Newspaper Page Text
TWO
BIG ADDITIONS
TO THE KHUPP
GUN WORKS
JbQorease Justified By Demands
of War. Governor of Warsaw
Captured. American Red
Cross Moves.
BsHln, (via tha Hague and London,
♦ sB6 a. m) —Dorman rnHualty lints Just
Issued record the deaths of two g<m
er&Js and the wounding of another.
EASY WAY TO KEEP
BABY'S SKIN HEALTHY
✓
How to Heal Skin Eruption* and Pre
vent Their Return.
Very few hablcs grow to childhood
without having Home sort of akin trou
ble. It may be only chafing, scalding,
or tooth rash. On the other hand. It
may be the worst kind of Itching eczema
or ringworm.
When I find a little one suffering like
that. 1 always advise the mother to do
this: Bathe the alok akin with warm
water and rselnol soap, pat dry with a
soft towel, and put on very gently a
thin «tlng of reslnol ointment. She
can dost a little good talcum powder
over the ointment If she Ukea. This al
most never fella to give INSTANT re
lief and a few such treatments generally
hat] the trouble.
Bathing dally with reslnol soap Is the
beat way I know to keep baby's skin
free from such Irritations and eruptions.
It la vary pure, soothing and lieHllng.
All druggists sell reslnol ointment nod
reslnol snap. For free samples, writs
to Ilept Sf-H, Haslnol. Baltimore, Mil
AT MODJESKA TODAY
JUSTICE
Thlg thrilling photo mrlo-drama
was scheduled for Tuesday. It
failed to arrive, therefore. It will
be shown today.
HIS TALENTED WIFE
Famous Keystone Comedy.
A CASE OF VANISHED BOND
An Edison Production.
HIS WEDDED WIFE
Vltagraph Production.
Plaza Hotel
BARBER SHOP
George Heintz, Prop.
I beg to announce that , I have
leased the Plaza Hotel Barber
Shop and Baths and am prepared
to give ths trade the very best
garvlce. Only first-class barbers
employed.
George Heintz, Prop.
J. H. Flint, Manager,
Do your Christmas shop
ping early and avoid the
rush. There’s no time like
the present.
It will pay to say “1 saw it
in The Herald.”
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
School Shoes for Children
Ever tried this More on School Shop*? If
not. w* believe you're m'snslng the beet School
Shoes tn Augusta.
Children's Shoes are a leading feature of
this Good Shoe Establishment.
Have you seen the Beautiful $1.1.00
Doll we are Kotn* to Rive away FRKKT
See Window and Ask the Man.
R. L. GARRETT, Mgr.
WE GIVE PURPLE STAMPS AND VOTES.
DOLL
FREE
General Alfred von Vrlelen was klll
en on November 11th and General von
Lepel Is the other commanding offi
cer reported killed on the field of bat
tle. General von Lepel was In com
mand of Ihe reserve Infantry division.
General Htenger, commander of the
53rd German Infantry brigade, is list
ed as having been severely wounded.
Governor Captured.
The Tngehlatts Poland correspon
dent reports the details of the capture
of Governor von Korff, of Warsaw,
Monday morning. It appears from
this account that the governor with
his Adjutant approached Kutno In an
automobile not knowing that the city
had already been ta.ken by the Ger
mans after bloody street fighting.
Suddenly the governor found himself
before the vanguard of German cav
alry and tried to escape but was over
taken by the Metz Dragoons and sur
rendered without resistance. He was
brought to Gnescn Province of Posen,
Monday night and oonfined In the
best hotel there.
The American Red Cross division
at Oleiwltz, In Prussian Hilesio, near
the Russian border expects shortly
to be moved to a more northerly spot.
By Krupp Family.
The capital of the Krupp Company,
which manufactures Germany’s big
guns and other war material Is to be
Increased from 70,000,000 to 250,000,-
000 marks, according to the proposals
of the directors which were submitted
to a general meeting of the company
at Kssen on November 12th. The In
crease Is Justified, It was stated by
the demand of war and by earlier ep
largements of the works, purchases of
coal fields and so forth, which locked
up considerable capital. The now
stork Issue will as usual he taken by
the Krupp family Part of the new
capital will be paid In on December
81st.
