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THE AUGUST A HERALD
Published every d»y by
THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO,
723 Brqgd St.. AugutU, Os.
THE DAILY HERALD
Is delivered by carrier every after
noon. except Sunday, for Ten Cent a
a week, payable to the carrier or
agent.
THE SUNDAY HERALD
will be aold by carriers, newsboyt
and agents for Five Centa a copy.
DAILY AND SUNDAY HERALD
Thirteen Cents a week. Fifty Centa a
month, Six Dollars a year, by carrier
or mail to any addrean.
<z^^sr>
Augusta. Os., Friday, Jan. 19, 1006.
X~Ln_n_rLru-u-u-u~.j-xj-j-Tj-L-u-ij-xrLrxoj-j-u-ii-i n - •■ ■ * m.*.s
Trmpptt at Wathinpton.
The stress In the situation be
tween the president and the congress
seems to he approaching very rapidly
the acute stage. The responsibility
for It Is attributed to the president's
disposition to dictate rather than lo
stiMeai, to use the "big stick" rather
than the kid-gloved hand. If the
estimate bo correct there Is place for
the reflection, what a difference there
Is between Roosevelt In his study and
Roosevelt In the lobby! Ills most
virulent critic would give him » large
measure of Justly due praise for Ills
message, but. If reports are reliable,
he la singularly wauling In the ahlll
ty lo tine the persuasion of his liter
ary efforts In a face to face encount
er. And yet it should be no very
great surprise to know that a crisis
baa come. The same happened lo
three of his predecessors and each
one of them weathered the storm In
tolerable security and emerged ssfe
If somewhat haltered
Andrew Johnson, I'. H. lirant and
drover Cleveland were each brought
into sharp conflict with itie legist*
11 vo branch of government. With
the Aral the opposition to him went
tho extreme of Impeachment but he
wax vindicated. The second seem
ed to be rather the victim of vici
ous stirrondlngs. an insatiable group
of rapacious political buccaneers. The
third was the victim of his own self
Importance affording an example of a
president, completely iihandoncd by
his party In the congress.
It Is certain that the railway and
other Interests which are In open hos
tllltjr to Roosevelt are making hay
while the sun shines They have
skillful agents on tho ground and
theses latter will rarefully foment the
embers of discontent with a view to
discrediting the president with the
country and thus stave off rate legis
lation II Is certain that this will
be done, but It will be Ineffective. It
la more than probable that the pres
ent discontent Is due more to the
wish of the rorporatlon agents ami
the Industry of their press represents
lives than to an actual condition. If
It exists In the menacing form rep
resented It la concerned entirely with
a manifestation not with a substance.
The president's temper Is the cattle,
j>ot the measures he advocates.
The suburban driveways of Augusts
present an enlivening scene these
ds>s by the varied turnout that utilize
them.
—♦—
The Hamburg American line has de
dared a dividend of 11 per cent as
compared with a !t per cent dividend »
year ago Th,. company haa twelve
large steamets In course of construe |
Ucu Including the new boats, tlu
Mne has s fleet of 140 steamers.
Honor lAs Bract.
Congress and Andrew Carnegie;
may give medals for bravery, but It
la only God who can give the bravery
Itself of the character manifested by
Captain Mark Casto. the New .lersey,
fisherman, who rcacued the Impel ill
ed llvea of alxtv three persona aboard
the 111-fated Cherokee. In plain view;
from Atlantic City—only three miles |
out- the Cherokee was fast aground;
and the furious waves quickly doing
their work of destruction This stout
ft'berm* n saw th<-lr plight and ex
claimed to hia new, "M> God! I,
can't see them dte so near shore." In I
lesa than an hour hi* ten ton fishing
amauk, the Alberta, had snatched the
passengers and crew from the Java
of death. The Jersey coast la amply,
provided with Hfe-aavlnx crew* and
device*, but the *ea at thl* ennjuhc-j
tur«- wa* of «o hotaterotia a mood that
the machinery wa* Inoperative. The
machinery of Captain Murk Casto's
aoul was of a different contdtrucMon
and It quickly responded to the dire
need. Hia new consisted of the fol
lowing: Axel Holmqiiist. Nelson
Kreason. Johnson. Jedlah
Schute, Frederick Busch and Frank
Marl*. These name* like that of their
brave captain art unfamiliar and have
a decidedly foreign sound. They ate
the kind of men thta country stand*
in need of and the foreign flow has
never failed to give a plentiful gttppl}
of the kind
Gentlemen of the Chamber of Com
merce, the space at the two tourist
hotel* Is engaged Already the over
flow Is housed in private cottages. Alt
other hotel,must he constructed. Who
will take the Initial Ivor
Cr/ticiim and Hypmrrrittettm.
