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— -
tfixv/UL.
miTTf BUftttV
ORDER
Bring it our way, if
i f ,s ^ or &■***
Goods. Every order
^AUIBfc«nas£aSl^/ filled promptly.
Victor Machines '.... .517.00 to $200.00
Edison Phonographs $12 50 to $55.00
Columbia Urapliophones $12.50 to $200.00
DOUBLE DISC RECORDS 65c TO $1.25.
Don't forget, our l{cpnir Department. It is ready
for any job of Phonograph Repairing.
A FEW MORE PIANOS AT .WHOLESALE COST
Macon Phonograph Co.
Phone 1108. 609 Cherry Street.
pruprlato for tliut time will Im showi
miMit al a Hinull sum from
known attorney.
At tin* eml of throe days
turned to the farm.
••Well. Bill, how'd ye Ilk
usUid IiIh father.
"It ain't what It's crack
responded mil. glooinlngly,
learned It."—Llpplueott’s.
study ho re-
to he,
sorry
not know that I am great Tf I
a not know why. I do not believe
from
SATURDAY NIGHT, DECEMBER 26th.
BIG HOLIDAY ATTRACTION,
AMERICA’S FOREMOST ROMANTIC ACTOR,
JAMES K. HACKETT
Direct from his Triumphant Season at The Hackett
Theater, New York, in
The Greatest of Romantic Plays
The Company and Production the Same in Every Respect
as in New York.
PRICES—25c TO $2.00. SALE OF- SEATS THURSDAY.
MONDAY NIGHT, DECEMBER 28th.
ELEANOR ROBSON
(Liebler & Co., Managers.)
In the Most Fascinating and Sensational Drama Yet
Given the English Speaking Stngn
By Richard Harding Davis.
The materialisation scene in Act 3 has never been
excelled or ovon equalled| it’s marvelous, alluring and
wonder provoking. See it by ull means.
Prices—50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00. Seats Thursday.
Nothing is more evident to careful mothers
than the fact that the child’s sweet tooth should
be .gratified with confections of unquestioned
punty. It is second nature for the little tots to
want “tanny,” and it should be the first care of
mothers to give them Steere’s Candy exclusively.
It is as pure as pure food laws and the laws
of hygiene and infant health could demand.
Sold by all Druggists and Confectioners.
Manufactured by
LITTLEFIELD & STEERE CO., Knoxville, Tenn.
Exclusive Agencies Gr.anlel
THE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 20, 1908
In The Theaters
DR. FARNHAM
SPECIALIST
Free
Consultation!
Free
Examination!
: When you go to-Dr. Farnham, yau
find out your troubles, no guess, tfht
Dr. takes time to examine you.
^ No Drug Bills to Pay.
|W Telephone 930.
pr. Farnham compounds his own
drugs and puts up his own medicines.
Treatment Reasonable.
Even the poorest people can have
the best treatment because it Is with
in their reach.
Nervous Troubles
’Are you growing weak and nervous?
Are you easily, excited?
Do you have sharp pains In ’chest,
head and over heart?
Do you have blind, dizzy spells?
Do you have black specks before
your eyes?
Do you have hot flashes?
Have you a bad taste In morning?
k * Do you get numb am! tingle?
See Br. Farnham and get those worn
out nerves built up. You are hound to
get worse and In time go on to com
plete collapso or nervous prostration,
I)r. Famham’s new treatment of med
icines and electrical massdge will
soothe the achiug nerves and put new
Ufo Into the worn out system.
Stomach Troubles.
Do you feel a weight In stomach af
ter meals?
Have you a burning In pit of
etomach?
Do you have futlncss In stomach?
Does your heart palpitate?
Do you have belching of gas?
I»o you have sour stomach?
If you have some of these symptoms
better sec a Specialist. DL Farnham
. docs not guess at your condition; he
gives a thorough examination and if
you can be cured he will surely cure
you.
Disease^ of Women.
Do yotr have pains low down In
back?
Arc you weak and nervous?
