Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11
Business Picking Up and Georgia
Not To Ask To Take Oft Fast Trains
Manager Chas. A.
Wickersham Decides—Ap
prizes Herald and M. & M.
Association of Decision
WANTS TO TAKE OFF SOME
LOCAL TRAINS, HOWEVER
Georgia Road Last of Roads in
South to Ask to Discontinue
Trains Because of Poor Busi
ness, Says Mr. Wickersham.
Genial Manager Chas. A. Wtcke.v
sham of the Georgia railroad, has de
cided that he will not ask the Georgia
Rrailroad ■Commission, at least for the
present, to allow his road to take off
trains No. 5 and 6, the two fast trains
between Augusta and Atlanta which
were out on last May. Mr. Wicker
sham Explains in a telegram to the Her
ald that business has been a little bet
ter for the past few days and he will
only.,' ask the railroad commission
Thursday, at the hearing which is to
conte up then, to ta*ke off local trains.
Augusta will affected by the pro
posed taking off of the Buckhead spe
cial which arrives here at 11 a. m. and
leaves at 4:45 p. m.
Mr. Wickersham explains, in a let
ter to the managing editor of the Her
ald K that poor business causes the
Georgia road to request discontin
uance of its local trains and he points
out that the Georgia is the last road
'in the south to pray for relief. With
regard to poor business because of the
present financial conditions there have
been widespread complaints and al
most all of the roads have been taking
off trains.
Protest Was Made.
Some days ago the managing editor
of the Herald wrote to Wickersham,
enclosing a clipping from the Herald
of last Sunday a week ago signed "A
Mere Citizen," in which protest was
made that the road should request the
railroad commission to allow' the dis
continuance not only of the local trains
hut of the two fast trains without some
promise that these trains would he
back on the road when normal condi
tions return. The gentleman writing
under the non plume of “A Mere
Citizen" stated that he thought the
M. & M. Association should investi
gate the matter. As it subsequently
develops the M. & M. Association had
written Mr. Wickersham on the 30th
of October relative to taking off the
k Charming Person is Miss Eva
Booth, Commander Salvation Army
TJells Reporter of Her Early Work As a Child in the Slums of
4 New York-- She is Pleading Now For the Hospital Aid For
the Soldiers in Europe.
There is probably no more interesting
/person in the country just now. or one
'* who accomplishes more than does Eva
Booth, a woman from Whose personality
vemanates a strength of character that
'readily explains how it is that she Holds
high position in an army that reaches
all over the world, and that is just as
active in its good works in A us: fa in
as in New A’ork. Miss Booth, in speak
ing to a Herald reporter last night, told
of her early work In the army, which
began when she was a little girl, of
how she had gone to live in tlie slums
of New Yolk so that she might see
what the people needed —to be one of
them as-it w'ere; of how she had dressed
in rags and sold matches and flowers,
of how she had tended the poor little
sick babies of that squalid element; of
how she had gone with her accordion
to the worst dives and sang, receiving
the pennies and nickles that were Klven
In response to her call. When only 1-
she had begun public speaking which
she continued as she did her work in the
slums until her health gave out and she
was compelled to give it up it’ a while.
Miss Booth is an English woman, al
though she has lived in the States for
many years. She has the full, rich
voice, rounded and expressive, that is
so characteristic of the English, arid as
she speaks there is something most
compelling In her tone that holds one s
attention until she has finished. Slight
of figure and rather tall, she wears her
dark, close-fitting uniform with a grace
ful dignity. A crimson silk blouse gives
n vivid dash of color to the otherwise
sombre gnrments and a mass of wavy,
brown hßir framed in by the big poke
Salvation Array bonnet gives a softened
sweetness to the strong, serious face.
Miss Booth’s hands are strong-looking
...and capable, and after seeing hrt- one
can readily understand how It Is that
she haa worked her way up to the posi
tion of commander In this wonderful or
ganization. And one has to work to
get promotion in the Salvation Army.
There Is no question of influence, pull,
u! anything of that kind, and, despite
the fHCt that she was General Booth’s
daughter, she began in the lowest ranks
and by sheer aint of work and ability
was promoted from post to post until
now she holds the position of command
Troubled With t orpid
Liver for Years
Wm. SNils, Harriman, Tew., writes:
** I have been troubled with torpid
liver and Indication for years. Hav
ing: used two bottles of Dr. Swan's
Liver and Kidney Remedy. I can
truthfully say It has sriven me more
relief than anything: else 1 have
found."
