Savannah Tribune
Saturday, June 29, 1907
Savannah, Georgia
Page text (machine-generated)
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Defense in Haywood Trial Will Now Have Inning.
ORCHARD CORROBORATED
Prosecution's Closing Day Brought Out Some Strong Points Against Haywood—Negro Was One of the
When the state closed its case at Boise, Idaho, Friday, against Haywood, charged with the murder of Frank Steunenberg, the defense made an unsuccessful attempt to secure from the court an order directing the jury to acquit the prisoner. Judge Woods' ruling, which requires the defense to meet with evidence the case that the state has presented, was made at 5:15 o'clock, and it was then arranged that Haywood's counsel should make their opening statement and present their first testimony on Monday.
When the trial opened Friday morning, it was stipulated that the record should show that the date of the draft sent by Haywood to Jack Simpkins late in 1905 was December 21, and after that the prosecution proceed to show by a handwriting expert that George Pettibone, using the names of "J. Wolff" and "P. Bone," made two remittances of money to Harry Orchard at San Francisco, through the Pacific Postal Telegraph company, in the fall of 1904. The state next called Jim Seahorn, a colored horse-trader, who swore that he sold a horse and buggy to Orchard in Denver in 1905, and identified Haywood as one of the men who rode with Orchard.
So far, many statements made by Orchard on the stand have been corroborated. He told of the houses he visited and the rooms he occupied in San Francisco; he told of experiments with the peculiar bomb which, he says, was invented by Pettibone; he told of receiving money from "Pat Bone," who, he said, was Pettibone; he told of the poisoned milk; he described his plans to blow Bradley and possibly his whole family to their death with a bomb loaded with dynamite; he gave his hotel address and each statement has been corroborated by witnesses whose testimony has not been successfully assailed in their cross-examination.
The state has contented itself with bringing before the jury the story of the blowing up of the concentrator at Wardner, where Orchard lighted one of the fuses that caused the death of two men.
The state commenced its strong corroboration of his story from the time of his connection with the Miners' Union in Colorado and the outbreak of the great strike at Cripple Creek.
The Vindicator mine netted the murderer two men. He told how the powder was stored and where, and how it was fired by a pistol exploded by the lifting of a guard rail to which a wire was attached.
The explosion of the Independence depot, confessed to by Orchard as having been planned and executed by him, resulted in the death of fourteen nonunion miners.
Orchard said he hunted Governor Peabody by bomb and gun and both the former governor of Colorado and his daughter have testified to incidents described by Orchard. The attacks on Peabody were failures, but the man who made one of the bombs described by Orchard has been found and the bomb itself has been traced to the place where Orchard said it would be found.
Orchard told of planting a bomb at the gate of Judge Goddard in Denver. This associate justice of the supreme court of Colorado has testified himself to the finding of the bomb after Orchard made his confession exactly where Orchard said he placed it. Orchard said he planted a bomb to kill Judge Gabbert, another justice of the supreme court of Colorado. Judge Gabbert escaped, but the bomb exploded and killed a passer-by whom Orchard described as "an innocent man."
Orchard has been traced through Colorado, Montana, Washington and Idaho up to the gate of Governor Steunenberg's residence, where, on December 30, 1905, his last fearful crime was committe and Frank Steunenberg wag killed.
The Savannah Tribune.
DENIES SALE OF ROAD.
However, Vice President Lawton, of Central of Georgia, Leaves Impression That a Deal Is On.
Vice President and General Counsel A. R. Lawton of the Central of Georgia Railway company, was in Atlanta Tuesday, having come to confer with Comptroller General Wright regarding the tax returns of that company. Colonel Lawton was asked by a representative of the Atlanta Constitution about the reported sale or effort to sell the capital stock of the Central of Georgia. With a smile, which seemed to indicate that there was something doing in this direction, he replied:
"I would prefer not to talk."
When asked specifically about the report that this stock had been sold to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad company and the reported sale of the Ocean Steamship company to C. W. Morse, he replied:
"Nelther of those reports is true."
"Then there has been no change in the status of the Central's stock?" he was asked.
"No," he replied, and then added:
"None that I know of."
"None that I know of."
Colonel Lawton left the impression that there are or have been negotiations looking to the sale of the Central's stock, but he declined to discuss them. In his conference with the comptroller general he declined to make any increase in the tax returns of the Central of Georgia. He considered they were high enough. Comptroller General Wright had not completed his assessment, but the valuation he will put upon the property will be somewhere in the neighborhood of $29,600,000. The matter will, of course, go to arbitration.
A Baltimore dispatch says: The report sent out from Atlanta, Ga., to the effect that the Baltimore and Ohio was believed to have acquired the Central of Georgia railroad, is denied by the Baltimore and Ohio officials. They say that there is no foundation for the rumor and cannot imagine how it originated.
· KNOX KNOCKS ROOSEVÈLT.
Senator Bids for Support of All Elements Opposed to President.
Senator Knox's speech Monday before the Yale law school is accepted in Washington as confirmation of the suspicion which has long been in the minds of administration officials that the Pennsylvania intends to gather about himself all the elements in the republican party that are opposed to the centralization of power in the Washington government. To this extent Knox is to pose as the anti-Roosevelt candidate for the presidency. The declarations of Knox are especially significant when an interesting bit of unwritten history in connection with the launching of his boom is recalled.
When the draft of the resolutions to be adopted at the Pennsylvania convention was presented to Mr. Knox for his approval, he made several corrections in it. He drew his blue pencil through the declaration that Senator Knox was a republican of the "Roosevelt type of public man." He made no change in the declaration that he stood for the Roosevelt policies, but did not want to appear in the light of a "Roosevelt type." This bit of information was communicated to the white house, where it was stored up for future consideration.
In his speech at Yale Senator Knox indicated wherein he differs from the president, and explained why he did not care to be classed as a Roosevelt type. He believes in restricting the efforts of the government in the corporation regulation line to the powers conferred by the constitution and is willing to let the states exercise the same rights conferred upon them by the same authority.
In the opinion of Washington politicians Knox has made a shrewd test. He is not so far out of line, however, with the president's views to be known as an enemy of the Roosevelt policies.
WRONG NEGRO ARRESTED.
Is Brother of Slayer of Young Brewster—Real Murderer at Large.
The negro arrested, charged with the shooting and killing of Hal Brewster on an excursion train between College Park and LaGrange, Ga., has turped out to be the wrong man, and the one wanted for the crime is still at large.
The negro arrested is a brother of the guilty man, and the resemblance between the two is so great that the natural mistake was made, both of them being on the train.
SAVANNAH. GA.. SATURDAY. JUNE 29. 1907.
PITIFUL STORY TOLD
By Daughter of Judge Loving on Witness Stand.
CHOKED WITH WEEPING
Declares She Was Drugged Helpless and Dichonored by Young Estes. The Recital Was a Most Pathetic One.
Between stifling sobs, with tears streaming from her bright blue eyes, and valyly struggling to control her emotions, Miss Elizabe.h Loving, who has occupied the center of the stage in the trial of her father, Judge William G. Loving, for the murder of Theodore Estes, told on the witness stand at Houston, Va., Thursday the story of her alleged ruin at the hands of the young man her parent shot down.
The recital was probably the most dramatic ever heard in a Virginia court of justice, and rivaled, if not surpassed, in point of atrociousness the story told by Evelyn Nesbit Thaw of her experience with Stanford Whi. It was the same story, she said, she told to her father on the day of the tragedy. The dead man, she declared, gave her a drink of whiskey from a flask* in his pocket while they were buggy riding the day prior to the killing.
After taking the drink she immediately began to feel dizzy and her head whirled as if she had been given some powerful drug. In this condition and despite her protests, she declared that her escort drove her through a road not frequently used and despite her screams outraged her.
Exhausted by the struggle and her mental faculties upset by the stimulant the witness declared that she recalled nothing more until she regained her senses, in bed, late that night, at the home of County Clerk E. L. Kidd, where she had been visiting.
On the following morning, when her father asked her to explain how she came to be brought to the home of Kidd in an unconscious, and drugged condition, she related to him on bended knees the same story she told the court. It was this recital, declared the defense, which so wrought up Judge Loving that he was impelled to hunt up young Estes and take his life.
Whether the story told by the 19-year-old girl can be weakened by the prosecution remains to be seen, and on the disproving of this story hangs the fate of the defendant. The state claims that it can be shown that the crime imputed to the man whose lips are sealed forever was impossible. The rebuttal by the prosecution probably will be the most important, though not most sensational feature of the case. Aside from the testimony of the young girl, the examination of two persons concerning the possible insanity of Judge Loving at the time of the killing and the testimony of the defendant himself and Harry Snead, were features of the day's proceedings.
Dr. William Tuncall, who saw Judge Loving before and after the killing, testified that he thought Loving committed the crime while insane. Tunstall is a practicing physician of Nelson county, and upon cross-examination acknowledge that he was not an expert on insanity. His theory that Judge Loving was insane was based on the fact that he failed to speak to him in passing before the killing, and after the deed. "His head hung low and he was pale," said the witness, and this personal knowledge of Judge Loving, who, he said, frequently "got on drunken debauches," ending in delirium tremens, led him to think the judge crazy. Dr. Melvin, who has for years practiced in Hallifax county, testified about the effect on the mind and faculties of excessive drinking.
FRENCH TROOPS MUTINY.
Desert Government Out of Sympathy for Wine Growers.
A battalion of the seventeenth infantry regiment, stationed at Agde, in the department of Harault, France, has deserted with its arms and ammunition and joined the insurgent wine growers at Beziers, the headquarters of the regiment. The mutineers, who mostly were recruited among the wine growers, number about four hundred men. They marched into Besees, which has about 50,000 inhabitants, with drums beating and cools flying.
STIRS RACE PREJUDICE.
Address of Senator Foraker at Commencement Exercises of Negro University Is Deeply Resented.
A Washington special says: From a republican standpoint, a bold political prediction has been made upon Senator Foraker's recent commencement address at Wilberforce university, Ohio's leading colored educational institution, in which he severely arraigned the president and Secretary Taft for their course in the Brownsville, Texas, incident, and urged the negroes all over the country to stand up squarely for their rights and array themselves determinedly against the grandfather clause incorporated in several southern states' constitutions. It has been stated by a man who spoke authoritatively that a member of the cabinet, after reading Foraker's speech, ventured this prediction:
"If Foraker makes many more such speeches there will be only one political party in the north and the name of it will be the white man's party." From another source, it was learned that Secretary Taft is greatly chagrined at Senator Foraker for the manner and the tone in which he discussed the action of the president in discharging three negro companies of the twenty-fifth infantry, and it is only by the strongest persuasion of close personal friends that he is restrained from answering the fiery Foraker without delay. In fact, Secretary Taft may yet decide to reply to Foraker while the latter's Wilberforce speech is still fresh in the public mind and before his own overwrought feelings are calmed by lapse of time. Not only does Secretary Taft feel that he is called upon to make a personal defense, but as a member of the administration which has been unprovokedly attacked he owes at least an earnest effort at resistance.
"LET THE HEATHEN RAGE."
Move of Steamship Companies to Taboo South Not Feared.
The statement that the principal European steamship lines engaged in carrying immigrants had decided to taboo the south was shown to John A. Betjeman, chairman of the executive committee of the Georgia Immigration Association, and he was asked for his opinion on their action.
In response Mr. Betjeman stated that the action of these two lines was not likely to cause any serious concern to either New Orleans, Galveston or Savannah, as it was definitely understood that a line as strong and aggressive was arranging to take care of both the freight and immigrant business into these ports.
WHO WANTS A RAILROAD?
Efforts Being Made to Dispose of the Central of Georgia Holdings. The undoubted purpose of the state of Georgia to regulate and control the great railroad corporations, through legislative enactments and executive administration, accounts for negotiations now under way in New York for the sale of the Central of Georgia railroad, and its auxiliary ocean steamship lines. There has developed an undisputed willingness on the part of certain interests to dispose of at least a part of their Central of Georgia holdings.
Tons Made at Augusta, Ga.
Acting under the pure food and drugs act, the revenue authorities are making an investigation of goods offered for sale in the barrooms of Augusta, Ga., and have developed the fact that a large percentage of the stuff is heavily adulterated, some of it being graded as almost poisonous. Seizures have been made and the goods turned over to the United States authorities
BEST MAN KILLS GROOM.
Young Men Went for Marriage License and Had Fatal Quarrel
While leaving Dalton, Ga., late Saturday afternoon with his marriage license in his possession, John Carroll, a young farmer, living a short distance east of the city, was shot and killed by Harrison Holland, a friend, who had accompanied him to procure the license. Carroll was to have been married Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. On the way home the men began drinking, and a quarrel was started, which resulted in the tragedy.
BOYWASMURDERED
FIVE ARE LANDED IN JAIL
Failing to Secure Ransom for Stolen Youth, They Became Frightened and Strangled Him to Death. Excitement Runs High.
A New Orleans special says: Two miles in the Interior of a big swamp near the city the headless body of Walter Lamana, an Itallian child between seven and eight years old, who was kidnapped and held for $6,000 ransom two weeks ago, was found by police and vigilants just before daybreak Sunday. He had been strangled to death, according to the confession of one of several Itallians held by the police.
The boy's neck is supposed to have been broken when he was strangled, causing the head to become separated from the body when decomposition set in. The head was found a short distance from the body.
Five Italians, two of them women, are under arrest, charged as accomplices to the murder, and extra details of police and deputies are maintaining order in the excited Italian quarter of the city. All day long small crowds were dispersed promptly by the police, despite whose precautions a report has gotten out summoning. a mass meeting at Elk place. Seventy armed deputies have been placed on guard at the Orleans parish prison, the strongest in the state, where three of the prisoners are held, and some apprehension has been felt over the safety of two other prisoners who have been taken to an adjoining parish.
Seldom since the mafia lynchings, sixteen years ago, has New Orleans been so stirred with threats of violence as now, and some of these threats are made by those who participated in disorders at that time. The law and order element is much stronger than it has been hereotore.
The murdered boy was found near St. Rose, about twenty miles from New Orleans, in a territory which has been well searched with blood-hounds in the past few days. When the dogs failed to locate the boy a "third degree' sweating process wrugs a confession from one of the suspects, who was taken from his home in St. Rose about midnight Saturday night, and carried into the woods by a combined force of the officials and vigilants, who have had the search in charge. This man, Ignazlo Campiglcano, was kept in the woods an hour, when he confessed, charging four Itallians with the murder. He said that about the time of a mass meeting in New Orleans more than a week ago, held for the purpose of prosecuting a search for the boy, these men, who were in a vacant house in St. Rose, became frightened and consulted about what to do with the child. The boy was crying, begging to be taken home to his parents, said Campiglcano, and one of the quartet of kidnappers grabbed the child and strangled him to death to stop his noise. Later, two of the kidnappers came to him carrying the boy in a blanket, and after threatening him with death, if he told, took the body into the swamp.
Campigiano, after relating this story, led the police by moonlight through two miles of swamp, where the searchers sometimes waded in water nearly waist deep, and at others crawled under tangles of oriars. In a shallow pool at the end of this search, the body was found in a blanket in a clump of wild cane.
ROAD REPORTED SOLD.
Rumor That the B. & O. Has Taken
Over Central of Georgia.
There was a well defined report in Atlanta Monday that the stock of the Central of Georgia Railway company, up to this time controlled through a holding committee, representing the Southern railway, has been acquired by the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, the reason for the transfer being the desire to keep from violating the Georgia law on the subject, the transfer giving the stock to a non-competing line.
NO.40
Recall of Jap Ambassador at Washington Seems to Have Been Only a Political Bluff.
