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THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY IS, 1906.
The Albany Herald
—BY THE—
Herald Publishing Co.
; M. McIntosh President
H.T. McIntosh. Sec. tnd Tress.
-■9)11. A. Davis Business Mgr.
Every Afternoon Except 8unday.-
Weekly (8 pages) Every Saturday.
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illy Herald, one year..........$5.00
illy Herald, six month!........ 2X0
illy Herald, three months 1.25
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vance, .
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as a matter of news, wilt be charged
for at the rate of 10 cents a line, ex
cept when suoh notices ars published
by. charitable organizations, when a
special rate will be named.
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all other entertainments from which a
revenuo Is to be derived, beyond a
.brief announcement, will be charged
, for at the rate of 8 cents a line.
Office, second floor Poatofflce Build
ing, corner Jaokson and Pine streets.
‘ The Herald deals with advertising
V agents by speolal contract only, and
•' no advertising agent or agency Is au
thorized to take contraots for adver-
■ tlscments to be Inserted In this paper,
THE HERALD IS
Offlolat Organ of the City of Albany.
O'fllolal Organ of Dougherty County.
IVMofal Organ of Baker County.
-9flletal Organ of the Railroad Com-
-mission of Georgia. for the 8eoond
TELEPHONES:
Composing Room and Job Printing
Office, 60 — 3 tings.
-Editorial -Rooms and Business Of.
Hdi; oo. "
jjp'ybb M« if In The Herald It’s so.
iff yob advertise In The Herald It goes.
' t inT-rtfr. '
MAY 1S ' ,9 ° 6 '
- Congressional primary tomorrow.
ifhe May -weather we are now hav
ing. down here In Cod's country Is all
Senator Ben Tillman has certainly
get tie president and the leading Re-
publican senators stirred up.
When the Hepburn bill gets through
til'd senate, If It ever does, Its author
Ml perhnps refuse to father It.
Mr. Business Man. attend the meet
ing, of the Business I-engue tonight.
Matters that concern jmt are to bo
considered.
It looks like the president of the
United States hns been Impeached by
' a member of the United' States sennto
and nn ex-member of thnt body. The
spectacle Is not n pleasing one.
. Ben Tlllmnn gnve the Republican
majority on the senate Interstate Com
nrerce Committee full- notice, nnd—
'well, they doubtless now wlstrthoy Imd
not. tampered with him.
Judge Fite made the race for con
gress without resigning from the
’berieh, nnd lost, nnd now the boys say
they aro going to beat him for the
Judgeship In the next election.
Let us cultivate more In Albany the
jplrtf which prompts ns to patronize
borne enterprises. It Is mighty bnd
form, and poor policy ns well, to send
iway for anything that cnn be hnd at
Some. '
-Now thnt he lias been elected to
congress, Captain Richmond Pearson
Hobson evidently feels like he hns
,\!tyed down that kissing business, for
be has been saying thnt he would hnvo
been elected two years ego but for the
Hosing stories.
Former Senator William E. Chan
dler was the chosen medium of Com
munication between the president and
Senator Tlllmnn. and now that n ques
tion of veracity has arisen over what
was said, the go-between corroborates
the South Carolina senator.
Hoke Smith appears to be making
second visits to some of the counties,
-flatting it i^cessary to carry them the
second time. But he will And that
many of . them will not stay carried
even after being carried the second
time. Nothing has been more appar
ent In the prezent gubernatorial cam-
^pplgq than the fact that Hoke Smithy
boom Is'now on the wane.
RUSSIA’S LOW MORAL STANDARD.
The fact that Maxim Gorky, the
Russian author and alleged' patriot
who fecently arrived In this country
on a mission to raise funds for the
revolutionists In the empire of the
czar of all the Russian, brought with
him and Introduced as his wlfo a wo
man who Is known not to bo his wife
—the real wife being left with her
children In Russlor-ls now well known
to the newspaper readers of this coun
try. It Is also well known that the
American people, upon learning that
the woman accompanying Gorky was
not his wife, gave the cold shoulder to
the couple.
, [t would appear to be perfectly nat
ural thnt the real Mrs. Gorky over In
Russld would feel gratified, rather
than displeased, at the snub given to
her unfaithful husband by the people
of thlB country. But not so. She ap
pears to be wroth, aB witness the fol
lowing letter which she addressed to
the New York Herald:
"To the Editor of the Herald:
. "I have today recolved a letter from
Alexis Maxlmovltch Peshkolf (Maxim
Gorky) which confirms the news com
municated by newspaper telegrams re
garding the reception given to film by
America. I am very Indignant at the
Intrusion Into tfie personal and Inti
mate life of a man and astonished that
the Americans, citizens of a tree coun
try, enjoying Bnoh largo political lib
erties, are not free from the prejudices
dead already even with us In Russia.
