Savannah Tribune

Saturday, January 4, 1908

Savannah, Georgia

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VOL. XXIII. FIVE DIE IN WRECK Fast Passenger Collides With Double-Header Freight. MANY NARROWLY ESCAPE Those Killed Were All Members of the Train Crews—Dense Fog Hid Signal of Wrongly-Turned Switch. Speeding through a dense fog at 10 miles an hour, Grand Trunk passenger train No. 5, which left Port Huron shortly before 7 o'clock Friday night for Detroit, collided head-on with a double-header freight train, half a mile north of Lenox, Mich. Five trainmen met death, four being killed instantly, the fifth dying three hours later. All of the passengers escaped serious injury. The killed were Engineer Bennett of the passenger, Engineer Bohowski of the first freight engine, Fireman Boughner, Fireman Albert McCall, Switchman W. G. Taylor. The passenger locomotive plowed under the engines of the double-hader and the trainmen were buried in the wreckage. Their bodies were terribly mangled and scalded by the escaping steam. Englester Fred Haug and Fireman Washburn of the second freight engine escaped death. Haug was caught in his cab, but was taken out unhurt. Washburn jumped and was only very slightly injured. All the dead trainmen lived in Detroit. The freight train had switched from the main track to a siding to allow the passenger to pass. It is alleged that the switch was not properly closed and on account of the heavy fog which prevailed the passenger could not see that the target was set against them. Denver Girl Defies Parental Opposition and Takes Red Man as Choice. News has been received in Denver, Cal., that Miss Cora Marie Arnold, of that city, was married Monday, December 23, in Santa Fe, N. M., to Albino Chavaria, a full-blooded Indian. The wedding ends a romance which began five years ago during the mountain and plain festival, when a number of Indians were brought to the city. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Mr. Rendon, a Presbyterian clergyman, and was witnessed by the sisters of the bride, Misses Lillian and Geneva Arnold of Denver. Chavarria is chief of the Santa Clara Indians, a tribe of the Pueblos in New Mexico. With a large number of his tribesmen he was in camp in the city park in Denver five years ago, when Miss Arnold saw him and immediately formed an attachment for him. After frequent visits to the camp Miss Arnold invited the Indian to call at her home. She lived at the time in a fashionable flat with her sisters and her stepfather "George Wilder." The Indian's first visit to his sweetheart was the cause of a disagreement between her and the remaining members of her family. Objection was made only to the Indian race, his character being above reproach. In April, 1905, Mr. Wilder jumped overboard from a steamer in the Gulf of Mexico and was drowned. He left a will in which he disinherited the present Mrs. Chavarria because of her refusal to give up her present Indian lover. The sisters of Miss Arnold finally consented to the marriage and one month ago they went with hes to New Mexico. Chavarria is full civilized, religious, fairly well-educated and well-to-do. He owns a large farm near Taos, N. M., which he cultivates himself. BOOKKEEPER AN EMBEZZLER. Made Way With $35,000 of Firm's Cash and is Arrested. On complaint of the New Jersey Boller company of Boonton, N. J., Samuel H. Debrell was arrested and placed in Morristown jail charged with the embezzlement of $35,000. Debrell was employed as a bookkeeper by the company and was arrested as a result of an examination of his books Friday at his home in Norfolk, Va. FURNITURE PLANT BURNED. Flames at Shreveport, La., Entail Loss of $125,000. Fire, believed to be of incendiarly, origin, early Friday morning, completely destroyed the plant of the Union City Furniture Manufacturing company Shreveport, La. The loss is placed $125,000, Insurance, $50,000. The Savannah Tribune. BARRETT MISQUOTED, National President of Farmers' Union Brands Alleged Interview a Fake Pure and Simple. National President Charles S. Barrett of the Farmers Union is much incensed at a recent editorial in the Savannah Morning News, based on an alleged interview with him at Greenville, S. C. The interview quoted President Barrett as stating that 8,000,000 bales of cotton are being held off the market by farmers generally, and The News in its editorial drew the conclusion that if such were the case, with the 5,500,000 bales already marketed, there would be at least a crop of 13,500,000 bales, not including the cotton not yet ginned. President Barrett was naturally indignant, both that he should have been quoted without authority and that a false interview should have been used as the basis of editorial conclusions. "Not only did I not say anything of the kind," President Barrett said, "but I gave no interview to any newspaper man in Greenville on any subject. "I was busy in the office of State Secretary-Treasurer B. F. Earle in Greenville when L. A. Watson came to me and said there were a number of newspaper men outside who wanted an interview. I sent word that I was very busy and did not have time to see them, and in addition that I had nothing to say. "That was' my only experience with newspaper men on the occasion of my visit to Greenville, and I felt surprised and outraged when shown by one of my associates an editorial from the Savannah Morning News, quoting me as saying that the farmers generally were holding 8,000,000 bales of cotton off the market. "Not only was the interview' false from beginning to end, but I have never at any time given for publication any expression of my opinion as to the amount of cotton being held or to the extent of the crop. "Why a man would be a fool to make any such statement as that, and I cannot conceive of the writer of the editorial believing that I made any such statement when he commented on it as he did. "Whenever I have anything to say about the cotton crop or any of the affairs of the Farmers' Union I shall make the statement over my signature, as I have consistently done in the past. "The trouble is, there are a lot of newspapers in various parts of the country which are pretending friendship for the Farmers' Union, but which are not letting slip any opportunity to attack us — not even that afforded by the fake interview. "I do not know who is responsible for the interview, but I do know that it is a fake pure and simple, and it ought not to have taken, any great amount of discernment to discover its falsity." BEER POURED INTO GUTTER. Over Two Thousand Barrels Emptied In Oklahoma City. Twenty-three hundred barrels of beer, valued at $17,500, belonging to the new state brewery, was poured into the sewers of Oklahoma City Monday, by United States Internal Revenue Collector Howard. The-brew was completed after Oklahoma became a state. The state authorities would not permit its sale and shipment from the state. PEACE DINNER PULLED OFF. Delegates to Pacificic Conference Dine in Washington. What was termed a "peace" dinner was given in Washington Monday night by the delegates to the recent peace conference of the Central American republics in celebration of the conclusion of an agreement of amity between them. Toasts were drunk to the presidents of the United States, Mexico and the five republics, parties to the pact, and speeches were made expressive of good will and a desire for lasting peace. GUILTY PAIR SKIPS OUT. Parason Cooke and Floretta Whaley Elude Officers in 'Frisco. Linda Sinclair in Prisco. Rev. Jere Knode Cooke, formerly pastor of the fashionable St. Georgia church, at Hempstead, Long Island, and Floretta Whaley, the 17-year-old helix with whom he eloped eight months ago, deserving a wife to whom he had been married for nine years, stole away Monday from the little fatt which they had occupied at 1199 Green street in San Francisco, where they were discovered Sunday, living under the name of Balcom taking with them their baby boy, born two months ago. SAVANNAH. GA.. SATURDAY. JANUARY 4. 1908. GOV. SPARKS YIELDS Will Call Special Session of Nevada Legislature. TAKES. ADVICE OF TEDDY Governor's Determination Assures the Retaining of United State Troops in Goldfield, Nevada, for Some. President Roosevelt Saturday Indicated by telegram to Governor Sparks of Nevada that the federal troops now at Goldfield will be ordered to remain there for a further period of three weeks provided the governor within five days issues a call for a special session of the state legislature. The telegram of the president was in response to one from the governor in which he sets forth the need of armed intervention and the doubt that to call the legislature would result in the necessary request from that body for federal aid. The letter of Governor Sparks, which was made public at the white house, was in part as follows: "Carson, Nev., Dec. 26—The President, Washington, D. C.; As chief magistrate of the state of Nevada I have been of the opinion for the past year that a condition bordering on domestic violence and insurrection has existed in the Goldfield mining district. "Without considering the merits of any of the controversies it is only necessary to state that the entire district became divided into two hostile camps. One on the one-hand the miners, with their adherents and sympathizers, and on the other mine owners, with their adherents and sympathizers. The union alone claimed a membership of 3,000 and fully one-half of the membership was constantly armed. Arms and ammunition were purchased and kept by the union as a body. "On the other hand, the mine owners had in their employ a large number of watchmen and guards who were constantly armed and on duty; in addition to those opposing forces were an unusually large number of the criminal element attracted to the new and booming mining camp. Under such conditions the civil authorities were probably, powerless. They could attend to the ordinary petty offenders from day to day, but at the first conflict between the real armies of labor and capital would have been swept away. The repeated strikes and continued threats of other strikes excited mine owners more and more. It was clear to me, therefore, that when the last strike was called in the midst of the financial crisis spreading over the country and with a long winter facing the 20,000 people situated upon the desert hundreds of miles from any centers of population, it was time to recognize the actual condition of affairs and to act accordingly. A state of insurrection arises, in my judgment, when armed bodies are in existence with satisfactory power to overcome the civil authorities and continued threats were made of life and property. This condition has existed in the Goldfield mining district the past year and exists there now." A dispatch of Sunday from Reno, Nev., is as follows: A special session of the Nevada legislature will be called by Governor John Sparks. The governor said that he would issue the proclamation and that the date of convening the legislature would probably be January 14th. The call will be made at the request of President Roosevelt. Notification of the decision to assemble the legislature has been transmitted to Washington. County Commissioner Roseenthal of Goldfield, whose resignation has been requested by Governor Sparks, has refused to vacate his office. The announcement that Governor Sparks will call the Nevada legislature together in special session has put an entirely new aspect upon the labor situation at Goldfield. At least a portion of the federal troops, it is thought, will remain in Goldfield for an indemnite period and fear of any serious disturbance, growing out of the dispute has vanished. It is not at all certain, however, that the legislature will act in accordance with the wishes of Governor Sparks, but the calling of the special session will have the effect of keeping federal troops in Goldfield for several weeks and will make the possibility of serious trouble more remote. ALABAMA COUNTIES DRY Fifty Are Now Closed to Sale of Booze and a Year Hence All in the State Will Be in Line. With the shrill shrieks of the hundreds of whistles of industrial Birmingham, announcing the advent of the new year, every saloon in Jefferson county closed its doors sine die. Tuesday night was the time set for prohibition to go into effect in the counties of Alabama in which local option elections have been held during the year. When the result of the election Tuesday in Crenshaw county became known, and it was added to the prohibition ranks, there were exactly fifty counties in the state which closed the doors of the saloons permanently at midnight. This leaves seventeen counties in the state from which liquor can be sold for another year. One year hence the entire state becomes prohibition by statutory act. Of the wet counties for the next year only four are exclusively saloon counties, Mobile, Montgomery, Dallas and Baldwin. There are eleven exclusive dispensary counties, Macon, Winston, Elmore, Bibb, Limestone, Madison, Cleburne, Perry, Barbour, Colbert, Covington and Coffee. Marengo county, has both dispensary and saloons. Jefferson county, in which Birmingham is located, is by far the largest county in the state, and in Birmingham alone 120 saloons went out of business. A remarkable feature of the last day under the liquor regime is the fact that there was less drunkenness noted than for many months. The situation seemed to be accompanied by consent, but the fact remains that the amount of liquor sold on the last day was probably greater than on any previous day in the history of Birmingham. This resulted from the purchasing by householders of various liquors in bulk to fortify them in cases of sickness and emergencies. The greater part of the liquor sold was in bulk. "TWENTY-THREE" FOR PASSES. Free Transportation in State of Georgia Now Cut Off. The general order of the railroad commission of Georgia, cutting off all manner of free transportation, except to employees of the common carriers, is now effective. It will, also, curtail the use of free telephones, for the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph company has stated to the railroad commission of Georgia that it considered itself a common carrier, and would observe the order by not allowing any more free phoning in Georgia after the first of January. This general order of the commission withdraws from every one, except those exempted under the national Hepburn law, the right of free transportation. HOARDING DID MISCHIEF. Dun's Annual Review of Trade States Cause of Stringency. The withdrawal of $125,000,000 from a few large trust companies, precipitating a season of hoarding and sending currency to a premium at a time when it was most needed throughout the country, is credited in R. G. Dun & Co's annual review of trade, with having been one of the great factors in turning the year 1907 from its promise of new records in prosperity to a closing period of financial disturbance that caused many plans for future extensions of business to be either abandoned or postponed. PHILADELPHIA MINT OUTPUT. Colns Made the Past Year Amounted to $63,263,104.93. The total output of the United States mint in Philadelphia for the year 1907, according to reports compiled Tuesday, was 183,598,943 coins, representing a value of $63,263,104.93. For the year of 1906 the output was 166,653,233 coins, therefore there is an increase in this year's production over last year of 16,948,710 pieces. WITH CONSENT OF PATIENTS. Medical Students Can Visit Charity Wards of Atlanta Hospital. Medical students from all the colleges of Atlanta will be permitted to visit the charity wards of Grady hospital for bedside teaching, under the provisions of a resolution adopted Tuesday afternoon by the board of trustees' of the hospital, after three hours of debate, at which at times waxed dangerously near the line of acrimony. It is further provided in the resolution adopted that in each case the consent of the patient shall be obtained. SEABOARD TANGLED RECEIVERSHIP IS ASKED Application Made to Judge Pritchard to Place Affairs of Company in the Lawyers representing the Seaboard Air Line railway system and the creditors of the company left Richmond, Va., about 7 o'clock. Wednesday night on a special train for Danville, Va., to meet United States Judge Pritchard and ask that the great railroad system be put into the hards of a receiver. Counsel for the railway company and its creditors applied Wednesday afternoon to United States District Judge Waddell, Richmond, for the appointment of receivers, but subsequently agreed to make application to Judge Pritchard of the United States circuit court, and thereby oblate the necessity of securing auxiliary decrees in each of the court districts through which the lines of the company operate. Judge Waddell announced that he would appoint the receivers on certain conditions, but it was thought best to go to a court with larger jurisdiction. The reason given for applying for a receivership for the Seaboard is that the company is unable to pay interest charges now due. In railway and financial circles the situation in which the Seaboard, with its thousands of miles of trackage, finds itself, is attributed to the legislative onslaughts that have been made on railroads and on other corporate interests for the past year in the states through which the Seaboard runs. These legislative onslaughts have reduced the earnings of the system and have made it difficult for it to meet its fixed charges. Worse than all the shaking of confidence by the antrailroad crusades in the states through which the Seaboard runs has made it impossible for the road to secure money to make needed improvements and to keep its equipment in condition to render the service demanded of it. The troubles of the Seaboard will be felt extensively throughout the south, as the system operates in the states of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina, Alabama, Georgia and Florida. In all of these states the Seaboard, in common with other railroads and corporate interests, has been subjected in the last year to much adverse legislation, with the threat from those authority of worse to come. The crusade against the railroads has been particularly severe in Georgia, Alabama and North Carolina. Railway men and conservative financiers say that the misfortunes of the Seaboard are only what might have been expected from the anti-corporation crusade that has been made in certain states of the south. AD SEABOARD The financial affairs of the road reached a crisis because January 1st was the 'date for paying interest on the underlying bonds of the system, and the company was unable to raise the money. The Seaboard Air Line has a total mileage of 2,905 including trackage rights of twenty-three miles. Lt and its connections run through the states of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama. the principal cities touched by the system are Washington, Richmond, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Raleigh, Wilmington, Hamlet, Camden, S. C., Columbus, S. C., Savannah, Atlanta, Brunswick, Birmingham, Montgomery, River Junction, Fla., Jacksonville, Tampa and Fernandina. The road has steamship connections to Cuba, and from Jacksonville, the Clyde Line to New York. NEW YEAR'S AT WHITE HOUSE, President Receives Callers for Seventh Time as Chief Executive. President Roosevelt received at the white house Wednesday for the seventh time a New Year's throng of well-wishers which was three hours in passing his hand. Mrs. Roosevelt and the members and ladies of the cabinet were his assistants. Though curtailed in number, 5,645, by more than a thousand over the proceeding New Year's day, the reception was resplendent in all the incidents of tradition which have accumulated to its interest for more than a century. Federal Judge Newman Turns Dawn Application of Brevice to Estop Georgia Prohibition Law Judge William T. Newman of the United States court at Atlanta Wes- day afternoon denied the petition the brewsra to prevent the state pro- bition law from being enforced. Fea- turing is the judge's order in full. In the circuit court of the United States, for the northern district of Georgia. The Christian Moorlein Brew- Company, et al., plaintiffs, vs. C. D. Hull, solicitor