The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, June 02, 1906, Image 2

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bany Herald —BYI THE— erold Publishing Co. I M.ln President • ■ • msinwin.,.■..,. .Sec. and Trees. 10. fit- Davie.. Buelneee Mgr. — ' " — d. McIntosh r . McIntosh. _ cry i Weekly (8 pages) Every 8aturday. ■ ■■ TERM8 OP 8UB8CRIPTI0N. ly Herald, one year $8.00 Herald, six months 2.60 . Herald, three months 1.26 ikly Herald, 8 pages, one year 1.00 ally payable In ad' and < = subscriptions oe. Advertising rates reasonable' i known on application, rds of thanks, resolutions of ro und obituary notices, other than „ which the paper Itself may give . a matter of newe, will be charged ir at the rate of 10 cents a line, ex- when such notices are published , charitable organizations, when a ilal rate will be named, otlces of ohurch and soolety and ill other entertainments from which a nue la to be derived, beyond a lef announcement, will be charged .. at the rate of 6 cents a line. Office,.second floor Postofflee Build' oorner Jaokson and Pine streets, is Herald deals with advertising lenta by epeolal contraot only, and > advertising agent or agency la au- lorlzed to take contracts for adver- Isements to be Inserted In this .paper. THE HERALD 18 lal Organ of the City of Albany, ifllolal Organ of Dougherty County. Ofllolal Organ of Baker County. OITIotal Organ of the Railroad Com mission of Georgia for the Second Congressional District. TELEPHONES: Composing Room and Job Printing -Office, SC — 3 rings. .Editorial Rooms and Business Of fice, 80. ' = If you see It In The Herald It's so. If you advertise In Tfte Herald It goes. 8ATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1906. Senator Burton doesn’t do things In haste. - S' tt looks now like Reod Smoot will have to retire from tho senate. If hor newspapers could build It, MU' ' eon would hnvo that tourist hotel. No, Pauline, It Isn’t any hotter than It usually Is in the month of June. SHE; Now that the young king of Spain Is ntarrlcd, he probably thinks hltnBolf a man. Cantaloupes will he ripe down here In God's country within the next tort- ptRht. Big . Parmer Jim Smith hasn’t quit the drive yet. Ho Is announced to speak In Bulloch county today. P -v ,' Newton Is going to change her cor porate stylo from “town” to “city," & SI ■1 . • and will complete the job by abolish ing tho old county court and sotting up a city court It now appears that Congressman AdaniB, of Pennsylvania, w,ho com mitted sulcldo In Washington yester day morning, was a victim of specula tton In Btocks. , • Speaking of the wonderful progress of chemical sclonce, Iho Philadelphia Record obsorvos that the Trust has been enabled to convert rotten pork Into the finest of markotnblo hams. lit One unfortunate congressman com- , mltted BUlclde yesterday, but the resig nation of one of the representatives of the people at tho national capital Is. something not yet on the boards. The New York shoplifter who swal lowed a diamond and then hnd appen dicitis may suggest to some of our American actresses an Interesting va riation of the old gag of stolon dia monds for advertising purposes. Albany hasn’t “lost out” on that public building yet Congressman Griggs Is behind It, and he says the Item for the building at Albany Is In the general appropriation bill that will be reported to the house of represen tatives. No section of the country Is devel ‘ oping as rapidly as tho South, no Southern state Is experiencing greater prosperity than Georgia, and no part - of Georgia Is more favored In the dis tribution of material blessings than the Southwestern section. Twenty re from now this will be-, as It was st'before the civil war, the garden . -a SOUTHERN ENINQ. With complaints of scarcity of labor already going up from nil sections of the cotton producing South, It cannot be doubted that the present' season