The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1890-1908, September 11, 1908, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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PAGE SIX Hit AUbUSU HtRM.I) 731 Broad St., Augusta, Ca. Published Every Afternoon During th* Week and on Sunday Mrrnlnq by THE HERALD PUBLISHING CJ. Entered at the Augusta Pos-office a« Mail Matter of the Second Class. SUBSCRIPTION RAILS Daily and Sunday, 1 year tj Daily and Sunday, 6 months 300 Dally and Sunday, 3 months I- I *- Dally and Sunday, 1 month.. ....... M Dally and Sunday. 1 week -13 Sunday Herald, 1 year 1 Weekly Herald, 1 year w TELEPHONES. Business Office CHy editor JJJ Society Cdltor No communication will bo published in Th« Herald unleaa th* noma of tha write la tlgnad to the artlcla. NEW YORK OFFlCE—Vrrr.]Mii.|ll<n latnln Agency, nr,in»wl<-k Building, Flfih Avenue. N»w York City. CHICAGO OFFICE—Vr.-lHnd He"'* min Agency W 11. Kenlnor, Mur. 1J0" Bnyr. Building. rhlrafo. 111. Tha Ilrrald la ilia ofOeial ndvrriialnf mrdlom of Hi. nty V A>igu*t‘> “ 1 thr County Of Richmond for all le*«J no tice* and odvarilaln*. Addraaa all bualnaaa communication! to IHE AUGUSTA IHKALD. 7*l Broad »t.. Auouata, Oa. “IF YOU WANT THE NEW# YOU NEED THE HERAt-D.' Auouata, Oa. Friday Bept. 11, 1908. Circulation of the Herald tor 7 Months, 190 S Fabruarf 210,488 March .... ...226,578 April 222,012 May June July 241,202 Annual 219,700 DAILY AVERAGES. For 7 month*.. ~ .. .. .. 7.815 For Alien*'. * •• 2,848 Thorn la no hotter way to roach tho home* of th* prosperous peo ple of thl* city and aeellou than throuKh the column* of The Her aid Dally and Holiday. Partle* leaving Augusta can have The Herald sent them by mall each day, Phone 297, Circulation Depart ment, If you leave August a, so I hat Th* Herald can reach you each day. A flow tcinparance drink concooted in ThnmaavHle In called Shoemaker * KIIIKCI. Klii cly . lull H the hint. They call It labor day, probably, he entlriti p«!Hlcl;tn* »:*«)« try In put In nidi a hard dm a' work on t hut da. iohn iimy Kvan* probably thought] hr experienc'd that cold il#> in Hep teudiei which ho escaped In August Holland «ttil Insists that olio wl!l] • punk C**trt>. hut It la noticed that now *h« Im* grown very polite In tel’ log him for the 'atcenlh time. |i Is computed that 14,000 now law yei . and an equally large number of] new doctor# hana out ihelr slilmtlo.. ovi'n ;.<ar No wonder the timber Supply I* grow my. scarce. And today Is the day that John Temple I* >° he notllled of hi* nomi nation. As ls ofim done, so In this esse ihey h»x> kept the licst for the last. __ The contract tor the Untun dam. It ta said was let to tho hl*he*’ bidder Hill wasn't that logical, since It Is the highest dam H< th. re should he an fnd put to these dam Insinuations Kleven member* of the British peerage ltA'o married aclrcssea, so It is aald No deuht this accounts In part for the peerage putting up such • llldt K* It dOf*k The llsrtwell Hun asvs that "a good deal of Hart county was carried down the Savannah by the August freshet. And some of It stopped here and has been added to Augnsla’s realty Those Augusta textile worker* who WSIC entice,| to New Oilcans ate al r»a<l' wtahin . the. w.ie hic k to \u gusta Th. v had been drinking Savannah river water, which alway* has thl* effect Forty rattlesnakes were killed re sent I v near Valdosta In one ,l*y. (evidently lhos« South Georgian* think that since snakebite cure has been blacklisted there I* no use keen mg the *nakeg _____ Probably It was hi* ahacbee from a Bryan meeting which he shout 1 have attended, that »*» hissed, and not hi* name, a* some of tho rabid Joe Brown partisan paper* complain happened In Atlanta the other day. \ Pennsylvania couple the other ,j,. walked twenty-eight mil** to s,*. marrhd Hut that I* nothing Homo married folk* go all >hc *«> » South Dakota to got unmarried, ana thev go alone at that. We have had Ihe bicycle face and th. automobile fare and are now to have the agrnplan, face. Vnd tlon «e shall eerfaluly have the dodger face which will probably he squint ,ved i.voking for automobile* to dodge on a level and for looking up ward* to dodge thing* dropped from aeroplane* The Atlanta Journal **'* that Tom Wanton could not attend the meet ln£ of th* unemployed in N** because he »** busy out In the gar I .In patching huttsrgle*" When the i ar. .monied next Novel, her It j will probably appear that Thom** MUigh; something else also »hUc hv aa* uuaj tu lb* garden. FITTING OUT THE CHILDREN FOR