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The Albany Herald
—BY THE—
Herald Publishing Co.
H. M. Mclntoah.,
H. T. McIntosh..
Jno. A. Davit...
President
8ee, and Treat,
Butlnttt Mgr.
Every Afternoon Except Sunday.
Weekly (8 pages) Every Saturdty.
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Ing
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tisements to be Inserted In this paper.
THE HERALD IS
Official Organ of the City of Albany.
Official Organ of Dougherty County.
Official Organ of Baper County.
Official Organ of the Railroad Com
mission of Georgia for the Second
Congressional District.
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fice, 50.
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If yen see- It In The Herald It’s so.
. If yav advertise In The Herald It goes.
TUESDAY, APRIL 17,
1906.
. A hoodoo seems to hove attached
Itbolf to the battleship division of the
United States navy.
V Russia Is not In such a bad way, at-
ter all, wlion It'appears that the czar’s
soyernment can borrow $450,000,000!
: ‘Missouri won^ Republican In the last
national election, but Bho still clings to
tho old habit of pulling off a double
lynching. < ,
Y Vesuvius Is no less terrible today
Mhhtf She Igas When ehe burled Pom*
peh and Herculaneum more than 1,800
yetus ago, and may overwhelm Naples
nny day.
The Southern Bell linemen hare
struok, and telephone construction
work, la at a standstill from Virginia
to. Mobile. However, the dulcet voice
. of djar Central continues to float In
oyor .the bussing wire, for ehe’e too
buhy.' to think about striking.
The authorities are making a show
at' prosecuting those who led the mob
that lynohed two negroes at Spring-.
Redd, Mo., on Saturday night. Some
arrests have already been made, and
a.'Bpectal grand Jury has been sum
moned.
Alluding to the fact that Representa
tive Dalzell the other day called a
feliow-momber of congress n "coward,"
the Philadelphia Record says: "There
t have been tlmos whon the utterance of
- aueh an epithet on the floor of Con-
gross would bo extremely dangerous.
But now It Is merely n harmless par
liamentary Indecency.”
IT:
The decision handed down by the
Supreme Court of . the United States
yesterday seems to shut the door of
hope in the face of old innn J. G.
Rawlings and his two sons, who nro
under sentence In Lowndes county for
the murder of two children of the
. carter family, their neighbors. Unless
the death sentence of old man Raw
lings shall he commuted to life Im
prisonment, which does not seem nt
all likely, this world will get rid of n
/' mighty bad mnn within the next sixty
fk or. ninety days.
—
The New York Herald publishes
r. '. what purposes to be a copy of a letter
IS from T. Mellon ’& Sods, Pittsburg.
£ bankers, in 1896, to the City Deposit
Bank of Pittsburg, inviting that insti
tution to contribute one-fourth of 1
per cent, of Its capital and surplus to
, tho Republican campaign hind. It
was explained tlmt the banks gener
ally were paying this tax. That assess
ment would have yielded nearly
$2,260,000 from the national banks
alone, and It was levied on state banks
and private bankers also. How can
tho Democratic party ever hope to beat
a'party that has such a hold upon the
haajks and the big corporations of the
wV country?
POOR GORKYI
The flrat great shock which Maxim
Gorky experienced after setting foot
on American soil was administered by
the metropolitan newspapers. These
ubiquitous Institutions Immediately
turned their searchlights upon Gorky's
domestic affairs, and discovered, or
claim to hare discovered, that Madame
Gorky, who came over with the noted
Russian genius, was not Madame Gor
ky at all, but an actress whom Gorky
had never tnarried. ,
And that these matters should have
been pried Into, and the results of the
Investigation published, was something
which Gorky oannot comprehend. Ho
declared In an interview that he could
not believe the American people guilty
of tho acta which had brought mortifi
cation to him and his wife. “This
dirt,” he exclaimed, "Is the work of
the Russian government.”
Gorky Is destined to be rudely awak
ened. The American people are all
right, but the Atnertoan newspaper—
that Is, some American newspapers—
have about as much respect for the
privacy of a man’s domestic affairs as
borky himself has for the Imperial
government of the land from which he
has just fled. He will find that noth
ing he does, nothing he thinks, noth
ing he dreame, even, la too good or too
bad for publication in the press of the
home of the free.
