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THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY ij 1906.
The Albany Herald
| ' — BY THE—
Herald Publishing Co.
H. M. McIntosh..
H. T. McIntosh..
Jno. A. Davis...
President
..Sec. and Treas.
.. .Business Mgr.
Every Afternoon Except Sunday.
Weekly (8 pages) Every Saturday.
. . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Dally Herald, one year $5.00
Dally Herald, six months.. 2.50
Dally Herald, three months 1.25
Weekly Herald, 8 pages, one year 1.00
ad-
and
Kgi
m
m--
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vance.
Advertising rates reasonable
made known on application.
Cards of thanks, resolutions of re
spect and obituary notices, other than
, th6ee which the paper Itself may give
as a matter of news, will be charged
for at the rate of 10 cents a line, ex
cept when such notices are published
by charitable organizations, when a
special 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
for at the rate of 5 cents a line.
Office, second floor Postoffice Build
ing; corner Jackson and Pine streets.
The Herald deala with advertising
agents by special contract only, and
no advertising agent or agency is au
thorized to take contracts for adver
tisements to be Inserted In this paper.
THE HERALD IS
Official Organ of the City of Albany.
Offiolal Organ of Dougherty County.
Offlolal Organ of Baker County.
Offiolal Organ of the Railroad Com.
mission of Georgia for the Second
Congressional Dlstrlot.
TELEPHONES:
1 *•
Composing Room and Job Printing
Office, 80 — 3 rlntfs.
Editorial Rooms and Business Of
floe, 60.
If' you see It In The Herald It’s so.
If you advertise In The Herald It goes,
SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1906.
, irfiey liad n double
Ainrerlcus yesterday.
hanging up at
, “Honesty Is the host policy” lp 'poll-
tlcfi as well ns In business.
The Perhahis are now giving Wny-
orota the best dally paper ever.
j/yho Port Gaines Sentinel 1h
lYcmocral after The Herald's own
heart.
It looks nilghjy Imd to seo the "llo”
passed up from the lloor of the United
*
litotes senate to the White House.
.-.'Editor nick Grubb, of the Darton
Garotte, says that a man can't live too
fctf HOUth In Georgia, And be knows.
The Standard Oil Company Is evi
dently beginning to feel tho force of
bnbUo opinion and is going to try tho
virtue of maintaining n press agency.
THE PRESIDENT AND THREE
SENATORS.
With such able statesmen and ener
getic exponents of the functions of In
cisive English as Benjamin R. Tillman,
Joseph W. Bailey and Isador Rayner
camping on his trail and sending a
rain of bombs and harpoons In his di
rection. the lot of the President Is one
certainly not to he envied.
Since tho beginning of ljls adminls-
tratlnn, tho President has been tho
target for much criticism and a moro
liberal allowance of free-handed abuse
than has fallen to the lot of most of
his predecessors, Much of this abuse
has come from those, who may be
clusscd as "small fry,' 1 however, and
the chief executive has been enabled
to lean on his dignity nod refuse to be
very seriously disturbed by tlielr out
bursts.
But It Is an entirely different condi
tion of affairs when such men as the
three senators named are making him
tho object of a fierce and almost Inces
sant bombardment. There are not
three abler men In tho upper house of
the national congress than Tillman,
Bailey and Rayner, and all happen to
be endowed with unusual qualifications
for saying things “with the edge ex
posed.”
Tho President’s recent Inexplicable
conduct with reference to the railroad
rate bill has rendered him vulnerable
undor conditions of which certain
Democratic senators have not failod to
take prompt advantage, and he has
been especially helpless because all
that has been charged against him on
the floor of the senate during the last
few days bore tho earmarks of truth.
The President has had decidedly the
worst Of on encounter which has been
far from creditable to him.
Right.
From the Savannah Press.
The Albany Herald Is right. It Is
mighty bad form and mighty poor pol
icy to send nway from home for any
thing that can be bought at home.
■ Again we are telling you, dear Paul
ine, that the political waters In Goor-
atn are clearing lip very rapidly, and
inoro and more the people of tho stato
are seeing things ns they really are.