SCHOOL School* day, will goon he here again Next Monday is ‘he oflicial opening, .end :• few day* later the. re viilar routine will he on. This means much to the children, 10 the parent*, nrid fh< household. The children have had three months of cessation from *tudy. They have variously employed ihelr time, »om« m vlalilng, some In playing and Idl ing, and *ome In work of other kind All this must now cease, and all as- I'lnhlo together again at school This will change the household rou tine, for the children must be got ready for school, and thl* *cent* al ways the most Important thing and she first to be looked after In school lime by the good mother. For the parents, and especially the mother this coming of the school days means a lot of hard work and careful preparations. No general, In gt.irtlnx out upon a long march with hi* array, is more partleullar In trying Jo pro ] vide all lls iieCCTilttea, than the care-| ful mother I* In trying to provide her j children wllh what they- need In a way for a successful career j at school. These wants are numerous vnrntlon day* tho children hgyc been allowed to wear out Ihelr ijlnth#*. j They romped and played or ..Wdrk«tl us the cake might he-, and at This they were allowed to yet tho last remain log service out of their summer wear, j Now the school day* have come, al most simultaneous with fall, and the ( little one* require to he rigged uui , from head to heel, only a mother] knows what I* needed for a child at- j tending LChool, for these needs ur, rn many nnd peculiar. Who. noi Ini ■ Dated, would know lb*' neg'iii'liqf an. education Is peculiarly hard nh boy* j pants and hIiooi? Yet. It Is a fact, af| .very mother haa learned by ex perlence And so on through a Ion;: ilst of want*. So these ant# schools days are busy I day* for the mother. All the thing* ; j must be provided which the children ] ! will require for.Guir material- wall, ! t.elng durlny the school term, there] are shoes to he bought, nnd not any j il.l shoe* will do for the children to] wear to school—they mtisl he ahoca 1 made to filiind Hie strain of acquiring i,ii cduca'lon which seems very hard i .in the heels and locs. There ar*. i nils :o he bought for Ihe hoys, and dr. exes for the girls; and boy s' school; Mills mu*, he of extra #trgngln in tie earns, nod glrhi, sblhkal desses, too, ] : require l,< he made of goods of extra , texture. And then there ale hats ; how the hoys' hats or caps tmisl be I Ihcl.clc.l wllh an eye to severe servte'\ 1 and He- girls' hats to he becoming and I yet be able to stand careless handlin'' And the stocking* the veryadrongw needed f.n oho >1 wear - and Ihe many olh.-r thing* that will he j needed. ! Ho the good mother ha* a bus.' time »1 It, providing what *b# known the children will require to equip ihem for school Only too often Is] 1 her purse le*s plentifully supplied ihalt It should he, and her dlfllc.lltle* : re increased liy the necessity of inak j Dig her dollar* go a* far as possible ] ! Ho these are <laya when with more \ than usual care she will watch the' dally pap. r, to find In tt ht. ts to guide her In Judiciously spending her tnoney ] tha! for the amount at her disposal , he may best equip her children for: t chixil. A SENSIBLE QUEEN. (Vn-Alterable Interest has been !caused among those who are Interest ! .-.I In *uch mailer* hj tin* stalemenl that the Duke of Abruist Is shortly to com* on a visit to this .omiti),i Abrussl was reported to |>e engaged I to Mt** Klktns, a rich American hetr es», the .laughter of Hen a tor Klktn »n.t .granddaughter of Uncle Haaaway Davis, Judge Parker’* running mate In 19ut It was asserted that th* 1 1 royal family of Italy was opposed to this match, which. .*n account at the I plebeian birth,'o< the lady, war re csrd.it by them as a mesalliance ] The announced Visit of the .hike * now coupled with the Information that he ha* at last ohtallied the con sent to hi* proposed marriage of th royal lamlly. with but one exception,! and that he com.** to renew his i courtship. The one exception I* Queen Mar- , gh.-rlta the king a mother. She I* | the aunt ot the Duke of Ahrutsl. and |the virtual head of the family, -uuv the assassins!loii of her husband, the, lal,, King Humbert, This queen I mother, with all her apparent stub . twinim-a* In this matter, seems to he a very scttaible old lady at last, and] tn her objection* Is Influenced by mo-; ! lives which do her credit. She doe* not object to Mi*» Elkins ] I because she la an American girl and not a prince** born Her objection , Is on account of her being a-rich lielre**. and because of thl* fact th-i Duke of Abruast, her nephew, being held up g* g fortune hunter, no bet-i ter than the real of that class of ] European noble* so Ignobly repreV-nt : .