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TEN
4% THE 4%
Planters Loan and Savings Bank
70S BROAD STREET AUGUSTA, GA.
ORGANIZED 1«70—44 YEARS AGO.
SOLIDITY—« TRENQTH—SAFETY.
The Bin meaning of thee* three word* when ueed in connec
tion with money, le RESPONSIBLE BANKING.
RESPONSIBLE banking la the policy under which thle lnatl
tutlon ha* been managed elnoe the first day tt etarted business
44 year* ago.
SAFETY I* only possible In e Financial Institution who*a
UNALTERABLE POLICY ha* Keen and always will be RESPON
SIBLE BANKING METHOD a
We solicit the amount* of careful, conserve five, energetic per
sons, and guarantee the name careful attenUon to small account#,
aa to the larger one*.
AQL «- C - HAYNE, President. m
A> GEO. P. BATES, Cashier.
I Never Disappoint My Patient*
Clifton R. Groover, M. D., the Nerve, Blood and Skin
Disease Specialist.
If you desire to oonmilt a rr.llabln, lons estab
llphed specialist of vast experience, como to me and
learn whet ran be accomplished with eklllful, scten
tlflr treatment. I uae latest SERUMB end BACTE
RIA® In the treatment of chronic condition* which
have failed to yield to ordinary treatment —for WEAK
NESS, LYMPH COMPOUND, combined with my di
rect treatment, reatorlns the vital porta to the fullest
degree.
I aucceaafnlly treat Blood Poison. TTlcera, Skin dis
eases, Kidney end Bladder trouble*; Rheumatism,
Pile*, Rectal and Intestinal dtyeaae* and many dls
eaaea not mentioned. Coneultatlon »nd advice free
and confidential. Hour* 9 a. m. to 7 j>. m. fiundsy
10 to 2 only. Call or vrlta
DR. GROOVER SPECIALIST.
804-7 Dyer Bldg.
The Thankful Baptist Church
Corner Lincoln and Walker Streets
Invites You to Worship With Them on Her
Seventy-iourth Anniversary,
Sunday August 30th, 1914
program
Early Prayer Merlin* nt 6: SO A. M. Conducted by Bro. Chas.
Weaver.
11:30 A. M.
Kermon by Rev. Channlnic Toblaa, International Secretary Y.
M. C A
S O'CLOCK SHARP.
Herman by Rev. S X. Floyd.
Our Kunday School .Mrs Henrietta Brown.
Selection by our B. Y. I'. 11.
Women'# Mission, Mr*. It. I* Braboy.
Deacon Hoard. M. W. Peachy.
Short paper on Hlatory of Church, B. W. Matthewa, Church Clerk.
| Our Usher Board, Llmsr Mlmm.
8:00 P. M.
Sermon by Paetor, Bev. T. P. Pinckney. O. D.
our Choir will be repreaented with her excellent mualc at an aerr-
Icea.
Mill
Every Member of Your Family
Will Enjoy This Hot Water
Service
GET away from the ald-faahloned water heating
method*. Save time, labor and money, and have
genuine hot water comfort. Nothing means more
to your household.
The Ruud Tank Water Heater
will give you and rom femllv mors real satisfaction and comfort,
and save you more Urns and labor than the same amount of money
could poeetNv buy in any other household convenience.
Phone as to-day, or better still, visit oar showroom end see for
youwaU what this wonderful heater will do.
The Gas Light Co.
London, 5:25 a. m.—The St. Peters
burg correspondent of the Pont de
scribe* the difficulties nature has
placed In the way of the Russian ad
vance in East Prussian and says the
Germans have enormously multiplied
those difficulties by a modern adapta
tion of age old methods. Lakelets
and marshes were sown with rifle pits
arid wherever practicable redoubts of
felled timber were placed. Every
where there are formidable wire en
tanglements.
"We have no exact Information,”
the correspondent continues, "of how
many army corps Germany left to
oppose the Russian advance. Per
haps there were seven and possibly
only five. Whatever their number
three are retreating under cover of
the fortress of Konlgsberg and one Is
In full flight on Osterode. All four
flung away In retreat their arms and
ammunition and even their food.
Run Strategy.
"The Russian army by forced
marches have driven a wedge between
the German forces. So demoralizing
was the Russian commanders' strat
egy that the German forces abandon
ed their entrenched position on the
Angrerapp without a fight.
"The authorities of East Prussia
1 /
NEUTRftLITY PHE
■ PROPOSALS
House of Commons Told of
German Offer to Secure Off
Hands By France and Eng
land.
London, 1 p. m. —Sir Edward Grey
told the house of commons today he
had seen an Incomplete publication
by the German government purport
ing to contain proposals alleged to
have been made with the Idea of se
curing French and British neutrality
during the war.
