free government
In Germany la abundantly clear from
the single fart that popular discon
tent there has produced no less than
three million voter* of (hr Bool a list
party.
R.f.rrina te Mr. XtooeeveU'a re
port'd statement (hat If ho had
•he candidate he would have carried
Georgia sad broken the ootid Bouth.
the Baltimore Bun quote* an old
proverb to the effect (hat the great
nod eat**
►the
pun
#1.0*0
Tb
Ad adds that
odor* Roosevelt has
hrtnklng vtoliL" T%e
* gdded that Taft got
i Georgia thla yaar
while Rooserolt in 1904 got only
WORTHY OF NOTE.
The Charleston News and Courier
has published a letter from W. R.
Franklin, a young negni man of
South Carolina, now attending tho
tow school of Harvard university,
who la a Democrat In potltlca and
who aaya h* earnestly desires to saa
the eleetlon of a Southern man aa
President of the United States.
Paraphrasing hla letter, the News
and Courier aaya: 'In hla opinion a
great change of aenttmeht with re
aped to the South has taken place In
the New Rngland half of the country
within the laat ten or fifteen year*.
The South has many frlenda there,
and In order to checkmate In some
degree the rising tide nf Republican
ism In the South this colors# man
would have tho South manifest itself
national politics. In hla opinion
the Republican party 1* stronger
than ever and Pie Democratic party
|a weaker than ever,' and he bellevee
that nothing 'could check this Repub
lican tendency half so well aa the
candidacy aof a Southern man for
President.' With tht# object In view
and for the purpose of crystallising
Southern sentiment ho propose* that
Woodrow Wltoon, president of Prince,
ton University, bo named by the
South aa a candidate for Prealdent
four years hence. With Woodrow
Wilson on a ticket with Richard Ol-
ney our colored correspondent be-
Itevee that a large number of the j racy prepared tamely to gtvo
meat Influential newspaper* In (ho j helm again into tho charge of »o luck-
North and Kaat, and many of thojleaa a eteereman? If not there'll no
more Important dally and weekly I recourse but for tho party leaden to
newspapers In the middle Weal, would ioppooe organisation with organ I xa
WHAT WILL DEMOCRACY DO
ABOUT ITf
W 'J. Bryan to with us again for
JiJS, Runping, for >b* Pmldbncyhn*
now developed Into a habit with him.
The Interviews glvea by him on the
subject leapt*. fw> shadow of doubt
about It. Formerly Mr. Bryan. had
some modesty In approaching the sug
geetion of ..a further candidacy after
hla successive defeats. Following his
first defeat) If we remember correct
ly, he gave Voice to the eentlraent
that he had had Ms chance, he had
lo*t. that It remained for him. to
thank th* party and show hla grfitl
tude hjr hla fidelity to Ita principle*
and interest*. Again In 1100
fft-yan was roneldervd permanently
odt of the running and seemed him
nelf to acquiesce In this view. It
IMG-ltftB. It will be remembered, he
was very stow to expressly admit that
he was a candidate— especially at
After It became a foregone conclu
slon that he would be the party's
standard-bearer. But tb|« time the
defeated candidate's elasticity In
covering from any disappointment or
depression Is unprecedented. Knocked
out. he refuses to take the count and
is* back Into tho ring smiling and
showing no ovMenee of punishment,
however much the Democratic party
may havo suffered. Neither has he
any healtancy in announcing where
he elands In the neat contest. He la
a r*cept(ve candidate and. In so far
as he Is concerned, be Is ready—In
fact, purposes to Ink*- up tho rolo
Juat aa If nothing had happened. Run
nlng for office, be says, to a mere
“Incident to the woric for reforma." 1
and so ha la preparing tho If IS Inst
dent" to pile an the patient Demo-
cratlc donkey, already grievouslr
laden with the UN, 1100 and 1901
"Inildents.** Interviewed at Ban An
tonio as to hla puspoaea with regard
to Jilt, Mr. Bryan said:
"If the party demands and oorv
ditlens arts* to warrant It I will
ba a candidate for ths Presidency
four years hence.