will witness the most distressing con ditions that have yet resulted from the dearth of efficient field help. Last year It was necessary In many locali ties to abandon a not Inconsiderable part of the acreage originally planted In cotton. This season, with the acre age Increased and the supply of labor rather diminished than augmented, It Is difficult to see how the abandon ment of a still larger area can be avoided. It Is significant that at this time, when labor problems are agitating farmers and others as never before, discussion of the possibilities of bring ing European labor Into the South should be on the point of bringing forth fruit. The work of various or ganisations that have been diligent in the Investigation of the possibilities of bringing Europeans to the relief of the agricultural South has been well directed, and the practical certainty now appears that In tho course of a few years, at the furthest, a steady stream of Immigrants—people of fru gal habits and abundant Industry- will bo pouring Into this section bent upon relieving labor conditions which have become Intolerable. The South has reached her present' groat prosperity In spite of her labor troubles. There Is no estimating what the section's achievements might have amounted to had an abundant supply of competent labor been available at all times since the close of the civil war. But tho future Is bright, and the lnbor awakening has come. The South Ib determined not to longer tolerate preBOnt labor conditions, and Southern negroes, competent but unwilling, will have to mako way for Europeans who are both competent and willing, The. hurling of a bomb at the royal carrlago as Alfonso and his bride wero returning to the -palace from the ohuroli Immediately after their mar r rlngo Impressed upon tlio young Eng Ilsh princess, accustomed to the un eventful qulot of tho ( moBt prosaic country In Europe, tho full meaning of her changed condition. She Is now a queen, where,as she was only a few days ago a princess: but Spain isn’t England, and bombs are not the only unpleasant things that are more plen tiful In tho formor country than in the latter. It was long before tho Chicago pack ing housos wero Invented that a philos opher advised the world not to watch the preparation of Its food. In spite of.Efforts to prevent It, a goqd deal of fruit and confectionery Is bought on the street and eaten with tho streot dust which tho wind blows over It, anil regardless of tho condition of the hands of the dealer who arranged It on Ills stand or cart. At tho annual mooting of tho National Health So ciety of England Sir Frederick Troves, nno of tho most eminent physicians In tho world, said that “If a non-moating being could visit this planet from an other sphere and see the way In which meat was thrown about here, handled by dirty hands and oxposed to dust and germ contamination, ho would never dream that, it could possibly bo an ar ticle of diet." Chicago Is not the only place where meats are handled by per sons who are not fastidious. Owing to restrictions upon meat Im ports, which'are maintained primarily for the enrichment of tho great agri cultural landlords, Germans are get ting less animal food, or ore ckeing out their supplies with horses and dogs. A 1 German paper connects the now tariff with the fact that the num ber of horses slaughtered for food had risen to 52,584 In the last three mouths of 1905, an Increase of nearly 20 per cent, In one year, and 2,405 dogs were killed for food In the last quarter of 1905, an Increase of nearly 40 per cent, in a year. “It will be seen," says the Badlsche Landes Zeltung, “that in the matter of food our nation is going to the dogs.” The best safeguard against head ache, constipation and liver troubles Is DeWitt’s Little Early Risers. Keep a vial of these famous little pills in the house aud take a dose at bedtime when you . feel that the stomach and bowelB need cleansing. They don’t gripe. Sold by Albany Drug Co., Hllsman-Sale THIS DATE IN HISTORY. June 2. 