-.I hv the two husbands of Anna ] . i.-uld. Queen Alargberlta know* the I worth of laiuis, Duke of Abruzzl, as a man, and she resents the idea that In seeking a wife he Ik chieflyinflu enced by such sordid motive*. Tbe Italian royal family, to It* credit be it *ald, has Hpcrciaeii a corn raendable independence in It* mat rtage*. They have not been made for state reaaonß, hence have not sought Kngllab or German alliance:*, as nearly all other royal families have done. The present king, Victor Em manuel 111, married a poor Monte negrin princess. And It la with the same gturdy spirit of Independence and good sense that his cousin, the Duke of Abruzzt, now denlreH to make an American girl his wife. Queen Margherita will no dpubt noon learn that she Is mistaken In her belief that the American people regard Abruzzi In the light of a for tune hunter. They know that he In a young fellow who has manly stuff In him. He has shown It by what he has done a* navigator and explor er, and they admire him notwlthstan i- Ing hla royal connection. If the American punster* and carlraturiKts ufta him a* a subject It is because no person of prominence escapes them, and not because they hold him in contempt. This the old queen mother will »»hii understand, and then she will withdraw tier object ton. In the mean lime the duke is coming over again, and It Is safe to predict that he will carry his American charmer back with him as lilh wife, and that one American heiress will marry a Kuro pean nobleman and no scandal will follow the marriage. A RENT PAYER'S JUBILEE A few days ago In New York Joseph Ostcrly and his wife celebrated th. DOleth anniversary of their tenantry j of the hons. In which they live, i Ostorly la seventy eight years of ar >, j '.ml his wife seventy-two. When they ! 'i r. married fifty years ago, they tented the part of the house which they have^ occupied contlnoualy since 'h< :t they are the only tenants In Dial great city who have occupied th ’ am,* t ii,‘ment for half a century and niv proud of th' lr distinction; and no less proud of the lad that during all Ibis time never once failed to pay i heir rent promptly on the day it was due, I he old man Is still hale and hearty and so is tils good wife. He is sober and industrious, und works steadily at his trade, which is that of shoe maker, lfo has never dissipated, and tor many years has made It his cus lorn to drink one glass of whiskey “'cry Hunday morning, and no more : I any other time. And he has never been sick a day in his life. The couple never tad any children, i n *lxl all these ijircumaMncea it 'Vouhl .'tin that the;' should now be "tv 1 ' fixed - but Hiey cannot be, sl-ice Ihelr landlord, because they were In straitened circumstances and had been good t. nants so long, reduced lh< Ir rent from JIR per month to $? When they moved Into tlio house; In 18f.S Die property was worth $5,b00 It was then on a street far on the outskirts of the city, with only annul hons..a around It and plenty ofv .can, : lots on which children played In the grass. The Dili., house still stands a* It stood then, but around It have he.-n luillt large tenement houses many stories high and the street ts now u busy hive of humanity. The property without Improvements hav ing been made to It, Is now worth 816,000. During the fifty years he occupied a l-art of D as a tenant it pus had three owners Two writer* Tt d, each leaving ihe property ;o hls son, so lhat Oslerly Is now paving rent so.- ihe same house to grandson of hls original landlord, the third generation Altogether he ha* paid In rent during these llfty years, for a part of the house lie could have nought complete for 8 i.Oiht, a total of 87,814, and this house, without other expenditure*, made on It than the little required for , Incidental repairs, could now be sold for $15,000. What a mistake tho old man made! j It. Instead of renitng when lie started out In life, he had bought the property not only would he have paid for tt long ago and now he relieved of the parts of the same property, tn the nee,-salty of paying rent, hut the other rent* that would come to him from others as unwise ft* he has h -on. would have kept him and hls old w ife IQ comfort, without the neeessllv up- : i nn them of regular dally toll during the evening of Ihelr live* There Is a lesson In this which :<p piles to all renters, and should ’a taken o heart hv them Whether It I-.