Albany weekly herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1892-19??, June 04, 1892, Image 2

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Proprietor, Editor. postage p*ld, or d«; ; or 45 cents it t 5 00 9 50 125 * payable In advance; no ex* e Vlav * end mede levor of anybody. ATM KKAHOXAM.il. end wtlon. tire, went *ldo of Washington “ o Commercial Bank, o pojlofllce et Albany, Oe., ea 3D AY, JUNE 4, 1892. you talk about monopolies, One man has secured the king privilege at the World's Is that what yon call yf rettc-smoklng young roan I alone now at a moral The tea-drlnklng girl hat i tlnoe a Cincinnati girl be- e from an over-indulgence illd beverage. stokk It the only living the Feel ndmlnlatratinn. an ttateaman now living, Vorld, was In active public .Mr. Gladstone had already eminent position. 'bird Party it at work t the Second district. A en made for a Third Party ) organize and to eleet dele- tlic Third Party conven- kely on the 15th of er bill has got to bo the t of the Democrats In Con- erves very much the same ir them that the old bloody for the Republicans, and i get dull and they want little spurt they shake it. ’ small-bore rifle has showed In a terrible way at a town A soldier happened to . The bullet passed through ounded one man slightly, :h the thigh of another lly through both thighs nn, who died two hours Indianapolis News. 01(0E A. WllITKlfKAD, for the General Freight a Georgia Central, has y (lltohed. On Monday otifled by Traffic Mana- tiat his resignation was a effect on June 1st., and . Wlnburn would be his request for MaJ. Agnation was quite a nd is nominated by onventlon, says the Pott (Illd.), lie will ex it never before attained ntlal candidate. To se- atlo nomination the t will not only bo oom- omo the hard work of Ivo and able opponents, litend with the peculiar a very Indiscreet friends. of the Hkrald was i extensive melon grower {county a day or two i Is what the gentleman r melon orops have been t ruined by the long spell her, and the melons will I. If we had had plenty of d have shipped melons In i now, but it will now he 15th and the 20th of iforo I will be able to ship n’t expect to make any Ills year’s crop. the Weekly Constitu- “I dp not believe the peo- th ever will believe us or as until they come down r a while. I wish they nd bring their knitting II have just as much ohance nd train the Negro ns they III Arp never spoke more The Northern peoplo lit) slok of all their about the “down 'd" were they to live in time. Those who do, nation In short order, klom any disputation on Btion between Northern live in the South and Disputes only arise be- who ore wholly ignorant of affairs and those fully 1th It. s friend, say ho will yot be : the eampolfcn. The clever vise individuals that s hud enough of n tiling, and nuts thut his Voice will not 1, at’ least in bin own behalf.* s et Bequentes are laying unotion to their souls Vooten is praotieally out Dongress, and that “his aln be heard" in Ills ey will And that they mistaken. Colonel In no condition, as y been stated by the :e speeches during the r weeks; but he Is now assures the Hkrald ake appointments t, and meet them, ontfa. The front page of the Chicago Inter Ocean of Hay 28 Is occupied b{ a car toon from the pencil of Thomas Xast, that represents Justice, drawn to her full, majestio height, and with scorn and Indignation on her face, arresting the lynching of a Negro by a mob of flerne-looking white men, armed to the teeth. Crouohing behind her and looking to her for protection are a group of frightened Negroes. At the head of the cartoon are these words t “Our Republic can only exist so long as Its citizens respect and obey their self-imposed laws.” Accompanying the cartoon Is an editorial headed “The Crime Against a Race,” from whloh the following clippings are made: The lynching, and llie murder, of ilia colured men by their white brethren In the South for the last six month, may Iw called a carnival of blood. Iai has lieen outraged and Justice cruciffed in thodctermineil efforts of men who neither know the one no. care for tlm other, to vent their mnllco against an n|,pre«.cd and downtrodden race. It seems too bad that the old ques tion between the two sections of the country cannot be left to rest In peace. Southerners are tired of the continued yawp of some politicians who stir up III feelings for political purposes. If men, whose “hearts go out In compas sion to the poor, downtrodden Negro” of the South, would Inform themselves on the true state of affairs, and