Newspaper Page Text
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THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1906.
No woman’s happi
ness cnn be complete
without children; it
is her nature to love
and want them
ns much so as it is
to love the beau-
Woman's
Nightmare
The critical ordeal through which the
however, is so fraught with dread, pain
very thought of it fills her with appreht
necessity for the reproduction of life to
— "-‘end so prepares
without any dan
Mother 9 ®
tiful and pure.
The critical ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass,
ht with dread, pain, suffering and danger, that the
hension and horror. There is no
i be either painful or dangerous.
The use of Mother’s Friend so prepares the system for the comingevent
that it is safely passed without any danger. This great and wonderful
remedy is always ap
plied externally, and
has carried thousands
of women through the
trying crisis without suffering. gf M
Send fnr freo book containing Information of PM# j
priceless value to all expectant mothers^ ^ ^ Saw BB SI If
The Bradfleld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.
«>**l******************0»»*>|l»»»$lfrl
Our Shirtwaist Proposition is not in force
after Wednesday, 12 o’clock. We have to
do this on account of the rush of busi-
V
ness caused from this free deal.
We will have something for you every
week. Watch this space.
New Albany
Steam Laundry.
'PHONE 39.
Georgia Northern Railway Go.
' ALBANY - BOSTON LINE
Read Down.
Read Up.
; No. 4
| Dally
No. 2 I
Daily I
Effective Feb. 23,1906.
STATIONS.
No. 1
Daily
No. 3
Daily
| 3:50pm
7:30am
Lv.
... Albany ..
Ar.
11:40am
8:20pm
j 4:44pm
8:24am
Ar.
. Tlcknor ...
Lv.
10:40am
7:16pm
4:50pm
8:30am
Ar.
.. Doerun ...
Lv.
10:35am
7:10pm
,| 5:30pm
9:10am
Ar.
.. Moultrie ..
Lv.
10:00am
6:35pm
| 5:45pm
l:16pm|
Lv.
. Moultrie ..
Ar.
8:35am
5:16pm
I 6:25pm
l:56pm|Ar.
.;. Pavo ....
Lv.
7:50am
4:30pm
7:00pm
2:30pm|Ar.
.. Boston* ...
Lv.
7:20am
4:00pm
Connections at Albany with S. A. L.
Nos. 1 and 4 make connections at Albany to and from Cordele. Savan
nah, Macon and Atlanta, via A. & N.
All trains make connections at Albany to and from all Central of Ga
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 Tlcknor, 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 Tlfton and Thomasvllle.
S. A. ATKINSON, U. T. A.,
Albany, Ga.
G. E. SMITH, Traffic Mgr.,
Moultrie, Ga.
. Fernland Farms .
Dairy Department
Sweet Cream Rich Milk
High Grade Butter
"Patronage Solicited
For Engagements Telephone No. 199
DON’T RISK YOUR VALUABLES
by leaving them in your house. You may lose them by fire or burglary.
“SAFE DEPOSIT" is the best fire or burglary insurance. Our armor clad
safe deposit Jvaults are fire ’and burglar proof. Box rentable from $3 to $10
a year. Your inspection is invited.
EXCHANGE BANK OF ALBANY.
s**m***********»»hi»i*ii»»**o*****»
DRINK A BOTTLE
CARBONATED
We thoroughly Sterilize evey bottle before it is washed
EVERYWHERE 5 CENTS.
The Trade
“ITS CLEAN AMD PURE. THAT'S SURE"
THE ALBANY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
— V.4V. V ~-J ■>»»•« WV.V1
# and rinsed. Drink Only The Genuine!
Mark is securely stamped upon every bottle.
, Exclusive Bottler* to the Trade. North' St.. AIbe.ny.Gn.
******************************
ED. R. ft CLAYTON JONES.
Attorneys-at-Law
And Real Estate.
Phone 408.
GRAINGER & BARTLETT,
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDER8,
Oawion, Ga.
Coat of Brick, stone, or Wooden
Sulldlnga Furnished.
JAMES TIFT MANN
Attorney and Counsellor at Law.
Ventulett Building
FOR SALE.
1,850 acres, farm and timber lands.
