Newspaper Page Text
Page Two
t-p N cH AND CAMP
I'. ~ , •?> HANCOCK, Aurin •«. 'B>-
W. * Aiken. Bd tor.
’nblshed with the co-operaton of THK
HERALD PUBLISHING CO,
Augusta. Ga.
ISSUFD ••'/'ON S3AY.
Vsl. No. >—January 15, 1519 No. 15.
Rr.teretJ as second-claw matter, beb
Sift. HiS, at the post office at Aug i-i»
Jeorgla. under the Act of March 3. IS.>
ASSOCIATE AND CONTRIBUTING
EDITORS
librarian O. C. Davis. Corporal Geo. K.
Sutiken. M. G. T. C.; Henry Luessen;
J. F. Martin; Regimental Sergeant J A
Julcn, M. T. D., Barton Richards; Mark
L Wall, K. of CL
4 Letter From
Capt. C. L. Snyder
Camn Hanrock. Ga., Jan. io. 1919.
To the Editor Trench and Camp:
Arc tho soldlera In Camp Hancock
tware of what Uncle Sam in doinr
tor them? Do they rralfxe that even
3io the period of emergency is not
tver. Uncle Sam is doing everythin;:
n hks power to release the mon who
ire urgently needed In civilian pur
tuits? »o they know that tho Army
s co-operating with the employers
ill over th» country and endeavor
ng to get the business of th s country
■sinning at f .11 speed, before tho mm
»ho are now in France begin mu
ng home In large numbers? Uncle
Jam wants the c-operation of the mi -
ll the Arnie; he wants their help In
Sils groat v>ork and to that end h<
las placed : t Building 014 an offtcoi
whose solo duty It Is to look after tin
nterests of the men hern In Camp
Captain C. 1.,. Snyder, with the aid of
Sergeant Doyle. Sergeant O’Connor
tnd Corporal Yetter will Investigate
ivery case brought to their attention
toncerning the welfare of the men
n Camp Hancock. Special emphasis
tor the last montn has been laid on
he discharge ot soldiers under War
Department Orders and contained tn
Memorandum T7. Headquarters, Camp
iiancock. Ga„ whereby any man on
isted after April Ist, 1917. on propoi
•videncu that ho is urgently needed
n apy essential business -can be dls
iharged Immed.ately from the sor
tie*. Men with families or with <!>•
lendents aro give;-, civilian posit one
>y UUnclo Sam. The Civil Service
iffers splendid opportunltioa for life
mme itositlons at good pay and under
die best working conditions no
■trikes, no layoffs and the lies! em
Hoyer In the world. The shipyard
ndustry with Its many different
tinds of work tan place any man
who is willing to work at good
nragts- 40c per hour to 51.50 per
lour. Think of where a salary like
3iat plates you. I'tie Merchant Ma
rine, noii’ tn Its infancy but with the
nost wonderful prospects offers
iplendld opportunities to the young
nen who 1 kc to travel, who levs the
lea and want to travel In France.
England. Spain. Italy. Egypt, China,
tnywherc, everywtere. It Is n
ihance ot a life lime tor tho young
nan with education or who Is willing
o do a man’s work In the world out
ilde
Come to the lb ildlng 634. Ask for
Captain Snyder, Sergeant Doyle or
cpresentutlve ot the U. S. Shipp ng
Soard, the Marshall Marino or I’. S
(Employment Service. Let them m ■
roti that Uncle Sam wants an op
rortunlty to do something for you. to
i pay you in part for giving you:
:elf when the country call'd.
Open all day and evening—-every
lay except Sunday.
C. L. SNYDER.
, Caujfiin. Inf.. U. 8. A.
J. IV. B. Will Help You
Get a Job
At Die time of the signing of the ar- :
nfotlce. the efforts of the. J. and ;
hftir reprewntMtives at Camp Hancock
rere directed toward the after war prob
em, the readjustment of the KOlab'r to
dviltan life. In thia phage of tho work
he most immediate problem that con
fronted the welfare agency wm to pro
rid*? employment and occupation for the
loklitr upon his discharge and then to
llsemlnatv that Information to the xol
\Her follpwing the program inaugurated.
