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SUNDAY. APRIL (2.
Value
with a Capital
V—
STYLE
with a Capital
S—
QUALITY
with a Capital
Q
and
LAMM & Co.
Clothes
with a Capital
L—
are emphatically empha
sized in our display of
Woolpna for Spring and
Summer.
There isn’t a Style
worrlh looking at that
we can’t make.
All we ask
of you is that you Come
In and look over our as
sortment, and leave vour
MEASURE with a Capi
tal
M
New. Straw Hats
The nobbiest collection
you ever saw. In plain
and* rough stylos. In al
most any shape. The
Beaver, English and the
modified shapes - Si .50,
$2.00, $2 50 $3 00
genuine panama
HATS
The telescope and the
creased crown shapes.
Will wear until you get
tired of them, at $5.00.
NEW LEATHER
BELTS
The initial as well a> the
buckle styles, in black,
grey, tan. etc.
35*. 50c. 75<\
“The Little Store Around
the Corner.”
Geo. H. Baldowski,
Jr.
228 Jackson Street.
Phone 2443.
ACTING BEFORE CAMERA IS NOT
LIKE ACTING BEFORE AUDIENCE
Mr. E K Lincoln, Leading Actor in "The Littlest Rebel,"
Picture Play Now Being Made in Augusta, Oivea Out In
teresting Interview on Difference of Technique Between
Speaking Stage and Motion Picture Studio.
That there In a great difference be-
Iwwn the technique .if the speaking
efa*e and Uu- motion picture studio,
which never Iwmmn an apparent aa
whin a "legltlmata" star enter* the
realm of the photo-play, la lha opin
ion of Mr. K. K. Lincoln, lata alar of
the Vltagraph Company, and now tak.
mu tha leading man'a part In "The
l.iilleat Ralial," tha flva-raal motion
(datura balott rnaila in Augusta hy the
Chotoplav I'n.dii. tlona Company, of
, Xr» York city.
Tha quantum on playara going from
tha speaking stage to motion pictures
la ona of great Importanw to all who
nra Interested allhar In tha ntnjta or
'tha photo-play It haa haan especially
airttatad of lata whan ao many atari
hava haan recruited to appaur In a
single photo-play. Aa a playar who
haa haan bafora tha public through
both madiurna and who la recognised
aa one of tha country'! moat Intelli
gent aa wall aa moat popular leading
man, an actor who haa ntudlrd tha
art and teohnlqoa of motion pictures
aa hava few otliara, Mr. Lincoln la
singularly well qualified to apeak upon
thla subject
Differ! From the Stage.
"While 1 do not wieh to decry the
work of legitimate at nra In any way,"
*ald Mr. Lincoln, "their appearance
In motion pictures hau Impressed on
rne the fact that of tent Imp* a very
ainart person may not timh-ratand an
other's business. The art of the photo
play tllffara from that of the stage
Even ‘making up' ta done differently,
for Instance, Than, the working lines
must he understood. Claying before
the camera la far different from play
ing before an audience. To get the
best results one must have experience
ami studied.
“That la my opinion and it Is the
policy of the Chotoplay Productions
Company. Mr Frank A. Tlrhenor, the
general manager, and myself hnvo
made an exhaustive study of this
phase of the producing end of the
motion picture Industry. We wish out
pictures to reach the public aa the
highest form of visualisation of the
plays from which they will be adapted
Take our first production. "The TJt
tlest Rebel" It lias been played In
every hamlet from coast to coast and
as a play ranks among the most pop
ular. Now. we will present II In mo
tion pictures and naturally we want to
do It In. the best possible war After
studying the work on the aereen of
players who have made a success aa
motion picture plovers and of the
players whose reputations have been
gained by work on Ihe speaking stage,
we decided If. mnkc up our east of
persons experienced in the silent
drama
Understand the Technique.
"Cur decision to compose the com
pany of screen players has been reach
ed because we know beforehand Just
exactly what to expect from llielr
Work. They understand the technique
of the business. It is rihdlsh, I be
lieve, to expect to transplant a speak
ing actor or actress Into an entirely
new atmosphere and method of pro
cedure at one swoop and expect him
or her to get the best results.
"This Idea Is amply borne out hy
the appalling number of failures that
have been mail, i.wiilly by legitimate
stars In expensive motion picture pro
Why Not a Matinee or Two Night
Performances For the Minstrels ?
Th* **lo2o Mln»tr#l” neat an la opened
ycaterday mortilnK fund within an hour
dll of tha acMta down hliilNii ware taken
The iihow will probably draw one of tha
largest crowd* that aver went to the
opera house.
