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SIX
AUGUSTA HERALD.
Published Every Aftrrnoon During the
Week end on Sunday Morning
THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
Entered nt the Augu*ia Poet of flee as
Men Matter of the Ser»>nd-cla*».
SIT B SCRIPT ION HA T KB:
Pally end Sunday. 1 year 16.00
Pally end Sunday, per week 13
Pally and Sunday, per mpnth 50
Sunday Herald eat 3.00
PHONES:
Pt;*lrvr Office :*97 Want ad phone 206
Soctetv 2616 I ManacV Editor 29J
New* Room .290 ' Circulation 2° ? *o
FORE TON ~ REPB tt 3 ENT AT! VK -T he
enjamln A Kent nor Co., 225 Fifth Av*.
New York City. 1218 People** O a Build
-Irg, Adfimp St and Michigan Mlvd.,
ChWIMTO. _
traveling rf.present ATrVES
J KTnrk and W P M Owen* tire the
only authorised traveling representative*
for The Herald Pay no mo» ev to fiber*
tin)*** thev r«n ehow written authority
from Riielneee Manager of Herald Pub*
M*hin« Co .
Addreaa all hoatneaa romunfcatlon* te
THI AUGUST/ HERALD.
?t r Frond St.. Aumiata Oa.
"Ffo rommunlc* I<>n wl 1 he publlsned in
The Herald uni eta the name of the
writer i*» aliened t‘> the art Ida ________
The Augusta ... . rger city
circulation, a.nd a argar total circula
tion than any other Augusta paper Thl*
ha* been proven by the Audit Co., of
New York
The i-toruM *? - tvi t -.m to
per cent, more Home Carrier City Cir
culate In Auguvta than 1* given by
any other Augusta paper.
Thl a guarantee will he written In every
contract and The Herald will he ready
and willing at all time* to give full ac
cess to its records io all advertiser*
who wlah to tes* the accuracy of ihl»
guarantee In comparison with the claim*
of other Augusta newspHpers
THE WEATHER
(Forecasts till 8 p. in. tomorrow.)
Augusta and. Vicinity
Fair tonight and Friday.
For Georglr.
FAlr tonight and Friday.
Comparative Data.
November sth, 1914
Highest temperature record, 79 In 18*8.
Lowest temperature record, 31 In 1879.
Ixiwest this morning. &u.
Precipitation yesterday 0, normal .10.
River Stage*.
RSver stage at 8 a. m , 6.6 feet
Change In 24 hours ending 8 a. m.. .0.
E. D. EMIGH, Local Forecaster.
PUSH THE GOOD WORK ALONG
IT MEANS TO HELP EVERY
BODY IN AUGUBTA.
The tveek atari In* November 18 th
will be an actual demonstration for all
the people of thla city anil surrounding
territory of Jimt what Augusta ran do
In the way of Home-made products
and In encouraging the Trude at Homo
spirit amonK all our people.
Augusta manofiioturers ore co
operating splendidly In the offer of dis
plays to be made, and the retail mer
chants ore also showing o splendid
spirit of active ro-operatlon In donot
lng window display space to be used In
the demonstration of the Made at-
Horre and Trade-nt-Home movement
Kvery organization In the city of
Augusta Is asked to take up this ques
tion for discussion, all the labor un
ions trade and civic organizations
churches, and charitable organizations
and especially the organizations or the
women of the city, for we all realize
that after hll three-fourths of the mon
ey spent In retail trade In Augusta Is
spent atul directed by the women of
the city.
This movement will not be cqnflned
to the city of Augusta but It Is Intend
ed to Include all the trade territory of
Augusta, and during this week com
mencing with November 16th, The
Herald will open for demonstration
purposes a City Market Headquarters
where the farmers of this section can
bring thetr products for sale and dis
play. If they prefer they can ship
them and the services of The Herald'*-
Olty Market Headquarter* for this
week are open to them free and with
out charge. on one day during the
week November Hist, the active co
operation %>f every householder and
housekeeper In Augusta Is to he en
listed and farmers are requeued to
send In wagons to The Herald's City
Market Headquarters to test out the
Idea of what a City Market will mean
both to the farmers and to the house
keepers of the city.