' Mr. Solon J. Kieser, representative In
•barge of Gamp Hancock enlisted the
dd of Di*. Wilkunson. educational diree
or of the “Y” and arranged a scries of
ev-turea throughout the camp illustrat
ng to the soldier tho value and Import
mee of his then, and present nitHtnry
fridnlug as adapted to his future re
lulrements and The military
raining of the wolider said Mr Solon
I. Riesvr, when on the sub
ect has a very Important bearing on the
•conomlr and material value of the sol
der in his replacement and In his bene-
It to the community In the same manner
is the military authorities took up the
luestion of the placing of the civilian to
i military life and along scientific linos
mdeavond to place, and rate the men
ir best adapted to their qualifications in
t>ecirtc branches of* services, so we must
tndeavor In returning them to civilian
Ife. classify them for their usefulness
©ward themselves We have been greatly
tided In our work with the soldier, by
eason of his enforced training and dis
:ip)ine while in the army. Men taken
tom various walks of life, the mechanic
llaced alongside the professional man,
he salesman alongside the Jaboror. all
unted into one melting pot for the pur
rose of war, were to be ■Misentangled and
•eturned to their normal occupations. On
heir entrance to the army they were en
abled to get tho benefit of the army
nethod of distribution. Their first con •
act gave them personal equipment, food
ind maintenance and a place to sleep.
Their second contact gave them a sot
tour at which to oat. a set hour for work
Uid play and fixed hour for rest fulness,
v’ature and its natural environments
sere exhibited to the soldier in their
Broadest form and even as is his move
»f life was regulated, so was his health
lafeguarded by the forced rule of dis
cipline, examination and inspection.
Our experiences continued Mr. Kleser
dong these lines Illustrated that the sol-
Her is in a much better position to help
limself than the accredited agencies and i
he United States government and their *
rarious employment agencies could do i
tor him. When the soldier bore in mind i
iis military training, the fact that he I
was taught how to think and think
luickly, for the best interests of him-
Kdf and the purpose for which he was
tngaged, it was no very difficult task,
provided he did not relax in his mode
>f living, for him to avail himself of tho
trmy conditions in his return to civilian
tfe.
In our various lectures around camp
rhere we came in clos ■ contact with more
‘.han 15.000 soldiers, we had the gratlftca-
Son to know that in most instances the
loldler who so desired it. could return
:o his normal and former occupation,
ipon his discharge Our efforts were
mneentrated along the line that which
.he army provided for his we should pro
vide him with upon his return, and In
tacping with th is program we com
nunleated with 122 cities wherein there
sxisted established agencies who were
villlng and desirous to be helpful to the
•eturning snldier. The puriJo.se was to
Ind a position wherein th.- soldier may
m med lately provide himself with main
reliance, subsistence and a home. We
•eglstered the names of such applicants
cho desired this class of h , wire and
ie lave our registory tsjl! op- n to the dis-
JQsal of the soldiers of Pam? Hancock,
rhe communitv response can best be
llustratcd by the reply from the PhUn
lelphfa Branch of »h-» Jewish Welfare
Soard, who conducted a campaign in their
ity to provide emp’oynjent :’«'r return
ng soldiers and huv- thus far pkic< d
ipwards of 87 men sent to them from
v amp Hancock.
From Syracuse. N. Y . we rw'ived the
ollowing invitation nftz-r affording . m
Payment to the two man s-.it th r’. if
here are any other Syra is-' m n «it your
Amp. we would appreoiate i< xou ran
<*nd m' their registration cards so r!o«'
o-opcrution can be developed here ”
from the city o. Denv.-r. w<- r rotved
he following; to assur? Prjvat
f ’ ' tlxat “non hi« return to
he City of Denver, his position will be
■J \
TRENCH & CAMP
weekly at the NaUoaal Curp» and Cantonmeste for the soldiers of ths
VBKec State*.
National Tlradnn’»rtern
Room 1212, 847 MudlMc* Avenae
New York Cit>
JOHM RTKWART BRYAN
Cbatrmaß es Advisory Board of Co-opcratint PchlUbcre
« Camp nsd location Newspaper Publisher
Alexandria. EaNew Orleans Times Picayune D r> Moore
Canjl, Kort Worth, Trr»« Fort Worth Star Trnirraa, Amon C Cart.?
CarUtmra Aolatlon FloM. Arr-adla. ria Tampa Timos j, b McKav
Camp Cal. fiomlnf. N. El Pa.-, lloraM H r> Slater
jjm, Custer, Battle Creak, Michßattle Creek Enqulrer-News A I. MHier
Srnn rH^w’w A K? r : Boston Globe Charlo* H Taylor. Jr.
