Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, AUGUST 23
WSa/fuM ■wiWMxjk iCj
*Mm mmBhHHS Vs
I
PAY DAY
What Does it Mean
to YOU?
Nn minor tvhat V' ir position may
be. -whether day laborer »r offtem
w'lHier, if *r« In that dieemirared
line til man wb'> get. t-li* same pitt*nc«
week niter we»-k without prospect of
anythin* belter, it U time you
appeal' ! U> the International Cnere
epondam e School* I '<>r I/i veers
tkey have licen qualifying dmatUfWl
worhars lor batter position* an«l
higher salaries
No matter what your circumstance*
are. i)»«y will q aii/v YOU Jot n better
fruit fan, (i higher Hilary, and a t aft
Jufyrr The way i« plain, easy, and
Mire for earni'tl men It. puts v i
undar n<> obligation to find out how
we ran help you. Simply mark and
mail the coupon below r<m you
afford to ttttUil an opportunity for
aavanifmfHi r
Intenulional Corrt.s|>ondence Schools
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KING PREDICTS
UNIVERSAL PEACE
f .ON DON Th* klni:’* Ht rlk 1n k
< h In lh* j»f*ari* ( OURK Hg Irns
b«*«*n m noli* atnuk In the right ill
rwnlon. mid one whleh muni hrliiK
glarim*** In tin* hearts of all who
b*’n*Vf* I hat th* era 1» nnl distant
when unlvernai pearo anmriK rlvlll*
«n 1 hhUoiih will <<v«uttirtll,v hi* rccof*
tilled aj* the true mean IMR of (hat
n*t»iiM*<i word
War Ih itOaChtiitlon (hat wan (ho
not#* of the con * reax The world i*
•pendmu four hundred million poundn
it year on |>repitr*»tloni for war. Four
or five hundred people anaemhlrd In
Caxton Hall to doe Ia re that war tmiai
end If NoundH a futile proteat, hut
It If the grain of muntard need whleh
will eventually apread to a Kreut har
vest.
FINt" THUNDER IN ARIZNO.
There wax a roll of thunder laxi
night that extended from Paradlae to
Pat agonfca and wax Mt ill rof’bH* vh *n
we went to xh”<ip. Heaven’a trip'iry
practice wax certginlv grand rihrl.if
the c\eutng’x porfoiTuanre *--Tomh
•tone ftpllnrh
ark you huillhinu V
W* Carry • Lire* Stock of
TIN ..... J? 0 HARD WOOD MANTELS,
RUBBER Krom 1n O* °"* TEB AND TILES,
TAR PAPER *\ uw 111 I fS PARIAN HOUSE PAINTS.
Blook and Oalvanliad Corrupatad Iron, Tar and Roam Sited Build
Inp Papor: Tin Shinoloa, Etc
Eotlmataa cheerfully furnlahod on Tin Roefinp. Gutters, Etc., Gal
vantxed iron cornices, and akytiphta.
DAVID SLUSKY,
100* BROAD STREET
LANK E Y ’ S
Is the place to go for a nice outing. Cool breezes,
fresh water and plenty of room.
Our natatorium is endorsed by Augusta and Sum
merville Hoards of llmlth.
Sons and daughters of loading physicians of Au
gusta are regular patrons of this place, and this is a
guarantee of it being safe ami sanitary.
JAKE SUMMERVILLE CAR AND GET OFF AT HEARD AVENUE; WALK
ONE BLOCK NORTH. I
Murder Mysteries of Augusta
Killing of Will Anderson
A few mtnut. “ before 12 o'clock on
! a hltti-r cold nlftht. In February, 1905,
1 Private .1 C, Smith of the Augusta
I police force, took shelter close to the
oofet *a|| of a store at Kollock and
D'Anttgnac tcrecta, where he could
j mis* ihe wind and keep a close look
out down Kollock street, toward the
| Iximbard crossing, for hla relief then
due In a very short while.
Suddenly, as he etood thus watch
,ua and waiting, two dark forms dart
j (>d out from the ehadow of a big
| tree opposite, the front gate to the
j home of Will Anderson, then a real
j dent of the house that stands next
place north of tin- old Second Baptist
! efturch building liiHtlnntvely, the po-,
| Bosnian followed, hoping If he hurried !
I to overtake the men. and Investigate!
their strange behaviour. Before he !
had proceeded more than thirty vardK
they were out, of sight, having dis
appeared around a corner at Tal
colt street.
