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THE ALBANY HERALD
BY THB MjLfj
HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY^ ootary-d
Every Afternoon Bxoept Sunday.
Weekly (8 pages) Every Saturday,
TERMS OF iUHHCRIPTIOH.
Daily Herald, one year 16 00
Bally Heruld, alx months 1 00
Dally Herald, th**e months 1 K
Weekly, eight pages, one year. 1 00
THE HERALD
Official Organ of the City
Offlolal Organ of Doughei
Official Organ of the M- '
sion of Georgia for the —
District.
ybody,
r made
jfe and
whlcf
iter
All •mbiorlption payable In adranee; no
exception to this rule In faror of anybody.
Advertising fates reasonal ‘
k no wn on apjUloatlon.
obi? .'" ‘
the K<
news.
route a line.
Notices of ohureh •ndsooletyand all other
entertainment from which a revenue Is to
be derived, beyond a brief announcement,
will he charged for at tharate of five cents
line, ini* irioor;* 12: fr’
Or no* tip stairs, west side of Washlngtoh
street, between Rropd and Plne streets.
Telephone-No.'ffOr • * J l
The Herald ' 4*kle with •• advertising
agents by special,contract only*, and no
sdvtrtUli^'i^fefasdl aganeyi Is. atitfear*
tsed to maka contracts for advertise
ments to be Inserted In this paper.
II you see It to the Herald
It’s so. ,tv.
II you tflvcrtlM In the Herald
It 800.,o ; , Anao, ,
that (atare generations will need (or
their eustenanoe will be the ootton.
plant.
A list of the different mannfaetnree
of cotton and Its seed and stalk wonld
bo nearly a. long as the list of Mils In
troduced to atdend tho code at an: aver
age seals)on of the Georgia legislature.
Aud still new ues aro bring found for
the plant and its product.
Now comes a Trenton (New Jersey)
man who proposes to smash the paper
.by'maiflng pulp from the holls of
o seed. Hitherto Site hulls have
teen the only partof the plant for whioh
no use had been discovered, while the
seeds themselves have'been employed
in the production of. "pure imported
olive'oil,’’eottoHne, as a substitute for
hog’s, lard; machine Oil, eta., and the
refuse has made a good fertiliser and a
nutritions cattle food. Tt is affirmed
that the nhw palp cannot bo distinguish
ed by .expert! from wood pulp, and that
the dost of its production will be only
•bopt ope. half that of wood pulp.
Great indeed is the ootton plant I
my of the newspapers qf the state
.SATURDAY, NOV. 10. 1000.
Chairman Jobes la a good <olaifher.
til
Anyhow,
' , Bryan ha. got them soaf^d.
i got them l
Today li tail to? 'day' for canipai
lies. i)f>3'10f[•;?', .j'n; -.ynj j.’
Only oneo^ow| day, ,9f^poU«fl*l
ymm, ,
The Goal'di hiVe'YoreOrosed on Ooant
Bool's title.
It'e al^nm DOW hot the shouting)
Bat who will 4olt»
£1 1(171414.1 .M.i id •...t.
Who oan tell today whioh way the
land will slide tomorrow?
•fid.
Brooks oounty carried off .the flrst
prise for the best oOnhty hxhthlt at the
State Fair.
The olalms of some of the party lead
ers ondprqphet* are going to look very
ridlonlons after tomorrow.
In 1890 thepopnlatlon of Ariaona was
plaoed at 00,690, and this year it is given
as 199,919, an inorease of 104.9 per oent.
in the decade.
The battle of ballots oomes tomorrow.
And then the oonnt, the paying of beta
and—the teUow who will be saying,: “I
told yon so."
If MoKtnley is re-elected Mark Banna
mav toko a notion to reorganise the
cabinet and take the treasury portfolio
himself; for finance is Mark’s strong
Wheu that pluoky south Georgia
town, Valdosta, brought the State Fair
to south Georgia, the sooth Georgia
comities showed the state what they
could do.
