The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, April 26, 1906, Image 9

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;i • -ssn*? HHMHgMggM THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1906. ■IV _ I. __ IB?mm. .Every mother, feels a ■kP^SMbRjI S reat dread of the pain IBfiHiltVRj']! S»H EU-lHwl and danger attendant upon WRFU ' ITHHBHW the most critical period mW of her life. Becoming a mother should be a source of joy to all, but the suffering and danger incident to the ordeal makes its anticipation one of misery. ue painless, but all the dungei by its use. Those who usd this remedy are no longer despondent or gloomy; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions are overcome, the system is made ready for tho coming event, and the serious accidents so common to the critical hour are obviated by the use of Mother’s Friend. “It is worth its weight in gold,” says many who have used it. $1.00 per bottle at drug stores. Book containing valuable information of interest to all women, will be sent to any address free upon application to BRADFIELO REGULATOR OO., Atlanta. Ga. Mothers Friend UNDER CANVAS Corner Broad and Jefferson Streets, TUESDAY, MAY 1ST — ONE NIGHT ONLY—TUESDAY, MAY 1st. The Original and Only ( BARLOW & WILSON, ' All White i i ii MINSTRELS. 50—All White Performers—50 Singers—Dancers—Comedians Superb Band and Orchestra PARADE AT 1:30 P. M. SPECIAL—An all white company catering to Ladles and Children. Will exhibit on vacant* lot, corner Broad and Jefferson Btreets, TUESDAY, MAY 1. ONE NIGHT ONLY. IlMflK Alexanders Artists Trim the Valdosta Team Unmerci fully—Score, 4 to 0. CroBley, cf 3 0 0 .3 .1 1 Total. .27 9 1 33 4 7 VALDOSTA— PO A E AB R H . Ferniand 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 beat fire or burglary insurance. Our armor clad safe deposit vaults are fire and burglar proof. Box rentable from $3 tol$10 a year. Your inspection is invited. EXCHANGE BANK OF ALBANY. PAINFUL PERIODS Life often, seems too long to the woman who suf fers from painful periods. The eternal bearing- down, headache, backache, leucorrhea, nervousness, dizziness, griping, cramps and similar tortures are dreadful. To make life worth living, take oP Woman’s Relief It quickly relieves inflammation, purifies and en riches the blood, strengthens the constitution and permanently cures all diseased conditions from which weak women suffer. It is matchless, marvelous, reliable. At all druggists’ in $1.00 bottles. WRITE DS A LETTER freely and frankly, In strictest confi dence, telling us all your symptoms and troubles. We will send free advice (in plain sealed envelope). Address: La dles’ Advisory Dept.,The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. “I SUFFERED GREATLY,” writes Mrs. L. E. Clevenger, of Belle- view, N. C., “at my monthly periods, all my life, but the first bottle of Cer- dui gave me wonderful relief, and now I am In better health than 1 have been for a long time.’' PIANOS! TWENTY INSTRUMENTS ON OUR FLOORS FOR YOUR INSPECTION. A PIANO, like a wife or .husband; is frequently a life companion. You therefore want something to suit you- perfectly when you buy. We believe we can give you satisfaction in the two essential points— QUALITY AND PRICE. BEAMAN’S MUSIC HOUSE 104 Pino Stroot, (Rumnoy Building.! Albany, Ga It wna a groat gamo to win. Tho folks who oxpoctcd to see Tuesday's performance repeated were sadly mistaken. Boyd had fine sup port and the home team won handily. Ramburger, on short, picked up an Im possible one; Crosley, In center, broke up two clean hits, and Eldred made a most beautiful catch nt second. The wholo team played phenomenal ball. Manager Alexander, on the Initial sack, fielded bis position In fine shape. Altogether It was a game worth look ing at For Valdosta, Weaver, In left, played star bull. Bnrbor was a trifle nervous, but the husky youngster is a pitcher, nil right. THE GAME IN DETAIL. First Inning, Mitchell, up for VnldoBta, gets four bad ones and walks to first. T. Gar rett files out to pitcher. Covington fans. Walters lilts n grounder to Boyd, out at first No hits, no runs. For Albany, Eldred gets his base, advances to second on Ramburger’s sacrifice. McCormack files out to La- mottc. Dudley blngles for two bags and Eldred scores. Snodgrass gets a nice hit and Dudley , scores. Lovelace fans. Hits 2, runs 2. Second Inning. Weaver files out to Eldred. Weak ley astonishes himself and everyone else by making a hit. D. Gnhrett fans. Lamottc taps to Boyd, to Alexander. Hits 