Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, Oct. 23.
•————— ■... i —.m. r.u-i ■ . ■i„.„i, m „i l i„ 11 . , m ,r, i —. ' , ■ -_ i,.!,
SPORTS ■ Os Interest to the Soldiers of Camp Hancock f
WHIRLWIND FOOTBALL TEAM WILL
REPRESENT ORDNANCE AT HANCOCK
Composed Almost Entirely of
College Stars of Yale, Har
vard. Pitt. University of Geor
gia and Other Institutions
A whirlwind football team, compos
ed almost entirely of old college stars,
will be representing the ordnance de- |
pertinent at Camp Hancock as sooiras (
the partial quarantine now existing is .
lifted. Over a hundred men are al- I
ready turning out daily; a schedule is j
being made up tha't include col- ’
leges and military teams all over the
southeast. The teams followers con
fidently expect that the eleven wilt be
a formidable contender for a sectional
ch a in plops hip.
Yale, Harvard, the University of i
Chicago, the University of Pittsburg, '
the University of Georgia, Pennsylva- |
Mia, and a numner of other schools
that have turned cut exceptional foot
ball teams arc al! represented on <he
res. er of met: that are candidates for
the ordnance elevon The difficulty is
n< ’ s much in get’ing material: it is
rather in sifting it out of the large
number of men wno want another
chance to ge. a whirl at the great col
kg r.te game.
• /tout. “Pete” Henley is coaching and
managing dvtinies of the new con- i
tender. So far as has no actual games
ktn scheduled. But he has a num
bein prospect, and nc feels that if he .
car get the right caliber of team to-
‘icr, he sh-mld have no difficulty in’
getting the competition. Georgia
Tr.-h, the University of Georgia, the
Go. u p in. Military Institute, and camp
and cantonment teams throughout the
southeast will probably appear on the
completed schedule.
The candidates were put through
tin »• first scrimmage of the season
yesterday afternoon, and the result I
X • ■ I » I < I. I V tl > I ■ 1 111 " 'll, 111 I' I ‘ • ■ ■ . ~ ' ...... . . . . . . . . V. < . V .
Georgia Tech and Camp Gordon'
on Machine Gunners’ Schedule
I ■
Coach Berry’s Eleven to Open
Season Next Saturday With
Vanderbilt College, in Nash
ville. Tenn. Squad Driving
Hard in Daily Practice
In spite of the inroads made upon the
football schedule at Camp Hancock by
the recent Spanish influenza epidemic,
resulting in not a few cancellations, the
Blue and Red contingent bids fair to
have one of the best schedules in the]
history of service football.
The following tentative- football “sched
ule for the Machine Cun Training Gen
der's cloven, the feature of which will be
the games with Georgia Tech and Camp
Gurdon, has been announced by Captain
Jam* s N.- Ashmore, the < hletic di
rector and Coach Lieutenant J. Howard
Berry.
< .her 26—-Vanderbilt College, Nash
ville. Tenn.
.November 2 . Georgfa Tech, Atlanta. Ga.
November 9—(.’liarleston Training
Camp. Augusta.
November 16—Camp Taylor, Louisville,
Kentucky.
.November 23—Camp Gordon. Augusta.
zN’cvernber ?Sih <’anip Sevier. Augusta
November 30 —Camp Greenleif, Birm
ingham.
it v, ili be seen that (’amp Hrncock i. ; to
meet a number ■ f the .South's strongest
< amps and coii.-ges on the football field
this reison, and the choice games of the
'amp’s schedule will be played in Au
gusta.
The Vanderbilt contest for this coming
Saturday i. absolutely certain. Captain
James N. Ashbore, the camp athletic di
i-ct.jr had a long distance phone <on
vq-'iiA".) with the Nashville collegians
yes:c:d <y m the effect that the M.G.T.G.
fiotbaii aggregation could be depended
ujion to pm. in their appearance in Nash
ville, T.-nn . on October 26th.
