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PAGE FOUR
IHt AUGUSIA NEKM.iI
731 Broad Bt., August*. Ga.
Published C ver y Afternoon During the
Wee* end on Sunday Mor ->g by
THE HERALD PUBLISH INO CO
Entered at the Augusts Poetoffice as
Mali Matter of the Second data.
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min Agency V/. H, Kentnor. Mgr., 1108
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lilt AUGUSIA 111 KALI).
731 Broad St.. Augusta, Ga.
"If YOU WANT THE NEWS
YOU NEED THE HERALD”
August*. Gs., Thursday. Ocl. 8, 1908
Circulation of Iho Herald
for 8 Months. 1908
February 210,488
March 225,5/8
April .. .. 222,012
May 241,860
June 241,820
July .241.202
Austin' 210,/00
September ~ ~ .. .« ..232,49b
DAILY AVERAGE FOR 8 MONTHS.
7784.
DAILY DETAILED STATEMENT OF
CIRCULATION FOR THE MONTH
OF SEPTEMBER.
1 7,769 j 16 7,505
2 7,750 17 7,542
> 7,57? 18 ... 7,622
4 7,615 19 . 7,590
5 8,151 i 20 7,848
5 8,450 21 .7,5.1')
7 7,56 b 22 7.641 i
• 7,542 23 7,626 |
6 7,506 24 7,611
10 7,54? 25 8,132
11 7.61; 26 8.177 j
12 7.531 27 7,713 !
16 7,967 28 7,89'*
14 7,662 ?9 7.920
15 7,667 30 . . 7,853 j
Total for September . 232,495
Thar# ie no better way to reach the
home* of the prosperous people of this
city and section than through th*
Q'limni of The Herald Daily and;
-• d#y.
i*l tit* leaving Auguata can have The
d e#nt them by mall each day
<;»* 297, Circulation Department, II
>eave Augusta. *o that The HeraU
roach you each day.
Tile* d«*mo< ritit of (**orKiti put th«*
>, ups t*)l right on Ysnccty (’srtsr.
Thi* roault In (ioorftU yostordsy was
another straw to sljow (ho drift of
tilings.
tlov. Anß**l t*f Houth (’arutlim u ont*
Kovprnor who doth not abuao the par-j
diming power.
It dot*Kit t rmjtiir** to much of hip
thing to have more of It than “Csrter
hud votes."
Th** AmotVan flat*! had n windy n* j
CSption *1 Manila, which jterhapa wan
vary opportune sinet* tU«* cholera lh
raging there
That war cloud in the lialkans U
liaiiiß agsln Hid that (foean t nicuu |
that there ia certain to he war, an
we have long tdnee learned by ex
p+rtsaoe
Ktom present appearances It look*
aa If the war on Turkey in Europe
and on turkey in thin country may |
At ait about the asms time next month.
Juat before Thanksgiving I»«>
And now the rad mad* in Oem
gl* asy they arc going to rala**
freight rate*," aa> * th** Anderam
Mail Morse than that, they n- duiu
done It, more a the pity.
Hldney Tapp may have d< laved
holding hla new party convention *o
lata ttecause he hellevea *hat 'h*‘ leaf
shall 00016 that Thi-y onoortlh dt>]
—oui ol th© llt I It' end or th.> horn
Governor IliKkrll i srmnir .r ittts
Ih- h little i*r>' HHii'llinM. hill In
laiuU on Teddi »iihmlit riiottgl ov
ary Urn© hn uultrabera hu onut
«i it or
Tht* Panvar Now* I* iw> far leading
■II other papers in th© amount ..r
mono) It h«* oallaotrd lor ho datm>
orallr campaign fund 1> *i would
■arm to tndlral# that thoro aro denm
rrata In th© far West
• .*© Atlanta tPrgtan In oallliu
ox or thr Hat of lady memp. r* of tho
fourth ©Mat© In Georgia. overlooked
tho uright p*‘r**i»pb©r of iho ttrum
wtrb Journal A sure alien that tho*,.
two papers don't axchang*
Mura avtdenr© that th.ro I. lull,
dlffeiXllO© brlvion tho two old
.url.o* Tho democrats in Now
J. r»»> arr running Mi t.rubh toi
congress against Mr flardmr, th •
n. miller of tho republican.
