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Aimed like the Srehunter, to hit it let* would have snorted at title u
it was the ayea of a deer, and to miss » wicked inrention to Justigg the
lfit was a calf—to Juitify the Go?- faxy white man who aometimes ehaa-
,rnU“ctlf it » anoffenre. io ed the la.? ne.ro with a whip/ yet
avoid a boomerang,it it was not an it seems that science supports it.
offense. Let na hope that Dr. Stiles and his
A report cornea from Atlanta that associates will succeed to ; heallng
Chairman McLendon was advised by the great multitude of the sick with
the ipgal adviser to the Commission, oat too much delay; for if,the white
Lawyer Hines, and also Commission- man gets it Into his head that, fie
er Hillyer, that it would not be un- can’t help being iaiy, and that the
lawful or improper for him to hc'p negro can help it, there will'^he
the Athens people float their bonds, trouble.—Macon Telegraph.^
We do not know whether or not this ciay~Ftoeleot7d~8sMtor.
h «™- “ V ™ Atlanta* Ga., July 8.-At 11.20
come out in the tayestlgaton. o’clock Tuesday morning Senator
But be these things as they may, ^ g CUjr ^ ^ county _
was for-1
two things are apparent. First, the mlUjr rM(lected „ United SUUa
chairman had the right to diwlde the seDator . He rMeired the UMnl mous
Atlanta port rate case. If he decid, yo(e , „ f botb b „ ncbCT of the , efU .
then Oovernpr, and It he incurred
the displeasure of the Governor, he
violated no law. Second, if he vlo-
bond matter-tilen it la not a case tor
a simple removal under the old law
which the Governor Invoked, it is a
case for Impeachment proceedings.
It is a case for tEe House'to pre
pare impeachment charges, and for
the Benete to try.
I* The removal proceedings on the
grounds maids by - the Governor In
|is message to the Legislature Is as
cheap a piece of small polltlos as
we have ever seen. The other
charge in regard to the bond deal
is something more serious add in jus
tice to the Commissioner himself Ilf
he Is Innocent), and in fairness to
the State, it ought to be Investigated,
first by the House acting separately
'with the view to preferring charges
liuund In our direction which concert of action will’land lot - us,-' a
tnat concert can find its greatest force and effectiveness in a^Board
Trade.
corporation
. Be sure to get your
exempt from taxation.
Evidtoitly some of the ‘‘blind tl-
«er»-*Hie officers in the neighbor-
dpg towns are catching are not as
blind Ss you might think.
Ike Hon. Richmond Pearson Hob-
stoa. a Jingo of the jingoes, will be
of the star attractions at lb*
M^s Chautauqua next week.
|Hg Howard a.ould"might write
■or tils Lndles’ Home Journal a se
al* of articles on “How a Woman
Can W •< Neatly on MO,000 a
Georgia School
of Technology
ATLANTA, GA.
in an impeachment trial before the
If upon investigation ’ the
I Senate. _ „.
House finds that no grounds for im
peachment exist, the matter should
l>e dropped. If they And sufficient
Lrouniia for impeachment thoa _ the
'shoiiftS^Uf IBS'"'
Senate.
Strip It of politics and the course
is plain.
NEGROES HOOK WORM^P ROOF.
Speaking to the North Carolina
physicians at Aahvllle recently. Dr.
C. W. Stiles, of the United States
Marine Hospital Service, declared
A TECHNICAL INSTTi JTE of the highest
rank, whose graduates occupy prominent
srtd lucrative positions in engineering and
commercial life. Located in the moet pro
gressive city of the South, with the abound,
mg opportunities offered its graduates in the
South s present remarkable development.
Advanced courses in Mechanical, Electrical,
Textilo and Civil Engineering, Engineering
Aexuiu aim civil engineering, engineering
Chemistry, Chemistry and Architecture.
Extensive and new equipmentof Shop, Mill,
Laboratories, etc. New Library and new
Chemical Laboratory. Coat reasonable.
Each county In Coorxii entitled to is free icholanhlpa.
Students received anytime during the Meeion.
For tlluitratcd catalog, addrtsa
K. Q. MATHESON, A. M„ LL. D., Pros.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
white class, who are afflicted with
the hookworm, which oauses lazi
ness and anaemia and an annnnl
loss of labor of $100,000,000. In
tome country districts, according to
Dr. Stiles, os’ account of unsanitary
living, from B0 to 80 per cent of tho
population is infected.
OPUIRIIVH 13 AliycVLUtA.