general of the Atlanta circuit, et al., defendants, in equity. This bill was presented to me, we- tterday afternoon, December 31, 1909, about five o'clock, and application made for a temporary restraining order. This application was denied, whereupon counsel asked for a rule to show cal- c on the defendants why an injunction pendente lite should not issue. After a careful examination of the bill I am thoroughly satisfied that an injunction pendente lile cannot and will not be granted. This being true it is unnecessary to call on the defendants to show cause as requested. WM, T, NEWMAN, U, S. Judge In accordance with Judge Newman's action on the petition it will be several months before any other step can be taken to challenge the prohibition law if induced any other step is to be taken at all. The bill will be filed with the clerk of the United States court and the defendants, that is to say, the solicitors of the county and superior courts, the clerk of these courts and the city recorder will have until the first Monday in February to file the appearance. The defendants will next have until the first Monday in March either to plead answer or demur to the bill. Not until then will the case be fairly under way to a hearing on its merits in the meantime the law stands. The law firm representing the breweries declaimed after having been told of Judge Newman's decision, that the firm would fight the case to the end at least through the circuit court of appeals at New Orleans. This effort to block the state prohibition law in Georgia by means of a federal injunction was made shortly before six o'clock Tuesday afternoon when attorneys for the Christian Moerlin Brewing company of Cincinnati, Ohio, and the Chattanooga Brewing company of Chattanooga, Tenn., presented to Judge William Newman a bill alleging the state prohibition law was contrary to the constitution of Georgia and also to the constitution of the United States. A restraining order is asked against the prohibition law on two grounds that allegation that it violates the constitution of the state of Georgia and furthermore, that it violates the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States. This first pla is based on section 3, article 3, paragraph 1, of the constitution of the state of Georgia, which reads: "The poll tax, any educational fund now (except the endowment of and the debt due to University of Georgia) a special tax on shows and exhibitions and on the sale of spirituous and malt liquors which the general assembly is hereby authorized to asses, and the proceeds of any commutation tax for military service, and all taxes that may be assessed on such domestic animals as, from their nature and habits, are destructive to other property, are hereby set apart and devoted for the support of common schools." This section of the state constitution, argue the attorneys, in so far as it provides for the assessment of a special tax on the sale of spirituous and malt liquors is mandatory and imperative and implies an inhibition on the part of the general assembly of Georgia to the exercise of any authority, with respect to that subject, which would frustrate the purpose of that provision. Therefore they continue to reason the prohibition statute, passed by the legislature is contrary to their aforementioned, provision of section 3, article 8, of the constitution of Georgia. FIGHT BEGUN ON PROHIBITION. Prohibition Judge of Culman County, Alabama, issues Saloon Licenses. Declaring the prohibition laws as far as 1908 are concerned, unconstitutional, the probate judge of Culman county, Alabama, has issued nine saloon licenses, and the liquor establishments in the county will be opened. Culman voted on December 8 for prohibition. The saloon men claim that the prohibition law is unconstitutional because it makes exceptions of counties, which voted, on the proposition prior to December 12. The Guaranty Aid and Relief Society SOL. C. JOHNSON, Supt. of Ageno Treasury of State of Georgia The undesigned Treasure of the State of Georgia, hereby acknowledges to have received from the Secretary of Dawson the following described: Dear Regiment and Company of Infantry, Elbertton, Georgia (Company of Infantry No. 14) 17th 10, in connection with the Dawson Company (0000) amends, dated 1925 The undesigned Treaty to have received from the Dear Regina, Ellen, Sir, 17th October, (2000) long as total Ten Thousand of Georgia, by authority assembled, approved 20th 1877. The undesigned Treasures of the Stats of Georgia, hereby accuse have received from the following described: long as total Ten Thousand Dollars, and which are held by the of Georgia, by authority and under the provisions of an Act of the Assembly, approved October 22d, 1887, and amended 20th, 1897. R. E. Part long as total Ten Thousand Dollars , and which are held by the State of Georgia , by authority and under the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly , approved October 22d, 1887 , and amended December 20th, 1897 . 1 CENT IS ALL IT WILL COST YOU to write for our big FREE BICYCLE catalogue showing the most, complete line of high-grade BICYCLES, TIRES and SUNDIKES at PRICES BELOW any other manufacturer or dealer in the world. DO NOT BUY A BICYCLE from anyone, at any price, or on any kind of terms, until you have received our complete Free Catalogues illustrating and describing every kind of high-grade and low-grade bicycles, old patterns and latest models, and learn of our remarkable LOW PRICES and wonderful new offers made possible by selling from factory direct to rider with no middlemen's profits. WE SHIP ON APPROVAL without a cent deposit. Pay the Freight an allow 10 Days Free Trial and make other liberal terms which no other house in the world will do. You will learn everything and get much valuable information by simply writing us a postal. We need a Ridder Agent in every town and can offer an opportunity to make money to suitable young men who apply at once. $8.50 PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES ONLY $4.80 PER PAIR Regular Price $8.50 per pair. To Introduce We Will Sell You a Sample Pair for Only $4.80 NAILS, TACKS OR GLASS WON'T LET OUT THE AIR NO PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES ONLY $4.80 PER PAIR NAILS, TACKS OR GLASS WON'T LET OUT THE AIR ORDER $4.65) E FROM PUNCTURES. ears experience in tire (CASH WITH ORDER $4.59) NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. Result of 15 years experience in tire making. No danger from THORNS, CACTUS, PINS, NAILS, TACKS or GLASS. Serious punctures, like intentional knife cuts, can be vulcanized like any other tire. Two Hundred Thousand pairs now in actual use. Over Seventy-five Thousand pairs sold last year. DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy with a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous without allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of F that their tires have only been pumped up once or twice in an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being prepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Back" sensation or soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" that squeezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming tires is $5 so per pair, but for advertising purposes we are made of only $5 so per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found a FULL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertised plated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture puncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts at OUR expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is safe banker, Express or Freight Agent or the Editor of this particular tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster. Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small puncturesair to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers statingly been pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh too more thanpuncture resisting qualities being given by several layers on anaphaltome by the patent "Basket Weaver" tread, which prevents all air fromthe tire and the road thus overcoming all section. The regular price of theseout for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider.All orders shipped same day after receipt on approval,until you have examined and found them strictly as represented.Office cost of 5 per cent (thereby making the price $4.55 per pair) if you sendI ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickelpump and two Simpson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metalused in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to be returnedreason they are not satisfactory on examination.Enable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster,reight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair ofind that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look DESCRIPTION: Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside with a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small punctures without allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating that their tires have only been pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially prepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Back" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt or soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being squeezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these tires is $50 per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider of only $80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received/ We ship C.O.D. on approval. You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. We will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price $4.55 per pair) if you send FULL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel plated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metal puncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy-gashes). Tires to be returned at OUK expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster, Bank Press Agent or if this tire is not suitable for you. If you order a pair of these tires, will find that you will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. We want you to send us a small trail order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer. COASTER-BRAKES, built-up-wheels, saddles, pedals, parts and repairs, and everything in the bicycle line are sold by us at half the usual prices charged by dealers and repair men. Write for our big SUNDRY catalogue. We Do Job Printing Of All Kinds. We Can Please You. anty Aid an ON, Supt. of Ageno Georgia hereby acknowledges described in L. E. Williams P. Edward Perris Walter S. Scott Sol. C. Johnson This company quiroments of t that the strict Its affairs are character and community. The fairs of the first themselves with By comparing liberal inducem pany in this bu That we pay and which are held by the State visions of an Act of the General and amended Decrees P. E. Parsi Treasurer of the State of Georgia. SOL. C. JOHNSON Notary Public. Deeds, Contracts, Wills and Other Legal Forms Prepared and Attested. 116 West St. Jullan Street. Masonic Books & Regalias. LODGE SEALS, FINANCIAL CARDS and BLANKS of every description. Publishers' and Manufacturers' Prices Liberal Discounts Will Be Arranged. 60L...C. JOHNSON, Savannah, Ga. W. H. LLOYD, —Dealer In— GROCERIES, WOOD AND COAL, 621 Oglethorpe Avenue, East. a. 518——PHONES——Dell 506 Containing Useful, Co Also The Mensura pli Handy Re Farmers, Profess Dealers in Lumb One H New-Yo Tribune A copy of WITH T NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING A delightfully perfumed Hair Pomade prepared especially for Coloured People. Nelson's Hair Dressing makes Harsh, Stubborn, Kinky, Curly Hair Soft, Pitilant and Glossy. By supplying the needed oil directly to the roots of the hair it tones up the scalp, stops the hair from falling out, increases its growth, prevents its splitting and breaking off, removes Dandruff, and cures itching irritating Scalp Diseases. Large bottles of Drug Stores 25c orsent by mail for 30c (stamp or silver). Good Agents Wanted (male or female). Writes for terms. GOVERNOR SPARKS ISSUES CALL For Assembling of Legislature to Settle Labor Troubles. Governor Sparks of Nevada, Monday afternoon, called an extra session of the legislature to convene January 14, 1908. For the twenty-four hours previous, the governor was deluged with dispatches from all over the state, and many places outside of Nevada urging the calling of the extra session to settle the labor troubles. If love would only remain blind after marriage—but what's the use? Notice the thick rubber tread "A" and puncture strips "B" and "D," also rim strip "H" to prevent rim cutting. This tire will outlast any other make—SOFT, ELASTIC and EASY RIDING. P. EDWARD PERRY, Vice President. HOME OFFICE WEST BROAD STREET, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. Phone 1183. Ga. Phone 2029. Directors. L. E. Williams. P. Edward Perry. Walter S. Scott. Sol. C. Johnson. W. R. Fields. J. H. Deveaux L. M. Polkard. R. R. Wright. W. H. Burgen. J. H. Bugg, M. D. J. M. Ferrebee. This company is duly chartered under the laws of the State of Georgia, and has complied with all requirements of the State Insurance department, therefore all policy holders are protected with all the safeguards that the strict insurance laws of this State seek to protect its citizens. Its affairs are directed and managed by Negro men of the city of Savannah of leading standing, and whose character and reputation are of such as to command the respect and confidence of all the people of that community. The same men that manage this Society are the ones that organized and are conducting the affairs of the first successful Negro Savings Bank in this state; therefore we can readily see that by connecting themselves with this Insurance company their interest will be in safe hands. By comparing our rules and benefits with other first class companies it will be seen that we offer the most liberal inducements with the largest sick, accident and death benefits to our members than any other company in this business. That we pay our claims promptly can be testified to by the thousands of our satisfied members. EVERY FARMER IN THE GOU - EVERY FARMER IN THE COUNTRY SHOULD HAVE-ONE ROPP'S NEW Commercial Calculator and Short-Cut Arithmetic Containing a New, Complete and Comprehensive System of Useful, Convenient and Labor-Saving Tables Also The Essence of Arithmetic and Mensuration Condensed and Simplified for Practical Use Handy Review and Ready Reference Designed for the Use of Farmers, Mechanics, Business and Professional Men, Bankers and Dealers in Grain, Stock, Cotton, Coal, Lumber, Produce, Feed, Etc. A copy of ROPP'S NEW COMMERCE postage p WITH THE N. Y. TRIBUNE FAR A copy of ROPP'S NEW COMMERCIAL CALCULATOR will be sent postage prepaid WITH THE N. Y. TRIBUNE FARMER ONE YEAR, FOR $1.00 Trail will consist of PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, Day Coaches between Savannah and Montgomery without change; making close connection at Montgomery with all lines diverging for Penascola, Mobile, New Orleans and all Western points; Birmingham, Memphis, St. Louis, Nashville, Chicago and all Northwestern points; the SHORTEST LINE to Montgomery, New Orleans, Birmingham and the earliest arrival at these points. At Savannah close connection is made for all EASTERN POINTS, Richmond, Washington, New York and with Coastwise Steamships for Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston. Get sleeping car reservations and full information from any SEAOARD Agent, or write to ADDRESS THE HOME OFFICE, 463 West Broad St., Cavannah, Georgia. WEEKLY, 20 pages, 12 1/2 by 18 inches. The most thoroughly practical, helpful, up-to-date illustrated National weekly for every member of the farmer's family. Regular price, per year, $1.00. COMMERCIAL CALCULATOR will be sent postage prepaid TRIBUNE FARMER ONE YEAR, FOR $1.00 NEW-YORK TRIBUNE FARMER, Tribune Building, NEW YORK CITY. TRAINS SAVANNAH & MONTGOMERY. EABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. D. 5.00 P. M. 9.15 P. M. 10.10 P. M. 11.15 P. M. 12.45 A. M. 2.00 A. M. 2.22 A. M. 6.45 A. M. 10.40 A. M. 6.00 P. M. EASTBOUND. Leave New Orleans..... 9.25 A. M. Leave Birmingham..... 4.20 P. M. Leave Montgomery..... 7.45 P. M. Leave Lumpkin..... 11.54 P. M. Leave Richland..... 12.16 A. M. Leave Americus..... 1.40 A. M. Leave Cordele..... 3.15 A. M. Leave Abbeville..... 4.20 A. M. Leave Helena..... 5.15 A. M. Arrive Savannah..... 9.30 A. M. IN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS, Day Coaches between Savannah and close connection at Montgomery with all lines diverging for Pensacola, points; Birmingham, Memphis, St. Louis, Nashville, Chicago and all LINE to Montgomery, New Orleans, Birmingham and the earliest close connection is made for all EASTERN POINTS, Richmond, Wash-Steamships for Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston. Full information from any SEABOARD Agent, or write to Send all orders to NEW-YORK TRIBUNE FARMER. Tribune Building, NEW YORK CITY. One Hundred and Sixty Pages. Cavannah, Georgia. Every farmer wants to know 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 to 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 important. Many books have been prepared to make the task of calculating easy, its results sure, but never one fitted to all men, in all kinds of business, 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 a million and a half copies have been sold. The last edition (160 pages) is from beginning to end filled with tables, short cuts, and up-to-date methods of calculating, making it the most complete, useful and comprehensive work of the kind ever published. It will make every one independent, sure and self-reliant in all practical calculations connected with farming and other lines of business. It will prevent mistakes, relieve the mind, save time, labor and loss. It is a pocket edition, with pocket for papers and a loose silicate slate from which lead pencil-marks are easily erased, and is an invaluable assistant for every farmer or business man. CHARLES F. STEWART, Assst. General Passenger Agent, Nayannah, Georgia. . = £ = s ° o - + ai ge e 7 . , = or ~ oi ggg i 7 "he. °° See , _FLOY’S. SILENCE. : By "ADA FERRIS who or when or how. The employes . had been asked to use extra care and vigilance, and the tnozt light-hearted girl there felt worried and uneasy. Was It a clever shoplifter? Could there be a thief amozg them? Did the firm susrect any cne? Was there perhaps a detective watching them even now? And—did detectives not sometimes make mistrkes? Every one was painfully nervous, and Impatient to have the mystery cleared up. “And I believe you know something about it, Floy,” sald Jeante Burnham, under her breath, to a fellow clerk. “Why, what makes you'thiak that?” Floy asked, startled. -“T know it. I know by—by the way you hold your tongue when ve are all puzzling about it. Now what is {t?” “No,” said Fidy Irving, very slowly, as if weighing every word, “no, I do not know any more than the rest. of you about this. ( don’s even know what fs missing." | “But you have a suspicion, Now own up” “No,” even more slowly. “And if I had, it might be doing a great mis- take to tell.” G = “Oh, you cbstinate little mulet 1 wish there was an X-rey so we could Jook through pecple’s heads and find out what they krew.” = But some one came up just then, and Floy seized the opportunity to slip away, with a deep breath of ‘thankfulness. For she did know some- thing—only, had it anything to do with this case? If she spolé, all in the store—or all but two, perhars— -would say at once, “That solves the riddje.” But would it? Or would it ‘ouly' practically convict one who might after all be Sunocent? Oh, if, there were only some X-ray by which one might look Into a soul and see if it were true! There he stood at an opposite counter, quiet and falth- ful, although he must know that one word from her would concentrate all this’ dark cloud of suspicion on his head. Yet why should she not say, “I do not know who fs the thief now, but I ‘know who was responsible for a simi- lar course of petty losses a few years 2g0, and not so many miles away. He calls himself Robert Murdock now, but he was sent to the reform schcol then under the name of Bob Jamfeson.” Yet was it quite fair to conclude that because Bob Jamieson, ill-fed, ill- clothed and ill-advised by an unscrup- ulous stepfather, had robbed.the em- ployer who provoked the act by re- fusing to pay -ifair wages, therefore Robert Murdock, some years older, ‘wiser, and to all appearance strictly honorable, was equelly guilty? He had been in the store some months now, and apparently she alone knew of this old trouble. She hardly knew why she had not told that he was an old schoolmate of her own— partly, perhaups, because so much had ‘een said of a girl's Inabliity to keep a secret, and she resented the Idea, but more on account of a kindly reluct- ance to make trouble for one trying to start anew. No one but himself knew that tho had ever met before. , Murdock’s behavior had been fault- Jess—almost too good to be natural, it seemed to Floy. Still, this might mean only that he was determined to retrieve bis good name and bury, the old disgrace from sight forever. ‘What injustice, then, rractically to convict, him of this new theft, with- ‘out one particle of proof, and make the cloud above him darker than exer! a¥et the word once spoken could never be recalled. And there before her eyes every day stood Robert Mur- dock, waiting the word that should hurl him to destruction—yet neither dy word nor look appealing for mercy. She slipped out hurriedly, when the day’s work was over, lestJennleshould overtake and ply her with more ques- tlons. She did not want to talk—or to think. What was the use of puzzling one’s brains over a problem one had not facts to solve? But before she had fairly reached her boarding place she was stopped by one of her comrades in the store, with @ piteous appeal: “O Floy Irving, I'm in such a both- er! You'll help me out, won't you? There's a darling! By head aches fit to split, and there- was such a crowd at our counter I couldn't begin to keep things straight, and some of the ladles pulled the laces all round and got them into such a tangle! I do belleve one of them was the shoplifter that 4s making us all so much trouble. T didn’t dare take my eyes off her, and I ing a corner, came sharply upon—RoL- ert Murdock? 