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THE HERALD.
s s s Sd— . S, e e e
Published Every Thursday,
SBUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1 A YEAR
IN ADVANCE.
Advertising Rates Reasonable
Official Organ Charlton County and
‘the Town of Folkston,
W, W. TYLER, Proprietor.
Emtered at the postoffice at Folkston,
Ga, as Second Class Matter.
e iet ot e st
A s B S
Ag to this belt controversy, the
Richmond Times-Dispatch has it on
good authority that the Boston men
habitually wear\ their pie-belts too
low.
e ———————————————
There isß no propriety in ostenta
tious extravagance on the part of
‘American ambassadors, avers the
Providence Bulletin. But they “are
entitled to such salaries and allow
ances as will enable them to meet
the ambassadors of other nations on
even terms,
Y The development of automobile
manufacturing during the decade is
a veritable fairy tale of American in
dustrial possibilities, .obhserves the
New York Herald. It has grown from
a yearly output o. 239 cars to 50,000
in the current twelvemonth, repre
senting a capital of nearly $200,000,-
000 invested in the building, fitting
and sgelling of the machine and em
ploying more than one hundred thou
sand persons. |
“This Playground Association,”
said the Duchess of Marlborough at
the Waldorf-Astoria dinner in New
York City, *is rendering superb
service to the country, for it is in
suring to its future citizens the fine
physique and alert minds we asso
ciate with Americans. Only the
other day I visited one of the splen
did public schools of New York., It
was a pleasure to see the wonderful
results of the mental, moral and
physical training the children receive
and to come into touch with the
- personal devotion which animates all
:he staff, in Ria g
" The species of insects are bewil
@ering, the individuals innumerable,
. their ecoromic potency well-night in- |
_Galculable, observes the New York
~ ‘Mail, There are from five to ten mil
~ lion known varieties; there are 50,-
000 specles of butterflies alone; there
Aare known to be 281 insect enemies
of the apple, and every time a new
fruit or vegetable is introduced, new
kinds of pests appear to war upon it.
Insects do $300,000,000 worth of
damage every yeuar to the orchards
and crops of the country. How much
more are ithey worthy of a serious
man's attention than the fugitive and
harmless bear, or the casual and
equally harmless moose? T
\ b o oe7 A S e
" Humanity has solved bigger prob
lems than anarchy, with its occasional
amurders and constant talking, boasts
the New York Journal. We have
- gome up through slavery, serfdom,
superstition, public official torture,
public wholesale burning at the stake
in the name of the divinity,™ublic
burning «of old women in the name
of \\jltthratt,f', We are even now
'grapbllng with plutocratic govern
ment by money, and the little prob
lem of anarchy wjth its few and rela
tiv.ely‘ _unimportant «little crimes is
not going'to wreck civilization. We
allow one single. trust,” the Milk
Trust, to kill thousands of children
every vear—and 'we ';10 not get ex
cited. We need not shiver with fear
,'becg‘ugq the ;;ixzzfchist ‘happens to be
a little more melodramatic in his
killing than the Milk, or Ice, or Beef
Trust., We ought to attend to them
all calmly.
v There were illustrators before the
late Valerian Gribayedoff. But the
~ Porte Crayons and Frank Leslies of
the pictorial weeklies were merely
‘his forerunners, insists the New York
‘World. The honor is his of creating
a department of daily Jjournalism
which in a guarter of a century has
transformed the newspaper from a
bare printed rectrd of the time into
a picture gallery of passing events.
Gribayedoff was the ‘'single spy.”
The battalions of sketch artists now
employed in newspaper offices from
New York to San Francisco testify to
the revolution he wrought. With
. the pen-and-ink sketch came the de
velopment of new industrial arts,
photo-engraving and color printing,
tr;:u‘n which the cheap magazine was
ip;t};ge to derive its existence. For
tunes have been made by firms whose
agents have literally canvassed thgi
globe with the camera in search of
~ mew subjects for illustration. . ‘
Farmers’ Union Reaches Agree
_ ment at Atianta Meeting.