. The Hkuald always keeps Its weather
eye open and one ear to the ground
whenever Albany lnu a "hen on," and
we can tell yon right now that the peo
ple nro coming to tho Hay Day Carnival
and Stroot Fair November 91-98.
Good democrats owe it to their party,
their state, their dlstriot and themselves
to vote in tomorrow's election. Leth
argy will be inexonsable. Let every
democrat go to the polls and cast his
ballot for the entire democratic ticket.
The Florida orange crop promisee to
be larger this soason than any sinoe
"tho great frost," while the quality of
tho frnit will be maoh better than
usual. It Is estimated that over a mil
lion boxes will be Bhipped to northern
markets.
The suspense will be over tomorrow,
and the oountry will know whether the
reign of HoKlnleyism and trusts is to
oontione for another four years. .If the
nation votes to oontinne the present
gang in power, it will do so with its
eyes open. _____
. A coroner's jury in Mississippi re
cently rendered the following remark
able Tordlot: “We, the jury, find that
deceased came to his death by a stroke
of an east-bound train, No. 904, ou l, O.
B. B., at Fentress, Sties., in Choctaw
county, on the 97th day of September,
1900, he being in o reasonable state of
intoxication.”
IlfCBE ASIftp UTI|
! r CO L “ J
OF THE
less the dis-
i -product of
the ootton field, and if the prooeas con
tinues tor • few years longer ohmi-HUI Lion ever asked for a pardon. He ear-1 between eight cents and nine oeuts, and,
Have quit soft-sbapldg 8am Jones, while
it is evident tfcsft.epmfof them have no
respeot for him. ffyro lathe way the
Miron Newa.forlhsta&oe, handles him:
ivSamjIones delight* id bis department
in the Atlanta Journal to lamp on poll-'
Zinthought
of the degrading efitetqfpnliUtioi. Yet,
he dpjs pot kepp put.. Several years ago
he dlolaiid to SteveClay h‘6w he shonld
run tbademotyafly.cf the state, growing
■*wtoAjWSJte Th “ h *
nhdertook tooverthtow the democratic
party, bi'jocganltlng apopnliittc-prohlbl-
?8?r r #i’! Kh “^r^ment. And
ne now dictate* <o Bpeaker Little and
BreefcttuaHdlraUi iln tha mean time he
ia diatribntlng through the mail* a olr-
■*«ned, defending
traeta and monopolies, indireotly aiding
ggdpfeiuUing for the suooeif of Mo-
Klnley." r;
Two member* of the legialatnre, one
a senator, and the other a member of tha
house, had a drunken fight oh' the
speaial train that carried the legislators
to the state fair at Valdosta on Wednes
day night, and the house member was
badly not by the senator. The injured
house member, Mr. Hardin, of Wilkes,
was token off the train at Forsyth. The
report of the affair says that he was but
in ten places, and that one of the
wounds is a dangerous one, Theetory
is told U> two. epeoisle to the Journal,
one from Forsyth and the other from
Valdosta, hot, for some nnaooonntable
reason, tho name of the locator who
wlelQed the knife is not given in either
dispatoh. The Journal ought to have
either suppressed both names and treated
both the partieato the unfortunate af
fair alike, or else suppressed the whole
thing.
Indiana has a peculiar bribery law!-A
voter who shonld oooept a bribe would
run the nsk of imprisonment for from
two to five years in the penitentiary;
the man who Bhonld inform upon him
would reoeive a reward of $100, and yet
the man who should offer the brlbo
would not be pnuiahed. In other words,
aooordlng to the Indiana oode of morals,
it ia wicked to aooept a bribe, bnt not to
offer one. There are groat possibilities
Involved In the situation. One man
might bribe another, and if the other
should not vote as agreed the briber
conld Inform on him, eoud him to the
penitentiary and olaim the $100 reward
offered to the informer.
