Newspaper Page Text
TIIE MACON DAILY TELEGRAPH: FRIDAY- MORNING, DECEMBER 25, 1908
The Macon Telegraph
Published Every Morning by
THE IMCON TELEGRAPH I'M. CO.
442 Cherry Street. Macon, Ca.
C. R. Pendleton, President.
Director#—C. R. Pendleton, W. T An*
derton. p. H. Gambrell. Macon; A. 8.
Pendleton, Valdosta. Oa.j Louie Pendle
ton, Bryn Athyn, Pa.
THE TELEdRAPH IN ATLANTA.
The Telegraph can b« found on tilt at
tha following placet In Atlanta: Tl»#
Piedmont Hotel, the Kimball Mouse, tha
Aragon Hotel, tha Terminal Elation and
by tha World Newt Company.
Linotype For Sale.
Model No. 1. two yehra old. two-let-
tar Mrrsmthaler Linotype machine; in
good order; 12.500, f.o.b. Mucon. All -
dreaa The Teicitriiph. Macon. <Sa.
IM’HKIHIILK.
Th« atory of the President's ro-
buko of aovoral college (Iris who
rode pant him noar Waahlngtou on
TbankaKlvtnK tiny has been reprint
ed with "corroboration" under n
Chicago date line, but It mure tliau
■trains the credulity of the reader.
If the half la true that Is published
nhout the monarchical fashions now
tn vogue at tho White House, wo
may well believe that Mr. Roosevelt
would be diaploased by the act of a
parly of college girls tn passing him
from behind even tf he kn«w that
they had spurred their horse, to a
gallop before they recognised him.
But thnt lie should spur after them
and scold them In an angry manner
la scarcely credible, and that be
er any other American-born man—
should rldo up and alrlke a young
lady’s horse with hta rldlng-crop la
unbollovablo. Only a man of un-
Mound mind or a ruffian without an
atom of the gentleman's deference
for the other sex would bo guilty of
such brutality, and the story must
lie dismissed as unworthy of belief.
We may add thnt unless the Pres
ident la disposed to effect royal state
whenerer he goes out to tako the
air on horseback, with outriders be
fore and behind to koep the way
clear, he must expect people to pau
him. and as even lie would hardly
latroducs so startling an innovation,
the story Is rendered the tnat;o
doubtful.
l.lt.HTMMi I AI.I.S ON OOMl’KltS
The 8tipromc Co|rt of the Ills
trlct of Columbia atuck It hard to
President Hampers, Vlce-Preitdent
John Mitchell and Secretary Prank
Morrison of the American Kedera-
tloon of Labor, giving them Jail
sentences or one year, nine month,
and alx months, respectively, for
violating the Injunction of the
court. Instead of Imposing the One
Which tho defendants doubtless an
ticipated would bo the worst that
could happen to them.
Prealdent (lomper, some lime ago,
tn anticipation of the wont that
could happen, declared he would go
to Jail before he would content to
the payment of a Una, hut the court
hat not left him' and his dlslln-
gulahed ro-defendanta any other al
ternative hot to go to Jnll.
Tho court does not agree with Mr,
Oompera that It Is a legitimate ex-
rrrlae of the constitutional freedom
«f speech and of a free press U
combine and conspire openly to In
tarferc with, boycott and break up
the private business of another, and
It contends that when this course
was defiantly pursued after the court
had forbidden II, there Is nothing
loft for the court but to Impose a
penalty that wilt deter others from
repealing the offense. As the court
puts It, the question was vital for
one side or the other. “There Is n
studied, determined, defiant conflict
precipitated In the light of open day
between the decr.ee. of a tribunal
ordained by the Government of the
Federal Union, and of (he tribunals
of another federation, grown up la
tbs land," say, the court, "aad one
or the other must succumb, for
thooe that would outlaw the law
are public enemies."
If we are to have duly eoaslltuled
tribunals at all their decreet mutt
be respected, and tha logic of the
coart appears unanswerable. It doss
appear a little curious, however, that
the drst prison aeateuoe to fait on
trust magnates should happen to
light on thooe representing labor.