A for the Georgia Tech contest, on
Siturday. November 2ml. such a treat is
well worth traveling mi'c.s to enjoy. Only
to • Johnny JL-: man's proteges In
action is x thrill. According to Heis
man's own -taterm-nt. this year. Tech’s
team Is one of the greatest he has ever
handled. Such an < tirnate coming from
such a great <-o i h is enough to to guar
antee a good mi.x-im whe i hi.- proteges*
line up agaiii-i J. Howard Berry's pig
skin gladiators. t
A< the rut look now appears. Coach Ber
ry has a few men on the squad who will
develop int<. w< ridorful linemen, and form
a combination licit wiil do credit to the
Machine Gmi Training Center in the
games to come With Mills, Brelos, Vcr
doT-riac’: and Thomas tn rely upon as ends.
Hancock is the possessor of four of the
best extremity men turned out in col
legiate football during thejiast two years.
These four men pus-<--- 'all of the re
quirements nw---s-.ry for a good end.
They are fast, follow the ball well, can
handle the forward pass tn great style,
and voreuver are splend d tacklers.
At tackle, “Woozy" Worsey, of In
diana, is certain to hold flows this posi
tion on the left side of the line. Worsey
has been playing a splendid game at this
post ever since lie came out fro the team
at the start of the season’s practice, and
he is undoubtedly one of the most fin
ished players --a the team. On the right
side of the line “J •!>’’ Murray* the big
Marquette tackle, will be seen in action.
Murray' is an extraordinarily fast, start
er and carries his efforts through admir
able fashion.
Teh guards do not present such a prob
lem. “Fatty" Boutz, of the Racine Regu-
LOU’S STUDIO
Photos and Post Cards.
THE GOOD KIND.
826 Broad St. Augusta, Ga.
“HOME FOLKS”!
Our Specialty—Selling Cigars by the Box.
BRANDS:
Hugo De Monterray, Romeo & Julietta, La Carolina, ||
1 Chas the Great, Cuesta Rey & Co.. Cortez Cigar Co., R|
La Delijencia, Gonzales & Sanchez, Van Dyke, E. 11. Hl
Gato, La Verdad, Webster, Rej- Tan, Portina, Girrard. gs
Page & Shaw and Johnson’s Candy. n
SODA AND SANDWICHES.
JNO. J. MILLER & CO. |
‘•HOME FOLKS.”
Albion Hotel Building.. 740 Broad Street.
i was stirprising and pleasing to the
coach and the fans that crowded
around the area where were
working. There was no evidences ot
stiffness *or need of loosening up such
as is always the case wth college I
teams when they first don the mole- I
skins. The candidates have been
through too hard a daily routine to
cause them any bother on any kind of
a workout, and yesterday they were
| calling for more after they had been
I through 35 minutes of the stiffest
• scrimmage.
There are four candidates on hand
I for each one suit that Coach Henley
* has available for issue. He expects
to give every man in camp a chance
to show just what caliber of football
he can play, and he doesn’t expect to
select a permanent team until he has
[played a few preliminary games to see
j how the men carry themselves under
! fire.’
j Dogan, an old University of Georgia
performer, cavorted around the field
yesterday like a kitten. He has speed
to burn, apparently, hits the line hard
and low, and is able to pick the holes
with accuracy. Logan is a backfield
man.
Brelos. who captained last year's
University of Chicago team, and was
one of the best ends in the confer
ence, is helping coach the candidates,
and is himself a candidate for an end
i position. “Pop” Thomas, who played
last year on the famous University of
I Pittsburg team under Coach Warner,
is in charge of all the line men, and
I will hin.self play either a guard or a
tackle position. l'o-»«e, an old Har
vard player, is out for center, and a
score of other men whose reputations
have Ijeon Household words wherever
football has a following, all are out to
make a, berth on the squad. The pres
ent competition for places on the team
assures its backers that the eleven
when completed will be the best that
the camp can produce.
pars, and Erwiq Gerber. the sterling
I Northwestern star, have veen playing al
| these, positions and bid fair to hold them
down for the remainder of the season.