The directors also proposed a divi
dend of 12 per cent as against the 14
declared In the previous y“ar. The
directors gave three million marks to
ward the relief of the families of
soldiers employes, two million to the
employes furlough fund and one mil
lion to the pension fund.
WORLD’S SURGICAL CENTER-
Washington—Members of the Amer
ican College of Burgeons were pro
ceeding with plans today to make
Washington the world's surgical cen
ter, the aim they determined upon at
the eftncludlng session of their third
convention here. The movement will
he featured by a campaign to increase
the endowment fund of the college and
establish Its headquarters here.
Happy Livers
Free from Bile—Free from Accumula
ted Poisons That Should Be
Eliminated —Everything
Working Fins.
All This from One Little Hot Springs
Liver Button.
Down here at Hot Springs we are In
the business of curing folks of their
These Ultle buttons are the fin
est stimulators you cun Imagine.
They wake up lazy livers and put
them to work. When you don’t feel
rlskt the chances are thut your sew
erage system Isn't In proper working
order.
The liver Isn’t doing Us full duty.
The food you eat 4* not digesting prop
erly. it Is fermenting and throwing
-off poisonous gas. Take a little Liver
Button and It will take away all that
bile and waste material and leave you
feeling fine again.
You enn buy a 25 cent box of Hot
Springs Liver Huttons from almost
any drug store and if you want your
money back you can get It. If your
druggist won't supply you, send 25
cents and your name and address and
we «tll supply you direct. Watch for
the "dt* t slip" In every box. It is
worth a lot to you.
Anyhow, he sure to give a button
a trial. 'Phone your druggist to send
you a box.
Mol Springs Chemical Co., Dept. 12,
Hot Springs. Arkansas.
paralysis •sarES?
Ilf TW7Clmmk»‘i ftp««rial YUimhJ «nd N«r* Tablet*.
1 ******* 324 N. Tcalh 81 reel Philadelphia. Pa.
IWMiAN KO’B FILS EKMKDT
■ Sir GivM limtani ralitf In itching.
* llleeJimr or Protruding I’ilea, We.
The Ur. Uomnko Co, Philadelphia. Pa.
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
all me n ts.
W e have
t h o ti s finds
of nick peo
ple every
year to
practice on.
The formu
la used In
the com
poundlng of
Hot Spring*
Liver But
tons Is rap
idly becom
lrtg famous
ns being the
best ever
discovered.
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
DOLL
FREE
FIND MURDERED
iN IN BARREL
Shot Through Heart, Packed in
Barrel, Left on Corner in New
York. Discovered By Woman.
New York.—A mystery similar to
the famous Cast Side barrel murder
some years ago today, confronted local
police They are searching for the
clue for the murder of Luigi Macau
loso, aged 22, who wan shot through
the heart, his body stuffed Into a bar
rel, carried to a lonely street under
the Queensborough Bridge and left
there, to bo found early today before
the warmth had left the body. Ma
cauloso lived In that sentlon of Man
hattan’s East Hide best kpown to the
police as the home of gangsters and
gunmen. He himself had served a
sentence for carrying a pistol and de
tectives seeking to unravel the mys
tery of his death thought It due to a
feud between rival gangs.
Two men unloaded the barrel from a
‘ruck, rolled It to the sidewalk and
stood It on end. They then leaped
back to their truck, whipped their
horses and dashed away.
A woman who had seen the actions
of the men went to the barrel and
looked In. She saw the body which
had been stuffed Into It and hastily
called the pollen.
Hearty Response of People of
Augusta to Live at Home,
Trade at Home, Made at
Home Movement Augurs Well
For the Future and Marks
Beginning of Greater Things
(Continued from Preceding Page).
aTe asking themselves now. That’s en
couraging.
