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THE HERALD.
Be e e e e e
Published Every Thuarsday,
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1 A YEAR
IN ADVANCE,
R e e e s b iiamemingi b
Advertising Rates Reasonable
—————— et e e e . e, e
Official Organ Charlton County and
the Town of Folkston,
W. W. TYLER, Proprietor.
Emtered at the postoffice at Folkston,
Ga, as Second Class Matter.
—————————— .S T W )78 W\ A GAIS £ g ea s,
n——-——#—-——“
A Dutch professor has succevded
in liquefying helium. But what good,
is that doing prohibition Georgia?
asks the Atlanta Constitution.
Says ‘the Boston Herald: Un-~
doubtedly red letter boxes will be
more conspicuous than green ones.
That is why the fire alarm bhoxzes are
painted red. Let's hope the re
adorned red letter boxes won’t lead
to confusion. Trying to put in an
alarm on a red letter box might lead
to delay in quenching the incipient
conflagration,
‘According to the Ilorida Times-
Union, this promises to be another
bumper crop year, The condition of
fourteen of the leading agricultural
productions is better than at this date
last year, by percentage of from four
to eighteen, while there promises to
be a strong demand for this country’s
products abroad as well as at home,
With money pouring into the country
for our agricultural products the
American farmer will be prosperous
and the whole country will start on
another career of busy trade and
expanding industries.
A wrlter for the Craftsman finds
that there is available for immedi
ate use in the United States water
power to the extent of 25,000,000
‘horse power. The possible develop
ments beyond are almost infinite. A
large part of the available power has
been given already to speculators
and more than a million and a half
horse power is going to waste_ over
““ Government dams. “On four rivers
of Northern California, where there
is a hotentlal development of 800,000
Jhorse power, only 20,000 has been
‘ntfll:od and the balance is tied up by
speculative rights.” -
' Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
~ and the most distinguished. How
‘often has this proved to be the case!
Coleridge and Washington Irving
were the youngest of eleven children;
Benjamin Franklin the last born of
«Bseventeen; Johann Christian, 4{he
elevgnth and youngest of Johann Se
~bastian Rach's children, was also the
greatest of them; Wagner, Mozart
and Rubens were each the last of
seven, as was also Daniel Webster;
Rembrandt was the baby in a famiiy
of six, Schumann in one of five,
George Eliot in. one of four, and
Charles Lamb the youngest of three,
The full list of famous youngest sons
is a formidable one. :
* Noting the significant decrease in
bookseMers the New York Evening
Post says: If the publishers can do.
anything to keep booksellers alive,
they will deserve well of the republic
of letters. But the publishers cans
not bear the burden alone, The rest
of us also have a duty to discharge,
A well stocked and intelligently man
aged book shop may be regarded as
an important public institution, It
deserves consideration and support
beyond that accorded to most mers
cantile enterprises. If we ask aue
" _thor, publisher, and bookseller to
make some sacrifice for the sake of
literature, we must also do our share,
The great truth that man shall not
live by bread alone applies to buyers
quite as much as to the makers of
books,
The evolutlon of summer garments
toward comfort is hardly realized.
Only twenty years ago men did not
care to lay aside their waistcoats. In
the heat of midsummer, recalls the
New York American, it was custom
ary to wear starched shirts and
waistcoats and long coats and boots.
+ It -tpok the laced or buttoned shoe
a ‘:aon; time to displace the boot
which fitted the foot like a glove,
Now the boot ififpgwtically extinct,
And, twénty years ago) it was regard
‘ed as improper not to wear astarched
white shirt, Men still young can re
member when French flannel negli
gee shirts made an furoad in favor
of sensible and comfortable summer
attire, From these light flannel
- shirts have developed the customary
negligee shirt of to-day and the belt
~ and the abandonment of the waists
cuat in the season of heat.
EXTRA SESSION OF LEGISLATURE PROCEEDINGS
IN THE HOUSE.
Mr, Alexander of DeKalb presented
to the house an amendment to the
Holder convict lease bill:
This amendment is to bhe written
into the constitution of the state to
prevent any lapse hy the legislature
into the business of conviet leasing
once it is wiped out,
The amendment also looks to the
construction by the state of a sys
tem of improved public highways, con
necting every county site in the state.