Strange to say, ths negro spreads |
man who lira here there la no work
In which young women may anfely
engage. Of nil the Eastern coun
tries China la in than* days the
most attractive to missionaries • of
discernment abd devotion. In tbe
Chinese they see the * best and
strongest human material In th*
East, and the race that promises
under* Western influence and lead
ing to develop tbo greatest effici
ency and the highest character.
must leave the live* of Chines*
alone.”—Harper’s Weekly.
AS TO REMOVAL~’~OR~IMPEACH-
ME NT. -
Ex-Governor Smith says that he"
did not know anything about the
alleged bond deal with which,
“rumor" haiNoonnectod th* came otl
the suspended chairman of ths Rail-1
&■!.]
DOSTA. OA., JULY 10. 190#
TWELVE PAGES.
■t despised near beer license la
ig in very handily after alL
b licorice on the free list we
: in sweeten things np s Ml
If talk built good rosds Georgia
moald be grtdlronad with macadam
Dr. Charles Eliot’s pralss baa not
jat “Paradise Lost" among Us
■tx best sellsrs.
toe. Aldrich"^determined that the
■annto shall not sailer fgsm nn over
«aat of tariff information.
Mr. Roosevelt's ammunition must
Stave given out/ for ha 1» now ship-
js.| gten animals to this country.
Kant time be "buys San Francisco'
Vxtrlck Calhoun will make ’em give
toto n regular deed to the place.
Times areTooklng up with » sky
ward aqulnt so pronounced that it
Isn't worth .wbllo to any longer de-
dfr k. ^ _ __
We are almost In favor of giving
the Chlnade Tongs In New York
fbw hampers and turning them
loose Qgone another '
The iakUlaturo needs to get busy
mow and provide funds to iske the
Mlaoa f of that vanislibd surplus in
^ =, ’bllnd tl
i held bit tern-
his tongue most admirably,
kut ws understand he will say some
thing before the legislative commit
tee this afternoon.
The House missed Joe Hill H»ll
yesterday. The statesman from
Bib* Is sway on s business trip
California, but he will he back on
tho lob next week*.
The income taxon and the corps-
ration taxer* may talk and scrap all
they please, but It’s a safe wager
that precious little tax will over be
levied on either.
Tbe Savannah Press says It will
kb Joo Terrell against Hoke Smite
tor tho United Statea Senate
1813. Too far off. A great many
things may happen befort 1813
And now the »oft drink maker*
auv In trouble. Tbe Government’s
^uve food experts sre charging that
■tuns of them are using injurious
drug* In their drink*.
VALDOSTA MUST HAVE A BOARD OF
If Valdosta Is to accomplish the things she ought to wlti
next twelve months, and maintain her commercial supremacy, .
must have a live Board of' Trade organized on 1 practical business
lines, and with tbe loyal backing of her business men. ..-SSI t.4
The country is on the eve of a great business and industrial . i
vtval. and the need of a live organisation in thl* city was nfyMBjRK;
Imperative. With the return of prosperity, as well as in
stress, the towns, cities-and communities whose people stand
an one man and pull with their united strength for the mal
cess, will always and without exception, achieve the greatest
of prosperity. . '■
Other cities find In their Beard of Trade or Chamber of Com
merce. a common rallying ground—the center from which "'radiate' the
Impulse* that do moat for th* common welfare—where toe buii
men meet and talk and swap experiences, and are profited thereby.
•Tn union there is strength," is a saying possibly truer today i
ever before In the history of tbs world. Tbs tendency of commercial.
Industrial and social Ufa Is mors and more toward organization, union
ism and s community or I Surest*. Tan men in a town working loyal
ly together, can accomplish mors in a public wjiy for the good of that
town than fifty can working without organisation and in n haphazard
way . The comparison la about liks that of a hundred, men peeking
away with tack-hammers on n barrier that a dozen men with a bat
tering-ram would demolish with a few blows.
Valdosta's buslntst and professional men should got In line’ with
other cl ties, and rolling up thalr sleeves go to work wi th a grim de
termination to get everything that 1* coming her way. The AlmlgtJiy
has favored us mightily, but that la no reason we should longer pre
sume on His kindness.
Let's organize the Board ^of Trade, place the dues at a reasonable
figure, and then let every busloos* and professional man glv* the asso
ciation hi* loyal support. Thus much can be done to sepure- nsw in
dustries, new dtiiens and new busmens, which it will be ImjJOBtlble/to
secure otherwise.
