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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11.
PERUCHI’S YACHT IN WHICH HIS
PARTY WILL TOUR SOUTH THIS WINTER
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NEW YORK—Anyway, as one of
them expressed It yesterday, the ac
tor folk abroad the good ship Lagon
da, which will clear for southern
ports tomorrow, there to afford the
natives of the delights of the theatre,
will not have to worry about walking
balk to Broadway—all they’ll have
tojTear will be swimming.
Everybody has heard of the actors
whose companies travel in “special
trains." It remained for Cheslo
Peruchl—an American despite his
name—to take his troup about in a
private yacht, for the Lagonda is a
wi U appointed single screw vessel,
with the accommodations for fifteen
person calculated to satisfy the most
fastidious, let alone actors to whom
"the road" usually means discomfort
if not hardship.
Peruchl, announced by his posters
to lie "a strong favorite In the South
land." is not without theatrical ex
pervnee. In fact, it is by reason
of his wide knowledge of the busl
nes* that he has devised this method.
•be success of which he says is as
sured. With his wife, who rejoices
in the stage name of Gypxene,
has headed companies that have con
fined their artistic efforts to territory
outside of Broadway, and in spite of
this has achieved financial success in
common with others whose reputa
tions have never penetrated the fast
ness of "little old New York.” For
tfu years he has maintained a sum
mer theatre in Knoxville, Tenn., and
he has been the Herr Director in sim
ilar enterprises in Chattanooga.
Tenn.; Augusta. Ga.. and Columbia.
S. c. in addition, he has sent out
road companies, one of which he in
tended to lead until the theatrical
cruise took form.
Peruchl bought the Lagonda in San
dusky. Ohio, and brought her here un
der her own power through Lake
Eric canal Into the Hudson and down
to West Forty-fifth street, where she
lies.
Ctptain Quinn, of Florida, com
mands the vessel, which is about,
eighty feet long with a seventeen foot
lx am. The Peruchi-Gypezene com
jpint will strike the Delaware-Rari
'an canal at Amboy and work down
the Delaware river to the Delaware-
Chesapeake canal and into the Ches
apeake bay to Norfolk. Va. There
the vessel will go through the Dismal
Swamp canal, avoiding the passage
off Hatteras, and emerge at Cape
1-ookout to take the outside route to
Jacksonville.
Wilmington. N. C., will see the
premiere. The cruise will be con
tinned along the coast and to the Ba
hamas. and it will last well into
The Popular
Brand
inj 11 i 1 ii—dii—iiiii
THAT
AUGUSTANS
DRINK
tja.
L TKL^LAuOKDA.
April. A repertoire of seven pieces
Is provided, and everything needed
for the performances, including the
actors, will be carried aboard the
yacht, except an advance agent, Mau
rice Brown Kirby, who will go ahead
by rail.
Mrs. Ritchie, mother of Gypzene,
will act ns chief stewardnoss when
not playing "character old woman”
roles. Richard Phelps will do "puve
niles” and be the mate afloat. The
boat is to be the home of the com
pany no matter how long the stay In
a town may be.
OLD-FASHIONED JEWELRY.
One of the most striking features
of the moment in the realm of jewelry
jis the sudden revival of the antique
as regards both the settings and the
gems themselves. Old - fashioned
and cumbersome brooches, massive
j chains, heavy gold or enamel buckles,
and cnoromus lockets of ponderous
weight are nowadays as much valued
by the fashionable world as was the
delicate Italian filigree work which
was so much in vogue a few years
ago.
Stones, whose names had almost
been forgotten and of whose exist
ence no one excepting perhaps the
stone-cutters themselves were aware,
are once more assuming an important,
place in the latest schemes, and are
rsponstble not only for letter
weights, trinket-boxes, and such per
sonal matters as umbrella-tops and
charms, but are being turned to ac
count as jewelry of a deflnate charac
ter.
CREAM AND CHERRY BRANDY.
This is a very good recelpe. for
whicn is required a elaret glass of
i cream, one and a hall' tablespoonfuls
i of cherry brandy, and a drop or two
i of cochineal. Remove all the cherries
from the brandy, ami mix it with iho
cream. The cochineal can be added
if a pretty pink is desired ami the
! drink be served in a glass. Another
; way of making it is to beat the cream
till it is thick enough to Just bang
on tue whisk, and then to add the
brandy and serve it heaped on a glass
1 plate. In which case it should bo
eaten with a spoon.
SABINE.