To cover the expense, sections 3 and
12 of article 7 of the constitution are
to be amended so as to provide a“spe
cial tax of not more than 5 cents on
the SIOO. The limit of such bond is
sue is placed at an amount that could
be paid off, principal and interest, by
the proceeds from this tax in thirty
years, .
A move to institute proceedings of
ifmpeachment against the members of
the prison commission was made in
the ~{}lousxe of representatives Thurs
day, when Mr, Crawford of Bartow
and Mr, Jackson of Jones introduced
resolutions looking to this end. Mr.
Crawford’s resolution provided for the
appointment of a committee of five
to prefer charges against the mem
bers of the prison commission. Both
resolutions were referred to the gen
eral judiciary committee, but no meet.-
ing of that committee was called.
The Friday morning session\ot the
house opened with a bill and a reso
lution directed at the state prison
commission. The bill was introduc
ed by Representative White of Screv
en, and after seeking to abolish the
present commission, provides for the
establishment of a board of control
of the Georgia penitentiary. It was
referred, at the request of its author,
to the committee on general judici
ary.
The convict bill of Representative
Holder of Jackson, which passed the
house at the regular session of the
general assembly, was again adopted
in somewhat amended form by that
body Thursday afternoon by a vote
of 99 to 58.
The Holder bill provides that upon
the expiration of the present lease
system on March 31, 1909, the founda
tion of a fund shall be begun which
will be used for working all the fel
ony and misdemeanor convicts of the
state on the public roads, Counties
and municipalities will have the priv
ilege of using them for this purpose,
beginning April 1, 1909, the remainder
to be leased out to individuals until
December 31, 1911. After the latter
date no convicts whatever shall be
leased to private parties,
IN THE SENATE. |
One bill and three substitutes were
presenied in the senate regarding a
reformation in the present convict
lease system and the prison commis
sion Thursday, After adopting the
report of the penitentiary committee,
the senate heard the Felder bill for
its third reading, When it was put
on its passage, Senators Boyd, Brock
and Born each introduced a substi
tute, 3 ’
A conference of senators draughted
what was read in the senate Friday
mornin usmslubntltut& bill’ No. 1 dt;)r—
--i x ,‘ s i N : or i 8-
b i prvieg o, 9 02
victs. e : '
Before the bill had come up for its
first reading, the signatures of twen
ty-three members of the upper house
had been affixed to it, insuring their
support and its passage through the
senate. Their stand was unanimous
except 'regarding the provision for
abolishment of the prison commis
sion. Some of the signers of the bm(
reserved the right to object to that‘
part of the substitute if they desired
to do so. ’ ]
The bill is one of the most compre
hensive that has yet been offered in
solution of the question that is troub-’
ling the state, one of its most inter
esting features being the Jevying of
an income tax, |
If it is finally enacted it will abolish |
the prison commission on October l.f
1908. i
It will create a prison board, con
sisting of the governor, the attorney
general and the commissioner of agri
culture, giving to that board the same
powers and authority now vested lnl
the prison commission, except in so
far as those powers are inconsistent
with the substitute, '
It will put the felony convicts ony
the public roads after April 1, 1909.!
It will gm the prison board dlrectl
supervision over misdemeanor con-|
viets, l
It will prohibit the working of any
convicts for private parties, specify
ing that misdemeanor convicts shall
be worked in tle counties where thoyl
are sentenced.
It will provide for the impmvement!
of the state farm, and for the pur-|
chase and equipment of such ofher
farms as may be needed. |
It will require that convicts on those
farms shall be females or boys under
15 years of age, or aged, infirm or
Cotton is coming into market
throughout Georgia very rapidly now.
Reports from the country are to the
effect that cotton is opening very
fast and that it will soon all be on
the market. There are a large num
ber of complaints from farmers, who
say the crop is off from a third to
a half on account of the dry weather.
Peas, sugar cane and potatoes are re
ported to be doing well.