Dr. Swan’s Liver and Kidney Rem
edy stimulates the liver, kidneys,
stomach and bowels, increasing the
secretions and excretions. Tones up
the system and strengthens the or
gans. Gives renewed vigor, prevents
biliousness, constipation, dyspepsia
and ne/vous weakness.. Invaluable
to women sufferers. Purely vegetable
—pleasant to take. v
Keeps the whole body in a healthy
condition and makes life worth living.
Why suffer with constipation, indi
gestion and other common ills when
relief is so easy ? 50 cents a bottle at
.your druggist. None genuine with
out the signature, National Remedy
Co., New York.
En Ar-Co Oil (Known for 30 year, a, the won
deitul Japanese Oiil if g'*o*l for pain,,
Uixeuisatixktfi. Sciatica, etc*
trains and Mr. Wickersham wrote the
M. & M. Tuesday afternoon, at the
same timo he wired the Herald, to the
effect that he had decided not to re
quest permission to take off the two
fast trains. Mr. Wickersham states
also in his letter to the M. & M. that
business has picked up a little during
during the past ten days and that he
would for the present at least, not con
sider taking off the fast trains.
The following telegram was received
from Mr. Wickersham yesterday af
ternoon :
Atlanta. Ga., Nov. 10th, 14.
Thos. J. Hamilton,
Managing Editor Augusta Herald,
Augusta, Ga.
Since replying to your letter have
concluded to continue trains five and
six a while longer. Slight Improvement
In passenger travel last few days.
CHAS. A. WICKERSHAM.
Mr, Wickersham’s Letter.
The following letter by special de
livery was received late yesterday af
ternoon: «
Atlanta, Ga., November 10, 1914.
Mr. Thos. J. Hamlilton,
Managing Editor,
The Augusta Herald,
Augusta, Ga.
My Dear Mr. Hamilton:
I thank you very much for your es
teemed favor of Nov. 6th, which has
Just reached me, on my return from
the north, and have noted with inter
est the clipping enclosed.
The last ten days has shown a slight
improvement in our passenger train
earnings, and it looks now as though
we may be able to see our way clear
to withdraw our petitions to the com
mission, asking the discontinuance of
trains 5 and 6; at least for the pres
ent, hoping the gradual improvement
will continue. We will necessarily have
to ask for some relief on our Ftrletly lo
cal service, but we feel that It will not
seriously inconvenience our patrons.
I wish conditions were such that we
could not only maintain our present
schedules, hut add to the service;
however, as you know, present busi
ness conditions make it imperative for,
not only the railroads, but other bus
iness interests to retrench. I think
the Georgia railroad has been the last
road In the south to pray for relief,
and we put off the evil day just as
long as could, hoping for better times
and that we would not be compelled to
curtail our passenger service.
I thank you cordially for sending
me the clipping, as well as the many
other courtesies received at your
hands.
Hope to have the pleasure of seeing
you in Augusta the first of next week.
With kindest personal regards, re
main,
Most sincerely,
CHAS. A. WICKERSHAM.
er in the army, one of the most complete
organizations that can be found—one
that reaches and helps everyone who
asks, irrespective of creed or morals,
irrespective of everything; simply you
are needy and you are helped. What
your past was. what your future is to lie
matters not until your present wants are
alleviated.
Wants Aid for Soldiers.
While Miss Booth's visit here, and in
fact In the entire South, is for the pur
pose of her lecture, she is yet doing an
other thing that will be productive of
wonderful good. She is asking the en
tire South to help In the Salvation Army
work of sending hospital aid to the
ropean soldiers, In an “Old jJnen Cam
paign” which she started a few weeks
ago in New York and which has already
succeeded so that there are
now a full corps working dally In Me
morial Hall, New York, sterilizing the
old linen, cutting and rolling the band
ages, getting spdhges and compresses
ready for sending to Europe, in this
work Miss Booth has met with a tre
mendous response and the help of the
New York physicians and nurses.
Send Without Charge.
The ocean steamers have volunteered
to send anything across without charge
if they bear the Salvation Army seal.
Every bandage, compress or other medi
cal aid is wrapped In sterilized paper
and labeled with the Salvation Army
seal, with the contents noted In all the
foreign languages. Everything In regard
to It has been attended to in the most
systematic manner snd with due regard
to red tape. She asks every woman In
Augusta will contribute some old linen.