Mr. Frederick I*. Fish, president of
the American Ttdephone and Tele
graph company, has recently delivered
a lecture at Harvard University In
which he Inveighed against she news
papers and magazines for their crlt
Irlsm of Industrial management, nf
Arming strongly his conviction that
ihe dlfAcuities of the Industrial prob-
I lent were Increased rather than re
moved as a result of the public dis
couragement consequent thereon.
1 Quite recently The Herald has die
, ruased a phase of criticism very
much in vogue nnwsdav* snd the
| present opportunity Is only seised to
| state again and emphasize tho injtts
i tie,, of that species of piracy.
C riticism Is a function an necessary
to a health) conduct of public affairs
as Is selection of food for physical
health. The escess of criticism, right
Ily denominated hypercrltlclsm, bears
the same analogy. Kscess of f<tod In
i form, and unsanitary in subatanee.
Induces ills which heroic remedies are
sometimes unavailing to allay. Hyper
crltlcksm Itegets a morbid repulsion
which leads to public discontent.
The function of criticism Is to hold
the bulance even, not to deflect, to
cither aide. The preponderance of ex
cess Is thus carefully noted and sharp
!ly defined. The rich man has rights,
so has the poor man Organizations
have privileges, so have Individuals.
The employer must have a guarantee
of faithful anti competent service and
the employe must have un assurance
of appreciation In an adequate wage.
These propositions are not new. They
are old as thought. Their demand Is
still exigent and their enforcement
still clamorous. Were they equally
observed the function of criticism
would be In abeyance, not extinct.
Juat ns long ns there Is arrogance
there will Ite resistance. As long as
there Is an unfair distribution of the
fruits of Industry the spirit of Justice
will he heard through the voice of Its
handmaid, criticism
The method of argument pursued
by the government to discredit Its
adversaries In the Panama Canal mat
ter lacks In novelty. Mud slinging
iihould be confined to Canal work.
As an evidence of Ihe fact that
amicable relations between employer
and employe can bo had, baaed on a
competent return of service for h sat
lefactory wage, the Order of Railway
Conductors may he cited.
Lucky California.
The proverb regarding the growtn
of huge ouka from small aroma has
a modem simile In the naval orange.
With the latter as the agent Call
fornis haa reaped an abundance of
wealth hardly surpassed by her gold.
When In tho late forties gold was
discovered at Sutters Mill In that
slate nn Impetus was given to ovoty
force that makes for civilisation.
Hardy enterprise and daring venture
contributed their quota to the full
measure which tln* yellow metHl filled
up and even literature found a flel I
altogether unique because a new type
of character bad appeared on Itfo'a
scene and Bret Harte described him.
I.ittle more than sixty years hav«
pa sard tdnee the resolute, the venturi ■
some, the fearless character of nn
overpopulated section found congen
lallly and fortune on the shores of the
Pacific, and now comes another e
dorado. the seedless orange, which
has already don wonderful thlnga. and
promises to do still more wonderfcl
things for that lucky state The tree
on which this fruit growß and ripens,
was found by accident on the bank a
of the A mason river In South Am
erica by the American consul at that
time. William Judson. In keeping
with precedent It should be named
the Judaon Orange.
Experiments were first made with
little shoots In IS7:i and success for
a time hung In the balance. At the
present day these little shoots
grown Into vast and extensive orange
groves, .occupying thitherto arid
wastes as well as fertile valleys, ar.d
yielding a revenue high up In the mil
lions each year. More than this the
luscious fruit has built up, literally,
the southern part of the state. in
the neighborhood ol the groves towns
and cities have sprung up and thou
sands of people find employment In.
growing and In transporting tin e
yield, adding to the wealth of the
state by $(l0,otu\,0o0. California Is n
lucky state.
A senile sprinkle and then a glow
of sunshine Is the variation of All ;
gustn's January weather.
—-
Thompson’s Seasons should be pop- i
ular tending here. The extremes ex-1
Ist at a distance and the mind ex
periences self-satisfaction,
Robert E. Lee.