"My friends do not require me
fo prejudice the future nnd I
shall not take the advice of my
opponents on this subject. I
*hnll continue to write and speak
In d«*fenao of tho things whloh I
believe to be good for the Amer
ican people.
"I hops that It may never become
naoeaeary to run for an office
again, but I will not attempt to
decide that question until tha time
oomaa to set. I do not see any
necessity to say more on the sub
ject.
"I am not at all discouraged aa
td th« future of th# Democratic
party. There must be n Demo
cratic party In every country nnd
I want our party to be democratic
nnd I have no doubt that the coun
try will see the necessity for th#
Adoption of tho reforms advocated
by th** Democratic parly. It la
nlreftdy a great educational force
and 1 have no doubt that condi
tion* will no vindicate (he pArty
aa to make tha voters turn to It as
the best instrument for the ac
complishment of necessary re
form a."
Of course the publlo will under
stand from these utterances wf»at Mr.
Bryan scarcely attempts to disguise,
that the only things that can prevent
his being the Democratic candidate
In lilt will be death or the refusal
of the party to nominate Mm. Ills
expression of the hope that “It may
never- become necessary" for him to
rnn again ts acarcely candid since
one does not truly hope for something
he baa the power to command and
yet deliberately Invite the defeat of
the thing hoped for. Evidently Mr.
Bryan has now reached the Tree!-
dentls manta stage. He identifies
himself Inseparably with the Demo
cratic candidacy. A Democratic vlo-
tory without himself as the candidate
would be. something else. The per
sonal viewpoint 1* the only one from
which he la capable of approaching
the subject. He fe deaf, dumb and
blind to all considerations of party
necessity for selecting some other
than a thrice defeated candidate. He
Is willing and ready to again run the
ship of Democracy on the rock which
has thrice wrecked It. la th# Democ-
gladly assist In the unselfish and pa'
trtette work of select Ing them. *Buch
a campaign.' In the opinion ot our
•would Improve tho
lose of oar national polities, relieving
It of soma. If not much, of Its present
day eordtdnese and personalities,' and
It would help to bury sectionalism.'"
Th* suggestion ef a Southern can
didate for President—which ws» flret
urged by The Telegraph after Bryan's
second defeat in 1*00—is now a fa
miliar one and need not be discussed
on It* merits In this article. What
Is Interesting and worthy of note te
that the suggestion should now he
made by an educated negro Democrat
of South Carolina who ts a student of
the tow school ef Harvard ualvorslty.
“Somewhere between the country's
•a*t lines a mother ts scrubbing,
mending, cooking (or th* President of
Arty yearn ahead. And ha— that
President to come—Is of yean tender,
nature ptoMtc and teachable." ittus
•Inga Alfred Henry Lewta.' Tou art
juri fifty yearn behind. Alfred Henry.
That President, of "nature plastic and
teachable." la already with u*. we
fear, and about to enter on hla king-
tie nod teachable" he proves to be aa
to whether uro wilt ha
at all fifty years from now.
Either Emperor William did aot
giro the ditputed Dr. Halo interview
or he la a At subject for tka bug
house
tlon and start right now to oppose
% he nomination of Bryan In till. The
Norfolk Virginian-Pilot well eayp:
"It has been demonstrated that a
patent majority of the suffragans of
the United Rtatee ar* not willing to
place the powers and responsibilities
of the highest office In their gift In
the hand* of Mr. Bryan. Whatever
the reason, the fact to beyonl ques
tion and that la the thing with whloh
the Democrstlo party has to deal, if
Mr. Bryan to unable to draw the log
ical deduction from what hae hap
pened It muit be drawn for Mm by
thee# organs and agenclea of the
Demacratlc party which do recognise
and reallta that he has passed out of
the class of available* Inta that of
the Clays and Blatnea. Th* time to
none too aoen to begin ta make It
certain that the necessity will not
arise* for Mr. Bryan's ssorifltlng hla
Inclination to a fourth appearance at
the head of th# National Democratic
ticket. Opportunity ha# knocked at
hla door often enough. Among hit
oplendld ebimtoe should not be look
ing that be discern hie own limita
tions. A graceful acknowledgment
new that he haa bag Ms full chance,
and that (ks party ekootd call new
blood to the fare .would bo aa an
which would well cap a remarkable
career. But at all event*. In an triad-
area be U said, be to out of the run
ning by alt tho rutoe of reason, at*.