then speak frankly the truth, uncolored by political designs nr maudlin senti ment, there would then be nothing In their speech or writing to arouse tile Indignation of the better class of Southern people. But such utterances as the above and the following tend, not only to make worse the sore feeling that every one must have who has fought for and lost a cause that Is dear to his heart, and that he believes Is a right* eous one, but it will arouse an intense, righteous Indignation In the breast of every man who has the welfare of Ills country at heart, and whose own particular seotlon suffers under a pe culiar Btate of affairs that all strive to better. Did the writer of that editorial live in a country that numbered live Ne groes to one white man, and where it Is unsafe for a lady to go driving alone for more than a mile or two be yond the limits of the town, or to be alone on any of the streets at night, he would not hesitate, himself, to bring retribution, swift and sure, upon the wretch who dared oommit an orlme that death Is too mild a punish ment for. Did he have any comprehension of the Negro eharaoter, he would know that tho fear of Imprisonment or the chain gang will not restrain him from, committing orlme. And, too, to im prison a Negro for crime, to await a sentence to be hauged from a Judge, and then to hang him after due delib eration, means, in many sections of the South, an uprising of the Negroes and a calling out of State troops to preserve the peace. No, tho knowledge that Judgment will be visited upon him certain and swift by an Indignant community, un fortunately, seems to be the only thing that serves to restrain the Negro ohar- notcr and to make It possible for white people to live among them. But enough of that. The following Is tho unklndest, most unjust senti ment, putting It mildly, that has for years appeared In a Northern paper Tho |miml iiluntov ami all hi. tribe, humill alad at defeat,,', tho battlefield and , riot,a over tho luaws tho war and Lincoln', iiroclnnintlon had brought ui„m him, found only tho Nogro on tvhioh to vont hi. .],loon or exerolM, Id. |,n.. .lone. Tho result ha. lteen p, ogress hut not poicfc. Under such condition, as tho war left tho South Immediate peace tva. liuptNulble. The Southern planter was never “fu rious over losses” the war brought on He accepted hU defeat ns Inevitable, came home and went manfully to work to bring out of the ohoatlc state of affairs a new regime upon a differ ent basis. What he has accomplished speaks for Itself in the present pro gressive state of his country. The Negro was never an object on whloh the Southerner vented his spleen. There is no class of people who so well understand the Negro character, who do so inuoh for him, and rejoice in whatever progress he makes, as the people among whom he lives. Is It not absurd to accuse any class of people living in a civilized country and a Christian era, of hunt ing down and generally maltreating another race of people among whom they have lived for generations! 1 There Is progression and peace both In the South—peace, except when some Ignoramus, some designing politician, or fanatio imbued with a missionary spirit, makes such utterances as found In that editorial, that stirs up righteous, burning indignation in the breast of every one who rends. The Northerner need fear no serious dis turbance between the Southern white man and Negro, but if he longs for peaceful intercourse betweeu the two sections of country as warmly as does the Southerner, let him* abstain from such atrociously untrue and unjust statements as made in that editor iai. A special front Tbomanillu to the Atlanta C'nn.iltntlnn My.: Pino Hill «„!,.Alliance, of till, county, ha. into the Third Party. The member, nd decided on this move. _ hare aim Men it .tated mm.when that hreoofthe .nh-Alllanee. of Thom., county have gone over to the Third Party. Now we want to oak Kdltor Winter, of the Tlmmn.vllle New., how many of tl,cm Third Pnrtyite. were in tho man-meeting that want ed to read Cnjit. John Triplrttnutnftbe Item- irty. Were liny of them In It, brother ocratle party.' ... ... r .Tfio I(KKALt) nak* because it want* to W Inter' ... know and believe* tho Democrats of the Second district would like to know. ebb down In Thomas.