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BEOAN AT I O'CLOCK TODAY IN WA^H-
' INOTON. j.
■ Masjr Prominent Officials Att*s4-Bo4jArill
' BA Cariitd <•. Castos, 6.. •• Special
Teals, These* 1* M*aetkl4—The Pretfr
Sen's Car Will ka AtfacM at Caalaa.
’.if'
Washington, Oct. 24 —The funeral
service of Jno. Sherman began at hia
honaeatl p. m. Bey. Dr. Smith of-
fldMted. A majority of the diplobata in
Utofflly-wiU attend, alao the fiillltary,
the order of Loy*l Legion, that Bepre-
aentatirea, State and Tnaabryj depart
ment offloera, army and nary offlcnce
and many other*.
After the aereloe at the bonae the re-
malna will be eaoorted to the -railroad
atatlon|by the Fifth oavalry, oommana-
ed by Oeneral Bafterty. Tha train will
be-niads a special to Oanton, where the
■prM^ept’aaM Willbe attached, thehee
, to’Hhqsflold. j
• 1 tpaahlugton, Oof, 24-rXhe following
• la the oomplete llet of the honorary pall
.bearera'for the fnneral of ^former Secre
tary of State John Sherman today:
Soaretary Hay, Secretary Gage, Jue-
k tlee Harlan, of the aupro&e oonrt; Ad
miral Dewoy, General Nolaon A. Mile*,
Ex-Senator J. D. Calnerotv My.-d; A.
TCasibu, of thg atate department; Judge
Banoroft Davie, Sonntor Hawley and
Myron M. Parker, of thta oity. ' ^
The family of Mr. Sherman bare rent
t'-a^Monal ffjyltation'a Jtpi the aervloe in
’ .thlaoltytoinch menftera of the dlpjo-
da. tffeo'deft carda at the
i ySwtDg-AtrSthe foot that Mr.
k Efierrafinw^g ftot</vV the time of hia
* neeted-wl# tbfjatate depart-
■ 'lppoaalhje for the depairt-
bWaVljf#™* df lnrlta-
natlp. cqrpe to attend
ei.- iy, the Wlah J l)f
the fam(jy,^q;»«v0r, tliat all member*
. ^ the oorpe aifw * n ^yjfthjflgton aboald
fpel thomrejvci luoldtlwUn. the general
. Invitation. The foneraljtraln will leave'
for Maniifieldlat 3 iBO this afternoon,
Oplnmbne,t3.j Oot. 24-jAt a meeting
of atate officials kora yesterday It wae
doolded ’ that a apcdlal f train ahould be
'- phfirterta Wl all state offlolala attend
' the TtineraTbf the late Hon. John Sher-
mab, ,'y •
The stale' ofRtooa will all be oloaed on
the afternoon dt the funeral. A oom-
mltteo waa appointed to draft suitable
reeolptloua.
Governor Hash Issued a proclamation
announcing the death, and Ohalrmun
Dlok, of the state republican oommlttee,
. laaued a proclamation auspending all
work of campaigning by repnbltoana
Thursday, the day of the funeral.
TOOIJltB A COLD IN ONB BAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund the money if it
falla toenrk. E. W. Grove’s signature
la on eaoli box. 2fio.
THE MUFFLER IS WORKIHC,
Aad lor Ibc Pint Tima In Months, Sandy
Bottom Is Happy.
From Thursday’s Dally Herald.
At laat that long expeoted compress
muffler has arrived, and la now tu oper
ation. It wa« erected yesterday, the
operation of the compress being tempn-
■ rarily suspended in order to ensble the
workmen to pnt it In position.
The muffler is a big affair and rites to
a height of some thirty feet above the
roof of the oompress warehouse. It is a
huge, funnel-shaped arrangement, small
at the bottom and larger at .the top.
The oap of the exhaust bulges out to
marly the else of a flour barrel, aad aa
• naiad killer mutt be regarded aa a no-
COTTON ON HAND.
Nsw Over Nila Tkasaaad Celts la Albany
Wartkeaws.
