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THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER IS, 1905
The Macon Telegraph
^ . Published Every Morning by
' THE SUCON ThLEGUPB PUB. CO.
6N Mulberry etr**t, Macon. 0a.
GRAVE REFLECTION ON SAVAN
NAH AN9WEREO.
Th i;-i. \v. I, I'kk iKl .• MtVRnnei-
M b.
•«1 it
“ 0. R. Pendleton, President.
pir*ctor»^C. « n, ntten. W. T. An*
demon. P. H. Csmbreli, Macon: A. S.
Pendleton. Vaid->tt« Ga.| Louie Pendla-
ton. ®ryn Athyn, Pa.
THE TELEGRAPH IN ATLANTA.
TI»o Telegraph can bo lound on ealo at
the following (HOC** In Atlanta: Tha
piedmont Haul, the Klmbail Mouee. the
t*ipa Hotel. t..o Terminal Station ano
by tha World New* Company.
/tr*-
of detention, apropos pi
eltuaUoli • r.aii.a In ihai city In
•>r lb© |.r«hU»m. n lau. Tfcta c*
•iuti /'iiiildi /mm * gentlemen of
Motto relptlw |m in old. »o!ie©r\«
ty Mi* h A.tvminab Id. com
f it reputedly law
>t largely of a qn)e
Linotype For Sale.
Model Ko. 1, two year* old. two-let
ter M©rg©ntholer linotype machine; in
good order; S 2.210. f.o.b. Macon. Ad-
drew The Telegraph. Macon. Ge.
ORGANS OIFFER ABOUT MESSAGE
• : il minds oomotfim-s do not run
|n tha name channel. Note the two
I •••mmcoto below from prominent He*
I •>ublle«n organa on th* Prealdent'*
pi««Mgn. Tb# Now Tork Trlbuno
[ a*r»:
► With his African trip before
him. <>nlr a few month* of hla term
in office loft, and only a abort ■#*-
elnn - f Congress In which to ac-
comp!) eh, anything. President
Room-volt In hl» message ohows
none of that weariness of public
life nad doelre to turn aside from
Its p obloma which would be nnt*
un»l <n any one of 1cm abounding
entrrv. 11# Is as voluminous ae
over. *
And the Wall Street nummary ob-
ferveo:
Pr« eldest Roesevelfa message la
written decidedly In a minor key.
It la an unlmpaaaloned. prrfunr-
torjr sort Of swan song, and larks
the pIcturesgueneaM and forceful-
Itess of lu many voluminous snd
vehement prrdecesoom. Tim gn at
man has evidently tired of hi* for
mer strenuous recommendations,
realising that they virtually
amounted to nothing: nnd so ban
given Congress a document that
will disturb neither Its equanimity
nor Its eae*.
Thus do doctors differ diametrically
even when they belong to the same
School.
OOCf IT PAY?
IVBi lAUira, a well known bad
man* In Memphis, who bad two dead
ona«->victim*—1«, the ©red It of hi*
mail-Hunting prow r-«»—walked Into -i
•ii|.»o#i Friday (tight end picked off
■'••ven men- negro**. It I* tru'-, but hu
man brings—-* Jth tola prolific ptalol.
I*hr •© of the negroes f*Jl dead In one,
two. three order, fu®r fell wounded
will equal pret-Uion.
1 allot ••ni and that's all 0*er« la :•» ▼
It." thr ' bad man" a.ilo when be war j
arr»*a ted. ^
It sounded like a *llly remark to j ^
♦
♦
♦
4
SKIDDOO SALE
OF
make, until r
the clrcvm*l»nc*». hi
tnan yearn :igo rhoi
id Ih«l was all theie wri
*na turned loose an
of it- 4 \guin he . hoi an
of HU killed
.ih whirl* »-j
II there
eee tint
‘l in
>• -Him
Tmh Pi
MU|S
"W- . -i-n*»t Dial ;n»> man in
Hii'.^nnah ewr .»* In danger from i
knlfi- or pistol Iwause of hl» prohi
bition or :mtI-prohibition views. We
he vr had Ram Jon** her®, and !*• use
far more nggreselv* than any of «»ur
city clergymen. He arraigned .peopf**
Ilf
egro, 'and that wn
t»» |l " Naturally he supposat
In -hoofing down men wholesale
th* usual reaul: .will follow snd
will bq "fr II there Is to It.'*
If he had been Imprisoned for
or h:inK*d wlien h© killed h|s flrwt
tliut would have
to if of him an
half dosen or more live* would have |
been saved. Rut the Juries who dealt 1 »
with his rase* were tender In their | y.
