The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, May 19, 1914, Home Edition, Page NINE, Image 9
TUESDAY. MAY 19.
HWi @F gQCTETHT
... Social ...
Notes of Interest
may is building her house.
(Richard Le Gallienne.)
May is building her house. With ap
ple blooms
She is roofing over the glimmering
rooms;
Of the oak and the beech hath she
buildel its beams,
And, spinning all day at her secret
looms.
She pictureth over and peopleth it
all
With echoes and dreams,
And singing of streams.
May is building her house. Of petal
and blade.
Of the roots of the oak is the flooring
made.
With a carpet of mosses and lichen
and clover.
Bach small miracle over and over,
And tender, traveling green things
strayed.
Her windows, the morning and even
ing star,
And her rustling doorways, ever ajar,
With the coming and going
Of fair things blowing,
The thresholds of the four winds are.
May is building her house. From the
dust of things
She is making the songs and the
flowers and the »’ings;
From October’s tossed and trodden
gold
She is making the young year out of
the old;
Yea, out of the winter’s flying sleet
She is making all the summer sweet,
And the brown leaves spurned of
November’s feet.
She is changing back again to spring’s.
DAN FORTH DAVIDSON
CARDS OUT.
Cards of invitation have been sent
.out by Mr. and Mrs. Walter Percy
Danforth to the marriage of their
daughter, Mary Anne to Mr. John
Sheldon Davidson, mi the morning of
Tuesday, June second at ten-fifteen
o’clock at St. Paul’s Church.
—Miss Carolyn Conn, of Athens
and Atlanta, will be in Augusta Satur
day during the convention of the
Woman’s Ciubs of the Tenth District
of Georgia. Miss Conn will, while
here, make plans for the organization
of a branch of the Drama League of
America, of which she is the state
representative.
—Mrs. B. F. McNeill is visiting
Miss Florence McNeill at the College
for Women in Columbia.
—Mrs. P. M. Woodall, of South
Georgia, is visiting the Misses Den
ning on Bay Street.
—Mr. and Mrs. Gaspard Hulbert
are in New Orleans in attendance at
the convention of the Southern Cot
ton Oil Analysis Association of which
Mr. Hulbert is secretary and treas
urer.
- -Friends of .Mr, C. E. Devineau
win regret to learn of his critical ill
ness at his home on Center Street.
—The continued critical Illness of
Mrs. Rosa Pound Facey at the
Widow’s Home will be learned of with
pincere regret. Mrs. Facey is suffer
ing acutely.
—Mrs. Frank Hinman, of Jackson
ville, Fla., is spending a few days
with Mrs. George Timmerman.
You don’t have to know how —
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Everything Is Ready For
King's Daughters Convention
Every plan has been perfected for
the coming convention of the King's
Daughtera of Georgia which will go
in session tomorrow, Wednesday,
night, the session to open, with a bril
liant reception at the First Baptist
Church. About fifty or sixty dele
gates from all over the state will be
in attendance and the gathering will
in a number of ways be a notable
one.
At the reception Mrs. Leroy Han
kinson will make a delightful little
address of welcome for the City
Union or King’s Daughters and Dr.
Ashby Jones will welcome them for
the church circles and Mayor Hayne
for the city. Afterwards the recep
tion will follow. Nothing ever given
in Augusta in a social way is more
beautiful or enjoyed than are these
LISTENING ON THE WIRE.
(From the Philadelphia Record.)
If there was a Nobel prize lor can
dor it should he awarded jointly to
the resident- of Byron, Ogle County,
111. They have confessed the great
venial sin of the farming districts,
the sin rarely confessed and never
forgiven. They listen on the party
line and they love it so that they
would rather admit it than have the
pleasure taken away from them.
All this came out when the tele
phone company offered to give Byron
an up-to-date system, with individual
service, at no increase in cost. To
the amazement of the Public Utili
tes Commissoin the Byron folk de
clined the apparent boon. Question
ed, they declared that such a change
would deprive them of their finest
evening amusement.
You may draw for yourself the pic
ture of five yawning, drowsy falimies
in Byron all on the same line. It is
too early to go to bed and too far to
walk to the moving picture show.
The motor car is out of order and all
the magazines have been read.
Bridge has never been introduced in
to the Tamily and checkers are passe.
Dullness reigns.
Tinkle,-tinkle! The family Is arous
ed to lige. Tlie chairman of the tribe,
keen of ear, gifted of memory en
dowed with powers of mimicry and
recital, steps to the phone, for the
sound means that somebody is calling
the Bilkins family down the road.