1, runs 0. Alexander gets hit, Crosley hits to pltchor, Alec' dies nt second, Boyd gets four and walks, Eldred taps for two, Ramburger singles and Crosley scores. McCormack hits the ozone three times. Hits 2, runs 1. Third Inning. Mitchell hits to short, out at first. T. Garrett singles. Covington gets to first on Eldred's fumble. \Garrett goes to second. Walters gets hit after hav ing fouled the ball, out. Hits 1, runs 0, Dudley pop fllos to D. Garrett. Snod. grass bunts to Boyd, out at first. Love lace gets three strikes from Barber. No hits, no runs. Fourth Inning. Weaver files out to Ramburger; Weakley grounders to Alexander; D. Garrett sends a fly to Eldred. No hits, no runs. Alexander gets to first on D. Gar rett’s fumble; CroBley hits to short, Aleck dies. Boyd grounders to second out. at first Crosley oat nt second. No hits, no runB. Fifth Inning. Lamotte hits to short, out nt first Barber gets to first on a wild throw, finally getting to third. Mltchdll to third to first. T. Garrett files out to Dudley. No hits, no runs. Eldred pop flies, out to T. Garrett. Ramburger and McCormack fan. No hits, no runs. Sixth Inning. Covington bunts, McCormack grabs It, out at first. Walters out to Cros- ley. Weaver singles. \Voakley ground ers out to Alexander. One hit, no runs. Dudley gets to first on Mitchell's er ror. Snodgrass singles. Lovelace out on foul fly. Snodgrass dies at second, Alexander files out to right Hold. One hit, no runs. 8eventh Inning. D. Garrett singles. Lamotte fans, Barber flleB out to Crosley. Mitchell gets a two-bagger, Garrett going to third. T. Garrett sends one to Crosley, bad Judgment, Garrett. Hits 2, runs 0. Crosley tapB to second, out at first. Boyd sends a fly to Weaver, out. El- dred sends one over the left field fence for four bags. Ramburger fans. Hits 1, runs 1. Eighth Inning. Covington tap's to short, out at first. Walters ozones. Weaver bunts to Boyd, out at first. No hits, no runs. McCormack gets to first on Coving ton’s error. Dudley fans, .Snodgrass ditto. Lovelace follows suit. No hits, no runs. Ninth Inning. Weakley fans. D. Garrett gets hit. Lamotte fouls out to McCormack. Barber fouls out to Mitchell. No hits, no runs. Line-up. Mitchell, 3b 0 0 Gnrrett, T.. ss 2 2 Covington, cf. 0 0 Walters, c 11 0 Weaver, If 1 0 Weakley, lb 3 0 Garrett, D., 2b 4 2 LaMottc. rf. '..2 0 •Barber, p 1 3 Total.’ 24 7 3 30 0 5 • Wllmot batted for Barber in ninth. 8ummary. Earned Runs—Albany 3. First Base on Balls—OH Boyd, 2; olt Barber, 3. Left on Bases—Albany, 2; Valdosta 1. First Base on Errors—Dudley, Alex ander, McCormack, Weakley. Two-base Hits—Mitchell, Eldred, Dudley. Home Runs—Eldred. Struck Out—By Bold, 0; by her, 9. Double Plays—Lnmotto to D. rott. Passed Balls—Walters. Hit by Pitcher—Alexander, D. rott Time of Game—1 hour, 30 minutes. Umpire—Groovey. TAX BOOKS NOW OPEN. The books for receiving tax return* for 1906 are now open. As the state demands prompt return of digest, as law requires, books Will bo closed about June 1st- B. W. GUNNISON, 2-lmo Y. C.. D, C. James Tift Mann, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Vwntulett Building Bar- Gar- Gar- LANTERN EXPLODED IN SCHOONER’S HOLD. A Terrible Experience on tho Lumber- Laden Schooner Jennie-Thomae. WITHDRAWAL OF EDITOR GRAVES. People of 8avannah More Interested In Gubernatorial Raeo. Special Ro The Hecald. Savannah; Gu„ April 26.—The acol- dent on tho schooner Jennie Thomas, bound from Savannah to. Baltimore, which was mentioned briefly In these dispatches yosterdny afternoon, was a terrible experience. Had It happened a little farther from port ft Is believed the ontlre schooner would have been burned to the water's odge As It waB the vessel was very badly damaged, ono man was killed and another so badly lnjnrcd that It Is fearod lie will die. The Injured man la Thomaa WoIIb. Tho dead man was William Comer. Both are colored. The Thomas had left port In tow of a tug with a load of lumbor. When she got almost to Tyboe the two men who were burned wont below with a lighted lantern to got some crude pe troleum from a barrel. Tho man wlio had the lantern dropped It and It ex ploded. Comer was so terribly burned that he dlod lnstantor. Wells was al most as badly burned, but he was still alive this morning. As soon as the oil exploded the vessel caught fire and much of Its'wood work was burned away. The tug that was towfng the Thomas and another tag that was nearby put out the fire and the dead and Injured were brought back to the city. 8peclal to The Herald. Savannah, Ga., April 26.