♦
♦
t
♦
' nil there wu- J
n stayer and « {
!♦
We Offer for Another Week Our Line
of $27.50, $30.00 and $32.50
and In.tliutlon., utlarkad iifficr. ■ r -»11n* with lilm—)url-n *cn-rnllv
Ih- 1:iw day nft.r -lay. and y. I rm In- |h«v.- *r»nl l.nitrrni-.n for murder. ',
dlynlly >u nv.r nff.rfd him. Hr i »nd linir- IHr rrnull.
a. cauatlc oa Carmack, aoinrllmr. a. H »"• rlatrd in Thr Trir.raph «mi«
al.url.a 3. Dr. Broughton, nnd yrl hr, -t«>« a»n (lint In Inndnn'n imputation
walked th. atrrria of Huvaiinah aa af lira million muI. ihrrr -.rr hnl
aafn a« John Wr.li-y did, uhrn hr ! nlnHy-two mu -Irrn rmmnlllrd In t»*7.
u.rd tn i rnnur. tha rarly mlmil.ta 1 nlmiit one nyird-.r to rvrry fifty (hour
"Dr.i*lokard la nm a long tlmr rt.l- |"nd prr.nna- In ISncland proplr who | 4
drnt of Havannah. Hr d"-« n»i know ! <'immli rnurdrr arc piinl.hrd. In the ■ -A-
th., rharnclrr of the proplr, Hr h.n I Ifnllrd Ht.t.a a.nrrally, and In the | ^
fallrd to rncounla. Ihrlr Ihorou.h | South aitpcditlly. we blu.h t# confrnn. | I
courl««y, Ih.lr kindly conuldrratton. I It l» »af< r lo kill n mm than l| la lo 1
rvrn for mrn who do not aurrn wllh ' "I'JJI a homr Thr oumtlon la, dor, h
them; for man prrrhanrr who do noi Ipny? Thr thin* moal urarntly nwded ,
undrntand th.m. they hay. the ln«h- In Ihl. .rrllon i« a «rrlr» of handnun "T
cut ronaldrratlnn. II I. Ir.ir Hint n | ' h »l will put Ik. homicidal alam.nl on j -4
Every Garment Tailored to Taste.
Suits Ordered this Week Delivered Before Christmas
drnstlc prohibition law fastened upon | noth-* that human life c
immunity which does not approve wl, h Impunity.
It. Is apt to result In violations of th*
w; nnd the violation of the law In j
1* purllrutar lead* In lawlessness In I
other ways: hut w* can tell Mr. Pic k- \
srd that n**«**lnatlnn bn* no lodgment j
In the hearts rf Ravannah people. A* j
one who has lived hero seventeen
years, snd has been both with snd
against (he tide of public opinion nt
different times, w* can say the spirit
of toleration In fUvsnnah marks It ns
s broad snd metropolitan city. Of
course, In every large place there are
ml be taken
“THE DEVIL- AMONG THE
MANAGERS.
FVans Molnaris "Th* Devil" has also
Incident ally 'raised tin* devil" among
the Association of Theatrical Produc
ing Managers, otherwise called the
Theater Trust. Two versions of the
.Hungarian playwright's production
'*We presented rtmtemporaneoualy In
New York, the authorised version by
llanry W. Ravage, and an alleged pl-
r.Hed on* by Harrison <le*y n»ke. The 'fn»J
conflict that ensued has Just resulted J crown colony.
1 > the expulsion of Manager Flake
from the association of manager*.
