The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, May 01, 1906, Image 6

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>! AT H O M E POLICE MATRON HAS STAR WITNESSES. It Has Stood the Four Girls to Testify Against Police Captain. Moons. E. H. DENNISON—Dentist 'Phone 8peclal to The Herald. Atlanta, Oa„ May 1.—When Police Captain Moon Is formally arraigned for trial before the police commission on complaint of. Mrs. Mary'Bohnefeld, police matron, It Is expected that a, quartet of girls who have recently flg. ured In police matters will be star witnesses. Captain Moon Is charged with undue Intimacy with female pris oners a.t the police barracks. J. W. DOR8ETT, Dentist, now In Davls-Ex. Bank Bldg., Phone 413. ‘Rain, rain, cpme again! If you advertise It in The Herald, the people will know about it. f THE MODERN RAZOS^^®^Twelve Wafer jflHT Blades. y^^Twenty-four Sharp Edges. The First Improve ment Made in Razor Slades in 400 Years, The fishermen are putting In good time these days. Almost any evening the banks of the Flint are dotted with them. Only the man who pays cash for all he buyB is not being called on today by the gentleman with the neat little stack of bills. This Is the day on which the city’s assessments for the paving of Wash ington street with vitrified brick are due and payable. The Gillette 8afety Razor has solved the problem of home shaving. Every blade provides twenty to forty velvet shaves, and not a moment la loat In stropping or a penny spent In honing. When a Gillette Razor goei Into a man’s home, that man ceases to be a patron of the barber. He has no more long Waite on busy days, and he shaves under conditions of olean- llness and sanitation which are only possible when all his shav ing tools and linen are his own. The prloe $5.00 Let us show you a Gillette, and explain points about It whloh we have not space to enumerate here, It will be a long time before the people quit talking about the Elgh- I teenth annual assembly of the Geor gia Chautauqua. The fans will load up with cow-bells and tin horns and hie themselves to the ball park Thursday afternoon to see that the season 1b opened In prop er style. The dry weather Is Injuring the gar dens a good deal. Of courBe, while no great damage has been done, if it con tinues much longer, things will suffer materially. WOOD! WOOD! OAK AND PINE. Cruger & Pace. ‘Bell Prices Ring True. Get your seats reserved early for the Guards’ Fantasy, tvhlch will be re peated, with almost an entire change of program, at the Rawlins theatre Thursday night. One hot day succeeds another. It looks as If the spell would never be When the long looked for broken. rain appears, though, doubtlesB the temperature will moderate a little. The T. P. A. ,men of Georgia will gather In Albany day after tomorrow, and their coming Is being a looked for ward to with a great deal of Interest not only by the drummers’ brigade, but by the public In general. INDSTINCT PRINT UNT I . THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 1, Most of the world does and most of the world uses Sherwin-Williams Paint. It’$ made to paint buildings with, inside and outside. It’s made ready for the brush. It’s made for home use and for practical painters too. It’s pure lead, pure zinc and pure linseed oil, mixed by specially made machinery operated by experts. It’s made for you. We, carry a full line of this high grade goods. Please call and see us, or phone No. S for color cards and prices. R. C. Eatman. 25 Washington street. Albany, Ga. ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD CO. PASSENGER SCHEDULES. IN EFFECT APRIL 9, 1906. NOTE.