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MACON, DUBLIN AND SAVANNAH
RAILROAD COMPANY
LOCALTIME TABLE.
Effective July 2, 1911.
No.lß N 0.20 Stations. N 0.19 N 0.17
A.M. P.M. Lv. Ar. A.M. P.M.
~7:10 3:25 Macon 11:15 — 4:30
7:22 3:37 Swiftcreek 11:03 4:20
7:30 3:45 Drybranch 10:55 4:12
7:34 3:49 Atlantic 10:51 4:09
7:38 3:53 Pike’s Peak 10:48 4:06
7:45 4:00 Fitzpatrick 10:42 4:00
7:50 .4:04 Ripley 10:37 3:53
8:00 4:14 Jeff’sonville 10:27 3:42
8:10 4:23 Gallemore 10:15 3:30
8:20 4:33 Danvilel 10:07 3:22
8:25 4:38 Allentown 10:02 3:17
8:34 4:47 Montrose %:53 3:08
8:44 4:57 Dudley 9:42 2:58
8:50 5:03 Shewmake 9:36 2:52
8:55 5:09 Moore 9:29 2:45
9:10 5:25 ar \ lv 9:15 2:30
Dublin
9:15 5:30 lv ar 9:10 2:25
9:17 5:32 SouMD&SJct 9:08 2:23
9:21 5:36 NorMD&SJct 9:04 2:19
9:31 5:45 Catlin 8:54 2:09
9:40 5.54 Mlntor 8:47 2:01
9:50 6:05 Rockledge 8:36 1:50
9:55 6:10 Orland 8:31 1:45
10:08 6:23 Soporton 8:19 1:33
10:19 6:34 Tarrytown 8:07 1:21
10:26 6:41 Kibbee 8:00 1:15
10:40 6:55 -Vidalia 7:45 1:00
CONNECTIONS
At Dublin with the Wrightsville and
Tennille and the Dublin and South
western for Eastman and Tennille
and intermediate points.
At Macon iwth Southern railway
from and to Cincinnati, Chattanooga,
Rome, Birmingham, Atlanta and in
termediate points. Also the Central
of Georgia, G., S. & F. railway, Ma,
son and Birmingham railway and the
Georgia railroad.
At Rockledge with the Millen and
Southwestern for Wadley and inter
mediate points.
At Vidalia with the Seaboard Air
Line for Savannah and intermediate
points, and with the Millen and South
western for Millen, Stillmore and in
termediate points.
J. A. STREYER, G. P. A.,
Macon, Ga.
Joley's
ORINO
I/axativQ
I* Pleasant aad Effective
CURES
Constipation, Stomach and
Liver Trouble.
by stimulating these organs and
restoring their natural action.
Is best for women and chil
dren as ORINO does not grips
or nauseate. /
Portable end Btatlonarr
ENGINES
AND BOILERS.
oa*, Luth and Shingle Milla Injeeton,
Tump* and fitting*, Wood Bawl, Split
jtera, Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gmo
tlaa Engines.
LARGE STOCK AT
LOMBARD
Feundry, Machine and Boiler Werki
Supply Store.
AUGUSTA, GA.
tmrsEiwTfw
Kako* Kidneys and Bladder Right
fl Your
Printing
ez q rm
If it is worth
doing at all,
it’s worth do
ing well.
□
First class work
at all times is
our motto.
Let us figure
with you on
your next job.
czd m
GREAT TEMPLE FOR SHRINERS
P Ai
A
I 1 *™ w list
Mill®
-
CHICAGO— On Tuesday, October 31, Imperial Potentate John Frank Treat
laid the corner stone of the new Medinah Temple in this city, and
the ceremony was witnessed by an Immense assemblage of Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine. Medinah is the largest organization of Shriners in the
world, and its new temple will be the largest building devoted solely to
Shrine purposes.
GUN SHOOTS BOMBS
Device May Make Aeroplane
Deadly Machine.
It Has Been Predicted That It Would
Make the Mightiest Destructive
Force Known to Modern
Warfare.