The eourta bar# been engaged la
litigation and Injunctions against
capitalistic trusts for yean, aad as
was said Is the recent aatloaal cam
paign. no trust magnate had yet
hccu seat to prtioh. II has hash a
nisi ter of tan yours gnarly stare the
Bi.ml.rj oil Trust was eaJoined
sud fiithidd, ii to eoatlaiMi yat It
estate tod.i aa ii has ctistid ualn
t.rr u;>t -d' sod so in. has bang sag
to Jail fur too.* •t.pt, either.
HOPE 18 FOUND THIS MORNING
IN MACON’S CHRI8TMA8 STOCKING
Tlio new year contains inn eh for Macon, it one would only
stop to thlnlr.
There is the expenditure of over a half million dollars in
the extension and improvement of the Central Railway shops.
This is assured.
There are buildings, homes and faetories, waiting for the
noise of the holidays to subside. These are assured.
And here are three things thnt will also come with the
year, if the plans of those who are able and anxious to do
things do not miscarry.
A tourist hotel, for which more than half the amount
necessary for its construction is up and waiting, and this, too,
without opening the subscription list.
A commercial hotel, as near a certainty ns it is possible
to he without the contract for its construction being let.
A ten-story office building. While not as certain as tho
others, is being figured on by‘those who mean business.
These projects are the foster-children, so to speak, of tho
(Jhmnhur of Commerce, and form its principal work for the
coming year. Rut the moving spirit is Mr. Emory 'Winsliip.
While he has.large interests elsewhere, this is the birthplace
and the homo of Mr. Winsliip. He coincs hack with rare hon
ors for a young man from stirring scenes of war to live in
peace in the Country of ids boyhood, aud thnt same activity he
displayed in other fields of usefulness impels him to a life of
business activity.- He therefore becomes a member of the
Chamber of Commerce and infuses new life into it. The mem
bership swells, and this body full of young aud energetic busi
ness men, needed only the leader.
These needs of the eitv, tho tourist hotel, the commercial-
hotel aud flte office building, become more and more pressing
and apparent, und the commercial element of the city, falling
it) line with the Clmmher of Commerce, stands ready to cl’owd
the new year with their consummation.
Business men of the city cost their eyes toward Augusta
and see tiie unimpeachable evidence of the advantages to thnt
city of a tourist hotel. They see the nnnuul flocking tof the
tourists who run away from the rigid winters of the north arid
cast nml west. They see the overrunning of those large aud
commodious hotels. They see the liberal spending of money.
They see the remaining behind of many who full in love with
the climate and people, mid who’invest their money in portnn
nent homes.
And these eommerejnl men know that Mncon possesses
every advantage of Augusta, in point of olituntc, in point of
beauty, in point of surroundings, .even to the hills. They see
the magnificent trains going through with the snows of the
colder climes whitening their .tops und rushing to tho warm
sunshine of Florida, nttd withont a stop. They see the advan
tage of tlie Italf-wny ground, the resting place, where they can
drop off from the long ride and stay a while before making up
their minds to proceed further, either to the soutli or to the
north. 1
The Clmmher of Commerce, with its increased member
ship and greater strength, with its new blood, will strive for
bigger and better things for Macon, and the new year is most
propitious for tho work. A change,in the national govern
ment, the fixing of policies, tho settling of conditions, and the
now lenf give the Chamber of Commerce a clear field of action.
Tlie work has already beeu commenced, tlie plans are be
ing laid, und everything now points to the erection dnring tho
coming twelve months of one, two, and probably the three of
the enterprises named. Not until nfter the holidays, when the
sounds of tlie Christinas festivities cease and business re
sumes the normal, can anything lie done, but from the outlook, sm * 11 amount eompawfi wtth th *
and from tho statements made by those who have u right to Tast W1>indl,im *“ ,1,c |ia> “ e * t ot
lie heard, and who mean what they say, these and utility other
big things will come out of the new year.
gather eradical. Then We tired
roues wife treat home to her
mother and taro months later
drought suit to compel her husband
ts paT her one-third of hta princely
salary, which was atUI alx dollars a
week. In rafuslng to five the order.
Judge Foster said: /
"This rushing into matrimony
may appeal to tho President of
th* United States, hut tt does not
to any one who weighs the evi
dence and acts Judiciously to de
termine whether or not such a
thing Is reasonable, right and
proper. . . . I am not going
to encourage this kind of matri
mony by making a husband whose
earnings are It it week go out
and steel to support a wife, be
cause he can barely live hhnseVf
on the It. I wilt make no order
In the tone, but will adjourn It
six months If tho corporation
counsel wishes.”