Tho statement which tho president
In a telephonic pasBlon denounced as
"n deliberate and unqualified false
hood,” William E. Chandler reiterates
with a circumstantiality of detail and
an Innate probability that will carry
to every reader the conviction that
Chandler’s 'memory Is much bettor
than the president’s. Mr. Roosevelt
Undoubtedly was discouraged at the
prospect of passing tho Hepburn bill
without, or with only a limited court
review provision; and as most of the
Democrats wore in favor of that, he
sought communication with Senator
Tillman In order to combine the Dem
ocrats with a portion of the Republi
cans for the passage of the hill sub
stantially ns It passed tho house. As
Senators Knox, Spooner and Foralier
were opposing tho bill in that form,
nothing Is more probable than that, he
used tho language regarding them at
tributed to him. In the unfortunate
controversy Involving personal verac
ity which has arisen ovor the railroad
rate hill In the senate nnd White
House, the position of the president Is
the most uncomfortable.
Vice-President Fnlrbnnks, “cold ns
mi Iceberg,” though he Is said to be,
ntppenrs to have warmed up tho Meth
odist brethren in the Southern Meth
odist general conference lit Birming
ham yesterday and lust night
Senator Bailey, In Ills pointed re
marks on Thursday, seemed to place
the onus of slander on President
■ Roosevelt and the lie direct tqion Sec
retary I-oeb. Tills all looks mighty
bad; yet the Texas senator had cause
to speak plainly.
O.U'l SellsIV. fled from Germany to
✓
ogcipe the penalties of treason, and
when he died the emperor of Germany
will his condolences to the family.
The German consul-general la New
York attended the funeral as one of
the honorary pall-hearers.
, Casting its eye over toward the na
tional capital the Philadelphia Record
, observes: “If all the accusations Of
wllll.ul. deliberate and malicious fulse-
■bood now current In Washington can
in.- substantiated the national capital
contains the materials for an Ananias
Club of great size and remarkable dis
tinction."
; The Georgia Populists arc playing
for time and evidently intend to take
advantage of anything that may turn
np at the eleventh hour. They have
now again postponed their meeting to
determine what course to pursue in
the present campaign until “some time
in July,”
THIS DATE IN HISTORY.
May 19.
1217—Battle of Lincoln, England.
1242—Henry HI. of England embhrked
for France.
1535—Cartier sailed on second voyage
to America.
153(5—Anno Bolcyn executed.
1.022—Osman I.. sultan of Turkey,
strangled by his soldiers.
1043—United colonies of New England
formed by convention.
1070—Battle of Turner’s Falls, Massa
chusetts.
1089—Charter of Connecticut removed
from the oak.
1715—Charles, early of Halifax, states.
man and orator, dle-i.
1786—John Wilson (Christopher North)
born; died April 3, 1854.
1795—James Boswell, author of “Life
of Dr. Johnson," died.
1798—Lord Edward Fitzgerald arrest
ed In Dublin.
1847—Brig “Carriole” lost on St. Law
rence; 170 drowned.
1802— Slave order of Gen. Butler re
scinded by President Lincoln.
1803— Battle of Vicksburg; assault re
pulsed.
1864—Nathaniel Hawthorne died; born
July 4, 1804.
1805—Arrival of Jefferson Davis and
fellow prisoners at Fortress
Monroe.
1808—Great damage by hailstorm at
San Antonio. Texas.
1875—Widow of President Lincoln re
moved to a sanitarium.
1878—Forty persons burned to death
in a Calcutta theatre,
from Taxu to Tientsin.
1893—James E. Murdock, actor, died.
1896—French defeated the Hovas at
Sakolare, Madagascar.
1905—Death sentence passed on ‘‘Blue-
beard" Hoch.
8, B, Brown,
President,
J. P, Munnerlyn, Cashier,
A: VfSSid.n,.
Albany Moil Bait
. OF ALBANY, GA.
Opened Business Sept. 6th, 100c
CAPITAL
8URPLU8.
- SBO.OOC
- 15,000
Every facility In the banking busi
ness offered to customers.
Savings Department.
interest Allowed on Time Depoalt«.
CENTRAL OF CEORCIA RAILWAY
Arrival and Departure of Train* at
Albany, Ga.
In Effect Jan. 8. 1905.