New York. —Ever since the aero
plane has been developed into a prac
tical flying machine it has been pre
dicted that it would be the mightiest
destructive force known to modern
warfare. But not until a practical
gun for use on aeroplanes had been
built, it was realized, would the power
of the aeroplane as an aggressive fac
tor in war be recognized.
This gun has now .been invented
and is at present being tested by its
designer, Lieut. Riley E. Scott, a West
Pointer and expert mathematician
who has spent years of time in trying
to solve the problems that would pro
duce a perfectly accurate bomb hurl
ing apparatus.
As soon as men learned how to op
erate a flying machine they began to
practice, throwing imitation bombs at
objects hundreds of feet below them
on earth. Batleshlps, drawn to the ex
act scale of a dreadnaught, have been
whitewashed on aviation fields and
the aviators have thrown oranges at
these targets to see how nearly they
could come to hitting the make be
lieve warships in a vital spot.
Glenn H. Curtiss, In July a year ago,
made some of the first bomb throwing
tests. A floating target in the shape
of a battleship was constructed on
Lake Keuka, Hammondsport, N. Y. In
the presence of a number of army and
navy officers who had been assigned
to watch the experiment, tar. Curtiss
flew his biplane over the lake and
more than a score of times hit the tar
get with small bags of sand represent
ting bombs. The military authorities
present took accurate measurements
and carefully examined the targets
after the tests, with the result that
they proclaimed the test highly suc
cessful.
With Lieutenant Scott’s new aerial
gun, the shooting of highly explosive
projectiles from the heavens on to
cities, forts or warships at sea, be
comes a simple matter. The accuracy
a gunner acquires in the navy or
army can now also be put into opera
tion from an aeroplane. Heretofore
aviators have been laughed at because
they either aimed oadly or their aim
was spoiled by the speed at which the
aeroplane was traveling through the
air, or the falling bomb would be de
flected by a strong wind current.
To obviate these difficulties, Lieu-
TO GIVE AWAY OLD SERMONS
London Rector Offers Them to Cler
ical Brethren on Condition That
They Be Read Aloud Twice.
London. —Many young curates will
be able to acquire a vicarious reputa
tion as pulpit orators if they accept
an offer made by Canon Jessopp, rec
tor of Scaring, East Dereham.
"I have a stock of old sermons,” the
canon writes, “which must approach a
thousand in number, very few of
which I shall ever preach again; and
yet they have their merits and might
peradventure be useful, to other
preachers, young and old.
“I am prepared to offer my younger
clerical brethren little bundles of my
old sermons which have done duty
during the last 40 years or so, if
they will give a promise never to
preach any sermon of mine till they
have read it twice aloud before they
make use of it in the pulpit.”
Muffler Is Expensive.
Darien, Conn. —Because Chester A.
Williams of Stamford opened the muf
fler of his automobile to help the car
up a hill, he paid the local court a
small fine and costs of $17.46. Curious
to know how the costs of so brief an
action could be so large, he was given
the following itemized statement:
“One complaint, $1; one grand
juror, $2.12; one warrant, 60 cents;
one subpoena, 25 cents; court, $3; of
ficers’ fees, $5.14; taking bond. 10
cents; copying record, $2; continu
ance. 25 cents; witness feert $3”
Members of the American Automo
bile association are advised to go up
Darien’s hill with closed muffler here
aditr.
tenant Scott has constructed his aero
plane gun in such away that the
speed of the machine, the velocity of
the wind and the distance from the
earth are all calculated automatically
and with reasonable accuracy. In ap
pearance the Scott gun resembles
somewhat a ship's compass.
The aviator must first sight the ob
ject at which he intends to fire
through a telescope that is attached
to the gun. In order to attain the nec
sary accuracy when dropping the
bombs it is of first importance for the
gunner to know the speed at which he
is traveling and the height from the
ground. The speed is determined by
the use of a stop watch attached to
the gun In conjunction with the tele
scope. In addition tables have been
prepared to be used by the aviator in
making his measurements.
The gun is to be tested from a "riot
monoplane,” which has been built by
Alfred Moisant, a brother of the late
John Moisant. The monoplane will
have room for a passenger and the
gun. One of the interesting features
of the gun Is that no concussion will
’ be felt by the shooting of the projec
tile. It Is simply dropped at the
proper Instant and finds its way to
earth by itself.