To Mr. Roosevelt, whose own
daughter chose a very rich man and
one no longer young. Judge Foster
may seem to hare "wantonly and
wickedly" defeated the ends of jus
tice, hut tho average practical^ man
la apt to conclude (hat be rendered
judgment more salutary than
cruel.
Perhaps a girl may venture to
marry on six dollars a week If she
likes Spartan simplicity and can re
duce thrift to a science, und If In
addition to his six dollars the man
owns a cottage out of town and can
And time to grow vegetables and
potatoes; for there are people. In
the world who would prefer to lire
on hominy or oatmeal end wear the
■ame clothes for live years than not
have their will. But If the girl Is u
town girl and likes chocolates arid
ribbands end theatres end Easter
bonnets and the rest ot It, she. had
better stay with papa nnltl the sal
ary 1 Is raised or—unromantlc though
It may be—until a more promising
and prosperous man confes along.
TIIE LION’S SHAKE.
According to a statement' made
by Vice-President Brown, of the
Now York Central railroad, the to
tal of the gross earnings of all the
railways of the United States last
year was $2,6S6.91J.000. But what
Is of chief Interest Is .the distribu
tion of this vast sum, as appears
from Mr. Brown’s statistical show
ing. tie tails us that there are 225,-
f 000 miles of rallrpads In the coun
try, employing In the aggregate
1,675,000 men and earning mon$
than 67.000,000 for each day in the
year. He declares that the railroads
receive more and keep less than any
of the other groat employing agen
cies. for out of each 6100 earned be
soys 610 gobs directly to labor and
621 he estimates as the labor cost
of fuel, equipment and material—
or 671 directly and Indirectly to la
bor. Tho apportionment of earn
ings Is as follows:
Employes on pay roll |<0
Fuel, waste, olL water *
Kalla, cars, engines, etc. . > T...., 16
Permanent Improvements t
Taxes 3
Terminals, joint trackage f
Interest »n bonds 14
Shareholderc 9
Surplus >
Total .Vi 6100
In the popular Imagination a rail
road Is a corporation so rolling In
wealth that It can stand the cheap
est freight and passenger rates Im
aginable, but according to this
showing the interest ot the'bond
holders end the dividends ot the
shareholders are together but a
A CRAVE t'llAUOB.
The New York Sun charges that
the Qorerameut secret service,
which was organised lo detect'crime
and bring crlmanls to justice, has
been perverted from Its uso as an
engine for the enforeement of law
and mado n machine for the suppres
sion of free speech and tha Intimi
dation of lawmakers. Says the
Sun:
By what process of lltegallty
tbl. has been accomplished ta at
present unknown. What statutes
have been violated, what Indecent
expcdlrnla have been resorted to.
Is not now ittaeloard. Only one
thing U patrol and notorious—
S ire and interment have searched ’
a private lives of member* of
Oongrara, have tunnelled through
mill and deception, not lo bring
before the courts thieves and cor-
nipUontate. but to furnish the
manna with which by threat of
exposure and ruin tho victims
might h.' brought tn heel like
don that fear a taahlng.
Not for the end* of Justice, but
ta strengthen and Intrench snip-
alkm; not to rid the public of un
faithful servants, but to make of
them pliant tools for the subver
sion of the legislative department
uf the novrmmrnt: not to con
demn to ike rxn-ratlon et the
public lla betrayer*, but to enroll
them under the banner of Rouse-
veltlMw— this Is the confessed usd
to which the secret ernrtce ha*
hem put. The reports lie la the
vaults, lo be brought out not
wheu the Judae la oa th# beam*
hut whs 11 the executive want*
Vote* or iwta that lothaldatlad
must again ha rvaurtad ta
il tibia* grant rhargr is well
founded, and If the members of Iks
two hausen have submitted meekly
sad continue is sahmK. (hay will
deserve I ha lass uf run poet far whkh
they must Intritably suffer tn per
son. Rub tho chief mutter of con-
corn Is the injury done to our. In-
sUtuttonu through the virtual abject
surrender ot the legislative branch
ot the Government to the will ot
tho executive and tho possible per
manent decline ot the former. Wo
trust that tha resolutions passed by
Congress are not mere words to pass
orer n painful Incident but are tbe
beginning of n determined struggle
to aalntnln tbe Integrity of a co
ordinate branch of the fiovernnieat
. i/uvi on as a m
The Journalistic debate oa tha
qnmtlon whether a man ran marry
on twenty dollars a week ended with
a vote of the majority In vke af
firmative. But ’ those who took the
view of the adventuring lovers—
and they were many, for all the
world loveu a lover—had plain, sail
ing compared with the fremlcd ar
gument that must now be put up by
those who would combat the dictum
ot Judge Foster, of New York, thnt
n man la a selfish brute and a girl In
fool to marry on alx dollars a
week.