A naphow of John D Hnckcfeltrr.
arrested in Now York for oirot dnu
tho a pood limit. wa» Kw-kod up tn
Jail until hla friend* could hunt up
a bond.men K< II day a aro *un*l'
Oomlug tor Standard Oil
Mod In law Nicholas ha* boon pci
ampterth ahut np for telling It nui
In fmhllo that tho plan ia to lot
Sooaavep. follow again aftor two
tortn* of Taft Nick ahonld know
hotter than *•<• . ■ .
4aat«i.* that ar* hat. hod Ui lh* famtl}
TRUTH IS 8T HANGER THAN
FICTION
In work- of notion, wherein tho au
rhor la rtrlvlnic after Iho aenaallonal
roin Ih .Ivon Horixitlrnoa to th' wild
out IlmhiH of tho Imtflnation, and In
ddont* an- narraiod with elaborate
cirpumstantlal doialla which, while
apparently f,oH*ll,le are *o far eon
• irary to roaaon that to proHent ihom
l ~h farts aooma to he the pluperfect
Mato- of rldleiilouauoMH. And yet It
sometime* happen* that In real life
aomcthlng happen* which HiirpaaaeK
fancy In lla extreme opposltenea* to
the common order, and It lihh lone
l.een observed that truth aometlnv t
Is *lisinger than fiction.
If home writer of fiction ahould
tell a etory of penal Institution* be
ing emptied, sjid the murderers,
raptsl* and other desperate crimi
nals they contained being turned
loose on the community In order to
make room for other and perhaps
less desperate criminals, such writer
would as once he given rank with
Jiil< k Verne, Daniel Lottos? and ths
sillmr grs at masters of Motion. No
author has up to the present time
dared to tak'- such a flight into the
i Mghs’st sirs'ich s,f tl.s* imagination.
But truth has r.-ashesi ibis height
: What ths rnsisi fen * fancy of the
j romancs r wait unable to conceive In
tlilH direction has baen touched by
Goorgla officials.
A report has been madsi to Iho
governor by a hoard of two. acting
under Hsjfjis' »ort of authority, that
linriis'dlats- pardon* he granted to
fifty four convicts In cur stntsi penal
Institutions. The bsinefidarle* of
Uilm rs's'ismim-ndesl clemency arsi
criminal* of ths- most desperate
class. Such n wholesale pardoning
of rankest s rlmlnals would itself be
a most singular performance, but
It Is made stranger still by the man
mr of Ills- selection that was made
In choosing ihi'se fifty-four out of a
lot of several thousands In choos
ing lhe subjects for the proposed
executive clemency not those wore
selected whose crime* had been the
least atrocious. The selection seems
lo have bean wholly made of such
convicts us were old, decrepit or In
other wavs Incapacitated from hard
manna! work In other words, the
recommendation Is made that the
governor pardon a half hundred of
•he worst criminals In the slate for
the one reason only that they uro
Incapacitated for regulur manual Ih
bor. A lurye propotlon, If not a
majority, of these convicts are mur
i 'lcier*, who escaped the hangman s
noose by some means and Instead
were given a life sentence, but whom
It Is now proposed to turn loose l>e
cau‘:e It doesn't pay the slate to keep
Ihajn In prison longer, or becatia*
the ijuartei„ they occupy are de
sired for other convicts
Tho very first on this list of con
vict h to lie pardoned Is Devi Cope
land, a negro serving a Ilf© sentence
for murder. Worn out with old
age and unable lo do hut little
work ■ Another Is Charles Fields, a
negro sentenced for life for murder.
Old age, unable to work," Is the
reason assign,'d for this proposed par
don, after only a few years scrclce
Another Is Isidore Minder, a while
inan who committed a brutal murder
lu Macon Iti IHu*, and who was con
ilcted only after the most stubborn
flgbt hud been made to skve hint,
from punishment. lie escaped the
gallows, got h iif., seutouce, and la
uow to be pardoned because 'he Is
In bad health and unable to work"
This h, u fair sample of the entire
j list.
