Savannah Tribune
Saturday, May 19, 1906
Savannah, Georgia
Page text (machine-generated)
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VOL.XXL P SAVANNAH. GA. SATURDAY. MAY 19, #06. - NO. 33.
eo. SP, «= . on
SOME ONE HAS LIED
Boldly Asserts Bailey of Texas
on Senate Floor.
HE HITS AT ROOSEVELT
Aively Racket Pregipitated by News:
Paper Correspondents — Tillman
Corrchorates Assertion of the
‘Texaa Senator.
EEE NILE LES) WEG SCDALOP DBI
ley of Texag rose to a question of
personal privilege to make reply to a
charge made in The Chicago Tribune
of Tuesday by a Washington corre-
~“spondent to the effect that Mr. Bafley
had been-responsible for the failure
of the agreement between the pres-
ident and Senator Tillman. - Former
Senator Chahdler was given as au-
thority for the statement that Till:
man had keen suspicious of Bailey,
who, it was also stated, was really
opposed to rate legislation and was
also in constant conference with Sen-
ator Aldrich, with the purse of de
feating the rate bill.
“After this statement had been read
Mr. Bailey took the floor and said
deliberately: =
“I have taken no part in the ques-
‘Hon of veracity between the president
and Mr, Chandler, and I had not even
given any public expression on the
question of good faith because I
Knew nothing about elther question.
Ihave never conferred with the pres-
ident directly, nor with Mr. Chandler.
“It was, therefore, & matter. of great
surprise to me when a senator called
‘My attention to the extract which I
have had read.,
“The correspondence, I understand,
‘was sent by a@ correspondent who is
very close to the .white house and
is “presumed: to speak with some de
gree of authority concerning trans
actions there,
“I do not know as to the truth of
<that, and I do not charge that his
statement was made with authority,
‘but I do denounce the publication as
na unqualified, deliberate and mall
cious He. I denouncé that correspond |
ent as an unquallfied, deliberate and
malicious Har. I denounce the man
who ints red the statement as ‘an un-
qualified, deliberate and malicious liar,
whoever he may be, and however high
‘the office he holds.”
The statement was made in a de-
liberate_monotone, but it was none
the less impressive.
It was recelved with absolute sl-
lence, and the sflence continued for
a few moments, until indeed Senator
‘Tillman had taken the floor, also on
a question of personal privilege, be-
cise the article quoted had stated
that he had been suspicious of Mr.
Bailey.
He had 1ead the parts of the corre-
ssrondent's letter which Mr. Bailey had
‘omitted and then proceeded with his
statement,saylng:
“This correspondent is undoubtedly
a muck-rake. Into whose house the
handle goes, or what hand holds it,
1 will not attempt to say.”
He said he counted eight distinct
Yalsehoods in the article, but he de-
sired to address himself first to a-de-
nial that he had ever been suspicious
of Senator Bailey. He declared bie
reat esteem and admiration for they
Yexas senator, and that their cordial
relations had always existed. Articles
of this character were being sent
broadcast over the country, said Mr.
Tillman, at the Instance of the repub-
fican machine to “befuddle™ the situa-
tion.
When Senator Tillman concluded
Senator Bailey againctook the floor
and said that his attention bad been
called to another’ article printed in
the New York Tribune. He said it
was of the same character as that
printed by the Chicago Tribune, and
that evidently they had been timed to
bring them both to Washington at the |-
same time. Pointing to the — ess gal-
lery, he eald:
“[ Intend to put in the record ypon
the statement of more than one reput-
able newspaper correspondent in that
allery, and as a rule they ‘are as
honorable as senators on this floor, |°
On their authority, I state that the |’
two chief cuckoos of this administra. |
tion ure the correspondents ‘of -the :
New York Tribune and the Chicago } |
Tribune. . '
“And, therefore, it seems to be con: } ,
clusive that this slander proceeds | .
from the white house. I hope, for t
the honor of my country, that it does | |
not proceed from the president him- | °
self.” ;
OLD TIME LIMIT STANDS,
Methodist: Conference Decides” Four
Years Are Enough for Ministers
to Remain at One station.
The general conference of the Meth-
odist Episcopal church, south, Wed-
nesday afternoon adopted, by an over-
whelming majority, the minority re-
port of ‘the committee o nitinerancy
opposing any extension of the time
“mit of pastors, The majority of
ihe committee had reported in favor.
of extending the Mmit from four to
six years, The report —recipitated a
tong debate, which was quite acrimo-
ofous at times.
In connection with the recent ac-
tion of the conference creating a com-
mission to meet similar reports from
other branches of Methodism looking
to a revision was a restatement of
the church’s creed, Dinsdale T. Young,
the fraternal delegate from Great Brit-
nin, attending the conference, {3 in-
ctined to belleve that a special act of
parliament will be necessary if such
a step is taken by the Wesleyan
church In England. Mr. Young sald:
“My impression {s that we cannot
baye a genuine restatement of revis-
fon of the creed without the consent
of parliament, owing to John Wesley's
poll deed, the legal foundation of
Methodism, This certainly applies to |
any alteration of the three-year min-
{sterial Hmit without an act of parlla-
ment, and I think the same rule ap-
to any alteration or revision of the
doctrine as well as, the constitution
of the church.”
IRREGULARITIES CHARGED
To Grand Master of Exchequer of the
Georgia Knights of Pythias.
‘The election of officers and the drill
of the uniformed rank of the Knights
of Pythias grand lodge at Augusta,
Ga., was dwarfed in public Interest
Wednesday by rumors that were later
confirmed of irregularities in the
books and accounts ¢f Grand Mas-
ter of the Exchequer W..A. MeAr-
thur of Augusta, who was superseded
in office. . *
The officers and Knights are reti-
cent in falking, but it Is acknowledged
that a statement was made to the
grand lodge at Wednesday's session
to the effect that irregularities were
found that «inf to a shortage of
more than $3,000. Friends of Mr.
McArthur deny that there was any in-
tentional wrongdoing on his part and
that the matter will be found to come
out all right. A close friend of Mr.
MeArthur says that McArthur ac
knowiedged that he had endorsed
notes for friends who had gone back
on him and that was the cause of his
trouble.
CHANDLER 1S FACETIOUS.
White House “Messenger Boy” Gilead
In-ssriallst Days Are Over.
A Washington dispatch says: The
most Interesting feature of Mr. Chan-
dler’s letter to Mr. Tillman fs con-
tained in the olosing paragraph, in
which he says;
“Cn the whole, perhaps I ought to
consider myself fortunate. If the old
iropertalist days had been ‘revived at
the white house, one whom Tf consid-
ered the best of friends, Senator
Lodge, upon demand would heve cut
oft my head and taken it to President
Roosevelt on a charger, and I should
have spoken no more. Now, at least,
I have left me the power of speech,
But | shall never use it again as a
mission from President Roosevelt ta
the democratic party.” |
WANT MONSTER BATTLESHIP.
House Has important Question Up for
Settlement.
Shall the United States have a bat-
tleship, the peer, if not the superior
of -any battleship, in the world, car-
tying as heavy armor and as ~ wer
ful armament as any known vessel
of its class? was the question which
presented itself to the house Wednes-
day during the consideration of the
naval appropriations bill,
————_
BY BOMS AND BULLETS
Four People Are ‘Killed on Streets
of Warsaw—Several Wounded,
| While Policé Captain Constantino
was standing in Marszalowska street,
Warsaw, ‘Monday evening, with two
policemen and four soldiers, a young
man threw a bomb into the group.
The explosion literally tore Constan-
tinoft to pieces and severely wounded
seven other persons, The assassin
tried to escape, and fred his revolver
and wounded a soldier. The other
soldicrs replied with 2 volley, killing
the assassin and two other persons.
RAKES ROOSEVELT
Bailey Aensaes Prvakdont of
Beinga Rank Turn-Coat,
TILLMAN PLIESPITCHFORK
Both Sénators Yae Scathing Language
Anent Attitude of Chief Execu.
tive Regarding the Railroad”
Rate Bill.
Rate Bill.
| In one of the bitterest attacks that
has been made upon Presidett Roose
velt during’ the debate on the railroad
rate bill Senator Bailey, at Saturdays
session of the senate. charged that the
executive had surrendered his <al
tion advocating “an effective meas-
ure” and hod sbandoned his demands
for tariff revision, The Tezas sena-
tor charged that the president’s ar-
raignment of truate had been made
after his election and that before that
time he had been as “silent as the
grave" on the subject of regulating
the railroads. The senator closed with
the statement:
“But let us have no more talk in
the senate and talk in the country
about this iron man, he fs clay, and
very common clay at that.”
The speech was in reply to Senator
Carter, who had defended the pres
Ident against criticlem, saying that
no one could charge him with cow-
ardice. In the course of his remarks,
Senator Carter referred to the demo-
cratic party as a party of negation
and nothing more. He declared that
the party had been frightened ‘into a
chill ut the prospect of action. He
charged that neither Senators Bailey
nor Rayner in all their congressional
career’"had done anything to secure
effective rallroad rate legislation.
When Senator Bailey gained the
floor he charged that the Montana
senator's ebullitfon was due to the
fact that he had not been mentioned
by Senator Rayner in his speech Fri-
day ag one-of the president's spectal
ambassadors. He defended his own
record on the ground that during his
congressional service his party had
been In power only the first four
years. If during that tima the demo-
crats were in the minority, he had
Introduced a bill to regulate the rall-
roads, the senator sald, a6 would have
been <rforming an act of buncombe.
He repeated charges of fnconsistency
on the part of the president in his
legislative program, saying that the
“absolute rate” first contended for
had been deserted for the “maximum
rate” and that the president had
changed his position on the subject
bf suspension of rates pending a re-
versal by the courts.
Senator Tillman also got busy with
his pitchfork during the session, and
hefere he had got through he had
ried up the ld covering the record
of negotiations between President
Roosevelt on the one hand and the
lemecratic senators on the other, tha
nost interesting result being the ap-
arent ~eciptation cf a question of
eracity in which ex-Senstor Chand-
er of New Hampshire, and the
resident are Involved.
Senator Tillman quoted a state-|
nent of Mr. Chandler, in which the
resident was said to have put Sen-
tors Foraker, Knox and Spooner
own as enemies of the rate bill.
Senator Lodge at once telephoned
he white house and got from the
resident a dental couched in good,
trong English, a denial that went
o the length of saying that the state-
nent attributed to him by the former
enator from ‘New Hampshire was
eliberately and unquallfiedly false.
Senator Tillman refrred to the
ong amendment, saying taat he did
> with the purpose of making an
xplanation. He sald that the sena-
rs probably would be suvaised to
now/that he had been fn conference
Ith the president. He then, con-
ary to his usual practice, read 9
atement of his negotiations regard
toro
A CALL TO KENTUCKIANS.
Natives Are Summoned from Other
States for “Home Coming Week.”
Tm summoning the 600,000 ex-Ken-
tuckians now residing in other states
to return to Loulsville for “home
coming week.” June 13 to 17, Govern-
or Beckham .hes issued a proclama-
tion, in which he says in part:
“Wherever you have wandered, into
whatever Iands or climes you may
have gone to take up your abode, you
are now, by parental authority, sum-
moned back to the proud old state
that gave birth to you or to your fore
fathers. A joyous welcome awaits
you.”
HONOR.CODE FRACTURED,
Tiliman Declares the President Has
froken Faith Regarding Rate
Bill—Makes a Statement.
A Washington special says: While
the debate on the personnel of the
interstate commerce commlasion was
In progress in the senate Tuesday,
Senator Tillman took the floor to
make a statement on behalf of ex-
Senator Chandler, which had been
‘momentarily expected since Senator
Lodge's conveyance Saturday to the
senate of the president's emphatic
denial of some statements attributed
to Mr. Chandler by the South Caro-
Ina senator.
Mr. Tillman read the portion of Bir.
Chandler's memoranda of his confer-
ences with the président, which has
heretofore been given to the public,
prefacing it with a brief statements
of his own, saying that on Saturday
the senate had been startled and mor
tified to hear the utterances of an ex-
senatur denounced on behalf of the
president as @ “deliberate and unquall-
fied falsehood.” As he had been re-
sponsible for introducing the subject
which had caused the attack on Mr.
Chandler, he felt under obligations
to place him right on the record. Tu
that end he read the ex-senator’s
statement.
The reading of that statement was
iollowed by the following from Mr.
‘Tillman: .
“There are only two points in the
president’s letter which I deem wor-
thy of notice. His attempted expla-
nation Is ingenious but ingenuous. He
catls in question the Integrity of pur-
pose and utterance of Mr. Chandler
by declaring:
“‘He wag asked to see exSenator
Chandier as representing Mr. Till-
nan, who was In charge of the bill.
‘He stated to me the views of Mr. Till-
man with seeming authority,’ “i
“Mr. Chandler has ‘declsred most,
positively in a written statement that
the president sent for him for the pur-
pose of getting into communication
with Senator Balley and myself and
he kas produced the letter of Mr.
Loeb.
“L now declare most emphatically
that to no human being have I ever
given authority or even expressed a
wish to have any conference with
Thecdore Roosevelt In regard to the
bill now under consideration. Onthe
contrary, I have expressed the opin-
fon in more than one public inter
view that he had nothing to do with
it, and that it was the business of
the senate. ft
“The other point to which I shall
refer is the cavalief way in which Mr.
Moody discusses the idea of the, pres-
ident not being bound. .
“While contradicting in no instance,
however slight, my statement of what
occurred, the attorney general seems
to think that the code of honor among
gentlemen fs not binding upon the
executive and his cabinet.
“The president asked him to sce
Mr. Bailey and myself. We met by
appointment made by Senator Chand-
ler and talked over the vital ques
tlop. He wrote and sent-to Mri Bal-
ley his understanding of our views,
and when we met subsequently we
reached an absolute agreement,. both
as to the form and the substance of,
proposed amendment, to which, he
said the president would assert” and
help get votes for.
“Of-course he was not bound not
to change, but he was bound under |.
such circymstances to glye‘notice and
that was not done. Even the attor-
ney general himself=was not notifiea.
The charge I medo,and- still make is
that the president is guilty of bad
‘aith and that the rate bill which will
be enacted into law, a much better
ind stronger measure than we had
hoped to get, has been emasculated |
f one of the most valuable and es- ;
ential amendments by the president's |.
ction. - }
“I am ready to Iéave the whole!
uestion to the thoughtful and hon-| |
rable men of the country.” ,
THIS IN NORTH CAROLINA.”
Girl of Twelve Years Convicted for
Defending Her Honor.
Tha jury in the cise of Susie Han-
non, a 12-year-old white girl, who
had been on ‘trial for two days at
Concord, N. ©. on the charge of
murder, returned a verdict fining hor
guilty of manslaughter.
The girl shot and killed a young
man named Stack at the residence
of her father. The defense alleged
that the girl fired to protect herself.
The judge charged the jury that the
girl should be found gullty of man-
slaughter or acquitted,
NINE MURDERED
Preacher, Wife end Children
Brained and Cremated,
HORROR STIRS FLORIDA
Appalling Crime Committed Near
Pensacola—Charred Bodies With
Skulls Crushed Found'jin—
Ashes of Burned Heme,
} One of the most thorrible crimes
in the history of Florjda, if not {n
the history of the south, was commit
ted in Santa Rosa county, ten miles
north of Milton, Sunday night, when
a man by the name of Ackerman, an
itinerant preacher, bis wife and sev-
eral children, the oldest between 13
and 14 years of age, were murdered
and thelr “bodies cremated in the
home which was fired by the assas-
sins, °
A fund of over $1,000' has been
raised by the citizens of Milton, which
Is offered as a reward for the appro-
hension of the murderers, and the
governor has beep {-ealed to to of-
fer a reward on behalf of the state,
The crime was discovered Monday
morning by parties with whom Acker-
man had an appointment, who found.
‘the home a mass of ruins, and the
: charred bodies of Ackerman, his wife
and seven small children among the
wreckage.
Examination of the bodies disclosed
thd fact that Ackerman and his wife
had been struck oa the head with
some blunt instrument, their skulls
being crushed In, The bodies were
scattered about in different parts of
the ruins,
Details indicate that the father,
mother and each of the seven chil-
dren were murdered before the build?
ing was fired, ag the skull of each
was crushed. The body of Ackerman
wos found near the location of the
door leading from the bedroom in
which he slept, and by his side was
a revolver. The body of Mrs. Acker-
man, who gave birth to a child on
Friday, was found with that of her
infant child outside, at the front of
the house, The oldest child was
found near the door leading out to
the front perch. All of the bodies
were badly burned, practically only
the trunks’remaining. The bodies of
three boys were found practically
where the bed upon which they slept
stood previous to the conflagration.
When a party from Milfon reached
the scene about 11 o'clock Monday
morning the sills of the building were
still burning, which seemed to Indi-
cate that the fire had been started
several hours after midnight. The
country nearby 1a sparsely settled, the
newrest neighbor residing about one
quarter of a mile away. This nelgh-
bor says he knew nothing of the fire
until early Monday morning when he |
saw that the building had been de-
stroyed and notified other neighbors
before trying to ascertain the dam-
age. The feeling throughout Santa
Rosa county is high.ovér the dastard-
ly deed and every effort Is being made
to apprehend the guilty parties.
Ackerman moved to the setilement
which was known as Allentown, from
Opp, Ala., about three years ago, and
has always been considered a good
aud peaceful citizen. While he had no
regular charge it was his custom to
preach oczasionally throughout that
section of Santa Rosa county. He
was not known to have had any ene
mies end the motive for the atrocious
ime {s a mystery.
° WEIGHTS MUST BE TESTED,
Georgia Indebtedness Law Upheld by
» Supreme Court.
ee OEE Se
The Georgia state supreme court
handed down a decision Monday up
holding the state law making a one
fourth reduction in a verdict secured
by any merchant for indebtedness or
a creditor, when it ts proven that the
welghts and measures of the mer-
chant’ are not tested according to law.
“NO PLACE FOR CHILDREN.
Pastor Advises Against Their Attend.
Ing Spectacular Revival Meeting.
Rev. .C. B. Wilmer, rector of St.
Luke's Episcopal church, Atlanta,
sprang a sensation In his Sunday
morning sermon when he stated that
he could not advise parents to send
the children of his congregation to
attend. the special meeting for chil-
dren €onducted by Dr, Torrey and Mr,
Alexander, cyangelists,
He objected because of the fact
that he did not know what would
be done or said at the meeting,
FAVOR NEW STATEMENT,
Methodist Conference Decides to Ap.
point a Committee for Purmrse of
“Revising Articles of Falth.
Monday, by a vote of 151 to 107,
the general conference of the’ Meth-
odist Episcopal church, south, in ses-
sion at Birmingham, declared itself
in favor of the creation of a commit-
tee to <repare a new statement of
fatth. A majority of the clerical and
Jay delegates was necessary to make
the report of the special committee
recommending the commission a law
and separate votes were taken. The
final result showed; Ayes, clerical,
83; lay, 68; nays, clerical,“86; lay,
51, There was no demonstration
wheh the result was announced.
‘The adoption of the report of the
special committee, composed of W.
F. Tillett, dean of Vanderbilt; W. R.
‘Lambuth and C. W. Carter, means
that a special committee of five mem-
bers, one of whom shall be a bishop,
and shall Invite all other branches of
Methodism to unite with the southern
church In the preparation of such a
statement of faith and such a state-
ment of the doctrinal system as is
called for in the twentleth century.
The committee recommended nou-
concurrence in memorials from MI
sissipp! and Miissourl annual confer-
ence at St. Louis, the Alexandria and
Prw'ar Bluff districts, asking legisla-
tion for controlling evangelists.
The committee on publishing inter-
ests srecommended the adoption of
resolutions that the conference af-
firms the action of the committee on
publishing interests of the general
conference in 1902 in reference to
the petition of the International Typo-
graphical Union seeking to untonize
the publishing house at Nashville,
Tenn. In regard to the memorial
from the Typographical Union the
committee says that it does not come
within the province of the comniit-
tee to take action thereon.
Non-concurrence was reported on
memorials fooking to consolidation of
The Quarterly Review with The Chris-
tlan Advocate; to give to one of the
book committee duties now perform-
ed by the book editor printing of
~ulnig selected as part of the order
of worship.
A telegram was read just before
the close of Monday’s session froin
Vice President Fairbanks stating that
he would arrive in Birmingham on
Thursday night, and remain in the
clty all Friday. The message asked
if this would be satisfactory to the
conference, and upon motion It was
decided to hear from Mr. Fairbanks
and Dr. W. S. Matthews, of Berkeley,
Cal., the fraternal delegates from the
Methodist Episcopal church, on Fri-
jay evening.