—These arrivals and departures, as well ns connections, are given information, but arrivals, departures and connections are not guaranteed. NO. 73 No. 71 |No. 74 No. 72||No. 71| No. 74 7.45a 10.2Da lO.tiOa 12.10P 4.00p 6.15p 6.30p 7.30p Lv Albany Aij 7.06p Ar Thomasvllle Lv 4.30p Lv Thomasvllle Ar 2.10p Ar Montlcello Lv| l.OOp 11.45a] 4.00p Lv Albany Ar 9.25a 6.15pJAr Thomasvllle Lv G.lOajj l.lSajLv Thomasville Ar 6.20a[| 8.05a|Ar Montgomery Lv 7.05p 4.30p 2.30p 6.50a No. 95 No. 90||No. 91 No. 95| No. 94 No. 90 2.00p 3.30p 6.00p G.15p 8.40p 9.00p 10.45p 1.55a 3.01a 5.10a 6.45a 7.20a Lv Albany Ar Ar Tlfton Lv Ar Waycross Lv Lv Waycross Ar Ar Jacksonville Lv Lv Jacksonville Ar Ar Palatka Lv Ar Sanford Lv Ar Orlando Lv Ar Lakeland Lv Ar Tampa Lv Ar Port Tampa Lv lO.SOpll 5.45a 8.56p 9.45a G.30p 9.50a 6.05p 12.55p 3.30p 1.051 7.55a 6.101 5.35a 11.45p 2.20a 4.17a 1.02a 7.54a 10.20p 9.09s 8.36p 11.22s S.OOpfl 1.53p 2.00p Lv Albany Ar 6.00p Ar Waycross Lv G.30p Lv Waycross Ar 9.36p Ar Savannah Lv 1.35aLv Savannah Ar 5.66a Ar Charleston Lv 1.40p Ar Wilmington Lv I 8.00p Ar Richmond Lv [ll.50p Ar Washington Lv 1.43a Ar Baltimore Lv I 4.25a Ar Philadelphia Lv | 7.23a|Ar New York Lv 11.46a 7.55a 6.05a 3.15a 2.60a 12.01a 3.45p 9.05a 4.30a 2.51a 12.19a 9.25p 10.30p 6.30p G.OOp 2.45p 9.00a 7.00a 7.25p 3.45p 2.12|: 11.55a 9.25a W. J. CRAIG, ' Passenger Traffic Manager, Wilmington, N. C. 8. A. ATKINSON, Ticket Agent, Albany, Ga. M T. C. WHITE, . Division Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga. T. J. BOTTOMS, ■ Traveling Passenger Agent, Thomasvllle, Ga. The average citizen now Indulges the hope that some of these days the city will he ahle to operate a street sprinkler on every block In the city. The dust has been making life ex ceedingly disagreeable for a week or ten days past. The fruit season Is nearly here. A carload of glass cans arrived In town yesterday. Canning time Is almost here, with Its discomforts, due to standing over a hot stove, with a tem perature outside that would do credit to a cremating establishment. A handsome sign consisting of “Cen tral of Georgia Railway" done in large gilded letters on a dark background has Just been placed over the uptown office of the Central of Georgia rail road. It makes quite an attractive appearance and adds a lot to the looks of things In general. Another bright prospect of rain was blighted yesterday afternoon when clouds which had begun to gather were dissipated by the winds, and It was realized by anxious watchers that another day had been added to the number Included in the drought. This Is a critical period of the year, and It Is of the greatest Importance that it rain in the course of the next few days. Good progress is being made on the high school building, the construction of which is being watched with a great deal of Interest. The children of the highest grade of the Intermediate de partment of the Albany Academy, and all the pupils of the high school de partment except those completing the course this month, will, next fall, take up their studies In the new school building. ’ Ln.i of the" Aristocrat*. "The old French aristocracy dies with me,” cried the Princess de Valmont on her deathbed. She was a bitter old soul, who, born of a long line of un- contnminuted ancestors and married to a noble of equally superfine strain, bad, through her busbund’s death in financial difficulties, to marry her fire children to “abominable persons" of high character, but with the blight of trade or Industry in their blood. Her last years were made mournful to her by this pitiful descent, and Just before her grandiose lust utterance, looking with n bitter smile at her children and grandchildren In tears round her death bed, she broke slleuce In the following terrible reflection: “Wo have here,” counting on her fingers, “representa tives of carringo making, wholesale grocery, confectionery, cou) 'mining and the stock exchanges, and all grafted on tho old tree of the De Vnlmonts.’’—New York Herald. How Would Ton Like Tills Bntterf The Moor prepares butter In an original way and gets a different taste from the usual one. Fresh butter <“si- blda,” as he calls It), as known by us, be despises and uses only for cooking. It must be old If It Is to be liked. After It has lain In a hole In the ground to* Some years and hnB got a certain ap pearance it becomes a delicacy. To make butter a goatskin Is turned In side out. It Is filled with milk, bound tight and tied to a tree. There It-Is beaten backward and forward till the butter Is made. That Is why you can not get butter In Morocco without hairs all through It. The butter Is then laid oil pieces of wood and the maker goes to sell It Possible buyers lift the dirty cover, put In their fingers and take out a taste and If the goads do