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PAGE FOUR
Hit AU6USIA HtKALU
731 Bro*d St., Auguita, Qa.
#*ubltah«d Every Afternoon During t' <
We«k end on Sunday Morning toy
THt HERALD PUBLISHING C)
Entered at the Augueta Poe.office »f
Mall Matter of the Becond Claee.
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TELEPHONES.
Bueineaa Office V
City "Editor 2W
Society Editor ?*t>
No communication will be published In
The Harald unleee the name of the writ*
le elgned to the article.
NEW YORK OFMCE Vr"i«n.l l>n
Jnrnln A*«ri<y. J*run»vl<k Hulldlnff, * iu
rlfth Avfnur, Nee York City.
CHICAGO OFPICf: Vr^rlurid
min AEdncy. W H Kr-ninnr. Mgr* 11Ok
Ttoyrt- Hulldlng. Chinn go. 111.
The Herald la the nffh .1 .dvertleln#
mediiim. of the City Augurtn and fi
the County of Richmond for all Utfsl no
tice# and advert lelny
Addreea all bu»*neee communloatlone to
THL AUGUSTA HLKALD.
711 Broad St.. Augueta. Ga.
YOU WANT THt NEWS
YOU NEED THE HERALD
Augusts, On., Friday, Auguat 21, 1908
Circulation of The Herald
For 6 Months, 1908
February 210.188
Mtrrb 228,578
April 222,012
May .213,866
Ju in, 211.829
July 211,202
Th*r* In no better way to reach
the homer of the prosperous peo
pie of tbU city and reel.lon than
through the eohiinna of The Her
ald fmllj and Sunday.
F*rtlss leaving Augueta ten have
The Herald cent them by mell each
day Phone 297, Circulation Depart
moot If you leave Augueta, eo that
The Herald oan reach you each day.
tyjvernnr Hinlth It doing rune*
heavy and judicious pruning of lagts
lathe growio with hla veto knife.
Wonder If fhoan IlHlneee have much
money* Thlr la hii lliiportanl question
among iho lawyer* ol Now York now.
Neither can It he truthfully raid
lhai liore lynching* In Bprlngfleld,
111., were orderly lynching*
•**“••■**•*• —*■»•—■l —<■" ■ «
A f*r has Jiihl died In N«w
York "wlm iirvor iitri) whip on a
horw * !?#• must hAvo hn*n the
driver of tiiiilo natiiH nil hu lift*
La tor on It mi) do to think with
pit) of Priry, hut just now hr* Is
having df*H<t«*dly ih«* h«*at of It. and
douhtlvaa think* witu pity of iih.
Thrrf tt a lurking suspicion that
the "Alnaku wheat, producing 100
hualo'lh jwt a« re/* la of th«- gold
brlrk variety.
The Standard Oil romt>anv ha# do
clarcd tta regular quarterly dividend
Who aaid that prosperity hud not yet
fully rat timed ?
The natur* wore talent
ad than umiai of late Witness the
alary told by a Pennsylvania man
that in his state a tmap factoty wu»
recently robbed by tramps.
The Georgia laundrytnen have heeu
in seaslou at Tybcc, IV>e# it show
B want of faith In their own •>. tm»
ltahntMd* for them to carry them
selveii to another water place?
A headline In the Memphis News
ttdmetar tells of a ' Humorous At
Re#n by Bryan ” Was tt the demo
critic donkay In tha role of huiuor*
ista ass?
All this talk of Sir Thomas t«lp*
ton challenging again for another
cup race la mere hoi air It ta too
late in the season now for a chai
Mr Brvan promtsaa to supplant the
»« Nile* with love He serra* ril*
p<>»*d to try whether more flic* eau
■o| be rauwht with *ua«t than with
glnag«r
A Ntfhaariaii I* mentioned who ha*
fought forty eight duel* without' hr
lag hurt Ho mutt have fought them
In France*. which makes a specialty
of that aort of du.