A year ago a young ewpreallee
painter of the metropolis, earning
six dollar* a week, got married. For
lea months he aad his hapefnl
yoaag wife sought to tolvw tha prab-
Some years ago the surgeon*
began exterminating the vermi
form appendix front the human
system, and Just I lied their conduct
on the ground that the appen
dix was of nu use whatever. \V»
observe now that some ot the
■earned men hare reached the
conclusion that It la of some use.
Uut what will th* people whose
appendices have been removed do
without them?—Philadelphia Rec
ord.
While those whose appendices
have been clipped can not share In
the re-discovered advantages of that
Organ, they may enjoy the satis
faction of having assisted tn adding
to the sum of srlenUflc knowledge
obtained through' vivisection.
CORRUPTION 13 PROORfiSfi.
Ferraro's Idea From a Comparison of
Rome and tho -World Today.
New York Son.
Corruption In ancient Borne woe an
entirely different thing froth oorrup-
Uon aS W# understand It notflffays.
and what the fellow cit’srn* of Au
gustus thought of as corruption la to
us eisentla! to progress, was tha Idea
put forth by UuKlI.lmo Ferraro, tho
Italian historian. In his address on
'Corruption and Progress in the An
cient and Modern Worlds" at Colum
bia University. Signor Ferrrro did not
waste time In diecuesing theories of
corruption. Ho defined the word both
lit its ancient and modern aensea and
then showed its effects.
It la evident." he said, “that there
a cap'tal difference between our
Judgment of this phenomenon and that
of the ancients. Tu (hem It was a
malevolent force of dissolution to
which ought to be attributed all In
Roman-history that was sinister and
dreadful, a sure sign of Incurable de
cay; that is why they called It 'cor
ruption' or customs and so lamented
Today, on the contrary, I*, appears
to us n universal beneflclent process
of transformation; so true Is this that
u-e ball ‘progress' many facia that the
ancients called 'corruption.'
“With luxury and wealth comes the
(Ay of corruption which the poorer,
cruder times do not know. This cry
does not come from the ordinary class-
It Is the slogan of the social re
formers. That Roman history la full
not only of Invectives In prose and
verse but of lows and administrative
measures against luxurln, amb'tla and
arnrltla la a sign that those laments
were not merely n foo'i.hnos. of
writers or, a* We say today, '•tuft' for
newspaper articles.”
The prospect of finding nn analogy
to Roman conditions In modern times
nnd In n modern government, accord
ing to fllgnor Ferrero. la difficult, be-
cauae “modern men are persuaded that
they are the model of all virtue. In
ih© modern world today are there car
ried on the nbomlnnble orgies for which
the Rome of the Caeaara la famous?
If we read the ancient aourcea we can
see that* the Idea of Roman corruption
haa been exaggerated, that we have
made for ourselves out of this famef
Roman luxury a notion highly roman
tic. But we need not delude ounehtos.
Rome even ot the height of Its splen
dor was poor in comparison with the
modern ’world. Even wMfn Rome
atopd aa a metropolis for gH immense
empire It was lew wcallhy and leaf
Imposing than a great city of present
Europe or America.
M Wo have pictured the imperial ban •
quota of ancient Romo a.i function**
Of unheard of aplendor. but if Nero
could coma to life and see the dining
room of & great hotel of Paris or New
York he would admire it far more
than the hall ih which he gave hlr
feasts.**
“What, the ancients colled corrup
tion.** h> said later, "tfot but a change
In the customs and the wants of the
people and proceeded .from generation
to generation. It is in essence the same
as that which takes place with us to
day. Vhe avarltla of which they com
plain so much was that greed and
impatlenco of making money which
we sea setting all clause* beside thcin-
aclve*. The ambit!a is what we call
‘getting there.’ Luxuria was tho de-
s're to augment pergonul conveniences,
luxury and pleasure*, the same pas
sion which stirs Europe and America
from top to bottom.. The Roman de
sire for luxury was developed through
associating with the Orient. Alexan
dria -being to the Romans what Paris
|« to file people ot today.’*
Crisp’s Lovable Nature.
