The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, April 27, 1906, Image 2

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BBBWIiaKaaagBBBBBBWa'BiMBWBgWWB^gia •>«„■. t. .lJ> JMBB5RK- • THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1906. te Albany Herald —BY THE— Publishing Co. . M. Molntoih President . McIntosh See. and Treat. v A. Davit..- Business Mgr. ery Afternoon Except Sunday. Weekly (8 pages) Every Saturday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ly Herald, ona year 88.00 ly Herald, elx months 2.50 ly Herald, three months 1.25 ly Herald, 8 pages, one year 1.00 I subscriptions payable In ad- end U; Advertising rates reasonable .,ade known on application. Cards of thanks, resolutions of re- and obituary notleea, other than __ which the paper Itself may give „ a matter of news, will be charged for at the rate of 10 cents a line, ex- oopt when sueh notices are published by charitable organizations, when a apodal rate will be named. Notices of church and society and all Other entertainments from which a revenue Is to be derived, beyond a brief announcement, will be charged Mr-at the rate of 5 cents a line, ifltee, second, floor Postoffice Build- corner Jackson and Pine streets, he Herald deala with advertising nts by special contract only, and advertising agent or agency le au- ted. to take contracts for adver- ibnte to be Inserted In this paper. A - THE HERALD IS elal Organ of the City of Albany, dial Organ of Dougherty County, loial Organ of Baker County. Organ of the Railroad Com- 16n of Georgia for the Second resatbnal' District' m i." 1 telephones: ,Room'and Job Printing 7*8 rings. ,, *> Rooms and Business Of- , *te It In The Herald It's ao. ou advertise In The Herald It goes. PAY, APRIL 27, 1806, f ' fn th&'flouth It Is Memorial Day; In Iho NoWh ll Is Decoration Day. ■“»’! |RlM' , TOUP earthquake at San Francisco Cl'j ' f, caused ^any engaged couples to get ■ Bwkfc:-, j, Tho (launderings ot the scientists In thole.efforts to explain tlio earthqualto ard pitiful. " Hobson has ceased to bo a hero, or • n joke, olther, t\nd has become a suc- polltldan. , , ;, The Georgia Chautauqua gets bigger •ad better and Its uplifting, reflnlng Influence Is being felt throughout Southwest Georgia. The musical concert given in the Chautnuqun auditorium In ^hls city last night would have been a credit to nay city In Georgia. ? Judge Dick Russell says he Is not running tor governor on Ills good looks, and .that lf‘ he can get. the votes of the ugly men he will be satlsfled. Maxim Gorky had as well go home. He brought with him n barrier to so cial recognition In this country, and as for money, the charitable are now thrntng the hand that helps toward flan FrandBCO. THff NEWBPAPER8 AND PREE PASSES. The Atlanta Georgian, John Temple Grnvos’s new paper, puts the world on notice that It does not propose to use free passes. Announcement to this effect Is made In an editorial “leader,” the first paragraph of which Is as fol lows: One of the cardinal principles which the Georgian has laid down ts the rule that none of Its em ployes shall accept or use a free pass upon a Tallway or transporta tion company In the state. Lest It may be misunderstood, the editorial goes on to state that the Georgian does not Intend to enter the field In any national or constituflonnl antagonism to the railway and trans portation companies of the state. After arguing the evil tendency of the free pnsB system, with reference to members of the legislature and oth er public officials, as well to new» paper men, the new Atlanta paper "saves Its bacon” In this qualifying clause: , Tills does not mean, of course, that we shall not enter Into com mercial and business relations with these great corporations. Our advertising columns are open to the exploitation upon a financial basis of their special otters and their special enterprises. For this they will pay our regular price, or we, may agree with them to accept payment, dollar for dollar, In the transportation books which they sell to commercial travelers, or to thebe who deal with them In a wholesale wayl ! * \ The editor of the Georgian may not know It, but It Is true, nevertheless, that many of the better class of news papers In Georgia, If not throughout the country, are following file, policy he has here outlined with reference to free passeB. The Herald adopted It yenrs ago, and has found It satlsfac- tory to all concerned. . Some of the railroads didn’t take