A Washington dispatch says: The formal announcement by Viscount Hayashi, the Japanese minister for foreign affairs, in a Tokio dispatch, published Friday, that Ambassador Aoki is to be retained at Washington is regarded as clearly establishing the fact that the present Japanese ministry, headed by Salonji, has assured itself of the support of both the unionist and conservative parties in its present attitude toward America. For a time there was some doubt in Washington, even in the minds of the officials of the Japanese embassy, as to the power behind the demand of Count Okuma for the substitution for Aoki at Washington of a "strong" man, by which term it was understood he meant a Japanese committed in advance to the policy of demanding from America full rights of citize. $ ^{9} $ of residents and
Aoki had real early the impossibility of securing all of these rights at this time, because of the inability of the national government to dominate state administration. He reports to his own government to that effect with the plain intimation that it was advisable to seek, instead of the unlimited rights, only those that might reasonably be expected to be conceded at this time—an opportunist policy—at first caused a disagreeable impression in Japan. The successful outcome of the recent war with the natural inflation of Japanese pride, tended to make the ambassador's policy of doubtful popularity.
It is quite certain that the Salonji ministry was for a time somewhat taken aback at the ebullition of popular indignation evidenced in the publication in opposition in the newspapers in Japan, and it even is surmised that there was a slight weakening and a disposition to make some concessions. But soon after the agitation had reached its height, the Japanese business interests began to feel a very strong pressure from abroad, conveying a clear warning that a quarrel with America would leave Japan friendless and certainly would discourage the investment of foreign capital in Japan enterprises.
With this favorable influence, the Salonji ministry found little difficulty in securing the adhesion of the two great parties in Japan to its policy, and the announcement made from Tokio, through the Associated Press representative to Ambassador Aoki's tenure is regarded as convincing evidence that Count Okuma's onslaught has failed and that the settled policy of Japan from now on will be to discountenance "jingo" agitation as directed against America, and to endeavor to strengthen the friendly relations between the two countries.
A MEANINGLESS MANIFESTO.
Issued by National Socialists and Circulated in St. Petersburg.
A separate manifesto was issued at St. Petersburg Friday night by the National Socialists and circulated in the city. It is a colorless document of a thousand words, describing the duma's relations with the government. Its most effective phrase characterizes the session of the duma as "a hundred days of captivity." This document closes with the adage that every nation deserves the kind of government it tolerates, but does not make any definite imperative recommendation.
DANGLING FROM A LIMB.
Body of Macon Collector Is Found. Either Suicide or Murder.
Author Dukes, a collector for the Wood Furniture company of Macon, Ga., was found dead in the woods near Ocmulgee park Friday evening at 6 o'clock. The body was dangling from a small hamb, where he had either hanged himself or parties bent on foul play. had committed the deed.
IMMIGRATION IS ENDORSED
At Annual Convention of Georgia Industrial Association.
At the annual convention of the Georgia Industrial Association, held at Warm Springs, the past week, with sixty cotton manufacturers from all sections of the state, in attendance, emphatic endorsement was given the movement to induce European immigrants to locate in Georgia.
The convention adopted by unanimous vote a resolution heartily inducing the work of the immigration association.
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Se , {0D WEST BROAD STREET,
a SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. ; - _
: ¥ eat Phone 1198. Ga. Phone 2029.
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g but write us a pestsl today, “(DO NOT THINK OF SUYING a
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MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, Beni. “JL GHICAGD, ILL,
SOL. £. JOHNSON
i
Notary Public,
Deeds, Contracts, Wills and Other
Legal Forms Prepared and
Attested.
116 West St Julian Street.
TS -
W. H. LLOYD,
a —Dealer In—
GROCERIES, WOOD’ AND COAL,
621 Oglethorps Avenue, East.
7s. 518 ———_PHONTS———Bell_ 50
7. 68
Masonic Green irocery
COMPANY, \
Under Masonic’ Temple, 519 West
Gwinnett. Street,
GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS.
«FRESH MEATS, Bro.
Orders delivered In any part of th
City.
P. L. BOWEN, Manager,
Bell Phone, 2837. 1
PREV VBIDEBETVOVUAEVYF
$ QEOH CHONSHOH SHOE OHoHS ¢
$ We Do Job Printing =
¢ 2 (OFAN Kinds, © 3 ¢
@ We Gan Please You. 2
° Snezenenénen oxen enone
EXCURSION TRAIN TRAGEDY.
Young Man Killed While Trying to
Stop, Fight Between Negroes.
' Hal Brewster, son of Colonel P. T.
Brewster, a prominent Atlanta law-
yer, ‘was shot and Snstantly kfllea on
an excursion train from College Park
to LaGrange, Ga., on Monday.
+ According to report Mr, Brewster,
in company with another man, acting
as special deputies, were trying ta
stop two drunken negroes from fight+
ing. ‘A negro from College Parg, nam-
ed Frank Erwin, did the shooting. He
was eaptured and placed in the La-
Grange jail. - ee
Every farmer wants to_knew to a cent the
value of what he buys and sells, and should not
leave this to be figured by the party with whom
he is dealing.
* As labor saving machinery has been invented:
to save time and physical strength, so there, are,
devices ta enable the mind, to reach quickly and
accurately results usually arrived at with much
thought and tedious calculation. Time is worth,
much, but accuracy is still more importante
Many books have been prepared to make the
task of -caloulating cay, its results eure, but,
never one fitted to all men, in all kinds of busi-
ness. at all times, so completely as “ROPP'S
NEW COMMERCIAL CALCULATOR.” This
reliable assistant to the farmer and others has,
been in the market for many years, and nearly
2 million and a half copies have been sold. The
last edition (160 pages) is from beginning to end
filled with tables, short puts. and up-to-date
methods of calculating, making it the most com-
plete, useful and comprehensive work of the
kind ever published, It will make every one in-
dependent, sure and self-reliant in all practical
calculations connected with farming and other
lines of business. It will prevent mistakes, re-,
lieve the mind, save time, labor and loss. It is
a packet edition with pocket for papers and a
fcose' silicate slate fram which fead pencil marks
are easily erased, and Is an invaluable assistant
for every farmer or business man.
Oh! fussy folks who freet and fume
And carp and sneer and criticise,
Whose presence puts an end to peace.
From whom all pleasure quickly flies;
Who never yet have found a place,
A person, function, thing, or clime
To your joy, aggravating souls,
Don't wear your ruffles all the time.
You make your troubles for yourself,
And ruffle others as you go;
You want December when it's May,
And sigh for roses in the snow;
You think the children haugh,
You think a frolic is a comedy;
For other people's saxes, I pray,
Don't wear your ruffles all the time.
You tire of single life, perhaps,
No boarding round, you say, "for me;
I mean to laugh little down
And take some comfort, you sneeze!"
But you're at odds with lysmene
The marriage bells have ceased to chime.
Just take a bit of good advice—
Your train is never fast enough.
Your paper is not fit to read.
Your tailor cuts your garments wrong.
The drama, too, has gone to seed;
The watter does not know his place.
The dinner is not worth a dime—
Tis thus you're always indulging fault.
Don't wear your ruffles all the time.
For when you climb the starry stairs
That lead above this earthly sphere,
An angel at the door will sall,
"You cannot wear your ruffles here."
So if you ever wish to sate
Your mansions, that sublime,
And your asphras there,
Don't wear your ruffles all the time.
—Mama kriving, in Leslie's Weekly.
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THE SCAREDNESS OF DORCAS TRIPP
THE SCAREDNESS OF DORCAS TRIPP
By ANNIE HAMILTON DONSELL
"Dear land, yes, we've had an epidemic fast enough, down to the Bridge! But it's over 'n gone, thank goodness, an' nobody dead, without it's me." Aunt Roxy Knapp's lean old face wrinkled into a smile. "My dear," she added, "I can count the little creatures that I didn't nuss on the fingers o' one hand."
Aunt Roxy had come up river for her annual visit to little Rosemary Lamont. Rosemary claimed Aunt Roxy because, she reasoned, she might have married Uncle Rufus Lamont "as easy as not," in which case she would have been an aunt, wouldn't she?
"I suppose you ain't heard how it happened? No, of course not—well, soon's I get my breath I'll tell you the hull story. It's a kind of funny story the way it's turned out, but, dear land, it might've been solemn enough. The Bridge folks isn't liable to forgive Mis' Tripp for one spell."
"Miss Tripp?" Rosemary queried, "Oh. Mrs. Tripp, with so many little Tripps!"
"五—boys and girls equally divided. She's the one I mean, my dear."
"Aunt Roxy!" Rosemary whirled about from the kitchen stove, "how do you equally divide five children?"
"Two boys, two girls, an' the twins—one a boy an' one a girl, and neither of 'em but a half. Two an' two's four an' a half n' a half is another. There's your five children, equally divided, my dear!" Aunt Roxy's laugh wrinkled again pleasantly. She put out a slender old hand for Rosemary's cup of steaming tea. Under its benign influence the epidemic story unfolded.
"Doreas Tripp was born scared, an' it grew on her, till when she come to be married and have children I declare to goodness If she wasn't most too scairt to bring 'em up! Epicomics was her worst dread of all. She was always certain the children were going to catch something. It frightened her nigh to death to hear they was'a case o' measels in town, or mumps, an' when somebody dropped in an' up 'n' told her Cornelia Higgin's boarder's little girl had the scarlet fever, you ought to've seen Doreas Tripp's face! Before that caller dropped out all the little Tripps had the scarlet fever and the twins was dead an' buried. "Well," Aunt Roxy took a reminiscent sip or two. "I heard how scairt she was an' I wear right over. 'Aunt Roxy,' says she, as pale as a ghost, 'I wish you'd button the children up, I've got to finish packing.'
"Packing." I says, took all in a heap. Then I saw she was cramming things into valises like one possessed. She never looked up but hep' right on talking. "I'm going to Cousin Flavilla's," she says. "The children's got their best dresses on for traveling—if you'll button 'em up. An' I wish you'd hurry, Aunt Roxy, says she, hurrying like everything herself, I'm not going to stay in this plague-ridden town a minute longer than I can help. Do you suppose I want to bury my innocent little children! The twins are delicate—none o' the children could ever stan the scarlet fever. What I say is—kind of screaming it out—that people no business taking summer boarders an' perilling the lives of their innocent neighbors! Cornella Higgin ought to be asheamed of herself! First she knows she'll have blood on her soul!"
Aunt Roxy rocked creakily. Yes, she didn't know but she'd have another cup o' tea. Rosemary got it with alacrity, its fragrant steam filling the little kitchen pleasadly.
"Well, my dear (a mite more sugar, if you please), Dorcas went. In less'n four hours after she heard the news she was on her way to her Cousin Flavilla's. You know where Flavilla Cross lives, don't you? A dreadful manufacturing place, swarming with furrins. It used to be real aristocratic up where Flavilla's house
in, but it's all built up with them fatties. Dorcas stayed. there till somebody wrote from the Bridge that Cornelia Higgin's boarder's little girl's scarlet fever had turned out to be the teething rash. Then Dorcas packed up an' come flying home with all the little Tripps a-tripping. My dear" (Aunt Roxy stopped rocking, stopped slipping tea; the teaspoon marked off her words solemnly), "my dear, in—just—seven—days—all—those—children—were—down!" "Down?" ejaculated gentle Rosemary, excited. It seemed the crucial moment of the story. Aunt Roxy's stories had crucial moments. "Yes, on the flats o' their poor little backs with the scarlet fever. They'd caught it playing with some o' those little furfaers." The dramatic pause that followed proved Aunt Roxy a true story teller. Rosemary waited with kindly solicitude to hear the fate of the little Tripps.
"No," Aunt Roxy said, as if answering her thought, "they didn't nary one of 'em die. I nursed 'em all," with unconscious ogism, "an' they all come out of it without being deft or blind or anyways afflicted. But they set the fever agong all over the Bridge, that's what they did. We up an' had a regular epidemic o' scarlet fever. Only the Lord's mercy kep'a lot of us from dying."
"And your nursing, Aunt Roxy," cried Rosemary, lovingly. "Didn't that make Mrs. Tripp feel ashamed of herself, 'perilling the lives of innocent neighbors?"
"Dorcas feel ashamed? Well, she was 'amost too scairt for that. She didn't have a chance to feel anything but scairt for one spell. But I was over there last night, an' I must say there was something sort of chastened 'about Dorcas'—sort of chastened. No, my dear—no, no I don't never take more'n two cups at a time."—The Country Gentleman.
UNUNIFORM MEDICINES.
Wide Geographical Distribution and Age Make Drugs Unreliable.
So, because any man, however ignorant, with any motive, however ignoble, may manufacture and sell any of the 50,000 compounds known to organic chemistry and may allege for them what curative powers he will; and because, too, of this unlimited opportunity for fraud among the older drugs, it becomes a matter of no surprise to learn that at the present time among the great number of firms manufacturing remedial agencies there is the greatest conceivable diversity of science, sincerity and wisdom.
These drugs come from the uttermost parts of the earth—from the dank forests of Prazii, from the frozen Siberian steppes, from the banks of the "gray green, greasy Limpopo River, all set about with fever trees," or from "siliken Samarkand," but almost everywhere they are gathered by barbarian peoples, the lowest of earth's denizens. It is small wonder, then, that with any one plant there should be a variation among its individual specimens in the proportion of the active medicinal agent it contains.
But when we add to this the fact that, in general terms, the per cent. of the active ingredient depends on the amount of sunshine it enjoys, on the time of the year it is gathered, even on the time of the day, on the amount of moisture, the elevation, the character of the soil and a dozen other factors, it becomes almost a necessity of thought that the amount of "medicine" in that plant must vary from a maximum to nothing at all.
A man's wife goes bravely down to the gates of death to pass through, or, if it may hap, to come slowly back, bearing radiantly with her the flaming torch of another life. Ergot is required. Now, ergot is a fungus growing upon rye, where it destroys and displaces the ovary of the plant. It comes from Russia, Austria, Spain, Sweden, and where not; its chemical analysis does not seem to yield reliable information, for its active constituents are not definitely understood. Finally, the physiological activity of the drug may be good, or little, or zero, just as it may chance, while after the lapse of a year it becomes unfit for use. Yet it is to this substance, so utterly variable, that the physician must trust the life of the woman and the child.—Harper's.
Fruits of Reclamation Service.
Figures are now available covering the work of reclamation carried on from the organization of that service pursuant to the act of Congress in 1902 to the first of this year. As a result of the operations, which are conducted under authority of the Geological Survey, eight new towns have been established, 100 miles of branch railroads have been constructed and 10,000 people have taken up their residence in the desert. To pave the way for these home-seekers the Government has dug 1267 miles of canals—nearly the distance from Washington to Omaha. Some of these canals carry whole rivers, like the Truckee River in Nevada and the North Platte River in Wyoming. Forty-seven tunnels with an aggregate length of nine and one-half miles have been excaved.
Automobiles and Coaching.
James Martin, at whose North Side stables the "Blue Dog" coach which was used to make trips to Highland Park was kept, says that the arrival of the automobile has practically killed the sport of coaching in Chicago. There is now no demand for drags and brakes, although they used to be most popular.—Chicago Evening Post
CONFIDENCES OF A CONFIDENCE MAN.
---
When I sit down with pencil and paper and jot down the amounts I've made during the past year in my profession as a confidence man, the total stregges me. What have I done with it? I have squandered money like a prince and borrowed it a week later like a beggar. I have missed my breakfast in order to "skim" a greenhorn of $700 and lost it all before I got my lunch. I have helped a stranger unload $10,000 in a "framed-up" poker game and then gone around the corner and lost the whole roll bucking another poker game. There is one thing I'm sure of—I'm smart enough to get another man's money, but I'm not smart enough to keep it.
