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BQUCT.AP (ILEBSNFR. M «>* J>ron
-■"W"*," = —~ ,
Upon whnt peg cf ths future will
H 4 Constitution now Lar g its hop-' s
<rt Roosevelt?
Vbat Crutn which the senate cant
wftjn the political waters camo back
after a very few day s.
——■ —•»--
Somebody wants to know if Pres
wfeyut Roosevelt will insist upon put
ting a large family plank in the next
Republican platform.
Wasn’t there some mistake, after
ail, about the cowboy president
caer having had a mother? Isn t
h«?> just a maverick, pure and siin-
PW
Clark Howell no doubt means
well in trying to coax the president
to tie good, but he is up against the
hardest proposition he has yet
tackled.
After Speaker Henderson retires
it t« announced that he will become
% member of the New York law firm
in which the late Speaker Reed
practiced.
- ——
Seats on the Now York Stock Ex
ci.a.nge are now worth fx3,000. The
Augusta Chronicle wants to know
heir much a seat in vhe United
Htetee senate is worth.
There is some talk of still another
State to be called “Calvzona.” It is
oat stated whether the name is
taken from a paient-medioine label
tr a health food can.
The Democrats applauded Speaker
Jenderson much more lordly when
Ki retired from the race last year
than when he retired from the
ch&tr Wednesday.
Congressman Bartlett’s injnno
tton to his Republican colleagues to
“go to hell I” would be all right if
they did not insist upon taking the
nnantry with them.
'‘Yes,” said the colored orator
who had read about Buoker T., “de
onlored race am going steadily foh
w«rd. It am going ahead es it du
go in de patrol wagons.”
- •
The Norfolk Landmark is trying
to figure out the relationship exist-
Kie? between the February ground
hog and the March lion. It seems
to as to be merely an offensive alli
ance.
With General Byrd out of the
State army department and Ad
miral Crowninshield out of the
navy, we fear that Emperor Wil
liam would find this country an
easy prey.
The Constitution ought to turn
Colonel Thomas Warlord Loyless
loose on Roosevelt. What’s the
use of having a colonel on the staff
it you can’t make him useful in his
regular line?
William R. Hearst likens the ac
tion of the present congress in re
gard to the trusts, to a young man
who winks at his girl in a dark
room ; ho may know about it, but
nGtoody else does.
A marriage notice in Wednesday’s
Atla' sa Journal is headed “Heller-
Het/ I.” Os course, if she felt that
■way about it, we don't blame her
for marrying a man with even such
aama as Hetzel
The Sparta Ishmaelite believes
sUat the best way to have a greater
Georgia would be to encourage the
liters to se tie in this State. The
Boer pi 4 . ot.-- and ’.he old Confeder
ates o’ .t’em:" well
S itor Gon tn should not be
too, ievated to the applause of his
confreres on return to the sen
aite. The vi * of that body has
never 1 <n f tillered synonymous
with the v .ceof the people.
Speaking of . debates, the
Athens Banner would like to wit
ness one between 2»lr. Guerry and
J)r Hr ■■n:h‘ . T ’ •-? .listtnguish
gent’e non ar. > at issue on the
i-ttbject of tuchre b m imente.
Pre si’ nt It. - - “volt's pious re
n.aik that lie would see Senator
Csr iick in hell before he would
mod •an appointum it favored by
’so:, shows the sari careful and
yerfnl attitude in regard to all
of which he boasts in
Howell letter.
THE RENOMINATION OF ORUM-
The New York Herald returns to
1 the ihe discussion nf the race ques
tion with President R ) s veil after
his recent letter. 1 \yill •’ r e-id
with interest since Crum’s r ati.e has
been again smtto tb s mate The
Herald ridicules the president's pre
tfiitim s. It shows that he has
dodged the issue and refused to face
the facts.
