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THE ALBANY DAI-Y HERALD: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1906.
ie Albany Herald
—BY THE—
'^Herald Publishing Co.
H. M. McIntosh President
H. T. McIntosh 8ec. A TreaB.
Jno. A. Davis Bus. Mor.
Every Afternoon Except 8unday.
Weekly . (8 pages) Every Saturday.
V, MBfjgte BSS55S1S5S ~ ~~•
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: Office second floor Postoffice Build
ing, corner of Jackson and Pine
streets.
The Herald deals with advertising
■ agents by speelal contract only, and
p,..; ho advertising agent or agenoy Is au
thorized to take contracts for adver
tisements to be Inserted In this paper.
THE HERALD 18
“Offlolal Organ of the City of Albany.
Official Organ of Dougherty County.
Offlolal Organ of Baker County.
Offlolal Organ of the Railroad Com-
mission of Georgia for the 8econd
. Congressional Dlstrlot.
TELEPHONES:
Editorial Rooms and Business Of
fice, 1 80.
Composing Room and Job Printing
pfflce, 60—3 rings,
V If you see It In The Herald It’s so,
If yo'|f advertise In The Herald It goes,
Kf'Jr! ■ >■? : - - — —:~rrr ——-r-r^rr
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1906.
me—*——
There are Investigations nnil Inves
tigations; but nothing pans out more
finely In the disclosure of graft than
the Insurance probing.
Mrs. Mlr.ner was mistaken.—Colum-
t s Enquirer-Sun.
Why not put It tills way: She ex
cised womnn's prerogntlvo and
■ anged her mind?
H 1
Sal
’ Valdosta will soon lmvo new and
better buildings on. the sites of thoso
tlint wore burned In Saturday’s disas
trous Ore. That’s the sort of town
Valdosta is.
E-
; The Democratic Senators, after cau-
pfissing for five hours, nnally adopted
a resolution on Saturdny afternoon
■ which commits the loynl Democrats
In; the senate to vote against the
Roosevelt Domlnlcnn treaty.
mt-
The"- 5 seems to be general astonish-
mfcr\ boenuse a canny Scotchman—
Ct'rles) t.oclchart. of PlttBunjc—'should
hr e been able In Ills lifetime to
got’ er tigetbei^nn estate worth $18 i,-
Astonlshmenl will be tem-
THE DOMESTIC HELP PROBLEM.
Not only-Is the labor problem the
most ucute with which the South has
to deal, but it Is developing new
phases and giving birth to fresh com
plications at a rate which can not fall
to prove disquieting.
And no feature of the labor problem
Is claiming n larger share of atten
tion thnn that which has to do with
household servants. In many com
munities It has come to pass that half
the families of whom One makes In
quiry report that they are without
servunts, and the household with u
full force of domestic helpers Is the
object of no small degree of envy.
Cooks, nurses, house girls and wash
women find their services ill such de
mand that they obtain a highly ex
aggerated idea of ttiolr importance, the
Inevitable result being Indifferent ser
vice nnJ ii rather frequent demand for
Increased wages.
That matters can not continue in
their present condition Indefinitely la
certain. The time la fast coming when
communities will take concerted ac
tion, or Indlvldiinls lie .compelled lo
take the dilemma liy the horns and
bring about a elinnged order of tilings.
Therefore, wo oxpect to seo the
South Importing white domestic help
long before any serious effort is mado
to supplant negro labor in the fields,
lumber mills, turpontlno farms, Indus
trial plants and on building enter
prises. The scarcity of mnlo labor
will bo apt to continue for n while
longer to retard the section’s develop,
mont, but the growing unrest of the
housewife who finds It necessary to
cook, nurse, scrub nnd oven, It may
be, do the family washing, Indicates n
fnBt brewing rebellion which It will
be possible to put down In but one
manner—by the Importation of white
servants. Fortunate, Indeed, is the
family without a servant problem on
Its hands.
Perhnps the Importation of white
domestics would exert a salutary In
fluence ovor our negro laborers. tVcro
the latter to bocome satisfied that
preparations were being made to sap-
plant thorn on the fnrms nnd whorevor
olso they tiro now employed, wo might
be trented to n picture of the re
awakening of n rnco. That would bo
aq end very much to he desired, for
the negfo, after nil. Is the most satis
factory laborer the South can hope
to possess—when ho will labor.
OF WHAT USE?.