7 Vow often sho had wished for a chzace to question him! Here it was— if che cnly knew how to vse It. “Did I frighten you?" he asked, civ- itty, for, she had given a startled cry. “I merely stepped cut to see who was coming in. Mr. Hale asked me to stay and help unpack some new good to- night.” Floy briefly explained her own pres- ence fn turn. No one at Vane & Hunt's wanted any suspicion attaching to thefr movements just now. Then— for She dared not let this golden oppor- tunity psss—she added hurriedly} “I— I want go ask you one question.” In- voluntarily she caught his arm and turned his face toward (he light. “Weil?” + “Is Robert Murdock ycur* true ame?” “My tree name.’ It was my fa'her’s before me. Jamieson was ozly my stepfather. Is that all?" For she had dropzed her band and turned away with a gesture of hopelessness. “Yesno! That is, what's the use? I know what you would say—elther way! There’s no use wasting time.” “And you wouldn't believe anything I saf@—cither way! No,“it's not much use talking,” she said bitterly. “I-1 don't understand!” dasped Floy, startled. : You think, ‘Once a thief, always'a thief.’ Well, you won't believe me, I suppese. I den't know why you have kej: my secret so leng, unless you Uked to play with me as a cat does with a mouse. NeveFtheless, 1 will say this—as heaven hears me, I ‘know nothing whatever about the thefts In this store. Iam as innocent . of them as you arc.” “I beltevé you!” Filey exclaimed, ex- tending her hand eagerly. “And I don’t Lelleve that horrible old saying. Don't be angry with -me, please. I didn't mean to be hard or cruel. I neversthought you cared to have me speak to you. I wasn’t playing with you. I kept still because I thought it was right—end now I know it_ was. You may trust me.” é He controlled his voice by an effort. “Forgive me, I should nét have spoke en so. You have a right to choose your acquatntances.'" “The watchman 1§ coming; I mist 50 at Annie's laces. “But I know what ,t0 believe now,” and she burrled on ‘breathlessly. A moment later she was hastily bringing order out of chaos, even’ while explaining her refurn to her friend, the watchman, “She's a careless one!” the old man growled. “I'd let her do her own straightening. "Tisn't your business,” “She was sick, you know,” Eloy sald, excusingly. “I don't mind help- ing her a little.” She glanced. uncon- ‘Selously over where Murdock was now arranging the new goods on the ‘shelves. * “If ‘twas any of the other girls, now, I'd just wonder if she hadn’t an idea that Bob Murdock might offer to see her home,” chuckled the watch- man. “But I Dever"say you show any weakness in,that line.’ <" “Ob, you don't see everything!" Floy laughed, although -her_chceks flamed. “But I'l be done-and- at, home long before he can get away.” “Oh, it you spoke to him tonight, rit warrant {t wag the first time.” At which suggestion Floy’s nervous fingers only flew the faster. She did not care to talk more with him to- night. Yet she was very glad she had come, Her doubts were setled now. Only—she wished she had been a lit~ tle less cautious and a Httle kinder— @ little more just, perhaps. “But at least she was thankful that she had not spoken out her doubts. But when she entered the store the next morning, the alr was heavier than ever with doubt and dread. More losses had beenpdiscovered, The girls huddled together, exchanging wild guesses in frightened whispers. ‘Phe firm had not given out any word, but there ‘was: unwonted hurrying to and fro, the senior partner had been sum- moned by telephone, and now was closeted with Mr. Hunt, the junior partner, one of the floor walkers and the head bookkeeper, And with them was,a sharp-eyed little man no one know—a detective, perhaps. Mr. Hale and the watchman had been called be- fore them, as the last persons in the store the preceding night. It seemed that matters were to be thoroughly sifted at last. : “They'd better ask who else was here last night,” Katie Maguire whis- Sot forgetting, Dowerer, to Eve 00~ ert Murdock a nod and a smiling “Good morning!” * -How gravely he retirned It! But of course this suspense was even harder for him than for the other. A little later she saw him entering the private office. . A particularly cxasperating customer taxed her aftention_to the utmost for the next quarter “of an ‘hour, but her long breath of relief as the woman de- parted was cut short by the ominous words: : “Yoa are wanted in the private of- fice, Miss Irving.” “1? What for?" Floy gasped, in cismas, eS “1 do not know. No doubt they will tet you.” Was It only her fancy, or ‘was the tone frosty with suspicion? She saw the girls around exchange startled glances, heard Katie's exult- ant whisper, “You see! Didn't I tell you’ so?” and Jennie's indignant “Hush! That doesn’t mean anything.” Of course it did not, Floy told her- self, “It was only thelr exeltement which gave significance to such a trifle. To be sure, girls were not, sum~ imoned to the private office often, But why shculd she be nervous? What if she had seen Robert Murdock enter- ing that private room just a Ilttle while ago? The villain in a story- book might make a false accusation to $d himself of a troublesome witness, but in real life— If only her cheeks would not bum so! I was enough to make any one suspect her, and the very thought made them burn hotter. All this flashed through Floy’s mind as she walked quickly from her coun- ter to the door of the private office: Lut if her heart beat so fast that it seemed to choke her, she carried her head bravely, é Inside the dreaded portal she passed, outwardly calm, inwardly fighting down a panic, “The partners and head beokkeeper were in close consultation. Xirdly Mr. Hunt nodded to her, bid- ding her sit down, but nervous Mr. Vane snapred out shortly: “We hear that you were here after hours lest ight, Miss Irving. How {3 that? And how did you get in?” Floy explained briefly why and how she hail retuined,-'forcing herself to speak stezdily, although all the time something seemed whispering in her eir, “How should they know that un- less be has forestalled you by throw- ing suspicionzon "you? Why did you let yourself be convinced so easily? Didn't you know that a man who would steal would le? Why didn't You speak out at first? After he has once accused you, your story will scind like a weak attempt at self-de- tence. And she could only tell herself, des- peratety, “I told him he might ‘trust me. I can't break my word unless I am sure.” : “How long were you here? What did you do? Be exact, now,” Mr: Vane demanded, while -Mr. - Hunt leaned Lack, watching her “with an odd, amused eir that bewildered and alarmed her, as If he were expecting —she,did. uot know what. Certainly not tie- matter-of-fact aniwer she Baves . “Not™over 20 minutes, I think. 1 stcpped-to exchange a few words with Mr,-Murdock—“maybe five minutes, I put thé counter.‘and drawers in order as quickly as posaible, arid went out as Tcame in, ‘The watchman spoke to me while I was at work, but that did pot delay me.” “And what were you talking about, it I may ask?" Mr. Vane snapped. Mr. Hunt's eyes twinkled as he waited for, her answer. ‘That volce seemed to roar in her ears, “Tell it all !¥ou will never have such a chance again. Can't you see hat he has accused you to save bim- self?” But she sald, steadily; “Oh, the. watchman teaséd me about ‘coming pack so as to talk with Mr. Murdock. We told cach other how we haprened io come back to the store, and—" “And what?” Mr. Vane demanded sharply, as she hesitated. “And complained a little about how 1ervous these mysterious thefts were naking, us all,” she finished, boldly. “What do you think about these hefts, Miss Irving?" Mr. Hunt asked, uddenly, his eyes “twinkling more han ever. : Once more Flow desperately fought ff & great temptation. “I don't know yhat to think.” ‘He chuckled, rubbing his hands to- ether In, satisfaction. “You understand stenography and asked for work. His father and I were old friends. I don't think 11 regret giving him a fair chance. And now the mystery of the. thefts is solved. It was the Janitor of the place next door. He found a board loose In the partition between the cellars, and thought he had discovered a bonanza—thought he never would be suspected. But when he tried to dispose of the things he was caught. “Tut, tut, child, don't cry! You've done splendidly. I expected every day thet you would speak out, and have every one thinking Bob was the guil- ty one, But you didn’t, so I think I can trust you to hold your tongue about other matters, too.” “But I almest said it 20 times,” Floy sald, honestly. pitted!” Way alan't you quite say 2” | “Because I was afraid it might be doing injustice—and ‘A word - once ‘spoken, @ coach and six horses can’t bring back,’ as grandpa used to tell us “Then if you once make up your yaind, after careful consideration, that ‘It Is riglit-to tell other people my bus!- pees secrets, you will do It, will you?” he asked, dryly: * “Why—yes—I suppose so," Flay fal- tered. fi : “But not till then?” “Oh, no!” she satd, earnestly. “Well, if you walt till then, [ think we won't quarrel. Consider yourself engaged. And you may tell Bob Mur- deel, if you like, that I haye taken you on his recommendation.”—Youth's Companion. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. American bumble-bees are wanted in the Philippines to°sting the clover plants into fertility. In the colony of Japanese in New York clty there are about one thous: and*mea nnd bit thirty women, ‘The new German law prohibits any person under 18-years-of age from driving an. automobile of motorcycle. Calico printing was a new industry in Japan twelve years ago. Today a single firm has factory buildings cov- ering nearly four acres. The com cob pipe isn't the only pipe made in Missouri. The pie fac- tory at Loutslana made and shipped 215,000 hickory pipes last yéar, and a pipe made from a section of; hickory pole Is sald"to be just as good a pipe as the much-glorified cob pipe. The Gollath beetle 1s a *Samson among Insects. It 1s found fn South Amerlea. Between the neck and shoulder this curfous creature has enormous strength. Anything placed within the aperture is tightly gripped and, if breakable,’snaps. A key which was fnserted In one as an experiment ‘was bent out of shape, In Hawall even private lands in for- rest are sometimes adminfstered by the Territorial Board of Agriculture and Forestry. Some of the lessees of pub- We land within the Koolau Reserve have turned over to the Board for ad- mlilstration both their leased and their private lands, amounting id all to 27,000 acres. * David Davis, an old man of Cinéin- nati, was seated on 2 twelve-foot wall with a number of companions today, ewapping funny storles. The old man laughed so heartily at one of the tales that he lost his balance on the wall and toppled over into the street, Ow- ing to his advanced age the Injures may prove fatal. The fire which destroyed the old British Houses of Parliament broke out on Oct, 16, 1834. The present building, termed the Palace of West- minster, was opened on Noy. 4, 1852. It stands on a bed of concrete twelve feet thick, and covers an area of nine statute acres, It contains 1100 apart- ments, one hundred staircases, and two miles of corridors and passages. The gréat Victoria Tower, at the southwest extremity, is 346 feet in height. The origin of eating goose on Al chaelmas day dates from the time of Queen Elizabeth. On her way to Til- bury Fort, on Sept. 20, 1589, she dined on roast goose and Bergundy wine. With the Jast glass she drank “De- struction to the Spanish Armada.” As she drained the glass news came of the destruction of the Spanish fleet by a storm. Thereupon she ordered that roast goose should be served for her every year on that day, and the custom soon became ‘general among the people. ‘Thieves"Steal a; Whole Church. Thieves of Chicago and vicinity, no- torious for many remarkable deeds, eclipsed all previous efforts some time yesterday when they sfole bodily the ‘Presbyterian church, seating 200 people, trom: River Grove, on the Des- Plaines River. ‘The church had ‘no regular pastor, but {tInerant ministers would address the farmers in the edt- fice occasionally. This morning Z. A. Rosi, a farmer Uving across the river, missed the chureh. He rubbed his eyes and call- ed his family. Then they crossed the river to make certain the church was gone, It had been stolen, down to the Jast splinter, and there ts no trace of ‘It, although: active earch has peen Kept up all, day-—Chicago Inter-Ocean, | Which machine of the type invented by Guillotin was first put to its dread ‘use Is not.imown, but that, iised for ‘the exécution of Marie Antoinéife still cexists—in Berlin. | , UP ON A SKYSCRAPER. PSE ES A Ra at rae | a eee ee Ee eeae eee ae ae Rom eit ee ae ae A Sane gi Se Ce et |For eance Raa pe os eee pars oe / eee ti ar eee See ee Sheer aaa Seto oe aes ee bese ea reine ee eG Beer ra epg ae cae . ee he io ee eee Slag ep eee BLE et eee ae ae : eee pee eae St Bee eee a ae te 2 eee pers Bese ee Ra = ee Bike: be ee yok Pe . y ce eae oa Aes Sey oa See ee fa ee 5S; ci a eee ae he fdas 8 tear oe - Poses praia ae aes ae ye es ee icnmaan , os ase peice pis ee . a Voce ee no Rm pais eae cee f - cs ce So ae PE Se eit rite g ue = ce ae pias: Posen rice: eee oS ; re CRS Bet Sees eS oe Ee Pa ae ej a Ree creas hee Feet eeaguear eo bas ee Gee 4 Ete Se cao Bey escaeed ea , Bees BM (watching the traffic below) —“Risky things, them there motors.” Sketch. an Police Alarm, found shade and rest and peace. But No one need now be in fear of | Wednesday afternoon some bold bad thieves and burglars, us a Boston {men went to repair the cornice of the man has devised a.contrivance where- | building, and the cottonwood tree by the police can be Instantly noti- | Was ruthlessly torn from the wall, fied that intruders are in the house |thrown to the ground, and assigned . jo the diteh, where it was afterwards = rescued and given aplaceinthis office.. =, ~ It is gnarled_and crooked, as it ha@? Fs not been given a fair chance to- . show what it could do, but then, it j did the best it could and is entitled S 8 to much consideration. Its‘birth was : yo noticed in these columns, and from f \yeur lo Sear got better attention” gp. than was given to more important a ff | | things, but it is no more in life, and Hee nf this In memoriam brings a imp into Yn NC} \ our throat that chokes us. Requies= > OF | cat in pace, you blessed Uttle cotton-* eo Vi "Oh 7y wood.—Kanéis City Journal. rt J; y ee fy 9, $4 Wi cer iene // & HY BP ace RR ae if 3 rea ae : aT i> ? f +1 [> Bee ee ¢ Re ty eo FY 5 . LT] FERRARI Seas Pate scee and help fs wanted at once. This is to be accomplished with the aid of the alarm tag shown In the illustra- tlon. The purpose of the device will be apparent at once. The tag, in- seribed as shown, is placed where it can be conveniently reathed when wanted. The occupant of the house on hearing suspicious, noises in the house quietly pitches the missile out of the window. The presumption {s that a policeman—or other passerby —will notice the tag, and help will be immediately forthcoming.—Washing- ton Star. A Little Tribute fo a Tree. Many years ago a tiny cottonwood seed settl®i itself between the wood- work and the brick wall of the build- ing opposite this office, and as it hap- pened to land jn proximity to a leaky spout, ‘it grew and expanded and spread out until {t had grown to bo quite a brush, writes Bent Murdock. Its roots-crept into the interstices of the brick wall and in the good old summer time {ts branches, which had grown big and strong, put out the green leaves, under which the birds =e awe Aesivente nes | Sbersemve arnt “Bs | es és : . NS. Bg Pog Si GF ke 2 ‘, > J Ge g: fe Se =e\ > wae 3 i . i? Sy “ages! ). “ee \ TIN RGIS ee a : a Le | “2 : ORs, Pi fod a Lt 7 Va - As . Oh ZZRESENN £7. Pleat 83 * > pe SEA ieee alee Ls oe Se re ay anf , Tae | ie : = \ —— a daeseiah ime ~~ — Ae Ve es _——= EY Sees apetee res: ea A" Sea NE ae Hh) SERIE SES en NN Hl eT Aes Sear - Saat AE | (hae ee ea nS Flsherman=-=ah! ‘That's a good beginning, a trae we A nee s only Zortorcatch a Ash.now’and I shall be all right."—Fr Ae tae “een CTS found shade and rest and peace. But Wednesday afternoon some bold bad men went to repair the cornice of the building, and the cottonwood tree was ruthlessly torn from the wall, thrown to the ground, and assigned to the diteh, where it was afterwards rescued and given aplaceinthis pffice., It is gnarled and crooked, as it haa’ not been given a fair chance to” show what it could do, but then, 1b did the best it could and is entitled to much consideration. Its"birth was noticed in these columns, and from ear We Fear Ge got better attention” than was given to more important things, but it {s no more in life, and this in meniorlam brings a limp into our throat that chokes us. Requies- cat in pace, you blessed little cotton-* ‘wood.—Kaniis Gity Journal, par: Pe ae Rid Fe Pa RUG se pst Pee Sea Ser oe ee) . ee NRE hh ena mes Bo | Ree ea, ae ~ ae, | | Pangea 5: Clege ee te | ae 7 Bees eee ae ny ee ~ Rar cer P Rebbe Seccsce cers si BERG . eb s ret tbs Faeries PON LEATHERSTOCKING AND HIS Dog: Surmounting the Monument to Jz Fenimore Cooper at Cooperstown. Anu effort is being made fn England to compel the use on automobiles of; automatic speed controllers to pros: vent a machine from running abovo's maximum fpeed on public roads. “START. a SN. a . fs. : 4 21/9. Va eS NI “19, fs Beta 2 S CEs — ’ Qawe as) “Sees s ae /- re) ; VS ere Z Q hia r ; > Ww Se. Be se = « fe Savannah Tribune. Postmen Evenr BaTORDAY, THE TRIBUNE RUBLISHING CO 116 W. St. Julian Street. Bell "Phone 2171. ‘ Supscrir:ion Rates. 