RUSS ADMIRAL PUNCTURED,
Hated Official Meets Death at Hands
of Assassin.
Vice Admiral Kuzmich, commander
of the port, who was unpopular with
the workmen, was assassinated in St.
Petersburg, Monday, by workmen,
whose May day demonstration he had
attempted to stop.
The admiral was killed at the new
admiralty works, a government instl-
tution, employing 2,000 men.
As the admiral was emerging from
a smal! shop fn the works, a work-
man who had been concealed around
the corner of the building, leaped on
Kuzmich from behind and drove a
long dagger into his back.
CARL_SCHURZ GOES HENCE. .
Was Widely Known Publicist and a
former Gablnet Momber.
Carl Schurz, widely known as a pub-
cist and former cabinet member,
died at his home in New York city
Monday morning. Desth was due to
a complication of diseases. : ,
Forced to fiee from the land “of
his birth before be had attained his.
majority, Schurz soon became and
for more than half a century rematn-
ed, one of the striking figures in the
public life of the land of his adop-
tion. He was 76 years old, having
been born in Cologne, Germany, on
March 2, 1829.
—_-—_ :
NO TRACE OF ASSASSINS.
Coroner Makes Investigation of Hare
. rible Butchery In Florida.
The investigation by tho coroner's
Jury into the murder of W. G. Acker
man, his wife and seven children, who
were found dead with their skulls
crushed and bodies partly cremated
in the smoking ruins of thelr home
at Allentown, Florida, early Monday
morning, was continued at Bfiltod
throughout the day, but no verdict
was reached,
As far as can be ascertained, thera
has been no evidence thus far to con-
vict any one with the deed.
“carpet Sieh are Death Benefits; Smgtest Preyrinms.
L E, WILLIAMS, Presidént® 8 #* <°, “pskBWarp BERRY: VicePisidedt: = *. . WALTERISS¢oTivsiretary and Tr cas.
_. The Guaranty Aid and Relief Society.
~ Sing tO Gian? Wollis, and whieh ae held by the Shite, Eve ryw here
of Getgia, ty aulhouly and’unda the s flavidions of an el of he Generat e 2 .
ety of pscced Glib Bet —485f,—and—amended—“Beem®t =. 2S. Liberal Terms and Commission.
~ SOU AEP. : he 6 Q; Ay "4g : , ‘ ADDRESS THE HOME OFFICE,
= ! 2 468 West Broad St,
. 1 Treasurer of the State of Georgia. . * ¥ , . Savannah, Georgia.
pee. 4A
‘EORGIA. BRIEFS
Hawkinsville Goes Dry.
Hawkinsville is dry for the firs
thme in four years. The hottest figh!
in the history of the auti-liquor move
ment culminated in the Glection of the
past week. The result was an over
whelming victory for the prohibition
Asts, Only four precincts out of a tota!
of thirteen in the county went wet
see
Must Furnish Drinking Water.
"In sustaining the decision of th:
superior court of Appling county {a
the case of the Southern Railway com-
pany against the state, the supreme
court strongly upholds the state law
fourd in section: 522 of the political
code, which requires all railroad com-
panies doing business in the state to
keep in their sissenger coaches 3
“supply of good, pure drinking water
during the day and night for the use
of passengers,” ’
ees
. Elghteen Counties to Contest.
+ Eighteen Georgia counties have. en-
tered the contest for the $1,800 prize
at the state fair in Atlanta next fall.
‘These counties which have entered
“range from the Nerth Carolina line to
the Florida border. President Conner
of the State Agricultural Society says
that this year’s fair will be the great-
est ever held in Georgia, and he
thinks the attendance will be even)
larger than last year. |
eee
Georgla Mayors Mect in June.
The Munlcfpal League of Georgia
will meet in Augusta in June. The
city council has already authorizzed
the finance committee to apprcerlate
such sums as may nécessary to suit-
ably entertain the visitors and prep-
arations are under way to make glad
the hearts of the city’s guests during
the two days the convention will be!
in session. 7
see
To Improve School System.
. Ata special meeting of the Albany
city council, which was attended by a
number of prominent citizens, invited
to confer on the subject of a pro.
posed im-sroved schoo] system, it was
decided to take immediate steps for
the inauguration of a public school
system to be supported by direct tax-
ation. This is in line with the en-
largement of"the clty school facilities
now under way. |
see .
Atlanta's Tax Values.
. According to the report just made
by tke Attanta city tax assessors io
the comptroller for use by the finance
committee in making up the June ag
portionments ‘the city’s revenue wil
be increased this year $42,379.41. Th:
tax assessors’ books show that the
real estate assessments this yea
amount to $57,906,138, as against $56,
388,984 last year, The assessments 01
personal property are $17,755,884, a:
against $17,543,745 for list year.
. s * @
Troops to Encamp at Chickamauga
| Georgia's troops will go into th
‘summer encampment this year a
‘Chickamauga Park, between the dates
of August 5th and 25th. The adj
tant general’s office has received 3
communication from the secretary a!
war asking for the estimates of cost
and time suitable for the encamp
ment of the Georgia militia, and As:
sistant Adjutant General Scott, after
figuring out the cost estimates, will
reply that the dates mentioned In Au-
gust will be most suitable.
eee
Extension Werk Belng Pushed.
The work of extending the Colum-
bus and Greenville branch of the
Central of Georgia allway from
Greenville to Newnan {s being push-
ed and it now seems likely that by
midsummer trains will be ‘running
over the new route between Atlanta
and Columbus. ‘
Not only is the line being extended,
but In addition to broadening the
gauge between Columbus and Green-
ville to the standard size, which has
nlready been done, many other per-
manent and substantial improvement.
ire being made along this Iino in
he way of constructing big fills to
‘ake the place of trestles, and buitd-
ng better bridges over the {mportant
streams.
. ee ¢
Refdrmatory Practically Compieted.
The state reformatory building om
he state’s land near Milledgeville 1s
wractically completed and will be
eady for the reception of occupaats
vithin a week or ten days. As soon
1s Governor Terrell has been noti-
ied of this completion, he will issue
, proclamation in accordance with the
aw, stating that the reformatory !s
-endy to receive those who, under the
aw, may be sent to it, and the
udges of the superfor ecurts through-
sut the state will act accordingly. B.
'. Bethune of Milledgeville has been
.r=ointed superintendent of the re-
ormatory.
zs 8s @
Condition of Georgla’s Treasury.
Treasurer R. H. Park’s annual re-
ort for the year ending December
1. 1905, has just been Issued.
According to‘the report, the bat
mee fn the treasury on January %
905, was $1,013,712.75. The recelpts
or the entire year of 1905 were $4,-
62,595.42, making a total amount of
$5,276,808.17, for which, the treasuret
was accountable.
During the year he disbursed $4,
260,844.36, leaving a balance on hanc
January 1, 1906, of $1,015,463.18. Geor
gia's bonded debt on December 31
1904, was $7,431,500, and $100,000 was
paid on January 1, 1905. A similar
amount was retired on January’1 ot
this year, but this does not 2 ear
in the treasurer's report. .
eee
Adkins Case Continued.
The famous Mell and Alex Adkins
case which was to have been called
in Washington the past week was
continued until the next regular term
of court.
The cause of the postponement was
due to the sudden illness of. Mrs, Aik-
en, wife of the man who was waylaid
and shot from ambush on the night
of February 10. Mrs. Aiken, at the
preliminary trial last March, turned
state’s evidence, and laid bare the
alleged plot which she said had been
instigated by Mell Adkins of Ogle
therpe county to kill her husband to
order that he might again elope with
her .
Mrs. Allen testIfied before the
grand jury, and upon her testimony
and that of several servants who
lived on the Adkins plantation, a
true bill was found against both Mell
and Alex Adkins, charging them with
assault with intent to murder. They
are under bonds of $1,000 each.
es *¢ €
Assessment Mede Tco Late.
In a decision just rendered in the
‘ase of Pope and others against the
sounty commissioners of Montgomery
-ounty, the supreme court denies the
‘ight of Montgomery county to levy
and collect a tax from the citizens
yf that part of the county which was
ncorporated {nto the new crunty, of
Toombs, for the purpose of bullding
1 new court house in Montgomery.
‘Montgomery made a tax levy of $5
ser $1,000 for the aurpose of building
. new court house and effort was
nade to collect this tax just two
jays before the final organization of
he new county of Tcombs under the
aw by which it was created. The
supreme ‘ccurt helds that Monfgom-
ry Is not entitled to and cannot col-
ect this tax. The same decision, how-
over, permits Montgomery county to
roliect 2 road tax from the citizens
sf the new county of Toombs, former-
y Montgomery, which was assessed
rior to the organization of the new
ounty, ; Q
ss @ |
Call te Popullsts.
Chairman J. J.-Holloway, .of ths
state executive committee of the yop
ullst party, has issued the following
officlal cally
“The state executive committee of
WA A SR ATOMS MERA OCK. .
. 2 ‘ “s
HOME OFFICE. of
. 488 WEST BROAD STREET, ‘| * :
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. =
Bell Phone 1192. Ga. Phone 2029. i
~~ ry ~ 2
Directors. 7
WR, Fields. W. H. Burgess, ”
‘ JH. Deveaux eo . J, H. Bugg, M. D.
° L. M. Pollard, 2 C. F. Jones. ’
ua R. R. Wright. _= . 4M, Ferrebee,
This company is duly chartered under the laws of the State of Georgia, and has complied with all re"
quirements of the State Insurance,department, therefore all policy holders are protected with all the safeguards
that the strict insuranca laws of this State seck to protect dts citizens. a
Its affairs aro directed and managed by Negro men of the city of Savannah of leading standing, and whose
character and reputation are of such as to command the respect and confidence of all the people of that
community. The same men that manage this Socfety are the ones that otganized and are conducting the af-
fairs of the first successful Negro Savings Bank in this state, therefore we can readily see that by connecting
themselves with this Insurance company their interest will be in safe hands. 7
By comparing our rules and benciits with other first class companies it will be seen that we offer the most
Hberal inducements with the largest sick, accident and death benefits to our members than any other com-
pany in this business. é .
That we pay our claims promptly can be testified to by the thousands of our satisied members.
‘the people's party is hereby called i
meet in Atlanta, Monday, May 21, x
10 o'clock a m., for the ssirpose >
aectaing upon the proper course of
the party in the present campaign an}
‘to transact such other business a:
the committee may see proper,
_ “Other populists who wish to at:
tend will be welcomed by the com
mittee.”
That the populists of the state shall
return individually to the democratic
party in order to participate in the
coming primary -under the rules” pre
scribed by the state Gemocratic con:
miltee, was the decision reached at
a party meeting recently held fn At-
lanta of the populist leaders in the
office of Judge James K. Hines, a
former candidate for governor on the
populist ticket.
Those at the meeting declared that
the course detided vee would be fol-
lowed by the populist state executive
committee when ft meets on the 21st.
Seaboard’ =
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with detailed information, secured at Seaboard Air Line City Ticket Of
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DAUGHTER KILLS FATHER.
aioe Merchant Loses Life
While Quarreling With Wife.
©. EL Hooks, a well known mer
chant, was shot and killed in Jack
sonvi:le, Fla., Monday afternoon by
his 17-year-old daughter, Bessie
Hooks and his wife quarreied recent,
ly, and he had been away free home
for a week. He returned Monday,
and had a violent quarrel with his
wife. His daughter says she secured
hts revolver to prevent his using it
and in a scuffle, he trying to tak
the revolver away from her, it was
discharged, the billet entering his
breast and Killing him instantly.
| . % 7
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POPULATION OF FLORIDA.
Census Returns for 4905 ‘Show an In-
creace of 72,590.
Census returns for 1905, given out
Friday for all counties in Florida ex-
cept Dade, Escambia and Orange,
show the population to be: White,
314,685; black, 241,870; total, 556,690,
Including 135 persons of other races,
against 483,000 fn 1900—an increase
cf 72590. Jacksonvilie’s population is
35,201; Key West, 20,498; Tampa, or
clusive of suburbs, 22,683.
TRAMMELL GIVEN FREEDOM.
Se
er of His Home.
The jury in the case of Byron
‘Trammell, postmester of Dothan, fla.,
charged with the murder of Ropert
J. Barnes, rendered a verdict of} not
guilty because of the insanity of the
defendant when the tragedy ¢ecurred.
‘Eernes was a bearder at Tram-
mell's home and was killed becavs:
of alleged criminal Intimacy between
Trammell’s wife and the deceased.
4 WELSH RONG
My Gwendoleen, my heart's delight! Sleep on through shivering spear and brand.
An apple tosy red within thy baby hand;
Thy pillowed cheeks a pair of roses bright;
Thy heart how happy day and night!
Mid all our woe, O vision rare!
Sweet little princess cradled there,
The apple in thy hand--thy all of earthly
care.
Thy brethren battle with the foe,
Thy sire's red strokes on him
sweep.
Wnlist thou, his bonny babe, are smilling
through thy sleem.
through thy sleep.
'All Gwalia shudders at the Norman blow!
What are the angels whispering low
Of thy father now?'
Bright babe, sleep upon my knee,
How many a queen of high degree
Would cast away her.crown to slumber
thus like shes
thus like thee.
Alfred Percival Graves, in Westminster Gazette.
ALMOST TOO LATE.
BY DOHA RUSSELL.
UNDER the maple trees
Grandfather Bennett's
house stood out all red, and
square, and comfortable,
and under the maple trees
Granddaughter Julia was
Just winding up a long quarrel with
her lover with a neatness and dispatch
that did great credit to her two years'
training in a fashionable boarding
school.
Poor John Renton!
Ever since Miss Julia's return from the school things had seemed to go "all wrong" between them, as he expressed it.
In the first place he had looked horrified at the peculiar style of dressing her hair, after the style of the Japanese ladies, with a tower above her eyebrows. He and expressed himself disrespectfully in regard to certain other fashionable vagaries in which she indulged; and in the last place, his crowning sin of omission or commission had been a good-natured willingness to take up their old boy-and-girl courtship just where it left off, when she was sent to Madam Fleur's school, without the least idea that Miss Julia now required to be wooed and won in a more romantic way.
So things went on, from bad to worse, each saying at, times much more than he on she really meant, and each being far too proud to "take it all back" and ask to be forgiven.
And now, on the eve of John's departure for "the woods"—where he was to stay, cutting down timber with a gang of twenty men under his orders, until the deep snows of the winter gave place to the clearer roads of spring—now that only a few hours of companionship remained to them, they had quarreled so sharply and so thoroughly, that Julia at last drew the little turquoise ring off her finger, that she had worn there ever since her fourteenth birthday, and placed it on John's broad palm without a word.
He looked down at it, as if scared by its sudden appearance.
"Do you really mean it, Julia?" he asked, at last.
"I do," she answered, firmly.
"Three years ago I bought it for you with the first money I ever earned. I was proud enough when I saw it on your finger, dear. And now you say everything is at an end between us."
"Everything."
Julia felt that her voice trembled as she spoke, for his allusion to their childish troth-plight had touched her. She felt, too, that he was watching her eagerly.
Did he think then that she cared so much that she could not see him go with dry eyes and a quiet heart?
She looked up at the stars and made some casual remark about their brightness, to show her perfect composure.
John uttered an exclamation that sounded almost like an oath, and darted away.
"It is all for the best," thought Julla, as she went into the house. "If he is so harsh and so violent now, what will he be when I am once his wife?"
John would be nothing better than a "down-east farmer" all his long life. And she had learned—or thought she had learned—to love the city better than the country—to pine for city sights and city amusements whenever the country's loneliness seemed too hard to bear.
The weeks went on, and nothing was heard of the men who were camping out in the forest fifteen miles away.
No news was good news, however, in their case. No one felt the least anxiety about them.
Not even Julia Bennett, who was making ready for a month's visit to a school friend in Brooklyn, who was the cousin and intimate friend a certain dashing young lawyer, whose admiration of Miss Julla in her schoolgirl days had been a subject of remark among her immediate companions.
"Herbert bids me say that he looks forward most anxiously to the day of your arrival," the city girl had written at the end of her letter.
And the country girl read the flattering reminder with a vain toss of her pretty head, and an unspoken wish that John Renton could read it, too.
"He would understand, then, that there are others in the world who care for me, and who don't take things quite so much for granted as he does," she thought.
Yet, during her preparations for the journey, Julia's thoughts ran oddly and continually, not on the dark-eyed lawyer, with the city alrs and graces, but on the broad-shouldered, hard-handed, florid-checked Renton, with his blue eyes and healthy bronzed face, and his snow-white forehead, shaded by thick chestnut curls.
"He would make two of Mr. Egerton, and yet he is so clumsy!" she thought, half laughing and half crying.
But all the while her heart was very sore.
On the night before her departure, Julia visited the postoffice, and also the telegraph office, to give notice to her friend in Brooklyn of the hour of her arrival on the next day.
She found the telegraph clerk wrestling with an unusually long message, and waited at the door until he would be at leisure.
An ox team slowly rounded the northern corner of the village street, and proceeded at a more leisurely crawl than usual past the telegraph office.
"Not much like Lawyer Egerton's trotting bays and shell-shaped cutter," thought Julia, smiling contemptuously at the homely vehicle.
"But something must be wrong there. I can see two men lying on the sled, wrapped up in buffalo robes, and the driver is surely Sam Paine; and, oh dear! they are stopping at Mr. Renton's gate!"
Julia's heart seemed to stand still. Sam Paine had been for the last century, as it seemed to her, the trusted farm hand of the great "Deacon Renton" place.
And the deacon had only consented to let John go into the camp with the loggers on the condition that. Sam should go also, and look after him.
What sleek man would they bring to Deacon Renton's door, save one?
What man, save one, would be placed so completely in the care of Sam Paine, that he would leave the loggers in that far-off camp to their own devices, and bring a slick or an injured man to the deacon's home?
"Now, Miss Bennett, I can send your message," said the telegraph clerk.
He started as she turned toward him.
"Bless me! are you ill? You are as pale as a corpse, Miss Julia," he exclaimed.
"I've had a fright. Some one is out there, ill, or dying, or something." She waved her hand toward the door. "Go over there and see what it is. I'll mind the office while you are out."
The clerk was a city boy of fifteen, banished to that country village by his father, for the benefit of his morals and manner.
He knew nothing of the childish love between John Renton and the elegant Miss Bennett, and came hurrying back, open-mouthed and eager to tell his news.
"They say there has been a bad accident up in the logging camp, Miss Julia."
"Who—what?" she gasped.
"Young Mr. Renton and one of his men. They've brought him home dead, poor fellow. The other may recover, but, among other injuries, he has a broken arm. Oh, it is a dreadful thing. Every one is saying so."
Miss Bennett muttered something behind her vell that the telegraph clerk failed to understand, and walked away.
"Why, she never sent the message, after all!" he cried. "But I've often heard it said that women have no head for business, and now I know it by my own experience."
All through that dreadful day Julia Bennett sat alone in her own chamber, mourning over the gallant fellow who had gone away to his death, uncheered by one kind word or look from her nay, with his brave heart wrung and bleeding because of her coldness and falsity.
"Do you know the truth now? Up in Heaven, Douglass, Douglass, tender and true!"
Those words kept surging through her brain until they nearly drove her mad.
At nightfall she could endure her misery no longer.
Come what would, she must look upon John's face once more, even if it was the face of the dead!
She wrapped herself in her cloak, and, avoiding the warm and lighted parlor where Grandfather Bennett sat beside the bright hearth, waiting for her to make his tea, she hurried out into the street, and ran blindly on, until she reached the Renton house.
The female servant who admitted her stared with a puzzled face as she listened to her whispered explanation.
"The master'll know about it, miss," she said, at last, and threw open the parlor door.
A tall figure, bending over the red firelight, in an attitude of deep depression, rose as she entered, and turned wonderingly toward her.
With a wild scream of joy Julia bounded forward, and threw herself upon John Renton's breast.
"Oh, I thought you were dead! They told me so!" she cried.
"No, love, no!" said John, holding her clasped in his left arm. "Poor Michael Paine, Sam's brother, was suddenly killed by a falling tree, and I got a broken arm and some other injuries, so that they kept me stupefied with drugs till I reached home. But I shall soon be all right—the sooner because you have come to me like this."
Grandfather Bennett waited a good hour for his tea. But at the end of the hour came Julia, radiant and smiling, with John beside her, and the turquoise ring upon her hand once more!—New York Weekly.
Pretty Wedding Custom
In some parts of the Tyrol a beautiful, though curious, custom prevails. When a girl is going to be married and just before she leaves for the church her mother gives her a handkerchief, which is called a fear-kerchief. It is made of newly-spun and unsuused linen, and with it the girl dries the natural tears she sheds on leaving home. The tear-kerchief is never used after the marriage day, but is folded up and placed in the linen closet, where it remains till its owner's death, when it is taken from its place and spread over her face.
