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FOUR
AUGUSTA HERALD.
Published Every Afternoon During the
Week and on Sunday Morning
THE HKKAI.Ii I'l BI.IFHIN ; CO.
Entered at the Augusta Poe offlae aa
Mall Matter of the Second-class.
PFR SCRIPT ION RATES
Dsllv and Sunday 1 year $4.00
Dally and Sunday, per week II
Dally and Sunday, per month 80
Rundav Herald. .ear 1 09
PHONES:
Rtiatner Office 29. Want ad phone 21*8
Society .2618 I Manag'd Editor 2<<»
Ne ■ « Wo«m 98 circulation ... 2038
“FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVE-—The
rntamtp A Ketrnor Cc.. 228 Fifth Ave-,
New York City. 1218 People’s Oa« Build
log; Adame St., and Michigan Bird.,
TR Vll.lN'i nFT’UTCF WTS TATTViCB—
J K trek f»n<l WDM Own ar« th*
r»»»lv 'luthorixcrt traveling r«pr**cntntlv*i
for Th» YfemM I'Rgr no mor*y to other*
twW* thev can *how written authority
fr«m mine** Mftnag#r of Herald Pub
-I!*hf ttk Cp ,
’ f) 11 hi’Ptneita com imitation* ta
fH l AUOUftT • HfRALD,
Prud Ft , Aurueta Oil
Ko rommut lea lon wl I bi pubiiihad in
The Herald tmleai the nam© of th#
writ•; * pilprn* to ‘h# artlcla.
TN n|«rN ! T*r»tr! ‘as a lwrrtr «’ty
circulation, an 4 * nrgar total clrculm
tlot than any oihai Auguata paper Thlj
h»i t»e« n proven by the Audit Co. of
K*-tv V«»rk
The Herald Caiatun cat Advart'aara 60
per cent more Heme Carrier City Clr
eulntir» In Auguetn than la given by
fcm other Augut’a paper.
Thl» „ u.irante«> will he written In every
contract and The Herald will be ready
and wiring at all tlmea to give full ac
cuse to Ita record* to all advertiser*
who with to tea* the accuracy of thla
guarantee In cornpa rl»ot> with the clolma
of other Augnat* newrpnpera
THE WEATHER
(ForeomU till 8 p. m. tomorrow.)
Augutta lind Vicinity.
Fair tonight ami Tuesday.
For G*c>rgl*.
Fair tonight and Tuesday.
Comparative Data.
November 2nd, 1914.
Highest tn iperat’tt record, 83 In 1882.
Lowest temperature record. 30 In 1874.
hnwrat thla morning, 41.
preclpltatto 1 yesterday 0, normal 0.9.
River Stages.
River stage at 8 a. m., 8.9 feet.
Fall In 12 hours to 8 a. m., 0.4 foot.
E. D. EMICIH, Local Forecaateo
DON'T SHUT OFF ANY MORE
BTEAM, NOW. MR.
WICKERSHAM.
General Manager Wlckersham and
General Passenger Agent Billups of the
Georgia Railroad, are to be congratu
lated on about doubling the net earn
ings of the road this year as compar
ed with last year. For the past few
months buslnesa has been dull, but It
Is picking up each day. The worst Is
over, Mr. Wtckeraham. Business Is
going to get better from now on. This
Is no time to shut off any more steam.
Keep the trains running. Encourage
the people to travel and do business.
This section needs all the sleum It
can get for the next three months In
order to catch up with the lost busi
ness. Business Is getting better every
Jay.
fr WILL THE WOMEN HELP?
A auffragette writing In Sunday's
Herald suggests a sensible scheme for
advertising Augusta In connection
with the suffrage movement.
Among other things the writer de
clares: :
"’Twill do more good then adver
tising in New York that bonds are
for sals for flood protection for
Auguota, or that the streets are
blocked with untold cotton, or that
wo are too poor to give charity.
Cut out all of the hard luck etoriee
from our newspapers and let ut
toll the world that the women of
of Augusta are shoulder to shoul
der with the men in making the
old town hum with prosperity.”
llere'o n chance for "the women of
Augusta to stand shoulder to shoul
der with the tnen In making the old
town hum with prosperity."
Will the women of Augusta take
It?
