Newspaper Page Text
EDITORIAL PAGE
il/i*hrd Bvory Afternoon Durin*
«v*rk nnd on Sunday Morning
UNCLE SAM, THIS IS A MATTER FOR
YOU TO ATTEND TO IMMEDIATELY.
Some day, it is announced at Washington, the govern
ment is going to provide money for a national leprosium.
Then John R. Early will have home and medical attention
until the dread leprosy has killed him.
Rut in the meantime. Early must be shunted from state
to state, from a Leper’s Home to an isolated shack, because
no state feels it should bear the burden of caring for this
leper.
Some time ago Early was confined in a shack on the
outskirts of Washington. That city treated sick dogs bet
ter than it did this human being afflicted with the disease
which rots the flesh away. Naturally, the poor, doomed
man didn’t like it. He ran away. Rut there was no place
for him to go. No man’s home was open to him. Villages
and cities drove him out when he appeared. Finally he
came to New Orleans. There is a Leper Home, supported
by Louisiana, for the few lepers of that state. Here Early
was taken in, fed, clothed and given what treatment physi
cians can give.
And now' the Louisiana authorities have asked the Dis
trict of Columbia to pay for Early's care and maintenance.
The district refuses, claiming that Early was a resident of
North Carolina when he enlisted in the Spanish-American
war.
North Carolina refuses to pay because Early has not
lived in that state for many years.
The United States government doesn’t pay because
Congress refuses to provide a national leprosium. It is a
matter for the United States government, not for any city
or any one state. Earlv was a soldier of the United States.
He fought for the whole country, not only for North Caro
lina, the District of Columbia, or Louisiana. While fighting
for the U. S. in the Philippines he contracted leprosy, for
which there is no cure.
Obviously it is the nation's duty to provide for Robert
Early down to the last minute of his life, and to take good
care of his dependents. This must be dorte at once. Con
gress should pay the Louisiana Leper Home for Early’s
maintenance until a national leprosium is built.
Early would never have been a leper had he not been
brave enough to enlist to fight our battles. For years he
has waited for us to do our duty. Let us do it now.
GENESIS ANI) NEMESIS OF A LYNCHING
STORY.
From the Philadelphia Public Ledger
A letter came from a correspondent, A. J. Kin#, was
printed in this column on April 20, describing the lynching
of a negro soldier at Blakely, Ga. The story has been found,
upon investigation, to have been without foundation. A
communication from the publishers of the Early County
News of Blakely, which newspaper reprinted the letter from
Mr. King, first called attention to the fact that the story was
false. Their communication follows:
To the Editor of Public Ledger :
Sir Our little city m inn to hove come In for an unuaual Khare of
i unfirtft* from aoirn unknown aourcp lately. The Intent came to tin In a
clipping* from youi paper. .Juat where your rorrenpondnnt, A. J. King,
not thin ntory 1h a puzzle. and w** would appreciate any Information that
will help us locate and expose the author of the mnllciotjn lie.
VV W. FLEMING K SON.
Hlakelv. Ga.. April 24, 1910
William M StuhhH of thin city, who decided to follow up the ntory
wrote to the potitmuater at Blakely and to hl« communication the pub
lisher* of the local newspaper went a reply, which Mr Stubbs haa turned
aver to th>* Public Ledger. Thin reply rune:
Sir Your letter «»f inquiry to the postmaster at Blakely In refer
« nce to a dipping from the Philadelphia Public Ledger concerning the al
• c»‘d lynching of ,i negro soldlmr named Wilbur Little ha been banded to
me for reply.
The ntory i* abnolutoly falee In toto. hn there ban been no lynching
of a negro eddier anywhere In thin section.
The only ground for darting auch h Hander on our city that 1 can
think of 1h that a n»*gro soldier from Alabama waa found dead in Early
county tear the Alabama line on the 26th of March, evidently murdered.
nH he w.ts ahot through the head, with no due a« to the Identity of Ida
ala vet*. Hut next day the mystery wna aolved and hie murderer located.