Twenty plows on It. Annual rental
850 lbs. lint cotton to each plow. 700
acres of It In hardwood timber. Three
and one-half miles of Central of Geor
gia railway run through It. Located
four miles west of Albany.- Land suit
able for cotton, corn, cantaloupes and
general farming. The timber Is worth
the . entire price. TermB, one-fifth
cash, balance 5 years, at 6 per cent
Parties desiring hardwood timber will
communicate with us.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
Attorneys and Real Estate, Albaay,
Ga.
FOR SALE.
■ A lot of 4-horse wagon wheels In
good condition.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
If you have real estate for sale list
It with us.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES,
FOR SALE.
Two-thirds acre corner Jefferson
and Third avenue in Arcadia.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES
FOR SALE.
The Lonsberg residence, 8 rooms,
57x210 feet, Pine street; 2-room .house
on alley; waterworks, electric lights
and sewerage.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES,
FOR SALE.
Four-room cottage, the Kirkland
home, East Albany; waterworks on
lot. Price $455.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
FOR SALE.
Residence lot, 210 feet, on West
brook aver.uo, 52% feet on State
street. Price $750.
ED. R. & CLAYTON *JONES.
FOR SALE.
Residence street lot, 52% feet by
210 feet. Price $550.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
“II ROUBLE CASE.”
The Brooklyn Eagle Gives
Some Interesting Political
History.
FOR SALE.
Seven lots In Arcadia, $59 each; $10
cash, balance $5 per month without
Interest.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
FOR SALE
Fifteen lots on Tift street for $100
each; $10 cash, balance $3 per month.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
FOR SALE
. Thirteen lots on West Tift street,
$05 each: $5 cash, balance $2.50 per
month.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
FOR SALE
The Kaufman one acre and resi
dence, Pine street.
ED. R. & CLAYTON JONES.
ED. H ft CLAYTON JONES,
Attobneys-at-Law
And Seal Estate.
Rooms 3,4 and S, Hobba Building.
The Croker and John F. Gaynor In
fluence In New York Politics and
How Roosevelt Snatched Victory
Out of the Jaws of Defeat—Final
f
Triumph of Justice in the Greene
and Gaynor Case. ,
From Tho Brooklyn KnRlo, April 18? 1900.
In 189S, when Judge Augustus Vnu
Wyek, of Brooklyn, was nominated for
governor liy the Democratic conven
tion In Syracuse, the Tammany con
tractors nnd politicians united with tho
Democratic politicians and contractors
of contral and western New York to
control the party convention. A result
was the nomination of. ex-Judge Au
gustus Van Wyck. of Brooklyn, for
governor as the opponent of Col. The
odore Roosevelt, the Republican can
didate. Judge Van Wyck was barely
defeated, and Mr. Roosevelt was bare
ly elected.
While Judge Van Wyek was always
differentiated and exonerated from the
Jbogglng crew that forced hla nomlnn-
Jobbing crew that forced his nomlnn-
and earnest canvass, Mr. Roosevelt’s
election was due to the attack which
ho waged upon the Richard Crokhr
nnd John F. Gaynor Influences, which,
he declared, Bought to control the state
government as they controlled the
state convention 'that year. Colonel
Roosevelt stood to be defeated on the
record of Governor Black, the Repub
lican executive, but he snatched vic
tory out of the Jaws of defeat by his
eleventh-hour nssnult on tho Croker
Influences and the John F. Gaynor In
fluences which had controlled Demo
cratic politics.
The John F. Gaynor Influences were
known and felt throughout central and
western New York. But contracts for
United States work in Georgia, held
by John F. Gaynor, had been brought
to light In Savannah, nnd Oborlln M.
Carter, an olflcer of the United States
engineers, was Buspected of criminally
profiting by swindles with which Gny-
nor was identified. These swindles
were being brought to light by the-
grand Jury of the United States dis
trict court In Savnnnah, nnd the Judge
of that court then was nnd now 1b
Emory Speer, who had been appointed
—though an Independent Democrat—
by President Arthur.
Shortly afterward Carter was con
victed. sentenced to a long term In
prison nnd heavily lined. John F.