Use of "Trees" Imperative.
Only the woman with a perfectly shaped foot can afford not to keep "trees" in her shoes when they are not in use. A pair of shoes actually worn out with daily use will be almost as shapely as when new, simply because trees were put into them as soon as they were taken off the feet.
decorations, but in all the latest colfires. Mrs. Longworth wears a hand some aligrette of osprey feathers, and every one of her street hats show wings and breasts of pretty songsters. One of her hats, a pale gray, has lovely white dove for adornment. Mrs. Roosevelt rarely uses birds if her hat, for though she is not a men
Acting as Mayor.
Pasadena's Acting Mayor is a woman. Miss Anna McGrew, young, pretty and clever, is probably the only one of her sex in the country, declares the Chicago Record-Herald, who knows what it is like to be the chief executive of a city. Miss McGrew is Mayor Waterhouse's stenographer, and has learned so much of the executive business that she is able to manage it very successfully while the California Mayor is on a visit to his former home in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
A Faring Skirt
If you have worn a sagging skirt and it is sagging at every inch, take out the hem, put it on and have the seam-stress sit on the floor and with an inch rule and a piece of white chalk go around the entire skirt, measuring two inches from the floor. This makes the turning up of the new hem a certainty as to straightness, and it is the only way that it can be done to satisfaction, says Anne Rittenhouse, in the Chicago Inter-Ocean.
After it is turned up it would be wise to put on the outside a two-inch blas fold of the material or something to harmonize with it in color and stitch this with two rows at each edge. This gives a wonderful steadiness to the footline.
---
A Landscape Gardener.
In a small Jersey town not far from New York is a young woman who is making her living by setting out hardy gardens for people. Befg.fond of plants she began by helping friends to arrange their flower gardens without recompense. From this her services came into demand, and now she earns her living by planning old fashioned flower garden for any who wish the work done. There is quite a knack in getting the right flowers together and arranging them so that the tallest plants shall form a background for the smaller varieties. Correct sense of color is demanded, also, for while it is supposed that this sort of garden is planted in a hit or miss fashion, a regular color scheme must be followed.—New York Sun.
Lace on Evening Gowns.
There is something decidedly novel and unique in the way lace is now put on many of the evening gowns, flat across the top of the waist, in both the front and the back, and yet with sufficient fulness to look wider than the broad girdle or draped folds of the waist below. A tucker of fine net held in place with a narrow ribbon or gathering-string is also a new touch, and one that is most becoming, for with it the gown can be cut more collate without being at all immodest. On the sleeves there must be also the flat bands of lace, either at the top or bottom of the sleeve or just through the centre, whichever best carries out the style. The elbow sleeves often have ruffles added now.—From Special Fashion Number of Harper's Bazar.
Irish crochet holds its own.
Limerick and Carrickmacross figure.
Guipure and Cluny are as good as ever.
Chantilly is by no means out of the race.
Point de Venise is not in some combinations.
Lace does not dominate hat trimmings.
For dresses and blouses any amount of lace is used.
Deep bands and whole coats are made of this lovely stuff.
A goodly part of some of the smartest frocks is made of lace.
Wedding Savings.
Married in gray, you will go far away.
Married in black, you will wish yourself back.
Married in brown, you will live out of town.
Married in red, you will wish yourself dead.
Married in pearl, you will live in a whirl.
Married in green, ashamed to be seen.
Married in yellow, ashamed of your fellow.
Married in blue, he will always be true.
Married in pink, your spirits will sink.
Married in white, you have chosen right—Home Chat.
"Andubonnetts" Moura Feather Fancy While women abroad, always anxious to follow the lead of Queen Alexandra, are adding their influence to her powerful plea for the protection of birds, no such tendency is found on this side of the water. Wise and tender-hearted "Audubonnetts" may argue as they please, it seems they must wait still another season to get society's car, for never has there been such a riot of plumage displayed as now. Feather hats are the height of popularity, and grettettes appear not only on the head
decorations, but in all the latest cofires. Mrs. Longworth wears a handsome aligrette of osprey feathers, and every one of her street hats shows wings and breasts of pretty songsters. One of her hats, a pale gray, has a lovely white dove for adornment. Mrs. Roosevelt rarely uses birds in her hat, for though she is not a member of the Audubon Society, her younger daughter and boys belong to the organization and attend all the sessions when they are in Washington. New York Press.
Natural Flower Hats.
Madame Sembrich trims her hats with natural flowers. This is probably not due to the fact that she enjoys the odor. Like all singers, she has no use for any flowers that have a strong perfume. The reason for this practice, says the New York Sun, is that she does not know what particular color she may want to wear on a black or a white hat. She decides this usually when she has the hat on, and then she puts in the flowers from the supply in her room. She has seen at the opera this year with a white and a black hat. Each has been trimmed in turn with mauve orchids, pink and red carnations. Few of her friends have ever noticed the peculiarity, for the reason that they have taken the flowers for the usual artificial decorations.
She confessed the secret to a friend the other day after the woman had asked her how she same to buy two hats identical but for the flowers. Then she told of her weakness.
"But suppose, it should be found out?" her friend suggested.
"It never has been, though," the famous singer answered. "The nearest anybody ever came to it was to remark how extremely natural the flowers looked—almost like real," one woman observed."
The Daughter's Salary.
Where a girl must serve as either governess, nurse or companion in her own home, there is no color of reason for refusing her wages, writes Martha McCulloch-Williams, in Good Housekeeping. If not the full amount an outsider would demand, all that can be fairly afforded. And where a whole family has reached adult age, it is indisputably just that those who earn money outside the home should pay part of it to those who do the housekeeping. With several daughters, the household empire may be divided into provinces, and parceled out according to adaptation. Let the jolly, outdoor girl, who loves everything animate, be supreme in the dairy or poultry yard, and entitled to half the increment thereof. If family needs require more than half, buy of her as of any outside person. Similarly let the slender creature who needs air and sunshine have the garden under a like agreement, the orchard and vineyard as well, if such things there be. With no more than a small hothouse, there are chances of profit. Money makes the mare go—and a great many other things beside.
Housekeeping proper, chamber work, the care of books, keeping accounts, work as social secretary, all, all, may provide employment that will help toward family harmony. If none of these things appeal to some particular climate, let her go out and away, to find the thing she is really fit to undertake. This is written primarily as regards daughters, but in exceptional cases it applies with equal force to growing sons. A share in the prospective profits will keep a boy at things, when all else might fall.
A bit of light or turquoise blue adds a becoming touch of color to an Eton costume of a gray mixture.
A wide silver filagree buckle is as handsome on a white silver girdle as the gold ones that are so popular.
Costly parasol handles with tips to match are sold in sets, and are of gold and silver set with jewels, carved ivory, tortoise shell and other expensive wares.
How very pretty is an automobile coat of white mohair with insets of the palest blue on collar and cuffs; and since mohair cleans so well nothing so pretty could be more serviceable.
The Empire hats seem to us a sort of extreme style; indeed they cannot be worn by everyone, but they are exceedingly rich in detail. Even then the buckle is very likely an exquisite miniature.
For the bodice of a net gown the horizontally tucked models are especially pretty for young and slight figures. The tucks are the same width on bodice and sleeve, and show up especially well on the thin net. White linen belt and collar with stitched blas bands of bright-colored plaid are a fitting accompaniment to a morning costume of white linen. Belt and collar of white polka-dotted in color are also neat and appropriate. The only trimming on a skirt of a white serge costume is a wide stitched band of the material applied near the hem and down the front. The bolero is sweetly simple with only narrow braid in pale blue and gold lines on the collar and cuffs—and zilt buttons.
POPULAR SCIENCE
The latent image—the undeveloped photograph—is an electro-chemical formation of molecular nuclei, around which the visible image is subsequently built up by development.
When the glass plate of a photographic negative is scraped free from film and cleaned chemically, nothing remains visible, but on breathing on the glass the photographic image may be brought out again as a faint gray and white positive.
Twice as much heat is generated by X-rays in lead as in zinc. The only explanation evident to the discoverer is that certain elements are broken up by these rays, and that the energy liberated from these atoms forms a part of that appearing when the rays are absorbed by matter.
The automatic gas kindler and extinguished of Herr Raupp, of Mayence, is based upon the singular effect of light in increasing the electric conductivity of selenium. With the coming of daylight, the selenium permits the ready passage of an electric current, and this causes the shutting off of the gas, which the apparatus turns on again and ignites as darkness comes again. The selenium, of course, is shielded from the light of the burning gas.
一
The powers of the stomach have been gauged hitherto by means of a test breakfast and the subsequent use of the stomach pump, or less directly by chemical test of the urine. A new method is being tried in Europe by Dr. Schwartz. He administers a large pill of a third or a half ounce of subnitrate of bismuth enclosed in a coating of connective tissue from the sheep or ox, and when examination is then made with X-rays, this subsequent na made with X-rays, this substance shows as a dark shadow. At first it appears as a deep black spot. As digestion progresses, however, it disseminates through the stomach, and in health gives a faint shadow of the entire organ in about seven hours. In such disorders as deficiency of acid, pyloric disease and cancer, the black spot persists nine, eleven or even twenty hours, while in hyperacidity the too rapid digestion may cause the spot to disappear in two to five hours.
A toxine of the blood of eels and allied species, preventing coagulation of poisoned blood, was discovered by M. Mosso as long ago ca 1880. The toxine has not yet been isolated, but late investigators have found that the eel serum retains its toxic power for a considerable time in the dark, but that the degree of toxicity varies with the individual eel and with the season. Like snake venom, the toxine appears to be active only when entering the blood, being harmless when swallowed. An anti-toxine can be produced in the blood serum of susceptible animals, and this renders rabbits and goats immune against great doses, though little effect is produced on guline pigs.
Experiments made by G. F. Becker and A. L. Day on the linear force exerted by growing crystals have brought out interesting facts. They found that crystals of alum are able to form in a saturated solution, in opposition to the pressure of a heavy weight, when they must lift. This linear force of growing crystals is, of geologic importance, for it has been found that pyritic crystals formed in slate rock are able to drive apart the laminae of the rock without any perceptible deformation of the crystals.
FOREST'S ON RESERVES.
How the Government is Restoring Denuded Mountains and Waters.
The area now under forest in the West is less by millions of acres than the area suitable for forest growth. In the first place, fire has destroyed an enormous quantity of forest, denuding mountain slopes so completely that forest renewal by natural means has been rendered impossible for ages. Again, vast arens, scores of millions of acres, like the chaparrel lands of Southern California, which once bore forest growth but long since lost it, must remain indefinitely unproductive wastes unless brought again, by planting, under forest. Moreover, the demand for timber, even, the local demand, cannot long be supplied from the reserves unless they are developed to the highest productive capacity, and, for this, forest replacement and extension, quite as much as conservative logging, are essential. Finally, the indirect use of the reserves is not less impressive. The vital importance of water for irrigation would, in the case of several of them, alone, suffice to render forest planting on watersheds imperative. In Southern California forest extension on the mountains is strongly favored by public sentiment, at almost any expense, because it is water, not the supply of fertile soil, which limits agriculture, so that land worth $2000 an acre with water could hardly be given away without it—United States Agricultural Bulletin.
Horse Abattoir in Germany.
It is reported that the consumption of horse meat at Nuremberg, Germany, where a few years ago it was quite insignificant, has now increased so greatly that the facilities for horse slaughtering at the municipal abattoir have become insufficient, and the City Council has been obliged to consider the construction of a new abattoir for horses, the cost of which is estimated at $43,000.
WHO'S AFRAID?
Maid of six and youth of seven
Underneath the sunny skies
Digging in the mud and gravel,
Much absorbed in making pies.
Bulldog comes to interview them,
Maiden hollers, much dismayed.
Youth puts chubby arm around her
With a manly, "Who's afraid?"
Maid of nineteen, youth of twenty
Selfsame couple meet again;
Occupied in tender parting
At the witching hour of ten.
Bulldog waits outside the portal
Youth appears in need of aid.
Maid puts slender arm around him
With a blushing, "Who's afraid?"
—McLandburgh Wilson, in the Sun.
RIPPLES
OF MIRTH
Casey—"An' whoi old ye name th' baby after th' Czar?" Corrigan—"Well, he don't know a thing about anmythin' an' shtill he's th' boss."—Puck.
"Did you ever know Bilkins to keep his word?" "Once." "When was that?" "I lent him $5, and he said he'd eaterally indebted to me."—Cleveland Leader.
"You say your first speech made several converses?" "Yes." answered Senator Sorghum regretfully; "from my side of the question to the opposition."—Washington Star.
"Isn't this climate changeable?" asked the man who worries about his health. And the man who suffers with the heat merely answered: "I hope so."—Washington Star.
Husband.—"You know, my dear, my devotion to you is unremitting." Wife —"Yes, I've noticed that when I've been away and wrote to you for money."—Baltimore American. This earth, upon its axis set.
"Two things make my wife awful mad." "What are they?" "To get ready for company that don't come, and to have company come when she isn't ready."-Philadelphia Inquirer.
"Some men say," remarked the beautiful heiress, "that I have no heart." "Oh, that doesn't matter," replied the poor but willing to be honest youth; "I'll give you mine."-Chicago News.
Mrs. Jawback-"I'm sure I've suffered every misfortune a woman can." Mr. Jawback-"Oh, no, you've never been a widow." Mrs. Jawback-"I believe I said misfortune, didn't I?"-Cleveland Leader.
Biggs-"After holding political office for ten years, Peachy has just retired a poor man." Diggs-"Huh! Why didn't he resign at the start, when he discovered that he was being watched?"-Chicago Daily News.
And nothing count$ but cold and clammy
cash:
Just think of all the genius$ and Scholar$ Who, lacking coin to advertise$, go snash$ —Edwyn Stanley, in Life.
"Why did you persist in calling your visit to this country last season a farewell tour?" asked he, manager coldly.
"It was in no sense a farewell." "Yes, it was" replied the famous primadonna. "I fared very well." —Judge.
Uncle Jerry Peebles was looking over the list, of "amended spellings" recommended by the reformers. "Good land!" he exclaimed, "I don't see nothin' strange in them words. That'r the way I've allus spelled 'em." —Chicago Tribune.
Mistress—"Well, why don't you boll the eggs?" Cook—"Sure, I've no clock in the kitchen to go by." Mistress—"Why, yes, Bridget, there's a clock in the kitchen." Cook—"Phwat good is ut? Ut's tin minnits fast!"—Cleveland Leader.
"Good morning," he said to the rental agent, "have you any nice little places in the suburbs, where a man will have ground space enough to have a little garden and a chicken-yard?" "Yes, indeed," said the agent. "I have quite a number." "Well, show me the other places. I tried gardening and chickens last summer."—Life.
Great Business on the Fly.
A curious lawsuit came up in a London, Court recently which involved a balance against a corn dealer of four shillings "for dried files." "What on earth do you do with them?" asked the astonished Judge. "They are used in the making of chicken food," replied the plaintiff. He explained that a bag of eighty-one pounds of dried files was supplied to the defendant at eightpence a pound, and according to the custom of the trade the gross weight was charged for. The defendant contended that he ought to pay only for the net weight. "You surprise me when you talk about eighty-one pounds of dried files in bulk," said the Judge. "Where do you find all these files?"
"They are imported."
"Where from?"
"America."
It is an export trade, suggests the New York Tribute, that deserves encouragement.
What Fashion Means.
The chief end of fashion is not adornment or the cultivation of beauty or anything of that sort. It is the promotion of trade. The design is to make all women who can possibly afford it throw aside, at least once a year, all the clothes they own and buy new ones. It is realized, when this season's fashions make last season's look so conspicuously out of date that no, sensitive woman can wear her last year's gown without grief.—Collier's Weekly.
In the year 1904 about $16,000,000 was sent or taken to Spain by Spanish who emigrated to the new world.
PUBLISHING EVERY SATURDAY,
BY THE TRIBUNE PUBLISHING CO.
116 W. St. Julian Street.
Ga. 'Phone 874.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year.....$1.25
Six Months.....75
Three Months.....50
Business must be made by Express or
Post Office Money Order, or Registered Letter
Advertising Rates given on application.
We acknowledge the receipt of the following invitations: Commencement of Morris Brown College, Dr. J. S. Flipper, president, May 20-30.
Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, twenty-fifth anniversary exercises May 20-24. Closing exercises of Tennille High School, May 21-23. Commencement of Florida Baptist College.
The white Knights of Pythias are attempting to stir up strife in the State between the races. At the recent grand lodge session in Augusta, a committee of lawyers was appointed to devise plans whereby the colored knights will be put out of business. They have a serious proposition on hand and will never succeed at it. If they attempt to do so they will have one of the liveliest legal battles on hand that was ever waged. For years the colored knights have been getting along peaceably, and on account of their marked progress, the breasts of the opposite ones are heaving with prejudice and anxiety for the annihilation of the colored brother. THE TRIBUNE predicts that the colored knights will be in existence long after the posterity of those who are now attempting to harm them have become extinct.
LAST week in the Superior Court, while trying a small colored boy, Judge Cann admonished the colored citizens to pay more attention to such cases and endeavor to keep the boys out of trouble. The judge's intention in this matter is alright but he has lost sight of the cause of so many boys in this city getting into trouble. The cause of it is mainly the lack of school accommodation. With over four thousand children unprovided with school facility, the wonder is that a greater number is not on the chain gang. We admire the able judge and would like to get his assistance in securing another school building for our children. As good citizens, we are doing much in our power to train our children as they should be, but when the avenues of ignorance and vice are wide open it is hard for us to stem them without the aid of those in authority.
Net Flt for Governor.
Mr. L. M. Merchison, chairman of Bryan county sent us an interesting account of the Hoke Smith meeting at Clyde, last week. He is indignant along with many who heard Hoke because of the utterance that, "It was a disgrace and degrading to educate the Negroes," and that the Negroes of Georgia-should not be allowed to vote Hoke said many other degrading things not fit for publication and utterances that a fair minded man would never be guilty of
Last week, State School Commissioner Merritt delivered an address at Clyde, Bryan county, which was well received. The grand jury of the county has recommened the establishing of an industrial school for our people in that county.
Masonic Notes.
From reports the coming session will be well attended and very interesting.
Full obedience to Grand Lodge regulations is expected of each Lodge.
Recreant Lodges are expected to forward annual report at once. It will be impossible for the Grand Secretary to render a full report unless the Lodges make immediate returns.
Past Master Samuel Bowen, of Keller, has the sympathy of the brethren in the death of his son.
Without the blowing of horns this grand old Order is doing much good and securing a foothold that will withstand ages The brethren and members of the chapters were glad to welcome to the city, Mrs. Viola E. Hart, Grand Royal Matron of the Grand Chapter O. E. S. She arrived in the city on Tuesday and at night lectured to Electa and Mt. Moriah Chapters O. E.
S. A large number of ladies were present and highly enjoyed the lecture, commenting on it as one of the best treats of their chapter life. The meeting was honored with the presiding officers of the three largest ladies' institutions in state, O.E.S., H.H. of R. and I. O.O. C., in the persons of Mrs. Hart and the beloved Mrs. R. L. Barnes, who is one of the F. A. T. A. L., and who represents the two latter institutions; After the meeting a reception was tendered the Royal Grand Matron and the ladies all joined in commending her for her timely address. Mrs. Hart has visited a number of the chapters in the state and speaks encouragingly of the Rite. She returned home on Thursday morning with the best wishes of the ladies of Savannah.
A Big Mass Meeting at Valdosta, In Interest of the State Fair
OF THE STATE FAIR
Prof. D. C. Suggs, VicePresident of the Georgia State College, having been invited to address the colored citizens of Valdosta and Lowndes County, made a flying trip there in the interest of the State Fair to be held in Macon. A large crowd had assembled at the court house for the purpose of hearing him. Prof. Sugge has the proud distinction of being the first colored man to address a body in Lowndes County's new court house.
The meeting was opened with prayer by Elder Z. H. Griffith. Prof C. G. Wiley, principal of the colored public schools, then in chosen words introduced the speaker of the hour, styling him as one of the greatest orators of Georgia and possibly of the South.
Prof. Suggs was at his best and fully convinced his hearers that the introductory remarks with reference to him were not flattery. His word pictures of the past of the Negro were highly enjoyed and evoked much applause. He carried his audience so completely along that when he told them that it was high time for the Negro in Georgia to give a State Fair, they were as a unit for it Professor Suggs is easily, one of the drawing cards in south Georgia.
The audience was next asked to take stock in the State Fair, and including a few shares previously subscribed 250-shares were subscribed for Lowndes County. The subscribers included most of the leading men of the county. Even Rev. T. N. M. Smith who has been reported as opposing the fair took out five shares. It is confidently expected that the number for Lowndes County will reach the five hundred mark before the subscription list closes.