Augusta needs to develop Its Home
Market -every community does In
times like these America must sup
ply 1U own needs, must be self-sus
taining largely, while the war lasts
What's true of the nation Is tme of
the North, Kast, South and Woat. lt'a
true of communities, sections and
cities. It's true of Augusta.
Will the women of Augusta halp to
make Augusta nnd this section aa
largely self-oustnlnlng, self-support
ing as possible? Will they direct the
spending of many millions of dollars,
which they spend annually, ao as to
encourage more largely our Indus
tries. our farmers, our laboring peo
ple and our merchants?
Hundreds of thousands of dollars
each week go away from Augusta.
Keep this money at home, circulating
It, the channels of local trade and
Industry and thousands of people will
feel It. It will mean more work and
(tetter wages throughout the whole
aectlon.
Augusta can get rich feeding and
clothing Itself—lt can put twice as
many people to work nnd at good
wages ts the women of Augusta will
direct wisely and pointedly the hun
dreds of thousands of dollars they
Spend each week.
Will the women of Augusta do this
for their city for the next month?
Will they experment with this Idea
during the Live nt Home Week. Nov
ember 14th* Will the women of Au
gusta Trade nt Home. I’av at Home,
Order at Home. Demand Home-Rais
ed Products, Wear Home-made Gowns,
Patronise Home Merchant!. Call for
AuguMta-Made Goods?
The big thing for the merchants
and manufacturers of Augusta and
other Southern cities to do Is first to
develop the "nme Market, if the wo
men of Augusta want to help the town
here's a chance to make their In
fluence felt In each store, work shop,
factory and individual h mie through
out the city WIKI. TUB WOMKN
OF AUGUSTA L>U IT?
I. ■■ , ll , I 'y m '*■ ■■ ■ s ii
\ A' .f
taOooa j,poer.r - /. g
- VOU/t. \ \S"~ jfi^
PjeiET^O i CACL -VO U V? i
Ar voo<? A/net+BoX 4 ustfsi'.' mu was seta/t i/u rw v/iv/aa/ pr< n- o> crookt-w-
WHv y rftv TO KEE? A GOOD APT 7ir POWA/ (riv£ £M A/fc QOyf'f
BILLY PIG AND HIS NEW CAP.
One morning Hilly Pig’s mother went
him to town to buy himself a new
cap.
Hilly thought nil along the way about
the new cap and could not quite make
up his mind which he wanted, u green
or red one, and w-lien he at last reach
ed the shop he wag still undecided.
LHlly Dig tried on a green one and,
then the red. and the red won, # or
Hilly l’lg thought everyone will look
nt me- when they see this cap and
think how' white my skin la ‘‘l believe
1 will wear It home. This old cap
looks so shabby.”
No Hilly Pig put on hts new cap, al
though his mother had told him not
to wear It home. ’1 will only wear it
a little way," thought Hilly Pig. and
then put It In the paper and put
on my old one.”
Hilly Dig was half through the woods
A*»J>
when ho espied some large berries on
a bush.
"I must get those berries," said Billy
Pig. 'I have not had any dinner, and
If 1 stop a minute fflbther will not
mind, 1 am sure,"
But Billy J*lg forgot all about his
new cap, and when he went through
the bushes it caught on an overhang
ing branch of a tree, and before Billy
Fig knew what had happened, It was
hanging on the branch out of ills
reach.
There was only one thing to do—
climb the tree and shake it off—so
Billy Big went through the bushes and
climbed up to a limb, but the cap was
far out on the end of a branch that w is
not very strong looking, ana poor Billy
Fig was afraid to venture.
\\ hUe he was thinking what he
should do lie heard a noise, and, peep
ing through the leaves he saw o'd Mrs.
Bruin and her three little ones coining
toward the tree.
1 can tell } u. Billy Fig began to
tremhla unit w Ish lie was at home
“Oh. see the cunning little red cap
hanging on the tree," said one little
Bruin.
Billy Fig was trembling so that he
felt sure oli Mrs Brum would see the
tree shake, and the little Bruins were
loklng ao eagerly at the cap that ltll'y
Fig eapm-ied rm) umiule ihul lliev
would see him.
"Oh! 1 want the cap, mother. Let
me wea it first." said one again.