1492—Granada surrendered; end dominion of Moors In Spain. 1530—John of Leyden tortured and put to death. 1572—Thomas, 'duke of Norfolk, exe cuted. 1581—James Douglas, Earl of Morton, beheaded at Edinburgh. 1009—Sir Thomas Gates and party of colonists sailed from England ' for Virginia. 1029—John Sobleskl born. 1671—Sir -Edward Leigh, member of Long Parliament, died. 1701—Madame de Scuderl, writer, died. 1754—Thousands killed in earthquake at CaiVo, Egypt. 1780—Gordon's “no-popery" riots be gan In London. 1814—Peace between Great Britain and France proclaimed in Lon don. 1816—Gen. Philip Kearney born; died Sept. 1,1802. 1836—Pope Plus X. bom. 1843—John Cary, Washington’s negro servant, died at the age of 114. 1858—Donati’s comet first observed by ’ - Dr. Donat!, Florence. 1865—Gens. Kirby Smith and Magru- der formally surrendered'their forces at Galveston. 1872—Mobeling attempted to lnate Emperor William. 1876—International telegraph confer- • ence opened at St. Petersburg. 1878—Wreck of the steamer “Idaho” on the coaBt of Ireland. 1882—Gen. Gulseppe Garibaldi died. 1886—Hon. Grover Cleveland married to Miss Frances Folsom. 1889—Forty lives lost In floods at Pet- tersburg, Va.. and Washington, D. C. 1892—The “High-Water Mark" monu ment at Gettysburg dedicated. 1894—Field Columbian Museum at Chicago dedicated. 1895—Eugene V. Debs, leader of the Chicago railway strike, sen tenced to Blx months' imprison ment 1904—Killing of "Caesar” Young, for whose murder Nan Patterson was tried. , 19D5—President Roosevelt’s peace of- ' fer to Russia^ and Japan. IlnalJih Il.ljVvny 'Slirn.l., An observant traveler on English railways could tell you at once the railway upon which he is traveling by merely looking at tho first signal he passes. It may surprise many to know that there are hardly two styles quite alike in this country In station archi tecture and fittings, color of rolling stock, design and color of the locomo tives, uniforms of the servants, style of the signal cabins and signal appli ances and many other details.—London Mali Adder Stones. The singular superstition of the value of adder stones for curing a variety of Ala has continued In many countries from the time of the Romans. .These celebrated charms are nothing more than antique green or blue glass striped In various designs and perforated. The virtues of these stones are sung in the poems of the ancient Druids and are mentioned by Pliny and other classical writers. A Warning. “See here!” Bald the theatrical man ager. “You want to quit your over bearing behavior toward the other members of this company’’— "Indeed?” haughtily replied the Thes pian. “I am the star, am I not?" “Well, yes, but you want to remem ber that you're not a fixed star.”— Philadelphia Press. No Use For Thom. Customer (being mensured In a fash ionable tailor’s shop)—By the way, what’s your price for a suit? Tailor- Sixty dollars, sir. How many pockets would you like? Customer—No pockets at all. I shan’t need any when I’ve paid your bill.- Roig’s Con Chos Extra CIGARS s ■ Are undoubtedly the hi ghest 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 & RAWS©SSL Fir© Insurance, Surety Bonds. Placed in tile best by companies DANIEL C. BETJEMAN, ' Woolfotk Building. REPRESENTING Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Co. National Surety Co., of New York. J. K. PRAY, President. A. P. VASON, Vico President! EDWIN STERNE. Cashier. The Citizens National Bank OF ALBANY, GA. Capital, r - $50,000. Safety Deposits received .subject to check. Loans promptly made on approved collateral. We solicit your business. Georgia Northern Railway Go. ALBANY - BOSTON LINE" Read Down. Read Up. No. 4 Daily No. 2 | Daily 1 Effective Feb. 23,1906. STATIONS. No. 1 Dally No. 3 Dally 3:50pm 7:30am