• apt tired and later tried In the Superior Court of thin county, convicted
by a white jury mid aentenced to life In the penitentiary. Yesterday I saw
the deputy sheriff carry him away to begin sentence, Juat twenty-seven
cl tya from the time he murdered the aoldler, 1 Inclose you dippings showing
these facta.
Our comunlty has been the center of a number of baseless stories
of this character in the recent past. Since the beginning of tins world
war many of our Southern negroes hav*' emigrated to the North. Some
of them, doubtless flattened by the attentions shown them, have invented
some of the most improbable lies imaginable If you could get a copy
of the Amsterdam News of New York city of the date of January 29, you
will find one of the most slanderous ami ahroluttely baa*lass storlea you
ever read. The street address of this negro paper Is 229 H Seventh avenue,
New’ York city.
Unforttinntely, w** have In times past had lynchlngs in our county,
but all of them were preceded by vicious crimes on the part of the victims.
But It has been several years since one of them* outbreaks has occurrd,
and there has been absolutely no such occurrence as described by the
Philadelphia Public Ledger's correspondent In Hlakrly nor anywhere near
here
Our* people have had no trouble of any kind with returned negro
soldiers Most of them have returned to their homes and gone to work.
I would thank you to correct th*e story. Incidentally, n negro soldier,
W ilbur Little, Is still alive and working for our city court'Judge
VV W FLEMING
iThe author of,the letter to the Public Ledger, Mr. King, when asked
the source of his Information, replied that he "had bead the account of
the alleged lynching In a negro newspaper." Editor Public Ledger.
The 100 Per Cent Home
ll.—Has Your Money Gone Into
useful Equipment, or
Showy ?
IV GENEVIEVE DALY REID.
Horn* • Making Expert and Examiner In
Charge of Woman and Glrla’ Dlvlalon,
Employmant Service, United State*
Bureau of Labor.
Why should you take an Invantory of
your noma*
Uncwuen If tharr la anything wrong. It
will ahow in thr Invantory.
An Invantory Iml Juat a Hat with
.wait valuaa attiwhr.l It la Ilka a doc
lur‘l aurvav of a patient- a collection of
fan!a which will ahow wliara tha dlaraaa
ilaa
Remember that a homo la a factory—
a collodion of mnohlnory operated by
day-labor an.l (leagued to produce cer
<am defmltr thing* food, health, hap
pinthn. culture. progress
Vet mam a hmisewifr Ip hopped by h**r
ftirnltur«* instead of havli’g furniture
that «IU work for h«*r
,V chair la a device for producing rest
„i convenience t bad la a machine for
producing alaap A iromlvme la an en
gine for prodtirinis neighborhood quar
rrls
Machinery preducea what II la designed
to produce nothing alar Youra producaa
tout lit. A kit. hen -bus producaa easy
an>l eft*. lent tahle-aervlce A allppary
hatrcloih »of» produce, dual, had tamper
and broken honea
if you have tied up IW capital In
a haircloth aofa. and none at all In a
kitchen-hua || will ahnw in the Invan-
Money In Wrong Piero
Moat home, ahow Ihla typical error:
y»r Oil r. capital will !*■ tied UP In ahow.
*omU that produce mile or nothing *X
, „,..k thae n Ihe ihlnga one roallf
example What do window cur
, VI ., pr .doc. * t'p to a certain point, they
nrodure privacy and olon beauty Bui
r vMid that point, they produce mere
•how an elaborate hoax for the paeeers
I mp*' "reputahOHlr—atupld Imitation—
Ivc.k out for them' Thev are Ihe hreachea
it. the wall Of common aenae 'hrough
Which mefllclon.-c Invade* the homa
H.. i. the nanal proportion of ex
penditure gamed hv averaging in round
number* many neoren of acfual thven
t. iles laker h middle claea home.
