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SIMM
THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1906.
Phe
Albany
—BY THE*-' 1
Herald Publishing Co.
i. M. McIntosh Prssldsnt
. T, McIntosh........ See. end Trees.
. A. Devle Business Mgr.
(very
eekly
iy (8 pages) Every Saturday.
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' Cards Of thanks, resolutions of re
spect and obituary notices,- other than
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•as a matter of news, will be oharged
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cept when such notices are published
by charitable organizations, when a
special Irate will be named.
e oas of church and soolety and
or entertainments from whloh a
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WHAT’8 ALL THE FUS8 AB.OUT7
The Atlanta Joufnal has jfdcoiqe so
frantic over the action of the State
Democratic Executive Committee In
restricting the voting privilege to
Democrats and such Poilullsts or oth
er party followers Us' are willing to
align themselvedwlth the Democratic
party and pledge themselves to sup
port its nominees, that It appears to
have completely lost Its head and rea
soning powers.
Because the Executive Co'mmlttee
refused to adopt the plan demanded
by the Journal for the special benefit
of Its candidate for governor and let
Populists, Republicans, Socialists and
what-nots vote In the Democratic pri
mary without becoming Democrats or
without 'aligning themselves In good
faith, with the party, the 'Journal de
nounces the committee, or the major
ity of the members, who voted for the
rules adopted, In thlp strong language
Unfaithful servants, you have been
of. announcement, will be charged
: at the. rate of 5 cents a line.
dfflco, second floor Postofflco Build-
-•Ini;-,corner Jackson and Pine streets.
The Herald deals with advertising
agents by speolal contract only, and
horpdvertlalng agent or agency la au
thorized to take contracts for adver
tisements to be Inserted In this paper.
kLLLcjA
recreant In the duties of your high of
fice., You have deceived those who
placed- yoii in authoHty. You have
violated the conildence of your con
st|tuents. You have disappointed those
who had a right to expect fair treat
ment and a square deal In the most lm-
portant political camplagn of a genera
tion. I
But In Its eagerness to'have Its can-
dldate fidn-at any cost, the Journal
-gan of the City of Albany,
rgan of Dougherty County.
OfflolaL Organ of Baker County.
OfMolal' Organ of the Railroad Com
mission of Georgia for the 8«aohd
Cohgr - “
Congressional District.
TELEPHONES: ,
slnff Room and Job Printing
e, 60 — 3 rings.
Iltorial Rooms and Bualnesa Of-
"it L
I* I" Th^Hyal’i; It's so.
bu advertise In Tito Herald It goes.
i ~
ri THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1906.
'• (Phe Atlanta Georgian leaped right
Into a. substantial wave of prosperity
first Jump.
The climax of‘tariff absurdity Is
Toaohed when exported produetB of
itko trusts are brought back by enter-
-firlslug merchants and sold for less
th’an the trust prices of the same goods
'ti dedlers ih the home market.
What business has hpybndy not
claiming to be a Democrat and not
twilling to bq known as a Democrat
voting In n Democratic primary, any
how?
The Savannah Press deolares that
jipe- -announcement that Mr. Clark
Ilowell rides on railroad passes Is
. (mistake. He wulked from the depot
to the hotel up In Swainsboro the oth
'ier'day. -
I The latest presidential candidate to
shy his castor Into the ring for 1908 Is
Cagt., Rfchmohd Pearson Hobson. And
"Hav-
the Philadelphia Record asks:
lag endured the strenuous Roosevelt
of the San Juan hills, why not the
salt-water veteran of the neighboring
sea-sT."
Hon Hoke Smith has reaohed the
coacluslon that each epunty board of
education can divide the school fund
between the races as it thinks best.
Sure! The ; Dougherty county board
of education has been
neiirly twenty years.
doing tt for
Congress appropriated something
- over 32.P00.000 for the California But-
.. fwers, and when the relief committee
ja( Ban Francisco Intfbiated that they
“/would like to have the money they
ware Informed that Secretary Taft had
already spent It for them.
We agree with the Savannah Press
that Congressman Bartlett said a good
thing about Father Sherman's march
wljeu he remarked that If the trip had
•A
bocu^made ten years after -the war, no
guide would have been needed, as the
'tyatl was still blared with waste and
desolation.
;V
The Savannah Press. In an editorial
. under the caption. “Putting Up tile
■ ponce,” alludes to the rather hysferi-
.<^.1 rumor circulated on last Sunday
nfght,, that the withdrawal of John
Temple Graves from the senatorial
f teat meant the entry of Tom Wat-
. iqto the contest, “had the effect
putting up the Democratic fence
bull strong, horse high and pig tight.'