Sable skins play a large and im
portant part in the millinery of to
day. and some of the new light col
ored felt hats with full (Towns are
adorned with sable or mink skins, the
head and tail meeting in the front,
and the neck encircled with a little
".tie” of silver ribbon fastened in a
neat how. A cacheprigne of sable
colored tulle Is the finishing touch
to a hat of this description, u spotted
sable-colored veil of chiffon or gauze
being worn with it.
A CHARMING EVENING WRAP
Some of the prettiest development
of fur fashions are seen in the real'll
of the evening wrap. Ermine is
prominent among these, an ermine
coat or bolero being supplemented
with a basque and waistcoat of or
ange velvet covered with heavy Ven
etian lace. The fronts are caught to
gether with twisted cords of • range
velvet and gold tissue, from which de
pend large gold tassels.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD.
101 IS COLOR
, FOR FULL WEAR
AMONG MODISTES
PREVAILING COLOR IS FOR ALL
PURPOSES. DRESSES. HATS.
GLOVES, SHOES AND EVEN HAT
PINS. *
NOT IN STYLE OTHERWISE
j Brown Fur* and Imitation Fur Cloths
Largely Used in the Jaunty Short
Jackets With Brown Braiding.
NEW YORK.—The necessary touch
]ln the color of the day is brown.
I Brown is worn with every color, uud
the very latest styles is to have, a
brown belt, gloves and veil to wear
with the street or travelling suit. The
blue and green palds that are so
popular have tills touch of brown to
set them off, and even the dresses of
pale colors need Just this distinctive
brown to make them the style of the
season.
Whole brown costumes are greatly
In favor, and brown velvet leads for
the afternoon toilettes. Every eos
tume shop in the city has shown
I brown velvet costumes in show win-
Idows this season, and besides the
brown velvet there are the chiffon
broadcloths, and the wool materials.
The single color and the smooth ef
fect rules supreme. The counters are
tilled with browns of every style and
j price.
One of the prettiest of the brown
| hats is a felt of golden tone, trimmed
' with darker shade of velvet and i
, lighter of silk. There Is a band of
each, and between tho bands is a lino
of pale blue silk in a soft. fold. Tho
! trimmings for one side of the hat Is
! brown plumes and for the front is a
single great pink rose. Most of the
brown hats are all L'own. and the
| touch of relief cotnes either in gold,
yellow or one of the soft pastel tints.
Brown Gloves.
The brown gloves are to be worn
with any costume, whether It he
brown or not. These gloves are el
bow length with the afternoon and
evening costumes, or wrist length
with the street dresses. One of tho
fashionable evening gloves is a very
j Pale shade of brown, embroidered lit
the darker tones of the same color.
Some of them are embroidered with
silk and have an applique of white
honiton lace. Some of the women ef
fect the heavy brown gloves that are
worn by men.
Vlth all the fancy for wearing
brown, the shoe merchants are bring
ing out shoes i n brown leather, brown
kill, both glace and scuds, and the old
fashioned bronze hoots. Low cut
brown shoes call for brown hose of
ihc exact shade, and to wear with the
low shoes there are the brown spats
or gaiters. Some of the women that
do not care for brown shoes wear the
spats with black khocs, and make the
spats do instead of an extra pair of
shoes.
Brown even extends to the hat
pins, and the shops have a large va
riety. there are the tortoise shell
pins, always good style, but the sash
ions hie ones of today are large halls,
as large as a walnut. Besides the tor
loise shell there are the smoky or
clouded anther pins and brown bronze
<mes. The pins for the hair are. too.
worn this season, run largely to the
tones of brown. Not, to have some
thing brown proves (hat one is not In
style.
Fashion's Favorite.
Brown being one of fashion's favo
rite colors this season, the winter will
see a wide and varied use of brown
lurs. Brown caracul and pony skin
will he seen to a great extent In the
jaunty short coats collared with mink
or marten, or trimmed with beautiful
soft pliable braids In black for con
trast. This use of braid on fur gar
ments is new to the season, hut it Is
one which We will doubtless see mtteh
of. It offers many suggestions for the
remodelling of past season's fur gar
ments which might otherwise remain
indefinitely In the cedar chest or moth
proofbag.
Ccllarlesa Coat.
While the majority of coats, both
great and small, are collarless, there
are some beautiful models which
show a high medical collar. This,
however, is only found In those loose
lined coats intended for evening or
afternoon street, wear, with semi
dressy toilettes, the collarless coat
still holding exclusively for strictly
evening wear.
One model of a beautifully blended
mink, •xpressed In the Empire mode,
shows a deep yoke, which stimulates
a deep sailor collar hack and front,
and a high medical collar of brown
satin, covered with baby Irish crochet
lace, the inside of the collar of mink.
