The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, October 02, 1908, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE FOUR THE AUGU.SU lit KALI) 731 Broad St., Augusta, Qa. Published Every Afternoon During *h t Waak and on Sunday Morning by THI HERALD PUBLISHING CJ. Entered at tha Augusta Poa.office a> Mail Matter of the Second Clast. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally and Sunday, 1 year .. .. .%*> »>" Daily and Sunday, S months -ids Dally and Sunday. 3 months 1-'A Dally and Sunday. 1 month M Dally and Sunday, 1 week li Sunday Herald, 1 year Ido Weekly Herald. 1 year -S'7 TELEPHONES. Business Office . . ?>7 City Bdltor ?■'* Society Editor No communication will be published in The Herald unless the name of the write Is signed to the article NEW YORK OFFICE -VfeHnml-l>n- Jnmln A«<n«:y. Hrtinewlck iMlldto*. *'-* Fifth Avenue, New York City CHICAGO OFFICE —Vronland- Item < mlh Apnry W M Mg'. 11<* Boyce Bulldln* Chicago, 111. The Herald le fht I medium of Ote City Aur<*'* »nd ■' the County of Richmond for ell legai no tices and advertlain* Address all business communications to lilt AUGISI4 IIIKALD, rai aro.d at . auquiu, a*. “ir YOU WANT TH l NEW* YOU NEED THE HERALD.' Augusta, Ga.. Friday, October 2, 1908 Circulation of the Herald Lor 7 Months. 1908 February ....210,488 March 226,578 April 222,012 May 243,166 Juns .. 241,820 July 241,202 August 219,700 DAILY AVERAGES. For 7 months . 7,646 For Annual 7,846 There la no better way to reach the horjtea of the prosperous pco pie of thla city ami aectlon than through the columns of The Her. aid Dally and Holiday. W— "■■■ —»«- -i - ■ -- —' -• Partlea leaving Auguata can have T*e Herald sent them by mall eao*i day. Phone 297, Circulation Depart mcnt. If you lca<r a Auguata, ao that Tha Herald can reach you each day. Haskell'* wrath Ih described to he; of the klml that dot-au'l require nuru ItIR to keep It. A French erlentlat claim, that love affect* one only on the left aide. Then the right aide mual be left entirely. And Mr Konaovrlt ahould remeto tier that Tillman la yet to take a hand, a* soon a* he get* Inn k The Alntiainn atate fair Ihla year will lie a hip iurn h» II I* given out that there la to to* a free exhibition of aheath itiwiia on Dvina modal* Thotnaa Kdlaon declares that sleep la only a habit. Hut It la »urh a plea* aut hahlt that all the preaching aaalnal tl will never make people quit II A Texas negro ha* been arrested for ateallna twelve turkeys That eonvaya a fair Idea of the hire of Teiaa turkey a. In Georgia lie could not have atolen more than two "Rav Mr. Moore, a Pennsylvania clergyman, apoke disparagingly of the Woman who u*e powder i»nft, Now ha'a repenting," say a the Wayneaboro True Cittaen. Then he’ll pruhably do •a no Moore. And Mr, Wulmiii. 100, Injeetcd a lit tie (Inget Into the campaign If he doesn't c.harpi Into tie luvarh that Haarat ha* made with hit letters then folk* will believe that he ha* lost Ida old-time spirit Sidney Tapp say* he waul* to launch a new political party. If Hid will wait until arier the election h will he able to buy one second hand cheaper than he could launch one, and It would do him quite a it ui All thoae democrat* who have eon tlihuled to the Hryan Campaign fund and Who believe Haskell t* .IS had as Roosevelt Bays he ahould at once n peat their aubacrlptlon*. lor a very ; obvious reason. The appointment of Herman 111.1 drr to the place vacated hv Haskell may he taken to Indicate ih.t th > Herman vote In the north will not h aa solidly republican Hit* year a* usual At Laxonta last week thev mid a horac swapper*' convention which laated three day* The reeordlng angel vai probably overworked dur tng that time nearly a* much a* dur Ing a Sahei iiieii a reunion Rome lime ago there *a* uturh lie Ing aald about liquified helium Car tlee unacquainted with the *tuff are hereby watnad not to mistake what la going on now polllcally (or dquin.sl helium It may bear a close renctn hlance. but It'a not the at off An lowa woman say* that heaven la full of piano* If that should be true It la to be hopi d at least that all the angel* have learned how to play, and Bone of them require to Igkc leaaon practice Hut then, It couldn't be heaven If they had to do thia. While Mr Brvan I* socking It to lfr Roo*.velt and the repuhllcan* tremblingly wait to eec what la com tng next, the democratic campaign commit tee la Indus'rkiusly passing around the hat. That* the trick, from the aalvatlon army to the at roil Ing W'SlcUu. ■ they all work It that »«• THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT. In a few days, next Wednewlay, tho ' citizens of Georgia will tie required I to to to tlio polls and vote their preference In the regular