If ha cannot aeo that this to and must
he oo. the eyes of others should sup-
plemcat hi* defective vision <* (hot
extent. The next nominee must be a
Democrat neither.'. *umdtrapped by
prfvlous defeat nor markedly Identi
fied by record with past divisions 1 n
tha 'party.** * * *
RENTED WEDDING PRE8ENT8.
R.ls stated <9hat at a recent wed
ding In New. York the guests were
amazed at th# display of eoatly proa-
ants, five rooms btlng filled with the
most expensive Jewelry, bric-a-brac,
tapestries, paintings, cut glass, china,
ceramics, rugs, furniture laces, etc.,
eto. The account of the widely*
talked-of marvel continues:
The father of the bride Is a
practical Jokef. He coudn’t keep
a family secret to save hla life.
“Whitt did you think of Carrie's
prencnta?" he asked an old friend
two or three weeks after the w**d-.
ding. “Why, Oeorge. old fellow,
1 wax thunderstruck! And Juat
think of the hard times! There
must have been half a million dol
lars* worth of stuff." George
laughed. -"Never breathe it to my
wife,** he whtepered: "but all that
va*t outlay cost me only 92jOOO.
I hired fgjjr roomfuls for (he oc
casion from A Co., and wa
had 'em on exhibition for a week.
The few things In the hall bed
room were oura."
When the greed for a great die*
(day of costly wedding presents hae
reached this disgusting extreme It to
surely time to begin a reform and
lift the tax from the persons of the
five hundred bidden to the feast,
fining the giving of gifts to near rel
atives nnd Intimate friends. The re
cent Announcement of a Cleveland
multi-millionaire accompanying
Invitation to his daughter’* wedding
that no presents would be received la
a welcome sign of returning sanity
and good taste.
A theatrical news note says: “The
lace shawl that Kdytho Chapman
wears la '‘Rasbara JFrtetchle** formerly
belong'd to Mrs. Jeffereon Davis
when her hsuband wee President of
the Confederate State*. The shawl
came to Miss Chapman through
f tighter of Benator McLaurin of Mis
sissippi.*' If the “Barbara Frletchle'
with whom Miss Chapman Is aeao
elated hae anything to do with the
ancient beldame who tried to nag
Stonewall Jackson. Mrs. Jefferson
Davis’ shawl could be put to more
appropriate use.
In response to (he chaffing of one
of this Yale classmates about hit
“wearing the mantle of Elijah” Preal
dent-elect Taft Is quoted as havlrfg
retorted: “If you read the Book of
Klnga carefully you mua| have aoen
that although th© mantle of Elijah fell
upon Elisha, It Is not recorded that
Elisha wore the mantle very long.'
We will see how long Roosevelt's
mantle suffices to cover Taft's broad
rtodldera.
'•Th© best cook In Cincinnati."
That'# what (hey aay In praise of
Mra. Taft, and young women who
Imagine household work to be be
neath them will please taka no
tice.—Washington Herald.
If the first lady of (he land under
the next national administration
ahould happily set th© pace and In
eplrp th© young wom©n of the coun
try to emulation of har culinary ac
complishment* we can defy th© “pred
atory Intereata" to do th©lr worst.
W© will still b« ahead of the game.
Shareholders representing 55
cent of the SlOO.dOS capital of
United States Express Company ti&va
asked Governor Hughes to Invest!'
gate Ita affairs and to urge legists
tlon that will permit the majority to
participate In Ita management, com
plaining that Senator Platt, aa Preal
dent, has a self-perpetuating regime
and refuses to hold meetings of
stockholders or make reports to them.
Charles Francis Adams, of Maasa*
achuaetta, describes the “tariff hear*
Inge" at Washington aa a struggle ot
the “hogs" of the tariff to get Into
the great protection trough "with all
fourt feet" and “proceed to gobble up
the twill." Scarcely elegant but »uf-
Aclently accurate.