Prof. Suggs was instrumental in securing for the people of Valdosta their present principal, and has spoken for them on an Emancipation Proclamation occasion, and has in other ways secured for himself the cordial welcome which the people of Valdosta and Lowndes County extend him. On Sunday night, May 6th, President Wright spoke at Dr. E R Carter's Church, Atlanta, Ga., in the interest of the Colored State Fair. A large crowd was present and Rev. Carter and his members subscribed liberally to the capital stock of the Fair Association.
On Monday the Evangelical Ministers' Union consisting of the ministers of Atlanta heartily endorsed the movement and each one of them subscribed for a number of shares. They also made plans for a grand mass meeting to be held in the interest of the fair. President W. H. Crogman, of Clark University, will have charge of the programme on Education Day and Miss Lucy Laney of Haines Institute, has been placed in charge of the woman's department. Rev. E. R. Carter is Chairman of the Atlanta local committee.
Boston Suprise.
Miss Bessie Moore gave her mother a pleasant surprise in honor her forty-seventh birthday on Wednesday evening of last week. Many games were indulged in and quite an enjoyable time was spent by those who were present. Refreshments were served at 11 o'clock. Quite a number of guests were present among whom were Mr and Mrs Shelner, Mrs. O. W. Jackson, Mrs. Elmore and son, Mrs. Barnes of New Heaven, Conn; Mrs. Morrison, Mrs. L. S. Stephens and Mrs. E. Stephens, formerly of Savannah; Mrs. Bush, Mrs. Seaforth, Mrs. Burwell, Mrs. Edward Stephens, Mrs. H. Moore.
of Savannah; Mieses Sarah Brown, Mollie Seaforth, Celia Burwell, Mattie Burwell, Meadames Coates, Oliver, Powell, and Lyle.
The Men's Sunday Club.
That the Sunday Club is maintaining its prestige, and that it bids fair to become a potent factor for the good in this community, is an important fact. The power and attraction it has, are evidenced by the large and representative audiences which gather each Sunday to listen to the very excellent programs, which from time to time are rendered.
One thing, however, which speaks very creditably for the Club, but which seems not to be so generally known to the public at large is the setting into headquarters by the Club. The interest on the part of the members in the reading room has not wholly been satisfactory, but it is gratifying to the officers to note the gradual but growing interest of the public at large in these reading rooms on Henry street, east, now established, a little above a month. The Sunday Club in this effort, is placing a premium on the reading man, and hops to educate our young men and young women to read more and which, naturally, will cause them to think more. Everybody is cordially invited to visit the headquarters, and to show thereby, his or her appreciation of what the Sunday Club is doing. Wednesdays is ladies' day. L-t us show our appreciation for the good things as they come.
On last Sunday a large and appreciative audience sat in rapt attention and greeted Prof. C. A McDowell as he addressed the Club on "Man's Place in the Universe." Mr. McDowell handled his subject in a simple, straight forward, and yet philosophical manner, causing the audience, at times to wonder whether or not they were listening to a Butler, LeConte, or a Kant. All seemed to have been edified by the very excellent address of Mr. McDowell, and went away feeling that they had digested a great deal of sound advice on science, philosophy and metaphysics.
Next Sunday, there will be a address by Miss O. E. Lincoln, one of the teachers of the Beach Institute. Let all come for a treat is promised on this occasion.
Preminent Knights.
"Among the men most prominent on the floor of the last Grand Lodge session ready in debate, quick at repattee, eloquent and convincing in argument, great fighters, were: N. B. B. Williamson, of Balnridge; Geo. S. Williams, of Bavannah; E. W. Sellers, of Macon, and Dr, R. C. Williams, of Augusta."
The above is clipped from the Pythian column of the Georgia Baptist, and it pays a just tribute to our "George," and we take delight in reproducing it and to add that Sir Knight Williams is a true type of manhood, representative in every respect, honored and beloved by his many friends. He is desi- dened for greater things that will undoubt- dly be attained on account of his ability and the friends he makes and retains.
Second Baptist Church.
Second Baptist Church services were well attended during the week. Bunday services were excellent. Pastor May preached an impressive sermon at the morning hour. Communion services were well attended. Two visiting brethren assisted Dr. May in administering the communion. Rev. Geo. C. Wiggins, B. S. preached eloquent sermon at night. Seven members were fellowshipped, one restored and one joined as a candidate for baptism. Collection for the week $71.10 There are a number of very sick members on the roll this week. Pastor May and his wife are happily located at 417 McDonough St. East All churches, denominations, lodges, hands and individuals are cordially invited to attend the "Installation" the fourth Sunday in May at 2:45. Come early if you desire a good seat.
There will be a general roll call and revising of the list the third Sunday in June at 4:30. Every member is urgently requested to be present.
This roll call is preparatory to a big raily a little later on.
Dr. May will preach the annual Thanksgiving sermon to the Sons and Daughters of Wesley Sunday night, he will preach the annual sermon to the Daughters of Zion the fourth Sunday night. Mrs. Mayne E. May, wife of Pastor May, made an impressive talk at church Thursday night of last week. She is an earnest Christian worker and an ideal preacher's wife. Two funerals were attended by Dr. May; the funeral of Mrs. Anna Floyd, from Second Baptist Church at 3:15 p. m. and of Mr. Alva B, Davis, son of Deacon R. M. Davis, from the family residence at 5 p. m. The fourth Sunday will be a great day at Second Baptist Church.
Mrs. Smith the famous singer and player of Newport, Rhode Island, who is working in the interest of the Home for fallen girls will sing and play one of her leading songs at Second Baptist Church Sunday morning after the sermon. Don't fail to hear her
Excursion to
NEW YORK Via Philadelphia.
Wednesday, May 23.
CHEAP RATE.
First Class Accommodations.
Through Transfer of Baggage.
For further information apply to
C. A. TURNER,
615 Henry Street, east.
To all members of our beloved Order,
Greeting:
In the great calamity which visited California on the 18th, our sisters of the Courts were among the great sufferers. Some of them lost their lives, while some were fortunate enough to escape, they lost all that they possessed. They are homeless; and without food. The entire country is rallying to the support of the sufferers. This appeal is made in behalf of our members. All Courts of Calan-the are requested to send a contribution for their relief as help is needed. I hope special meetings will be called to attend to this matter. Send your contribution to this office and it will be forwarded to those in distress without delay. Receipts will be sent and the list of those who contribute, will be published in THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE, THE PYTHIAN ADVOCATE and THE ATLANTA INDEPENDENT. Please act promptly as help is needed now.
Mrs. R. L. BARNES, G. W. C.
Mrs. M. S. GRANT, G. R. of D.
Through Train A. C. L.
Through train and sleeping car service between Jacksonville, Fla, and intermediate points to Augusta, Ga. Effective January 10, 1906, the Atlantic Coast Line will inaugure through Pullman and Sleeping car service between Jacksonville, Fla., intermediate points and Augusta, Ga. These cars will be handled on Florida and West Indian Limited No 82, and New York and Florida Express, No. 89, with dining car service northbound and buffet service southbound. Trains will arrive at Augusta 9:45 p.m., daily, depart at 10:30 p.m. affording best possible service between South Georgia points and Augusta. For detailed schedule or other information see ticket agents or write. T. C. White, T. E. Myers, D. P. A., Sav'h, Ga. T. P. A. Sav'h, Ga
WANTED: by a Chicago wholesale and mall order house, assistant manager (man or woman) for this county and joining territory.
Salary $20 and expenses paid weekly; expense money advanced. Work pleasant; position permanent. No investment or experience required. Spare time valuable. Write at the office,iculars and enclose self-addressed envelope.
SUPT., 132 Lake St., Chicago, Ill.
The Rev. Richard Bright cordially invites the general public and strangers who are visiting the city to the services of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church at the corner Habersham and Harris Sts. All the scats are free, come and sit where you please. Hearty congregational singing. The gospel of Jesus Christ preached. Hours of service; Sundays 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Wednesdays 8 p.m.
Congregational Services
First Congregational Church, lt.v.
W. L. Cash, pastor, Sunday s-service:
Preaching 11 a m, and 8:15 p m;
Sunday School 9:45 a m; Junior:
CE Meeting 4:00 p m; Y P S of G
E 7:15 p m; Prayer Meeting, Wed
nesday 8:15. You are cordially in
vited to all services.
Scientific Embalmer.
A. B. CUMMINGS, Hygenic and Scientific Embalmer, Registered State of Ga. No.10 Arterial and Cavity Embalming. Clark and Barnes needle process. Remains prepared for shipment to any part of the world. Now with the Estate of J. H. Johnson, No.133 Jefferson street, Bell Phone 676.
Notice.
The Union Loan and Investment Company is now open for business, we have on hand 100 shares of stock (or $5.00 per share) Money invested here is money secured and is subject upon investment herein, to a pro rata part of all interests fees and fines accruing to the company. We have ready money to loan upon easy earns on secured notes, real and personal property negotiable papers including Stock certificates. We are open for business and solicit the patronage of the public. While we regard business transactions as a public privilege, we also regard it in its personal relations, taking into consideration the whims of the individual. We are open at all hours, at 20 state St., West, (up stairs). Ask for Geo. W. Jacobs.
Pres and Gen'l Manager
DR. L. S. PARKS,
ENTIST
240 Barnard St., Savannah, Ga.
Does all kind of high grade dental work of the best quality and workmanship Gold crowns and bridge work. White Porcelain Pivot, and Gold Crowns mounted on the natural roots. Gold Fillings, Cement Fillings, and Silver or Amalgam Fillings, from nine to a full set of tech $7.00 and $3.00 Broken Places mended and teeth added to old ones for a small cost. BellPhone 1244
Gold Crowns Guaranteed
23% K Gold
Both Phones 689
F. F. JONES,
DEALER IN
Beef-Veal-Lamb-Mutton
PORK, HAMS, BACON
and Gorned Beef.
All Kinds of Game in Season.
Goods promptly delivered to
any part (af the city free of
charge.
Stall No. 31, City Market
THE ROYAL
PONCIANA.
524 West Broad Street,
A. B. CUMMINGS, Prop.
MEALS served in first class
order. Table and Transient
boarding. Everything neat
and inviting, try us once,
you will try us again.
FOYE'S Great Annual Clearing
Annual Clearing Entire Winter Stock
Immensely
Ladies and Children Ch
and Separate
Absolutely S
During the con
Unusual Ind
In Embroideries and
FOY
Broughton and Ba
Metropolitan
and Realty
(Incorpora
Capital Stock
Shares $1
Full Paid and Nom
d Children Cloaks, Sultan and Separate Skirts
Absolutely Slaught
uring the coming week
Equal Inducen
roideries and Muslin Un
OYE'S
Brighton and Barnard Str
politan Merc
Realty Comp
(Incorporated)
al Stock $500,0
tres $10 ea
Full Paid and Non-assessable.
Ladies and Children Cloaks, Suits, Waists and Separate Skirts Absolutely Slaughtered During the coming week.
Unusual Inducements In Embroideries and Muslin Underwear.
Broughton and Barnard Streets
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company. (Incorporated) Capital Stock $500,000. Shares $10 each. Full Paid and Non-assessable.
Six Years of Success
and service tells a tale unprece
of Race Enterprise.
Six years of experience and
epoch of corporate adventure and
Six years of pluck and push, t
Six years of progress and pro
prestige.
Six years WORK and worry,
IS THE HISTORY of this g
This with Real Estate is behind
pay SEVEN PER CENT and
Churches, Halls and Houses,
thousand men and women.
Make an investment with us a
grow.
tells a tale unprecedented in the enterprise. A of experience and extension may corporate adventure and business achievement of pluck and push, trials and tribu of progress and prosperity, patien WORK and worry, wisdom and w HISTORY of this great race inst real Estate is behind your investment IN PER CENT annually. We talls and Houses. We employ o men and women. We are here in investment with us and see your
and service tells a tale unprecedented in the annals of Race Enterprise.
Six years of experience and extension marks an epoch of corporate adventure and business achievement.
Six years of pluck and push, trials and tribulations
Six years of progress and prosperity, patience and prestige.
Six years WORK and worry, wisdom and winning.
THIS IS THE HISTORY of this great race institution. This with Real Estate is behind your investment. We pay SEVEN PER CENT annually. We build Churches, Halls and Houses. We employ our two thousand men and women. We are here to stay. Make an investment with us and see your money grow.
P. SHERIDAN BALL PRESIDENT.
L.P.C. COLLINS, SEN
J. H.
F. M. COHEN, Teller. J. W. ARM
222 W. Broughton St., Savannah
W. M GRAY, Pres., J. M.
A, L. MONGIN, V. Pres., D.
JOHN D. SAVAGE, Gene
The Afro-Am
Union Saving, Loa
Le C. COLLINS, SECRETARY.
J. H. ATKINS, T
eller.
J. W. ARMSTRONG, Ge
on St., Savannah, Ga. Bell
res., J. M. NORTHINGTON
, V. Pres., D. W. OSBORNE
D. SAVAGE, General Manager.
Afro-American
wing, Loan Tru
F. M. COHEN, Teller. J. W. ARMSTRONG, Gen'l Mangr.
222 W. Broughton St., Savannah, Ga. Bell Phone 1144
W. M GRAY, Pres., J. M. NORTHINGTON, Cashier,
A. L. MONGIN, V. Pres., D. W OSBORNE, Treas.
JOHN D. SAVAGE, General Manager.
The Afro-American Union Saving, Loan Trust Co.
Capitalized at $50
216 Whitaker St., San
THIS COMPANY
Is now open for business. Depositors
following favorabe rates upon all deposit
5 Per Cent
Itntarest will be paid upon DEMAND
upon all ANNUAL Deposits.
MONEY LOA
Upon Negotiable Notes and Real Estate
governing such Transactions. We soli
OF THE PUB
The Company has a few more shares of
per Share. After Stock is paid up, Sto
not less than 8 per cent.
realized at $5000.00
Maker St., Savannah,
THIS COMPANY
business. Depositors being favored
the rates upon all deposits.
5 Per Cent
paid upon DEMAND Deposits.
ALL Deposits.
MONEY LOANED
Notes and Real Estate subject to
transactions. We solicit the Patr
OF THE PUBLIC.
a few more shares of Stock for sale.
Stock is paid up, Stock holders wi
er cent.
Dr. E. D. B
Capitalized at $5000.00.
216 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga.
THIS COMPANY
Is now open for business. Depositors being favored with the following favorabe rates upon all deposits.
5 Per Cent
Itntarest will be paid upon DEMAND Deposits. 7 per cent upon all ANNUAL Deposits.
MONEY LOANED
Upon Negotiable Notes and Real Estate subject to the Rules governing such Transactions. We solicit the Patronage
OF THE PUBLIC.
The Company has a few more shares of Stock for sale at $5.00 per Share. After Stock is paid up, Stock holders will recieve not less than 8 per cent.
and SHERBETS.
I am now prepared to furnish the
Public with all kinds of
the very best
ICE CREAM and SHERBETS
in any quantity on reasonable terms
and on short notice.
See me before going elsewhere.
[S. S. McFALL,
Reynolds and Anderson streets.
G. James
215 Randolph Street, corner of
Jackson Street.
Beef, Pork, Veal and Poultry,
Also carry a fine line of Groceries, Cjgars, Tobacco, etc.
Prompt attention will be given to all patronage.
ICE CREAM
al Clearing Sal
Sliety Reduced
Green Cloaks, Suits, Waist-
Separate Skirts
Slaughtered
are coming week.
Inducement
and Muslin Underwear
YE'S
and Barnard Streets
Can Mercantile
City Company
(incorporated)
Stock $500,000.
$10 each.
and Non-assessable.
Access
unprecedented in the annals
race and extension marks an
feature and business achievement.
push, trials and tribulations
and prosperity, patience and
worry, wisdom and winning.
this great race institution.
behind your investment. We
WT annually. We build
houses. We employ over two
men. We are here to stay.
with us and see your money
BIDENT.
INS. SECRETARY.
J. H. ATKINS, TREASURER.
Y. ARMSTRONG, Gen'l Mangr.
Evannah, Ga. Bell Phone 1144
J. M. NORTHINGTON, Cashier,
D. W OSBORNE, Treas.,
General Manager.
American
Loan Trust Co.
(incorporated.)
at $5000.00.
Savannah, Ga.
COMPANY
depositors being favored with the
all deposits.
Cent
EMAND Deposits. 7 per cent
LOANED
Real Estate subject to the Rules
We solicit the Patronage
PUBLIC.
shares of Stock for sale at $5.00
up, Stock holders will recieve
Dr. E. D. Bulkley,
—DENTIST—
All Branches . . .
. . . Of Dentistry
211 East Broad Street,
Cor. Oglethorpe Lane.)
BELL PHONE 1124.
Savannah, Ga.
SUITS to order including Ladies Skirts and Jackets. Send for samples. All Work Guaranteed.
Edward G. Bryant.
Fashionable Tailor and, Cutters Cleaning, Repairing, Pressing and Dyeing 9 Farm Street, North
Mrs. B. L. Barnes leaves next week to make official visit s.
Mrs. Mary Frances Green left on Tuesday to visit relatives and friends at Crescent and Darien.
Mrs. A. E. Robinson and Mrs. C. B. Lewis returned from New York Sunday after a stay of several weeks.
Mrs. Rachel Hudson left on Wednesday last for New York via Philadelphia. She will be gone for the summer.
Mr. Edward C Williams, who has been teaching at Haines Normal Institute, Augusta, is in the city and will remain until next week.
The Farmers Union Society will give its annual supper at Sackville, on Monday night May 28tn, Tickets 25c. Supper free.
The annual sermon will be preached to the E. K Love Benefolent Association on Sunday night at the F. A. B. Church.
Mr. B. J. Jordan, of Brunswick, gave us a "pop" call on Tuesday. Friend Jordan is always a welcome visitor and ever the same to his friends
Rev. W. L. Cash, leaves today for Charleston S. C. where he will be in attendance at the ordination of deacons at Plymouth Congregational Church. He will deliver the sermon at the morning services.
Mrs Carrie B. Johnson of New York City, who has been spending the past few weeks in the city visiting relatives and friends, left for her home on Wednesday.
There will be a Patriotic Concert in observance of Memorial Day given by Mrs. J. H. Patterson's School at the Second Baptist Church on Wednesday evening May 30th. Tickets 10 cents.
Mrs. Jas. F. Harris after spending the winter at Asheville, N.C. has returned to the city looking well. Her many friends are glad to greet her home.
Mrs. Lula Robinson, nee Miller, formerly of this city, died in Wash ington, D. C. The remains were buried on Tuesday, R-v. W. L. Cash, officiating.
WANTED: Smart, energetic girl or young woman to sell attractive booklet. Liberal commission. Address StrictlyBusiness, Trubne office
The Steamer Louise will leave the foot of Whitaker street, with the students and friends of the Georgia State College at 3 p.m., Friday, May 25th, by way of Thunderbolt and Savannah harbor. Friends are invited to take the trip with us Fare 25 cents.
The third year Normal class of the G.S.I.C., entertained the graduating class on Wednesday night, May 16th. There were a few invited guests and all expressed themselves as being very much pleased.
Mr. H. E. Perry, Life Insurance. Room 423 Empire Building, Atlanta. Ga. 8-7-06.
Mr. M. C. Parker, one of Pierce County's most prosperous and prominent citizens spent Monday in the city and gave us a pleasant call. Mr. Parker is a solid business man and counts for much in his community and at the same time making a record that is beneficial to the race. We are always glad to greet him Mrs. Fannie H. Starr, chairman of the committee of Star of Savannah Fountain No. 2450 True Reformers, that gave the concert at Masonic Temple last week, wishes to extend thanks to the parents for the use of their children in the concert, and to the public for their liberal patronage.
Mr. Geo. W. Smith of this city was married to Mrs. Lillian R. Williams, of Worcester, Mass., by Rev. J. A. Brockett, D. D., at the residence of Mrs Joseph Huzel, on Thursday night April 26th The bride was becoming gowned. Many valuable presents were received. They are now in their commodious cottage, which was recently built at Fairview.
Mrs. A. E. Edwards of Thebes Ga., was in the city during the week. She is looking well and her relatives and friends here were glad to see her.
Go to Lincoln Park Monday, May 21 and hear Prof. L.B. Thompson deliver an address in honor of the 15th amendment formerly celebrated by the military but now by the Chatham County Emancipation Association.
Mr. Thos. H. Bemby, of Hawkinsville, after having taught a successful term at Green Grove, had his closing exercises and picnic on last Saturday, and is now at home enjoying the summer months with his wife. Mrs. Ellen Bemby.
