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PAGE SIX
THt AUGUSTA HERALD
Published Evpry Afternoon During the
Week and on Sunday Morning by
THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
Entered at the Augusta Pon toss ice as
Mall Matter of the Second Class.
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Business Office, Telephone 29 1
City Editor f yj
Society Editor
FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES The
Vreeland-Beniarnln Agency, --•» Fifth
Ave.. New York City, 1108 Boyce Build
Ing, Chicago.
Address all businesr communications to
THt AUbUSIA hiKAID
731 Brnnrt H(r<-ot. Augusta Ua.
“IF YOU WANT THE NEWS
YOU NEED THE HERALD."
Augusta, Ga., Thursday, Feb. 18, 1909
No comnimiW ai ion will jfl published
In The Herald unison toe name ot the
yrtler Is elsoed to the article.
The Herald t advertising
msdium of the City of Ai.gutta and of
the County of Richmond for all legal
notices nnd advertising.
Thsre Is no better way to reach the
homes of the prosperous people of this
city and section than through the col
umns of The Herald, Itally and Sunday.
Telephone the Circulation Department,
Phone 297, when leaving Augusta, and
urrsnge to hove The Herald sent to you
by mall each day.
The Augusta It are Id has a larger city
circulation than any other paper, and ,i
larger total circulation than any other
Augusta paper. This has been proven
by the Audit. Co., of New York,
Th« beatify squad will be It. at the
Inaugural lon. Wonder If they aro all
bachelors?
The lime will soon be hero when
the sporting editor will bn lhe most
Important man In town lo the fans.
Wlckt rsham, Wright and Wilson ,
are said lo be slated for cabinet post
tlons. That will be alliterative, If
true.
Perhaps the conclusion that Adam
wag a democral was drawn from the
fact that he never was elected to an j
office.
Another thing, we need those two
new stales to get names for more
battleships. The supply ol names Is
about to run out
Perhaps the criminal classes csn
smell a rat In the announcement that ;
a woman detective has been added I
to Atlanta's police force
Macon Is lo have a million dollar
soap factory. Perhaps politics will
be cleaner In that city after their
factory gets to operating.
Man's wants are many and ts told
Would number many score,
And wore each one a mint of gold
He still would want some more.
Savannah expects to pul up an aero
plane factory Strange tha* Atlanta,
where hot air is alweys so plentiful,
hadn't been the place for such a sac-j
tory.
nti
If Castro should find lime hang
heavv on his hands In Europe, he
might run over to Oonetantlnoplo to
show the Sultan how to. nutnngn a
revolutionary party.
While Australia Is pulling a heavy
tax on Japanese to keep them out of
that country, ltrsr.il is offering a
nlpr bounty to got them to enter.
VIUMt a queer world this Is,
The report ha»ltig bpen spread that
a bug In Oeorgla la eating up all the
legislative records, the people of
other statea are talking about Import
these bugs to turn loose tft their
capitols
Having got the most ignorant Jury
that could be fixing they are now pre
senting file evidence In the Cooper
rasa .last as though they had a Jury
of ordinary Intelligence. Runny things
lawyers de sometimes,
When Mr. Taft asserted In his be
lief that the canal would be finished
daring tils administration It led some
aatgte observer* nt onto to the con
elusion that he l* utroady figuring on
a third term tor himself.
Some evil uainSed person threw a
bstrk the odw* day at Paragrapher
John Burtle, qf the Macon News. But
John shcmldu't complain, since he
throws more or letgt brickbats every
day, and th*v hit the mark, too
One good thiqp. Raster will not
coins »« curty this year That will
at least keep off those milltnary hill
eoßeeicjrs a "’ijU# longer Always
oouiothlng can n« found to ho thank
fulfor If ouq only looks lar enough
—■ *■ in
JsaCttfta Caanon took the floor
and voted with the prohibitionists on
that harmless llttlo prohibition hill
before congress Which shows that
Joe-llnele expects to ho » candidate
for redaction at least one more time.
In South Carolina a moonshine ntlll
has boon found In a araveyard, ami
now they have found a coffin In
Georgia filled with bottles. That
corpse probably was intended to Vie
Interred in the aforesaid South Caro
lina graveyard.
