Newspaper Page Text
Page Two
TRENCH AND CAMP
__
CAMP HANCOCK, Augusta, Ga.
W. J. Aiken, Editor.
Pubtebed with the co-operaton of THE
* HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
Augusta. Ga.
ISSUED ..VaRY~WIDN -BDAY.
Vol. No. 2.—February 5, 1919.—N0. 17.
Entered «s eeoond-clees matter, Feb
Uth, ISIS, nt the post office at Augusto.
WKVgla, under the Act of March 3. 18 <B.
ASSOCIATE AND CONTRIBUTING
EDITORS
Librarian O. C. Davis, Corporal Geo. K.
Honken. M. G. T. C.: Henry Luesecn;
C. r. Martin; Regimental Sergeant J. A.
Quinn, M. T. D.: Barton Richards; Mark
A. Wall, K. of C.
CAMP HANCOCK TRENCH AND
CAMP FINAL EDITION
With this isffue, Camp Hancock
Trench and Camp concludes its work.
The paper has been conducted for the
holdiers and has met with general ap
proval. Its object has always been to
maintain morale. Victory was won
to a large degree by morale.
Seventy editions of the paper have
teen published. Each edition num
bered from ten thousand to eighteen
thousand copies. Most of the editions
contained ten full size pages. The
paper has always been < lstrll>tited free
of cost to soldiers. A small mailing
list for which a nominal charge was
made was mantalned for convenience
of those who desired th? paper sent
by mail.
The success of the paper was made
possible only by the generous co-op
eration of The Augusta Herald Pub
lishing Company of Auguste, and The
Reliance Engraving Company of Pitts
burgh.
MOTOR M. G. CO. FEAST
OF FUN BIG SUCCESS
(Continued from Page 1.)
Wild and yelled and urged their favor
ite man to do better, when each one
was doing ths best he possibly could
and didn't need urging whatever. But
little Benny seemed to nave the most
trouble of them all. First of al! he
Jammed his nose too far into the juicy
contents and nea-'y ohoked, and later
on got so wild St the game that he
tor pie, plate and all off the chair.
But that didn discourage Benny, so
he got flat on his stomach and com
menced eating ’he pie from the floor.
But all six of the men must be praised
for their “pie- eating skill” and they
more than likely learned the trade
back home when mama used to bake
tbsm. Mahloch won the contest and
Benny took the booby prize.
Following this affair Sergeant Sauls
read a comical story, and later Ser
geant Smoieu cave a piano solo which
proved to be a hoax, the Sergeant
usinf the pin yer piano for his solo.
The entertainment closed with a
comical reading given by Private Bell
man.
Tea, Corporal Eaton was present
and guvp Ms little entertainment from
the outside f the ropes, cracking one
of his little, okes here ami there that
threw the l.owd Into a roar of laugh
ter.
The officers of the company were
present at the entertainment and
seemed to enjoy it very much.
After the entertainment a supper
was given in the company mesa hall
for all members of the company, which
proved to be a tnative treat and was
enjoyed by everyone. The entertain
ment proved to be a success and I hero
express our thanks to Sergeant Tur
ner tor his trouble and hope he will
plan »om»- more of the same kind In
the near future, and I expect that the
- jyniNrs the jfnmpar.j will help to
ma i it a still gD a.ar affair than the
one on Monday night.
The mess sergeant la one of tho
luoky ones to go today. Good-bye,
Sergt. Benny will never forget those
chocolate plea if he lives to have gray
hair.
Hyt Benny says h<> expects to see
the mesa sergeant and his pies again
when we have our next war.
A'l .corporals have now been added
to the goldbricker 11,.t. Oh. but don’t
they look tine, as they go marching
down the line to wrestle tents, scrub
mules and handle the pick and shovel.
Maha was on the sick list the tirat
day with a hand full of blisters. Foot
boy, I feel sorry for you. but how r
love to see you work.