I saw in a paper the other day a list of the salaries they pay to Congressmen, members of the Cabinet, Supreme Court Justices, Governors and a lot of those big guns. I make more than any of them, and I haven't a cent when the notice comes up from the office to pay the room rent or move. It's always so with bunko men. While he is framing up a game that will "skin" other "suckers," somebody else has a game waiting that will "skin" him
Why, back in Chicago, where we used to work the crooked faro dodge on every stranger we caught loitering around a hotel, there was an Oregon gambler who ran a faro game on Wabash avenue exclusively for bunker men. That's a fact. He had a big play, too, and went to Europe on his profits. Every$night you'd see the "con" men line up around his faro table and go against the same game in which they had trimmed the yokeis earlier in the evening. It was a private game and none but "con" men and crooks had the entree. Nobody seemed to think it strange, and we lost our money about as regularly as we made it. Of course, we didn't always lose the first night, but it was only a matter of time.
There are no faro games in San Francisco, but craps, poker and the races do just as well, and keep the gang hunting fresh marks without any let-up. Not very long ago I made half of $700 and lost it before I had the price of a lunch out of it. It happened this way:
My partner and I picked up a fellow in a place on O'Purrell street who was anxious to beat the races. We were ready to help him. My pal told him he knew a horseman who had something good coming off in a few days, and introduced me as the man. I was offish and didn't want to have anything to do with outsiders but finally, after the stranger had bought a dinner for all of us, I warmed a little to him and agreed that I would let him in on the deal.
"We'll make no mistakes," said I, when it had been agreed that our host was to be a party to the cleanup. "My horse worked the three quarters in thirteen flat this morning, and there isn't a thing in the race that ever did better than fourteen and a half. But I'm taking no chances." Here I leaned over toward them, looking around cautiously, as if afraid of being-overheard and lowered my voice. "I've got an electric boot." I whispered, "and I'll win that race if I have to turn my nag into a dynamo to do it." Our intended was properly impressed, and we made a date for the following morning, when I was to have the electric boot in evidence. I had to borrow $25 from the owner of the poker game where I usually lost my money to buy the boot the first thing in the morning.
I was up bright and early and bought the boot and spurs. Inside was as pretty a little battery as you ever saw. It seemed a shame that the boot was not to be used.
My man showed up, prompt to the minute, and I proceeded to show him how the contrivance worked. He was delighted. Then I told him that he would have to give me his money to bet, as I didn't intend to trust anybody with the secret of the horse's name until post time, and he was about to demur.
"Look here," said I. "I'll write the name of the horse on a sheet of paper, put it in an envelope addressed to you and leave it at a messenger office with instructions for them to deliver it to you at post time. You are to give me your money now to take over with me. If that doesn't suit everything is off as far as you are concerned."
He hesitated a minute, but we had assured him that my horse would be as good as fifteen to one, and the thought of the amount he could win overcame his scruples. He handed over $700 in gold to me to bet. I was to keep a third of the amount won to give to the "jockey."
In this sort of business the money, of course is not bet at all. I wrote down the name of a horse that didn't have a chance and put it in an envelope and pocketed the $700 as a clear profit. The "snucker" came to me for an explanation that night, and I showed him a fake ticket showing him that I had bet the money. Of course he had no redress.
But to return to the fate of the $700 after it dropped into my pocket. I had been in such a hurry to get the electric boat in time that I missed my breakfast. When I separated from the "greeny" it was after 12—just time to take the boat for the race track. I went from my room directly to our rendezvous, where I met my pal and divided the money with him. Then I jumped on a car for the ferry and was off to the races. In my pocket I had $350 of the "sucker" $ money and a lonely quar-
ter of my own. Five cents of the quarter went for carfare and with the remainder I bought a round-trip ticket across the bay. In consequence when I boarded the boat I had nothing but gold in my pockets. I had intended to get my lunch on the boat, as I was hungry by that time, but on the after deck I met an assistant trainer in one of the big stables at the track.
"What's good to-day?" I asked him after we had chatted a while. "Got any money?" was his answer to my question. I jingled my pocket full of gold.
"There is something coming off in the first race," he hastened to say when he heard the clinking twenties. "You'll do the right thing if I put you wise?"
"You know me," I said. Then he went on to tell me about a "frame-up" in the first race by which a horse called Yellowstone was to win. "It is all cut and dried," he assured me, "and you will get ten or twelve to one for your money." Before the boat reached the other side I had agreed to bet $200 on Yellowstone in the first race. Also I was still without my lunch, but I promised myself that I would get it at the track immediately after the race. When the odds went up for the opening event I went round the ring betting $20 at a crack on Yellowstone. Others were doing the same, and before post, time every book in the ring was loaded with Yellowstone money.
It was a mile race, and the minute the barrier went up I knew my money was burned up. Yellowstone got off lengths behind the field—might just as well have been left at the post. He ran a cracking good race and finished fourth, but that did not save my $200. I still had $150 in my pocket and was standing in the ring gnawing my mustache, and snapping my fingernails in my disappointment when a man-about town whom I knew came up and told me that Michigan Smith, the plunger, had sent $1000 into the ring to be bet on the favorite, which was then two to one. "It looks like a clown," my friend
"It looks like a cinch," my friend said as he drifted away.
I didn't hesitate a moment, but elbowed my way to the nearest book and handed over my remaining $150. The horse was beaten a nose after a furious drive. Everybody said the boy tossed the race away by overconfidence. It didn't make any difference to me anyway. The books had that $350, which was all I cared about.
As I turned back toward the betting ring cursing myself for a fool, I saw a fellow being served with a nice, thick porterhouse in the restaurant. Then I remembered my lunch. Gee, I was hungry, and I didn't have the price of a cup of coffee about me. On the first two races I had lost all my money, even including the $25 I had borrowed to buy the boot. I hadn't bought even a shave or a shine or a lunch out of the money.
As I "mosied" glomily ground the ring the rest of the day and saw the horses I would have bet on win right down the line I tried to figure what was the difference between myself and the "sucker" who had given up the $700. The only difference I could see was that I had the privilege betting my money before losing it, while he had not.
I had to walk up from the ferry that night for the lack of carfare, but I was comforted somewhat by the thought that Mickey, my pal, would lend $50 or even $100, and I would be on my feet again. The minute I saw him I knew it was all off—that his money was gone, too. His face was longer than anybody's in town. Before a word was said each knew the other was "broke."
"What did you lose yours on?" he asked.
"Good things in the first two races. Where did you drop yours?"
"Poker game," he answered. "I wean up to where there was a big game going. They had been at it all night. I lamped around for a while and saw that they were playing them high and loose. One fellow in particular was bluffing on every other hand and standing 'pat' if anybody stayed. Then he shove in his whole pile and make 'em lay down. I stood behind him and he did that a couple of time without a pair in his hand, as I could see. So I thought that I'd sit in and wait for him to try it again. I bought checks for a hundred and left the rest of the $350 in front of me. The first hand I picked up three aces. Somebody opened the pot. I just stayed to draw them on and the bluffer raised us $50. We both saw the raise and drew two cards apiece. He stood pat. Knowing how the fellow had been bluffing on the same kind of a play my three aces looked like a cinch. We both passed and he shoved in all he had in front of him. The other fellow laid down and I called him, putting in all the money I had.
"Three aces here," I said, and was reaching for the pot. I was so sure of it, but he showed down a small full house and took the money. I left the game minus my $350 after playing just one hand.
We were silent for a while.
"Let's go out and rustle up dinner
money," I said at last, and we went.
Let's go out and rustle up mime money," I said at last, and we went. At the commencement of the present racing meeting at Oakland my pal and I opened a "tipping" bureau. Our idea was that he would run the "tipping" game and I would pose merely as a customer. In this way
I could hang around the office and "freezs" on to any likely looking "suckers" who appeared. His dealings were to be strictly on the square — that is, he would sell a couple of tips a day and refund the buyer's money, as per agreement, if they did not win. If I landed any of the clients for a bunch of money I did it on the outside and my pal sympathized with them, but told them he only knew me as an occasional customer.
The business prospered beyond our best hopes. Micky had all kinds of luck in picking the winners and by advertising we soon had an income of nearly $200 a day. In addition I steered one of our clients into a poker game where he lost $3500, and the next day I caught a boy from San Jose for $5000, which he had just received from his guardian on his twenty-first birthday.
These "killings" set us up in the world, and we lived like millionaires. I also had luck at the track, and in the middle of December I had $18,000 in a safe deposit vault. That was the heyday of our prosperity. It was a common thing for us to have nothing but a tip for the waiter left out of a $100 bill after we had dinner. But we didn't care nor even think about it. It's easy to be prodigal when you have $18,000 in a box waiting to be spent and more coming in every day.
But it wasn't long before the tide turned. In the first place we struck a losing streak with our tips and the $200 a day dropped off until we scarcely paid office rent. Meanwhile I was dropping big wads of coin at the track. I couldn't seem to pick their right. One day I lost $4500. On another $2800. My roll couldn't stand that long, and on New Year's Day I took our last thousand over to the track. I intended to bet on two horses—Firestone, which I knew was likely to prove; the best two-year-old on the Coast, and Proper, in the New Year's Handicap. A horseman persuaded me to stay off Firestone, which he said was not ready to race, and at the last moment I switched from Proper to Logistilla. The latter was left at the post and Proper won.
On the way back that night I felt natural. I was broke. I've been broke ever since, and the way things look now I am likely to stay that way, for the easy marks are staying out of my path, if there are any in town.
Now, I am an old idiot at all kinds of gambling. I make my living by knowing more about that sort of thing than the man whose money I want, and yet I squander all I make in going against games in which my money isn't worth ten cents on the dollar the moment I sit in.
Years ago I was talking with John Condon, the blind racetrack magnet of Chicago. We were discussing gambling and the chances a man has to win.
"Weil," said Condon, "there's only one way to beat a gambling game. Make the other fellow go against your game. With me any time a man didn't want to go against my game there was no play."
Shrewd old John Condon hit the nail on the head. As long as the "suckers" play my game I get the money. The moment I begin to gamble in any other game where another man has the percentage I lose my money the same as any other "sucker." I know this and yet I go right on losing my money. Why? There's a conundrum. If I had $10,000 I'd give it all to know the answer.—San Francisco Chronicle.
THINGS WORTH KNOWING
Although South America has about twice the area of the United States, it has only half the population.
2.
Life insurance companies in Japan are paying sixteen per cent. dividends. In one of the directors got only $2100 fees for their year's work.
Lancaster County, Pa., has twenty-one Presbyterian churches, and at least three of the congregations are almost 200 years old.
Wounded, Elk, a full-Slooded Sioux missionary, is organizing a revival movement in New York City. He has a wonderful flow of simple oratory, besides a majestic presence.
The consensus of opinion among historians is to the effect that the most ancient city is Damascus. There is no doubt about the fact that Damascus has the longest continuous history of any city in the world.
The English occupation of India began with the administration of Clive, in 1763. The present population of India is 240,000,000. The English residents in India, civil and military, number less than 100,000.
Porson was a great talker and a man of immense learning, and Carlyle was not far behind him, but both were handicapped by temperamental difficulties. Perhaps the greatest and most admirable all-round conversationalist was Lord Macaulay, with Olive Wendell Holmes as a close second.
Horseshoeing is very ancient. It is represented on a coin of Tarentum, South Italy, about 200 B. C. Iron and bronze horseshoes have been found in tumul in France; Germany, Belgium and England. It is, of course, impossible to designate the first instance in which a bronze or iron horseshoes was used.
With the Funny fellows
Like All the Rest.
"My only mistake," said Darus Green,
"Lily right in constructing my flying machine.
In the cloth of old rope, wooden framing,
and things.
Just covered with cotton and fastened with string.
I'll build one of steel in her frame, with the wings.
Overlaid with sheet copper, and furnished with springs.
Non-breaking, slant, scientific clear through.
My armship of metal will now reach the blue."
To test his machine, bright with polish and gilding.
He went to the top of a very tall building.
How did he come out? Well, how did you feel?
After taking your flier in copper and steel?
—Freesman Putney, Jr.
She Wouldn't Let Go.
Sybil—"This is your first engagement, isn't it, dear?"
Claire—"Yes; and I'm going to take good care that it's the last."—Scraps.
He Knows It All.
She—"You can always tell a Harvard man."
Ho (from New Haven)—"Yes; but you can't tell him much."—Harper's Weekly.
Perfectly Horrid.
Grace—"You look tired. There's an awful worn look about your mouth." Evelyn—"I guess you don't know my finances." Syracuse Herald.
Just as Tough.
"They say soothing music will make food more digestible.
"I don't believe it. My wife always sings lullabies while baking biscuits."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Something Just as Good.
"Frankie, dear, I don't think you have washed your face and hands as I told you to."
"No, nn; but I've dusted them carefully."—Punch.
His Ideal.
Young Chip—"If I were only rich—"
Old Block—"What would you do?"
Young Chip—"Get richer."—Illustrated Bits.
Appropriate Return.
Uncle Silas—"What would I be willin' ter do for a nice dish o' pre-digested oats?"
"Well, I'd be willin' ter tackle a pre-sawed an' pre-split wood-pile."
Judge.
Terms of Payment
Terms of Payment.
"The payments ain't so hard."
"What terms?"
"A dollar down and a dollar whenever, the collector ketches me."
Louisville Courier-Journal.
He Usually Left 'Em.
Roberts—"Poor Williams died and left a wife and three children." Jones—"That's nothing. He was too mean to take them anywhere when he was living."—Life.
As Best We
"The rich ride to the hounds, mused the near-philosopher. "Well?" "The rest of us have to go to, the dogs or the hoof."—Washington Herald.
"Well, Drs. Brown and Smith are going to operate upon old Gotrox. "Is the operation necessary?" "Why, yes; Brown has a note coming due, and Smith wants an automobile."
Met Accidentally.
Alice—"How did you come to meet your second husband, Grace?"
Grace "It was merely accidental. He ran over my first one, with an automobile and afterwards attended the funeral." -Smatt Set.
PUBLISHED EVENT SATURDAY,
BY THE TRIBUNE PUBLISHING CO.
116 W. St. Julian Street.
Hall 'Phone 3171.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year. $1.25
Six Months. $3.50
Three Months. $5.00
Three Months must be made by Express
art Office Money Order. or Registered Letter
Advertising Hates given on application.
SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1907.
The first bill introduced in the
senate after organization will be
the prohibition bill. The re-
demption of a certain class of
the youths of our race lies in
strict enforcement of a prohibition
law.
DURING the week on an excursion train, near LaGrange, one of the finest white men of the state met his death in attempting to separate some combatants among the colored excursionists. This is to be regretted, because such incidents only tend to widen the breach between the two races. Whiskey was the cause of it, and so was the ever handy concealed weapon.
It is said that whiskey is sold on Sundays at Lincoln Park. And not only that, it is sold during the week also and as the great majority of the attendants out there are young boys and girls, those in charge would be guilty of a double offense in selling on Sundays and selling to minors. The attention of the authorities is called to this violation, and it is hoped that it will be abated. Vicious resorts of this kind are breeding places of crime. Break them up.
At a meeting of the trustees of Atlanta University held in Boston, Wednesday of last week, Dr. Horace Bumstead resigned his position as president Dr. Bumstead succeeded the late President Ware, founder of the University. His administration was marked by the withdrawal of the State appropriation $8,000 annually because he refused to accept the policy dictated by the State. Rev. Edward Twichell Ware was elected as his successor and will assume charge next September. The resignation of Dr. Bumstead is regretted but the University is to be commended for securing such an able successor.