The week starting November 16th
is going to he an actual demonstra
tion of what Augusta can do for her
people in the Uve-at-Hunia, Made-at
home, Trade-at-Home idea. Yuur In
terest is Invited to 00-operale with
the manufacturers, merchants, and the
farmers In title territory to make a
success of a big widespread co-opera
tive effort for the good of this city
and section.
PLENTY OF MONEY TO FINANCE
THE SOUTH S COTTON.
Here’* what Chicago did to help
raise the fund* to finance the South'*
oottcm crop:
Chicago. Eight million* dollar*
In 16 minute* ttu the record of
t'hirago banka today In subscrib
ing to their pro rat* ahare of the
$ 1 95,000,(H>0 national cotton loan
pool to aid the Southern grower*
In carrying the portion of the 191«
crop which they have been un
able to export during the war
Before the day wa* over prac
tlcally the entire f 11,000,000 part
of the loan apportioned to local
lnatttutlon* had been auhaurlbed
fur. Ten million* wa* taken out
right and approximately 12,000.000
waa taken by bank* on the condi
tion that the loan ahould meet
the approval of their board* of
directors "
Augurta la doing tl* full ahate in
the matter of co-operating with the
farmer* of tht* section 1n storing and
financing the cotton croi Augusta
has broken all record* In the mailer
of stock on hand and It la estimated
that the storage capacity of the big
warehouse* In Augusta will bi»
renrhed. unlea* th* cotton !• com -
proved.
Auffuflita canned do a better thin*
than build more warehouee*—fire
proof—bonded aareliouere Th# need
yt additional warehouse room is going
be made apparent this year. (
' / fKM - aUi I "S W^E F ?MM ( ia- e Vt»*T IW s£TTl£X>‘' < '
WALL &EV rHB. WA/L / OF AftCrUMEV A j>o 0B / p|U-0 MUST BE A\NA>4- '( K T>\€.
<xn!> THAT* 1 s*OU<-Z> Bt f s>A-/ /( C A^ £ / T . L/ -yoW ' feP A |_MTNI«-HT / • St6 * j ir— x \
Up A<; A/njT/ | O «E* <N / - V pr.vjOEß. A M£ WA& »*! s H T.tL-,- /AtmT <T \
■—■ ]
As he went out the door Mr. Fog
picked up a bone and began to eat It.
Suddenly he dropped It and began to
groan "Oh! my tooth! my tooth!”
he cried, holding hi* fnce and Jump
ing about on hla hind lege.
"What la the matter with you, ltey
nard?” asked Mr#. Fox, dropping her
dishcloth nnd running to the door.
"Oh. 1 lilt on my sore finoth and It Is
aching something awful," said Mr. Fox
between groans.
/ <S /r <?*' -YF y-OOT/V 4
"Well, come in here and let me put
something hot on your gum, and then
1 will put a poultice on your face and
tie It on." said hts wife.
”1 don’t know what you would do
without me," she said, as she put a
piece of cloth under his chin and
brought It around hts face, tying a
knot on the top of his head with two
ends sticking up.
Mr. Fox sat down tn a chair by the
fire and leaned his head back.
When Mrs. Fox came out of the
closet all she could see was the ends
of the cloth sticking up over the hack
of the chair.
BUYING OPPORTUNITIES
Readjustments in the various merchan
dise markets have brought many opportu
nities.
While in some instances prices have
risen, in others there have been great cut
ting of quotations due to the fact that the
holders of goods desire to liquidate.
This liquidation is not unhealthy.
It merely means that commerce iR read
justing itself to new conditions.
But the fact that such price fluctuations
exist make it more than usually important
that people post themselves before buy
ing ; in other words—
It will pay your pockebook to study the
advertising in The Herald.