Send It to Salvation Headquarters. The
linen should be washed and boiled, no
starch or blueing It will, when sent
to New York, be sterilized and convert
ed Into bandages. There have been con
tributions sent from all over the States,
the first response coming two days af
ter her first newspaper appeal, when a
Virginia woman sent her a lot of hand
some old linen with a beautiful note
telling how the linen had been port of
her mother's bridal Unen, that the flax
had been grown ort‘ her
Southern plantation, and spun by hand,
and that she was sending it In mem
ory of her mother’s seventy-fifth birth
day, and that surely If there was cura
tive and healing power In any Unen it
would be found in this.
Miss Booth spoke most enthusiasti
cally of the South, how she loved It and
what splendid audiences site was hav
ing. In Atlanta they were most anxious
that she should speak again as all who
heard her were even more charmed and
entertained than they had expected.
Miss Booth goes from here to Montgom
ery and Birmingham.
FILMS MADE IN AUGUBTA.
..Augusta, Ga., Nov, 10, 1914.
The Augusta Herald,
Live at Home Editor,
Augusta, Ga.
Dear Sir—We note your list of
made at home articles In yester
day’s Herald, and note your re
quest to fill In the unmentioned
ones.
Please enter our name on your
list as an Augusta enterprise
started by Augusta, capital en
tirely.
Thanking you for this favor, we
beg to remain, ’
Yours very truly,
MAGNOLIA FILM CO„
By B. H. Goodwin,
Secretary and Treasurer.
*11.26, *15.00,, *18.76, *22.50 suits,
Hart Shaffner and Marx make, they
are cheap at the regular price' which
U 25 per cent more. F. G. Mertins.
U need a Biscuit
Nourishment —fine fla
vor—purity—crispness
—wholesomeness. All
for 5 cents, in the
moisture-proofpackage.
Graham Crackers
A food for every day.
Crisp, delicious and
strengthening. Fresh
baked and fresh de
livered. xo cents.
SNAPAROON3
A delightful new bis
cuit, with a rich and
delicious cocoanut fla
vor. Crisp and always
fresh. A io cents.
Buy biscuit bated by
NATIONAL BISCUIT
COMPANY
Always look for that Name
BOND GETS
HER SHARE OF
AUTO rats
Nearly SIOO,OOO Being Dis
tributed By State Treasurer
This Week Among 148 Coun
ties, $2.22 Per R. F. D. Mile.
Richmond County received from
the state treasury this morning the
sum of *461.50, this being her portion of
the automobile tax money collected by
the state and which fund of nearly
*IOO,OOO is being distributed among the
148 counties in projjprtlon to the
amount of rural mileage In each coun
ty.
Richmond's Pott Roads.
There are, to be exact, 203.43 miles
of post roads In Richmond county,
which is thus entitled to the above
named amount, as the rate Is $2.22 to
the mile. There are only 250 auto
mobiles registered In Augusta, ac
cording to City Treasurer 11. H. Mor
ris, Mr. Morris states, however, that
his Information is that Richmond
county contains, it Is estimated, about
800 machines. They are not made to
register, he says, from the fact that
neither the county nor the city gets
any revenue from It. The state ben
efits to the extent of *5 for every ma
chine registered.
In the 148 counties of the state there
are 41,696 miles of rural mall routes,
which Is not far from the estimate
made some weeks ago To these 148
counties the sum of *92,739.58 will be
distributed by Treasurer Speer.
Carroll Leads.
Carroll county lends the state In the
J number of miles. 688. with Cobb a
close second, with 667. I-aurens has
' 664 and GwinnPtt 616. These are the
j only counties in the 600 class, but
there are many with 500 or more.
Fannin and Mclntosh will not re
ceive a cent, as neither has a nvlln of
rural route. Glynn has only 44. Charl
ton 54, Dade 58. Ten counties have
less than 100 miles.
Bibb will receive *469.32, and has
754 machines registered. Carroll will
receive $*1,528.80, end haa 179 ma
chines registered. Fulton will get *453.-
75 and has close to 4,000 machines
registered.
Other South Georgia counties with
the number of rural routes follow:
Sumter county, 395 miles; Crisp, 240;
Lee, 182; Macon, 248; Randolph 415;
Stewart, 250; Schley, 121; Webster,
159; Dougherty, 162; Houston, 416;
Dooly, 403.
Remarkable Cura for Croup.
| “Last winter when my little boy had
crop I got him a bottle of Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy. I honestly be
lieve it saved his life,” writes Mrs. J.
B. Cook, Indiana, Pa. "It cut tho
phlegm and relieved his coughing
spells. I nm most grateful for what
this remedy has done for him." For
sale by all dealers.