Shall k man escape punishment
tor the imo t dastardly crime simply
because be Is not a strong man am!
unable to do hard work? If this is
to W the policy of the state, then
sickly or physically afflicted men
may commit any crime the devi’
[may prompt them lo commit, with
the a -nranee of a pardon awaiting
th, m If by some means the slate
should xi cure a conviction
It Ik a monstrous wrong upon the
| state that Is proposed to be comtni*-
ted In the contemplated pardon of
i infirm criminals
The abolishment of th© com let
lease system may make the dlsposi
| Hon of the convicts a perplexing
1 problem to the state. It may bo
ier> desirable to make mom on the
, prison farm for ts many as •>vsstbb*
of those who are now working In
; brickyards or lumber raui|>s Put
jit is wrong to Itb. rate a worse class
M criminals simply because they aro
unable to d<> hard work, only lo
• make room for other convict* who
i may have committed lest serum*
J ertntea buwwho ar* able bodied and
S can work
Physical disability Is no justtflia
tlon for crime, and should not b©
made an Incentive to crUu,'. a* tht
! pardoning of Infirm erfmtnsta a
I?© Such a thing ha* n©v©r b©fotv
1 been nrvipoard In any other country.
Jlt la a monstrous fare©, so strange
■*. •
.of a romancer to present it And I'
: has b -en acwialtv proposed to th©
I governor that he do this A case
|of truth stranger than Action
WOMEN AND THEIR WORK.
A North Carolina preacher has
thrust himself Into the ranks of th"
men In the public ©ye by the declara
tion that “There are too many l.izy
men lying arouijd letting heir wlvpg
j support them.” To this sago oofter-
I vatlon the Dalton Cltlx.-n rises to re
j mark that he "forgot to speak-of the
, largo number of women lying around
j and making their husbands support
j them."
The editor of the Citizen Is a
bachelor, and this expression of his
I views reveals why he has beet, un
rtucceagfuh notwithstanding the aid
of John Reese, the Georgia pres*
mat rlmonlal rriaich maker, tn per
suading a fair partner to trot In
double harness with him. Such ex
pressions as these led them to be
lieve that he would be a heavy task
master ' for a better half, and one
and all they excused themselves
when he made this proposal to them
As he himself with sadness admits,
referring to his long list of propo
sals, there was "Nothing doing.”
But aerloufily, it Is a mistake and
an injustice to them to talk ot lu/.y
women and hold them up, as a hor
rible example. Dazy women there
are, without a doubt, but they arc
far less numerous than lazy men.
Rather does th© opposite apply, that
women work too much. All observers
will agree to the statement that
among married people th->re are an
Incomparably larger number of lazy
husbands than wives. It is blit ne
cessary to notice who brings in the
coal and builds the fires to deter
mine that point.
Mon do not always justly appre
ciate the work that Is required about
the house. In a general way, “man's
work lasts from sun to sun hut wo
man's work Is never done.” House
hold duties are exacting, and largely
of a nature that when the work is
done It doesn’t show how trueh ef
fect was required to do it. To keep
ihe house in order, with Its thomtand
and one details (tint are embraced in
this task, and to have the care of
children and look after their wants
In sickness and In health Is » horcu
lean task, one so heavy that It would
[ appall a man did he fully realize its
magnitude, and one under which
! many a sweet faced, patient ahd
; overworked wife and mother Is
crushed to till a premature grave.
Del no man talk lightly or the work
i of womeu In Iholr houi>u. They
have tlu‘ hcavlcH end of the w, nt
! burden that the maintenance of a
i home Imposes. This ahonld be rec
• ognized, and Instead of making it be
- object ot Jest or treating It lightly,
iby very possible means this heavy
j task that is theirs should be lighten
j <d
There are few mutrtniontal parr
j nershlps. In any station of life. In
which the woman does not work
harder to keep up the Joint establish
ment than the man.
THE AUTOMOBILE AS FOOL
KILLER
Accident-Insurance figures are pub
lished to show that while automobile
i accident* have more than doubled tn
i the Isst four years they have bA
j conn- markedly less In proportion to
j the number of cars In u*„. This Is
pleasing information.
