Newspaper Page Text
EIGHT
4% THB 4%
m m Planters Loan & Savings Bank
705 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
Organized 1870
UPON THE ROCK OF 44 YEARS DAILY EXPERIENCE, this
Institution has built Its well-earnod reputation for
SOLIDITY, BTRENOTH AND SAFETY
Thousntvls of our people re rtlfy to a happy experience here, and
give just credit to this bank for the success of themselves and
their children. In their effott to acquire financial Independence.
OUR BEBT FACILITIES ARE OFFERED to those neekln*
bank connections, and no effort Is spared to enhance the Interest
of our depositors.
WE SOLICIT THE ACCOUNTB or careful, conservative peo
ple, und give the same careful attention to small accounts as to
the larger ones.
SAFETY LOCK BOXEB In five different sixes, $3.00 to $20.00
per year.
DEPOSITB MAY BE MADE BY MAIL. •
Our Mailing Department has been established with great care
and the accounts of depositors living out of town are handled with
accuracy and dispatch.
L. C. HAVNE, President. QEO. P. BATEB, Cashier.
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BUILD WITH BRICK
GEORSUUAROUIiA BRICK COMPANY
AUOUOTA, - OBOKOIA
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BAILIE-EDELBLUT FURNITURE CO.
708-710-712 Broadway
Special June Sale on
Porch Rockers
$2.50 low back, cane seat $1.98
$3.50 high back. canc seat and
back $2.50
$4-50 high baek, eane seat and
back $3.50
$6.50 high back, eane seat and
back $5.00
$5.00 Porch Swings, 4 chains, put up
for $3.50
SIO.OO 4 passenger Lawn Swings $7.50
SAFETY!
BANK SAFETY lies not only in
adequate steel vault protection
but in strict carefulness of
business methods. This bank
prides itself in having not only
the most modern burglar and
fire-proof safes, but in observ
ing vigilantly a most conserva
tive banking policy. That is
the double meaning we give to
"Safety.”
THE
AUGUSTA SAVINGS
BANK
34 Years of Faithful Service.
Cix?dir Newly-weds^
JC 11? i- ** . «li mJ j.
WE SELL ON THE
CLUB PLAN.
WE STORE
FURNITURE
«yj n t f -
mu ~i ~a~ i ■
Start Right and let Us Fit Up
Your Office
We hava a complete line of
Roll top desks, all sizes.
Flat top desks, all sizes.
Standing, single and
double, all sizes.
Office tables, all sizes,
Typewriter tables and
dt'sks.
Office chairs and stools,
25 Per Cent Reductions.
Today is “Father’s Day;” Custom Has
Crown Out of Mother's Day and Of
ficially Recognized By Congress
He was nut the sort of father that you
read about in books;
He wasn't strong on language and he
wasn’t strong on looks.
He was not the sort of father that you
hear about In plays—
He was Just a human father —sort of
quiet in his ways.
Just a sort of family father, fairly
sound In wind and limb,
Always ready at the word and not a
nasty trick or whim,
Seldom off his feed and never had to
graze,
Safe for any child to drive and broke
to harness forty ways.
Steady »t the bit. was father; found a
lot of fun In working;
Threw his weight against the cdllar;
seemed to have no time for
shirking.
Used to to smile and say the feed bin
kept him steady on the track;
Safe to leave him without hitching;
he’d he there when you came
tiack.
No; he never balked at working, but
whin he was through It once,
right down to the grass was
father, with the children doing
stunts.
Kveryone would idle upon him, and
he’d welcome all the pack,
But I’m wondering, after playtime, did
we stay there—on his back?
Wasn't strong on dissipation; said his
"gambol on the green’’
Was to fill the platter quicker than the
kids could lick it clean,
And the next best game he knew of
was an equal one to beat;
It was keeping covers up to the supply
of feet!
w
Mind! his tailor never told him
when his Sunday coat was fitted,
That his wings necessitated wearing
shoulders loose or slitted.
