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WAYCROSS EVENING HERALD.'*'
THE EVENING. HERALD
—Publish#* By——
t HE HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
A. P. Perham, Sr,
A. P Perham. 4r-
i.ditor* and Proprietor*.
Mlsc Carrie Perhatr,
Perianal, Society and Local
The Waycroia Herald founded io
\ *'$5. The Daily Herald founded In
C8S»2 by K. P. Perham, S>. *
Telephone*
Business Office 26
Kdltorlal Office 26
Residence ttb.
Every Afternoon Ercept 8unday
Office No. 8 Jane Street.
THE INSURGENTS AND
THE EXTRA SESSION.
By James Callaway
It has been aaked why was It that
what is called "Cannonlim’’ was not
killed in tin* extra session of March,
1009, when the country was told the
insurgents were triing to combine
with the Democrats to revise.the tar
iff.
The reason why was because the
insurgent* were not ready for It.
They refused in that extra session to
vote for some other than Cannon for
Speaker, and they further refused to j
onirnlttecd to tariff reduction, j
But whan the test came during the
pendency of the bill, the insurgents
declined to avail themselvea of the
concession wrought from the 'regu-
Jars'*. They stood by the Payne-AI-
dricii bill, cut off debate by the Deal
ocrats, and voted against recoin n: it
incnt of the hill to the ways and
means committee by which the Demo
crats hoped to get the tariff nearer
to a revenue basis.
They were rule reformers to a cer
tain extent, but tariff reformers jo
no extent. ,
Oyr tariff opportunity lay In th
organization of the extra session. Tfc
Champ Clark only suceeded in getting I 8,x f ' eor sians saw' this and
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THE HERALD 18 THE
Official Organ of the City of Waycrost.
Official Organ of Ware County.
Official Organ of the County Board
of Education.
Official Organ of th** United State!
Court of the Southern District of
Geo.gta.
Governor Brown’s message to tho
Georgia General Assembly seems to
be giving general atsifacllon. ft suits
The
day v,
have <
that i
be .
— *
Governors un
is (lie lodges
rer known to
mo. The Go
lug talkative.
*
uige of yester-
lloke Smith's ’candidacy will tem
porarily slop twenty thousand plows
In Georgia. The Joe Brown men and
the Smith umi will leave their plows
to fnlii polities at the c ross-roads
Stores while (lie grass grows in the'
furrows. It Is a pity and the Herald
regrets It.
them to consent that a committee on
rules lie chosen to report at the De
cember session.
Their refusal to kill Cannonisro and
help us on the tariff caused Champ
Clark to reject In the Democratic cau
cus those resolutions urged by the
twenty-three Democrats, Among whom
were six Georgia Congressmen.
Those resolutions were for bus'ness
on the spot. They stood for an Imme
diate basis of agreement for common
action between the Democrats and
the Republican insurgents, not defer
ring It to the December session, nine
months off.
The Resolution: "First, that the
Insurgents shall vote for some othei
person than Joseph G. Cannon for
Speaker until a n election occurrs.
"Second, that t|ie Insurgents shall
vote with the Democrats for a rule
which would permit reasonable debate
upon an amendment thereto to each
schedule of the tariff bill to Le sub
mitted to Congress.
'Third!, that during the extra sea
slon the House shall proceed to consid
eration of a system of rules for the
government of tie- same, which work
ol revision be completed during shld
extra session." ,
Whon tho tariff was out of the
Hbuse and gone to the senate there
were three months of Idle time In the
House to discuss the rule and thresh
fight In the two hours’ e* ki j
to have the Insurgent
some common ground of action, but
Champ Clark’s political vision was j
eclipse, and he had the caucus to d>
feat the resolution urged by the si
Georgians to bind the insurgents t
aid us.
Ail Democratic Congressmen now!
recognize the wisdom of those resolu-j
tlons offered In the caucus by the j
twenty-three, who did not want to let |
slip the opportunity to bind the insur- ;
gents. Why defer the matter to the !
December session? .*Jhe Insurgents
were f<y Cannonism for the extra ses
sion-voting for Cannon for Speaker, 1
and voting for the high tariff bill— •
their insurgency to be operative at
the December session through a pros
pective report by a proposed commit
tee. which report was subject to ac
ceptance or rejection.
Champ Clark’s resolution did not
Involve tariff revision, but rules re
vision only; and It is said he will this I
week issue -a card In which he
say that his effort to revlso the rules
have no relation to the tariff revision;
and that if this resolution has passed
the House It could not and would not
have made any change in the Payne-
Aldrlch hill as It was adopted.
