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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19.
Si FREE
tlJPMttr
Heaiin&Plant
with specifications and
estimates drawn up for you
without charge, without 06-
ligation to buy a nickel’s
worth of anything. Come in and
let us explain. Let us tell you about
“Warm Air Furnaces
Be»t because they ventilate
as well as heat. Flood your entire
house with pure, fresh,ozygenized
air as well as with warmth and
comfort. Durable, reliable, eco
nomical, trouble proof.
There’s a lot you ought to
know about the Warm Air Heating
System before installing any other.
Ask us about it. Let us get
J*P a PLAN to meet your particu
lar needs. FREEtII Come Soon.
AUGUSTA ROOF
ING & METAL CO.,
Cor. Jackson and
Greene Sts., Phone
2683.
ATTENTION!
FORD=OWNERS
DEMONSTRATION IN FRONT
OF ALBION HOTEL
World’s Fair Famous Car Common
Sense Spring that does away with
all repair bills and saves 50 per
cent, on your tires for all time.
Address
COMMON SENSE SILENCER CO.
162 W. 116 St., New York.
AGENTS WANTED.
Sewing Machines.
Baby Carriages, Go-Carts Re
fitted with Rubber Tires and
Repaired. Best Needles, oil and
Parts for all makes of Sewing
Machines. Furniture and Or
gans Bought, Sold and Repaired.
Louis E. Moseley
219 11th Street Phone 1557.
Augusta, Ga.
READ
The Herald
AND
PROFIT
By the Habit.
THE DR. KIRK
RADIO DOCTORS
JH. J. NEWHALL KIRK,
Registered Specialist in Many States,
But Confines His Practice to Georgia.
When I located in Augusta
there were those who said; "He
won’t last long.” “Just one of
those traveling Quacks,” etc., etc.
But I have rather fooled these
wiseacres.
It might be startling to these
calamity-howlers to know that
I have treated to date, in round
numbers, 670 visitors in the four
months I have been located here.
An average of over 300 office
visits a month. Why, many
physicians do not see that many
patients in a year.
Now, as to the results: I have
e names of a great many peo
ple who have been restored by
me who are willing to testify.
There are scores of others who
are grateful, but on account of
their disease or prominence de
sire that I hold their names in
secret. I do not publish the
names of my patients. I con
sider the business of patients
and doctor as sacred as between
priest and penitent. That is
why many women and men trust
me with their ills. I do not min
gle with society, attend medical
or political meetings nor lodges,
have absolutely no outside af
fairs. My entire time is given to
NEW PATIENTS GIVEN EXAMINATION PREFERABLE ON MONDAY
Columbia Theological Seminary Professors
To Deliver Lectures at First Presbyterian
Few announcements have attracted the
attention that has been aroused by the
coming of the professors of the Columbia
Theological Seminary to deliver a series
of lectures in the First Presbyterian
church. The five gentlemen whose pic
tures appear above will come over, one
each day ,ar.d deliver a lecture on a sub
ject on which he is an authority. Rev.
Thornton Whaling, D.D..L.L.D., (center
on bottom row) is the president of the
Seminary and Professor of Theology. He
will lecture Sunday night on “The Atone
ment and the Modern Mind.”
Rev. W. M. McPheters, D.D..L.L.D.,
(bottom row, right) is professor of Old
Testament Literature and exegesis. He
will lecture on “Our Lord as an Interpre
ter of Scripture,” on Monday night.
Rev. H. A. White, D.1).,Ph.D.,L.L.D.,
Professor of New Testament Literature
and Exegesis, will lecture on “The Teach
ing of the New Testament Concerning
Heaven as a Definite Place” Tuesday
night.
Rev. R. C. Reed, P.D..L.L I")., (lower
left) Professor of Church Hist ofy and
Polity, will lecture on “The Apostolicity
of Presbyterianism” on Wednesday night.
Rev. James O. Reavis, D.D..L.L. D. (up
per left) will lecture on “The Fullness of
a i rL-x£\
Iheatl
W—IMEANSr-W
FI MINUTES! lIKBICESTIDN.