If the old underground railroad,
toh! ot In l-'ncl# Tom* Cabin. I*
*MI! In existence, It I* probably well
paWi-mred aaalu no* in au uppw
all* direction
»
'.he atrouge*! water power la a
woman's tear dtep* " The Rome
Tribune Herald inakca tbi* *age re
mark Ona of It* editor* ha* only
recently married, whlrh recto* to ex
plain thla observation
The Urun*wiek Journal think* hat
th* poor man ought to be happy
that he ran t afford a gaeollne yacht
to be blown'up* and down ln.“ Ye*
Indeed, he entt drown In hla bathtub
without Aral Item* blown up
The "keeper of the Washington koo.
who wat bitten by a rattlesnake wu
finally saved, after lying at death'*
aaer fer two day*. II most hate
been a near antidote with which ha
as, treated *n lead ol the old roll
■Me
A PlTtaburg flr| r advertised for a j
haabaed to be r*i,«*ed Irotn her !
work la a pickle factory. If she |
shettld be successful *be may fln.t i
tlaat ahe got out of one pickle to get
orhaeit M>tv aneUnr, uo4 a worse
MS
FAITHFUL UNTO DEATH.
There died u few <lay* in Arizona
K man whose narn* and fame deserve
to he commemorated, for the beauti
ful example he ha* presented of a
husband’s devotion to his wife.
This roan wn* General Ward well.
Despite bi» military title he wasn’t
no much of a military man, and the
distinction was conferred upon him
becatioe of hb unflinching physical
courage. He lived in a wild section
of country, where the refining Influ
ences of civilization are as yet not
strongly exerted, a country where
the male population largely predom
inate* In the mining camps and cat
tle ranches, leading unrestrained live*
which make reckless men Among
such people "General” Wardwell act
ed as peace officer, carrying hla life
In his hands every (lay In the per
formance of his duty, engaged In a
hundred fights with bad men who
were notoriously quick on the trig
ger, and making them respect fne
majesty of the law at the muzzle
o. his gun.
. enderneaa would be about the last
thing to expect In the make-up ol
-> uch a man. and yet thla terror of
the border ruffians has proven to he
lhe tendere»| and moat devoted of
husbands. Ills wife wa* stricken
with an Incurable Ulrica*, requiring
constant ministration. He became
her devoted nurse. A friend said to
him: "Why don’t you get a nurse
for your wife? II must be terrible
to be at her beck and ca.. night and
day " Wlni a look of amazement he
replied : "She didn’t marry a nurse
She mnrrled a husband. She did that
when she wa* young and pretty and
could have married most any one she
wanted to. She trusted me, and you
bet ahe wasn’t fooled, either.”
The wife’s disease proved to be
leprosy, and It became necessary to
Isolate her In a cabin far removed
from other habitations. General Ward
well went with her as her nurse and
only attendant. He snew that in do-
ing this the disease would at last
fasten Itself upon him, but It did
not deter him. fThe was his wife,
(he woman who bad given him her
young love, and whom he had promis
ed to love and cherish until death,
and that he would do as hla most
sacred duly, and he did It.
And there he died, not the slow
death which he had faced with such
devotion, but a sudden death which
snatched him from life while In ap
parent good health Ills death de
throned th» poor wife’s reason, and
no wonder He van literally all In
the world to her. In mercy H ap
pears that her mind wa* made n
blank, *o that ahe could not realize
her lohh while sh* slowly went down
to the certain death in Its moot loath
aorae form to which sh« was doomed.
In strong contra*! to the etorles of
divorce *n<! marital troubles comes
I hi* atory of General Wardwell** de
votion Y»t It ts not so rare. !Anr
tunately instance* calling tor hi* par
ticular kind rtf sacrifice are rare, but
throughout the length and hreadth
of our land there are husbands and
wives who*t> love and devotion ta
equal to this In sickness and In
Uiwlth. through suuahtne aud shadow,
through good report and evil report,
faithful unto death I* not a theory,
hut an actual experience in thousand*
of lives It is but rarely that they
arc brought to public notice, as are
scandal* of all kind*-, but for all that
there I* more of thla marital devo
tlnn which is sublime than there Is
ot the hu if* of 111 mated rauplea to
whlrh so much publicity Is given.
