The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1914-current, November 20, 1914, Home Edition, Page TEN, Image 10

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TEN WHAT TO BUY YOUR FATHER FOR CHRISTMAS In the I>< ■ ember Woman's Home Com panion appears « list of 1,000 suggestions Jor Christmas The reader is told what to buy for mother, father, gr andmother, grandfather, the baby, the maid, and h<j on. Following are some suggestions as to what to buy for father. Phonograph records Phonograph cabinet I mbroila. hook handle Cuff links In gold or silver S< rap basket of .Japanese wicker Writing p per with engraved address pa /(if fbe sure it’s a good one) Pad of shaving paper Fountain pen 1 Milford In brown leather Foot st oo upholstered In leather heather brief-case heather case for papers Heading glass horn handle better opener, silver or brass Grandfather or banjo clock Silk shirts Box of neckties fillk socks Mom grit mined <f Initialed handker chiefs Rox of suspenders Half brushes in ebony Clothes brushes RESINOL HEALS RAW, ITCHING SCALY SKINS No mat tor bow. lonic you have ho*n tortured and disfigured by itching, burn ing, raw or scaly akin humors, Just put a little of that soothing, antiseptic Ileal nol Ointment on the sores ami the suf fering stops right there! Healing begins that very minute, and In almost every ease your skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the mon ey you threw away on tedious, useless treatments. Ttesinol Ointment arid Tlesinol Soap clear away pimples, blackheads, and dandruff. Prescribed by doctors for in years and sold by all druggists. For trial size of each free, write to Resinol, I»ept. 40-11, Hiitlttiore, Md. VALUE OF HYOMEI It's the Safe Catarrh Remedy. Nothing Better for Head Colds or Bronchitis. Do not endanger your health by taking strong drugs into the stomach . In the hope of curing catarrh, coughs. g ;|lhnui uinl head colds. At the best f they usually do little more than upset 4 tis» digestive organs. Dm* Myomel, which Is nature's own remedy for all such diseases. It is a combination of lieul ng oils, gums and balsams, which, when breathed through the Hyomel inhaler, saturates the air you breathe with its curative and health-giving medication it , i b ars stuffed up bead like magic. Hyomel quickly goes to all the sore and inflamed tissues lining the nose, throat and bronchial tubes. Its anti septic healing begins at once—dull headaches, distressing choking, con stant snuffling, and unclean dis charges of the nose surely cease. Hyomel is not only the most pleas ant. but the most natural treatment, and very inexpensive. All druggists have it. Re sure to get the complete outfit that contains Inhaler and bot tle of liquid. T. G. Howard will sell you Hyomel on the “No-cure-no-pay" plan. Purely try It today you have nothing to lose on this generous of fer. PIANO LESSONS. BARRINGTON BRANCH Peai>od.v Conservatory Plano diplo ma, 1#09: subsequently studied In Berlin. Vienne ami London with GAHKILOM rTBCII, GOPUWKKY, and MARK HAMBOUHO. Telephono 69SS. AT Modjeska Today “THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY"— Ep.sode 21 "AN INCOMPETENT HERO." A Keystone Istugli. "THE HILL OF LIFE" A Vllngraph Production. "A MOTHER’S INFLUENCE" A Majestic Production "MOTHERHOOD" A Beauty Production, with .Margarita ITachei and Harry Pollard In the Title Bole. A residence without electric service is scarcely more mod ern today than a residence without water service. Central Garden’s Exhibit Of Home-Grown Flower* in An drew* Brothers' show window Wed nesday. Central Garden Phonos, Ore'll Hnun> ■ Night and Sunday Society SM of clothes hangers Scarf for dresser Pag for soiled collars Tie rack, swastika shape Shoe-blacking kit Kvening studs of pearl Holder for newspaper at table engagement record New card plate Tomorrow: What to Huy Daughter for Xmas. * * * HOW TO SCALE FISH COMFORTABLY In the December Woman s I lonia Companion appears a department of househo d news called "The. Kxchange” in which readers contribute Ideas which they have developed out of their own experience. A Mississippi woman tell* as follows, how to scale fish with a min imum of discomfort: “Hi lling fish as generally done is a disagreeable task us scales fly in every dire tion. I have discovered that fish our. I.e S'.ibd without tills trouble If the. are held under water in a large pan during the operation. Have Just enough water to cover the fish nicely." CHILDREN’S CLASS AT Y. W. C. A. GYMNASIUM. The children’s class will meet Sat urday morning from 10 to 11 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. John Moore Walker came over from Macon last night and will be with Mrs. John H. Connelly and Miss Caroline Beane until Sun day. Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Lamar will la* interested to learn of the birth of a bright little son, who will be called Thomas Gresham. Miss Daisy Jackson in visiting Mrs. Reuben Clark In Savannah. Mrs. Moses Levy returned last night from Savannah. The many friends *»f Mr. George P. Gleason will be very glad to learn that although still at the City Hos pital he Is steadily improving from injuries sustained in a runaway ac cident several weeks ago. MRS. STOVALL ENTERTAINED. The Savannah Press says: “Mrs. William Garrard gave a ( harming little afternoon lea today at her home on Lafayette Square for Mrs. Pleasant A. Stovall, wife of the, American minister to Switzerland, who has recently returned from Ku rope for a two months’ stay at home. She has been spending several days with relatives in Augusta and arrived this morning with tier daughter, Miss Pleasant Stovall, to visit Mrs. Gar i.ird, and the tea this afternon gave a number of her old friends an oppor tunity of meeting her informally and very pleasantly. Mrs. Garrard’s home was adorned with many lovely flowers. In the drawing room there were pale pink chrysanthemums and daisies and pink carnations, and In the library Ameri can Beauty roses, red dahlias and ear nations. The table from which re freshments were served had a beau- ! tifut gold colored centerpiece embroid ered In pale pink flowers. and to deepen this pretty color effect pink and yellow chrysanthemums were used, and the candles were shaded in pink and yellow. Assisting Mrs. Garrard In serving wen* Mrs A. <\ Read. Mrs. Krnest North. Miss Kugenia Johnston, Miss Maud Thomas, Mrs. Henry Cunnnig hnin. Mrs. Abram Minis, Mrs. George Posen*. Mrs. Burton Mason, Miss Deborah Adams. Miss Pleasant Sto vall and Miss Eleanor Cosens. THOMPSON BLACK. The marriage of Mina Annie Laurie Black and Mr. John Prank Thompson «U an event Interesting to many friends and took place yesterday af ternoon at half after five o clock al the home of Mr. Avery on tipper Broad Street. After the ceremony which was performed hy Ucv. Thomas Walker, huffet refreshments were served. The Pride was most attractive In a wed ding k"W» "f lustrous satin and car ried roses Congratulations are being extended the happy and popular young couple. The Rev. and Mrs, F. M. Light foot, who have been visiting North Augusta friends, returned today to their home In Clinton. MISS BRYANT ENTERTAINS INFORMALLY. Miss Ada Bryant entertained very pleasantly Monday evening at the home of Mrs. .1. M Wells on Taylor Street. Her guests were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Anderson. Mr. B. Mason. Miss Idled McCarty. Mrs. Mulligan. Miss Jessie Waldon. Mrs Crumpley. Mrs. Helmut!). Mrs. Hutchinson, Miss Al ma farter. Mr. Johnny Wells, Mr. Willie Helmut!). Music performed hy Mr Johnny Wells, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Joe I Anderson. Light refreshments were served. AUGUSTA PLAYERS TO BE ENTERTAINED IN SAVANNAH. The Augusta men who will come down the end of the week to play off s tennis match with a Savannah team on Saturday and Sunday at the <!olf Club will he entertained at a supper and dance after the game on Satur day A number of young girls will assist Miss Cosens, chairman of the house committee, al tea In the after noon and at supper after the game. They are Miss t’ardo Kreneon, Mtss IMlth Bryson, Miss Dorothy Karow, Miss Kmma Walthour, and Miss Kath erine Ives. The Augusta visitors will he Mr. Frank Capers, Mr. John Devoreuux, Mr Mettaner Kennedy. Mr. Henry Garrett and Mr. Bothwell Lee. The Savannah players are: Mr. W W. Gordon. Jr. Mr. Fred Bradley. Mr