110 CDS OR UN STOMACH MISERY
Don’t Suffer ! Here’s the quickest, surest relief known for
Dyspepsia, Sourness, Heartburn or an Upset Stomach—Try it!
Wonder what upset your stomach—-
which portion of the food did the dam
age—do you? Well, don’t bother. If
your stomach is in a revolt; if sour,
gassy and upset, and what you just
ate has fermented into stubborn lurries,
your head dizzy and aches; belch gases
and acids and eructate undigested
food; breath foul, tongue coatecß-just
take a little Diapepsin and in five
minutes you will wonder what became
of the indigestion and distress.
Millions of men and women today
know that it is needless to have a bad
stomach. A little Diapepsin occasion
my practice, and that keeps me
too busy to discuss my patients’
welfare publicly, or mind other
people’s business.
I often think that this is why
many professional men are of
ten out of work, their time is so
taken up with the affairs of oth
ers.
A lady called upon me in Oc
tober who said that where a man
was so maligned as I was, there
must be come merit. She under
took treatment and today is one
of my best advertisements, so
grateful was she for her restora
tion.
A gentleman from the coun
try called upon me last week
and said: "Three doctors called
you a fraud, a crook, and a liar,
respectively, so I thought 1
would come and see you. A man
must have brains to be all of
these successfully.” I examined
him and found that a few weeks’
treatment would restore him.
notwithstanding the fact that he
was told he would have to go
to a hospital for a month and
possibly undergo an operation.
This morning I received s
check for $60.00, from this gen
||\l PAPE’S^
] DIAPEPSIN 1 r#|l
STOPS INDIGESTION lif Tj
HAVE “MADE GOOD”
IH AUGUSTA
Dr. Kirk says, “Let the Knocker Knock, that’s
his business. If you are a chronic sufferer, have been
drugged, operated on and disappointed, you should
not let your own mother influence you against coming
to ‘The Doctor with the Practice.’ ” That’s your busi
ness.
Read the following and see if you think we
have “made good”: *
AUGUSTA HERALD READERS ARE SUBSTANTIAL CUSTOMERS FOR AUGUSTA HERALD ADVERTISERS
Life Through the Revelation of the Pres
ence of God” on Thursday night.
The lectures will be preceded-by fifteen
minutes of music. Mrs- Garrett will be
gin one of her beautiful organ numbers at
S o’clock. This will be followed by a
vocal selection by the quartette or some
member of the quartette, then an of
fertory, during which a free will offering
will be taken for the expenses. No ad
mission will be charged and the public
generally is invited.
DUCKS DISLIKE AIRPLANES.
Kiel, Germany.—Ornithologists have
discovered that the wild duck does not
like the aeroplane, apparently taking it
for some huge bird of prey. From the
North sea coast of Schleswig-Holstein it
is reported that the great flocks of ducks
which in previous years stopped for rest
and food on the coastal sands and is
lands on their tlight from the far north
to the south, have avoided that region
this year. The explanation offered is
that they were frightened away by the
many aeroplanes that are constantly
scouting aloqg the coast.
ally keeps the stomach regulated and
they eat their favorite foods without
fear.
If your stomach doesn’t take care
of your liberal limit without rebellion;
if your food is a damage instead of a
help, remember the quickest, surest,
most harmless relief is Pape’s Diapep
sin which costs only fifty cents for a
large case at drug stores. It’s truly
wonderful—it digests food and sets
things straight, so gently and easily
that it is astonishing. Please don’t go
on and on with a weak, disordered
stomach; it’s so unnecessary.
tleman, saying he had received
that much benefit, if he never
received any more. So it goes.
I could recount dozens of such
cases.
"Every knock is a boost." I
shall go steadily onward, un
mindful of verbal attacks and us
each month shows an increase In
business, shall arrange for more
rooms, and plan free treatment
for the poor or those whose cir
cumstances do not permit a spe
cialist’s services.
Watch for my announcements.
Again let me say, I am perma
nently located here—here to
stay.