Ulv ingrocm « *M*
Item bedroom * «o«
vi-rord bedroom $4"
rvir. oigvoi.tr ... *N»
Kitchen , . . ... Id#
The more one think, about ihla thr
woe.. ' get*
Yvoee vvttir bom. ahow thta upside
Entered at the Auruata. Ga., Pontof.
flc* »» Mall Matter of tht 'Second la a.
down of affairs? If io, it li not a
”100 per homo.”
The working room* of the house should
receive an much caah outlay aa the allow
rooms.
G«*t'a amall notebook and take your in
ventory. one room at a tme Head your
pages "Ltvlngroom.” •'Diningroom." etc .
not forgetting "Bathroom.” "Linen-
Closet.” "Wardrobe.” “Garden*” "Ga
rage.**
Liat each and every article with ita
caah value Compute the latter by put
ting down the original coat, adding in any
special expenses for transportation ami
repair, and subtracting any cash profits
you may have gained Alan subtract de
terioration ahere%er you can figure it
though In general It ts safer to omit It
With articles you have made yourself
estimate the retail price In a stoic
Htudv and think about these figures
for several days. It wilt tie an educa
tion to you
Have you spent too much on shoe*, and
too little on utility? Have you put flv«»
times as much on your tlvingroom. which
Is used only three hours k day, ;ts on
your kitchen, which Is used constantly?
Do you get six times «a much !tfe-\aiue
out of that costly drawn-work bed-cov
ering as you would out of a plain one
costing a sixth as much?
Is your home-factory Investment stand
tng on Its head?
tTo be continued.)
(used fifty years
sss
MAKES PURE BLOOD
AT ALL DRUGGISTS
Rub-My-Tism tg n great pain
killer. It relieves pain and
•orent'ss caused by Rheuma*
tiim, Neuralgia. Sprains, etc.—
adv.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
Tife)
(By O. B. JOYFUL.)
Baron Goto, Japanese «tat'Krnan. I* be-
Ihk lioniz'd In A city editor
there asked a reporter to—
Go to Goto and find out where Goto
to when h*- a pointc to go else none
will know where he's gone to when Goto
goen ’’
And the reporter went, too
Lcokinn Backward in 1929.
This is certainly a period of financial
inflation and our memory goes back to
the time when the acquisition of an auto
mobile gave a family more social prestige
In tLe neighborhood thaji the acquisition
of an airplane does now.
Oh, We Knew Something Wat the Matter
With Kansas!
Mine Lizzie Wooster. Kansas superin
tendent of public instruction, now under
stand* how it feel* to he between the
devil and the deep blue uca.”
First she Issued a new “rule arid regu
lation ' In which revoked the school
teaching certificate* of all men teachers
who used tobacco.
“Fine' Hurrah’ And a couple of
Cheers'" Thu* exclaimed the lady school
teachers. They had never liked the idea
of having smoke anywhere in the school
hnuto- but the furnace.
And the m< n teachers got terribly peev
ed at Miss Lizzie.
Then she en.m* to hat with another new
rule and regulation. Hhe *aid she’d re
voke the cert|fleatos of women teachers
addicted to the uge of cosmetics.
“Great stuff' Make ’em quit painting. ’’
exclaimed the men teachers.
Now. you know every pretty schet»l
ma’arn dabs a wee bit of powder on her
nose, and deepen* the roslness of her
cheek a tiny touch.
And the lady teachers got terribly peev.
ed at Miss Lizzie.
And now both the men and lady teach
ers are sore, that is those men who
■ moke and those ladies who paint.
The German* nr< tnlklng of channinK
their Hag from Red and Black to Red,
Black and Gold. Yep, they need a streak
of yellow In It’
Columbia university (N. Y.) senior vot
ed on favorit* beverages. Water won,
beer second, milk third. How do they run
with you?
Such Are Husbands In Phlla.
Philadelphia mothers' club decided at a
meeting that bur-hands are a necessary
evil; that a man is a thing woman mar
ries and that they drink, vote, smoko and
swear, T’t to churcn.
From •«*'>' »o!d me of your
mother In-law ! should think you hear
enough from her In person without having
can d to induce tier to talk into your
phonograph.”