not please close It down again and the salesman pursues his way. Ingrowing Toe Nalls. It has been fouud by some that the copious application of dried powdered alum is sufficient to cure most cases of Ingrowing toe nails. The applications nWi not painful, and the lullamed tis sue Is dried up, and a hard, resistant, nonsehsltlre bed Is formed for "the nail. The toe Is wrapped lu a cloth soaked In soap and water for twenty-four hours beforehand, und then the pow dered alum is poured Into the space betweeu the null und Its bed, using cotton to keep the alum in place and repeating the application dnlly. The suppuration, if any exlstB, rapidly dries up, pain nud discomfort are al most Immediately relieved, and, the application being repeated for about five days, a care usually results. Crashing a Bore. An Englishman, complimenting Amer icans on their skill at postprandial or atory, went on to discuss the possibili ty of boring an . audience. He said the severest;reproof for a bore which he recollected was that administered by tile great Talleyrand while driving with a friend who kept telling him stories. As they pussed through the streets of n continental town, which In those days were policed by many sentries, they observed one sentry yawn at Uls post, and Talleyrand said to bis friend: “Hush! We are overheard." Fortunate Missourians. “When I was a druggist, at Livonia, Mo.," writes T. J. Dwyer, now of Graysvllle, Mo„ “three of my custom ers were permanently cured of con sumption by Dr. King’s New Discov ery, and are well and strong today. One was trying to sell his property and move to Arizona, blit after using New Discovery a short time he found it unnecessary to do so. I regard Dr. King’s New Discovery -as the most wonderful medicine in existence." Sur est Cough and Cold cure and Throat and Lung healer. Guaranteed by Al bany Drug Co., druggists. 50c and $1. Trial bottle free. * Chief James kept the reserve fire steamer ready for business all day! yesterday. Two of the mains on' thickly populated streets were out. of. commission, and a head of steam was maintained In old No. 4 so that prompt' response could hare been made had there been a fire on either of the; streets where mains were dead. ' For- i tunately, there was no occasion for use of the steamer. Sheet Music! Chautauqua visitors will And it to their interest to look at our im mense line of Sheet Music. We have everything that is new and popular, and for this week we are offering Music at / 2 off. Big stock of McKinley Music at 5c per copy for .this week. Come and get a cat alogue free. A piano to try music, at your disposal. LQNSBEHG’ BOOK AND MUSIC BOUSE. : &■ NET OPEN NET CLOSED “Dixie” Mosquito Frame and Net. The “DIXIE” frame is the only perfectly fempered frame soli.. It preserves its temper and elasticity < through the yeatis. 11 bend or get out of shape and refuse to fold. Put one up PibP®' 1 ^ It takes your net back and folds it gracefully and perfectly, ', S H °w £,wn do not have to fan out the mosquitoes and the files when It is let dow_. We have sold them for years, and the years have brought us Inci eiased business on them. And we are the only people from whom thej can be obtained in this town. THE “CLIMAX” PULLEY NET, made by the Dixie people, is also without a peer in its class. We are ready to supply your demand for these goods, and there is no better time for this work than • thfe present. The SteeleJPurnitureand Hardware Store, Leaders’“in JHighl.Grade Go'ods. ’Phone 156 S. Reich. 96 Broad St*. The Bargains for the Ladies. Ladies’[Neckwear. Hosiery. White Waistings. Within the Shadow. OF OUR Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear Hats. We are offering for this week a SPECIAL DISCOUNT on our entire stock. THEY ARE GOING. . You Will Never See Anything “Snappier” Tharo These Skirts. Made of Black Silk, Gray Voile, White Panamas, Linen—Black Voile. . “TAKE A PICK.” Why,Jit's Just Like Finding a Gold Mine , When you see our swell line of Readp-to-Wear Shirtwaists and Shirtwaist Suits. It always pays to buy from me. We Are Looking for You. S l~"> 2 DoorsJAre Wide: • IfEIOll Openjo You. Parties Wishing to Seil Their Next Season. COTTON SEE ALBANY WAREHOUSE COMPANY*