Of course automobile accidents
; continue to Increase, as every reader
|of newspapers knows. It Is rarely 'a
| paper may be read that does not tell
!of such nri accident. Still it la
| doubt leas true that the Increase In
| the automobile fatality list does' not
keen puce with the Increase In the
| uumber of those machines In use.
1 his Is natural Motor machinery
j has been so much improved that nto
j tor cars may now b» nut without In
j furring any risk They any the safest
j form of conveyance In use. There
is tar less danger In the automobile
i than there is In ihe horse ami bug
i gy. It comes about as near being
absolutely safe to use as any vehicle
von It! hop© to he made.
That there are so many accidents
j I* not due to the machines, but to
j tools who operate them Aud these
! fools are not * the Inexperienced
drivers, for so easily can automobiles
i-e operated that Inexperience, If
>' ’tided with ordinary prudence,
| could not bring disaster. The fool
j who plajs the principal role In a,-
j most ©wry automobile accident Is
I the speed fl "ttd the fellow' who Is not
| satisfied with a reasonable speed but
must try to go streaking by Ilk©
the wind,
Th© number of Innocent hy-atand
\ ers who become automobile victim*
J i* constantly decreasing, and when?
! one such la non killed or Injured It
Is almost always a* ihe victim of •»
1 speed fiend In lh© car. Nearly all
■ automobile victim* now arc riders,
j drivers or passenger* of cars that
j »c© wrecked General;? In a f.val
' hecident ihe driver Is among the
j killed and injured, and 1n this w»)
the automobile now ranka as the
I most effective fool kill©! ,?f fjic dm©
if only no others should be killed
, but th© speed fiend responsible for
j Ihe accident, these might he regard
led without regret, aud the autumn
i bile in Its rapacity of fool killer
| could be classed with our actively
j beceflclent agencies for making lb©
I world better.
T T R AUGUSTA HERALD
Still Harping on Haskell.
The plea of "No Funds” put forth
by th© republican campaign managers
Is meant to perform the double duty
of throwing dust. In the eyes of the
people and arousing the rascally cor
porations to a livelier sense of dan
ger.
There has been no time when the
republican treasury was not full to
the brim. But never before has there
been to great a need of money to
meet the exigencies of the situation
which menace these corruptionists on
©very hand. There is scarcely a state
which they have not to fight for.
'1 here are two debatable states at.
leaKt In New England, Connecticut
and Rhode Island Big money will be
required to carry them. Leave money
out and both would go democratic.
Even the state of Maine hangs in the
i balance. Michigan, lowa and Kansas
are doubtful. The democrats have a
i certainty in New York by not less
than fifty thousand majority. The
tarn© Is true of Indiana and Nebraska,!
whilst they hold the better of It In
Ohio and Illinois.
The republican managers know this
and their sole hope is a campaign
fund big enough to reach It. all the
way from Hell to Breakfast; green-
I backs to burn; money to throw to
the birds Quay is dead and Mark
I Hanna Is dead. But, 10, there stands
William Nelson Cromwell.
Aye, Cromwell; Vanilla Bean Crom-!
well; Edouard I.ampre Cromwell;
Panama Canal Cromwell; the greatest!
promoter of modern times; that Crom
well, who got up the Parisian scheme
to bunco the United States out. of
Forty Millions of Dollars for a worth- j
less lot of pots and pans; that Crom
well who financed the fly-by-night re
public of Panama buncoing us out of
ten millions of dollars more; that !
Cromwell who then worked us out of
ten additional millions of dollars for I
expenses—sixty millions of dollars In
nil—with a five hundred million dol
lar job still before us—William Nel- j
son Cromwell, the Robin Hood of tho
Ixibby at Washington, the Jesse
James of Wall Street—All Baba Crom-
The president, is doing the talking
(luring the campaign and there Is no
real reason why Judge Taft should go
about the country overexerting him
self, but since he Insists upon essay
ing to play a part in the president's
campaign for the perpetuation of his
jiolicles It Is unfortunate that he has
lost his voice - -as s result., possibly, of
attempting to talk loud enough to
make himself heard above the din
and crash at the White House. Sym
pathy should be extended to him. To
be out upon the stump industriously
boosting the policies of someone else
Is sufficiently haril luck to a gentle
man who aspires to the office that
should go to the best man In the
Union rather than to the greatest ad
mirer of the man whose greatest ad
mirer believes him to be the best
man. But to be voiceless in the wil
derness Is an additional cause of suf
fering.