I have Just received n new lot of
Stetson hats. See F. G, Martins.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
Augusta Retail Merchants
Ready and Willing to Handle
Augusta-Made Goods in Pref
erence to Others to Foster and
Encourage Living at Home
(Continued from Page One.)
most enterprising concerns stand
ready to do their share.
The manufacturers, who possibly
have given more attention in
the past to developing a foreign mar
ket for their goods, are ready now to
do what may be necessary to take ad
vantage and give the advantage of
the home market.
There is an unmistakable willing
ness and readiness on the part of Au
gusta merchants to handle In stock
such articles and such goods as are
manufactured and made in Augusta
mills, shops and factories.
All that is necessary now to get the
Live at Home, Buy at Home, Made
at Home motepient In full swing is
that the Augusta buying public get the
habit of palling for and insisting upon
Augusta- made goods.
It's up to the people of Augusta
And everywhere throughout the city
In hundreds of homes, on the streets.
In the street cars, shops and stores
the people of Augusta are talking
about Live at Home, Buy at Home.
Mode at Home Week.
Live at Home, Buy at Home. Made
at Home Week begins next Monday
morning. It will be a week of demon
stration —first to acquaint the buying
public with what* goods and articles
are made here, where they ran be
found when they are needed; to bring
the farmer and the city dweller to
gether and establish diject trading
relations between the producer and
the consumer; to demonstrate what a
great big undeveloped market there is
right here at home in Augusta for Au
gusta-manufactured goods and for
country produce raised in the Augusta
section.
Merchants Welcome Movement.
A representative of the Herald called
upon half a dozen or more of the heads
of leading retail business houses to
day. These eoncems wore picked at
random. The question was iput to
one and all:
“Are you willing to handle such
goods as are in your line that are
made in Augusta in preference to
goods of the same kind made else
where if the people want them.”
Unreservedly and right off the bat,
one and ail alike answered very em
phatically—Y es.
It Is. therefore, up to the people of
Augusta.
Augusta merchants are going to sup
ply their customers with what their
customers want, what they buying
public demands. That Is a foregone
conclusion. But in talking with these
heads of Augusta business houses to
day it was not that fact that stbod
out, but the fact that these men have
caught the spirit of Live at Home,
Buv at Home, Made nt Home; that
they would prefer to sell their Augus
ta customers Augusta-made goods and
articles in preference to the same kind
of goods and articles made elsewhere.
They know and appreciate, these men
of business, how it will help, not only
■ their Individual businesses, but every
1 business, every manufactory, every in
i lerest and every individual person In
Augusta in the long run.
A Whole-Hear'ed Endorsement.
Mr. F. P. Gracey, trustee of the J.
B. White & Company department
store, said:
•‘We not only endorse the movement
which the Herald has been so enter
prising and wide-awake as to inau
gurate, but we are doing everything
that lies tn our power to boost It along
and to urge its adoption by the people
of Augusta. It has wonderful possi
bilities, this Live at Home, Buy at
Home. Made at Home Movement.
"This store is ready and willing to
always give the preference to Augus
ta-made goods and to carry tn stock
these goods always, anything in our
line, and even to add lines if
our customers ask for goods made Sri
Augusta that we do not now carry.
"There are not very many things in
cluded in the list of goods manufectu
ed In Augusta as contained in the Hun
day Herald that we could not earry
and supply to the people of Augusta."
A Splendid MovS.
Andrews Brothers are of the opin
ion, as expressed by them, that tha
Live at Home, Buy at Home, Made at
Home movement cannot be too highly
praised.
“It Is splendid It Is the very.klnd
of co-operation that Augusta needs to
erystalize and bring forward as a
dominant factor in the civic life of the
community an Augusta spirit.
“There are goods of Just as fine
quality made in Augusta factories as
anywhere, certainly ns fine and as
good as other manufacturers else
where turn out. What Is made here
In certainly good enough for us. W<-
are willing to cooperate In any wav
and in every possible way, not only
to make Live at Home, Buy at Home.
Made at Home Week a big success,
but to instill the sentiment of co
operation behind the movement Into
our business and Into the whole town ”
Will Benefit All Classes.
