The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, October 20, 1914, Home Edition, Page NINE, Image 9

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2« Society MARRIAGE OF MISS DORIS AND MR. W. A. FAUGHNAN. One of the most interesting mar riages that has taken place in a long while and one of very cordial interest to an unusually large number of friends, was that of Miss Nelle Doris and Mr. William A. Faughnan which took place at Sacred Heart church at six forty five this morning,,Father Lonergan performing the ceremony which was attended by a large number of friends despite the ariy hour. At all times is Sacred Heart beautiful but never is the sweet sol emnity of the sacred edifice more marked than in the early morning hours when the very spirit of holiness seems to brood over it and to make more sweetly solemn the vows plight ed. Today it was beautifully adorned with palms and cut flowers and many gleaming candles placed on the ex- YOUR HAIR NEEDS PARISIAN SAGE It Quickly Removes Dandruff, Stops Falling Hair and Scalp Itch. If your hair is full of dandruff, thin, streaky, dull and never will do up to look pretty, you can almost immedi ately remove the cause making it beautiful, thick and fluffy by the use of Parisian Sage, one of the most help ful and invigorating hair and scalp tonic 3 known. Parisian Sage not only saves your hair but stimulates the hair roots and furnishes the nourishment needed to make it grow long, abundant and ra diant with life. Just one application removes every trace of dandruff and stops scalp itch —your hair becomes soft and fluffy with an incomparable gloss, beauty and charm. You cannot be disappointed with this harmless and delicately perfumed tonic for there is nothing so good for your hair. It is easily applied at home and costs but a trifle from T. G. How ard's, or any drug counter. A residence without electric service Is scarcely more mod ern today than a residence without water service. dTOMAOI. OUT OF FIX'? If you suffer with dyspepsia or in digestion telephone your grocer to send you one dozen pints of SHIVAR GINGER ALE. Drink one pint with each meal and. if not re lived, you*- grocer is authorized to charge it to the Manufacturer. SHIVAR GING& ALE TONIC, DIGESTIVE, DELICIOUS Is prepared with the celebrated Mineral Water. Sold under a positive guarantee to relieve any case of dyspepsia or Indigestion, or your money refunded. If your grocer has none In stock tell him to telephone hie wholesale grocer. Bottled Oni ' " i SHIVAR L RING SHELTON, SOUTH CAROLINA. In a beautiful woodland dell. QUIVERSITY PLACI 4Mie mock Watt of Broadway NEW YORK CITY MipDBBN Ajbsijlt AiT'rmwpßoor 800 Rooms (200 with Bath) SATIS SI.OO PIR DAY UP ARE YOU MOVING ? n a n L\ JJ JF you are moving this season be sure to give us at least ten days’ notice so your telephone may be moved promptly. Call at the office to day and sign an order for the move. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company qulsite altar. The music was furnish ed by Miss Alice Doyle and the strains of the wedding march pealed through the church as the little bridal party entered. The bride and groom entered to gether and were proceeded by the maid of honor, Miss Regina Heffernan, who entered with Mr. T. P. Doris. The bride wore a beautiful tailored suit, an imported model of blue chif fon broadcloth, with a pale pink chif fon blouse and a Gage hat in pink, laced with black velvet and trimmed in monkey fur and tiny pink roses. Her flowers were a prayer book shower of valley lillies and maiden hair fur. Miss Heffernan wore a becoming gown of dark blue messaline fashioned after one of the new models with a plaited tunic and finished with white collars and cuffs. Her hat was a pic ture effect in blue beaver trimmed in blue plumes and a silver rose. Her flowers were an armful of pink Killar neys. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Fuaghnan left for Florida where they will spend a few days. On their return they will be at home to their friends at their aparment at 403 Greene street. There is no young woman in Augus ta who is more universally popular or more genuinely beloved by her friends than is Mrs. Faughnan, nor is there a finer man in the city than is Mr. Faughnan. Sincere and many are the good wishes extended to them and beautiful and handsome were the gifts showered upon them despite the fact that no cards had been sen out. WHO IS THIS PRETTY BRIDE? There is an interesting little rumor afloat that one of Augusta’s prettiest girls has been married for the past three or four weeks, or to be specific, since the twenty-sixth of September. The marriage, so it is said, having taken place in Aiken, and the groom, an out of town man, leaving almost at once for his home. Formal announcement will probably be made in the next few days. MR. NORMAN TOOLE TO WED MISS WICKER. Augusta friends have received cards from Mr. and Mrs. Laurence D. Wick er, of Sanford, Fla., to the marriage of their daughter, Genie, to Mr. Nor man Toole of Philadelphia, the mar riag to take place on the twenty first of November at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. Toole is a former Augustan and is a brother of Mrs. M. Sanders and Mrs. Peeples, of this city. 1-Ie is now located in Philadelphia, URGE WATERY PIMM Fffi Began to Itch. Rubbing Made Them Worse, Festered and Came to Head. Could Not Rest. Used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Trouble Gone. Terry, Miss.