So there 1.4 nothing to the charge
that had the twenty-three Democrats
supported the Clark resolution of
i
(
SUMMER HAS ARRIVED
An electric fan is the finest
thing in the world to have at
home or at the office during
the hot weather. It co^ts but
little to buy, wi 11 last indefini
tely with but little care, and
costs next to nothing to oper
ate. We have a supply of them
and can fityour needs perfect
ly-
Ware County Light & Power Co.
committees should be named | March ,n - the Payne-AIdrlch bill
V A HOMEMADE FLV POISON.
Boll for three minutes a half pint
of milk, four ounces sugar and two
ounce* black pepper. Cool, pour In
HHiicers and set about the room,
diseases. KIR every fly that strays ^
"Keep tho flys away from the sick | ,I "
especially thoso 111 with contagious * ni
Advice offered by Merchants’ As so- on
elation: In'
Into Mi * ..Irk room ills body Is oov- ex<
out h"
and nil other questions* dealing with
rules. But louder Clark rejected the**
rosol tit lots' in that brief Wo hou$k'
caucus on the ground that the insur
gents would not stand for them.
After Cannon was elected Speaker,
reiving the insurgent vote, then Mr.
Clark offered his resolution, the same
lie presented to the Democratic cau
had not passed and become law.
•d with dlxi
ylng material of
opincloH for sarin
drain
Cov
bury i
•d aftc
< al.
erus©.
Screen all food exposed for sale.
Hcroea alt windows and doors, es
pcclally the kitchen and dining room.
Ibin’t forget that If you see flic*
their hroodiuf ^ilare Is in
filth
SAFE TO HOLD RADIUM.
•arhy
THE WATERMELON.
Says tho‘Savannah News: "Water
melon season is ut hand. It has al
ready been In Florida, where two
carloads of scrub stock have been
gent to market. The melons were lit
tle and runty and green, to be sure
but they were watermelons, and nar
Mr. Clark provided In his resolution j Lingers of the crop now on Georgia
that tho Speaker appoint, as usual. I vines, condensing and combinine
the ways and means committee that j sweetness nnd sunshine. By the time
d tho tariff hill, also tho confer-, wo get kneedeep in June real water
once committee that really mado the , nvdons will be moving to market
law for this extra session. By this freely from the Georgia farms,,
exemption his resolution was meaning-1 then life will onco more be \
less as to the extra session, for he J living. And when
lost Ids tariff opportunity; and tho, enough, there'll
provision that a committee of fifteen cream."
be appointed to rn|>ort on ru es for j of course, one never gets wntermet-
the December session was tuorely . on enough—the suggestion wns mero-
prospective and speculative, us the J jy (ho by play of poetical llcenso—
December session would accept or re* i but If one did peaches and cream l
Ject tho report of the proposed com-. would not^ be a satisfactory substitute
mlttec of t|fteen. Besides, the Clark j jn fact, nothing would. A Hatley of
resolution contemplated that the re*
port of the committee Si fifteen should j nil things. An appetite that refused
recommend not only that the House j to budge at the behest of watermelon
elect the connultteo on rules, hut al ! would he ft budgeless appetite,
so the .standing committees. J Every watermelon prospect please.
Tim *ix Georgia Congressmen were \ t ia the fruit of the people. It Is
opposed to doing away with a custom | controlled by no trusts and affected
of one hundred years and electing by no tariff. It grows out in the open,
standing committees of the House, and'encouraged by the Lord’s sunshine,
that, too, In advance of the report to , and nobly responsive thereto. No
he nmdo In December. But they fa-' 1>a rt of It need go to waste—Its pulp
\orod tho election by tho House of a j is an immediate delight, its rind a pre
rules committee, as shown by their serve item unlimited in dainty possl-
ready support of the Norris resolu- i billty, and its seed may he utilized
th*n i u tho December session which j to the production of more watermel-
did not include t|ie standing commit on!
»c. s but related to the committee on j The watermelon possesses the uap-
rult "• i PJ faculty of making i’self at homc-
N‘»w when Champ Clark has ex- j everywhere a nd at all hours. On its
emi icd tho extra session from his j native heath or a thousand miles a-.
only in our own Sunny South Is tho
genuinely good article grown.
The watermelon comes early in the
summer and stays late. Blessed be
the watermelon! ,
Nearly every man and certainly ev
ery newspaper has a pet law that the
legislature should pass and there are
a lot of fellows wanting someting re
pealed or amended. Legislators do
tidings sometimes that are quite stu-
rorth ■ PM* but If they were to pass all tho
•e had melons I ,nWs and r eP ei *l all the laws they are
peaches ane | advi8 * d to they would leave things In
a crazy condition for sure.—Moultrie
Observer.
^
Knew All About It.
Teacher—What Is the meaning of
j "parvenu?”
Johhny—An upstart.