'No, I want It first Don't let Icm
have it lam bigger ban he Is nnd
l want tl llrat," said the second big
gest little Ilrutn.
"1 am the biggest and I want <t,
mother. I esn have It. can't 1? bees ..so
1 am tbe biggest. Bay. 1 can, mother:
pleat do.” said the biggest Bruin,
jumping about his mother and pull
ing at her eKlit.
Slop this Instant.” said Mrs. Bruin
"1 seem to sniff him In the air." she
raised her head as she spoke and snif
fed hard and long. Then she dropped
her hind nnd looked over her gb ssee
with wide-open mouth. She saw Billy
Fig in the tree.
"I thought you must be about lierh,”
she said smiling «t him "How did
you get up there?"
"1 |o my cap.” replied Billy Pig,
"and I was trying to snake it down.*
INDOOR SPORTS
"Shako harder!” commanded Mrs.
Bruin.
Billy Pig made another try, and this
time down went the cap, and the little
Bruins tumbled over each other try
ing to go* It.
But at last the middle ltttle Bruin
got It, and Jumping up, lie ran llckerty
spllt Into the woods, and the others
after him.
Mrs. Bruin gave one longing look al
Billy Pig and smacked her mouth, but
she was a true mother and knew her
children must be cared for, bo she ran
after them and left Billy Pig alone In
the tree.
.tiny IMg crawled back to safety, and
after making sure the Bruins were
gone for good, he got down an 1 started
for home. His cup was gone, his
trousers torn and he was weak from
fright and hunger.
His mother ran out to meet him.
"Where Is your cap?” she asked.
Billy told Ills Htory, and while his
u other scolded him for disobeying her,
she felt he had been punished severely \
with the fright he had from the Bruin
family.
Copyright. 1914, by the McClure News
paper Syndicate, New York City.
Tomorrow’s Story—“ Drusilla and,
Bobby Jonas Discuss a Visitor,”
INDUSTRIES IN GEORGIA.
Growth of Manufacturing in th« State
Shown by Labor Commissioner's
Report.
According to the report of Commis
sioner of I-abor Stanley of Georgia that
slate is making rapid strides la the
development of Its resources and the
manufacture of crude products Into
finished articles.
In the state are located 1411 cotton
mills, the capital stock of which reach
es a total of $36,378,938. The mills
annually use cotton valued at $36,936,-
913, and the finished product has a
value of $81,673,152.
There are seven woolen mills In the
Mate with a capital stock of $825,000,
manufacturing $477,175 worth of cruda
material Into cloth, valued at $789,-
627.
In the state are $9 knitting mills,
with a capital stock of $1,835,117. The
mills use 4.152,669 pounds of yarn, and
the total value of the output of the
mills is $975,000.
The total number of all textile mills
In the state Is 182, and thev manu
facture goods with a value of $86,673,-
152.
There are IST foundry, machine, and
general repair shops. They have capi
tal stock of $9,200,000, use $3,000,000
worth of raw material, and manufac
ture finished products valued at $7,-
000,000.
There are 94 marble and granite
quarries and marble yards In the state.
The capital stock of these Industries
totals $3130.000.
More than 114 brick, stone, ttle and
terracotta establishments are located
In the state and their estimated capi
tal is $3,800,000. Their manufactured
product hna u value of about $2,375,-
000
There are 173 bottlers and brewers
In the state, with a capital of $3,000,-
000. They use $755,000 worth of ray
materials and the finished product has
a value of $5,515,000.
AUGUSTA'S LIVE AT
HOME WEEK.
Btsrts November 14th.—-Watch
This Psper for Further An.
nouncement.
Live at Home —Trade at Home—
Buy at Home—Fay at Home-
Order At Home—Made at Home-
Raised at Home—Help at Home,
You are Invited to join in the
denn n itr.-tton of what the AU
GI'RTA AT HOME movement
means to the people of this sec
tion. You'll see It broadcast, on
every hand, in every window dis
play, during the week of November
14th.
If you are interested In the Live
at Home, Trade at Home, Mads st
Homs, Raisod at Homs. Buy at
Homs Movemsnt, writ* tho
Livo at Homo Editor,
AUGUSTA HERALD
For Furthor Particular*.
THE IALD, AjGuSTA. GA.