THE LABORERS ARE FEW.
j Out in the great northwest it I*
m>» ihut the harvest |n while ami
'lie lal net ar* tew A month or
more ago II wm Kansas which aem
out the urgent call for help The
wheat harvest aeaaou has moved
northward, and today it la the north
j "eat whu h I* sorely in need o{ labor
help
To help them In the harvest fields
h*> fanners of Minnesota and the Da
kolas .» week or two ago aent out a
evil for 7.*00 men at from || so Ji
per day, with board, and In some
I east a mil road (are also Is paid Tha
Canadian provinces called for SO,coo
or more linndh
Yet, while this call Jar help la made,
a call to which only a partly elfec
Uvr response Is made, the same talk
about the unemployed Is going on
IVmagoitiei couilnuc right atwng to
»e*p ifccir tears and tear thetr hair
In well simulated despair over the
steal arnit of unfortunates who art
said to be out of work, unable to ilu.l
work, and starving . And there are
actually people who are caught by
this sort of chaff.
Rt ginning In Oklahoma and Kansas
in June and (allowing the fcarvant
wave northward through Nebraska,
the Dakota* and Minnesota, and end
>ag In the northern provinces of Ca
nad* In Heptrratx r. there ta a busy
harvest season during which there
never yet has been a time when there
were enough laborer* to supply the
demand, and any hind of ut.-
' Hied labor du not command 12 tier
day, with hoard, and often much bel
ter pay than that. And before the
last of the wheat is harvested In the
farthest north, th* cotton Helds In the
south arc calling Tor pickers, and .t
Is a veil-known fact that there are
never enough T o supply the demand.
Here are six months or tic re during
each year that there Is a continuous
demand for labor help that Is never
enough to supply the demand. Here
fully supplier.
Yet during this lime even, the cone
plaint continues to be made, In the
various Idg cities of the north, that
there Is the grcateit suffering because
of the large army of the unemployed,
nl men who with all their seeking can
And no work to do.
Is not this exposed as a mistake, a
hollow sham, lri view of the almost
despairing cry for labor help that Is
sent. out. from the great grain fields
white nnto iho harvest?
NEW QUESTIONS THAT WILL
ARISE.
According to general belief, we
stand today at tha threshold of aerial
navigation. Several dozens of inven
tors In different countries are each
experimenting with flying machines of
thalr own Invention. These differ
greatly fn construction and in what
they can be made to do. Most of them
cannot fly any more than a flying
horse, hut some of them have been
actually up In Ihe air. A few of them
have done still better, and have made
short flights. This shows that flying
machines can be built, for If an air-
Rhtp can sail the air for a hundred i
yards It can sail the air for a hundred
miles. All that Is wanted Is continued
experimenting and gathering of knowl
edge from experience, the combination
perhaps of several fit the Ideas now
applied singly, and thu practical air
ship will he here.
And when It comes. Its name will
quickly he legion. Juat its the auto
mobile within ton years from its in
troduction as a practical road locomo
tive came Into general use and Is
now met on every road, so within a
few yeors from the Introduction of
a practical alrkhtp will we find them
flying In the ulr everywhere.
This will mlsc many new questions.
The Invention of everything new
brings with It new questions, which
were never known before, and which
must be solved Our Immense codes
of law must be further enlarged by
the addition of sections relating to
the questions that will arise from
aerial navigation.
For Instance, In violations of the
law, where would be the jurisdiction?
Such case* must be tried in the conn
Ilea In which they are committed,
hut how high up In the ulr do the
counties extend? If they extend up
wards interminably in perpendicular
lines, would there not be endless dis
putes In rases where airships were up
very high, as to the Ideutlty of the
county directly beneath? Would It be
with air ship* as with water ships,
that all such cases would fall under
the jurisdiction of special federal
courts, and we shall have aerial courts
as we now have marine tribunals?
Ami how about damages that might
be caused? With airships common, It
must certainly be expected that thiugs
would drop out of Home of them some
limes Suppose a monkey wrench or
empty beer bottle carelessly dropped
should fall a few hundred feet, alight
on a fellow's head and provide a Job
for the undertaker? The careless air
sailor or air passenger might sail on
In blissful Ignorance of what he had
done, and the victim or the witnesses
of th© accident might know only that
the damage was done by some airship
the Identity of which could not be es
tabliahed because It was too far away
and soon completely out of sight,
would there be no redress In such
cases? if a railroad kills a man or
a cow, through fault wholly Its own.