"I did not know before that so many
things we use every day were made
here In Augusta" others are saying.
An Undeveloped Market.
It Is apparent that the farmers and
truckers of this section have neglect
ed the market that Is right here In
Augusta for their products.
All day yesterday and all today
there have beeVi calls at The Her
ald’s City Market for country prod
uce. Dozens of women, Augusts,
housekeepers, have visited the
headquarters st No. 629 Broad
street searching for chickens and
eggs, country butter, vegetables
and produce of other kinds. What
has been sent In by the farmers
has hern easily and readily dis
posed of at fair prices. It has been
Impossible to supply the demand.
This should he an important and a
significant fact for the farmers. If
they cannot sell their cotton at former
prices received for the stuple they can
sell their country produce for cash.
Augusta provides the market. Augusta
housewives are ready to pay fair prices.
Permanent Market Needed.
For the reason that it has been Im
possible to secure from the farmers thp
country produce City Market head
quarters has been given over for Live
at Home Week principally to Industrial
exhibits: hut the response on the part
of Augusta housekeepers to the pro
posed plan of conducting a city market
for a week to try It out has demon
strated In nn unmistakable manner the
demand for and the necessity of a per
manent city nnrket here In Augusta
In other wotv's the people of Au
gusta are more \han willing to give
direct to the farmers of this section
the money that Is now spent here every
year for such food products as the
farmers of this section raise and which,
amounting to many hundreds of thou
sands of dollars, goes Into the pockets
of some other and remote section of
the country. The reason Augusta Is
Just now more than ever before con
cerned nhout this matter Is that the
people of Augusta are Just now begin
ning to realize the scope of the Live
nt Home Movement. Augusta Is the
market for the farmers of this section.
They secure their supplies here. If
Augusta Is -made the selling market
ns well ns the buying market for the
fanner he will have more money In
his purse or to his credit In the hank
and he will become, quite naturally, a
better customer of Augusta's shops
and stores. It is all based upon co
operation. through which both the
fanner and the city man amt woman
will benefit.
Farmers Invitsd Saturday.
Rut It 1s necessary that the
farmers meet the people of Au
gusta half way. For that reason
and to that end, and that an op
portunity may he afforded when
the farmeTs may establish trading
relations, laying the foundations
for a regular line of customers In
Augusta, the Open Air Market has
been arranged for Saturday of this
week.
The Open Air Market will he on the
500 and 600 blocks of Hroad street, and
Augusta housekeepers will visit that
part of town to give their orders. No
farmer In this section who has any
thing to aell In the way of country
produce -no matter what nor how
small the quantity-should miss this
opportunity. It means ready money
now and a regular Income, If the ad
vantage Is followed up, In the future.
The Open Air Market Is going to he
the most popular feature of live at
Home Week.
WohlraWtyan Team
Regains Lap Lost;
Repeated Sprints
New York. Repeated sprints that
almost overlapped held cyclists In the
si a-day race at top speed for more
than an hour during the night and es
tablished a new record for the time.
Today 18 of the 18 teams that started
still whirled over the bIR bowl at Mad
ison Square garden At the close of
one of these burst* of speed the Wohl
rab-ltyan team won back the lap they
lost Monday night and aantn took rank
with the leaders. Purina the early
morning George Seres of the team of
Seres and Dupy developed water on
the knee and retired from the race.
At the same time Frank Cavanagh of
Plerce.v and Oavanogh retired because
of a severe cold Pupy and Plercey
combined In a new team.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
*• . - ,£/;
Otis Skinner in “The Silent Voice,” at the Grand Tonight
Charlotte News-Observer Says: “Otis Skinner
Has Superb Play, The Silent Voice, One ot
the Extraordinary Attractions ot the Year”
Mr. Otis Skinner will appear at the
Grand tonight in his new play, “The
Silent Voice.” The play Is from the
pen of Jules EskePt Goodman. The
Charlotte News and Observer in
| speaking of the company and play had
the following to say:
“One of the most powerful plays
seen in Charlotte In a long while was
that of “The Silent Voice,” with Mr.