My practice now crowds four
rooms in the Harlson Building.
I am arranging for more
rooms. I am busy from 8:30 a.
mto 8:30 p. m. Am seeing over
80 people a day. I refuse cases
I feel uncertain as to the cure,
and #m willing to arrange easy
payments if necessary, for the
curable I specialize in catarrh,
and all catarrhal diseases, head,
stomach, bowel, bladder, kidney,
liver, heart, etc. All such dis
eases of private nature unsuit
able for public print. Htrlct con
fidence Hours 0 to 8, dally.
The Radio Medical Drs., 303
llurlson Bldg., Augusta, Ga.
CARING FOR DEAD
IN THE WAR NOW
IS SYSTEMATIZED
London. — (Correspondence of The
Associated Cress.)- In keeping with all
other phases of the war, order has
come at last in the care of the dead.
Where all was topsy-turvey two years
ago in the first pell-mell rush to bat
tle, and where there was little time to
bury men even where they fell, the
British now have evolved an organisa
tion and a system of dealing with tHis
ever-growing problem which will at
least relieve the bereaved at home of
the added torment and anxiety of the
unknown grave.
At the beginning of the war men
wore buried near the trenches only to
have their graves blown away by ex
ploding shells the very next day. Hut
many remained, and some have been
identified as the allies have fought
their way slowly back over part of the
ground once occupied by the Ger
mans.
Where there was hard fighting in
France and Belgium, the eye of the
traveler along the roads today is struck
by many low crosses sticking out of
the ground in the fields, in cottage
gardens, in corners of farmyards and
orchards, even on the roadside strips
of grass. Where the ground has
changed hands a good deal in the
course of the war one cun see, within
a few hundred yards of each other, the
gabled and eaved cross of the Ger
mans, the “Hier ruht in Gott" and a
name painted white on a dark back
ground; the beaded wire wreath of the
French with its ltequieseat or "Mort
pour la France.” and the plain lined
cross of the English, white or light
brown, or just unpainted wood, “In
loving memory,'* of one or more offi
cers and men.
The very position of some of these
isolated memorials is elequent. Near
Frtcourt, on what used to be "No
Man's Land" until the English won it
the past summer, a number of English
crosses stand to the memory of tin
known French soldiers. This was part
of the line turned over to the English
by tbe French. "We leave you our
trenches and our dead," they said.
When the English offensive began last
July and the first line German trenches
were carried by storm, it was one of
tthe first cares of the British Tom
mies to bury the bodies of their French
comrades, some having lain in the fire
swept zone since late in the winter.
To some officers the idea of being
buried where they fall, and have there
erected even the modest little me
morial of a roughly hewn cross, Is an
honor greater than the shelter of
Westminster Abbey. A few such graves
and some part of the trenches near
them, probably will be preserved for
ever by village communes or private
owners of land.
But as the war has lingered, and
there still is much stubborn fighting
ahead some say for years—the care of
the dead has become a most important
branch of war work- important alike
in sentiment and sanitation. The
British have organized a Commission
of Graves Registration and Inquiries
and under its direction registration
units and sections have been sent to
the front, and back of the front. Much
of the work is done by non-combat
ants, but many of their tasks must be
carried out under fire and some have
been killed and others wounded.
When an officer or man is killed at
the front, or dies of wounds, his burial
is now at once reported to the registra
tion units. If killed in action he may
still be buried in the old way some
where near the trench. If so, the chap
lain or officer who buries him, reports
the position of the grave, which as
soon as possible is marked with a
durable cross and an identification
plate stamped in aluminum.
But this mode is becoming less com
mon. The army lias been quick to
realize the desirability of burying its
dead in the nearest of the 300 or more
recognized cemeteries behind the lines.
The bodies are carried back by road or
light railway to one of the little wood
en, iron or canvas mortuaries which
the registration units have set up in
the cemeteries. There Is nothing per
functory about the funerals. Every
thing is done as tenderly and rever
ently as if the dead were in un English
churchyard.