It must pay the value of the life It
destroyed' and just how valuable
some people or some cows are ts
never suspected until It I* revealed hy
s damage suit against th» railroad?
A man killed by an airship has a*
much right to be paid for belug kill
ed as a man killed by the railroad.
Should the government pay all such
damages, or bow should this ba ar
ranged ?
So ther,. will arise numerous que*
tlon* Would a ntarrlugc up lu the air
be legal. If »o, under what code or
form? A runaway couple from Geor
gia might be married while passing
Over rivuth Carolina; would a Qeor
gla license be logoi, or would such
a marriage bo legal without license,
aa la the law of South Carolina? And
there Is the prohibition question.
Could an airship from a wet state,
supplied with a bar attachment, ills
penoe liquid Joy while passing over a
dry state; and If so, would coming
to anchor deprive it of this right, and
If not c*u!d not aerial bar room*
make regular trip* trom wet to dry
states?
And so there are a thousand and
one questions that present them
selves, which may now seem absurd,
but which In some form will thrust
themselves upon U» as live questions
which must be settled With the
cumins of the airship wv lall sum
(Ind ourselves under the nec-aslty of
making a whole lot of new taw* relat
ing to aerial navigation and the que#
Ueoa arletaa tWetrciu
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
POINT AND COUNTERPOINT.'
Can’t Wak* Up.
A girl at Llndale has been fast
asleep since Thursday. When It
Is known that Llndale is near
Horne, Ga., thU will not cause so
much wonder—Augusta Herald.
Guess that will hold the Tribune-
Herald for awhile.—Dalton Cttlxen.
No Comfort In That.
"The Vldalla Advance disconso
lately oaks: "What do we live
for?" Cheer up, brother, It Isn't
quite so had as that, with express
lines running to Chattanooga and
Jacksonville.—Augusta Herald.
The Herald Is not In a position to
properly sympathize with us. They
cannot speak from experience for the
reason that they were never sccub
tomed to having to use the express
lines—always had it near by even
now—Just across, the bridge.—Vldalla
Advance,
When it Is Underhand Trickery.
' James Hamilton Lewis Is a
Georgian, too, and It surely was an
oversight that he should have
been overlooked In making pres
idential nominations.”—Augusta
Herald.
How can It fail to be an oversight
when a man Is overlooked?—Jackson,
vllle Tlmes-Cnlon.
Two-Btate Fair In Augusta.
With a Georgia State Fair In
Macon and a Georgia State Fair
In Atlanta and a Georgia State
Fair In Au—no, Augusta gets
along without a Georgia State
Fair.—Dublin Courier Dispatch.
Augusta has a Two-State Fair,
thank you, which as a fair Is as
far ahead of a single state fair divid
ed between two, as a double-barrel
gun Is ahead of a single-barrel affair.
LITTLE FLASHES OF WIT.
If that candidate for president who
is in the Nevada state prison for life,
should get elected wouldn't It be nice.
He could pardon himself. —Macon
News.
There arc many complaints of the
near beer in Georgia, but the most
; Important seems to be that the ma
i jorlty do not And It near enough.—
i Houston Post.
Taft ha* too much flesh to be very
athletic, but he apes Teddy all he can
.In that direction.— Athens Banner.
In a Vermont cemetery, tnere is a
stone erected by a widow to her de
ceased husband, which bears this le
gend: 'Host In Peace —X'ntil We
Meet Again '—Savannah Press.
'
A husband on being told that his
wife had lost her temper, replied that
he was glad of It for it was a very
had one,— Standard Gauge.
Attorney General Bonaparte says
half water and half alcohol Is not
■■vhlski y. Correct —a little fizz, and
it’s a high ball.—Columbus Enqutrer-
Sun.
No Democrat need feel badly
about that im.nfln limit. The gen
erous patriot can give SIO,OOO for him
self, SIO, OOO for his wife and $10,060
for each of his children.—Jackson
ville Times Union.
If John D Rockefeller Is a stickler
tor the eternal fitness of things his
forthcoming book will appear in oil
cloth binding —Vienna News.
\ press dispatch said the other day
that a president of a South Amerl
, can republic had died a natural death.