President Duckworth Delivers an Inter
esting Address Explaining Greatest
Proposition Yet Undertaken.
After adopting a plan to warehouse
and finance the coming cotton crop,
gathering statistics from seventy-five
counties, which indicates the acreage
in Georgia is off by 10 per cent and
the crop condition off from 35 per cent
to 60 per cent, the Farmers' union, af
ter a session of two days in the sen
ate chamber of the state capitol, ad-
Journed,
The plan of financing the crop 1s
kept an executive secret for the pres
ent, at least, but, it is stated, it has
been settled and the union will go
ahead on this basis.
The system of warehousing, as un
dertaken in a number of counties
throughout the state during the past
few years, and which has proved suc
cessful, will be expanded and in
creased.
The union believes this method to
be the solution of the situaticn, and
will act accordingly.
President R, . Duckworth get forth
the full purpose and aim of the meet
ing in a speech delivered to those gath
ered. He sald in part:
“You have been called here today
for the purpose of completing plans
for carrying out the greatest proposi
tion that has ever been undertaken
by the Georgia farmers.
“We would call your attention to
the fact that the plans vou are about
to prosecute have required the very
best brain in all ages. Thousands of
men have lost their hundreds of thous
ands of dellars in attempting a corner
on cotton, and while your efforts are
not an attempt to corner the cotton
erop, it is a plan for financing it,
which will require a similar amcunt of
money, and the plans ycu develop to
day will have a great deal to do with |
the successful pricing of cotton by the‘
gouthern farmer.
“We have always realized the great
fmportance to the cotton producer of
a plan for the financing of his cotton.
Heretofore our flnancial propositions
have been copfined principally to coun
ties. Tfls I#an hag proven very suc
cessful, but not so completely controll
fng the cotton situation as would a
plan by which the cotton of each gtate
would be financed from a central of
fice cperating through _the several
counties interested. Whén this plan is
put in operation, and that, too, not in
violation of the anti-trust law, the
southern farmer will become as inde
?:'ndent and prosperoug as any of his
llow citizens engaged in other lines
of business.”
- WASHING AWAY AN ISLAND.
: § it
Novel Scheme Adopted to Remove
Obstruction to Augusta Canal,
Augusta is going to wash away an
island. For some time the normal
power of the Augusta canal has been
reduced and traffic obstructed by an
fsland of considerable size at Harkers
Bend. The obstruction was never re
moved on account of the considerable
cost attached to dredging it. Super
intendent John D. Twiggs, after an
experiment of several months, has ar
ranged a movable coffer dam, as it
were, operated by means of flats, with
which he is washing the island away
at practically no cost to the city.
PROHIBITION CONVENTION
Called to Meet in Atlanta On the 28th,
No State Ticket Planned.
An official call has been issued for
a state prohibition conventicn to be
held in the hall of the house of rep
resentatives, capitol, Atlanta, May 28,
at 11 o'clock in the morning.
Seven delegates to the national pro
hibiticn coavention in Columbus, Ohio,
on July 15, will be selected, and an
electoral ticket for this state nomi
nated. ~ I
No state ticket will be put out, und!
local candidates will not be put up by
the party. A new executive commit
tee is also to be named.
BARRETT DECLINMNED.
President of State Farmers’ Union
Turned Down Trip to Washington,
Chartes S. Barrett of Union City, na
tional president of the Farmers' union, l
declined the appointment recently ten
dered him by Governor Smith to rep
resent the state at the conference of
governors and prominent citizens of
the various states, at the white house
in Washington,
FIX ENCAMPMENT DATES. l
Troops io‘Go__‘jto Chickamauga From
July 13 to 22 as at First Designated. l
It has been finally settled that those |
of the Georgia'troops which are to gni
into camp at' Chickamauga this 3‘em-!
will go from July 13.t0 22, the dates
originally. fixed. . |
At first there was some talk of hold
ing the encampment in September,i
then it was decided to fix the dates
from July 13 to 22, and.the troops
made their preparations . accordingly,
when there came another notice from
the war department that the date had
again been changed to July.l to 0.