Mr. Moisant is very much interested
in the new gun, and in aviation circles
it is generally understood why he
should be. His brother, John Moisant.
It has often been said, took up flying
with the object of using the aeroplane
In war President Zelaya of Nicaragua
encouraged him to take up aviation
with that very definite purpose.
WALKS STREET IN HER SLEEP
In Night Dress, Young Brooklyn
Woman Plods _ Through Mud—
Taken Home by Policeman.
New York. —Barefooted and sound
asleep, attired only in her night
clothing, and with her hair hanging
in a long braid down her back, a
young woman plodded along through
the rain and mud of Nostrand avenue
In Brooklyn early the other day, be
tween the car tracks and the curb,
utterly indifferent to her own uncom
fortable plight or the astonished gaze
of two score passengers in a street
car that overtook her.
They wrapped her in coats and she
awoke in fright. She said she was
Miss Sophie Michaels, twenty-two
years old. of 206 Lee avenue.
A policeman took her home. He
found the kitchen door open and the
girl’s parents still unaware that she
was missing.
NECKTIES WORN IN GERMANY
One of Signs of Times in Kaiser’s Em
pire—Man Should Be on Lookout
for What Is Most Beautiful.
Berlin.—Among the signs of pros
perity which have marked the Ger
mans of recent years is the new and
increasing attention devoted to the
subject of neckties. A Teutonic philo
sopher on clothes writes about the
matter wdth the earnestness and pro
fundity which distinguish bis coun
trymen in all branches of scientific re
search.
He does not go so far as to define
man as a necktie-wearing animal, but
no shallow power of observation is in
dicated by his remark that while the
very being of woman seeks expression
in ornament and coloring, man, at
least, for the last hundred years, has
renounced anything that might be con
sidered loud until his fashion of cloth
ing himself has become universally
monotonous with one exception—the
necktie.
On this he exhausts all his fancy,
displays all his taste and either ac
quires the silent approbation of his
fellow-mortals or exposes himself to
their satire and condemnation. The
necktie question then, being one of
the first importance. It is well to bear
reverently the conclusions the Teu
tonic investigator arrives at; all the
more as they will be found in the
main correct.
First of all, as there are no canons
of taste binding on all mankind in the
matter every man must choose his
neckties on his own resposibility He
will do well, says the philosopher, not
to rely, as many men do, on the way of
even a very pretty girl behind the
RESTORIIOLD CITY
Monument of Southwest Is Now
in Hands of Government.
Casa Grande, Near Florence, Aria,
Repaired as Far as Possible
—Built Like Present Day
Cement House.
Denver, Colo. —One of the most re
markable of the monuments under
control of the national government,
the Casa Grande, near Florence, Ariz,
has been restored and repaired as far
as possible and an effort will be made
next year to provide better facilities
for persons wishing to visit it.
Discovered in 1694 by Padre Kino,
one of the missionaries sent to the
new world by Spain, the Casa Grande
is considered a typical structure of the
aboriginal natives of the southwest,
and it is the only structure mentioned
by the early Spanish explorers that
can be checked and Interpreted down
to the present day.
It was originally an extensive group
of buildings and no doubt served a
considerable community as a place of
defense against the wandering tribes
of the desert —ancestors of the war
like Navajos and Apaches. The name
Casa Grande, in Spanish meaning
“great house” was applied originally
to the large single structure standing
in the southwest corner of the area
covered by the entire collection of
buildings. The total area at one time
covered with buildings is about sixty
five acres. Mounds and scattered de
bris show where the buildings stood.
The building known as Casa Grande
was one of the smallest of the struc
tures, but for some reason its walls
remained in a much better state of
preservation than the walls of the
larger buildings. The walls rise to a
height of 25 feet. The area covered
and inclosed by the standing walls is
43 feet by 59 feet. Evidently the build
ing was three stories in height The
main building rose to two stories, but
a central tier rose another story.