Whispering at Fargo unsupported is
uphill work when the president, as
sisted by Loeb and the cabinet. Is lift
ing a stentorian voice at Washington,
keeping the wires red hot with siz
zling adjeetlves. There was never
much satisfaction in playing second
fiddle outside of an orchestra. And
It seems that the natives conspire to
e**> *♦*«*** + *»*«,
♦ «
♦ HERALD ECHOES. ♦
♦ ♦
Another Effect of the Panic.
Rev. James Morrison declares that
stealing is less frequent now than it
used to be. So it seems, says the!
Augusta Herald, that the panic also
had a depressing effect on the steal
ins business..—Jacksonville Tlmes
liulon.
Split the Diffeernce.
A (treat dispute is on between ex
inerts as to whether John Temple's
speech of acceptance was of the ex
ordium or peroration class. Put It
down as a judicious mixture of both,
suggests the Augusta Herald, to hide i
j t he absence of real gum —Athens Ban-1
tier,
Geornia a Battle Ground.
The Augusta Herald thinks that 1
Georgia Is becoming the general bat
tle ground of the campaign Rev
Aaron Watkins, vice presidential can
dldate of tho prohibitionists. Is also ■
now dispensing campaign thunder in !
Ithe state. —Way-cross Journal.
Keep Your Eye on Hobson.
Tho Augusta Herald notes that Cap
tain Hobson is very quiet these days; j
that he has not launched a war scare;
jin several weeks. Possibly he is pre- j
paring for the tight with Japan which
he has been predicting for some time!
p»«t. The captain is not the man to]
!he caught napping. Columbus!
; Ledger.
Collecting Campaign Fund* in Texa*.
In Texas It has been found neces
sary to appoint dentists as collectors
for the Bryan campaign fund, because,
explains the Vugusta Herald, It was
found to be like pulling eyeteeth to
separate those Texans from their coin
In such a cause.— Houston Post.
♦ ♦ ♦ ><>♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦o
• ♦
♦ PUNCHING JOE CANNON. •
♦ •
>*»**«eeee»*«*e
J Adam Bede, of Minnesota, has
been defeated for re-election to con
gress because he was too friendly
to Joe Gannon. The favor of the cxar
Is a good thin* tn Washington but
a bad thing at home. —Atlanta Con
stltutlon.
Cannon refuses to answer Mr. Bry
an a searching question "Where did
you get it*" and says he was only
"joking' (’note Joe should smoke
up Columbia State.
Speaker t annon's grand vlalers are
| filling in every direction, J. Adam
I Pncle Joe might retaliate and call
well—Patron Saint of the Lawless
Rich arid father-confessor to the
Forty Thieves.
Yet the president 1* still harping on
Haskell. Cromwell could give Haskeii
two points in seven and beat him out
of his shoes and stockings. Cromwe.l
could shake the smallest of his mon
ey-bags in Haskell's face and make
Haskell go way back and sit down.
Cromwell could play poker with Has
kell and never need to look beyond
the backs of the cards. Still the pres
ident harps on Haskell, who is out
and gone, "like Ranger's eye;” who,
demanding a hearing and denying all
accusations, resigned at once his post
In the democratic management; whose
voluntary withdrawal was concurrent
with the enforced withdrawal of Du
Pont, the Predatory Trust Magnate,
under Indictment, who headed the re
publican spell-binders; yet, with Du
Pont that was, and Cromwell that is,
the president continues to harp on
Haskell.