This was not satisfactory, .and Ad
jutant-General ‘A, J.. Scott so notified
the department- ' . Mg
b et o ol ¥ |
SUICIDED AFTER FIRE.
A Sensational Afteérp;th‘ of Burning
| of Depot at ‘Spread.
' Sensational developments have been
‘made regarding tae 'fire at_Spread,
fn which the Augusta.Southein depot,
“cotton ;sgfled warehouses, gimuery.and
flour niilts were déstroyed. = According
‘to *an’ authentic rebort, X 2T. Glover,
Jr., the ‘depot agént atthe :rhitroad,
was short in his accounts, and e wis
found dead in hed, having suicided *by
taking laudanum. o
PEACH GROWERS IN SESSION,
Meeting He'd in Atlanta at Which Status
of Crop is Discussed. -==
The Georgia Peach Growers’ asso
ciation, one hundred ‘strong, convened
last Wednesday morning at the Kim
ball house in Atlanta. The matter of
the peach crop’s disposition, how
much should go to the canners, and
also the question of its price, con
sumed the opening session, i
President H. A. Matthews, in his in
trocductory address, emphasized the
need of a large portion of the crop be
ing canned, if a glut of the peach mar
ket is to be avoided. He also brought
out the fact that the peach crop is
not so large this year as has been
thought, He insisted that there has
been much over estimation of its size.
A. M. Kitchen, of Baldwin, Ga.,
brought up the question of what price
the crop will bring by stating that half
the California crop is annually sold to
the canners at fifty cents per bushel,
This price from the canners, he in
sisted, would be more profitable to the
growers than any price secured by
shipment,
I. C. Wade, of Cornelia, moved that"
it be ascertained how many of the
growers present would be willing to
sell their crop to the canners at fifty
cents a bushel, but this motion was
laid on the table. The sentiment was
evidently strocng among the growers
that no such small price would be
taken, .
A representative of a Pittsburg com
mission house, speaking to the con
vention, declared that the Georgia
peach crop will be from 7,000 to 8,000
carloads this year, and will amount in
value to $5,000,000. ¢
MONEY FOR GEORGIA.
Summary of Appropriations for Public
Buildings in the State.
The omnibus public buildings bill
reported in the house carrieg the fol
lowing appropriations for public build
ings in Georgia:
Increased appropriations, Americus,
$25,000; Gainesville, $15,000; Marietia,
$10,000; Rome/ $20,000.
For enlargement, remodeling or im
provement, Athens, $43,000; Augusta,
SIO,OOO.
New buildings, Griffin, $50,000; New
nan, $45,000; Waycross, $75,000. of
which net more than $6,000 may be
expended for additional ground.
For purchase of sites and erection
of buildings, Cordele, $50,000; Dublin,
$50,000: LaGrange, $50,000. ;
For acquisition of sites alone, Bain
bridge, $7,500; Cedartown, $7,500; El
berton, $7,600; Milledgeville, $7,500.
Savannah marine hospital, for addi
tional land, $13,500; Tiftcn, $7,500. .
UNPLEDGED DELEGATION
Slated for Chicago By Georgia Repub
licans—Administration Indorsed.
At the state republican conyentiom
held in Macon Walter H. Johnson of
Atlanta; Judson Lyons, of Aigusta;
H. L. Johuson, of Columbus, and
Clarke Gree of Dublin were elected
delegates from the state-at-large to
attend the national republican conven
tion to be held in Chicago June 6. Al
ternates, J. W. Gilbert of Augusta,
George S. White of Macon, S. S. Min
cey of Montgomery and §. A. Harris
of Athens, |
The delegates will go to the conven
tion uninstructed.