"Oil. you can t imagine the pleasure It
give* me to start the machine going and
then shut It off right in the middle of a
•entencs.”
Young people who are wondering if
“two can live as cheaply as one. - ’ may
In- Interested in hearing that Joseph Ed
ward* (arrested in Chicago) ‘has been
supporting three wives on SIOO a moTith.
Is It Hard for You to Remember Your
Sweetheart’s Name.
Hagertown, Md. When Oliver Hicks,
aged 71. was applying for a marriage li
cense the clerk asked him the Christian
name of the bride-to-be.
“Gosh, all hemlock*!” exclaimed Hicks.
Ain't 1 gone and forgot to askAher what
her first name Is' 'Rears to nfe as how
I've heard some call her Nettie.”
“Well, whnt do you call her?" Inquired
the license man.
“Oh. I call her dearie* all the time, ex
cept wrlu-n I call her darling. Letter
make it Nettle on the paper, though.”
Also, They Are Flat When They’re Fried.
Vork, Pa—,T 1> Voting, of Seven Vol
ley*. thi* county, has a hen which lay* a
flag egg regularly* The hen Is a blue An
< lulu si an rosecotnb.
The egg which the hens lay la flat on
both aide* Mr Young will save some of
them and see If flat chickens will hatch
out of them.
We are pleased to announce the arrival
of an S pound gtrl baby nt the home of
Mr. and Mrs. George N. Stork, of Chicago.
ILLUMINED SOULS
LIGHT THE PATHWAY
(By Rev. Charles Stelxle.)
Staff Writer on Religious Topics.
“And God said, Let there be light: and
there was light ”
ThlH Is the first recorded command of
the Almighty. And ever since men have
been trying to bring the earth back to
the time when It was 'without form,
and void,” and when "darkness was
Upon the face of the deep ."
The kaiser succeeded fairly well. And
the Holshevlkl go him a pretty good sec
ond.
But God has decreed that there shall
be light and no man can long compel
the world to live In darkness.
And then God sent prophets igto the
world, and teachers-- to establish "lights”
In the darkened souls of men.
Ami tin* greatest of them all once said
to his followers:
"Ye are the light of the world."
There Isn’t much that's bigger and
better and finer than being a light to
men who are struggling in the darkness.
Maybe It’s the darkness of ignorance
which causes so much conflict and per
secution.
Or It may be the darkness of sin—re
sponsible for so much suffering, to the
Innocent, as well as the guilty
"And God said Let there he light.”
That's the will of the Almighty
And just as He swung the stars in the
heavens when the world was young, so
THREE PRIZE PROBLEMS PRESENTED
TO THE CLERKS OF AUGUSTA.
The Augusta Herald offers $28.00 for the eight best
answers to its three Prize Problems in a salesmanship con
test open to all the clerks in anv of the stores in Augusta.
Read the problems and write your answer. Address it to
Salesmanship Problems, Augusta Herald.
HERE ARE THE PROBLEMS.
WHAT WOULD YOU DO’
Here ar* thr*«* <problem* from
a count** in aalcsmanshlr Ye*, thev
are difficult to answer, bit In order
to make it worth while me August*
Herald will pay S2S 00 for the e ght
best letter* (of not more than ROO
' th* plop
In each cm***
1 Three <*u*tomer* approach your
counter at the same time Mr* Jone*
i* *mall. nervous. daintily dressed
She says: “I don’t knt w lu*» what
1 w»nt * Mr* Smith admit* that ahe
i* onl> looking,” but pauses to et
amine some neckwear In which ahe
appear* to b • interested She 1* stout,
capable-looking ami very determined
Mr* Brown .* so tired that she can
hardly walk Her clothe* are shabby
and ah** look* discouraged Alt th**
other clerk* are bn\ K«W would
YOl* handle the trio*
'•! A mother and daughter aged
seventeen, enter the suit department
and request you to wait upon them
The mother spies a dark blue suit
that she th'dks "would b* Just the
thing ** Daughter, however, has her
heart set on a lavender costume.