Ravage charged, among other thing*,
that Flake had "secured and la foist
Ing upon Ih* American public an un
authorised version' of The Devil.' i
and ‘ihsl Mr. Flake produced a play
of which he hsd full knowledge Unit 1
h»d the prior and sole righla."
Tlie director* of the nsf-octallon
found thst by reason of there being
re copyright treaty with Hungary nt
fhe time the play was contracted for
or produced legal right* were not in
volved and therefore the chargre above
mentioned could not be *u*talno-1.
They, however, condemned and ex
pelled Flake on the charge that he had
made false statement* and hnd de
reived Savage when ^HAvage ap
rrogched Flak* aa one member of the
«f^rtation to another.
Mr. Flake claims that th* derision
was a personal vindication for him.
Inantpueh aa the board did not find
him guilty of ona “esaentui charge."
The members preaent. he claim*, we-e
“ready apd Willing to d*' Hie bidding
of the trurf and were closely asso
ciated with Mr. Savage, the president,
founder and manipulator of the as-
•relation and tnieL
%, f waa found ipiltfy' not on any of
the charge* dealing with the produc
tion o( The Devil*." said Mr. Flake,
“hut for not' telling Mr. Savage my
plan* or my buelaeen arrangement*.*'
Aa a result of thr decision which
euatatnrd Savage's claim to th* au-
thorieed weloti. aeveral eminent
m*q>h*rs resigned from the theatrical
association and a war of some sort
tuajr result Hi theatrical circles.
Macon theater-goer* hav* the satls-
flcHon of knowing, however, thst the>
hive aero the authorised version • f
t IgYeigning sensation In dramatic elr-
, w* a ptay which *urp«>** ‘The
\lf'rty Widow" In dt» polnt«s1nes* of
•« .iiiuslaMk but falls far short of it
in the attracttvarers of the prrsenta-
Prealdent Roosevelt U quoted a*
having made an Important announce-
men! to a delegation of Georgian*,
headed by Governor Hoke Smith, who
called on him Wednesday. "When I
go lo Africa Wall afreet expects every
lion to do hla duty." he said. "Wall
sareet hates me with fervent sincerity
not because of any general denuncia
tion of railroads but because I hav*
done things.'* The President Is re
ported ss having spoken in a loud
prop*, who mlfht bo guilty or varlou.I vo * c - •" >» Wall .trr.t might
.... ..... ... ,K_ hi-ur lit. rrmgrkj-. bm »> rn-gil Ih*
fact llmt he saug^ery low on lh»* sub
ject of Wall street for some weeks he-
fore the election.
rimes, hut for the fear of detection.
That Is true the world ov*r: that Is
what laws nnd courts afro for. nnd
that |a why police are employed. Ihit
tlmt th-r* I. «ny Uung-r .Ith.r lo <•, . Vr , k „ , ftor , h . ^po.uw,
mlnl.t.r of tho go-tN-i or a Juilgo " n .„, k |, mmwtlon with tho Dll Tru.t.
thr b-nrh In the und moot lvr< , nM . vsllon , hr
gorvuttvo city Hi Ooorgl*. w. *nv.l h(fc> „ npnMn ,«,
Tho Y.ry Id-* |* fon lgn 'lo thr -htrlt „,. r „ n B(
» f » ur hM "0. Thr Hrgr.l rlvll >nd , „ r ,.,, lrd Thw „
rotlglon. Hbrrty h„ n»rkr,t II. j v , rlllr lh „
cannot l»e denied the Rc
,h »' ""•Oh. breuim- •| |>Mbllb , n K ,-.,«l-„.. Thr,- .n.kr noprr.
tension nt dlsgutaing the direction In
■Jodgr Hprrr. I«.l , P rl,.,. rrrolvrd n , ymp , |h|M
threatening leltor which finally re- J ,
suited In the arrest **f an elevator boy i "Mr. llarrlman says Idle money
In a clly «ky*srra|icr. Muhaequentlv j as l»nd as Ml* labor ' Ever do any
he was discharged. Dr. Pickard »*ema!tdt* labor?" asks the Cleveland Reader,
to think that th* Judge was dally In Ye*, we've gone fishing often.