The circumstances. Sir Edward
*ahl, were as follows:
It was reported to him one day that
the German ambassador in Ixjndon
had suggested that Germany might
remain neutral In a war between Rus
sia and Austria-Hungary If Great
Britain would remain neutral and se
cure the neutrality of France If Ger
many went to war with Russia. This
was quite a different proposition, the
foreign secretary continued, and In
view of France's alliance with Rus
sia. one whtch could not be enter
tained.
Augusta, Qa.
HALTED IT SEA,
»S PLEDGE
British Steamer Boarded By
Men From German Cruiser.
Wireless Apparatus Destroy
ed.
New York.—Captatn Kvnns of the
British freight steamer Drmncllffe re
ported on the arrival of his ship to
day from Buenos Ayreß and Trtndad
that on August 16th off the coast of
Brazil, the Drumcliffe waa halted by
the Herman cruiser Dresden and that
he was compelled by the Dresden’s
commander to sign a pledge not to
fight against Germany.
Captain Kvnns said that he had
given the pledge only because he
feared for the safety of his wife and
child who were on board.
The German hoarding party came
alongside, he said, with rifles pointed
white the cruiser stood by with her
guns trained on the ship The Ger
mans destroyed the Drutncllffe's wire
less apparatus and the Dresden, after
standing near the fretgtiter for nearly
four houra steamed wist.
The New York and Porto Rtco line
steamer Amoleo, which arrived today,
reported that she left the Hamburg-
Amerlean I.lne steamer Prnesident at
anchor In San Juan harbor on Au
gust find. The Praesident has been
stripped of her reservists by the Ger
man cruiser Karlsruhe, which recent
ly coaled at San Juan and put to
sea.
No trans-Atlantic vessel was due to
leave or arrive at this port today.
Charity Organizations
Are Being Called Upon
New York.—More destitute persons
have applied to American charity or
ganisations for aid nine* the beginning
of the European war than at any time
alnoe 1 k 93, according to charity work
er* who today announced that they
had about reached the limit of their
resource*.
The biggest percentage of men out
of work are drawn from the ranks of
the stevedores and other* who depend
on the movement of trans-Atlantic
freight. The cessation of importation*
al»< ha* made idle many who are em
pH'vail «( trade* where they u»e only
thing* Imported from Europe.
AMERICAN ARTISTE,
London. The American artists who
• long with a number of British pslnte.'*,
make their eumm*r home* at Eta - e*.
r.e ir Boulogne. France w tth one exonp
tlcii are .Mining over to England. Marlon
Bfrtpw, a well-known American painter,
ha* .decided to wtwy.
*4 wo us the refugees. John Nob,* and
Hen 1 y Tanner arrived In London ;oUiv.
l'efore their departure trom Kia ..oe they
heipeit the women of the vicinity *et tit
their crop*, ail the men having been
called to the cwiorw.
DIFFICULTIES RUSSIAN
HDVANCE ARE ENORMDUS
Nature Has Placed Many Obstacles to Aid German Defenders.
Muscovites, By Forced Marches, Have Wedge Between
Kaiser’s Forces
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
have caught the panicky feeling from
Germany’s armies. It is reported that
the commandant of Marienberg has
ordered the inhabitants to evacuate
the country, while at Elbing the
sluices were opened with the object
of flooding the country to prevent the
Russian advance. These are methods
of despair and indicate pretty cer
tainly that Germany has no more
trained troops to oppose the Rus
sians.
Poland Left Bare.
“With the true eyes for strategy
which mark the born commander of
men. Grand Duke Nicholas has aban
doned to its fate everything every
where which did not lend Itself to the
attainment of a single aim of locat
ing, attacking and crushing the ene
my’s force. In accordance with this
policy quite half of Poland was left
bare of Russian troops and all pub
lic servants of Russia’s state were
warned to quit betimes when the Ger
mans advanced.
"Both the Austrians and Germans
accepted the Invitation to this easy
conquest. There were no soldiers any
where to meet the German Invaders
whose cavalry raided as far as Lodz
but they have since been swept out
again."
TURK TO THE
0.5. TOO 01
Orders Placed By Italy and
Greece Alone For Over 300,-
000 Tons,
Norfolk, Va.—Barred by reason of the
foreign war from procuring their usual
supply of coal from England or Germany,
several countries on the Mediterranean
as well as those In South America have
turned to the United States for the fuel
which they urgently require.
The last one of these Is Greece, the
government of which has placed orders
In this country for coal, the first cargo
of which Is expected to go out in the
Norwegian steamer Tellue, which arrived
here today to load.
Other cargoes are expected to follow
this one to Greece and It has been re
ported at New York that orders have
been placed In this country by Greece
nnd Italy for more than 300,000 tons of
steam coal.
NO CIPHER CABLES.
Washington, D. C.—Ambassador Page
In Ixmdon today Informed the state de-
Tonight atlO-The Curtain Is Drawn
GOOD BYE TO YOU ALL !
