The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, April 12, 1906, Image 2

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IpHPSTINCT P^INT | THE ALBANY DAUY HERALDS THURSDAY, APRIL 12,1906. The Albany I Kr 1 . . ^ —By tRe- Herald Publishing Co. H, M. McIntosh. President H. T. McIntosh Sec. and Trees. Jno. A. Davis. . Business Mgr. WICKED CHICAGO. It Is how claimed for Chicago—not ’’Corrupt as hades," are they? In other words, “You are a son-of-a- Every Afternoon Except Sunday. Weekly (8 pageh) Every Saturday. TERM8 OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Herald, one year.,.. $6.00 Dally Herald, six months 2.60 Dglly Herald, three months 1.25 Weekly Horald, 8 pages, one year-IDO All subscriptions payable In ad vance. $1 Advertising rates reasonable and made known on application. IjJF Sards of thanks, resolutions of re- epect and’obituary notices, other than 'those which the paper Itself may give ar a matter of news, will be charged ,.fdr at the .rate of 10 cents a line, ex cept when such notices are published 1 by charitable organizations, when a special rate will be named. Notices of ehurch and soolety and all other entertainments from whloh a revenue Is to be derived, beyond a brief announcement, will be charged fdr at the rate of 6 cents a line. ' Office,’beednd floor Postoffice Build ing; corner Jackson and Pine streets. The Herald deals with advertising agents by - special contract only, and no'advertising agent or ageney Is au thorized tb take contracts for adver- ta bs Inserted In this paper. 'by Chicagoans, though they may have 8e a-cow If you do not subscribe to my , to admit it—that Chicago Is tbe wick- and If there are any ' meaner fish In the deep you are that!” edoet city In the, world. | The Te ie gra p h the apologist of no Aroused, by an unprecedented wave man, nor )s It the backer of any man of crime, which has lately swept seeking any office; but It Is a dofend- flercoiy to its flood, Chicago Is now er of the right; the advocate of the about to make a determined effort to true Dem00racy ' a *. d the ,,pholder ot retire from Its unenviable position as • Beyond the conflfle9 ol common ly . the world’s most wicked city. lng there Is a gt)Ofl deal of slander The record is a fearful one. and hypocrisy In this campnlgn. It Think of 122 murders In one city will bring its owfe reward, during iL single year! Yet this Is but the capstone of a monument of law lessness erected by the largest and most fearless gang of burglarB, thugs and hold-up men this world, probably, has ever seen. Durlfig the first two months of 1900 Chicago recorded 22 murders, 840 bur glaries, 210 robberies and 30 assaults on women. New York, with all Its lurid, melodramatic reputation and Its greater population, had 18 murders, 400 burglaries, 20 robberies, and 26 assaults on women. Philadelphia, with 7 murders, and 164 burglaries; rrp: the HERALD I? fflclal .Organ of the City of Albany. Ififclal Organ of Dougherty County. Offlcl jOfltd. ., . . . Official Organ of Baker County. ■ «ffidlal Organ of the Railroad Com- tnfbelon of-Georgia for the Second . Ctuigresstonal District TELEPHONES: n f, d 60 Orlal ^° om< * !Ul Bu,ln8,, 0, ‘ Bmipoalng Room and Job Printing $-9 rings. • . : ■ ■ If . you see It In The Herald It’s SO, If you advertise In The Herald It goes. ' THURSDAY, APRILL 12, 1M|. old Dowle 1b trying to lay all twmblae on his wife. i,Wo~ Infer from one of Dowle’B .thfdafe that they havo a JMl In Zion Tout,' w «IU • i- ‘jt'Jjeglns to look more and more like -Mpoii' is going to got the State Dem- Chicago, qjrntlo Convention. It' Is a sprry Bort of man—or woman, olfh^fc—who, after doing wrong, seeks attylbe, hoping to find somebody else Id.hlame It on. The Dowle Bcandal Is getting to be nauseating. It is perhaps Impossible tO'.bHdlo tho tongue of the old repro- jbafp, but It Is time for decent nows- fcapors to draw tho line on it. • There’s no accounting for New Jer sey people and courts. Recently a man In a theatre got on his ear and raised a row because a pretty chorus girl winked at him, and the court fined him heavily for hls display of temper. Why, of