biennial slate election. Slrfhe the real con test ha* already been decided hy th prlniaty there Is llttie Interea' In this regular election. And yet It I* lire ! porjgnt shat every good democrat ipj I to the fio la on that day ar.d vote the democratic ticket. Not that there I* any doubt ahoot the election of tin primary nominee for governor. Hon Joseph M Brown Since the primary anothci candidate for governor has been put In tho Geld, rape Yaneqy Carter, who la running u* the candidate of the In dependence League. Captain Car ter I* a good man, all rignt, and If i lected would doubt lens make Geor gia a good governor, but the white voters who participated In Hit prl imiry are In honor hound to vote for dr. Brown, and they will do *o, with perhaps a few egeeptlona Cap'. Carter ran then only hope to get th , votes of thl* small fraction of white voters together with that other amall fraction which did not participate in ihe primary, and the negro vote. It I* very doubtful that he will get all, or even a considerable portion of tho latter, and so hi* candidacy may b.i dismissed from consideration. To the rest of the state ticket there is no opposition. The office of pension commissioner wa» made elec tive since the primary was held, and for this office six candidates have announced, Including the present In eumhent. As the law provides that the legislature shall elect, If neither candidate receives a majority of all the votes east, the probability Is that this will result; and that eliminates Ho red ot ihe ticket from any great concern or uncertainty. There are besides the oHl.'i-rs two Constitutional amendment s to ue voted on. Thi first of these relates to giving representation to a tiewly made county, which will, of course, be ratified unanimously. Hut the other admendinent Is the thing around which all the Interest In the election will hinge This Is the *o t tiled negro disfranchisement amend ment. It will not do to assume *hnt this will certainly he ratified, and In that belief any voter remain away from the i«ilis It Ji certain that tie ballot of every negro wßm shall void will be east against It Besides this there have alwnyr. been many whlto voter* who are oppom'd to It How great their number nohodv can tell, for there ha* never before been an opportunity to put thl* question to iho teak It Is Ihh uncertainty which make* It the hounden duty of every denim rat who Is In harmony with this plank of the democratic sta'e platform to turn out and vote "yen" on the proposition to ratify this ■itnendment It will not do to Dike the rhanoes of Its being defeated, after nil the effort spent In having the law passed, by an ovtroonfldenc" In Its ratification. This I* the only Issue In the sfflt i election concerning which there is any doubt. Lei every democrat who favors thl* law see to It thm he re;;. Ister* his endorsement of It at the colt* next Wednesday. THE POLITICAL ARMAGEDDON. In another column Is reprinted parts of an editorial In the lmula\tlle Cou rier Journal. written In Col. Walter son's most vigorous style and present Ing the present political situation and the Issue Involved In the pending na ttonal contest so clearly that he who runs may be able to read and under stand Col. Watterson does not Indulge In any mtidsllnging Conditions are suf ficiently black nol to require resort to this ready expedient of the dema goguc He shows the situation as tl Is. Foraker la not lambasted as the one great sinner among a set of sslnla. simply because he happened to he caughl with the gooda. but full justice I* done him In the extenuating circumstances* which surround his case and It ts pointed out how. In becoming the attorney of predatory corporation* while holding a commis sion from tho people, he was largely the creature of c'rrumetanree created by the republican party. Cannon, Aldrich aud other republican loaders are at eater alnnera tn thla reapect than Foraker It la the republican party, through tf* machine control ac quired In filly years' hold of power, whleh I* the cause of thl* polttcal cor iruptton Rooeevelt, giving him full I credit for honesty and ability and In tent 101 l to atop the evD of'trust dope ination of our guxerifment by the ; method* exposed In the Foraker mat ter, during the seven years of hla ad ministration was unable to cheek It. much less to break It up And ts i Rooeevelt. so strenuous that hta stren ! uousneas and restless activity haa been coined into the log Stick” phrase could do nothin* how useless i and preposterous It would he to ex pect Taft, the fat easy going and ease loving heir-apparent chosen by Rooee veil, to accomplish anything Carties, aa Col Watterson point* out, are never purified from within. In the very nature of the