- tn New York or In Augusta, the principle I* the same Whether It he : lor the si me hou*.- or whether to th.-i cost of rent he added the additional io|. «nd lose.-- of occasional moving, I tt figure* out the same wav tn the end The man who pay* reut for a] term of year* pays the eo»t of the 1 property, and In ’he erd ha* ttolhl.t. j *1 hen why should not every tout.,; man. alerting out tn life secure ht* own Kerne. In»t,**d of renting ' Therei ta tu thl* home-owning not only th.-, pecuniary advantage lllualrate-t above, hnt there are other and still gr< atx-r j moral advantage-, which are obvious; to all Then to own a home should he the first desire of every Venn* mat | who assume* the duties ot head of t.; family. This can he done by rvorv one who really desire* It. The want of money does not prevent Itt every city there; an- men and corporations who sell , teal estate on the Instalment plan , and who gladily sell to any stead-.! mdustrou* young man a home on monthly instalment* hut very little j shove ihe rent price Instead of pay ] Inc rent as a tenant the occupant ] would he pa-lnf for the purchase i price at the owner Ht ranee that any should prefr- pay- j tns rent Yet ih. r» are thousand* a 4! unwise aa the old shoemaker In New I York, THE AUGUSTA HERALD AS THE HERALD SAID. The Atlanta Spirit. The Augusta Herald says "there is something admirable in the Atlanta spirit." Probably due to the fact that It didn't get watered like the Augusta article.—Lawrenr.evllle News-Herald. An Important Essential. An Atlanta man claims to have ln ! vented a new life preserver. But, as the Augusta Herald remarks, its price per bottle la not stated.—Jacksonville Times Tnion. A Seaside Advantage. The Augusta Herald says “In Bruns-' i wick, Ga., they seem to have a “booze , boat. where the thirst-afflicted ran go and secure That’s 1 one advantage of being on one edge of ihe three-mile limit.—Orangeburg ] Times Democrat. A Serious Question. Th ( . Augusta Herald InsistK that the Boston doctor who says that men with a tendency to baldness should pro cur,. nightcaps should now tell what such men In prohibition states are to do.—Cuthbert Leader. A National Conclusion. The Augusta Herald says that a new kind of chewing tobacco has been named Tom Watson. It may be ex pected, then, that the fellow who bites off a piece of It will find that he has got more than he can chew.--Calhoun Times, — Tough Chickens in Rome, The Augusta Herald notes that Rom e I* not likely to he chosen as ] the meeting place for the Methodist ! conference. A woman there recently, sprained her arm in wringing the ] neck off a chicken. —Rome Tribune- ] Herald. TALKS ABOUT AUGUSTA. Plucky Augusta Georgia's Boast. Plucky Augusta has gone right ahead helping herself out of the chaos of the storm. Her men. women and children havp forgotten self and all white and black are laboring for the common good. Georgia's boast for years to come will be of the indomlt ablp courage and bravery shown by the people of Augusta in clearing away the traces of their great calam Ity.—Brunswick Journal. Battling Bravely With eHr Problem*. Augusta Is bravely battling with her problems, Pho will come out on top and won't be long about it.—States boro News. Federal Government Should Help. The At Ileus Banner thinks Augusta EoUlrt be protected by a leve P being Unlit, nnd that, as the Savannah river Ih navigable, the Federal government should build It. The Banner Is right— Augusta should not have such a dis astrous occurrence again.—Marietta Journal. Hard to Please Dome Folks. Some of the prohibitionists are mad because Augusta Is not yet a dry town Savannah Press. Don't Use That Kind of Mud. "The mud Is fast disappearing," says th e Augusta Herald That's right, don't keep any ot it to hurl in the next political campaign.