Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Big Reductions in
Price of Gas Ranges
$16.00
GAS RANGES,
Now $12.00.
Small Payments, Connections Pree.
This Reduction is for Balance of August.
GAS COMPANY.
DIARRHOEA
There is no need of anyone suffering long with this disease, for to
effect a quick cure it is only necessary to take a few doses of
Chamberlain's Colic, Choiera
and Diarrhoea Remedy
In fact, in most cases one dose is sufficient. It never fails and can be
relied upon in die most severe and dangerous cases. It is equally
valuable for children and is the means of saving the lives of many
children each year. In the world’s history no medicine has ever met
with greater success. Price 26 cents. Large size 60 cents.
KERN’S SPEECH
(Continued from png,, one )
known, ought to he supreme ami
rhould be given Immediate ..fleet
And If the will of the people, once
Known, in not given effect, then i*
l>neple do not rule.
BLEAK LEY'S
Bargains for this Week
Ladies’ 37 Gore
Tailored Skirts,
worth $3.00 each, made of
Real Linonette all AC
sizes, at %PI.UO
Special Linen Sale
MATCK TABLE CLOTHS AND NAPKINS. '
Cloth 72\2 yards l«»ng and Napkins was $7.50 per set, now .. . $5.13
Clot It 72x2' yards lonp r and Napkins was per set. now $5.60
(loth 72x3 yards lone and Napkins was s!•.(*> jw>r set, now. $6.10
24 in. $1,85 Dinner Napkins, now $1.15
Alt $-1,00 Towels at )>ei'do/ .. .. $3.00
30 dozen $1.75 Linen 24-inch
Dinner Napkins at - - -08 c
One Dozen to Each Customer
A Copy of Butterick
Fashions Retail at 25c Kach
will he given as a premium to all suhseribeni
to the Delineator tlii> month.
VII the new pattern now instock.
Will any intelliirenf man claim that
• her* or haft boon any auhatantiai
Ah entity ol opinion !n thin country
on the question as to whether the
tariff duty on wood pulp used In the
manufacture of paper ahotiM ha re
duced f »r removed? In this cape the
tariff tax operated for 4he bench;
of the paper trust alone, allowinr: tha*
combine io levy millions of tribute
each year upon the newspapers of the
country and their readers. The pro s
of the country, without regard to par*
ty, united In demanding relief. Tin?
people of our republic unanimously
seconded the demand The president
lof the United States threw the in-
CHOICE OF ALL
$1.25, $1.50, $2. $2.50, $3
Embroideries at 50c yd.
We are now showing our first shipments of
Fall Suits. We can lit and suit you if you
are in need of a nobhv suit for the Mountain
Sen Coast or for Foreign travel. See
Bleakley’s line before you ever think of
Buying, lie eun sureh save you money.
BUY OF BLEAKLEY and SAVE MONEY
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
fiuence nt his great office in favor of
the d'-raand of the press and the
people. Hut all without aval!. The
dominant forces vitbin the republi
can party had estahttshed in the low
er house of congress a parliamen
tary condition, In ’he interest of mo
nopoly, under wh'ch the Bole power
to determine whether a measure
: hould he allowed to become a law or
not. was lodged In the speakers of that
body and hi* committee on rules, and
by the fiat of that one man the will
of the press, the people and the presi
dent was set at naught. Behold tire
spectacle! On one side 80,00U,000*1
of free people demanding legislation
!to right an admitted wrong. On the
other sldf, a few men engaged in
public plunder, aided by the dominat
ing power within .he republican party
I represented by the presiding office!
jot the once popular branch of con
gress! And the plunderers and thes**
unfaithful public servants prenail
i over the people ot this great republic'
In this instance did the people
mle?
Time forbids the multiplication of
1 instances where the popular w'ill has
i been defied'and set at naught by the
real republican leadership—some-
I times by the one-man power of the
I house —and sometimes by the few
representatives of monopoly who dom
inate the senate. t
Measure after measure—scores o.
hem —favored by the people of all
i.-titles—ln many tbstances advocated
..trenuously by the president —either
railed of passage or was so emascu
lated hv amendment as to utterly faii
to register the popular will.