WPii dogged persistence, though,
the officer Kept on. At Anderson’h
gate he stumbled and almost fall j
aerosa the latter's prostrate form, ly
leg Just In Hi'- yard entrance. Smith
raised ihe man up. when he had sum
moned all his courage lo overcome
the nerve shock of such a horrible
discovery, hut Anderson was appar
ently dead. Blood spurted from a
great hole In the side of hln head,
Just above the right ear, snd when
Ihe policeman laid him down again
lo strike a mtileh and examine more
closely he found a piece of lead pi
ping, twelve Inches or more In length,
lying close to the fence, where ths
desperate thug had dropped It when
In- struck the fatal blow.
Hinllli awakened Mrs. Anderson and
together they carried the unconscious
man Inside. A doctor was summoned
and next day he was taken to the city
hospital, where he died In twenty-four
,iouis, without having ever recovered
consciousness.
Iha was perhaps the darkest mur.
iier ever done In the elty of Augusta.
About the whole affair hung a cloak
of mystery so Impenetrable that po-
Hre detectives were never able to se
cure the slightest clue. No arrest was
even made The sleuths suspected
lio man. They were absolutely In the
dark, with no starting point from
whleh to begin their search.
Anderson was rohhed; his clothing
showed that The highwaymen are
supposed to have seeured a roll of
greenbacks amounting to three hum
drod dollars, maybe more They did
not take a few dollars in silver mon
ey that the unfortunate man carried
In a pocket separate from life larger
sum.
Smith was unable to say whether
I he luglllves wore white or black.
1.0 merely caught a glimpse of them
as they emerged from the shadow
and timdi olf in a dead run. He
heard no cry. nor did the sound of
a struggle reach hi* ear*. Anderson
kepi a meat house at Campbell anl
Uugas street*. He left the place alone
and nobody saw him on hla way home.
He may have taken . Ith*r one of two
or three different route* Smith
would In all probability have seen
TiMls
FOR lOHI’H) LIVCR.
A ftirpld liver deramgeii the wtioAl
•)j(rm, and produces
SICK HI ADACHE,
Doprp'ia, ContlvrnAsn, Rhi'ii*
r.iiitU.n, Sallow Skin and Pilot,.
There I* no better remmlv for Iheec
common dl«rn»<-. I h«n [>R. Tl' n ’ll
LIVI k* P 11.1.5, a. a trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.
him had he proceeded up Dugas to
Kollock and down the latter street
to his hone- as the policeman stood
for several minutes on Kollock street,
Just beyond D’Antlgnac.
OXYGEN HABIT
! NOT KNOI HERE
>
Local Physicians Say the
Latest Form of Intoxica
tion Has • Not Reached
Augusta—What, it means
to Get Drunk on Oxygen.
it seems to he a hard matter to j
check people jn their Intoxicating
habits and a new fad han developed
that promises to put prohibition In
the shade for the time being 8n
far as can be ascertained there are,
no habitual customers of the new oxy j
gen stimulant and Intoxicant In An
gusia yet awhile, but the papers and j
the public ihroughout the country are'
much interested In the new Idea.
It brings Into reality the biblical j
story "drunken, hut riot with wine
staggering, hut not from strong
drink " In Georgia especially the
new method will no doubt attract
much attention as soon as It becomes
generally known, but still it is doubt
fill If ovtr It will nuiie Into use In
a degree worth mentioning as long
as the dispensary Is on the n*her sld'-
of the river, or blind tigers are found
in tieorgla.
The system seems to have started
In laOridon and the Inhalation of oxy
gon Ih'-re has come to he a fad.
Chemists supply cylinders of oxygen
to eiistopieiH whose numbers are ever
Increasing Oxygen Is a powerful
stimulant tor mind and body and ae
cording to a chemist many society
women are devotees of the habit, and
reputable physicians acknowledge
t hat with the Incteased AiollUl** foi
Its supply Its use Is rapidly spread
ing
The gas is supplied compressed In
Iron cylinders fitted wlih a tap, and
on attachlngs a rubber tube and fun
n«J, a slenin of gas, gentle or strong,
ran ho applied at will In any direc
tion. Usually two or three minutes
Inhalation of a gentle stream mixed
with air Is sufficient at a time.
As to the general use of the gas In-
Itsrrtmlnato'v hv the public, medical
opinion Is adverse ll 1* uniiiiesllon
atdy a powerful and valuable stimu
lant, hut excess!vo use Is d.ingerom.