Contest open both to men and women clerks. Talk
these problems over with your friends, make up your mind
how you would handle them, and write your solution to The
Herald. Confine answers to 500 words. All letters must
be in Herald office by Saturday night. June 7th.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD.
that men might not stumble, so has He
sent illumined souls Into the world, so
that they might light the way for
troubled, tempest-tossed travelers on the
highways of life.
OBSERVATIONS
Wall Street complains that the south
ern planters' organization to hold cot
ton I* a combination in restraint of good
gambling.
Helnle's wail is occasioned by the fact
that, he didn’t know a square deal had
some many sharp edges.
We are at some pains to teach a boy
the value of good manner* and he grows
up to discover that the chronic kicker
gets the best service.
Jf you will make a careful stud** of
our laws, you will discover that civili
zation consist* in a high regard for
property rights.
We have never been able to under
stand the justice of a wage system that
grant* the same amount of kale to the
man who i* doing his darndest and the
man who is doing just enough to get by.
Weather, *tvlc and price urge us to
wear fewer clothes
The headlines are getting hack to nor
mal. and the great American boy would
rather he a .400 hitter than to he a
general.
Why all this patient, discussion of the
terms with Heinie? Who won this war.
any way 7
The justice of Italian occupation of
Greek islands lies in the Italian’s con
viction that he can lick Greece.
Loughbovs in occupied territory of
Germany nave been instructed not to
step off the sidewalk to let Huns pass.
Either the order was unnecessary, or
something terrible has happened to our
doughboys.
While the French complain that
statesmen are throwing away what the
soldier* won, Italian statesmen continue
to take w’hat the soldiers didn’t win.
The only class in Germany that is
heartily In favor of signing the peace
treaty 1* the cannon fodder.
Lenlne’s new year, beginning on Oc
tober 25th, instead of January 1, is to
have 270 working days. Any sort of
year that has working days will be con
demned by American Reds
Our guess is that Heinie won’t he
blockhead enough to invite a further
blockade
SPEAKING THE PUBLIC MIND
ROLLERSVILLE CEMETERY
IN NEED OF ATTENTION
To The Herald - Permit me to take
this means of calling to the attention of
the municipal "powers that he” a condi
tion whicli reflects anything but credit
upon the city at large
There’s a small and all but forgotton
city of the dead up on Hicks street, aban
doned save for the snakes, frogs, mos
quitoes and the like and occasional hoi
vines that enter its fenceless confines to
crop the grass from about the sunken
grave*. Gray could have written a much
sadder “elegy” if old Rollersvllle Ceme
tery had been the place of his rumina
tions. and a modern Roe could find there
plenty of Inspiration of a ghoulish tale.
T am told that several years ago the
city closed Rollersvllle Cemetery to furth
er Interments This, of course, was a
wise move, owing to the cemetery’s lo
cation and the fact that Its burial space
was steadily diminishing, hut why has
the place been left In a state of disrepair
for all these years? Conditions there are
indeed deplorable. I suggest that the
fences be repaired and the underbrush
removed as early as possible.
Isn’t it up to the cemeteries commit
tee of city council?
W. R. V.
Protests Against Certain of the Blue
Laws.
To The Herald:
There has recently been an agitation
in regard to our Sunday ‘*Rlue Law*”,
the enforcement and non-enforcement of
certain of them I should suggest an idea
not from the standpoint of a minister of
the gospel, but from the standpoint of
one who would very much like to see con
sistency at least, he our ruling motive in
the enforcement of our ordinances.
We say fee should not he delivered on
Sunday. In effect. It is a luxury. But.
are cigars and coca cola and other soft
drink* not luxuries? Are we to be as
foolish as that? I heartily agree that Ice
should not be delivered. But I more
“trongly argue that neither should cigar
*tore* and the like he open to the public
on that day.
The sum total of this inconsistency is
! prima facie foolishness, and a desire to
FLIES
Use Frierson’s Fly
Driver and Mosquito
Exterminator
t’aed with a sprayer it drives out or
kills house flies and mosquitos In a
few minutes.