From Wednesday’s Herald.
For several week* post' the daily cot
ton report published in the HnttALD bat
not been partying enough "stock on
band.”
Ooourrehced of thePast three or four
daya led to an investigation yesterday
afternoon and this morning whioh baa
resulted In disposing the fact that, In
stead of the stook on hand being only
about 7,000 bales, as oar report baa bad
It, there are now in the warehouses -of
Albany over 9,000 bales of oottofl.
A oot ton report la worth nothing if
not reliable, and the HxraLD hastens to
oorreet the report which it has' carried
for several weeks past with referinoe to
the local stock on band, 'idle report
whioh we give today la oonedti .having
been verified not only at the warehouses
hot by our own record book, which
shows the receipts and shipments for
eaoh day alnon the opening of the sea
ton.
We are nnable to tell just when .or
how onr report as to the stook on hand
got wrong, as there are two or three
ways In wbloh it qpuld ■ have qcojrred.
It might ^ave beerthe respltpf hurried
figuring In making ppjiha^ieport, or it
might have-been dne'to A tpy^paphlpal
orror-T-elttor A- 6oth. . *
This tlmf last jf'dkr the sjjjgk qj^-h^jid
was 8t4lB* bs^et. ''Today,lt is 0,0t7V
tore, that, theatre
W cotLpi^^^Jg^our
*tan there
olYast^^v
#*.» -«•**«;
HI
will be
1,204 -mere 1 '
wafehotfleJ today
tM corretjjdtidiL'gi
■M.
By this we do not mean to oonvey the
idea that tha exhaust eon no louger be
beard, for suoh la not the ease. But in-
\
stead of the tremendous explosion of
abeam from the big cylinder of the preaa,
there is only a deep rambling, and the
noise is not at all annoying. Tha im
provement la a very notloeable one, and
tha people living in the neighborhood of
the preea are delighted. Thta is the first
muffler which haa been able to stand
firm against the tremendons power ex
erted by the exhaust.
Th# Beat Prescription for Malaria
Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove’s
Tasteleea Chill Tonic. It is simply iron
and quinine in a tasteleea form. No
cure—no pay. Prioe 60o.
Great wagon loads of sweet potatoes
keep oomiog into Albany every day.
Merohants and housekeepers are always
willing and even anxious to buy them,
add the crop is proving one of the most
profitable that can be grown.
b) lysj&qlb** earns-tv
I. M(gdar ir.flelJ fit, th.’’ Murder of'.*,.
' r "Msboay la Ms^on.
I. Minder, a tailor who jived T# Al
bany for. about a year In 1808' and
la In serious trouble in Mooon. -He
stabbed Abe Mahony, another tailor, to
death yesterday afternoon,- and Is held
in Bibb oonnty jail on a oharge of mur
der.
When in Albany, Minder had a
tailor shop in the rear qt the store on
Broad street now ooonpled by M. Bll
vorstoln.
TheMaoon Nows tells of the killing as
follows:
"The oause of the trouble was an old
feud dating book eight years when the
two men worked In Atlanta. Both hare
lived in Macon several years and the
feud hat been renewed at Intervals, the
last quarrel between them ooourlng yes
terday.
"Aoooording to eye witnesses the
murder was moat foul. Mahoney, 8.
Simons, A. Bene!, Mrs. Greer, Miss
Langston and Miss Mamie Harley were
at work in the front room of the shop,
eaoh with tbetr backs turned. Mahoney
was sitting at a machine with book dl-
reotly to the door, when suddenly
Minder sprang Into the room and began
stabbing him before any one bad time
to turn round to see who had entered.
Mahoney threw up hia hunda to ward off
the blows and his fingers and arm were
badly out in doing so. There were at
least ten stabs, bat the fatal ones were
in the book; one was on the nook and
another under the shoulder blade. The
•tabs In the book were three or four in
number and eaoh one went the depth of
the knife blade, whioh waa shout five
inohea long.