course, just as should have been done. But see what the Bly old gentleman who presides over the edi torial columns of the Montgomery Advertiser says about It: " It Is quite difficult to understand the man’s heat except In one way. It may be that he had hls wife with him „ , . • and knew that she saw the wink, and Cincinnati, with fl murders and 36 bur- .. . • ’ , • " , , , , , , ' I... that hls only chance to save hls hair glarlos, and Boston, with 3 murders . _ . . t „ , ■- l was to affect to he exceedingly angry to be al* at the girl. It was .a grand-stand play, and 42 burglaries, seethed most living the simple, virtuous ffe In , §1 tbe ^ BbouW bave potoa^p. • . ■ ^ I taken tile circumstances Into consjd-. the last px year, hays witnessed »fewer than 769, murders in Chicago, ™ • —A a.Ia ' .1-1.1 ‘ L ,1 — yet there were only eight'hangings. Thls ^e. epjpes frqip Washington: Ini 1903 that city reported six times as Spipe One asked Congressman Jojin many murders as'Lhndcin, and nine Wesley,’ Raines, pf Tennessee, hpw It tithes as many as F^riS. ' Every year 8«M»ahpflt ftat fir* QfWW, of that treat LhkC city. 1 I- Why rt Chicago so wicked? THIS DATE IN H18TORY. April 12. 1433—Henry Chtcheley, Archbishop of Canterbury, died. ■ 1649—Joan of Kent, an anabaptist, condemned to be burned. 1646—Francis BasBompierre, Marshal of France, died. 1678—Thomas Stanley, author of '“His tory of Philosophy," died. 1704—Bishop Rossuet, died. 1709—First number of the Tatler ap peared. 1777—Henry Clay, American states man, born; died Jhne 29,1862. 1780—British bombarded Charleston, 1. C, 1788—“Slrst power loom began to work In Philadelphia. 1793—Five-pound hank notes first Is sued In England. 1796—Battle of Montenotte, Italy. 1798—Switzerland made a Helventtan republic. 1821—Samuel G. Arnold, historian, born; died Feb. 12, 1880. 1841—Espartero appointed regent of Spain by the Cortes. 1844—Treaty for annexation signed by the Texan commissioners. 1861—Fort Sumter fired upon. 1866—Mobile, Ala., taken by the Fed- erals. 1878— William M. Tweed died in Lud low street jail, New York. 1879— Richard Taylor, Confederate lieutenant-general, died. . 1889—Leonard J. Farwell, ox-Govemor ; of Wisconsin, died. 7 1891—Haymarket Theatre, Chicago, destroyed by fire. 1893—American Railway Union organ- ' lzed In , ChIca ! |b by Eugene V. Debs. *. Fooled by Nplsemakere. 60,000 tortsts upon variolic charges, Wgs beaten Jor ireeleotlpn., ’’I From the Montgomery Advertiser. ;; i tt cgh only pgpJaln, It,’’said Mr. QalncS, Georgia and Alabama are much alike many of them serious, are made Ih the „ by repeating a copvarsation between fn some respects. To our Inquiry If there U anything left to think about in their campaign The Albany Herald In forms us that "there la plenty to think about yet In the. Georgia campaign', but It seems that there are a lot of people who had rather be fooled by mere pretense, noise, and false issues Same here, brother. Congressman Brownlow and' Gibson bpforb the last el?otlop. ‘ They are Mayor Dunno ass—is that it Is both JRepubllqapa, an<l Gibson was largely because the police force Is too asWn ® Brownlow how It was that ke , „ ■ . , , -managed to get so many places for small, only 812 men being on duty at conBtltupnt8i can , t do |t>> . GlbBoa flight lii the entire city of 200 square said. ’I. bring the best men in the 'dls- mlles. | trlct up here and they can’t pass the j than to think.' Furthermore, there are 60,000 home- c * vB service. How do you get themi - - less min, and 70,000 porous, many of ‘ hrdUBh? ’ Bro ( wnlow U ® T “ can’tTnd""! trt "”” ed WU ” *"** " nd . .. . .. 1 . . . find a man in your district smart 3«* , ' n '| We have received a large “sprinkling” of our new two-piece Spring and Sum mer Suit. The styles and patterns are all new and different from any that have ; ever been shown you before. The fils ; are as neai perfect as the artistic hand ■ ; can make them. cure, try Wltfch Hazel them hoys, victims of the cocaine hab- 7, 7“““ “ /T‘n 1 17.™* ! 9il,va ' b,,t he 8nre you Efit that Tnade .. . 