“Nothing that has ever been Inau
gurated In Augusta is or more Im
portance to the people of all classes
than the Live at Home, Buy at Home,
Made at Home movement," declared
Mr. Charles W. Wise of the Wise Dry
Goods Company. “The surest way to
bring more diversified manufactories
to Augusta to swell the payrolls and
to keep Augusta money at home Is to
patronise home industry. We should
always give Augusta-made goods the
preference when we buy such articles
as are manufactured here, for at pres
ent there is enough that we must buy
that Is not made here. This store is
willing and ready to do Its part. We
will not only give our customers and
the buying public what they want but
we shall be glad to sell Augusta-made
goods In preference to any others.”
Keep the Money et Home.
Mr. von Karnp, of von Kamp,
Vauhan A Gerald, end the members
of that enterprising and progressive
firm have fallen heartily and enthus
iastically in with the Live at Home,
Buy at Home, Made at Home move
ment,
“Underlying this Live at Hame
movement I* the basic principle of
splendid cooperation, cooperation of
the kind that builds up cities anfl ac
complishes great big things.
"We believe In it. We endorse It
not only in so far as buying Augusta
made goods hut we shouljl extend this
Live at Horne movement to Include the
farmers of the Augusta section, buy
their produce In preference to that
shipped here from somewhere else,
and whenever we ran, when we buv,
first ascertain if the money we spend
can be kept at home—if so, keep it at
home.
"Our firm is ready to cooperate in
any practical way to popularize tlio
Live at Home movement. We want to
see it firmly and permanently estab
lished.”
Make It Permanent.
“It is a splendid movement,” said
Mr. C. H. Schneider, of C. H.
Schneider A Brother. "We would like
to see Live at Home Week continue
all the time. We are willing to co
operate In every possible way and \r,>
want to see everybody get the habit
of calling for Augusta-made goods”
Cannot Be Too Highly Praised.
Mr. J. Willie Levy does not think
that the Live at Home, Buy nt Home,
Made nt Home movement can he too
highly praised.
“A magnificent stroke of enterprise
on the part of the Herald." said Mr.
Levy, “but,” he added, "1 think now
that the movement has been adopted
by tlie public and does not belong ex
clusively to the Herald any longer. I
nm sure of It, because everybody seems
to he talking about it.
“We don’t know what we can do
here in Augusta, hut this Live at Home
movement, If it spreads like It should
and is practiced, will make Augusta
a much better and a much busier and
a much livelier city. There's no doubt
about that. Of course w'e are ready
and willing and anxious to do out
share."
Eat Home-Killed Meats and
Help the Farmer to Move
Smokehouse From the West
to His Own Farm
(Continued from Page Onp).
hotel and case, will have no other hut
home-killed meats, and getting thfll
habit next week of calling for home
killed meats and insisting that the
butchers supply what Is wanted, will
thereafter continue demanding home
killed meats, at least two important
things will soon have been accom
plished.
One of these accomplishments will
be that to help supply Augusta’s meat
supply there will be more beef cattle
raised in this section. The farmers
of the Augusta trade district will reap
Rome of the benefit and got some of
the money which, spent for meat In
Augusta, finds Its way Into the
pockets of the farmers of the middle
west who have been for so long a
time the feeders of the South. AVlien
he gets this money, for beef cattle or
for hogs, the farmer living In Augus
ta’s trade territory will spend It here
or at a point so close to Augusta that
It will be bound to come back here.
When the money goes to the western
farm or the chances are It Is gone for
good.
Another accomplishment will he
thnt such an enterprise as the Au
gusta Abattoir Company, which just
now needs substantial encouragement,
will receive the support it deserves.
There has been a great deal said
about the farmers of this section mov
ing their smokehouses from the west
to their own farms. Hereafter more
of them than ever before are going
to raise their own meat. It Is going
to be Just as easy for the farmers to
raise feedstuffs enough to fatten more
hoge and cattle than they will need
for their own consumption. Every
time an Augustan goes Into a butcher
shop and Insists upon having home
killed meat in preference to western
meat he will be helping the farmers
Would You
Trust A Man
whose surrroundings, mode of life, and food drink,
have combined to make him treacherous, indolent and
unreliable?
And food and drink are among the chief causes.
Coffee—one of the commonest beverages—contains
a drug, caffeine, which affects stomach, liver, heart
ind other organs.
Some persons are strong enough to stand the at
tacks of the coffee-drug, hut to most people it is a pois
on, and sooner or later is bound to tell.
If you find coffee is hurting you, quit it and try
POSTUM
This healthful food-drink is made of prime wheat
and a bit of wholesome molasses, carefully blended
and roasted. It contains the food elements of the
wheat and molasses and nothing else—nothing inju
rious or harmful.
Serve Postum piping hot and it is delicious and in
vigorating.