kindly to It at first and held out against It for some time, but every system now touching Albany Is doing business with us on a business basis, and we have every rea son to bellove that they are quite aB well satisfied as we are. An$ SO Instead of Inaugurating a new reform niovem'dlit touohlng trio free pass Bystem between the press and the railroads, the new Atlanta pa per Is merely adopting a business-like system that has been In successful and satisfactory operation for some time. tqent has been made satisfactory to all parties In Interest! Mr. Bryan Is now In the Holy Land. He will probably write about It, but let him not trespass upon the pre serves of clergymen by preparing a lecture on It. -Lectures on the Holy- Land— well, every American clergy man who goes abroad seems to think that he has to have one. Here's a fish story from the Florida Times-Unton: "A cat fish In Lake George on the St. Johns had swal lowed two ducks, which were found in his stomach when he was taken'. And the story will gain Interest If we allow the Georgians to call the hero of It n salmon while they eat him." 1124 1102 THIS DATE IN HISTORY. April '27. -Alexander t. of Scotland died. -Conrad de Monferrat assassin nted. 1200—Edward t. of England defeated the Scots at battle of Dunbar. 1404—Philip, Duke of Burgundy, died. 1010—Patent for Newfoundland grant ed to the Earl of Northampton. 1667—Milton disposed of the copyright of "Paradise Lost” for 825, 1682—Feodor III. of Russia died; born June 8.1656. 1736—Death of Prince Eugene. 1741—Cartagena attacked by Admiral Vernon. 1762—The Irish leVelera suppressed by Lord Halifax. 1791—3. F. B. Morse, InSentor of the telegraph, born: died April 2, 1872. 1802— Louis Kossuth, Hungarian pa triot, born; died March 20, 1894. 1803— Toussalnt Ouverture, chief of St. Domingo, died. 1820—Herbert Spencer bom: Dec. 8, 1903. 1822—Gen. XT. S. Grant bom; died July 23,1885. 1830—City of Guatemala nearly de stroyed by an earthquake. 1848—Abolition of slavery in the French dominions decreed. 1856—Crimean war terminated by rat ification of treaty of peace. - 1859—Victor Emmanuel declared war against Austria. 1882—Ralph Waldo Emerson died; bora May 25. 1803. 1893—Great International naval re view at New York. 1898—Matanzas, Cuba, bombarded by Admiral Sampson's squadron of ' United Stntos warships. Booker Washington says the ne groes are following his advice, and this leads the Houston, Texas, Post to . remark; "If that be true somebody ought to Invent a process to convert Booker’s advice Into bull-tongue plows.” Editor Clark Howell, of the Atlanta Constitution, attended the Chautauqua • musical concert In the auditorium Inst night, and after It was ovor he snld that he realized more than ever be fore what a great Institution the Geor gia Chautnuqun Is. Wide variations still exist between the estimates of the best Informed Insurance men of the liabilities of the underwriters In San Francisco. Un derwriters In Oakland who have tabu lated the amount ot Insurance carried In San Francisco estimate that be tween 3175,000,000 and $185,000,000 Is in the burned district. The California Insurance commissioner has estimated the Insuranco loss as the smaller of these sums. The manager of the {loyal Insurance Company thinks $200,000,000 would bo a low estimate. The manager of the Connecticut Fire puts the figures at $225,000,000. Tho officers of tho Continental think $150,- 000,000 high enough; the president of tho Home thinks $85,000,000 will cover It; tho general munnger ot tho British- Amorlcan and Western Is assured by his California managers that millions of dollars - worth of property reported a total loss can be repaired at moilor- ulo expense, and he thinks tho loss will bo between $85,000,000 and $100,- 000,000. Even lower figures are given. Tho losses In Baltimore provod to bo very much less than was believed a few days nfter the fire. - The fool with the gun has killed several persons In San Francisco since the earthquake, one of his victims be ing a prominent citizen nnd mombor Ot the relief committee. Guns arc necessary things and are useful In the protection of life and property, but they should never be entrusted to . fdbls for such purposes. -, The Dallas. Texas. Ttmcs-Horald liras moralizes and philosophizes over the recent appalling disaster at Suu Francisco: - “ Fortunes went up In smoke In San Francisco, nnd men who were millionaires on Monday were 'bankrupts Tuesday. Man struts the stage ot