Cami, Dlx, Wrtkht.lowr,, N. I Trenton Times James Kerner
Smn £j£.l“ro.TS t Oklahoma City Oklahoman. Z . ,i*V
Camp Forrest ChlrHamarirr. OaChattanooga (Tenn, Times H c A,Her
Camp Fremont. Palo Alto. Calßan Francisco Bulletin h a frothers
rime K “. Topeka Stale Journal Frank P Marl rnn.ro
Lamp OoMm. Atlanta, O.Atlanta Constitution,'lark Howell
r«mn b ,It > 0 ’i < !’ ’ll' A Th '’ ch ‘ / ' , ‘« r 0 Daily News Victor )’ t.awsin
ramp Graane. Charlotte, N. CCharlotte Observer w n .. van
Camp Harsrtoek. AußOKtn. <>aAugusta Herlad Bowdre Phlnlsy
C*Tb Janka., n . C01uj,*,,.. 8 . C c-iumbt. State. . . ... . . f w Xg
€ 'r. ?'* J-rksonvlHe Time*-Union w A. Elliott
Cte 'v 11, * I-oe Ar.itoles Times Harry Chandler
Xm® l7wta P Tal;™l tvYln Richmond News beaderJohn Stewart .firyan
Taeoma, Wash....,Tacoma Tribune r. s Baker
rlmn ^ On - i l ' Houston Peat. Roy o Watson
rime M-rießan rLVlld , S'*'’'’ M ' ,r ' ,ln S N '”" ..Charles E. March
Fort P ! JeP^ n n ■'.""d’Vmm^’j^un,!”"'-'''' l^'1 "' ' A “’ ) N ’ W * VleUr 11
Atlanta. G*. Journal J. s. Cohen
Plkt‘ ,e Tlfrfr’l? , ’e**?■>’ Wash. (D C > Evening Star Fleming Newbold
rtei n m’ j k ,4 Arkansas Demoernt E|m„r E. Clarke
IS. .1 ’ Oreanavmn, B. C Gro-n.vllle Dally News fl H [■...,, 0
t T *■ M ’" M " w I’”” James M Thomson
? Sheridan Montgomery. AlaMontgome-ry Advertiserc. ll All< n
clmp Trovi BM y^nl’! H ’rlx.'': K . i '(’' < ' Ul ”''' 11 * C ° Ur "' r J<iUr,, “' H * bOrt
Kelly Field am! Camp Httinlry . .’‘|San Antonio LightObAriea S. Diehl:
Wb‘f D .' e T!l u hanl1 ’ h ' • N T.... New Tork World Don C. Belts
Al Strato*- Charleston News and CourierH. C. tdogilng
nJ / Marboo Mta f 10n.... Charleston PortT. R. Waring
Buffalo Military District, embracing)
ten camps | Buffalo Evening N*wwEdward H. Butler
n»i.r? b 2 , .’ , l W1 U, !?5 r .. tb ' an “» lc «a of lha National War Work Council. T. M. C. A. of the
united states, with the rio-operatlon of tho above named publlshere and papers.
War has been called “one of the
Greatest cleansers of the soul.”
Only soldiers, particularly those
who have charged to battle can under
stand that in its peculiar significance.
There is something about battle, be
it a brush between small units in a
wood, or a crash between mighty
forces in the vast open, that strips
men clean of every ignoble quality
and bares the ooul to them. Love and
truth stand revealed. No psycholog
ical laboratory could ever hope to en
trap and analyze the surges of the
soul, the conflict of emotions, which
war calls forth. God-given qualities
cannot be analyzed or destroyed by
material methods.
Soldiers who have crossed No.
Man’a-Land have given to the world
pen pictures of this tumult, when the
proximity of deoth blots out images
of all petty problems. Purifying, in
deed, is the white flame of war in Its
Material loss is often the forerunner
of gain.
Numerous incidents as tho war have
Illustrated thia fact. Never, perhaps,
has It been more clearly shown than
in the following incident t
A chaplain, visiting wounded sol
diers at a hospital near the firing limes
in France, stopped at tho bedside of
one, The covers of the bod were rum
pled tho length of the man's torso to
his hips. It wa» apparent that this
soldier had lost both his legs. Tho
chaplain, observing the cheerful glow
in the man's eyes, said to him:
"You have lost both legs?"
Tho man on the cot nodded, emlted,
dismissed the subject with another
jerk of his head.
“Don’t worry about that," he said,
"there’s more of me now than when I
had my legs.”