Havo you ovarian neuralgia?
Have you displacements?
Dr. Famham’s treatment will relieve
end cure you and save you from a
serious operation.
HEMORRHOIDS OR PILES.
Cured without the use of tho knife.
Dr. Farnham guarantees a euro and
you do not have to lay ofT three or four
weeks and go to hospital. Not neces
sary to lose any time from your work.
FISTULA
Cured without a mrlous operation. No
knife, no chloroform, no iierlou. opera
tion, no painful operation.
Diseases of Men.
Special attention given to these dis
eases. Dr. Farnham cures where others
fall. Specific blood poison cured to
stay cured.
Dr. FARNHAn
, MACON, GA.,
. 568 Cherry St.
lloara—t-lt ft. m ; z-G p. m. Sun-
day, I a. m.—1 p. a.
character creations which have
brought fame and fortune to such
stars as Do Wolf Hopper, Frauk
Daniels, Francis Wilson and other
similar prominent actors. The rest
of the principals surrounding Mr.
Waters include the clever comedi
enne, Leona Thurber, Eveleen Dun-
more, Isabel Lowe, Grace Turner,
Alberta Davis, W. H. Thompson,
Carl Hoffman, Sydney Broughton
and Alec Francis, and their* long
Identification* with “Co.mlng Thro’
the Rye” Insures a perfect perform
ance of singular merit and charm.
The chorus is large and highly
spoken of. The production Is char
acterized by a vast array of beau
tiful scenery, costumes and otVr
effects, and the entertainment, pop
ular from all points of view, i p-
pears to fully justify the extraordi
nary popular favor which has been
bestowed upon it. The advance sale
of seats begins on Wednesday
morning.
ELEANOR ROBSON IN “VERA, THE
MEDIUM."
The management of the Grand has se
cured a strong attraction for Monday.
Dee. 28, In Miss Eleanor Robson. Mlssn
Robson's vehicle for the present season is
Richard 1 larding Davis’ play on spirit
ualism, "Vera. The Medium.” It is said
to be abound in very strong dramatic sit
uations as well ns delightful humor and
eel characterization. Tho company
supporting Miss Robson "'111 measure up
to the usual high standard maintained by
her managers, Messrs. I.lebler & Co.
as they live and has learned to know
their manner of thought, the action of
their simple, upright souls and minds and
hearts. This man is Sir Gilbert Parker
and he has put them on paper us they
are, and us they have been for genera
tions. In his stories of Canadian life he
has drawn them with on etcher’s point
and made them living, breathing beings.
The village of Chandlers, in Parker's
"Tlte Right of Way," Is a typical French?
Canadian village far from the struggle
and turmoil of civilization, where sim
plicity. honesty and genuine faith are
the principal characteristics of tlte peo-
cleurly drawn, is pictured with more
fidelity to typo—wftli more compelling
force. He Is a type worthy to ho classed
with the great characters of fiction. Op
posed to 1dm In tlte story la another dis
tinct typo—Charley Steelo, brilliant,
cynical, a doubter and a drunkard, the
gais. No greater contrast is to bo found
In literature than these two wonderful,
characters, the one loaded down with
R rlmitive passions, tho other saturated
i civilized vices. In tho play thut Eu-
f ;ene W. Prcsbroy has made from Sir ou
ter t Parker’s book these two characters
stnml out with unwavering fidelity to
type and are even.more fascinating and
alive than In the novel for Guy Standing
and Theodore Roberts, co-stars In the
production, have endowed them with tho
berath of actual life and have made them
real. In their hands Parker’s two great
characters live and breathe on the stage.
This play with tho original New York
cast and production will be seen In this
city soon. -
THE GENUINE
Oxford Bibles
Can be had here—not the imitation Oxford. We have
them from $1.25 to $15.00, and on any $2.00 (or higher
priced) Bible . .
WE STAMP NAME EREE
lVe Also JInvc
GIFT BOOKS, LEATHER GOODS, FANCY BOX PA- 1
PERS, FOUNTAIN PENS, OTHER CHRISTMAS AR- j
TICLES, DENNISON’S LINE.