The chairman stands like a statue at
the receiver for five minutes, while
the rest of the family is silent as the
grave, for no alien sounnds must dis
turb the wire and break up the great
game of listening. After that the re
ceiver is silently dropped upon the
hook and the waiting family hears, in
minute details, all the "said-shes” and
“Said-Is” and “He'a-been-beatlng-her
agains.”
Multiply this scene by three or four
and you have the sum of the pleas
ure of listenng on the wire. The
game puts the village postmaster out
of business as a clearing house for
gossip; yet until Byron was driven to
confessing, everybody has always de
nied committing the sin
Incidentally, listening on the wire
is an indoor sport that is not con
fined to the farming districts. It is
enjoyed in the cites, too. Strangely
enough, the person most frequently
Kings’ Daughters' receptions and
this promises to exceed, from a point
of artistic beauty, anything that has
been given in a long time. The dec
orations will be unusually elaborate
and will be a pleasing diversion from
those of last year when gorgeous pur.
pie wistaria was used so abuhdantly.
This season the entire decorations
will be in varying tones of purple
morning lories.
Among the notable guests will be
Miss Georgia Libbey, of New York,
of the central council, and Miss Kate
Hall, of Florida, the state president,
whose removal to Florida causes the
election of another president neces
sary. While no information has as
yet been given out it is .generally
understood that Miss Mary R. Camp
bell will be unanimously chosen as
Georgia’s president.
accused of listening on the wire is
the one innocent person. That’s
central. She hasn't time to listen,
and even if she had she has troubles
enough of her own without pickng
any more off the wire.
—Mr. and Mrs. Stallings and fam
ily have taken a cottage on the Hill
until October.
—The many friends of Mrs. E. K.
Orinfes will be glad to hear that she
has returned to her home, from the
City Hospital.
The Herald's
Picture Gallery
By Tommins Studio
ANNIE L. HICKS.
Jr ***
MP~p* 'TO---"'
HHHIHHHIHHBIHHIHH
Here Is another little tot from
South Carolina. It 1b Miss Annie L.
Hicks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Hicks, of North Augusta. Miss Annie
is the very embodiment of good
health and besides being blessed with
plenty of good looks, has her full
share of high spirit, although she Is
Just the kind of little lady to make
friends wherever she goes.
She has made an excellent run in
this great* race for fame and fortune,
but if she is to be one of the gran!
prize winners, her friends must put
forth renewed effort in her behalf
beween now and-June 29th. Sitting
back and waiting for the plums to
fall into your lap won’t win for any
one and much less in a competition
so keenly fought as this.
VIVIAN LUNDY.
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" ' . mg mpr£b,
There are many charming little
ladies In The Herald’s great race for
fame and fortune, but none sweeter
than the one who looks at you from
this picture this evening. It is Miss
Vivian Lundy, daubhter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lundy of Richmond Hill. She
Is Just as sweet and cunning a little
lassie as you will find anywhere.
She has many friends who aro
working hard to seo that she is
crowned the little queen of Augusta
and vicinity. And she is a very
strong possibility for premier honors.
Her parents are going to be the
proudest papa and mama in all tho
world should Bhe meet with this suc
cess, and if work will do It, her
iriends are ready to do their part.
On to the Bonita tonight to see
the babies who are candidates In
The Augusta Herald’s Greet Show
er of Gold Contest. Applaud your
favorite baby as Its sweet face
greets you from the screen. The
following will appear: Miss K/i'.h
--erlne Clark, Miss Mary Gavalas,
and Miss I’atnelia Helglcr.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA,
ITCHING EM
IS DRIED RIGHT
DP WITjLSUIPHDR
Use like cold cream to subdue
irritation and clear
the skin.
Constant or Intermittent irritation
producing Itching and red, angry
Eczema patches on the skin Is readily
relieved with hold-sulphur cream. The
moment It Is applied the itching stops
nnd the healing begins, says a noted
dermatologist.
It effects such prompt relief, even
In aggravated Eczema that it is a
never-ending source of amazement to
physicians.
For many years bold-sulphur cream
has occupied a secure position in the
treatment of cutaneous eruptions by
reason of its cooling, parasite-destroy
ing properties. It is not only pnrasit
leidat but also antiprultio nnd nnti
septic and nothing has ever been found
to take its place in overcoming irrit
able and inflammatory affections of
the skip. While not always establish
ing a permanent cure, yet In every In
stance it instantly stops the agonizing
itching; subdues the irritation and
heals the Inflamed raw skin right up
and it is often years later before any
Eczema eruption again appears.
Those troubled should get from any
pharmacist an ounce of hold-sulphur
cream nnd apply it directly upon the
aftected skin like you would any ordi
nary cold cream. It isn’t unpleasant
and the prompt relief afforded is very
welcome, particularly when the Ecze
ma is accompanied with Itching.