That dominant power which now
guides and directs lhe republican
party has on many occasions defied
the president in cases where he has,
on the demand of the masses, made
I sporadic efforts in their behalf. In
j .some instances he has persuaded this
handful of leader* to compromise on
! iiieir own terms with the eighty mil
lions-of people whom he assumed to
' represent, but in most cases he has
| been absolutely powerless.
That dominant leadership elects
j the speaker of the house, names the
committees ot the senate, and is in
lull charge of the ingenious machln
i erv provided for the protection of
intrenched monopoly against the de
| mands of the people.
It dieisfed the platform adopted by
that party in Its national convention
; this year, and after defying Mr.
i Roosevelt for three and a half vea*-s.
j and killing or crippling nearly all hi>
■ proposed reform legislation, and hav
j lng received fiTs unstinted denunicta
lion therefor proceeded with the
finest irony to Indorse his admlnlstra
! tlon, after which it dictated a com
mittee to take charge of the cam-
-&S®
l
s<thttott
\There s no better salmon
canned at any price than
Argo. It's caught and
packed the same day, so
there’s no loss of its excep
tional qualities.
your qrovor tor 4rqo Hod S.lmom
ALASKA PACKERS ASSOCIATION
S.n Francl.oo, California
WHITE SKIRTS
¥
Choire of all $2.25 white Linen Skirts, newest styles. Best fitting
skirts made, nieelv tailored. Material retails at 15<* yd. These skirts
are on sale for Monday, at each $1.19
All sizes, large small and medium. Seo windov display.
Six yards, 26c boxes, Tourist
Ruching at .
IS Cents a Box
1,000 Yards of Madras,
worth 15c yard, your choice
without limit, as long: as the
small supply lasts, at
yard Ow
Wear the American
Lady Corset
The kind that fit and suit our Southern Wo
men. New and complete stoek now on hand.
Are You on Good Terms
With Your Stomach?
Treat it right—its your best friend. Abuse it
—and you’ll find there’s a limit. When the limit
is reached, the stomach must rest. Kodol rests it.
That is what Kodol is for. The stomach can
not stop work ; if it did you would stop existing.
It cannot even take a vacation and “rest up”—
except when it has Kodol to assist it.
Very likely you never gave a thought to how
hard your stomach works. Most people don't until
they have to. Sometimes, though, it cost less to
do a little thinking before one lias to.
Even the galley-slave of the ancients rested—at
intervals. But the stomach of modern man works
harder than the galley-slave, and it never rests—
of itself.
Kodol, of course, will rest the stomach, but
that is something nature didn't provide for. If
people now-a-days lived the way nature intended,
It wouldn’t have been necessary to provide for it.
But they don't that’s the trouble.
Better keep on good terms with your stomach,
if you can. Your health depends absolutely upon
the perfect performance of the stomach's func
tions. Ever think of that—or why it is true?
The human body is composed of certain chemi
cal elements. These are combined to form sub
si ances such as fat, protein, carbohydrates, min
eral matter and water.
The food we eat is composed of exactly these
elements. The stomach must disintegrate this
food and correctly apportion it to the needs of the
system. Looks like a lot of work for the stomach,
doesn't it? No wonder It occasionally needs
Kodol to help it do t his.
The person who has the kind of a stomach that
can do its own work continuously, without assis
tance has a good deal to be thankful for. Most
people haven't that kind. That is why they re
quire Kodol.
palgn, and is now in full command of
the party organization.
The vhters of America are no* like
ly to be deceived as to the tariff
question by the stock arguments of
the opposition.
The Average voter understands that
ihe tariff is a tax, to be paid by the
consumer of the article taxed. He
knows that taxes in excess of the
nerdß of the government are unjust
and oppressive, and that extravagance
in government administration indulg
ed in for the mere purpose of creat
ing a necessity for additional taxa
tion is profligacy.
He Is also coming to know that the
use of the taxing power of the go •-
ernment in such ways that a few ben
eficiaries may enrich themselves by
levying tribute upon the masses is
legalized robbery.