Gaynor nnd Beniamin D. Greene, ac
complices of Carter, were Indicted and
put under $40,090 ball. They escaped
to Canada, their ball was forfeited,
and they reimbursed thoBe who went
their ball, and who thereby enabled
them to escape. That was six years
ago. For over five years they resisted
iby legnl devices their extradition. Bat
a few months ago all devfces were ex
hausted, and they were put on trial
for three offenses In Judge Speer's
court In' Savannah. Yesterday they
were convicted. Today they were sen
tenced, and probably the longest fight,
on record between the United States
nnd criminal defendants was ended by
the victory of the United States In the
same court, conducted by the same
Judge from whom these defendants
sought to escape. This Is a most not
able vindication of the persistence of
justice shown for a long time. It Is as
dramatic ns It Is JuSt. that Judge Speer
should be the' presiding officer of the
court In which these men have been
found guilty.
A law article could he written on
the long fight these men In vain put up
against extradition. Another article
could he written- on the progressive
nnd triumphant results which followed
from the bare victory of Theodore
Roosevelt, whose election as governor
John F. Gaynor and Richard Croker
nearly prevented. Still another article
could be written on the consequences
to Democracy, which the former dom
inance of Croker nnd of John F. Gay
nor caused. And, at least, one more
article could be written upon the ne
cessity of reducing extradition of
criminals from British territory to the
United States to simplicity, to cer
tainty and to celerity. These articles,
however, can wait. Speculation could
Infinitely consider what would havo
followed, had Roosevelt lost the gov
ernorship to Judge Van Wyck and had
the Democracy of the state passed un
der Croker and Gaynor management
then.
The simpler and the salutary thing
to consider today, however, is the pa-
tlnce, the persjstence and the final
victory of moral Justice, under legal
forms, In the court of the United
States In the southern district of Geor
gia. The triumph of Justice In that
court over the devices and resources
of guilt Is a matter for congratulation,
for faith In the right and for hope for
the future. The defendants are of lit
tle consoquenco, except as their case
has contributed to tho judicial and
moral vlndlci^lon of justice and of
law. Tho light tho defendants put up
may havo been within their legnl
rights, but tho immoral quality of that
fight, oh tholr behalf, has sorely, and
rightly, Impaired the standing of law
yers and of judgos In tho Dominion.
So great wns the resultant scandal
that the highest courts In England had
to Interfere on belmlt of Justice In the
case of Gaynor nnd Oroene and against
tho efforts of several lawyers nnd some
judges In tho Dominion of Canada on
their behalf. Yet all the while tho fed-
oral court In the southern district of
Georgia calmly awaited the triumph of
Justice and of law, nnd today tho Judge
of that court, Emory Speer, pro
nounced the sentence of Justice and of
lnw upon these criminals nnd con
vlctcd defendants.
We're Right Here, You Know,
Where you cnn come nnd “have It out"
with us If anything goes wrong with
anything you buy here. That’s why
we’ve got to take pjilns to have things
right In the first place—why 'we’ve
simply got to “square” ourselves with
you on anything that does not prove
Just ns we say. We’ve got to do busi
ness with you nnd your friends "on the
level” or not at all.
If you buy a “mall order” buggy or
harness and It disappoints you, you
nmy get satisfaction, and you may not
You’re only one of thousands of cus
tomers, and the mall order concern
doesn’t depend upon the trade of this
town or vicinity. If you do get satis
fnctlon It will be at a cost in time and
correspondence that will eat up all the
savings.
By all means buy where you can buy
to the best advantage, but keep your
money In your clothes till you've
talked with us; then If we can’t show
you why and how if Is better to spend
your harness nnd vehicle money right
here we won’t sny another word.
ALBANY BUGGY CO.,
19-9t In Woolfolk Building.
A Good Hinw.
After the Duke of Wellington’s vic
torious campiilgns the University of
Oxford complimented the duko him
self and his principal ofllcers by con
ferring upon them the honorary and
not very appropriate degree of doctor
of civil laws. At that time tho fees
were heavy, and one of the distinguish
ed soldiers, who hud gnthcred more
honor than profit In the wars, declined
the proffered degree In the following
vorse:
Oxford, I know you wish me well,
But prithee let me be.
I can't, nine, be D. C. L.
For want of £ s. d.
Tradition.
What an enormous “camera obsenra"
mngultler Is tradition. How n thing
grows In the human memory. In the
huinuu Imagination, when love, wor
ship and all that lies la the human
heart ure there to encourage It. nud la
the darkness, In the entire Ignorance,
without dutc or document, nu hook, no
Arundel iniirhlc, only boro nnd there
some dull monumental calm.—Carlyle.
Violence.
Violence ever defeats Its own ends.