BURKE’S
508 Cherry Street
Theodore Roberts.
ittuu
BLANCHE WALSH.
At tho age of sixteen. Miss Blanche
"Walsh graduated from a New York dra-
„ made an actress. It is an In
born Intuition and before I knew tho ele
mentary principles of a play, necessary
for every actress or actor. 1 was a star
In Shakesperlun roles. 1 have appeared
hivmany successes since—In fact, 1 have
nover had a failure—but l consider
"Emma Eltyngo” the greatest character
I havo ever portrayed. Hhc is a noble
woman who has been imposed upon, and
1 feel eevry emotion myself when I drag
her from tlic depths Into which a society
nrn nls plucing her, to an enviable posi
tion In the world. ‘Tho Test’ is by far
tho most powerful of all plays in which
I havo ever appeared.*
• The Test" will be seen at the Grand
soon. Miss Walsh Is surrounded by an
exceptionally strong company.
AT THE LYRIC.
For this week tho management hns se
cured one of the best bills of vaudeville
that has been seen In Macon and assures
all that they will see an exceptionally
line show for Xmas week. . .
Miss Jennie Dewoese a violinist and
banjolst, comes with flattering pres
Savannah, where she won favor ad muny
friends while playing there.
KluB and Courtney. In their comedy
playlet entitled "Room No. Ilf, or Watch
the Hell Hop." will prove one of the host
comedy acts that has been presented at
the Lyric.
Tho pictures will be selected especially
popularity with the people cf Macon
Is winning favor with each week.
Useless. Knowledge.
At a dinner of a legal association held
in Washington not long ago, one of the
speakers told of a farmer's son In Illi
nois who conceived o desire to shine as a
legal light. Accordingly ho went up to
Springfield, where he accepted employ
er llpe^ tills artist in
Dec H 24° 0t 9tal8 " m 0pen ° n Tbur<da y»
“THE RIGHT OF WAY/*
The exploration, practically tiie discov
ery of the northern portion of the Ameri
can continent was done by r. strange
class of woodsmen and adventurers
known by the French names of ’’coureu-
eis des Intis” und "voyageurs.” These
men, sturdy, bravo to the degree of he
roism, hardly and never-tiring opened the
vast wildernesses of the north and made
of them an empire. With their packs on
the backs, and their- light birch-bark ca
noes. they traveled up the unknown rlv-
®r* nnd through tho trackless forests,
living like the Indians they found there
and learning from them the secrets of
many of them soldiers of fortune, who
loved tho wiki country for Its own sake
and led a life freo from restraint and
ctosa to the earth. From these pioneers
a rare of hardy, fearless. Indepen ■
frontiersmen that exists today prar
y as it was when the French lielifi
I Canada and which the march of civilisa
tion has constantly driven further and
farther back Into the forests and moun
tains asi the. Red men were driven befor's
them. Yet they remain today In the out
of the way places of Canada and they
live with a simplicity, and earnestness
that cares not for the world outside.
"They have lived and loved and walked
And worked In their own way, and the
world ha* gone by them.** They art the
last remains of tho French power In the
new World, they are the ••habitant" one
might almost say the natives of Panada.
Only one writer has ever found them
aucur - t*
Some Blends of Radiant Beauty and Gifted Talents.
pa I Ion.
The British Postofficc.
The business of the British postofficc
during tho year ended March SI, 1908, as
reported liy Consul General Wynne, ag
gregated 4.97?,070,000 pieces, Including
letters, newspapers, parcels, etc., an In
crease of 2.2 per cent over the previous
year nnd an average or 112 pieces of
mall for each Inhabitant. The mideliv
end articles numbered 3I.27I.000, an In
crease of over 0 p*r cent. The net profit
of the' department was f24.271.712, or
1310,SM leas than lit the previous year.
The deficit In ths telephone and tele-
graph service was |4,145,M4, an Increase
of II.017.VU
'm.