From (2,000 In 1812 to 1400,000.000
In 1908 la a far cry, but this to the
development that tha Standard Oil
Trust haa undergone In that tlma,
paying 40 per cent dividends to th*
stockholders In the meantime, aa told
by Mr. Rockefeller on the witness
stand.
John XX Rockefeller eaye the oil
business In which tha Standard was
earning 140,000,000 a year for divi
dends and 140.000.000 a year for the
surplus was haxanloue. Wonder what
he would consider a safe business?
"A scientist aaya If we are to avoid
***** w* must eschew cabbage,
calory, onion* and lettuca." Bring on
your old disease, but leave ue the
succulent cabbaga and tha savory
onion.
know tha naed of tha mortd.
though It would not have me know,"
alnge Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Too are
on. all right, Ella, but don’t give It
away. There's a good girl
Hearri !■ aald to be after Roose
velt for an editorial writer. Is John
Tempi* Graves' job In danger again?
Htafan aaya he la "out of politics
for good.* Ha ccrtatoly was not' ta
pollttea "for goad."
Tom Johnson haa gone “broker
rough politic* and now he te going
tala politics for a living.
So Cannon to going to see Taft.
Vac!, vidl, tkL *
HUMMEL PLAYED
THE SCAPEGOAT
Morse Paid Him $1,000,000 to
Go to the Tombs to Help
Him.
NEW TORE, Not. St—Wfcm the
suit for S40,0<MI. brought by Edward
M. Bracken, a~-nrlvate detective,
against Obarle« w. Moras, comes up
for trial In the supreme court an at
tempt will ba mad# to show that Abe
Hummel went to Blackwell's Island
to save Mors*, and ttat ha received
k sum estimated at H.000.000 for
playing tho scapegoat. It will be
directly charged, U la said, that Morse
C eld tnle sum for a bundle of letters
a wrote to the lawyer, and that .It
was through their return that he
kept out of jail himself.
A. Edward Woodruff, counsel for
Bracken, eaid In hla home In Rah
way. N. J., laat nlg'it that he could
not discuss hla client's esse. He
would only say that a sensation was
likely. Bracken, too, was reticent.
-“I pity Morse and have no 111 will
against him." said Bracken. "I wa*
misrepresented to him. bring charged
with sums of money 1 never received,
and until the suit was brought I sup
pose he thought 1 had been paid."
While the principals tried to pre
vent the facts from leaking out It
was learned from n man who has
had much to do with the preparation
of the case that the entire Dodge-
Morse divorce matter Is about to he
aired again, and that this time facts
entirely new to the public will be
brought out In the form of testimony.
Moras Gave Hummei a Million.
"Bracken Is prepared to prove that
Hummel saved Morse from going to
jail, and that 'te went there himself
Instead," said the World's Informant.
“For saving Morse Hummel received
II,0*9.000. and that to the sum on
which he la making such a spread
now In Parla." •; „
An effort will be made to show
that Morse, having become extremely
Wealthy, wished to break Into society,
but waa prevent©# from so doing be
cause his «wlfe had no social connec
tions. That More© wished to obtain
a divorce and marry Mrs. william H.
Gelkhenen. widow of the formef presi
dent of the Garfield National Bank,
will also be shown.
In the Bracken ease a package of
letters said to have been written by
Morse under the name of Wyman to
Hummel, will figure conspicuously.
Morse, it Is declared, had written free
ly to his attorney. It Is declared that
had they been submitted as evidence
the testimony of Capt. Jim Morse
would have gone for nothing and that
the financier would have been placed
behind (he bars with little or no
trouble.
It. therefore, became highly nece*
sarjr for Morse to get hold of all this
correspondence and to this end h#
opened negotiations with Hummel
through a big firm of lawyers who
were Interested In seeing that Moras
kept out of jail. At least this !■
what Bracken will attempt to show.
Tho negotiations were successful and
the letters delivered. A little inter
It became known that several missives
had disappeared. Who got these Is
something both Hummel and Mores
would like to know.
Lawyers Are All Mum.