The construction of this house is
unique. It is not of adobe, but is what
is known as "cajon,” or puddled clay
molded into walls. The cajon, in huge
blocks from three to five feet long,
two feet high, and from three to four
feet thick, was manufactured on the
spot, much as cement makers manu
facture the material for modern ce
ment houses. Walls made of cajon are
even harder than adobe, and, as long
as there is a roof on the structure
made of such material the wind and
rain have little effect. Without a pro
tecting roof the cajon will wear down
gradually. It is by this process that
most of the buildings near the Casa
Grande have been worn down.
After an extended investigation and
report by scientists in the employ of
the government, it was decided to
brace up the tottering walls with
brick. Most of the bad effects of ero
sion were visible at the base of the
walls, the falling water from heavy
rainstorms having eaten great holes
close to the ground. The northeast
and southeast corners had fallen, and
large blocks of cajon were strewn
about the ground. Other walls were
tottering, and it was unsafe to come
near the structure.
Masons were set at work and braced
up the walls with gricks, detracting
somewhat from the appearance of the
building, but preserving the remains
for future generations. A corrugated
iron roof -was put over the entire
structure as a last resort. This de
stroys the picturesque effect of the
ruin, but it practically assures its
preservation for generations to come.
Raises 100-Pound Squash.
Couderay, Wis.—A large hubbard
squash raised on his farm in south
ern Sawyer county was brought into
Winter by Roy Van Alstine. It meas
ures twenty inches through the cen
ter, thirty Inches long, and weighs
100 pounds.
necktie counter; nor will he be guided
in his choice by mother, sister or
fiancee, for, as is shrewdly remarked,
they will be likely to take their own
scheme and standard of dress, not his.
Again, a man should not buy a
necktie merely because he wants one.
He should always be on the lookout
for what is beautiful in this line, and
having seized the opportunity and
purchased it, should add it to his col
lection. The material should be first
class, and one should wear a different
tie every day. The final injunction
is that the necktie should harmonize
with the clothes, that it should be
carefully tied so as not to look like a
rope around the neck and that it
should not be disfigured by a pin.
LOVE NOTE ON ICE 10 YEARS
Answer to Egg Message Not Received
by Writer Until Long After He
Had Been Married.
Terre Haute, Ind. —Because the love
letter he wrote on an egg ten years
ago wasn’t delivered until a few days
ago, John Zenor of Bowling Green is
wondering over the ways of fate. The
egg message invited the receiver to
write to him with matrimony as the
pleasant object. Less than a year
after it was writen Zenor married.
The other day he received a letter
from a girl in Brooklyn saying she
had received the egg and that she
wanted to start the wlth-Cupid-in-sight
correspondence. The love letter has
been lying in cold storage ten years.
Zenor decides.
DANGEROUS VARIETY,
W 1
Caroline—She may be a gossip, but
I believe she tells the truth.
Pauline —My dear, the truth is fre
quently the worst form of gossip imag
inable. -
MRS. SELBY AND PRIZE BABY
"I have always used Cuticura Soap
and no other for my baby and he has
never had a sore of any kind. He
does not even chafe as most babies
do. I feel sure that it is all owing to
Cuticura Soap, for he is fine and
healthy, and when five months old,
won a prize in a baby contest. It
makes my heart ache to go into so
many homes and see a sweet-faced
baby with the whole top of its head
a solid mass of scurf, caused by poor
soap. I always recommend Cuticura,
and nine times out of ten the next
time I see the mother she says: ‘Oh!
I am so glad you told me of Cuticura.’ ’’
(Signed) Mrs. G. A. Selby, Redondo
Beach, California, Jan. 15, 1911.
Although Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment are sold everywhere, a sample
of each, with 32-page book, will be
mailed free on application to "Cuti
cura,” Dept. 20 L, Boston.
Wasted Blessings.
Aunty (just arrived) —Bless your
sweet heart!
Marie —You needn’t waste any of
your blessings on him, aunty.
Aunty—Him? Who?
Marie —My former sweetheart.
We’re mad at each other now. —
Judge.
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPCDINE*
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudiue will relieve you*
It’s liepud—pleasant to take—acts iinmedP
ately. Try it. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at drug
stores.
It Is much easier for us to forgive
some one for being an enemy to our
friend, than for being a friend to
our enemy.
