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‘IILIi’fHOUGHTs FOR THE DAY
OUR WHOLE DUTY—+“Take dili
‘gent heed. . . . to love the Lord
your God and to walk in His com
m.ndrients, and to cleave unto Him,
and to serve Him with all your
heart and with all your soul.” Jos.
22:5. ;
¥ F"E BUFFALO RANK
In aigulley on the Missouri river's
westery bank a few hundred buffalo
nestle lazily where once roamed thou.
sands of thelr kin. ?
They réepresent the remainder :of
the old Scotty Phillips herd, omce the
largest buffalo herd in captivity and
the source of almost all the buffalo
to be seen in American parks and pre.
serves,
Phillips, an Indian trader and a
rancher of a generation ago, was the
first to take practical recognition of
the fact that the buffulo was dying
out. Hoiesnbllshed a herd of the
shaggy™beasts on his ranch here, and
with hje half-breed wife cared for
the animals until the herd numbered
many thousand, and was virtually the
only bixggalo herd, wild or tame, in
the United States.
Sinee the death of Phillips some
years ago the herd has been largely
dllperui, and qul and reserves in
a dozen gtates have established herds
of their‘.’fiown by acquiring animals
from the ranch here, Circuses and
carnivals also have been good cus
tomers, -
The Phillips herd now numbers less
than 2,000, but each fall the ranch is
the scene of a big buffalo hunt, in
which sportsmen from throughout the
country participate,
Pioneers of western South Dakota
recall many interesting tales about
buffalo hunts of bygone days. The
most famous was at Buffalo Gap, ‘l]
D., so-called bécause there, at a pass
through a mountain chain, the buffalo
would congregate at the migrating
season, sometimes to the number of
800,000, —
The buffalo hunter's greatest peril
laid in the danger of being unhorsed
in the path of a buffalo stampede.!
The ani'fl_;als. running forward, would
never .swerve from a straight line.
Occasiomally the buffalo would charge
a mountain hunter, but the animals
are easlly outridden it a path of es
cape is clear.
Likelthood that the buffalo ever
will become extinct has virtually pass.
ed. A hardy animal, the buffalo will
live and flourish in captivity. He is
ditficult to transport by train, how.
ever, and most of the shipments of
buffalo from the Phillips ranch have
been made on passenger train sched.
ule, longer trips proving fatal to many
of the beasts,
“® MRS, ROSS UNOPPOSED
Nellie Tayloe Ross, the first woman
governor of the United States, ap
pears to be the unanimous choice of
the democrats in the Wyoming pil
mary election on August 17. No op
posing candidate will be on her bal.
lot and pdlitlcal obsén;ers do not be.
lieve a single name will be “written
in” by the voters,
The woman governor, however, is
certain to face a man in the No\'em.!
ber election, as the two candidmesi
for the republican nomination are
men. They are Secretary of Sme}
Frank E. Lucas and State Englneer?
Frank C. Emerson. |
Thrust into the governorship frmn}
the role of a housewife following the
“GET THAT MACHINE”
The voters of Georgia are warm.
ing up to one of the greatest cam.
paign slogang they have ever adopted
—“get that machine,” This word is
going down the line in fine manner
—going down the line surely and cer.
tainly. Whether it will do the work
will have to be made definite in the
primary September 8, but Georglans
are fast joining hands to “get that
machine,”
There isn’'t a particle of prejudice
and meanness in it. The slogan is
| commendable, thoroughly sensible.
Kven many of those who are already
determined to go after the machine do
not know all of the great handicaps
that have fallen upon those who try
to do Wworth while things in Georgla
because that machine is in the way.
Progress isn't possible, Nothing in
state affairs can go without approval
{rom those dominating. No man in
office in Atlanta is sure that when he
does his whole duty he can retain
his place. He asks himself often if
when he conducts the public’s busi
negs as it should be and that conduct
happens to run counter to the wishes
of the machine — every officer who
éblnas to the deciding point wonders
_whethef doing his whole duty towards
the people will not in the doing cost
him his official head.
On the other hand not a place can
be filled in any department by any of
ticial without first consulting the ma
chine and naming the friends of the
machine. This is all maintained in
order to build the machine stronger.
That kind of corrupt dominaticn of
Georgia public affairs fs an abomina
tion to good government. It has been
a bane for years. It will continue
g 0 in the years to come unless it is
put down.