"EKATERINA PB8HKOFF.
“Yalta, Crimea, Russia, May 12,
1000.”
tt is said that the real Mme. Gorky
has followed the example of her hus
band and has again married—that 1b,
has. married as Gorky married Mme.
Andrelova.
All this would seem to Indicate a
very low standard of morals In Rus
sia. tt also goes to show that the
Russian people do not know the dif
ference between liberty and license,
for Maxim Gorky and his wlfo both
are evidently laboring .under the Im
pression that In free America thero Is
neither moral code nor civil law.
PATRONAGE OF HOME INDU8-
TRIES.
There aro two considerations which
should appeal to ovory business man,
laborer or gontleman of leisure In In
fluencing him to pntronzle homo In
dustries.
The first Is based upon tlio Bound
theory thnt the Intorosts of his neigh
bors should be considered ahead of
the Interests of thoso at n distance.
Our neighbors nre our frlonds—If not
our personal or social friends, certain
ly our business friends—and tho man
who will not show them preference In
bestowing his patronage Is afflicted
with a deplorable prejudice In favor
of pennies nnd against public spirit.
Tho other consideration relates sole
ly to solMntorest. As a purely selfish
proposition, It pnys us to patronize
those about us. Helping them con
tributes to their prosperity, and thoir
prosperity advances ours. If this mer
chant Is succeeding, ho Is enabled to
meet his obligations promptly and to
enlarge hla business. Thnt puts more
money Into circulation, gives more
people In tho community employment,
nnd stimulates trade. Tho result Is
that nil business enterprises feel the
beneficial effects of tho Improved con
ditions. A hundred dollars sent nwny
from home stays away. A hundred
dollars spent at home stays at home,
and changes hands a hundred times In
perhaps ns many days.
So whatevor tho motive, patronizing
home industries Is something to be
desired and encouraged hy every pos
sible moans.
Negro parents continue to lock their
children In houses from which escape
In case of fire Is Impossible, and chil
dren continue to be sacrificed to the
criminal shortsightedness of their el
ders. Near Covington, Tenn., ulght
before last, Henry Hupt and wlfo, ne
groes, went to ohurch, leaving their
four small children locked In their
cabin. When they returned the house
was In ashes, and the charred bodies
of their children lay among the ruins.
Hunt and his wife probably feel that
they have been sufficiently punished,]
but such cases of criminal careless
ness would seem to call tor such pun
ishment as would-make similar
of less common occurrence.
THE WIDOW OF‘THE CONFED
ERACY:
Reports of continued Improvement
In the condition of Mrs. Jefferson Da
vis are received with gratitude In all
parts of the South.
The Widow of the Confederacy Is
Inexpressibly dear to the people of the
section whose bitter experiences of
the civil war and even greater trials
of the reconstruction period she un
complainingly shared.
During the declining years of her
husband'B life, Mrs. Davis was bis
mainstay and comforter, and her place
In the affections of the Southern peo
ple Is like that held by no other living
person. All share the hope that she
will be spared for many years to come,
though It Is a hope which must b’e In
dulged with sad misgivings.
Teach the girls to swim. Encour
age them to learn to be capable of
taking care of themselves In deep wa
ter, or of lending a helping hand on
occasion to someone elBe In distress.
A 15-yenr-old Albany girl fell from a
high bank Into a stream where the
water was twenty feet deep on Sun
day, and although she was burdened
with the clothing she wore, she swam
to safety without difficulty or without
being sorlously disturbed. Swimming
Is by many considered an exclusively
masculine accomplishment, but here
Is no more reason for this than that
/ * ,
men should have exclusive rights lh
any other field.- Don’t In the caBe of
your daughter, follow the example of
that famous old woman of narrow vis
ion who gave her daughter permission
to "hang her clothes on a hickory
limb, but not go near the water,"
William E. Chandler, formerly sec
retary of the navy and senator from
New Hampshire, has one of the keen
est minds and sharpest pens that has
been In public life. As a friend of
both the president and Senator Till
man, who could have no direct com
munications with each other, the pres
ident selected him as the means of
communicating with the South Caro
linian, who, though of the minority
party, had been placed in charge of
the rate regulation bill. The president
has unqualifiedly' denied making 'cer
tain statements which Mr. Chandler
says he did make, and which he re
ported to Mr, Tlllmnn. Mr. Chandler
says: "I shall not rest under the Im
putation cast upon me by the prest-
dent." The statement he will make
will be mighty interesting reading.