I The center position appears to be well
I taken care of with su<. h good material a-:
Guhnares, of Harvard, ’'Billy” Murphy, of
the New York A. and Brama, an
other western star. Berry has been de
voting a good deal of his time instruct
ing Murphy in the fine points of snapper
back, and under his guidance he should
develop into a good centre.
There are quite a number of aspirants
for the backfield posts, and the final se
lection has not as \'et been decided. The
best combination that has been working
together seems to be “Shorty” Silverman
<of the Ordnance (’amp, and Harry Bote,
, of Gettysburg College, a.t quarter. Kil
. gore, the Texas star, and ' Bobby” Ros
ter at halfbacks, and J. Howard Berry,
the former Penn sensational star, at
fullback.
THOMAS H. REILLY
DIES OF PNEUMONIA
New Orleans, La.—Thomas H. Reilly,
baseball plax.r with New Orleans South- I
ern Association <'lub' in 1915 and with:
Atlanta in 1917, died here today of pneu
monia.
FLIGHT OF GAME BIRDS
BY THE STATISTICIAN.
While there is considerable variation
in the speed of flight of game birds,
the table below' may bo taken as the
most accurate approximation of the
comparative speed at which the. better
known wild birds fly.
The crow may be taken as an exam - 1
j>le of the slower flying bird, with a
rate of 35 to 55 feet a second, and with
an average speed of 45 miles an hour,
while many species of hawks attain
the remarkable fast speed of 200 feet
a second.
Here is the table showing the aver
age rpeed in flight:
Feet.per Aver-
•’ Bird. Second age
Quail6s to 85 75
Ruffled Grouse .. ..60 to 90 75
‘Snipeso to 70 65
Snipeso to 70 65
I Mallardss to 90 75
Wood Duck7o to 90 80
Teall2o to 140 130
Canvasbackl3o to 160 145
Canada Geeseloo to 140 130
Red Headllo to 130 120
Jt may be said that if ducks are
scared they can reach maximum speed
at w 11, and this sprinting flight is
usually what the gunner has to make
allowance for.
On the other hand, many wild fowl
are jumped and killed while overing
over decoys and moving slow.y, and
birds like snipe nd quail are often ;
killed before they have attained full
speed.
Upland birds are not often shot
while passing the g n at right angles,
but going straight away, quartering or
twisting.
SHIPYARD ATHLETICS
MAY BE ABANDONED
Philadelphia.—Athletics in the ship
yards of the country will be aban
doned, according to Charles Piez, vice-
I president and general manager of the
’ Emergency Fleet Corporation.
i “We are going to concentrate as
! much of our attention as we c; n on
j making ships after this,” declared Mr.
! Piez. “The men have been diverted
J too much, I am told by labor
and the men themselves complain that
they are led to waste too much time.”
/w?
fa
« 2J
IWS ITEM!-ONE LOPIE MARINER CAPTURED SiriCiLE-HAHDED SEVEN CRACKSMEN
OF*THE GERMAN INFANTRY."
THE M. G. T. 0. ELEVEN
LOOKS LIKE ONE OF
THE COUNTRY'S BEST
of all the leading service football teams
Camp Hancock's perhaps has suffered
least from the drain of the influenza epi
demic upon its personnel. In it. line-up
the Machine Gun Training < 'enter have,
all star players who performed oik the va
rious big collegiate tcum during 1917
and in addition Coach Berry has a greuo
of reserve players who should do mu- h
to aid Hancock in winning honors this
t season.
In point of development for the . ts- n.
In spirit and team co-operation, in know
ledge of the fundamentals of tin- pastime,
the M. G. T. aggregation is far ahead
of the other service teams, and in an
other week or two should have attained
the zenith of its form.
