Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20.
CASH
“bargains
10 pounds Granulated
Sugar 60 c
2-lb. Bucket Flake White
J .ard 22 c
&-lb. Bucket Flake White
Lard .. . . 53'
Arbuckle's Coffee, ground 220
Wesson's Salad Oil,
2-lb. can .. .. 27C
Sweet or Irish Potatoes,
best stock, peck .. .. . -25 c
White Artichokes, peck 40'
Red or Yellow Onions, -
peck -35 C
Bell Teppers, Head Lettuce,
Spinach, Beets, Carrots, Celery,
Egg Plants, Green Snap Beans;
in fact, I carry almost complete
line of both home-grown and
Florida Vegetables, at popular—
cash prices.
L. A. GRIMUD
210 CUMMINGS STREET
PHONE 1305.
Just turn a switch or press
a button and flood the room
with light—if you live in an
electric home. It’s very dif
ferent if you do not.
■RELIANCE”
Rubber Roofing
GUARANTEED— ,
2 Ply 7 years
3 Ply 10 years
Without recoating or any at
tention from day it is laid.
WHALEY BROS.
PHONE NO. 3247.
Read Herald “Wants”
A Display at City Market Headquarters
—of—
BLUE RIBBON
8. C. BUFF ORPINGTONS.
Bred in Augueta.
Took Eve Blue Rffibaca out of seven entries August*. Poultry Aa
saciatMm 1914 tSuyw.
SCver Cup for twist disptar. varieties rrmpettwy
Draft ten to see this Interesting esMWL
R. W. WHITAKER.
Telephones Mi. WBJ-J. 892 Pfa* Street. Augusta, Ota.
GOODS THAT REVEAL A MAN AT
HIS VERY BEST
The man satisfied with less than the best in hats and furnishings is not playing
the game fair. We seek trade from men not afraid of our judgment of styles and of
values. Once we get a man’s trade, we hold it steadfast, because we give value receiv
ed down to the very last penny.
HATS THAT REVEAL A MAN AT HIS VERY BEST
61«<coir
$5.00 STYLE, $3.00 VALUE <tO Afl
OUR PRICE
SHIRTS
To see our line of Shirts means that you will buy from us. All the most popular
patterns are here. You can’t fail to find just what you want. Prices ranging from
SI.OO to $5.00.
One lot of Shirts, regular $1.50 values, on sale Saturday only at SI.OO.
One.lot of Shirts, regular 85c values, Saturday only 55c.
Neckwear, Underwear, Hose, Gloves, Arrow Brand Collars. The most up-to-date
line in the city. •
DIETZ BROS.
“THE STORE FOR MEN.” 1022 BROAD ST.
GRAY HAIR
Darkened—S ur e P o p—So
Evenly No One Can Tell.
When your hair turns gray, faded,
streaked with gray or prematurely
gray, simply apply, on retiring, like a
shampoo, Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer
to hair and scalp. Soon the gray dis
appears and the hair becomes beauti
fully dark, so evenly and completely
(even to edges where hair joins the
scalp) that no one can tell you use
anything. Althougs not a dye'. Q-Ran
acts on the hair roots and makes the
hair dark, lustrous, soft, fluffy, thick,
healthy and abundant and stops itch
ing scalp and dandruff. Q-Ran is a
simple, harmless, clean preparation,
not sticky or messy, and makes a
splendid hair dressing. Money back
if it doesn't satisfy you in every way.
Only 50c for a big 7-oz. bottle ht
Frost’s Pharmacy, 502 Broad St., Au
gusta, Ga. Out-of-town people sup
plied by arail.
To Cure Catarrh
Purify the Blood
Reason it Out, Where Does it
Start the Mucus From ?
Innumerable catarrh sufferers have
cured themselTes by purifying their blond
with S. S. S. Catarrh often inyades the
entire system before It chokes the nasal
passages. It becomes so chronic and ex
tensive that, the stomarh, liver, kidneys,
bronchia 1 tubes and most of the glands
are Involved without such serious condi
tions being realized. Catarrh may be
the result of some serious blood trouble
of former years, and this is only one of
the many peculiar effects of Impure blood.