Harry S. Edwards offered resolu
tions in the convention indorsing the |
administration of Pregident Roosevelt,
which were adopted. Alexander Aker
man presented resolutions indorsing
Walter H. Johnson’s administration as
chairman of the executive committee,
which were also adopted.
PRIZE “TWIN COUNTY”
Is Meriwether as Revealed by School
Commissioner’'s Report,
Meriwether county is probably the
prize “twin county” in Georgia, if not
in the south. - s
County School Commissioner R. M.
McCaslan has just completed a cen
sus of the school children of Meri
wether, ‘
He found sixty-four sets of twins,
fifty-one colored and thirteen white.
In one family he found three sets of
twins,
TO PROMOTE EDUCATION
Georgia Branch of National Associa
tion is Organized.
With a membership of 394 to begin
with tne Georgia branch of the Na
tional Scciety for the Promotion of In
dustrial Education was organizedq at
the Atlanta chamber of’ commerce,
constitution and by-laws drawn and
adopted, Asa G. Candler named as
president, Thomas C. Irwin as treas
urer and a movement launched to
have the national association meet in
Atlanta this fall.
A FEATURE OF STATE FAIR
Will Be Cattle Show, for Which Prep.
arationg Are Already Under Way.
General Manager Frank Weldon of
the Atlanta State Fair association,
which is to hold the state fair in At
lanta this fall, October 8 to 24, under
the auspices of the Farmers’ union,
has been in conference with Dr, H. A.
Payne of the bursau of animal indus
tries, of the department of agricul
ture, Washington, in regard to the cat
tle show, which is to be a feature of
the fair.
Dr. Payne is in the south for the de
partment-engaged in the study of
“Texas fever,” and is very.much inter
ested in the coming cattle show,
MUST PAY COURT $500,000.
Judge Speer's Requirement in Noted
Tift Lumber Rate Case.
A decision in the H. H. Tift lumber
‘rate case against the railroads of the
Southeastern Freight association has
ibéen rendered in the federal court at
’g\’mu by Judge Speer.
“4The defendants are required to pay
iiinj;olthe court $500,000, which is tae
amount of the supersedeas bond put up
b,\'j}t!},égidefendams to stay the opera
_tioa'-‘otgg perpetual injuanction grant
ed-the fic \plainants some time ago,
Florida*Congressman is Beaten
With Stick by Ex-Governor.
Remarks Made by Congressman Clark
in a Public Speech Angered Ex-
Governor, and Caused Assault.
Jacksonville, Fla. — Congressman
Frank Clark of the second Florida dis
trict was belabored with a stick by ex-
Governor W. 8. Jennings in the lobby
of the Hotel Aragon Sunday afternocn.
Clark is being opposed for re-election
and he has been bitterly assailing
thise who are opposing nim. Clark
spoke at the opera house Saturday
night, and among those whom he at
| tacked for opposing him was ex-Gover
nor Jennings. Clark reviewed the pub
lic career of Jennings, and, among oth
er taings, charged that the ex-governor
-had a genius for grafting. :
The ex-governor called at the Hotel
Aragon Sunday afternocon and found
| Clark in the lobby,
One version of the affair is that the
eX-governor wanted to know if he had
’ been called a grafter by Clark.
“Did you call me a grafter?” asked
‘the ex-governor of Clark.
- “I did,” replied the congressman.
~ “Then you are a liar and you knew
you were a liar when you said it”
cried Jennings,
Then the ex-governor snatched a
heavy cane, which Clark was carry
ing, and began to belabor the con
gressman lustily about the head and
- Shoulders.
. Congressman Clark was - standing
‘talking to Dr. G. A. Nunnally, presi
dent of Columbia College at Lake City,
when Governor Jennings approached
him. According to Clark’s version
Jennings approached from behind and,
jerking the stick from the congress
man, struck the latter three times
over the head. Jennings struck with
such force tnat the walking cane, a
stick three-eighthg of an inch in thick
ness, was broken, but, owing so a thick
head of haid and a felt hat, Mr. Clark
wasg not seriously injured. As soon
as he realized that he was being at
tacked, Mr. Clark wheeled and caught
the stick, wrenching it from Jennings’
hands. Bystanders promptly caught
hold of the gentlemen and prevented
any more blows being struck.