W. C. Codman. Mr T. I\ Good body and Mr. Stillman Bain, MISS BATTLE RETURNS FROM NEW YORK. Friends of Miss Margaret Battle, as well as admirers of her beautiful voice will he delighted to learn that I she has returned from New York, where she has been studying under Isadore Luckstone. and will again be | identified w ith the choir of th» First Presbyterian Church, and will be heard Sunday at both morning and evening services THE BELGIAN AID WORK PROGRESSING FINELY. The work that Is being done by the Augusta Womans Club for the relief of the Belgians. Is progressing splen didly Already several substantial checks have been sent In and many yards of material which will he con verted as soon ns possible Into good wnrm clothing. All ntumt the city In the prominent plaice have been placed a box and PECULIAR SONG OF WOMAN’S LOVE A new song in New York which is the latest craze with the fair sex is a love ballad called “For Every Smile You Give Me You Caused a- Thousand Tears,” the story of which tells of woman’s loyalty through every adv< Ity, even at the cost of a breaking heart. Following is part of the chorus: For Ev’ry Smile You Gave Me You Caused A Thousand Tears > Chorus. ifb-S Si s I For ev - ’ry smile you gave to mp, You li)*- R:* UM- *, L„! I '''caused a thou sand tears,., For ev - ’ry \p 4~ -1 r*p m *3 d.iy of hap-pi-ness I’ve lived a thousand §ir "i” y years, I played the game of love and 'l'' -i'' - Hr"l lost, You cheated and I paid the cost, For pk m m .L :i i •v - 'ry smile you gave to me, You C<vjrlfbt i'JM Monr'• 11. Roieufeli Although the song has only been out a few days the printers are unable to supply the demand. It is said to he one "f the most realistic songs which New Voik has known In many years. these have been contributed to most 1 generously. Ihe office, No. .305 Leonard Build i ing, will be in charge tomorrow, Sat urday, of Mrs. Charles Phinizy, Mrs. Thomas Barrett, Mrs. Thomas Loy- Ichs and Mrs. G. R. Stearnes, who will receive contributions of either cloth ing or money, from ten till two in the morning and from three till six in the afternoon. Mrs. J. T. Smith, of North Car oline, who has been visiting her sis ters, Mrs. Ira Mock and Mrs. J. G. Metis, has returned to her home. Mr. and Mrs. VV. H. Mock, who were here to see Mrs. Smith, have returned to thier home in Hylvanla. MARRIAGE OF MISS WHITTLE AND MR. E. L. BAGBY. Interesting to friends throughout the ■ city will be the announcement of the ! marriage of Miss Hattie Whittle and j Mr. Edward L. Bagby, which took | place at eight-thirty last evening, Rev. Thomas Walker officiating and the ceremony being attended by a num ber of close friends. The bride was very pretty in a stylish tailored suit with a picture hat in black, and was attended by Miss Lula Harris, who also wore a tailored suit of blue with a black velvet hat. The groom's best man was Mr. Roy ■ Bagby. The young couple are receiving con j glut illations at 710 Chafee Avenue. FOR MRS. PETERSON. Mrs. Lester Peterson, of Florida, who is visiting relatives, Mrs. J. R. Gibbs. Mrs. Walter Bearden and Mrs. Herbert Thomas, formed a congenial little party at a spend-tlie-day party , Tuesday with Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Peterson being the guest of honor. LAKESIDE BAZAAR STILL SUCCESSFUL. The bazaar which is being run by the Lakeside Boat Club is still doing a fine business. Last night there were many al supper and still more out for I the dance which Is enjoyed every might with Balk’s fine orchestra in at | tendance. The fancy articles which 'are so beautifully displayed have met jwith a ready sale and If it were not that they have been added to daily there would not he so many pretty things to lie seen. Drop in tonight and have supper and enjoy the dance. Miss Katherine .leard had a few friends in yvlth her very Informally !thls morning to "sew for the Bol ' glans." THE “DAY OF REST" AND HUMAN EFFICIENCY. The refreshing Influence of the weekly "day of rest" on a person sub jected to the strenuous routine of a busy life Is a feature which he him self can duly appreciate in the effects jon his "feelings" and "spirits." 