And the Press further says that “the
straight-, old-line Democrats will en
tile Iron-clad rule which prob-
was necessary at this time/’ •'
taro; -A-s.'k,.' A.
we believe, who organized a McKinley
club in 1896 and voted the Republican
ticket that year and again In 1900,
wheh the question of bl-inetallsm In
the' standard of money was an Issue.
LeJ the Democratic rule laid 'down by
the Democratic Executive Committee
be applied to every one of them. They
are no better than Tom Watson, and
no more entitled to vote In a Demo
cratic primary after having bolted the.
party In an election than the (Populist
leader is. The highest and final-test
party loyalty Is in voting, ahd If a
man doesn't vote the .Democratic
ticket he cannot consistently claim to
be a Democrat.
Let the chairman of the Democratic
i ’ i
Executive Committee of Fulton coun
ty get oilt Ids yhrd-stlck and apply It
to these “captains of finance” in his
bailiwick In Che next state primary.
Make ’em “line” just as they would
Tom Watson or ‘ any other ■ Populist
before permitting them to vote In the
Democratic primary. '
now turns to the party .recalcitrants
and hntl-Democrats and appeals to
them to “come- back Into the party.”
No such appeal has been made by the
Journal until It ^ound that the Popu
lists, Upon whose voteB Its candidate
Is largely relying tor the Democratic
nomination, would not be allowed to
vote In the Democratic primary with
out,squarely aligning themselves with
the^pilty. ’
Hero is the Journal's appeal:
We say to the former Populists of
Geprg)a, it Is, in your power to defeat
the nefarious tricks and schemes of
these ring > serving politicians. vThe
plodge which, they have adopted Is In
tended to.o/fend you—nay, more; It Is
Intended to exclude you from partici
pating In the prlmarjl. You'arc Demo
crats at heart and your organization
has vlrtuallyceased to exist. You can
defeat the scheme If you will come
back Into the party. and meet- the
terms laid down by a partisan major
ity of the committee.
Commenting on this plea and wall,
the. Macon Telegraph In a strong edi
torial this morning says:
"No^, Isn’t that a beaut?
But the Journal does on to say to,
them: "The terms of the pledge ark'
not so onerous but that you can meet
them. ‘Any man who votes In a Dem
ocratlc primary becomes.by that act
an organized Democrat. There Is not
n PopullBt In Georgia who cannot meet
the terms by which the politicians
hope to exclude them.”
Then whnt are you going mad
about? Why are you kicking If ‘there
is not a Populist In Georgia who can
not meet the tornm?' ”,
This puts the Journnl up a tree.
And ivhon It Is forced to admit that
"there Is not a Populist In Georgia
who cannot meet the terms, we aBk,
In the name of common sense, what's
all the fuss about?
entitled to the appellation “Rev.” He
has quit the church, he'declares: We
have suspected for.,some time, that the
Rev. Thomas had either.fallen from
grace or was -deliberately planning to
backslldef. ' ' ,
At the rate at which congress has
been passing private pension bills, it
Is predicted that this session will add
3,000 of them to the list Yet every
one of these bills Is for a pension or
an Increase of pension not allowed by
the general law, and that law Is aston
ishingly liberal. It 1b no longer neces
sary to prove that the Injury com
plained of was Incurred in the mili
tary service; It may have occurred
forty years after the war. Age Itself
Is trtated as a disability without any
speoliio Injury. All the, rates of pen-
THIS DATE IN HISTORY.
May 3.
1410—Pope Alexander V. died.
1612—Nineteenth general council (6th
F ^of the Lateran) opened.
1666—English took island of Jamaica
from Spain. ' •
1660—pigpe of Oliva.
1079—Archbishop Sharp assassinated
- at St. Andrews. •'
1770—Sir Peter Parker's squadron ar
rived at Cape Fear river.
17791—New PbllBh constitution pro
mulgated.
1797—Napoleon deelared war on Ven
ice.
1810—Lord Byron swam the Darda
nelles. ' >
1813—Havre de Grace, Maryland,
burned by the Brltlsfi.
•Louis XVIII. entered Paris (the
first restoration.)
1816—Murat defeated at Tolentlno.
1828—Don Miguel assumed title of
183,9—Fernando 'Paer, Italian dramat
ist, died.
1846-—Thomas Hood .died; born 1798.
1849—Insurrection at Dresden, Sax
ony.
18j>6—George Mclntobh Troup, gover
nor of GeoGrgla, died,
1869—Napoleon m. declared war
^against Austria.