On account of the absence of the pastor, Rev. W. L. Cash, Prof. Geo. B. -Hurd of Beach Institute will speak at the First Congregational Church at both the morning and evening services. At the evening service there will be a special song service with a short address on "The Use of Song in Public Worship."
St. Phillip Dots.
The attendance at 11 a.m., services on Sundays is still increasing. Rev. Lindsay
discourses on Sundays are very instructive and beneficial and his popularity is shown by the crowds that attend each service. St. Philip sent $18 to San Francisco sufferers and a letter was received from Bishop Abraham Grant, D. D., L.L. D., acknowledging the same. St. Philip Church is the first colored church in Georgia to send any donation to the sufferers. Rev. Lindsay left for New York City on Sunday to attend the meeting of the Home and Foreign Missionary Board of the A. M. E. Church, which convened at Bethel A. M. E. Church on Tuesday. Don't forget the excursion to Beaufort, S. C., on Tuesday June 12. The committee will spare no palms in making it enjoyable for all who attend. Fare round trip 50 cents, children under 12 years of age 35 cents. The following services will be held on to-morrow, Sunday: Praver meeting at 5 a. m.; preaching at 11 a. m.; Sunday School at 3 p. m.; Allen's League at 4:30 p. m.; preaching at 8:30 p. m. Strangers are cordially invited.
Mr. C. A. Turner has made arrangement for alarga number of persons to go to New York next Wednesday via Philadelphia. The fare is reasonable and the accommodation superb. Mr. Turner has conducted similar successful trips and expects to make this one more so. See him, ad. in another column.
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Services at Bethlehem Baptist
Church, Rev. L. L. Blair, Pastor, to
tomorrow as follows: Special sermon
to candidates at 5:30 a.m. and baptism
at 7:30 Preaching at 11 a.m.
Sunday School at 2 p.m. Communion at 3 o'clock, preaching at 8 p.m.
The public is invited, the Church is arranging for an excursion to Beaufort in June.
B. Y. P. U.
The Baptist Young Union of the F. A. B. Church, Franklin Square, held the second meeting of their reorganization Wednesday evening last. A number of members were present, also many visitors. The topic for the evening was "Christian R-sponsibility." The devotional and literary parts of the programme were quite interesting and well performed. The solos rendered by Mr. J. H. O. Jenkins, Misses Daisy Robinson and Rosa Hooks deserve much comment, also the duet by Misses Mary and Sabena Bing. The paper on "Duty" read by Mrs. Sarah Hatcher, was a rare treat, also the well spoken recitation of little Eleanora Hatcher Mr. W. G. Williams concluded the meeting with an address. The members of this Union constitute some of our best young men and women, and their progress thus far bespeaks a bright future. You are invited to attend these meetings each Wednesday evening from 8:30 to 10 o'clock.
Baptist Ministers' Union
Baptist Ministers Union met as usual on Monday, Rev. J. W. Carr presidug. After devotional exercises the sermonic reports were taken up as follows: Rev. J. H. May, D. D., subject The Land of Unclouded Day. Rev. W. A. Daughtry, subject Baptism. Rev. H. L. Haywood, subject The gospel of the Kingdom of Christ. Rev. F. Rice, of Chicago, Ill., was introduced to the union and gave a interesting talk. Rev. J. W Carr, D. D., was elected representative to the National Sunday School Congress at Nashville, Tenn., June 18th, 1906.
Rev. Carr made a statement relative to the ordination of two brethren to the eldership and asked the union to assist in same. Sister Flora B. Smith of Newport, R. I., was introduced and spoke of her efforts to raise funds to establish a rescue home for fallen girls, she also sung and played. She secured appointments with different pastors. Rev. U. Chatman was admitted to membership in the Union. The meeting was inspiring and enjoyed by all present. The criticisms were friendly.
Allow me space in your valuable and widely read paper to state that the members and friends of St. James A. M. E. Church gave their pastor, Rev. J. A. Brockett, D. D., and his wife, a most elaborate surprise as a token of their high appreciation for the noble and herculean work he has done for them. It was a surprise indeed, for the good doctor was engaged in business meeting with the financial board of the church, when he was in the midst of this very important meeting some one dared to disturb the peace and harmony by rushing in and calling him to marry a couple that was in waiting at the home of Brother J. W. Millen, who was himself at the meeting and who had very skillfully planned the surprise. So they hastened away and met at the door by two of his officials, who said that they had some thing they wanted to leave till morning; it was a wagon loaded with hams, sugar, coffee, canned goods and everything nice too numerous to mention. The party then proceeded to Brother Millen's there to meet a crowded house of friends, who had actually slipped the organ cut of the church to use, and sweet music was rendered, Rev. J. T. Thomas, B. D., P. E., made the presentation speech in a few well chosen words in behalf of the stewards and trustees of the church. Dr. Brockett, responded in a manner befitting the occasion. He was greeted with applause at most every sentence. Mrs. Brockett, also expressed her appreciation in timely words. The following persons were present: Rev. J. T. Thomas, B. D., P. E.; Rev. J. A. Brockett, D. D.; Mrs. J. A. Brockett; Rev. J. Williams; Bro. J. W. Millen, Bro. S. S. Jones, Bro. J. S. Elmore, Bro. M. W. Green, Bro. B. W. Montgomery, Bro. W. M. Watson, Bro. B. W. Carter, Bro A D. Rlvers, Bro J. T. Lockhart; Mrs. Anna Broswell, Mrs. Sarah McLoyd, Mrs. Lizzie Middleton, Mrs. Louise A. Alexander; Mr. C. W. Alexander; Mrs. Hester Tillman; Mrs. Catherine Alexander, Miss Aurelia Ryles, Miss Ardella Butler, Mrs. Eliza Millen, Mrs. Dollie Morgin, Mrs. Lier Smith, Miss Patient Nobles, Miss Esine Godfrey, Miss Mary Green, Miss Ella Spain, Miss Isabella Elmore, Miss Lockhart, Miss Mamie Peacock, Mrs. Patient Larkin, Miss Patrick Peacock, Miss F. S. Marshall, Miss Rosa Mott, Miss Anna Clark, Miss Clara Millen, Miss Racnel Coleman, Miss
Katin Lightfoot. Thus ended one of the grandest surprises in the history of St. James. Ice cream and cake were served to all present. Reporter.
Union Baptist Church.
The services of the Union Baptist Church, Charles, street were held as usual. Prayer meeting at 5 o'clock was well attended. 11 o'clock services were conducted by Rev. F. Rice of Chirage; Ill. All who heard him was much gratified with his sermon. Sundav school at 3 p. m., conducted by the Superintendent, Deacon E A. Sweanglin At 8 p. m., the services were conducted by the pastor, subject, "The Gospel of the, Kingdom of Christ." Rev. Rice will conduct the services for the next ten days. He is a power in the pulpit. The public is cordially invited out to hear him. The last two wee s. the following couples were married: Mr. Grant Mills and Miss Hannah Dorman; Mr. William Russel and Miss Grtrude Bynes; Mr. Allen Greyson and Miss Lula Johnson; Mr. William Sweangin and Miss Sarah Sams; Mr. Moses Washington and Miss Alice Smith; Mr. Isaac Edwards and Miss Marle Hamilton. Our pastor was at Guyton, Ga., on Sunday and delivered a sermon to Pinora Lodge of the G. U. O of O F., and the Household of Ruth. The sermon was delivered at the Macedonia Baptist Church. Every space was taken up and many stood out side. Services will be conducted on tomorrow morning and night by Rev F. Rice. The public is cordially invited to attend the services. The Baptist Young People's Union met on Monday night at 8:30 o'clock, Miss A. O. Newsom. President. The meeting was real enthusing. Much good is expected to derive from these gatherings. All are invited to attend.
AMUSEMENT COLUMN.
Coming Events in The Social World.
The Little Folks Minstrel Co will present "A Trip to the Klondike" under the management of Mine F. L DeaVerney at, Masonic Temple, Friday night, June 1st Tickets 15 cents
The annual Picnic of the Sunday School of the First Congregational Church, will take place at Cattle Park Monday June 4. Cars leave Gwinnett and Habersham Sts, at 9 a.m. Tickets 20 cents.
The female brass band will give a grand entertainment at Evans Hall, on Monday night May 21st, Tickets 10 cents
A grand concert will be given for the benefit of Bethel A. M. E. Church Monday night May 21st, Tickets 10c.
A grand Parasol Contest and Musical entertainment will be given at Mt.Tabor Baptist Church Monday night May 28th, Tickets 5c.
The Eureka Aid and Athletic Club will give their first picnic to Lincoln Park Tuesday May 22nd Tickets 15c.
A grand Outing at Lincoln Park will be given by Club No. 1, of the West Broad and Bolton Streets F. A. B. Church Monday May 28th, Tickets 15c.
Dont forget that Tuesday May 29, is the date of the Adelphia Club's picnic at Lincoln Park Tuesday May 29th, Tickets 15c.
The Mutual Club will run their annual excursion to Beaufort on the night of May 29th, Ticket 50 and 25c.
A grand May Pole and Tableau Scene will be given by the Concert committee for the benefit of Second Baptist Church Monday night May 28th, Tickets 15 and 25 cents.
R. G. Shaw Past No. 8, G. A. R., will make their annual visit to Beaufort for the Decoration Day Celebration. They have chartered Steamer Clifton, and will leave at 11 o'clock on the night of Tuesday May 20th, Tickets 75 and 50c.
A grand concert will be given for the benefit of Bethel A. M. E. Church, Monday night, May 21st. Tickets 10 cents.
A joint celebration will take place at Lincoln Park under the auspices of the Chatham County Emancipation Association, Monday May 21st. Tickets 15 cents.
The Union S. and D. of Gospe Travelers will give a grand ball at Duffy Street hall, Monday night May 21st. Tickets 15 cents.
A Grand Hop will be given by Sanctiorum Lodge No. 22, A. F. and A. m., at Masonic Temple Monday night, May 21st, Tickets 35 and 50 cents.
The Cooper Friendly Brotherhood Club, will give a grand ball at Masonic Temple, on Monday night, May 28th. Tickets 15 cents. "Rev. Bright" and his congregation cordially invite their acquaintances, "well wshers," and the public at large to ac company them on the annual excursion of St. Stephen's Church, Tuesday June 19th. In order to take the proposed route it is absolutely necessary to leave early, 2.30 p. m. Music, refreshments and dancing. Popular prices: 50 and 25 cents
Commenced business
Oct. 5th 1900 - - $ 102.00
October 5th 1901 - - 1,144.00
October 5th 1902 - - 2,462.03
October 5th 1903 - - 11,637.37
October 5th 1904 - - 14,587.63
October 5th 1905 - - 20,897.28
April 5th 1906 - - - 26,413.64
We solicit your patronage. Shares $12.00 each, payable $1.00 down and .50c per share monthly. IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT we allow interest at the rate of 5% compounded quarterly. Money withdrawable on demand.
AND INVESTMENT COMPANY
"The Pioneer Negro Saving
Bank in Georgia."
468 West Broad Street
Bell Phone 1198 Ga. Phone 2029
B. H. LEVY, BRO: & CO!
GRACE, DASH, DISTINTION,
CALL it what you will there is a something that marks our High Grade lines of Clothing from the ordinary kind. Men in all walks of life can be fitted here more satisfactorily. BETTER VALUE does not necessarily mean higher price that experience which comes from over a quarter of a century of continuos endeavor to obtain the very best there is at the least possible outlay to the purchaser has resultad in our being able to offer
"BETTER VALUES AT THE SAME PRICE."
Men's Full Suits 10.00 to 35.00 Men's Coat and Pants 7.50 to 30.00 Genuine Panama Hats 6.00 up. Straw Hats all shapes 1.00 up.
B. H. LEVY, BRO. & CO. 5 Broughton Street, West.
YOU and your friends are cordially invited to inspect the new and original series of post cards now on the market, devoted to and illustrating the progress of the Negro Race. Authorized pictures of such leaders as Douglass, DuBois, Washington and Dunbar; realistic views of the foremost educational institutions, and gratifying glimpses into the business life of the Race are shown, being reproduced in the latest photographic style. Prices 2½-5-10 cts.
Dr. J. W. Jamerson,
Go to him and have yourwork done Crowns, gold and white, looking like the natural teeth. Filling gold, silver and cement. Plates, full or partial, Bridge neatly done. Extracting done with ease. All work neatly in a neat first class place.
Provided with all modern appliances. 623 WEST BROAD STREET Bet. Huntingdon and Hall.
Metropolitan Mutual
In addition to our sick and death benefit policies we are offering the public industrial insurance in straight life policies ranging from $100.00 to $500.00. Premiums within the reach of all. A fair value for your money in a reputable company is what all of us are looking for. This is what we are giving. See any of our agents or call at the company's office for rates and particulars Energetic men and women can make anywhere from $5.00 to 25.00 a week working for this company.
Office 222 W. Broughton St. Savannah, Ga. J W. ARMSTRONG Vice-President.
Good Quality.
Our 44 RYE WHISKEY is a wonder. Only $2.75 per gallon. Send us a Trial Order. Price List of all kinds of Liquor on demand. S. Raskin & Son, West Broad and Henry Sts., SAVANNAH, GA.
(Incorporated—Charter Perpetual)
(Incorporated—Charter Perpetual)
The leading insurance company in the shuth. Giving employment to m young men and women than any other company of like benefit.
The UNION BENEFIT ASSOCIATION is the peoples favorite, since it is the first home insurance company of its kind in this city.
Founded, built, owned and controlled entirely by Negro men of the city.
Every policy is backed up by a deposit of $5,000 with the State Treasury.
When you take out a policy with the UNION BENEFIT ASSOCIATION you have made a safe investment.
She is striving now to place her policies in every State in the union
Shrewd and energetic agents are wanted.
Call and see us at 20 STATE STREET, W. Bell Phone 2322
GEO. W. JACOBS, General Manager.
The leading insurance company in the young men and women than any other in the UNION BENEFIT ASSOCIATION is the first home insurance company of the Founded, built, owned and controlled. Every policy is backed up by a dept. When you take out a policy with the you have made a safe investment. She is striving now to place her po
Shrewd and energetic
Call and see us at 20 STATE ST.
GEO. W. JACOBS,
You Will Tru
Whose neighbors speak well of his city—whose business associates rests testify to his fair dealings—and him that a SQUARE DEAL is essential.
Nothing to do but collect your re
CHAS. Mc
ing insurance company in the South. Giving emple-
and women than any other company of like benefit.
BON BENEFIT ASSOCIATION is the peoples fa-
mme insurance company of its kind in this city.
Built, owned and controlled entirely by Negro me-
nicity is backed up by a deposit of $5,000 with the S
Su take out a policy with the UNION BENEFIT A
le a safe investment.
Giving now to place her policies in every State in the
and energetic agents are wanted.
We us at 20 STATE STREET, W. Belle
GEO. W. JACOBS, General Manager.
Will Trust The M
bors speak well of him—whose friends vouch
business associates respect and honor him—
his fair dealings—and whose ability and brain
QUARE DEAL is essential to permanent suc-
do but collect your rents and look after you
AS. McDOWE
You Will Trust The Man
Whose neighbors speak well of him—whose friends vouch for his honesty—whose business associates respect and honor him—whose customers testify to his fair dealings—and whose ability and brains have shown him that a SQUARE DEAL is essential to permanent success. Nothing to do but collect your rents and look after your property.
CHAS. McDOWELL,
22 West State Street.
SUITS TO ORDER
Good Material—Perfect
SCOTT BRO
462 West Broad St
ats, Caps, Collars and Shirts
Women and Children Hos
Apron Ginghams and N
A new line of CORSETS—Best for t
Hats, Caps, Collars and Shirts. Men's Women and Chidren Hosiery. Apron Ginghams and Notions. A new line of CORSETS-Best for the Price.
Announcement.
or friends are cordially invited to inspect the post cards now on the market, devoted to a degro Race. Authorized pictures of such leagton and Dunbar; realistic views of the for gratifying glimpses into the business life introduced in the latest photographic style. P
hy invited to inspect the new and original market, devoted to and illustrating the zed pictures of such leaders as Douglass, realistic views of the foremost educational into the business life of the Race are photographic style. Prices 2 1/2-5-10 cts.
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WORKINGWOMEN
Their Hard Struggle Made Easier-Interesting Statements by a Young Lady in Boston and One in Nashville, Tenn.
MissFrankie Orser MissPearl Ackers
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fall.
All women work; some in their homes, some in church, and some in the whirl of society. And in stores, bills and shops tens of thousands are in the never-ceasing breadmill, earning their daily bread.
All are subject to the same physical laws; all suffer alike from the same physical disturbance, and the nature of their duties, in many cases, quickly drifts them into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, tumors, ulceration, falling and displacements or perhaps irregularity or suppression, causing beadsache, nervousness, irritability and lassitude.
They especially require an invigorating, sustaining medicine which will strengthen the female organism and enable them to bear easily the fatigues of the day, to sleep well at night, and to rise refreshed and cheerful.
How distressing to see a woman struggling to earn a livelihood or perform her household duties when her back and head are aching, she is so tired she can hardly drag about or stand up, and every movement causes pain, the origin of which is due to some derangement of the female organism.
Miss F. Orser, of 14 Warrenton Street, Boston, tells women how to avoid such suffering; she writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
"I suffered misery for several years; with female irregularities. My back ached; I had bearing-down pains, and frequent headaches;
Backache
gives woman some of her most miserable and wretched hours. Along with the backache, generally come headache, waist pain, falling feelings, irritability, nervousness and the blues. Have you these periodical troubles? If so, you may know that they are due to disease of some of the most important organs of your body, organs that should get help or, in time, through weakness, will wreck your health and life. Help them to health with
WINE OF CARDUI
WOMAN'S RELIEF
Says Mrs. Blanche E. Stephanou, of 1228 S. 42nd Ave., Chicago, "'suffered miserably for five (5) years with a constant pain in my back and right side and although my husband employed several of the best doctors in this great city, not one could give me relief. At last I took Wine of Cardui, which relieved my pain, prevented an operation and restored me to health." It is a wonderful curative medicine for all womens' ills. Try it.
It amused Thompson's Eye Water with wreak eyes. The coldest city in the world is Yakutsk, Eastern Siberia. Dr. Björger Huckleberry Cordial Never Falls
Chahbes of Living In Battle.
In Homeric days a battle was a prospect of armed mobs. The nearer you got to your assailant, the better was your chance of killing or being killed. The bigger the man, the better wary his chances in the strife. In these piping times of mechanical warfare, the situation is reversed. Battles are fought at ranges of a mile or so. The smaller the man, the less are his chances of being hit. An ingenious mathematician has figured out that perhaps the casualties on the Japanese side must have been considerably less than those of the Russians in the recent war. If it be assumed that thenermanship of each was equally good, the advantage of the Japanese was inversely as the cubes of their height and breadth.
The average target is often esc to the enemy are as the cubes of 1,585 and 1,642, or as 106 to 118, an advantage in favor of the Japanese of about 12 per cent.
I could not sleep and could hardly drag around. I consulted two physicians without relief, and as a last resort, I tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and to my surprise, every ache and pain left me. I gained ten pounds and am in perfect health.
Miss Pearl Ackers, of 327 North Summer Street, Nashville, Tenn., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
"I suffered with painful periods, severe backache, bearing down pain, pain across the abdomen; was wary nervous and irritable, and my trouble grew worse every month.
"My physician failed to help me and I decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I soon found it was doing me good. All my pains and aches disappear and, I no longer fear my monthly periods."
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the unfailing cure for all these troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles, and displacement with all its horrors will no more crush you.
Backache, dizziness, fainting, bearing-down pains, disordered stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society—all symptoms of the one cause—will be quickly dispelled, and it will make you strong and well.
You can tell the story of your sufferings to a woman, and receive helpful advice free of cost. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. The present Mrs. Pinkham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years she has, under her direction and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge.
CAPUDINE
IMMEDIATELY CURES
HEADACHES
Breaks up COLDS
IN 6 TO 12 HOURS
Trial Bottles 1c. At Drugs
(At20-'06)
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, soften thegums, reduce inflammation, allays rrin, curea wind colle, etc. a bottle
The new Italian postage stamps will not bear the monarch's head.
HOW TIS SUNG IN BOSTON.
Every one labore except our distinguished progenitor.
He reposes in a recumbent position within our residence through the day,
His pedal extremities idling upon the bronze of the steam radiator.
Serenely engaged in extracing nebulous atmosphere from a tobacco receptacle of mundane matter.
Our material mentor receives solled linen for the purpose of cleansing it.
And in this connection I should include filial Ann.