And whv shouldn’t Mr. Harrlman
operate a big saloon. If tt came Into
his possession through no fault of his
own? He has many side lines be
sides his principal business of gob
hHntt up railroad, and why net a
saloon also*
It may be true that Ere spoke only
flftf'-three words in the Carden of
Kdeo. as somebody claims to have
discovered, but there can be no doubt
thatVhe gave Adam a lengthy tongue
lashing after they had been turned
out of the Garden.
THE SOUTH’S ASSET IN WATER POWER.
“Power’’ has become the most irroprtant thing In modern life. Since
the electrical age set In. and light and heat as well as motion are sup
plied by that agency, power to generate electricity has become a neces
sity. Without electricity a modern city could not long exist. If for any
reason i ectrieity could not Ire supplied to a city, that city would soon
become a deserted village. Human activity cannot now be applied to
advantage where electricity Is absent, and as yet we are merely in the
Infant stage of electrical development. More and more will electricity
he used, and become necessary, not only In the city, but also in the coun
try, on the farm as well as in the great factory.
Electricity Ik developed by power. For this coal is now principally
employed. But the coal supply ts being used up. It Is estimated that
our coal resources aggregate 582 billion tons. This seems an inexhaus
tible supply, but at the present rate of consumption it will all be used
up in 05 years. Should this happen and there were no other means of
generating power, the civilization of the world would be driven back to
Its pre-electric stage.
But coal Is not a necessity for generating power. It is at nest hut
a crude substitute far a much superior agent. That agent Is water power
This is superior, not only because It Is inexhaustible so long as the early
and the later rains shall fall upon the earth, but because it is cheeper
It doesn’t require to be transported, but can be utilized on the spot. '1 he
first cost of harnessing a water power having been incurred, thereafter
It supplies power in perpetuity, almost without cost.
It follows then that the future centers of Industrial activity will be
In those sections where water power is most abundant.
It is estimated In the South there are 5,000.000 horsepower of water
power available. This estimate :s far short of the mark, for water
powers exist all along its hundreds of streams, hn water power the
South Is the richest country In the world. No other country Is as rich
In streams and In annual rain fall, which In the South exceeds the rest
of the country, except a small area on the Pacific coaat, by 20 to 100
per cent. Thiß points to the South as the great Industrial centre of this
continent, under the development of electricity.
Through the South there is st etched diagonally lat is called the
fall line. Richmond. Fayetteville, Columbia, Augusta. Macon and Colum
bus are situated on this line, which separates the lowlands from the hill
country. This range of "sandhills" marks the boundary of open naviga
tion, where rivers break through them on their course from the mountains
to the sea, arid in their fall at these points constitute the greatest reser
voirs of nature's power supply.
Then this region, adjacent to this line of sandhills, the most richly
endowed by nature In water power, is Inevitably bound to beoome the
greatest manufacturing centre of the country, as progress or at last nec
essity shall lend to the substitution of water for coal in the generation
of power And the man who makes Investments with an eye to their
future can find no safer place to make them than right here In Augus
ta. where one of the largest rivers on the Atlantic seaboard breaks
through the sandhills, and In Its descent can supply a vaßt amount of
horse power.
STRAINING AT A CONSTITUTIONAL GNAT.
The democrats in the lower house of congress did not cover them
selves with glory In the fight they made against the passage of the
bill to reduce the salary of the secretary of state to Its present figure.
Home time ago a law wan passed increasing the salaries of all the
cabinet officers, and later, when Mr. Taft announced that he would
choose Senator Knox, of Peennsylvanla, for secretary of state, some
body discovered that under the constitution Mr. Knox would be ineligible
to hold lhat office, because it provides that "No senator or representa
tive shall, during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any
civil office under the authority of the United States which shall have
been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased dur
ing such time.” The senatorial term of Mr. Knox will not. expire until
1911, and therefore under this provision of the constitution he was in
eligible to be secretary of state, whose salary hud been raised by the
senate of which Mr Knox was a member.
As it appears that Mr. Taft very much desires Mr. Knox in his cabi
net, and as Mr. Knox was willing to serve in this capacity for the sal
ary paid heretofore, a hill was Introduced in the senate to reduce the
secretary's salary to its previous figure, and promptly passed. In the
house objection was raised to it by Mr. John Sharp Williams and Mr.