1882-—Horace Maynard, ex-postmaster,
geperal of the United States,
died. . . ' ^
1894-—Earthquake shocks in Greece.
1897—33.6oO,OQO fire lu Pittsburg, Pa.
slon hare been repeafedly raised since
1874, when congress began
rates above what they were during the
civil war. Under suck liberal laws
• • ’■ ", tV % • • *. T ' “
who,need private penBlon laws?
Financing San Francisco will make
an Interesting chapter when the full
history of the great catastrophe shall
come to be written. In nine days fol
lowing the earthquake there was
transferred from New York to the
stilcken city , over 330,000,000, t-
thirds of which was remitted through
the sub-treasury and one-third was
sent by express. To replace this sum
nearly 330,000,000'of gold has been Im
ported, the Importation being expe
dited. by Secretary Shaw’s plan of ad
vancing gold to banks that haVe or
dered It,from Europe. •
The man who Is a Democrat or who
Is willing to renounce his former po
litical affiliations, wllether he has
been a Populist, Republican or Social
ist, ought not to find'any'fault with
the conditions ldld down by the State
Democratic Committee for voting In
the state primary.
Thomas Dixon, Jr., writes to the
newspapers to say that he Is no longer
1814-
^ l
is a mere outline, a
mere suggestion of
how High ; ; Art
Sumnier CoatsaM
Pants lit and lpok.
We would like to'
• • ;Vr:
show you the real
garment and then
you can judge for yourself why High
•• Art two-piece suits for men and young
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
Arrival and Departure of Trains at
, Albany, Ga.
In Effect Jan. 8. 1906.
, DEPARTURES:
For Dothan, Floralla and Lock-)
hart 7:46ami
For Dothan,' Florala and Lock-
hark .................8:60pm
For Macon. Atlanta, Augus
ta, , Columbus. Savannak.. 4:06 am
For Mkchn, Atlanta, Colum-'
bUB, Montgomery, Troy... .11:64am
For Macon, Atlanta, Savan-
nah 9:00pin
ARRIVALS:
From Lockhart, Florala and t
Dothan ........ .1.......... 8:45 pm
From Lockhart, Florala and
Dothan ...-,11:40 am
From Augusta, Skvannah,
Atlanta, Macon....,..,-..., 7:26am
Prom Montgomery, Troy. Co
lumbus, Atlanta, Macon... 3:40pti
Prom Atlanta, Savannah, Ma
opn, Montgomery, Colum-
bus ....11:30pa
ALL TRAIN8 DAILY.
Drawing room sleeping cars be
tween Albany and Atlanta, on train:
arriving at Albany at 7:26 a. m. and
leaving Alban} at 9:00 p. m. Parlo:
car between Albany and Atlanta on
train . arriving at.vAjbaim, at 3; 40 p
m. and leaving Albany ht 11:64'a; in
For: further - information apply to S.
A. .Atkinson, Depot Ticket 1 Agent oi
R. S. Morris, Commercial Agent, A)
hany. Ga
LET THE RULE APPLY TO ALL
The Atlanta Georgian, In a sly effort
to “relieve Mr. Howell" of "current
crltlcUm,'' Bays: *
"It would scarcely seem that our-
rent criticism of Mr. Clark Howell's
connection with the action of the ex
ecutive committee In restricting the
ballot In the. coming primary can be
well founded.
Attention has been called to the fact
that In this city and Its sdburbs many
of the >most Influential supporters of
Mr. Howell In the coming primary will
he completely disfranchised by this
enactment. There are In Atlanta bank
ers, and capitalists, wholesale mer
chants, and financiers who for years
past have been accustomed to vote the
Democratic ticket In state politics, and
to vote with the Republicans in na
tional campaigns, because of the finan
cial view for which the Republican
party stands. It Is stated that in one
suburb of Atlanta alone there are at
least fifteen prominent supporters of
Mr. Howell who will bo handicapped
and effectually debarred from votlag
uader this qualification.
So that, In simple justice, and as a
recorder' of the facts aB they are, the
Georgian will observe that If Mr, How-
ell had any part whatever In the effort
to disfranchise so many Georgian# in
the coming primary by the limitations
of thO committee, that he has done 3o
at the expense of many of his own
most Influential frlendp In cities who
cannot In honor or dignity subscribe
to the terms of the condition whloh
the committee has'placed upon the
ballot.”
This brings to notice the fa'ot-that
there are a lot of men in
. I
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 THEk'PAYMENT QF ALL OUR
LOSSES,"
You can get absolutely safe* Insurance by applying to '
DANIEL C. BETJEMAN, Agt.,
Rooms 7 and 8 Woolfolk Bldg.