The language used by Mr. Clark, to
which Governor Jennings most serius
ly objected, was the statement that
Governor Jennings entered the office
of governor of Florida, reputed to be
a poor man, and that he left that office
reputed to be a man of wealth.
. “Where did he get it?” asked Mr.
Clark, and this question he repeated In
a signed statement given to tae local
press for publication,
- Ex-Governor Jennings is a cousin of
William Jennings Bryan, and it is said
the relationship had much to do 7vith
making him governor of Florida,
TAFT TALKS GF CANAL. ]
Says Work is Being ‘Enthusiastically
Rushed on Great Waterway.
Charleston, S. C.—The Hon. Wil
liam H. Taft, secretary of war, arrived
in Charleston harbor at noon Sunday
on board the cruiser Prairie, and, af
ter spending a few hours in the city,
during which time he was met and
greeted by a number of officials and
friends, left the city for Washington
at 5:550 p. m., via the Atlantic Coast
Line. Secretary Taft is returning
from Panama, having sailed from this
port May 1 and completing tae work
which we had in view two days ahead
of his proposed schedule. He is the
picture of health in his accustomed
good humor. He said that his trip‘
had been delightful and, while he was |
kept very busy, he had enjoyed every
moment of the time. The secretary
dined with Mayor Rhett, and held an
informal reception at the Charleston
Hotel, afterwards meeting federal city
officials and friends. |
When asked to say something of
conditions and prospects in Panama,
he talked freely with regard to' gen
eral conditioms, but said that he would
not wish to be quoted on such matters
as the relations of the United States
and Panama, which had been suggest
ed as a possible reason for his visit,
. TWO RAILROADS INDICTED,
Federal Jury Returns Indictments for
Alleged Rebating.
New Orleans, La—lndictments for
the acceptance of rebates on cotton
shipments were returned Saturday
against the Illinois Central and the
Yazoe and Mississippi Valley railroads
by a federal grand jury.
NEW SCHEME OF NIGHT RIDERS.
Pay Value Placed By Owner on Tabac
co Beds and Then Destroy Them.
Louisville, Ky.—Night riders insti
tuted a new system in Kentucky when
a band cf fifty from Owen county rode
through Grant county into Scott and
destroyed many tobacco plant beds.
In each instance they called out the
owner of tae bed and told him to fix
a value on it. This done, they paid
him cash for it, and then proceeded
to destroy it, at the same time advis
ing the owner not to make any fur
ther attempt to raise a tobacco crop.
East St.—_f:(_):xvigrlll‘—il‘he five-story
plant of the Sendelbach Wheel com
pany was burned Saturday, causing a
loss of §IIO,OOO. The plant was in full
operation when the fire started and
some of the employves had narrow es
capes.
N ol g
Pittsburg, Pa.~That Cashier Wil
jiam Montgomery of the Allegheny
National bauk suffered from a mild
form of insanity and that he was
money mad, will be the defense of hig
friends who hope thereby to save him
from the penitentiary.
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LABOR WORLD.
Bricklayers in Japan are paid thir
ty-six cents a day.
An effort is being made to organize
the workmen of Mexico.
In the building trade of the United
Kingdom there are employed about
1,200,000 people.
For the twenty years 1887-1906 the
average of unemployed among 639,
678 British trade unionists was 4.5
per cent. ;i
Montreal (Canada) ’longshoremen
object to the bonus system introduced
by the shipping men, but the latter
refuse to abolish it. -
Organized elecirical workers in
Minneapolis, Minn., are taking more
than an ordinary interest in the pro
posed street illumination pians.
Much enthusiasm is displaved by
the labor men of Baltimore, Md., over
the passage of the new eight-hour'
law, which is regarded as effective.