Champ Clark, the democratic leaders, because they claimed that to pass
it would be an evasion of the constitution.
They were certainly right. Technically it was an evasion of the
constitution. The salary of (he secretary had been raised, and Mr. Knox,
elected lo membership until 1911 in the senate which passed the law
raising this salary, was ineligible. The passage of a iater law again
reducing this salary watild not rub out the fact that It had been
rulsed.
But when the salary had been reduced it was no violation of the
spirit of the law for Mr. Knox to accept the appointment. The purpose
of that law clearly was to prevent members of congress from creating
offices or raising salaries of offices they expected or hoped lo ail. The
old salary being restored this oould not apply to Mr. Knox. The spirit
of this law, If not Its letter, was vlolatod when congressmen voted to in
crease I heir own salaries, but. not In this Knox case as it stood wRh
the salary reduced to Its previous figure.
Then why should the democrats oppose this law? It look* like capti
ous opposition, the straining at a gnat; and the world has cause for
being suspicions of those who strain at gnats, for experionoo has proven
that too often they swallow camels with the greatest ease.
The bill was passed despite this opposition, as It should have been,
and the attempt to defeat it was 111-considered isud unfortunate.
A DISTINCTIVE TITLE FOR BACHELORS.
The demand for Womans Rights continues to grow apace. It has
become nearly world-wide. In Ungland the suffragettes are demand
ing the ballot. In Turkey the woman's rtghters demand th« right to
exhibit their faces lu public. In our country they are demanding
everything that is In sight. And they are gaining these rights. From
victory to victory they go, no sooner having gained one point than
they begin on another. And such advances have they made that their
leaders Actually have to lie awake at nights trying to study up other
rights til claim.
Some of these leaders in Illinois have now found another. Women
do not all bear the same title As aeon us they reach fbe stage of
young womanhood and politeness requires that a handle be affixed to
their names, then this Is applied Every young woman Is Miss. This
title they carry until they are married If a woman remains unmar
ried she remains a Miss all her life, and so it may aad does happen
th»l an octogenarian lady may be Miss Smith, while a sweet sixteen
may be Mrs. Smith.
This gives the advantage or disadvantage—as the case may be—
that, knowing a woman's correct title it may always be known wheth
er she be single or married It Is an advantage’ to a mau to know
this who has bis weather eye open to become the son-in-law of some
old money bags, and It is a disadvantage to a married woman who de
sires to get up merely a flirtation with such a man.
In this mailer man has the advantage He is Mr. from (he time
he casts oft knee breeches and with It the tille of Master. His cor
rect title may be known, hut tt doesn't Indicate whether he Is siugle
or married The woman s rlghter* now demand that this inequality be
tween ihe sexes be wiped out, and that some distinctive title be ap
plied to married men as is Ihe case with married women. And they
have Induced Senator Ettelson to introduce a bill to this effect in the
Uinois legislature.
No doubt such a law will be passed; If net at once, then later. The
women's fighters never let up. until they got what they contend for.
Recognising that sooner or later this must come to pass, tt is well to
be prepared to act when that time shall conic. In what way shall the
distinction be made?
Following the precedent a man would of course remain Mr. as
long as he remained unmarried. In this way Mr. could be equivalent
u> "bachelor ' Hut what title shtmld be given the married men?
This is a knotty problem, which inly an advanced suffragette will ever
be able to solve \n> other title now in use. such as Col. or Prof,
would not answer, since unmarried men may bear them. The only
wav would seem to he ihe coining of a new title, as in England Mr. John
Smith becomes Sir John Smith to denote that he ts the son of a lord
or something.
l’vrhaps Henpecked would be an appropriate title—certainly when
that day shall come when woman's rights have advanced so tar that
ihev require the fact that a man la married to be indicated by his
name.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
AUSTRALIA A WHITE MAN’S COUNTRY
That Little Country Courageously Excludes
Mongolians By Means of a Heavy Tax
No Asiatic immigrant can set foot
j in Australia without paying a prohi-
I bitive tax of thousands of dollars.