THI8 DATE IN HI8TORY.
May 15. j
1464—Duke of Somerset defeated by
Edward rv. at battle of Hex
ham.
1626—Battle of Frankenhausen, Ger
many!
1667—Mary Queen of Scots married
James, Earl of Bothwell.
1002—Bartholomew Gosnold discov
ered Cape Cod.
1G45—Earl of Montrose defeated the
Scots at battle of Alderne.
1740—Ephraim Chambers, English eu-
cyclopoedlst, died; born 1080.
1788—James Gadsden, South Carolina
statesman, born; died Dec. 20,
' 1868.
1791—Slavery abolished In French do
minions.
1790—Treaty of Paris concluded.
1820—Florence Nightingale, Crimean
war nurse, born.
1833—Edmund Kean, tragedian, died;
born Nov. 4, 1787.
1841—Jas. H. Berry, United States
senator from Arkansas, born.
1847—Daniel O'Connell, Irish patriot,
died at Genoa on his way to
Rome.
1855—Universal Industrial Exhibition
opened at .Paris hy Louis Na
poleon.
1800—Garibaldi defeated Neapolitans
at Calatiflni, Italy.
1807—Russia ratified Alaskan cession
treaty.
1884— Mexican congress ratified treaty
with United tSates.
1885— Capture of Riel, the rebel, in
Manitoba.
1898—Edward Remenyi, celebrated
Hungarian violinist, died In San
Francisco.
1904—Japanese battleship Hatsuse
sunk by mines; 460 perished.
Report is current In newspaper cir
cles that Sam Small Is now writing
editorials for the Atlanta News. We
don’t know who writes them, but some
good ones are appearing In the News
dally.
Orlno Laxative Fruit Syrup Is best
for women and children. Its mild ac
tion and pleasant taste makes It pref
erable to violent purgatives, such as
pills, tablets, etc. Get the booklet and
a sample of Orlno at HUsman-Sale
Drug Cm
TALKING FEETMTO CELEBRITY.
The lnte Marshall Fldld, that great merch
ant prince of Chicago, sent for me after I
had treated his feet, which came very near
frlghtonlng tho wits out of me until hesald,
"my feet are all right, but what I Want you
to do Is to tell me alt about my own feet.” To
beworrlod almost to'death with corns, bun
ions, Ingrowing nails and perspiring feet Is
absolutely unnecessary. I remove them In
stantly without pain or blood. It 1s a most
pleasing experience. Twenty-five cents a
corn and It does not hurt a sp»ck. Strictly
antiseptic. DR. R. E. WILLIAMS.
Surgeon Chlropodlst-Mnssncer-Samarla.
Telephone yftg Thonmsullle, Ga.
P. S— Dr. Williams ofTersfB reward for an
ingrowing nail he cannot cure without pain.
Mrs. Williams does dsinty manicure, mas
sage Hnd hair dressing Scalp treatment
and the morcel wave a specialty. • •
YOUNG CHICKENS
LIKE CHILDREN
Require a specially prepared and delicate food.
There is nothing on the market which gives
the marvelous results and keeps your young
chickens healthy and strong as our
Chick Peed for Biddies,
Scratch Feed for Chickens,
1 io Pounds for 25 Cents =====
The best Food on earth for Fowls.
MOCK & RAWSON.
The Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co., ad
vises relative to San Francisco disaster:
“We take pleasure In announcing that our reaerve and large capital
will be Intact and there will also remalg a very 'substantial surplus
BEYOND THESE ITEMS AFTER THE PAYMENT OF ALL OUR
LOSSES."
You can get abaolutely safe Insurance by applying to
DANIEL C. BETJEMAN,. Agt.,
Rooms 7 and 8 Woolfolk Bldg.
For
For
We are offering for the next
ten days 100 two-piece Suits,
former price $7.50 to $10, for
$5.00
S. B. Brown & Co.
ALBANY & NORTHERN R'Y.
DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES.
NO. 17.
Lv. Savannah ...7:15am S.A.L.Ry
Lv. Atlanta 8:00am C.ofGa Ry
Lv. Macon 11:30am G.S.&F.Ry
Lv. Jacksonville 8:00am G.S. ft F.Ry
Lv. Cordele 2:10pm
Ar. Albany 3:35pm
NO. 16.