case. If a change from the policies they have adopted and out of the ruts they have worn ha* become necessary, it can be secured only through another party. And the country now demands a change; domanda It because condi tions have grown such that a change must come, if not one way, then In some other way. The democratic parly had been In ;power for sixty years, and the coun try demanded a change In the chattel slavery condition then prevailing, which had become a necessity, just as now a change from oppressive trust conditions is demanded. The demo cratic paliy then could no more yield to public demand than the republican party can now, because the machine had been set to run that way. And because what the people demanded and what had become necessary was not obtained at the polls the great civil war followed, with all Its fear ful cost of blood and treasure and its still more fearful cost of class legists tlon which waß a consequence of It. Exactly the same conditions prevail now. A change In the policy of our government is demanded by the peo ple, because It has become a neces sity. The predatory corporations must he controlled. The republican party cannot do It. The democratic party must be placed in control if the change required It to be Instituted by peaceful means And now Is the time. If, with all the things that are In Its favor now the democratic party fall to dislodge from fiower the party In power en trenched In the offices, then It can never hope to do so. This makes the present contest a political arranged don, the great decisive battle. Dem ocratic defeat IbU year would mean revolution. A third party has been rising. It has been slowly growing for many years. It. will probably poll a million voles thi* year If the democratic party fall now, and does not win the chance of correcting the trust evils by constitutional means, then look for the socialists to become the scourge to effect it hy unconstitutional means. "RARE OLD BEN TILLMAN.” One of the cuiions consequences which have followed the exposures nede by the letters *1 ven to the public by Mr. Hears!, and the hot tight between the republican and democratic loaders which grew out of them. Is the admiration of Sena tor Tillman expressed bv northern paper* Thl* Is something entirely ne* Formerly they all, without a:i exception almost, delighted In taking a crack it him. In Ibis even some of the paper* of hla own state were well In the front. Never uny'hlng good could they say about lieu Till man, hut he was represented as the Pitchfork senator, a wild, uncouth fe' low In whom there was no good, a sort of senatorial hull in the chltm shop who could bellow, paw the earth, charge around and tear down, j but who was unfit for auy good cause! or work This has changed now. end j northern papers have suddenly dis covered that Senator Tillman "was a fine asset of llnolf Sam" In his rut ged honesty, n faithful and most valuable servant of the people. In the revelation* made hy the let ter* read by Mr. Hears! was the ex j poaqre of the fact that among those senators who were lubricated by Standard Oil w»k Senator McLnurln. of South t'srollg i. who tor on- term \v:t» Senator Tillman's colleague. He tween there two no love was lost, for the> sere men totally unlike eaeh other, and MeLnurtn rotlgM to break j Tillman's Influence In South Ca'ii lltta lie w.ia allied 'n 111* fight liv I'resident Roosevelt who tninll'estel 'a striking partiality for McLaiinn olid a corresponding antagonism to Tillman which went to tho length o( publicity and deeply Insulting him ; over i social function How plain It all is now ' McLatt ! tin, serving the greatest offender among the predatorv trq-,l*. expect ing with It* aid to make hltnsrlf the 1 political master of South (-trnlln.i; I rillman. In rugged honesty, standing i up for the people, opposing the trust* ! and McLaurtn. th»tr ready friend j\n I Roosevelt, with a clear under ' standing of the situation whleh thy people had not then, forming a clone 1 friendship with McLaurtn and aiding him In hi* design*, even lo the extent of gross!) inao.ltlnx South lajonna* i senior senator and foremoat cltjgeu. There sat a bunch of ,ho*e aeua j tor* who w ere zealous friends of th > I truats What eettsed (hi* ftlendshti hi* heen revealed by the exposures | ‘.hat have been made tn regard *o I Senator* Foraker, Halley and other*. The very idea ot Senator Tillman | falling under such a temptation I* i preposterous There lan‘l a man llv 'ng who believe* that Senator Till- I man would accept a fee to work for j the trust* while holding a comm!