MARRIAGE OF MISS COOLY
AND MR. LOUIS BARKSDALE.
Countless friends will bn interested
in the marriage of Miss Emms
Cooley, of Lowndesville, S. C., and
Mr. Louis Barksdale., of Nortli Au
gusta, formal announcement of which
is made.
—The continued improvement In
the condition of Mrs. Greenville Tal
bott is tho occasion of pleasure to
her numerous anxious friends.
MR. AND MRS. WHALLON
TO ENTERTAIN
AT CARMICHAEL'S.
Mr, and Mrs. Frederick Whallon
will give a delightful little farewell
party tonight at Carmichael's. They
leave Thursday for Minneapolis.
—The many friends of Miss Bertie
Pearce, of Asheville, N. 0., are giving
her a very cordial welcome. She is
spending this week with Mrs. James
T. Bothwell.
—Miss Kate C. Hall, state presi
dent of the King’s Daughters of Geor
gia, will he the guest of Mrs. J. J.
Tyler, on the Hill, next week.
DON’T DEPRIVE "1
YOURSELF |
MAXWELL
HOUSE
BLEND
COFFEE
Expresses the highest
art in coffee produc
tion and is always
packed in sealed tins.
Ask jroar tracer for It.
Cheek-Neal Coffee Co.,
ItaahvllU Jachaoavllle flourfoe
CRUSTY RINGWORM
ALL OVERFACE
Suffered Terribly with Itching, Pim
ples in Patches. Formed Crust.
Scalp Attacked, Hair Fell Out, Cu
ticura Soap and Ointment Cured.
R. F. D. Ns. 14, Corapeake, N. d<—
"Soma year, ago 1 was troubled with what
la called ringworm all over my face. I suf
fered terribly with Itching and a crusty
acale over my fare which looked awfully. II
would break out In fine plmploe In pa tehee
about the alte of a nickel and Itchad so that
I would (cratch them until they would form
a cruat. After a while the ecalp waa at
tacked with an Itching which ceuaed my
hair to fall out. My bead would Itch ao
badly at night and In damp weather I could
hardly raat. The ringworm* were more an
noying to me In the aummer than In winter.
Feraplratlon would get Into tho Irritated
place* and cauea me to (cratch more than
ueual.
" I waa aaked to try Outlcura Soap and
Ointment and 1 aent for a trial which helped
me conalderably. 1 ordered (one and It
did not take but a caka of OuMeure Soap
and one box of Outlcura Ointment to cure
me. I have a floe bead of hair.’’ (Signed)
Mlaa L. M. Riddick. Sept. 4. 1913.
Vhe Itching, burning, differing and loea
of (leep of eczema*, raatiaa, and Irritation*
of the akin and acalp are at once relieved
and permanent akin health reatored In moat
caaea by warm bath* with Outlcura Soap
followed by sen Me application* of f'uMcura
Ointment when all elaa fella. Outlcura Soap
f2flc.) and Outlcura Ointment (DOr ) are
eold everywhere. A (Ingle aet la often
auffldent. Liberal (ample of each mailed
free, with 32-p. Sirin Book Addrees poet
card ’’Cuticura. Dept. T. Hoeton.”
UrMan who ahava and (hampoo with Ow
ticura Soap will And It beat for akin and acalp.
PICNIC POSTPONED.
It was announced in yesterday's
Herald that the Woodlawn M. E.
Sunday School children would have
their picnic Thursday.
These plans have been gonKwhnt
changed and the picnic will not coiue
off until later. Further announce
ment will appear in this paper.
REID MEMORIAL PICNIC *
TO BE ON NEXT FRIDAY
Will be Held at Oraniteville, S.
C., at Invitation of Mr. T. I.
Hickman. Use Special Car.
The annual picnic of the Reid Me
morial Sunday school will bo hold next
Friday in Granltevllle, S. C. Tho pic
nic Is given by the Sunday school at
Oraniteville at the Invitation of Mr. T,
I. Hickman, president of the Uranite
yille Mfg. Co,
There Is a beautiful lake there, on
the side of which Is u clubhouse, that
furnishes an admirable resort for tho
plea sure-seekers. The outing Jh given
Ok Granltevllle every year and there
is no picnic in Augusta that is more
enjoyed than Reid Memorial's.
A special Aiken enr will convey the
picnickers to and from Uranlteville.
~TTthF b |j °u
Tonight is the last opportunity to
see “The Knickerbocker Girls’’ at the
Bijou. Tho hill makes a complete
change tomorrow, beginning with the
matinee at 3:30 o’clock. Two night
ly performances are given.