Today the annual return of the natal
da*’ comes round of one whose char
acter was without stain, whose In
tegrity was above reproaeh and whose
manhood tanked him with that peer
less few who have given their services
and their fortunes to their conviction
of duty regardless of the ties It sev
ered. the advantages lost, or the ad
v<>rattles encountered. In all the ro
tation* of life, honorable nud heroic.
In all the duties of uiau, punctilious
and persevering, la all the exactions'
of service, ready and resolute The
name of Robert Bdward l/C« Is In
scribed on the scrolls of fame In letters
of Imperishable brilliancy to which
succeeding years mid lustre and re
nown. —.
The Vsla of Youth.
As one who climbs the path that
leads to heights.
Where cold and wintry winds for
ever blow,
Will oftlmes pause ’mid bleak and
barren scenes
To view the vale which lies far
down below:
The vale by Natures hand ao richly
blesaed,
The sun seems there to shed Its
brightest rsy;
The sweetest, fairest flowers s-em
there to bloom;
The birds seem there to atng their
merriest lay:—
180 climbing Life's pnth wherp the
shallows crowd.
And groping 'round a foolhold sure
lo find,
tl oftlmes turn to view with longing
eyes
The vale of youth which Ilea so far
behind:
| The vale of youth where sorrowa
were unknown;
The lighteat cares ne'er entered to
annoy;
Kach tlay, soon a* It reddened In the
sky.
Drought to my waiting heart its
own sweet Joy:-
Ho upward still, more slow the path
I rllmb.
And darker grown he landscape,
and more dear.
Yet all la well while tr.m that die
tant vale,
The echoes of the pas* I still can
hear.
School Journal.
Herald Ranks With Best
Southern Evening Papers
(Barnwell, H. C., Senjlnel.)
Barnwell Is Rt a disadvantage 111
getting morning papers. Sometimes
the News and Courier gets hem on
the morning train, but the Htale and
Chronicle never get In until In the
afternoon. On the other hand, they
ran get a good afternoon paper de
livered at the postnfflce at 4 o’clock
In the afternoon. The Augusta Her
ald. which ranks with Ihe best south
ern evening papers, ran he read by
the people of Itarnwi II while It is be
ing read In Augusta and while the
people of Columbia and Charleston
are reading their nf.ernoon papers.
WHAT EDITORS SAY.
(The (irdiln Call. I
flood resolutions are commendable,
'though they may be easily shatteicn.
(Columbia Sentinel.)
Ailisi (tlhson has left the country,
hill Ihe Rlrflt will continue the effort
to live up to Ills pictures.
(Athens Banner.)
I'nele Sam may get Ills fingers
burned yet finding with that Moroc
can question.
(Bullock Times.)
A "Federation of Fools'' is“a new
organization In Chicago. Other cities
have similar organizations under
other names.
(Macon Daily Telegraph.)
Kx-I’reslilent Morales Is now safe
In Porto Rico. If he has got any
horse sense he will stay there and
go (o work for a living.
(The Savannah Press.)
Mr. Howell ami Mr Smith were
In the lltut*light hi Columbus, hut
Mr. Watson and Mr McWhorter have
been prominent in the aftermath.
(The Marietta Journal. I
According to the Journal and Con
stitution how each Candida'" de
molished the other. Ilowell and Sn’lth
ought to he laid up In the Orady hos
pital.
(Mdledgeville Union-Recorder.)
Mr. Smith expresses himself clear
ly, and there paun u possibly he any
misunderstanding of tho principles
for which he stands. The people
admire men wlih honest convictions.
(Columbia (8. C.) State.)
If wo butt In at Algcclrns. with
what decency can we deny to tier
many or France the right to butt tn
at Santo Domingo ->r Venezuela or
elsewhere among our mischievous
l.athi American proteges?
(Savannah Morning New i
Candidate Smith ought to make his
distinguished nekiu>wledgmoui s to
Judge McWhorter Tor (he bitter's
kindly consideration. Judge McWhor
ter says that if he wanted to do so
he 'could explode h big firacnicker
under the candidate's chair, but he
won't do it.
(Charleston (S. C.) Kvcnlng Cost.l
Gen. Horace Porter one# expressed
the opinion that sympathy Is all 'cry
well, but that It ts easy to go far while
trying to be agreeable. By wav of Il
lustration he told of a girl whose
sweetheart said to-tier one evening:
"Were von aware that t passed your
house last night?" She gave him a
glance full of reproach. "Of conrr •
1 was." she said. 'Thi von think 1
would not know your step But at
this . o grew grave and distrait, for
he had passed in a cab.