In the Crum matter the Herald
insists that the appointment is ob
noxious to the people of Charleston
and it has drawn expressions of
disapproval from public men and
newspapers. Mr. Roosevelt is
specious in his plea that he “cannot
treat color as a bar to office. ” The
Herald overthrows thia empty argu
ment by showing that Dr. Crum
was evidently appointed because of
his color. There was no lack of
available white citizens ot greater
worth and business qualifications in
Charleston. The appointment of
Crum was the result of a deliber
ately planned policy of the presi
dent. It was a piece of strenuous
and uncanny tactics which he now
regrets probably, but which he is
obliged to defend.
President Roosevelt wants to
know why “ther appointment of a
colored collector at Charleston
should cause more excitement than
the appointment of a colored col
lector at Savannah? President
Roosevelt forgets that the appoint
ment of Deveaux at Savannah
aroused a vigorous protest from the
business boaies of that city. A
large meeting was called and a
resolution was adopted. The reso
lution was presented by Senator
Clay to the white house, but did no
good. The president was de
termined to appoint him. The
claims of white men ot undoubted
business standing and character
were presented to the president.
The matter was laid before him in
the strongest way, but the people
who went to Washington to talk
against the confirmation of Deveaux
were ruthlessly turned down. The
president took refuge behind a bill
of the legislature which had placed
Deveaux upon the retired list. This
was a subterfuge. He used as a
shelter a device of routine legisla
tion to defend an action which he
had already decided upon.
President Roosevelt claims to be
following in the footsteps of Mr.
McKinley. The Herald shows,
however, that Mr. McKinley never
was guilty in forcing undesirable
men upon communities. He did not
obstinately insist in forcing an ob
noxious nomination against loud
protest from the people. When an
Augusta negro was named for post
master the people rose up in op
position and the president trans
ferred the obnoxious man to
Washington. The aotion of presi
dent Roosevelt in sending in Crum’s
nomination as a recess appointment
shows that he has determined upon
his unfortunate and unpopular
policy and that there is no chance
to argue with him. The president’s
first mistake was the appointment
and the second was insisting upon it
and repeating it when the senate
had refused to confirm it.
Speaker Henderson has no fears
for the future of this country, not
withstanding the fact that he is no
longer a congressman from lowa
but soon to be a lawyer of New
York. This is indeed reassuring,
Spirta Ishmaelite : “Macon got
the State fair over Atlanta, but the
latter is not down-hearted. She
has the elephant, Bobby Walthour,
thepoltee commission end an oc
casional visit from Sam Jones. It
is a big cup that such blessings
would not fill to overflowing.”
The parties who appealed against
the fee of 1200 allowed John Smith
for his services in the bankrupt
procedures of the Macon Sash, Door
and Lumber Company, and thereby
caused the court to raise it t ) SI,OOO,
hava been put down on the records
among the people who are sorry
they spoke.
—
There is very evidently something
wrong with the executive mansion
‘n Atlanta. The last three govern
ors, including Governor Terrell,
were healthy and hearty men until
they went into it, but all of them
have been laid up in the same wiv
afterwards. This is no joke, and
should bo looked into by the sanita
ry sharps.
President Ibiqseveltjdid not make
us wait long to judge him by his
future actions instead of his recent
ones, as ho took the first oppor
tunity to again send in the name of
Crum to the new senate, after it
had failed of c nfirmation by the
last one. The cowboy president
s'-o-ns to bi un irreclaimahly bad
Pg: '-
—» -
The Columbus E: quiror Sun looks
at it this way : “President Roose
. velt is out in a long letter in which
he attempts to defend h sJjSouthern
| p jlicy. However, it will require
' stronger arguments than he brings
forward to convince Southern peo
ple that he is on the right track.
The Southern people have their own
ideas about the negro question, and
they are not likely to change their
views from reading the sophistries
of one who dines a negro, appoints
him to office over the protestations
of white people, and, lastly, but ny
no means least, invites him, men
and women, to the white house re
ceptions ”
<*■
President Roosevelt congratulate
Speaker Henderson on the fact that
“no other congress of recent years
has to its credit a record of more
substantial achievement” than the
one that has just expired. This
record foots up $1,554,108,514, or
something more than a hundred
millions in excess of any previous
congress; a very substantial
achievement, indeed.