INDOOR SPORTS
“I declare If you don't look like a
Jack rabbit sitting there," she said.
"The ends of that bandage look Just
like his ears."
Mr. Fox’s tooth did not ache so
much Just then, and he got up and
looked in a bit of a mirror that was
nailed on the wall.
“I do that, sure enough. If anyone
saw Just the ends of the bandage I
could fool them sure enough.”
Then Mr. Fox began to think, and
by and by he looked at the big mirror
again; then he looked out of his door
and saw that the sun was low.
Mr. Fox straightened the ends of his
I bandage and started out of the house.
He run over the hill, keeping well be
hind the bushes and rocks as he went,
and by and by he came to Farmer
(Smith's barnyard.
He peeked through the fence and saw
that the dog house was empty, then
he looked through the crack In the
stable and saw that the carriage was
gone.
“Good luck," ’said Mr. Fox; “the
farmer has gone to town and taken
the dog along. The rest Is easy,” and
he crawled around the stable until
he came to a rock.
Then he looked around to be sure
no one was In sight and ran behind
the rock.
Mr. Fox took some time to fix him
self, but when at last he did the ends
of his bandage and a tiny bit of the
top of his head showed over the rock
looking for all the world like Jack
Rabbit sitting behind the rock.
He didn’t have long to wait, be
cause Mrs. Duck was Just waddling
down to the pond with her little ones,
and, while she told them to keep close
to her. Bennie Duck, who thought he
was wiser than the others, and there
fore could wander farther away from
his mother, espied the ends of Mr.
Fox’s bandage and decided he would
see what was behind the rock.
Mr. Fox was quite hungry and Bon
nie Duck did not return.
In a short time Mrs Brown's hen
and her chicks came out and she sow
as she thought Jack Rabbit asleep
behind the rock, so she ran buck to
the barnyard. "Do come and see
Jack Rabbit; he haa fallen asleep be
hind the rook on the other side of
the fence," she called to the others,
“there will he Just time before we
have our aupper."
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA. GA.
So out went all the foolish hens and
ducks, and just as they reached the
rock, bounce, came sly Mr. Fox into
their midst and off he ran with sup
per for Mrs. Fox held tightly in his
mouth.
“Well. Reynard, you are a very wise
THE WAYS OF THRIFT
REAL COLD STORAGE EGGS.
By J. B. Mitchell, President, Chicago
Butter and Egg Board.
From now until March, hens will be
laying less than 5 per cent of the total
number of eggs consumed In the Unit
ed States. Of the eggs thus actually
laid in the winter, many will be eaten
by the owners of the hens and their
friends and will never reach the mar
ket. The few that do will he sold at
exceedingly high prices.
Nevertheless, millions of eggs will
be eaten each day this winter. How
are YOU to get GOOD eggs at-a reas
onable price'.' You are not only safe
In eating cold storage eggs—but cold
storage eggs are a superior class o£ eggs.
The United States government has
striven for years to educate people to an
appreciation or this FACT, but un
fortunately the reports of the federal
Investigators have had a limited cir
culation. It is an unreasoning public
prejudice that has practically forced
many grocers to label their highest
class eggs ’fresh” and their inferior
eggs "cold storage." although In act
ual fact the labels often should have
been reversed.
As a matter of absolute, Indisputable
fact the bulk of the very finest eggs
on the market In winter are the high
grade, candled, selected cold storage
eggs eggs that have been preserved
for you In a scientifically refrigerated
warehouse, and not stored In a farm
er’s barn or cellar to hold for high
winter prices. It is a peculiar fiction
that eggs are "fresh" merely because
they have not been taken care of In a
cold storage warehouse.
Therefore, If you wish to he quits
certain that you are getting pure,
wholesome eggs at a reasonable price,
»»k for and in*i*t on getting the best
grade of cold storage eggs.
Cold storage warehouses receive
their stock of eggs during the month*
of March. April and May, when hens
are laying the best eggs and laying
the most eggs. At that time of the
OLD BOOZE, THE MAGICIAN
Walt Mason In Collier's Weekly.