Banny seemed right at home as he
kneeled before his chocolate pie Mon
day night. Oh, says Benny, I learned
that back home us I often proposed to
her on my knees. No wonder he land
ed the booby.
But Mahloch is a terror, and seemed
not to like It at all that Kians’was
with him in the ring. So he picked
him up and made an effort to throw
him out of the door, but lie quickly
changed his mind Be more tender
with him next time, Mahloch.
Corporal Eaton made his little spiel
on the outside of the ropes. He made
Benny so excited that he dropped his
pie off the chair and was lost for
about five minutes
Patty says there is one-song that ho
loves to h<m played and that Is "Home,.
Sweet Home.” W. hope you get homo
soon Pat, and hear that “best little
girl in the world” play H for you.
What is hsr name. Patty?
Our Top Sergeant is now a mem
ber of the s. O. L. Order and we ex
pect that he will make himself at
home in the barracks with the rest of
us. I don't know how we could get
along without his sm-ling face which
he always carries with him.
'"lore is Pi'.ity When he Is still half
■eep mornings tit mess. Hum and
~B please. Well fried and turned
.er. A little tomato sauce and salt
,nd pepper. Too bad Patty wasn't
promoted to mess sergeant.
Why not get up when the bugle
blows' reveille, bey, Corporal Faber?
Speaking about the bugle, who in
dented the bugle, anyhow, says Faber.
The other morning Patty came out
of his barracks singing.
“Home, sweet home, sweet home,
I Be it ever so hu. ible.
I ’here is no place like home,'
m along came Turner yelling. ”1
na go home."
ie Supply Sergeant entered and
the recreation room Monday night
ray of the window. Oh, yes the
4 has two doors. But 1 presume
■•anted a glance at the six choco
pies.
idential Notes of Head
quarters Co. Emteedee
'Continued from Page 1.
We hope you get out soon, and
? 'ck if you start that farm.
I have said before I hate to
t but
<ot weary yet. but
.*a go home
| hope this ! the last time I am
this stuff for “Trench anti
:ll I can say is ♦’Sit Harry R.
enjoyed writing this stuff
Iks the editors for publishing
».fore, I say “Clac Oil” till tne
ar.
TRENCH & CAMP
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Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Ky. .Louisville Courier Journalßobert W. Blngharn
Camp Travis, San Antonio, Texl „* . 4 , .. . a
telly Fl»ia and Corap atanlnyj Ban Antonio I.lxbtCharles 3. Diehl
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Published uadnr th* auspice* of the National War Work Council. Y. M. C. A. *f the
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HONOR OF T
Never before in all history has the
American uniform stood for more
than it does today.
Those who were privileged to reach
the firing line, to stand shoulder to
shoulder with our associates on the
blood-soaked soil of heroic France;
these who by day and by night will
ingly bore their burden of the drudgery
of office work to keep steady the flow
of supplies to the front and those who
speedily left civil life to endure the
grilling training to condition them
selves soon to take their places on the
line, trxjuy occupy a niche high in the
esteem of their fellow-countrymen.
The American people are not given
to demonstrative expression, still deep
in the heart of the average citizen
there is an appreciation of the army
that time can never erase. From Cha
teau Thierry to Sedan were speedily,
but indelibly, written chapters of
American history that will not be fully
understood until the whole is chroni
cled for the edification of future gen
erations. Still the men and the women
and the children of the country today
take consummate pride in the achieve
ments of tueir soldiers, and there is a
deep feeling of appreciation of sacri
fice that approaches reverence.
It is distinctly up to the men in uni
form to maintain this prestige. Upon
the men just leaving the service, with
that unimpeachable reference —an
honorable discharge—depends most in
defending by their conduct the honor
of the service in which they were
honored by being included. As the
test of a chain is its weakest link, so,
also, is the honor of the army depend
ent upon the conduct of the men com
prising it.