—The an nouncement made in the afternoon papers of the state yesterday that John Temple Graves had withdrawn from the race for the United States senate excited considerable interest In Savannah, although it cannot be said that It caused much surprise. But little has been heard of Mr. Graves' race in this section of the state. Sen ator Bacon has many friends In Sa vannah -and the First congressional district and there has never been any doubt ns to how this district would go In the senatorial race. There has been much more Interest In the race for governor than In that ho squats over Its bole, making a low for senatqr.>The fight that, the various, hissing or whistling ’ sound with his nnnAl^olne nva mnlrthv In frtita Ann. Ilm Snnil till* nimbi* mittt itl linnil Mlt candidates are making In this con gressional district ha* oreated the keenest Interest In Savannah. The First district being his home district lias been looked upon as certain to go tor Estlll, but the frequent viBlta paid It by Messrs. Smith and Howell Indi cate that they are trying to take It away from him. The counties In the district that do not go for EstUl will go for Smith. Can You Count a Pillion t The following*culci.',itlou on the length of time which It would take a person to count 1.000,000.000 ap peared 111 tile English Mntlionintlolnii: What Is u billion? The reply Is simple. In Englund u billion Is u million times a million. This Is quickly written and quicker still pronouuced, but uo man Is able to count It. You will count 100 or 170 n minute, but let us suppose that you go up as high as 200 a minute, bout after hour. At that rate you would count 12,000 an hour, 288,000 a day or 103,120,000 In a year. Let us suppose now that Adam, at the beginning o( his existence, had begun to count, bud con tinued to do so and was counting still. Had such a thing been possible be would not yet bnve finished the task of counting a billion. To count n bil lion would require a person to count 200 a minute for a period of 0,312 yours 312 days 3 hours 20 minutes, provided that he should count’ con tinuously. But suppose we allow the counter twelve hours dally for rest, eating uml sleeping. Then he would need 18.025 years 310 days 10 hours 45 minutes In which to complete the task. ALBANY— Eldred, 2b Ramburger, a. s. McCormack, c. .. Dudley, rf. Boyd, p Snodgrass, If. ... Lovelace, 3b po a : . 1 0 AB R H Alexander, lb 11 Baseball Season Tickets. Season tickets of admission to the Albany ball park for the’entlre league season of 1900 are now on sale. These tickets entitle the-holders to grand stand seats-at all the games. There will be forty-two games played on the home grounds. Tho general admis sion charge will bo 25 cents, and 25 cents extra will be charged for grand stand seats. A party witnessing all the games will, therefore, pay out $21. The price ot season tickets Is $15, and one represents a clpar saving of $6 on the season. There are scores of Albanians who will attend all the games, and these should avail them selves of the opportunity which the offer ot season tickets makes avail able. Io the event all the games are not played holders of these tickets will have refunded all money not so- tually earned. The season tickets -are on sale at the drug stores and at the Rialto saloon. Devil’s Island Torture Is no worse than tho terrible case of PUsb that aflllcted me 10 yonrs. Then I was advised to apply Buoklen’s Ar nica Salve, and less than a box per manently cured me, writes L. 8. Na pier, of Rugles, Ky. Heals all wounds, burns and sores like magic. 25c at. Albany Drug Co., Druggists. Snake IItinting With/ Noses. When the Australian aborigine is pushed and con find no other gamo, bs catches snakes for food. With his won derful brown eyes bo can soe the faint est trail where a snake has slgzaggsd through the dry moss and leaves. At nighttime his broad nostrils tako up the chose, and, stooping down among tho bushes, with a tough forked stick In his hand to support him, he follows tho track as unerringly as a blood hound. When be runs a snake to earth, If he cannot surprise It In tho open nnd kill It by a sudden blow of his stick, lips. Soon the snake puts Its hond out of the hole and peers round. Iu nn In stunt the forked stick descends nnd fixes it to tho ground by tbo neck, and the black fellow, seizing It behind the hoad, so that It cannot bite him, drags it out of the hole nud either twists Its head oft or pounds It on the ground till Its back Is broken. llumanltr