The recently organized Master Bar
bers" Association at San Francisco,
Cal., has promised to finance the Bar
bers’ Union in its efforts to put all
the shops in a sanitary condition.
A labor congress is called to be
held in Wheeling. W. Va., May 30,
for the purpose of forming a Labor
party to go into the political arena
from the standpoint of the man who
toils.
The Congregational Ministers’' As
sociation, of Minneapolis, Minn., has
asked the ‘local Central Labor body
the privilege of paying dues the same
as other orgdanizations. The offer was
declined. '
In the installation of a co-opera
tive sewing shop at ‘Manhattan, an
other practical side of the Women’s
Trade Union League has developed
along lines of great utility to the
women workers,
- PROMINENT PEOPLE. ;
Fernando E. Guachalle has been
elected President of Bolivia.
President Roosevelt returned to
‘Washington from Pine Knot, Va.
J. Ogden Armour is preparing to
retire as head of the great Armour
packing house.
Senator Teller, of Colorado, sayvs
he will retire to private life after
March 4, 1909.
Andrew Carnegie has interested
himself to a- certain extent in the
new language, Esperanto.
The engagement of Joseph Lc=eiter,
of Chicago, and Miss Juliette Will
iams was announced at Washington,
D.C.
Dr. D. K. Pearsons, the college
philanthropist. celebrated his eighty
eighth birthday recently at Pomona
College.
Sir Alexander Condie Stephen, K.
C. M. G., who was a groom in waiting
to the King, died in London. He was
born in 1850.
Lincoln Steffins has ceased his ac
tive connection with the American
Magazine and will devote himself to
sociological studies.
Tributes to the memory of Repre
sentative Adolph Meyer, of Louisiana,
were paid in the House of Represen
tatives at Washington, D. C.
Augustus Thomas, himself promi
nently mentioned for the place, de
clared Daniel Frohman was the man
best fitted in America for director of
the New Theatre.
A signal honor is to be cunferred
upon Frederick M. Crunden, wao has
served St. Louis as librarian for thir
ty-one years. The new branch library
is to bear his name.
Senator Daniel, of Virginia, de
clares that if the combined armies of
the world were to attack the United
States they would never get an op
portunity “tc drink from the Ohio
River.” ; S
R R
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Investigations of Land Titles a
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e e e e et T
Senator Bulgely of Connecticut urg
ed the senate to act this session on
the bills for the re-enlistment of the
soldiers dismissed on account of the
Brownsville afiray.
In the senate Monday Senator Tay
lor of Tennessee gave notice taat he
would speak on the financial .resolu
tion of Senator Newlands at the close
of the morning business tomorrow.
Race track gambling to be sup
pressed absolutely, and local option.
combined with high license, to regu
late the liquor traffic, were two of the
most salient recommendations of Gov
ernor J. Y. Sanders’ inaugural mes
sage to the Louisiana legislature. -
tariff schedules.
Georgia won the college debate with
Washington and Lee at Athens. The
tariff question was discussed, Georgia
championing the democratic position
of tariff for revenue only.
Out-of-town companies encamped at
Tybee are loud in their praises of tae
Savannah troops for the reception ten
dered them. All tents were in place
when the visitors arrived)the dining
tables were in place, with benches, etc.
It is conservatively estimated that
Putnam county has on hand, holding
for better prices, 2,000 bales of last
vear's cotton, in which it is calculated
there is a loss of $30,000
Yorest preservation is about to be
come one of the big public questions.
Uniess the trees ure looked after we
chall become ‘short on timber and
long on floods, laments the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
|PR R TR SO R
......Books for Girls
......Books for Boys i
......Novels, High Grade i
......Young People's Library |
......Business Guide
.......Cook Book
.......Stock Book :
'......Doctcr Book ]
......Dictionaries
......Kings of Platl’m & Pulpit
«eess.American Star Spealer
ceere Wild Beasts, Birds, ete.
T TICARTRE S I A A