Following an energetic campaign,
which has been on foot for several
weeks, it has been announced at
Waycross that plans considered very
good are under:way for a large cot
ton factory to be located at Waycross,
This is an industry that ‘Waycross
has oftea tried to land, but for vari
ous reasons never has,
The secretary of state has issued a
charter to the Coweta, Franklin.and
Troup Railroad company, which will
build a line 50 miles long beginning
at a point either on the “Central of
Georgia or the Atlanta and West Point
in Coweta county and running through
the counties of Coweta, Heard and
Troup to a connection with the At
lanta, malnghaq and Atlantic. The
county of Heard at present has no
railroad. The capital stock will be
$300,000 and the principal office will
be at Franklin; the eounty seat of
Heard county, °
diseased—such as cannot be worked
on the roads, A
It will stipulate that- the labor of
the farm convicts shall be direetly
!entlrely to the support of the system,
in the raising of supplies for the whole
Inumber of convicts and in the making
of clothes and equipment for . their
luse, “it being the purpose and policy
of the law to use the farm simply
lfor a basis frem which to work the.
convicts on the public roads.” I 8
I It will authorize the commitment-of
female misdemeanor convicts to the
state farm, in the discretion of the
trial judge, ‘ ; o
It will keep the races separate, at
work and at leisure, s
It will give the labor of the felony
convicts free to the counties on their
)pwblic roads, providing, however, that
‘all material for counstructionn work
shall be purchased bi the counties.
It will recognize three sources of
revenue for support of the system—
the lease money under present con
tracts, until those” contracts expire;
an annual income tax of half a mill
on the dollar; and a specific tax of
S2OO per annum for the sale of “imi
tation beer” and SSOO per annum for
its manufacture, . i
- Regarding the tax on “imitation
beer,” it provides thaf “this tax shall
not, however, be taken as legalizing
the sale of any malt liquors or other
tntoxicating beverage, and shall not
‘in any way affect the provision of the
law prohibiting the sale of such.” |
Under the prison board, and to be
;clect,od by that board, it provides for
a superintendent of penitentiaries at
$4,000 er annum; a state road commis
gloner at $2,500 per annum; a clerk
at $1,800; a secretary of pardons at
'51,500, such superintendents of farms
as are necessary at $1,200; for war
dens at §IOO per month; guards at
SSO and physicians and road superin
tendents at a maximum compensation
of SIOO. : kL
It will require all officers and em*
ployes to take an oath of office and
give bond, and will prohibit any of
‘them receiving other pay than that
given them by the state. Physicians'
are excepted in the regular practice
of their profession, E
It will provide a system of parole
for felony convicts, on -permit of the'
‘board approved by the governor; pa
roled convicts to be at any time lia
ble to re-arrest on order of any mem
'bér of the board, i s
STATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD.
~ Amos E. Fuller of Gainesville has
gathered three crops of beans from
the same vines this summer and
\shoots were putting out on the vines
‘again when he plowed them up a tew;
days ago. Each time the vines were!
full of beans, b e 1
| There may be other “Peachtgfie;
streets,” but there seems to be only:
one recognized the world round by
the postoffice authorities, and that one
lis in "Atlanta, Ga. Another proof of
this assertion was evidenced when a
letter mailed on a dare from Karls
bad, Bavaria, German empire, Eu
frope, addressed simply to the name
of the young lady, “Peachtree street,
Vi 8 ,as,;_‘.karrxved, on time and Woam
delivered” promptly in Atflanta,
Colonel W. A, .#Marris, the colonel
of the second Georgia regiment, na
tional guard of Georgia, has com;nts
sioned Captain W. H, Beck to engist
musicians for a band to be located in
Grifin. The government will furnish
all the instruments, music, uniforms
‘and rent for quarters when the band
{s formed. :
President M. M, Parks of the Geor
gia Normal Institute finds it neces:
sary to notify the public that all vas
cancies were filled by July 31 and!