Where you cuuuot drive you cun al
ways persuade. A gentle word, a kind
look, a good uatured suille. can work
wonders and accomplish miracles.
There Is a secret pride In every human
honrt that revolts at tyranny. Yon
may order and drive un Individual, but
you cannot muke him respect you.—
Huzlltt.
Jo.t n nis.
Proud Mother—Professor Octave call
ed at our bouse todny, and my daugh
ter played,tho piano for him. Ho Just
raved over her playing. Her Neighbor
—How rude: Why couldn’t he conceal
bis feelings Just ns the rest of us do?
Ilap.le...
"Tom has proposed, and asks me to
give him his answer In a letter.”
“Shull you do It?”
“No. I will ls> more liberal and give
him Ills answer In two letters."
Or Cook With Them On.
There never was an angel . who
wouldn’t take off her wings and cook
for tho rnau she loved.—New Orleans
Picayune.
Something New In Life Insurance.,
In addition to carrying your policy
from the 10th to the 20th year for 5
per cent, of the premium, and If. you
die In that period no charge Is made
against your policy, yon cap. by pay
ing 60 cents extra for each $1,000, be
Insured against total or permanent dis
ability from accident or disease, pre
miums cease and the policy Is folly
paid up, thus covering two risks for
one premium. Come and see me.
C. M. CLARK,
14-lmo
LADIES!
i
CStll and see the latest
Clincher Cellar Supporter*
—Prevent! the collar from
wilting.
Pliil Harris,
Leading Jeweler.
m
Take care of your eyes.
We are the Leading Op
tician! and make a spec
ialty In fitting the Eyes.
EYE3 EXAMINE FREE.
Phil Harris,
Leading Optician.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
Arrival and Departure of Train* at
Albany, Ga.
In Effect Jan. 8. 1905.
DEPARTURES!
For Dothan, Floralla and Lock-
isrt 7:45am
For Dothan, Ftorala and Lock
et 3:50 pm
For Macon. Atlanta, Augua-
ta, Columbus. Savannah.. 4:05am
For Macon, Atlanta, Colum
bus, Montgomery, Troy....11:54am
For Macon, Atlanta, Savan
nah , 9:00 pm
ARRIVALS:
From Lockhart, Florala and
Dothan 8:45 pm
From Lookhart, Florala and
Dothaq 11:40 am
From Augusta, Savannah,
Atlanta, Macon 7:25am
From Montgomery, Troy. Co
lumbus, Atlanta, Macon... 3:40pm
From Atlanta, Bavannah, Ma
con, Montgomery, Colum
bus 11:80 pm
ALL TRAIN8 DAILY.
Drawing room Bleeping cars be
tween Albany and Atlanta on trains
arriving at Albany at 7:25 a. m. and
leaving Albany at 9:00 p. m. Farlot
car between Albany and Atlanta on
train arriving at Albany at 8:40 p
in. and leaving Albany at 11:54 a..m.
For further Information apply to S.
A. Atkinson, Depot Ticket Agent or
R S. Morris, Commercial Agent, ’A>
■•nny. Ga
L. GEIGER;
We Herewith Offer
a Few
SPECIAL VALUES'
For Next Four Days.
A rich assortment of brand-new
Shirt Waists, In the very newest
designs, fine In material and flrtlah,
beautiful embroideries and laees
tastily eomblned with sheer white
fabrics; worth 75o, $1.50, $2.00,
will go at 48e, 85c, $1.25 and
$t.75, ’
$j.85.
‘on m
20 piece* Long Cloth especially
softly finished yarn, at 9c per yd.
Excellent quality sheer India
Linen, 40 Inches wide, at OJ/Jo per
yard.
A lot of fine,- sheer India Linen
from 8I/2C to 16c.
New Spring Percales, light and
dark styles, the W/je quality, 9^£e
per yard.
New plaid Ginghams, big assort
ment In syles and colors, from 8%
to 10c per yard.
L. GE1GBR,
71 Broad Street.
A New City Convenience for
Albany
Which will deliver Standard Kerosene
Oil at your home every day at the same
olfi prices.
1 gallon, 20c. 5 gallons, 90c.
Jones & Thornton, ?
’Phone 23.'
ALBANY BRICE CO
BRICK
—MANUFACTURERS OF—
Annual Capacity, 10,000,000.