life In hts gaudy trapplugs. but Old Massa alone Is all powerful 1 all wise.” A settlement has finally been made by the Vatican authorities with re gard to the division of the $7,000,000 paid by this government for the friar lands In the Philippines. Tho money has .been divided into threo parts. The Income of one part Is to go to the support o( churches and other ec clesiastical educational and charitable Institutions in the Philippines; the Inconle of another part Is to support missions maintained by the dispos sessed fratdrnltles, mainly In the Far East, and tho third part Is to bo used for the support of aged* and decrepit friars who aro members of tho orders In question. After payment of the money nnd the surrender of the land this government had no further con cern In tho matter. It Is gratifying to know, howuver, that a final adjust- A FACT PROVEN. MmU Convince Even tke jloot Skep tical of IU Truth. If there Is the slightest doubt In the minds of any that Dandruff germs do not exist, their belief la compelled by the fact that a rabbit Innoculsted with the germs became bald in six weeks’ time. It must be apparent to any person therefore that the only prevention ot baldness Is the destruction of the germ— which act is successfully accomplished In one hundred per cent, of cases by the application of Newbro’a Herplclde. Dandruff Is caused by the same germ which causes baldness and can be pre vented with the same remedy—Newbro’a Herplclde. Accept no substitute. "Destroy the cause you remove the effect.” Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. In stamps for sample to The Herplclde Co., Detroit, Mich. Albany Drug Co., Special Agents Inside .four Bones. People usually Imagine that their bones are ot solid mineral construc tion. without any feeling lu them. As a matter of fact, there are blood ves sels and uerves Inside the hones just as there are outside. During amputa tion of a limb much more pain Is felt when the hone Is attacked than when the fieeh la being cut through. Through the marrow which Is inside the bones run the nerves aud blood vessels, en tering the bones from the flesh without by little holes. Nature adapts the bony structure of various animals to their habits In a very Interesting manner. Sluggish creatures, like the sloth, huve solid bones, whereas the bones of the deer and the antelope are comparative ly light, so that they may run fast, and the leg bones of the ostrich are hollow. You will Had In the bones of any skel eton the application of mechanical principles which have only become knoiwn to man through the processes of laborious - and loug considered In vention. died Southward the 8tar— Kriini the Now Ynrn To read that New Orleans Is second only to New York us an exporting cen tre. and that Galveston Ib third on the list, makes the New-South seem like n lact already accomplished—as It Is— and also makes us take off our hats to the shades of James Monroe and Rob ert R. Livingston, those envoys to PnrlB who, without waiting to Bend home for Instructions, bought from Napoleon at a bargain not only, the mouths of tho Mississippi, but the western half of the Mississippi Val ley. The Father of Waters Is the father of commerce, and the future of the Crescent City when the Isthmus shall have been pierced, looks bright Indeed. Lion of Babylon. One of the oldest ami at the same time most Interesting lilts ot pictorial work which have been preserved froL-i antiquity Is that of the lion of Baby- loti. and so careful was the workman ship that even after the lapse of sev eral thousand years not ouly the out line, i>ut the color. Is very distinct. The figure was used very generally for decorative pur;>cses lu undent Baby lon. A ringer Pillory. The finger pillory Is still preserved carefully lu the parish church of St. Helen Ashby-de-lu-Zoucli and la thus described: “Au ancient and rather sin gular curiosity Is a finger plUory. This Instrument seems to have been used for the punishment of disorderly per sons during divine service. It consists of two upright posts about three feet high, which support a boom of nearly the same length, In which are bored holes of various dimensions, cut first horizontally, then perpendicularly, In order that the first Joint of the finger may be Inserted and the finger retained In an angular form. The culprit la then secured by bringing down over the holea another beum which Is attached by a binge at the end to one of the posts and fastened at the other by a lock."