—Albany' IIkrai.d. Tbe New* gladly give* place to the above, be. oanso It affords another opppnrtnnlty for an at tempt to set the Albany Hkrai.d right. In tho first place, the only effort that has been made to read Capt.John Triplett out of tbe Democratic party, In Thomas county, exists only In the fertile Imagination of the men who have shown sueh readiness to vindicate him. C'apt. John Triplett linked for the compromise that was acted on nt the maMMineeting of the Ittli of May. To escape some resolution* aimed at himself he agreed not to be a candidate for a delegate's place to Chicago, ffo forgot this agreement wlion ho got to Atlanta. No attempt was made to abridge hi* right to vote and hi* right to be a Democrat, and none wn* intended or enter tained. According to the now code of ethic* adopted bv the If KHALI) it muy lie reading a man out of the party to expect him to do what he had pro* poiicd to do, but there I* In good old Thomas a lingering Idea that a man is under some obliga tions to enrry nut n trade he had asked for.— Thntnneville Nows. Gome, now, esteemed contemporary, don't dodge the issue, You have over looked the questions asked and the main point raised by the Hkrald. Come again, and please tell us how many, if any, of the Pine Hill sub- Alliance fellows were in that conven tion. We are not now particularly in terested In the terms of the oompro mlse agreement with Capt. Triplett, especially since he has been vindicated by the Democrats of the district. What we want to know Is whether any of the Third Party Alllancemen that have been taking so much rope in Thomas county were in the Demo cratic convention. Blaine’s photographer admits hav ing told the Secretary of State not to wink. This is significant. A wink may mean as much as a nod at this grave juncture.—Philadelphia Record. w Verily, it appear* that Democracy la at a low down hi Tli And we feel that our efforts will be appreciated. When you want a carpet put down in good shape, your mattresses renovated, your nice furniture repaired or varnished, your wall paper put up as it should be, or your sofa re-covered, or, in fact, any other first-class work in up holstering done, leave orders with THE FURNITURE DEALERS, _r m COMMISSION. MERCHANTS! STAND BV VOtin FI.AO. Ruilyard Kipling lias an American wife, and If she lias tho usual Amerl* can woman’s grit, Kipling will soon put nn end to Ills abusing tills country or his wife will quit him. Tux Hkrald takes no notice of nn- iionymous communications that are not accompanied by the real name of the author, and whenever you see a communication in these columns you may rely upon its being genuine, and may also know that the name of the author Is in the bands of the editor. WeeiB, One thousand men to empty 5-oent schooners, at Gavkhry’s. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS THE ENTERPRISE BOTTLING WORKS, Washington Street. (Sandy Bottom) ALBANY, GEORGIA. We make the Best SODA WATER, SARSAPARILLA, GINGER ALE, SELTZER WATER. Anil guarantee every bottle that we send out. Goods delivered by the crate, in any part of the city, and also f. o. b, cars. Bottled Soda made with all the popular flavors for domestic use. Give us a call. ENTERPRISE BOTTLING WORKS jei.ym FOR RENT. O„o fix-room iioubo on Flint street. Apply to myU-Ut( It. B. BROWN. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. LAWYERS. ■ W. WALTERS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Practice in nil tho Court* of tho Albany C'ir tit. ami elsewhere by special contract. Ortlco in Ventulott Block, Washington street. £ R. JONKM, LAWYER AND REAL ESTATE BROKER. Local agent Equitable Building and Loan A* sociatlon, Albany, Ga. 2-11-daw-ly. C. B. Wooten. W. E. Wooten, UIOOTBN & IVOOTGN, City Att’y, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Ortlco in Ycntulett's Block, Washington street. Albany, Ua. 2-11-daw-ly, Uf T. JONES. * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. All business promptly and persistently at' tended to. Office in Willingham's Block, Broad street. Telephone 49. D0CT0R8. MICJO ROBINSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office over Gilbert's Drug Store, Washingto . ..a.