Indeed, everybody is engaged in some variety of occupation in our domestic habitat
Excluding, as primarily suggested, our distinguished progenitor. —R. Q. Man in Springfield Republican.
Coal In a Tree.
In the churchyard of a Welsh village a unique storing place is provided for coal used to heat the church during the winter months. In the churchyard stands four large yew trees, prominent landmarks known to all the villagers. But these grand old yews are not only ornamental; one, at least, serves a good purpose, for in a hollow in one of them, which is protected by a door, is stored the church's supply of coal, says Home Chat.
TRANSFORMATIONS
It is almost as hard for an old coffee taper to quit the use of coffee as it is for a whisky or tobacco blend to break off, except that the coffee user can quit coffee and take up Postum Food Coffee without any feeling of a loss of the morning beverage, for when Postum is well boiled and served with cream, it is really better in point of flavor than most of the coffee served nowadays, and to the taste of the coinoisseur it is like the flavor of fine dawn.
'A great transformation takes place in the body within ten days or two weeks after coffee is left off and Postum Food Coffee used, for the reason that the poison to the nerves has been discontinued and in its place is taken a liquid that contains the most powerful elements of nourishment.
It is easy to make this test and prove these statements by changing from coffee Postum Food Coffee.
IN THE WATER
The U. S. S. "Constitution," now at the Boston Navy Yard, Charlestown, The Upper Picture Shows Wheel and B Innacle Captured From the "Java" in 18 12
SCISSORS SHARPENER.
It is important in sharpening a pair of scissors that the angle at the cutting edge of the blade be uniform throughout. This is easily accomplished by the scissors sharpener illustrated below, patented by a Pennsylvanian. In this device the sharpener is drawn back and forth along the blades of the scissors, and the construction is such that an excellent bearing of the shank
Sharpens the Blades.
of the sharpener against the side of the blade is assured. The sharpener proper consists of a file, which is made in conjunction with a holder, the device fitting over the blade of the scissors. The file is then in a position to gye the edge of the blade of the scissors the proper angle, and as a large majority of those called upon to use the shears and scissors are of the female sex, and as they are not particularly skilled in the sharpening of scissors, this feature is important. To facilitate the use of the sharpeners the point of the blade of the scissors is forced into a convenient piece of woodwork and the handle of the blade grasped firmly, when the operator can exert considerable pressure to hold the blade firmly in one position while rubbing the sharpener back and forth over the blade. It frequently happens that the screw upon which the blades of the scissors are pivoted becomes loosened, in which event the screw driver extension is a very convenient adjunct to the sharpening device.—Philadelphia Record.
A Daring Experiment.
A Daring Experiment.
We have decided that "booze, and business" is a bad mixture, and will just try plain business for a short spell. If this doesn't work well we may decide to cut out business and try booze. This decision was reached after a very forcible argument with our devoted spouse, who warned us in no uncertain language that we would be using some of that fair restorer on our topmost point unless we wiped it off our list altogether. As it would be a sin to waste the precious fluid in this manner we have cut it out. Boys, be warned and don't tempt us, for we will be compelled to murder in cold blood the first one who flashes a bottle of tincture conflurium in our presence.—Coiweta (L. T.) Courier.
Senator Hoar's Speech in Canada.
At a Fourth of July celebration in a Canadian town where both English and American guests were assembled the flags of the two countries were used in decorations. A frivolous young English girl, loyal to the Queen, but with no love for the Stars and Stripes, exclaimed: "Oh, what a silly-looking thing the American flag is! It suggests nothing but checkerberry candy." "Yes," replied the late Senator Hoar, "the kind of candy that has made everybody sick who ever tried to lick it."
Not All Houeless.
"When you know a man is a devotee of golf," said the enthusiastic golfer, "you can be absolutely certain of his mental calibre, and be assured—" "Oh, come, I wouldn't say, that," replied the plain man. "I don't doubt: that some men play golf who are really quite sensible." -Stray Stories.
DOOR. ALARM.
Traveling salesmen especially do not always find locks on the doors of the rooms to which they are assigned, and the small portable alarm bell shown here would be invaluable in such instances. It can be used temporarily or permanently, and can be conveniently carried in a traveling bag. It can be attached in an instant's time to the shank of the door knob, the parts being so combined and arranged that oscillation of the door knob in either direction will cause the bell to ring. The bell is of the ordinary bicycle bell pattern, and is operated in a novel way by a push pin, the releasing of a spring ringing the bell. The bell is supported on a strip of metal, at the end of which is a clamp, the latter fitting on the handle of a door knob. Sliding on this strip of metal is a corresponding strip, having at the top the pushpin, the head of the clamp engaging with the lower end of the sliding strip.
The device is first clamped to the door knob, and as soon as the latter is oscillated in either direction the knob and clamp forces the sliding strip upward, releasing the spring operating the bell. If a spring bell is used the bell will, of course, continue to ring until the spring is run down or until the knob is returned to its normal position—Philadelphia Record.
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Rings Automatically.
weight of the bell will cause the bell to swing as far as it can go in that direction, the head of the clamp forming a pivot. The turning of the door
Impitation Jewelry.
"Never have I known such a craze for imitation jewelry as now," was the remark of the manager of one of the big department stores, and it only needs a glance to see that in a store where the crowds are greatest the imitation jewelry lies.
"We can't supply the demand," went on the manager, "and I know it is the case not alone with us, but even more so with those firms who make a specialty of selling it alone.
"Jewelers who have for years been in the business have told me that their trade has suffered greatly from this cause. Such art and skill have entered into its manufacture that in many cases it can't be told from the real, and very frequently women who can afford better things purchase the cheaper sort when some article is seen to be a passing fad. That many of the wealthy women in society have duplicates of their handsome jewelry we all know." - Philadelphia Telegraph.
A Gallant Boy.
A Bostonian was talking about the late Henry Harland, says the New York Tribune.
"Harland was a graceful, gallant soul," he said. "Even in his boyhood days he turned the prettiest compliments.
"In his boyhood he studied Latin under a charming young lady.
"This young lady, calling him up in class one morning, said:
"Henry, name some of the 'chief beauties of education:' ~
"The boy, smiling into his teacher's pretty eyes, answered:
"‘Schoolmistresses.’"
EVOLUTION Trying to Develop Specific Peculiarities.
WHAT is that in the egg which enables it to develop all the qualities of the bird? Something must be there, and we may even assume that all the separate qualities displayed by the bird have their representatives in the egg. Now, if it were only possible to get at these representative particles within the egg, what changes might not be effected in the development of the bird? To take a very simple example, the peacock has a white variety, lacking the bright colors of the feathers. If in the egg of the ordinary peacock we could seize upon the representative particles of the color and impede their development, perhaps we would succeed in reproducing the white variety at once and quite artificially.
Obviously this is the heart of the matter, for if once the principle should be discovered to dislocate such a representative we might apply it to numerous other instances. A white peacock would be no novelty and no gain, but we would be able to make white varieties of other birds and other animals, and perhaps even of the bright colored flowers, which until now have resisted all encavors of breeders in this line of work.
Methods of attacking this problem are not at all falling. We might try to kill some of the representative particles in the egg, or to stun them, or to injure them in ever so slight a measure, so as only to retard their development.
The process of the evolution of animals and plants must be attacked by direct experiment. This evolution, however, has a long history, covering many millions of years. Its historical part, of course, is not accessible to experimental work. From its innermost nature it must be studied according to historical and comparative methods. In laboratory work we may simply pass it by.
After eliminating this great mass of detail concerning the pedigree of the animal and vegetable kingdom two points remain, which present themselves for experimental study. These are the beginning and the end. Obviously the real end is not yet reached. Evolution is going steadily on even now. In the same way we may assume that the beginning is not yet finished. The laws that ruled the material world some twenty or thirty millions of years ago must have been the same that are still ruling it in our days. Circumstances may have changed, but it is not very probable that those which permitted life at the beginning and those which have made it possible during the long geological ages should have been widely different. On the contrary, it seems only natural to assume that new life may nowadays originate as well as in former times. It is only a question of where we are to look for it.
On this very difficult point I like to be guided by the genial conceptions of Brooks. In his "Foundations of Zoology" he depicts the primeval seas and their living population. All life must have been limited at those early periods to the high sea; all organisms were floating; amid the waves, going only to a depth of some few metres. Here the mafnia lines of the animal and vegetable pedigree must have been produced, starting the great divisions of both kingdoms. The only exceptions are offered by the flowering plants and the vertebrate animals, which seem to have originated on the shores or perhaps on the land itself. As long as all life was in this floating condition evolution proceeded rapidly and broadened out. Then came a period when, as Brooks says, the organic world made the discovery of the possibility of living on the bottom of the sea, feeding on the sinking remains of the floating world. This great change was the starting point for numerous adaptations and for the evolution of a richness of forms and structures, but without the previous progress in the production of many really new divisions.
The experience of agriculturists and horticulturists has long since established the fact that new forms of animals and plants from time to time arise. How they originate is another question, which it is not the task of practice, but of science, to answer. The fact, however, is undeniable, and all observations point to sudden changes or so-called sports as the first beginning. Especially in the dominion of horticulture Korshinsky has shown,
How Herbert Spencer Painted His Carpet
In Harper's Magazine appears an article on "Home Life With Herbert Spencer," written by two friends-who lived with him. It reveals a new and amusing side of the great thinker's character. Here is one of the incidents:
"The pattern of his drawing room carpet began to fade when it had only been down a few months. It consisted, or rather had consisted, of clusters of blue flowers on a drabbish ground. Now, with the principal color gone, it had become far too dull for the taste of that lover of brightness. He therefore conceived the unique idea of having each flower stamped over with red ink. For this purpose he invented a small tin tray, which was so made that it stood quite flat on the floor to prevent any possibility of the ink being split or dropped about. Bent in it were little wells about as large round and, twice as thick as a halfpenny. These depressions were filled with the liquid.
"The semempress—whom he was always glad of an excuse to employ be-
by an ample critical survey of the historical evidence, that sudden sports are the prevailing rule and probably even the exclusive manner of originating new varieties.
Such considerations have led to the conviction that what occurs in horticulture must also occur in the experimental garden. If the conditions are the same, why should not the phenomena be the same, too? If mutations are rare in horticulture, the experimenter has only to arrange his work so as to be able to detect rare occurrences in his cultures, too. In doing this I have succeeded in observing mutations quite anomalous to the horticultural instances and collecting all the evidence concerning their ancestry and their descendants, as well as concerning the mode of their appearance.
Moreover, I have had the good fortune of discovering a wild plant which is even yet in a condition of mutability. Yearly it is observed to produce new species. It is the large flowering evening primrose, which bears the name of Lamarck, the founder of the theory of evolution. It clearly shows how new species arise from an old stock not by continuous and slow changes but suddenly. The stock itself is not altered by the process nor even noticeably diminished. The new species which it produces arise on all sides. Some of them are in a higher, others in a lesser degree, fit for their life conditions; some persist during years, while others disappear nearly as soon as they arise.
This instance of experimental mutation is found largely to agree with the experience of breeders, especially in horticulture, and likewise with the conclusions that have been drawn from comparative studies. The assumption that those species and genera which now consist of large groups of closely allied forms have originated in the same way seems quite undeniable; and as soon as the validity of this generalization is granted for these cases it will have to be considered of general, if not universal bearing.
Two main lines have to be distinguished: to study the phenomenon itself and that of its causes. Mutations, of course, cannot be assumed to be a special feature of the evening primroses. They must occur elsewhere, too, and these must be sought. One or two novelties among thousands of individuals of the common type are not easily found, especially where the differences are slight and new and thereby apt to be overlooked. No differentiating remarks, however silent, should be considered as insignificant. All aberrant individuals should be planted separately and protected with all the care required to insure the fullest development. Many of them afterward prove to be only fluctuating variants or to have deceived the experimenter. They are simply discarded. It is quite sufficient if some remain and prove to be mutants. As soon as in this manner a mutable strain will be discovered, the greater part of the other species may be excluded, although the search for new mutable species should never be wholly neglected. Each year some new forms should be taken into culture, in order to have sufficient chances of gradually increasing the evidence concerning the occurrence of mutability in nature.
The chief objects of this inquiry, however, must be study of the mutable strain itself. Some of its seeds yield new species, while others are more conservative. Thence the question, Which seeds mutate and by which causes are they elected to do so? The location of the mutating seeds within the fruit, the position of the preferred fruits on the spikes, the influence of the individual strength of the sundry branches and many other points have to be investigated. Further, it is probable that the degree of mutability, or, in other words, the yield of mutating seeds, is more or less dependent on the outer life conditions. Thence the necessity of studying the influence of culture in general, of light and heat, of soil and water, and last, but not least, of manure. Extreme combinations of these factors should be tried to see whether perhaps they may give extreme results.
Underlying all and directing all the efforts should be the hope of obtaining such a knowledge of the phenomenon as would enable us to take the whole guidance of it into our own hands.—Scientific American.
cause she was so hard-working and so poor—was soon set to carry out his plan. Down on her knees she had to go, and as she was decidedly stout, it was no light task. With a cork cut the exact size and dipped in the ink, she pressed firmly down on each flower, thus leaving it as it covered with red cherries. No wonder it took her over a week, working all day, for the carpet was from twenty-five to thirty feet long and proportionately wide."
Pretty Wedding Custom-
In some parts of the Tyrol a beautiful, though curious, custom prevails. When a girl is going to be married and just before she leaves for the church her mother gives her a handkerchief, which is called a tear-kerchief. It is made of newly-spun and unused linen, and with it the girl dries the natural tears she sheds on leaving home. The tear-kerchief is never used after the marriage day, but is folded up and placed in the linen closet, where it remains till its owner's death, when it is taken from its place and spread over her face.
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- THE-PULPIT,
ACSCHOLARLY SUNDAY, SERMON BY
- DR. CHARLES EDWARD LOCKE.
Subjectt The Universal King.
Brooklyn, N. ¥—Dr. Charles Edward
Locke, pastor of the Harison Place MM.
E. Chureb, preached Sunday in the
New York Avenue M. E. Church on
“Jesus. Christ the Universal Bing.”
‘The sermon was the annual oue be
fore the New York East Conference.
‘Che text Was from Revelation xi:15;
“The Kingdoms of this world are be-
come the kingdoms of our Lord and of
His Christ.” “Among other things Dz,
Locke said:
‘With His own band God wrote on the
foundations of>history, “The seed of
the woman sball bruise the serpent’s
head.” On the radiant advent morning
the angel said to the bewildered shep-
herds, “Behold, I bring you good tid-
ings of great Joy, which shall be to all
people;” and, later, the Great Teacher
Lfmself announced, “I, if I be lifted
up from the earth, ‘will draw all men
unto Met” Though Confucius died of
a broken heart, fearing he had spoken
no truths which would sureive bim,
and Socrates drank in despondency the
hemlock in hig cave overlogking Ath-
ens, yet Jesus Obrist, the world’s Great
Optimist, cried out, in triumph tn the
midst of the agonies of the cross—"It
Js finished” and Paradise Lost became
‘Paradiee Regained. John, the Revela-
tor, in the seraphic isolation of his
exile, saw-in his vision the fuldllment
of all these prophecjes, and exultant!y’
wrote, “The knigtoms of this world
are becéme the kingdoms of our Lerd
and of His Christ.”
It Was a long looked for psychologi-
cal moment when Bethlehem's star
appeared above the dimpled hills of
Judea. Civilization had slipped down
from the hoary highlands of Bactria
to the lowlands of Hindustan; it then
moved westward, tarrying long enough
to build its towers in Persia, its tem-
ples in Greece, its tombs in Egypt and
its thrones in Rone At its birth
Christianity encountered the fieree op-
Position of emperors and armies. Rome
was mistress of land and sea. ‘The
fonnder of Christianity was a Roman
subject, its chief apostle a Roman‘ejfi-
zen. The whole Romaneempire was
hurled across the path of the progress
of Christ. His followers suffered, but
in the sign of the cross they conquered.
Our forefathers bravely followed the
guiding star to the summit cf the Alle
ghany Mountains and fixed the west-
ern boundary of the new republié; but
the years pushed the frontiars west-
ward, and when at last against the
prophecies of American statesmen the
plains were crossed by the intrepid
Pioneer, then autocratic lawmakers
defiantly announced that the serrated
peaks cf the Rocky Mountains would
outline the western boundary of the
paticn, but steadily and gracefully
moved that point of light until at last
it mingled its silver beams with the
golden embroldery of the sunset coast.
‘Then even the wisest of modern magi
thought that the starof empire had
become a fixed star, but fatthfally it
as pursued its noiseless tread until
to-day it is brilliantly’ shining above
eastern archipelagoes and continents.
‘We are the,creatures of that star and
must keep up with {ts aerial fight,
for wherever it lingers there is another
Betblekem's cradle and another advent
bymo.
‘Within the lifetime of many here
present the star appeared in the
<slatic beavens and the angel choir
again sang “Glory to God in the high-
est, on earth peace, good will to men.”
The year 1838 has been called the
Annus Mirabilis of modern missions,
and truly it was a “year “wonderful,”
for the doors were opened to one thou-
sand million of the human race. In
that year IndJa was transferred from
the clutches of the avaricious East
IndlayCompany to the British crown
and Gueen Victoria became Empress
of India, By, the Treaty of Tientsin
the ports and interior of China were
opened and the people were permitted
to accept Christianity without perse-
cution, and Japan, after 200 years of
exclusion, made its treaty with Great
Britain, Now, let us see how these
great kingdoms of the earth are becom-
ing the kingdoms of our Lord and of
His Christ.
Indla bas 2 pépulation of £50,000,000
aud an area of 1,860,000 square miles,
Suttee, infanticide and the voraclous
juggernaut are gone forever. .Because
of the huge reservoirs Constructed by
English foresight famine ts rapidly dis-
appearing, and the gradual elevation
of women fs taking place. India will
be Christian from the Himalayas to
Ceplan, from Bombay to Calcutta.
China has had continuous authentic!
history for forty centuries." ‘The first
real character in Chinese history was
the Emperor Yu, who ruled 290 B. C.
The Chitieso are supposed to be the
descendents of Shem, the oldest son
of Noah. ‘They settled on the banks
of the Yellow Miver and established a
kinedom -coeval with Babylonia andj
Egypt, and before Abraham came cut
of Chaldea.
Four hundred and six millions cf peo-
ple and 4,225,000 square miles, and has
a coast line of 2500 miles. The climate
is very Duel like our own. There are
Egypt, and before Abraham came cut
of Chaldea.
Four hundred and six millions ct peo-
Dle and 4,225,000 square miles, and has
a coast line of 2500 iles. The climate
is very much like our own, There are
broad rivers, lofty mountains and va}-
leys of extraordinary fertility. There
is vast mineral wealth. Beside tron,
gold, silver and copper there are im-
mense coal fields;‘all of which-lle al-
- most undisturbed waiting for the com-
tng of the higher civilization which
will some day adorn tbls drowsy ma-
lion, China lies partly in the temper-
ute zone, where the greatest natlons
have developed and where the possi-
bilities of-power and permanency are
assured. .
They are an industricus pecple, al-
ways busy, quiet and peaceable, What-
ever lethargy characterizes the country
as a government, the typical Chinaman
Js a shrewd, active, successful toller.
‘The Chinese invented printing and
gunpowder; first used the magnetic
needle; made the finest*porcelain and
to-day manufacture the finest silk and
the most exquisite embroidery.
They are an educated people. ‘All
candidates for official position—which
4s said to be the universal ambition of
all citizens—must pass difficult exam-
{nations. Of course I do not need to
remind yon that their standards of edu-
cation are low; their astronomy is pic-
turesquely mingled with astrology and
nll their science 1s pathetically behind
the studies of the West.
Coctrings and principles. Tie ~basis
of government and soclety {s the fifth
commandment—Silal devotion. Obed!-
ence to parents and respect for old age
are everywhere persistently inculcated
jand practiced. Herein ies the secrét
of whatever of virtue and permanency
may be found among‘Chinese, When
a man reaches eighty years of ‘age his
name {s reported to the Emperor, and a
Yellow robe is presented to him as a
mark of imperial respect on the pre-
sumption that his life must have been
virtuous or it would not have been
prolonged.
All that China needs to make it a
progressive and useful nation is Chrise
tianity, with its Christ-and:His instl-
tutions, They are a more promising
people than were our ancestors in
Britain befére their conversion to
Christianity through the preaching of
Augustin and the graceful influence of
Queen Bertha, the wife of Ethelbert.
They have won thelr way by venerable
age to everything which Occidental na-
#ons can do for\them, Confucianism,
with its negative virtues, and Bud-
dhism, with {ts Intangible mysteries,
have been tried and found wanting.