The soup houses of 1907-8 in the
large cities of the country were a
realization of hut a part of the “ro
seate expectations" of republican
statesmen.
The farntfr understands that while
he has <o buy everything in a pro
tected market, where, on nearly ev
ery purchase, he is compelled to pay
tribute to the trusts and tariff bene
ficiaries, he is compelled to sell his
surplus products in a free trade mar
ket. where he comes in competition
with all ihe rest, of the world.
Kodol will do all the stomach's work for It,
when necessary- giving ft a period of complete
rest. The rest that restores health. That’s how
Kodol cures Indigestion—which is merely a good
digestion “gone wrong.”
People used to think that w’hen they had indi
gestion they should stop eating or limit them
selves to a’ prescribed diet. Others commenced
purging with cathartics. All that is very dis
agreeable and unpleasant. Also, it isn’t necessary.
Starvation or purging doesn't cure anything.
Kodol doesn’t cure anything either—but shows
nature the right road, in short order. Kodol
merely establishes complete and perfect digestion.
It does this by digesting every particle of the
food. The stomach then rests and cures itself.
That is what was intended when Kodol was made.
It couldn’t be any other way. s
Kodol Is quite Indispensable to a good many
persons. To all, in fact, who haven’t time in
their daily lives for a careful selection of foods
and diet. It very quickly enables nature to reo
tify any disagreeable effects of wrong eating.
Our Guarantee
Go to your druggist today and get a dollar
bottle. Then after you have used the entire con
tents of the bottle if you can honestly say that it
has not done you any good return the bottle to
the druggist and he will refund your money. We
will then repay the druggist. This offer applies
to the large bottle and to but one in a family.
Every druggist knows our guarantee is good
The dollar bottle contains 2H times as much
as the fifty cent bottle. Kodol is made at the
laboratories of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago.
PEUGi PLACE
iDEDTOESDW
Bailiff Sturges, accompanied by
Deputy Sheriff Banks, Bailiff Whiffle,
County Officers Gay and Sibley and
Deputy Watson, raided the soft drink
store of Mr. E. A. Feagan, on the Sa
vannah road, just beyond the city
limits, Tuesday about 12 o'clock.
The officers found about 1200 worth
of whiskey, but no beer. Mr. Feagati
has given bond.
"Clinehfield is a fine Domestic
Coal.”
BEVO, A BEVERAGE.
The new Hop and Malt non-intoxi
cant. Healthful, Sparkling, Invigor
ating. A delight to the palate, and a
nutriment for the stomach. A hott'e.
taken alßo at‘ bedtime, by reason of
ihe large percentage of lupulin con
tained in Saazar hops—one of the
principal ingredients of "BEVO"—in
sures a sound and refreshing night s
sleep. Prepared by Anheuser-Busch,
a guarantee for Its purity, wholesome
ness and superiority.
BIGURY DOVE
FROM BRIDGE TOP
Human Fish Gave Exhibi
tion of His Skill on Mc-
Kinne Street Structure.
Bigury. the human fish, who is onp
of the attractions at the Air-Dome
this week, save an exhibition of his
ability Tuesday afternoon, by diving
from the top span of the McKinnie
street bridge info the Savannah
river. A large crowd saw him make
:he dive. Bigury is an added attrac
tion at the dome this week. He eats,
drinks and smokes under the water.
He has a mammoth glass ease that
he uses for his art. The case ia In
he middle of the stage in plain sight
of the audience and is filled with
water.
The remainder of the show at tj>e
dome this v*ppk is good The mov
ing pictures also deserve mention.
There are three performances daily,
from T: i!0 to 11:30 o'clock. Stormy
nights the show will be a' the Su
perb*.
BENSON HOMe’bURNED
IN WASHINGTON, GA
-
The many friends in Augusta of I
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Henson will re !
1 gret to learn that their horn" in Wash- i
| ing on, ('it., was destroyed by fire last ]
Sunday morning about 1 o'clock Mr. I
I Henson was the only ore in the house
! at the lime and he had a very n*r-
I row escape. Thtjtonse was not in
I sur- d and the ill be very heavy,
Mr a. i"raon, with her little daughter,
j Marie, are In -he city, they are stay
I mg with Mrs. Hensons mother, Mrs.