Claimed That Tomorrow's Election
to Increase Democratic Majority
SENATE.
Total membership present Senate, 96. Necessary for majority, 49.
Present membership. Democrats, 53; Republicans, 42; Progressive 1.
Terms of thirty-two Senators expire March 3, 1915. Of the thirty
two, sixteen are held by Democrats and sixteen by Republicans. Owing
to the deaf-’ of Senator A. O. Bacon (Dem.) of Georgia, two Senators
will be elected in that state. The death of Senator Bradley CRep.) of
Kentucky, necessitates the election of two Senators from that 3tate, the
term of one to expire March 3id next. In Louisiana, Representative Robt.
P. Hroussard already has been elected as Senator to succeed John R.
Thornton.
HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES.
Total membership 435; necessary for a majority 218. Present Stand
in Democratic 285, Republican 122, Progressive Republican 2, Progres
sive 1, and Six Vacancies due to resignations. The latter were Democrats.
WHAT IS A GOOD ROAD
Milwaukee, Wis.—Cheapness in road
construction Is our most extravagant
luxury.
A good road Is one that fits its traf
fic.
nrst cost is a minor item in road
economy. The way to figure economy
is to measure it by the condition of
the road to bear most easily the traf
fic to which it may he subjected.
These and other highway precepts
were laid down by Jquie.s T. McCleary,
highway engineer of Cuyahoga county,
Ohio, adjoining Cleveland, Ohio, dur
ing the greater part of the time when
that county’s 400-mile system of brick
roads wire constructed. McCleary was
assigned to speak before tbe North
western Road Congress herein meth
ods of brick construction, but he also
paid his respects to what hi, called the
“literary and oratorical side of high
way building."
“For arousing public interest,” he
said, “the literary and oratorical forces
should receive commendation. They
would be subject to no criticism il
they rested at this point, but they have
usurped the place of the engineer In
telling the public what kind of roads
to build and what kind not to build.”
“The most ambitious schemes of in
ter-county highways do not cover mor*
than a tenth of the total rural mile
age. The cheaper forms of road con-
In the Space of a city
b ock where ihere are perhaps
40 or 50 homes you will find one household
wanting to buy a cook stove, another an auto
mobile, another a piano, and so on down the
line you will find that each home in the block
needs some one of the articles daily advertised
in the Want Ad pages of The Herald.
If you have tht stove to sell,
or the automobile, or the piano and you under
take to find the buyer for the stove, or the auto
mobile, or the piano by either circular letter or
by personal solicitation you will be compelled
to send your circular letter to, or make your
personal call at ehch one of the 40 or 50 homes
in the block to find the buyer you seek—alto
gether a costly and troublesome trade-getting
method.
The Herald Want Ad Page
carry your ad telling about your stove, or auto
mobile, or piano which you offer to sell, to each
and every one of the 40 or 50 homes of that city
block and into all the homes of all the other
city blocks.
Through the Want Ad pages
of The Herald you circularize 12,000 homes
with your announcement of what you have to
sell, at a cost of 2 cents per 1,000 homes—for
this cost you send your announcement each day.
By Tad
struction must always survive for the
less traveled roads. For the ma.n
roads, permanence is the only worthy
criterion.”
The roads radiating from Cleveland,
he said, proved that the cost of repairs
on brick roads is negligible for the
first two decades, providing the brick
is properly laid.
PENANG’S WOUNDED ARRIVE.
London, 6:45 a. m.—A dispatch to
Reuters Telegram Company from Ba
tavia, Java, states that an officer, ten
petty officers, 230 marines and thir
teen wounded survivors of the French
destroyer Mosquet, which was sunk
in the harbor of Penang by the Ger
man cruiser Emden, have arrived at
Sabang, on the Island of Wai. on the
steamer Newburn. The officer of the
Mosquet, who was also wounded, died
soon after his arrival in the hospital
at Sabang.
TURK GUNBOATS AT SUEZ.
London, 7 -.11 a. m.—A Rome dispatch
to the Central News asserts that Turk
ish gunboats are reported at the en
trance of the Gulf of Suez. Numerous
detachments of Turkish cavalry, ac
cord 'ns to the same dispatch, have
reached Akabah, a fortified village of
Arabia, u the gulf of the same name.