Some of the cemeteries are great ex
tensions of little village graveyards.
Some were begun by special corps or
divisions, which wished to bury theii
dead all together, in one is found srp
•irate plots, each with Its special en
trance, for Gurkhas, Sikhs and Pun-
Jabs. I 'rider the great trees of another,
where many of those who fell at Fes
where many of those who fell at Fes
thubert lie, some Indian soldiers have
followed the custom of their country
and i*nilt brick tombs of extraordinary
massiveness.
At Villers aux Bois the French bur
ied 2,300 of tho: e who were killed In
winning the Vimy Hodge. o n each
grave, at the foot of its wooden cross,
there is still stuck in the earth, neck
downward the bottle in which the first
hasty record of the interment was
placed.
A few days ago a woman In deep
mourning visited one of the French
cemeteries with a handful of white
flowers. She was arranging these on
one of the French graves when one of
the usual little bareheaded processions
with an English chaplain in front pass
ed by. On the stretcher was a body
sewn up In a brown army blanket, a
big Union Jack lying over it. The wo
man rose, and shyly, with some of the
flowers still in her hand, fell In at the
rear of the procession As the chap
lain was reading "dust to dust,” and
"ashes to ashes,” the little French wo
man was kneeling on the ground. The
service over, and the rest turning
away, she came close to the grave,
dropped the white flowers in, and re
turned to the other grave empty
handed.
The Elcar Making Favorable
Impression Locally
Mr. Miller Warren who. associated
with the Audley Hill Auto Hales Co.,
is handling the Elcar In the local ter
ritory, is enthusiastic over the pros
pects for this new line of cars which
have made such a favorable Impression
Ott the local people. The agencies
handling this line In Houth Carolina
have met with great success. It has
become quite a favorite whsrever It
has been shown and demonstrated.
Mr. Warren Is now In possession of
his demonstrators and will welcome
the opportunity of demonstrating to
Interested parties In Augusta and vl-
I lntty. An engagement can be made
by calling at the Audley Hill Hales Co..
718 Kills Ht.
MONEY IN CIRCULATION.
Washington.—Money In circulation In
the United Htstes on November I
amounted to $4,241,163,189, treasury offi
cials report. The per eaplta circulation
wan $41.13 on that date.
CONSERVATISM
The man with an in
creasing regard for the
element of conserva
tism is usually the first
man to seek the co-op
eration of the Mer
chants Bank in his bus
iness operations.
Every endeavor to
assist is made along
the lines laid down by
an established policy
for diversifying our
loans—not plunging in
any one line of busi
ness—thereby eliminat
ing all chances of se
rious loss and protect
ing our depositors to
the fullest extent.
Your business is in
vited.
MERCHANTS
BANK
AUGUSTA, GA.
Whei. Shopping Say, “I Saw It In The Herald”
A Large Shipment of
WILTON RUGS
Just Received
We Bought These
Rugs Before the Prices
Advanced And Are
Going To Give Our
Customers The Bene
fit of the Low Prices.
9x12 Kremlin Silk Bound
Seamless Rugs, weight 50
pounds, regular .$75.00
value, now $65.00
These rugs are the finest
rugs manufactured and you
should see them before mak
ing your purchase.
9x12 Latona Seamed Rugs in all colors and patterns, regular
$65.00 value, now $55.00
BAILIE-EDELBUT FURNITURE CO.
LEADERS IN QUALITY FURNITURE.
708-710-712 Broadway, Phone 1632
SOUTHERN TIRES
with the silver side-walls are the
classiest tires in appearance on the
streets.
They are as good as they look.
Besides they are home-made and on
this account should be a source of
pride to you.
Ask your dealer for them.
SOUTHERN TIRE and RUBBER CO.
AUGUSTA, GA.
C. K. Lawrence, Jr. F. E. Lawrence.
LAWRENCE
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
Nine buildings since
the fire and not a
dispute in settlement.
When selecting a
contractor ask the
man that’s been
“through the mill.”
127 Jackson St.
Augusta, Ga.
111
THREE