The board of consulting engineers
of the Panama canal recommended a
sea-level canal. But the Panama
Canal Commission rejects the plan of
the engineers, nnd recommends to
Secretary Tnft that a lock plan be
adopted, at an 85-foot level. The Sec
retary will have a say-so In transmit
ting the report to the President, who
will thus also he given n crack at
the whole proposition.
The board of engineers, the best on
two continents, was employed with a
great flourish of official trumpets in.
order, It was presumed, that no pos
sible false step might be made In plan
ning the stupendous Isthmlnn enter
prise. A majority of the hoard of en-
glnqers (recommended n son-level ca
nal. Now every member of the canal
eommlaslon save one reports In favor
of n look canal.
The question naturally arises, why
wero the engineers employed If their
recommendation was to be deemed of
such small value that it could he light
ly toHsod aside by the canal commis
sion?
A Healing Gospel.
The Rev. .1. C. Wnrren, pastor of
Sharon Baptist Church, Belalr, Gn.,
says of Electric Bitters: “It’s a God
send to mnnklnd. It cured me of
lnmo back, stiff joints, nnd complete
physical collapse. I wns so weak It
took me half an hour to walk a mile;
Two bottles of Electric Bitters have
mnde me so strong I have just walked
three miles In 50 minutes and feel like
walking throe more. It’s mado a new
man of me.” Greatest remedy for
weakness and all Stomach. Liver and
Kidney complaints. Sold under guar
antee at Albany Drug Co. Price 50c.
It will pay you to keep Chamber
lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy In your home. It only costs a
quarter. Sold by Hllsman-Sale Drug
Co.
A Story of Alexandre Damne.
This story Is told of Alexandre Du
mas: It Is well Uiuv.*u tliat lie could
not refuse a request—at least not of
ten. One day be gave a man a letter
to one of his intimate iVIeutls in Brus
sels. The friend, a wealthy merchant,
received lilm as though he hud been
Dumas’ own brother, Introduced him
to his circle of acquaintances, placed
lAs stable at tlie man’s ul/./Juaul and
did everything in his po\fti* to make
life pleasant for Duma.;’ friend. After
the lapse of fourteen days the man
suddenly disappeared and with him
|!k? best horse in the merchant’s stable.
f;ix months later the merchant visited
Dumas and thanked him for the kind
of people he recommended to his con
sideration. “Dear friend,” he added.,
“your friend is a shark. lie stole the
best horse-In my stable.” Astonished.
Dumas ruised his hands toward heaven
and cried, “What, he stole from you
too!”
, ----- —A-w
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Is furnished by us and guaranteed by Chase & Sanborn.
The question of quality is settled, and the question of blend
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and at prices for any purse.
Pure Mocha and Java, 2 lb. Tins, 75c each.
A Delicious Blend, 35c a lb., 3 lb. $1.00.
An Excellent Quality at . . 25c lb.
Either whole or ground.
port'd by coniJBerlne tho IP " succors
i.
of another Srntohn'nn — Mr. Andrew
Carnegie- In the same field of effort.
But the Philadelphia Record declares
that Pittsburg Is n breeding place for
millionaires. In that protected nest
they are hatched by hundreds under
the warm shelter of government favor
itism. The whole nation tolls nnd
• .audits to feed fat the Pittsburg fledge
lings
The Democratic Executive Commit
tee of Doughovty County, at Its moot
ing on Saturday to order a primary
for the nomination of candidates for
the county offices, did not protend to
puss upon the question that hns arisen
over the dunl ofllce of Clerk of the Su
perior Court and ex-officio Connty
Treasurer. Being Informed tlint there
would he candidates for tho office of
Treasurer, on tho presumptl in that the
offices of Clork nnd Treasurer were to
be separated, the Executive Commit
tee, without presuming or pretending
to pass upon the legal questions In
volved In the case, merely provided
for having tin ■ contest, over the office
or Treasurer held Inside the Demo
cratic port; organization. Jo have
lort the gap down for nil Independent
candidate in the general election would,
in the opinion of the Executive Com
mittee, have been n dangerous i-recc-
dent.
Undoubtedly the mildest, • richest and most appetizing
American, Imported Swiss or Philadelphia Cream. All of
these contain the best quality money can buy, and they are
sure to please you. 1
I
The Atlanta Journal wants lo know
how many dally papers In the state
free from railroad domination,
ell, here is one. There are twenty-
other dallies in the state, anil we
surmise that nt least twenty of them
are
six
Senator Bacon is booked for a
speech in the upper house this week
in reply to Senator Spooner’s recent
defense of the President’s usurpation
of the constitutional rights of the
are absolutely Independent of the rail- j Sem>u , ln , nittlng lnt0 e(fect tho Dom .
roads, and tho Journal, too. for Hint
matter. The Journal might find some
• thing better to do thnn to Impugn the
^Integrity of Its craft. — Thomnsvllle
m
Tlmes-Enterprlse.