It is with no hesitancy that I say that I am sorry it is so near over. It is
with a tinge of regret that I pen these words, ‘‘Good-bye,” for in the short time
that I have been herel have made many good friends, and I sincerely hope that it
will be my good fortune some day to come back here again.
Up to this hour —1 p. m.— the day’s business is beyond my wildest predic
tion—that’s just the word. The clerks in the store told me I was WILD when I
told them last night at closing time what we were going to do today—but now
they know I knew what I was talking about. I know the buying public pretty
well, and know that when for 17 days you give the people a square deal—day
after day—that you need not feel uneasy about the final and last day.
We are nearing the close now—just a few more hours —but these hours
are jammed full of the best bargains that mortal man ever dreamed of, and
when the clock strikes the hour—lo p. m.—my work will be over and I will feel
that I have added one of the greatest successes of all my career to my list.
The whole victory is not in the simple fact that we have done a tremendous bus
iness—no, not by a long ways— this would not be so much in itself—but the best
and biggest victory of this great campaign is the NEW WISE CUSTOMERS—
HUNDREDS OF THEM, AND THEY WILL BE PERMANENT CUSTOM
ERS OF THIS STORE, as they have learned during these days that they have
been missing an opportunity for better goods at less money by not knowing this
store better in the past.
If there’s one single soul who has not been to this sale—won’t you try to
get here just at the home stretch? I will be glad to see you and meet you face to
face and say “howde” and say “good bye” at the same time.
THE “WIZARD.”
THE WISE DRY GOODS CO.
858 Broadway. The Shop of Quality Augusta, Ga.
WHAT $lO DID
FOR THIS WOMAN
The Price She Paid for Lydia
E.Pinkham’sV egetable Com
pound Which Brought
Good Health.
Danvilie, Va.-“ I have only spent ten
dollars on your medicine and I feel so
much better than I
did when the doctor
was treating me. I
don’t suffer any
bearing down pains
at all now and I sleep
well. I cannot say
enough for Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound and
Liver Pills as they
have done so much
for me. lam enjoy-
ing good health now and owe it all to
your remedies. I take pleasure in tell
ing my friends and neighbors about
them.”—Mrs. Mattie Haley, 601 Col
quhone Street, Danville, Va.
No woman suffering from any form
of female troubles should lose hope un
til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound a fair trial.
This famous remedy, the medicinal
ingredients of which are derived
from native roots and herbs, has for
forty years proved to be a most valua
ble tonic and invigorator of the fe
male organism. Women everywhere
bear willing testimony to the wonderful
virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound.
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, write
to Lydia E.PinkhamMedicineCo.
(con tiden tial) Lynn,Mass., for ad
vice. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
partment that the British censor regula
tions provide that only messages pass
ing between diplomatic missions and the
government at Washington may go In
clphek. All other telegrams mUBt be
open.
Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly
The Old Standard general strengthen-
Ing tonic, GROVE'S TASTELESS
chill TONIC, drives out Malaria, en
riches the blood, builds up the system.
A true Tonic. For adults and chil
dren. 60c.
No. 666
Thi* i* a prescription prepared especially
for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER.
Five or six dotea 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
Last Call at
These
Prices
$9.95
For our SIB.OO and $15.00
Men’s Suits
i
$14.95
For our $25.00, $22.50 and
$20.00 Suits.
MS Creaky's]
“Home of Good Clothes.”
PM R% THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
MM MM A successful remedy for Rheumatism, Blood Poison and
■ all Blood Diseases. At all Druggists SI.OO.
■ ■ F. V. LSPPMAN CO.. Savannah. Ga.
TO RENT
No. 1354 Ellis Street 6 rooms $20.00
No. 963 Broad Street 10 rooms $40.00
No. 536 Reynolds Street . .10 rooms $22.50
House, west of Arsenal . . .11 rooms $75.00
House, Battle Row 5 rooms SIO.OO
House on Turpin Hill,
for colored people 3 rooms $5.00
Partially Furnished House on Highland Avenue, 9
rooms, for rent. Price $50.00 per month.
JOHN W. DICKEY
SATURADY, AUGUST 29.
V 11TH STREET *
UNIVERSITY PLACE
One Block West of Broadway
N W YORK CITY
to Wholesale and Retail
Good* District*. Railroad end
(Steamship Line*..
MODERN ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF
300 Rooms (200 with Bath)
RATES *I.OO PER DAY UP
Exsell rot Restaurant and Cate,
i > Moderate Prices.
. Sean for tree lllattratedGaldessd
k Map of Now York CICT. a
WALL PAPER
Mattings, Shades, Pictures
T.G. BAILIE & CO.
712 Broad Street
AWNINGS
Relieves CATARRH of
the
BLADDER
Ik and all
i Discharges in
024 HOURS
W Each capsule bear* the i
f name S' N. ,
Beware, of (MIDY)
counterfeits. V _y 1
Sold hr all drogeist*. 1
fsANTjfIJ
umR