The show Wednesday and Thurs
day will lie “The Swindlers," and on
Friday and Saturday a complete new
show will lie seen; “Two Old Sports.''
Last night for the opening show of
the week, the house was crowded, the
attendance being much larger than
No. 666
This is ■ prescription prepared especially
for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER.
Five or six doses will break any case, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver better than
Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c
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GLOVE SILK UNDERWEAR
Bilk Underwear In now conaldered nn economy and especially In thin no when onn li traveling or off
on a vacation. The garment* will nattily pay for themgelve* In laundry hill aavlnga and then too add to
one'* comfort. Below we quoin apeclul greatly underpriced In white, blue, pink and black:
$2.00 Bilk Shirts $1.48 $2.75 Bilk Bloomers $2.19
$3.50 Bilk Combinations $2.98 $4.50 Bilk Combinations ....$3.98
$2.25 Embroidered Silk Shirts $1.89
White Crepe and Linen Dresses
The Crepes are of a soft white Crinkled Crepe, eollar, euffs and double
tunic, finished with button hole scallop colored or w r hito ribbon girdle and
tie. The Linens are made of soft, white French non-arushable Linen with
long low set tunic, trimmed in Ball Crochet Washable Buttons tfi? QO
These are exceedingly smart morning dresses ifiUtSU
AM-I-FRENCH LIINOERIE
No underwear ever put on the market hoa ever met with the popular favor that this Amffrench
Lingerie hoa (or at leaat to our knowledge,; Them, garment* are all coplea of P*rench garment* at
three or four tlmea the price end everyone acalloped and every acallop guaranteed.
Combinations .. .. SI.OO to $3.98 Corset Covers up
Gowns .. . $1 00 to $2.98 Pants 59£ up
Embroidered Voile Skirts $ I.4ft
Dyer V X/’<2* Phone
Bldg. T O 262
THE STORE THAT HAS THE NEW THINGS FIRST
You buy
unequaled
quality and fit in
Silk Gloves
More pairs of “KAYSER” Silk Gloves are sold
__ than all others
N\ —because |
/ “KAYSER" Silk Glove# 1
wear better, fit better and
if J hold their shape better than jT jl|
/X ft any other silk glove In tho I J |
world. I / I
Look for "KAYSER” In the h«m / /' J.
yon will find It in the genuine.
A guarantee ticket with every pair that tf/z V* '
the rips outwear the gloves. t
Short "KAYSER” Silk Gloves 50c to sl.>s
Long "KAYSER" Silk Gloves 75c to s2.o*
AT ALL STORES f
wni at first expected. Judging from
the size of last night’s audianoe the
light tabloid vaudeville at summer
prices. 10 and 20 cents, la meeting with
popular favor among BlJouitea.
The Genamore Slaters, in their own
specialties, make a great hit with ev
er, audience, and Rudolph IJenlcke, an
old Augusts, hoy. is a comedian of
| splendid ability nnd a. good musician.
This Is the canvasser's best list; “The
woman across the slrset bought ow*. 1 '
KELLY’S
Advance Showing
and Sale of
Graduation
Dresses
New White Skirts
Just received pretty white Ratine, Rice Cloth,
Rep, Cotton Golphine, PTC and Crepe Rkirt*.
These models are of the very latest and ont of
the ordinary elass, in both regular and extra Rizes.
Priced $1.25 to $5.98
New Silk and Wool Skirts
New popular priced Rilk and Wool Rkirts, in Taffeta,
Crepe, Hergeß, Shepherd Checks and Blacks. These
goods were received by Monday’s oxpreßß. All new
models, including the low long tunicß. Moderately
priced $5.98 to $12.50
If a woman can sniff at the humbug in
an average magazine for women, she is
sufe to hand the pay envelope, tpn,
THE JOY OF DANCING EXERCISE
Very fsw women or men seem to cere to Tango or
set Dancing Exercize unless they ere assured the
freedom from selling feet that Alleo'e Foot-Ease,
tiro nnllsepiic powder to he shaken into the shooe,
always elves. Blue* the tendency to hold Dancing
pun 101 has bscotn# almost a daily end hourly usces
ally 111 evary community, the sale of Allen's Foot-
Ess-, sn the Druuglsts report, hae reached the high
water mark. Bold Krery where use. Trial package
face. Address Aileu B. Olmsted, Leltoy,R. Y. J
$15.00
At this popular price we are
showing twenty crisp New Dresses,
‘‘no two alike,” in pretty sheer
white Organdy, Crepe and Mull.
These dresses are trimmed in dain
ty lace and embroidery with broad
ribbon girdles with the long or
double tunics. These dresses on a
special purchase and are real $20.00
and $22.50 values. Your choice sls.
NINE