1.. enough to pass a civil service exam- by m 0 DeWltt & go.. Chicngo. It Is The grant number of low-grade drinking snloona’ls another cause. Now, however, Chicago Is to In crease the pbllce force to nearly twice The Savannah presB expresses the •Kbps that the Atlanta Journal la will- tneJto lot Chairman Yoomans breathe iiwhlle longer now that he has called that committee together. lnatlon you won’t stay In congress.” Its present size by an addition of 1,200 Romney Bldg, men, abolish 4,000 of Its saloons by a now high license law, and begin the greatest clvlo battle for redemption In modern history. Albany Decorating Co., Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Wall Paper, Burlaps, , Room Mouldings. ’Phone 393. the Original. If you have used WTtch Hazel Halve without being relieved It Is probable that you got hold of one of the many worthless counterfeits that ore sold on the reputation of the eenulne Da Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Hold by Albany Drug Co., Hilsman- Snle Drug Co. While, demugoguos and yellow mug- azlnes here at home seek to create •aired and distrust of our courts, a SSarned German JurlBt and privy coua- setor, President Hoffman, of Berlin’s district court, who has spont fifteen months da the . United States studying 0eorgl(l . Th)B la onB of them, A RECKLES8 CAMPAIGN. , From the Moron ToloRroph. The Atlanta Journal prints a signed statement, of which tho following Is a pnrt: “I ohallonge all Hoke Smith’s oppo nents to show mo a single person, hnv- lng received an appointment from the presont administration that Is not for, Clark Howell. In other words, show, me one that’s for Hoke Smith. They ore all alike, gone astray and as corrupt ns Hades." | There ore some features of this, campaign which are more shameless | than anything we have yet known la the.country’s judicial system, warmly recommends Us Important features to adoption by Germany. 1 . Kalph Smith, tho bright young man ot»tbo Atlanta Journal, who follows Candidate Hoke Smith around the ■Btiffi; und oarrles—In the Journal— each county visited by hls candidate, i'that the enthusiasm of the people hvllle readied the horses and so the animals that they tried to Off-hand, let us recall some of these gentlonton who are denounced as be-' lng as corrupt as hell—“hades" Is only, supposed to be a polite woy of put ting It. Take Governor Terrell’s appoint ments to tho supremo bendt; H, G. Turner, J. R. Lamar, B. D. Evans, J. 1 H. Lumpkin, M. W. Beck, S. C. Atkin- 1 son, W. H. Fish, John S. Candler. On the superior court bench: L. S. Au- At This Season You Want Dried Fruit Prunes, . Evaporated Peaches, Evaporated Apricots, Evaporated Apples. AH fresh and the highest grade possible to buy. And best of all they are very reason able. , Smithfield Hams The most delicious market. They are possible. • 25c a pound. Virginia Country Hams Another style and cure of delicious meats, as mild and sweet as you want. cured meats ever placed on the cured in the most delicate way 17c a pound. ... - ... cunlaway. Fred Lewis, of the Atlanta R° an » Fair burn; H. C. Hammond, CoftBtftdtlpn, who is doing for Clark gusta; T. A. Atkinson, LaGrange; R. Ciowcll what RAlph Slmth 1b doing for w. Freeman, Newnan; W. A. Little, pMBuBmithL, yifl haye to look to hls Columbus; G. T. Cann, Savannah; danfpts. Mosob Wright, Rome; A. F. Daley, The venerable Senator Morgan, of Wrl’ghtsvllle; J. T. Pendleton, Atlanta. Alabama, with hta accustomed power State house officials: Governor A. of loglo, has shown that the Hepburn A Candler, compiler of records; J. W. «>lll as it.stands Is an attack upon the Lindsey, pension commissioner; S. W. reserved rights of the states to eon- Harris, adjutant-general; H. W. Hill, ttol.tha corporations of their creation, railroad commissioner; J. M. Brown, Ah. such ho’holds that the bill Is au railroad commissioner; O. B. Stevens, | immense stride toward the consollda- railroad commissioner; C, J. Welborry • Ui&'ifn the federal administration of state librarian; T. G. Hudson, com- ' [Bftwers that belong to the states. In- mlssioner of agriculture. '•-■Maff of extending the control of the Trustees Soldiere’ Home: William (federal government over the business