The yoke Is outlined with a two-inch
band of the ntlnk, and the corners of
the yoke are Joined or seemingly held
to the body of the coat by shirred
straps of brown velvet, connecting the
front and the back beneath the arms.
These are eanght to the point of the
yoke bv rosettes of velvet w'th Jew
‘lie,| centers. Another lnter\ulng
feature of this same coat is thd ms,
of the mink on the cross of the pell,
in the form of a border in the coat
shirt, and in the wide cuffs of the am
ple sleeves.
Sleeves or fur garments are both
long and hort On< ; maker shows a
sit ail sleeve Idea in ills pony coat
models, which is quite the moat novel
seen this season. The sleeve Is really
full length and Is so worn for getter
al street, wear, but the lower part Is
■■■<> constructed that It. may he turned
hack to form a cuffed sleeve of three
quarters' length, the fur being used In
' taring between the wrist and the el
bow. when worn long, cords anil
ollvpsybutton the sleeve In form, and
when reversed thes„ have the effect
~ t au ornamental trimming.
CAUGHT BY THE GRIP
RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA.
La Grippe Is Epidemic Catarrh.
LA GRIPPE spares no clast or na
tionality. The cultured and Ihc
Ignorant, the aristocrat and the pauper,
tho masses and the classes art til sub
ject lo la grippe. None are exempt—all
are liable.
la grippe is well-named. The original
term, la grippe, is French, but It has
been shortened by tho busy American
to one word “grip.’*
Without any Intention of doing eo, a
new word has been coined which do
verities the disease exactly.
Tho ailment clings to tho patient as
tenaciously as if some terrible giant had
cluteliod him in a fatal clasp.
Men, women and children—whole
towns and elites are caught tn the bane
ful grip of this terribly monster.
Have you the grip? Or, rather, has
tlie grip caught you? If so, read the
following letters.
These testimonial* will show you tho
quickest and best meant of ridding your
self of tills tonueioue disease amt its
after-e (Tecta.
Suffered Twelve Year* from After-
Eflccta of La Grippe.
Mr. Victor Patneimdo, SUN Madison
Bt., Topeka, line., a well-known carpen
ter and member of knights and Ladies
of Security, writes:
•‘Twelve yea's ago I had a sovoro at
tack of la grippe and l never really re
covered my health and strength—but
grow weaker every year, until i was
unable to work.
"Two years ago I begun using Peruna
and it built up my strength so that tn a
couple of months I was able to go to
work again.
"This winter I had another attack of
la grippe, but Peruna soon drove it out
of my system.
“My wife and I consider Peruna a
household remedv.”
Pneumonia followed La Grippe—
Pe-ru-na, the Remedy That
Brought Relief.
Mr. T. Barnccott, West Aylmer, On
tario, Can., writes:
"Last winter I was ill with pneumonia
after having la grippe. I took Peruna
for two months, when I became quite
well, and I can say that any one can be
cured by it In a reasonable tlmo and at
little expense.
“Every time 1 take a cold, I take some
Peruna, which makes mu well again.
"1 also advised it for my daughter who
was so ill with prostration thatshncould
not follow hsr trade of dress making.
"A bottle of Peruna made such a
change in her that she has been able to
follow her trade ever since.
"1 also induced a young lady, who was
all rundown and confined to the house,
to take Peruria, and after taking Peruna
for thren months she is able to follow
her trade of tailoring.
If your druggist docs not keep Peruna in stock, send remittance to
cover price of one bottle, $ 1.00 or six bottles, $5.00, to The Peruna Drug
Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio, and the medicine will he forwarded to you by
express prepaid.
Relies To Peary's Exposition To Pole.
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bqlar ‘Exhibit .at kusbun ce u^xuiALHiaioKLs^
NEW YORK. —Illustrative of Robert
K. Peary's progress In the Arctic zone,
an interesting polar exhibit has been
arranged In the American Museum
of Natural History, In Manhattan
square.
Ah the main feature of the exhibit
there la ahown a fully equipped (define
lined by Peary in hIH trip acroHH the
Ice In i 1)00-1 !iu2. Thin sledge Ih drawn
by four dogs and Ih guided by a fig
ure In complete Arctic robe*. I'anally
drawn by eight dogs, thin Hledge, car
rying ion poundn, wan flrat lined by
Peary with hlx flogn anil then, toward
the end of hlm trip, with only four.
Included In the display are a chron
ometer, pocket sextant, compass and
aneroid barometer used by Peary on
an earlier expedition, and also those
abandoned by General Greely at Fort
Conger. The aneroid barometer Is
tiHeil to register the pressure of at
mosphere without the employment of
mercury or a similar fluid.