Roosevelt, the "Jiner,"
President Koosevel; is becoming
what i* commonly known as a
j’’jlner." that Is one who joins all
! sorts of societies. He belongs to a
great many organisations just now,
|and If he keeps it up he will l>,« the
beat ‘Vrganl/.ed " man in the country.
;It is to be hoped that the honorary
I memberships which are conferred
upon him carry with them no obliga
i lions for dues, else he will have to
ask congress tor an appropriation or
waste his small private fortune.—
i Philadelphia Inquirer.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD.
Naw Insurance Bill.
WASHINGTON. Senator Dryden
baa revised hla Idll for government
control of Insurance and reintroduced
It In the senate on Monday, He ex
pr«ssea the belief that II will correct
practically all of the Insurance evils
exposed by the New York Inquiry,
Publicity'la the keynote of the bHI.
the provisions for the detection of
wrong-doing and the punishment of
offenders. The bill defines policies as
Instrumentalities of commerce, and
provides for the regulation of the
business through a controller of In
surance, along lines of the control over
national hanks. The senator saya he
believes this will go fsr toward meet
Ing the objections of those who have
questioned the constitutional possibil
ities of federal regulation of Insurance,
lb- saya the hill has tho Indorsement
of the president, administration offl
cials, eminent constitutional lawyers
In and out of congress and others who
are familiar with Its general features,
as coming nearer to meeting the dc
mauds of the situation than any of
the other numerous pending measures.
Discussing the principal features of
th<- bill Senator Dryden said:
The hill contains some fifty separate
provisions, of which the first thirteen
relate so the organization of the pro
posed bureau of Insurance in the de
partment of commerce and labor. The
bureau Is to be in charge of a con
troller of Insurance, who Is required
to furnish a bond of SIOO,OOO.
There Is to bo a deputy controller,
who Is also to be s Itonded officer,
and an actuary, who is required to he
a person of recognized professional
ability and experience. All fees or
other moneys collected are to be paid
into the treasury. The controller must
make an annual report to congress.
The provisions of the act apply to
all corporations, associations or part
nerships engaged In interstate Insur
ance business or who make and deliver
Insurance contracts outside of the
state of incorporation, nr origin, or
authority, but have no application to
fraternal societies or organizations
carried on for the rolo benefit of
members and not for profit. Such as
soclatlons or societies may voluntarily
take advantage of the act, and, after
complying with all Its provisions, be
come duly authorized by the controller
lo transact Interstate Insurance.
The controller is required to es
tablish ruleß and regulations and rea
sonable fees for eonduetlng the busi
ness of Insurance, including annual
and other reports to he made by com
panies. The penalty for failure to
make or transmit any reisirt or state
ment of fact required Is SIOO for each
day of delay. The controller Is also
required to have a conservative valua
tion made of the business of life com
panies, or determine the reinsurance
reserve of other companies, upon ap
proved methods and tables and by
such a standard of Interest as may
In his Judgment and discretion best
serve the purpose to determine and
establish the true financial condition
and attendant liabilities of companies.
Authority and power to Inquire into
the details and facts of the manage
ment of all corporations engaged in in
terstate insurance are given the con
troller. and In- may have the coinpa
nles examined by special examiners
whenever necessary or expedient. To
this end he may ask the aid of any
court of the I’nlted States to require
the attendance und testimony of wit
nesses and the production of books,
papers and‘documents. Failure to obey
such order of the court may lie pun
ished ns a contempt thereof. It Is also
provided that companies may be In
vestigated by the controller upon the
complaint of any state commissioner
of insurance.
Corporations transacting Interstate
or foreign insurance are specifically
exempted from making any other or
separate sfcatemenls or reports, or held
to he subject to any visitorial powers
of examination of its business and ae
eonnts. ’ other than by the controller
of insurance or by the proper author
ities of ihe state of Incorporation or
origin
Corporations engaged In the busi
ness of Insurance In more than one
stale must file a copy of their charter
or other documents of local authority’,
and annually publish a list of their
stockholders or trustees. They are re
quired to make a deposit of SIOO,OOO.
either with the commissioner <»f In
surance or with the proper official of
the state of Incorporation or origin.
Did the King’s Brother Die Intestate?
(Marquise de Fontenoy.)