that over 300 applications had to be
turned down on account of lack of
room. It is impossible to admit more
students to the dormitories or from
private boarding houses, as there is
no more ;%om in the recitation halls
than for the number already accept
ed. The college doors are closed to
all who have not been already accept
ed, B
The Wayne County Farmers' Union
has accépted the proposition of the
Jesup Warehouse and Storage co pa
ny, in regard to locating the Unfgn’s
cotton warehouse at this place. The
Jesup company will furnish a bulding
built of concrete, free, for five years,
giving the Unlon the privilege of buy
ing the building any time during this
period. S
The primary in Franklin county re:
sulted as follows:* For representative,
Chandler 992, Strange 920: ordinary,
McCay 1,054, Nelms 859; clerk, Me-
Daniel 1,089, Little 835; sheriff, Can:
ady 773, Wanslet 1,142; road com:
missioner, “McFarlan 1,275,. Jordan
648; tax collector, Brown 1,079, West
moreland 824; treasurer, Smith 968,
Thomas 938. Among the incumbents
in the race not one was re-elected.
Rain prevent a full vote from being
polled.
The recent annual }eunion of Pike
county veterans held at Bluff-Springs
camp ground was in many ways the
most successful that has been held
by the survivors of company 421, An
unusually large number were in at
tendance, and the weather during the
stay was almost perfect. L. M, Par{'
brother of State Treasurer Park, was |
present, and added largely to the suc
cess of the meeting.
The Lois cotton mil?s at Douglas
ville will begin goerations zoout Oc
tober 1. This is” a new mill, and
sjarts with bright prospects, The mill |
will start with 70,000 zpindles, and
this is to be incroased at a very:
early date. A great,many new people
are coming in whfire to be connect:
ed “with the new mill and” who will
add materially to the town,
Washington is making rapidigteides
in the matter of public improvements.”
Besides the item of some $15,000 in
buildings that are going up in the
city, it is now pretty certain that the
town will issue bonds for paving cer
tain business sections of the city that
are greatly in need of better streets.
The question of paving the entire
business section of the city has been
agitated for some time. This agita
tion has been gaining strenfth.‘ with |
the result that the needs of certain
section have been pointed out as be
ing so' urgent that all opposition to
paving these sections has given down,
Makes Many Important Rulings
of Interest to Shippers:
Permission is Declined the Georgia Rail
road to Increase Passenger Rate
1-4 Cent a Mile.
’
Atlanta, Ga.—The state railroad
commission has decided to take a
hahd in the fight against the increas
ed rates ordered by the railroads on
grain, hay and provisions coming into
Georgia and other southern territory
from Ohio and Mississippi river cross
ings,
The commission has issued an or
der directing its special attorney,
Judge James K. Hines, to prepare and
present to the i#nterstate commerce
commission an appeal for relief from
the excessive rates which the rail
roads are seeking permanently to im
pose,
This action on the part of the com
mission will be learned with much
gratification by the shippers of the
state who had reason to believe, as
the result of an action on the part
of that body, some time ago, that
they would be left to make the fight
single-handed.. Now that they are to
have the support of the state, strength
and encouragement will be lent to
their cause,
The increased rates apply on class
es B, C. D and F.from Ohio and
Mississippi river crossings, and were
made effective August 1, There is no
way of estimating what additional ex
pense these increases put upon the
shippers of Georgia, but by some it
has been put as high as $1,000,000
annually, e
The railroad commission has declin
ed the petition of the Georgia Rail
road company fox.' permission to in
crease its rate of passenger fare from
2 1-4 to 2 1-2 cents per mile. The de
cision was based upon the ground
that the increase was not warranted
by the facts presented in evidence to
support the petition.
Instead of the road’s having lost
money, it was stated before the com
mission that its earnings for the first
six months of 1908 showed a substan
tial increase over those of the same
six months of 1907, though the latter
year had prior to this time been the
banner year in its history.
The commission also directed the
Central of Georgia Railway company
to operate ité Griffin passenger train
which now runs daily between Grif
fin and Bremen on its Chattanooge
division, between Griffin and Cedar
town for a period of six months on
trial, at the end of which time the
commission will decide whether it
will require a continuance of the
‘new schedule or not.