! The self-reliant Australians of Brit
! ish descent have settled this matter
for themselves, without asking the
permission of their mother country
i England, the ally of Japan), and not
caring what the Mikado's people
i would say or do. The possible con
sequences of their courageous action
! trouble them much less than the fear
of having their country overrun by
' human swarms from China and Ja
pan, and of having their white work
ing classes degraded and driven to
the wall by such deadly competition
to say nothing of the endless future
strife with a foreign and unasslmil
able race.
And yet the Australians number
les3 than four millions, they have a
vast continent to devlop, and are
greatly in need of immigration. They
have done what they thought best—
and what no doubt Is best —for their
country, regardless of tftfc needs of
MR. ROOSEVELT’S CAREER
< "
Roosevelt is one of the most demo
cratic of presidents, not only in his
policies, but in his personal relation
to the American people. His popu
larity has not waned, either at
Washington or throughout the coun
try. 1 was not prepared, having read
many newspaper stories about the
president’s popularity among Wash
ington officials, for what I actually
found. I found that even among the
men that fight him hardest, for po
litical advantage, many entertain for
him the most profound respect per
sonally. They know, better than we
at a distance can know, that back of
all the misrepresentations made for
politieal effect, the president stands
firm as a rock for the square deal;
that neither he nor any of his friends
or kinsmen has ever made a dollar
by reason of his public service; that
he will leave the office poorer in
purse than when he entered it, and
that he has never for a day ceased
trying, by every means withih his
power, to live up to the noblest pos
sibilities of his place.
The men that have fought Roose
velt hardest have been the chief ben
eficiaries of his policies. I mean the
controllers of the railroad systems
and the huge Industrial trusts. It
has been his desire and his labor to
prevent the popular wrath against
these men from carrying the nation
farther than it is really prepared to
go at this time, with jsutice to cap
ital and safety to labor. He has ex
erted his great powers to steady ths
nation through an era of tremendous
change. In my opinion he has per
formed a greater, more genuinely
statesmanlike public service to the
American people than any other man
since Abraham Lincoln, the soil-horn
son of Kentucky and the foster son
of Illinois, wiped out human slavery
upon American soil. This service is
the checking of the conspicuous waste
of national resources and the reserva
tion from spoliation for private gain
of several scores of thousands of
miles of headwaters forests. If he
had done nothing else than this one
tnlng. he would have taken deserved
rank with the foremost statesmen of
America. — Frank Butnam in Houston
Chronicle.
THE TROLLEY LINE.
For many reasons there has been
no activity in the matter of the Au
gusta and Edgefield Electric Railway
Company; but from now on active
measures will be taken to commence
the survey of the line. In a matter
of this kind progress is naturally slow.
Add to that the tightness of money
in the business world and It will not
be hard to understand the situation.
The corporators ask for indulgence.
They will do tbeir duty and build the
road. The building of the proposed
line is a matter of time.
It is going to be built.
—Edgefield News.
AUGUSTA AND AUGUSTANS «
THE BEST CITY
Augusta. Oa.. is a good city, a grow
ing city, and a city with a good busi
ness. She is conservative and neve. -
blows hard. Had some other cities
that we might name had Taft, Ham
man, Rockefeller and other notables
as their guests, the associated press
would have grown rich in advertising
them There are good etttaens in
Augusta, many of them. We Uke
Augusta and we like Its people. They
know how to treat a man when he Is
within the gates of the city and that
goes a long way.—EdgefUeld News.
HER FINE CLIMATE
Mr Taft has advertised Augusta
all right; and her fine climate will
attract many tourists noxt season. —
Darien Gazette.
AUGUSTA'S FAMOUS BARBECUES
Those Augustans are such queer
people. They have been having bar
becues this winter. A barbecue is
never fit to eat unless it is cooked in
the spring or summer, with roastin’
ears and young potatoes in the hash.
—Anderson Mall
TO WIN THE PENNANT
THIS YEAR.
Look for trouble In the SnllW
League Augusta's new manager s
named C’actro.—Anderson Mall.
HON. CHAS. ESTES.
Hon. Chas. Estes of Augusta, who
i last week attended the Taft banquet
In South Carolina, has just celebrated
his ninetieth birthday He compared
remlntncences with Mr. Rockefeller,
and found that his memory was bet
ter than the Standard Oil Company.