During the period betweA dis
charge and donning civilian clothes
comes a peculiar test of the soldiery
qualities of the man. Outside the mili.
tary law the honorably discharged sol
dier has the time of his career to even
improve the impression he made while
still in the service. Lot him wear his
uniform in a slovenly manner, fail to
salute officers or commit other
breaches of military regulations, cour
tejies and customs, and the civilian ob
servers gather the impression that the
soldier's conduct in the army was due
more to fear of the law than honor and
respect for the service of which he
was a part.
To the officers no less than to the
men from the ranks do these principles
apply. In this respect no more telling
admonition has been compiled than
the following memorandum from the
commander of the naval forces in
France:
"The uniform of an American of
A RECOGNITION OF SERVICE
The new silver chevron for service
outside the actual theatre of opera
tions has, on the whole, apparently
met with general approval both by the
civilian population and by the officers
and men entitled to wear them.
The only criticism heard has been
by a few who have said that it merely
marks them beyond question as having
failed in securing thj duty they covet
ed overseas.
Nothing, of course, could be further
from the truth or purpose, as the left
sleeve bare of any chevron indicated
this fart just as unquestionably in the
CURRENT EVENTS
By Henry Lues sen
“OVER HERE”
Why should the death rate from dis
ease anions civilians be four times that
umong eol'Lers? Now that Uncle Sam
has s«d a new standard for his soldier
ncq I- ws can’t he do it for his civilian
nephews and nieces? The soldier learns 1
to take care of himself Will the civilian
profit from his example?
The lailui ' of the Socialist candidate
for Governor to receive three per cent of
the total vote cast recently in .Massa
chusetts deprives that party of official
recognition in the primaries next year.
A Chicago druggist fired a shotgun at
a buglar who entered his store, putting
the intruder to flight .and thus saving 1
about $175 in his cash drawer. but
smashing with his shots a $250 showcase
and $250 worth of bottles.
The total Solar Eclipse of May 2sth.
1919. will extend across South America
at Its widest point, and also across equa
torial Africa. The duration will be six
seconds.
In commemorating the heroic deeds
dqne by our soldiers in France nothing
would be bo fitting as a great national
memorial or group of memorials at those
places w li. re our army added new and
glorious pages to the traditions of Am
erica.
Many towns are asking for German
helmets as souvenirs owing to the com
ing Liberty loan tn April. If the supply
Is as great as the demand, we will have
to enter into another war with the Huns.
Claude Shafer, the father of ’’Old M)an
Grump” cartoons and wtm has amused
the soldiers at all th V huts at Camp
Hancock as well as other vamps of the
USA. chalk-talked his way* through
England and France to the great amuse
ment of the fighting Yanks.
In a message to a V. M. C. A. official f
in France. General’Pershing said: ‘‘With
a deep feeling of gratitude for the enorm-j
HE UNIFORM
ficer slands for honor and responsi
bility.
"At this time in our nation’s life
it represents the highest kind of a
calling. Everything noble in our
nation should be symbolised by that
uniform, and it should not be
brought into disrepute by any action
of its wearers.
"ft should be seen antid worthy
associations and in places where no
disrepute can stain it or action of
its wearer discredit it.
"There is no judgment. of our
country that will be more searching
or severe than the judgment upon
its officers.
"They are supposed to be picked
men, leaders, trained, educated, re
sponsible. In France you are mak
ing the reputation of America.
"Your commission calls for moral
responsibility as well as military
activity.
"The eyes of a great nation are
upon you! It should not be neces
sary to point out to an officer the
fact that he is an example to his
men.
"No unit will ever rise in conduct
higher than that of its officers.
Your men know you better than you
think, and their judgment upon you
is searching and severe.
"Unconsciously they catch your
spirit and follow your example.
Therefore it becomes necessary for
you to enter heartily into the spirit
of those rules which are made for
the guidance and government of the
service.