Although the eetimated cost of Gal
veston's proposed broakwatcr is
$3,000,000, it will probably be built at
as early a date as possible. The pre
liminary arrangements will conBnme
several months, and congress will have
to take its own time about providing the
money. The breakwater will be seven
miles long and ten feet above mean tide
level in front of the city. It will be
forty feet wide at the base and ten feet
wide at the top. The wall will be cap
ped by stones weighing five tone eooh.
LEB NEVER ASKED PARDON. HOLDING COTTON.
Some statement having been made j The buyers and sellers of cotton are
that General Robert E. Lee bad asked still apart on the market, and'hut little
for pardon, the New Orleans Pickaynne j of the ataple is being sold - For some
states the historic fact that General time now the market price has stood
rendered his anpy and himself at Ap- .so confident are most of the farmers
pomattox, on the 9th of April, 186S, on ' that there will,be an advance that those
who are in condition to hold their cot
ton are refusing to sell.
There Is perhaps more cotton in the
I.’
parole, with liberty to return home end
not to take np arm* until duly ex
obanged.
"GederalLe* lived under that pro-
vision, and, although there was talk of j before at this season of the year. And
arresting and bringing him to trial for j this is not the cose here alone. Cotton
treason, he wss never interfered with | seems to be piling ap at nearly all the
On Jnly 4, 1888, President An- , interior markets. A Memphis press
drew Johnson issned a proolamaion dispatoh says:
giving amnesty and exemption from | Freight men in Memphis are - still
prosecution for treason to all Oonfed- patiently awaiting the time when the
crates not already under indictment.movement of cotton will beeorae brisk
from this market, but the pro-peots just
at present for auy material increase in
This inolnded General Lee. Oo the
90th of December, of 1808, President shipments is by no means encouraging
Johnson issned a proclamation of'to them.
amnesty and pardon, whioh inolnded! A* has been the case from the open
President Davis and all other Oonfed-
ing of the Besson, an indifference on
, ,, . _ _ tho part of the planter to dispose of his
eratea then living. General Lee never | crop hM bRen tn eTtden06i ftnd atthp
asked for pardon or any other indul-.i close of business yesterday the receipts
gence at the hands of the Federal gov- by rail showed that not only was the
ernment, and, until he died, held him- ootton not being concentrated on the
local market, bnt that It is being held at
home. j,
I'i'his year at the oloee of the season
the figures showed that fromlaat season
only 7.890 bales were held over; whereas
at the same date the previous year the
| records of the ootton committee showed
bales were on hand. It will
*eU ready to most any fate that his
leadership of the southern armies
might bring upon him."
The Boers are thoroughly democratic.
Even their army is democratic and the j
democracy is of a brand that is superior, thus be seen that the receipts np to the
to army red tape. This view is confirm
ed by the-news of a conference held un
der a flag ,ot trope between General
PagetandOommandfnt Botha, with a
view on the part of the British General
to lndqoe the Boers ,to. surrender.
Botha's, reply to General Paget's sug
gestion was in striot aooord with what
has beopme known of thf; military sys
tem of tha Boers, - It would be impossi
ble, said the Commandant, for him to
treat for surrender so long as the
burghers shonld wish.to continue the
last'day of Ootober daring the season of
1899-1900 had way yonder the start of
the reoelpts of 1900-1001, and consider
ing this foot, the records of the present
season art not so hod in comparison,
after all, except as to the forwarding
movemont.
Receipts np to yesterday were 188,000
baits, and the stock on hand 99,878
bales. Last year from September 1 to
the last day of Ootober 900.089 balee had
been received, whioh, with the 66,i
bales carried over, made a total nhmber
handled and on band at that'time of
361,000 halos. The (took on hand was
199,814 bales then, showing that constd-
war. The burgher army is a democracy erably more- ootton had beta shipped
in anas, and in. the last, analysis the
supreme authority rests with the men
who oompose the f<me, not with the
leaders. The latter,do hot command
In the sense,of the word as it is
used in the military Parianoe of Eu
rope and Amerloa; they merely diroot
operations whioh the component puts' appearance'
of their forces may agree to carry out. Tli e law has been,i|
A foroe thus constituted oannot be snr-
rendered by the word, of one man, no
matter how high may be his rank.
than had beta held, whereas this year
the fignrss are quite different as out of
the 186,000 bales received this year con
siderably leas tha" the total has
gone forward,
Bays the 9a'* 1 “
repeal the dog-t
Says the Savannah News: Should
the faaiia of representation Under the
neat reapporttonmeot bill be raised to
900,000, the Hones of Representatives
would be enlarged by eighteen members.