A LARGE per cent of those on the chaiangang of this county are young boys, many of whom have never had the opportunity of common school learning. This can not be remedied as long as the authorities allow over four thousand colored children to be out of school for the want of accommodation. It is a wonder that the per cent on the chaiangang is not greater. We are willing to declare that of those who are there none of them can be found who have attended our public schools. This is a broad assertion but the proof is easily ascertained. Does this not argue in favor of more school facilities for the colored children and the cutting down of court, jail and chaiangang expenses, thereby decreasing the burdens of the tax payers?
The following is clipped from the Memphis Citizen and speaks for itself:
Today one of the most damnable conspiracies known to annales of crime was brought to light when Dr. Wm. Knight, manager of the Visitors Drug store, colored, was acquitted on a charge of criminal assault upon a white girl.
The girl testified before the grand jury that she had gone in the store to make a purchase and while there she was assaulted by Dr. Knight. He was at once arrested after he to give $200 bond. Dr. Knight is of light complexion, and would be taken for a white man.
When Dr. Knight appeared in court the girl did not know him and broke down completely. A white paper reports the following:
"The case of the State vs Knight, the colored druggist, charged with criminally assaulting a white girl, was not proscribed by Prosecuting Attorney Means in the Gleitnourt Court this afternoon. The reason for dismissing the case was the fact that Eva Burnett, the prosecuting witness admitted to the prosecuting fattorney that she testified falsely before the grand jury and that not only Knight, but no other colored man assaulted her. She stated that she was induced by other parties to accuse him of the crime—Hot Springs Daily News
LAST week at Meldrim, Effingham county, a white man killed a colored man because the colored man earlier in the day assaulted the white man's father. The white man was acquitted. For any wrong that the colored man did, we do not and will not condone, but we do condemn the white man for his action. It is right for him to defend his father but it is not right for him to have murdered the colored man
under the circumstances which it happened. The officials of the county should have taken the matter in hand and punished the colored man for whatever crime he had committed. If this was done the white man today would not have the brand of Cain upon him. Our good white friends should see that violations of every kind be met by stern justice regardless of who the guilty party may be.
AFTER this week hundreds of boys and girls will commence their summer vacation. Parents, give them something to do so as to keep them off the streets. Keep them employed even if you have to pay some one to do so.
THERE is certain element of our people that can not attend entertainments or go on picnics unless they have some weapon concealed and an appetite for whiskey. This is a combination for trouble. Cut these two articles out and everything will be serene. The better element among us must preach reform along this and other moral lines. Keep mum and things will be come more demoralized.
THE legislature convened on Wednesday last. For fifty days it will be in session. It is called the reform legislature, and no doubt, it will handle the Negro question without gloves. The hope is expressed that the conservative element of both branches, but especially the senate, will see that nothing is done tending toward class legislation.
If anybody doubts the Republicanism of Col. Sol C Johnson, the brilliant editor of the SAVANNAH TRIBUNE, can clear his mind of the doubt by examining his editorial page and seeing what prominence he is still giving the campaign appeal of Chairman J. S. Sherman of the Republican campaign committee in 1906. Mr. Sherman was elected a Republican Congressman more than nine month ago, but Col. Johnson is still carrying Mr. Sherman's campaign literature. Solomon is a noble Roman.—Atlanta Independent.
We plead guilty to the insertion of the campaign block of '06, in our issue of June 15, inst., as presented by our versatile and able contemporary, Benjamin.
We were out of the city during that week, therefore the "devil" took charge and edited the paper largely with blocks.
Register; Every-
BODY REGISTER
A mass meeting will be held at the Harris street hall on Friday night July 12 to interest our people to register. The entire State is alive on this question and Savannah and Chatham County must not lag behind. For pride sake every colored man should pay up his tax and become qualified. Those who have not done so, should go at once and make returns and register at the same time. The return books close on July first. Be men for once. Become qualified. Attend the mass meeting on July 12 and urge upon your friends to attend. The ladies should become interested and urge the men to do their duty.
Protection Lodge 3200 G. U. O of O'. F. Whereas it has pleased the Almighty in his divine power to lift from our midst our beloved Bro. P. N. F. Chas Edwards, and to spare us and his kind and untrifling man may prepare to meet him in the grand hall where there will be no sorrows, sufferings or partings. Therefore be it
Resolved, that we the above named doest mourn keenly feel the departing of our beloved brother and friend. He was always loyal to his lodge, his brothers, and when he, was called up higher, he proved that he was loyal to his God. Feelings we do the departure of our beloved brother, our hearts in unity go out in sympathy to the bereaved one, and we hereby singularly and severally tender her our heartfelt sympathy, and support, as we are to dry the widowed one, and to care for her and a help in time of need, may we be found. God granting and helping that, we may be always vigilant to the discharge of our solemn duties.
Resolved further, that a copy of these resolutions (properly certified) be forwarded to these bereaved ones, and also that a copy be spread on our minutes.
W. D. Kennedy, Chairman Adopted by Protection Lodge; in session of June 20, 1907, and ordered published.
C.M. Brinson, N. G.
J. D. Powell, P. S.
Negre Business League
Notes.
The eighth annual session of the National Negra Business League is to be held at Topeka, Kansas, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, August 14th, 15th and 16th, 1907. The Central Passenger Association is just preparing notice of its meeting for the coming meeting of the League. The committee on Home and Location have arranged for all visitors and league members to be taken care of at an average
rate of $1.00 per day for board. There will be no attempt to hold up the delegates on this item. The officers of the Topeka League have just issued a special invitation to all members of the National League and their friends, urging them to attend the meeting and assuring them a profitable and interesting stay in Kansas. Detailed information along any line and especially as to accommodations can be furnished by Mr. Ira C. Guy, Vice President of the National Negro Business League, 311 West 14th street, Topeka, Kansas.
Local Notes.
St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Haberham between Harris and Macon streets. Services: Sunday School 10 a.m. m church services at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m., Wednesdays at 8 p.m. Hymns that everybody can sing Short sermons, all paws free, everybody welcome.
The Primrose Club held a special meeting Sunday afternoon last at the residence of Mr. Joseph Hunt, S17 Montgomery street. After the meeting Mr. and Mrs. Hunt entertained the members of the club with refreshments from 530 to 6. Those present were Mrsra Winston Childs, J. Myers Green, Joseph Turner, Joseph Hunt, R. J. Johnson, Robert Butler, Wallace Richards, Jr., W. A. Tyson, Isaac H B. Goodwin.
The Married Women's Charitable Aid and Pleasure Club, opened the season with an entertainment Friday evening last, at the residence of Mrs. Carrie Maxwell. She being elected vice president, is now president, after the death of the deceased president Mrs. B. M. Den slow. The evening was pleasantly spent in a few games. A solo by the Misses May Stewart and Anna Mav Williams Solo by Miss Rosa E Davis, a recitation by Mrs. F. Mason, all of which was quite enjoyable. Delicious ice cream, cake and lemonade were served by the following ladies: Meadames Murry, Causey, Howard and Mason. The guests were, Mrs. Frances Soriven, Mrs. Mamie Davis, Mrs. Mary Small, Mrs. Josephine Waldburn, Mrs. Julia Brown, Mrs. E. B. Whitfield, Mrs. Nellie Taylor, Mrs. Mable Green, Mrs. Lavinia Willis, Mrs. Henrietta Drugs, Mrs. Corine Davis, Mrs. M. E. B. Ill, Mrs. Doro theia Waring, Mrs. M. C. Brown, Mrs. S. J. Hill, Mrs. Anna Green, Mrs. Margaret Anderson, Misses Anna May Williams, May Stewart, and Rosa E. Davis
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Services were well attended all day
Sunday last at Bethlehem Baptist Church.
Preaching at 11 a.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Sunday School at 3:30 p.m., communion
4 o'clock sharp. We had several visiting
pastors and friends out with us
Children's Day.
The entire day to morrow will be Children's Day at the First Bryan Baptist Church. Their will be a temperance sermon preached at 11 o'clock. At 2 o'clock the People's Transfer will leave Indian and Farm streets with the teachers and a number of the scholars for Kingsville where they will organize a Sunday School. An excellent program has been arranged for the organizing of the school. The public is invited to take the transfer to and from Kingsville. At 8 o'clock there will be a Temperence review at the church. Mrs E. R. Dennis, Organist; Mrs J. O. Woodruff, Chorister and P. I. Small, Supt.
Second Baptist Church.
Sunday services were fairly good. The pastor preached at 11 a.m. Mr. Rev. Este preached an excellent sermon to a large congregation at 8:30. The siek list is very large. The pastor attended two funerals during the week; neither were members of the Second Baptist Church. Several couples were united in marriage by the pastor during the past week. Every member who yet holds a rally card is urgently requested to fill it to courtriction without fall. Uuual services to-morrow. Prayer meeting 5:30. Preaching at 11 o'clock by pastor May, subject, "Christian suffering." Preaching at 8:30 by Prof. Jones of the Booker T. Washington School Tuskegee, Ala. Everybody is cordially invited to attend these services.
Sunbonnet Numbers.
The fifth in the series of the famous Sunbonnet Pictures will be given with next Sunday's New York World. These are superb color reproductions of a series of beautiful and unique paintings. 50 and 35 cents.
Be a Citizen.
W. H. Brown, Jeweler, 807 West Broad Street, will discuss a subject of vital importance at Masonic Temple, Gwinnett street July 14th, 1907 at 5 p.m. Subject "Opportunity neglected." All are cordially invited to be present.,
Special Notice
To owners of lots in Laurel Grove Cemetery colored: I hereby notify sold owners that lots owned by them in the old portion, that has no identification must be拿来 for some or they shall be used as strangers ground. H. WILLIS. Keeper.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all persons
Sherman, late of said county, deceased,
Sherman, late of said county, deceased,
to present them to me, properly made out; within the time prescribed by law, so as to show their character and amount; and all persons indebted to said deceased are required to make immediate payment to me.
A. L. Tucker, Administrator,
Savannah, Ga, June 18, 1907.
In Memoriam.
In memory of
HARVEY ELLIOTT.
Harvey thou has left us
And thy loss we deeply feel,
But it is God who has berefted
He can all our sorrows heal!
May he rest in peace.
Your dear mother,
BERTHA WILLIAMS.
In loving memory of my dear mother,
Mrs. ELIZABETH MAY,
who entered into life eternal June 27, 1904.
There shall we meet parent and child and dearest.
Where changes and death and parting never come.
```markdown
```
Private School.
Miss Opelbia V. Ebbys, a recent graduates of the Haven Industrial School, has opened a private school at East Broad and first street. The patronage of her friends and others who have children and who are desirous to have them take lessons at a private school is earnestly solicited. Painstaking and careful attention will be given to each scholar. Rates reasonable.
Proclamation.
Office of the Grand Worthy Counselor of the Grand Court, I. O. O. C., N. A., S. A. E., A., A., and A., Jurisdiction of Georgia.
To the Grand Court Officers, Deputy Grand Worthy Counselor, Past Worthy Counselors and Representatives,
Greeting:
Int. According to the requirements of Article and Section 2, of the Grand Court constitution of I. O. O. C.; that the Grand Courts shall meet at the same time and place as the annual session of the Grand Lodge K. of P.
Therefore be it known by the power of the above mentioned article and the aufthronte vested as the Grand Worthy Counselor, he hereby call the Grand Court of Georgia to assemble in its tenth annual session in the city of Augusta, State of Georgia, on the second Wednesday in July (10) in Court Castle Hall at to a.m.
2nd. All endowment must be in this office by the first of July otherwise the Court is fined $5. 50. All per capita tax must be in the Gradd Register of Deeds of the S. Grant, Darlen, GA., by the first day of July otherwise the Court will be fined $2. 50.
3rd. No representative will be allowed a voice until all indebtedness is paid.
5th. All representatives and members of the Grand Court must wear the Grand Badge, those haven't them can get them at the session for 50 cents. 6th. All officers and representatives will receive board and lodging free of cost that have sent in their names to H. B Sweet, 1405 Hunter street, Augusta.
7th. The following are the credential committees: Mrs. M. S. Grant, Mrs. E. G. Harris, Mrs. Louisa Gardner, Mrs. Cathrine Davis, Miss Rosa L. Bettis and Mrs. U. E. Collins. Turn your credentials to them on Tuesday before the meeting. Part of the second day's session will be devoted to the Juvenile Courts. 8th. A reduce fare; I fare plus 250 has been secured. Procure from ticket agent certification including their full face, has ticket not be precured at the starting point purchase to the most convenient point at which such ticket can be obtained then purchase through to place of meeting. Mrs R. L. Rarnes, G. W. C Mrs. M. S. Grant, G. R. of D*
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of George W. Smith, James T. Smith, J. H. King and E. E. Green, all of said County and State, respectively shows:
1. That petitioners and such other persons that may bereafter become associated with them and their successors deserve the annuity of the SAVANNAH PHARMACY COMPANY for a term of twenty (20) years with the privilege of renewal at the expiration of that time.
2. That the object of their association is individual and pecuniary gain and the particular business they propose to carry on is the buying and selling of wholesale and retail drugs, proprietary remedies, patent medicines, perfumes, soaps, novelties, drummels sundries, seeds and other merchandise and personal, property of all kinds.
3. That they ask the corporate right and authority to acquire, own, and use receipts and formulas for the manufacture of medicinal preparations and proprietary medicines.
4. That they further ask the corporate right and authority to purchase, hold and convey any real and personal property that may be convenient of the object and purposes the accomplishment of the object and purposes the same by deed, mortgage or other lien, to sue and be sued, to make rules and by laws not inconsistent with the laws of this State or of the United States and generally to have and exercise all the privileges incident to private corporations created under the laws of the State of Georgia.
5. That the amount of capital to be employed by them is five thousand ($5000.00) dollars divided into shares of one hundred ($100.00) dollars of which ten (10) per cent is actually paid in, but petitioners desire the right however, to increase its capital stock to fifty thousand ($50,000.00) dollars.
6. That the principal place of business of said corporation shall be in the city of Savannah, County of Chatham and State of Georgia, but petitioners desire the right and authority to establish branch houses or agencies in other cities or towns in the State of Georgia or in other States of the United States as the same may be deemed advisable.
Wherefore, petitioners pray that they be incorporated and made a body corporate under the name and style aforesaid with all the rights, privileges and immunities and subject to the liabilities fixed
hy law, and to have all the usual and incidental powers given to corporations under the laws of the State of Georgia. J. H. KINCKLE Petitioners Attorney. Original filed in office June 14 1907. James L. Murphy, Dep. Clerk, 8, C. C. C. Georgia.
Y. M C. A
Subject June 30, "Wing is a mocker; strong drink is raging, whoquerest is deceived there by is not wise." Address, "Be, Do, Have" by Mr. W. O. P. Sherman, Jr. Subject July 7, "Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered." The subjects Love, Patience and Truth were ably discussed and brought out many fine and helpful though's. The young men are getting themselves ready for hard work to raise the moral stand rd. Good singing, lively meetings. All are cordially invited to be present. Sunday afternoon at 5 p. m. Harris Street Hall. Bring your bibles.
Are You a Dreamer?
There is only one place for a dreamer
Fell behind what's dreaming of love.
And the plains is a slow going steamer
With the moon brightly shining above.
With a dear little grille besides you,
With a good band that know how to
play.
With a nice cozy corner to hide you,
And how quickly the time files away.
Armenia Lodge excursion to Beaufort,
Monday, July 8, will be an ideal place for
deramers.
Milledgaville, Ga., June 1, 1907,
Dear Sir:
This will inform you that I am in the
race for G. M. R., at our next G. L.,
I guess that you know that I was forced
to be operated upon during the month
of March 1907, and as a result of said operation
I am not able to do my general
practice. Hence I am compelled to do
office work. You can see from this that
I need something to supplement my office
work.
This is my reason for entering the race for G. M. R.