. Teacher—Give a sentence in which
atermelon would mean a salety ofl,. _ . , ,
|t f t / |the word * 8 U8ed -
| Johnpy—When a ma n sits down on
j a bent pin he gives a violent pjfrvenu.
| —Chicago Tribune.
WAKEFIELD LODGE, NO. 27
KNIGHT8 OF PYT**>A8.
lil
[Everyone Can Have
Waxed Floors Now
I! you have wished for a beautiful waxed.
floor you can have it now.
For you don’t have to buy a heavy, expen-1
|^_ sive waxing brush and wear yourself out*
y/j pushing it over the floor.
/ . Columbus Liquid Wax has changed that, t
There’s no effort at all in applying it.
Apply With a Cloth Coven More Surface;
Apply with a soft cloth, and One gallon will cover 2,500
15 to 30 minutes mb lightly to 3,000 square feet,
a lustrous finish. Goes many times as for as
Columbus Liquid Wax dries iany paste wax.
hard, wkh a satin-like lustre, ^ u,e il on hard or soft wood
| and the floor can be washed floors> P ia “o» and
“ 1 i”SSi »
It contains no'paraffine'or, Floors > Fwe, <
other greasy substance to soil'
rugs and clothing. Heel-marks 1
don’t show. Scuffing of furni-'
ture won’t scratch it^
Watt Hardware Go.
Dn
r
What is tji.scrlbetl by Its makers ns
the moat ingenious safe ever con
structed has jvmt bee 0 completed by
tlu* (TiuMi Company, ,»f London, for
the British R.tdinm Corporation. The
problem presented to the manufactur
era uaa not only u\ construct a safe
that would hid defiance to burglars
but which would nt the same time
prevent the escape or radium.
It h< well known to science that resolution and permitted the Speaker j way, R ) 8
radium emanations will pas* through t 0 appoint the select committees ns
the hardest steel. For this reason, j usual, thereby losing tariff opportunl-
the inner suffer of the safe was made j , y . then It wai that Mr. Fitzgerald
of lead three Inches thick. Inclosed offered fcls substitute so as to get some
within ,t burglar proof steel. There , valuable concessions on rules. These
aro mans other « t >eelM features. In- 1 h0 Kot . Ho wa , for debate
otuitlm > means of collecting the radl j „„ ,i H . tarl(r especially such as sched-
urn emanations before the coffer Is „|e K. of the Paync-Aldrtch bill, so
opoaed.
as to sliow the country the infamous j ever refreshing.
benediction and a song
Impartially. It is served as tho piece
dc resistance In the swellest cafes
the lard affords; It joys the Inmost
heart el the negro plow hand bss!de
hU cabin e*oor. Chilled artificially
or with the dew of the early morn
ing, it is the same, always delicious,
Ing, It is the same, always delKNout,
Meets ev«rv Moudaj f jjca
vening at ’:30 In
Castle Hal f?iant ave
Members a*** requested!
to attend, and visiting
Knights are most
RaUy Invitad to meet with ua.
B. F. HEARN. C. C.
C. tt Miller, K. of R. & S. & M. of F.
This compartment of the safe Is do- taxation proposed. And If there was | America enjoys a monopoly ef wa-
.Ixncd to hold 100 pound, ol radium any drift rcvl.lon downward In thetormclon,. Nowhere else l n the
valued at *5,000,000.000. The total heart, of tho Insurgent* they could world la the real thin* to be had.
0f ,hC ***' l * 10 be 0B * * nd * vomhfoe with the Democrats for tar!Rank »®d poor imitations cultivated
OfAYCROSS COUNCIL NO. 21
Jr. O. U. A. M.
Meet* every Monday evening In Red
lien's Hall. Lott-Hltch building st 1
p. m.
Visiting brothers cordially Invited
to meet with us. *
She.od Coillns, L. Ctrl Collins.
Rec-Secty. Couacllot
IS reduction.
here and there about the earth, but
WAYCR08S LODGE No. SOS.
F. & A. M.
REGULAR COMMUNICATIONS ON
SECOND AND FOURTH TUESDAY
EVENINGS AT 8:90 P. M.
All Mnaent Invited to Attend.
W. D. MORTON, W. M.
C. A. MAYS, ES&
Desirable Home
FCR SAII: Cheep, ly ct> ners on Eliza
beth Street, hut (ive Heels frem the hetels.
a five-room two story house, two halls, hath
room, pantry, wired, four fire-place, nice
yard fence, wil 1 he completed ready to occu
py in a few days. This is the coming
ppit of Waycoss. You will have
to hurry if you want a chance at this
bargain.
L RAINWATER BROS.
Jans Street Under Vlrd i- Hotel. PKONE 47a
axxcx
OTa R
Try a Want Ad.