There have been times while Gorky
was In Russia when the governments
spies could not place a finger on his
biding place, bnt so long as ha re
mains In the United States the sleep
less reporters will have him spotted,
morning, noon and night v
THE END NEAR FOR RAWLINGS.
The time Is rapidly approaching
when J. O. Rawlings, tho notorious
Lowndes county murderer, will be
requlrod to show whether he has been
really In earnest In his protestations
th&t he longs fqr tho carrying out of
the donth sentence In whoBe deepen
ing shadow he. has been living for sev
eral months.
The court of highest resort In the
land has decided that Rawlings must
hang, and the only enrthly power
which can now save hlB neck Is tho
pardoning power of the governor Of
Georgia, who will not act except In
case of recommendation by tho Par
don Board. 1 The elder Rawlings is for
the present strongly BUBpected of In
sincerity In hie protestations to the
effect that he longs for the carrying
out of the i death penalty In his case,
due to the fact that ho recently made
an almost successful attempt to es
cape from Jail nt Valdosta. It now re
mains only for Rawlings to be re
sentenced and executed, a fate which
two of his boys seem destined to
Bhare.
The very men In the Democratic
party, especially those of New York,
who fought William J. Bryan so des-
perntely In 1890, and again In 1900,
are now beginning to turn to tho No-
brnBknn to save them from William R.
Hearst. This, from tho New York
Tribune, shows how the political wind
Is Mowing ln^Tow York: “William J.
Bryan will havo the support lu the
next Democratic national convention
of tho very men from this elty, who
fought him twice and who Anally nom
inated ex-Judge Parker nt St. Louis,
two years ago. In the Democratic
Club there Is talk'of arranging a re
ception In his honor on his return
from his tour around the world. Do-
lancey Nlcoll, n week ago, at tho Dem
ocratic Club, eulogized Mr. Bryan as
an honorable Democrat. His declara
tion nt the time nroused a lot of com
ment, but It was favorable comment.
Mr. Nlcoll Is vice-chairman of the
Democratic committee, and will re
main in that position until the assem
bling of the next national convention.
In his speech he voiced the deep hos
tility of the so-called Cleveland wing
of the Democratic party to William R.
Henrst, who Is regarded with a rapidly
growing dread by the conservative
Democrats of this city.”
Mrs. Lavlnla B. Lewis, the aged
mother of Congressman E. B. Lewis,
died at her home In Montezuma early
yesterday morning. She had been In
declining health for some time, and
the immediate cause of her death was
some heart affection. The death of
this estimable woman Is a matter of
personal bereavement to a number of
relatives and friends In Albany.
THIS DATE IN HISTORY.
April 17. ,
1365—Marino Fallero, Doge of Venice,
beheaded.
1492—Ferdinand and Isabella signed
the agreement with Columbus.
1521—Luther appeared before the Diet
of Worms. ,
1635—Bishop Edward Stllllngfleet
born.
1687—George Vllliers, second Duke of
Buckingham, died.
1790—Benjamin Franklin died; born
Jan. 17, 1706.
1793—Battle, of Warsaw, Poland.
1806—William Gilmore Simms, author,
born, Charleston, S. C.; died
June 11, 1870.
1813—Pragmatic sanction by Cbarles
VI. of Austria.
1818—Norvln Green, president West
ern Union Telegraph Co., born;
died Feb. 12, 1903.
1830—Navigation of the Black Sea op-
- ened to American vessels.
1837—J. Pterpont Morgan born.
1849—Justice Wni. R. Day, Of United
States supreme court, born.
1866—Peace conference at Paris for
settlement of Crimean war.
1861—Virginia convention passed ordi
nance of secession.
1868—Installation of Prince of Wales
aS Knight of St Patrick.
1874—Comet discovered at Marseilles
’ by H. Coggla.
1883—Charles H., Duke of Parma,
died.
1886— Stry, Galicia, destroyed by Are;
hundreds perished.
1887— Morris Ranger, ox-cotton king,
died in New York.
1888— John Baring, banker, died in
London.
1892—Alexander MacKenzIe, ex-pre
mier of Canada, died.
1894—Brazilian insurgent warship
Aquidaban sunk by government tor-
' pedo. ,
1904—Attempt to assassinate Premier
Maura of Spain.
Have the 8cotch Captured EngtaSid?