Garrard, or Savannah; J._H. Estlll, of r 'bt’tHbi. people, he maintains that the Real - Estate - Rents - Lows - Insurance Albany Real Estate improvement and Investment Company, Inc. Rooms 7 and 8 Woolfolk Bldg. Daniel C. Betjeman. Mgr. Representing Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Co. The Traveler's Insurance Co., of Hartford, The National Surety Co., of New York, New York Plate Glass Co. S. B. Brown & Co. SEA HOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. Schedule Effective July 3 1906—90th Meridian Tima. No. 80 NORTH | No, 72 2:10p.m.Lv ..Albany.. Arl l:30r.m. 2:39p.m.Lv ..Sasser.. Ar|12:63p.m. 2:64p.m. I.v .Dawson. Ar|12:36p.m.| 3:66p.m. Lv .Richland. Arlll:31a.ra. 5:16p.m. Ar Columbus Lr!l9’.16a.m.l 4-a5p.rn.iAr ..Atlanta.. Lvl 6:40a.m.I ! Via A. & N. Ry. f 2:00 m.lLv ..Albany.. Ar| 3:26p.m. ’’•OB.i.m. Lv .Cordele. Ari 1:26p.m. 8 :00p.m.lAr Savannah' Lvl 7:16a.m. No. 8o WEST 2;10p.m.|Lv 4:16p.m. 6:47p.m. 6:23p.m. 7:45p.m. ll:30p.m.|Ar 6:00a.m. Ar Albany.. Ar Lv .Lumpkin. Ar Lv Hurtsboro Ar Lv .Ft. Davis. Ar Ar N’tgomery Lv . Selma.. Lv Pensacola Lv 2:56a.m.|Ar ..Mobile.. Lv 7:16a.m.|Ar NewOrleanoLv 5:44p.m.lAr .St. Louis. Lv 1 20p ■ ll:12a.r 9:36m- 8*Rfis r 7:S0a.m 6:00an ll:06p.ir 12:40a.m 8:15p.ai 8:00a.rr- On week days No. 110 leaves Albany at 6:30 a. m„ arriving Dawson 7:25 a. m. and Richland 8:45 a. m., connecting at Rlohland with trains for Columbus. Amerlcus, and Savannah. No. 80. Through train to Columbus, making close connection at Rloh land and Montgomery for all points West via L. & N. and M. & O. R. Ry. at Columbus and Atlanta with all lines diverging for Eastern and North ern points. Full Information upon application to any SEABOARD Agent S. A. ATKINSON, U. T. A., Albany, Ga. W. P. SCRUGGS, T P. A., Savannah, Ga. CHARLES F. STEWART. A. G. P. A., Savannah, Ga. ALBANY & NORTHERN R’Y. DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES! NO. 17. NO. 18. Lv. Savannah ..✓7* 15am S. A. L. Ry Lv. Albany . . .12:00noon Lv. Atlanta . ....8:00am C. ofGa Ry Ar. Cordele .. .. .1:25pm Lv. Macon ... .,11:30am G.S.&F.Rj Ar. Savannah ...8:00pm S. A. L. Ry Lv. Jacksonville 8:00am G.S.&F.RJ Ar. Macon .. ...4:20pm G. S. & F.Ry Lv. Cordele . ...2:10pm Ar. Jacksonville 8:00pm G. S. & F.Ry Ar. Albany . .. .3:35pm Ar. Atlanta . ...7:50pm C.-of Ga.Ry NO. 16. NO. 15. Lv. Albany . .. .4-30pm Lv. Macon .. ..6:46am G. S. & F.Ry Ar. Cordele . .. 6:15pm Lv. Helena . ...5:30am S. A. L. Ry Ar. Macon .. ...9:35pm G.S.&F.Ry Lv. Cordele .. .. .9:30am Ar, Helena . ...,9:30pm S.A.L.Ry Ar. Albany ..11:16am For additional Information, rates, etc., address A. V. PHILLIPS, Com’l Agt, Albany, Ga. J. 8. CREW8 S. A. ATKINSON, Union Ticket Agt. V. P. & G. M., Albany Ga. J, Q. ADAMS, Soliciting Freight and Passenger Agent, Cordele, Ga. Savannah: Alonzo S. Freeman, of West Point; E. H. Thornton, of At-i west ruiiit, ci, xi. iuuiuluu, ui ,V/*racUt:al method of dealing with tho i a U^WlUlam T. Young, of Augusta;J of idllroad transportation Is in judge A. C. Pate, of Hawklnsvllte; W. 1 'P jiij^rovlng the waterways of the coun- S. Thompson, ot Atlanta; W. M. Dun- 1 tr>v Whether this would afford an b^r, of. Augusta; A, P, Perham, of government regulation enaln- of buslnesa affairs. vast Maflotta. ‘ t 1 “auy.othere not now re- Jf. K. PRAY, A. P. VASON, EDWIN STERNE, Pnaldanl. ,r/ - Vice Pmldontl Cashier. The Cite National Bank OF ALBANY, GA. Capital. - $50,000. • -f T’ 1 ’ ' ' ■ I; - T Safety gss^j*fe«52i tiheralitv . L » - —- Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. PASSENGER SCHEDULES. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURES AT ALBANY, GA, IN EFFECT APRIL 8, 1906. DEPARTURES For Wayeross, Brunswick and Polnta South and Eaat Train No. 91 Leaves 5:45 am Train No. 95 Leaves -2:00 pm For Thomasvllle, Moittlcello and Polnta' Weat Train No. 71 v Leavea • 4:00 pm Train No. 7$.Leaves 7:40 am ARRIVALS From Wayeross, Brunawlck Points 8outh and EasL Train No. 94 Arrives Train No. 90 Arrives > .11:45 am ,10:30,pm F.rom Thomasvllle, Montleetlo Points Wert, «n$ Train No. 72 Arrived.......li:86on Train No. 74 Arrives. 7:11 pm T. J, BOTTOMS, TrwrtlaV'