Now S. S. S„ in Its influence upon the
mucous surfaces, causes those catarrhal
Bccretlons to be changed or converted
Into a substance easily, quickly, and nat
urally expelled from the body. It so
changes this mucus that It is not the
ropy, clogging stuff that plugs the noße,
chokes the throat, causes severe bowel
trouble, upsets the stomach and contam
inates the food just entering the blood.
It Is often difficult to - convince catarrh
sufferers that chronic cough, chest pains,
gagging, fetid breath and other symp
toms are only the local evidence of deep
seated trouble. Get a bottle of S. S. S.
today and try It. You will get good re
sults, real benefit and soon be aware of
a gradual cleaning up and a check to the
progress and dangers of catarrh. Avoid
substitutes. S. S. S. is prepared only by
The Swift Specific Co.. 61 Swift Bldg*
Atlanta, Ga. They conduct a medical de
partment for free advice that is worth
while consulting.
KARLSRUHE SEE
SEA TUPS FOR
THE EIEME
Former Passengers of the Van
• Dyck, Seized By German
Cruiser, Tell of Capture of
Seventeen Vessels Off South
American Coast.
New York.—How (he German cruiser
Karlsruhe set traps for vessels flying
oof nations at war with Gefrmany was
told by former passengers of the Ham
port and Hiolt Liner Van Dyck, cap
tured by the Karisruhe \wiile enroute
from Buenos AvVes to New York. The
passengers arrived lieVe today on the
steamship Sao I’aulo from Para.
Captain Hans Fritsoh of the Ger
man naval reserve commanding the
steamer Asuncion, to which those aboard
the Van Dyck were first transferred
gave the pnsseng Vs the information.
Captain Frit sell saVi that the Karlsruhe
was constantly accompanied by four
captured merchant vessels manned by
prize crews. The flotilla spread out
over a line about 15f> miles long. When
a vessel flying the enemy’s flag was
sighted by one ship, the wireless noti
fied the Karlsruhe which with superior
speed would dash In and capture the
pvize.
Had Taken Seventeen.
Captain Fritsch said that the Karls
ruhe had captured 17 ships In or ner*r
equatorial Atlantic waters.
Daniel Idndo of New York as spokes
man for the 114 former passengers on
the Van Dyck aboard the Sao Paulo
told the following story of the capture
of the Van Dyck:
"The Van Dyck loft Buenos Ajteg on
October loth, with 198 passengers and a
crew of 210. The British cruiser Bris
tol convoyed the ship between Rio Ja
neiro and Bahia.
At Great Speed.
"On the morning of October 26th after
we left Bahia we saw a gray war ves
sel coming in our direction at great
speed. Soon we found out that the
worship was the Karlsruhe and that the
Van Dyck was a prize of war. In the
wake of the cruiser there came the
steamship Farn which we learned later
was a captured vessel.
"A long boat filled with officers and
men then put off from the (Yuiser. Of
ficers came aboard and after inspect
ing the ship’s papers informed us that
we would be transferred to another ves
sel and taken into some port.
"Three other vessels also came up.
They were the Rio Negro, the Asuncion
and the Indrani. The fiVst two used
to be vessels of the Hamburg-American
line: the Indrani was a captured ves
sel. The next morning the passengers
were taken to the Asuncion.
Six Days Patrol.
"The Asuncion with 511 persons
aboard patrolled north and south over
a path sixty miles long for six days.
That wag done to prevent news of the
captuVe of the Van Dyck from becom
ing known. The Karlsruhe was watch
ing for the steamship Vestrla, which was
bound south and reported to be nearby.
"Captain Fritsch told us that the
Asuncion steamed without clearance pa
pers from Santos, August Bth with a full
supply of coal and provisions. She join
ed the Karlsruhe at a small island off
the coast of South America. The coal
and provisions weve transferred to the
cruiser which was badly in need of them.
The List.