—“ When I first noticed the trouble It was fine pimples which began to ttch on my entire person, but my face seemed to be more affected than other parts. I would rub them which would make them Itch much worse. Then I began to scratch and this caused them to become large and form watery pimples. They festered and came to a head, then they burst aod became sores. On account of the Itching at night I could not rest well. “ After using skin lotions they would heal a little, then break out again. After aboht a month my sister told me about Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I used water as warm as I could bear and made a lather with Cuti cura Soap, bathed then dried and applied the Cuticura Ointment which gave relief at once. I kept on using them and in a month s time the trouble was entirely gone. Cuticura Soap and Ointment had cured me.” (Signed! Mrs. Ella A. Hunter, Jan. 31.1914. Samples Free by Mall For red, rough, chapped and bleeding hands, itching, burning palms, and painful finger-ends with shapeless nails, a one-night Cuticura treatment works wonders. Soak bands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura Soap. Dry. anoint with Cuticura Ointment and wear soft bandages or old. loose gloves during the night. Although Cuticura Soap (28c.) and Cuticura Ointment (60c.) ars ■old by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each with 32-p. Skin Book will be sent free upon request. Address post-card: “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." Don’t Merely “Stop” a Cough «•» the Thine that Causes It and the roach will Stop Itself A cough is really one of mir best friends. It warns us that there is in flammation or obstruction in a danger ous place. Therefore, when vou get a bad cough don’t proceed to dose yourself with a lot of drugs that merely “stop” the cough temporarily by deadening tne throat nerves. Treat the cause—heal the inflamed membranes. Here is a home made remedy that gets right at the cause and will make an obstinate cough vanish more quickly than you ever thought pos sible. Put 214 ounces of Pinex (SO cents worth) in a pint bottle and (111 the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. This gives vou«i full pint of the most pleasant and effective cough remedy you ever‘used, at a cost of only 54 cents. No bother to prepare. Full directions with Pinex. It heals the inflamed membranes so gently snd promptly that you wonder bow it does it. Also loosens a dry, hoarse or tight cough snd stops the formation of Chlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, &u» ending the persistent loos# cough. Pinex is a highly concentrated com pound of Norway pine extract, rich in sruaiacol, snd Is famous the world over for it* on tho To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for “2*4 ounces of Pinex,” and don’t accept anvthim* else. A guarantee yt absolute satisfaction, or monev prompt ly refunded, goes with this preparation. Hie Pinex Co.. Ft. Wayne, Ind. where he is connected with a ifarge insurance company. VIVIAN-MAXWELL WEDDING CARDS. Mr. John Vivian has sent out cards of invitation to the marriage of his daughter, Annie, to Mr. Robert Jef ferson Maxwell, on Monday afternoon, November fourth at two o’clock, at Broadway Methodist church. CHILLDREN’S CLASSES AT Y. W. C. A. GYMNASIUM. Tho children’s classi will meet at the Y. W. C. A. gymnasium Wednes day, October 21st, from 4:30 to 6:30 p. m. The next meeting will be Sat urday, October 24th, from 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL BIRTHDAY PARTY. What to send for the pantry— Look on your own pantry shelves ami take a can of fruit or vegetables ora jar of jelly or preserves and send it to the Birthday Party at L. A. Rus sell’s Piano Co.—or — When you give your order on the morning of Oct. 26tli, tell your grocer to send to tho Children’s Hospital— -1 sack of flour—or 1 peck of meal—or 1 peck of grits— Potatoes or apples or 10 pounds of sugar or 1 pound of coffee or anything else you will. THEATRE PARTY FOR MAN OF THE HOUR. Miss Matti Pilcher will compliment Miss May Armstrong, of SandersviUe, with a theatre party of twenty to see the Brady production of The Man of the Hour, tomorrow night at the Grand. HARDY-YOUNG CARDS OUT. Cards of invitation have been re ceived by Augusta friends from Mr. and Mrs. Francis a Hardy, of Evans ton, 111., to the marriage of their daughter, Edith Walbridge to Mr. Ar chibald Belmont Young, at high noon on Saturday, the eleventh of Novem ber, at St. Mary’s church, in Evans ton. Following the church ceremony there will bo a breakfast served at half after twelve at the Hardy home, 1214 Bridge