Alfred Henr* Lewis In New York
American.
The other day inthls column I re
ferred to tlie late Speaker Crisp. Folk
in Washington will wait long for one
more lovable or more high than Cri*p.
His Impressive traits werg a frank
nobility of heart, a want of affection,
a lack of snobbery* an Iron confidence
—when courage and confidence were
asked for—In bis powers and his posi
tion.
Crisp was a natural captnln. • He nr
turned command of men as though It
were his birthright Withal, he was
as much without art ns without arrog
ance
This was characteristic of Crisp.
When Rhea played Camille In Alhaugh’s
Opera House Crlsp’a chair was the one
In front of mine. When the curtain
descended on the second act he turned
and said:
“It Isn’t often I come to the theater;
Mr*. Crisp Is much of an Invalid, and
I commonly pul in my evenings with
her. iRut I was curious to see this
play of *Camilie.‘ The last time I saw
'CuraHie* my father was Armand and
my mother was Camille; and while I
should not care to nay”—here Crlap
■railed—"that my mother was the
greatest Camille .that ever lived,
think she was far and away superior
to this lady.”
“Who Is he?” asked an English gen
tleman who was with me. “Is he con
nected with the theaters?”
“He Is the speaker of the house or
representatives”—you should have wit
nessed tha stare of that Briton—“and,
per Incident, the second moil power
ful officer in a nation of ninety mil
lions.”
THE SHADOW CHILD.
Whv do tha wheel* go whirling round.
Mother, mother?
Oh. mother, are they giant* bound.
And wlU they growl forever?
Tea. Oery glam* undetgrmmd.
Daughter, little daushter.
FOR SALE
Nos. 607 and 609 Mulbegry aL. 3-
Itory brick building. Second Mary
arranged for rAiidchce. BARGAIN for
QUICK BALE.
Orange *L residence, 10 rooms, re
cently overhauled and painted. Alley
on 2 aide*: tot.
Tv/o-atory br;ck store In good bual-
n«*s locality. Will exchange for small
farm. Inquire at office for parflcu-
U ”ew Cottage; largo lot. at Crump’s
Pa 81x-roou> dwelling and 4 mcrea In
^*36°acre* near town. Plenty of wa
ter and wood*. $1,160.
100 acres splendid level land. New
Improvements; flno orchard of 2.000
tr pome splendid farms from $6.00 per
aC Home* funds on long time at 7 per
cent. Cali on me next week SURE.
GEO. W. DUNCAN
ARCHITECT#
,u*». 414 Fourth St.
No.. 378 Orange St..
No. 453 Second St
No. 666 Poplar St
No. 742 CoHffge St
No. 270 Columbus St
No. 015 Poplar St....
$25,000
To Loan
More peopio como to us for loans
than go to any one else. The-reasons
are plain: We always have the money
in tlie bank ready to pay. We make
examinations promptly; that means
no delay for you. We have ono
charge to everybody.
Geo. B. Turpin Sons
For Sale
A neat five-room cottage on about
an aero of around fronting car. lino,
near Log Cabin Club an exlremoty deslr
able place and with plenty of room
for another house without crowding.
Price 12,509. This U cheap consid
ering location and Improvements. Can
moke reasonable terms if wanted
Little of Everything
o—
A Brooklyn nun ha. .ecurad a patent
on • .piked driving wlieel and masers to
replaco the uPMaarv nboels to convert an
automobile Into a roociur-driven .Irish
when mow la on the ground.
Clement Cuaha. *2. father of fifty
living children, was arrested In Taun
ton. Mas,., for non-.import of air.
and four-day-old twins.
The Argentine ant, which haa
wrought l.wvor with Oho Louisiana
auger plantaUons. ha. now appeared
oa the Pacific moot.