And something right gleaming in
his eyes convinced the chaplain, thus
given an object lesson in the things he
preached. More of him than when he
had his legal Tho soldier, of course,
meant that he had grown spiritually,
Uncle Sam proposes to give back
his Yanks to their families in as good
a state of health as they evidenced
when they entered the training camps.
He made a solemn promise to the
homefolks at the time, and he meant
it.
He relies on your help to do so.
Take care of yourself. Observe the
general rules of sanitation laid down
for your guidance, and report prompt
ly any infraction of them. When you
go away fr6m demobilization camps
to home, you will want to be the
strong, sturdy, well set-up apecimen
of army life which popular thought
holds as a representative model.
Men are now being mustered out
rapidly at the camps in America. The
sick and death rate will rise in camps
from now on, owing to a logical con
dition, but there is nothing to be
alarmed about in that. Only men who
THE ARMY A FACTOR IN EDUCATION
Does education pay?
That it does has been amply demon
strated in the great war, where edu
cated brains have been at a premium
and the man with a background of
general knowledge was recognized as
one with a desirable equipment.
awaiting him." In reference to .1 request
to the Packard Autumoblio Corporation
for lite employment of one of their form
er employees Ils Philadelphia branch com
municated as follows: "If it refers to
the Branch in Philadelphia, assure
that immediately upon
his return a position will be waiting
for him If he was employed at the
Detroit factory, let me know at ones, so
that a position can be declared there
for him." Through the assistance of
tho 11. S. Employment Bureau and their
agencies in New York City, wo have
provided placet! for several hundred men.
I We have followed out the system of the
I Personnel Division of the nrntv in en
deavoring to grade the men in accordance
I with their individual necessities and
' qualifications, and have presented eaeli
win so requesting it with a letter of
introduction addressed to our local branch
reading as follows: "We have forwarded
to his local branch prior to his dis
charge an illustrated card reading as
follows: (B) and from .1 number of
Close on to 600 men registered at this
camp with tho exception of a few isolated
I instances, we are enabled to report the
1 utmost co-operation and mice ,< Os
1 course men tin not Immediately step into
, the clans of position that thov d 'slre One
I purpose was tn provide them with Inmi"-
! diate employment and then permit them
to use their army judgment and become
.their own personnel! officers In grading
. themselves so long as they were self
! Bin>nortinc.
We will he verv glad I:' Trench and
tamp would extend to the nun In Camp
Hancock, the Invitation of this Welfare
I Hoard to enlist their aid If they so r ■■•
Vi an<l "" ari * ho Pef'>l that
! with the on-operation of th ' various
1 agencies with whom we have in
1 communication in the respective towns
I that "> can provide employment for .-'ll
, rot urn tn? soldiers who so r.-.iuiro If ard
jho upon investigation merit such’ em
ployment
Bobby had just arrived at his first gar
den party given tn ?;-lor of “wound, ds '•
At the fra* “blue b u • h.' saw h cHM’
Jdook, mother’ Tlrnt man's wounded ”
Motbcr frowned. “Hush Holb. she
Don t talk so loud: He'll heir
your Ht.ir
H.bby know, then?” piped
t hY ! ?T n l , , s k i d what the national air ot
nl'-i "’ as « '‘.’lo French
"Hair. Uall-the' Ga^An’ :
THINGS WORTH WHILE
action on the soul, searing to cinders
unworthy thoughts and crumbling to
ashes and nothingness the Ijttle gods
of envy, malice and the like.
Only the things worth while re
mar.-r.
There is no room in the thoughts
of the soldier who has faced death and
felt the great calm which came from
the realization that Right was on his
side. Where was there space for the
small and the low, the pretty and
mean, the underhand and deceitful in
the heart of a man who had made his
choice between the enternal opposites
of Right and Wrong, and stood on the
side of Right? There is no place in
such hearts for anything but the
highest and best. War, for all its
pain and misfortune, haa taught men
the value of an ideal and the everlast
ingness of the things worth while.
Only they remain. No battle could
ever wipe them out.
THE MAN WHO GREW
thought the fortunes of war had shorn
hltii of part of hts physical self.
Out of the horror and madness of
battle that soldier had come with a
vision of a higher self. He who had
seen hia comrades throw their physi
cal all into the furnace of death, had
come away happier for the knov/ledge
that their spiritual life had been made
fuller by those last, unselfish sacri
fices. ft was the understanding of
what It means to be on ths side of
Right, which had added to the growth
of that great-heart, thought to the eye
he was but a legless cripple.
Think of the maimed man in France,
the next time some problem arises,
and of his answer to the chaplain.