and Machinery. Machinery Is the cornerstone of mod ern society, the very foundation on which law, sclem/o, ethics, tho arts; even the state itself, rests. It Is so new that we do not yet know Its pootry. We do not yet understand. Only two generations have lived be side the highway of steam; only one baa seen the Bessemer converter trans form the blacksmith Into the mastor builder of ships and towers. The sew ing machine, the far speaker, the type writer, are common things of today, ac cepted as a matter of dally conven ience, and yet are they teachers of the people. Machines that come close to our lives and homes Insonslbly teach truth, precision, the adjustment of uni versal laws to human needs, respect for that wise American Idea that labor saved la labor released for high er und nobler toll. Tbo machine la the bead master of the high school of tbs race.—Reader Magaslne. At a French Wedding. At wedding feast I* an Important ceremony In Trance among all Classen of society. Even ifmong tho very poor est of the Parisians n wedding banquet Is the occasion for a reckless expendi ture of money In the purchase of wine nnd viands. In Brittany a wedding Is even a more gorgeous affair than In Paris. At a recent wedding ceremony In Brittany the guests numbered 1,200, and three bullocks were slaughtered to provide them with meat Wine was consumed in large quantities, and In addition forty barrels ot cider was con sumed. The Currant. The currant of commerce la said to be one ot tbo most nutritious forms of food, a pound of the little lierrles from. Greece containing more than three times as much actual nourishment- as the same weight of lean boef. “Cur rants.” says one authority, “should really be eaten every day. Tbey con tain nil the IxmcHclnl properties of tbo apple, but tu greater proportion." The most' iuiportuut fact connected with them is that tbey supply the body with ,muscle building nnd nerve sustaining material lu a form ready for speedy dlgestlou and assimilation. . A Lucky Postmistress Is Mrs. Alexander, of Cary,. He., who has found Dr. King’s New Idle Pills to be the best remedy she ever tried for keeping the Stomach, Liver and Bowels in perfect ordor. You’ll agree with her It you try these painless puri fiers that Infuse new life. Guaranteed bv Albany Drug Co., Druggists. Price 26c. - v PERHAP8 THI8 MEANS YOU. Your eyes are not so stfong as they need to bo? Perhaps you have hart them reading or sewing too many years not to have it tell In your eight becoming rim at times —perhaps you have suffered from some nervous trouble which shows In the eyeB—perhapB It Is becom ing difficult for you to thread a needle?—perhaps letters blur and lines mix?—perhapB nil you have guessed about glasses may be wrong? Come here—get bur advlco—let us show you that science hue a remedy. Phil Harris, Leading Optician. BETTER EXAMINE your wheel carefully before starting on your season’s riding. Little de fects sometimes cause big accidents. Besides, no defective bicycle ever be came less so by use. If you let us. REPAIR IT NOW the damage can be etklly, quickly and cheaply done. If you neglect It now, you will pay for It later on, perhaps lit broken bones, certainly la mo There Is nothing too small about wheel for us to fix. There Is nothing on the wheel that we cannot adju Avoid expense and danger by le us fix things now. B. F. SMITH, The Leading Wheelman, Pino Sti Banks’ Closing Hour. The undersigned. birakB of will olose tholr doors for bust] 1 p. "m. evorjl ddy during Chn week, except Saturday, when f remain open until the usual hour closing, 3 p. m. The First National Bank. The Exohange Bank. The Albany National The Third National Bank, The Citizens’ National Bank 4-20-lwk L. GEIG! We Herewith Offer a Few For Next Four Days. A rich assortment of brand-new Shirt Walati, In the very-newest designs, fine In material and finish, beautiful embroideries and laces tastily combined with sheer white fabrlce; worth / 76o, $1.60, $2.00, $2.75, will go at 480, 85c, $1.25 and $1.85. 20 pleees Long Cloth espeoially softly finished yarn, at 9o par yd. Exoellent quality sheer India Linen, 40 Inehes wide, at V/ t o per yard. A lot of fins, sheer India Linen from 8l£c to 15c. New 8pr!ng Percales,, light and dark styles, the 12J4o quality, b’/ac per yard. New plaid Ginghams, big ment In sytea and colors, from to 10o per yard. GEIGER, 71 Bread Street. IlHBRHHsHHHHMflHBHnnBM lUMIMtl HSSESEs GRAINGER &1 CONTRACTORS AND Bl Dawson, Gs. Coet of Brick, Stone, or sulldlngz Furnlehed.