'The PROVISIONS FOR THE ARMY IN THE FIELD. Importance of keeping body well nourished. In time nf war, the greatest effort Is always made toward cutting off the enemy s base of supplies. It Is the well-nourished people who fight the i strongest and live the lougi-al and con tribute most to human progress. Is your stomach doing its duty—does it convert food into good blood and tis sue? ltr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discov ery has been so successful in the treatment of Indigestion, that thou sands of former sufferers owe their ' good health of today to its wonderful power, and testimonials prove it. It arouses the little muscular fibres 'lnto activity and causes the gastric Juices to thoroughly mix with the food you cat, simply because it supplies the i stomach with pure, rich blood It's | w eak. Impure blood that onuses stom ach weakness. Get good blood through the use of Dr Pierce's Gohlcn Medical I Discovery, and you will have no more 1 Indigestion. It is the world's proved blood pvtrl ' fler. It’s not a secret remedy tor Its 'ingredients are printed on tlie wrap ' per Stm t to take it today and before another day has passed the impuri ties of the blood will begin to leave your body through the liver, kidneys, bow els and skin, and in a few days | you w ill know by your steadier nerves, i firmer step, keener mind, brighter | eyes and clearer sktn that the bad • blood Is passing out. and new. rich, pure blood in filling your veins and art cries. The same good blood will cause plm ; pies. acne, ecteniu and all skin erup | tloixs to dry up and disappear. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Is the helpful remedy that neartv every one needs. It contain* uo alcohol or narcotics of any kind. THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA. 1 efficiency of the working man, the length of the working day the inter jection of pauses for rest in the ached- I ule of labor for persons of different 1 ages and stations in life—questions of the sort are constantly arising for solution on a scientific basis. Not ; (Oily in the field of manual labor, but also in the case of the school child, ihe office boy, the factory girl, the banker and the merchant, efficiency is the keynote of the times. Fatigue is the enemy of efficiency; and to detect ami cornpensat • for or overcome, it ia ihe duty of those concerned with the promotion'of human welfare. In view of this, says the Journal of the American Medical Association, . of more than passing interest to , know that Dr. Martin and some of his associates In the laboratory of physi ology at the Harvard Medical School, • have been making a careful study of ;the whole question of fatigue and ef ficiency from a physiological stand point. A long series of experiments j have been made on first year medical | students who were following a regu r I Far routine of school work during six (lays of each week. The routine was j interrupted weekly by the Sunday re cess, an interval occupied variously by the students, but in no case In precisely the manner of the work days. The daily observations made on these persons during several weeks show that at the beginning of the week the nerve reaction tends to be high, that from then until the end of the week there is a fairly contin uous decline, and that following the interruption of the routine by the in tervention of Sunday it returns to the original high point. The decline is interrupted as a cumulative result of general fatigue Incident to routine. What is even more significant, however, is the ad ded fact that a pronounced break In the routine-—such as the “day of rest" occasions may bring about a return of sensitiveness to a high point, or in other words, it restores the nerv ous tone. Studies continued In this direction should lead to some useful conclusions regarding the maximum of work, with respect to both its dura tion and type, that should determine the conditions under which the or ganism of man may be maintained without depletion. | CAN WOMEN STOP WAR? In the November Woman’s Home Companion great emphasis is laid on j a chapter reproduced from Olive j Schreiner’s “Woman and Labor," in which the suggestion is made that ! women can stop war if they are