In view of Lha tremendous demand
Manager Sparks Announces Change
In Character of Shows at the Bijou
Manager Sparks, of tha Bijou Thea
ter of this city, with a number of
other theatrical managers, haw recent
ly been to Chicago In the Interest of
having restored lo this circuit. Includ
ing Augusta and four other cities, a
belter class of shows for the Mg vau
deville house* than have been brougn:
here In the recent pawl.
Mr Starks slates that beginning
tomorrow the policy of the Bijou will
be to offer for the first three days of
the week Keith Vaudeville (everyone
knows whal Keith Vaudeville Is) and
the last three days of the week a big
tabloid company.
Heretofore some good "tnha'' have
been to town and also some had ones
and no Keith Vaudeville.
The show for the first three days
CIVIL CASES FOR
WEEK OF APRIL 11
Judffe Hammond to Have
Criminal Business During the
'Week Beginning May 4th.
The following not 100 has boon sent out
: to members of the bsr'by Judge lUm*
] mood:
j Notice to members of the b»r:
The superior court convenes Monday,
April 30th. st 10.00 a. m„ grand Jury
In attendance.
All civil esses stand for trial during
the week beginning Monday, April 2711 i
| lit 10:00 a. 111.
Counsel intending to tr> any civil
‘ cases will on or before Thursday the
! l«th. notify the clerk and opposing
j counsel, in writing of such Intention.
| Cases will lie assigned In the order In
which they appear on the docket,
j t'ounsel objecting to any assignment
! will Immediately, In writ ng notify op
! peeing counsel and the court. All ob
jections lo assignments will be heard
! amt determined at It' 30 a. m Monday
the 30th. In the super.or court room On
I Tuesday the Slet. the clerk will prepire
I a list of cases assigned standing for
J trial Ten cases will be assigned for
j each day. All unconteated divorce oases
will tie tried Saturday. May 3nd
j All criminal cases stand for trial dur
ing the week beginning Monday. May
| oh at 10 a. m.
Please keep this notice before you on
| your desk
This 11th day of April. 11*14
HKNitv t’ hammond,
Judge, Superior Court, A. C.
| duct lons I believe that It would nut
I be placing the average too high to miv
that not one In feu of these great
people of the spoken dramas hava been
satisfactory In their work In picture*
In several Inalanees they have fallen
down utterly. Sometime* It la the ex
aggerated artistic temperament which
prevents the star from getting Into
the spirit of the work, hut as a gen
eral rule It la an absolute lack of
knowledge of pictures that cuuaes tha
t routes. With reasonable (raining and
some real hard study of the basic re
quirements of this brand-new art the
real actors of the legitimate gtage
mould most readily round Into fine
picture actor*. but uaually they are
drafted at a big salary to work In one
picture and they have 'fallen down'
and gone out of the game before they
have grasped even the elementary de
tails of plctur acting.
One Orest Difference.
"One great difference between mo
tion picture playera and those of
the speaking stage Is that the first
must he primarily actors or actresses,
while the latter are often readers of
lines. The speaking votes covers a
multitude of alns on the speaking
stage. It cannot do so tn motion pic
tures. The player on tha screen has
but two methods of conveying
thoughts: expression and pantomime
He learns these. He becomes a master
of the art and enlarges upon his ve
hicles until they are sufficient. The
player on the speaking stage relies
all too often on a quaver of the voice
to convey pathos or mirth and other
tricks of the trade which are of no
use in pictures. The use of the speak
ing voice differentiate between the
two very largely.
"Blanche Hales, the emotional ac
tress, for one, knows this I was In
terested In a recent speech of hers to
the graduating class of a school of
acting. 'Hrcserva your speaking volca,
acting. 'Preserve your speaking voice,’
she aald. ‘lt Is all that stands be
tween us and the motion picture
players If It Is not worth the extra
two dollar* what ia to become of ua?’
Miss Hates was right. In that the
speaking voice doea stand between
the two. And wtu-n a player from
the speaking stage comes to pictures
where hla silver throat does him no
good he is as handicapped as a whist
playar would he if hla bund was
stripped of all its trump cards.
What Picture Actora Know.
"On the other hand, the folks who
have been playing In pictures know
Just what Is required of them. The
camera catches exactly wh'nt they
want It to catch They know what
photographs well and what does not,
and they enlarge on the one and en
deavor to eliminate the other.
“That Is why. with a choice of the
best in the legitimate for there are
few Imbed who are not anxious to
enter pictures now at our disposal,
we chose the cast of 'The Littlest
Rebel' from actors and actresses who
had already demonstrated their ability
In pictures and this, in my carefully
formed opinion, la what all of the pro
ducers of big features will have to
do In the near future, because the
picture public is getting wise and is
already beginning to put the boycott
already beginning to put the boyeot
on badly acted filing.”
for seats It has hern suggested that a
matinee he given /Whether those In
charge wool consider this Idea seriously
or not Is unknown, but It would aeein
logical to either do this or give two
night performances, say Tuesday and
Wednesday nights.
this week Includes- Mag and Snvder.