Morse. In the Tombs, waa given an
opportunity yesterday to either affirm
or deny the charges to be made by
Bracken. Two note* were sent to
him by a reporter, but he refused to
make any jtatement.
Odditiea'in tho Day’s News
The comptroller of New York receiv
ed yesterday $10 from a man who said
that 20 years ago he waa an employ#
of the old city of Brooklyn, and re
ported sick one day when he was well.
Tho $10 waa conscience money—the
man's pay for on* day.
An appendicitis club haa been or
ganized In Ottawa, Kan., and Its mot
to !s “Cut It out."
A roan In Jloward. Kan., la such a
rapid talker that a book agent who
called on him a few days ago not only
failed to make a aale, but was unable
to get away for two hour*.
Capt. Nathan Robert# of East Nor
walk. CDnn., 15 yeara old. the oldest
automoblllst In tb© state, rowed four
miles into Long Island sound and
caught a bushel and a half of black
A Roman RuralisL
New York Sun.
Clnclnnatus had arranged to be dis
covered ploughing.
"Tee." he cried, “I looked eo much
like the real jjilng that they sent a
rural commission to uplift me."
Herewith he exhibited mingled pride
and anger.
Roosevelt'S Dream.
Richmond Time* Dlspatoh.
President Roosevelt is credited with
saving: “If I had been a candidate
for president this time. I would havo
carried Georgia and broken the solid
south." Don’t anybody aay a word.
Let the man have hie dream out.
Georfi* III. and William's Third
Licking.
New York Sun.
Georg* lit. wns pussled by how the
apple got Into the dumpling.
“That's nothing." they cried. “Bryan
doesn’t know how he was beaten."
Herewith royalty cheered up.
“A KISS HE TOOK."*
A Was he took, and a backward look.
And her heart grew suddenly lighter;
A trifle, you eay, to color a day.
Yet the dull gray morn serened
brighter.
For hearts are such that a tender touch
May banish a look of sadnee*:
A small, alight thing can make us
ting.
But a frown will check onr gladness.
The cheeriest ray along our way
la the little act of kindness.
And the keenest atlng tom* careless
thing
That was dona In a moment of
blindness.
We can brave:* face life (a a home
where strife
No foothold can d’acowr.
Ar t be lovers ettlL tf w* only will.
Though youth's bright day are
over.
Ah! sharp as awords cut the unkind
wordt
That are far beyond recalling.
When a face Ues hid 'neath a coffin
lid.
And bitter team are falling.
We fain would give half the live# we
live
To undo ©nr Idle scorning:
Then M as not miss the smile and
klai
When we part in the light of morn-
tag.
—Lillian P*unk*H, la S*n Fnnclsco
Call* wK Vl
Modern
Clothes
at
Moderate
Prices
Suits and
Overcoats
$10 to $30
ARCHtTEOTg
CURRAN R. ELLIS
ARCHITECT
Office Phono 2S9. Residence Phone 2819.
Offices—Ellis Bldg. . —
Cherry 8L and Cotto.i Ave.
MACON. OA.
FRANK R, HAPP,
Architect.
Office: Roome 92 an# Cl Fourth Na<
GEORGIA. BIBB COUNTY.—Personally
appeared before me Charlea L. Bar* **
who, on being duly sworn, deposes
— - — oati,, y,»t at the else tlon held
euch candidate he waa voted for In said
election.
Deponent further siys that the oam<
palgn expenses Incurred by hlfn
counter such candidacy and *
For printing and distributing tfekats
containing the names of tha
ai electora, Ms own
idldate for congress,
election were
dentlai *
preal'
me as
— or congreia. and tha
amendments to the stats consti
tution $19. SO
roetaia
Total mi.uu
Deponent further says that th# amount
so puld on account of set* expenses waa
derived from hla own personal and prl-
vitte means. C. L. BABTLETT.
Sworn to nnd subscribed before me this
..141.00
the 20th day of November. 1908.
_ O. H. HALL. JH..