danger of bodily harui. There wan'
never any demonstration against, or, Thr * Mt for Demeeracy"
In our opinion, any dnnger to the Judge return lo Ita principles of the p-^'
of the United Slates coin:, to any
public speaker or preacher. There Is
no hl.,-k-lwn4 «m»|>lmry. mi nn1»- ' r j ^ w „kly'j7ir.r.nnl.n,
nlghl rldow. In Ch.lham enuuty T»lk j ,-„ r h ,| nK " 0 nink mid dl>nrd.rly
about assassination la unfortunate ex-Mayor James G. Woodward, of At*
^ -* ^ 1 Inn* ■--- * -i*m ‘ ■
i nit
568 Mulberry Street
uiorul clement punish-d with *gtr<-i
.; severity.
Atlanta ‘
unexampled most un-rhrlatlan ' and starts.
So! If a democratic- nominee gets Unfortunately for Woodward,
what his, drunk, the nomination is not binding. ‘ spree happened to coincide in time
virtuous wrath
of Atliinta.''
It Is a thousand pities that the gen- i Atlanta knew c: - , -
tlem*n .if Atlanta w ho call themselves I wr *Kncss was when the primary race f» that the new rule? 1 with one of Atlanta's flood spells. The
'the moral dement" did not lake hold 1 ' VH * ° n - Th® moral element should If drunkenness voids the nomination, j two Jhrm collided, and Jim's Jag was
or the Jim Woodward problem In u | . , l! ,t ' n ; . Rverybody ‘why shouldn't it annul the alection? J annihilated,
different spirit.,
i haVe a'serted Itself thci
j know* that Woodward had been adver-, Why not declare that drunkenness i
Wataon on Woodward.
it unit rarly. Thr fr«r nurli " I gi{ 1 '-“*on h ",,'‘, , r l V"* d ,h '' pon '
thing c«n only MBI In Ih. nlldr.i Ira-1 || r °hH.i »on thr nominnllnn for thr
aginstlon"
hlsMslt.le*.afa"t
The revised formula for calling an
other a liar ®a Illustrated by the moth
mis of th* recognised master of the | WooitwArd
mayoralty -this year id n white dent
©erotic primary, and there wan no
claim that he had won It unfairly.
Tlon. a few weeks later, he had a
i meeting with John tlarleycorn—and
, wh>* c\*r got the Iw-ttor of a bout In
ilh old John? The conduct of
scandalous, beyond all
art has been reduced to this: "Y«vi
statement Is false. You nee i con
splcuou* offender against the law* o
truthfulness and honesty. Your eon
duct Is scandalous snd Infamnmi. Y*»t
occupy an evil eminence. Your Mst*
•n» (• a tissue of utterly false state
ments. Perhaps the foregoing Is n«t I natural. That a targe praportlon
«* r^jSL$sr n'JraiJdur
cover over)thlnr--the
question He himself so confessed.
Hut he was tha regular democratic
nominee, thr winner In a legal, regu-
Isr. orderly whit* primary. Therefore
the Issue raised by his notorious of.
fense was not only delicate hut vitally
Imp irlanl
That Atlanta should feel the shame'
of linvlng s mayor who |.« guilty of
bring drunk and disorderly'* Is most
habitually and .coutlmially. and ms
matter of business practice every
form of mendacity known to man.
You suppress truth. You suggest th"
false. You tic dlrec^. You practice
mendacity for hire In brief, you are
infamous and an ataiuilnable I tor.