-nr
j. k. pray:
President.
A. P. VASONi
Vice President!
EDWIN STERNE.
Cashier.
The Citizens National Bank
OF ALBANY, GA.
Capital. - - $50,000.
Deposits' received subject to check.
Loans promptly made on approved
collateral. We solicit your business.
PIANOS!
TWENTY INSTRUMENTS ON OUR FLOORS FOR
* . YOUR INSPECTION.
A PIANO, like a wife or*husband, is frequently a.
life companion. Ypu therefore want” something to suit
you perfectly when you buy. We believe we can give
you satisfaction in the two. essential
QUALITY AND PRICE.
/rfi j; •' . . - - —
BEAMAN’S MUSIC. HOUSE*
104 Pino Street, (Ruifmey Building.) Albany, Ga.
men are in demand by discerning dres-
sere. Each garment is carefully tail
ored ; the Shoulders, lapels, collars and f
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 & Cd.
■
BREAKFAST
Breakfast Bacon
Ham
Eggs ,
Mackerel
■.Codfish
Chipped Beef
Oatm„eal
Cream of Wheat
Force
Buckwheat • »
Maple Syrup
Shredded Wheat
Coffee
“bankers' and capitalists’' prInclpa " 3r '. «PH PP
DINNER
Delicious Tea and Coffee
Canned Peaches, Pears, Apricots, Cherries, Pineapple.
Fresh. Strawberries Raisin Cake
Lady Fingers
Macaroons
Pound Cake
White Fruit'Cake
Florida Fresh Snap Beand
English Peas
Cucumbers
Tomatoes
SUPPER
Caviar
Pates de Fois Gras
Anchovies in-Oil
Sardines
■*m £■'' v
Salmoii, £, t v iv V • V'V'M
Olives stuffed with Anchovies * 'i
Preserved Cherries, Strawberries, Raspberries, Peaches
Delicious Tea and Coffee
MOCK & RA WSON.
SEA BOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
Schedule Effective July 3. 1905—90th Meridian Time.
No. 80 ! NORTH
No. 79
2:10p.'m.
2:39p.m.
2:54p.m.
8:65p.m.
5:15p.m.
9: |Rp.m.
12.00 m.
2:06p.m.
SjflOp.m.
Lv ..Albany.. Arl 1:30p.m.
Lv ..Sasser.. Ar 12:53p.m.
Lv .Dawson. Ar[12:36p.m.
llv .Richland. Arlll:31a.m.
Ar Columbus LvjlO: 16a.m.
Ar ..Atlanta.. Lvl 5:40a.m.
Vie A. & N. Ry. |
Lv ..Albany.. Arj 3:25p.m.
Lv .Cordele. Arj 1:26p.m.
Ar Savannak Lv| 7:16a.m.
No. 8o
2:10p.m.
4:16p.m.
5:47p.m.
6:23p.m.
7:46p.m,
11:30p.m.
6:00a.m.
2:55a.m.
WEST | No; 79
Lv ..Albany.. Ar
Lv .Lumpkin. Ar
Lv Hurtsboro Ar
Lv .Ft. Davis. Ar
Ar N’tgomery Lv
Ar ..Selma.. Lv
Ar Pensacola Lv
Ar ..Mobile.. Lv
7:15a.m. Ar NewOrleansLv
JJ>:44p.m.|Ar .St. Louta. Lv
l:20p.m
11:12a.»
9:36a.m
8:66a.m
7:80a.m
5:00a.m
11:06p.ro
12:40a.m.
8:15p.m
8:00a.m
On week days,No* 119 leaves Albany at 6:30 a. .m„ arriving Dawson
7:26 a. m. and Richland 8:46 a. m„ connecting at Richland with trains for
Columbus; Americus and Savannak.
No. 80. Through tr»ln 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
8. A. ATKINSON, U. T. A.,'Albany, Ga.
W. P. SCRUGGS. T P. A., Savannah, Ga.
CHARLES _F. STEWART, A. G. P?’aT Savannah. Ga.
COTTON
COKE.
COAl
CARTER & CO
warehousemen and Goal Dealers
r v
COME TO US FOR
Wo Are at Same Old Stand on Pfne Street:
We keep In stock Montevpllo, Climax T1d Ton
" 80 th ® celebrated ? ^ ind other
Sf®old ^ nB“ a,S - ACCUmte W6i8to eetlsfactlon guaranteed. 6n
WAlso Hard Coal for Furnaces,, and Blacksmiths' Coal.