Will kill and prevent cock roaches,
bed hups, water buf?s. ants, moths,
fleas, mites, chicken lice and all bltlmr
Insects.
Hotels, markets, lunch rooms, res
taurants, bakers and barber shops buy
It by the gallon and use with a pump.
Sold and Riiaranteed by,
FRIERSON CHEMICAL CO.,
Charleston. S. C.
Augusta Drug Co., Wholesale Distribu
tors, Augusta, Ga.
coating considerably more. Both ap
pear to he determined In their
cholera Therefore It la a moment
that demands diplomacy of the moat
delicate nature What kind would
TOU use’
3 A woman of forty-five rather
waahed-out and aahen ,n appearance,
cornea into the. millinery department
determined to pure ha ee n very loud
red toque You. the aaleaman. are
certain that thle particular hat would
not ault her: lt'a aomethlng that a
girl of twenty might wear, but not
a woman of her ag. You know that
the cuatomer la a steady patron of the
More and you naturally want her to
he ratified with what ehe purchaaea
Hut ahe a made up her mind to have
that hat and none other Would you
aell It to her and rlek the chance of
fittuie dmaallafactlon or try to In
fluence her taate toward aomethlng
leaa glarln;’ ff the latter, how?
Addreaa replica to ‘*Baleaminahlp
Problem*.•' Augoata Herald
Ten Dollars for tha Bast Latter.
tS.CO for tne neat, $3.00 fer the third
and 53.00 each for the neat beet five
Eight prices In all. totalling $28.00.
Contest closet Saturday night, dune
?th.
appear as a religiously governed city,
when in truth we, under this humorous
law. certainly are not. J. 11. B.
Thanks Herald for Article.
To The Herald.
Augusta. Ga.
Your article of May 21st on the import
ance of American expoi'ta to the re-build-
Ing of Lithuania has just come to our at
tention and we desire to thank you for it.
Although the full value of the Lithuan
ian market to American business men will
not become apparent until Lithuania has
been officially granted autonomy, it is of
the utmost importance to both countries
that information of the sort contained in
your article should be published at this
time.. Lithuania, as you point out. will
present a lucrative market for products
of the number of varieties which America
is generally In a position to export. She
will prefer American products to any
other, not only because of the intimate
relations that the two countries have
maintained for a number of years, but
also because American products have
been found already in Lithuania superior
to any others and cheaper in price.
Influential papers like yours are per
forming a real public service in bringing
matters of this sort to the attention of
vour large reading public.
Yours very truly.
JONAS ZILIN6.
CROSS-EXAMINE BISHOP
London. —Bishop Welldon. dean df Dur
ham, had the unusual experience of be
ing cross-examined by workers at a May
labor demonstration.
The bishop’s gaiter and unuual style
of hat attracted the notice of the work
er and he was Immediately surrounded
and tackled on various questions
One woman declared that while sup
porting conscription and sending boys of
18 into battle, the clergy were careful to
take care of their own skins.
“Quite a large number of clergy have
lost their lives in the war,” replied the
bishop.
“Why do you support conscription?” the
woman said.
”1 don’t support conscription, hut we
must keep it in force until peace is sign
ed or you will have the Germans on you
again,” said the bishop.
A man then took up the examination
RECOMMENDED
BY UNCLE SAM
FOR MALARIA
Quinine, One of the Three In
gredients of the Famous Ma
laria Medicine, Dr. Wil
liams No. 101 Tonic.
The United States Public Health
Service at Washington recommends
quinine for malaria, to which every
reputable physician agrees. This is
one of the ingredients in the popular
malaria medicine. Dr. Williams No.
101 Tonic, which is prescribed by quite
a number of promi: ent physicians
thruout the malarial belt. They say
they get better results from it with
their patients than if they prescribed
straight quinine. Di. Williams No.