— —
Mr- Roosevelt and Congress-
Harper’s Weekly.
At the end of his second session of
congress Mr. Roosevelt has hardly
any sincere friends in congress. The
party machine is .the mo«t perfect
we have ever seen. It governs ab
solutely, and its decrees are embod
ied in legislation. For the moment
the country is governed by the
edicts of an oligarchy, and not by
laws which are the result of discus
sion and deliberation. The oligar
chy gratifies the president with
some legislation, denying him much,
and deceiving him in some respects.
What it grants is for the sake of
harmony. The independent, think
ing republicans, who are averse to
this rule, who bad hoped for help
from the white house against the
tyranny of the oligarchy, are hurt
and angry. The president may re
tain the affection of their constitu
ents, bat he has lost the friendship
and the confidence ot the represent
atives. The president is now the
ally of the ruling oligarchy, whose
leaders do not agree with a single
principle which he announces. They
are satisfied, however, with his ulti
mate surrender, but they would
throw him over if they dared. This
is the precise truth as to the presi
dent’s relations with the Republics-n
politicians at Washington.
A New Novel by Charles King.
The reading public will hail with
pleasure a new novel from the pen of
General Charles King, the noted and
popular author, entitled, “A Daughter
of the Sioux,” and illustrated by
Frederic Remington and Edwin Willard
Deming. It is now several years since
General King has written a book based
on the stirring scenes of the Far
Western Plains, among which he passed
so many years of his active military
life. Critics who have read the advance
sheets hail this new story with great
interest and enthusiasm, claiming for
it the true ring and action of his earlier
books, and comparing more than favor
ably with them. It is certain that his
host of oldtime readers are still thor
oughly appreciative, as witnessed by
the large number of copies already sold
before publication. Its literary merit
is greatly enhanced by the talent em
ployed in its artistic embellishment,
and we submit that seldom is found on
one title page such a trio ot illustrious
names as King—Remington—Deming.
We predict for the volume a great suc
cess. It is published by The Hobart
Company, of New York.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that
Contain Mercury.
As mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely derange
the whole system when entering it
through the mucous surfaces. Such ar
ticles should never be used except on pre
script long from reputable physicians, as
the damage they will dots tenfold to the
good you can possibly derive f tom them.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by
1* . .1. Cheney Ac Co-, Toledo, ()., contains
no mercury, and is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces ot the system. In buying Hall’s
Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine.
It is taken internally and made in To
ledo, Ohio, by 'b\ J. Cheney & Co.
Testimonials free.
bold ny all druggists, 75a.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The best nill ‘neath the stars and
stripes;
It ch anses the system ami never
gripes.
Little Early Risers of worldly repnte,
Ask for DeWitt's and take'no sub
stitute.
A small pill, easy to buy, easy to
take and easy to act, but never
failing in results. DeWitt’s Little
Early Risers arouse the secretions
and act as a tonic to the liver,
| curing permantly. Brooks Drug
Store. .
NEW SENATE
SESS BEGINS
Convened at Noon 3y Procla
mation of President.
NEW MEMBERS ARE SWORIyI IN.
—
President Roosevelt Asks That Aotlon
Be Taken cn Treaties With the Re
publics of Columbia and Cuba.
New Senators Present
Washington, March 5. —The United -
States senate met at noon today in a
special session called by the presi
dent. It was an interesting event as ;
such &esslcms do not usually occur ex
cept when a president of the United
States is inducted into office. At the
beginning of each new congress and
today was the firsit sessions of tho
senate of the flfty-eigth congress, the
oath was administered to 26 senators
elected for six years. Os these 16
were re-elected as follows:
Allison (Iowa), Clay (Ga.), Dilling- [
ham (Vt.), Fairbanks (Ind.) Foraker ,
(Ohio), Hausbrough (N. D.), Kittredge
(S. D.), McEuory (La~), Perkins, Mal
lory (Fla.).