Not the least of important factor indi
i eating a triumphant campaign for- Han
cock is ’(hr If.-itii of res.frw u'.'it •li.i I.
Lieutenant Berry will have available
throughout the season, whejca; a A ma
poi it y of the ot her Ser? let t<
tindi- 7 it difficult to as.-.mnble arc cixe
force (tapable of fficient play. And it'
will be those men who will reli'vc the
strain of the early season campaign fiom
the regulars upon whom Berry is count
big to win for him in the more important
contes.s <>f u:e future.
A Fine Backfield.
Os al! the Army and N;r y back folds
this season, it is doubtful if there is any
of greater promise than that which How
ard Ben y has as:-'an bled. S'dverman and
Rol€ at quarier-l>a> k; Kiirs re and I es
ter half backs, and Lieutenani:• N \e
. and Berry, full-backs, show to great ad
vantage on the practice livid. I < u<: is
(me of the best prcfessional 1 aif-b.<'k
|of the day. SiltfVrnian, the slar little
quarter shows great pr-omls in open field
running and runs the teem with a brand
of generalship that conjures up memories
of the great quarters of other years.
Tlolgore and Foster compose a pair of
half-backs that should give Hancock's
foeman al sorts of difficulty in ; a ij. s
this season. Kilgore is splendid in fhc
open field, an elusive runner when < a, l y -
ing the ball and a sun-, hard tackier. I'ri
der Berry's coaching he should d" clop
into a finished performer in every n- ,
sped. Foster promises to be. a '. aimible
asset in line plungmg.
Conover Makes Debut.
Corporal Larner Conover, mad-- his in
itial appearance on the practice f,. -id
yesterday afternoon. as an end ami . ci -
ter. Conover is the man who "ap: a i i.-d
the P* an Stat*? Gridiron Gladiators ias!
year, and was also chcosor as an Ail-
Arnerican find Tim: o who have sols- .- I
the gridiron sport for the past, two sea
sons are well acquainted with t in- v. «-’ !< of
Conover. He was listed as the premier
end that ever played on a Penn Sta.e
eleven during th past five years.
Coach Perry, has a b-ar-cof guard in
Erwin Gerber, the former .N<a ’ n <-.u .--i n
all-around athletic star. All of the - fi : -
ics of the West selected him for All-
Western honors last year. He is extra
ordinarily fast in starting a d . -.- j -. ;
efforts through in admiiai.ic fashion.
Lieutenant William Murph;,, ;>• showing
great promiste at center-, mid ' 0.-o ri Bcr
! ry is counting upon him to round into an
all-star gridiron star For fully two
hours, yesterday afternoon, the squads
wmt through :u jg very hard proc, i.-e, t
and showed plenty of “pep’’ j;i tie- r el- 1
forts.
o o
AN UNNAMED HERO.
I
When an American prisoner of
war was asked for inform-iL,p t
he said, “Ask l' :;>h:ng or cable
Wil.-orr. They (un furnish the
farts.'' IL »S. Hinkley, Oydc-ri,
I ! Utah.
O< > i
The officer:- of :s c ; .;. t ncqro 1-f.y- l
ment were having sor :e trouble in p. *-
vailing on the so' ; q i. to t;i.<e out the ■
life insurance offered cam by t-ic
government. But one dm tlm
was turned. A husky f !i.» . ■■ .ipr<, -c>,.
ed the sergeant on the su jm i. •1? ~
much do you wan't? ' he . asl.r-d.
“How much can I git?" h<? demand
ed.
"Ten thousand dollars
“All right, sub/’ he answered in 1
loud voice. “I 'wants ten thousartd '
dollars' worth, sub. I wants it all i
Uncle Sam ain't goin’ to tak.- no phaa- •
cos with his ten-thousand-*! .Bar boysj
No, sub, they ain’t goiii’ to L•> up in
the front line. I s teiL’n' you it s th< • u
thousand-dohar Nfggah. lie:; ip/ing t>
run his risks with. Gi- e me ten tnous- ’
and dollars’ worth.”
