Newspaper Page Text
Mere Shall the Press the People’s Rights Maintain.
BAINBRIDGE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING JANUARY 17,
1901.
$1.00 a Year.
A Good Suggestion. I Democracy Cannot Die.
Keep Out of Debt.
Professional Cards.
The father?
Gone for the
dcctot. The
mother? Alone
with her suirer-
iog child,
^HUhedoc-
tor never
eerne ?
South Carolina
million dollars
pensaries last veai
•j. I 11 is reported that Great Britain
! desires to exchange the island of
Jamacia for an
inpine Islands,
not very la rye,
| ill«out six thousand -quart
The Albanj
and Smith odi
the Joiimalis
Morning News, Green i
>rs, is a new venture in
nvrt ^ ,
• y n e R there
The
>■- -
ins house
you can’t
get the doc-
;r uick enough. It’s
tco dangerous to v/ait.
Don’t make such a mis-
again; it may cost
sp crop last year
remunerative — -oiling re,
the local market from 2
?allon. It is no\
cents at re'a'l.
proved
s quite near this countr
ant from our southern ;
~*w hundred mih-s. It
The Democratic party has been
badly engineered at times, and
ha- made mistakes. But it is a
-xuiGase to suppe-e that it is going
to go put of t>u-ine:s. It has stood
the storms of th« nineteenth centu- |
rv. It will live through the twen- |
■ait
! tietn. ub
! will ere long
| add addition
i *-eeord of us
j in irener.d. at
generaGh
tuni
ip It
and
long
ikir.d
f th«
. Q
All of the reports on the cotton
crop indicate that the croj> for the
| present season will go to at least ten
I million bales, though the price re
mains high with indications of still
higher prices. The supply in the
mills and warehouses appears to be |
shorter than it was a year ago, and
in fact, is unequal to the demand. ]
The lemim
time and the
when it will
bales to met
Attorneys.
Albert H. Russell.
A TT< )RX E Y-AT-LA W.
Bai abridge, Georgia,
n. E. O’Neal.
COUNSELLOR
is in -reasing all the
day is not far distant
e«juire fifteen million
tl:e u 'inann ol the
ATTORNEY A
AT LAW
AND HEAL ESTATE
AG Eli.
Will practice in
special attend
galion of Land
of Administi alien.
i the S ite Courts
i erven le investi-
ities and the Law
to 3*>cent’
worth P
ns
to
rsni!
a life. Always keep on
hand a dollar bottle of
is determined
her. His paper the Gommo- |
will follow Harm-worths’ idea j
century 'journalism an
in tabloid form.
! AIi
1
! ua
nam ot’
dir
by defeat, rec
if nearly ~X
and restored
s t v the wi-
tii!
t>
The Savannah Press says Gover
nor Candler probably has the largest
staff of any excutive in America.
Perhaps the Governor wishes to
give good measure in his administra
tion.
It cures the croup at
once. Then v/hen any
or.e in the family comes
down with a hard cold
or cough a few doses of
the Pectoral will cut
short the attack at once.
A 2£ cent bottle will cure
a miserable cold; the 50c.
| size is better for a cold
I that has been hanging on.
Keep the dollar size oa hand.
‘ About 25 years ago I came near
E tv!L— with consumption, but vras
cured trith Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
I since which time I have kept Ayer s
I medicines in the house and recom-
i n.cnd them to all mv friends.”
j C. D. Mathewsos,
I J~r. 10 1*09. Bristol, Yt.
tv rite the Doctor. If you br.vc try
r o.oouTit whatever and desire the
best medical advice, write the doctor
free'.v. Address _ „
Ur. J. C. AVER, Lowell, Mass
Lowell, .'lass.