9 OMG YOR Tene eneneersee ne TS Bix Months ecceeeeneee reece 07S. TDhYCO MODS rs pmenen me an BO Hemittance mast be made by Erp ost Office Money Order. or Registered Letter advertising Rates given on application, ee ii] Saturpay, Jan. 4, 1908, - Wrra the new year comes new inspiration and a desire for im- provement. Individually and ag \arace we must during the year improve ourselves many per- cent along all rightfal lines. Ovr men in this city alone Have spent weekly not less than five thousand dollars for whis- key. They are admonished to leave the blind tigers alone and save this money, or use it in better caring for their family and educating theirchildren. ~ It was commendable that de- spite the hateful things Judge Norwood has said about us, at the celebration on Emancipation Day, not one word was said abouthim. This shows our ut- ter contempt for his venom. All just citizens are proud of the expiration of his term on the bench, and if he dves not repent of his hatred of race and hard- ‘ness of heart, when death ap- proaches him he will have an agonizing time. Irisfar better to pay no at. tention to the tirade of Judge Norwood against the Negro in his validictory on the bench last Tuesday. Ephraim is joined to hisidol, and it is as hard for the judge tospeak a commendable ‘word for us as itis for the leo- pard tochange his spots. All ‘who know therecord of Judge ‘Norwood will approve this. The judge’s tirade will tind lodgement only in the minds of those who think as. he does, that the Negro is next to beasts. Those who think otherwise have placed the proper appreci- ation on wkaf he has said. All students of ethnology can notagree with him in saying that the Negro was never civiliz. ed, has added nothing to arts, science or the inventions of the world. Students of ancient his- tory, especially of the races can refute successfully what he said. Wecan only agree with him when he scored the certain white wen for their criminal actions towards our women. We strongly refute his charge as to the immorality of our women. We would advise Judge Norwood to learn about the homes of yur leading citi- zeus, their schools and their places of business. li he knew more about this and did noc judge us by the low class of enminals whom he vented his race prejudice upon, probably his heart would be less harden- | ed towards us. Space forbid our saying more. Judge Norwood Tipped His Hat toa Colored . Coupte. All Savapnahiuue know Judge Norwood’s hatred for the Negro and that he holds him as hig 1n- ferior, An amusing incident oc- curred the day after hia tirade on the race, sear the post office. A ‘well known gentleman and a lady were passing the judge; the gentleman asid “Good moroing Judge, and tippéd his hat. The judge who was looking down reading a paper immediately reached up aud tipped his hat. Those who witnessed it were amused, especially to note how discomforted the judge was after seeing tc whom he ha tipped hia hat, F. A. B. Church. ‘The aervices on last Sunday at the F, A. B. Oburch, Franklin Square, were well attended. Rev. DS. Orner preached an able ser mon at the 11 o'clock service to the poor saints of the church and asonl stirring one at the evening services, subject “Remove not the landmark sst up by our father.” ‘The old mothers ofthe church were seated in the front pews. ‘Ihe ser- mon indeed was befitting the occs- sion and bore a deal of encourage- ment as well as sympathy for the old mothzrs. Mies Bertha D. Williams [reed Spaper subject, "How we can help the poor at our doors.” The ! paper. was indeed a rich production getting forth our duty to the poo! ‘and‘aged, and their power with God j andgusefainess in old age. A large tabléfilled with delicacies was spread in the basement of the church when the old folke sat and enjoyed them aelyes immensely. ,, Baskete of gro. ceries and a little fund were givec eech. Rev, J. W. Johnson of Atlan taand Rey. J. M. Milton assiatec during the day’s services, Indica tions from the week's seryices ee IK - ee ee: pecially the covenant meeting Athuraday evening point toa glori- ous day to morrow which will be our first communion ib 1908 All are invited. Our members are earnestly aéked to pay their Rally $2.00 before Jan. 17° rder to meet an urgent - . The clerk of thechurch p > . an en- couraging report for _ at the anpual conference Jan, 20th. DAY OF FREEDOM. the Exercises Grand and Inspiration Great. Last Wednesday was observ- ed by us as Emancipation Day. It was a great celebration and it made every patriotic Negro’s heart tinge with pride to note it. The several societies gathered at West Broad and Gwinnett streets and took up the line of march as published in our last issue, headed by Chief Marshal R. Barnes, and his assistants. Several bands were in line and enlivened the vuccasion The societies turned out with full membership and -participants looked their bestand aided to make the parade very imposing. The entire procession was very orderly and receive the plaudits of those who saw it. The exercises took place at St. John Baptist Church, and in a little while the edifice was crowded. _The speakers with the officers of the Emancipation and Chatham County Associa- tions were seated on the rostrunt and within the rails. Rev. H. L, Haywood was master of cere- monies. The singing by the congregation was inspiring and the selection by the choir were among the best ever heard. ‘the invocation by Rev. R. V. Branch was in keeping with the occasion and touched all who heard him. Mr. David F Moses’ address on “Tilton and the Negro,”? was delivered in a well poised manner and was wellreceived. The document thatall of our people hold so sacied, Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, was read in a dis tinct manner by Mr. John H. Baldwin. In timely words Rev. H. L. Heyward introduced Dr. S. Palmer Lloyd, who deliv- ered the main address. He was received amidst applause and immediately entered into his address, It was noted especial- ly because there was flo com- plaint about the manner in which we are treated by others, but figures were given and fac s shown about the Negro’s pro - ress since freedom, and in a teli Ing Way the vast audience was told what they must do to make the progress greater by helping each otuer and sticking 6 the business ‘concerns of the race. Hearty amens were given. ‘The speaker named a nuniber of business concerns of the city, the amount of business each dues and the number of persons employed, and showed that if the members,of the race in the city would jonly spenda few cents With them that they would he able tu give employment to many moreof our young men and women. ° It is a pity that thousands more ot our people did not hear the address, especially that sturdy class that has the making or unmaking of the race within its grasp. . "The celebration was among the best that we have , had and those who had the arrdnge- ments in hand deserve untold cummendation for making it so. AT BETH EDEN CHURCH At night at Beth-Eden Church an observance was had under the auspices of the Men’s Sun- day Club. The program as pub- lished in ‘tue TRIBUNE last week was carried out. A large crowd was present and every- thing was conducted on a high order Pride and patriotism were the order and fully demon- istrated by all present. Bethlehem Baptist Church. ‘The Christmas exercigeswere neld on Thursday evetiing of last week, ‘The tree was beautifully decorated with burning candles, etc. Euch member of the Sunday School re ceived a.gift. The songs and recita- tions were well rendered. Supt, F. H. Williams received a lovely Gift as-did the organist, Misa Surab Cater, Death of Rev. Perry.3 News reached the city:on Wednes- day night announcing the death of Rey. B. L. Perry at Bluffton, 3. O. He haa been ill only a short time. His sons, Messrs, P. Edward and B. L, Perry, along with other mem- bers of the family were at his bed aide when death came, Rev, Perry waa well known in the city and es teemed by allwho knew him, egpecial- dy at Bluffton, .The funeral takes place to-morrow at Binffton. Hev. Wm. Gray has been invjted to con= duet the services. jhe bereaved family has the sympathy of all friends, i ; rs Week of Prayer. ‘he week of prayer will be ob- served at the Kirst Oongregational Church, Jasuary 5thto10th. There will be prayer and praise services, addrestea and sermons, Among those.who will speak will be Rev. DW. Cannon, Rev. 8. T. Redd, and the Rev. Thomas Elgar, Prison Evongelist, of New York ity. These services will begin prompt- ly at Se m. On Sunday at 11 a. m,,a New Years sermon will be preached oy the pastor. The cele- bration of the Lord's supper will be held at 8 p.m. You are cordially invited to attend any or all of these serviees. Strangers are always welcomed, “i Second Baptist Church. _ Fane closing services Of the year were held Bunday with good congregations, Pastor May preached at 1t o'clock. Rev. Brooks of Boston filled the pulpit at night aod preached asermon that was subject to much criticism A successful watch meeting was held Tuesday and many ex- pressions of thanks, resolutions etc were made by members and friends. Two couples were united in marriage this week by the pastor Those on the sick list are Sister Florence Gardner, Ogle- thorpe Avenue east Sister Maxwell, wife of Deacon Maxwell, Charlton street east, Sister Rena Barnard, Nicoll street, Bro. Georgg Carr, Bolton and Atlantic streets Old brother Carter, East Boundary street Sister Larsha, Gwinnett street cast, Sister Denegall, Randolph street South ‘of An- derson, Brother Brown, Reynolds stre-t, Sister Jenkins, 419 Perry street east, Sis- ter Brown, 1613 ‘Burroughs street, two members at Sandfly station and others. Brother Alexander Melton an old member of the church who is at the National Soldiers Home, was in the city this week and was delighted to meet the pastor. The pastor installed the officers of the Ladies Union last Sunday at’6:30 and was handsomely rewarded. All of the annual ly elected officers of the church and Sun- day school will be formally installed the second Sunday night In this month, at the conclusion of the night services, also license will be presented to Bro. James H. Rogers by the pastor, by ihe authority of tne church. To-morrow will be prayer and fast day, also the roll will be called at 3 o'clock and every mem ber is requested to be preset. No ser- vices to-morrow night. Every member and friend requested to send their children to Sunday scho I the third Sun- day toa special meeting preparatory to the 1908 year’s work Parents also ask ed to come. St. Philip’s Dots. Our congregation don't seem to let the weather keep them from attending church services. Notwithstanding the inclement weather on Supday they were out in force ateyery service. Rev.C. Jobnson o} Mt. Zion Circuit, West Savannah district, preached 4011 a.m. His discourse was 101 Psalm 12'verse, subject “Song of the believers.” Rev. Johnson isa young minister and the way he delivered his sub ject, shows that he isa speaker of no mean ability. At 8p m. Rev. Lindsay preached his last sermon for 1907, whieh was one of those heartfelt sermons which was animating tothe soul. St. Philip is highly hodored ia this year’s emancipation celebration,having on the program four of its members in the person of Prof. J. H. Baldwin who read the emancipation pro’ clamation; Mr. David Moses who deliver an address on ‘Tilton and the Negro,"; Mr. J. Hi. Law, secretary of the Emanci pation Association and Mr. R. Barnes chief marehal of the day, Watch meeting services were heldj on Tuesday night; many persons had (0 go away, could not get Seats. The first quarterly conference of St. Philip will be held on Friday night January 10th. Our monthly love. feast wbas held on last Fiday might. Oa Thurs day night the 26 ult, the Chris Kriogle arrived at St. Philip consigned to the J. H Baldwin Co, ‘The Cargo was composed of various assortment of Christmas goods Santa Claus found that it would be a difi- cult matter to’sénd such alarge number of packages consigned to oyer 350 people. To overcome the difficulty, Old Santa Claus awarded to Mr. Ragis Middleton the contract to build a ship, 2 two masted full rigged schooner for this specialifreight The Chris Kringle is afine ship and is acredit to the designers and builders. afd in theohistory of all Christmas tree festivities nothidg of the kind has ever been seen. The ship was manned by a full crew of trained sailors commanded bya Capt Santa Claus. fhe following was the crew: Masters Howard, Lindsay, Singleton and Baldwin. While the children were waiting the arrival of the Chris Kringle, a literary program was rendered which, was very good. On the arrival of the skip, Capt Santa Claus was given @ warm reception after which he wished them a Merry Christmas aad Happy New Year as they have been sc very good during the’ year he had brought something for them, ‘the -program as arranged was carried ‘out to perfection and many a little one’s hear was made glad. The old adage, St. Philip's lead and others follow, be. wise and send your chfldren to St, Philly Sunday School. ‘The following services will be hela on tomorrow (Sunday.) Prayer meeting $:3 a. m.,.Preaching and Baptism of adults at | 11 a.m., Sunday School at 2 p, m., Commt nion at 4p. m., preaching at 8 o'clock Strangers are cordially invited, The New-York Tribune Almanac. Of "course fit is possible to worry through life without keeping « Tribune Almanac at your elbow, but [tis worth while—dees it pay? For 25 cents a year this publication supplies you witha really maryellous amount of information, and the man who hasit is an authority ia his neighborhood. He does't have to be “guessing” or “supposing” abourelection pluralucs, the names of Cabinet Minis- ters, Senators, Congressmen, Governors, or Judges. He dosen't have to depend upon his memory when anythiog comes up about. the bigevents of thepreeeeding year or In relation to-our army ‘or navy ‘sporting records, or f fact, almost any. thing else of record. worth knowiog. If you have never examined The Tribune Almanac just {avest a quarter for one, and see how pleased you'll be. The 1908 ee a a rae 462 West mn. SOOTT BROS. Near Gaston _ . “ON THE SQUARE” - q DRESS HATS for Men and Women, latest sty%es HATS direct from New York at the lowest. prices. * Winter line of UNDERWEAR for men, women Underwear Miaren. , Wecansuit you in Hosiery, Cuffs and Collars, SUESINE SILKS, all colors, Canton Flannel, . Ginghams and Ontings. OUR shoes have always given satisfaction, give | SHOES ‘them a trial. Weare looking for your Bosues I a We offer the right prices. Men’s Rubbers 66c,_ Women’s Rubbers 50¢, Children Rubbers d0c. MEN CLOTHING MADE 'rO ORDER. ICE CREAM farnished in any quantity allthe Winter. You know our [ce Cream is the best. « 462 West Broad Street. SCOTT BROTHERS, one will be on sale January 1, and may be had from your newsdealer, through your local paper or, direct from The Tribune ‘Office, New York, Notice to the Public. .. , Sayannah, Ga, Dee. 18, 1907 To the Republicans of Chatham County: I want itto be known’ to my frleads and the public in general thatl am ‘candidate for chairman of the Républieas Party: of Chatham County, and respeet- fally ask your support and Iofluence at the coming election . Respeetfully, tf F, M, Ben. TREE OI a In Memoriam. In memory of one of the first colored citizens of Savannah, Mr. WILLIAM BHEFTALL, mho departed this life December 26th 1897, ten years ago, age 73. The Lord called him to His arms, but it seems but today. Hewas aloving husband and a devoted father. We love thee well but the Lord loved the best. The light of the home is missed. no more will we hear your darling voice, How we can see vou, 80 fresh, calling Jesus to come Oh howcan we forget thee when thia day you bade us good bye. We will bear the grief, but never forget thee. Sleep on dear one for soon we too shall join your number, where no farewell tears are shed. . His loving wife and daughters, Mrs SARAH SHEFTALL - Mrs. MARY CAMPRELL, Mrs. SUSAN CRAWFORD. In memory of cur beloved mother, MARIE TURNER, Died Dec, 25, 1906. Our dear mother has left us, Gone to dwell above, But we hope to meet her - On that bright and happy shore, How lonely seems the home, And sadly are the hours, Since our dear mother departed From this greeneatth fora better home We loved her, we loved her, : But angels loved her more, And they have sweetly called her To yonder shining shore, ‘Miss Georcta ANDERSON. i NOW IS THE TIME TO INVEST IN ELBA Ls BSTATE. Ik Wateh this space for my offerings. CHAS. A. R. MCDOWELL; , ~ . Real Estate and Renting Agent « Bell Phone 3188 , 22 State Street, weet. FOoOHRNnsSson’s : ; Undertaking Establishment, ‘FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS. All Orders promptly aftended, Day or Night. Firstolass Embalming and all work of that kind guaranteed. Our © stock of Coffin, Caskets and Robes is the largest in the city. Wealso havea first class Livery Stable where we furnish the best Carriages, Hearses and Funeral Cars. We also have in our employment Mr. . H. S. Dunbar, who would like to see his friends at auy time. - * —~MANAGERS;——— HS. DUNBAR - = W. R. FIELDs, Bell Phone 676. 335-333 JEFFERSON STREET. “*Gone but not Forgotten’? _ £807—1908 BURA RD HOURS, My beloved husband died Jan. 6 1907. He hore his weakness and confinement with fortitude, and retained his faculties to the last moment. He was aloving and affectionate husband, a dutiful son and a kiadand loving brother. He wata love ly christain and itis a comfort tous to know that death had no terror for him, and never again wil! he be weary or trov- bled. His cirele of friends was large and yet select and knew the sterling lotegrity of his character, and the keen but liberal sweep of his thought. He has left us but we may yet hope to see him again where sorrow and parting are no more. Gone, gone to the beautiful land, Gone where the angels dwell, All that is glorious ta share, Gone with the dear Saviour there, BiGone to fthe beautiful land. 2 (Warz.) Union Savings & Loan Co, ~ CAPITAL 50,000.00. es * aE] Stands for . mei Ei S| Negro Manhood§ re ti Sik Le bee ioe Negro Homes ected and Negro Busi- Py Sabet 1 Th Te eee’ The Hope of the Race.. Bees aes Ps MMbemeeS STATE STREET, Went. ~ THE FIRE INSURANCE ~ COMPANY READY FOR BUSINESS. 25 Experienced Agents . Wanted at Once. ‘The Savannah Matual and Fire Asso- ciation of 20 State street, west, of Savan- nah, Ga, announces its readiness to begin business. The company will write ia- surance on the homes, household goods, churches, lodges, business houses and other property of our people. ‘This will afford protection which has /hitherto been denied them, ‘Twenty-five or moré agents will be put 0 work at once ia various parts off the State, and a thorough canvass made for ‘safe legitimate business, A few persons 25 or more who have had some experience as agents and pos- sess other ‘required qualifications may secure positions with salaries of forty to fifty dollars per month, according to fit- ness forservice. For further particulars address D. C Suggs, Pres. or L. 8. Reed, Rect. 20 Biate street west, Savannah, Gx. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY - Reduced Rates.Christmas. - Excusion tickets will besold December 20th, 2ist, 22d. 23d, 24th,-25th, 30th, and 3ist and January Ist, and will be limited for return until January 6th, 1908. For further information, rates, etc. call on or write your nearest Seaboard Air Line gent. Colored Congressmen in the United States. Stoce the abolition of slavery in the United States in 1863, many colored men -haye held official position. I'wo were United Srates Senators acd twenty Representatives. A fine engraving of these Congress- men has just been tesned giving accurate portraits of each; also the Congress in which they seryed and the years of service In the picture the two Senators, Messrs. Revels 4nd Bruce,wccupy the center of the group, surrounded by the other twenty Representatives. In the background, the Stars and Stripes in color. This beautiful engraving, ‘with a booklet containing bi- ographies of these eminent” men, is sold for one ($100) dollar. ‘Chis engraving is a graphic political history of the Negro in Ameriea. No home, lierary; office or school room will be complete without it. Send for one to day. THE COLORED AMERICAN 3} NOVELTY CO., P.O. drawer 2318, * Washington, D. C. Agents WANTSD. N. B. We also bave in stock large engravings of Frederick — Donglas Paul Dunbar, — Toussiant .L’Ouverture, Booker T. Washington, W. T. Vernoc Register of tne ‘Treasury, Phillis Wheatley and “Everything about!Colorec People’? ia books, pictures, invention: and souveniss SANTA CLAOGS EXPOSITION., The Santa Claus Exposition will take place from December 18th to the gist. He will reach my store on the above date and will remain for 12 days. He will bring articles for father, mother, sister, brother, aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, cousin and friends. What will he bring? He will bring the follow. ing articles: Watches, rings, cut glasses, hat pins, studs, cuff buttons, collar buttons, brooches, ear rings. earsrcews, neck chains, watch charms, shirtswaist sets, pocket knives, magic charms, scarf retainers, lockets,.eyeglasses, watch JJ chaihs, blouse sets, bracelets, fob chains, swastika and articles of every des- cription; beauty pins, emblem for cry secret order in exsistence; key chatn 4 checks, key chains, magic hair witch, hair curlers bair waving machine, hair puller and in other words I have gifts that will please him or her, A gift of a wateh goes straight to the heart. It is a lasting gift and it unites beauty with usefullness berged any other form of wearable things. The best stock of watches is at BROWN’S, 807 West Broad street. Would you make a supreme Xmas gift—a ring inany form, pin or what not isthe thing and the Ybest assortments in size and price are at BROWN’S. 807 West Broad street. if in loubt as to the “acceptable and perfect” gifts, see our beautiful things at Brown~ 807 West Broad St., and your doubts will he solved. Gifts like jewelry come and.see. Give her a locket and see her eyes sparkle, from 75 ceats tipwards at BROWN’S, 207 West Broad street. Wouldn’ta clock till the bill? You couldn’tgive anything that would bring the donor so often to mind, as it 18 constuntly refered to. There is a place for it in the dining room, parlor, or bed room. Sce 7 . W.-H. BROWN, Watchmaker and Jeweler, 807 West Broad Street, Savannah, Ga. THES OLDSAST OF THEM ara The Royall Undertaking Go., AREA SRAINGORPORATED. een Funeral Directors and Embalmers. Only First Class Service Rendérea ;with —Respecttual ,Attention.— OUR STOCK OF CASKETS, —— COFFINS, ROBES, Etc, is Complete BElcessr 319 Oglethorne Ave., Wési W..S. ROUNDFIELD, Manager. ° Fe “Residance 693:Andersb" St,,E, - ~Bell Phone 9572 7 _ Dr. Isaiah D, Williams PHYSICIAN ana SURGEON, A recent graduate of Meharry Medical Co lege, has a neatly furuished office with all modern appliances at * 5244 West Broad Street, over Metropolitan Bank, For treatmentof diseases of WOMEN and CHILDREN and Veneral Diseases ‘a specialty Office Hours—8 5 Jo my 1980 3 3104 Pym. ,6t0 8H. m, and allfaight.: : 35-bit Phone sto eee PANE ALE IE aE SEES ee ERAN eT rs EE FSSseGee REST ES hs BIE aa “ > BEG ren PTS NN LOE ENE 1, Sate EER foe nie fen = nee MoM ae ff pee a RE eas ag iwc ei Sa ee he ie) SSS SSS a a STHE FARMER'S HOME AND ACRES / "Turn Out the Horses. Notes About Horses. A horseman suggests that during | If-ycur horse is out of conditlon, ¢ clear weather it is well to tuén the | you know why? work horses cet in the karnlot at If the feed and care are qwhat the nights. Give- them some hay nd | should be, then look at his teeth. Si leave them out ali might. They like | that the grinders come together eve to roll and after sweating and worklog"| ty, acd smooth off the shatp point hard all day they do not enjoy stand-| air the pleasure of the country II ing in the barn. Mes in the ownership of a good hors ine fations: __ Every farmer should have a hor ‘The following ration for pigs is ecm- mended td make them grow, and yet not, get “potbellied,” viz: Two parts of siddlings, two parts cornmeal by welght m{xed,- according to Professor Henry. For every pound of this mix- “ure feed one or two pounds of skim anilk, A Ilttle oflmeal may be used, If it cam be secured cheap enough, but at present prices this feeding stuf rules too-high for amy considerable use. Feedcthe young pigs.three times a day and be sure to give them a good rua on pasture where they will get exer- vise and green forage as well, is po3- ‘sible. . * = Care for the Nest. Do yon know that you éan train a hen to be a poor layer? Do you know thal’ she can and will keep her ‘eggs when ready to lay for a whole day? If this Condition fs allowed to con- ‘nue she may and probably will lay fewer and fewer eggs, finally becoming un indifferent layer, hence the neces- sity of having plenty of clean, comfort- able nests. Did you ever notice how shyly the young puilet will go about looking for a secret place where she may stealthily deposit her precious eggs? : How very particular she fs about it! If there is an Insufficient number ‘of nests, or if they are unclean, or Xoo much exposed she fs likely, after ‘some delay, to lay the egg on the floor per rae ae hens; which may ead to epz eatin’ N Comfort is one ofthe essentials of egg productions, and what is more necessary than handy, clean and com- fortable nests? . — ‘The Care of Collies. Here are a few words on the gen eral care of a collie dog given by a }writer in Recreation: * In all favorable weather wash the @og once a month and in summer once reach week. Feed him twice daily of -‘cooked food. Do not keep him too fat. ‘Good muscular condition and a smart, salert collie are not the result of too fmuch feed. Once a week give him a 4teaspoontul of powdered sulpbur in a yan with some milk It keeps his ‘Dlood In fine condition, Use a medi- “cated animal soap when washing him. { Disinfect the kennel with crude car- “bolle acld once a month. In fall and printer, when washing is out of the “question, owing to the unfavorable freather, dust him through all _ his dense coat with a tobacco dust powder. Ht is a fine method of keeping his ‘skin clean and Insects off after contact awith other dogs. Have him clipped Jn ‘summer, if convenient, and let him go ‘on the vacation with you. He will flove the water, and It will be a sin to sJeave him héme. fczOnce owner of a collie, always an pwn,” {6 an old but true saying. No rorrastances will prevent the keep- foe ‘of 2 collie after they have once fron you. We'know the truth of this tm a dozen instances. They are the 'Bilde of every one Who possesses them, ‘gad will always be first in the heart ‘of a strong man or woman who fs fon¢ of the dumb but true. Birds That Eat Scale Insects. All told, 57 species of birds have fyeen found to eat seale Insects. It is linteresting to note that this number (Comprises representaives of 12 taml- Mes, differing widely not only in struc- ture but in habits. They were dis- f buted as follows: Nine woodpeck- ters, two jays, three orioles, elght spar- ws, one Waxwing, six viroes, 11 war- ers, two wrens, one tree creeper, two uthatches and eight tits of the: tlt- jouse family, one kinglet and one catcher of the Old World war- [Pier famity, and the varled thrush and ‘Ithe bluebird. [At first thought {t seems strange that the large birds should take the yuble to pick up such small insects as jes, Yet the numerous representa- ition of woodpeckers on the list and lthe fact that the grosbeaks among the Ikier species are most conspicuous cale destroyers prove it unsafe to as- “feome that a direct relation exists be- ween the size of o bird and its insect -frood: At the other extreme of size jamong scale eatérs are some veritable {feathered midgets, 2s, for example; the ruby-crowned kinglet, ‘the black-tailed @aatcatcher, and the bush-tit, the last it whickr makes more than’ one-fifth lof ita. food of, scales. F -saong-the majority of these birds .both*great and small, there is notice _able one similarity of-habit. They. ar a trécirequenters, On-thelr arboreal ex “ouratons, they. must constantly com Saneross scale, ingécts, and as thé latte 2"ire no‘doubt nutritious.and are-tooth Xeno fo: the-dvlad taste. i¢ is* only’ 1a Feral ‘iat binds should feed, jee Thee = asters Ee do: nok ote SH att streterebutewbich areki Jneluds seiner ener o> Iwobably secure, them. very, =, Spates pas, a Fasmen oe Se Notes About Horses. If.ycur horse is out of condition, do you know why? If the feed and care are ahat they should be, then look at his teeth. See that the grindetS come together even- ly, acd smooth of the sharp points. Half the pleasure of the country life les in the ownership of a good horse. Every farmer should have a horse that the wife and daughter can ride and drive, as well as the boys. din selecting such a horse, choose ‘one about fifteen hands and one or two Inches high, weighing about 950 to 1000 pounds. _-He should have a good even dispo- ‘sition, and go equally well in harness or under saddle: _ Of all the fools who drive horses the ‘ones who rush a horse down hill are ‘the worst. It weakens the tendons and nerves, Jars the shoulders and springs the “knees. "_ As:the cool nights come on pe care- ‘ful about putting your horses in the stable when heated from work or drly- Ing. Give them a good rubbing all over with a towel of cloth, and put on a light woolen blanket. If the blanket becomes damp, put on a dry one for the night. It fs still better to rub the horse un- til,he is dry. It does not take long, and it pays, though’ few farmers will do it. . It takes much patience to teach a horse seven or eight years old to do new kinds of work. But let patience have her perfect work; the horse is not so much to blame after all.—Farm Journal. * {Long Chicken Runs. The following from the Farm Press contains some very sound advice. I never yet saw a chicken yard-too long, but I have seen a great many that were too small. I never knew chickens to get sick and make trouble when they had plenty of room arid plenty of green stiff. It costs some- thing to fence a long run, but it pays. A yard twenty feet wide and two ‘hundred yards long may be plowed and cultivated with horses. If a succession of green stuff Is grown, starting in the spring and reseeding at different times during the summer, a yard like this will grow enough to almost feed thir- ty or forty laying hens. Such things as-peas and oats may be planted very early In the spring and by having runs may be closed and different grains and vegetables may be planted in season. ‘A'great deal, of picking may be had from corn, They may eat off the young stalks and they may let some of them grow up, but, in any case the chickens get the benefit. Rape is an- other good crop to grow. It may be planted almost amy time between spring and early fall. Radishes, bects, ‘buckwheat, In fact, almost anything that grows on the farm, will come in all yight in the chicken yard. You may plant in rows and culti- vate occasionally, you may sow broad- cast. You may leaye the chickens in the yard or turn them out until the stuff gets fairly started, according to circumstances. It makes but little alf- ference how you manage, so long as you fit enough ground and plant enough to keep the poultry busy. I prefer a poultry yard in an or chard, preferably of small fruit trees such as plums, cherries, apricots, prunes and pears. The partial shade from the trees is beneficial to poultry. In this way you don't feel the expense of giv ing.» WI fg Jo f ground to a poul- eae rou Leer run wire poul try netting down ibe Fows betweer the treés and partition off a yard & wide or as narrow as you want It. Thy width makes but little difference: length is what you want sa you Cal get the horses in to do the work I have seen Httle yards that wer supposed to be dug over frequently ‘The digging gets done-about once; no body has time affer that for any” suc! | backaching job. The only way.to hav |a chicken yard cultivated Is to do ! "| by horsepower. You can't work eros: _| ways in a narrow ‘Jot; you can’t hay | a chicken yard very wide but you ca have it the whole length of the o1 | chard and it willpay to dq it. Bungalow Houses. ‘The bungalow, the camp, or what. ever one’s retreat In the wilderness ‘or by the shore is called, Is sald to be influencing architecturally the build- ing of an,occasional all-the-year-round house in guburbaf and near-by coun- try places. One big living roont run- ning the Jength and nearly the Dreadth of,tho house, with a small, ditchen tucked in dn ‘out-of-theway corner, three or four sleeping rooms overhead, and .a porch suitably. sereened to allow outdoor sleeping quarters, make up the Ideal residence. —Bogton Transcript. Modern Annoyancea. +. ~ ‘The following advertisement { pub- shed" in the Kriesblatf, 4 newspaper published at Hoechst, near Wiesbaden: “Can any-one favor mewwith the ‘names dt. thie ‘balloonists who,. when passing over the -yillige of Bled last ‘Thurs- day evening, dropt a~bag of ballast ‘down my vchimney and "- completely srotnea ya, fruit, tack which: Twas cooking !=Jolie. Sehmiaf,.-14, Britzel: |Sasse; Rigd."-—IAteraty=Digest> + 26 A % itm . | i : . i. f Stewed Okra, | ‘This vegetable does not fill the place it should In our summer menus. It ‘Is not only nutritious but very tooth- some when properly prepared. Only the young tender pods should be stewed. Wrap them in a cloth or put them into a bag and stew until tender. ‘Then dress with salt, pepper and a few ‘tablespoons of cream. Serve with olled rice, Figh Balls. « | Cook together in boiling water one cup salt codfish picked in small pleces and two cups diced potatoes. When the potatoes are quite soft, drain thorouhgly and mash, Add ‘one-halt tablespoon butter, one egg well beaten, and one-eighth teaspoon pepper. Beat with a fork for two minutes, then add salt. Take up by tablespoonfuls, put In frying basket, and fry In deep fat until well browned, then drain on brown paper. Arrange on hot serving dish and garnish with parsley.—Wo- man's Home Companion. Creamed Salt Ccdfish. Pick salt codfish in small pleces; there should be one and one-half cup- fuls. Soak in lukewarm water thirty minutes, until soft. Drain thoroughly, and add two cups white sauce seasoned with a little pepper. Add two eggs slightly beaten just before sending to the table. Turn into 2 hot serving dish, and garnish with toast points, parsley and slices of hard-boiled eggs. The nutritive value may be increased by adding one-half sup grated mild cheese. Allow the cheese to melt in the sance before adding the eggs, Fat Roast. _ . For a pot roast get a short thick piece of the cross rib of beef and iard it with little strips of clear fat pork. Put the’pot in which the meat Is to be cooked over the fire and when hot lay in the beef and brown, turning from side to side until the whole surface is richly colored. Add a half dozen lt- tle onions, two tablespoonfuls of to- mato, a ittle chopped parsley, a bay ieaf, half a dozen whole black peppers and three cloves, together with a cup of bolling water or stock. Place the pot where the meat will just simmer and steam for three hours, keeping the pot closely, covered. An hour before serving, add three carrots, slice thin and another cup of stock is needed. ‘When done take up the meat on a 20% platter, season the sauce with salt and pepper, arrange the carrot slicés about the’ mest, alternating with little rounds ‘of peas, then strain In the sauce over the meat. For a Second Serving—For @ second day’s serving cut the meat remaining into small portions; put in- to a deep baking dish, cover with gravy, then make a baking powder crust without shortening, the same as for dumplings, and cover the disb. Steam about three-quarters of an hour, then serve.—Washington Star. pees 2, in the Kitchen. Half a lemon dipped in salt 13 ex- cellent for cleaning copper articles. Oxalie acid, too, is equally successful both for copper and brass. 2 Vinegar and salt will remove the brown tea stains from china cups. Vinegar will also clean and brighten ‘water bottles that have become dull. Boot or shoe laces will never come undone if slightly waxed. If the tag has come off the lace, slightly wax the end, and it will go through the holes quite easily. ‘ Add a little soda to the water in which you are going to wash greasy dishes. ‘This helps to remove the grease, ond keeps the dishcloth in good conditivn. Ink stains can be removed from the hands by rubbing with ripe tomato juice, if applied at once, It is some- tmes svecessful in removing ink stains from white fabrics. ‘To remove bad gdors {rom a room, burn A plece of dried orange peel on ‘a hot shovel or old tin, The odor will disappear, leaving a pleasant one in its place. Burned coffee is also ef- fective, Badly tarnished, brass may be clean ed with ease if it {s first rubbed with salt and‘ vinegar or oxalic acld. Fol low with a good washing of soap anc water, then polish with any good clean ing prepaartion. If you wish to,remove @ screw that fs difficult to loosen, heat a poker ret hot and hold it on the head of {he screw for a short time, then, while I it still hot, apply the screw-driver, ané it-will ‘come: out easily. * To take out iron rust, dip the po into a strong solutiod of tartaric ack and expose it to the sun. When it 1: lary, wet the article with warm -soap | suds; rub the stain with ripe tomat ,| jutee, expcse It to the ‘sun’ again, an || when tho stain is nearly dry wash | "| in more soapsuds. | if you ‘are leaving your house for’ | few hours, and want.the fire to kee :| in, instead of throwing a lot of co! | on, it Is‘much better and safer to pu two or three pleces on, atid then thro a handful of’table salt over'them. | ‘mt$ G-aone, you will find = kood fr -| at the end of four or five hours. r| Carrots and onlons-are better fe 2 | eqoking if soaked in cold water fc 3 | twelve houra.before using, to draw! E| the strong flavor. ‘Carrots should 2 | ways be‘cut in slices instead of, cube t}] Hecause “the darkér outstde’part _ ¥ ‘richer ‘and better in:flayor than‘ fl 1] Aighter-centrext: Tf.served in ‘cube |" somie would ‘not! get tHe choléer parts FROM A WOMAN'S VIEWPOINT + Thin Dresses*Made Warm. ‘The adoptlor'this season of the cha- mois sacque to go under the evening wrap Will make it possible to wear tulle, chiffon and organdie dresses in the depth of winter. The loose-Atting leather garment keeps out wind and cold to an amazing extent. -Its weight Js not great. Advice to Girls, ‘When a girl talks to a man on the street, and he leans up against @ wall while he tafks, that is the kind of a man to shake, and shake promptlySIt a man hasn't the energy to stand up without a wall to lean against, he hasn't enough enersy to male, him worthy of any girl's chase—Atchison Globe. Lace Gloves Queen's Fad. Real lace gloves, which will cost from 50 cents to $1 @ pair are neces- sary to thé society woman's wardrobe this season. Queen Alexandra of England 1s responsible for the fasb{on. She tired of the trouble in taking off the long kid glove, and disliked to peel it off at the wrist, tucking the hand portion under the upper part of the glove. The lace glove {s taken off easily. ‘dee: : Mewes: Mrs. W. J. Bryan can swim a mite. She Is a splendid walker. Ske rides a bicycle with ease. She can drive mettlesome korses and bake, cock: and sew. She knows how to keep house, and all her home expenses are record- ed, so that she knows from day to day and week to weck, how matters stanl. She Is well read, not only in current literature, but in the good things of the past—The Argonaut. Death for a Kiss. ‘The rules and regulations which en- viron unmarried ‘girls in France are exceptionally strict. when compared with those of England or America. On the other hand, compared with the social lows of Spain, I think those .of France are favorable to the jeune fille. I have personal knowledge of a cas¢ in which a young Spanish girl shot herself because she had been kissed by a young man and because— 4m consequence of this small indiscre- tfon—her life had been made unbear- able by her relatives—Paris corre- spondence the Madame, . Miscaains' and: Wott: «: For the year ending June 30, 1905, 301,585 women, nearly one-half of the number of men, came to this country. The great majority of these came here for work. Nineteen out of every one hundred native American women are engaged in gainful occupations, but thirty-two out of every one hundred foreign-born womtn are so engaged, and the percentge is increasing. In an Investibation of several thousand unmarried immigrant women and mar- ried immigrant women without chit dren-who had arsived within three years, fully 90 percent were found at Work or looking for work. Truth About Economy In Dress. ‘There {s something anterlor to the cutting and making of dresses at home (an-accepted, but not always a successful, form of economy); a some- thing anterlor to the remodejing of last year’s gowns, and to the study of the care of clothing, important though all these may be. It has to do with the practical understanding of econ- omy itself, It is a matter of the head rather than of the hand. In its relation to dress cconomy isn’t skimp- ing on material; it isn’t. making this or that old thing do; nor Is it living In pargain-bought shoddies or misfits and madeover things, and so being “more or less apologetic for one’s ap- pearance and inwardly saddened over it, even while bending in a spirit of resignation under the weight of work which certain economical sewing - methods often involve. Economy in dressiig, primarlly, 1 prudence. It is alert, prudent buying and careful planning, both of which presuppose an acquaintance with cur rent dress forms and current prices o! Gress materials. This acquaintance is an essential to economical dressing swhether the economy to be, practise ts one of calicoes or of silk. It Is nec essary that the woman who must be economical inform herself as to wha fs to be had, how jt is to be used afte she has purchas@d it, aud even how ; given garment Is td be put on once | becomes hers.