But then Mr. Rockefellers memory
always was uncertain, and Mr. Es!p«
-never targets anything. -Savannah
I Press.
their .large planters, indifferent as to
the wishes of the mother country, and
not stopping to inquire whether Ja
pan may regard their action as a
‘wanton insult” or not.
The calm and resolute course of
this comparative handful of white
men in decreeing an “Australia for
tne Australians" is in startling con
trast with the hysterical dread at
Washington lest Japan become mor
tally offended and wipe 80,000,000
of Americans from the face of the
earth if California should insist on
shutting adult Japanese immigrants
out of her primary schools. It is
true that Australia has made no
treaty guaranteeing resident Asiatics
all the rights of resident Europeans,
but her statesmen were too wise to
do that in the first place and too
thoughtful of the welfare of their
own people. California’s rights un
der the Constitution would not be de
nied her if there were more of the
Australian spirit at Washington.—
Macon Telegraph.
NEGROES, NORTH AND SOUTH
The hotels at Atlantic City are sub
stituting white girl waiters for the
negro men formerly employed in that
capacity. A dispatch which tells of
the arrival of "the first carfoad of
pretty waitresses" says: ‘‘This move
may change the political control of
the resort, by driving away thousands
of negro voters, who have been the
principal dependence of the powerful
Republican machine.”
These girls took the places of two
hundred negroes employed as waiters
in the big Chalfonte hotel. The ne
groes were peremptorily discharged,
and will be forced to seek employ
ment elsewhere. The young women
are of the better olass, being mostly
students of domestic economy from
the colleges.
The action of the managers of the
Chalfonte will likely be followed by
others hotels at Atlantic City, and t.he
movement, it is believed, is a plan lo
wipe out the entire negro population
of the place. The dispatch continues:
At present the negro waiters make
up a large majority of the 2,000 ne
gro votes, which hold the balance of
local power In politics. At least 6,000
negroes, including families of married
men. are affected by the change pro
posed. The heads of the Waiters’
Protective League are planning to
stop the Invasion of white waitressei
If possible. Any such effort will have
the strong support of ward leaders
here, who look with disfavor at the
discharge of the batalions of their
negro voters.
These facts go to show that what
has been frequently shown in other
ways befoire, that the negio has no
friend at the North, except those who
can use him politically for their own
benefit. In Southern hotels negro
waiters are preferred, and negro la
bor is in demand hero in any piace
where negroes aro qualified and coin
patent.
The difference between the South
and North, as illustrated in Atlantic
City incident, is that hero the negro
is given work, but shut out of poli
tics; while in the North the reverse
Is true. Nowhere in the North is a
negro population deemed desirable.
Nashville Tennessean.
HERALD ECHOES
The Augusta Herald says: “It is
certainly a mistake, as somebody as
serts, that bald heads are an unne
cessary evil. What would the front
seat at a ballet performance be with
out baldhaads?” Of course it is a
mistake to say that bald heads; are an
unnecessary evil. What would bald
headed men do without them?—Jack
sonville Tlmes-Union.
The Darien Gaaette thinks that
Governor-elect Brown gets closer to
the people. And that's no joke, de
clares The Augusta Herald, when en
thusiastic school teaches In South
Georgia have taken to kissing him.—
Savannah Press.
A Texas paper comes out with a
ifull-page of skating costumes, and
The Augusta Herald thinks that it is
time George Bailey wore getting back
or all the wonderful yarns he has
been spinning about the saintly sum
mery winter weather around Houston
will be treated as nature fakes.—
Houston Post.
Stolen kisses are valued at $lO
each in Chicago. They are doubt
less cheap at that, but The Augusta
Herald suggests that if they could
only command the cash in every in
stance an appreciable wave of pros
verity wpuld soon be apparent.—
Rome Tribune-Herald.
Atlanta is complaining about the
switching nuisance in the heart of the
city. That is. adult Atlanta—The
Augusta Herald opines that the At
lanta small bay Is more concerned
about the switching nuisance about
the region of the seat of his knicker
bockers. —Macon News.
"Red nosed angels in Nashville,
says The Augusta Herald.'' Do the
women up there drink too?—Bruns
wick Journal.
Champ Clark says that the average
price of a woman's hat Is $5.00.