— ... '*—y• street. Albany, Go. 12-da w-ly. Uf L.DAYIS, * PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office over H. J. Lamar & Son's Drug Stee corner Broad aud Residence streets. Residen corner Flint and Jefferson 611*6018. E HAVE determined to offer to the people of Albany a blessing they have never before enjoyed, viz., the sendees of a FIRST-CLASS UPHOLSTERER. G f^E E Jl & fllAS Ofl. NO. 92 BROAD STREET. CARTER & WOOLFOLK SUCCESSORS TO N. & A. F. TIFT & CO., .1 M A Welcome Visitor. If you have millions you can buy nothing better than our Lounges. Buy them for show and they’re what you want; buy them for ser vice and they are what you want, just the same. Don’t be fright ened by the talk of millions; you’ll wonder what on earth is the mat ter with prices when we tell that these Bed Lounges are going for ‘ :fc BAGGING, TIES, FERTILIZERS, less than evqr before. A year ago such a figure as that would have bskss laughed at even as a whole sale rate, and the truth of the mat ter is that it ought not to be quot ed now, but we are stirring up things a little and quick buyers get the benefit of it. ALBANY, GA. J. L. JAY 8- SON, BUILDING CONTRACTORS -AND DEALERS IN— Lumber, Rough and Dressed, all Grades, and Manufactur ers at their Planing Mill and Variety Works in South Albany, of Mouldings, Cabinet and Plain Mantels, Brackets —AND— Columns, Fancy Arches, Etc. All kinds of Turning to order. Shingles and Laths for Sale. Uniform Prices and Fair Dealing shall be our Motto. Albany, da., March is J. L. JAY & SON. CITATION. STATE OF GEORGIA, Dougherty county. To Whotn it May Concern: * F. It. Robert tins tiled his petition for probate of tho last will and testament of Z. J. Odom in solemn form. This is to cite ail persons what soever that I will pass on said petition on the first Monday in June next ntiny office. “ ” r SMITH, Ordinary. 6-td 8. W. 1 CITY TAXES. Digut Hot Open for Elton of Taxes, Notico is hereby given that the City Tax Digest Is now open and that I am ready to re- cefvo city tax returns for the year 1801 at my office m the Western Union Telegraph Com pany’s office on Broad street. ttp8-tf Y. C. RUST. City Clerk. Richard Hobbs. A. W. Tucker Hobbs & Tucker, ALBANY, GEORGIA. Huy and sell Excliauge; give pronipl ’ emit foi attention to Collections, and rem: same on day of payment at current rates; receive deposits subject to sight checks, and lend money on approved time papers. Correspondence solicited. F^RR INSURANCE. We represent a good line of Insur ance Companies and write in surance on all properties. J- B HOPE 8 BRO. Have established a steam sfltu cnmit i Nenr Oakfleld, eighteen miles from Albany, on tho A. F. <fc N. road, and are now pre pared to All orders for all kl.ids of LUMBERI Our timber has never been turpen tined, and the lumber that we saw wil all be first-olasB. tVe solicit orders from dealers and builders, and guarantee satisfaction. Write us at Oakfleld, or orders left with S. B. Brown in Albany will reach us promptly. J.D. HOPE & BRO. ATTENTION! We have received the finest and best assortment of m soys CLOTHING Ever brought to Albany. WE CAN FIT ALL The fat and stout, the long and slim men can easily be fitted. Also a nice stock of Shoes, Hats and general line of Furnishing Goods. A large and beautiful line of sam ples for Custom Made Pants. Fits guaranteed. GIVE US A CALL. CUTL1FF & JORDAN. CRAIN & SONS’ ALBANY NEWS CO. This is the place your bargains to buy, If you don’t believe it please step in and try, And it will not take long to con vince you that we mean what we say, and will supply you at satis factory prices. BLANK BOOKS, INKS AND PAPETERIES, MAGAZINES, PAPERS AND NOVELTIES. All orders promptly filled. CRAIN & SONS COMMERCIAL BANK ALBANY, GA. Paid Up Capital, $100,000 T. M. Carter, T. M. Ticknor, Cashie President That Tired Feeling, If you happen to have it, won’t last long in one of our Reclining Chairs. There’s only a narrow shave between what we are asking for them and cost price. It’s al most like letting you name the figure yourself. We need not ask you to rivet your eyes on the price, because it will probably make you stare: $6.50. There isn’t any su'A word as economy in the English language if this doesn't illustrate to what limits economy can go. We are not calling it the chance of a lifetime, but we are calling jt a most unusual opportunity—ati op portunity without a parallel. Remember, Willow Chairs and Rockers at cost. Furniture Sold on In stallments. MAYER A CR1NE FURNITURE CO. Good I Times ON WASHINGTON! Do you want to feel good in the midst of these hard times ? Well then go to the ip: and examine the new line of Em broideries, Laces, Hosiery, Shoes and other Notions. We sell for cash only and there fore we give you very low prices. Call and see. Waldrop & Williams. J. I. JOINER, JEWELER, Washixgton St., Opposite Commercial Bax* Watches, Diamonds, Sil verware, Musical Instruments and Table and Pocket cutlery, Fancy Goods, etc. Reliable Goods, Fair Dealing, Bottom Prices. Fine Watch Repairing—20 years experience—all work guaranteed. ■Hi ■mu Spectacles and Eyeglasses accurately fitted at moderate I charges. J M: .'t i v I _ -