* ! Hon from ihe people, and when It la | shown that other senators did (hi* no wonder that papers Ilk- the Wash I Intrton Merg'd are led to exclaim ad mlrtngly Rare old Hen TIUMas,” | ,nd wish hltu mighty well these da) s THE AUGUSTA HERALD The Sin Of Republicaism Has Found It Out. (Louisville Courier Journal.) The paramount, issue of this presidential campaign is the danger of entrusting one party too long with power. We are supposed to live under a government of public opinion. Mod ern politics, however, ha* created machinery especially designed for con trolling this public opinion. The machinery, so fabricated, places all the advantages in the hands of the leaders of the party in power. The "ins." begin on, are as an army fortified. The "outs” are but a body of raw militia, which, bravs. and no matter how capably led, have yet to cross many lines of entrenchment, to *torm the cannon-mouthed redoubt and to carry the murderous barricade. It is yet a question whether vic tory against such odds 1* possible. The present campaign is to de termine that. It is to decide whether the people, unaided, can success fully go against a party occupying a fortress —whether the American voter Is, or is not, an overmatch for the money devil, commanding the party in power—whether, In a word, it Is possible, short of some cat aclysm, to reach a change of parties at Washington. The old, historic democratic party had sixty years of power, to make its exit the signal for s sectional war. Even then the opposi tion only crept in through a breach. The republicans have been in now nearly fifty years. If we cannot peacefully remove them what may wo not look for when their time of exit comes? Maybe a civil war. Bat, will It not be wary of the people to take time by the forelock—of pub lic opinion to rear back on its hind legs—of the average citizen to go to the polls to exercise his Intelligence and his volition, and to do his duty? • • • • Of Judge Taft’s personal Integrity w* make as little doubt as of Mr. Roosevelt's personal integrity. But, in politics, a line is too often drawn between personal Integrity and party service, to the confusion of the former, and precisely as Judge Taft appealed to the Ohio republi can* to vote against Foraker and Cox, do we appeal to the republicans of the United States to vote against Aldrich and Cannon, the real pow ers at Washington, with Sunny Jim Sherman on the Taft-Rooseveit ticket, because there is no hope of reform In case their one-party rule Is continued. If Roosevelt, with his nigh eight years of domination and his stren uous big-stick, could not prevail against these, how can Taft, the soft and amiable opportunist, expect to do so? Why four years more unde, - Taft when eight years under Roosevelt have proved so insufficient? Not a sinner repentant for all the president's incessant preaching. Not a malefactor in jail for all his noisy prosecutions. same old crowd at the fore. The same old abuses—all of republican origination— In the saddle. Yet all this fallß in with universal human experience. When in the history of affairs, did ever a party reform itself in power? Never. The only way for the people to right the wrongs done by their public men is to turn the rascals out. of office, and then to punish the rascals convicted of crime. This democracy proposes to do, and we ask all honest republicans to Join us in doing it. The Foraker business Is but an object lesson. The repudiation of a single senator will nowise matte good. It is the republican party which Is In the dark. It. is the republican party which these revela tions expose. It is the republican party, tried in the balance and found wanting, which Judge Taft and Mr. Roosevelt—the people’s best witnesses to Its bad character—are trying to save. But the sacrifice of Foraker will not suffice. To prove themselves honest, they must also throw Aldrich and Cannon and Sunny Jim Sherman overboard. Never has the republican party faced such conditions as meet it whichever way it turns. All thoughtful onlookers concede that New York Is irrevocably lost to It. Tha nomination of Lilley makes Connec ticut a doubtful state. Rhode Island and New Jersey hang in the bal ance. There are both hell and chaos In Ohio. Indiana, thanks to Hanly, is gone past redemption. The prairie fires of an awakened public con science sweep over Illinois, leaping the Mississippi river into lowa, crossing the Missouri river into Kansas and Nebraska, impeded only by the tenantless walls of the Rocky mountains, to Issue thence again and to swoop down to the golden shores of the Pacific. Weil may the republican leaders, intolerant and arrogant, used by money and machinery to carry all before them, quake with fear and whiten with dismay. In their rage they bite one another like fright ened beasts of the forest Well may they swap horses in the middle of the