And lie wasn’t any martyr; said that
life and love were good
And no man deserved Ills dinner if
he wouldn't split the wood
Alw'ays on the job was father, plug
ging quiet like and strong.
Never making any noise, but helping
all ids little world along;
And to think. Lord ain’t it funny, you
you can see things years and
years
And you never know they've been
there till your eyes are blind
with tears.
Quit his Job one day and left us, smil
ing as he went, away
NEW DISCOVERY QUICKLY ENDS
KIDNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLES
Chronic Sufferers Find Relief
After Few Doses Are Taken.
If you are bothered with backache—or
rheumatism, have disagreeable, annoying
bladder or urinary disorders to contend
with—or suffer with any other of the
many miseries that come from weak
kidneys, here is a guaranteed remedy
you can uepend upon, no matter what
else may have failed to cure you.
It i sa positive fact that the new dis
covery, Oroxone, promptly overcomes
such diseases. It Is the most wonderful
remedy ever made for ridding the sys
tem of uric acid, removing the cause and
curing the troubles.
It soaks right in and cleans out the
stopped up kidneys and makes them
filter and sift out all the poisonous
waste mutter from the blood. It neu
WE GIVE AND RE
DEEM PURPLE
STAMPS.
WE PACK
FURNITURE.
THE QUALITY STORE
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
Kulogy seems all so foolish; what can
anybody say?
Seemed like even in his leaving he was
saving some one bother,
For the one word In the granite which
is over him is FATHER.
—By Edmund Vance Cooke.
Father’s Day.
Today, June 21 is Father’s Day Many
have protested that poor old father
can worry along very well without a
day, but the movement started in Spo
kane, Washington five years ago by
Mrs. John Bruce Dodd has now' been
officially recognized by both houses
of congress and the anniversary will be
observed in enough cities to make it a
national festival.
The Father's Day movement has
even spread beyond our shores. It has
been taken up in Germany, Sweden,
Korea, Japan, Mexico, Hawaii, Can
ada and India,
To observe Father’s Day one has
only to wear a cluster of red and white
roses in the button-hole or at the cor
sage on the third Sunday in June.
It is the beloved father who has
passed this life rather than the living
lather who is commemorated.
The custom of Father's Day grows
out of Mother’s Day. Mrs. Dodd,
foundress of Father’s Day, first inter
ested her friends in Spokane. This
w'as in 1909. The next year the Spo
kane Y. M. C. A. gave the day for
mal endorsement. Then followed the
approval of Mayor N. S. Pratt and
Governor M. E. Hay. In June the
Spokane Ministers’ Alliance accepted
the invitation of Mrs. Dodd to approve
and adopt the plan. Many publications
supported the movement, leaders in
other cities took it up and tomorrow in
thousands of pulpits sermons appro
priate to the occasion will be delivered.
In many churches baskets of roses
will be passed among the congrega
tions.
Shows Photographs of
Spirits of the Dead!
Rochester, N. Y. —A lecture, illus
trated by stereopticon views of the
aura or astral body that is said to cor
respond to what is known as the sou!,
accompanied with odd snakelike
marks, to be pictures of thought and
flanked by photographs of the spirits
of the dead, was given today by Rev.
R. R. Behleusner of New York, before
the New York State Spiritualists in
convention here.
tralizes and dissolves the uric acid that
lodges in the joints and muscles, caus
ing rheumatism; soothes, and heals the
delicate linings of the bladder; and puts
the kidneys and urinary organs in a
clean, strong, healthy condition.
More than a few doses of CYoxone are
seldom required to relieve even the ob
stinate long standing cases, while it
cures the most annoying forms of kid
ney, bladder trouble, and rheumatism in
a surprisingly short time.
You will find Croxone entirely differ
ent from all other remedies. There is
nothing else on earth like it. It is so
prepared* that it is practically impossi
ble to take it into the human
without results. An original package
costs but a trifle at any first class drug
store. All druggists are authorized to
personally return the purchase price if
t roxone fails to give the desired results
the very first time you use it.