Serving on appointment until the ‘
legislature meets: Penrose (Penn.), !
Perkins (Cal.), Pettus (Ala.), Platt
(Conn.), Flatt CX. Y.), Spooner (W) i
Teller (Oolo.).
The oath was administered to ten i
new senators, although one, Mr. Gor
man, had previous served 18 years la '
the senate.
The new senators are:
Fulton (Ore), Gorman (Md.), Hey
burn (Idaho), Hopkins (Ills.), Late I
mer (S. C.), Long (Kans.), McCreary I
(Ky.), Newlandk* (Nev.), Overman I
(N. C.), and Smoot (Utah).
Three newly elected senators —An-
kenny, Clark (Ark.), and Stone —were
not swbra in no? was the oath ad
ministered to Mr. Gallinger.
The senate being a continuous body,
its officers -hold until their successors
are chosen, promptly at noon the body
was called to order by President Pro
Tern. Frye. The scene was a bril
liant one, and not unlike the opening
of every session of congress. Tha
galleries were filled- at an early hour
and in the family and' reserved iillen
ies were friends and relatives of the
new senators. The desks of the new
senators could be distinguished by the
wealth of flowers which had been pro.
vided. The laviehnoss of tho ad
mirers was shown by tho fact that
desks and even chairs In some in
stances were completely burled under
huge floral pieces and beautiful bo
fluets.
Washington, March 5. —President
Roosevelt today sent the following
message to the senate:
“To the Senate: I have called the
senate In extraordinary session to con
sider the treaties concerning which
it proved impossible to take action
during the session of congress Just
ended. I ask your special attention
to the treaty with tho RepubHo of Co
lumbia, securing to the United States
the right to build an isthmian canal
and to the treaty with the Republic
of Cuba for securing a measure ol
commercial reciprocity between ths
two countries.
“The great and far-reaching impor
tance of these two treaties to the wel
fare of the United States and the ur
gent need of their adoption, requires
me to impose upon you the inconveni
ence of meeting at this time.
“Theodore Roosevelt
"White Hnmoe, March 5, 1903.’*
TWO DEATHS BY FIRE.
One Was Suffocated, While the Other
Jumped From Fourth Story.
New York, March 5. —'Ellen Vail,
25 years old, and Elizabeth Vail, 23
years of age, met death in a fire in
East Seventieth street today.
Tho older woman was suffocated;,
and the younger woman leaped from
the fourth floor. The property loss
by the fire wae email.
James Vail, the son of the older wo
man, was the only one of the family
who escaped. He tried to rescue his
mother and elster, but was cut off by
the flames and forced to run to tha
rear of the building to a fire escape
to eave his own life.
The ten famillea in the house num
bering one hundred people, became
panic-stricken from the fire.
POPULATION pF NEW YORK.
Estimated by Health Board To Be
3,732,903.
New York, March 5. —According to
the report of President Tx’derle of the
health board, based on figures com
piled by his ins-pctors, the population
of New York. Is 3.732,903, divided as
follows:
Manhattan. 1.917,186; Brooklyn,
1,291.597: the Bronx, 268,341; Queens,
182,681/and Richmond. 72,608.
Scored Liberal Party.
Now York, March 5. —Premier Bal
four, speaking at a dinner of the non
conformist Liberal Unionist Associa
tion, treated Lord Rosebery’s recent
utterances in a spirit of banter, says
the London correspondent of Tho Tri
bune and represented the Liberal par.
ty as a starving caterpillar in search
of a now leaf.
Indiana Holds Cantrell.
Indianapolis, Ind., March s.—Rufua
Cantrell will not be permitted to go
to Chicago to assist in uncovering tho
supposed tllefts of corixjcs from ceine.
teries 'there.
FOR ST. LOUIS EXHIBIT.
Growing Sentiment in Favor cf on Ap
propriation.
