Newspaper Page Text
TWO
President Kalbfleisch Signs Dudley
to Contract to Manage Club in 1915
’Was Head of Thomasville Team in Georgia State League
for Three Years. Has a Splendid Record. Augusta Club
Now Has Eleven Players Under Contract.
M. O. Dudley, gntinager of the Tho
iznasville teem In the Georgia State
League, hen been employed to manage
the Augusta club In 1910. Dudley ar
rived here Saturday night, having been
summoned by President E. O. Kalb*
flelnch to come to th!« city for a con
ference. After talking the matter over
with Mr. Kalbflelach and other offi
cials of the club Sunday the former
State Ijcogue manager came to terms
anrt affixed hie signature to a contract.
The new manager of the Augusta
club was pilot for the Thotneavllle club
for three years. He won the pennant
two years and the third year played
In the poet season scries He was a
member of the Augusta club for a
short time when E<l Itanaick was man-
MANY BASEBALL
BLAIS FILED
Arbitration Board of National
Ass'n of Professional Leagues
Has More Than a Hundred
Claims to Deal With.
Omaha, Neb,- More than a hundred
Halms of club owners and playera were
on the docket for consideration by the
board of arbitration of the National
Association of Professional Haseball
Deagues when that body met today.
They Included claims ngwlnst major
deague clubs on sales anil drafts of
-players from minor leagues and of
Individual players who presented their
grievances to the hoard.
The list was unusually long this year
because of the extraordinary condi
tions which affected organised baseball
during the last season. The flrat meet
ing of the association proper la sched
uled for Tuesday morning, hut the In
flux of baseball men from every part
of this country and Panada added in
terest to the meeting of the arbitration
board.
Trains todsy brought representa
tives from practically every league In
organised baseball Members of the
National ltaseball Commission were ex
pected to be on hand to observe the
•siellheratlons of the association.
Up. clflc suggestions as to chemicals
and dyestuffs that should be made in
this country are asked for by the
American Chemical society. Nobody,
of course, might to suggest chemical
blondes. —Boston Globe.
Opportunity
waits for no man.
But you may over
take it with a
WESTERN UNION
Day Letter or
Night Letter
Full information gladly given at any office.
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO
lEl®w W m JJdi ©mi d© Wm@w iH© MFsid L@@lk ? ° My GB Brf a Fndadr'
a number of yearn ago How
ever, he wan a youngster then and had
hut little experience. He wan re
leaHPtl and ho# wince made a aplendid
record an pilot for amaller club*. Dud
ley 1h expected to do practically all of
the catching for the Au«u»ta club next
Hummer.
President KalbfleiHch now ban
eleven players under contract, in
cluding the manager. He 1« expect
ing a good He/tMon next year and be
lieved that Dudley 1h the man to make
a winner. The new pilot met a num
ber of AugiiHta fan* here and he made
a favorable linpreM»lon on all who Haw
him. Sunday night ho left for hin
home In MlHnlHHlppt to begin work
Hhaplng up the team for next Hf*a»on.
FDR INCREASED
FARM PRODUCTS
1,000 Delegates Gather For
Discussion of European War
Demand for Food.
Washington.— PoKHlblliUen of in
creaHing the production of American
farm* to meet the war demand for
food were dlacuHsed by leader** in ag
ricultural science who gathered hero
today for a aerlen of mooting** that
will continue through the week. Ten
national aMoriatlonn are represented
by more than J,OOO delegates.
The American Society for Agrono
my, the American F»nn Management
Association, the A merit rm AHHociatlnn
of Karin Institute Worker* and tha
National Association of State Univer-
HitlcH arranged their werie* of pro
gram* to begin todav.
other organisation* whose ncHiilnnit
will begin later In the week Included
the AHHodation of American Agricul
tural Colleges and Experiment Sta
tions, Society for the Promotion of
Agricultural Science, American Asso
ciation for the Advancement of Ag
ricultural Teaching, American Society
of Animal Production, Hand Grant
Engineering Association and the As
sociation of Official Seed Alalysts.
Prayer is the spirit speaking truth
to Truth Hailey.
Mrs. Gahhetgh- John, you were
talking In your sleep. Husband
That's funny, for I was dreaming of
you. Mrs. 0.-VYhat whs funny about
it? Husband--Why, 1 don’t see how
1 g**t a chance to say a word.—Bos- !
ton Transcript.
he isi ir
IS THE SLOGAN
IN BERLIN
Everybody in German Capital
Accepting Sacrifices Entailed
By War. Little Excitement
As Bulletins Read. Food
Aplenty.
