Newspaper Page Text
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
M. S. STEWART,
ARCHITECT
Estimates on Plans and Specifi¬
cations cheerfully furnished.
Office No. 8 Hui*St Building
PELHAM, GEORGIA.
J. W. McClain, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office in Piney Woods Drug Co,
building.
* Residence on McDonald Street.
C-W. REID.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
PELHAM, GA.
Office in new City Hall building.
Residence on Hand Avenue.
J. R* CLEMENTS.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
PELHAM, GA.
Office in Turner Building, and can
be found at night at residence on
Hand A-ve., formerly occupied by
Dr. J . W. McClain.
All calls answered promptly
W. S. Hill, M. D.
Pelham, Ga.
Office at Drug Store during the day
And residence at night.
J. R. O’Neal.
DENTIST.
Office in mize building
PELHAM GEORGIA.
DAVIS & MERRY
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
CaWilta, Ga. y
Offices
Pelham Ga.
Practice In AH Courts
O. B. BUSH.
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Hurst Block over Mitchell
County Supply Company.
Residence on Barrow Ave
Calls answered day or night. Leav°
calls with Piney-Woods Drug Co.,
Mitchell County Supply Company,
or Residence. Residence Phoi.e No.
88, office No. 44.
REAL ESTATE.
Farm and City property bought
and sold. Rents seen after on rea¬
sonable terms. List your lands for
sale. Let us know your wants.
Pelham Land Loan & Improvement Co.
D. L. Turner, Sec. & Mgi.
Office over Pelham State Bank.
Have you seen the low cut shoes
at Hand Trading Co. They are
snappy.
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THE PELHAM JOURNAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1&08.
Brewers
“Saints *
Would Be.”
Nation’s Beermakers Confess
Themselves Lawbreakers, but
Plead “Another Chance.”
WOULD “FEED BABIES BEER.”
Milwaukee's Notorious Mayor Wel
comes Drunkard Makers With Beery
Eloquence—While Convention Is De¬
claring "Prohibition a Fake" More
Than 200 Carloads of Saloon Fix¬
tures Returned From New Made
Prohibition States Lie Stored In
Warehouses.
[Special Correspondence.]
Milwaukee, VVls.—While floods of
beer fed eloquence aud alcoholic assault
upon Prohibition filled the halls and
corridors of Milwaukee auditoriums a
few days since, one of the most Im¬
pressive proofs that Prohibition does
prohibit lay concealed in the mammoth
warehouses of the local beermakers.
“Prohibition is a fuke. a failure and
never did prohibit.” was the vociferous
text of every session, and yet in the
current number of the American
Brewer (Der Amerikanische Bier
brauer). copies of which were In eir
culation at the convention, and which
as published in New York, is “desig¬
nated by the United States Brewers
association for the publication *bf of¬
ficial communications,” there occur;
the following editorial, which throws
a startling light upon all the fail
words of the sugar coated “appeal to
the public” issued by this convention
This editorial in the American Brewer
is as follows:
Some Effect* of Prohibition” as Seen
by the American Brewer.
“Milwaukee aud Wisconsin have suf
fered more serious injury from tin
Prohibition movement than the aver
age citizen of that state realize. Thou
sands «f woodworkers, glussblowerr
skilled artisans and coiffiuoiV ItfMferT
have been thrown out of employment
The Prohibition agitation has e'veu af
fected the cigarmajters. Within tb
past six months four large cigarmak
ers' unions in Wisconsin alone hav
been disbanded as a result of the eeo
nomic conditions growing out of tin
enforcement of Prohibition laws.
“Milwaukee breweries have been pu;
to the necessity of recalling close to
200 carloads of fixtures from different
sections of the United States where
Prohibition has been put into effect.
“According to Colonel Gus G. Pabst.
the average expenditure per annum is
$20,000,000 by breweries and distiller
ies for uew buildings, machinery, im¬
provements and repairs. The present
year will, as he says, see not to exceed
$500,000 expended In this direction if
the first three months can be taken as
an index to what will be done in the
last three-quarters of the year.”
What the American Brewer Forgot to
Say.
Of course In this connection the
American Brewer forgot to refer to
the hundreds and thousands of work¬
men who. once victims of these brew¬
ers' saloons, but now freed from their
temptation, have at last begun to se¬
cure steady employment, aided alike
by their own steadier habits and by
the uew demands automatically devel¬
oping wherever the dramshop parasite
is removed from business.
This paragraph in one of the leading
organs of the beer trade gives the lie
to all their convention slanders about
Prohibition.
It also clearly reveals the real motive
behind all their promises to “be good”
and all their professions of reform.
From their lengthy and formal “reso
iutions” one would imagine that this
was the first time they had ever had
their attention called to the rottenness
aud vice which now flourish so open¬
ly wherever the saloon lives to breed
them.
The brewers say they are shocked at
the Tact that gambling has been dis¬
covered In connection with their bars.