The ntonv form of oxygen In minute
quantltlev Is. of course, excellent, hut
when Inhab-d In larger quantities p.
become* a dangerous poison, causing
hendaehe and Irritation of the muconx
membrane and so on so man pure
oxygen Is absolutely dangerous and
must he largely diluted,
rhsd-sobgoth ? ..tclce cfwypl
A spc<*allat, on tiring questioned ns
lo what would he the effect on the
system If oxygen w> re taken regular
ly and In large quantities, saiiD
“It would simply mean that the vi
tality of the luxlv would be prema
turely used UP and would tend to
Hhorten life. If the heart were con
tlnually stimulated with pure oxygen
It* bests would he quicker and atror.g
er, and blood would droiilate more
rapid I v You would be living 100 fast
and your chances of reaching three
score years and ten would be vetv
small Indeed "
A Dondon paper ha* printed a do
serlpllon by one of Its reporters of
the sesation* experienced during what
he called an "oxygen orgy. 1 '
"I am aim under the Influence of
Aft pen sellona ol oxygen," he wro'o.
and lee! more Inclined to wrestle
than lo write—not from popnaclt; .
hut from the Joy of being alive and
possessed of ft healthy body to per
form the cominanda of the stlnmlat
,'d brain '
Alter the Inhalation of u certain
quantl'v of oxygen th • man undergo
ing the experiment said that his heart
made Itsetl ohvtous "it obtruded, ll
clamored for recognition like a good
servant who had boon ignored. Kv
hllnratlon followed, aerial champagne
—life ethereal cue raising the vital
principle —It was all this'
"After further inhalation my ears
sang and I felt slightly uncomfortable
n» if 1 had hung downward over a
cliff and protesting blood pulsed 111
mv arteries. As I rose to my feet I
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
MAN'S PLACE , NOT WOMAN'S
The superintendent of famous old
cotton mills In Massachusetts has
written a letter expressing his feel
ings and conviction* upon the ques
jtion so Important at ail times: Wo
j roan's place In the industrial world.
Mr Martin superintends over
l twenty five hundred people in hi*
! mills, and his experience has been
wide and varied from Nova Scotia
Ito California.
Mr. Martin j»ays; *
"I claim that in giving women men’*
•vork, we have done her the greatest
harm and injured our home land. We
have narrowed her and there is no
freedom In It. There are too many
i good women at work in the places of
i men. What we need Is more men at
work wuere these women work, and
who would be capable of support
ing homes and take these good women
and make them happy wives.
“We need these women to grace
lovely little homes and make them
( harming. 1 claim that it is wrong to
engage a woman to do a man's work.
There is no grander sphere for wo
manhood than in caring for a home.
The press, the church; the good writ
ers should take up thl* subject, and
women should be more encouraged to
marry and make homes instead of har
boring the mistaken notion that, she
must go out and be the wage earner.
That is man's place, riot woman's."
Mr Martin has, of course, the right
view of this subject; the view which
must be held by all those who study
the nature of man and woman, and
who realize why the sexes were cre
ated Woman was never meant to
go outside the home for employment.
Mr. Martin speaks still further re
garding wages; woman is paid twelve
dollars a week, he says, for work
which a man formerly did for twen
ty-five, and this shuts men from em
ployment, while it shuts the woman
from the home. In fart, destroys
the home. But all this evil con
dition started with man's greed and
selfishness. First of all, some man
who received his twenty-five dollars
a week failed to divide it fairly with
his wife and children. It went into
the saloon, the pool room or the rare
track This compelled the woman to
ask for employment, herself. When
the employer found that the woman
The Sympathy of a Nation Goes
to Italian, Who Lost The Marathon
LONDON. —The enthusiasm with
which the heroes of the Marathon
race were greeted In Condon, and
the tremendous Interest which the
rare has evoked, have made the vic
tory lo an American all the more tri
umphant .and among the history of
athletic contests that race will stand
out as memorable and historic.
American enthusiasm and American
generosity will, however, readily
grant that the winner of the race,
Mr. Hayes, was not the central figure
of that strange scene. Under the
burning sun. acrrrss the glaring roads
of the dusty country, fifteen men
started In this race. Along the way
the crowds had cheered them as they
passed through the long and well
kjiown route from Windsor to Har
row Wembley and Worn wood Scrubbs
Countries were represented, new and
old, each man bem on carrying away
for his nation the laurel wreath of
the Marathon race. At the Stadium
Itself SO.OOO people waited breathless,
80,000 heads turned toward the en
trance waiting, waiting under the
burning sun for the arrival of the
first figure which should herald vie
torv to the hero of the day. At. last
a man staggered into the Stadium,
pale as death, his hands hanging
limply before him. his head sunk up
on his breast, a little man who look
ed more as though he had escaped
f’nm some great battle, and for dear
life had come to tell of the disas
ter. than the winner of a contest. The
pitiful little figure quivered for a mo
ment. when the immense round of
cheers hurst upon the air, a-id then
fell and lay apparently dying. A
great hush fell on the huge audi
ence Women began to sob and cry
that they had killed hint He lifted
hi* head and was raised from the
ground, and he tried once more to
make those final steps, so few and,
yet of such Import to him, hut the !
nerveless arms fell and his legs once !
more sank under him, and the lit
tle heap lay still and motionless
again The queen rose from her seat.