Atlanta, Maith 5. —Renewed inter
est is being taken among state officials
and members of the general assembly
in the proposition to arrange for a
suitable exhibit for Georgia at the
coming L*ffisiana Purchase exposition
et St. Imuis in 1904. All of the
state officials are anxious to have ,
Georgia send an exhibit Worthy of the
state, and there is no doubt they will
lend their best efforts to the plans.
Much gratification Is expressed at
the fact that Mayor Howell, of Atlan
ta, has taken the matter up, and is in
correspondence with the mayors of all j
important cities and towns in the
state with a view to enlisting their
support In the matter of securing an
appropriation for such an exhibit.
Mayor Howell has received a letter
from G. H. Carswell, of Irwinton, in '
which the latter states le can assure
the mayor of khe support of the repre
sentative from his county for an ap
propriation, because he himself is the
representative from that county and
le heartily in favor of it
The sentiment in favor of an eThffr
it is growing among the members of
the legislature and the proposal to
appropriate $50,000 for the purpose
will find many staunch supporters.
Those who have studied the question
express the opinion that there is no
law, constitutional or otherwise, in
the -way of the general assembly mak
ing such an appropriation. The only
prohibition upon appropriations in the
state constitution is the section which
prescribes that no donation, gift or
gratuity shall be made to any per
lon, association or corporation. An
appropriation for an exhibit at the
St. Louis exposition, it is said, can
not be viewed in tho light of a gift
or gratuity to any one, since it is
nothing more nor less than a plan to
advertise the state for the purpose of
attracting desirable Immigrants and
foreign capital within its borders.
Governor Candler tok this view of
tho mayor in his last message, and
urged that the appropriation be made.
TWO APPOINTMENTS MADE,
President and Attorney General Agree
on Incumbents for Fat Jobs.
Washington, March s.—Two impor
tant appointments in the department
of justice were agreed upon by Pres
ident Roosevelt and Attorney General
Knox today. William A. Day, of the
District of Columbia is made assistant
attorney to the attorney general at a
salary of $7,000 a year, and Milton D.
PuMy, of Minnesota, is appointed as
sistant attorney general Mr. Day
has been for a long time the attorney
for the interstate commerce commis
sion and Mr. Purdy is a prominent
lawyer of St. Paul. He formerly was
assistant United States district attor
ney of Minnesota. These places were
created by a recent act of congress .
TRIAL IS POSTPONED.
Undertaker Charged with Fake Pau
per Burials Out on Bond.
Knoxville, Tenn., March 5. —The
trial of W. C. McCoy, a prominent un
dertaker, who is Charged with false
pretense and defrauding Kinox coun
ty by fake pauper burials, was not
held this morning as had been ex
pected.
McOoy’s attorneys stated that be
would waive his examination to the
circuit court, and the magistrate fixed
Ms bond at which was readily
given.
The arsest of McCoy is one of the
outcomes of the investigation, Inquest
and opening of graves that has been
going on at the county cemetery here
for ten days.
This is the second arrest w
Cholera Infantum Antitoxin© Tested.
Baltimore, Md., March 5. —The re
cently discovered cholera infantum
serum has been injected into animals
at the Wilson sanitarium here and
has been found to be wonderfully ef
ficient. _ The effect of the eertun,
however, has not been tried yet upon
human beings. The discovery that
cholera. Infantum was due to the ex
istence of a germ was f.rst learned
through the researches ot army sur
geons in the Philippines.
Choked Her In Mis Sleep.
TBkHamapolls, March 5. —Before leav
ing for Hamilton today, Mrs. Annie
Knapp, the fourth wife of the man
held for five murders, said: “I am
going to have a kmg talk with my hus
band. He must haveobeen insane. It
is true that he once elrokcTt me in his
sleep, but it is not true that I have
threatened Mrs. King, Knapp’s sister,
in Cincinnati, who 1» reported to have
opposed my marriage to Knapp. I!
they Lake my husband to the chair, 1
want to die. lam so lonely.”