Germany’s first eteitrlc ferry boat re
cently urn. launch. I at Duisburg. Ii
ha. a rapacity fur *11 passenger., be.
utfie. horse* and v Hi trie*.
Whr do I pick the threads all day,
Wtfno h mmSun**cVudren are at play?
And must I work forever?
Tra. shidosr-chnd, the llvrioog day.
Dauchter. fit tie dauahter.
Tour hand. mint pick toe I
And feel lb* sunshine never.
Why do 1
Motkar.
tt ah dav tons I nn and run—
Run with Ik* wheel* forever?
The birds ur sin. ill! I, done*
IXi up titer, mile daughter.
But with the wheel, ronr feet mull run
Run with th, wheel, foravrr’
WO- do I feel oo tired each night.
Mother, mother?
The whei* ore ain'tys boastna bright:
moat ph-k toe thread, away,
h, aotwhln. never.
do the bird, ring In th. .un.
Oh. hfthv thine BO Molt and while.
Daughter. mile daubhter.
The Mg wheel, grind u. la their
And they will (rind forever.
And Is the white thread never apn.
Mother, mother?
And In to. white doth never done—
tow y«u and me done never?
Oh. yen. ear thread wtrt alt b. rnnn,
Unuahier. little dauahter.
fi'hon W. lie Aiwa tn Ih* r ~
arorh as m
And i
tnd '
Mel
th, n_
Out In th.
> that I
’ d«r.
A company of Iff pick'd asldiera
from tho Herman army rorowtly la t» Nor.'.iwltow
, . . .. . „ . minute, built a bridge of Meet boats Itouaht
lam of k.e»lng thewkvtrna all** and ami plan. I*a fret tong by id wide. | Whe
MUafylSd Ike rial aw ot the landlord
. win pm
-Jatltay. mathae?
Ob. shall we taosh and ring aud play
For Rent
.$60.00
.$60.00
.156.00
.160.00
.$36.00
.$26.00
.$50.00
Georgia Loan & Trust Co.
565 Mulberry Street,
For Sale
;In Vinoville, on the car lints,
Loiter n six-room cottage, on
large lot, for ti quick bale, nt
r $2,000.00
This is a new house and has
porcelain tub, cabinet mantels,
and is generally wliat is called
a modem house. I can make
terms with n fair cash pay
ment
Frank B. West
Real Estate and Insurance,
417 Cherry St.
CURRAN R. ELLIS
ARCHITECT
Office Phone 239. Residency Phone 2519.
Office.—Bills Bldg
Cherry St. and Cotto*. Ave.
MACON. OA.
frank r. Sapp.
Architect.
Office: Rooms 22 and 2* Fourth Na
tional aanw Bulldlnn.
Telephone—R»*. 652: Office 990-
ALEXANDER BLAIR,
Architect.
Office Pnono 71.
CHARLES A. CALDWELL,
# Civil Engineer.
WASHINGTON BLOCK. Room
Water suppiy. water power, eewe—
age and municipal engineering,
port*, plana, specifications, _ ‘ “
and *up«rlntendance. Off
Residence phone 3288.
P. E. DENNIS, Architect.
CARLYLE NISBET,
Architect.
Offic, Phone 163.
Grand Bid#?.
Residence 64L
Macon. Go.
CONTRACTING AND pUILDING.
Residence phone 696.'
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Classified advertisement* under, thle
DR. M. M. STAPLER.
Eye, Ear, No*e and Throat.
Doctors’ Floor. American* Notional Bank
Bldg. Office rhope. 2742; re*!dence. UlS.
OCULI6T AND AURIST.
DR. J. H. SHORTER,
Eye. Ear, Noe* and Throat.
**The Grand” Rid*., next to Court Hou*e.
Phones: Office, $72; ra»idence, $W.
EYE. EAR. NOSE. THROAT.
PHYSICIANS AND BURGEONS.
DR. TH08; H. HALL, Ejye. Ear. Nose.
Throat Specialist, 607-$ Grand Bldg.
DR.
Phono*:
mV
RY C. McKAY.
^^Gr^nd JBuliding.
2554; Residence, 1465.
UL JlroAUI
iltwrSr ft. room. I’and 5,
■ck. Hour**. • to M r. nu.
Telephone con- t
fence, 572 Mul’
12 to l and fi tp 6p. m. - -.......
nectlona at office and reaidence.