Otis Skinner In the leading role, at
the Academy last night. The play is
In four acts and was written by Jules
Eckert Goodman, founded on a story
by Gouverneur Morris, which appear
ed several years ago in a leading mag
azine.
"The plot is one that readily lends
Itself to highly dramatic development,
which In the hands of Mr. Skinner,
found an adequate and altogether
satisfying interpretation. Mr. Skinner,
who Is quite a local as well as na
tional favorite, has visited Charlotte
frequently and he has perhaps more
warm admirers here than any other
actor on the American stage today.
Last night’s vehicle was one admir
ably adapted to Mr. Skinner’s art and
In it he revealed himself with even
fuller and more masterful emphasis
than ever before. The supporting
company was one of poise and talent
and afforded all the assistance that
the star might' desire.
The story of the play is familiar to
everyone. It is that of a wealthy
New Yorker of middle age who, In the
enjoyment of bachelorhood and all
the other good things, falls In love
with the ward and marries her. He Is
a man of middle age while she is
young and full of the Joy of life. She
casts herself Into the society to which
her position entitles her and thus is
thrown In the company of a young
man who makes desperate love to
her. The husband, noticing the in
fatuation of the young mjm for his
wife, becomes almost an agnostic and
hies himself into other channels of
society. He deals with the needy, the
poverty-stricken and the despised, and
thus regains his hold on life. His
wife all the time has remained true
Feels Better Than She
Has For Five Years
Mrs. All. Sloasker, New MaUmoru,
Ohio, writes t
"Dr. Swan a Livsr and Kidney Rem
edy cured me of a pain 1 had in the
side for five years. I feel better now
tban I ever did in my life.”
When the liver is cranky and
the kidneys not working as they
should, the whole system gets
out of time. To keep your pre
cious bodily organs up to the
notch, use Dr. Swan’s Liver and
Kidney Remedy.
Health is too precious a thing
to neglect. At the first sign of
Biliousness, Dyspepsia, or Con
stipation, get a 50 cent bottle of
Dr. Swan’s Liver and Kidney
Remedy. Keeps you in prime
condition. Invaluable for all the
family. None gentiine without
the signature. National Remedy
Co., New York.
Rhaumatic, Nmiralgiac and other pains stop
whan you apply En-Ar-Co Oil, known for
W years as Tha Wonderful Japanese Oil."
CLOSING OUT BOYS’ SUITS
For boys from 6 to I*. every
suit In our stock that formerly
sold all the way up to $6.25. we
are selling the rest of the week
for
$3.95
MS C RE ARY’S
to him and in the closing act the two
are brought together again and in the
closest accord. The conclusion of the
play Is altogether wholesome.
Of the art of Mr. Skinner volumes
might be written and then the half
would never be told. It Is enough to
say that it is pre-eminent. Mrs. Skin
ner appears as “Mildred Hallam,” Eu
genie Woodward is “Mrs. Heloise De
Lorme,” while George Gaul is “Bobby
De Lorme, Star’s nephew.” All are
excellent. Reference to the play with
out the consideration of the excellence
of the stagecraft would be short of
the mark. It was beautiful and In
keeping with the production. All In
all, the play was one of the most en
joyable of the year. In recognition
of the merit of the piece and as a
testimonial to Mr. Skinner, there was
a capacity house present last night."
CAPTURE WARSAW’S GOVERNOR.
London, 3:35 p. m.—Among the Rus
sian prisoners captured by the Ger
mans in the battle of Kutno were the
governor of Warsaw and his staff, ac
cording to a Berlin telegram for
warded to Reuter's Telegram Com
pany from Amsterdam.
Get Rid of That Miserable Feeling.
You may ’.earn something from the
experience of Mrs. William Troute,
Ilion, N. Y., who was sick for a long
time from a badly desordered stomach.