It harmonizes well with the words |
of President Wilson, in his address to 1
the University of Paris:
“The triumph of freedom in this war ;
means that spirit shall now dominr.tc
the world. There is a great wave oi
moral force moving through the
world, and every man who opposes;
himself to that wave will go down in (
disgrace.”
KEEP WELL
have passed the final examinations
showing that they are in as good
physical condition as Army medical
treatment can give them, arc being
discharged.. As the well men go, and
tho not-so-wcll remain, the ratio of
sick to will men is becoming greater.
Soon there will be more convalescents
In camp than well men
But you who remain, particularly
the unwell, can still be of good cheer.
As demobilization proceeds, health
conditions in camps will be improved.
A reduced number of men in a camp
simplifies the sanitation and health
problem. Successful treatment of all
cases is more easily obtained, with
fewer men. There is less danger.
Soldiers left in camp will have a
better chance to get well, or to retain
health. Seize the oportunity. It will
help Uncle Sam—and you—to have
you go back home in the best possible
physical shape.
Many soldiers who left colleges and
technical schools in the middle of
their courses, at the call to arms, are
debating whether or not to rctvrn to
their studies, or to plunge at once into
some profitable employment.
By all means thev should r»n<rH
Stranded Troopship and Rescuers
Bringing Wounded and Well Ashore
F ■ -
/
! /
T \ /Sk /H\ JWk/ IF i
I talk., flw-- ife' \ I
jhM . .. -A" •_'■ ■
\ ''*ss J ’Sr-t: >
I V:? ■& X ‘'* a.'-
,1 ~ -- - wigUty 1
many of ntni
motor craft «rd vow boata wh»n a errl fie snowstorm mt V? k ' m b ( ut 200 ,' a,i het 2 n tak en off with breeches buov.
men SHU on board. Sixteen ladders d onimd from th h d . Rh . lp f L om vlew and delayed removal of the wounded
wounded ww 4 lowerod in bm-kets to the small boats h stea >» er * s > de we re used by the ablebodied and the seriously
rRE HC H AND CAMP
their respective institutions of learn
ing. In these years of remaining
youth they possess an opportunity for
equipping themselves mentally for the
future. They will return to the class
room with a maturity which the o’fc-.r-'.
age student never attains in school.:
Their outlook on life, apreciative of!
its pitfalls and possibilities, will be of
immense value in assimilating good
from a curriculum.
It is safe to say the soldier-student
who returns to study will never be
guilty of indifference to instruction,
or question its ujefiriness in activities
Educational Work In The Home Associations
Among the services that the Home
! Young Men’s Christian Associations—
: and there are such Associations in all
i important centres—are to render to
< the men returning from service with
I the Colors, a large place must be giv
en to the Educational opportunities.
; Many Associations, particularly those
' employing Educational Secretaries,
! maintain short.term courses to pre
pare men to enter skilled trades and
j occupations, and to equip men al
! ready engaged in such callings for
l more effective service. It may also
be taken for granted that any group
of men seeking a course in some par
ticular subject, will find the Associa
tion more than ready to provide op
portunity foj such training.
Associations, through their Edu
cational Departments, are now giving
special attention to the following
; forms of training:
Technical Subjects
Automobile, Oxy-Acetylene Weld
ing, Mechanical Drawing, Mechanical
Engineering, Telegraphy (both Wire
and Wireless), Applied Physics,
Tractor Mechanics, Freehand Draw
ing. Airplane Mechanics, Electric
Welding. Blue Print Reading, Elec
tric Engineering. Applied Chemistry,
Architectural Drawing, Civil Engi
neering.
Business Subjects
Accountancy, Salesmanship, Sten
ography, Bookkeeping, Business Eng
lish, Business Management, Arithme
tic (and courses in preparation for
branches of civil service), Advertis
ing, Foreign Trade, Typewriting, Bus
iness Correspondence, Business Law,
Penmanship.
General Subjects
English. Spanish, Geometry, His
tory, First Aid, French, Algebra, Civ
ics, Geography.
The work is of elementary and ad
vanced grade according to the needs
of the student.
In selecting teachers for the work:
special attention is given to securing!
instructors who are thoroughly con-
■A J pf-t-r>Y tr- Flifi
~ 111 j., t -..--. j m.. ..j.
1
[J) - -V
S QcC
to tjM ro* ti> SiLeJt,.