But there Is some doubt as to what
Is a natural death for a president of
a South American republic.—Ander
aou Mail.
Rockefeller’s preacher. Mr. Asked.
i says everything In this world is grow
, In* better. He probably had not
hoard of the Georgia convict lease
system Brunswick News.
SOME POLITICAL DOPE.
He’s Only a Near. Democrat,
The most pitiable political object
one aee* these day* t* the man
who claims that he Is a democrat and
who wants Tatt elected, but Is aßhatu
! ed to come out into the open and de
j clare for Mm. Columbus Ledger.
Bryan and the South.
Wm J Bryan * sestlmenta toward
the Confederate veteran* were clear
■ Iv shown at the St. Louis convention
iin I; . when he supported Cockrell
for the presidency. He stated In a
1 magnificent speech., seconding the
i nomination of tin Missourian that 1 he
j was not afraid to vote for any man
tor the presidency who had feugnt
as bravely as Cockrcl had for the
I Confederacy.’ -Public Tlmea.
Mr. Watton is Miscalculating.
Hon Thomas R. Watson Is making
| * strong hid lor the Georgia electoral
vote, twit according lo our notion he
will fall to get It.—Mllledgevllle
[ l uton Recorder.
Put it up lo the Legislature.
" h>' doesn’t the governor remove
| 'n.- prison commlasionera? He has
heller reason Ilian he had for the
; removal of Joe Brown as railroad
i commissioner.—Marietta Journal
The Water Wagon Stalled.
State wide prohthltton seems to he
|in hard lines. Texas don’t want It,
| net;her dee* Tenneffeee. Louisiana and
j * lends The cra*c *rrms to be get
j ting saner.—Dalton Cttlaen.
He t> Helping Bryan,
i he keeps up the lick Tom Wat
son will certainly succeed In bringing
out a big vole far Bryan In No vein
bur The democrai* are waking up
—Darien Catena
AGED PREACHER TO
WED YOUNG OIL
Explanation Given is that
He Dfeairea to Make Her
Hia Heir.
ELLIOTT CiTY, Md.—A license
was issued yesterday for the mar
riage of the Rev, George S. EUzhugh,
aged 67 years, to Lulu V. Frazier, a
girl JO years old.
The proposed marriage has not
taken place, however. Mr. Fltzhugh
having suffered a severe attack o!
heart disease after obtaining the li
cense, and he Is now said to be criti
cally HI.
Mr. Fltzhugh is understood to be
an Episcopal olergyman of Virginia,
of which state the little girl Is also
a native. When the license was ob
tained a neecssary letter of assent
from the girl's mother was exhibited
to the clerk. The explanation of the
peculiar case is said to bo 'hat the
Rev. Mr. Fltzhugh desires to make
Lulu his heiress, and that his objen
cannot be attained to his satisfaction
by the adoption of the child.
A BURGLAR AT NIGHT
WAITER IN THE DAY
The Dr. Jekil and Mr.
Hyde Life of a Confessed
Burglar.
CHICAGO -Samuel Hanson, by his
own confession, works in a down
town case as a waiter during tha day
time, but at night he indulges in
burglary as a side Una. He has a
(lipiorna from the Joiiet penitentiary.
He was sent there in 1905 lor burg
lary, and paroled last June.
He stole Jewelry and silverware
valued at S6OO last evening from the
apartment* of Mrs. E. B. Huyler, on
Newport avenue. Mrs Iluyler saw
him with a suit case in hand coming
out of the building.
When she entered her apartments
she found it had been ransacked. She
ran out and followed the man with
the suit case until she came across
Beargent James Duncan, to whom she
told her story. Duncan arrested
Hanson after a chase of several
blocks.
WIFE SHOOTS HUSBAND
WHO THREATENS LIFE
Fight in a Virginia Family
That Had Bad Record.
MONAKER, Va. —A fatal shooting
affair took place yesterday at Fin
nej, near Honaker. Edward Cook
quarreled with his wife and, drawing
a knife, threatened to cut her throat
The woman picked up a shot enn and
fired polpt-blank at the enraged hus
band, the load taking effect in his
face. Cook cannot live.
Several members of Conk’s family
have been shot and killed during tive
past few years. Hla brother hai
served a term in the state peniten
tiary for murder, and was killed a
short time ago in Buchanan county.