Old Booze, the magician, does won
derful things; he'll change the condi
tion of paupers and kings. Some flag
ons of whiskey concealed In his frame,
the cripple grows frisky, forgets that
he's lame; the beggars are riding on
beautiful steeds, the man law-abiding
does desperate deeds. The husband
and father who'* kind to his wife kicks
up a huge pother, inaugurates strife;
and then In the morning h# coughs
up his fine, anil gets a grim warning
to cut out the wine. The man who for
mildness Is famed flar and near is
driven to wildness by schooners of
schoners of beer; with shotgun and
hatchet we see him cavort, and doesn’t
he catch It when drngged Into court!
The thoughtful provider, whose kids
were well fed. now lays In hard elder
What Great Men
Have Said About
War
O, War, thou Son of hell!
SHAKESPEARE
War 1* a braln-spattertng. wind
pipe alittlhc art.—LORD BACON.
War 1* the devil'a gambling game.
--GEORGE EOX.
There never was a good war nor a
bad peace. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
War never decided any question of
right or wrong—THOMAS JEFFER
SON
War is the trade of barbarism
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
War 1* the statesman's game, the
lawyer's jest, the hired assassin'*
trade.—SKKLLET.
By Tad
fellow,” said his wife. “I will never
again think you are dull.”
Copyright 1914, by the McClure News~-
paper Syndicate, New York City.
Tomorrow’s story—“ The Charity of
Two Little Girls.”
year the temperature Is cool, so the
eggs keep well while being collected
on the farm, at the country store, In
transportation, etc. Also, they are
collected more rapidly tn a more busi
ness like manner than at any other
time of the year. Therefore, they
reach the warehouse quickly In splen
did condition.
Before being put into cold storage
the receipts are sorted and selected,
the very small, dirty, cracked and oth
erwise defective eggs taken out and
the fine, large, clean, sweet, full
bodied eggs packed In new whitewood
cases In odorless fillers, and stored for
future use. It costs no more to keep
a good egg in cold storage than to
keep a poor one. Hence money is
never wasted in refrigerating any but
the best eggs.
In cold storage warehouses the eggs
are kept at the precise degree of tem
perature and the exact percentage of
humidity necessary to preserve them
in the condition that they were in
when they entered. So perfect is this
regulation that the temperature will
not vary one-tenth of a degree In
months, and the same identical tem
perature will prevail In every part of
the room.
When eggs are taken out of the
warehouse to go Into consumption they
are fully candled by expert operators
who pass each egg before an electri;
light and reject any that may become
Imperfect during storage. Those that
pass this severe test are sold to the
grocers as the best "March,” "April"
or "May" eggs. And right now eggs
are lower In price than they have been
In any October or November In recent
years. There was an unusually large
production of unusually good eggs last
spring a. a result of favorable cli
matic conditions. And the very best
of these eggs are being sold to the
grocers of Chicago for 24 to 26c a
dozen. That is reason enough why
you should eat eggs every day—and
lots of them. But be sure you get the
highest grade of cold storage eggs.
Instead of rye bread. The man who
was stralghter than any strings look
poured gin in his crater, and now he's
a crook. The man who wa* natty, and
groomed like a beau. Is ragged and
ratty, an emblem of wos. One held
the truth higher than any in tow r n;
Booxe made him a liar, and battered
him down Old Booze, with his chalice
doth miracles work; he ruins the pal
ace. dismantles the kirk. Industrial re
gions he turns to a void. Increases the
legions of starved unemployed. The
depths and the shallows of trouble he
brings, he lead* to the gallows the vic
tim who swings; he smuggle* the cop
pers of men who are blind, persuading
the paupers he's friendly and kind. And
always he's Jolly, and blithely he cries:
Join me In my folly—fools only are
wise!"
My greatest regret is that I have
been the author of three wars In which
thousands of lives were lost.—PRINCE
BISMARCK.
AUGUSTA S LIVE AT
HOME WEEK.