Weather and Water
Proof Furniture in
Willow
Tea Tables,Desks,
Rockers, Settees,
Davenports, Swings,
Baskets. See win
dow display.
T WKfe?" im**h f»|lp
V l#?! W4d w ilts- y&JxWjyM
“* J/y '•,
Thomas & Barton’s Old Stand
Sanitary Refrigerators That
Also Save Ice
Only standard makes of proved worth are
offered for sale at the pri«*e reductions.
Only sanitary refrigerators that will keep
food sweet, clean and free from taint.
$35.00 3-door White Enamel lined. . .$20.00
$45.00 extra large size $28.00
$50.00 4-door White Enamel lined.. .$32.50
$65.00 4-door Porcelain lined $45.00
ALWAYS IN THE LEAD
Tomatoes !T S a can 6c
Corn sweet and tender a can 6c
Jelly 3 a tumbler 7c
Pineapple a can 15c
Catsup,,”.""’”’' a bot. 5c
CA Golden Loaf, Raisin Loaf, Any .
LJ- White Loaf, Jelly Loaf, Kind jUC
JZ Enamel Dish Pan free™™ A&P Baking Powder 50c
A&P Old Virginia Sugar Cured Hams, lb.. JtOc
Swift's Premium Hams, pound 22c
For Ice Tea use Thea*Nsctar or Golden Key, pound 60c
Snowdrift Compound No. 5,55 c; No. 1.0, $1.10; No. 20, $2.20
New York State
Potatoes, TCp
peck vlxJi.
Yard Eggs, nr f
dozen
Y. M. C. A. Boys Leave For Summer
Camp at Flat Rock Tomorrow
Younger Members of Association to Spend Two Weeks of Fun
and Recreation on Their Old Camp Site. Have Splendid
Boating, Bathing and Fishing Facilities.
Between twenty-five and thirty of the
younger boy members of the Y. M. C. A.
of this city will leave Augusta tomorrow
morning on the 10 o’clock Aiken car for
Flat Kook, their camp site, located near
Graniteville, S. C. They wijl be gone
two weeks fishing, bocting. swimming
and enjoying regular camp life.
The young campers will be under the
care of Bovs' Secretary, Pan C. Halford,
of the Y. M. C., who will have as his
assistants Robert Sherman. Arthur De-
Vaughan and Otis Rae. Theree will be
an adult leader for every six or seven
bovs, consequently the boys will be In
the best of care. Each of the leaders
is an expert swimmer, a real camp lead
er, and one in whose trust the young
campers can rest assured they are safe
in every manner.
“Safety First.”
The Y. M. C. A. summer camps, es
pecially the ones for the boys of which
Mr. Halford has had charge, have a
perfect record so far as accidents of any
kind are eoncened. All of the boys know
how to swim—they are taught this in
ihe Y. M. C. A. pool at the association
building. As their motto is “Safety
First,” extreme precaution is borne in
mind by the boys and particularly the
leaders at all times.
The youngsters will follow a regular
schedule, which, in regards to swim
ming, will allow the boys to go in the
water only at certain times during the
day, and positively at no other time.
They will all be in bathing at the same
time with their leaders right in with
them. The regular hours will be at 11
a. m. and 4 p. m. daily, with a dip early
in and swim right out.
A great deal of interest is being taken
by tlie boys in the camp fire and the
nightly camp fire stories that are told
them.
There will he plenty of plain whole
some food and it is not likely that any
of the youngsters will find themselves
minus a large size appetite.
Among Those Going.
Following is a list of the names of the
hoys who knew positively yesterday aft
ernoon that they would go: Albert Leh
man, Chas. Doolittle. Harmon Clark,
Frank Walsh, Wiley Griffin, Henry Rob
inson, Fred Kahrs, Sears Gardner. Ken
pard Trowbridge, Amory Smith, Morris
Belding, Milton Belding, Ralph Wilcox,
Marion Ridgelev, Jr.. Irvin Miegel, Teo
dy Edelblut. Bert Wells, Asbury De-
Vaughan, Harry Newman, Henry Bred
enberg, Amory Saxan, Rufus Belding,
Jno. E Murphey, Donald Blount.