EXPRESS COMPANY’S
AGENT HELD AS THIEF
Charged With the Theft of
Five Hundred Dolalrs.
COVINGTON, Va—T. M Radford,
assistant agent for the Adams Ex
press company, was placed under ar
rest by Special Agent L. L. Seharer.
a do'ective connected with the trans
portation department, charged with
the theft of S6OO in cash from the
company.
Practically all of the money was
recovered Radford apparently did
not consider himself In any danger at
my time. He made no effort what
ever to escape.
BLIND STAGGERS EPIDEMIC
AROUND SALKEHATCHIE
SAI.KEHaTCHIE. S C.— There
seems to be an epidemic of blind
singgors, or some similar disease,
among the horses and mules of this
section. Mr L. C. Weekly lost i>
line horse Monday and a spleudld
mule the dav following.
Messrs. Daniel Rlake. Charles
Bolneau, W. C. Blocker and K. T.
Hewitt are among those who have
.oat tine animals during the week. It
may he that the disease is glanders
and some steps will be taken lo In
vestlgite the trouble.
A few lavs ago iwo cows belouginu
to Mr. John lliggott were killed by a
| holt of lightning.
MR- STEVE bHrUSSELL
WEARING BEAUTY SPOT
Through some Inexplicable prank
ihe wheel Mr. Sieve B. Russell,
Heard Service operator for Th, Her
aid. fell u 8 hts bicycle last night and
received a palnlul biuisc near Ills
tight eye.
The daplorable accident put bhu
out of rommlisiot. for a few hours
this morning, hut he wrs able to re
sumr his duties this afternoon and
as soon as his beauty apot vnnlahes
he will no doubt again be wearing hW
usual smile—the kind tha'. wont come
off
WHITE AND NEGRO LABORERS
HAVE FIGHT IN CHICAGO
CHICAGO.—Rive men wo*t hurt
in a fight between white men and at
gro laborer* employed on the Wes.-
ern Transit company's dock e: Not h
Water and St. Clair wtreeia
The fight was slopped ot.’.yr after
the arrival of two wagon loads of po
licemen who used their clubs freely
and threatened to shoot A crowd ot
spectators shouted "fayneb the nc
■ rues' duriac LA. BabL
Come in Now
For Fall
Clothes
Lots of men who know
the value of first choice
are leaving their order
now. Come in anyway
and take' a look—ypu’ll
find it quite worth while.
We enjoy showing them
—they make new friends
for us. everyday. Then,
with such materials and
patterns, Dorr Tailoring
shows to the highest ad
vantage.
DORR
Tailoring For Men of Taste
724 Broad. Augusta.
GIN
ond Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys. Belting. In-
! lvo *. Shingle, and Lata Mill,. Ga.ol.na Engines.
Company: ,ron works
MEET ME AT MICKEY’S
Where they have flret-ola** workmen. No long waits and be«t atten
tion. LADIES HAIR DRESSING PARLOR IN THE HARISON BUILD
ING, ROOM 213.
Remember the Place—22l Eighth St.
HICKEY’S BARBER SHOP.
OFFICE STATIONERY.
Buy your fall supplies of office Stationery of us.
We have a full stock. Our prices are right.
RICHARD’S STATIONERY COMPANY.
To Sell More,
Tell More!
You cannot get the best out of your
business until you put the best into
it
There’s POSITIVE value to steady,
strong, persistent ADVERTISING.
I prepare ad. copies that speak for
you. and solicit business with Mer
chants, Firms and Banks. No corres
pondence school Ideas, but ideas of
actual experiance.
H. D. Griffin,
P. O. BOX 738.
Telephone Girls
Who uiro you telephone service are trained op
erators. They are citizens of this city and
faithful, earnest workers. But they arc liuma
beings. Their energies are bending towar
giving you good service. Their mistakes are
mistakes of tlie head and not of the kean.
EFFICIENT SERVICE. 1
REASONABLE RATES.
For Information Call 9050-
Southern Bell Telephone Telegraph Co.
READ HERALD WANT ADS.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 21
If there are any left, kill
them now.
Gardelle’s
Bed Bug Poison.
25c a Bottle.
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