The policy of the Journal nnd Its
candidate for governor In assuming
’tlint they alone are honest nnd lnile-
t pendent, while nil who don’t run with
them or take snuff when they sneeze,
J are corrupt, is a “stop-thief” species
of strategy that Is so transparent that
I only those who want to bo fooled will
fooled by It. When It comes to
-eedom from railroad domination.
,ere are few newspapers In Georgia,
and perhaps none of the five other
candidates for the governorship of the
, whose records would not com
very favorably with those of tho
mrir.il and Its candidate.
he
1 state,
tiilpnn treaty. Senator Bacon Is the
recognized lender of the opposition to
ratification of the treaty, and ills
speech is expected to be one of the
most interesting — and- one of the
warmest—of a number to bo delivered
before this question is‘ filially dis
posed of.
It seems a piece of “hard luck” of
two kinds that the $30,000 Science
Hall building nt the State Normal
School should lmve been destroyed by
fire just as it was receiving Its finish
ing touches. Tho school wilt thus be
deprived of the use of the building,
which is badly needed, and the con
tractor, G. B. Hlngnmn, of Atlanta,
suffers a financial loss of $15,000, hav
ing had but $12,000 ltfBorance.
The Best Coffee you Ever
Drank
Cheese
Mock & Rawson.
J. K. PRAY.
President.
A. P. VASON.
Vice President
EDWIN STERNE.
Cashier.
' I r HIS bank has a good active board of Directors and a
strong body of Stockholders. In addition to supervision
by the national government it has bi-monthly examinations by
the Directors.
‘The Citizens National Bank,
Of Albany, Ga.,
SEABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
Schedule Effective July 3 1905—90th Meridian Time.
to. Ml
!: 10 p.m
::89p.m
.. a Ip.ui.
i fir,p.m.
i’ISp.m
'•afin.m
NORTH
2:00 m.
2:05.), m
8:00p.m.
. .Albany.
..Sasser..
. Dawson.
.Richland.
Columbus
.Atlanta.
Via A. & N.
|Lv ..Albany.
ILv' .Cordole.
lAr Savannah
| No. 7£
No. 8o
WEis’l
. Arl l:30r.m.ll
. Ar|l2:53p,m.||
Ar|12:36p.in.||
, Arlll :31a.m.ji
Lr'lO: 15ii.m.il
. Lvl f: lOs.in 111
Ry. 1 '
. Ar| 3:26p.m. |
Ar| l:25p.m.|
Lv( 7:16a.m.!
2: lup.m.
-1:16p.m.
5:47p.m.
6:23p.m.
7:45p.m.
1 -30o m.
5:00 a.m.
2:65a.m.
7:16a.m.
5:44p.m.
M ■ O&t.j
.Lumpkin.
Hurtsboro
.Ft. Davis.
N'tgomery
Selma
Pensacola
. .Mobile..
NewOrleana
.SL Louis.
Ar|ll:
Ar| 9:
Arl 8;
Lv) 7:
I ,V‘ 5-
Lvlll:
Lv|12:
Lv| 8:
Lv| 8:
12a.m.
35a. m
50* ru
80a. id
eon ro
06pm
40a.m.
15p.m.
00a.m.
No. 80. Through train to Columbus, making close connection at Rich-
uid and Montgomery tor all points West via L. & N. and M, & O. R) Ry
•t Columbus and Atlanta with ail lines diverging for Eastern and North
mlnta. Tull Information upon application to any SEABOARD Agent
8. A. ATKINSON. IT. T. A., Albany Ga.
W. P. SCRUGGS. T. P. A.. Savannah, Ga.
CHARLES T drewART. A. G. P. A., Savannah. Be.
.. Fernland Farm4* ..
Dairy Department
Swf^et Cream Rich Milk
High Grade Butter
i
“Patronage Solicited
For Ervga.gements Telephone No. 199
of most fastidious tastes, as well as men of
all physiques, can make satisfactory selection
of their Spring and Summer needs, from the
well-known assortment of Made-to-Mea<ure
materials, shown by Strouse & Bros-, makers
of the Celebrated HIGH ART CLOTH!Nl
Their expert cutter will be at our store
Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
FEBRUARY 1, 2 and 3
and will be glade to receive your order.