From the floltlmore Run. . _
The “Annual Report and Year Book’!
of the Royal Society of St George for
1906 calls the. attention o{ patriotic
Britons to the fact that at present all
the four principal personages In the
Empire, ranking after royalty, are
Scotch, the four being the Prime Min
ister, the Archbishop of Y° r k. the
Lord Chancellor and the Archbishop
of Canterbury. The Governor-General
of India Is likewise Scotch. In-the
Ministry the Scotch hold the Impor
tant offices. Sir Henry Campbell-
man has placed a Scotchman over the
navy, another Scotchman is Lord-
V 1 - 11
Lieutenant of Ireland, the'chief Secre
tary for Ireland'la Scotch, and the
Chancellor of the Exchequer and Sec
retary for India site for Scotch con
stituencies. Sir Edward Grey, of the
Foreign Office, is the one prominent
Englishman not under Scotch Influ
ence. The qiiestlon suggests Itself
whether England has annexed' Scot
land or Scotland has annexed England.
As England contributes 90 per cent
of the cash required for the upkeep of
the Empire, It lq unfair, - the report
urges, for the Englishmen to be ex
cluded from a share in its* govern
ment. Gladstone boasted himself a
Scotchman, Roseberry, hie successor,
was 8cotch, and Balfour, who was re
cently Premier, calls himself Scotch.
Scotch Premlershlpe, It Is urged by
the report, "seem ever to be associ
ated with some national calamity.”
Under Gladstone occurred the surren-
der at Majuba. Roseberry was foiled
In Africa, and Balfour has the Boer
war to his credit “We cannot,” It Is
added, "preserve our purely English
characteristics, traditions and customs
when strangers are thrust upon us
who share our sentiments Imper
fectly.”
FOR SALE!
Three Sites for Stores
on Brood Street,
(Near JacJcson).
--V i
Size, thirty feet front on
Broad street And running back
210 feet to alley.
This property is rapidly en
hancing in value and, will be
worth double present price in
few years.
Full infprmation on applica
tion to '
Tilt Jits & Sill Title
Loai Go.
. No Pill Is as pleasant and positive
as Dewitt’s Little Early Risers.
These Famous Little Plllg are bo mild
and effective that children, delicate
ladles and weak people enjoy their
cleansing effect, while strong people
say they are the beet liver pills sold..
Never gripe.
Don’t Be Uneasy
If there is not (he assortment of Fresh Vegetables
in your garden to answer your wants, you are not in'a
dilemma. Our stock of Canned Vegetables is far ahead
of anything 1 offered in this market. The Peas and Corn
and Lima Beans and Tomatoes and Snap Beans, and
many others, are grown and packed at a point where
they reach the greatest perfection, and they are sold
with the understanding that they will please you in
every way.
Five Thousand Roig’s Conchas
4 Extrat Cigars
. f.
The one Nickel Cigar which pleases more smokers
who know quality than all others. They co& us more
than 4c each. ‘
Mock & Rawson
Real - Estate - Rents • Loans - Insurance
Albany Real Estate Improvement and Investment Company, Inc.
Rooms 7 and 8 Woolfolk Bldg.
Daniel C. Betjeman. Mgr.
Representing
Springfield Fire and Marinei Insurance Co.
The Traveler's Insurance Co., of Hartford,
The National Surety Co., of New York,
New York Plate Glass Co.
J. K. PRAY.
President.
A. P.
•vYc1 S Pr«l
EDWIN STERNE.
Cashle
The Citizens National Bank
OF ALBANY, GA.
Capital. - - $50,000.
fill Deposits received' subject ?to check.
\9tfilU Loans promptly made on ^approved
UUIUIJ collateral. We solicit your .business.
This Illustration
is a mere outline, a
mere suggestion of
how High Art
Summer Coats and
Pants fit and look.
We would like to
show you the real
garment and then
you can judge for yourself why High
Art two-piece suits for men and young
men are in demand by discerning dres-
sere. Each garment is carefully tail
ored ; the shoulders, lapels, collars and
fronts skillfully worked into shape by
expert tailors, and the style and drape
of these garments are sure to win ad
miration of men who know good
clothes,
If you want a ‘‘warm weather suit,”
try them.
$12.50 to $20.00
S. B. Brown & Co.
SEABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
Schedule Effective July » 1905—90th Meridian Time.
No. 80
2:10p.m.