The Times wants to see Valdosta don her seven-league boots a
—to tee her people re-baptized In the faith that moves mountains,'
which lias rendered her invincible in the past and made her name:
synonym for progress wherever she is known.
Great times are looming up Just shgad of us—many things
road Commission- when h* removed ! tbs. psraMt^butlaltomra2^S!
him. ^ , | effects. Lucky negro! If tbePwj
Perhaps' the then Governor dil not sny-other race that can go a Ad
attach much importance to It, if he [ lpread , ng without'.u5tr-
heard It, and It went by without n i . .. .. ■ > ja
Ueriou* thought; but It Is.a tact th.tf“* fro “
the ex-Oovernor-a private organ, the'"* * #t r “ che <l <«• Here is one
J Atlanta Journal, sprang the bond particular at least in which the black
or deal immediately after the Governor j m » n •* more thpn the equal of the
issued bis order removing the Com- white. We regret taht the authority
missioner and before ne sent his!Quoted failed to explain tbe laziness
message to the Legislature giving; of bookworm-proof negroes. We are
his reasons for the removal i left to infer that, while the wh’te
It seems peculiar that th* Journal Itxineai is a disease and accidental,
was ready .to -spring that Question i that of the negro is innate or tbe re-
jnst “betwixt and between.” It baa 1 cult of mere slothful habit We
the'appearance of having been timed, fear the old mid-century Aboiltiou-
The Coffee County Newi, rublDb
•d at Douglas, laments the tact :hat
106 excursionists left that town last
Sunday for St. Simona, while at the
IMethodlst church, which has nearly
400 members, only 73 persons were
present at the morning service.
Aren't the fellows who are ap-
I-lring for McLendon's Job 'display
ing unseemly haste? Quyte isn't
«Sfreiy down and out yet, and If
tin legislature doesn't sustain Oov.
Snifth In his summary dismissal of
the commissioner there won't be
■J9 vacancy to fill.
There’ll be something doing up at
Ptanglaa next week. The first an-
maul assembly of the Douglas Chau
tauqua commences on Monday, con
tlnutng for a week; tbe Georgia
Weekly Press Association meets on
Wednesday for a session of two
days, and a good roads convention
will be held on Thursday. A pret'.y
good week's program.
Some of the speculators are pre
dicting. and all of the cotton grow
er* praying, tor IS cent cotton this
’ fail. Bully! let it come. The bal
ance of the world is sticking the
■oath for everything she has to buy,
aad it la about time to even up the
•coca. Fifteen cents tor short uto
pia cotton ought to mean 28 or 28
cents for Sooth Georgia and Flori
da's tea Island, and we beliav* It
MIL '
AN UNFOUNDED FEAR.
The Tlrasi hi-Ik-vea that the fear
which a number of Southern Con
gressmen and politicians profess to
feel over the possibility of negro
census enumerators being appointed
In the South Is unfounded.
Leaving out of the question the
conalderatlon which President Taft
has ao tor shown the people of this
seetjon in his - apopintmenta, too-
white republican lenders to the South
who havs beaded their every energy
‘ ” lie b'igfnaTng of gflfegffm.
palgn to build up n Southern wnlte
republican party, will hardly agree
to wipe out til progress they may
have made in that direction, by allow
ing the appointment of negrue* who
are to go into the homee'of Southern
white people next year aa census
enumerators. That the appointments
would be resented Is ts patent to
them as to anybody eii*.
No other republican president,
with the possible exception of Mc
Kinley, hot shown ns kiqdly fooling
toward the South as has Taft. He
lived tor eeveral months with them
following his election. Ho )ws „trav
eled over every section of the South,
and knows Southern conditions and
sentiment. In all of bla public ut
terances hs expressed a desire N to
treat the people of this section aa fair
ly as partisan politics will allow, and
It la not likely that ha will allow
them slapped in the face with petty
appointments so repugnant to them.
ed. Miss Clark goes on to say; ¥,t
It is the attraction of sex that
predominates la both case*, not
that of religion. Despite all thaT
Is in the paper*, the public
not see tbe other
Chinese aide. The pictures
I have seen are of young, vain,-
frivolous, white women deli
erately flirting with and lead
ing on their Chinese pupils.'