Star* November 16th.—Watch
Thi» Paper for Further An
nouncement.
Live at Horn#—Trade at Home —
Buy at Home—Pay at Home-
Order at Home—Made at Home—
Rn sed at Home—Help at Home.
You are Invited to Join In the
demon..tr. tlon of what the AU
GUSTA AT HOME movement
means to the people of this sec
tion. Ton'll see It broadcast, on
•very hand. In every window dis
play. during the week of November
l«th.
If you are Interested In the Liv*
at Ho"i*, Trad* at Horn*. Mads at
Horn*, Raised at Hors#, Ruy at
Home Movement, write the
Live at Horn* Editor,
AUGUSTA HERALD
• For Further Particulars.
When You Wear
Derr 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
stvle.
DORR
good Taste Apparel
UMITED
®|^^pLAUNDRY
«THE housewife who Is a keen student
of domestic affairs and employs
the labor and time-saving devices 2
which make housekeeping easy, thorough
and economical, will be interested in
unlimited hot water for the laundry as
provided by the
Ruud Automatic Gas
Water Heater
The Rand i* connected to the gas and water pipe*
and supplies a tubful or a dozen tubfuls just as f
easy as the pint or miart for the toilet, and all |
at the nine time. It neats only the water actually
drawn without any waste of fuel, time or attention »
—you simply turn the faucet. Further information
can be had at our showroom where the RUUD is
displayed in operation.
The Gas Light Go., of Augusta
I Never Disappoint My Patients
Clifton R. Groover, M. D., the Nerve, Blood and Skin
Disease Specialist.
If you desire to consult a reliable, long estab
lished specialist of vast experience, come to me and
learn what can be accomp’lshed with skillful, scien
tific treatment. I use latest BERUMS and BACTE
RINS In the treatment of chronic conditions which
have failed to yield to ordinary treatment—for WEAK
NESS, LYMPH c IMPOUND, combined with my di
rect treatment, restoring the vital part* to the fullest
<\ggrre.
I successfully treat Blood Poison, Ulcers, Skin dis
eases, Kidney and Bladder troubles; Rheumatism,
Piles. Rectal and Intestinal diseases and many dis
ease* not mentioned. Consultation and advice free
and confidential. Hour* 9 a. m. to 7 j>. m. Sun lay
10 to 2 only. Call or Its.
DR. GROOVER SPECIALIST.
004-7 Dyw Bldg.
Before Shopping Read Herald Ads
We were fortunate enough at the beginning of the European
w-ar to put In a full stock of all the popular Imported Powders,
Soaps, Toilet Water. Extracts. Cosmetlques, etc., and we can now
fill orders for anything In that line. Some have advanced tn price
and aome w> sell at the old price. # If you can't obtain what you
wish elsewhere, you can here
GARDELLE’S, 744 Broad
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER S.
' AUGUSTA HERALD.
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
DAILY AND SUNDAY HERALD.
The circulation of the Daily and Sun-
I day Herald for the month of October,
1914, was as follows:
Oct. 1 12,645
Oct. 2 12.665
Oct. 8 12,839
Oct. 4 11,770
OcL 5 12,540
Oct. 6 14,435
Oct. 7 12,440
Oot. 8 12,375
Oct. 9 13,215
O t. 10 12.815
Oct. 11 11.740
Oct. 12 13,220
Oct. 13 13,043
Oct. 14 12,270
OcL 15 12,355
0< . 31
TOTAL OCTOBER 388,836
DAILY AVERAGE 12,538
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.
14-I 4 -
Oct. 16 12:373
Oct. 17 12 653
Oct. 18 11,655
Oct. 19 12,413
Oct. 20 12.406
Oct. 21 12,626
OcL 22 12,434
Oct. 23 12,153
Oct. 24 13,090
Oct. 25 11.640
Oct. 26 12 323
Oct. 27 12!520
Od. 28 12.450
Oct. 29 12,360
Oct. 30 12,345
Augusta, Qa.