Berlin.—They still eat wheat bread
in Berlin. Amusements proceed with
little sign of abatement. Few post
er* to call men to arms are in evi
dence and there are many able-bodied
rrin on the street In civilian cloths.
These conditions in striking contrast
to the situation in neutral Holland,
where all people are compelled to eat
bread that has a 75 per cent admixture
of rye and where almost all walls are
i covered with official announcements
relating to mobilization and the regu
lation of /rices, were sources of won
iderment to a correspondent of the As
sociated Press.
Street Impressions.
That Germany is at war could not
be gleaned from the street impres
sions though a person might specu
late on the causes that have* led to
two conditions. Everywhere one sees
large photographs of the emperor,
she German Crown Prince and Generals
von Hindenberg, von Bezier and other
military notables. The second condi
tion is the poor state of the horses
which do the hauling In the city. All
good horses have been requisitioned
for military purposes.
There are surprisingly few soldiers
to be seen in the streets of the Ger
man capital.
Cases Crowded.
Business in Berlin is normal as far
a* can be ascertained. Shortly after
mobilization some of the large amuse
ment places, concert halls and vaude
ville house* closed. Many of them
have been re-opened with the coming
of the winter season. The cases are
crowded to capacity.
“We must win,” is the slogan of
everybody in Berlin. To make ris
possible everybody accepts resignedly
whatever sacrifice has to be made.
While* the army has the hard work in
the battle line, the women Including
the empress and the ladles of her court
knit socks, wristlets, gloves, sweaters,
bands and even calf
"warmers.”
There is so little excitement In the
capital that even the war bulletins of
the newspapers get but half the at
tention they do elsewhere.
ALL AUGUSTa’tAKING HOLD
FIRMLY ON LIVE AT
HOME IDEA
(Continued from Preceding Fage).
with growing enthusiasm and with a
wide spreading sentiment of co-opera
tion towards next Monday, when Hive
at Home. Huy at Home, made at
Home, Pay at Home, Order at Home,
Help at Home Week will begin.
Augusta has never before had such
an opportunity us will next week he
presented to reveal herself to herself
—to acquit one and all with Augusta s
possibilities ana to demonstrate the
logic and the common sense of living
at home, self-dependence If you please.
Augusta likes the idea. The people of
the city have been quick to grasp the
significance of this co-operative move
ment.
The list of goods and articles that
are made and manufactured !n Au
gusta mills, factories and shops as set*
fortli In Sunday's Issue of The Herald
wns read with more interest than at
taches to an ordinary news story, it
Contained in its summing up some
surprises, illustrating the fact that
the Augusta people as a whole do not
know enough about their own busi
ness. considering, of course, that
everything that is done in Augusta,
every industry and its output, every
achievement in every line of honest
endeavor. Is Augusta's business. Yet,
the list published Sunday was only a
partial list. It did not Include all tho
many and varied kinds of goods and
articles made here.
GooJ Enough for Anybody.
“Why not live at home?" an Au
gusta woman who has been reading
The Herald remarked today, "isn’t
home good enough for us?”'
That, in a few words, presents a
phase of the Live at Home movement
that is worthy of consideration. With
out the co-operation of the women no
I.lve at Home movement could hope
to succeed, for It is the women who,
if they do not spend the most money,
are at least masters of the purses out
of which the supplies for the homes
are paid for. The purchases of the
women of any community are th«
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
purchases which count heaviest,
therefore. In the general scheme of a
j city’s housekeeping.
The Power of the Women.
The women buy for themselves, for
their children and tor their homes.
It Is gratifying that such organiza
tions as the United Daughters of the
| Confederacy and the Philomathic Club
' have put themselves squarely on rec
i ord as so heartily in sympathy with
ihe Live at Home movement, pledg
ing their members to the co-operative
i plan and commending it to their sis
ters. m
If all the women of Augusta would
take kindly to the idea, ascertaining
next week what goods and articles
are made, in Augusta and where they
can be found on sale when they are
needed, then cultivate the habit of
(railing for a/id Insisting upon having
Augusta-made goods—accepting no
substitutes —it would not be a great
while before they would find, the ma
jority of them at least, that the
would have more money in their
purses, more liberal allowances. Why?