—Bruns wick News, SOME POLITICAL DOPE A Dispassionate View of It. Although Tip' Times Is not snp porting Mr Watson, It Is not one to take any stork In the talk about his telling out to the republican party for a money consideration, because his ability to earn money with his tongue and his pen is such that there would be not the slightest necessity for hint to resort to questionable means to make a few thousund dol lars Uubltn Times. A Plausible Explanation. Those enthusiastic democrats who cannot sleep nights nor attend to their business during the day be cause ,loc Brown refused to break into s vacation at the behest of his enemies to shout for Bryan, should quit poHtics~long enough to join a Don't Worry Club. Griffin News. Seems to Bet on Tom. John Temple Graves, the sweet tongued orator of Georgia, says that be Is going to stump the state for the Independent candidate for govern or We only ask that he and Tom Watson get together just one time. One of them won't be able to go Hgam. Willie Hears! would do better ito keep the loud mouthed little one up In New York, pushing the pencil. Thomasrllle Times Enterprise, Much Effort Spent in Vain. John Temple Qravi s wilf lx> notified In Atlanta Friday nlxht of Ms nom ination for vice president by the lode pendvnee party. Hearst, HI see it au-l ; Graves will speak, and the notified jtlon will be followed by a four of j the stats by Mr. Graves, who will ! probably remain In Georgia during the greater past of the campaign. • Albany Harold. StraigHout for Watson and Brown. The Moultrie Observer observe! that we are supporting Watson for | pro;-!dent but do rot/swallow Vain--* i Carter for governor, and wants ffJ ; know what t* the difference Well. i«o supported Brown In the primar and would feel bound to s'lek to hint Itn nnv event Ret were we heart whole and fancy free we would not ! support the Hearst hired man, for th j reason that we have no confidence in [•he origtn or purpose of the eo-ealled I Independence league. We support Jlr i Watson for he is a real democrat running on a platform of real democ [racy. Meigs Review. No Harm Was Done Or Attempted. Only one conclusion need b e drawn from the buliet that whistled through the air in the neighborhood of Saga more Hill on Saturday and the arrest there of an Insane man on Monday— the conclusion that the president is j well guarded, and that, while exposed j like other people to the ordinary ac cidents of life, he is as safe a» he could be made without inflicting upon him an amount of surveillance and re- j straint which he or anybody else of j like quality and courage would find in-1 tolerable. It is unfortunate —for the public's j peace of mind —that th e two episodes j came so near together, and entpha- j sized each other, but ther e is not the slightest evidence that they wer e In | any way connected and many good I reasons for the confident assumption j that they were wholly unrelated. The ! bullet Is sufficiently accounted for by ] the amount of hunting by more or less , careless men that, goes on all over j I-ong Island at this season of the year. ] and there is not even an excuse for j suspecting that the shot was crim-1 inally aimed. Certainly it was not j fired by the unfortunate Coughlin, for j Inevitably, If his mania were of the] homicidal type, there would have, been no effort on hls part to conceal i the deed, and lie would have invited ! not eluded, capture. Homicidal, however, Coughlin's j j mania is not. according to all the re-1 ports of his talk, in and out of court, j and he has not e vi ?n imagined a grlev- j ance against the president. Instead, i the man only wanted the president's ] i help in remedying some imaginary ' i wrongs committed by others else ] where, and, while this might easily I have developed later into antagonism against the president himself, it had not done so at the time of his arrest. The affair therefore jacks practically all the elements required for making a sensation, and it should calm rather j than excite apprehensions, since it demonstrated the xvatchfulness and competency of the president's gitardi-: ans. It is perhaps a little tn he regretted that the secret service men did their work so gently. The average- “crank" is rarely irrational enough not to stand in fear of personal castigation, and a well justified fear of receiving It if caught prowling in the neighbor hood of Sagamore Hill would have a good effect on the whoie troublesome tribe,—New York Times. 9 4 ► POINTS AND COUNTERPOINTS 4 Valuable Information for Him. Rome wants a sheriff who is quick with the rope to cure some of its shooting negroes who are quick with their guns. Rome should get a man from Spring field. lll.—Augusta Herald. WhPn we wrote the above we had not heard of Springfield. Hi., and its wonderful qualifications.—Rome Trib une-Herald. Can Be Little Doubt of That. The Elberton Star thinks that . the young lady who fell through a skylight Into a pot of soup doubtless came out in a stew. But perhaps she felt that she had got herself into hot water?—Au gusta Herald. Pho got her foot in it, doubtless— if the pot was large enough.