Captain Fritsch said that the Karls
ruhe had captured the following vessels:
August 31st, Maple Branc;h September
Ist. Strathroy; September 14. Highland
Hope: September 17th, Indrani; Septem
ber 21st. Maria, a Dutch vessel with
contraband of war aboard and the Rio
Icyana, September 22nd, Cornish City.
October 5, Maria De and the
Meltade; October 6, Farn; October 7th,
Lycronna; October Bth, Cervantes; Oct
9th, Pruth; October litli. Condor; Oct
18th, Glanton; October 23rd, Hurst dale;
and October 26th, Van Dyck."
The tenement Romeo whistles to his
Juliet and she comes out on the fire
escape.
fHE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
To Men and Women, Who Would
Walk a Block to Save a Dollar
If you want a shoe on your foot so stylish and aristocratic-looking as to incite every
one’s admiration without paying dearly for it, buy the—
$2.50
Disabuse your mind if you think that $2.50 or $3.00 is not enough to pay for shoes.
You haven’t worn The ECONOMY Shoe, or you would have learned long ago that $2.50
or $3.00 is an ample price to pay for shoes. Realize that you are buying of the MAKERS
when you buy the ECONOMY Shoe at $2.50 or $3.00, and that the dollar you SAVE by
your enterprise is the RETAILER’S profit. Over two million men in the United States
have learned this lesson of shoe economy. Have you?
ECONOMY SHOE STORE
310 Jackson St. ...... Augusta, Ga.
310 Jackson St.
IN COUSIN
PLAN, SUCCESS
This Form of Municipal Gov
ernment Flourishing in Nine
of Nation’s Largest 50 Cities.
Baltimore.—The European war la
having no serious effect on municipal
activities in the United Ktntes, accord
ing to a survey made by Clinton Rog
ers Woodriff, seeretary of the Nation
al Municipal League, who delivered
his annual address before that organi
zation here last night.
With Inquiry among many of the
representative cities of the country,
Mr. Woodruff learned that, municipali
ties were going ahead without tha
slightest abridgement In their plans
for such Improvements as had already
been authorized, and although some
cities were experiencing difficulty In
placing loans through the usual chan
nels, municipal credit did not seem
to be Jeopardized.
"Indeed,” he said, "the opinion pre
‘vails among financial authorities that
the European situation will in a stiort
time make municipal ser-urltlea the
moat desirable in America."
He reported no recession of inter
est in the commission or commission
manager forms of city government.
The “Vanishing System.”
"What Is aptly called the ‘vanishing
system’—the bicameral form of city
government,”—he said, "Is to lie found
now In only nine of the largest fifty
cities—Philadelphia, Baltimore, Kan
sas City, Providence, Louisville, At
lanta, Worcester, Richmond, Va., and
Cambridge Mass.
"In the light of the events of the
past five years,” he continued, "it
would not he hazardous to predict that
five years from now not one of the
larger cities will be risking Its busi
ness and Its future to the evils of a
form which affords such abundant op
portunities for Inefficiency and waste
and mismanagement.”
Hand in hand with this advance he
notes the progress of municipal home
rule "which In the course of the corn
ing generation is destined to become
the settled policy with regard to the
relations of the states to the cities.”
Nine lowa cities operating under the
commission form of government had,
he noted, lived within their inrotne for
the first time In 1913. A federal cen
sus also showed that out of 69 com
mission cities, 61 were found to he
running at less per capita than the
average head expense of the 195 met
ropolitan rentera of all classes con
sidered.
Notable Improvement.
There was a, notable Improvement
In municipal housekeeping accounts,
lie found. The "happy-go-lucky" way
was being superceded generally by
scientific budgets which made both
ends meet Both the demand for mu
nicipal ownership and that for effec.
I vc control of privately operated mu
nicipal utilities continued unabated.
Wyoming and Utah, he said, were the
only states In tile union which had
no form of control to regulate, In some
way or another the public
There was atlll much discussion
throughout the country' as to whether
such control should he by state or lo
cal commission, with the developments
of the past year seemingly more in
favor of state action in these mat
ters.
lie concluded with a reference to
social problems. The frar that Inter
cat in work along these lines would be
abated on account of the great war,
he believed to be unwarranted. "The
vary greatness of the European cata
clysm will emphasize the need for
greater social and civic effort," he
said. An Increased emigration from
Europe to America was to he expected
as a result of the war and this Itself
would require no little attention.