President Refused to Join.
blew Haven, Conn., March 5. —-Pres-
ident Roosevelt has declined an In
vitation to become an honorary mem
ber of the boys’ club of this city,
which is run in connection with the
Young Men’s Christian Association.
He wrote he had no time to give to
membership of the organization, and
he never joined a club of this kind
unless he had time to give to it.
Troops For Philippines.
San Francisco, March 5. —-Th® army
transport Sheridan will leave for Ma
nila, April 1. She ■will take 81fi men
of tie nghteenth infantry, 216 of the
Thirteenth cavalry, and about 48 ro
crufts and casuals. She was to have
taken a number of marines, but res
ervation of epaee for them lias been
cancelled. .. ■ ’
i 4 mail
STORK ' WB
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MOTHER’S 11 J
FRIEND I
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Among the manifold aids to childbirth
Mother’s Friend has grown in popularity
tind gained a prestige among rich women
as well as poor; it is found and welcomed
in the mansion as well as in the cabin, j
, By lessening the mother’s agony of mind
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All Druggists sell Mother’s Friend at SI.OO.
Write for our free Book “Motherhood*
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta G*
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA— Spalding County. J
To the Superior Court of Said Countys
The petition of A. J. Burr, J. P. Per
sons and Douglas Boyd, of said State and , V
county, shows:
Ist. That they desire for themselves, *
their associates, sue lessors and assigns to
be incorporated under the name of the
Burr-Persons Hardware Company for a
term of twenty years, with the privilege
of renewal at the expiration of said term.
2nd The capital stock of said corporation
is to be ten thousand dollars, which has al
ready been paid In, and petitioners ask J.
the privilege of increasing the t ame by a
vote of the majority of the stockholders
therein to twenty-five thousand dollars
or any part thereof.
3d. The stock is to be divided Into shares,
of the par value of one hundred dollars
each.
4th. The object of said corporation Is
pecuniary proflit and gain to Its share
holders, and to that end it is proposed to
carry on a general hardware business, to
buy and sell staple and patent hardware, '
stoves, ranges, guns and all kinds of
hardware and tinware, and agricultural ‘ ’
implements, to manufacture tinware and
to do all such work as is done by tin
ners* and plumbers, and to buy and sell
all such machinery as is usually carried
by hardware dealers. T
Sth. Petitioners ask the right and
power to buy and sell for cash or credit all
such articles and things and to buy, sell
and mortgage real and personal property,
stocks and bonds, and the right to bor
row and lend money and the right to ex
ercise the functions of agents in connec
tion with buying and selling for others,
and the right to exercise and have all and x
singular the powers, privileges and Im- ‘
munities which may pertain to or be con J
nected with the business proposed to be
carried on by said corporation.
6th. The place of said business will be
in Griffin, said State and County.
7th. Petitioners ask the right to elect a
president, secretary am) treasurer and a
manager, and such other oiheers as may
be necessary to running and operating
said business, and to colsolidate any or all k
of said offices into one.
Bth. Wherefore petitioners pray to be
incorporated as aforesaid with the right ,
to sue and be sued, to have and use a cor- •
porate seal, with all the rights, privileges
and immunities of bodies corporate and
subject to all the liabilities fixed by law. «
And your petitioners will ever pray,
etc. This 23d dav of February, 1903. ' ‘
PERSONS & MCGEHEE,
Petitioners’Attorneys. '
GEORGlA—Spalding County
I, Wm. M. Thomas, clerk of the su
perior court of said county, hereby certify
that the foregoing is a true copy of the
original petition for charter under name
and style of Burr-Persons Hardware Co.,
fl 7d in said clerk’s office, this February
3g, 19('3. Wm M. Thomas, Clerk.
VIA
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V lrnyu.il. 1 V.OVO I-Slim-Uias. Sold by
1 *ll bruggiets < hh’beatcr (Ju n;leal Co..
lUuUoq Uiis paper. Madison PiILLA,.. PA.
H. J. GARLAND, v *
DENTIST.
Office over Griffin Banking Co.,
GRIFFIN, GA. k