Herald’s M. & M. Con
test Demonstration Days,
Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday
Junior 0. U, A. M. Will Hold Its
Demonstration Day at Con
test Headquarters at 213
Macartan St., Monday,
June 22; Y. W. C.
A. Tuesday, June
23; Boys’ Home
Wednesday,
June 24.
Every lady who calls at Contest
Headquarters and -places an order for
any article listed in the Contest
through her regular grocer, no mat
ter how small, will be given 500 votes
which will be credited to the organi
zation holding the demonstration. In
addition to the 500 extra votes, double
votes will be given on all orders placed
on demonstration days. In addition to
this the labels from the products or
dered are good for the regular vote
value, in other words, all goods or
dered at the contest department on
demonstration days are approximately
worth three (3) times the regular vote
value. Members of the above organi
zation should make a special effort to
have as many of their friends call at
Contest Department and vote for them
as possible and have explained to them
all the details of the contest.
FAVORABLE COMMENT
ON THE NEW ORGANIST
First Baptist Church Secures
Splendid Man in Mr. J. Atlee
Young.
The Baltimore Star makes the fol
lowing announcement in regard to Mr.
J. Atlec Young, the new organist and
choir director of the First Baptist
church of this city.
"The Baltimore Choir Bureau has
announced the appointment of J. At
lee Young, organist of St. John's Epis
copal church as organist and djfeotor
of the First Baptist church of Au
gusta. Oa. Mr. Young Is one of the
best of the younger organists, and has
often been heard In recitals In Balti
more and nearby towns. He is a
Marylander by birth, and has received
his musical education at the Peabody
Pure Lard’ b «, a lb. 13c
Matches a 12 boxes 5c
Salt 10 lb. bag 10c
Sugar 2 °:;X a pkg. 16c
Sugar XX a pkg 40c
Conservatory—studying organ with
Harold Phillips, and piano with Eman
uel Wad. Harmony and composition
have been studied with Howard B.
Thatcher.”
Mr. Young is a welcome addition to
the music circles of Augusta. The
choir of the First Baptist church is
composed of: Miss Helen Battle, ~o
prano, Nfiss Lillian Wilson, contralto,
Mr. W. L. Ewing, basso, Mr. J. K. Mat
thews, tenor.
DO YOU FEEL
SLUGGISH ?
When you awake in the morning
do you have that tired slugg s sb
feeling? If so, there isn’t any
thing better for toning up the
system than a bottle of
Randall’s 417 Chill and Fever Cure
It knocks the kinks out of your
system and makes you tackle your
work w r ith a vim.
Remember, no cuVe no pay.
Phone 2214 for a bottle today.
RANDALL’S
NOTICE
Many inducements are
offered you at this time in
reductions on Suits. We
have the Hart-Schaffner
and Marx Clothing, all
Wool and Silk, We mark
them down as they come
in, and the additional re
ductions we now have
will exceed them all. No
matter what others are
offering, you will find
our goods better and
prices lower.
F. G. MERTINS
The Tailor and Clothier.
SUNDAY. JUNE 21.
Fancy 24 Hds.
Patent r-j
Flour . ...V OC
Best A&P ftA
Creamery 1 iP
Butter uuu
HALF PRICE
for Momen’s
Spring Suits
EVERY SUIT IN THE STORE
WILL GO QUICKLY AT
THIS HALF PRICE SALE,
SO DO NOT DELAY.
Millinery half Price
SI.OO a Week.
Woman who have »een our
■took know that theta suite
are elegant, etyliah and par*
fact in every detail.
Every sls suit n0w.... $7.50
Every $lB suit n0w.... $9.00
Every S2O suit now... .SIO.OO
Every $25 suit n0w....51&5C
Every S3O suit now... $15.00
Every $35 suit now... .$17.50
Summer Dreteei,Suite,Weieti,
Skirts in every popular ma
terial are offered at
SI.OO a Week
The Menter Co.
940 BROAD ST.
AUGUSTA, GA.