There is no better Democrat than
one who serves his party for the
good, plan on the
eminent to p.rov:
an asylum in that
insular territory t
would in a niea-n
the ravages of flu
are destroying s
Jamaica alone
ipt
nn
diseases which
many of them,
not sutncientlv
people’s benefit. There is
Democrat than one who
partv for his own benefit.
o worse
uses lib
large to accommodate all the negroes
in the United Mates, but with t-!;e
addition of the llarbmWs, the island
of Trinidad, the Danish West Indies,
IIayti and other island- in that re-
| gion, all cf width can he acquired,
j including the waste places ot C uba
j and Porto Rico, amply -utile
this purposes, would
The nearness of these
lit for
available,
fis would
It is the transfer of the smoke
house and flour box from Kansas and j
Missouri to their own back yards
that have made the farmers in this
section prosperous.
One of the strongest evidences of
permanent prosperity in the South
is the greatly increased price that is
being paid for farm lands, not only
in thickly settled communities but
in sections remote from schools,
churches and railroad facilities.
The coffee trust and the sugar
trust have reached an agreement
that they will not to do business in
each other's territory in the future.
In other words, they will take oppo-
render the deportation cf this ra
easy of accomplishment, and. would
insure that the welfare oi these
people would be properly guarded
by this government.
The South owes much to this race
who have done so much to develop
it, and it is to be hoped that our rep
resentatives in congress will confer
a real benefit upon them, should an
opportunity present itself, by sup
porting anv measure looking to their
being placed under more fa\ orable
conditions.
be in die tv
it via.- in ilu
vital force :
continent.
-uppose tha
cued with a-
it adher-
e butter
' it- best
iemocratiu party will
eu'iietl: century what
nineteenth, a living,
n the affairs of this
Let not its enemies
it is nut to he reck-
of yore. T e Bryans
may come and go, but the Democ
racy will live on. Its fate is not
sealed up in the personal fate of
any man-
I aking
Other People’s
Mail,
T" the farmer who raises Ids own
„ I
• upp.Lies at home and makes cotton ;
as a surplus crop farming promises)
to be a more remunerative business i
than ever before. The profit from j
cotton, even during the present
AY. Ft.um n.
Dona-lson & Fleming-
A11 o r n e y s- a f- La w,
ba i \ br t doe. iiEnma i,
Office in Belcher molding.
year, has aided many of the tarrnei
What of The Future.
We believe in the doctrine that
Divine plans are being worked out
site sides of the street, and rob the arK i these can only make for good to
nocple going and coming. the human rive. The time has come
1 = ~ v .-l,en human knowledge shall break
IE AD.
ry the CuX
Here’s a bit of timely philosophy
from the Americas Times-Bccorder:
‘We need more kindness, more tov-
boarance, more charity, and more
P arity, and more democracy, less
,!y ? s ©ream hnt0 am l war and selfishness if we
— * T - would make the twentieth centu.v
blessed. ’
.res the Senf-es of 1
I Hearing.
lartir'f !s ap.-Ut-d intoeaeb no^jr 1 ^ ^
trmi’.iie. Pi-w.-50:-. a« L- York,
u. FLY liKOTEERS.sr. Y arrrn--,-
. K. HAWKES
ie famous Atlanta optician.
receive d
‘OLD MEDAL*
ttt AWARD DIPLOMA OF HOBOK
YiiiifSSSVjgqis
Towns in the Unitea_*>«*-
FAMOUS GLASES FOBi SAL' 1
l UiTY DRUG CO. BAIN3--IhEi
8. D. HARTSF1ELD, CAIRO-« - \
® SIGHT TESTED
lntJ ticket to vote U!U . ,, ie ui. v ° f
fct i«n by the farmers 1 t
" a nd hominy.
I„ jsoo there .vas not a railroad
in the world, not a steamboat, not
r«e«i.n match, not a cooking stove
a. tve note understand the term Not
ot coal "-as mined m the
I’liited States and postage stamps
v ‘' not known. The telegraph
"k an undreamed ofthing and tele
phones wore still among the thu.„.
10 be.
The* SavannalTPress remakrs that
Georgia led tlm Sontb in j the -
^ctionot ^tton ^tui^ed
Qmt r’v made ^y her mill, a net
t hc sho"U» - er \. en t. in the six
earning of established and
months it has ^ its capita!
am l the move to m &
bY $25.000- Ql ^ 1 “ ai divi(k nds Bain-
all bounds and search out all secict-.