"Let your men see you always the
master of yourself, clean, temperate
and discreet in your actions and as
sociations, avoiding always the very
appearance of evil, by liabit, bearing
and language tvinning their confi
dence and respect.
"lYe are jh!l responsible tg the
moral law of our own home and our
own country."
Between discharge and resuming his
position in civilian pursuits the rep
resentative soldier will be guided by
the moral obligations of military rules.
He will wear his chevrons, whether
they be gold, silver or red; he will
find expression of his respect for au
thority by saluting his officers; he will
bear the same lasting reverence to the
flag that today means more than ever
before, he will take a pride in his mili
tary bearing—in short, he will, by
every word and act, endeavor to make
himself worthy of being a part of the
most lofty profession of the times in
the minds of his fellow-countrymen—
a real American soldier admired by
friend and feared by foe to the far
thest corner of the earth.
past, while failing to differentiate be
tween the man who has been in service
since the beginning of the war and the
one who came in early in November.
The order which provided for these
chevrons states that the President, on
behalf of the Nation, wishes to express
his appreciation of the self-sacrificing
service given by officers and men who
military necessity has held for the per -
formance of duties outside the theatre
of active operation.
As pointed out in the President’s
order, many of the men who wear
these silver service chevrons were kept
on home duty because of their excep-
ous contribution which the Y.M.U.A. has
made to the morale and physical welfare
of the, American army, all ranks join me
in sending you Christmas greetings and
cordial wishes for the New Year.
i William 11. Hirst, attorney for the New
York State Brewers' Association. an
i pounces that the liquor men will not
1 1 abate th<ir opposition to the final finish
‘ of the “drys ”
Pennsylvania’s death-rate for 191S—
> 21.6 as compared with U.S for 1917 was
' the highest In the history of the State
Health Department, reports a dispatch
I from Harrisburg.
Federal ownership, operation, or regu- i
lation of public and semi-public utilities
is recommended in the report of the com
mittee on reconstruction of the Ameri
can Federation of Labor published in
Washington.
Twelve persons were tiled and fifty
injured by the explosion of a tank of mo
lasses on the Boston water-front, syrups
of this kind must be dangerous these
days.
The Y. M. C. A. announces the inau-
1 guration of a national thrift campaign to
assist the sale of the new $2,000,000,000
issue of War Savings Stamps.
Service Insignia for members of wel
fare agencies on duty with the organiz
ed forces of the army overseas is pro.
vided by an , order issued by the war
department.
Nearly seventy thousand German hel
mets are being shipped to this country.
These metal canopies have been aban
doned by the dithdrawlng .army. They
will be used as prizes in connection with
the next Liberty loan
Secretary Glass states that the last
big war-loan drive will be the Victory
Liberty loan, which will probably be
float* d in the k-st three weeks of April.
The amount wJI not exceed <6.000,C’0,-
{OOO.
| —i —■—
j Gold badges have b?cn pretested to 10S
- TV r, rn K nn Xjt
TRENCHX b CAMP
tional military and administrative effi
ciency.
As one silver chevron worn for each
six months of service, the wearer is
correspondingly marked as a rela
tively experienced soldier rather than
as a newcomer. The country is in
terested in recognizing men who have
served the Nation, not only well but
long, by their vitally essential and self-
Discharged soldiers go back to
civilian life with a responsibility they
should never shirk. They must uphold
the tradition cf the Army man.
Men and women in civilian life
recognize the Army as the accepted
method for instilling into men alert
ness, dscipline and intelligent co-ordi
nation of mind and muscle. Every
discharged soldier will find that his
friends, relatives and employers—par
ticularly the employers—will expect
something oi him which they ’did not
always insist upon before.
They expect men who have been
mustered but from the greatest mili
tary machine of history to exhibit
those unfailing signs of the true sol
dier—obedience to superiors, ability to
command and the habit of bearing
oneself with military carriage and pre
cision.