Governor Walker is back home en-{
thusiastic about the good things he
tried to do for Georgia——vemhuslastlcl
because he has been in the company
of a group of governors who talked
state progress. He wants Gerogia to
have some of these things. He isn't
dabbling in the primary that is under
way, but men asking for office in'
that contest kept Clff Walker out of
the progress which he had set down
for Georgia, Nearly everybody in
Georgia knows well who they are.
They are at the head of a machine
that sticks its gripping grafting paw
into everything this state seeks to do
—and keeps it there till it amounts
to nothing but waste and graft.
We want this type of politics wiped,
out—it is a great cancer eating at
the heart of all progress. Peanut
politics is a gentleman’s name for it
Georgiang are offered a man who will
clean out with that kind of traffic
in the state's affairs. Dr. L. G. Hard
man is making great progress as a
candidate for governor. He is gaining
rapidly. He will be the next man in
charge of that office if those who
know him to be the outstanding type
of man he is, will only go to the polls
and vote for him. They are fast be
ginning to realize that they must
make that kind of choice to be rid of
Ahe troubles they have so long borne
in state public affairs, due to peanut
politics. He is the man to rid Geor
gia of the gripping blight of the ma
chine. 1f Georgians let the whole
ismle. governor's office and all, fall
into the hands of the machine, they
‘mny well stand aside for a while
‘uml weep. There can be nothing but
Imm‘e blight, We have our chance to
get out of it now, The word is go
llng down the line—" Get the machine.”
We hope the task will be well done
by the voters in the primary.
SLATE ALREADY JAMMED
Although congress has hardly rest
ed from its return home from seven
months work at the capitol, atten.
tion already is being called to the
formidable array of legislative prob
lems to be tackled in the brief ninety
day session beginning in December.
Just where time will be found for
the work to be do;w is expected 'lo
\__—________________________
Edmnh of her husband, to complete
two years of his unexpired term, Mrs.
Ross' supporters say she has given
Wyvoming a notable state administra
tion. Mrs. Ross, unlike the situation
in Texas, has had no husband to
guide her hand in the intricacies of
state affairs.
O N SRS P R e .
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WRANGEL, THE BIG POLAR BEAR, Is the Red Grange of the Oakland, California, zoo. These ]
hot days it keeps them busy keeping Wrangel cool. ,
cause leaders more than a passing
worry, as several committees have
been given authority to meet early
in the fall to draft more bills to be
added to the large number now listed
on the calendar,
As usual at short sessions, the
senate faces the most acute situation,
as. this body has yet to dispose of a
numb.m' of meauutq’i already passed
by the house and sent there for ac
gion, ! :
Of this group, two, the omnibus
rivers and harbors bill and the French
war debt settlement, promise consid
erable trouble,
Preceding the convening of the ses
sion, the senate will meet on Nov.
10, as a court to hear impeachment
charges brought by the house against
Federal Judge George W. English of
the eastern Illinois district. No time
is set for conclusion of the trial which,
if extendeéd into the regular session,
will add to the congestion.
~ Both senate and house also will
‘have before them the long smn(ung‘
!questlon of disposing of the govern. |
‘ment propertics at Muscles Shoals.‘
Alabama, with little indication that
speedy action ('hn be obtained. !
Other matters awaiting attention
include the MacFadden branch hank-l
ing bill, the White and Dill radio
bills, a report to be made by the
commission investigating land grants
on the Northern Pacific Railway com.
pany, and a number of minor meas
ures.
Besides, the regular annual appro
priation bills to provide funds for the
various governmental departments
must be acted on, while the house
lcommerce committee expects to pre
sent some form of coal - legislation,
“and the house ways and means com
!mit(eu plans to draft a bill to cerry
out alien property awards.
An English inventor’s windmill for
generating electricity has adjustable
sails and a governor that maintains
a constant voltage when the wind va
ries in pressure.
SHEEPHEAD
CROAKERS
MULLET
TROUT
o o
PHE CORDELE IMSPATCH
ALBERT WOODRUFF WAS
HERE SEEKING VOTES
Albert Woodruff, who came so close
to winning as candidate for the public
gervice commigsion in the last pri
mary, was here yesterday afternoon
shaking hands with the voters in his
race for the place again this year.
lllc is a hustler and a popular candi
date.
PEAY IS WINNER
NASHVILLE, August 11—(P)—
Hill McAllister, state treasurer, op
posing the renomination of Governor
M,
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Austin Peay, today in a formal
statement conceded the nomination
‘to Governor Peay following an offi
cial count of the votes in | the
counties.
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V. oOI.ESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1926