Aa soon as Minder did the stabbing
he bounded out of the door and down
the steps. Mr. Lofton Hyman, who waa
oomiog np the Maps at the time yelled
to Mr. Bishop to weten him aud he did.
so. Minder started to thow fight, but
Mr. Bishop told him he oonld ont as
well aa ha oonld and he submitted to ar
rest. He was tamed over to Offloer
Warren Moody and looked up.’’
■taps the Coash and Works Of tha Cold.
Laxativa Bromo Quinine Tablets cure a
oold In one day. No Cure, No Pay.
Prioe 23 coni*.
Registration Books Now Open.
According to notioe whioh haa been
published in the Hmuu> for several
weeks past, the registration books were
opened yesterday at the offloe of Oity
Clerk Rust. Those desiring to vote in
the city election! during the next year
have from now until the 28rd of Novem
ber In whioh to register, aa the book*
will dose at 6 p. m. on that date.
It’s a good Idea to go now and regis
ter while the matter is fresh in your
mind.
The hunting season opens on Novem
ber the first. There is muoh discussion
as to the time the hunting season opens,
and the Herald thus informs its readers
that it opens on Novembor the first and
not on November the fifteenth as some
erroneously suppose.
STOLE $700,000,
AND A LIKE AMOUNT. WILL BE SPENTTO
CATCH HIM. ’* .,
Aired. Net* Teller *f tbs First Nitleaal Bask,
of Nsw York, Suc(*t4<d la D*!aalUs| Far
TM* Basra*** Aaaast Briar* His
Wroagdriags Wart Datactad.
New York, Oot. 34.—Ohas. L. Alvord,
Jr., note teller of the First National
Bank, la a fugitive, having defaulted to
the enormous amount of #700,000.
The announcement of the defalcation
was made yesterday afternoon and cre
ated muoh excitement.
The following Is the statement issued
by the bank:
“The note tdler, who has been in the
employ of the First National bank for
many yean, la a defaulter to a huge
amount. His operations have ooutlnued
skilfully concealed through a manipula
tion of hia balance book. Thedlseovery
waa made by one of the bank’s em
ployes a'few days after the completion
of ^examination of the bank by the
IN THE STRIKE REGION.
No Oavriepaesti of Special haptrtanc* la
Fast Tweatjr-Faar Hears.
Hazletdn, P«., Oot. 24.—Around the
national headquarter* of the Dotted
Mine Workers the belief is unanimous
that the end of the strike will come in a
very short time. President Mitchell,
notwithstanding oontrery reports, has
4et no dare for calling off the strike. As
soon as all the operators signify their
willingness to pay 10 per cent, advance
in wages until April the national execu
tive board will be called In session to
vote on ending the oontest.
Soranton, Pa.. Oot. 24.—The Forest
Mining Company, at Arohibald, employ
ing 900 men, has posted noliees giving
the 10 per Cent, increase in wages, re
ducing the jirilie 0 f powder to #1 60 a
keg, the new price to figure in the in
crease to contract miners and guaran
teeing the Increase to continue nntil
April 1 next and'thereaf ter nntil farther
oifiers. ” The employes of this company
have been on a strike since last January.
the. Jaqk ,baa,..also; hafi ;<reqneaf’ in
dependent examinations, inolthbr' 1 ,of
Whlpjt . ,h*t 4ta**ippe& any NWUju-
larity. Tlje, aggrogattapefr-: the' >falj>e
entries atpogntingto .#Jflp,000- has -been 1
charged off on the-boolpkef-the bank ont
of' tjje reserve f nnd.witjjo.utd tmlnlihifig-
the^ * orpins apd^ profits, of thebankna
"reported t ln iulast pqlJl*Jied-statement,
it iatapAotedthat 4hOhortage*-wlU4»e.