Road. At home after January first at 1029 South Third Avenue, Louisville. Ky. —Mrs. E. J. O’Connor, Miss Louise O’Connor and Miss Della Kearney are spending a few days In Atlanta. —Mr. W. J. Cooney has returned from a month’s'stay in California. —Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hughes are receiving congratulations on the birth of a fine little son. —Friends of Mr. M. J. McAuliffe will be very pleased to learn of his satisfactory condition after surgical treatment at the City Hospital. —Mr. and Mrs. Jake Schrameck are at the Plaza Hotel for the winter. —Friends of Miss Carrie Coffey will regret to learn of her continued ill ness at her home on Walton Way. Master Alfred Coffey, who has been quite sick is now out. —Mrs. Kimbrough, of Anderson, S. C., and Mrs. Lawson, of Orangeburg, are guests of Mrs. Frank Kimbrough for the Fair. Mrs. Cleiland Rood has returned to Albany after visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Hauser. SUFFRAGE CLUB IN WASHINGTON NAMED FOR SOUTHERN WOMAN. An assemblage of Southern women In Washington on last Saturday com plimented Miss Kate Gordon of New Orleans by naming a newly founded woman suffrage organization after her. It was decided that the Washing ton Club will adopt the policy of the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference, and as Miss Gordon Is considered “mother of the conference.” these progressive Washington women will call their organization the “Kate Gordon Branch of the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference.” Tl.e meeting was held at the home of Mrs. Martin Wesley Stoner. In a telegram to Miss Gordon, Mrs. Stoner gays: "Groups of prominent Southern wo men representing every state In the solid South today assembled at the residence of Mrs. Wesloy Martin Sto ner and, amid ringing applause, adopt ed the policy of' the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference, naming this latest powerful club the Kate Gor don Branch of the Southern States Conference.” Miss Gordon Is also In receipt of a telegram from Mrs. Estelle Willoughby lons, of Washington, which ways: “As a native of Louisiana and mem ber of the Era Club, I rejoice to tell you that the Southern Suffrage League of .Washington, founded by me last February, has today planned to become affiliated with the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference at a meeting held today at the home of Mrs. Stoner. TIEDEMAN-CHAPIN WEDDING PLANS. The marriage of of Miss Inez Ttede man to Mr. Roy D. Chapin of Detroit Mich., will be one of the most promi nent events of the early winter sea son, taking place on Wednesday eve ning, the fourth of November, at St. John’s Episcopal church, and followed by a reception at Mr. and Mrs. Tiede man’s country home, Carsten Hall, at the Isle of Hope. The wedding party will be a large one, Including, besides a maid of honor and best man, six bridesmaids, six ushers and two pages. Most of the attendants are from away, and be sides these visitors a number of Mr. Chapin’s relatives and friends will come South for the occasion, so that there will be a large number of out of-town wedding guests. Miss Tledeman's maid of honor will be Miss Helen Mcßurnie of Winona, Minn., and Mr. Chapin’s best man Is | Mr. Jules Glaenzer of New York City, The bridesmaids are Miss Moselle Neely of Waynesboro, (>«.; Miss Doro thy Roberts of Albany, N. Y.; Miss Frances Long of Merlon, Pa.: Miss Dorothea Baldwin of Savannah; Mrs. George B. Bourne of New York, and Miss Edith Adams of New York. The ushers are Mr. George Angel of Detroit, Mr. Bernard Htroh of De troit, Mr. Angus Smith of Detroit, Mr. Sydney Gardner of Chicago, 111., and Mr. Webb Wlllets of Norton, Va. Among the out-of-town wedding guests will be the groom’s father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Chapin of Lansing, Mich: his aunt, Miss Anna Chapin of Chicago; his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Chapin of Detroit; his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jennings; Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe B. Jackson of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. How ard E. Coffin of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs Henry Souther of Cleveland. Mr. George Qcet Bourne of New York, and Mr. and Mrs. C. I). Joyce of Hwarth- 1 more: Pa—Savannah Press. THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA. How To Eradicate All Superfluous Hair Advice by a Skin Specialist The best means I have ever found fert* removing all signs of disfiguring growths of hair on the face. neck. arms, or hands is a new preparation culled Mrs. Os good’s Wonder, 1 have recommended it in thousands of oases and 1 know per sonally of its ability to banish every hair forever It cannot injure the skin or complexion and is quite inexpensive. You can get Mrs. Osgood's Wonder from T. G. Howard’s Drug Stores, or any up-to-datio druggist. Signed Money- Hack Guarantee'with every package. Do not apply this treatment except where total destruction of hair is desired. MISS