Kvery woman was on tiptoe, watching
I breathlessly. Once more he was on
n.s legs again, the men around help
i lr,g him. and the great crowd cheered,
,nd blindly with bent head he stag
gered toward the tape Another run
| tier was close behind him "Tne
American.' was on everybody's Ups.
nnd the sun shone on the stars aui
stripes ol his vest. "C!o It Hayes,
f you love usl'’ was shrieked front
every American lung, as the sturdy,
short man plodded his way steadtiv
down lh,. track IJuruudo had heard
. the cheering tor another man. and
> once more gathered himself together
and made a Anal effort. Once more
Ihe fell, once more he waa assisted
|to hts feet, and then he was over
j (he line. Was he dead, as he lay so
1 motionless on the stretcher?" The
i queen * pitying eyes were turned up
; on him a* they carried him from the
held and then the mighty roar rose
i from the rrowd The American had
the victory. Just as he won Hefferon.
' the Bonth African came upon the
, track Then the sequel—Hayes »n»
prom uneed the winner, Porando dl»-
-way -ft *!lahtl> My speech was a
little hraiiattn* —idea* swarmed. but
It way hard to setae them "
The physician who administered the
owgeti reportcd'that the pulse during
the administration period of atiotit
•n minute* increased from 74 to #O,
tub stlrht flurhlnic and a allien•
i. rspliatem An hour later the *f-
I tecta passed away. leavtnK the con
I illttous much aa usual.
By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
could do the same work for tweive
dollars for which the man had been
paid twenty-Ave, the spirit of greed
took possession of him, and other
women were encouraged to seek posi
tions. And bo the hall has grown,
until It* enormous size shuts the
doors of homes and proves an insur
mountable obstacle to the marriage
altar. Had the man always been
Just, fair, liberal and decent in his
treatment of woman financially, she
would never have sought work outside
her home.
It .B quite true that no other sphere
iB so suitable for woman as the
sphere of home.
But the woman who sits in a home
alofie, late into the night, illy clad
and illy feed, and knows that the
money her husband has earned Is go
ing Into unworthy places and for un
worthy amusements, cannot be ex
pected to feel a reverence for her posi
tion as home keeper.
However unfortunate the condition
of tjie sexes has become through this
employment of women In public of
fices, it is late in the day to under
take any change under our present
system.
Employers who mnke their millions i
out of the cheap wages paid women 1
and children are not going to en
courage any return to the employment j
of men in their places. Women who j
have grown away from the domestic
plane, and who have learned the sat
isfaction to be found in an independ
ent purse, are not going to take a
large view of the subject and re
turn to the hearth, the embroidery
frame and the cradle, dependent upon
their husbands' mood for the use of
a dollar.
All the combined efforts of church,
press and rostrum could never effect
this change.
It will have to come In other ways.
It will have to come by a changed
industrial system.
That change is on .the way.
The world never goes back. It
goes on. And woman is learning great
lessons in present conditions of
strife and toll—lessons which will en
able her to be more useful and bet
ter satisfied when she again becomes
the home keeper and man the wage
earner.
God speed the day.
qualified because he had been helped
to his feet.
No more gracious act was ever
done By the queen than when she
stepped forward to offer the special
cup for the Italian runner. But Por
ando was to recover, and when he
was well enough to give an account
joi himself and the heroic effort that
j he had made, in his little bed-room,
'in Shaftshury avenue, he told how
It was that, on entering the Stadium,
the sound of that mighty cheering had
sapped his strength, that he had not
lost consciousness, and he believes
that he could have picked himself
up without aid, although his vitality
was almost spent. The Marathon
race is run, but the question remaini'
in my mind. What of the exhibition '
-he memory will remain to those
who saw it of pale faces, dead eyes,
quivering nerves, men overcome by
effort. There »as a great element
of cruelty In this greatest race of
modern times, and the remembrance
of the tragic figure of the little Itali
an must not he the forerunner of a
long line of others who suffer to make
an English, or, rather, an internation
al holiday.