Who sail say that within the next
one hundred years men slial not fly
through the air as safely as they
now ride on a railway? Or that
thev may not communicate with the
stars or wrest from nature the se
cret by which she now makes out of
a few simple grains which we now
produce from the soil, the delicious
fruits and life giving chemicals and
and the action of sunshine. In one
hunred years from now may not the
people of the earth have discovered
and made common things to us as
miraculous as the telephone and tel
egraph is to us? The things dreamed
of yesterday are the actualities ot
today and there is no reason to think
that-we are anywhere neat the limit
of human achievements.
Those persons who have been in
the habit of taking other people’s
mail from the po.-toffice and fail to
give it to the one to whom it is ad
dressed, or return it to the postof
fice, had better be a little careful.
They are laying themselves liable
to severe punishment.
Anew postoffice ruling has ju.st
gone Into effect, imposing a fine of
$500 or one year’s imprisonment
on anyone who, through careless
ness or otherwise takes mail not
belonging to them from the office
and fails to return it immediately.
This applies to newspapers as well
as to letter and other valuable mail.
People when taking their mail
from the office should examine it
before going out of the building. It
will only take a moment, and will
save a great deal of trouble. To
say it was tne postmaster’s fault
will cut no figure under this ruling.
It wili be your fault if you don’t re
turn if, and you will be the one to
suffer.
Worry,
to save themselves and to become
practically independent. If their
operations in future arc conducted
upon a cash basis, holding their ex
penses down to a minimum and rais
ing at home everything that can be | i
raised there, we may confidently ex
pect the wealth of the rural com
munities to make unprecedented
gains in the next ten years. The
first thought of the farmer should be
home supplies. Then let all the cot
ton be made that-can be, without in
volving him in debl.
The greatest bane to the southern
farmer during the past ten year- has
been debt. Hoping for higher prices
for cotton has led them to pitch their
crops upon a basis of prices that
have seldom panned out. It has been
a disastrous sort of speculation for
them. Now that they have ex
perience to teach them, let them
keep out of debt and make cotton
their Surplus crop. Then the profits
from the farm will be good, whether
cotton brings a high or low price.—
Times.
, WILL H. KRAUSE,
Attorney at Law,
Bainbridge, Ga.
Office
Collections a Specialty,
with Hawes Hawes.
11. BOH ER.
BYBOX D. BOW Kk IK
Bower ec Bower,
>TEYS AND COCNSELLOKS
ATTOf
AT LAW.
BAINBRIDGE, - GEORGIA.
Practice in all itie (’“’irts, State and
Federal.
Office on Broad street, over Mrs.
Reynolds’-Miliinerv store.
J. Sterling Roberts.
AT i'ORX EY-AT-LAW,
Bain bridge, Georgia.
Will practice in all the Courts.
PltyMlciaus.
Dr. W. E. Rouse,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGECT
STEAM MILL, GA.
Special attention given to the diseases
of Women and Children.
Xo man can really injure another.
All real injury comes front a man s
own acts.
DR. V. ERRY,
Physician
m.
Georgia Leads,
ed States
Georgia has led the Unite
in the textile mill br.ildmg during
the current year, with North Caroli
na a close second and South Caro
lina in third place. The Carolina-
« t iU have each a larger number o
bv not having a j fectories t han Georgia, but the
I Empire State of the south i> sU *
sa-gi.’s^si-s
• D c cultivation ot su = -;n annul in numbei or
e st m tne v . ;
There is nothing in the world or
in the human dispo-ition that kills
so many peop'e as does worry. It
is the secret? cau-e of the condition
of nine-tenths of the sick people,
the nervous folk, the insane. It
makes men weak and cowardly, it
makes women hysterically,and sad
dest of all,it turns away the heart
from Gcd, and bids us worship the
idol of despair. Sometimes peo-
plejexcuse it by saying they cannot
help it: sometimes they say they
were born with anxious disposions,
out no matter for the cause, or the
physical metaphysical condition,
we know two great facts; one is
that it is wrong to worry ; the oth
er. that we can conqur the tempta
tion to worry. It is wild and wick- i
ed for mtn and women to go on j
wearing themselves out, weaken*,
ing their work and making them- j
I selves nuisances by anxious fee.-
I ing and thoughts and words and
deed? and habit?.
and Murgeon^
Office f>n Broughton street, opposite
office of Hawes & rlai' <=-.