STOVALL IN ’ RED CROSS WORK Savannah, Ga. —Advices received in Savannah today from Berne, Switzer land, state that Miss Pleasant Stovall, daughter of Pleasant A. Stovall, Amer ican minister to Switzerland, is now studying to prepare herself for Red Cross work in Europe, She will prob ably go to the front. Many of the young girls and women in Berne and in the principal capitals are enlisting for the service it is stated. —The continued improvement of Mrs. Edmund L. Melvin will be learn ed of with pleasure. SEND YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS TO ME B. H. WALKER 217 7th Street, Augusta, Ga. How I Helped My Husband to Make More Money New Ideas By Wives Which Have Built Men’s Fortunes One man got $75 a month; the wife got an idea and to-day he is making a fat salary and has $40,000 in the bank. Another wife’s idea has bought a whole ranch without ready money. Another wife is multiplying the family income by four. Scores of women have been induced to tell their ideas in the greatest series a magazine has ever printed. The first few are IN THE NOVEMBER ISSUE OP The Ladies? Home Journal Fifteen Cents a Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct Boys Wanted to Deliver on Routes. Apply to Our Sales Agent J. S. FARR 740 broad St., Augusta, Ga. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square (Philadelphia Pennsylvania NEWS OF NEARBY TOWNS THOMSON HAS A NEGRO WOMAN 106 YEARS OLD; AUNT CASSEY. Thomson, Ga.—Not many people In Thomson knows that there is a centena rian living in our little city. There is ami her name is Oassy Hamilton, col ored. She claims to be 106 years old. While she may not bo quite as old as that thefre are a number of our oldest citizens who have known her all their lives state that she is certainly a hun dred. flho belonged to Mr. W. H Stones father durinc slavery, and she says that she was a grown woman when lie bought her. She says that Mr. W. 11. Stono was a baby four months old when she first knew him and that she had several grown children when the Civil War broke out. Aunt Cassy looks younger and #s more active than lot of people many yearn younger than she is. CAT IN SYLVAmA, THOUGHT MAD, BITES NINE CHILDREN Sylvan la, Ga. —A cat supposed to be mud bit nine children near Syivnnia last Monday. Those bitten wore the chil dren of Mr. Walter Wells. Mr. Ad Lewia mnd Mr. Lewis Lewis. Tho cat was killed and its head sent to the state chemist, who reported that though too badly decomposed to stato with cer- For the Ladies Home Journal, Saturday Evening Post or Country Gentleman. Price $1.50 a year each. Any two for $3.00 a year. Authorized Subscription Representative,Curtis Publishing Company. Agent for all Magazines and Newspapers. tainty, yet it looked suspicious of hy drophobia. 'Phe children have ull been given the Posteur treatment, and it is to be sincerely hoped that it will prove effective, which tho physicians feel as sured ll will. A dog supposed to he mad bit the cat and was afterwards killed. Jle also bit some other dogs. GORDON MASONsTdEDICATE LODGE; SPLENDID EDIFICE MilledgevWe, Ga.—'Phe Masons of dor don dedicated their new lodge yesterday afternoon and last night. The new build ing is one of tho finest in the thriving little neighbor town mid reflects much cvedit on the members of the fraternity there. Many prominent visiting Masons were present at the exercises yesterday. The dedication exorcises proper occurred at 2 o’clock and et 5 o’clock an excellent dinner was served. Liter initiation work was put on and tlie event on the whole will no doubt bo long remembered In Gordon. DANIELS HOPEFUL FOR GAME. Washington, D. C. —Despite tho word from the athletic managers that the off. Secretary Daniels still was hopeful off, Secretary Daniels sill was hopeful that some way might tie found to ar range the annual contest. Make Every Dol lar Buy 100 Cents Worth Buy your Fall Dressing where value is— Shop about —look at the Fall Suits others offer at twenty five dollars. —but don’t buy until you— SEE and try-on your model ALCO Fall Suit at $25.00 —not a SBS suit for $25 but a full value, long wearing, rightly styled, 26 dollars worth of gen uine suit satisfaction. — “You can pay more BUT you cannot buy bet ter. MS Creaky's “Home of Good Clothes.” READ THE “WANTST Help Us Improve Your Service “Information” should be call ed to obtain the number of a new subscriber not yet listed in the directory. Considerable delay will be avoided if you will always con sult the telephone directory before asking “Information'* for the number. The switchboard operatoi cannot answer questions. She is too busy and records cannot be placed before her. ‘‘lnformation” has complete records, corrected daily, of all subscribers and telephone numbers. She is not, how ever an information bureau upon subjects other than tele phone listings. We ask your co-operation. SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. SEVERAL BARGAINS In Used REMINGTON TYPEWRITERS Call and See Them and make an offer. BUSINESS OFFICE, AUGUSTA HERALD. NINE