The orderly room was stampeded for '
ten-thou.- ind-dollar fcoliciea.- E y- ’
I body's Magazine.
; Sc.-gt. Frtd M. Sec t entered a re
|quest for a pass to the bridge J 7
• “for the purp'S- (>f reque :. g the ' ; : -
| tain to stop the ship i her that ti;e '
: jMjhre detail may polish the |a q-:>• a «
; blades. ’’ It was referred to Captain Bcf
fel. who roc mmended that such min r ;
details could wait until the coal the j
bur.krr- had betn properb duated and ’
jxiHshed.
• TRENCH AND CAMP
’ OVER THE TOP
J IN SPOUT i
With Joe Jacobs
11 I
While Washington has warned the!
. people not. to be too optimistic over!
the exchange of corres]»ondei.ce w.th
Berlin, the strong possibility of peace
1 li.-i •. ' .■!) now and spring causes a de
; cided bullish feeling in the sports rnar
' ket.
Mon who want - i to exchange shares
of baseball stock for empty show boxes
a feeling that “W lien Johnny Comes
•Marching Home” there will be a re
vival in sport that will cause the
looms and -de;)res:-.ion to run to the
. cellar.
; It n.ust not be forgotten that eports
’ ; slumped in interest before America en
, | tcia- i the war. Sport began limping on
; a flat lire shortly after August, 114,
‘ lion tin- big war had its start. It. was
m.hii: bad when Brest.font Wilson sad
dled th? Yankee entry in i-'elnamry,
I lit 17.
Will Bound With Popularity.
Once the v.ar ends, sport will hound
■ back into the popularity it enjoyed in
the salad days of ’l2 and ’LI. liven
I since America's entrance into the war,
''sport thrived whenever it had a real
, | (•'mneo. Attractive boxing matches
I drew as they never drew before. Race
i tracks were packed Baseball was
j dormant in (-very city in the circuit.
I Some ch s drew better in I!HS than
j in 1916 and 1917.
War heroes will have the call in
I sport. C: n you imagine how ' y Cobb
' ■. ill be reo.- ivcl when he puts on a
uniform ri and provide*! hi is
spared incapacitating injury? And
chat about Alexander the Great ami
H.'l Killefer? Won’t they leromc the
' prizp points pair of the universe.
Owner Weeghman will get his $60,000*
back before June. Stars of the high
est order with the stamp of war heroes
lo boot, they will become the biggest
(hawing cards in America. Not a sin
sports figure wearing khaki will
fail to reap the benefit of hero wor
ship.
Joint Baseball Session.
f’.a ' .ill is just like the man who,
after buying his young son a dru for
birthday pi t sent, lies down to lake
i quiet and more or less well earned!
nooze. It car 't sleep either. They I
won't et. it. Even though they can’t
play it they nsi: . upon talking about
t. Just as soon as baseball fell under
the official ban a lot of folks who
never made a liaso hit or who never
were justified in giving an umpire a
ciimbed into the for*?, rank as
our grr-atest baseball lingo :-tv.
All of which is merely byway of;
introducing ; rumor that is parading;
'the strfpts of the industviom? an*' pro-!
i arc. sive community of N"W York with
I; •* nch shoes. The*, report in effect is
i hat wh'n the Na tonal League con
venes in annual meeting in >ipw York
City on December 10, and wh<-.. the
American Lea/uers get together to talk
‘i.s’p; over in Chicago a. few days later
it.m- sessions wiil bo followed by a oint
i meeting in the shadows of Gotham’s
skyscrapers to discuss th ngs of com
mon and vita] importance. In other
•-.o,ds, the clu bowners have reached
the conclusion they must meet in the
i i same room, deck their canes outside.
| ’ -’. .--;dc Hair bri-k bats r-nd a- 1 down
Ito tho real bodness of determining
jus! how g c;.,t a barrier organ z d pro
f -sifmo! i Jail is up agai and
■ : • i-ow they should proper.■ until the
Kaiser had ’-• > disj»ose*l of.