DR. J. J. 8U0KRS, . _ _
Permanently located. In tho special*
ties venereal. I^>st energy restored.
Female IrreguUrltieB and polnon oak?
euro guaranteed. Address in confidence^
with stamp. 610 Fourth st., Macon. Oa.
H. Horne
REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE AND
LOANS,
Grand Building. Phone 4H
oiure, Jin uiiu yuu vui
Store, 4:*l Cherry street,
iroad track facilities. I
Second and Third floor Evening New*
DWELLINGS.
f -t. dwelling near Whittle School.
•r. dwelling 210 Flcat atreet
-r. dwelling, 457 and 459 New street.
J-r. dwelling, 243 Carling avenue.
$-r. cottage South College vtreat.
$-r. cottage. lojmn ave.. VlnevOle (new)
C-r. cottage. 4K and 40S Ro*s atreet.
l-r. in dwelling. Ml Orange atreet.
Elegant - apartments tn Dr.. Waster’s
new apartment hduae of 5. 6. $ or 18
room*. Steam heat, water and Janitor
lea furnished.
Brown House
Opposite Union Depot—MACON v GA.
American
Plan.
F. BARTOW. STUBBS. Proprietor.
W. aomotroNO. Manaoer.
aa4 roan say.
Money lo Lend on ,
Real Estate
Well rated commercial paper
and very low ratea on Mar
ketabla securities.
Macon Sayings Bank
QEORQIA RAILROAD.
Departi
}}•” Mr*.
Arrival
1 ~Tn Z ,b»i^M l fe’X 1 !g7Wmaa <>.- » OT It
*• ■ r ™ ,r ’ *"• V*-[ (Wintry MM year e«t«rM| mma tiu* Il ii*« p 'CL
■fMJftlfcMk prims Vim lUUM# •$ rnwfc »»• MA4» M +****• I Till iruip tmimtf MLiiili i tl «Mi*r II iC 1 ' 4ii
Inward lovo'a you at 4rr*M It a|t#»|"* N **• •vmMi Mid Vi m | rmi mm vMffir •- o* • •««**+* w. w harowmk. • a.
I ,,u »v»va » wir l(«v»f*4, IjRMi, I **•$».* >* #WH> MbaalVt I . M Cherry H
DENTISTRY.
DR*. J. M. & R. HOLMES MASON,
Dentist*.
264 Second at.. Phone 955.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
FOR SALE
$ 900—'Will buy one of the n'cest lota
on the crest of North Highlands.
It la lot No. 22, fronts 70 feet •
and i*_ 210 feet deep. We will
also help you to build on mmi
on reasonable terms.
- . . $ MO—A nice vacant lot on • Duncan
pu 8 .X” ^‘t".ra ltaUro^!i n tr»?k m f^?“ a «nuo. on Huguvnln Heights.
— 2U.OOO—WUl buy clow, tn business
property, renting for $100.00 per
month; this is two brick stores,
and always rents, in the heart
of tho city. “Shows good Inveat-
ment. * -
•We have $10,000.00 to lend on good
property at 7 and 8 per cent—no delay
if the security la sufficient.
Murphey & Taylor
Real Estate, Loans and Insurance.
Phene 267. Citizens Nat. Bank Bldg..
- For Rent
It Hilt Park Si., 7-r 227.59
... Cleveland Are., <-r 112.09
497 Duncan Ave.,' 9-r 920.09
nt Duncan Are., 7-r...,.,,,...919.59
111 Cleveland Aw 8-7.! 929.09
125 Piedmont Ave., 5-r 212.64
Ut Lamar St.. «-r .525.09
421 Boundary St.. 9-r 920.00
509 Hawthorne St. 5-r 112.Oo
lit Bembeit Ave.. T-r......... ..IfiT.M
TH Anderson Bt.. T-r .Titfifi-ta
... LUae st„ l-r I l.fifi
FOR 8ALE.
A plot of alx (9) beautiful'lot., front
ing Bellevue avenue on c.r line Ju.t
beyond Log Cabin, finely l.K-ated and
will make splendid bom, alto., br.tdc
there about one.half acre In etch
lot. W. offer the entire plot of alx
lota all for O.VLT 1900.
Jordan Realty Co.
Real Estate, Imurance
and Loam.
Phone 1136.
National Bank Building,