—Hart well Sun. But H 0 Can’t Be Ignored. The Rome Tribune-Herald says that Bryan ls the only clean shaven man in the bunch. Wrong again, for there is our Georgia candidate. Tom Watson. —Augus- ta Herald. * A man little enough to run for spite, or In spite of common sense, should not be considered.—Dalton Cit izen. Still Worrying About Pauline, That "lady friend" of a num ber of the paragrapher*. “Paul ine," is a densely ignorant young woman and if any of the Mrs. Paragraphers meet her there’s go ing to be trouble . She's getting too much promiscuous attention from the married ones of the ' profesh."—Brunswick Journal. So far as we have noticed Editor Bowdre Phlnlzv has been more famil lar with ’Pauline" than anv one else. He is a bachelor man, so It is prob ahh all right. Don't notice "Pauline'' ge Tng any publicity in these col umns, do you?—Atlanta Georgian. Aunt Carry Nation’s Worth. Carry Nation ts said to he* worth 8200,000. Prancing around with her hatchet, and having her self put in jail occasionally has been a profitable business with her. Augusta Herald. It is a principle of political economy that anything is worth just whai it will bring in the market- no ‘more, no less Now, who in the thunder would give 8200.000 for Carrie?- Jack sonvllle Time* I'nlon. A Distinction Not a Difference. One of the negroes lynched In Springfield was eighty years old. IToe* this discredit the old prov erb that "An old dog never learns m w tri- k- ?" Augusta Herald. It shows how nicely this one 'tumbled "—Bremen Gateway. TiffiMk will save the dyspeptic from many dav* of miser., and enable Mm to eat »I*rover be wlahc*. They pr»ve«* SICK HLADACHE, can** tk«foo4tOMllllinit(aMMMh Uta the txMly. gi*c Kccu afpctiU. IMA CLOP ILFSH and raw . ic. Elejr*»tljr Mga* xualeU. idke No Substitute# Come, Take a Look. new neckwear of the Dorr Kind Is Here. Just a word to say that never before was such an offerina of neck fixings shown by us. Fancies of various schemes and innumer able shadings. Plain colors in a score of different tints, all made according to the Dorr Standard of style. 50c to $3.50 DORR Tailoring, Furnishings for Men of Taste House Raiser J. W. Giffin, practical house raiser and mover, can be found at 841 Broad St., McAuliffe’s Plumb ing Shop. THE SEVEN STAGES OF LOVE The incipient stage. The silly stage. The unconscious stage. The unreasoning stage. The reckless, or marrying stage. The sobering-up stage. The sensible stage—The Smart Set. "Pa!” “Well, what is it now?” “Pa, when I grow up, how will 1 keep from marrying the wrong wo man?” ■"You won't.”—Life. A doven grains of rice in a salteeil ir will absorb dampness and keep the sal* in power. It. also breaks the lumps that may be in the salt. Telephone Girls Who give you telephone service are trained op erators. They are citizens of this city and are faithful, earnest workers. But they are human beings. Their energies are bending toward giving you good service. Their mistakes are mistakes of the head and not of the heart. EFFICIENT SERVICE. REASONABLE RATES. For Information Call 9050- Southern Bell Telephone <£■ Telegraph Co. A GENTLEMAN SAID to our Salesman th*> other day: "Do you remember that Bedroom Suite I bought here twenty-four years ago?” "Y'es,” the Salesman replied, "but has It been that long?" "Y'es.” said the Customer, "my oldest boy is now -25 jears of age. and ie was Just one year old when 1 got that Suite, arid it ls perfectly good yet." Of course the patterns may be a little different now but OCR FURNIT.'RE ls as GOOD as any. And lhat Is the kind of Furniture we sell—the kind that lasts long and pleases. Let us show you and give you prices. The J. L. BOWLES FURNITURE CO. I*o4 Broad Street. Angnsta's Oldest Furniture Store Read fterald le)ant jtfds. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 GET THE RIVER MUD OFF. Hygea furniture Polish 25c Bottle Will make your furniture an other sort. VARNISH STAINS For funiture, woodwork and floors. Call at the store ad we will help you get rid of all traces of the freshet. L.A.GARDELLE DRUGGIST; 620 Broad St. For Sale 33 acres, near Wrightsboro road, seven miles from Augusta. 15 acres cleared balance pine, oak and hickory. Four room house and barn. Bold spring and branch. One mile from Graigs Crossing, price SI,OOO 00 APPLY Clarence E. Clark 842 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, GA. T. G. BAILIE & COMPANY 832 BROAD ST. Large assortment of Wall Paper and Compe tent Force of Workmen to do Prompt Work. Big Stock of MATTING, CARPETS AND RUGS. REASONABLE PRICES ON EVERYTHING