Kansas, Nebraska, Maine and Virginia
Would each lose one congressman. The
gains wonld be by Arkansas, Colorado,
Oonneotiont, Florida, Louisiana, Massa
chusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New
Jersey. North Dakota, Washington and
West Virginia, one member each, and
Illinois, Minnesota, New York, Penn
sylvania and Texas, two members each.
The oertainly Democratic Btatea wonld
gain seven votes in the electoral college,
the Republican states wonld gain eight
votes, with the remainder of the In
orease in states that are now called
doubtful. In the matter of lasses of
eloctoral votes, it might be called a
stand-off, for convenience, between the
parties—Kansas and Maine to the Re
publicans and Nebraska and Virginia to
to the Democrats.
It Is possible, not to say probable, that
Georgia will have a new congressman
under the new apportionment that will
follow the 1900 census.
China is willing to pay $900,000,000
indemnity, bnt wants to offset this with
a olaim amounting to something like
$190,000,000 for outrages committed.
Parisians are all agog over the latest
Castellano scandal. The idea of a fel
low spending fifteen million francs in
cool cosh and running up debts to the
amount of an additional twenty-three
million is a little more than the average
Frenchman's mind oan grasp without
an effort, and Count Boni's name is on
every tongue in the gay Frenoh capital.
Sinoe George Qonld has been placed in
oharge of Anna’s affairs, however, the
count's Ideas of high living are defined
to get a rode shock. George Gould has
a bit of a grudge against Boni; anyhow,
it is said, and it is not pfobable that he
will let pass this splendid opportunity
to get square.
' bill to
ade its
ilatnre.
than
year; far too abort a time for any cor
rect estimate of its value to be made. If
it were eufproed for five years, the prob
abilities are that ten or twenty times
the number of sheep now in the state
would be on the farms, and the wool
production would amount to thonsands
of dollars where it now amounts to hun
dreds. It is this very matter of the
eternal ohanging of laws that makes
longer interval between sessions of the
Legialatnre so desirable. Under the
present system one never knows how
long a law Is to last An aot is passed
at one session and repealed at the next,
without having had time to demon
strate its fitness or nnfitness. This per.
petual state of nnrest tends greatly to
oheok the state's material growth and
prosperity. It may please the politicians
to thus keep thiugs in a condition of
turmoil and uncertainty, but it is not
pleasing to the agricultural and com
mercial interests ”
Georgia will felioitate herself for a
long time on the splendid showing she
makes among the states. Her growth
in population daring the past
ten years has not been more
rapid than has been her ad
vancement along all lines of material
development, and today, more than
aver, is she entitled to the proud dis
tinction of being the Empire 8late of
the Booth.
woman’s
Lite....
is hard enough as
it is. It is to her that
we owe oiy world,
and everything
should be made as
easy as possible for
her at the time
childbirth. This
is just what
MOTHER’S
Friend
will do. It will male e
baby’s coming easy
and painless, and that without tak-
ing dangerous drugs into the sys
tem. It Is simply to be applied to
the muscles of the abdomen. It
penetrates through the skin carry
ing strength and elasticity with it.
It strengthens the whole system and
prevents all of the discomforts of
pregnancy.
The mother of a plumb babe in
Panama, Mo., says: "I have used
Mother a Friend and can praise it
highly.
Get Mother’s Friend at the
Drug Store, SI per bottle.
The Bradfleld Regulator Co.,
ATLANTA. GA.
Write for our free Illustrated book.
“ Before Baby is Born."
PREMIUMS AT THE STATE FAIR.