May China not be a natlan which is
to be born in a day? There is a tra-
ditlon that the Apostle‘Thomas carried
the-Gospel first to China. As early as
1288 Pope Nicholas sent misslonaries
to China. There is a God in Heaven
who has not forgotten the Chinaman.
Avhat shall I say of Japan, the land
of little people and of great deeds; of
culture and courtesy, with a population
of 45,000,000 living among 4000 islands
whose area is 162,000 square miles—
about three times the size of the State
of New York? A phenomenal uation,
Only thirty years ago it was a crime
to accept Christianity in Japsn. In
1860 an English sailing ship fost re-
turning from the Orient reached the
Thames. On board were two Japanese
youths, who had worked their way
‘before the mast. Disconsolate and
alone, they went to bed supperless that
first aga because all the crew had
‘gone ashore, A few morths ago one
of those Japanese boys again returned
to Great Britain. ‘This time he was
‘welcomed by the Lord Mayor and a
‘distinguished company’ of such men
as the Duke of Argyll and Lord Rose-
bery. He came as the guest of the
city of London, and was lavishly en-
tertained at the Mansicn House. He
was Marquis Ito, who bas been four
times the Prime Minister of Japan.
‘This is a romantic epitome of the na-
tion of Japan, Many of its statesmen
are Christians. Admiral Togo has a
Christian wife, and is himself not a
pagan. In the recent war the bravest
generals were Christian mén. Japan
was pagan yesterday, it is agnostic to-
day, to-morrow it will be Christian.
Doubtless among the kingdoms of
this world which the ecstatic John sdw_
becoming the kingdoms of our Lord
and of His Christ was the great em-
pire of Russia, The Russlans are a
mighty, mysterious, paradoxical, provi-
dential people. “Their ancestors are
found among the ancient Scythians in.
Southern Europe five centuries befors
Christ, worshiping a sword fixed in thd
ground as an image of the god of war.
Under the reign of Viadimer, 1000 A.
D., the Russians became Christians,
getting thelr religion not from Rome,
Dut from Constantinople; bence they |
are Greek Christians.
The. Russian has clear religious con- |
Yictions and is devoted to the rites of
his church, Senator Beveridge says:
“The religious side of a Russian is all
sides of him.” His faith is serene
and steady; the holy icons are rever-
ently protected, and the devoticn cf the
soldier {s marked. Like Cromvell's
army they often rush into battle with
sacred songs on thelr lips.
Russia is in process of evolution,
She is not “a bear that walks like a
man,” as Kipling safd, but she is
man’ who has peen acting lke a Dear.
But it will be remembered that another
nation in its developing history be-
haved so much like a quadruped that it
will Probably always be referred to as
“Jobnny Bull.” Russia's medievalism
is-being rebuked, and her virility, and
integrity, and- faith, and enterprise
will yet bring her forth into a full-
orbed Christian uation.
By their men ye shall know them!
If there have been cruel and heartless
rulers, there have also been epoch-
making leaders. A nation must have’
permanent qualities of greatness which
can claim among its master minds such
men as Prince Kuropatkin, De Witte,
Verestchagin and Loo Tolstoy.
‘The Anglo-Saxon and the Slav are to
be- the two great regenerating infu-
ences of Asia—the former moving
westward, the latter moving,enstward_
The future of the, world mist reckon
with the Russian. Other races have
had theip.chance and failed. The two
great peoples who could‘ emancipate
their own slaves are destined to teach
the liberty of Christ to the nations at
the ends of'the earth. It 1s true ofthe
Russian as it is true of the Anglo-
Saxon that he not only conquers, but
he assimilates, - .
At the end of the first century there
were in the world 5,000,000 Christians;
Expect Blersinces
Begin to-day with the detérmination
to find blessing. His tender mercies
are about us on every élde. - Be on the
‘lookout for them and you will find
‘them. “The more we look for them,
‘the more of them we will see, Bless-
Ings brighten when “we*count them.
Out of the determination of the heart
the eyes see.
“If you want to be gloomy, there's
gloom’ enough to- keep you glum; if
you want to be glad; there's gleam
enough to keep you glad. Say,+“Bless
the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all
His benefits.’ Better lase count in
enumerating your blessings, than lose
your blessings in telling over your
troubles. ‘Be thankful unto Him and
bless ‘His name!’ ”"—Rev. G. BR. Lunn,
fu Christian Intelligencer,
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AWFUL SUFFERING
from Dreadful Pains From Wound ov
Foot~System AN Run Down—Ml-
racalous Cure by Catiearn.
“Words cannot speak bighly enough for
the Cuticura Remedies. 1 am now sev-
enty-two years of age. My system had
beén all run down. My blood was so bad
“that blood poisoning bad set in. 1 had
sevéral doctors attendin??me, eo finally f
went to the hospital, where I was laid
up for two months. ‘My foot and ankle
were almost beyond recognition, Dark
blood flowed out of wounds in many places
acd I was so disheartened that 1 thought
surely my last chance was slowly leaving
me. Ae the foot did not improve you can
readily imagine how J felt. 1 was simply
Cisgusted and tired of life, 1 stood tbis
pain, which was dreadful, for six months,
and duriog this time 1 was not able to
wear a ehoe and not acle to work, Some
one spoke to me about Cuticura. ‘The con-
sequences were 1 bought a set of te Cus
ticura Remedies of one of my frieads, who
was a druggis®, and .he nraise that 1 gave
after the second appticaticn is beyond de-
scription; it seemed a miracte, for the Cu-
ticura Remedies took effect immediately.
I washed «Le foo" with the Cuticura Soap
before apy tying the Uintment, and I took
tne ,Mesohent at the same time. Alter
tivo weeks’ treatment my foot was healed
comptetely. People rho had seen my fodt
during my illness and who ave econ it
since the cure can hardly belie-e their
owneyes, Robost Schoenbauer, Newburgh,
N.A. Aug. 21 1895.”
Mang fail through success, while others
muceed through failure.
Thesfacse Canaet Te Carel
hyle~alapplicationsasthey etnnot reach tho
dissqsed portion ofthe ear. ‘fLerel only one
-way'to cure deafness, and that fs ht eonsti-
tational remedies. Daalasea Is caused by an
infiimod condition of the mudous lining of
the Eustachian Tube, When this tube isin.
flamed you haras runt’ Jing sound or imper-
fect hearing, and whea it is entiraty closed
Deafness Is the recult, ard nolnss the inflam-
mation can bo taton out aod this tube res
stored to its normal cond-tfon, bearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine eases out of ten
arecansed by catarrl, which fsnothing but an
inflamed condition of the mucons surfaces,
‘We will givo One Hundeed Dollars for any
cate of Deatntsa(caused by eatnrth) that oan
not bscured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for
cieculace frec. P.J,Cnaxtr & Co, Toledo, 0.
Bold by Drugeiste, Te, _
‘ako Mall's Family Pilts for constipation.
Dover has become one of the favorites
among English health resorts.
Lim Lem nese
Buy f. & M.*Paint and get full gallon.
Wears 10 ta i5 years. because L. &. 4.
Zine hardene 1. “& M. White Lead and
makes 1. & M, Paint wear like iron,
4 gallons of I. & M. mixed with 3 gatlons
oil-will paint a modérate sized houses
C.S. Andrews, Ex-Mayor. Danburs,Conn.,
wries:“Balated my house 19 yeas eae
with 1. &M. Looks well today.”
PAINT YOUR HOUSE,
15 per cent. commision allowed,,to any
Tesident where we have no azeng. on sale
of L. & M. to property-awners: at our re:
Ci
APRIY FO LUAVAAN & MARTINEZ,
= Paint Makers, New York.
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It your blood 4s impure, thin, diseased,
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rheumatism, oF any blood or skin disease,
take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) accord-
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e medicine for, old people, as Ht gives
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cure. trample, free and prepald by writing
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Des-rfbe
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also sent in sealed letter. B. B.D, ists
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_ : a be First: there's °
a Ou e P some money saved to
your pocket every time you
e gay —_ buy a pound of Good Luck Baking "Y
. Powder—price only ro cents per can. ¥
7 aviln 4 ‘This is the purest add most reliable arti-
i Y cle on the market. Strength never varies.
: Every good cook who tries Good Luck be
a D a Gomes a steady user, but we couldn’t sell such .
7 way «enormous quantities if we tried to make too
A much profit—therefore 10 cents a can,
Ji A wondet of modern merchandising is
; de ‘ Powder
Seconds you receive useful and elegant preminms for y ££
the'Good Luck coupons {notice picture below), and ,
there is a coupon on every cat, Many clever women ———
R manage to furnish their homes and obtain handsorie Ser
B pieces of jewelty for themselves, all from these coupons. [ii fe
Other baking powders claiming to be equal to Good aaa iy f
Luck cost more, and bring you no premiums, either, , fis 14
Ask your grocerforacan, Ifhehasn’tit, plese VN
Mh send us his nome. Rail sPiby FS
. TRE SOUTHERN MFG. CO., p Cut.the “car!” Bal Ps asd
Kichuesl, Ta, ; coupon from i Part
Ee nm back of can, F de fe ‘
seneerbatrancus savers - Ss CUUTHERN Mie
oases | cua
Fa Py os
‘Tho more natural diet is more palatable, invigorating and strengthening to body and
mind—tight to the contrary with unatural, improperly prepared food, which stunts
the [ieae! dwarfs the mind, causes a lack tl pace ‘and steadiness of nerve.
No doubt that fifty per cent of the failures in life can be traced to improper dict
‘when young.
p R a E K [ ¢ é S
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
is a natural food, and is healthy for Bonne children. Let the children try it, and
note after continued use the mental and physical vigor it imparts. | *
Pafatable—Nutriffous—Easy of Digestion and Ready to Eat
seaman QV Prous
Lr. Price, the creator of Dr, Price's Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts.
10 CENTS A PACKAGE AS HUCHNODRISHNERT AS THREE LOAVES OF BREAD
INg956.
“sauae!”
“Waat fs it, Jobn?”
“This boracie acid ple doesn't taste
like: the boracic acid ple that mother
used to make,”
“" GNLOVE, *
“T wish there were ten dayS4o the
week,” sighed Gladys.
“Why?” asked Grayce,
“Jack could call oftener then.”
[Whenvouby j
WEATHER ey:
UESS
CLOTHING _2°-4424,.
youwant = “/q x
complete ‘ XG
protection by
and long 4g ie
service. J\7
These and mi “ue
ther good paints bp
erecombinea in’ A
TOWERS
FISH BRAND
a cart
eee ne afford, 4
feast
noyyze
amuses Qs is
DOMESTIC FINANCE.
Mrs, Knicker—Can you get money
from your husband
Mrs. Bocker—No, By the time I've
pald the cook for.a good dinner before
I ask him I’m just even.—Harper’s
Bazar,
Sensible wives devote their spare
Ume to mending thefr husbands’ gar-
ments rather than to nagging at them
WASTED TO A SHADOW,
Bat Found o Care Aftsr Fifteen Years
of Sutering.
A. H, Stotts, messenger at the State
Capitol, Columbus, 0., says:
+ “For fifteen years I
Peg had kidney troubles,
LIRR aS Nt though I deétored
fj PSD \eaitututty, coutd not
y pia) onda cure, T had
PEGWE heavy backachey,
een AMR izzy headaches and
| So Ges 4 terrible urinary disor-
pe ders, Ore day I col-
DMEF fas tasea, fell insensible
9 Babe SEG on the cidewalk, and
‘7a then wasted away fh
n“ a i ec ae
CS had kidney troubles,
SL SS Yd though I doétored
PRE \taltttults, could not
y Bia na a cure, T had
PEGS heavy .backachey,
eh AMD dizzy héadaches and
| So Noes 4 terrible urinary disor-
calles ders, Ore day I col-
QPP fps lapsed, fell insensible
¥@ Biab SEG) on the cidewalk, and
EW aiead then wasted away fh
ws “bed for tea week’,
After belog given up, I began usivg
Doan's Kidney Pills. In a couple of
months I regained my old health, and
now welgh 388 pounds, Twelve boxes
did tt, and I have been well tro years.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box,
Foster-Milburh Co,, Buffalo, N. Y.
The deepest gold mine in therworld
ts ot Bendigo, ia Australia.
———
0 ugly, grizzly, grey helrs. Use LA
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Catalog No... 75, Mam. 70 BO. 6 secsessnossnesersensssene ssbeceeeeesgen
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY COMPANY, 159-160 ésewocd arene, ATLARTA, GA.
Pe ae _ — , -
ieee
m retes 4 3 66 L A 39
cand NUBLACK
ae Loaded Black Powder Shells
eM ol ” Shoot Strong and Evenly,
Se Are Sure Fire,
eee es fe Will Stand Retoading. °
eee
Re ce a They Always Get. The Game.
we * For Sale Everywhere.
Piece :
fo, ue
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$5,000 88%k derostt
Aa Notes taken. Limited educa-
sion no hindrance. Board at Cost. Write today.
GA.-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Marcas, Gx
= a See
sige ©.
aS eiat fee
Be ea Stig
aR SE:
Batts “Se a
pe tesa SS
% ar eae
i pa
. =
ee
Pe see rae prev cmaineits ReneS:
Only $14.00
For this Osk Mantel, French Plate Mirror,
Tile Hearth and Facing, inch Grate; no
Summer Front Send 2c. for catalogue show:
tng 109 designs from $10 to $100. :
J. E. Hunnicutt & Co.,
ATLANTA, GA.
| MALSBY & Co.
- 41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga,
y a
ates F Foy,
Portable and Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw: Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY
Complete line Carried in stock for
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
YW. L.. DOUGLAS
33592 53:° SHOESH,
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Clit Edge Lino
cannot be equalled atany price.
| eeisey| VA y
y id eR
IS MAy
hercneee
I aT I:
| Nese |
f
Bagesesess| rat a0 caf
W, L. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELES MORE
MEN'S $3.00 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER Ii THE WORLD,
$10, 000 REWARD fo anyons wha ean
000M Ssprove th sttemen
Ml could take you into pay thtee lary: factories
st Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
care with which: every palr ot ‘shioes Is made, you
would realize why W. L. Dougias $3.50 stiocs
Cost more to make, whyhey hold their shape,
fit better, wear longer, aad ere of greater
intrinsic value than any other $3.30 shoo,
WE Oouates Siang Hade Shoes fon
‘Men, $2.50, 82,00. Bays Schoo! &
CAUTION viscies Renee nee
selene yon Raving Wiebonge
Las shock. RANE ao substi: None gonelse
‘Without his name and prico stampod on bottom,
Fast Color Eyelets used; theg will not wear brasez.
‘Wile for Westra Ctsoge
W. 1. DOUGLAS, Hirocktou, Masts
tne DOMIDEAR Tice oitoy igs:
THE DAISY FLY KILLER srt
story comiort terry Ur, O00 Ee, bot Jian oe
SRL oe en
se SL ye Ete
esas Waseem seins Tat
Pg ne i
NU A sc AI am em, ioe br
ee eee 3
WINE Nicer
ae eS 52 Bats Ara,
ew The Value ~~
Of College Men
‘By. Former Mayor Charles Schieren,
of Brooklyn. .
Deviveass¢ lege education, In fact, it was deemed rather a detriment,
because ft consumed money and valuable time; but business
amethods have changed and the aggregation of wealth and the growth of in-
<dustries and large corporations require extraordinary ability and knowledge.
lit is necessary for young men to have higher education to properly fill large
and responsible positlons and conduct the affairs of such large corporations.
In former years a pjisiness man would writs most of the correspondence
ot Lis business, today. he simply dictates his letters to a stenographer. ' While
“it may appear an easler way, still it requires greater training to dictate and
Arame the letter properly, because he must think quicker. He also needs
Aigher education and commercial training which a public school hardly pro-
‘vides, but which may be obtained at # college,
~ It Is claimed by some business men that collegetbred men are impractical,
nd prefer to train young men themselves for office work. While it may be
true that a young man just graduated -from college is hehdicapped when he
senters upo2 2 busiiess career, and ft may take him some time to.master the
dletalls of the business, bis catlege education will, however, be 2 great ald, and
“with a thoroughly:trained mimi he will grasp the situation quicker and make
.sreater progress ‘than will an untrataed clerk, Therefore, in ordinary bus!-
tess life a college education may ‘be of value.
It is true that many prominent and successful men In cur commerclal and
‘financial world bave had no college education, they received only an ordinary
education, but most of these men readily ackowledge'that thelr lack of a thor-
ough education is a handicap in many ways in thelr business.
* With the constant growth of large corporations, where a man of extraor?
ulcary ability ts required to conduct the Dusiness, It is not surprising to find
‘So many young college men at the head of these large enterprises.
I thoroughly bellevé in education. We cannot have too much of it nor too
‘many educatfonal institutions. I am glid to see so many prosperous colleges,
because it means stabliity in the affairs of thls country and its sociat and
commercial welfare.
‘We lead In many things in this country, especially In labor saving devices,
handled by the most skilful and ingenfous mechanics, Our inventive genius
fs nnsurpassed anywhere, but we are still behind in the sclence of chemistry,
which requires extraordinary ability and education. We have made wonder-
{al progress in our schools and colleges, and no doubt will also in due t!me con-
quer In the art of chemistry. We, therefore, welcome all efforts to improve
eur colleges,
§ Railroad Pessimists
, By George Horace Lorimer.
, ns ms
Figs do grow from thistles. The Union Pacific was rather sinfully nur-
‘tured. Its Credit Mobiller scandal shocked the country. But the real ‘good
that was In the caterprise remained, It led the way for the other trans-con-
tizental lines, and performed a highly valuable public service. A few years
ago, In Chicago, an enterprising quasi-politiacl crowd procured from a com-
plaisant city council an ordinance for a pretended competing telephone plant,
under tbe wideopen terms of which they cheerfully began constructing a sys-
tem of subways beneath the city street. Public temper changed, The enter-
Prise was called to a balt and forced to accept an amended grant, giving the
city full supervision. Some twenty miles of tunnels have been constructed,
‘which will become the property of the municipality and which will give a
smnique underground method of freight and parcel transportation that will be
of important public benefit. Instances might be multiplied. Whatever is
~aloable in the Standard Ojl and beef organizations #ill be saved,
‘The railroad men must cheer up. Assuredily the good that they have ac-
complished in the operating field, where they admittedly have been highly
competent, will not be lost because the government futervenes in the rate-
xsaking field, where they have admittedly been Incompetent,
‘Tiils view is urged upon them because their objection to government in-
tervention is not selfish, but Is based, as they point out, upon patriotic fear
that the roads will be made less efficient thereby. This feards quite unfound:
ed— Philadelphia Saturdey Evening Post, a 7
- Life’s All a Bluff
>
(From an Address to Students of thé University of Pennsyl. ania.)
[have noted the grave disappointment if any personage behaves as an
ordinary child at any publ{e function. I have no doubt that !f I had appeared
Before you taday with a black curl over my brow, with long face and brooding
eyes, with an absentaninded alr as if I were communing with the spirits of
all the departed poets, I would have mads a deeper Impression on you than 1
do in these clothes, which convention compels me to wear, and with an ex-
pression on‘iny face of a child that is badly scared—which I am.
Each man who has made his mark has chgsen his character—the charac-
ter best Adapted to him—and hes played it. Abraham Lincoln had his idiosyn-
-<rasies, his gestures; Daniel Webster never, never lost an opportunity to act,
-and Grant chose for model Willlam of Orange, surnamed the Silent, The first
‘thing a man thinks of when he has to fee an ordeal, be it a coronation or an
execution, is, ‘How am I golng to look? Shall I appear calm and dignified or
‘kappy and pleased?” :
‘We are apt to say, “Be natural!” As a matter of fact, is man ever hat-
uralt The bravest man 1s the min who is fraid, and yet faces danger. If
jhe were entirely natural he would run away. He acts the part of a brave
mar a
Actors on the stage are scarce, Actors off the stage are plentifal. Life
Insurance presidents, with directors and trustees have been busy acting thelr
' Several parts, and are now busy unacting them. Men are so occupied from
ekildhood with the almighty dollar that imagination is dying out, and imag-
fsatlon is necessary to make @ poet and an actor. The art of acting 1s the
crystallization of all the arts. It is, therefore, the most difficult of all the arts.
Mediocrity houses no opposition, but strong individualitles and forelble opins
‘fees make enemies. \Many an actor has set out with an ideal, but failing to
Zain general favor has abandoned it for the easler method of winning popular
a
2 &
- *
oo a
> at
see
DPevivegesi¢
a
, <aneaae:, 1°
°
PLE
4 1
r
1
I have noted
ordinary child at :
before you today v
eyes, with an abs
all the departed pi
do in these clothe
presstan on‘iny fax
Each man wh
ter best adapted to
crasles, his gestur
and Grant chose fc
thing a man think:
execution, is, “Hoy
kappy and pleased
‘We are apt to
Ht N this progressive age there seems to be nothing so availa
£ ble to a young man as a thorough college education; fo fact
¢ we owe very much of our present prosperous/condition anc
$ marvelous development of the resources of our country t
= our educatfonal fastitutions,
ae In former years we did not consider it necessary for
+£ young man In ordinary business pursults to recelve a col
-5¢ lege education, In fact, if was deemed rather a detriment.