When You Wear
Dorr Clothes
You unconsciously
feel that you are as
well clad as the
best dressed in any
company.
Dorr Clothes rep
resent the highest
type of tailoring,
worthy materials,
artistic workman
ship and proper
style.
DORR
Good Taste Apparel
“ALGO CLOTHES”
Are trade winners to us
because they fit, style and
satisfy ever the most
hard-to-please men and
young men.
A try-on proves the
style and fit—and ALCO
tailoring wears - wears
wears !
Other Dressing
that’s sure to please you
awaits your early call—
M&CREARVfr:.
“Home of Good Clothes”
Pp|FRIERSOH’S
COMPOUND
jglra^BOlATtf
•fiM! TALCUM
m 25?
QUICK RELIEF
FOR PRiCKLY HEAT,
CHAFED SKIN,ETC.
PREPARED BY
Frierson Drug Store
Charleston, S.C.
“op sal* by T. Q. Howard Dn,
•tores and Gre#«t-Horsey Druo Co.
Use Herald “Wants"
WHEN A LADY ASKS FOR STATIONERY
sho does not mean a “box of writing paper”—the term common
among all cloaees beLore the HURD line gave rise to the dlatlno
tlon “Fine Stationery.” Now the lady and her coterie have learn
ed the dlffcreace—(he distinction —and they desire FINE BTA
•IONERY—HURD’S FINE STATIONER'?, Sold by
Richards Stationery Co.
Make This Your Drug Store.
You Won’t Regret It
GARDELLE’S
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2.
AUGUSTA HERALD.
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
DAILY AND SUNDAY HERALD.
The circulation of the Dally and Sun
day Herald for the month of October,
1914, was as follows:
Oct. 1 12,645
Oct. 2 12,865
Oct. 3 12,839
Oct. 4 11.770
Oct. 5 12,540
Oct. 6 14,435
Oct. 7 12,440
Oct. 8 12,375
Oct. 9 13,215
Oct. 10 12,815
Oct. 11 11,740
Oct. 12 13,220
Oct. 13 13,043
Oct. 14 12,270
Oct. 15 12,355
Oct. 31
TOTAL OCTOBER ~,.388.636
DAILY AVERAGE 12,536
The Augusta Herald, Dally and Sun
day, has a circulation In Augusta ap
proximately twice as large as that of
any other Augusta newspaper. Adver
tisers and agencies invited to test the
accuracy of these figures In comparison
with the claims of any other Augusta
newspaper.
FORD
IS THE
CAR
The Wife and Boys and
Girls can drive as well
as the men.
See Lombard,
Going to Build?
If bo, get the right ma
terial and right price.
Lumber orders for rough
or finished stock. Mill
-work or estimates are all
carefully supervised by
officers of this company,
and you can make no mis
take in sending the busi
ness here.
SASH, DOORS,BUNBS,
SCREENS,MILL WORK
Let us know your wants
by mail or telephone and
we will do the rest.
The Perkins
Manufacturing Co,
Phone No. 3. 620 13th St. {
PILES
CURED
Without the
knife, detention
from business:
without caute
ry; no danger.
No one need suf
fer from this
complaint when
this humane cure
is awaiting them.
1 GUARANTEE RESULTS
Rheumatism in most of its forms
is permanently cured by my system
of treatment.
Eczema, Pimpies, Erysipelas or any
eruptive diseases of the skin promptly
cured.
Bladder and Kidney Troubles, tin
der my system of treatment show
signs of improvement at once.
Ulcers —I care not how lond-stand
lng, I usually cure them in a short
while.
Consultation and advice free and'
confidential. Office hours, 9 a. m. to
7 p. m. daily; Sundays, 10 to 2 only.
DR. GROOVER, Specialist.
504*7 Dyer Bldg. Augusta,
Oct. 16 12,373 .
Oct. 17 12.653 }
Oct. 18 11,655
Oct. 19 12,418
Oct. 20 12,400
Oct. 21 12,520
Oct. 22 12,430
Oct. 23 12,485
Oct. 24 13,090
Oct. 25 11,640
Oct. 26 12,325
Oct. 27 12,620
Oct. 28 12,450
Oct. 29 12,360
Oct. 30 12,345