101 Tonic not only contains quinine,
which kills the malarial germ, but
also iron, which is <. splendid tonic and
increases the appetite. The third in
gredient is magnesia, which regulates
the bowels. Dr. Williams No. 101
Tonic is therefore a well balanced
efficient remedy. Try a bottle. Your
druggist can suppl you.—Adv.
Awnings
Porch
Shades
Wall
Paper
T. G. Bailie
& CO.
712 Broad St.
j PUT ONE ON EVERY DESK
Mend your speech YOU CAN AFFORD TO DO SO, NOW YOU GET THEM
■ Lest It mar your fortune .
hood advice from AT THE MERE COST OF HANDLING—DISTRIBUTED
• EXCLUSIVELY TO READERS OF THE
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I Greatly r? V
I Reduced i/F
In Blsa wfYn*
bound in black
SEAL GRAIN
Round Corners : Rad Rdf**.
Ntw Tyr»e; Bp«<tal Paper: Ptr*~>ng
and Durable; easy on th* Evs»-4
Luxurious Book
Coupon Appears Daily. Clip Coupon Today, Page, 2
MEMBERS AF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Associated Press i exclusive!} entitled to tfc* use of repuLlicsMon of
all news dieoatches credited to it or not, otherwise, credited in this paper and
also the local news published herein.
by saying, "I want to talk to you as a
working man.”
"I also am a working man," retorted
the bishop.
“Yes, but you get 1,500 pounds a year.
"Weil, I earn it,” said the bishop. "I
work longer hours than you do."
IB "NELSON'S will make you proud of yoar hair. ”
Thousands of particular colored people all
over the United States join in declaring
Nelson’s
Hair Dressing
cannot be equalled. Nelson’s is the
original high-grade hair dressing. It has
been sold and recommended by drug
stores for over 20 years.
Nelson’s makes tke most subkom kair soft and
ear? to manage, and gNes it a beautiful gloss.
Take this advertisement to tke drug store,
and be sure to get the genuine NELSON’S
Nelson Manufacturing Co., Inc.
I RICHMOND. VA.
I
American Dental Office
All Work Guaranteed Largest and Best Equipped South.
Sunday 9:00 to 1:00.
Over Howard Drug Store, Corner Jackson and Broad
Entrance 214 Jackson St (Johnson Bldg.) Augusta, Ga.
All Cars Pass Office.
Phone 639 for Dr. Lanier—Dr. Clark.
FREE
)
A SOUVENIR BOOK OF THE GREAT WAR
Which also contains a chronology of the war and other
interesting information, together with
a Buyer’s Guide of
AUGUSTA AND VICINITY
ATTENTION, MR. BUSINESS MAN!
Be Sure That Your Name is
Included in the Buyer’s Guide.
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For information call Phone 606 or 1718, or call per
sonally at The Herald Office.
AUGUSTA HERALD
The New Universities
Dictionary
Should be on the desk of every stenographer and
within reach of every clerk. Get them today.
Demand has been tremendous. The
people like the book—your neighbors
are taking it in great quantities.
And no wonder—it is the
Best Dictionary
Ever Published
All brand new this year.
25 Dictionaries in one.
Thousands of new words never before in ANY
dictionary.
Best illustrated dictionary in the world —profuse
in page and double page color plates.
The Augusta Herald
A Luxurious riook
Take One Home Today—
Money Back if Not Satisfied.
Publisher’s
Price
$4.00
YOURS FOR ONLY
THREE COUPONS kJMf*
and IliJll
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER’S
OA3T O R I A
My a
Mj y
I
I l W
1 V IBS' $
V \- iiv /
RUTH COLLINS
■ colored girl of Ft. Worth, Tex.,
sty* Nelson’s is the finest thing
she knows for making the hair
*oft and easy’ to menace.
Send us photograph
if 3>ou use NELSON'S. ail
■ _
Best Work at Lowest Prices
Gold Crowns $4—56.00
Bridges $4—56.00
Fillings .. .. 50c—75c— $1.00
Painless Extractions ... SI.OO
Mail Orders
Filled. See
Coupon.