In a remarkable acrobatic act; Lydia
and t'lara Knott, In a comedy playetio
entitled ' Making Marv Over"- the
Three O'Neil Sisters singing and
dancing trio, and Qulgg and Nicker
son, In a screaming comedy musical
act
The last half of the week comes:
Eva Mudge. stunning character com
edienne: Golden and Hughes, rival
ing Mclntyre and Health; llarrlson
West Trio, featuring Buster Boy com
edian, and Sheppard and Ashton, in a
comedy singing and piano act
The “tab" will not he put on this
week, the vaudeville taking the place.
Tin* combination will begin promptly
next week. announces Manager
Spork*.
Van Goosby Surrenders;
is Brought to Douglas
Douglas, Ga.— Van Goosby was
brought here today from Danville, Va„
" here on Monday he surrenderee and
confessed he was wanted for the mur
der of hla stepfather. Thomas Hodge,
In Coffee county. In September 1910
Me will not be tried until fall. Goosby
claims he slew Hedge In self-defense.
sls 00 All-Wool, nicely made Suits,
you w 111 find no such values else
where. F. G. Martina.
GRAND
Universal Film Mfg. Co., Carl Laemmie, President, Presents
TRAFFIC IN SOULS
600 SCENES. A Powerful Photo Drama. 700 PEOPLE
A Sensation in Twenty Cities. A Towering Triumph of Good Over Evil.
Teaching a Great Moral Lesson.
SEE IT ! WONDERFUL !! THRILLING !! !
PRlCES—Matinee and Evening—Adults, 25c; Children, 10c; Orchestra and
Balcony—2sc; Gallery, 15c and 10c.
fHE AUGUSTA HERALD. AUGUSTA, GA.
GAIN IS SHOWN
P. 0. RECEIPTS
Over $2,000 Gain During the
Quarter Just Ended Over the
Same Quarter Last Year.
A splendid increase In recslpts Is
shown In the quarterly rep<ad of post
master Thomas I). Murphy. During tbs
quarter Just ended, which la the third
quarter In the fiscal year 1913-1914. the
receipt s were 142,*37.22, iignlnst »tn.-
291 04 for the same quarter In 1912-1913
and 339.x71.29 fts- the same quarter In
1911-191.' Postmaster Murphy Is now
engaged In the count of the parcel post
for the first IJ> days of April, 7914. Tha
eoiint so fur shows that the pa reels
have doubled the number during the first j
PI days of April last year.
FEDERATIBN OF
LABOR SESSIONS
Georgia Federation Meets in
Macon April 15-17 For Three
Days’ Convention.
Macon, Ga- —The following program
! was Issued today for the sixteenth an
| nual convention of the Georgia Fed
eration of lather to be held in this city
on April 16, 16 and 17 at the city au
ditorium:
Opening.
Convention railed to order at 10 a.
m. by C. T. Williamson, president .Ma
con Central Labor Union
Invocation, llev. John S. Bunting.
Address of welcome on behalf of
the members of organised labor, by C.
T. Williamson, president of the Macon
Central Labor Union.
Address of welcome on behalf of the
city of Macon, by Hon. Bridges Smith,
mayor.
Address of welcome on behalf of
the Macon Chamber of Commerce, by
Hon. W. E luinwody, president Ma
con Chamber of Commerce.
Response by Mr S. B. Marks, presi
dent Georgia Federation of Labor,
President Williamson turns the con
vention over to Mr. S. B. Marks, pres
ident of the Georgia Federation of La
bor.
First Day's Session.
Convention called to order.
11 ‘a. tn , adjournment
2 p. m, convention called to order.
5 p. m., adjournment.
Wednesday evening. April lf>th,
grand ball, beginning at 8:30 p. m„ at
Macon Volunteers Armory, across
from auditorium.
Second Day.
Convention called to order at 9 a m.
Adjourn at noon to go to Macon
Volunteers Armory for luncheon.
Meeting called to order at 2 p. m.
Night session, 7:30 to 8:30,
At 8:30 p. m. the public will attjend
to hear an address hy Mr. Jerome
Jones, and by lion. T. S. Felder, the
first attorney for the Macon Central
1-abor Union.
Third Day.
Convention called to order at 9 a. m.
and remain In session until the busi
ness of the convention Is completed
The public is cordially invited to at
tend all meetings
General Committee—W. A. Mc-
Kenna. chairman; J. C. Sullivan, sec
retary; Hr. W. T. Morgan, treasurer.