Which leads The Augusta Herald to
ask Have the democrats in the house
made a mistake in choosing for their
floor leader a man so ill informed? —
Fairburn News.
AUGUSTA'S MUNICIPAL
ELECTION.
The Augusta papers are again carry
ing alderman's announcements. They
seem to have an election over there
about as often as a short term net*
ifalls due.—Macon News.
Really
Fine
T ailoring
In a community like this there’s
usually one house that caters to
the best tastes—whose produc
tions are modeled in the best style
possible.
There’s always a demand among
men of highly educated tastes for
apparel that is the best obtainable.
That is the why of the continued
success of Dorr Tailoring—a suc
cess that had its infancy nearly
half a century ago.
Goods are now here
for Spring Suits
DORR
Tailoring, Furnishings
For Men of Taste
Engines
AND BOILERS
•aw. Lstta sntJ MUnci. MUR. InjeMor*,
sad FHttas*. Wood »sw., Split*™,
•I“fw. Pallors. Bolting. Qotoliao Bnflaoa
BABOSJTOOK LOMBARD,
had* Mtffo! iri Worlu mi kppl, &U*
AVGUSTA, QA.
FORTUNES
are made on land near cities, with
fifty thousand or more inhabitants.
Augusta is rapidly growing West
ward. Land for sale by the acre;
Summerville, High Point, near
Country club, Monte Sano, David
son, Fairmont, Wheles6.
Apply to
Clarence E.Clark
REAL ESTATE.
842 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, GA.
MR. E. H. HARRIMAN.
The Macon Telegraph, having walk
ed right up to Mr. Harrlman and
looked him over carefully, anounces
that he is possessed of neither hoofs
nor horns. The Telegraph may have
noticed also that his smile is exceed
ingly childlike and bland.—Washing
ton Herald.
Fire, Fire, Fire!
You are safe from fire, wind and weather when you buy
our roofings. Tin, Corrugated Iron, Rubber and Composi
tion Roofings. Our price is the most interesting part of it
Augusta builders Supply Co.,
643 Broad Street. Telephone 321.
“Prosperity of 1906 is About To Return.”
j
Build Now or Pay More
Which Will You Do?
INDUSTRIAL LUMBER COMPANY
Home Builders. Phone 282
To The Building Trade!
We are pleased to advise that the capacity of our Keystone
Lime Kilns has been increased to now the largest in the south, en
abling us to offer the famous
"KEYSTONE” WHITE LIME
in this territory for prompt shipment.
"KEYSTONE” is the highest; priced, but the strongest, whitest
and best Lime for Brick Work and Plastering. It is packed In the
best cooperage.
We can sell you good TENNESSEE LIME at lower prices.
Let us quote you Delivered Your Town, car lots or less.
Carolina Portland Cement Co.
SOLE DISTRIBUTORS. CHARLESTON, S. C.
ERNEST H. MOBLEY
:: GENERAL CONTRACTOR ::
Estimates Cheerfully Furnished on all Classes of Buildings.
PHONE 2202. 109 MONTGOMERY BLDG.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19.
Specialties
In Garden Seeds
LIVINGSTON’S
Special grown Tomato Seeds in
original quarter pound packages,
all varieties, including the New
Stone.
WOOD'S *
Special grown Canteloupe Seed.
Early Hanover, Perfection, Rocky
ford and new this season, the ex
tra early Rockyford, larger and
two weeks earlier than the old
Rockyford.
—
L. A. Gardelle’s
Seed Department
620 BROAD.
Are You Going To
Paint A House ?
Before doing so, won’t you see
us, get color cards and informa
tion about
Devoe’s Pure Lead
And Zinc
Paint.
Price is reasonable, quality
can’t be better. We will be
glad to suggest reliable paint
ers to do the work for you.
Alexander Drug Go.
708 Broad St.
HOT AND COLD DRINKS.
Baths
Turkigh SI.OQ
Russian 75c
Shampoo 50c
TURKISH BATH HOTEL,
HARISON BUILDING.
PRESIDENT-ELECT TAFT.
The inauguration of President Taft
is going to be the grandest that has
ever taken place in this country. The
people are evidently tired of vtldy
and on the 4th of March they are go
ing to show him how glad they are.—
Darien Gazette.