To women the feature of the gym
nastlc displays at- the Stadium In the
White City was undoubtedly that giv
en by the Danish lady gymnasts.
"The finest thing I have seen tor
years,” remarked an eminent medleal
man to me. who had himself witness
ed It, “and the finest women I have
ever seen."
The Danish authorities have tnsis
ted on gymnastic training for girls
three hours a week In every school
throughout the country. Convinced
oi the Improvement In health and
strength to the nation hv this eman
cipation of women, they have set
themselves steadily to work to the
attainment of the flexibility of body
and figure necessary to perfect hu
man health. The theory was mani
fested in practiee when the army of
Danish amazons marched through the
Stadium, tall, strong and fair, grace
ful In movement, beautiful In limb,
nnd forever .jey set at rest the query
as lo whether strength and beauty
could be allied Medical testimony
has showu that the Danish children
today are stronger physically and
mentally than were the children of
former generations. The worth of a
nation certainly does not depend up
on Its size, and little Denmark has
In more than one way shown us
wherein real advancement and civili
sation consist.
Teas
Special blend mixed tea at
SOc a lb.
Unsurpassed for Iced tea.
25e will buy one pound of
Republic CofTee. positively th*
best coffee In Georgia for the
price.
PHONE YOUR ORDERS.
£. 1. DORIS
Phone 633 1302 May Ave.
BABCOCK
THE VEHICLES THAT SATISFY.
WILL ALWAYS be exactly as represented.
“ “ have a construction as nearly perfect
as good material, skilled workmen
of three generations with sixty-five
years experience can make them.
* 5 * give that satisfaction and durability
which honest construction insures.
“ “ have that air of perfection in those
minor details which either make or
mar a vehicle.
“ “ be so built as to insure user of the
pleasure, comfort and the service,
known and experienced only in the
Babcock Vehicles.
“ u uphold the Babcock reputation of sixty
# years for building The Vehicles That
Satisfy.
WILL NEVER be over enthusiastically described.
“ “ give that endless trouble to the users
which arises from poor construction.
“ “ look and wear like those built “one
every minute.”
“ “ lack proper proportions, completeness of
details ana good taste.
“ “ prove excessive in their prices.
“ “ disappoint you, they are sold as, you
have a right to expect them to be, and
they are The Vehicles That Satisfy.
H. H. COSKERY, Sole Agents.
BC I /"> Bed and Busf > Dry Pressed
It I v> r\ and Common Building
LARGE STOCK. PROMPT SHIPMENT.
Georgia-Carelina Brick Company
Howard H. Stafford, President.
Write for Prices. AUGTJSTA, GA.
RoycrofL Philosophy.
By Fra Elbertus.
Written in a sineere and kindly desire to help
the young who do not know, and the older- ones
who sometimes forget, *
The less you require looking after, the more
able you are to stand alone and complete your
tasks’ the greater your reward. Then if you
can not only do your work, but direct intelli
gently and effectively the efforts, your reward
is in exact ratio, and the more people you di
rect, the higher the intelligence you can rightly
lend, the more valuable is your life.
Ner carry matches loose in your pocket —have
a metal match-box. \
Never use letter paper or envelopes to figure
on or for memoranda —it shows you do not
realize that the first requisite in business is
economy,- The same rule applies to burning of
lights that are not needed; whether there is a
meter or a “flat rate” makes no difference—
avoid waste.
Do not argue with customers, nor contradict
them. x /
The man who endures everything from rude
customers and got even bv selling them a bill
may not have been actuated by the best motives
but his general policy was right.
Always lie circumspect and courteous. Bear
the faults of some, the impoliteness of others,
and pardon everybody sooner than yourself.
Responsibilities gravitate to the person who
can shoulder them, and power Hows to the man
who knows how. Don’t worry!
The habit of borrowing small sums of money
—anticipating pay-day—is a prenicious prac
tice and breaks many a friendship. It is no
kindness to loan money to a professional bor
rower. *
Don’t touch pencils, pens, erasers or papers
on another man’s desk, unless he is there. The
Golden Rule applies well here, as elsewhere.
The love you liberate in your work is the only
love you keep.
The man with a debt he could not prevent,
caused perhaps by sirkness. should go frankly
to his friend or his business chief. Shun ilu*
money loan shark as you would contagion.
Poverty, discouragement, temptation, too of
ten crime, are the fruit of that sort of “confi
dential” financing.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 23