There is Bheldon; identified with
seventeen trust companies. Still
harping on Haßkell. There Is Aldrich,
Boss of the Senate, whose only daugh
ter is the wife of the only son of
Standard Oil Rockefeller. Still harp
ing on Haskell. There Is old Joe Can
non, Boss of the House, standing pat
and holding firm for the trust-breed
ing tariff. Still harping on Haskell.
There are the Three Musqultoers of
High Finance, the He Goats of Pro
tectionism, the self-righteous, self
glorlfying Beveridge, the steel-plated
Dalzell and the unctt*.us, iron-clad
Payne. All of these, led by Roose
velt, still harping on Haskell.
Nothing can avail them The Big
Stick even in the hands of a Crom
well cannot brain and blackmail
money enough out of the Steel Ring
and the Sugar Ring—out of all Pitts
burg, out of the whole of Wall street
—to dam the waters of the Niagara of
the people's wrath. If Mark Hanna
were alive he could not save the day
for Taft. If Matlhey Stanley Quay
were alive neither could he. —Louis-
ville Courier-Journal.
Mr. Taft’s Lost Voice.
| make the candidate's task tougher
! than It might otherwise be. At Fargo
I he was met by a torchlight proces
sion and fourteen brass bands, the
Illumination and volume of sound rep
resenting perfectly the spirit of “my
policies,'' but throwing a whispering
speaker into the background. As if
to further emphasize the fact that \lte
gathering wait a Roosevelt demonstra
tion and not a Taft rally cowpunchers
rode yelling through the streets, bears
were chained to tho platforcrt and ran*
i beat* meat was about to be served at
(dinner when someone whose sense of
the fitness of things vas highly de
veloped decided I hat lae spectacle of
Judge Taft eating the Teddy Bear
1 would be inept, dramatically consid
ered.
Amid these wild and ruddy Roose
veltian scenes Judge Taft breathed
almost inaudiblv his promise of the
revision of the tariff—the Pavne-Aid
rlch-Cannon-Dalzell revision. In full
I voice the speaker would not have
fitted into the picture. Voiceless, his
plight Is enough to wring tears from
the eyes of all whose hearts are not
! adamant. Let us hope that Provi
dence and troches will restore his
vocal chords to the accustomed use-
I fulness.—Louisville Courier-Journal.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦s
♦ i
♦ SANCTUM COMMENTARIES. »
♦ *
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#
Ohio and Oklahoma.
"Oklahoma is a young \state and
will doubtless outgrow Governor
Haskell,” says Tho Toledo Blade.
Oklahoma, at least, has the excuse
of the very young. Ohio can plead
no such extenuation in the cash of
Senator Foraker.—Atlanta Georgian.
Georgia and Kansas Leases
Georgia has. been talking as much
about her convict lease as if it had
been Mary Ellen, once the pride ot
Kansas and the noise of the United
States.—Jacksonville Times-Union.
An Experienced Villain.
Brandenburg, who sold the fak<
Cleveland letter to the New York
Times, is the same chap charged
with attempted bribery by Gompers
Strong collateral proof that the Gon.
pers' version is true.—Norfolk V:;
gdoi&n-PUot.
The South's Presidential Timber.
"The south produces the strongesi
structural timber" says the Fitz
gerald Enterprise. Yes, and th
strongest political timber, too, but
the democratic party hasn't got sense
enough to use it as it should.—Am
ericus Times Recorder.
Those Nightrider Warnings
It is safe to bet that nine out of
ten of the so-called night rider warn
ings are the work of some mischiev
ous boys who see in the scheme a
good wav to scare people.—Green
wood Index.
Negro Dolls for Negro Girls.
The colored folks are planning to
establish a factory for the manufac
ture of colored dolls. Ought to be
t imying scheme as ail the iitti.
white girls would want a colored
nurse for their dolls.—Elbert on
StSar
Their Geographical Knowledge Scant
Some days age the Savannah Press
‘ made ftm of a Tennessee paper for
1 saying that Augusta was inundated
by the Oconee river Now the Co
lumbia State says the Oconee rive
-1 Is In South Carolina. Oh. heavens!