stream, exchanging Proxy Frank Hitchcock for Foxy Murray Crane. Well may they make alliance with the Unspeakable Hearst, Taft himself crying "help me, Randolph, or I sink!” Well may they call to their aid the crushed ones of the steam-roller, promising ail the kingdoms of the earth for their worship and support. It is amazing. It Is pitiful. If is humiliating. Their sinß indeed have found them out at Inst. Scandals to right of them: scandals to left of them; defeat In front of Hem. —only the Taft-Sinton millions between Cannon clinging to Sunny Jim”—Aldrich falling upon the neck of son-in-law Rockefeller—the thieving tariff exuding fat no longer, but making quagmires for the robber trusts— the people disgusted on the one hand, or indignant on the other—the Grand Old Party of graft and fraud Is in truth a sight to see! Yet a little longer, and then the bone yard, leaving only a stench behind, and this inscription— Whilst it lived it lived in clover; When it died It died all over." ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ * ♦ TALKS ABOUT GEORGIA. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Georgia and Her Convicta. Georgia proposes to make all her convicts highwaymen.— Jacksonville Times Union. ' Georgia High Flyers. Orville Wright, the flying machine proufller. soars high, but Georgia's Scah Wright ran do some soaring himself.—Marietta Journal. Georgia’s Political Embroilment. When we reflect upon Georgia's embroilment with the Hearst party, how thankful we should feel that the llearst (tarty in South Carolina for mally abdicated two months ago! Charleston News and Courier. Georgia Mules. "A Georgia mule is reported to have kicked a railway train off the track and escaped uninjured.” How about the train and its passengers?— Richmond News Leader. Georgia Legislature. The Georgia legislature had to wig gle its neck considerably and violent ly in order to get that anti-convict lease bill down, but it did get it down at last and adjourned. All's well that ends well, we presume. - Washington Herald. Georgia Peach Orchards. Acres of peach trees are being cut down in Georgia this fall and the ground will be devoted to something more profitable The peach business has been overdone, as some of our grower* have found out.— Lawrence vllle News-Herald Georgia's Murder Record. Georgia Is making a bloody record 'these closing days of the summer Murder* and lynching* are too fre quent. and human life I* too cheap. If the jurle* will do their duty we will have more hangings In Georgia, 'and when It Is known that punish ment is sure, the criminally Inclined will he awed and deterred.—LaGrange Reporter. i '■ JUVENILE REJOICING, i 1 guess i must be growln' cut thay’s somethin happened now. That ought to happened quite a while before; 1 I'm btgger'n dad. an’ say, you bet I'm happy anyhow, *Ctm I needn't wear ht* cast-off duds no ntc* -Los Angeles Exprsss. ♦ ♦ O WITH OUR CONTEMPORARIES ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦ Sound and Sensible Advice. The Ishmaellte doesn't approve of the course of several Georgia papers !n persistently "oaggingb the gov ernor-elect. We gave him our he r ty support on June sth. What we want to say, however, is that the "pot is railing the kettle black” when those papers of the state whirh have relentlessly hammered at Gov. Smith for several years up to the present time cry “persecution” when The Journal takes a shot at the governor elect. l,et Hoke Smith alone, boys, so that his followers may get a chance to let up on Joe Brown. Don't j re-open the wounds of the late prl ■mary; help heal them. And In the meantime get busy for Bryan and Brown!—Sparta ishmaelite. Each Must Decide for Himself. The man who did not vote in the primary lasi June may refuse to vote for Brown for governor and maintain his political self respect, hut we can not see ho* one who participated in the primary can vote for anybody bu: l.rown. However, this is a free coun try, and If a man can satisfy his conscience, w> suppose his neighbors have nothing to do with it.—Dublin Times. All to Injure the Cotton Grower. Many things are combining to do j the cotton grower this fall. On top ■of the short crop and low prices i comes the acts of the so-called night riders. This last may prove the greatesi hurt of them all.—Oglethorpe Echo. • Take Advantage of His Troubles. A uayonne, N. J.. hen Is reported i ta have laid an egg w hile in flight recently. Evidently the natureJakers are determined to renew their per ’ nlcious activities, now that they know the president hasn't the time to both er with them-Washington Hera'.d Political Bedfellows. Politics, indeed, make strange bed • fellows Hearst is now the tool and ' ally of Roosevelt and It was Roose velt who a few months ago stated 'that Hearst was the man who Incited the sentiment that led to the shooting !of McKinley —Brunswick News. NOT EATABLE. Mrs Benhani—A tramp stole one of my pies today. Bonham— I wonder what he will do •with It?