There arc also photographs of tlx
Roosevelt, of the crew, of the family
of the explorer on hoard the ship and
of different aspects of the ship. As a
background there is a large hemls
phere showing tlx; different routes
that have been taken by various Arctic
explorers.
Ai the entrance io the display la a;
I v *: X&kOr
I Mr* \i A-\ tL fijp ifit
r\V vfc -*<\ * r ' s£k
3( dwypit
!
I /f 1 v r »
l fcSifMv - #
*«> MI |V -*r A/ % waßtfc^iSß
- ifv fWP^jy
IjV .'* f;\ tev Jfc* , 4l -
J®§™ *v£im
\jPrWrm '■ jk
77»c Medlcai
Profession jp'SY f / y*
Recognizes i'i'lftjJl r f\jpf y i f
La Grippe as MMEdili” i* //
Lpidemlc fi& fSj * ,$! % gn rT&rvk ’/ I
C-r-rr/,. m\3ff P *-fji I
,'ik„x.'C J’
A A A AAAAAA aA- A A A A AAA A A A A A A A AAA A A A A A a A a A A a a a A A A - A a a a
“I can recommend Peruna for all such
who are ill and require a tonic."
Systemic Catarrh, the Result of La
Grippe. Pe-ru-na Receives Credit
for Present Good Health.
Mrs. Jennie\V.Gilmore, Box W,White
Oak, Ind. Ter., formerly Housekeeper
for Indiana Reform Hchool for Boys,
writes:
“Hlx years ago I had la grippe, which
was followed by systemic catarrh.
“The only thing I used woa Porttna
and Manalln, and I have been In better
health the last three years than for years
before.
“1 givo Peruna all thocrodlt for my
good health."
Pe-ru-na—A Tonic After La Grippe.
Mrs. Oho*. E. Wells, Hr., Delaware,
Ohio, writes:
“After a severe attack of la grippe, I
took Peruna and found it a very good
tonic.”
Judge Horatio J. Goss, Hartwell, Ga.,
writes: "1 had a severe spell of la grippe
which left me with systemic catarrh. A
friend advised me to try Peruna. The
third bottle completed tlie cure."
blackboard on which has been out
lined Peary’s progress and mode of
living in the polar regions. An ex
hibit of musk oxen, such a have been
eaten by the explorer's party, has been
placed in the mammal department.
Soi KILLS THE GERMS
OF SCROFULA
The laws of nature and heredity arc fixed and invariable. Parents who
are related by the ties of blood, or who have a consumptive tendency, or
family blood taint, are sure to transmit it to their children in the form of
Scrofula. Swollen glands, brittle bones,*weak eyes, hip disease, pale, waxy
complexions, emaciated bodies, running sores and ulcers, and general weak
constitutions are the principal ways in which the disease is manifested.
Those who have inherited this blighting trouble may succeed in holding it
in check during young, vigorous life: but after a spell of sickness, or when
the system has begun to weaken and lose its natural vitality, the ravages of
the disease will become manifest and sometimes run into Consumption,
S. S. S. goes down into the circulation and forces out the scrofulous deposits,
kills the germs and completely cures the disease. It changes the quality of
the blood by removing all impurities and poisons and supplying this vital
fluid with rich, health-sustaining qualities. »S. S. S. is a purely vegetable
medicine and is especially adapted to systems which have been weakened
and poorly nourished by scrofulous blood. Literature on Scrofula and zued*
ical advice free. TH£ SWIFT SPECIFIC CO ATLANTA , GAm j
PAGE THREE
“Most Effective Medicine Ever Tried
tor La Grippe.”
Hobt. L. Madison, A. M., Principal of
Cullowhoe High School, Painter, N.C.,
is chairman of the Jackson County
Board of Education, He has for nearly
six years been teaching in Painter.
lie is a writer of occasional verse and
has contributed to a number of leading
papers and magazines,—religions, edu
cational and secular.
In speaking of Peruna, Mr. Madison
says:
“I am hardly ever without Pernna in
my home. It is the most effective medi
cine that, t have ever tried for la grippe.
"It also cured my wife of nasal ca
tarrh. Her condition at one time was
such that she could n >t at night breathe
through her nostrils.
“In consequence, an Inflamed con
dition of the throat was brought
slamt, getting wor-- and worse, and
yielding to no roll « l> until Pernna was
tried.”
For special instrui tions, address TV,
llartman, President of the Hartman
baniturtum, Columlu s, Ohio.
If a girl Ih dressed In pink It's a
sign she Ik going Hornewhere with a
! red-headed man.
hiving In the Hiihurbs Ih a sort of
tra in Ins--, for the place you may hava
I to live in In the next world.