6<
<Gtvt 'ixgzla ov, trvu-ev’c, Jto j
TXW cLO CvtjU -vj-ok. Ul-ooxt' 4ZC. rox-
W Acxx. J
TTVU.
J, Pv-e. fUuL Ta/W>a cvotX- ■
Co
{xlWisL u-jo & rnx. wAtnvo ( x<rC
XhdXAj - JO4. -JcVnajUi. / S
qro’o C-(Urt»b CztZf-.
JU, ArbtZi stv-vv d
’Co aXC
of civlSsn life. He has learned to
: study, to obey, to take advantage of
■ opportunity in the best training schebl
: on earth—the United States Army.
Academic courses will te postgradu
■late work of high werth to soldier
students. The thousands of student
! soldiers in the Civil War, North and
South, who went back to the universi
ties to finish their collegiate careers,
never regretted the step. Knowledge
gained at school by mind stimulated
by military discipline, helped them im
measurably in the trade world and the
professional field.
versant with the practical require
ments of the trade or calling, and
who are also competent to present
the theoretical side of the subject.
The instruction is also so planned as
to be as far as possible individual,
with the view to meeting the needs of
each student and of giving opportu
nity to advance as rapidly as possi
ble.
The classes offered in any Associa
tion are also those most likely to pre
pare men for the industries and busi
ness offices in the, community. Often
times co-operative arrangemnts are
made with manufacturers and busi
ness men with reference to the par
ticular needs of their establishment.
Even where an Association does
not maintain an organized Education
al Department, the General Secretary
is often able to make arrangements
for classes where there appears to be
a need or demaifd for such instruc
tion. Associations, futhermore, are
ready to give through their Employ
ment Departments, or otherwise, in
formation upon opportunities for
work in various callings, and to ad
vise us as to other agencies and in
stitutions. college, technical and pro
fessional schools, where training can
be secured. In country areas the
County Work Secretary frequently
may be in a position to aid such men
as take up farming as an occupation.
The value of the Educational
courses conducted by the Associations
is shown by the great number of men
who have through these means been
enabled to secure good positions, and
to make rapid advancement in tiro
business -nd industrial world. Apart
from the instruction which is given,
one who is enrolled as a member of
an Educational Department, is free
to make use of an Association build
ing with its reading rooms, social
halls, lectures, entertainments and
gymnasium equipment.
The fees for courses vary accord
ing to the character of the work and
to the locality. The Educational
Work is in no sense intended to be a
means of profit, but such charges for
instruction and equipment as are
made are such as to cover the actual
costs. in any cases where these
charges exceed the ability of the stu-.
dent, satisfactory arrangements can
doubtless be made as to payment.
FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
| AT—
u IHE PRE I TIEST SHOP IN TOWN”
CONVENIENT fO ALL CARS.
STULB’ NURSERY
“Augusta’s Leading Florist.”
203 Eighth Street. “Just Off Broad.”
11 Phones—Nursery, 549. Store, 570.
; d
New Planters Hotel
European Plan
irriNHS .u—i ■— *■. hi—
-945 Broad Street
j_ _ I
50ptical Co.
Broad Street
ONIC BUILDING
rICI A N s
rassßmK—
[walk-over boot shop
I 828 BROAD ST.
Complete line of Officers’ Dress Shoes,
Price $ll.OO.
I Cordovan Puttees, strap and spring, $15.00.
Trench Boots, SIO.OO.
Corner Broadway and Jackson St.
Tlie Pioneer European Ho lei of The
Southern States.
High-Class Restaurant in Connection.
CLUB BREAKFAST, 30c and up.
Table d’Hote Dinner, 75c Week Days
Sundays, SI.OO.
CLUB SUPPER, 60c.
A la Carte Service Par Excellent.
HOTEL RATE—SI.2S to $3.00.
MESS I
ATTENTION!
FOR FISH AND OYSTERS
CALL ON THE
BIG WHOLESALE HOUSE
FRESH ARRIVALS DAILY
NORFOLK OYSTERS.
PHONE OR CALL
AUGUSTA FISH CO.
1115 Fenwick Street. Phone 2666.
ii . 111
I AUDLEY HILL CO. I
Triangular Block, 630 Seventh Street.
(Near Union Station.)
| WHOLESALE FRUITS, PRODUCE I
| AND GROCERIES. I
P We Cater Especially to
Mess Sergeants.
PROMPT TRUCK DELIVERY
s
a Our Aim: v
Quality, Service and Fairness.
| IF IT CAN BE HAD, WE HAVE IT
Wednesday, Jan. 15