! a E. Sully, on upper Broad street
I Mis. Rpnson ts here (or medical treat
ment.
MR- PHILIP WELTNER
AT ST- JOHN CATHEDRAL
The many trlrnds in Augusta of
Mr. Philip Weltner, will he glad to
km- the* h, ha* secured a position
at the enlheml of St. John *h. D‘vi»e,
ns tns rtf, or in primary erman and
French Mi. W<-t*nrr's position will
no? interfere with hla law studies.
Mrs Meeker—Oh. doctor, my hus
band seem* to l>e wandering in hi*
mind its morning.
Doctor - Don't let that worry you;
1 he can't go very far. 1 ’
iUMUAT, AUGUST 25.
BIG EXCURSION
FROM TENNILLE
Stoy Brought in About
Seven Hundred Visitors
From Along the Augusta
Southern.
The excursion from Termite, over
the Augusta Southern arrived in the
city this morning at 10:40 o clock.
The train was composed of eight
coaches, four for white and the re
mainder for the colored people There
were about 700 people or the train,
most of the white people came to see
l, he ball game Tuesday, betwfcm Au
gusta and Tennile. The Ten lile ball
team came up on the excursion.
The streers are thronged with the
sight-seers and Broad street looks
like a busy Saturday. A good many
people along The Augusta Southern
took advantage of the elieap rates
prevailing Tuesday to come to Au
gusta to transact their business.
There were about 40 tickets sold at
Blythe and Spread, about twenty
were sold at, Avary.
Some of the prominent people "who
came to the city on the excursion
are Dr. .1. Bell, Judge James Bowick,
Mr. M R. Newman, Mr. A H. Moore,
from Blythe; Mr. W. H. Parish, Mr.
Will Perdue, Mr. Geo. Rabun, Mr.
George S. Thompson, from Spread;
Mr. 1. S. Peoples, Mr. Sam Johnson,
from Bells Crossing; Mr. John Staple
ton. From Keysville; Mr. \V Walton,
from Wrens; Mr. C. L. La Favor. Dr.
J. C. Lailey. Mr. W. J. Rawlins, from
Avary. The excursion will leave tha
city at 8:30 o'clock Tuesday night.
THE TRUTH ABOUT
KIDKEY TROUBLE
(PHYSICAL WEAKNESS) ..
When there is a pale, pasty com
plcxlon that persists in spite of diet
and careful living, or where there Is
physical weakness that likewise re
sists the usual treatment, the kidneys
are to be suspected.
Food often does people with kidney
disease very little good.
Instead of storing in the system th»
albumen, starches anA sugar that ouf
food releases the inflamed kidneys de
flect them, and tests disclose them in
I the eliminations unused. The patient
grows weaker and weaker, and as the
kidneys are no, sensitive there is usu
! ally no pain, and there appears to be
i no cause for the continued weakness.
| In such cases a test for albumen may
j disclose a strong percentage of the
I strength of the food tn the ellmlna
:tions unsued. hut. as albumen can not
he seen and ts only disclosed through
.chemical tests, the patient, unless he
1 Is in the hands of a physician, often
I has no line on his difficulty, and
thousands of such cases grow un
-1 wittingly into the supposed chronic,
j Incurable statie.
In these cases Fulton's Renal Com
pound acts definitely, but quite slow
] ly, for the inflammation Is usually of
| considerable standing and perma
nence. As in the other cases of in
flammation of the kidneys Medical
Works have nothing but diet and
symptomatic treatment, both of which
have proven futile in these chronic
j cases.
As Fulton's Renal Compound re
| duces the inflammation, the albumen
will be found to be decreas
j tng and recovery slow but definite in
about S? per cent of all cases,
Literature mailed free
JOHN J FULTON CO..
Oakland. Cal
Alexander Drug Co. are our sol*
local ag. nte Ask for 81-MoatUl
of late recoveries _