Soldiers ready for inspection would
not think of letting their shoes go un
polished or of wearing a garment with
out all its buttons and bearing signs of
lack of attention. When they become
Commentators throughout the coun
try are impressed by the profound in
terest being shown in national welfare
by returning soldiers.
Successive Congresses after the Civ
il War were controlled by men who
participated in that strife and, while
to-day there are but eleven men in
the two branches of Congress who
wore the Blue or the Gray, the in
fluence of the men of the early sixties
has been keenly felt through the whole
span of more than half a century.
Favored by advantages unknown to
their forefathers, the soldiers of to
day are described as the “Best educa
ted, most intelligent and best informed
men ever found in the business of
war.” Soldiers, sailors and marines,
combined with the host that labored
in the munition plants, keeping steady
the flow of supplies, compose a force
of perhaps 5,000,000, which combined
with mothers and fathers, sisters and
brothers and other relatives, presents
a total of about 15,000,000.
It is an encouraging sign that this
stupendous force of the most repre
sentative American citizenry is ex
hibiting a lively interest in the welfare
of the Union. It is indicative of a
healthy patriotism, but even more en
couraging is the fact that these men
hava no time for fads. The destruc-
———
I" honor ablh
Ii discharge fff
A a i*y ! /
-^'lrihinK!
VTlow Proud
YOU BOttlWl Be
women who for the past two years have
been doing war work at the plant of a
motor edr company in Toronto. Canada.
“OVER THERE ”
The Responsibility for the Greatest
War in History will soon be placed. The
’ men who have been given this import
t ant duty are: Secretary of State Lansing.
• of the United States: Sir George Gordon
I He wart, of Great Britain; and Andre
Tardieu, of France.
President Wilson the other day manip-
• ulatetf his awn typewriter. Something
■ must l c brewing.
i
General Pershing's creed is posted in
the Bvd Triangle huts throughout France.
“Hardship will b‘ your lot. but trust in
1 God will give you comfort: temptation
■ will befall you. but the teachings of our
1 Saviour will give you strength. Let your
valor as a soldier anti your conduct as
a man be an inspiration to your coun
try.”
! .
Great Britain now wants $l3O. instead
of $65, the cost for carrying an American
, soldier to Europe in a British vessel.
It is the plan of Maj. David Davies, a
member of Parliament, apd his wife, to
establish a chair of international polities
, a’ th* University of Wale;.. The\ pro
pose to name the chair for President
Wilson. Why not a similar chair in one
of our universities, and give it the name
of Ex-PnMdent Taft, who is doing so
> much to encourage better relations be
tween nations?
•The total mobilized strength and cas
ualty losses of the Allies are as follows:
Mobilized 39.676.564; , dead 4,869.478;
wounded 11,075.715! prisoners or missing
1 1.956.233. For the Central Powers: Mobi
lized. 19,500,000; dead 2*912,328; wounded
7 605.542; prisoners or missing. 2.124.347.
The giand total for all nations engaged
in the ware are: Mobilized 59.176,864:
dead 7.751.806; wounded. 18.682,257; pris
oners or missing 7.080.550.
Mr. A H Mann, editor <jf the London
Evening Standard, makes the following
statements: ‘’Germany should b* made
to pay a big indemnity, an indemnity
that would require fifty years to liqui
dat» France requires guarantees against
German aggression in the future. if
Germans can not pacify themselves, I
believe that the allies should intervene
in Germany, seize Berlin, and establish
SHOW THEM WHAT THE WORD SOLDIER MEANS
SOLDIERS AND NATIONAL WELFARE
sacrificing wort on home duty, and |
the silver service chevron recognizes
the men of experience and longer j
service.
Men returning from abroad are ex
pressing the desire to add the silver
chevron to then gold ones, as they feel
that otherwise they are denied recog
nition of their term of service on this
side.
civilians again people will be surprised
if they find the ex-soldier any less i
punctilious in the niceties of dress. In j
this war, more than any other, have :
the outsiders been impressed with the ;
general good appearance cf United j
States soldiers.