Residence, corner of Troupe and Clay
streets. Telephone call o7.
Dr. E. J. Morgan,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
Having- associated with him hisson, D
T. E. Morgan,gives special attentio
to the treatment of Female
Diseases.
Office rear of Bruce’s new Drug store
corner of Broughton and South
Broad streets.
1554 MSLES
S. J. Chesnut, fl. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
OF
modern railway
TRAVERSING THE
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, and
Mineral Lands
ilSOUTH,
Tenders his professional services to the-
people of Bairihridsie and vicinity in
the nratice of medicine and surgery
in ail its branches.
Special attention iriven the treatment
of diseases of the ear, throat and air
passages.
DO YOU NEED SPECTACLES?
I am permanently located at
Hicks’s Drug Store.
IN THE
And guarantee all work and ma
terial to be the BEST
THROUGH RATES AND TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL, POINTS
Ey
63
X.
PERRY, Optician,
Bainbiidge, Ga.
Just sec
bridge is nl
Cotton Mill
the ctuuv— -.r
i Georgia and Florida,
throughout ^ oll <ro
P- G
lights of D al]i011
ag i° if Savannah, has gotten
r. Purse, M*- r)fcaue
lit Ol J-'-
1 -t-olllfl
exhaustive
- ■ . V OI1 the cultivation of cane
OTtab W,»pri».of DrW. <-
“T 13 ! a»‘l vataal*
'Ey will many bu9ine=^ .
hen 110
fles t0
StubbS ’ He history and cultivation
work on th ®V ia J an d a histjy
0 f cane m 3 t - cane in Jibrida,
y the same prindP 1 "” - r ot i ie r
lranc<? ) that they ^
n «s? They handle ^; e Th^ ^
teHTS '•
« f ° r
inncuwM'v - . f
decade she will equal m number ot
spindles and looms and amoun
capital invested any of her ststers
of the South, if indeed she does not
surpass them. Georgia s liberal law s
and unsurpaseed natural advantages
cannot fail to place her m the tront
r ai iksV the manufacturing state..
Her future is particularly briglu.
d “ 8 „ot become wrong bv be.ng
revealed.
In tune ot peace prepare for wa
.applies with peculiar force to the !
farmer, and now is a good time to
prepare for your spring crops. Begin
now by looking after the proper
drainage ofyourbotm lands. Ditches
should be cleared of all debris, when
this i- properly done they will not
cret filled up and cause the overflow
and sogging ot thv soil. The land
will be warmer and aeration will be
iioiiig on, preparing food for the next
crop. The soil will be ready for the
plow much earlier. Your hill land
should be plowed deep in order to
receive all the moisture possible,
which it will retain for a longer
oeroid than with surface plowing.
Contra! of Ceorgia Raiiway,
Ocean Steamship-Co.
Strictiy First-class Service,
Polite and Attentive Barbers.
I most respectfully solicit your pat
ronage. Wilt.. F. Thornton
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS
PASSENGER ROUTE
TO New York,
Boston
AND
THE
istomaUm. lata. SchaAilM ol
*ralM iN Wlk| Dates ol Steamn Cfcoer-
Passenger and Baggage
Transfer.
To and from all Trains and Steam
boats, Day or night. Handle all
Baggage with care and dispatch at
moderate charges. First-class six
seated Hack and Sarry.
A share of public patronage so
licited and satisfaction guaranteed
John H. Barco.