Notary Public. Bibb County. Georgia
The undersigned hereby giro notice
pursuant to paragraph SS2B of the Civil
Code of Georgia. 1895. of their Intention
to transfer 100 shares of the second pre
ferred stock of the Georgia Southern
and Florida Railway Company, standing
In the name of Eleanor Hendricks, lats
of the city of New' York, suite of New
York, deceased, letters.
upon the estate of said d<
testamentary
— .... ... j ceased having
been duly Issued to them by the sui
upon
been
gate's court of tho county
safd state, where said decedent resided
the lGth day of October. 1908. m
CLARENCE A. HStnttQtlBS.
Dated New York. Nov, 4. 1908.
PUBLIC SALE.
GEORGIA, Bibb County,—Whereas, on
the 19th day of May, H97. Anthony
Matthews executed ana delivered to the
Union Savings Bank ahd Trust Company
a deed with power of sale, said deed of
record in the clerk’s ofru-e of Bibb su-
K rlor court. In book 42. folio 264. upon
s following real estate: That lot or
parcel of land lying and being in the
county of Bibb, state of acorgta. In Vlnc-
vlllc district, a suburb of the city of
Macon, and situated north of the Forsyth
road, and known as part of the land
formerfo belonging to the estate of An
derson Comer. Paid lot Js bounded .On
the north hv a forty-foot street, which
street on the south by tot
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Phone 71.
Residence Phone 1479.
873 CHERRY 8T. MACON. GA.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room 1I-1*.
Water suppiy, water power, sswer-
sqs and municipal engineering. Re*
ports, plans, speelflcatlsns, estimate#
and superintendence. Office Phone 1142.
Residence phone 32tS.
P. E. DENNIS. Architect.
Rooms 703«4*9"S American National
Bank Bldg. Phone 942| Rseldtnc*
rhond 2747.
CARLYLE NISBET,
Architect.
Office Phone 45S. Residence 111.
Grand Bldg. Macon. Ga.
CONTRACTING AND BUILDING.
W. w. d.haveN.
General Contractor and Builder.
Residence phone 498.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Classified advertisements under this
head are Intended etrlctiy for the pro-
factions.
.OCULIST.
DR. M. M. STAPLER,
^ Eye, Ear, Noes and Throaty .
Doctor#* Fleer, American National Bonk
Bldg. Office Phono. 2745; residence. 1848.
OCULIST AND AURI8T.
OR. J. H. SHORTER,
Eye, Bar, Nose and Threat,
"The Grand*' Bldg., next to Court Hone#.
Phonos: Office. 978; residence, 950.
BYE, KAN, NOSE. THROAT,
DR. FRANK M. CUNNINGHAM,
Eye, Ear, Note, Throat. Grand Bldg.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
DR. TH08. H. HALL. Eye, Ear. Noli.
Throat Specialist, 507-1 Grand Bids.
OR. MARY E. McKAY.
Grand Building.
Phones: Office, 2G64: Residence, 141$.
Washington Block. Ilnurs: 8 to 10 a. m.,
It to 1 and 6 to * p. m. Telephone con
nections at office anq residence.
of .
Ism
juR
lot
i.y
lot
n ri
Mil
't!
sect
nob
mor
odworth. on th# west by
Holmes, on the east by an
tho northern part of the
rd to Thomas Iinlmes, and
ilmea to J. J. Cobb. Bald
the forty-foot street above
ty-two feet, and runs back
distance of one hundred
Joseph Btoodworlh; and
lie said deed was given to
•two certain promissory
day 1*. 1*97. and duo
liter. The first seventy-
last said promissory notea being for the
principal sum of $20.04: and
Whereas. There Is now past due and
unpaid upon said Indebtedness ths sum
of $115.04. with Interest upon th* same;
and.
whereas, field default has continued for
a
t.» t
vart
i u.
pub!
MM r
u e
due
Cow
not*
wilt
DRS. J. M. A B. HOLMES MASON,
Dentists.