It Is difficult to believe that so
methodical and orderly a man as the
late Prince Philip, of Belgium. Count
of Flanders, and one so devoted to
his faintly, should have neglected to
make a will. And yet It is offfclally
announced from Brussels that he died
Intestate, a condition of affairs which
has the result of vesting the entire
control of his enormous fortune In the
hands of Ills elder hrother ns chief of
ttie dynasty ami ns executor. The two
brothers wore at no time on friendly
terms with each other, l.eopold bit
terly resented the fact that Philip had
been unduly favored In their father's
will, receiving far and away the larg
est share of his immense hoards
Then. too. Philip was opposed to all
speculative enterprises, not only nan
A DOLLAR
SAVED
IS A DOLLAR
MADE
rnd we pay von for saving
Ik-giu with a dollar and add
to it weekly or monthly. |
In ease of need you have mon
cy in the bank subject to your
order at anv time
FOUR PER CENT INTEREST.
How About One of
Those New Soft Hats
for a Change?
We have a number of
tiew ideas In Hats.
They’re called ’’Karly
Spring Styles’—Hats de
signed lo satisfy the aver
age man's desire, right
now, for a change In
headgear.
THE OIALFONT
IS A VOIM, MAN'S MAI
Nobby, new, neat and
swagger—not too much
brim, and yet not small
enough lo look boyish.
Pearl is the popular color,
but we have Blacks,
Browns, Nutrias and
Fawns.
$3
Also several excellent
conservative styles In
staple shapes.
DORR
Tailoring, Hats,
Furnishings
BROADWAY. AUGUSTA
cautious man of business, but also he
cause he considered them as out of
keeping with the dignity and prestige
of royalty. He absolutely declined to
take stock in hts brother's numerous
financial ventures or to assist him
In any way pecuniarily; was so op
posed to him politically that some
time before his death he resigned his
offices and his military commands
and made no secret whatsoever of his
pronounced disapproval of Leopold's
private life and of his relations with
the members of his family.
The idea, therefore, that he should
havo died a slow and lingering death
without nuiking a will, well knowing
that this neglect would have the es
feet of vesting the absolute control
of his great fortune in the hands of
that elder hrother whom he so dis
trusted. Instead of its being at the
disposal of his widow and of his chil
dren, is simply inconceivable, and the
affair is likely to develop into an
other one of those unfortunate scan
dais which since the advent of Leo
pold to the throne have done so much
to impair the prestige and the good
name of the reigning house of Bel
gium. a dynasty that has enjoyed the
unfortunate distinction of having con
tributed a large number of chapters
tn the ehroni,|iie seandaleuse of the
Old World than any other reigning
family of Europe.
Marshall Field a Good Man.
(New York Commercial.)
Much could be said commendatory
of Marshall Field. His death here in
New York gives opportunity to speak
with freedom. He was one of Amer
ica’s greatest private citizens. His
fortune- his Immense fortune—was
not acquired by any of the several
rtieans of Juggling so distinctively
peculiar to modern finance, it was
made In the legitimate rhannels of
commerce. It was not the earnings
of an hivtr; it was the fruit of a life
Urge. The beginning was at zero.
Slowly the man grew; slowly his busi
ness grow. Much time was spent in
the acquirement of knowledge of what
he was about; much time in the study
of men. Application, unswerving In
tegrity, concentration upon the one
thing marked the whole course of his
career. Without ever seeking fame it
ultimately came to him until the name
of this American merchant was fa
miliar around the world. His early
choice of a location had its bearings
on his great success. He entered the
new west and it grew up around him.
That was a fortunate circumstance,
but in all tin 1 course of his career
we see no element of chance. His
method was to treat all men honor
ably; to understand In its detail ev
ery transaction. His principles were
sound, his capacity for knowledge of
nffairs greai. And thus, at the end
we find men universally paying him
the deserved tribute of saying that
he was a good man and a good citi
zen.
Sending Voice by Mail.
The so-called phonooard is finding
murh favor in France. For produc
ing this phonographic postal card an
apparatus is used which records the
human voice upon a piece of paste
board of the form of the card. Ac
cording to one report, the phonocard
possesses numerous advantages. The
recording of the voice is an
ordinary phonograph of simple con
struction. by means of a peneil with
a sapphire point. This peneil makes
It* Impression upon a suitable sub
stance called ‘’sonortne’’ spread
{upon the surface of the card. The
| "sonorine," which can be easily
spread over pasteboard, possesses all
the properties of a wax ev.inder. and
lis iu reality the invention The I
Thirty $175 Lots For Sole!