This change was made to accommo
.date the people living along this line
between Bremen and Cedartown who
now have only one train a day each
‘way, while those on all other portions
;)t_the,llne have ta dogble daily sery
. It was contended that this in-
Mflnm &nyldmfifiiffigfim%‘
asked that the change be ordered. The
Central contends that it would lose
nmoney through the new schedule.
WILL ERECT MEMORIAL FOUNTAIN.
Women Appointed as Collectors by
Officials of W. C, T. U.
Columbus, Ga. Active work is to
be begun at once toward raising the
funds for the memorial prohibition
fountain to be erected on the state
capitol grounds in Atlanta projected
by the Georgia Woman’s Christian
Temperance Union at the last state
convention in October at Columbus.
The fountain is to be of, permarfent
material, marble or bronze, and is to
contain the name of every member of
the legislature who voted for Geor
gla’s prohibition law as a memorial
of their loyalty to the welfare and
happiness of the people of Georgia
and an expression of gratitude and ad
miiration.
Collectors have been appointed, one
for each congressional district, as fol
| I'%jws: First district, Miss Haddle Da
- ¥ls, 118 Oglethorpe street, West, Sa
vannah; second district, Mrs. Lee
Hall, Newton; third district, Miss
Maud Allen, Abbeville; fourth district,
Mrs. W, Gowdin, Cotton, P. O. Box
871, Columbus; fifth district, Mrs. M.
L. McLendon, 139 Washington street,
Atlanta; sixth district, Mrs. J. L.
Kennedy, Barnesville; seventh dis.
trict, Mrs. C. K. Henderson, Cedar
town; eighth district, Mrs. G. B. Std
vall, Madison; ninth district,. Mrs. J,
C. Bennett, Jefferson; tenth district,
311‘8. J. C. Martin, Thomson; eleventh
istrict, Mrs, Augusta Deen, Way-
Oross, . ¢
~ 12-YEAR-OLD TRAIN-WRECKER, -
Admits Putting Bolt on Track to
N Wreck Train,
Buford, Ga.—With slight realization
of the enormity of his crime, Lewis
Qooksie, the 12-year-old lad who
wrecked northbound Southern train
No. 38, and thereby caused the death
of Engineer Ben Dewberry of Atlanta,
wand his negro fireman, is now locked
in the coynty jail awaiting trial in the
fimflor court on the charge of mur
‘der. Immediately following his arrest
the little boy confessed to having
. placed the bolt on the track which de
railed the big flyer.
[ In the artlessness of his childhood
he recounted how he had been infiu
enced by two older youths, whose
flames he would not furnish, to place
the bolt and await the wreck which
was sure to follow,
: BOY Cfllii]'l‘fill SUICIDE.
_Fourteen-Year-Old Lad Ends Life
.~ With Shotgun,
QOdessadale, Ga.—l—lar?ld sgmman,
14 years of age, who lived ofe mile
from Odessadale, shot himself to
death,
A shotgun was used to accomplish
death, which was instantanéous. The
_entire load entered his heart.
The boy is well thought of here, and
_his mother, a widow, has the deep
sympathy of all. The boy had been
ill for some time, which probably- ac
counts for his strange act,
ALBANY WHISKEY COMPANY,
115-117 BRIDGE ST., JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
PREPAID PRICE LIST—ORIGINAL CASE GOODS BOTTLED |IN
y BOND,
Three Feathers .. .. ..4 Qts. $7.00
Four ROBES . cu 've st Q 8 7,00
old Forrester,., .. .., ..4 Qts. 5.50
Upper “TeN .. ve ‘sn +.4°Qtß. 35.50
Murry Hill Club,, ~ ..4 Qts. 5.00
Bilver Lake .& oo s os4 QUB 5. 00
Echo Spring .. «s «. ..4 Qts. 5.00
LOWIe 88 vi i sdve o QLB BOV
1. W HANGT s v 5 o 2 QLB B 0
BHYEE TID oo i ve wained QB 4100
Old Henry .. .. oo oo .4 Qts. 4.00
Hamilton Club, ~ . .+4 Qts. 4.00
Gin Phosphate ~ .. ..4 Qts. 4.00
Duffy’s Malt .. .. .. .4 Qts. 4.00
Shaw’s Malt ~ .. ~ ..4 Qts. 4.00
Rum, Peach and Apple Brandy from
$2.25 to $5.00 per Gal.