—London Academy. .mini i 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. Holding th« Breath. It Is a physical Impossibility for a man to kill himself by holding his breath. Individuals differ greatly In ths length of time they can hold their breath, and what practice and deter mined effort, '.combined . with natural great lung capacity, citu'do lu this di rection Is shown by the long periods for which champion divers cun remain under water. If a man succeeded. In continuing to hold his breath In spite of the physical discomfort In which be bad placed, himself the result would simply be to induce a state of cornu. When this state was reached nature would rensaert'herself. and the breath ing functions would again resume full activity, preventing a fatal Issue In spite of their owner's desire. Hue. Scarron. Mine. Scarron, afterward the famous lima de Malnteuon, the wife of Louis XIV., was lu her girlhood remarkably beautiful.' She >vus dark, with piercing black'eyes-end wavy hair.-. In middle life her gravity of countenance end of deportment was considered quite ex truordluury lu that age of gayety. One of her contemporaries said that she did uof smile once a year, and yet she was uot gloomy, but only of n sedate habit of mind. A Monster God Hoaso. In Mexico arc found ruins of an cient Aztec teocallis, or “god houses," some of which are thousands of years old. One of these, near Cholula, is In the form of a truucated 1 pyramid, Each side of the buse of this pyramid Is 1,423 feet, which Is twice the length of the great pyramid of Egypt. The height of this Mexican wonder is 177 feet, an«l its base covers an area of r • -<*:ranr acr*»s. The Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co., ad vises relative to San Francisco disaster: “We take pleasure In announcing that our reserve and large capital will be Intact and there will also remain a very substantial surplus BEYOND THESE ITEMS AFTER THE PAYMENT OF ALL OUR L08SES.” You can get absolutely safe Insurance by applying to DANIEL C. BETJEMAN, Agt,, Rooms 7 and 8 Woolfolk Bldg; J. K. PRAY. Praaldant. 'A. P. VASON. Vice President* EDWIN STERNE. Cashier. Safety The Cites National Bank - * * OF ALBANY, GA. Capital. - - $50,000. Deposits received subject to check. Loans promptly made on approved collateral! We solicit your business. BREAKFAST Breakfast Bacon Ham Eggs Mackerel Codfish Chipped Beef Oatmeal Cream of Wheat Force Buckwheat Maple Syrup Shredded Wheat Coffee DINNER Delicious Tea and Coffee Canned Peaches, Pears, Apricots, Cherries, Pineapple. Fresh Strawberries Lady Fingers Macaroons Pound Cake White Fruit Cake i Raisin Cake Florida Fresh Snap Beans English Peas Cucumbers Tomatoes SUPPER Caviar Pates de Fois Gras Anchovies in Oil Sardines Lobster Shrimp Salmon Olives stuffed with Anchovies Preserved Cherries, Strawberries, Raspberries, Peaches Delicious Tea and Coffee MOCK & RA WSON. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. Schedule Effective July 3 1905—90th Meridian Tims. No. 80 | NORTH No. 72 2:10p.m.Lv ..Albany.. Ar 1:30p.m. 2:39p.m.Lv ..SasBer.. Ar 12:53p.m. 2:64p.m. Lv . Dawson. Ar 12:36p.m. !:65p.m.|Lv .Richland. Aril:31a.m. 6:16p.m.|Av Columbus Lv!l9:15a.m. 9:35p.m.lAr ..Atlanta.. Lvl 5:40a.m. | Vis A. a. N. Ry. | 12:00 m-ILv ..Albany.. Arj 3:26p.m. 2:05p.m.lLv .Cordele. Arj 1:26p.m. 8:Q0p.m.lAr Savannah Lv) 7:15a.m. | 5:44p.m.|Ar .at Louis. Lv No. 8o WE8T Lv ..Albany.. Ar Lv .Lumpkin. Ar Lv Hurtaboro Ar Lv .Ft. Davis. Ar Ar N’tgomery Lv Ar ..Selma.. Lv Ar Pensacola Lv Ar ..Mobile.. Lv 7:16a.m. Ar NewOrleansLv 2:10p.m. 4:16p.m. 5:47p.m. 6:23p.m. 7:45p.m. 11:30p.m. 5:00a.m. 2:66a.m. No. 79 l:20p.m 11:12a.m. 9:86a.m 8:66a.m 7:80n.m 6:00a.m U:06p.m 12:40un 8:16p.m 8:00a.m Oh week days No. 110 leaves Albany at 6:30 a. ni., arriving Dawson 7:25 a. m. and Richland 8:45 a. m., connecting at Richland with tralnB tor Columbus. Americus 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. ATKIN80N, U. T. A., Albany, Ga. W. P. SCRUGG8, T P. A., Savannah, Ga. CHARLES F. 8TEWART, A. Q. P. A., Savannah, Ga. COTTON COKE. COAL GARTER & CO. vyarenousemen and Goal Dealers COME TO US FOR COAL./' Wo Are at Satno Old Stand on Pfno Street. ' ' - - • '\ \ ; We keep In stock Montevallo, Climax, Tip Top and Blockton, tfie beat from the Cahaba, Ala., coal fields. Also the celebrated REX aha other high-grade Jellco coals. Accurate weights and satisfaction gu* all eoal sold by ns. f CTAlso Hard Coal for Furnaces, and Blacksmith*’ Coal/