LOCATED ON THE FOLLOWING STREETS AND AVENUES:
MOORE. THOMAS. KINGSTON. HOLLEY, BROWN, RAILROAD AVE
NUE AND TURKNETT SPRING ROAD.
DIMENSION OF LOTS 40x160. QUICK PURCHASER GETS THE
PICK OF THE LOTS.
MARTIN l GARRETT
GROUND FLOOR. LEONARD BUILDING.
For Sale!
House and two lots on Wslton Wsy
on easy terms. Property rapidly en
hancing i n value in this section. Ap
ply to
Clarence E. Clark
842 Broad Street.
Mfl
with most people who open a bank
account. “Is the Institution Safe,
Sound and Conservative?" This is a
perfectly natural question.
This hank has been conservatively
managed since its organization twen
ty-seven years ago and has grown
stronger and stronger with each suc
ceeding year. We want to make thp
year 1906 the best year of our exist
ence. We invite man. woman
and child in Augusta ao open an ac
count with us.
4 PER CENT INTEREST PAID.
THE AUGUSTA SAVINGS BANK.
823 Broad Street.
WM. B. YOUNG. President
J. G. WEIGI.E. Cashier.
POULTRY
SUPPLIES
N. L WiLLET SEED CO.
CORNO HEN FEED
Sunflower, Kaffir Corn, Wheat,
Cracked Corn, Oat 9, Barley, Mil
lets—all sound and unadulterated.
$2 per 100 pounds.
CORNO CHICK FEED
Cracked fine, same Ingredients
and high quality as Hen Feed.
CYPHERS INCUBATORS
AND BROODERS
ALL POULTRY TONICS,
FOODS AND NECESSITIES.
PURITY ANIMAL FEEDS (full lines.
Hen, Chick, Horse. Cow).
ANIMAL REMEDIES.
Moore-Edenfield Electric and
Manufacturing Go.,
1033 Broad St. Augusta, Oa.
Everything Electrical. Repairing a
Specialty. ’Phone 1316.
■:
signs are impressed in the form of
a spiral, beginning at the margin of
the card and ending in a very small
circle, and are impressed so deeply ;
that the stamping by postal authori- j
tie*. can only destroy two or three
words. The curd has room for 75
or SO words.
*■— * *** -*— "
Loved and Lost.
Nell —lxive doesn't seem to agree
with Maud. She is thinner by twenty;
pounds than she used to he. Belle —
She has loved anil lost, oh?
Jamison Coal
Causes Talk.
Those who have been using
my Jamison coal like to tell of
its good qualities. They sing
its praises on the streets and
1 am getting more orders for it
every day.
If you haven't tried It you
have missed that mtieh of the
go<vl things of this life. It is
rpally a great pleasure to have
coal that makes such delight
ful fires.
Phono IC.
A. H. McDaniel,
Augusta, Ga.
Building Material.
FRIDAY, JAN. 19.
GARDELLE
HAS IT- '
The latest fad In
Sachets and Extracts
is
AEOLIAN
A perfect rage now
with the New York so
ciety set.
The Extract is $4.50
per bottle
And the Sachet $1.75
per ounce.
L.A.Gardelle
Dealer in Drugs and Fine Perfumes
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN,
209 7th St., Augusta, Ga.
GIVES FREE EYE TESTS for all de
fects of sight; grinds the proper
glasses and WARRANTS THEM.
Lenses Cut Into Your Frame While
You Wait.
FREE OF CHARGE—TeIIs If you
need medicine or glasses.
ARCADE
BARBER SHOP
A 24 Broad Street
HARRIS &, MURRAY.
GASOLINE ENGINES
WOOD SAWS AND PUMPS,
LIGHT SAW MILLS,
SHINGLE AND LATH MACHINERY
All kinds Machinery and Reptairs
and Supplies, Shafting, Pulley's Belt
Pipes and Fittings.
Lombard Iron Works
AUGUSTA, GA.
200 Hands.
Perfect
Rubber Goods
At
Alexander’s.
We thoroughly examine
our Rubber Goods and sell
none which are not per
fect absolutely perfect.
Hot Water Bottles,
fountain Syringes.
Ihermalite Bags,
“Kantleek" Rubber Goods.
Complete stock. Fresh,
new rubber. Long wear
ing. Stand hard usage.
Prices will suit you.
Send Us Your Prescrip
tions to Fill.
Telephone Humber 44.
Alexander
Drug Co.
708 Broad Street,
Augusta, Ca.