HE trouble with many rallroad men {s‘that they are pessl-
mists. They will"not look on the bright side of the rate-
‘regulating business. It fs true, as they lugubriously point
out, that the roads, under thelr uncontrolled management,
have developed a splendid efficiency {n operation, moving
trains faster and cheaper than anywhere else in the world.
But, bless their hearts, all this good will be saved after the
government has taken a hand in ratemaking, where they
Rn eee ae ae eee ee Sareea
By Richard Mansfield, Actor.
IFE'S a bluff and if you're wise to the game youll blutt with
the rest of humanity. The difference between the man off
the stage and the man on it is often merely that the first
acts, while the other acts acting,
Mr. Thomas Lawson, if he had studied the art of acting
would have found his complaints ridiculous. A fly ought to
know a spider when he sees one, and Sf he shows the habits
of a spider he mustn't walk into the parlor and then com-
plain becanse the spider bites pieces out of him.
HOW BRIBES WERE GIVEN,
i
DIl Combine Resorts to Many Bunco
Tricks te Kill Come:tition—More ~
Sensational Evidence
A Chicago disatch’ says: Despite
the objections of the counsel for the
Standard O11 company, 'F. 3. s4bbs 01
Peoria and for thirteen years an em:
ployee of the Standard ON company,
was permitted Saturday by the Inter.
state commerce commission to Illuy
trate a number of tricks, whieh, thc
witness says, were used by salesmen
2nd agents of the Standard Oil com
pany. 2
“tn testing the ofl of a rivel com
pany,” sald Mr. Hibbs, “we used a
new, chimney and the magnesta in the
glass made the chimney ~look cloudy.
For our own use we had an old chim
ney, with the wick perfectly dried
and uot too long. We used to rub «
moistened finger across the wick of
the competi, and after it burned a
short time {he damp spot would’ be
reached, the light would grow dim,
and there would be a sputtering. All
this time our light would be burniag
brightly.
“Our wicks were trimmed 20 as to
make u thin ‘fame, and those of the
competitors we trimmed so as to make
a thick fame, The thinner the flame,
the whiter'the ght, Then we would
often bend down, the lower aurt of
‘the burner and let alr in under tho
chimney, which would cause the lamp
to smoke, Sometimes we would fil
up some of the ventilating holes
aroiind the burner with chewing
gum.
“I only resorted to these tricks
when a competitor was selling olf {n
a town and I wanted to get rid of
him.”
“Do the agents of the Standard Ol
company still practice tho tactics you
have mentfonad in meeting compett-
tion?” asked Attorney Monnet.
“Yes. They are doing it today.” re-
plied the witness, “They pay rebates,
‘bribe people, cut the price and sub-
stitute an inferior quallty of ol! and
in fact do anything necessary to get
the business and put the competitor
out of the way.” .
‘The witness then told of a dinner
given in Peorta by C. T. Hand, man-
ager of the Cincinnatt office of the
Standard Oil com ny,at which the
different methods of getting business
were discussed.
‘The witness said that Manager
Hand related how Robert Carlyle, a
salesman, had used $100 ip getting a
certain cutomer and that it was a
good investment. ‘The money was
used In bribing the employees of the
firm using the ofl, Another Instance
was cited where the engineer of &
large plant was bribed by agents of
the Standard Ojl company to put grit
in the of] sold by a rival.
‘The witness gave specific instances
where he had bribed railroad’ em.,
ployees walle he was in the employ
of the Standard O!l company to get
information regarding —shlpments
made by the Royal O!l company.’ He’
seid the company always urged
agents never to remember names or
facts connected with the work of ob-
taining information about the bust-
ness of rivals.
Attorney Monnett then attempted to
show that the Standard O1l company
<tid Jess than 10 per cent of the
taxes it should pay under the law,
but Commisstoner Clements ruled the
commission could not properly go into
that raatter In the present Inquiry.
‘Wholesale bribery of ministers and
priests by agents of the Standard Oil
company was-another seneational rev-
elation made before the commission.
Letters and other documentary evl-
dance that showed how the Ohfo min-
istry had rot only accepted, but In
several Instances had solicited insig-
nificant bribes, was brought out to the
amazement of scores of auditors. The
ministertal agents were to give them
ree ofl for thelr churches and their
personal use, In return the preachers
advocated among thelr parishtoners
fhe use of only Standard Oil to the
axclusion of competitive ols. Also,
\ccording to the letters shown, many
ot them gave “testimonials” to sales-
nen of the Standard Of) trust.
‘@
GENERAL WHARTON DEAD.
Vallant Seidier and Prominent ‘Citi.
zen of Southwest Virginta.
General G. C. Wharton, C. & A,
1s dead at his home at Radford, Va.,
‘at the age of 82 years, He was one
of the best known and most promi-
nent citizens fn southwest Virginia.
General Wharton served throughout
the Mexican war, and upon the out
break of the civil war he entered the
confederate service as a colonel of
Infantry. Hoe rose to the rank of
brigadier general,
NICARAGUAN OFFICIAL SLAIN,
Minister of Foreign Affairs the Victim
of an Assassin.
Mr, Coea, the Nicaraguan minister
at Washington, bas received a cable
gram stating that Adolfo Altamirano,
the Nicaraguan minister of foreign
affairs, has been assassinated.
The state department has received
a dispatch from Jame3 G. Bailey, the
Amerigan charge at San Jose, Costa
Rica, confirming the report, but, gir
ing no details. -
OPEN THE PRISONS
Is Order to Czar from -Rus-
sian Parliament,
AMNESTY IS IMPERATIVE
Address In Reply to Speech from the
Throne Ia Formulated — Ten
Important Demands Aro
Made, |
A Bt. Petersburg special says: The
draft of the address to the throne,
in reply to the emperor's specch*at
the opening of parliament, was sub-
mitted to the lower house of patlia-
ment' Tuesday by the commisston, It
conststy practically of the following
ten demands; .
Firat—General amnesty.
Second—Te abolition of the death
penalty. =
‘Third—Suspension of ‘martial law
and all exceptional laws.
Yourth—Full clei Uberty.
Fitth—The abolition of the council
of the empire. ¢
Sixth—The revision of the funds-
mental Jaw. “
Seventh—The establishment of the
responsibility of ministers,
Highth—The right of interpellation,
Ninth — Forced expropriation of
land, ‘ \
‘Tenth—Guarantees of the rights of
trades-untons,
Before the house convened the cab-
Inet virtually hed decided on amnesty
for political prisoners with the excep-
tion of those charged with murder,
attempted murder, or robbery, While
partial amnesty might have made a
deep, potential Impression, had the
emperor sigualized the occasion of
the assembling of parliament by such
an act of grace, {ts favorable effect
will be largely destroyed when thus
forced from his hands. |
There was a long wrangle at the,
opening of the sessfon over the ques-
tion of parliamentary procedure, etc.,
no rules to govern the house having
been adopted.
* ‘Phe address in reply to the speech
from the throne saygi
“It bas pleased your majesty in
your speech addressefto the people's
representatives, to éxpress your de
termination unshakably to preserve
the institutions whereby the people
have been called to exercise legisla-
tive power in conjunction with their
monarch. The parlfament regards the
monarch’s formal promise to the peo-
ple as a sure pledge of that consoli-
dation and of the forther develop-
ment of order and legislation in ac-
cordance with a strictly constitutlonal
basis.”
‘The reply to the speech concludes
as follows:
“On the threshald of our labors,
one question agitates the soul of the
whole Rusglan population and pre
yents us from calmly entering upon
our legislative work, The first word
pronounced In parliament was am-
nesty. It was met with cries of sym-
pathy. ‘The country is thirsting for it.
It Is a demand of the people's con-
selence which it 1s Impossible to re-
fuse or delay. Sire, the parliament
awaits full political amnesty as the
first pledge of a mutual understand-
ing In the future and concord between
the emperor and, the people.”
EXPLOSION KILLED FIVE MINERS
Box of Dynamite Gives Way and Ig-
nites Miné Gas.
| Five miners were torn to pleces
‘and twelve badly burned by an ex.
‘plosion of dynamite in the Shenan-
doah City colllery of the Philadelphia
and Reading Coal end Iron company
Tuesday. A box of dynamite which
a workman was catrying fell from his
shoulder and caused the explosion,
which ignited the mine gas. There
were about fifty men at work in the
east gangWay of the shaft when the
explosion occurred, but, so far as
known, all escaped except those work
ing on the first lift.
CRAPSEY VERDICT DELIVERED.
Rector Is Given a Chance to Recant
or Sut¥er Suscension. .
Se a Ee Set ee
The verdict in the heresy trial of
Rey. Crapsey was delivered to the ac
cused minister at Rochester, N. Y..
Tuesday, Four of the jurors state
that In thelr opinion sentence should
be passed as follows:
“That the respondent should be
suspended from exercising the func
tions of the church until such time
as he shall satisfy the sotestastial
court that his belfef and teaching
conform to the apostles’ creed and
the Nicene creed as this church hath
recelved the same.”
REPORT ON ‘FRISCO LOSSES.
F 0
Companies in New York State Aro
Hit for Sum of $113,441,595.
The New York state insurance do-
—rtmeit made public Saturday the
figures showlag the losses in the re-
cent California conflagration of fire
and fire marine insurance companies
doing business in the state. They
show estimated net losses to a total
of $113,441,595.
SS a ee ee
. ; Ho th
’ . Be
‘Tress Operated by #6th Metidlan Time—One Hour Slower Lhan Olty Time.
SOHEDULE EFFECTIVE APBIC9, 1005.
READ DOWN. READ UP.
82 90 |e |NoRTH AND sOUTH| *s2 | 85 “5
sseeee] ‘105p|--000.] 1 55a) 5 400|Ly ....Bavannah .... At] 2 £28] 9003)......) 6 $5p}....0
seosee] O10) scnee] 9 Bball Oba] Ax <---Charlaston.."Lr]12 01p] 7 003)..00.4) 3 O5P}-o---
sence LEASQLCIET 1 M00). .00efAr~os Wilmington...Ly] 8 459}... po] 6008}.....-
secnes] GAMA] 8 O0p|-.20 cars. efichmond....L4y $084) °735p | 00 -. cd seefeeseee
“sce Dal reeeod ples |" eablngeant." Ea} 4 Baa] $469] cee freec-ccee
seseee] BOa).c0. 2) L48al.... JAP... Baltimore... Lv] 4 Btaj 312p)...00.[oscefoecsee
seteeefD 42a] pase 4 Bsa). [as.. Flladesphla... Lvlts Alt) 28].04joeeeefooeee
NESTE ELT. ARES Now: KorkessseEYl sa9pp #a6aleccee bE
87 ab "BS | *80 soUuTs, 80) 968 | *82 22
G45p| 245p)......] 905a| 8 tba] Ev ....Serannah..., Ar| 1 15a} 9 404]12 55p}......] 98>
server] TOP) soscfesees.| 8 202/Ar....Brunswick . Liv] 8 S6p]......] 9 588} .seve-|esenee
16°60p} 6 O0p},.277:]i2'30p] 6 osa|ar’s-..Wayorosa.... Livj1015p] 8 Sd) ¥ 50a}. ... | 6 30p
104]....0.f-ccoe-] €90p]10 205 /Ar,...Thomasvilie ..L] 2 88p] Bldal @ 16a}. ....).....
*HOSOp| Sco... FL ASa/ Aro... Albany 4... Lvl. ose! ..04] 5 45Divese0| 2007
220a]...ceefscccee] S40p/4L 85a) Ar... Batabridge . Lv} iZ5p] Fda} $ 008/04. Jf...
BOSApe... |... Jeveeed 6 159} az. Montgomer7...-Le 6 BOa] TASp|...ee-[ereedefereess
svvvee] 840917 5... VUGp} 8 acalar-- Jaeksonyilic... Ly] 8ogp]..... | 8 S5a]......] 830p
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AID BSpLII] @ asphya SipjArs. <-Banford "SExy 2 O0p/-2.° 7.) 2adal oe.) cess
sesceep 3O8a/-.0...] 720p{"S OSpjar..... Orlando:....Lv{1342p]......] L021, ....[eseen
Se] B 38a) S00 9 top] 6 sop/Ar.<.. Lakeland,...:L7/10 35a]-.,.,.]10 20p/. 0.2]...
S022] 1000) "72510 Bop! g S8pfAr- 22.” Tampa ...-, Liv] 9 Oe. 2220] 8S5p] ose feeeee
SLE] Taal SI") aopf 7 osp]Ar-Tampa Bay HotelLy] 8 ¢0a}--2.°-) 8 18p|oo ef cce
Sel] TBS) 207] Oop] 7 25p]Ar....Port Tampa...) 8 30a] ..°..] 1 55p|..escefeceere
SII) 8 Boa-2227]..0 "| osplae. .Bt, Patersdutg. Ly] 540a/......] 545p|--e20.] om +
sift aoa sevose]s sooo! Y 2Op/Ar... Punts Gorda.,.Ly] 6458]....24] 4 O5p}.-ree]oreere
=: SOE fug aap ar oc Wt. Myers... Ly] 6 18a) 2.27 2435p] cecca]cacoce
NORTH WEST AND SOUTH WEST.
| St | Vindesup | 968 |ea9 | et [vie aontgomery.| #8 | 920
soos | 645p]Ev..Savannah..Ar] 9453] ..., || 3 150] 6 45p|Lv..Savannah..Ar] 9403) 9859
seco | 880¢/4r... Jesup. Ge} 75a) 2022 | |oc.o2- leescee[AF coceeneerese LY] sees | ees
svee } 8008! “* ...Maoon...‘{ 31a! .. €15p] 8 Ota) “ M’tgomery, “| 7 45p! 6 60a
cess [Boal cc Atanta. © (ALSO. G88)
Sl | 9 45a] “Chat'nooga "| 6 0p} 2.12 || $.1nal 7125p] ..Naohvilic... “| 8454)......
eos | 7 8p, “Louisville. 8 Sa} °°: |] 8 20p| 2 10s) ** Loulsrilie, “| 245a]......
sess | 740p{ “ Glneinnst!, “| $ 80a) 27. | {12 01m] 7 20a] «* Olnoinnatl, «11 COpy.... 2.
sees [20008] «|. Lots. | gap] 2°25 |] 1839p] T40a) “st. Conte. | 8450). =.
sees | 70a] EChIoago.. “ I'8 Sug} 1.2, asses] Ms Chicago "| 64up]......
aces | T00a)Ly,Atlanta.. Arl10080/ <2. 4500| ‘4idplar.: Mobile. Ly] 12ép[ia da
ce | BOSe[Ar. Memphis. Ly tin | IID] | gosal e tsp New Orleans | 9258) 8 15p
ase | $40al * Kansas City, “| 6S0p| <... iba | (Mi, & 0.) | |
w-- | 8.98al Bt Goma | 75%ph.... -
Dally. Connections made st Port Tampa with U.
‘Trains {nto and out of Charlestonare op- | 8. mall steamships of the Paninsular and
erated by Eastern time Occidental Steamship sailing Sundays,
Nos. 82 4nd 85, the Plorida and West [o- | Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11:40 p.m.
dian Limited, fsest all the year round be | - Tickets offces, DeSoto Hotel, Phones 73;
tween Southern and Eastern citle, sold | Union Station, Bell phone 295, Georgia 211.
yoatibulod train, ares room, sleeping W. J. CBAIG, Passenger TraMc Manager,
cars, dialog car and Pullman high class | Wilmington, N. 0.
coaches. Schedule and service unequalled.| T. C, WHITE, Divielon Passenger
No, 89, leaving Savannah 8:16 a, m,,con-| Agent, Savannah, Ga. :
noots at Jacksonville with Pullman Buffet} TAOS. E. MYERS,Travellng Passenger
Cars for Tampa and &t. Petersburg, Agent, Savannab, Ga.
‘No. 21, leaving Savannah 245 p. m.,con-| I, C. SAPP, City Ticket Agent, DeSoto
nests at Jacksonville, with Pullman Buffet | Hotel, Savannah, a, ss
Geoping Cars for Tanipa Bt, Petersburg, Ft.| R. G. BLATINER, Depot Ticket Ageat,
Moyers and intermediate polats. Dnfon Station Aavannah, Ga.
. WHEN
YOUR CLOCK STOPS
Striking and your Watch
_ goes on Strike, consult
W. H. BROWN,
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
608 West Broad, Comer Charles St
THOSE WHO WANT.
MADMAN RUNS AMUCK,
Telegraph Operator Kills, One Man
and Wounds Several Others,
| Crazed by drink and {nflamed with
revenge for belng folled in his Infat-
uation for a Idyear-old girl, James
H, Clark, the night telegraph opera-
tor at Chamlee, Ga., a station on the
Southern railway, near Atlanta, ran
atnuck Monday night, and early Tues-
day morning killed one man, shot five
others, threatened the lives of sev-
eral women, including the young girl
with whom he was infatuated madly,
set fire to a house crowded with wo-
men and children who were seeking
safety from his bulleta and then fled
into Dunwoodie, five miles distant,
left death in his wake and escaped
to the woods, wher’ he shot himself
Father than surrender to a: posse.
As a result of the reign of terror,
the villages of Chamlee and Dunwoo-
die and the northern and eastern sec-
tlons of DeKalb county were {nflam-
ed with excitement and alarm.
Clark’s victims were: Willlam J.
Cheek, merchant at Dunwoodie, shot
through the heart and killed; J. W.
Purcell, brother-in-law of the girl
Clark loved, shot In the lp and serl-
ously wounded; E. 8. Purcell, father
of J. W. Purcell, shot in the hand;
Frank Bolton, shot In the side with
birdshot and slightly injured; Wil!
Coker, of Duawoodle, hit: over the
hoad with a shotgun and palafully
hurt; W. S. Mask, day operator at
Chamlee, shot In the arm and slight-
ly Injured.
Clark, who was twenty-seven years
of age, a victim ‘of white swelling
for years and more recently Snear
death from meningitis, had followed
the Insane’ and abnormal hallucina-
tion that Httle Annie Gay, fourteea
years of age, was in love with him,
and that her relatives and others
were Interfering. -
SOUTHERN BAPTISTS MEET.
Sixty#irat Annual Convention Opens
at Chattanooga.
See ee
The Southern Baptist convention
nret for ita sixty-first annual session
in Chattanooga, Tenn.,"Friday mora-
ing,
‘The convention is not a synod, con
ference nor presbytery, nor does it
have charge of any of the affairs of
the varidus churches. The conventiow
js purely a misslonary organization,
and has only to do with the home
and foreign missionary work of the
church, The various churches have
beep organizzed Into state organiza-
tlons which has asscclations aud mis-
sionary boars and thgse, in turn,
form the southern association, %
3
"We Lead, Others Folloy.
The New Pressing Club
AND TAILORING.
Pants $3.50. Suits $15.00 made
of LATEST FASHIONS.
Ladies’ Suits and Skirts Cleaned and
Pressed. We make Jean‘
Pants for $2.50.
T. W. WILLIAMS, Manager.
242 Barnard Street
Masonic Green Gi
asonic drecn Urocery
COMPANY,
Under Masonic Temple, 519 West
Gwinnett Street. .
GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS.
FRESH MEATS, ETC.
Orders delivered in any part of th
City. -
P, L. BOWEN, Manager.
Bell Phono, 2837.
Shoes & Harness
é Made or Repaired.
Gatlataction Guaranteed for Each Jo!
for Cash. :
CLOTHES :
Cleaned and Pressed on Same Order
‘We will send for and deliver
all work. Just leave orders at
"616 BAST BROAD ST.,
F. J. JAMES, Prop.
THE SELECT
Pressing Clob & Tailoring Co
CLEANING
PRESSING AND REPAIRING
NEATLY DONE.
‘Monthly Pressing per Month.
Ladies’ Work a Specialty.
WARD & ‘TURNER, Proprietors,
914 West Broad St.
W. H. LLOYD,
—Dealer In—~— *
GROCURIES, WOOD AND COAL,
621 Oglethorpe Avenue, East.
Ga. 51¢———PHONES———Bell 508. «
ADDISON & SCOTT,
HAT CLDANING
AND!BLOCKING.
Dyelng, Cleaning and Pressing,
and Tailoring.
Cheapest and Best Work in City.
108 Jefferson St, Cor. Rroughton St
:
caste