—Harpers W*ekl>. Dorr Clothes. Another Reason Why - In ordering a Dorr suit, not only are you assured of getting the Beat that tailoring art can supply, but there's also the advantage of having the largest stock from which to make a choice. Ample capital aids the Dorr taste to secure the ohoiceet in the market. Get Measured NOW Tailoring, Furnishings for Men of Taste Teas Special blend mixed tea at 50c a ib. Unsurpassed for ioed tea. 25c will buy one pound of Republic Coffee, positively the best coffee in Georgia for the price. PHONE YOUR ORDERS. E. J. DORIS Phone 533 1302 May Ave. ♦ <> ♦ TALKS ABOUT THE HERALD. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<» The Crank Vote Will Be Split. Clark Howell says that John Tem ple Graves will get 4,000 votes in Georgia. According to the Augusta Herald. Clark doesn’t think this is the total number of cranks in Georgia, but he knows the crank vote will be split between several candidates.—Sa vannah Press. Red Headed Statesmen. Carmack, of Tennessee, has become the editor of the Tennesseean. This leads the Augusta Herald to ask; "Are all the red headed statesmen going to mount the tripod?"—Americus Times-Recorder. Rather Breezy. The Dalton Citizen says it will be given for publieation Representative Glenn’s views of the sheath gown, which will be very warn). That is more than can be said of the garment itself, says the Augusta Herald, which would appear to be too opan and airy for much warmth —Dalton Citizen. When the Champions Meet. Alvin Stark won the world's cham pionship at plowing in Wheatland, 111., before the steer-piowing contest took place at the Rome fair, a contest which will have such illustrious en tries as Bowdre Phinizv. T. S. Shope. I Clair Rowell, Jack McCartney and others. The rows they plow can be itised as a pattern for a worm-fence.— Atlanta Georgian. Great in All They Undertake. The Augusta Herald is authority for the statement Hint the Booster club of that city is doing a great work. We presume they ore hauling water or throwing up dykes.—Anderson Intelli gencer. A Superfluous Question. The Augusta Herald ask*. “Won der If Mr, Hearst takes his pa-ty se riously?" Of course he doesn't. —Co- lumbus Enquirer-Sun. ♦ ♦ ♦ PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN . ♦ ♦ 4 The Hon. Thomas E. Watson must have been handed an awful lot of le mons.—Columbus Ledger. Fnniebody Is going to win sure, and H won t be Watson or Graves.— Thomasvllle Tlmes-Enterprlse. I That scientist who declares that I "there never was a miracle, and there ! never will be," cruelly robs Tom Wat son of the only chinee he had lo be j elected.—Columbus Enquirer-Sun. If Bryan ean't come to Georgia In j person he might send his trick mule, j for a kich'ee match with the anti | BryanUeti.—Columbus ledger. It Is understood that Gov. Johnson [has assured Mr. Hryan that he will take care of Minnesota. If he does ! It would take trace chains to keep ; him from the nomination In 1*12.- i Brunswick News. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 Floor Stains Walnut. Mahogany. Cherry. Rosewood. Oak (light). A Oak (dark). ’ In Pints, Quarts Half-gallon and Gallon cans for Inside floors. Ask for John Lucas & Co.’s floor stains. L. ft. Gardelle’s Paint Dep’tment. 620 Eroad. For Sale # 1485 Harper Street, 6 rooms, 50x100. PRICE $1,200.00 Apply to Clarence E. Clark 842 BROAD STREET. T. G. BAILIE & COMPANY 832 BROAD ST. Large assortment of Wall Paper and Compe tent Force of Workmen to do Prompt Work. Big Stock of MATTING, CARPETS AND RUGS. REASONABLE PRICES ON EVERYTHING ALL SORTS OF BRUSHES AT ALEXANDER’S Hair Brushes, Tooth Brushes Clothes Brushes, Bath Brushes. Paint Brushes, and all ohter knds of brushes. When in need of anything in the line of BRUSHES or In the Drug Line genciully come to ALEXANDER DRUG CO. 70S BROAD ST. NiNE-TtNTHS Of Ol'R C ALAMI I IES MAY BE REDUCED TO “INCIDENTS” By a timely and effec tive use of the classified ads. And to "use the classified ads. not alone THE PUP TIONB OF OUR W AND QUESTS, bu; READING AND WERING OF THE OF OTHER PEO an occupation whl< opened “new road THRIFT AND Pi for millions of pie. HERALD WANTS. GET RESULTS. IS YCUR TELEPHONE WORKII.v Then why run out or send Tor small purchase: m the drug store? >ust 'phone Will T. Ca'dwell for •'0 the smallest purchase is* you will get 1 before you could send. We are giv ing special attention to 'phono or ders and we want you to wt ug vy,. will send for vour prescription*, E l and deliver them.