They are “aw—aw—so exceedingly
sawry, dou’-eh'-no.” that boys of minor
age have l>een permitted to drink in
their resorts.
Their fine sensibilities are ruffled
that some of their saloons have become
lurking places for criminals, that some
even foster mid encourage wine rooms
and prostitution as an aid to business
aud that on flaming signs the names
of leading beermakers hang above
dives aud buffets alike.
All this is very affecting, but it would
be-far more convincing were the brew¬
ers honest In their claim that these
conditions are a new and sporadic de
veiormient aud are not general.
Brewer* Coolly Lie When They Call
Bad Saloon New or Rare.
Facts and the record of the drink
traffic prove that the same breWers
and saloon men who now pretend sur¬
prise and regret over the present char¬
acter of their business have been
promising just as excitedly to reform
for all the past forty years, with ex¬
actly the same result—no change and
no reform at all.
How the Poor Maligned Booze Maker*
Felt Twenty Years Ago.
Alas for the penitent beermakers of
15)08. the promises and good resolu¬
tions of his predecessors of other years
rise up to mock his pretended anxiety
for reform.
Twenty-two years ago the national
liquor dealers’ convention for 1880
In high sounding “resolutions” de¬
clared: j
Resolved. That we are In favor of both
public and private morality and good or¬
der and popular education. We most ear¬
nestly favor temperance and most strong¬
ly condemn Intemperance.—National Liq¬
uor Dealers' Convention, October, 1886.
What*the Liquor Traffic Was Twenty
‘‘Year* A 90 —and Still t«.
On February 10, 1881), in the midst
of the last great Prohibition revival,
Bonfort’s Wine and Spirit Circular,
then, as now, the oracle of the liquor
trade, read the following curtain lec¬
ture to its friends, which one could
easily imagine was an editorial from
Its latest issue In this new hour of
liquor defeat:
“It is all very well for the wine and
spirit trade to (fuiet its apprehensions.
* * * but the fact is still apparent
that the sentiment against our busi¬
ness Is constantly growing In this
country and gaining friends among
the most substantial element in our
population. The question is a grave
one, and the sooner we appreciate fully
the hold it Is securing on the public
mind and conscience the better, it is
to most of its followers what the Slav
erv ouestiou was to Its adherents
Continued on page a.
~ ~
RESOLVED
That our. Summer tale is
'hot one of those Fake sale s
WE AREfkYlNC Tb WEEDOUT
OUR STOCK- \JE DONTCARRY
LEFT OVERS. THOSE BUBBLE
SALES ARE NOTOUR. VAYOF
Doinc Business
BUSTER BROWN.
: 4 -*a* i#*» *vy«l|wtT«i *aawN «acmc*a*.
&U5&LE5 &UR5T AND "REDUCTI0N5 5ALE5"
THAT ARE NOT GENUINE REDUCTION 5ALE5
DON'T LA5T LONG. IF YOU HAVE NOTICED OUR
FRONT DOOR YOU HAVE 5EEN MANY PEOPLE
GOING AWAY WITH MG FAT DUNDLE5 UNDER
THEIR ARM-5. THI5 MEAN-5 THAT THEY FIND
THING5 IN OUR 5T0RE THEY WOULD RATHER
HAVE THAN THEIR MONEY, AND IT MEAN-5 THAT
TH05E WHO COME To OUR 5TORE FIND THAT WE
BACK UP WITH OUR GOODS WHAT WE 5AY ON
PAPER. THE FOLLOWING PRICE5 ARE NOT &U&
&LE5 &UT 50LID ALL THE WAY THROUGH:
Straw Hats, Half Price.
RE5PECTFULLY,
C0N50LIDATED CLOTHING AND DRUG Co.
Timmmmmimmmmmmmim
Operation for Piles will not. be ne¬
cessary if you use MahZan Pile Rem¬
edy, guaranteed. Price 50c.—“Sold
by Consolidated Clothing and Drug
Co.
♦ Spring 4
♦ and Summer Lines 4
♦ 4
♦ 4
♦ RE AD V 4
♦ —■ — ——- 4
♦ 4
♦ 4
♦ 4
♦ For 4
♦ 4
♦ Men, Women and Children. 4
♦ 4
♦ \ 6est Values : moderate Prices* 4
♦ 4
♦ 4
♦ Upon request will mail of 4
♦ we you a copy our 4
spring and summer catalogue, giving full 4
4 description ar.d prices. 4
4 4
4 Goods on Approval. 4
4 Upon request will send gccds by Expresss 4
4 we C. ().' D. sub¬ 4
ject to examination. 4
4
| B. H. LEVY, BRO. & CO. 4
4
4
4 4
4 SAVANNAH. GA. 4
4
3
Bees Laxative Cough Syrup for
young and old is prompt relief for
coughs, croup, hoarseness, whooping
cough. Gently laxative. Guaran¬
teed—“So d,I>y Consolidated Cloth¬
ing and Drug Co.