Enter / tbout Knocking.
| If this joint tnlkfest is held ii will
•be the frs» meeting held in so many
■ vears t’u* oldest base-ball man cannot
! • ••member it when a shingle has been
I hung on the <loor, ilr.ter Without*
, Knocking.” Mod'-'-n h; s‘bull meetings!
’ ■ -• been invariably f atured by the!
, • ■ -t'-nt, consistent and insir. ent j
1 roundings of the sb-dg( Not so this;
lone. It mu e t 1 dist :r ly understood.!
w eording to th- r» ! on. ail who enter |
must do so vrh ?r hammers in;
their h 5 > pcrk< ts and be prepared to
tm- into a •- - ovs con - ulb.tion on the'
tient’s malady. x
———
Th»- gimlet-*’••'! mao. given tn pro-!
d*r.g ' !?•’■ »m: . -nranq a new one
on ‘n-nr- fr>nd rhe other day.
“V,'h;.f •• ]c. ? ped. “N thi■••e-sovenths ’
'f chicken, t’" -thirds of cat, and one- (
P was. of a- »"■' tri’ en un.
• •
Ofc c»! * A . (0)j ‘G’i: -
three -ever:’ <-f chicken: *ca’ is tww-
I hird- of ca-.. and go’ jsone-half of.
'gnat/ ’’
Whercijnvn •■ y threw him out of the .
place.—New Evening Bost.
BASEBALL RAPIDLY !
BECOMING POPULAR I
1 AMONG THE ALLIES I
j New York.—The poj?ulari'y of ’ ase- I
| ball amouy; the allied nations abroad j
| is spreading so rapidly that thei j is <
heady a demand for simple instruc
tio’is .nd ruloF. of the game, printed f
infor» : g‘t languages. To meet these I
re<|i irements several expert baseball |
authorities are c* llaborating in the J
preparation of a baseall primer v ’ ich |
will e distriuted in various rcctions i
of Europe. :
The* pamphlet, which will be printed
i French, Italian, English and Span
ish, will carry the rub . of the game in
the simplest form. In addition there
will e pages of explanations an.' an
swers to the questions which arise
among those who are playing their
first contests. These questions and
answers will bt printed both in Eng
lish and various languages in parallel;
columns in order that when American :
and f *ign player i or meet, without ’
being able to speak the language of ;
their opponents or neighbors ’ the
stands, there may be a. medium of ;
connni iicati*»n at hand. A glossary
of technical and baseball terms in all
languages is also .j be appended.
What is probably one of the last
of the spec al baseball war-time con
; acts, which* star players insisted the
magnates should sign in order to re
tain their service during the days
when the Federal League was raiding
th-- major circuits, was spread before
the public recently. When Jak Dau
heit, first, baseman of the Brooklyn
Nationals, carried his appeal to the
N tional Commission for the balance
<>f his salary due under his interpre
tat on of his contract, the special tr- :
tides in the same were announced as
follows: '
“The dub agrees to pay the player, «
for the .uasons of 1914, 1915, 1916, .