Cost of Shares Increased.
Savannah, Ga, June 15th, 1992
Notice is hereby given the public that on account of Reserve and accumulated profits of this company amounting to more than 50 percent of the paid in capital, the Board of Directors has ordered that from and after July 15th, next stock in this company will be sold at the rate of Fifteen (15) Dollars per share.
THE WAGE EARNERS
LOAN AND INVESTMENT Co.,
L. E. Williams. President
Willie H. Johnson,
The Leading Grocer
Fine Stock of Groceries
and, Confectioneries,
Also MANUFACTURER of
Candies and Ice Cream. Good
Profit is made on Johnson's
Ice Cream
Special Prices on large orders.
Bell Phone 3728
Cor. Cuyler and Duffy Sts.
SEE HOW
Commenced Business
October 5, 1900 -
October 5, 1901 -
October 5, 1902 -
October 5, 1903 -
October 5, 1904 -
October 5, 1905 -
October 5, 1906
Apr 5, 1907 - -
This steady growth shows the confidence of the pub.
BECAUSE we show visible eyelids with the funds intrusted with us for inves have built or bought for them.
BECAUSE the people have full composes our Board of Directors
BECAUSE our company is a strictly being used exclusively for the bettermen.
BREING US YOUR DEPOSITS, compounded quarterly. Take have paid 12 per cent dividend
The Wage Earners Lot
The Pioneer Negro Sa
Bell 'Phone 1198.
SEE HOW WE GROW
Commenced Business Combined Assets
October 5, 1900 - - - $ 102 00
October 5, 1901 - - - 1,144 00
October 5, 1902 - - - 2,462 03
October 5, 1903 : : : 11,637 37
October 5, 1904 : : : 14,587 63
October 5, 1905 : : : 20,897 28
October 5, 1906 : : : 35,749 51
Apr 5,1907 - - - $49,662.24
This steady growth shows that this company has the confidence of the public; BUT WHY?
BECAUSE we show visible evidence of the good we do for our people with the funds intrusted with us for investment in more than too homes we have built or bought for them.
BECAUSE the people have full confidence in the twelve good men that composes our Board of Directors
BECAUSE our company is a strictly HOME institution, and all of its funds being used exclusively for the betterment of Savannah people.
BREING US YOUR DEPOSITS. "We pay 5 per cent interest compounded quarterly. Take some stock with us. We have paid 12 per cent dividends for the past four years.
The Wage Earners Loan & Investment Co.,
JULIAN SMITH, Pres. Union Benefit
Union Benefit Assocation.
(Incorporated—Charter Perpetual)
The leading insurance company in the south. Giving emp-
yong men and women than any other company of like benefit.
The UNION BENEFIT ASSOCIATION is the people of
is the first home insurance company of its kind in this city.
Founded in 1880 and controlled entirely by Negro men.
Every policy is backed up by a deposit of $5,000 with the
When you take out a policy with the UNION BENEFIT A
you have made a safe investment.
She is striving now to place her policies in every State in a
Shrewd and energetic agents are want-
Call and see us at 20 STATE STREET, W. Bel-
GEO. W JACOBS, General Manager
Union Savings & Loan
AUTHORISED CAPITAL $50,000.
Stock $1 25 per share. Unparall
A clean record, splendid showing, managed
The leading insurance company in' the gouth. Giving employment to man 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.
Stock $12 per share. Unparalleled Success. A clean record, splendid showing, managed by a board of directors of able business men; looks after the interest of the people; conducts a thriving SAVINGS BANK; pays 7 per cent on deposits. The UNION SAVINGS solicits your account upon its record. We desire the accounts of Firms, Lodges, Societies and Social Clubs. Get in line with the thinking men and women of the race and stand by Negro Concerns. UNION SAVINGS & LOAN COMPANY, 20,State Street, W.
Notice.
Having acquired an interest in the Johnson Undertaking Establishment I wish to announce to my friends and the public that I will thank them for all future patronage as in the past: All work will receive prompt attention. Bell Phone 76.
W. B. BROWN,
325 Jefferson Street.
For a Day of Real Pleasure
Spend July 4th, at Spingfield, Ga
With the
E. A. & S. C.
Govla The New Brinson Railway.
Trains leave Central Station 8:30 a.m and 1:30 p.m. railroad time
Fare round trip 75¢
Styles' Park Open
FREE FREE FREE
To Societies, Lodges
and Clubs for
PICNICS AND OUTINGS
For general information, apply to
H. W. MANN, Agent,
551 Liberty Street. east.
The People's Transportation
Wagonettes leave Henry and
East Broad every Sunday at 4
o'clock p. m., until further
notice
G. James
17 Randolph Street, corner of Jackson Street.
Green Grocery,
DEALER IN
Beef, Pork, Veal and Poultry.
Also carry a fine line of Groceries, Cigars, Tobacco, etc
Prompt attention will be given to all patronage.
Special Notice to Ladies
When your Sewing Machines get out of order—skip stitches—breaks thread or runs heavy. Call at New Home Office Corner Barnard and York Street. And ask for BLIJAH J. QUARTERMAN, Expert Adjuster.
Noble's SHOE EXCHANGE
First-class Work
Guaranteed.
Best material used.
Prices Reasonable.
SECOND-HAND SHOES
SOLD, BOUGHT OR, EXCHANGED.
Work called for and delivered.
409 Jefferson St. Bell phone 3470
WE GROW
Combined Assets
$ 102 00
1,144 00
2,462 03
11,637 37
14,587 63
20,897 28
35,749 51
$49,662.24
what this company has the public; BUT WHY?
ence of the good we do for our people investment in more than too homes we evidence in the twelve good men that HOME institution, and all of its funds out of Savannah people.
We pay 5 per cent interest on some stock with us. We funds for the past four years.
Man & Investment Co., Savings Bank of Georgia.
468 West Broad St.
SEO. W. JACOBS, Gen'l Mgr.
The Best Association.
south. Giving employment to man
company of like benefit.
TION is the peoples favorite, since it
kind in this city.
d entirely by Negro men of the city.
issu of $5,000 with the State Treasury.
UNION BENEFIT ASSOCIATION
cities in every State in the union
ents are wanted.
GREET, W. Boll Phone 289
General Manager.
& Loan Co.,
CAPITAL $50,000.00.
Unparalleled Success.
owing, managed by a board of
The Savannah Triiinne
* Sarurpar, June 29, 1907,
eT ee ee ee ee ee ee
were pleasant callers Jast week.
Dr. B.D. Butktey made a fying
trip to Tallabasseo Fis., this week
‘to visit his mother,
~ Room to rent, farnished or up.
fornished, in a nice family, 615 E.
Henry street, Mrs. A. E. Benbow.
Miss Maggie Sullivan of Auguste,
18 1n the city to spend a while. She
ia atopping at 318 Gaston street,
west, ¥
Mre. L, H. Lawson of 635 Walker
street, has been very sick for more
than a week, but at thie writing fe
much better.
Mr. Geo. 8. Williams, the popular
and efficient mail clerk, spent sey.
erel days in Atlanta Iast week, and
saw many of his old friends
Mr. Rogers 9. Lovett eft on
Saturday for Baltrmore. On his
return be will he sccompauied by
his cousin Mise Cora Soruggins.
‘Mina Sarah Perryman, of Macca, ts
in the city spending a few daya, the
gueat of Mrs. Nora Bos ght,
West Gaston street She va
next week for New York.
Miss Anna Wigg of Beaufort is
spending awhile in the city the
guest of her cousin Mre. Gertrude
Green at ber residence 541 Gordon
atrect, ena’.
Miss Susie E. Bates of Marietta,
Ga., one of the public school teach
era of that city is in the city visit-
ing her sister, Mra. Jennie Roberts,
Minia street, west.
Mr. B. J. Mitchell, accompanied
by his wife Mrs. Sarsh Mitchell left
on Monday lust for Grabamville, 8.
O, to attend the tuneral of his uncle
Mr. Jonas Mitchell. 7
Mies Carrie L. Heard one of the
popular city school teachers of
Washington, Wilkes Co., is in
the city apending her vacation with
her sister Mra. Alston ou Oharles
atreet.
Miss L. P. Lemon, A. M., of At-
Janta, editreas of the “Missionary
Searchlight” and preadent W. H.
and F, Misstonary Socisty of the
State isin the city guest of Mrs.
J.A. Lindsay.
Mre. Louisa White and children
left on Wedneaday for Philadelphin.
They will join Mr. White who pre-
ceeded them there enme time ago.
‘They will make Philadelphia their
permanent ubode,
Miss L. Elizabeth Mitchell of
Beaufort, graduated from Bean‘ort
Pablic School June 7th, arrived in
the city on Friday of last week and
will take up a conrae fof ‘Trained
Nursing at the Georgia Infirmary,
‘Miss Susie Nowell, daughter of
Capt and Mrs. J R. Nowell of Col-
uwmbis, S. C., arrived in the city on
Thuraday to be the guest of Mies
Cathrine Flagg, Robertstrest. Oapt.
Nowell is expected to. arrive to-
morrow merning.
Rey. J. S. Stripling, preridin,
elder ot the Savannah ‘istrict of
the M.°E. Church. in company with
Rev. G. H. Lennon, called to seo us
on Tburaday, Rev. Stripling sno-
ceeded Rey. Fisher as the presiding
elder of this district,
Mr. June Lewis and Miss Minam
Governor were joined in holy wed-
lock Wednesday evening last, to the
delight of their many friende and
well wishers. Rey J. A. Lindsay
officiating. Both the bride and
gtoom havea hoatof friends here
who wish them success through life
The committee in charge of St.
Benedicts’ excursion to Daufuskie
next ‘Tuesday bas arranged for
transportitien for thelr patrons
to and from the boat. Vehicles will
atert at Henry and Habersham
to Gwinnett, Price, sBroughtor,
Drayton, Bay to Whitaker. On the
the West side from 31st, down Wert
Broad to boat. Hours willbe 8,
$:30° 9 and 9:30 a, m
‘The private school o” Mra. Louisa
A Alexander closed on Monday last.
‘An excellent program wos rendered
aud enjoyed by all present. Among
the participants were Alberta
Alexander, Wille West, Charles
Brown, Julia Lane, Ruth’ Ballineanx,
Effie Oarter, Annie Mitchell, Rebec-
ca King,Richard Young and Beatrice
Mitchell. Those preseat were Mrs.
H. Jones, Mra. EmmatAdams Eloise,
and Alice Adams, Misses Cathrine
and Nettie Mitchell E. Strickland,
Mra, Lane, Misses Ethel Davis, M.
Poblic Sehool Closing
The public schoolaof the city clos
ed yesterday for the term, At esot
of the gehools appropriate closing
exercices were beld, witnessed by £
large concourse of the paren fs an¢
friends of the graduates.
‘Following are the graduates o
the, varioys achools :
. EAST BROAD.
Claredon ‘Allen,-Gordon Dingle, Fred
Hunter, Walter Howard, Willie Heard,
Walter Mitchell, Ben Odum, Earl Parks,
‘Allen Robinson,' Arthur Spencer, Eat:
uel Spencer, John Washington, Eugene
Wright. Atnette Cannick, Ruby Dud:
ley, Annie Doby, Willie Duncan, Mar-
jorie Dowse, Lottie Everett, Triphenia
Fleming, Gassie Green, Bertba Gait.
yrood, Mamie Haywood, Hazel Heffron,
Oraline Harrison, Blanche Johnson,
Usula McMilan, ‘Cornelia McDowell,
Camilla Marshall, Emma Noble, Minnie
Noble, Gertie Roberts Virginia’ Rogers,
Maria’ Simmons, Jennie Stephens,
Mable Tyson.
‘MAPLE BTREET.
Henrietta Victoria Johnson, Mary Ellen
Henry, Maggie Louisa Mitchell, Eliza.
beth Monroe, Ella Simmons, Perelean
St. Pare Martin, Catherine Albertha
Bryant, Christena Patterson Hazzard,
Lucy Perdethia Williams, Helen Le:
nora Carter, Florence Louisa Haines,
Evaline Louisa Drayton, Lela Beatrice
Smith, Sarah Belle Phoenix, Lela Eliza-
beth ’ Clarke. Emma Maude White,
Estella Swinton, Viola Verbena Chis:
holm. Anna Eliza Jenkins, Clinton
Celestine Greene, Gertrude’ Victoria
Wallace, Blanche Camilla Gay; Eliza.
beth Theresa Spann, Viola Belle Perkins,
Floretta Albertha Foreman, Helen Eva
Scrogeins, Elizabeth Wilhams, Ella
Pope, Anna Rebecca Gay, Addie Willis
Linday, Charlie Fernil, Dayid Ander-
son Duncan, William Henry Anderson,
Chas. Henry Cogswell, Joseph Henry
Watson, Chas. Swift ‘Lockett, Harry
Benjamin Witson, John Herman Brown
Alcephus Gooding, Ollie Walker, Jasper
Moses Willinms, Lallie Queen Lindsay.
WREST BROAD
Ida Belle Victory, Mary Martha Law,
Anna Barnwell ‘Campbell, Elizabeth
Lillian Kiley, Helen Price, Olive Los
sene Holloway, Ethel Louisa Grant,
Jessie Mae Riley. Mae Belle Deas, Rosa
Mae Young, Ruth Frances Robinéon,
Florence Ana Powell, Albertina Smith
Arie Mae Johnson, Lillian Belle Wilson
Florida Cornelia Durden, Mabel Louise
Barron, Viola Clifford Johnson, Chris-
tepher Frederick Brown, Joseph Edwin
Johnson, Lorenzo Dowe Debroe, George
Henrs Price, James Walter’ Oliver,
George Washington Brooks, Colonel
Julius Hemby, Clem Brown, Frederick
Leonard Goyernor, William Aaron
DeLorme.
Davis-Shivery.
On Wednesday June 26th, at high noon
the clever and capable Miss Louise Davix
will become Mrs. George R. Bhivery,
and will become a resident of Savannah.
Miss Davis is one of our most_taleated
young women and\since graduating from
Atlanta University some years ago has
devoted her time to teaching. She is one
fof the most valued members of the faculty
of Walkers Baptist Institute, and a0 great-
ly are they attached to her, and 0 much
do they appreciate the value ef her work
that the board has re-elected her to con-
tinue on the faculty, and have urgently
requested that she de so, dn this school
she had the Latin and Greek languges
and the proficiency of the studente in
these studies has beendue greatly to ber
earnest and capable efforts. Bhe 1s also
astudentof mutic. and her sweet voice
has added pleasure and enjoyment to
many gatheriags, both public and private.
Augusta regrets to lose her, even though
the hope is held out that sbe will retura
and continue ber workin our midst. We
greatly fear that the Doetor and Savan-
tak, will hold with too relentless a clutch.
We'wish her joy. and congratulate Savan-
nah upon its galu.—Georgia Baptist.
The wedding took placeon Wed-
nerduy and the bridal party arrived
in the city the same'evyening. While
Augusta regrets, Savannah rejoice
in gaining Mrs. Shivery, The
scores of friends of Dr. Shivery who
{sone of our popular dentists, are
extending him eongratulations.
Knights of Damon
The Ancient Order of Knights of
Damon and Hermion Courts will
give a grand entertainment st Har-
Tis street hall on Monday night
July lat. The committee will
make this a fine affair. The sub-
ordinate lodges of the Order will at-
tend in a body and will have a
atreet parade escoted by Mfrddleton's
band. Speeches will be delivered
by Messrs, E. Great, A. Harrie, W.
E. Phillip, J Wright, G. W. Shaw,
O. Coles, R. N: Rutledge, Mra.
Ssrab Colea, Mra. Minnie Holmer,
and Mrs, Mary Johnson. Mr
William Jackson, Grand Deputy for
the State, 1s the manager. The
public is invited to attend.