given greater voice in the management of governments. A brief extract from Mrs. Schreiner’s argument follows: "There is, perhaps, no woman who could look down upon a battlefield covered with slain, but the thought would rise in her, “So many mothers' sons! So many young bodies brought into the world to lie there! So many months of weariness and pain while hones and muscles were shaped with in! So many hours of anguish and struggle tha breath might be! So many baby mouths drawing life at women’s breasts —all this, that men might lie with glazed eyeballs, ana swollen faces, and fixed, blue, un closed mouths, and great limbs toss ed!’ And we cry, ’Without an inex orable cause, this must not be!’ No women who is a woman says of a hu man body ‘lt Is nothing!* “Woman will end war when her voice is fully and clearly heard in the governance of states—because, on this one point, and on this point al most alone, the knowledge of woman, Won’t You Give Us That Promised Try Just Bring Us $3 and WE’LL DO THE REST Guarantee Shoes Carry More Style, Better Material, Lower Price. So Let Your Next Pair Be From GUARANTEE SHOE CO. lOth and Broad - Augusta, Qa. HV sia liijiii^mm WWMwm IS W ' : iWw ill! y ] iiliitiiliy FSLI thm (M h|k< « Care in the making means quality in the candy. First in the selection of every ingredient —then in the blending of the selected ingredients —then in the packing of the finished product every step is watched and checked with care by Every piece in every box is pure— fresh—delicious! L. A. Gardelle C. T. Goetchius & Bros. Hotel Bon Air Summerville Drug Co. Land Drug Co. HUYLER’S COCOA, LIKE HUYLER’S CANDY, IS SUPREME simply as woman, is superior to that of man. She knows the history of human flesh; she knows its cost; he doee not. “In a besieged city, it might well happen that men in the streets might seize upon statues and marble carv ings from public buildings and gal leries and hurl them in to stop the breaches made in their ramparts by the enemy, unconsideringly and mere ly because they came first to hand, not valuing them more than had they been paving stones. One man, how ever, could not do this —the sculptor. He, who, though there might be no work of his own chisel among them, yet knew what each of these works of art had cost, knew by experience and long years of struggle and study and the infinite toil which had gone to the shaping of even one limb, to the carving of even one perfected outline, he could never so use them without thought or care. Instinctively he For That Next Pair of Shoes You'll Have Cause To Congratulate Your self IF YOU DO. would seek to throw in household goods, even gold and silver, all the city held, before he sacrificed its works of art; “Men’s bodies are our woman’s works of art. Given to us power to control, we will never carelessly throw them in to fill up the gaps in ambi tions and greeds. The thought would never come to us as women, ‘Cast in men’s bodies; settle the thing so!'” ANTI-GOSSIP CLUB. A group of progressive wemen of Memphis has organized a movement which could well be followed to ad vantage by the women of other cities. It is culled the Anti-Gossip Club of which the Memphis News-Scimitar makes the following mention: One of the interesting features of last year's work of the Current Topics Department of the Nineteenth Cen tury Club was the organization of the Anti-Gossip Club. Mrs. Mary L. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. Beecher, chairman of the department, decided that there were enough cur rent topics of real interest to women Without indulging in petty gossip of “she said" and “I heard” variety. So at her suggestion, the class formed an association for the suppression of gossip by not listening to it. This Anti- Gossip Club will continue through the present ymr, and the current topics class an example to the rest of the club in the manner in which it separates the wheat from the chaff, and absorbs all the real news of the day, paying no attention to idle ru mors. Constipation. When troubled with constipation take Chamberlain’s Tablets. They are easy to take and produce no griping | or other unpleasant effect. For sale J by all dealers. Your Feet