Before 1 quit let me «ay I wgnt you to
understand thst you are a potent
f for evil in the community. It v
now your privilege to yell. I over
looked one Important gwsltitt You lie.'
rile
aid. However, that
pa gave th* Flake
rhe Devil-
,nd refine-
The sud-
Devll" in
MWty i
Thr Mavsnnsh Press soys Mr. liar-
rlmnii talked sense when he **10
Ve arc sure to m*et with auecepa. It
e keep our fret In toueh with the
rth snd do no* get the speed «ra«*
Nothing ean b. gained by exaggerate
is our pioMpertty" And It may
td'fst that nothing worth having can
tv- a lined here in the South by exag*
g*rating our *p»**d If our resource#
an- to hr gobbled up. given away or
mortgage.! for alt time to
come to ahsrnt. e be nr It cl arte* In the
Tl*
> the
thing pain
rtr to
• his Erst
ai th® play
rf worWb
tpraasad lo
I Happy and ft lewdly are the foreign
I relations which require no ritscgsBtcn
F* 1 ®' I in ppblL* doeuntaats." *». ktlms Hr*
*“* " York Tribune IHit how about
reign relation* that will not txvtr
*»Joa in public documenlafr"
With
I his -
ik Cf I raisnea# Prctden
Ity and votamti
atrelched
drunken Noah, the son* of Noah, and
the .useful rioak to the contrary not
withstanding-proves that a spirit of,
political independence Is abroad, even
III Hie poor old party-ridden south.
Hut suppose there had been a quiet,
non*partisan meeting of men of aU
classes called to consider the sltuattanl
.it'd .ii|>|h»hc that ,i commute* com
posed of men. representing xll claasse*.
bad pone to Woodward -without hsv-
ing brass band* and flr* companies -
and had appealed to what Is Iwst -lu
him P* resign, in order that another
whit* primary might he held for th"
puri*tse of nominating some one else.
Do mi au>bodv doubt that Woodward
sinl his friends would have realUud
that It was good policy to yield?
? »er> thing depends upon the man-'
In whleh one takes hold of a thing
Mr. Jefferson u-rsl to dwell upon the
advantage* of "taking hold of things
by the smooth end." lie himself never
took h«ld of things tn any other .way
and hi* record Is a marvel of achieve,
ment.
From the e*ry start, the hue and
cry was om after Jim Woodward, ns
If It werv* tha Ural time In tha history
of America that a democratic nomine-
*\er got drunk afttr the nomination.
They guv* him no chance to rctl*v
wlthowt humiliation. The vacy first
thing they did was to give the utmo«»
publicity to the forts The winner n«»»
only had to be nut aside, but he mus*
he ruined Tha brother who had fall**
moat net bt tamtritanicad and ahari-
takiy carted home, but HI* ahame must
be shouted to tbe attarmoal peris of
th* land and hla family HtaHarf la th*
coma pit of humiliation as himeari
Ills friends wee* given no time to la*
terpo** and tt*e their good offices artth
Woodward. Who knows that h<*
friend# weald not Hava dona this. H#*'
•Hay bwn .*■*#•» th* appariwaityf
No* The Fhnstlan spirit waa n-»-
w'.*y nmol fasted There era* not a
Mfiicte ®f forbr.*rsnr* not the leas*
»>*h d «Hsriti. not a hlai of w*rr»*r.
Th»t a d-movratlo imMIMHnn .look throughmii ihi
not change the colors of rainbows and | “whlh
of black sheep ta one of our life-long; Atlanta,years.ago. j in that event there would he a high
contention-. Consequently a sweet j , ” u * H was conceded . that he had old time.-tiro enough.
song of Joy ta being sung In our aoul.! . n A* m *Y° r * an,, 11
uiul We Welcom
line "llie moral
ItroihriN, shake!
Here's how. And so forth.
Instead of going to Woodward in
epirit of Christiana, of brothers, who
pcrhnp* have not the best of titles to
oust stones, "ill© moral element of At
lanta" first churm-d Itself Into a lather
of rage and rushed at Jim Woodward
with th© fury of tigers-
Keen the cowardly hound dog wllk
turn and tight, when driven Into a
®»rnrr. They drove Woodward into a
e«»rner. and he had to fight, or he iron-
ifhtared more cowardly than a hound.
They hnd already dune enough t©
eternally mortify him and his fumtlv
and hi- friends—to continue in th©
race couldn’t make It any worse.