—From the Specla | Pechion Number of Harper's Bazar. ‘The Spinster of Literature, Apropos of “The Neurotic Spinster of Literature,” Anne O'Hagan, who has been entertaining the readers of Harper's Bazar recently’ by some de- lightfully humorous and remarkably sane talks about spinsters, In the last pumber,of the Bazar vigorously de- fends her sisters from the imagination ‘of somé story writers. She says: ‘Maida, who has in her own family, constantly ready for the purposes of fnvestigation, a spitister who works some. six or elght hours a day at a calling which démands a measure of -ganity;‘a,spingter who eats her three “jneals a ‘@ay"“with excellent appetite and’ frequently supplementa’ them by a, fourth; -a ‘spinster who (devautl} thanking Heaven for, the great’ gift frbtoleescam shergrowste-oys the: strects thi trdes Wal id edat WW skzolehos of-the shorerinsmenzand: women, {1 books and weather, in fine~ ralment whea she can compass it, in bridge and shows and music and friendship, and all the rich, deep, joyous exper!- ences of daily life—my sister Malda, who has such a spinster, I say, under close observation and a score more Such under slightly more remote ob- servation, will read these maudlin tales of neurasthenic old maids, and will think that she bas discovered the true unexpressed attitude of mind of the whole class. “Victims of thwarted instincts! ‘There are those In all classes; assur- edly among unmarried women, But. they exist wherever mature women sit down to brood upon the difference be- tween what they yearn for and what the fates have vouchsafed them. What of the thwarted instincts of a child- less wife, of 2 neglected or abandoned wife? Or even of a successfully mar- ried woman who happens to have, in additicn to her traits as woman, tho fustinet for artiste creation, for sci- entific Investigation, for business. but who is by circumstances or by some social convention forced to deny these their outlet? If, in real life, we all went about making tragedies of all our thwarted Instincts, this world would soon resemble the stage at the close of ‘Hamlct’ And if in the casual lit- erature of amusement we arg.going to celebrate thwarted Instincts, in pity’s name do not let us make the busy, re- spectable spinster class bear the whole burden of the exposition! Near- ly two thousand years of civilization and convention have really trained her to hear her lot with decorum, and even with forgetfulness of its draw: backs!” ‘The Proaress of Woman. timental standpoint, doing one’s own work 1s the most wasteful possible form—next to having man and woman do it separately,” writes Charlotte Perkins Gilman in the Woman's Home Companion. “This sounds like nonsense, no doubt, to the conscl- entious housekeeper, who knows that she cannot 4fford a servant, much less ap expert. “But Instead of looking st the ques- tion from a strictly personal stand- point, let her look“at it for a moment collectively. Wealth is made by hu- man labor applied to materlals. The more expert the labor, the more wealth tt produces. The better organ- ized and specialized the labor, the more wealth it produces. Society grows in wealth, erse, lelsure, power and Intelligence, as it devélops from self Industry to world industry. Very well, In fifty families we have fitty men and fifty women—a hundred units of wealth-producing labor. Now sup- pose—just for a contrast—that these fifty women all work at some trade earning a dollar and a half a day— nine dollars asweck, and that all the men were only housekeepers to the women—cooking, sweeping, washing, caring for the children, for no wages. ‘The family income would be nine dol- lars a Week—and both parties work- ing all the time. We can see ata glance what @ loss of wealth is in- volved. ’ “Those men, we cry, would earn more than one dollar and fifty cents a day if they were free to specialize, to develep thelr various talents, to com- bine, organize, serve one another and their families at the same tlme. Let the men earn the money and the wom- en do the housework. “go we usually have the-reverse of the picture; the men earning from one dollar and fifty cents to four or five dolars or more a day, a much-In- creased average Income, and improved service—the men's service, that fs. “Now, these fifty women represent potential wealth as well as the ‘men. While each of them works all day in the house for no wages, sbaring the income of her husband, {s {t not possi- ble that she might be working at some special labor she preferred? We continually forget that all women dc not like home work nor all kinds o| housework equally, and that each fam iy 1s obliged to put up with inferlor | service in some particular. | “Some women have a special genlu: | tor generat management; such migh! manage inthe housekeeping business }|in this utopian future we are jooking '| at, and be wel paid for it. Some Mk "}to cook and can cook well. Thess [could tearn the beautiful art to it ‘fullest, and cook for appreclativi numbers. Some Ike to clean, ant +|coutd learn the laundry business— ‘|tearn it all—and provide for eac! group of patrons beautiful laundr: work of keep the house antisepticall Clean. Some have esprcial talen with bables and children, and. coul :| undoubtedly develop that ~ talent, t >| the probable advantage of our som: {| times mishandled infancy. -| “By such division each woman, sp y | clalfzing, would iniprove the quality c t | her labor and add to Its market value -| she would serve more people, serv n| them better, and be paid more. “But here we are pulled up sho! ,\against a blank wall. Habits as o) t | a3 history are not to be overridden’ s|a day. Prejudices far older than bi ay tory cannot bo blown aside like feat f|ers. We object to such a change j 2 | this. “We do not want it. We ster el ty disapprove of it, I honestly b y | lieve, however, that social prosre ly, | along this iin’ cannot be-permanent t)'| stopped.” We can hang*back ahd 3; |our, heels in=Uke, tsulky- child, b es | Mother Nature draga ‘uaon relet ae es General Demand of the Well-Informed, of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and eficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; laxative which physicians could sanetion for family use because ite com- ponent parts oro-known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet pronipt, in action, a” In supplying that demand with its ex- cellent “combination of Syrup of Figs and Blixir of Senna, tho California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds slong ethical lines and relies on the merits of tholaxative for its remark- able success. ‘That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leaditly druggists. Price fifty cente per bottle. © GA.-ALA, BUSINESS COLLEGE § MACON, Ga. a Mew Managerat est Expect Fascly }FINEST POSITIONS ‘‘AMERICA’S BEST** WRITE FOR CATALOGUE F PORATABLE AND STATIONARY AND BOILERS Baw, Lath, and Shingle Mille, Injectors, Setipbama Fitness Wood ews, Bptitters- BAERS Wulieye Belting: Gasoline Hogines: uncsrocx LOMBARD, fFoundsy, Mackiny and Bailer Works asd Supply Sto, AUGUSTA, GA. gra CURED a= Giver a we Qulek % Relief Dab, nemores ail swetiiag in 81029 A ol igtsis todays Praiceatment ‘ss Tepe liienirce Rechingean betairer QMS Wrrce Dr. HH. Green's Sons. se MA A Se tte Aetna hghors CURES SFE et COLDS AND GRIPPE ss.) 35 pod retotigeingcsirli dat a | onaaches and Rretee te (Raat HOW IT WORKS. Kaleker—Opportunity knocks ‘once at every door. ‘Booker—And the fellow who was out knocks ever ‘after—New York Sun. ’ FIVE MONTUS IN HOSPITAL. Discharged Because Doctors Could . Not Cure. Levi P. Brockway, 4. Second Ave., Anoka, Minn. says:, “After lying for five months in a hospital 1 was dls- charged as ineura~ ble, and given only six months to live. My heart was affect- ed, 1 had amother- ing spells and some- times fell urcon- scious, 1 got so f couldn't use my arme, my eyesight ‘aan imenivet. ana SOE Be en ere gOPX posvital 1 was dis Gea. charged as incura- ive. _ \ ble, and given only eesieR | cis’ montte to live. Ux. 3) My heart was aftect- AGE J ed, 1 had smother Ne ing spells and some- MG times fell urcon- PZ Wry scious. 1 got so £ ie pe couldn't use my SN arme, my eyesight - " ‘was impaired and the kidney secretions wero badly dis- ordered, 1 was completely worn aut and discouraged when I began using Doan’e Kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have beer feeling well ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a bor. “Foster-Milburn Co,, Buftalo, N. ¥. PROHIBITION. Physiclan—You must not eat be tween, meals. ‘Boarder—Dut - that is the only chance I get—Now York Bun. Mrs, Winslow'sSoothing Syrup tor Children tecthing,softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion, alias pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottla + RAD TASTE. “Does Barker's wife dress appro~ priately?” No, tadeed. - She wears forty horsepower togs in a runabout—Life. re 1a 034 Days. Ointment is teed fo cure any easeof I! Blind, leeding. See yaormeney felunded 238 GOOD SIGN. Blobbs—Snobbs has sworn of smoking, I guess. Dobbe—How do you know? Blobbe—I saw him Kicking the dog this morning—Cloveland Leader. = Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’ eth Srsids Saint. Mac aruaeaes As to Powere of Vision. The best eyesight 1s possessed by those poople whore lands are vast and'barren, snd where obstacles tend- ing to shorten the sight are few. Eski- mos -will detect a white fox in the snow at a great distance. The Arabs of the deserts of Africa have puch ‘extreme powers of vision that on the ‘yast plains of the desert they will pick out obfects invisible to the ordinary: eye at ranger: of, from one to ‘ten Filles. Among. .clvilised peoples the Norwegians bare the.best eyeelaste Be Oa cg SER ety The Pulpit A SERMON BY THE REV HRAW HENDERSON Theme: The Bible. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Welfrield street, on the above theme, the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took as his text Is.40:8: "The Word of our God shall stand forever." He said: This has been an age of criticism of the Scriptures. There has never been a time in the history of Christianity when the Bible was more searchingly examined and the truthfulness of its facts as presented more questioned than in the days through which we have passed and are passing. The written truth of the dyline revelation has been put to severe tests. Its foundations have been analyzed. Its superstructure has been sounded. Its conclusions have been negatived and its very fabric has seemingly been destroyed. Some of us have feared that its permanence has been threatened, its influence curtailed, its contents in some measure expunged. Criticism has been strenuous in its handling of the Bible. Far more strenuous than some of us have thought advisable. Far more strenuous than many of us have thought justifiable, necessary or wise. Under the combined influence of a new science, a larger view of history, a more comprehensive geography, the tests of the validity and value of the Scriptures have been changed and the content of the Word of God has been differently considered than customarily. It has shocked many a soul, this process. It has brought many a layman and many a minister to the tide of the ocean of doubt and distrust and of spiritual uncertainty. But it has been done. Whether we have liked it or no the light has been turned on. It has incidentally been turned on much that was the foolishness of immature scholarship masquerading under the guise of wisdom. The criticism of the Scriptures has created a widespread distrust of the whole Book of God. It has upset theology. It has removed many of the old foundations for our belief in the inspiration of the Word and of the divinity of Jesus Christ. Sadly in many quarters it has undermined faith. But that has been rather because men have lacked the power to make sense and because they have mistaken facts for human development and interpretation of the same because the Scriptures have been scientifically studied and the light of the spirit honestly and helpfully turned on. Actually there has been little cause for alarm. Because we test the water is no guarantee that it is contaminated. Because we put acid to our silver is no surety that it is only plated. Because we take the invitation of the Almighty and try Him and His Word is no reason why we should fear that either or both are frauds. Because we study the Word carefully invites no presumption that it will not be able fully to meet all our questions and successfully to elucidate all our perplexities and to justify itself. The Bible is not a book for dummies. It is the mechanically preserved Word of a living God who through the long ages has spoken to living men and who yet speaks. It is for men of intelligence who are alive. And it invites the inquiry of live and intelligent men. There is and has been no cause for alarm. For theology and religion are not the same thing. A very religious man may have a very atrocious theology. And while it is always best to express our religious knowledge and experiences in the best theological formulae that we may be able to devise, it is always possible, humanity being what it is, that we may not be able to express in words the exact consciousness of our minds and souls. A man's theology will change, if he be a live and intelligent man, with the maturing and magnifying of his religious experiences. And if our theology is effective to relate our spiritual and moral experiences, if our creeds do not correctly reveal our thoughts, there is no reason in the world why we should not do as our fathers before us have done and change our creeds, our formulated theologies. Creeds are necessary as an expression of religious consciousness. It were folly to scoff them. But they should be plastic. They should grow with our growth and expand with our expansion. And so if investigation of the Scripture has reald the ground for our belief in the inspiration of the Word of God we should not be fearful. For it has made the foundation but more intelligible and truthful to the minds of men of to-day. It has not destroyed the fact of inspiration. It has simply changed our major ground of belief therein. The Word is as inspired as it ever was. No theological statement, however, learned or carefully worded, can alter the fact. If the examination of the Scripture has restated the grounds for our belief in the divinity of Christ, it has been simply to intensify our intellectual acceptance of the fact of His divineness. For He who was the fullness of grace and truth depends not on any theological formula for demonstration or justification. For He was divine ere men began to prove Him so. We ought to be thankful that the test has come. For out of the fire has emerged a stronger faith in the inspired.Word of God, a clearer comprehension of the reasons for our faith. And it were worth while to go through fire and through flood to secure that. Gospelism has eliminated many a perplexity. It has clarified much of the obscurity of the scripture records. It has brought the testimony of the four ends of the earth to the substantiation of the accuracy in every essential part of God's most Holy Word. It has given us a larger knowledge. - It has given us a surer knowledge. Except, for those who were nearest to the events that are chronled in Scripture, there has been none more accurately informed, so far as we have light concerning the facts of Scripturethan are we to-day. The more I read of the researches and results achieved by critical students of the Bible and of the lands with which it intimately associates itself the more am I convinced that the investigation is worth whatever it may cost and that it is providential. And I am also convinced that we would do well to go slow about discounting the opinions concerning the Scripture and the facts therein recited that have been held true in days long past. It is a good thing that we should remember that the sum of human wisdom is not resident in us and that our forefathers were not fools. This is an intensely critical and scientific age. It demands proof and evidence that heretofore was not deemed necessary or reverent. But the more we read and hear the more we are led to believe that the fathers, in not so informed and scientific an age, were not so deluded when they accepted on faith that for which we demand proof. For we get the proof when we ask for it, so it would seem, and it is very largely confirmatory of the past. The gates of hell cannot prevail against the Bible. For it is the truthful record of the largest longings, the wickedest sins, the most delightful religious exaltations of individuals and a people. Its human interest is superb. It meets our lives at every point. It has comfort for the sorrowing, peace for the afflicted, inspiration for the heavy-hearted, enthusiasm for the discouraged, admonition for the wicked, salvation for the penitent. The farmer feels its vitality, the shepherd acknowledges its appeal, the rich man learns its lessons, the poor man thanks God for itsocracy. It is the book of the people, for it is redolent with the life of the people. And wherever there is a soul in torment, wherever there is a man who mourns, wherever there is a woman with a broken heart, wherever there is a mind in gloom, or a body that is racked with pain, there will the Bible be and be enjoyed. For it radiates the deeper she speaks to honesty of the deepest things, life it warns us of the congenues of evil and the satisfacions of righteousness. The Bible's as intelligible to youth as to old age. It has a message for all. It can charm a boy with its heroes as a man with its profound philosophy. It can animate a girl as it can inspire and intensify a woman's love for God. And it does these things. And because it does it will never grow stale or profitless or valueless. It will ever stand. "The Word of our God shall stand forever." It is eternal. It is not the creature of time. It is the child of eternity. And it would stand forever if for no other reason than that it unfolds the earthly history of the incarnate God. So long as the Bible speaks of Christ as the one or he is its inspiration. The development Him its mission. And so long as men shall sin and need salvation, so long as souls shall turn to God in Christ for aid, so long will men love the Scripture and magnify its force. Shallow thinkers may enlarge the difficulties that inhere within the Scripture. Bad men may quote it for their evil ends. Foolish men may twist its meanings and assure us of its fallibility. But the Bible will stand. It will stand forever. And when we are gone and the countless generations that shall follow us have come and gone the long way in our steps the Bible will be here. For it is the Word of the Lord. Let us never forget it! And it shall endlessly perdure. A Rise by Self-Sacrifice. Enough has been gaid of the fall by self-ill to show us that man must rise by self-sacrifice. To grow this passion within him were all the sacrifices to which God led