Appreciate Their Pastor.
A reception was tended Rev. and
Mre. G. H. Lennon on Tuesday
night by the members of Asbury M.
E. Church, The members were out
i large force and had -prepared
dainty refreshments for the occasion.
Each one present joined in giving
the reverend and madame a royal
welcome to the church and city.
Rev, Leonon succeeded the Rev. Mr
Deas. He in already liked by
bis members. It is hoped that his
partorate will be a suocessful one.
Gathered at a Ripe Age
Mrs. Adeline Wright reliet of
Edmond Wright who died abont
twenty years ago, departed this life
Monday morning last, at a rips old
age. Mra, Wright was well aud
favorably known, especially by the
older citizens. For many yeara she
conducted astallin the city market
until a short time ago when she
became too unwell to attend to it.
‘The funeral took place from her
late residence 34th streat, weat, on
Tuesday afternoon. It was attended
bya large number of frierds of the
family. The services were well.con-
ducted by Reys. Wm. Gray and E, 0,
Johnson. =,
Mrs, Wright wes the mother of
ten daughters who proceed ber in
death. Her(nesrest and ‘oxy
living relative is Mr. John A. Sny-
der, who is ber sole heir. Mrs.
Wright left » valuable estate with
goed bank account.
a —___
Men’s Sunday Club
At the Men’s Sunday Glub tomor-
row afternoon, Dr Bascomb Anthony
will deliver an address. The Ap.
pollo orchestra will furnish music.
Musical number alao by Mr. Monl-
trie.
AMUSEMENT COLUMN.
cial World.
Remembr the annual excursion to
Daufuskle by St Benedicts Church, Tues
day July 2d, Tickets so and as cents,
A grand 2 boats excursion will be giver
to Beanfort by Mt. Beir Lodge No 2441,
G. U.0. of 0. F., Tuesday July agra.
Tickets so and 25 cents.
A Swell dance will be given at Masonlc
Temple by Morning Star Lodge Ne. 31,
I. 0. of A. K.,cktonday night July rat
Tickete 15 cents.
The Mutual Club will give a grand ex-
cursionto St. Helena, The Steamer will
Teave foot of Whitaker street Wedoesday
night July 3rd at 10 o'clock. Fare se
cents.
You are cordially invited to spend the
fouth of July at Daufuskie with the West
Side Pleasure Club, Tickets 50 cents.
Agrand entertaiomeat will be given
at Dufly street hall, by the Ivory Leaf
Pleasure Club Monday night July 15th.
Tickets 15 and 25 cents.
“A fair (ours: Any person wishing
to exchangl a day of Pleasure and recrea-
tien fora “half dollar” cando so by at
teoding the Armenia Lodge excursion: to
Beaufort Monday July 8.
The eleventh annual entertainment of
‘the Union Brotherhood Benevolent As-
seclation will take place at Harris street
hall, Monday night July 8th. Tickets 25
cents.
A grand excursion will be given to
Bluffton, $.C- by Friendly Brothers A.
gad S. Club No. r+Bunday July 14th.
Tickets 50 cents. .
Mt. Bethel Baptist Church and the Btar
of Bethel will give a grand excursion to
Beaufort, S. C., Monday July agth.
Tickets 85 and 35 cents.
The Twenty Stars Ald and Social Club
will give s grand dance at Margaret street
hall Monday olght July 6th. Tickets 15
and 25 cents. =
The Oak Greve Club {nvites yoo to
spend the Fousth of July at Styles Park
with them. Tickets including fare both
ways 30 cents.
The Ways and Means Committee of
of Browas Mantle Fountain No. 2394 U.
0. T.R. will give a modern Pjak’ Picnic
and Barbecue entertainment at Masonic.
Temple, Wednesday duly roth, frem 3:30
p.m. to2:30 a.m, Tickets 5,25, and 35
cents. *
‘The Farmers Union will_givea grand
Pyenic at their hall in Sackaville on
Tiaursday July 4th. Tickets 15 cents.
For a day of real pleasure speed the
fourth of July at Springfeld, Ga. via
New Brinson Ry. Train leave Central
depot 8:30 2. m. and 1:30 p.m. Fare
Round Trip 75 cenrs.
Bt. Philip's, Monumental A.M. E,
Church and Sunday School will picnic at
Danfuskie Wednesday July — roth.
Tickets bo and 25 cents,
A grand entertainment will be given at
Harris Street ball by the A. O. Knights
of Damon, Monday night July Let.
Tickete a¢ cente,
The 8. S. and B. Y. P. U. of the F. A,
B. Church and the Macedenia Baptist
Church will give a grand excursien to
Dayfuakie Monday July rst. Tickets
so and 25 cents.
Golden Star Lodge No. 357 1. 0. G.8
and D. of S. ULB. A., will give a grand
excursion to Beaufort Monday night July
Isth. Tickets so and 35 cents.
The Fairmont Afd and Social Ciub will
rive a grand exeursion to Blufften B.C,
Sunday July 21st. Tickets so cents.
Attend the Auction sale of Savannah
Pearls Fountain at the residente of Mrs.
Mary J. Wright, g12, Atlantic Avene
Monday July rsth. Tiekets 10 cents.
Attend the grand novelty, musical and
comedy concert and entertainment given
by the Invincible Concert Troupe under
the auspices ot Willing Workers Club of
Beth-Eden Baptist Church at Masonic
Temple Wednesday night July 3rd.
Admission 25 cents,
‘The third anaual dance of the H, P, A.
and S. Club at Harris street ball, Monday
night July isth, Tickets 25 and 40 cents.
The Colonial Pleasure Club will give a
swell dance at Masonic Temple Monday
night July sand. Tickets 25 and 40 cents.
The E. A, and S.C. will given Private
Outing at Daufuskie Tuesday July rétn.
Tickets 50 cents.
A garden Party will be given by the
Alex. Ellis Club for the benefit of Beth
Eéen Baptiat Church Monday and THesday
nights July Sth and oth at the residence of
Mrs, Flereace Pinckney, 516 Nichole
Street. Tickets 10 cents.
‘The first Summer daace givea by the
Morning Glory Aid and Bocial Club will
be given by at Margaret Street Hall Men-
day aight July ist. Tickets r5and 25
cents.
A grand combination excursion will be
given for the benefit of Bethlehem Baptist
Church to Beaufort Tuesday July 16th.
Tickets 50 and 35. .
The annual onting of St. Augustine's
Bunday and Parochial School will take
place at Styles’ Park Tuesday July 16th.
Tickets go cents. |
A grand Fourth of July Hop willbe
given by Coming Event Fountain No.
a4ig U. O. T. R. at Our hall. Tickets
15 cents.
A grand excursion will be given to
Blufiton by the Pilgrim Travelers ef S. C,
Monday July oth. Tickets so cents.
‘A grand Picnic will be given by the
Christian Pilgrim Society to Daufuskle
Monday July rsth, Tickets so cent.
DLS. PM,
DENTIST: oo
240 Barnard St.. Savannah, Ga,
fDees all kind of high grade dental werk
ol the best quality hd workmanship. Geld
crowns and bridge work. White Percelain
Pivot, and Gold Crewns mounted en the
natural roots. Gold Fillings, Cement Filt-
ings, and Silver or Amalgam Fillings, from
nine to a {ull zet of teeh $7.00 and $3.00,
Breken Places mendea and teeth added to
old ener tee a asmalt cost, abellPhone 1244
2 owns Guaran
eat Sara =
ee
J b P in ti
B, H. LEVY BRO, & C0,
STYLE AND FIT.
Get THEM Right __
and then You'll be Right .
The Right is Here with .’
. | Us in Our :
Correctly Made Ready-
for-Service Goods. .
The Proof Waits You--~—
Try on and be Gonvinced
B.H. LEVY,BRO. & CO.
5 Broughton Street, West.
Metropolitan Mercantile & Realty
Company, :
, {(xcorPoRaTED.) :
: ara
Capital Stock $1,000,600.
HAS ON THE MARKET A BLOCK OF $100,000 WORTH OF
STOCK AT $20.00 PER SHARE.
There was sold in the city of New York a few daysago,
$25,000 worth of Stock inone day. It is the bost investment
offered the public and will not be on the market long. Pays 7
percent.
Weare building those ‘Queen Annie’’ Cottages every aay P
Our terms are the easiest and best for the poor man and the’
safest forthe investor, Call or write and Jet us talk business —
witht yous, Onur proposition is worth investigation and invest
ment.
Branches everywhere. ‘ Reference everybody:
P. Sheridan Ball, President. iu. C. Collins, Secretary.
J. H. Atkins, Treas, W: D. Armatrong, Gen’l Rep.
J. J. Bolen, Fiscal Agent. F. M. Cohen, General Manager.
526 West Broad Street, Savannah, Ga. Bell Phone 1144
‘A Jack-o’-Lantern Lawn
Fete.
_ The Faith(al Workers iavite thelr many
friends to a Jack-o'-Lantera Lawn Fete
to be held at ibe residence of Mre. Hen-
rieta Richardson 2118 Harden street,
Brownsville, Monday aight July 16th,
1907 at 8:30. No pains or expense will
be spared to make thie a most enjoyable
evening. The Apollo Orchestra has kindly
conseated to appear. This js a, most Ja-
viting occasion for the fair set to display
their latest styles and mush-reom hate.
Singing, etc., will be participated in until
the Wee sme’ houre of the lone moralng,
Come with your glad rage en and leaving
sorrow and care behind, An afternoon
for chUdren 4 to 8 p. m. Admlesion 10
cents, children s cents.
F. F. Jones,
—DBALER IN—
Beef - Veal - Mutton
Lamb-Pork-Hams
Bacon and .
CORNED BEEF.
All Kinds of GAME in Season.
Goods promptly delivered to
any partof the city free of
charge. *
STALL 31, CITY MARKET.
MetropolitangMutualy; ..
Benefit Association
Do you like Good Clothes? -
We combine the three egsentials in garment making in our
Clothes namely, Quality, Style and Fit.
Not every man knows how to make fine clothes; P
But the man who knows, and kaows hé knews, is the right mas—follow him.
WE DO LADIES‘ TAILORING TOO.
Sc, @ORI OF: drop us
Paes . — a acard, we do
} hil Tee a r the rest
) OFarm Street,
a 7
we —
4 = :
CORRECT OUTFITTERS. Savannah; Ga.
eg eet co
In addition to] our sickjand
déath benefit policies we are
offering the public industrial
insurance in ficraignt life poli-
cies ranging from $100.00 to
$510.00. Premiums within the
reach of all. A fair value for
your money.ina tapas com
pany is what all of us are look.
ingfor. This is what we are giv
ing. See any of our agents or
callatthe company’s, office for
rates and partis alars. 2
Baorge io men and, women
can anywhere from $5.00
to 96.00 a week, worsing for, this
company. a
Ot&ce 626 West Broad Street,
Savannah, Ga.
F. M. vOHEN,
Manager.
BE. A. SEABROOK,
: ; °
Funeral Director
General Undertaking end Embalming
hs Everything Firstclass. Rates
, Reasonable. ="
; W. B. FIELDS, General Manager.
NORTH EAST CORNER{WEST BROAD & HUNTINGTON
yi «STREETS, «= 0 - = SAVANNAH, Ga. “i
3 © a
Dr. J. W. Jamerson,
DENTIST.
= Geltey him amd Shave yourwork dene
Crowns. geki ead white, Tooting ike the
eararal testh, Filling wold, oliver oad =
fos, Reacting dows wittrecse: ‘Ailes
“Prleided wich All ederm applansce
623 WEST BROAD STREET.
Bet. Huntingdon and Hall.
—— OB. i. cnet cadet at
i . i 7 eS « gis AoA a. ee
Se edie Tio. + a eae A GI Sica s
ek, sabhectig, Lida sic: vtohal ts
A SERMON’ & Soe
py THE REV— pedo
[BA V4 ENDERSN BBA
1 ;
“—*" Subject: Profanity. :
Brooklyn, N, ¥.—Preaching at the
Irving Square’ Presbyterian Church.
Hamburg avenue and Weirfield
strect, on the theme “Profanity,”
the Rev. Ira W. Wemmel Henderson,
Pastor, took as his text Exodus 20:7,
‘Thou salt not take the name of the
Lord thy God in vain.” He said:
Af there fs anything that is disgust-
dng it ts unbridled profanity. And
the prevalence of useless, pointless,
WRiustified swearing merits the atten-
Yon not alone of the Church but al-
80 of the civil authorities whose duty
St is to keep the moral atmosphere
of this and every other community
free of verbal pollution. The com-
mand ought to be obeyed and the
civil law oa the point ought to be
enforced. The silly fool who spreads
the germs of diphtheria or typhold or
smallpox broadcast throughout the
comraunity will soon feel the iron
hand of the law laid heavy on his
«shoulders and he ought very properly
be put under Jock and key until san-
ity has returned, but any man with-
‘out a sense of moral respectability or
even elementary decency may satu-
rate the moral atmosphere, in which
we have to live and to rear our youth,
with all manuer of verbal disease and
the average policeman will Dut smile
or perhaps add to the sum total of
uneleanness. ‘The man who has such
poverty of language and such an ab-
solute incl: of common’ sense that
profanity is to him the one way to
dignify and emphasize the expres
sion of ideas, should be jailed with
that other man who endangers our
phystcal health. The third command-
ment has, we know from experience,
a very practical and forcible applica:
tion to this day, Nowhere may we
escape the mah ct unwholesome
speech. Men with gray locks and boys
just out of kills, men who should
know better and boys who must Jearn
the disgrace of proftigate language
if they are ever to amount to much in
life, both and all are guilty af: the
most shamefal depravities of apeech.
As thinks stand to-day, uo man can
Tear a child wit 2 pure mind. We
walk our streets and curses every-
where fill the air and fail npon our
ears. Does a herse Ualk the Almighty
is Invoked to move,him. Is the dray-
man deiayed.a moment he curses the
fellow just ahead. It is impossible to
sit by an open window on any prom-
iment thorougafere without being
morally poisoned. Dées the boss in
the shop wish to hurry up the men
the vilest of language is the means
he uses to set speed to hand and
mind, Not once but hundreds of
times I have scen fowl mouthed in-,
spectors, overseers and sang bosses
Snvoke the maledictidns of heaven
and hell upon poor dumb driven
brutes made in the imace of the
Maker, lest forsooth they ‘straighten
Weary toil bent backs to siexe 2 mo-
ment’s rest. | °
Of course thee very men will tell
you that they have no desire to dis-
honor God nor to offend our moral
sensibilities Ther lay it to habit.
thoughtlessness and a hunéred other
causes. J am convinced myself that
much of the swearing of the day is
due to thoughtleseness rather than
to wilfal sin. Azd yet I Have seen
the same men take mere liberties
with the narie of Almighty God than
J would allow them to take or they
‘ould dare to take with my name—
elther thonghtlessly or wilfully.
‘Thonghtlessness is no excuse. God
gave us brains and tongues, and it
$3 our duty to exercise oar wills and
to°use our tongues for the expres-
sion of worthy thought alone. Of
course men don’t think, that is to say,
the most of then fo not, for if they
did swearing wosld go by the board
to a short and sure death. To plead
thoughtlessness in extenwation of sin
4s to play the baby-aet. Men should
think and cut the enraing ont.
‘The third commandinent has solid
sense behind it, as have all of God's
commands. The misuse of the name
of God, or of the name of our Lord,
Frofanity, swearing. ‘cursing, all
should bs abhorred for several good
and sufficient reazons.
. Profanity is unnecessary, unmaniy,
indecent, immoral, ungodiy. ‘Thera
are five good reasuas why it should
be put aside.