But consider what a puzzle
Buch a woman must be to
Chinese, of a race totally
.tarnish.
mpn. U It strange that
misjudge behavior that even
American man would questli
As to what subtle attract
causes the downfall of the while,
1 woman missionary I ' do not
know. The Chinaman is a mys
tic, but not romantic—not in
the sense that would appei
women. - v
The only light I can see
what might be called tbe gal
lantry of the Chinese, Eeir
kindness and gehtleness' to
women. 1 ^
Does any one realise thst
more than half of the women of
the underworld who com* to
Chinatown, and make -their
homes there, are .there because
Chinese are more kind to them
than white men? It ia true., t
have seen it; seen Chinese pitnc-
tlcally married to these, wombn,S
the slaves of opium, treating
them with gentlenea* which , ap
peals. I know not what else.
Practically all th* Chinese in this
. - — | * a auiivniij on tun vuiuiog IU turn
Director of th* Census, Durand Ii country are living Hoisted from the
said to have stated that the reoom-! wom , n of their own race. They are
mtndatlons of republican leaden In | about as dangerous associates foi
the Southern States would largsly j yrung g| rt missionaries, and the g{rl
govern the designation of ctntuv mltl lonar!ea are about a* dangerou*
supervisors, and the appointment of j conl pany for them, at could be coh-
enumerators would then b* made by ^ celv6(1 . Por Am o r | C an women who
the supervisors. It is safe to say l lre interested |p the "chrlstlanlza
thst whatever the Inclination of. tlon of the Chinese the place to
some of the supervison might be WO rk Is tn China and among the
(assuming that they will aU be white ch ine*e women. There ts a vast
men) that political debt-paying to deal to do, but among the Chinese
the negroes will not be allowed to
overshadow the work of building up
Southern white republican party.
The tatter proposition is the great-
eat ambition of men of the Taft
stripe, however futile it may be.
In a few sections of thu South,
populated entirely by negroes, the
appointment of negro enumerator*
would be entirely proper and even
desirable. But they should'not b*
aent into the homes of the whllu
people.
CONVERTING THE CHINESE.
In th* matter of tbe American
girl teacher, Elsie Slgel, who ‘was
Murdered by her Chinese lover, no
better sense has been spoken than
la attributed by tbe paper* to Miss
Helen Clark, of the Clark Mission
in Worth Street. For fifteen years.
Mist Clarl^ says, she has protested
against whit* woman attempting to
Christiania* Chinese, add ah* de
clares that there are move woman
missionaries degraded by Chines*
men than there are Chinee* convert-
Paxson's Blood Compound
has no equal as a blood re-
newer ana tonic. It cures in
digestion, catarrh, rheuma
tism and all other diseases
arising from an impure blood.
PRICE, $1.00 PER BOTTLE
or Six Bottle for 95.00
Paxson’s Pile Ointment ^
Paxson's Pile Ointment Is a
sure cure for pilea, corn*, old
sores, swollen joints, tetter,
eczema, ringworm, itch, etc.,
and ail other skin diseases.
Price, 10c and 25c. Per Box..
Pixrtn Medicine Co.. ^
u a ! G 5?“ en ? en : “ " t .T° 7 tar§ **° I
had indiceshon ao badhr that I would
h*»e a choking actuation niter meals
which eauaed me continued Buffering. I
tooktwo bottles of your P. B. C. and was
cured aound and well and I have not felt
anyaymptoroj ©f thp- dreadful disease
' *.*.*“* Pl*««ure in recoin-
ng this wonderful medicine to any-
iffering with indigeBtion.
Yours Terr truly.
J. Q. WARD,
Douglas, Ga.
Compounded By
The Paxson Medicine Go.,
Valdosta, Georgia.
Write them for treatise on
Blood Diseases.
NoUco to Stockholders of Alliance
Warehouse.
call si meeting ... tut- stock
holders of the Alliance ' Warehouse
will be held at the warehouse on
Thursday, July IB, 1909.
W. F. Arnold, President.- —
The famous Georgia mosquito has also put
in his appearance with a buzz and an occasion
al sting. Are all your beds provided with
nice, new mosquito canopies? We have them
in stock of all' kinds and sizes to fit baby
beds, three-quarter beds and full size-beds at
rices Ranging from $1.25 to $6.00 Each.
Are your Summer porches fixed
up? Have you got them protected
from the morning and afternoon nun?
If you haven’t, we can fix it up with
our Famous Vudor Porch Shades,
Hammocks, Swings and the Chain
Mission Swing. Our prices are to suit
you. In fact our summer line of furn
iture and house fitting* was never
more complete. We invite you to look
through our stock or ’phone or write
and you will have prompt attention. .
Valdoita,
ompany,
Georgia.