Rye, Corn, Gin, in jugs $2.25—§5.00
Corn, Rye, Gin, in jugs. You pay
express chargesi $1.50—51.75.82.00
cash, and drum goods at special
prices.
WE DO NOT PAY EXPRESS CHARGES ON ORDERS FOR LE‘SS THAN
$2.25 GALLON. : 4
——————————————————————————————————
LATE NEWS NOTES.
General.
James Keir Hardie, socialist mem
ber of the house of common, has ar
rived at Montreal, Canada,. The ob
ject of Mr. Hardie’s tour is to try
nad amalgamate the American and
Canadian trades unionists and social
ists into one political organization
like the British labor party.
Official tests of gas meters in New
York city show that defective me
ters give the gas companies the ben
efit of the doubt, that is, where there
is cne that is too slow there are two
that are too fast.
Dr., James F. Rymer, a native of
Croydon, will soon gain the distine
tion of being the first fully qualified
English physician to carry on profes
sional work within the Artic circle.
A few days ago Dr. Rymer left Ed
monton, Albera, on a lonely journey
of one thousand eight hundred miles
along the Athabasca and Mackenzie
rivers. His destination is Fort Good
Hope, which is about 2one hundred
miles within the Artic circle. He does
not propese to return to civiliation
for at least three years. Dr. Rymer’s
patients will be Indians and Eskimos.
Declaring that he had received a
message from heaven in a vision that
the city of New York would be visited
by a terrible disaster and the city’s
buildings would tumble to the ground
unless it repented, Rev. Milton Sparks
has announced to his congregation at
Chester, Pa., that he will immediate
ly go to that city to try and save the
wicked who make their home in the
metropolis,
Boston electrical engineering ex
perts have issuéd a warning against
the placing of flagstaffs on skyscrap
ers and other tall structures. They
declaré that the danger from light
ning is great and that all flagstaffs
must be removed from the high build
ings. If not there will be a catastro
‘bhe in the near future which will be
‘appalling. They also insist on all
high smokestacks and chimneys be
ing equipped with “spiders,” a. new
form of lightning conductor,
Mrs. Mee Stone, wife of a wealthy
young business man of Wytheville,
Tenn., who has been missing for ten
days, and who, it is feared, has been
the victim of foul play, has become
violently insane, Not a trace has
been heard from the young man,
With one of his own razors W. C.
Conlee, a St. Louis barber, commit
ted suicide by cutting his throat.
Conlee had been despondent for some
time, owing to the falling off of his
business, which-he ascribed to the
use of safety ragzors by former cus
tomers,
The return -of Cardinal Gibbons
from abroad will be a social epoch
with the Catholic circles of Baltimore
and ‘the south, He is expected Octo
ber 10. Governor Crothers has an
nounced that he intended to assemble
his staff and hold a public reception.
The mayor of the city will allso car
ry out a suitable recetpion for the
prelate,
Veteran printers of the United
States will be benefited by the old-age
pensions to be paid by the Interna
tional” Typographical union, The pen
sion of $4 a week for printers more
than 60 years old who have been
members of the union for twenty
years or longer has become effective,
and the first money will be paid out
of the pension fund.
As a result of a collision with a
sailboat as she-was leaving London
the steamer Etruria, Cunard line, was
unable to leave on her trip to New
York. The sailboat was sunk and one
of the crew drowned. A panic was
averted by the calmness of the crew
aboard the immense liner,
After a world-wide chase over three
continents, Bela Walder, said to be
a nobleman from Austria-Hungary,
accused of forgeries to the amount
of $50,000, was arrested in Chicago
and thrown into the county jail, °
Washington.