Now count the costs! Atlanta torn
to pieces l»y a fierce factional warfare
which almost tad to Hot und blood
shed: business Interrupted: and h^urt
burning- left that will exert n baleful
Influence on the city for years.
But that is not ths worst. "Th*
morel clamant of Atlanta" appealed to
e.'ty ouni-*- .l-H Woodward for hav
Inq been “drunk and dleorde-l
• rtw NfeuiW vo TL WAS U8ED.
TO BEAT THE NOMINEE OF A
REGULAR WHITE DEMOCRATIC!
PRIMARY.
Who can estimate the cvl| influence I
of such an example b
All thla Is had enough, one would
think, but In Its savage exultation over
Woodward ami his friends, the At-
lanta Journal whooiw ms follows:
"The negro voters of Atlanta nrn en
titled to 111© appreciation of V»c public I
for tha blah sens© of eltiienahlp they I
exhibited on ycstsrday In supporting I
Mr. 'Maddox ami th© cause of good!"
morale.
"The negro voters of Atlanta at©
entitled lo th© appreciation of the
nubile for the high.sense of cltlienship j
(hoy exhibited on yesterday in -up- ,
porting Mr. Maddox and the cause of j
good moral-.
'It la an evidence of the esteem In '
which the best element of our colored <
population ImM the duties of clttxen- ;
©hip and‘a growing regard for higher ;
civic and domestic Ideals."
That editorial In Hoke's organ will
do Iota of gtsMl. won't II?
Any tuau who has an ounce of grey
mailer In his head knows why Ih© At
lanta negroes voted against Wood
ward. First or all. the chance te
smash the nominee ef a white demo-
crtle primary waa welcomed by them
with unepeakabi* pleasure.
Then n« doubt, there waa the music
of Jingling coins to gladden the Afri
can heart. Aad then the ride to tho
polio in th# automobile* ef “th* moot
principallest men of the town “
How could human beings of th,* Af
rican sort Pealsl all these tempters?
To the n©gm voters of Atlanta It
was a glorious day. Most emphatically
they had a gopd time.
A© they proudly rode through th#
streets w© can fancy them smiting ex
ultantly at on© another and saying:
"Two years a«o the Atlanta riot#
were on, end w# were ffeeina to© our •
lives* leavim the streets littered with ‘
the wounded and the dead: NOW
LOOK! Th* same white folks that
boat and shat ue then ar* naw takinq
ua to tho polls in their auto*. TO
HKIP * HEM SMASH A WHITE
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY!"
Consider th© insult given by that ad-
'lortat I© Woodward and hie I.Obd
friends
Are the Nefraeo who voted eqeinet
Woodward batter man than h*f So
Hoke's organ implledlv soya. Are th*
j jo rose *f Atlanta batter than tha
ountry because | the part of th© democratic officeholder. A Great Jewish Pr-acher.
nubile Jug while h© was mayor of j vacates the office? I To the current Itsue of Harper's, Week
ly William limits contributes mi accminl
. _ - - - of a remarkable Interview with Rabbi
........ there-; Kvery now und then we have l«
side *»r the | fnr ° thought, when he was chosen at have a virtuous spell. We ought to be
r*f Atlanta." 'he primary, that Atlanta wanted him : good all the time,-but we ain’t. Tho
| again, in spite of his one fkiling. morel ©lament of Atlanta ought to bo
think that when he fell by the up and doing all th© time, but like
wayside, after hla nomination, the fe- Jim Woodward and hi© occasional
rocltv with which hr was assailed \va*| spree, the moral element works by fits
in 1905 to become rsbbl of th* Temple
Kmanu El In New York, the richest and
most powerful df the city's synagogues.