Pain and Swelling seldom indicate in
ternal organic trouble. They are usually
the result of local cold or inflammation
which can be quickly removed by Hamlins
Wizard Oil.
Some men have a well-seated preju
dice against giving up their place to a
woman in a crowded car.
Marriage is a contract —and there
are lots of contract jumpers.
k ~ ~
li >4
HiiHiiiiiniiiiiiifiHiiiHdiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'.unnn
TinirimrrnirniniiiTiHiiiinmTniHiiHiiiirniiiiiitnmT
ALCOHOL—3 PER CENT
/Vegetable Preparation for As
similatingtheFoodandßegula-
M ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
l.;— 1 : —
tir Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
K nessandßest.Containsneiiher
l j> Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
$ Not Narc otic
R«ipt of Old DrSAMV£LRYfC/fER
Pumphin Saad -
o*! Alx Senna * \
• J. Rochelle Salls •
S* Anise Seed . I
Ml Pepp-rmint. - \
.S BiCnrbanateSodti* [
harm Seed - I
At* . Clarified Sugar I ,
^'Q Wintergreen Flavor '
^0 A perfect Remedy for Constipa
><J) tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
^0 Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish
kQ ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
. r
Vh facsimile Signature of
gb*> The Centaur Company.
&* NEW TORK.
X^Guaranteed under the Foodan^l
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
ism ii ii —ii—iiuiimiatwwiif waimwiin
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tSp PERFECTION HL°HEATER
In every cold weather emeraency you need a Perfection
Smokeless Oil Heater. Is your bedroom cold when you dress
or undress ? Do your water pipes freeze in the cellar ? Is it
chilly when the wind whistles around the exposed comers of /
your house?
Xj**** o & Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater brings complete com-
i fort. Can be carried anywhere. Always ready for use—-
glowing heat from the minute it is lighted.
yXjJc your dealer to show you a Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater | or
for descriptive circular to any agency of
k / Standard Oil Company
fj (Incorporated) * *
MY
DAUGHTER ’
WASCUREH
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Baltimore, Md.—"l send yon here,
with the picture of my fifteen year old*
daughter Alice, who*
was restored to
health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta-*
ble Compound. Sh«
was pale, with dark
circles under her
eyes, weak and irri
table. Two different
doctors treated her
and called it Green
Sickness, but she
grew worse all .Uia
time. Lydia E.Prsk-
ham’s Vegetable Compound was rec
ommended, and after taking three bot
tles she has regained her health, thanks
to your medicine. I can recommend it
for all female troubles.”—Mrs. L. A.
Couilran, 1103 Rutland Street, Balti
more, Md.
Hundreds of such letters from moth
ers expressing their gratitude for what
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound has accomplished for them have
been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass.
Young Girls, Heed This Advice.,^
Girls who are troubled with painful
or irregular periods, backache, head
ache, dragging-down sensations, faint,
ing spells or indigestion, should ta*
immediate action and be restored w
health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vego
table Compound. Thousands have been
restored to health by its use.
Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn*
Mass., for advice, free.
ITHESE^cd
PlLLs>^^
ActW^
on Torpid Livers
—quickly relieving BHiousncM.Constlpation and the
other Illa which follow In their train—such as Ipdf*
geetlon, heartburn, dyspepsia, dizziness, sick head
ache, faintness, fluttering at the heart, rheumatnm
and other disorders arising from a derangement of
the stomach and impure blood.
Mandrake la the best known specific for disorders
of the liver and blood. It forms the ineddciusT
basis for Dr. DeWitt's Mandrake Pills.
Keep You in Good Health
Will Not Gripe the Bowels
Price, 25 Cent*
The W. J. Parker Company
Manufacturing Druggists
Baltimore, Maryland - - - U. S. aJ*<
If your dealer does not sell this remedy, write us.
iwKIEEaBEEaeSMZ^^
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I AIT T nii^iiiii AND
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GOES OS LIKE PAINT; LOOKS LIKE WALL PAPEK: YOU CAN"WA?H 11
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KJEISTONE VAKNISH CO., Brooklyn, N.Y.
ent
ror Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
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Bears the Z z tJh
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CftSTDRIfI
TH« OUNTAUR COMPANY, MBW YORK OITV.