“I felt miserable all of the time,” she
writes. “I was tired and had no ap
petite. A friend advised me to take
Chamberlain's Tablets. I did so and
my appetite Improved and I gained
rapidly In health.” For sale by all
dealers.
FOR RENT
No. Street. Rooms. Price.
408 Taylor St. 9 SIB.OO
802 Telfair St 5 18.00
814 Phillip St 6 19.00
821 Phillip St 6 18.00
1711 Walker St * 12.00
449 Reynolds St 4 11.00
445 Watkins St 5 15.00
1845 Jenktna St 6 20.00
1705 Jenkins St 5 20.00
106 Reynolds St 6 10.00
485 Reynolds St 8 26.00
120 Centre St., (store &
932 Reynolds St 9 35.00
441 Walker St. . 9 40.00
441(4 Walker St 5 30.00
1041 Broad St 12 40.00
1545 Broad St 6 12.50
1347 Ellis St 3 s’r,o
Eve St. near W r . Way 5 22.00
429 Calhoun St 5 22.50
902 Centre St 7 ...... 22.50
17'IS Gwinnett St 5 JO.OO
1470 Sllco* St 4 12.00
1468 Cooper St 3 6.00
712 Kollock St 4 13.50
644*4 Broad St 5 33.33
Lockhart, Lucky & Co.
211 SEVENTH ST.
Telephone 640.
For boys from 10 to 18, every
Norfolk suit, every serge, diago
nal and other suits that we for
merly sold up to sl2 50, we are
selling the rest of the week
for
$5.45
&OHNEIHMIT3
Ladies' New Fall
Ladies’ new Fall Suits, two hundred and fifty
in this lot. These suits are ours at our own price
and now on sale. The materials are magnificent
broadcloths, garbadines, poplins, serges, etc,, best
linings and newest styles, worth S2O to $45. We have
divided these in three lots at
$8.75 $11.75 $14.95
Ladles’ All Wool Sweaters
Ladies’ new all-wool Sweaters, newest styles, in all
colors and color combinations; special $1.90
Sale of Pret»t»y New
new Fall Coats in beautiful mixtures,
nW College Coats in the newest novelty plaids, in
cluding the black and white plaids and all color
combinations, and handsome black tailored coats, at
$5.00 $6.75 $9.75
Blankets and Comforts
FINE COMFORTS
Extra fine quality, sat
een covered Comforts,
filled with good grade
cotton, and a big buy
Tomorrow,at, QO
each
MORE COMFORTS
Large size, good cotton
filled Comforts, worth
and made to sell for
$2.00, special for this
tomorrow sale 98c
WOOL BLANKETS
All pure lambs’ wool
Blankets, full 11-quai’-
ter size. These good
values, d»0 QO
pair «y«Js*/0
Dress Goods and Silks
FINE SUITINGS, ETC.
Full 60 inches wide,fine
camel’s hair suitings,
wool serges, poplins,
plaids, etc., and full 54-
inch satin-faced West
of England broadcloths,
$2.00 values, qo
at, yard i/OC
FINE BLACK SATIN
Five hundred yards,full
36 inches wide black
satin, every thread
pure silk, to sell £A
at, yard Di/C
SCHNEIDER’S
SfI&ESDAY, NOV. TET.
GRAY BLANKETS
Large size heavy gray
wool Blankets, never
sold before for less than
double the QO
price, pair .... JOC
COTTON BLANKETS
Large 11-quarter size,
white and gray cotton
Blankets, special for
tomorrow qq
pair tfuC
JUNGLE BLANKETS
Babies’ Jungle Blank
kets, large size, pretty
animal patterns, special
tomorrow,
VELVETS
Fine velvet, 25-inch cos
tume velvets and bro
caded trimming velvets,
in all colors; $1.50 val
ues, special for /*A
yard OiJC
SHEPHERD CHECKS
Fifty bolts black and
white shepherd check
dress goods and fancy
suitings, all the new
shades and qq
checks, yd... eji/C