Profanity is unnecessary. A curse
never prove a point. It rather dem-
onstrated the paucity of thought of
the swearer. " Oaths never convince
A person of the validity ar strength
of an argument, but they do show up,
the poverty of language of the man’
who uses them. Curses never made
any workman do better work; they
have, however, been the excuse for
many a murder. Sense and no swear
words will unravel many a perplex-
tng problem, ‘The uame of God is to
be hallowed not looted oa the
streete. The name of Jesus is wor~
thy of reverence and adoration; its
misuse damns not the man who is
maligned but the curser. There is
Ro problem in life that can not be
solved without curses. Sense, indus-
try, wise reasoning and good juds-
ment will settle any difficulty. Pro-
fanity is useless, unnecessary and
wholly unprofitabie.
‘Then, too, profanity ts unmanly.
Many boys Seem to have the idea
that the one sure sign of manliness
4s to be able to swear with vigor, pro-
ficiency and volume. ‘There never
was a steater mistake in theworld,
Instead of being a sign of manliness
fr teat eps tan Ab peda tat Betacam reed
befits a normal, rational human be-
ing. | Creatures’ of reason as we are,
we find that the curse files in the
face of sober thought. Used as we
are to logical processos we find the
curse deyold of logic. "Profanity
reeks with sulphur and sends Satan
to our hearts. Tt E utterly unbe-
Atting and unbécomins:
To say that it, is dishonorable Ss
Sust to begin the damning count
against profanity. ‘The curse {s with-
‘out honor for it Is used only to spread
dishohor. It looks never toward God
but rathersuses His name to invoke
the aid of the powers of hell. It is
dishonorable from start to finish and
indecency marks it as her own.
But one of the two worst things
about profanity {s that it fs tmmo-
ral, root, branch, tree and fruit, Ca-
tering as it does to all that {s low in
man, Hand and bond servant as it fs
to ail the hosts of sin, profanity dis-
integrates the unity ' ofe individual
personality, No man can be profane
without dishonoring God and dam-
aging himeelf. We cannot give vent
in word to the evil that is im us
without spreading contamination not
only through our own lives but also
through the lives of men and women
al about us. Profanity is unclean,
it strikes at the foundations of mor-
ality. It undermines the sense of
honor and destroys the faculty of
cool, deliberate judgment; under no
circumstances {3 It susceptible of
justification and its immorality {s un-
questfonably a fact. :
But the last and the worst charge
‘that may be upheld against profanity
js that it fs ungodly, “Thou sbail
love the Lord Thy God with all thy
heart and mind and soul,” says our
Father. The curse is heartless ‘and
it destroys our finer faculties do we
give it time. Under its blighting in-
fluence the power of mental appre-
ciation of the glories of God will be
lost. It is soulless to the last ex-
treme. How can a man be godly
while cursing the children of Goi
in the name of the Father who has
given them Iife? How can a man
Be godly when the springs of sin are
rushing from his mouth? Ab, no!
Profanity, is ungodly. It shames God
and disgraces man. It seviles the
Father and degrades His sons. God
is good but profanity is evil. Géd Is
Kind.but the curse is verbal murder.
God jis truth but the curse cares not
for truth. 5
Unnecessary, unmanly, indecent,
immoral and ‘ungodly profanity is
the most frequent as the most insidi-
ous of the sins of the tongue. And
yet bad as it is when used by men,
it is most abhorrent when coming
from the lips of a woman. Not that
it Is morally any worse, but that it
sounds Worse. If you ‘really want
to become positively assured of the
horridness of profamity you need but
hear a woman curse.
We need to-day’a strict insistence
upon cleanliness of language. No
man can be a friend of Jesus who is
ungodly In his talk, Christ proved
divinely the possibility of forceful
speaking without the use of profan-
ity. And to-day men are most force-
ful, most manly, most convincing
when they do not swear.
Pull Your Boat Up Stream.
To drift with the current oF to
pull against it—this is the problem
which is born anew with each new
day. Some of our daily dutles are
easy to perform. We turn to them
‘as easily and naturally as water secks
a level. There 4s no conscious ex-
‘penditure of will-power. There is no
resistance in our nature that must
‘be overcome. But these are the du-
ties of the day In whose performance
there is found the least merit.
Fortunately tor us we cannot,~or
at least dare not, always drift, nck
day has its tasks which test the will
and try the heart. Their perform-
ance requires stern determination.
They afford the best discipline and
@evelop the latent powers of the soul.
Inclination Is not always—tn fact, not
often—a true test of the thing we
ought to do first.
Sometimes it has been a source of
wonder to find a preacher very:zeady
in the use of language, and yet mak-
ing no headway in his chosen profes-
sion. Jn more than one case the ex-
planation has been found in a dislike
of study and reading on his part, To
talk has been with him as casy as
to drift. To stady—well, Le has beea
unwilling to pull against tiie current,
and ke bas fatled.
‘To pull azainst the current devel-
ops muscle, Jung and nerve: It in-
creases the power of resistance and
endurance. To do the thing we dis-
like beeause we ought to do it, 15 to
zive the will the place it deserves to
Occupy. It is to make conscience a
master, and make us conscious of
our own powe-.
‘The hills of God are up stream,
not down.. The mount of victory !s
never reached by drifting. ‘The * ay
of success lies in the “pull;” not the
vulgar “pull” of the fineneier and
‘politician, but the pull against the
eurrent.—Pittsburg Christian Ad-
vont. FS
Helped by Our Company.
There are some men and some
women in whose company we are al-
ways at our best. While with them
we cannot think mean thoughts or
speak ungenerous words. Their mere
presence is elevation, purification,
sanctity. All the best stops in our
nature are drawn out by thelr :0-
tercourse, and we find a rousic in
our soul'that was never there te-
fore. If to live with men dilvted to
the milllonth degree with tho virtre
of the Highest can exalt and purify
the nature, what bounds can be set
to the influence of Christ?—Profes-
sor Drummond.
Care of Human Prodigals.
‘Whatever retribution God has for
men on the other side of thé grave
means love, not hate; {t means re-
form, discipline, redemption, not
damnation. God {s a shepherd. No
sheop will wander from Hs fold in
any world that He will not seek, and
sooner or later find and bring back.
God is a Father. We may trust Hin
forever, sure that He will watch and
wait with deathless love, unt! the
last prodigal among His human chil-
dren comes home.—J, 7. Sunderland,
__ Heights of Prosperity.
Beltever, remember, heights of
Prosperity are safe, if only God Wy
with you, and the vale of adversity 7
healthful to the soul, if God takes
you down Snto it.—Gordon Hall,
eee) 8: Boe i OF eA a Ei CeELS\ ERE?
~ CORN. FPG tures Gee:
- “Gocause of thoes ualy, ariztly,cray halre. Use =
SULPHUR BATHS-AT HOME. -
They Heal the Skin and Take Away
Tes Impurities,
Solpbur baths heal Skin Diseases, and
give the body a wholesome glow. Now
you don't have to go off to a high-priced re-
sort to get them. Put a few spoonfuls of
Hencock’s Liquid Sulphur in the hot water,
and you get a perfect Sulphur bath right
in your own home.
Apply Hancock's Liquid Sulphur to the
affected parte, and Ezcema and other stub-
born ekin troubles are quickly cured. Dr.
B. H. Thomas, of Valdgsta, Ga., was cured
of a painful skin trouble, and he praises
it in the highest tercis. Your druggist
ella it.
* Hancock's Liquid Sulphur Ointment is
the beat cure for Sores, Pimples, Black-
hiesds ond all infammation, Gives a soft,
Velvety akin. *
SHE WOULDN'T CONCEDE IT.
“But,” eaid the lawyer, “your case
seems hopeless. I don't see what I
ean do for you. You admit that you
deat your wife.”
“Yes,” replied the defendant, “but
my wife's testimony will discount that.
She'd never admit that she was beat
en."—Cathollc Standard and Times.
THOUGHT, CHILD WOULD DIE.
Whole Body Covered With Caban
Itch—Cuticura Remedies Cure
ae Cok al She.
“Ay little boy, when only an infant of
three months, caught the Cuban Itch.
Sores broke ont from his head to the bot-
tom of bis feet. He would itch and claw
himsdlf and ery all the time. He could not
sleep day or night, and a light dress ia all
he could wear. I called one of our best
doctors to treat him, and hii treatment did
not do any good, but he seemed to get
worse. He suffered so terribly that my
busband esid he believed he would have to
die, I had almost given, up hope when a
lady friend told me to try the Cuticura
Remedies. I used the Cuticura Soap and
applied the Cuticurs Ointment and he at
‘once fell into a sleep, and he slept with
ease for the first time for two months.
After three applications the sores began to
ary up, and in just two weeks“from the
day 1 commenced to use the Cuticura Rem-
edies my baby was entirely well. ‘The treat-
ment only cost me 5c, and 1 would have
sladly paid $100 if 1 could not have got if
any cheaper. I fecl safe in saying. that the
Cuticurs Remedies waved his life. He is
now acboy of five years. Mrs. Zana Miller,
Gnion City, R. F. D., No. 1, Branoh Co,
Mich May’ 175 1906."
eS
WINNING CHOLLY'S HEART.
Polly—Cholly {s in love with Molly.
Dolly—Why what on carth attract-
ed him to her?
Polly—She was the first one to no-
tleo bis new mustache, I belleve—
San Francisco Bulletin.
Argo Red Salmon fs caught in Ber-
ing Sea among the Icebergs. That {3
why the flesh fs so firm and the flavor
80 delicious,
SEEN WORSE.
‘Clty Niece: Uncle Hiram, I don't
zee how sou have tho paifence .2o
work with a-mule, Ain't they the
most obstinate things on earth?
‘Uncle Hiram: Waal, I uster think
so wen I wuz a young feller, but
sense I've be'n moarzied I don’t notice
it so much—Chicago News.
The Modernity of Trousers.
It will assuredly seem more thar
strange that within the last bundred
‘years the wearing of trousers ha:
deen regarded even as frrellgtous. The
fact that in October, 1812, an order
‘was mado by St. John’s and Trinity
Colleges that every young man whe
Appeared in hall or chapel in panta
louns or trousers should be consideres
es absent-is startlicg enough; but i
would appear that cight years later
the founders of Bethel chapel at Shet
field inserted a clause in the trust
deed ordaining the “under no circum:
stances whatever shall eny preacter
be allowed to occupy the pulpit who
‘wears trousers.” This is striking, but
it 18 oven more Impressive to find that
the Rev, Hush Bourne, one of the
two founders of the Primitive Metho-
Gist Conneuiion, anid of bis co-fpund
er, “That troueers-wearing, beer-drink.
ing Clowes will never go to heaven.”
‘And {t would neod a student of “the
Breeches Bible” to say precisely when
this assumed connection between
theology and trousers ‘began and
where the departure from it will end.
==Notes and Queries.
King Edward's ‘Sitting Room.
Tho King’s ‘sits room contains
exquisite eighteenth century furnl-
ture. ‘There is an Oriental red cer-
pot, and the curtains are the same
tone. The mural decorations com-
prise a handsome white dado, with
soft green frieze, ‘Tho writing room,
where His Majesty attends to his
business affairs, is like a clty mag-
nate’s private office. The King, how-
ever, does not care for revolving
chaits, which are conspicuous by their
absence. Nor does he favor the-roll-
top desks, He mrites at a flat table
with drawers down each side. His
‘balr {6 upholstered in morocco lea-
ther, with armrests. Hoe uses an or
dinary steel pen, and 1s never with-
out clgarets or cigars while dictating
to his secretary—London M.A. P.
Ask your grocer for Argo Red Sal-
‘mon, and do not accept any substi-
tute. There is no fuer Salmon packed.
Lots of men seem to think the
wrong side of a salocn is the out.
aide,
Where Beggars Ride.
"It withes ‘were horses beggars
might ride; says the old saw, but
in Porsia beggars petually do ride,
although they patronize the bumble
‘donkey instead of his more aristo-
cratic brother. How they manage to
obtain theze useful animals, or even
to exist themselves, pastes European
comprehension, but the fact remains
‘that they do both.
‘The Persian tramp, astride his don-
Key, often makes very long journeys
‘even as far as Meshed or Mecca,
whence he returns with the proud
title of “Hadii.” Useful as the dbn-
‘key 1s to bis mendicant master, the
‘latter usually treats him in a most
‘brutal fashion, a length of chain be
ing u frequent! substitute for a whip
when the unfortunate animal needs
encouragement.—Wide World.
FITS,St, Vitus'Dance:Nervous Diseases per.
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nervo
Restorer. “#2 trial bottle and treatise frea
Dr. HB. Eline, L4.,031 ArchSt., Phila,, Pa
HALSALL. Masa.
“Papa, what year was mamma born
ing”
“In 1860, Willie, Her birthday’s in
February,”
“That woulds make her forty-seven
‘years old, wouldn't it?
+ “Ahem! Not necessarlly."—Denver
Post. #
The hands of the housewife will
be kept soft and white and free from
all chap, redness or roughness if
borax is used.
THE ORCHARD SITD.
‘Two mistakes are often ‘made, in
selecting a location for the orchard.
Very moist land will give a gcod
growth for a few years, but the fruit
does not cet well aud the trees decay
and die young. Trees set in a shel-
tered sunny spot will also fail to givo
satisfaction. Give the orchard plenty
of alr and g good frost drainage and
do not give it too much water—Amer-
fean Cultivator.
Surface cars on Manhattan Island
do daily damage to persons and pray
erty in the average sum of $2,760.
Over-Worked Eyer,
Aro relfeved of blood-shot and infiamation
without pain in one day by Leonardi’s Gold-
en Eye Lotion. Cools, heals and strength-
ens. inset on basing “Leonatdl's.” It maxes
strong eyes. Gueranteod or money retund-
ed. Druggtsts seit tt at 25 ets. or 1dzward-
ed’ propuld on receipt of price by 8. B. Le
Gnardl & (0. Pomc wie
CULLING THE FLOCK.
very breeder of thoroughbred
stock mho aims to make a reputa-
tion endeavors to cull frem the flock
oF herd any anrmal that has the least
blemish. if the farmer would pursie
such polley, evén with grede_ stock,
he Would increase the producing en-
‘pacity of his animals each succeed-
Ing year. Every inferior animal re-
tained 16 a drawback to all others, as
success is had by using only*the best
for trceding—Epitomist,
Argo Red Salmon fs not only Pure
Food, but it is the cheapest and most
nutritious food in the country.
Remorse is the pain incident to Dr.
Experience calling and injecting a it
tle common sense,
LR HICKS"
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a moro potent remedy in the roots Er wer
Sadherbeofthe dela thanwasever [farm] ~ Pes
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in the good old-fashioned days o! sR i
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Combination of drugs. LYDIA E. PINKHA’
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‘No other remedy in the country has such s record of cures of
female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United
States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink-
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‘Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has
guided thoueands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising [F
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am and as her assistant for years before her decease advised under her
jmmediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. *
the NEW PERFECTION
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} Th
*" Rayo Lamp |
gy a clear, steady light. Fitted with
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Every lamp warranted. Suitableforlibrary,
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A
FLAG DAY.
Your flag and my flag—
And how it flies to-day!
In your land and my land,
And half a world away!
Rose-red and blood-red,
The stripe forever gleam;
Snow-white and soul-white—
The good forefathers' dream;
Sky blue and true blue, with stars to shine
aright—
The glorious guard of the day, a shelter
through the night.
Your flag and my flag!
And, oh, how much it holds!
Your land and my land,
Secure within its folds!
Your heart and my heart,
Beat quicker at the sight—
Sun-kissed and wind-tossed,
Red and blue and white.