On being told that h* would be subject!
to and under the control of the board
of trustees, Rabbi Wit© replied that ther*
would not be enough money to hire him,
and forthwith established the Fre® Syna
gogue. on th© basis of a free pulpit, no
pews and dues, voluntary contributions
* democratic organisation.
hurlty, hut social service, build-
Stephen 8. Wise. Ph. t>., of the Free ; Ing upon the'rock of social Justice, will
Synagogue. N. w York. Rabbi \VI«o. who j be the watchword of the Fre© Syna-
I, .till in hi.’ Thirl leu, nfler Iravlmr 1 ,,.^1° *y th °E ■
achieved a reputation
- _ _ — of Israel—sv ..
- - — i th© teaching and practice of the Fre©
Rcth-Isrnel In Portland. Oregon, and held j Synagogue—I* to quicken and keep alive
nmqy offtalal nosts'In the prison and : the soelul conscience, to strengthen and
work of that state* was invited i make Indissoluble the social bond.”
Stylish Shoes
FOR
MODEST WOMEN
THE SOROSIS
Best Known and Most
Worn Ladies’ Fine
Shoes sold in- Macon.
Perfect fitting, durable
and exceedingly stylish.
$5.00 Value for
$4.50 and $4.00
PERFECT is the fit.
Snappy Shoes I
FOR
DRESSY MEN
NEW ARRIVAL? in
Patents, Vici, Tans and
Oxblood, in Button and
Lace, including those
having eyelets and
hooks in bright natural
brass. i
$4, $5. $6
Swell is the word.
Five Per Cent Rebate Checks
Are given with all cash purchHucs at this store and
on December Hist there will be given fo our patrons:
$100 IN GOLD FREE
white men who voted for Wood-
Hoke’s
OOMttTIC IDEALS" then th
vHlte men who voted for Mm?
organ Impliedly says
the 4.000
that
WHat • brutal, cnwsrdlv insult t© a
'slier White man and hi* <wi feithfUl
%H"* frtandi! It !« enough to make
t varrkm crow *kk at th* stomach.
rvrr beheld such Fharl«*©ism
TH* yvffersnntsm ^eiMh't ©v©n know
**•« f|*©adwstd h\ sight and tn tHM
t.©»» man hid -lam o end h* must '•* ! tetter Has ex# t© grind but w*
JH* I. M It, NI «««ki M lk*l *.'1 tnlUI. I* Ml Ull k* Mi MM
DOLLS GIVEN AWAY
With each purchase of Ladies’, Misses’, Boys’ and
Children's Shoes, amounting to $2.50, $.1.00, $3.50, $4.00,
$5.00 or $10.00. Some are regular $2.50 and $3.00 values.
$3.50 Ladies’ Shoes $2.40
We offer the most attractive propositions now on the
market in Indies’ Shoes at a Bargain Price. There
arc over 500 pairs in the lot; they sell regular at $3.50
and $3.00. made up in Patents and plain d*rs jq
Vici, Lace nnd Button, choice /
$3.00 and $2.50 Ladies’ Shoes
In Golden Brown. Black Kid nnd Patents; high heels
and school heels; Button or Lace. Choice (Prt -J Q
of 500 fiairs *P^». 1 J
Big Lot Misses’ Shoes
Priced regular $1.75, and more than worth (Pi OQ
that money, will go nt the ent price of »P X J
$5.00 Men’s Shoes for $3.29
We place on sale over 500 pairs Men’s Shoes, all strictly
NEW — this season’s styles, REGULAR Stock. In
Patents, plain Vici, Box Calf, Gun Metal, Tans and Ox-
*blood that sold for $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00; <J»q rtQ
choice, cash \
Little Gent’s Shoes
Desirable goods, in many styles and sizes, Qjr _
bnt all to be slaughtered. Your choice of lot for. ,/OC
Buster Brown Shoes
Fog Boys and Girls, all to be closed out at special
reductions on former prices.
THESE REDUCTIONS ARE FOR CASH ONLY
Special Notice
The Five Per Cent Due Bills will be given to all
. CASH PURCHASERS of Made-to-Order Suits nnd
Overcoat*. Hat*. Gent’s PurnUhiug*, etc., as well as to
buyers of SHOES.
Renffoe'ElliS’Permenter Co,
OLD DEMPSEY BLOCK
CORNER CHERRY AND THIRD.