—Savannah Press
■ ;lm of the young progressives.—Blr
mtngusm Age Herald
And now Uncle Joe Cannon says
, his statement regarding Mr. Bryan »
| 'possible wealth was Intended as hu
tnor. But the chances are Mr Can
non has long since ceased to see any
thing funny about tu -Atlanta Const!
. tut lorn
Chilly Days
Mean Changes
in Underwear
We’ve every kind of Underwear
comfort for man. Right now we
are selling a
Gauze Cashmere
Underwear, $1 .25.
Very light weight but with Just
sufficient wool to keep off chills.
DEIMEL LINEN MESH, TOO.
Rut ours is the genuine kind. And
we are sole agents for Jaeger wool
for man, women and children.
DORR
Tailoring, Furnishings
for Men of Taste
T. 0. 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
Meet me at the College Inn, under
the Albany, New York’s Leading
Rathskeller, a place to eat,
and be merry. Music.
ROBERT F*. MURPHY,
Proprietor
HOTEL ALBANY
41« t St. and Broadway
NEW YORK
Remodel!'! 4 J-wiA Fur
nished. New Thrcughou.
~ - *i.,.11 *® 11
ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF.
In the heart of the City.
500 Rooms 300 Bath ’Rooms
European Plan. Cuisine Unexcelled
Gentlemens’ Case, Ladles' Restau
rant and Moorish Rooms
Popular Prices.
Plenty of life—but Home-like.
SI.OO per day and up.
SEND FOR BOOKLET.
READ HERALD WANTS
ANNOUNCEMENT!
On account of the very targe
increase In the volume of our
business we found It necessary
to Increase our fore* of cutters
we have been extremely fortu
nate in securing the serv
ices of Mr. A. J. Peters, th©
mention of his name being a
sufficient guarantee that our
former high standard of excel
lenee In the cutting departmeiv
wtli be maintained We have
also increased the capacity of
cur wcrk'ootr.s and with the
largest stock of Foreign Wool
ens in the entire South we are
equipped to demonstrate to you
that "the proof of the pudding
is In th© eating thereof and
not tn the ©mission of hot air
JNO. B. JONES.
Importer and Tailor.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8.
Black LusLre
FOR HEARTHS
Beautiful and Glossy
25c Pint*.
Waxolac
Liquid Wdx
For Polishing Floors
and Furniture
60c Quart,.
L. A. Gardelle’s
Paint Dep’tment.
620 tread.
For Sale
1486 Harper Street, 6
rooms, 50x100.
PRICE $1,200.00
Apply to
Clarence E. Clark
842 BROAD STREET.
Kill Your Bugs
and Mosquitoes
Buy a package of INCENSO
and a burner, all for 25
centa, and get rid of the
pests. The cold weather
has not killed them in the
house ypt.
But This Will.
ALEXANDER
DRUG CO.
703 BROAD ST.
HOTEL NAVARRE
Thirty-Eighth 3tr#«t and tev#nth Av.
NEW YORK.
Exceptionally Cool—Open on All Sides.
200 FEET WEST OF BROADWAY
Accessible, Quiet. Eitgant for 3uai
n#»s M#n, Families and Tourists.
In the Heart of the Theater and
Shopping District. Cars pass
the door for all Railway
Stations.
300 ROOMS 200 BATHS. ROOMS
$1.50. WITH BATH. $2.00
SUITES. 2 ROOMS AND BATH.S4 00
PARLOR. BEDROOM and BAI'H
$5.00 to $7.00.
Send for Illustrated Booklet.
Celebrated Dutch Qrill-slso-Restau
rant on Roof Garden.
Telephone European
646 i -33 th. Plan.
Richard H Stearns Charles W. ©>abb
DISINFECTANTS
NOW IS IHE TIME TO USE THEM
SIN SANITARY FLUID.
The ideal disinfectant. True deed
;rixer and germicide; a powerful anti
eptic and purifier for the sanitary
purification of dwellings, schools, hos
pitals, water clossts, sinks, slaughter
houses, stables, etc.
One pint 2fo
One quart 33c
One gallon . .JI.OO
Klve gallons, per gal .. _...75c
Special prices made cn ifSrrels
N. L. WILLET SEED
COMPANY
309 JACKSON ST. ♦*