Lv. .. Albany .. Ar. 11:40am 8:20pm 4:44pm S:24am Ar. . Tlcknor .. Lv. 10:40am 7:15pm 4:60pm 8:30am Ar. .. Doerun .. Lv. 10:30am 7:10pm 5:30pm 9:10am Ar. . Moultrie . Lv. 10:00am 6:35pm 5:46pm 1:16pm Lv. . Moultrie . Ar. 8:35am 5:15pm 6:26pm l:65pmlAr. ... Pavo ... Lv. 7:50am 4:30pm 7:00pm 2:30pm|Ar. .. Boston .. Lv. 7:20am 4:00pm Connections at Albany with S. A. L. Nob. 1 and 4 mako connections at Albany to and from Cordele, Savan nah, Macon and Atlanta, via A. & N. All trains make connections at Albany to and from all Central of Ga. Ry. points, including Atlanta, Macon, Amerlcus and Montgomery. Sleep ‘.ug car service via C. of Ga. between Albany and Atlanta. Leave Albany 9 p. m. Returning, arrive Albany 7:25 a. m. Connections at Ticknpr, via F. R. & N. E. for Pelham. Connections at Boston via A. C. L. for Quito Valdosta, Savannah, Jacksonville and points south. Connections at Moul trie via A. A B. for Tiftou and Thomasvllle. S. A. A.HINSON, U. T. A.. . 0. E. SMITH, Trnfflo Mgr. Albany, fin. Moultrie, Oa. ’ ■ i-r ati ^ wl - So far as tailoring, design ing is evidently limited. All men can’t make a life study of clothes making and clothes .selling, yet all men must wear clothes. ••When you biiy a “High Art” Suit ypu need have no knowledge of how they were made, the label on the inside coat pocket assure you that the garment is made right; and as to style and fit leave it to your friends, they know a good looking suit when they see it and they will tell you so, when they see you in one of our new summer models tailored by Strouse & Bros. Price Range from 12.50 to $20.00. S. B. Brown & Co. ALBANY & NORTHERN R’Y. DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES. NO. 17. Lv. Savannah ...7-.16am S.A.L.Rj Lv. Atlanta 8:00am C. ofGa Ry Lv.'Macon 11:30am G. S. &F.RJ Lv. Jacksonville 8:00am G. S. & F.Rj Lv. Cordele 2:10pm Ar. Albany 3:35pm NO. 18. Albany ... ,12:0Cnoon Cordele 1:26pm Savannah ...8:00pm S.A.L.Ry Macon 4:20pm G. S. & F.Ry Jacksonville 8:00pm G. S. & F.Ry Atlanta 7:60pm C.-of Ga. Ry J NO. 16. Lv. Albany -i'30pm Ar. Cordele .... 6:15pm Ar. Macon 9:36pm G. S. & F.Ry Ar. Helena 9:30pm S. A. L. Ry NO. 15. Lv. Macon .. . .0:45am G. S. & F.Ry Lv. Helena 5:30am S.A.L.Ry Lv. Cordele 9:30am Ar. Albany .... 11:15am For additional Information, rates, etc., address A. V. PHILLIPS, Com'l Agt„ Albany, Ga. J. S. CREWS, S. A. ATKINSON. Union Ticket Agt. V. P. & G. M., Albany, Ga. J. Q. ADAMS. Soliciting Freight and Passenger Agent, Cordele. Ga. SEA BOARD NO. 80 AIR LINE RAILWAY. Schedule Effective July 3 1905—90th Meridian Time. NORTH 2:10 p.m. 2:29p.m. 2:54p.m. 3:55p.m. 5:15p.m. 9:35p.m. 2.00 m. 2:05p.m. 8:00p.m, Lv ..Albany.. Arl 1 Lv ..Sasser.. Arll2 .Dawson. Ar|12: .Richland. Arlll: Ar Columbus Lr|19'. Ar . .Atlanta.. Lvl 5: Via A. & N. Ry. j Lv ..Albany.. Ar| 3: Lv .Cordele. Ar| 1: Ar Savannah Lv! 7: | No. 79 || No. 8o I WEST 30p.m. 53 p.m. 36p.m. 31a.m. 15a.m. 40a.m. 25p.m. 25p.m. 15a.m. I No. 79 2:10p.m. •1:16p.m. 5:47p.m. 6:23p.m. 7:46p.m. 11:30p.m.|Ar 5:00a.m.lAr 2:55a.m. |Ar 7:16a.m.|Ar | 5:44p.m.|Ar ..Albany.. Ar ■ Lumpkin. Ar Hurtsboro Ar • Ft. Davis. At N'tgomery Lv ..Selma.. Lv Pensacola Lv ..Mobile.. Lv NcwOrleano Lv • St. Louis. Lv 20p.m. 12a.m. 35a.m 50a.m :S0a.m 00a.m 05p.m 40a.m 15p.m OOa.m On week days No. 110 leaves Albany at 5:30 a. m„ arriving Dawson 7:25 a. m. and Richland S: 45 a. m. t connecting at Richland with trains for Columbus. Amerlcus 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 Aeent 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. Warehousemen and coal Dealers COME TO US FOR COAL. Wo Are at Same Old Stand on Pfne Street. sskuSv*- ”•'*"» i-sst?gf||r| OTAlso Hard Coal for Furnaces, and Blacksmiths’ Coal. Parties Wishing to Sell Their Next Season COTTON SEE ALBANY WAREHOUSE COMPANY. OFFICERS ; W. W. PACE, President W. M. WILDER, See. and Treat. A. P. VASON, VIce-Prealdant T. N. WOOLFOLK. Mahaear.