Because the women will have done
much to keep at home and to divert
into local chi nnels of trade hundreds
of thousands of dollars that now go
away from Augusta after being spent
here for goods of the same kind that
are made here. Buying on the co
operative plan, these hundreds of
Ihousnnda of dollars will go a long,
long wav toward relieving the present
existing financial and business strain
here In Augusta. Th" payroll of every
Augusta industry will be increased,
necessarily because manufacturers of
Augusta-made goods will find It nec
essary to Increase their outputs to
meet the greater demand, which will
mean the employment of more men
and women. The men and worn n who
draw these larger payrolls will spend
their money here at home —it will find
Its way Into the cash registers of
every business In Augusta, and every
body sharing in the community bene
fits, the husbands of the women who
will have been such strong factors
In keeping Augusta money In Au
gusta, will naturally and Inevitably
get their proportionate share.
The whole thing moves round and
round in a circle. When money that
might Just as easily be kept at home
Is sent away to Increase payrolls and
help make prosperity elsewhere, the
circle is broken.
Men Will Follow Women’s Lead.
The women will find, too, that giv
ing their support, encouragement and
Influence to the Dive at Horde move
ment, the men will follow their load.
A great deal depends upon the wo
men. The husband of tho woman who
will have no substitute for an Au
gusta-made article; who Instead of
sending away, for instance, for a gown
that some Augusta dressmaker could,
perhaps at less cost, build and put
into the creation just as much style
or "chic" or whatever other subtle
quality is supposed to lurk In the
name of some maker of women’s
fashionable apparel who is at a dis
tance, in the metropolis perhaps, has
her clothes made here in Augusta, will
soon come to the conclusion that there
Is more to the Live at Home Idea than
he thought. He will fall naturally in
to the habit of calling for Augusta
mado goods, buying them when he
nerds such things as are made here,
depending upon Augusta tailors to
muke his clothing instead of a no
bottcr tailor elsewhere with a name
for which he pays in addition to the
fabric and workmanship.
RUSSIAN BLACK
SEA FLEET OFF
London, 7:55 a. m. —A dispatch from
Berlin states that the Russian Black
Sea fleet has left Sebastopol and is
proceeding Eastward, says the Central
News correspondent at Copenhagen.
The Russians, according to his dis
patch, have bombarded Kohlu and
Suglu on the coast of Asia Minor.
FRI IMAM FOR SICK CHILD
GIVE “CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS”
Cleanses tender little stomach,
liver, bowels without
injury.
Every mother realizes that this Is
Nte children’s ideal laxative and
physic, because they love its pleasant
taste and it never falls to effect a
thorough "Inside cleansing” without
grlptng.
When your child Is cross, irritable,
feverish, or breath Is bad, stomach
sour, look at the tongue, mother! If
coated, give a teaspoonful of "Califor
nia Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours
all the foul, constipated waste, sour
bile and undigested food passes out
Speaking
... THE...
Public Mind
IRELAND, ENGLAND AND GER
MANY.
To The Herald:
It is with the greatest reluctance
that I wrote on a subject I wish I
could avoid—the mistaken idea of a
large number of my countrymen that
j England’s defeat by Germany would
j bring freedom to Ireland. Never was
i there a vainer delusion. When Eng
land falls, Ireland falls, and another
j long tragedy commences for my un
fortunate land. I hate England. She
| has treated my country ruthlessly,
i savagely and beyond any vengeance
we cau repay, but that is all over, and
England today Is inclined to make
' some recompense for past injuries.
As to Germany, hostile in race and
| creed to Celtic, Catholic Ireland, make
|no mistake. If England goes down
; before the Teuton, Germany, imperial,
! autocratic, would never tolerate a
Celtic republic on her western ocean
boundary, with Ireland’s vast natural
resources facing another free land,
America. B. L.
Former Protectionist Enlightened.
To The Herald:
For years I, like many others, have
been voting the Republican ticket for
Protection, believing it to be a good
thing to put a heavy tax on things
coming into this country. Hereto
fore. I thought it best for the people
of the United Slates to keep out for
eign-made goods. Now, behold you,
because of the war, no foreign mer
chandise can come here, and yet our
mills are not running overtime, some
not full time: in fact, many industries
are closing down because they cannot
get material from abroad.
If Protection, or prohibiting Imports,
is a good thing for the workingmen,
then this nation should now be en
joying the greatest kind of prosperity
on account of the war in Europe. F. D.