GERMAN SUDDENLY STRICKEN.
Berlin, (via the Hague and London,
10:22 a. m.) The official announce
ment of the sudden death from heart
failure of Major Genera.) von Verghta-
Rhetz, quartermaster-general of the
German army, recalls the fact that
he succeeded General von Htein In this
post only a short lime ago. His ap
pointment caused at the time the er
roneous statement to be circulated In
Holland that General von Verghts-
Rhetz had been chosen as the eventual
successor to General von Moltke aa
chief of staff.
TOO BAD.
"I see It is predicted that the world
will rqme to an end December 16."
"Just my luck. I’ve got a note
coming due the day before.”
SATURDAY’S SPECIALS
Pure Lard, lb 15c
Plum Pudding 23c and 43c
Mincemeat, lb 15c
Currants, 3 pkgs 25c
Malaga Grapes, lb 12c
Mincemeat 3 pkgs. 25c
Prunes, lb 10c, 12c, 15c
Evaporated Peaches, lb. 6c
Evaporaled Apricots, lb. 12c
Mincemeat, 5-lb. jar. . . 55c
Crystallized Pineapple
and Cherries, lb. . . . 60c
Cream Cheese 22c
Galvanized Coal Scuttle Free
Fresh Roasted Coffee
The Best
Coffee Values
Ijfpjr 1 M
Snowdrift Compound No. 5 Pail, 55c; No. 10 Pail, sl.lO
Potatoes, N. Y. qn p
State, peck .. OUw
Yard Eggs, an p
dozen ft tUb
READ HERALD WANTS
CTDAMn TODAY ONLY
OI nANU CONTINUOUSLY
Paramount Company Presents
Augustans Today
Evelyn Nesbit Thaw
(And Her Hon Russell)
In a five-act Sensation, Called:
“ThreadsOf Destiny”
Do not miss this chance to
see "Evelyn Nesbit” wife of
Harry K. Thaw, and their son,
In this great play.
Usual Prices 5c and 10c
THE BEBT—BO COME.
NUTS, ALL KINDS
Pecans, lb 25c, 30c, 40c
Walnuts, lb. . . .20c and 25c
Almonds, lb. . . ,22c and 28c
Almonds, shelled, lb. . . .60c
Brazils, lb. 15c
Filberts, lb 15c
Mixed Nuts, lb 20c
Swift’s Premium
Hams, Pound 19c
844 Broad St.
$3.00
Chambarlain’a Couqh Remedy.
Mrs. Levi Franklin, of Boonervrtlle,
N. Y„ says: "X am pleased to ray that
Chamberlain’s Court) Remedy -.was
used by my son about two yeartuggo
and It. proved to be very beneficlaUin
relieving hoarseness and curing a cold.
It has also been used by other mem
bers of my family end we have a very
high opinion of It.’’ For sale by all
dealers.
Save delay and annoyance
by doing your Christmas
shopping now. Shopping
Bargains are always found
in The Herald.
FIGS
Layer Figs, lb 15c
Figs in boxes 10c
DATES
Fard Dates, lb 10c
Pitted Dates, pkg 15c
Arab Dates, pkg -5c
RAISINS
Layer, lb . 10c
Seeded, 3 pkgs j. .. .25c
Malaga, cluster . .25c
Malaga Grapse, lb. .... 12c
Grapefruit, each ....... ,5c
Cranberries, 3 qt 5..... 25c
With 1 ran A. & P.
Baking Powder . .wVC
lona Tomatoes, No. 3, can. .
Fresh
Roasted Daily
FIVE
Tomorrow will be ironing
day, but it will havk no ter
rors for the housewife who
lives in an electrio home and
usee an electric flatiron.
H
Brookfield n
Eggs, dozen . vJvIL
- ,V
Best A&P ng
Creamery jHI!
Butter