2; 39p.m.
2:64p.m.
>:65p.m.
6:15p.m.
9-85p.m.
1 >' • 00 m.
2-06 i.m.
8:00p.m.
NORTH
Lv .'.Albany.
Lv ..Sasser..
,v .Dawson,
.v .Richland.
Lr Columbus
ir ..Atlanta.
Via A. A N.
ILv ..Albany.
ILv .Cordcle.
.lAr Savannah
No. 72 No. 8o
1:80p.m.
12:63p.m.
12:36p.m.
11:31a.m.
LvjlO: 16a.m.
Lvl 6:40a.m.|
Ry. I I
Ar| 3:26p.m.
Arl 1:25p.m.
Lvl 7:15a.m.! 5
lQp.m.
16p.m.
47p.m.
23p.m.
45p.m.
30p.m.
00a.m.
65a.nl.
15a.m. |
44p.m.
WEST
Lv ..Albany.. Ar
Lv .Lumpkin. Ar
Lv Hurtshoro Ar
Lv .Ft. Davla. Ar
Ar N’tgomery Lv
Ar ..Selma.. Lv
Ar PenBacola Lv
Ar . .Mobile.. Lv
Ar NewOrleanaLv
lAr .St. LouIb. Lv
No- 79
l:20p.m,
ll:12a.m
9:36a.n
8:56a.in
7:IOa.m
5:00a.ir
ll:06p.ir.
12:40a.m
8:15p.in
8:00a. m
On week days No. 110 leaves Albany at 5:30 a. m„ arriving Dawson
7:25 a. m. and Richland 8:46 a. m., connecting at Richland with tralnB for
Columbus, Amorlcus and Savannah.
No. 80. Through train to Columbus, making close connection at Rich
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. 8TEWART, A. O. P. A„ 3avannah, Ga.
ALBANY & NORTHERN R’Y.
DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES.
NO. 17.
Lv. Savannah ...7-.15am S.A.L.Ry
Lv. Atlanta 8:00am C. ofGa Rj
Lv. Macon 11:30am G. S. & F.Rj
Lv. Jacksonville 8:00am G. S. ft F.Rj
Lv. Cordele 2:10pm
Ar. Albany .....3:35pm
NO. 16.
Lv. Albany 4-30pm
Ar. Cordele 6:16pm
Ar. Macon 9:35pm G.S.&F.Ry
Ar. Helena 9:30pm S. A.L. Ry
NO. 18.-
Lv. Albany .... 12:OOnoon
Ar. Cordele 1:25pm
Ar. Savannah ...8:00pm S.A.L.Ry
Ar. Macon 4:20pm G. S. &F.Ry
Ar. Jacksonville 8:00pm G.S.&F.Ry
Ar. Atlanta 7:60pm C.-of Ga. Ry
NO. 15.
Lv. Macon .. . ,6:46am G.S. &F.Ry
Lv. Helena 5:30am S. A.L. Ry
Lv. Cordele 9:30am
Ar. Albany ...,11:16am
For additional Information, rates, etc., addresB
A- V. PHILLIPS, Com’l Agt,, Albany, Ga. j. s CREWS
8. A. ATKINSON, Union Ticket Agt. v. P. & G. M„ Albany! Ga
J. Q. ADAMS, Soliciting Freight and Passenger Agent, Cordele, Ga.
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co.
PASSENGER SCHEDULE^.
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURES AT ALBANY, GA.
IN EFFECT APRIL 8, 1906,
DEPARTURES
For Waycroaa, Brunawlck and Point*
South and East
Train No. 91 Leaves
. 5:45 am
Train No. 95 Leaves
..2:00 pm
For Thomasvllle, Montlcollo and
Point* WeiL
Train No. 71 Leaves
..4:00 pm
Train No. 73 Leaves
7:40 am
ARRIVALS
From Waycroaa, Brunawlck and
Polnta South and East
Train No. 94 Arrives,......11:45 am
Train No. 90 Arrives...'.... .10:30 pm
From Thomaavllle, Montlcollo and
Polnta WetL
Train No. 72 Arrives!......11:86 an
Train No. 74 Arrives..i 7:15pta
o. «. mimimson, U- T. A., Alhany, <
T. J. BOTTOMS, Traveling Paaaenger Agent, Thomaavllle, Ga.