him in his weary history. More and more nearly did God reveal Himself unto man, until in the self-sacrifice of Calvary the heart of man was taken and God's self-sacrifice began the life of self-sacrifice in humanity. "The glory of God and of the Lamb is light thereof." Enough has been said of the city—its divine socialism—to show that to reach it each man must begin to live for others, that his whole life must be a life of meekness and burden-bearing. God through the ages revealed Himself as the bearer of man's burdens and by this revelation lifted men slowly to a life of mutual helpfulness, until at last in the sin-bearer He disclosed Himself as the victim of Calvary. The future social organization after that could have no other light but that of the glory of God in the slain Lamb. Enough has been said of holiness in man—of saithood—to show that the city of God will be inhabited—if it is the Holy City—by those who have met with foes and vanquished them, by those who have known the cross before they saw the crown. I look into John's vision and hear the unuttered philosophy of spiritual power, as the redeemed come home. First, the new heavens, then the new earth, Vision, then action. Men like colonists who have now and then graced them a vision of how things ought to be and ideal, in the land of which they are from beyond. By and by they get there the reality comes out of them to meet the reality which ever hath been there. So by His spirit we put into our hearts the idea of the brotherhood of man, under God, in Christ Jesus—Dr. F. A. Gausulaus. "Poor. Yet Making Many Rich." The Church Times gives an interesting little account of a poor girl, blind and deaf, an inmate of a North Devon workhouse, who "lives a life of prayer in her darkness and solitude." To this afflicted one the initiative, of the organization of the Missionary Candidates' Fund of the S. P. G. may be traced. That fund now has reached the sum, of over £3000, subscribed in a comparatively short time, the first item being the three shillings saved by the blind girl. The writer of the notice says: "She was in a little bare ward in the workhouse when I saw her, looking very sad because her Braille copy of the Mission Field had been torn. She asked me to pray for her, and then told us not only to pray for missions, but also for the parish, for Sunday-schools and Bands of Hope, etc.; and one, felt rebuked as one thought of her life of prayer, always thinking of and interceding for others in her darkness and silence." London Christian. Despite the heroic sacrifice of nearly 100 square inches of skin' by Geo. 100 square inches of. skin by Geo. Klottenbucher, his four-year-old son, Emil, died today of burns received a year ago while playing with a toy street car with a lighted candle inside. The father, after submitting to the ordeal of having the large section of epidermis removed from his limbs to be grafted on the injured child's flesh, was taken violently ill and nearly died, being in a serious condition for months. The case aroused much interest, and many people offered to contribute, but the father insisted on doing it all himself. The skin taken from his limbs covered the child's right, side and right arm, but the wounds did not heal properly—Lafayette (Ind.) Dispatch to Cincinnati Enquirer. HAS HELP Bardlets: "Married life affords me no inspiration for song. How do you find I¢ Does it give you any impetus in your work?" Rhymeit: "I should say so. My wife makes $6 a week doing washing."—Chicago News. FRANK J. CHENKY makes coth that he is senor partner of the firm of J. K. CHENKY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforeseen, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATARNIR that cannot be cured by the use of HALY'C CATARNIR CURK. FRANK J. CHENKY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D., 1886. (SEAL.) A. W. GLEASON. (SEAL.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure istaken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonial, free. F. J. CHENRY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 766. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Jewel for Child Heroine. Ethel Johnson, a child heroine of the Columbia disaster, has received a magnificent butterfly of gold and diamonds from an unknown admirer. It was taken to the home of R. R. Dingle, where the little girl is stopping, on Saturday, by a jewelry store employee. There was no note of explanation, no signature, telling who was the sender of so magnificent a gift, merely the words "From a Portland admirer." Little Ethel Johnson saved two lives in the Columbia disaster. She rescued her child companion, Effie Gordon and held her above water until taken aboard a lifeboat. While struggling with her companion a man who could scarcely swim was also saved by her. He seized hold upon her and was also held above the water by her childish efforts. Perhaps this man sent the present. — Portland correspondence Seattle Times. Taylor's Cherokeo Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullion is Nature's great remedy—cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. The "lid" hat will not be greatly different from the lid of other seasons—a plain, flat rain-shield like a buck-wheat cake, with little pretense of ornamentation, and stuck on at any angle whatever. Embroidery of all descriptions will play an important part in coming modes. Even the stout figure can wear the Empire, hence its general popularity. Exquisite scarfs are in mousselline or other delicate fabrics, edged with a border of marabout feathers. They match the evening gown. A toque of purple velvet with wide spreading wings of the same shade has a band of handworked embroidery in shades of orange and green round the brim. A shooting suit is of green and red homespun, the coat of which has three-expanding pleats on each side, and a long basque fitted into a waistband. Tallored collars are often embroidered in brald or decorated with velvet hems. SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS With Eczema—Her Limb Peeled and Foot Was Raw—Thought Amputation' Necessary—Belleves Her Life Saved by Cuticura. "I have been treated by doctors for twenty-five years for a bad case of eczema on my leg. They did their best, but failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At this time my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot was like a piece of raw flesh, and I had to walk on crutches. I bought a set of Cuticura Remedies. After the first two treatments the swelling went down, and in two months my leg was cured and the new skin came on. The doctor was surprised and said that he would use Cuticura for his own patients. I have now been cured over seven years, and but for the Cuticura Remedies I might have lost my life. Mrs. J. B. Renaud, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que., Feb. 20, 1907." ONE METHOD: "I can take one drink and stop." "Um." "In fact, I invariably do." "in fact, I invariably do." "Don't you ever buy in return?"— Washington Herald. DODGES. Tommy—Pa, what is a hypochondriae? Pa—Johnny, how often have I told you not to use bad words?—Somenville Journal. "I'd like to see the cashier," said the bank depositor. "So would I," replied the president of the bank, "but he's out of town." "Ah, gone for a rest, I presume?" said the bank depositor. "No," answered the bank president; "he went to avoid arrest."—Chicago News. FTTS, St. Vitus' Dance; Nervous Diseases permanently curbed by Dr. Kline's Great Nervus Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. B. Klinn Ld. 831 Arch St., Phila, Pa. A KIND WORD. "So you don't share the general indignation toward the railways?" "No," answered Farmer Cornosell; "I have always felt that a locomotive was entitled to a great deal of credit for sticking to the track instead of snorting up and down the country roads like an automobile."—Washington Star. . Only One "Bromo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Use this World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 22c. Calls Men Food Faddists. Men who say women are inclined to spend their leisure hours discussing clothes and scandal are now being "got back at" by an Englishwoman. Mrs. J. D Hay Shaw says that to the average man the question as to what form of nourishment will best meet the approval of his digestive apparatus is a source of never-falling interest and anxiety, and as a topic of conversation it never falls to enthrall his attention. There are few men who have not pet theories on the subject of food in general, and their own food in particular, Mrs. Shaw says. It is among his own sex that the food faddist finds his most enthusiastic disciples.—New York Press. BABY EASE TRADE HARK THE Worlds Best Baby Medicine Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions, Colic, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Worms, Allays Perturbations, Good, It Aids Digestion. It Makes TEXTING Easy, Promotes Cheerfulness and Produces Natural Sleep. Reilable Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sizes. Wheat Separators. BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH DIST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH. Large Enginees and Bollers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Enginees & Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. UNFORTUNATE is the man or woman who, loving a good dinner, must curb their appetite through fear of after consequences. Parsons' Pills are an aid to digestion, insure assimilation of food, and make hearty eating possible without distress or regrets. Price 25c, five bottles $1. All druggists. 1. S. JOHNSON & CO., Erosia, Mass. $150.00 BUYS INTELLIGENT "Let us see. Private Girellini, if you have quite understood what are the four points of the compass. Now the east is in front of you, at your left the north, at your right the south; what is behind you?" "My knapsack, captain."—Translated from II Motto per Ridere. FREE A POSTAL FROM YOU And We Will Send Free, to Prove That it is the Most Effective External Cure for Rheumatic Pains and Aches, a Large BOTTLE OF MINARD'S KING OF PAIN LINIMENT Confident that it will do for you what it has done for others, and that to use it is to praise it, as does the writer of the following grateful letter: "With muscular rheumatism I suffered to the extent that even to control the pen held in my right hand was impossible at times. On one such day I first used Minard's Liniment. No indorsement could come from a worse sufferer or more grateful heart than mine. G.W.D'Vys, Cambridge, Mass." Send a postal to Minard's Liniment Co., So. Framingham, Mass. LARGEST PLANT & TRUCK The Ferguson Smith Premier typewriter and fine roll-top desk HAND is 100 per cent ahead of any of the old the time. EVERY GRADUATE IN A C addresses of those interested in a business co. Address THE FERG COLUMBUE, GA. PLANTS THAT WILL Early Jersey Wakefield Charleston Larre Type Wakefield Hend Success I am located on one of the Sea Island just sufficient cold to harden and cause setting out in the colder sections. I guarantee points very low. PRICES: 1,000 to 5,000 at Special prices on large lots. Send your order to E. W. TOWNE Intograph office, Fergus's island, S. T. Martin's P. A BOTTLE WILL BREAK YOUR CHILLS Wintu CHILLS Cures Chills AND Malarial Fevers 50c and $1 I am located on one of the Sea Islands of South Carolina, our climate is mild, just sufficient cold to harden and cause plants to stand severe freezing after receiving a $100 price satisfaction or money refunded. Express rates to all points please online. **Price:** 1,000 to $1,300 at $130; 5,000 to $9,000 at $125; and over at $100. Special prices on large lots. **Send your order to:** AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the ties of Open Air Grown, Cabbage Plat 4,000 at $1.50 per thousand; 5,000 to 9,000 Meggett, B. G. All orders promptly fill prices on 50,000 or 100,000. Cash accompany Address B. L. MULE TEAM BO FOR THE Not only softens the water, but removes and prevents the ouc irritation and renders the skim Soap clogs the pores—Borax removes th All dealers. 10-litre pkgs, and 3 lt. boxes. Sample, Boo PACIFIC I AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the world with any of the best known varieties of Open Air Grown. Cabbage Plants at the following prices, viz. 1,000 to 4,000 at $1.50 per thousand; 5,000 to 9,000 at $1.25; 10,000 or more at $0.0. F. O. B. Meggrett, B. C. All orders promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed. Ask for prices on 50,000 or 100,000. Cash accompanying all orders or they will go C. O. D. Address B. L. COX, Ethel S. C., Box 8. MULE TEAM BORAX Not only softens the water, but cleans the skin thoroughly, removes and prevents the odor of perspiration, soothes irritation and renders the skin fresh, soft and velvety. re those Gra Dressing and Restorer Price DOT BE A CARRIAGE HEAD B. L. COX ETHEL. S. C. BOX 8 ```markdown ``` Ohl Papa don't forget to buy a bottle of CHENBY'S EXPECTORANT for your little girl. You can buy it at any Drug Store and you know it never falls to cure my Croup and Cough. FREE Do not try to any woman with a paxtine Antisepsil will improve her health and do all we claim send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtine with book of instructions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. PAXTINE cleanses mucous membranes, such as nasal catarrh, phthisis catarrh and inflammation caused by paxtine lilis; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its curative power over these troubles is extraordinary, and gives insufficiency. Thousands of women are using and recommending it every day. 50 cents at drugstores or by mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TOKYO. THE I. LA PAXTINE CO., Boston, Mass. yf’ A HAPPY NEW YEAR. e 7 - oe - Be a eX Pr EN SS hg cur, |eras: Sl AG omy = CD FREE NE a CG PEs 3, Suttle EEN EIR EDF fa fae 5 ES NEN [lS Gagan | Rips ei SG Rs eee) LO Sok sg II Agel) ee iP aa: Lt z Pose CaM anes Pag eee AY) «PES mie: Ce CREA EE SES s ac keh. SiG 5 ee Ve, eemtemeeag att - RE ae eas Vein Ae 7 Pegg WL ; eG. ae en ae ¥ ees be 1 Spee ee “Agee ae on ety 4 f : ‘Cn Errata Bea Co Th ! Aen oS has of LEN 4 ak se 7A oN ee A ee ee A ee Gees SS : 7 ARS FeO OO 2G SS Cee eros . AT THE YEAR'S END. By Ctinton ‘Scotlard. ¢: At the year’s end one saw before him “Am that fair faith you cherished, precious 3, rise wise.” = ~Epantesma Lave thnt once'sou dated’ "He met their glances, levelly. aware, wand the sesond Tad, whe mocking That cach ball ittered naught save truth, “Am that’ ambition which, in epledidid , He fell po amarting of remorse’s stings. Ee 7 ’Tis thas with those brave souls who, stair Bot B day and night Was ever by your posts ta Bove atl #4. , At Co third exclatned raneenehinr, ecend, the yearn, above all vai reerel, Being until July 4th, the 132d year of the Independence of the United States of America, and corresponding nearly to The year 1326 of the Mohammedan ora, beginning Feb. 4th. - The year A. M. 8017 of the Greek Church, beginning Jan. 14 (0. 8.). The year 4605 of the Chineso era, beginning Feb. 2. % The year 5668-9 of the Jewish era, Sept, 26 or at sunset Sept. 25. The. year 2668 of the Japanese era, beginning Feb. 2. . The Year 5908 A. L. (Masonic). . Tho year 2661 A. U. G. (of Rome): The year 5912 of the World (Usher). : The year 7416 of the World (Septuagint). ; 1808 IS A BISSEXTILE OR LEAP YEAR. ? 5 “Moon is thée-Reigning Planet This Year. CARDINAL POINTS. “Verni-Eufilitx, entrance of the Sun Into Arles, March 20th, at 7 o'clock in the eventag. . ; Summer Solstice, entrance of the Sun Into Cancer, June fist, at 3 d'clock: in the evening. is Autumnal Equinox, entrance of the Sun Into Libra, September 234, at 6 o'clock in tho morning. : : ‘Winter Solstice, entrance of the Suz {nto Capricorn, December 224, at 1 +__ Glock iu the morning. : jy a . 7 Inu THE, SEASONS. aioe Washingion Mean Time. e DOH, OM D. HM, December ......22— 6—36p.m. Winter degins and lasts..89—,0—35 March ......'..20— T—11p.m. Spring begins and Jasta. .92—19—52 Juno .... ,...21— 3— 3p.m. Summer begins and lasts.93—14—39 Beptember .7°..23— 5—42.a.m. Autumn begins and lasts,89—18—35 December ...1122— 0—17a.m. Winter beg. Trop. Year.365— 5—A1 dD FH, MM. D HK. M, December ......22— 6—36 p.m. Winter degins and lasts..89—, 0—35 March ...... ..20— 7—1ip.m. Spring begins and Jasts. .92—19—52 June .... »+.-21— 3— 3p.m. Summer begins and lasts. 93—14—39 September .< ..23— 6—42a.m. Autumn begins and lasts. 89—18—~35 December .. ...22—- 0—17a.m. Winter beg. Trop. Year.365— 5—41 q ECLIPSES FOR ‘THE YEAR 1908. EF ‘ ‘There will be three eclipses of the Sun this year and one Luna Apulse. I, The first will be a total ecl:pse of the Sun on the 3d of January, Invisible in America, visible on the Pacific Ocean. If, The second will be an annular or ringform eclipse of the Sun on the 28th of June, visible, in part, In the United States. -The eclipse will be annular in Tampa, Florida, and on the Bermuda Islands. The begin- ning will be at 9 o'clock 27 minutes {n the forenoon; the end at 12 o'clock 41 iniutes at noon. (Washington time.) Ill, The third fs an cclipse of the Sun on the 22d and 23d of Decem- ber, invisible in North America, visible on the Atlantic Ocean and in the eastern part of South America. ¢ i: MORNING AND EVENING STARS. f° There will be three ectipses of the Sun this year snd one Lune Apalse. I. Tho first will be a total ecl:pse of the Sun on the 3d of January, Invisible in America, visible on the Pacific Ocean. II, The second ‘will be an annular or ringform eclipse of the Sun on the 28th of June, visible, in part, in the United States. -The eclipse will be annular tn Tampa, Florida, and on the Bermuda Islands. The begin- ning will be at 9 o'clock 27 minutes fn the forenoon; the end at 12 o'clock 41 Infhutes at noon. (Washington time.) Ill. The third fs an cclipse of the Sun on the 22d and 23d of Decem- ber, invisible in North America, visible on the Atlantic Ocean and in the eastern part of South America. z he MORNING AND EVENING STARS. Morning Stars. Evening Stars. Vonus after July. “PVenus until July 5. o Mars after, August 22. Mars until August 22. . Jupiter until January 29, after Au-| Jupiter after January 29, uitll Au gust 17. gust 17. é Saturn after February 29, until Sep-|Saturn until February 29, after.Sep tember 30. tember 30. Mercury until January 14; February | Mercury, January 14 until Februar 28 until May 7; July 4 until Au-|- 28; May 7 until July 4; August 2( gust 20; October 28 untll ‘Decem-| unttl October 28; after Decembr: ber 11. 11. st —— PLANETS’ GREATEST BRILLIANCY. Mercury—February 13, Junv 7, October 4, sets in“the evening after the Sun and rises in the morning before the Sun} March 27, July 25, No- vember. Jupiter—January 29. Venus—May 29, August 7. Saturn—September 30. MOVABLE FEASTS AND CHURCH DAYS.. PLANETS’ GREATEST BRILLIANCY. Mercury—February 13, Junv 7, October 4, sets In-the evening after the Sun and rises in the morning before the Sun} March 27, July 25, No- vembert33. Jupiter—January 29. Venus—May 29, August 7, Saturn—September 30. MOVABLE FEASTS AND CHURCH DAYS.. Septuagesima Sunday, February 16. | Trinity Sunday, Juno 14. Sexagesima Sunday, February 23. - | Corpus Christ{, June 13. Quinquagesima Sunday, March 1. Thanksgiving Day, on fourth or las Shrove Tuesday, March’. Thursday in November, as Pres ‘Ash Wednesday, or first day of Lent,| dent may appolnt. March 4. First Sunday in Advent, Novembe Quadragesima Sunday, March 8. um 29. = Mid Lent, March 26. Sundays after Trinity are-23 th Palm Sunday, April 12. : year. Good Biaay Apaith oe ‘riday, Aprii 17. ‘Baster Sunday, April 19. ‘Quatember or Ember Dayo. ‘Low Sunday, April 26, Ist. On 11, 13 and 14 of March. ‘Rogation Sunday, May 21. 2d. On 10, 12 and 13 of June. ‘Ascension Day, May 28. 3d. On 16, 18 and 29 of September Whit Sunday, June 7. 4th, On 16, 18 and 14 of December. ee: ee te. ic et meee ee ee ne oe Nn emeeae e eeee e k Automobile record for mile on circular track, by Walter Christie, 52 seconds. Swimming record for 100 yards, by Charles Daniels, 55 2-5 seconds. Horse running record, one mile and an eighth, by Charles Edward, at Brighton /Beach, 1.50 3-5. “Shooting record, by Captain Hardy, who broke 13,066 fiying targets. Homing pigeon’ makes average speed of 1612 yards per minute for 600 miles. 