254 r
rty days: and
d deed with power of aale
luthortxe* th* Union 8av-
Trust Company upon sum
eed to sell said real estate
bidder for cash after ad-
am«, and the time and
of sals in the newspaper
jb county. In which tit*
’or.Bibb county are adver-
reek tor tour weeks; and
t total Indebtedness now
Savings Back and Trust
irtu»3!WHr!5H
f $548.00 Interest, together
of these proceedings as
iwlded in said deed:
Now therefore, the Union Savings Bank
and Trust Company, under and by virtue
of said power of sals contained In Mid
deed, will sell between the legal hour* of
sole on the 7th day of December, lttt.
before the court house door of Wbh
countv. to the highest and brat bidder for
rash the real estate herein described, and
will make to the purchaser fee simple
titles to the same aa Is authorised In
ThisHth day of November Hof.
UNION SAVINGS BANK AND TRUST
COMPANY. _
CIIAB. R HALL. JR., Attorney.
$2,900,000.00 SAFELY LOANED.
14 years we have loan-
ed 12.f.o# Ooo.OO on Real Ertate for homo
and foreign investor*, safest and most
profitable Investment, Those desiring to
or haring mo ner to Invest will
find It to their Interest to tee us.
SECURITY LOAN AND ABSTRACT CO.,
.. Cd """* f eto* B *mk fiulldlnp.
Tnemaa S. West. Secretary end Attorney.
Honey to Lend on
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
ami very low ntw oa Mar
ketable seenritiao.
Macon Savings Bank
WANTED
.Far cask two medtoas priced residence*
loet ta.
rOK SALE
One splendidly Improved plantation
near Macon; vary best condition; would
meks grand country home. Fame la
various localities, lumber land* vaeaat
lots in different pert# sf city. Several
Improved city lets that pay well as la
ves tm seta.
JONES REAL ESTATE
AGENCY
MACON. DUBLIN a SAVANNA RAIL-
HOAO COM—ANY,
Arrtv.l in, D.i.rwr. »f
Trains at Maoon.
Effective March is, 190*
DR. J. J. SUBMR9,
Permanently located. In the special-
tit. u. L*jet energy restored.
Female Irregularities and poison oak:
cure guaranteed. Address In confldanot.
with stamp. 510 Fourth st., Macon. Ga.
i Second at., Phone 9K5.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
ROBERT L. BERNER,
Attorney at Law.
Room* 704-707 American National Bank
LOANS
Negotiated promptly on im
proved farms and city proper
ty on ensy terms and at loweet
market rates.
If yon need money call on na
HOWARD M. SMITH &. 00.
583 Mulb.rry 8L. MACON. QA-
Leon S. Dure
Banking and Investment!.
Btscka Bond., Real Eatal., MortiMW
Macou. Uu.
Brown House
Opposite Union Depot—MACON, GA.
American
1 Plan
F. BARTOW STUBBS, Prsprlaler.
F. W. ARMSTRONO, M.n.,.r,
ALBERT McKAY,
Maker of Men’s Clothes,
cherry St., Macon, Oa.
La
- -y
•MOTM Fin- wr Aamk
BENT LIST
US Clayton Ave, 5-r $22.60
489 College, 9-r $17.60
424 Carting. B-r. ..$20.00
742 College, »-r $85.40
Cor. Carting and Rerabert. H H. 825.00
<2$ Carling, •-(.*. .820.04
810 Duncan Ave„ HII-. 6-r...‘.8l8.00
1lfr Holt Bt.. 9-r $72.is
Johnson Aw, H.H., l-r........$17.10
Lynn Ave^ YinevlUe, 6-r $80.00
522 Monroe, l-r $20.00
1082 Oglethorpe. 5-r $14.00
1171 Qgle'-horpo. 7-r ...$21.00
147 Rase Park. 9-r. two betha. i
STORE#.
450 Poplar Bt L !..940.00
8tor© and dwelling. Crir Cotton
Ave., and Pine St. dialling $-r 810.00
S. A. WISE & 00.
S. S. Parmelee
Company,
Cdrrtagesi Buggies, Wagons, darts
Harness, Saddles. Bicycles. Baby Car
riages, Accessories.
Largest stock In the South to select
from. A pleasure to aerv# you. _
B. 8. PARMBLEB CO. M.O.H, Ba.
IKE WINSHIP HERBBAT SMART
WINSHIP a SMART,
INSURANCE.