Former fighting men of Uncle Sam
owe it to themselves to set an example
of what’s what to civilians. When
your employer calls you into his office,
go into it with the same degree of
alertness you would have in the Army
when a superior officer addressed you.
Let instructions and advice sink into
your memory just as you would have
taken orders in battle. Don’t forget,
don’t slouch, don’t let slide the little
things you would have blushed to have ,
forgotten in the army.
Carry on! It’s the spirit of the j
army game while you’re in it, and the ;
man who thinks he should forget that
spirit in the civilian hereafter is dead
wrong. It’s the finest heritage he re
ceives from the war, and one which
will always stand him in good stead.
five spirit that has swept through
parts of Europe and Asia, wrecking
nations, knows no place in the minds
of the returning men who stood ready
to make the supreme sacrifice for Am
erican ideals of freedom and fair play.
The men about to quit the service
seem unwilling to tolerate anything
calculated to interfere with the speedy
readjustment and reconstruction that
will bring the country to a normal
basis without delay.
The hundreds of thousands who left
home and country to cross an infested
sea and face the Hunnish hordes on
foreign soil, there to perform their
duty in a manner that won the admira
tion of the world, are in no mood to
brook interference that might threaten
the world they have suffered to pro
tect.
The army on the way home, to re
sume peaceful pursuits, gives every in
dication that this influence will be
sanely, safely and intelligently exer
cised. The preponderant majority is
coming back better mentally, morally
and physically. Their vision has been
lengthened and broadened, their inter
est in national and international pol
icies has been quickened and, unless all
indications are misleading, the healthy
influence of the men of 1918 will be
felt for generations for the betterment
of all things American.
ea stable government.
London is unofficially informed that
the new armistice terms to be presented
to Germany include retribution for the
murder and iJL-treatment of allied pris
oners. and the removal of $500,000,000
gold from Berlin to a safe place. Ger
, many is also required to turn over 4.000.-
• 000 tons of shipping to carry food-sup
plies to needy countries in Europe.
' i .
i American ‘army officers are planning
» ! a survey of the devastated conditions in
I France and Belgium to five President
Wilson an independent estimate of the
■ actual physical damage suffered by Huso
; two nations.
One hundred and fifty guns of .77 v.i’.i
--i b r and $500,000 worth of leather are
. found by American officers In one day,
i sttaes a message from Coblenz, recent
i ly. Under the armistice terms the guns
r and leather pass to the Americans as
r abandoned material.
j
Associated dispatches report Dr. Lieb
knecht and Rosa Luxemburg killed in
Berlin and note apprehensions of a gen
- 11 oral strike and uprisings to avenge their
1 deaths. The Gedman Bolshevik: appear
cuYBt(V-; IGcu Sar-LACounc Bin
to be in full control in Berm-ur Cux- |
j haven and Brunswick.
‘ It was announced that regue.y aerial I
; | passenger sen ice with Paris in eehnee-
■ nectlon with the peace cenfereace would
■ |be inaugurated.
Lloyd’s Register reports more than
6.000.000 tons wer under ecnsti action in
the world's ship-building yarns or. Sep
tember last.
The number of totally blinded victims
; of the war among all the Allied forces
• is placed at 7,0('0 by a Fret- ch authority.
■ Twenty-five or thirty per < -’it will prob
-1 ably have tq be added to this figure from
• among the patients now undergoing
1 treatment.
Russian prisoners in Germany, said to
number 1.5"0,000, are to be supplied with
food, medicines. alid clothing, reports
1 Buris, by the American R«*u Cross.
■ Germany, under the draft of the pro
posed now Constitction. is divided into
eight federated repvb ics It is provided
: that the president be el -ted by the cn
’ tire German people for a term of seven
years. The chancellor. to be appointed
by the president, will be responsible to
the chamber.