Lv. Albany .... .-4 • 30pm
Ar. Cordele .... 6:15pm
Ar. Macon 9:35pm G. S. ft F.Ry
Ar. Helena 9:30pm S.A.L.Ry
NO. 18. ^ -
Lv. Albany ,...12:00noon
Ar. Cordele 1:26pm
Ar. Savannah ...8:00pm 8-A.L.Ry
Ar. Macon 4:20pm G.S. ft F.Ry
Ar. Jacksonville 8:00pm G.S.&F.Ry
Ar. Atlanta 7:60pm C.-of Ga. Ry
NO. 15.
Lv. Macon .. ..6:45am G.S.&F.Ry
Lv. Helena 5:30am S. A. L. Ry
Lv. Cordele 0:30am
Ar. Albany ...,11:15am
For additional Information, rates, etc., address
A. V. PHILLIPS, Com'l Agt., Albany, Ga. J. 8. CREWS,
8. A. ATKINSON, Union Ticket Agt V. P. & G. M., Albany, Ga
J. O. ADAM8. Splloltlng Freight an d Pasaenger Agent, Cordele. Ga.
SEA BOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
Schedule Effective July 3, 1905—90th Meridian Tima,
No. 80
NORTH
No. 72
2:10p.in.
2:39p.m.
2:64p.m.
3:55p.m.
6:16p.m.
>19:16p.m.
12.00 m.
2:05p.m.
8:(l0p.m,
Lv ..Albany,
Lv . .Sapser..
Lv .Dawson.
Lv . Richland.
Ar ColumbUB
Ar ..Atlanta.
Via A. ft N.
Lv ..Albany.
Lv .Cordele.
Ar Savannah
Aril :30p.m.
Ar 12:63 p.m.
Ar 12:86 p.m.
Arlll :81a.m.
LvjlO :15a.m.
. Lvl 5:40a.m.
Ry- I
Ar| 3:26p.m.
Arl 1:25p.m.
Lvl 7:15a.m.
No. 8o
2:10p.m.
4i 16p.m.
6:47p.m.
6:23p.m.
7:46p.m.
11:30p.m.
B:00a.m.lAr
2:65a.m.|Ar
7:15a.m.|Ar
6:44p.m. lAr
WEST
, -Albany.. Ar
.Lumpkin. Ar
Hurtsboro Ar
• Ft. Davis. Ar
N’tgomery Lv
..Selma.. Lv
Pensacola Lv
..Mobile.. Lv
NewOrleans Lv
• St Louis. Lv
No. 72
l:20pr
ll:12a.n
9:36a r
8:66a
7:l0a-n
6:00a.n
ll:05p.r
12:40a'
8:15,.
8:00s i
On week days No. 110 leaves Albany at 5:30 a. m„ arriving Dawson
7:25 a. m. and Richland 8:45 a. m., connecting at Richland with trains for
Columbus, Americus and Savannah.
No. 80. Through train to Columbus, making close connection at Rich
land and Montgomery for all points West via L. ft N. and M. ft 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. ATKINSON, U. T. A., Albany, Ga.
W. P. SCRUGGS, T P. A., Savannah, Ga.
CHARLES F. STEWART, A. Q. P. A., Savannah. Ga.
COTTON
COKE.
J.
K. PRAY.,
President.
A. P. VASON.
Vice Presidents
EDWIN STERNE.
Cashier.
The Citizens national .Bank
■: --( • .... ,,
OF ALBANY, GA.
Capital. - - S50.000.
Deposits received subject to check. 1 1
Loans promptly made on approved H
collateral'. We solicit your business. ~
:■ rsnft«c 1 r-' •" .:-rt ir-
COAl
& CO.
. , . and coal Dealers
COME TO US FOR COAT.
We Are at Same Old Stand on Pfne Street.
We keep In stock Montevallo, Climax, Tip Top and Blooktnn tho hast
A, V «*» fields. Also the P Sbramd REX and ott“.
uf^Mld by us Aocurate we| gfit8 and satisfaction guaranteed on
WAlso Hard Coal for Furnaces, and Blacksmiths’ Coal.
Parties Wishing to Sell Their Next Season
SEE
ALBANY WAREHOUSE COMPANY.
OFFIOERS:
W.'W. FACE. Freald.nl A. p. VASON, Vleo-Fmldut