DEPARTURES:
For Dothan, Floralla and Lock
hart 7:46am
For Dothan, Florala and Lock
hart 3:50pm
For Macon, Atlanta, Augus
ta, Columbus. Savannah.. 4:05am
For Macnn, Atlanta, Colum
bus, Montgomery, Troy... ,11:54 am
For Macon, Atlanta. Savan
nah 9:00pm
arrivals:
From Lockhart, Florala and
Dothan 8:45 pm
From Lockhart, Florala and
Dothan >..11:40am
From Augusta, Savannah, ,,
Atlanta, Macon 7:25 am
From Montgomery, Troy, Co
lumbus, Atlanta, Macon... 3:40pm
From Atlanta, Savannah, Ma
con, Montgomery, Colum
bus 11:30 pm
ALL TRAINS DAILY.
Drawing room sleeping cars be
tween Albany and Atlanta on trains
arriving at Albany at 7:25 a. m. and
leaving Albany at-9:00 p. m. Parlot
car between Albany, and Atlanta on
train arriving at Albany at 3:40 p
m. and leaving Albany at 11:64 a. m
For further Information apply to S.
A. Atkinson, Depot Ticket Agent 01
R S. Morris, Commercial Agent, AJ
bany, Ga.
Married
Women
Every woman covets a
shapely, pretty figure, and
many of them deplore the
loss of their girlish forms
after marriage. The bearing
of children is often destructive
to the mother’s shapeliness.
AH of this can be avoided,
however, t«y the use of Mother's Friend before baby comes, as this
great liniment always prepares the body for the strain upon it, and
preserves 1 be symmetry of her form. Mother’s Friend overcomes all the
danger of child-birth, and carries the expectant mother safely through
this critical period without pain. It is woman’s greatest blessing.
Thousands gratefully tell of the benefit and x-elief derived from the
use of this wonderful
remedy. Sold by all
druggists at $t.oo per
bottle. Our little
bool:, telling all about
this liniment, will be seiit free.
Tie Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Qa.
For
Mother's
Rati road Commissioner Joseph M.
Brown’s letter to the people of Geor
gia, which deals with somo statements
that have been made by the Atlanta
Journal and Candidate Hoke Smith
with reference to certain railroad rates
In Georgia, which Is published else
where In today’s Herald, certainly puts
somebody up a tree.
Taft vs. Dlngley.
Prom the Pittsburg Post, May 1G.
Mr. Taft has thrown the “ stand
patters” Into another fit. Ho wants to
buy two sea-going suction dredges for
use at Panama of a Scotch firm on the
Clyde for $91,000 apiece cheaper than
the next lowest bid of a Maryland
steel plant. Mr. Roosevelt, In the
course of his revolution around the
tariff axis, approves the Idea. This is
alarming. Here Is the government re^
fusing to patronize its own fostered
steel infants. (Shouts by the mob—
“Soup house! Soup house!”) Here is
the government reducing wages to the
foreign pauper scale. How easy it
would he to justify all this by explain
ing that the foreigner pays the tax,
and- in this case the government
throws It off and hence the cheapness;
But no: there never was any tariff on
these government Importations. The
square proposition Is to permit the
government to do what a private
American is prevented from doing—
buying in the cheapest market. We
see no way of.emerging from tills bar
gain, except that foreign tax idiocy
that only the parrots remember.
’Phone 280 for stove wood and ice.
ALBANY COAL & ICE CO.
Roig’s Con Chos Extra
CIGARS
Are undoubtedly the highest grade article sold any
where at
5c Each.
A combination of the best tobaccos grown, blended
in a way to give a light and delightful smoke. It is a
fact that very few 10c cigars have as much merit, and
if you are dissatisfied with the brand you now smoke,
t ry one or two dozen of these, which are guaranteed
to please you.
MOCK & RAWSON.
Fire Insurance,
Surety Bonds*
Placed in the best companies
DANIEL C.
by
BETJEMAN,
Woolfolk Building.
REPRESENTING
Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Co.
National Surety Co., of New York.
J. K. PRAY.
President.
A. P. VASON,
Vice President!
EDWIN STERNE.
Cashier.
Safety
The Citizens national Bank
OF ALBANY, GA.
Capital, - - $50,000.
Deposits receive*! subject to check.
Loans promptly made on approved
collateral. We solicit your business.
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. i
ALBANY & NORTHERN
DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES.
R’Y.