Theatricaj
Notes ot Interest |j
“STOP THIEF.”
Bert Heigh and Hazele Burgess will
he remembered as the two people, who
always come around each season with
something new. something to make
people laugh and this season will he
the biggest laughing show that they
have appeared in yet. "Stop Thief”
is the title, and as Bert Leigh says,
believe me its some entertainment.
The scenic production that will be used
in this show is the same as used in
its long run at the Gaiety Theatre, N.
Y. C. Bert Heigh and Hazele Burgess
appeared here last season in Geo. M.
Cohan's musical farce, ‘The Eittle
Millionaire.” Mr. Heigh played the
wine agent, Miss Brugess was the
maid. This season Mr. Leigh is a
Thief and Miss Burgess a female Thief
his pal and sweetheart, but its only
in the play.
For downright-rib tickling fun, for
a swift kick at gloom, grouch and des
pair, see "Stop Thief” when it comes
to the Grand next Friday, matinee and
evening.
The Herald’s City Market Will
Be Open Next Week at
629 Broad St.
(Continued from Preceding Page),
that It will he indespensable, and that,
of the bowels and you have a well,
playful child again. When Its little
system is full of cold, throat sore, has
stomach ache, diarrhoea, indigestion,
colic—remember a good liver and
bowel cleaning should always be the
first treatment given.
Millions of mothers keep “Califor
nia Syrup of Figs” handy; they know
a teaspoonful today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Directions for babies, chil
dren of all ages and grown-ups are
plainly on each bottle.
Ask your druggist for a 50 cent
bottle of "California Syrup of Figs.”
Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get
the genuine, made by "California Fig
Syrup Company.” Refuse any other
fig syrup with contempt.
III! jj j|
The Luscious
I|i I ■ „ . . I
Peppermint
\ Flavor is /
\ Double Strength /
in this latest /
\ confection—it /
ji 111 iljj | |j!| lots of /
VolvotStnoomS. /4|j
ft JSsSmBhI
Ira L
' IJr and '\fippperniint
/with each\i Imt I I I i
y_ w| ra eacn \
/5c Package
j j JJ|J|rMed^^Conpon^l^
|f Valuable Presents >
e-t-'-' WRIGHTS. Hlfcih*
EZEZEZp'
now also comes with United Coupons i
* I ,
the plan having been given a thorough
tryout, there will have been created
such a demand for a city market that
steps will be taken to establish here
in Augusta a market where the pro
ducer and the consumer may meet and
trade on a direct basis.
Many farmers who perhaps have not
enough produce on hand to send to the
City Market or who perhaps are com
ing to Augusta anyway on Saturday,
November 21st, wil bring in country
produce to be sold at the Open Air
Market on the 500 and 600 blocks of
Broad street that day. City council
has given permission for the farm
wagons to park on these two blocks.
Farmers desiring to send produce to
The Herald’s City Market may bring
or send in their produce this week any
time.
QTQAMfI Toda y Only,
V I lift PI U Continuously.
Daniel Frohman Presents
Through the Paramount
Pictures Company
The Dainty, Distinguished
MARGUERITE CLARK
In a Bewitching Characteriza
tion of
“WILDFLOWER”
A Tender Tale of Sweet Inno
cence and Eternal Youth
From the “Pen of Mary
Germaine.
Schedule of Starting Hours:
10:30, 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30,
3:30, 4:30, 5:30, 6:30, 7:30,
8:30, 9:30.
Prices —5c and 10c.
THE BEST—SO COME!
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9.
PIANO LESSONS.
BARRINGTON BRANCH
Peabody Conservatory Piano diplo
ma, 1909: subsequently studied in
Berlin, Vienna and London with
GABRILOVVITSCH, GODOWSKY,
and MARK HAMBOURG.
Telephone 6988.
PILES
CURED
Without the
knife, detention
from business;
without caute
ry; no danger.
No one need suf
fer from this
compla i n t .
when this
hum an e wig
cure is
awaiting them.
flfl
I GUARANTEE RESULTS.
Rheumatism in most of its forms
is permanently cured by my system
of treatment.
Eczema, Pimples, Erysipelas or any
eruptive diseases of the skin promptly
cured.
Bladder and Kidney Troubles, un
der my system of treatment show
signs of improvement at once.
Ulcers —I care not how long-stand
ing, 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, Ga.