Faultless Fit, Superior Workmanship and
Up a to=Date Styles.
S. B. Brown & Co.
T“T
Georgia Northern Railway Go.
ALBANY - BOSTON LINE
Read Down.
Read Up.
No G
No. 4 |
No. 2 |
Effective Oct.
4th,
No. 1
No. 3
Daily
1905.
Su. only
Daily |
Ex. Sun.|
STATIONS.
Daily
Daily
7:30am
3:50 pm
7:30am
Lv.
... Albany .
. Ar.
11:40am
8:20pm
8:2-lam
4:44pm
8:24am
Ar.
.. Ticknor .
. Lv.
10:40am
7:15pm
8:30am
4:50pm
8:30am
Ar.
... Doerun .
. Lv.
10:35am
7:10pm
9:10am
5:30 pm
9:10am
Ar.
.. Moultrie
. Lv.
10:00am
6:35pm
9:30am
5:45pm
1:15pm
Lv.
Ar.
8:05am
5:15pm
10:10am
G :25pm
1:55pm
Ar.
.... Pavo ..
. Lv.
7:20am
4:30pm
Id: 45am
7:00pm] 2:30pm
Ar.
... Boston .
. Lv.
G :50am
4:00pm
Connections at Albany with S. A. L.
Nos. 1 and 4 make connections at Albany to and from Covdele, Savan
nah, Macon and Atlanta, via A. & N.
All trains make connections at Albany tb and from all Central of GU.
Ry. points, including Atlanta,' Macon, Americus and Montgomery. Sleep
ing car service via C. of Ga. between Albany and Atlanta. Leave Albany
9 p. m. Returning, arrive Albany 7:25 a. m. Connections at Ticknor, via
F. R. & N. E. for Pelham. Connections at Boston via A. C. L. for Quitman,
Valdosta, Savannah, Jacksonville and points south. Connections at Moul
trie via A. & B. for Tifton and Thomasville.
S. A. ATKINSON, U. T. A.. G. E. SMITH, Traffic Mgr..
Albany, Ga. / Moultrie, Ga.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co.
PASSENGER SCHEDULES.
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURES AT ALBANY, GA.
IN EFFECT JULY 25, 1905.
DEPARTURES
For Waycross, Brunswick and Points
South and East.
Train No. 89 Leaves.
Train No. 95 Leaves .
.12:50 am
. .2:00 pm
For Thomasville, Montlcello and
Points West.
Train No. 71 Leaves 4:00 pm
Train No. 73 Leaves 7:40 am
ARRIVALS
From Waycross, Brunswick and
Points South and East.
Train No. 94 Arrives.
Train No. 90 Arrives.
11:50 pm
3:20 am
From Thomasville, Montlcello
Points West.
Train No. 72 Arrives ll;
Train No. 74 Arrives 7;
S. A. ATKINSON, U. T. A., Albany, Ga.
T. J. BOTTOMS, Traveling Passenger Agent, Thomasville, Ga.
ALBANY & NORTHERN R’Y.
DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES.
NO. 18.
Lv. Albany ... .12:00noon Lv.
Ar. Cordele .....1:26pm Lv.
Ar. Savannah ... 8:00pm S. A. L. Ry Lv.
Ar. Macon 4:20pm G. S. & F.Ry Lv.
Jacksonville 8:00pm G. S. & F.Ry Lv.
Atlanta 7:60pm C.-of Ga. Ry Ar.
NO. 17.
Savannah ... 7 • 15am S. A. L. Ry
Atlanta 8:00am C. otGa Ry
Macon 11:30am G. S. &F.Ry
Jacksonville 8:00am G. S. & F.liy
Cordele 2:10pm
Albany 3:35pm '
NO. 16.
Lv. Albany 4-30pm
Ar. Cordele .... 6:15pm
Ar. Macon 9:35pm G. S. & F.Ry
Ar. Helena 9:30pm S. A. L. Ry
NO. 15.
Macon .. . ,6:45am G. S. & P
-Helena '.....5:30am S:A.L
Cordele 9:30am |
Albany ....UU5am
TMnCTTMrT DDTMT
For additional information, rates, etc., address
A. V. PHILLIPS, Com’l Agt., Albany, Ga.
8. A. ATKINSON, Union Ticket Agt V. P 6.
J. Q. ADAMS, Soliciting Freight and Passenger Agent Cordele,' 0 ^
J- 3. CREV
P. & G. M., Albany, fiz.