ipaterUkUy reduced v fey, a subatMtt^
ram, «( > tr^'..tiMN'ii:^^|WMr l
reoo f wr^’’
New York,. Oot: 94.^-No trabo esu bo
fopnd «f Alvord;- the default! fig-note
teller of the First National Bank.' The
polios believe he had aooompltoesi The
search for. Alvord will be the most ex
tensive ever known. The bank offlolala
will spend at nraoh ka he stole to' tetoh
him. . • , k*! T 4 '
YOU KNOW WBA7 YOU ABE ¥a)I|NO
When yon take Grove's Tasteless OhlU
Tonio beosuse the formula^lg,plainly
printed on every bottle showing tpst it
is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless
form No Cure, No Pay. 30o, ,
ADYEftTISIB LETTERS. '
Albany, Ga., Oot. 24,1900
The following Is a list of letters re
maining in this offloe on Oot. 24, iOOO,
Dnleaa called for they will be sent to the
Dead Letter Offloe:
gentlemen’s list. ,
A—John Arnol, Andren Allen.
B—Gain Batson, Edah Burden, H. A.
Burnside, Alfred Bradley, Herman
Baer.
O—Ool. S. H. Oooke, John Oool.
D—O. L. Darnell.
H—Edward Higgtn, Charlie Harris,
Loots Harris.
J—J. I Johnson, George Jackson.
K—Judge L. Knighton.
L—H. H. Laramore.
M— B. W. M. Mersarj, Ohas. Milohell,
8. O. Mills, Billie Meroy, Joseph
Macon.
P—B. Paschal, W. J. Perry.
8—Joseph Simpson, Viotor Smith.
W—Bev. O. H. Wilson, Thomas White,
Henry Willis, Abraham Williams.
LADIES' LIST.
A—Ootavie Anderson, Mrs. J. M. Avers,
Mist Anna Adams.
B—Miss Do rah Brian!, Mias Emelia
Brian!, Miss Basle Bilden, Miss Ella
Barnes. ,,
O—Mrs. Alice Oobb.
G—Mr*. Jane Gillen,
H—Ooreelia Hutson,Mrs. Ussy Hatcher.
J—Mrs. Adlln Jackson.
L—Nandi Lane. - ■ ..f.
M—Mia. Gave MeUvim. . ..
8—Mia. Llssie Seam ore.
T—Mrs. Cary Tift.
W—Mrs. Anne L. Walker, Mrs. Proem
Williams.
rams. '
W. B. Davis & Co, Mutual Mercantile
Agenoy.
PACKAGES.
B. F. I. Halley.
In oelllng tor the above letters
please say "advertised” and pay one
oent for same.
B. F. Brimrsrry, p. m.
Somebody is going to get nebbed, first
thing somebody knows. Aa the Her
ald stated several diys ago, it is re-
portsd on reliable authority that several
parties are already shooting quail in
Dougherty oonnty, and those sports
men who make it a point to abide by
the game lawa of the state are only wait
ing to get oonolusive evidence against
the guilty parties to oome down on them
with weighty vengeance. The man
who oannot respect the game laws, bat
persists in killing protected game ont
of sea-on, can blame none bat himself
when he is reported and prosecuted.
, By virtue of order by Court of Ordi
nary of Fulton -oonnty, Georgia, Feb-
rpary, 1900rWtU be sold before the oonrt
house at .Albany) Georgia,- during leghl
boon of sale, on -the flret Tuesday iw
December-next, the following described
lands belonging; to estate of Frafioes
Juliana Obprtn, deoeasd, to-wlt: Jl ~
arena, more or,less, off soathsldi
land lot No. .243.Also 88acres, more
or leas, off southeast corner of. land lot
No. 248, and 50 adiee, more or less, off
northeast oomer Of land lot No. 278,
same being in. the .Seaond distriot of
Dongherty oountyi 'Georgia. Sold for
benefit of oraditore and nelre. Terms,
oash. B. F. Robert,
27-wky-td Executor.
. ..■ *■
The sugar oane orop in this Immedi
ate seotlon is almost a oomplete failure
this year, and very few of us have had
opportunity to “ohaw” a stalk of real
good green or ribbon oane. Later, after
frost has fallen, there will be a decided
Improvement in the quality of this ever
popular product, though no big, fat
stalks are to be had.