WHILE THEY LAST
Best Bedding Rolls . .$11.50
Best Sleeping Bags . .$.9.00
T. G. BAILIE & CO.
712 Broad Street.
If you are looking for something to eat, we have it. "
LIBERTY BOND RESTAURANT I
9TH AND WALKER STREETS.
One block from P. O. Near Union Depot
JACKSON & FISCUS, PROPS. ■ ;
BEST COFFEE N TOWN HOVE-MADE PIES OUR SPECIALIf- I
“ASK THE BOYS THEY KNOW" g
■ 'uh i mu—n^——
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE WAR RELIEF HOUSE
WHELESS ROAD CAMP HANCOCI.
OPPOSITE Y. M. C. A. A DMIN’ISTRATION BUILDING.
All those in the service of this country, or its allies who wish |i |
quiet place in which to read, write or meeLtheir friends, will find a w|- I
come here. i
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE WAR RELIEF COMMITTEE
FOR THE STATE OF GEORGIA.j |
i»iiii 11 min inu 11 w ii' iiiWT'*n*M*Ma**a*fm***
THE LITTLE JIM CAFE
THE SOLDIERS’ FRIEND.
Eat at His Restaurant When in Augusta.
317 EIGHTH STREET (JACKSON STREET.)
WIITWF”»T-»H 8 kill I■— 11 111 II ■ ■l*ll Mil 11 ■ ll»l ■* 111 lll UTT *
IFOR STRICTLY HIGH CLASS WORK GO TO
A. H. MIEGEL
TAILOR..
No. 5 Union Savings Bank Building. Eighth Stree’.
MS*GN—O3*SfICWZSOEXESSSB’SCT*D—S——■*■*——BB—MB—BCaEEZJ—BS3— U—** *■■■■•
, imor
TYPEWRITERS
Remingtcn, Monarch, Smith Premier and Remington Junior.
?he Remington Junior is the portable rmchine for officers.
L. J. HENRY
THE T' EV. RITEh MAN,
123 Sth St.
■ >jj— ii nw ■■ * iutt"
| JOHN W. DICKEY
STOCKS AND BONDS.
Corner Broad and Eighth Streets.
; HULSE’S” STEAM LAUNDRY
OFFICE 319 EIGHTH ST.
Largest and Best Equipped Laundry in Augusta.
ffiMI*—KMMHMMMIaBUSM—«■—S&TJS*M—HMffISM—IaEHHO—HMMKHB—K3E9—I—TIin—II*I—MB
Terminal Barber Shop
ALL NEW AND UP-TO-DATE.
Eighth and Telfair Streets.
CIGARS CANDIES
TAYLOR & MILLER, Props.
Next Door to Augusta-Aiken Depot.
Woodward Lumber Co.
Opposite University Hospital.
Corner Roberts and Dugas Sts.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER.
Composition Roofing, Office and Barracks
Utilities, Pine and Cedar Boxes.
PREPARED TO FILL CAMP ORDERS.
i nwim SSSw—
MESS SERGEANTS]
ATTENTION 5
FOR FISH AND OYSTERS
CALL ON THE
BIG WHOLESALE HOUSE
FRESH ARRIVALS DAILY
NORFOLK OYSTERS. '
PHONE OR CALL
AUGUSTA FISH CO. Z
1115 Fenwick Street. Phone 2666.
os— eesi ,
I Louis P. Speth J
| STOVES, RANGES, GRATES, HOUSEFURNISHINC I
. GOODS. /
All Ktnds of Camp Cooking Utensils. J
g 1064 Broad St. Augusta, Ga. Phone 61 /
SPIRAL PUTTEES
Per $1.75 Pair.
All-wool U. S. Government Stan,
dard. made will. I extra reins
forced piecing. Send monel
order. Cash will be refunded ■
not satisfactory.
S. Rosenau & Company
Manufacturers
DARIEN & NOBLE STS. I
Philadelphia, Pa.