NO. 17.
NO. 18.
Lv.
Savannah
...7-.16am S. A. L. Ry
Lv.
Albany .
,.12:00noon ,
Lv.
Atlanta .
...,8:00am C.ofGa. Ry
Ar.
Cordele .
...1:25pm
Lv. Macon ...
..11:30am G.S.&F.Ry
Ar.
Savannah
... 8:00pm S. A. L. Ry
Lv.
Jacksonville 8:00am G. S. & F.Ry
Ar.
Macon ..
...4:20pm G. S. & F.Ry
Lv.
Cordele .
.. .2:10pm
Ar.
Jacksonville 8:00pm G. S. & F.Ry
Ar.
Albany .
.. .3:35pm
Ar.
Atlanta .
....7:60pm C.-of Ga. Ry
NO. 16.
NO. 15.
Lv.
Albany .
... 4 • 30pm
Lv.
Macon ..
..6:46am G. S. & F.Ry
Ar.
Cordele .
.. 6:16pm
Lv.
Helena .
...6:30am S. A. L. Ry
Ar.
Macon ..
... 9:36pm G. S. & F.Ry
Lv.
Cordele .
.. .9:30am
Ar.
Helena .
....9:30pm 8. A. L. Ry
Ar.
Albany .
..11:16am
address
J. S. CREWS,
S. A. ATKINSON, Union Ticket Agt. V. P. & G. M„ Albany, Ga*
Q. ADAMS. Soliciting Freight an d Passenger Agent. Cordele. Ga.
For additional Information, rates, etc.,
V. PHILLIPS, Com’l Agt., Albany, Ga.
SEABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
Schedule Effective July 3. 190S—90th Meridian Time.
No. 80
NORTH
| No. 78
2:10p.m.Lv ..Albany.. Arl 1:30p.m.
2:39p.m.Lv ..Sasser.. Ar[l2:53p.m.
2:64p.m.Lv .Dawson. Ar|12:36p.m.
8:55p.m. Lv .Richland. Arlll:31a.m.
5:15p.m. Ar Columbus LvjlO:16a.m.
9:35p.m.|Ar ..Atlanta.. Lvl 6:40a.m.|
| Via A. & N. Ry. |
12.00 m. Lv ..Albany.. Arj 3:25p.m.
2: OBp.m.il.v .Cordele. Ar| 1:25p.m.
8:00p.m.|Ar Savannah Lv| 7:16a.m.
No. 8o |
WEST
2:10p.m.Lv ..Albany.. Ar
4:16p.m. Lv .Lumpkin. Ar
6:47p.m. Lv Hurtsboro Ar
6:23p.m. Lv .Ft. Davis. Ar
7:46p.m. Ar N’tgomery Lv
11:30p.m.Ar ..Selma...Lv
5:00a.m. Ar Pensacola Lv
2:55a.m.Ar ..Mobile.. Lv
7:16a.m.|Ar NewOrleansLv
5:44p.m.lAr .St.. Louts. Lv
No. 79
1:20p.m.
11:12a.m.
9:36a.m.
8:56a.m.
7:80a.m
6:00a.m.
ll:05p.m
12:40a.m.
8:lEp.m.
8:00a.rj.
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.
. tyo. 80. Through train to Columbus, makipg 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. ATKINSON, U. T. A., Albany, Ga.
W. P. SCRUGGS, T P. A., Savannah, Ga.
CHARLES F. STEWART, A. G. P. A., Savannah, Ga.
COTTON
COKE.
COAl
CARTER & CO.
and Goal Dealer
COME TO US FOR COAL.
We Are at Same Old Stand on Pfne Street.
We keep In stock Montevallo, Climax, Tip Top and Bloclcton, the best
from the Cahaba, Ala., coal fields. Also the celebrated REX and other
high-grade Jelico coals. Accurate weights and satisfaction guaranteed on
all coal sold by us.
WAlso Hard Coal for Furnaces, and Blacksmiths’ Coal.
, Parties Wishing to Sell Their Next Season
COTTON
SEE
ALBANY WAREHOUSE COMPANY.
OFFICERS : '
W. W. PACE, Prerident a. P. VASON, Vice-President •
W. M. WILDER, 8ec. and Treat. T. N. WOOLFOLK. Managtr.