.iTuyuettp^a like-character are expeoted
Un(ted States examiners. During the from all tkeWge’companies in the re-
C taUnuanoaa(Jii«ap<»alatlon.,peri 0 dl-. BlDn . t j 1?t . . hWMnot yet posted their
oal..epwiinatlon* havst been made byj^imes-m- •
several distlnot oorps v«f- examiners
repfrtjpjttog the omuFtwAtr.’*' depart!
.with expert>accMinlanti, and
Thomas Niqolls t president ofstlie did-'
tffot No.^ of the United Mine Workers
‘ ” i.em) at the strike is near
int^haf it vjlll come in a very few dags.
X meeting- ol-*ll the .distriot find ijfil
tioni^ offloer* haa been oalled for today!
kV*sald, and at this meeting peaitlve
ibahly be taken, provliled' f
action will,
thjit an coal companies wqnlij^aarafi^qb
a 10 per oent. advaboe until Aprll-l?* - ' 1
rj-Bars tar^e Size LAUNDRY SOAP, while it lasts', wjj
-^at thevWW-prlce of..r^,,..
‘ ’-JL ( .w»s4llfY»e*0«<^p«3
Large ioc Si?e-Box Pqtash-aniy jrc ber box. ./rifliall
’”-4-Boxes for. -vw’-nfiN i,.,-.i,iM...,.*'r
t- AIM ' , * jfit •'ft'-
Iron hfcukJJertl-T,-somethinjf. sflb'stanUdt;,''- ain,be locke^.
1' »*■ wVs-*19 «-*:■ W >' r '■ v '
* . tils • - • * .5. j .
L#a!e#M»Vrap
1 MW,
fi-ii^'iSprCSale.
watches! ■ "*■ 'X; 7 ,:;., • ~c ""
Good time-keeper for. I
A. F. Churcliwell & Co.
X* 62 Broad Street, Albany, Qa.
+ Rosenberg Brothers'f
THE ONE PRIOR 8TORR.
Insure Your Sole
And uppers, too,
By Buy-
ing your footgear from us. Now,
of course, we have men’s shoes,
ladies’ shoes, boys' shoes, girl’s
shoes and over-shoes in all quali
ties and styles, and offer you high
quality and low prioe in all
grades, but we desire to make
speolal mention (this time) of our
$2.50
AHI60 SHOES,
For Ladies Only.
We seoared th* oountry for the
best #2 SO shoe—selected the best
from a dozen samples—then gave
orders to make one better still
than the selected one. Besult:
The Celebrated Amigo,
the beet women's shoe ever sold
nt the prioe. All sizes, widths
and styles, one prioe and fully
guaranteed.
“Remember the name! Remember
the prioe 1 Remember the store I
Telephone No. 113.
Rosenberg Bros.
Footcoverers to all Mankind.
You Have Heard
of the boy who, when asked to name the smartest boy in school, said
he couldn’t do it', as his father had told him “NEVER TO BRAG."
We are not quite as modest as he, lot need we be, considering
that you, as a buyer, need to he told where you can get the best goods
for the least money. Our New York buyer recently secured a big job lot of
Matting at 10 per cent, less than
Wholesale Prices.
Call and inspect it. Yard wide, bright, fancy patterns, and would be
very cheap at 20c yard. ' While it lasts you can get it at
36x72 Reversible Jute,Rug-!. Bright, fancy patterns, O m Wfi
and well worth $1.50 ; here at f/Ov
30x70 Reversible All Wool Smyrna Rugs, the
$2.00 value.; to be-had-here at...
$1.48
YOUR
FORK WARTS
can best be supplied at the
old reliable Steele Furni
ture Store, where you will
always find the biggest as
sortment audio west prices
in South Georgia.
GET INTO THE HABIT
of coming to our store for
anything you may need in
the Hardware line. It’s a
habit that will pay you.
Our stock is second to
none, while our prices
please prudent purchas
ers. We will be glad to
have you call and inspect
this line whether you buy
or not.
The Steele Furniture Store.