‘There’s a Reason” for POSTUM
irlilMAiisM
are always aggravated during
damp, changeable weather
and ordinary treatments are
often useless.
Such conditions need the oil-food
in Scott’s Emulsion to reduce the
injurious acids and strengthen the
organs to expel them.
Scott’s Emulsion, with careful diet
for one month, often relieves the
lame muscles and stiffened
joints and subdues the sharp, itSiA
unbearable pains when other
remedies have failed. Vi If
NO ALCOHOL IN SCOTTS. J)
14-el ‘Avia
of this section to move his smoke
house from the west to his own farm —
helping to keep thousands and thou
sands of dollars at home In the course
of a year.
During Live at Home AVeek, which
begin next Monday, there will he on
display at The Herald's City Market,
629 Broad Street some choice cuts of
home-killed meats—-such as are
slaughtered daily at Augusta’s splen
did abattoir.
CMMCT fan BIG
SEVER LEI TUESDAY
The contract for building the sower
on Camllld street wan awarded Tues
day afternoon to T. O. Brown & Son
for ♦9,396. The sewer will be 1,022
feet long and seven feet In diameter.
The contract was awarded at a Joint
meeting of the streets and drains and
health committees of city council. Bids
wore naked for both brick and con
crete as the material and the lowest
bidder for a concrete sewer gave a fig
ure of *13,238.
Tho drainage ditch between the
Wrlghteboro load and the Mllledge
ville road and between the Savannah
road and the Beaver dam ditch will be
dug by A. J. Twiggs & Sons, the
lowest tildderH, their hid being *3,760,
Contracts to build pipe sewers on
Druid Park avenue and Hickman road
were let to D. A, Bowe for *7BO and
*740, respectively.
The following were the concerns
bidding on the sower work: T. O.
Brown & Son, Augusta; AV. F. Bowe,
Augusta; Jones & Garrettson, Au
gusta; A. J. Twiggs K. Sun, Augusta;
McKenzie Construction company, Au
gusta; W. A. Young, Macon, Ga.; An
drew P. Stuart, Atlanta; Berry-Fort
ner Construction company, Katonton,
Ga.; Thompson & Moseley, Greens
boro, N. C\; Dyshard Construction
company, Atlanta; Vi. !6, Williams &
Co., Macon.
New Articles Being
Added Daily to
List ot Augusta
Made Goods
SEND IN YOUR LIST. LET’S
MAKE THIS LIST
COMPLETE
The Herald is in receipt of a
communication from Mr. Chas.
L. Mac Murphy, who adds a
number of articles to the list
below of Augusta made goods
and products. Read the list
carefully and send in your list
of additions.
The following is only a par
tial list of goods and articles
manufactured in Augusta mills
and factories. Read it over.
There are some surprises here
for you. Possibly, however,
you may know of some articles
not listed that are made in Au
gusta. If so kindly write a
postal card to the Live-at-
Home Editor of The Herald and
state what it is and what fac
tory makes it. A full and com
plete list is desired that dur
ing Live at Home, Trade at
Home, Made at Home Week,
November 16-21, there may be
a comprehensive display mada
of Augusta-made goods.
Automobile Tires.
Automobile Wind Shields.
Awnings.
Bread.
Brick.
Bed Springs.
Brooms.
Bologna Sausages.
Beer.
Boxes.
Boilers.
Blinds.
Candy.
Cigars.
Clothing.
Cabinets.
Castings.
Olay Piping.
Chimney Linings
Cotton Seed Oil.
Cotton Seed Meal.
Cotton Sed Hulls.
Curtain Cloth.
Cleansing Compound.
Cotton Batting.
Cotton Goods.
Dress Goods.
Duck.
Doors.
Flour.
Feltilizers.
Fire Brick.
Farm Machinery,
Harness.
Ice Cream.
Lap Robes.
Meat (home killed.)
Meal.
Mattresses.
Moldings.
Outing Flannel.
Overall Cloth.
Pulleys.
Picture Frames.
Printing.
Pottery.
Paint.
Rubber Stamps.
Sausages.
Sash.
Shafts.
Silk Thread.
Soda Water.
Sewer Pipe.
Sheeting.
Shirting.
Sail Cloth.
Towel Cloth,
Tiling.
Trunks.
Veneering.
Winnies.
Wagons.
Yarn.
Watch for window display
of these and other articles dur
ing Live at Home, Made at
Home, Trade at Home Week in
Augusta, November 16-21, -
SEVEN