HEART SURGERY
BT DR. CARREL
Nobel Prize Winner Tells of
Successful Operations on
Dogs; Now Beady For Human
Beings.
New York.—|W Alexis Carrel, head of
the Rockefeller Institute and winner of
n Nobel prise In science, discussed his
latest experiments In surgery of the
heart here today. These experiments
were performed on dogs with the Idea of
developing methods anil technique which
can now he easily applied to human
beings.
His Method.
“In several recent Instances.” Dr. Ctr
vnl said, ”1 have tuccebeded In clamping
cn masse the neek or pedicle of the
heart, thus putting off the circulation
of the blood for a period of two or three
minutes and giving opportunity for a
rapid operation on the aotlo and pulmo
nary valves After the operation wus
completed and the clamps removed the
heart resumed Its pulsaton and after a
vary short time the pulsations became
regular. An Interruption of circulation
for a much longer period Is umlouhted-
Iv possible, so that operation* of a
more compllostcd nature could be per
formed.
New Surgery.
"In no case Were there any accident*
or was there any need of massaging the
heart when the Interruption of the cir
culation did not exceed two and one
thtrd minute* The valves were gen
erally exposed by an Incision about an
Rich and a half long, made half on the
pulmonary artery and half on the ven
tricle of tho heart "
Dr. Carrel indicated this new surgery
would mske possible the curing of many
valvular heart troubles.
THREE DAYS- Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Daily Matinee.
Performances 3:00 and 8:30 p. m
Join in Line and Fol
low the Crowds at
MILLINER’S
Cut Price Grocery
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
1121-1123-1125 Broad Street
Telephone 2136 and Save Money
%
We guarantee quality and
price. This has always been
our motto: a square deal to all.
So come down and make
our store your store.
Note a Few of Our Cut Prices
Special For This Week
Rest Self Rising
Flour, per sack 75c^
Rest plain Flour,
per sack 75<
A good Flour,
per sack 70^
A nice Flour,
par sack (>o^
WE DELIVER AND SHIP EVERYWHERE
PURE FOOD AND
DRUG WISER
Washlng-.on, D. C| —A clearing house
for pure food and drug Information col
lected by the federal and state govern
ments has been established in the de
portment of agriculture. Announcement
was made today of the temporary ap
pointment of Dr. J. S, Abbott, formerly
of the Texas Food Commission, as
head of the new department. As soon
as Dr. Abbott takes a civil service ex
amination Ills appointment is expected
to be made permanent.
Dr. Aliberg’s Suggestion.
The new work has been taken up In
fulfillment of a suggestion mad# last
November by Dr, Alsberg. chief of the
bureau of chemistry, at a confer' nee
here of state food and drug commission
ers during which it was brought out
that there was much duplication of work
by the states and the federal govern
ment In making tests and Other food
and drug work. Lark of conformity In
Rest Country Meal,
per bushel ... 95(^
Rest Grits,
per peek 30^
Rest Japan Riee,
per lb 5^
Rest Norway Mack
erel, 6 for .. ..25^
enforcement of pure food and drug laws
has caused the federal government much
trouble. Dr. Abbott is a graduate of
Chicago University, was formerly con
nected with the Southwestern Univers ty
Medical College and was % ehemist on
the referee board of the Texas Seed
Cruchers Association. He alroady has
taken up his work here.
BRICK
LARGE STOCK.
Georgia-Carolina Brick Co.
Write for Prices. Howard H. Btefford, President Auguste, Qe-
BIJOU
FOUR BIG ACTB OF THE LATEST KEITH VAUDEVILLE PRO
DUCTION.
Sheppard and Ashton
A. Screamingly Funny Singing and Piano Act.
Maxwell Holden
A Shadow-graphical Expert of Rare Ability.
Three O’Neil Sisters
Who are not only Beautiful hut are In a Class by Themselves When
It Comes to Singing and Dancing.
Golden and Hugfhes
A Rivalry to Mclntyre & Heath.
FOUR ENTIRE NEW ACTS THURSDAY,
FOLLOW THE CROWD TWO REELS OF
ONE HOUR OF SOLID MOVING PICTURES
AMUSEMENT. AT EACH PERFORMANCE
Best Tennessee Meat
per lb 12%*
Round Plate Meat,
per lb 10^
Best Tennessee
Smoked Shoulder,
lb 13yo*
Best Tennessee Hams
lb 18d
Ford Motor Cars
Car load latest styles; just rail and
see them; will he »one directly.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS,
Augusta, Ga.
Red and Buff, Dry Pressed
and Common Building.
PROMPT SHIPMENT.
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
3 Performances Daily 3:30 7:30 9:15
Prices 10c, 20c, 30c