The one flag—the great flag—the flag for
me and you—
Glorified all else beside—the red and white
and blue!
Your flag and my flag—
To every star and stripe
The drums beat as hearts beat,
And fifters shrilly pipe.
Your flag and my flag—
A blessing in the sky!
Your hope and my hope—
It never hid a lie!
Home land and far land, and nalf the
world around,
Old Glory hears the great salute and flutters to the sound!
-W. D. Nesbit, in Baltimore American.
Jack Gridley's Celebration
ACK GRIDLEY crawled through a hole in the fence back of his home and cautiously tiptoed toward the house. The sun was higher than Jack had intended it should be when he returned; when he
ACK GRIDLEY crawled through a hole in the fence back of his home and cautiously tiptoed toward the house. The sun was higher than Jack had intended it should be when he returned; when he had slipped out of the back door, just before midnight, with two big cannon crackers and his pockets full of smaller ones, and had joined Bill Ainsley, to set the church bell wildly ringing, on the stroke of 12. in joyous-time honored salutation to the glorious Fourth, he had planned to be back in his room and in bed before the sun rose.
He was none too soon, for even as he slipped his jacket off preparatory to jumping into bed, Miss Ann's thin, cracked voice rang up the narrow stairway: "Jack, you can get up now!" "Yes'm," was the meek reply.
Jack filled his pockets with the remainder of his crackers and presented himself in the kitchen. Jack Gridley was motherless, and his father, a commercial traveler, had found a home for the boy with Miss Ann Hobart.
"Now, suppose," continued Miss Ann, "that you give the two large crackers to me for safe keeping; I am afraid the temptation to fire them will be too great otherwise." Jack grew red in the face, and hastily gulped down a glass of milk. "Can't, they're busted," he said.
"You mean they are broken. But you haven't told me how you broke them," continued Miss Ann, sweetly. "I—I I fired 'em!" Jack blurted the truth out manfully. "John Gridley! what do you mean?" All the sweetness was gone from Miss Ann now. "You haven't fired a cracker since you rose this morning. Now when did you fire those big ones? Tell me the truth instantly!"
"Last night," said Jack, feebly. "At what time last night?" "I don't know Jes' what time," was the weak reply. "John Gridley, look me in the face and tell me what time you left this house." The jig was up and Jack knew it. "Well, if you must know, it was a few minutes of 12," he said.
"Hand me those crackers, every one you've got. Now, John Gridley, don't you stir foot outside of the yard this day. Now go out to the woodpile, and saw until I tell you to stop."
Poor Jack! He wouldn't give Miss Ann the satisfaction of knowing how bad he felt, but when his stint of wood was finished, he fled to the barn
and up in a dark corner of the haymow he had his cry out with only the sympathetic whinny of old Nell in the stall below for comfort. All the morning he had heard the pop, pop of crackers, and later the circus band, as the procession paraded the streets; he had even caught just a glimpse of the parade as it entered the tent, for the circus had pitched not far from Miss Ann's house. This was the first circus in Easthampton for years, and Jack had set his heart on going. Miss Ann strongly disapproved of circuses, but Jack had written to his father and obtained consent, providing he was a good boy, and now—Jack wept afresh. Most of all he wanted to see the elephant (it
"Signing of the Declaration of Independence."
THE CONFERENCE OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES
John Hancock is seated at the table on which rests the Declaration. Near him, standing, are Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Sherman and Lyingston.
was a small circus and had but one of the huge pachyderms).
About 3 o'clock Miss Ann relented to the extent of allowing him to have his crackers, and in the noise of these he tried to drown out the noise of the circus band that floated out from the big dingy canvas so near and yet so far. Suddenly it flashed into his head that he might send up crackers on his kite. Why not?
"Signing
John Hancock is seated at the table
Jack took the biggest cracker that he had, one he had been saving for a grand climax, made an extra long fuse, attached it. In the usual way and then gave the kite all the string he had. Up, up, up she sailed until she floated fairly over the circus tents. Jack heard it explode, followed instantly by a scream that made Jack's hair rise. Out from behind the tent shot a huge black beast, tearing across the fields with awkward, lumbering strides, but wonderfully fast. It was the elephant! With trunk thrown up and back of its head and trumpeting shrilly, it made straight toward Jack, smashing down the rail, fences in its path as if they were straws, his keeper in full pursuit, hopelessly distanced. From the big tent began to pour out a strange motley crowd of townpeople, painted clowns and scantily dressed bare riders to see what had happened. For a moment Jack, too frightened to move, watched the huge beast bearing down upon him, then he fled to the hayloft in the barn, and through a crack watched the mad race. Then the runaway caught sight of the big, wide open barn doors (Miss Ann had told Jack to close them that afternoon) and probably seeing safety in the dark recesses, of the barn,ushed in, where he stood trumpeting and trembling with fright. Gradually the elephant grew quieter and Jack's courage began to come back. Presently he noticed the long trunk feeling along the edge of the mow and examining the new quarters, so he beat a retreat once more. The new hay was not yet in, and the small amount of old hay left was at the back of the mow. A rustling at the edge of it caught his attention and he made out the elephant's trunk stretching for the hay, which it could not reach. Cautiously he held out a wisp. It was taken and the trunk disappeared. A minute later it was back again. So Jack continued to feed the elephant, and growing bolder, crawled to the edge again, having
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a bundle of hay in his hands. This time the elephant saw him and before he could retreat the big trunk had caught him and deftly, but gently, lifted him down. The hay he still held, and timidly offering it, it was promptly accepted. A few minutes later the keeper opened the doors, to find to his astonishment his big charge and a small boy on the best of terms, and when the elephant was ordered out, he refused to move without Jack. "Pick him up, Mike," ordered the keeper, so, gently, the elephant placed Jack on his back and the procession started for the circus tent once more, Jack the envy of all the boys in the village, and Miss Ann realizing her helplessness in the situation.
The show settled for the broken fences, but Miss Ann still retains her prejudice against circuses. As for Jack, to this day no one knows who dropped the cracker in front of Mike. Jack looks back to that Fourth, when the circus came to him because he could not go to it, as the greatest celebration he ever had.
Independence Day.
Letter from John Adams to his wife, written on the 5th of July, 1776:
"Yesterday the greatest question was decided that was ever debated in America, and a greater perhaps never was, nor will be, decided among men. A resolution was passed without one dissenting colony, that these United States are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States. The day is passed. The 4th of July, 1776, will be a memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to Almighty God. It ought to be, solemnized with pomp, shows, games, sport, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations from one end of the continent to the other, from this time forward forever. You will think me transported with enthusiasm, but I am not. I am well aware of the toll and blood and treasure which it will cost to maintain this declaration and support and defend these States; yet through all the gloom I can see the rays of the light and the glory."
of the Declaration of Independence
on which rests the Declaration. Near Franklin, Sherman and Livingston.
THE FOUNDING OF THE UNION.
July 4. 1776.
Clang! Clang! the brazen notes fall on the air,
Proclaiming liberty throughout the land;
Lo! a new nation springs to life this day,
A nation reigns on every hand;
Weak in the present, and yet strong enough
To wrest its birthright from a tyrant king,
Who can foretell the glory and the power
That this infant Union years shall bring
BUMBLE
This A FAMOUS SIGNER AND HIS SIG-
fore NATURE.
John Hancock
WARREN'S ADDRESS.
July,
tion
ated
hided
issed
that
light
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Stand! the ground's your own, my brave!
Will ye give it up to slaves?
Will ye look for greener graves?
Hope ye merry still?
What the emperor feels feel?
Hear it in that battle-pearl?
Read it on yon bristling steel!
Ask it—ye who will.
Fear ye foes who kill for hire?
Will ye to your homes retire?
Look before you are afire!
And before you, see!
Who have done it! From the vale
On they come! And will ye quail?
Leaden rain and iron hail
Let their welcome be!
In the god of battles trust!
Die we may—and die we must;
But, oh, where can dust to dust
Be consigned so well?
As where Heaven its dews shall sheil
On the martyrred patriot's bed,
And the rocks shall raise their head
Of his deeds to tell!
Jon Piermont
NEVER INTERRUPTED.
The observance of Fourth of July as a national holiday dates from its first anniversary, and has never been interrupted since its first establishment. The United States was one of the first nations to create public holidays that
ependence."
Painted by John Trumbull. Near him, standing, are Jefferson, Adams, on.
honored the achievements of their own people. Later France followed in celebrating July 14, the destruction of the Bastille; Mexico commemorates a famous victory over the invading French army; on May 5, while Brazil exceeds them all in having nine national holidays, a most remarkable and extensive series. These blue memorial days begin January 1, to commemorate universal brotherhood, and end November 15, when they celebrate the glory of Brazil generally.
MISTRESS COLUMBIA
SEWS A
NEW STAR
ON
Is Harry Orchard, Says Attorney for Haywood.
OTHER SIDE OF THE CASE
Defense Begins Task of Breaking Down Evidence of Prosecution in Court at Boise—Darrow is Sarcastic.
In an address that occupied two sessions of the district court at Bolse, Idaho, Monday, Clarence Darrow of Chicago outlined to the jury the defense of William D. Haywood to the charges that he murdered Former Governor Steunenberg.
In broad description it is to be a denial of every material count in the testimony of Orchard with a showing that Orchard killed Steunenberg because of a private grudge borne of the loss of a rich share in the great Hercules mine, and explanations of the independent circumstances that tend to connect three co-defendants with Orchard's life and operations.
Haywood will take the stand to make personal denial of Orchard's accusations. Moyer may be called to testify solely to events and circumstances affecting the Western Federation of Miners, but Pettibone will not be a witness in this case. Mr. Darrow explained that Moyer and Pettibone must stand trial for this same crime, and declared that every lawyer knew the danger, whatever the circumstances, of exposing men awaiting trial under like circumstances.
Mr. Darrow denied the existence of the great conspiracy to murder alleged by the state with Orchard's testimony as a basis; denied that the federation was anything except an earnest fighting labor organization.
"Harry Orchard," said Mr. Darrow, "was a cheap soldier of fortune, a shoe-string gambler who had not ever done a day's work in his life.
"We don't think that Orchard was at the Bunker Hill and Sullians mills. We will show that he was not-there and we will show that he was engaged in his favorite work of gambling with the eastest mark he could find. We will show that he did not participate in most of the crimes of which he has here boasted. I don't like to take any of the bloom off a peach like that, but while we will show he is not the murderer he boasts himself, we will compensate him by proving him to be the most monumental liar that ever existed.
"Before our first witness leaves the stand, gentlemen, we will convince you; we will convince Mr. Hawley himself that this man Orchard has lied out most of the essential points of his story. We will have from twenty-five to thirty witnesses who will take the stand and contradict this man absolutely. Some of these will be miners, but others will be eminently respectable people who have never done a day's work in their lives."
Here, as at other points in his speech, Mr. Darrow's sarcasm caused wave after wave of laughter. Sometimes the bafflers had to rap for order.
Mr. Darrow briefly sketched the wanderings of Orchard as related by the witness. Orchard remained in the Couer D'Alenes, he said, trying to regain possession of his one-sixteenth interest in the Hercules mine until he was driven out by fear of arrest and confinement in the "bull pen." "Then he wandered from place to place, seldom working," said Mr. Darrow. "He was a sort of gentlemanly miner who mined the miners. In 1892 he turned up in Cripple Creek. But from 1899 to 1903 this important personage in American history, is all except lost to view. Pretty certain, however, that during that time he could have been found in the back room of some saloon, gambling.
"If Orchard today held his one-sixth interist in the Hercules mine, he would be worth half a million dollars; but I think he'd rather have what he's got because it is more valuable to the newspapers.
"That story about the Bradley house was another of Orchard's pipe dreams thrown in to make him the greatest criminal of the age. We have a deposition from Mr. Bradley in which he says the house was wrecked by gas; that he smelled the gas and that when he lighted his cigar the explosion occurred. Orchard never blew up the Bradley house, and I tell you this without having any special intention of defending Harry Orchard."
CONTRACT FOR BIG WARSHIPS
Let by Navy Department for Total Outlay of $8,364,000.
The Newport News Shipbuilding company with one bid at $3,987,000,
and the Fore River Shipbuilding company of Quincy, Mass., with a bid at $4,377,000, were the successful bidders for building the big 20,000-ton battle-ships.
The coming twelve months will be strenuous ones for each officer and member of subordinate lodges. Let them prepare for effective service.
Last Monday was observed as St. John's Day. Eureka Lodge No. I, under the lead of Worshipful Master George L. Blinejard, observed the day by carrying a large excursion to Beaufort, where the lodge united with the Sons of Beaufort Lodge and other visiting brethren in celebrating the day. The lodges made a short, parade from the hall to the church, where an inspiring address was delivered by Rev. Brother Jefferson. The Sons of Beaufort Lodge had refreshments in abundance prepared for the visiting brethren, and, in fact, did everything possible to make their stay very pleasant. The sail was a delightful one and each person expressed himself as being well pleased with the trip and the courtesies extended. Eureka Lodge never does things by halves.
The endowment plan of the Grand Lodge is meeting with hearty approval, and from the present outlook it is destined to be the best governed institution of its kind in the state, one that the brethren will have complete confidence in. The board of management consists of Grand Master H. R. Butler, M. D., Grand Secretary Sol. C. Johnson, Brother Charles A. Clark, Brother W. D. Johnson, Jr., and Brother W. C. Thomas, as secretary and treasurer. We pride ourselves in saying that we could have made no better selection of a secretary and treasurer. Brother Thomas is an efficient bookkeeper and has a sufficient amount of faithfulness to push this departments to success. Let every member rally loyalty for the next year, especially in meeting their obligations to the endowment department. As Masons, let us be loyal.
The building of the Widows' and Orphans' Home, is badly'in need of painting. The brethren saw the great need of this at the last Grand Lodge communication, thereby a unanimous vote of the Grand Lodge each lodge was requested to forward to the Grand Secretary immediately two dollars for this purpose. The Grand Secretary has already received this amount from Oak City Lodge at Burbridge and Eureka Lodge, Savannah. Now let the other lodges follow the lead of these lodges as soon as possible so that we can improve our building.
The Grand Secretary is hard at work preparing his minutes for the printer. If there is no disappointment by the latter he hopes to have them distributed by August. Lodges that have failed to forward returns are urged to do so at once if they are desirous of having same appear in the minutes.
Worshipful Masters must learn one thing, especially, and that is to begin meetings on time, and adjourn early. By doing so, especially in this hot season, it will be the means of a larger attendance and the brethren will take more pleasure in attending.
The. indiscriminate conferring of degrees should not be done. In the rural districts -where the lodges have but one meeting a month, this may be permissible, but not where a lodge has two meetings during the month. The old custom which must be adhered to is to have the first meeting for business only and the second meeting for lecture or "work." No "work" should be allowed at the first meeting, and at the second meeting no business transacted other than the collection of dues, lecture or "work." Worshipful Masters, stick to the old custom, and by all means shorten your meetings.
The Grand Chapter O. E. S, meets in Americus on Tuesday, August 20th. This is expected to be a grand session. Each chapter in the state will be represented and the Grand Officers hope to report the formation of many new chapters. Mrs. Viola E. Hart, Royal Grand Matron, is a hard worker among the chapters, and she is beloved by all of the members.
The Masons are the toast of the state on account of the great amount of harmony that exists at their Grand Lodge communication. There is no wonder about this because, we have a high-toned Christian gentleman and able Mason as our leader, supported by officers who have instilled that true Masonic principle. Let us keep it up.
Past Grand - Master DeVeaux continues ill at his home. All of the brethren love him.
The way to judge eof a man's ideals is to study what he imitates.
After turning to rubber Lot's wife turned to salt.