The State Fair at Valdosta lSBt week 19 Mm mnKWMjn V
is over, and the universal verdict ia that ITOH IS TORTURE.
it was a grand suooess. As an exhibi- licamt caiued by an acid humor in
tion of the produots of the state it ear- the blood coming in contact with the
. , .U. ki — . thin and producing great redness and in-
passed any fair in the history of the fl amnu tiouj little pustular eruptions form
State Agricultural Society, and the and discharge a thin, sticky fluid, which
_ dries and scales off; sometimes the skin ia
greater part of the display was made by blrd dry uld fi Hur ed. Rczcma in any
a few counties in the southern part of form is a tormenting, stubborn disease,
and the itching and burning at times an
the state. almost unbearable; tha acid bur '
Brooks count j was awarded first prise £S3Ul_
‘ *' | ‘1 T nil applications do any real good, fora*
long as the poison remains in the blood
It will keep the skin irritated.
BAD FORM OF TETTER.
“For thre« year* X
had Tetter cm my
hands, which caused
them to swell to twice
their natural site. Part
of the time the disease
was in the form of run*
ning sores, venr pain
ful, and causingma
much dfacomfort. Four
doctors said the Tetter
had progressed too far
to be cured, and they
could di nothing for
me. 11 jok only three
bottles of 8. 8. 8. and
was completely cured.
This was fifteen years
S [o, and I have never
0* “"”“ ■■— —
of $500 for a county exhibit. Lowndes
county got the second prize of $300,
while Oamden coanty was given the
third, of $200
For the best individual exhibit of
farm pro'dnots t':e flrst prize of $800
was awarded to W. E. Pane, of Dodge;
second prize of $200 to Miss Susie Will
iams, of Worth, and third, of $100, to
B. D. Lumsden, of Bibb.
The population of principal countries
of the world, according to the latest au
thentic information in eaoh instance, is
as follows:
United States .' 76.295,320
Austria-Hungary 41,531,842
China 886,868.020
France 88,848,192
Germany 52,279 901
Groat Britain and Ireland ... 88,104,975
India (British).
Italy....
Japan
Russia
Spain
Turkey
Jece seen any itgn of my old troubl.,"—Wii.
b. B. Jackson, 1414 alcGce St., Him City, Mo.
I ' S. S. S. neutralizes this acid poison,
cools the blood and restores it to a healthy,
natural state, and the rough, unhealthy
shin becomes soft, smooth and clekr.
cures Tetter, Ery
sipelas, Psoriasis, 8ut
Rheum end all sUn
diseases due to a pois-
. 28,459,628 about your case. Our pBysidans have
.40.435,461 made these disease* a life study, and con
118 014 187 “*lp you by tbrir advice; we make to
' I'Mf'S.Bia ‘ All correspondence
, 27,694,600
The Britons oontinne to lay awake
nights on account of American jookeys.
It it a little remarkable that British
vacht racers shonld be so game while
British horse racers canaolAfaas the
maslo when their American competitors,
see fit to sweep in all the turf events in
merrie England.
Is conducted in strictest confidence.
THB ftWIFT SPECIFIC 00. ATLANTA, *4.
+Rosenberg Brothers-f
THB ONE PRICES STORE.
“Too Ugly To Lhre.” ]
From the Momphia Scimitar. f j
Members of families should bear in
mind that the bgly duiikhug of the
brood has rights whioh should be re-
speeted, and ohtef of all these is the
right to have his or her fselings consid
ered in regard to the matter of personal
appearance. Naturally that Is a sore
subject with the person most concerned,
and therefore to be avoided.
Chicago has recently furnished an in
stance going to show that tannta on that
score may have a dangerous effoot
Louis Mofson, a lad of 17, was continu
ally derided by Ms mother and slaters
on account of his homeliness, andat last
became so wrought np that ho concluded
he wss too ngly to live. So he bought
a bottle of oarbollo aold and was about
to take a dose of the stuff when he was
dtsoovr»d ,md deprived of his danger-
one purohase. The boy was arrested on
the charge of disorderly conduct, and at
the station-house he told his atory.