1917 and 1918, beginning on or about
the 14th day of April in cadi o r said ,
veers, and ending on or about the 14th I
day of Octob r in each of said years, |
:• salary at the rate of nine, thousand ;
($9,000,00) dollars per season.” In ad- «
dition this contract had dimirrtited ■
from it the paragraph known as the j
t(-n-days-not’ce-of-releaw clause, and ■
•Jso had inserted therein the follow- *
ii g: |
"It is further understood a agreed
’hat the services T the party of the
second part shall not b*» releas as- |
igned, traded or ransferred without 5
the consent of the party of the second ?
part.” j
It is very doubtful, according to the
’..is* bJI rnagnat s. if a contract con- /
(mining similar clauses favoi q the j
. player will rece ve the s gnature of the
I dub owners for many years to come. -
*An agreement giving ■ salary of $45,-
000 »to an athlete for appro nately F
thirty months' work, with# an annota- |
lion which makes it impossible to dis- I
pense with his services without the I
consent of the pljiyer, is going to be
a rarity well worth framing i: the
future, if the baseball dub owners are
to bt believed.
Sport and war were strangely min
gled in the recent Seine swim, the
big sport event of the year in iris.
The h* roof the race down the Seine
though Paris, a distance of about
7 1-3 miles, was not the winner but
'!•" who f nisned last of the male
■ ornpetitors. He was Charles Nun- ,1
g. sser, the champion aviator, who t
though still hampf-ed by wounds not ifr
yet completely healed, his left leg in |
fact became useless early in the race, |
; [ ersevered to the end and finished in I
! hours and 43 minutes, receiving a |
! gre Per welcome from the thousands |
’j bring the banks than even the winner. L
The Fiench are not usually regarded j
jas an athletic nat on. but this face, I
; organized every year, attracted 3* en- I
pries, of whom 28 started and 22. (13 ;
; and nine women) finished, with- j
|ou counting the veteran George Pau- I
! -. aged 58, '.ho winner of this event »
n 1905. who gave : n exhibition swim. 2
! coming in s xth. The winner was a
'George Michel, a g.inner in the ’ eavy r
I artillery, wb.osr time was 3 hours and |
13 minutes. The first woman-to ar- |
riv*-, Suzanne Wurts, came in sixth in I
: hours and 19 minutes, followed by E
• Juliette GardeJle, in 3 hours an ’ 21 |
minut's Women took the 12th, Kith. J
| 18th. 2“th and 21st places, the last but • J
: one being a I'ttle girl, Henriette Gar-I j
delle, only 1-3 years old, who with a;l
handicap of half an hour, finished in I
1 hours and 43 minutes. I
Say you saw it in th« Trench arrd 'S
. Camp. *
* . \ <1:
rf teg Bancorit
Visit our store when 4own in the City,
where a hearty welcome will be yours.
HIGH GRADE CIGARS
CIGARETTES, ALL KINDS
PIPES, TOBACCOS,
CIGARS and CIGARETTE HOLDERS
SODA WATER, ICE CREAM,
CANDIES.
EIUIARj) AO POOL PARLOR
Burdell Tobacco Co.
752 BROAD STREET.
HULSE’S STEAM LAUNDRY
OFF ICE 319 EIGHTHi_ST.
Largest and Best Equipped Laundry in Augusta.
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WHEN YOU WANT A GOOD MEAL '
GO TO
MOTHER SHEEHAN’S.
[i HOME COOKED MEALS. 339 BROAD STREET.
MOTHER OF THE SOLDIERS.
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! JOE’S SHANGHAI RESTAURANT
REASONABLE PRICES. QUICK SERVICE.
JOE’S
(THE BOY FROM YOUR HOME TOWN)
Chinese and American Restaurant |
316 Jackson Street
(NEAR OPERA HOUSE
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We deal in leather are therefore competent judges qf good leather.
I Chevrons, Captains’ and Lieutenants’ Bars, Etc. %
AUGUSTA TRUNK FACTORY
718 BROAD STREET.
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I WALK-008 BOOT SHOP
823 BROAD ST.
Complete line of Officers’ Dress Shoes, |
Price $ll.OO. I
| Cordovan Puttees, strap and spring, $15.00. |
Trench Boots, SIO.OO.
Buy Your Bonds
From
1 ' UNCLE SAM
i Buy Your Uniforms
| From
I
F.E. Ferris & Co.
J 758 Eroad Street
I
I ' I
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