ACCIDENT, HEAZJTH, IM
Wuhlncton Block
For Sale
A bargain In * eubnrt>an heme 4I«
rectly on car line In one ot the beat
suburban section* of Mecon. Good
five-room cottage almost new. Lot
has long frontage on car line and could
be subdivided into four or fire first
class lots after leaving very large lot
for the house. We can make terms
If desired. Price $3,600.
Georgia Loan & Trust Co.
565 Mulberry Street.
FOR RENT
266 Washington Ave^ 7
11 Hill Park Bt. 7-r..
467 Duncan Ave.. 6-r...
530 Washington Ave., 4
Cleveland Are.. 6-r
221 Duncan Ave.. l-r...
408 Ross St. 6-r
408 Ross St. 6-r
116 Cleveland Ave., 8-r.
209 Carling Ave., 5-r..
45 White St.. 6-r
120 Grace Ave., 5-r....
1S5 Piedmont Ave., 6-r.
112 Lamar St. 6-r
421 Boundary St., f-r...
Johnson Ave., 5-r..
509 Hawthorne Bt. 6-r
138 Rembert Ave.. 7-r..
,...$30.00
,...$17.60
,...$20.00
,...$18.00
,...$18.00
....820.00
,...$25.00
...112.60
....220.00
...$20.00
....$10.00
....$12.50
,...$12.50
,...$26.00
....120.00
....$18.00
...$13.00
,...$27.50
JORDAN REALTY CO.
Real Estate. Insurance and Loans.
Phone 1136. Fourth Nat. Bank Bldg.
For Rent
..$60.00
..$$0.00
..$55.00
..$50.00
..$20.00
..$50.00
STORES.
No. 820 Second St....v
No. 414 Fourth St
NO. 458 Second Bt
No. 666 Poplar St
No. 403 Mulberry St
No. 615 Poplar St
$15,000
To Loan *
Geo. B. Turpin Sons
RmI E.t.tt, Iniuranc, Loan*.
No. 353 Third St Ph.it. 7T.
Schedule .ffe.tlve S.pt. 20, 1908.
M.&B.
6. F. PARROTT, Receiver.
MACON AND BIRMINGHAM
RAILWAY.
. Trains leav* Macon for Usel-
la. Culloden, Yatesville, Thomae-
ton, Woodbury, Columbus, Har
ris, La Grange and Intermediate
points aa follows:
No. 41 at 4:26 p. m. dally and
No. 6S at 7:00 a. m. Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday.
No, 41- makes direct connec
tion with Southern Railway at
Woodbury for Warm Springs
and Columbus, arriving at warm
Springs 8:17 p. m. and Colum
bus 10:00 p. m.
Trains arrive Macon as fol
lows: 42, 11:35 a. in. dally;
No. $6. 5:40 p. tn. Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays.
Trains Ieav« from M. and B.
Ry depot. Fifth nnd Pine ste.
C. B. RHODES. Gen. Pass. Aat
Phene 1100.
fi-S. & F. RY.
Schedule Effective Oct. H, teoc.
OEFAftTURMi
fiP k, m„ Ne. 1, Through Train te
Florida, carries ObsarvaUea Par
lor car and coaches, u»ami u
Jacksonville vi* Valdosta- mb.
nocuon mode for WUu
Lake City, PalntkT "’T
jvsrvaStii ’Srartjsx
JTk.
18:IS a. m., Ne. *S. ‘-Dials Flyer,**
cesshre end Pullman slesWrl
Macen to Ttfton, « n rests from
fit. Louis sad Chirac* to /nek-
aonvlUe. "
ARRIVALS:
* 5 !L a * ?•* No * 4 * OsnffH
•m iuwwiM Limited." from
JarksonriUe and Fa^du. looS
nl«<*p*r JtcksonvUU t< "
pasrengsrs can remain
K81# «■ Bw *
8:2* O. m
coashes M
Ttfton to Maomi, (u nm! irom
Js<?ksonvUl* to fit. Louis nod
Chicago. ***
points. Parlor ObssreatJeTcar
Jacksonville t* Moran.
C. ». RHODES. Q»«. Fora. Age*.
Mason. Oa.
Limited." firem
Orot .1 bm
as
Moran. «n routs frem
•*r