7 : _ Thompson's Colts bowling team (five men) rolled a 2853 score for three games. ‘Balph Rose, John Flanagan, Martin Sheridan, George Bonhag and Melvin Sheppard all-broke athletic records: * : Fastest time on snow shoes, 47m. 203, + Longest ski jump, 114 feet. Z SO 75 Lives Lost In the Alps. Seventy-one Hunters Kitted, ~ and 350 Other Mishaps fn 1907. During Season of 1907. * JLondon.—Ofiicial statistics Just {s-] {hicago. — Seventy-one persons sued supply the death rate in 1901 |were killed—most of them by care- toe te misadventure in the Jtallan, |lessness—during the hunting season “gwisd-und Austrian Alps, The'num-jof 1907. This is slightly below the rher'@f lives lost was neyenty- BG, the |record for 1305. “majority being Swiss and Germans.| Thé number of injured In 1907, Next eave tho British_and after ther'| however, is Jn excess of ‘that of the ‘the: 'g.- There were 350 serlous|season ‘before, elghty-one hunters peel ee having. been Jotirt' in 1907, compared Ba let catse.of the fatallty was | with only-seventy during 1906. - — Vyeothardipess;sswhich, is becoming} 1n Wisconsin; Michigan ‘and MMin- » mordsprevaientyevery:.year, in at-|nesota fifty persons lost their lives ta “tempting’ascents withguta guide. . [19077 . * 0 ‘Venus until July 5. o Mars until August 22. < Jupiter after January 29, until Au- gust 17. 3 Saturn until February 29, after Sep- tember 30. Mercury, January 14 until February + 28; May 7 until July 4; August 20 until October 28; after Decembor | aL :ST BRILLIANCY. October 4, sets Inthe evening after ore the Sun} March 27, July 25, No- Venus—May 29, August 7, RD CHURCH DAYS.. Trinity Sunday, Juno 14. 7 Corpus Christf, June 18. Thanksgiving Day, on fourth or last ‘Thursday in November, as Presi- dent may appoint. miret Sunday in Advent, November Sundays after Trinity are-23 this year. Quatember or Ember Days. Ist. On 11, 13 and 14 of March. 2d. On 10, 12 and 13 of June. $d. On 16, 18 and 19 of-September. 4th. On 16, 18 and 1% of December. AMAAAAAAAAAAAAALA A: * er a a AMONG THE MASONS,. A a 7 “ A AAAAAAAAALAAAAADA St. John's Day was generally observ: ed by; the brothers throughout the state. = 7 Brother George A. Willlams at Bat. ler informed us that he and the breth- ren had a glorious time along with the Grand Master, last week, The breth- ren of the other lodges envy Brother Willlams on account of, his honored visitor. Let each brother ‘In the jurisdfetion resolve to be more dutiful and loyal to their lodges and the order during the year than ever before. This reso- lution would be a good’ ond to keep land carry out,. We intend making the Masonic Col- umn one of the features of The Trib- une, and to do so we request the sup- port f-each lodge in the state. You can support-us by getting the mem- bers > subscribe, and those who are in arrears for their subscription—they can help us by paying up, and again you can help us by sending in short land pointed articles about the work- ings of your lodge. The lodges in Savannah held a joint installation on St, John’s night. The officers were installed by Past” Grand Master J. H, Deveaux, assisted by Grand Secretary Johnson. After the installation several of the brethren spoke encouragligly about the work, and admonished the brethren -on to greater efforts. After closing the brethren were invited to the second floor where the committee had prepar- led Ught refreshments, The officers lof the following lodges were instdlled: Eureka No. 1G. L. Binyard, W. M.; James Wilson, S, W.; Robert Neal, J. W.; I. Binyard, Treas.; Sol C. John- son, Sec,; J. A. Monroe, S. D.; M. Bedgood, J. “D.; Simon Roberts, 8, D.; D, J. Hamilton, J. S.; G. W. Stewart, Chaplain; William .Carson, Marshal; Robert S. Smith, Tyler. Pythagoras No. 11—F. M. Cohen, W. M; F. B. Pettie, S. W.; D. D. Mills, J. W.; J. H. Hooker, Treas; ©. A. McDowell, Sec!; L. J. Robinson, S. D.; W. T. Winn, J. D.; Jesse Randall, S. S.; J. S. Reynolds, J. S.; Rev. L. L. Blair, Chaplain; J. C, Williams, Marshal; J. A, Mills, Tyler. Mt. Moriah No. 15—C. W, Swinton, W. M.; W. H, Burgess, S. W.; Fred Richardson, J. W.; L. M., Mongin, Treas.; Geo. W. Green, Sec.;*J. A. Da- vis, S. D.; J. P. Garnett, J. D.; J. W. Smalls, S. S.; S. G. Goss, J. S.; Rev. P. M. Hunter, Ciaplain; J. Fer- guson, Marshal; Samuel Cage, Tyler. Sanctorum No, 22—D. Pringle, W. M.; Willigm Boyd, S. W.; John Woods, J. W.; G. L. Bowen, Treas.; William Chisholm, Sec.; Willis Branch, S. D.; Warren’ Evans, J. D.; R. Winthrop, S. S.; Willlam Thurman, J, S.; B. J. Houston, Chaplain; F. Cobb, Marshal; M. Jones, Tyler” Prince Hall No. 28—W. T. Davis, W. M.; Thomas Jones, S. W.; Grant Ba- con, J. W.; M. J. Garey, Treas.; B. J. Roberts, Sec.; F. Allen, S. D.; ‘L. Palmer, J. D.; Toney Palmer, S. S.; Abram McQueen, J. §.; Andrew Jack- son, Chaplain; -D. Lawson, Marsbal; R. Ford, Tyler ‘A number of' our brothers have no doubt read of the burning down of sev- eral halls belonging to secret. socre- {les in southwest Georgia. This Is’ regretted very much. Our Grand Mas- ter being always alert as to the best interest of the craft had the following very excellent article published in the Atlanta Constitution: | PLEA FOR THE NEGRO MASONS. Grand Master Butler Writes of De ' struction of Property. mt af In regard to the storles of destruc- tion of Negro lodges in Early county, ‘The Constitution has recelved the fol- lowing communteation from H. R. Butler, Grand Master “for Georgla:- Edftor Constitution: As Grand Mas- ter of the Colored Free and Accepted Masons of the stafe and jurisdiction of Georgia, I feel it my duty to say a few words to the public at this time relative to that fraternity. “ I have read in the papers recently of the blowing up of the halls of col- lored secret societies in this state. I paid little attention to It until today, when I received a very sad communi- cation from a member of our Masonic lodge at Blakely, Ga,, stating that their hall at that place had been blown to atoms. What I wish to state to the public is, that everx colored Masonic lodge In the state is a monument to honesty, good citizenship and purity in the com- raunity in which they exist. The 7,000 members of that fraternity scattered lover the entire state are made up of the best men in the state; men who have’ made themselves a part of the communities In which they lye by owning their homes and who live hon- est and respéctable lives in their re- spective communities. ‘These men have met as Masons, worked as Masons and every man who, 1s a Mason knows what.I mean when I say that, to Smproye themselves and te prepare to care for -their widows land orphans. *:They have deprived themselves and have “bought twenty ners of* land, ,at -Americus, Ga.,’on lwhich they have' erected .an Industrial school for the orphans: and half or |phans of deceased members: of th fraternity. -In thig way they are Jend fing their humble efforts to the state lin its endeayor t6 care for its poor and helpless and at the same time ‘reduce the population of, the chain |sangs. I feel sure that those who arc [responsible for the destruction of the {halls and properties of these humble jstfugeling men are not aware of’ the great good these» colored Masons are {doing for their communities ana the state. It-any one doubts what I am [saying Jet them write any of the lead: ing bankers and business men, of Amer. jlcus, with whom we spend hundreds o1 jdollars every year for the support of jour orphans’ home arid industrial school, |. tm Srder to Improve ourselves in ,Masonry and raise funds to carry on ‘our work, It is necessary to hold meet- ings; further, it is necessary to have halls to meet In, hence it {s a great mistake and an Injustice to destroy the halls. | | ‘Every white Mason in the state is asked to lend every effort he can in protecting the property of the colored Masons. It is not a political organt- ization, neither is it a labor union. It stand for all that is great, good and noble in humanity. ‘ It Is a serlous mistake to destroy the property of any people. They be- come dissatisfied and lose confidence in the officers of the law and will move away, leaving the community without labor. dissatisfied people, a people with no confidence in their officer, a hopeless people, are dangerous people. I would urge that as far as possible ‘these people In every community be ‘made satisfied, that the officers“ind cit- fzens protect their property and hold ‘out to them a helpful and friendly hand, . « H. R. BUTLER, M. D, .Groud Master. On the 27th of December officers ‘of New Hope Lodge No. 83 were in- stalled by Past Master C. M.-Moore, as follows: J. H. Lane, W. M; G: E. Street, S. W.; J. P. Pooler, J: E. Streét, Treas.; J. W. Mann, Sec.; D. R. Smith, J. D.; A. J. Holmes, S. D.; M. H, Hendley, Chaplain; H. H, Harper, Tyler. = Mt. Moriah Chapter No. 37, 0. EB. S., elected the following officers: Mrs, R.L. Barnes, W. M.; Mrs. Elsie Hill, A. M.; Mrs, Margaret Roberts, W. T.; Mrs, Loulsa A. Alexander, Sec.; Mrs. Catherin Davis, Con.; Mrs. Bessie Me; Tyre, Ass. Con.; Mr. W. H. Burgess, W. P.; Mrs. Elizabeth Turner, War- der; Mrs, Henrietta White, Ada; Mrs. Carrle Swinton, Ruth; Mrs. Sarah Mar- tin; Esther; Mrs. Cora Howard, Mar- tha; Mrs. Mamie White, Electa; Mrs, Elizabeth Denstow, Rec. Sec.; Mrs. Ella Pride, Marshal in East; Mrs, Sal- Iie McNiel, Marshal in West. MARCH OF” PROHIBITION. Georgia Makes Fifth State Which To tally Bars Booze. Tho states that are now dry are Geggia, Kansas, Maine, Oklahoma and North Dakota. A year hence Alabama will be dry by state ehactment. A large portion of the state, including Jefferson county, in which Birmingham 1s located, is already dry, Kentucky, with $100,000,000 invested In the manufacture of Hquor, has 97 dry countles out of 119. North Carolina has dried 99 per cent of her territory. South Carolina, 17 out of 41 counties ary. Tennessee has but three cities whers Mquor can be legally sold—Nashville, Chattanooga and Memphis, Fight for prohtbition being wagetl in Mississippl, Maryland, Virginia: and Delaware. Massachusetts has 250 dry towns 100 wet-ones, . Sixty-two per cent of the populatior of New Hampshire lives in dry terri tory. . . NIGHT RIDERS, BADLY SCARED. ae 1 Kentucky Authoritles Promise to Make — "it Hot for Them. " A special term of the Christlan coun- ty, Kentucky, circuit court has been ordered for the purpose of rigidly in- vestigating the recent raid of night riders on Hopkinsville when aboyt $200,000 worth of property was destroy- ed and the local authorities and state administration have made it plain that naither effort nor cost will be spared to track down and putsin the peniten- tlary every one of the masked riders. ‘The activity of the state and local authorities has caused a ‘panie among the night riders and their friends. AWARDED HEAVY DAMAGES. Judge Wellborn at Los Angeles Allows Salt Company $456,746. ° Damages to the amount of 456,746 were awarded the New Liverpool Salt company Tuesday by Judge Olin Well- porn, in the United States district court at Los ‘Angeles, against the Cal- {fornia Development company,. on ac- count of the destruction of -property caused by an Overflow‘of thé-Colorado river, which resulted, it was alleged, from the,construction of canal Intakes by the development company. * DEPOSITS SET OFF NOTES: Court Renders ‘Important Decision ae “to Status of Debtors to Defunct Neal Bank at Atlanta, If @ person has a deposit of $500 in the defunct Neal bani at Atlanta and in consideration of a Joan of an equal or Jarger amount, has given his note, his deposit can be applied In the payment of his note—provided the same ts still in the bank's possession and has not been sold to an innocent party: An order to this effect was Issued by Judge Pendleton at Atlanta “on application of Attorney General John C. Hart through Candler, Thomson '& Hirsch, Judge Pendleton’s order makes no distinction between notes held by the bank and notes which have been hypothecated, but those fa- millar with the law declare that the order will apply only to nojes now actually held by the bank. This matter has been the subject of a great deat of interesting discussion since the state authorities took charge of the bank, Some Have held that all obligations would have to be met and that depositors who owe ~the. bank would have to take their chance of getting thelr money back the same as depositors who are not In debt to the bank, claiming that any set-off would make a preferred creditor of the de positor who happened to owe the bank. Others have held that a bank stands in the same position as any individual or other corporation and where a man Js both a’ debtor to .and creditor of ths bank there must be 2 set-off, only the difference to be pald. There seems to be practicall¥ no division of opinion ag to the fact that where the bank has sold a note the giver must meet It at maturity whether any deposit he“may have had in the bank is returned to him or not. The note-having been sold 4s in the hands of an Inocont party, | the bank is known only as an indorser, and the man who made it is responst- ble for Its payment, the fact that he is a depositor in the bank having ne bearing on the case. | All unpaid checks on other banks de- posited with the bank to the accounts of depositors will be charged off artd re- turned to the depositors. This appiles to similar checks not yet reported and not on the List, at- tached to the petition as an exhibit. In describing the noteS in question the petition, stated that there were numerdus notes and other evidences of indebtedness ‘signed by customers with deposits on hatid at the time a receiver was appointed, some of which have been become due and som@ ara approaching maturity, that depositors had claimed and would claim setoffs, and it was asked that such notes should receive the credit of deposits, As to the checks on other banks, It set out that drawers had ordered pay- ment on them stopped before presen- tation and that the order was obeyed by the bank, This was before a re. celver was!named and before the fact of insolvency. The petitioners asked that the amounts of these unpald checks be charged off the accounts and returned to the depositors, Deputy Sheriff Dan Perkerson took charge of the“stock-of dry goods, mer- chanldse, etc., of @. G. Reld at 165-167- 169 Peters street to satisfy the chattel mortgage held by the Neal bank and foreclosed by the Central bank and Trust company, recelvers. The amount of the indebtedness of G. G. Reld was $10,999.10 plus $307.72, principal and Interest of -four promissory notes drawn August 20 of this year. The first was Cor $1,000 due October 15, the sec- ond for a like amount due November 1, the third for $3,000 die December 3 and the fourth for $5,990.10 due Jan- uary 1, 1908, 2 Only the stock and store and store fixtures are Involved. | * 1 ‘mee Sl amsunnes ntavamaneimenmennt Governor Holds Troops in Readiness - for Any Emergency. Governor Haskell of Oklahoma re- celved most disquieting reports Fri- day from Henrietta nd two compa- nies of national guards were being held in_readiness to move to that town at any moment, Armed guards are patrolling Henri etta streets and courlers and officers are out endeavoring to locate an arme¢ body of negroes who were last re ported for miles from the town. | ~ SLIGHT SEISMIC SHOCKS. Earthquake Tremors Felt in Four “Miesissippt Towns. | Four towns ‘on the Mississipp! gulf coast reported slight shocks .Friday, belleved to have been caused by an earthquake. The disturbance. was not ed at Pass Christian, Guifport, Moss Point and Pascagonla. NEEDLES ENDED HER LIFE.‘_- ‘Woman Who Swallowed 144 Elghteen, Monthe Ago, Finally Succumbs, Mrs. Mollie Desmond, who attempt- ed to commit suicide eighteen months ago by swallowing a package of 144 needles, died in New York Monday, after physicians had made twenty-ive- surgical operations, upon her and had removed all but a dozen of the fee- dies, + ‘pepe sg CORPSE IN COFFIN Was, Revelation on Opening: : Druce Grave in London. =’ GREAT MYSTERY SOLVED: 2 ae Sensational Allegations of Druce Wit nesses Fall Flat After Ten Years ~ of Legal Fight—American is Involved In the Case. ‘The body of Thomas Charles Druce,. In High Uate,“cemetery, London, was - exhumed Monday morning, just forty- three years-to a day after its burial. The_coffin was foimd to contain the remaffs of a human body, thus ex-, ploding the romantic tale told by Rob- ert C. Caldwell and others during the recent hearing of the Druce perjary ° case that It contained a roll of lead. , |The official statement given out by~ the home office and others officially present at the exhumation seems ef- tectively to prove that the body buried in 1864 was actually that T. C. Druce- ‘The authorized statement follows: “The coffin opened and found to von- tain the body of an aged bearded man; the plate on the coffin bord the ndine of Thomas ”Charles Druce.” ‘The scene at High Gate~ cemétery when the vault was opened’was re- markable. All the entrances to tue cemetery were surrounded by cordonz ” police. Only those persons who had - Sasses trom the ‘home office were 2d mitted to the grounds. George Hol- - lamby Druce, who claims he is tho rightful helr to the Portland duke- dom,and to ifs vast estate, tried un.# svecessfully twice to get into the cem-! etery. io’ ~ The operation began at daybreak Monday with the removal of the top- most coffins In the vault containing the bodies of a wife and a son of T. C. Druce. It was’ nearly 11:30 before the coffin was brought ready for open- Ing and inspection. The top was quickly unscrewed and the jnner cas- ing of lead cut open. ‘There was no need for the dictum of _ the eminent surgeon, Augustus J. Pep~ per, to assure all present that human remains lay in the coffin. ‘The Druce vault has thus given up Its secret after ten years of leghl pro- ceedings ‘which have cost a constdera- ble fortune. A large part of this mon- ey was obtained from servant gifls and other workers who were {aduced to buy shares in a company formed to prosecute the claims of George Hol- lamby Druce against the estate of the duke of Portland, which produces an annual income of $750,000. ‘The charge of perjury against Her- bert Druce Is effectively disposed of, and those persons who have sworn to the placing of lead instead of a hu- man body in the coffin have been dis- credited. ° ‘A New York dispatch says: Robert C. Caldwell, whose testimony as.a wit- ness in the Druce case led to the reopening of the grave of T. C. Druce, fs now at the hime of his daughter at New Brighton, Staten Island, Ho 1s under $5,000 bond to answer to a charge of perjury, preferred by the Brit- ish authorities In connection with tho story he to’d in the London court. Caldwell was arrested when he arrived from Europe, December 21. Caldwell's ‘story of the alleged dual personality of the duke of Portland was the real sensation of one af the most remarkable legal cases which has ever’ engaged-the attention of the British cgprts. ‘The reopening of the Druce (grdve was undertaken as a final effort of the government to prove that Caldwell'sgtestimony was “wil- ful and corrupt perjyry.” Caldwell's story Was to the effect that the duke of Portland and T. C. Druce, a London storekeeper, were one and the sime. He Bad known tho duke of Portlind under both names, he safd, and at the request of the duke had arranged a pretended death and mock funeral.of Druce, so that his TARE BACKS ROOSEVELT. Gives Broad Endorsement of Admini tration In Banquet Speech, Greeted’ with cheers as “The Next Tpresident of the United States,” a topic which he carefully avolded in his own remarks, however, Secretary of War William H. Taft delivered his- first public speech since his world: circling tour atthe annual banquet of, ‘the Merchants’ Association at Boston, ! Mass. Monday night. _ : Mr. Taft's speech was {n the main a broad defensé, of President Roosevelt and the administration, ‘MINE EXPLORATION COMPLETED, Total of 220 Bodies Removed from the: Wrecked Darr Pits Explorations in the. Darr mine_ of; the Pittsburg Coal company At Tacdb'a Creek’ were completed Sattrday with the exceptidg‘of the numerous Tate of slate. ae Ral of 220 bodies haver Jpeen recovered from the main headings and’ entries. The number’ of, bodies: stilt unrecovered Is catisvated werent