"My sisters fund my mother are al
ways telling me I am too homely to
live," said he, “and the worst of it is
These Articles
Are Those
Articles That
You Cannot
to pass by, especially when quoted at
these prioe*. Our Increasing business'
does not come by chance. The discern
ing women of this town know iall well
where thdr dimes and dollars do great
est doty. Bnt here are double values,
to astonish even those who know ns best.
60 Pieces Teazledown Outings, extra
heavy, donble fleeced, bountiful pat
terns. . This week only Oo, worth 12j{o.
Fall yard-wide 84x84 Sea Island Per-
oulcSln polka dors, pn stripes, figures
and solid oolors this w»ek nr, 10 ). Ton
know what the regular prtoo of the
goods Is.
10 Pieces of Plaid and Oheoked Dress
Flannels, worth 860, only 26o. A splen
did value.
K|D CLOVE SPECIAL.^
We offer for this week a $1 50 real
kid glove for $1.00, in blabk only.
16 Oolors in Liberty Silk for the ex-
what they say is true. I know lam an. * r8n >6ly ] °w prioe of 59o per yard,
awful looking hoy, and I feel it all the *•*•- • - ■
more beoanse my sisters are so hand
some. Whenever my friends see my
sisters they won't have anything more
to do with me, because I am so ugly."
The angels, he said, all lookalike, and
he had determined to join them and
thus become presentable.
The absurdity of the bov's proposed'
remedy for his misfortune do»s not de- !
tract from the pathos of Ids cuse. !
The weather Man
has predicted a blizzard whioh will
strike this section on or about the 8th
of this month. In view of this fact we
offer
Blizzard Blankets
, at July prices. These were bought for
„ . ... i business briugers. and we believe they
Oonnt Boni seems to have handled his will accomplish the purpose. We would
wife’s share of Jay Gould’B millions on , U \V° » aTe yoa , r ° D l nlon -
. A ... We offer one lot of
the idea of “easy come, easy go.” . ..
'RAINY DAYSKIRTS
■ at. $4.98 per garment, worth oonsider-
jably more. We have brown, block,.
. ~ ~ — l?rey, blue mixed and oxford in home- ,
1 ne number of hopeless lunate | spans, oheviots and serges. It is to
whose insanity has been caused by the -J° B l j [ r i r i ( . uterC!8t *° aee these before buying
excessive use of oigarettess is constantly
on the increase.
The Blakely Reporter thinks that
Hanna’s motto is "a government of
money, for money and by money."
Tlie case of swell-head which two
terms in the presidential chair gave
Grover Cleveland holds on, and he still
considers himself bigger than the party
that honored him.
Defaulter Alvord’s troubles have but
just begun. That the authorities con
sider him "big game” is evident from
the fact that he has been bound over
for preliminary hearing in $150,000 ball.
Sam Jones denies the report that he
is going to move to Atlanta, whioh de
nial will cause Atlanta to breathe easier.
None of the European countries want
to harbor Oom Paul.
Georgia’s population has increased
twenty per cent in ton years.
The Atlanta Daily News still appears
to be keeping right np with the pro-
oession.
Valdosta says her fair is a big suooess,
financially and otherwise, and that the
orowds are larger thnn had been antici
pated.
^ 4 AQ bays a $3.75 Child’s
I .yO Reefer daring this
. sale. We don’t need
to describe thewe. See them and you
will buy them.
Remember that we sell better goods
tor the same money; the same goods for
leas money.
Telephone No. 118.
Rosenberg Bros.
Men’s Furnishers Up to tha Moment.
DR. A. H. CHEATHAM,.
ALBANY: GA.
Diseases of the EYE, EAR,
NOSE and THBOAT exelns-
Italy. i i t t t
: 911 ll] 510 bp. I.
Store For Rent.
_ Th ® vacant store in the Carter te
Woolfoik warehouse building, oorner
of Washington and Pine streets, is ft* 1
rent. Apply to
14-tf ’ T. N. Woolyol*.