Mrs. Elizabeth Sousa, the mother
of John Philip Sousa, the bandmaster,
died at her home in Washington, S?m
was the widow of Antonio Sousa, who
was connected with the United States
marine band for years,
Records of the treasury department
show that the port of New York dur
ing the fiscal year of 1907-1908 has a
larger balance of trade in its favor
than ever before. For the entire
United States the balance is $666,457,-
103, which exceeds by $2,000,000 the
largest year before, which was 1900-
1901. ;
David E. Thompson, American am
bassador to Mexico,. was ‘run down
by-a bieyclist in the City of Mexico
and suffered a fracture of one arm
and contusions of the face. An X-ray
examination was made to ascertain if
he had suffered "any other injuries.
His condition was not considered to
be ‘serious, .
President Reosevelt received a ca
blegram from the governor general
of ‘Australia thanking the American
government for sending the battleship
fleet to their coutnry, |
Bottled Goods. >
Queen of Jacksonville... 4 Qts. §3.73
Carlton Club .. .. .. ..4 Qts, 3.5
Our Private Stock ~ .4 Qts, 3.25
Monogram .. .. .. .. ..4 Qts. 3.00
Mullis Favorite' oo s o 4 Qts. 2.75
Honey Grove .. .. ...4 Qts. 2.75
XXXX Monogram ..,, ..4 Qts, 2.75
Our PHdE. .. i ss A fte 9.7
©ld Homest John ... ~4 Qes, 2.25
Old Forest Corn .. ...4 Qts. 2.25
Old NHek 5 v vnies 224 QtE. 2,50
Old Homestead ~ .. ..4 Qts. 2,75
Blue Mountain .. .. ..4 Qts, 3.00
Elk Valley ... 5. <o ..4 Qts. 8.00
Old Fashioned .. ......4 Qts 8.50
XX Holland Gin. . ..4 Qts. 3.25
No. A Holland Gin ..,..4 Qts. 2.40
No. B Holland Gin .....4 Qts. 2.65
No. C Holland Gin .....4 Qts. 2,00
No. D Holland Gin .....4 Qts. 3.15
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New Discovery
PRICE
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GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
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| ATTORNEY AT LAW,
e Folkston, Ga. s
Investigations of Land Titles a
Specialty.
———-—————-—-——-——-—_—_'_
LABOR WORLD,
A new union of carpenters has been
formed at Virgues, Porto Rico.
The Waterville (Me.) textile work
ers have applied for a charter from
the United Textile Workers.
Scottish blacksmiths are taking a
vote of the members as to affiliation
with the English Labor party.
The Governor of Porto Rico has
recommended to the Legislature a
law creating a labor bureau on the
island,
The membership of the British
Provincial Association of Cotton Spin
ners is 18,143, an increase of 1641
on the year,
The German ironmasters threaten
to close down all iron-works because
of skilled labor’s refusal to accept re
ductions in wages. . ‘
The Marine, ’'Longshoremen and
Transport Workers’ Association has
decided to increase its per capita tax
from five to fifteen cents.
San Francisco (Cal.) Iron Trades
Council will vote on a proposition to
join the recently formed Interna
tional Metal Trades Association.
The recexnt Scottish Trade Union
Congress passed resolutions in favor
of old-age pensions and in favor of
compulsory intervention in labor dis
putes. g
The Scotch ShipbMilding Employ
ers’ Federation and the men’s union
are arranging for a joint agreement,
and the men’s union has appointed
seven well-known representatives to
draft a constitution,
During June the average number
employed daily at the docks and prin
cipal-wharves in London was 12,049,
a decrease of 3.1 per cent., as com
pared with a month ago, and of 0.2
per cent.,, as compared with June,
1907,
The Canadian Pacific strikers at
Montreal accused officials of the com
pany of vlotting to disrubt the union.
With an increase of“(;;e dollar a
year in the cost of keeping a dog,
insists the Indianapolis News, a con
siderable increase is expected in the
number of people who don’t know any
thing about that cur which stays™
‘around their house so much of the
time. .
" You ean tell a bride and bride
groom by the way he is afraid it will
fatigue her if she carries her own
parasol, and after they've been mar
ried a few years by the way lugging
around the baby is good exercise for
her, confesses the New York Press
s ———
One can make even old Poverty
feel good by just telling him “Good
morning! Here's a health to you!” ex
claims the Atlanta (Constitution. '