Newspaper Page Text
SIXTEEN
The 100 Per Cent Home
Vi. —“Efficiency Bedroom”
Avoids Fancy Furnishings
and a Wasteful Wardrobi
The "Efficiency Bedroom" is a simp!
thine to obtain - so simple that it 1h t:\ir
prising how ftw bedrooms an* efficient
Any survey of fifteen or twenty home
will reveal
Bedrooms with windows overadci
with costly curtains that stop the fresl
air supply—
Bedrooms with elaborately bedecket
bods tying up enough money in fan*:
lace coverings to furnish a HCindbli
room—
Bedrooms with badly designed ward
robes that damage the clothing an<
shoes—
Wardrobes Jammed full of "cere
monial" clothing. seldom worn, bu
costly and useless
Bedroom curtains have a strange his
tory The first and worst houses ha<
no window*. Houses of wood or stone
built with an eye to defense, admitted
draughts of air through deep holes Ir
NUX-IRON
’ j;
C'3 Yrn<l. Murk
ft BmkJ Htnre
TONIC
Willi Paw-Paw Added
THREE POWERFUL
FORCES IN ONE
PUT UP IN LIQUID FORM
Mr. J. It. Watson, by occupation a
paperh&nger, rtriiling at No. SV4
l'rln<vs» Mreet, V.'llnilnt, r tori, N. C.
says:
"I was run down suffering from
constipation, nervous Indigestion and
stomach troubles. Hearing of the ro
markable virtue In Ironl/.ed l’aw-Paw,
I purchased a bottle at El vl ok ton’s
Drug Store. Itegan to taie It three
times tuefore meals, and In a few days
I felt like a new man, can eat anything
I like now without distress and can
recommend it to any sufferer, ns It
hies all that you claim for It, and will
never be without some In my home."
’ When run down, nervous, tired and
worn out all the time, take this re
liable preparation and know what It Is
to again feel like your old self. The
■ oat, regardless of the size of your
purse. Is the sum* and It may be se
cured without trouble at all leading
drug stores, and by taking It one loses
no time from work or pleasure and
Soon feels the wonderful transforma
tion wldeh comes over one when re
taining strength, vitality and old oni
bltlon. (Jet a bottle today. Interstate
Drug <•(!., Inc, New York. Adv.
• ■
Have You Piles?
Then You Hsve Something to Learn.
Thousands who have piles have not
leurned that quick and permanent re
lief can only be accomplished with
Internal medicine. Neither cut ting nor
any amount of treatment with oint
ments und suppositories will remove
the cause.
Had circulation causes piles. There
Is a complete stagnation of blood In
the lower bowel and a weakening of
the parts. I>r. J. * Leonhardt was
first to find the remedy. Ills pre
scription Is IIKM-ItOlI), a tablet med
icine. taken Internally, that Is now sold
by druggists generally. Dr. I .eon hard t
tried It In 1000 cases with the marve
lous record of success In OR per cent,
and then decided It should be sold un
der a rigid money.buck guarantee
Don't waste any more time with
outside applications (let a package of
HKM - HOI D from Wat..on Drug Co. to
day. It has given safe and lasting re
lief to thousands of peop'e, i.nd should
do the same for you It seldom fall*.
- adv
IlradaclK* ar«
often canard
from eve strain
or badly fitted
Glasses. M jri
business for
22 years has
been relieving eye strain with
correctly fitted Eye Glasses.
OR. HENRY J. GODIN,
Qstometrial Office, 956 Broad St.
Put VIM In Your Business
Iho \ IM is every ounce a truck—no part of it was
e\er designed or calculated to be used in a pleasure car
—that accounts for the VIM'S stamina, for its low operat
ing coat.
Ihe \IM is made to help the farmer and mer
chant make more money out of their business—and DOES
IT.
M e always carry a complete line of parts, to 5-ton
models, ready for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
WM. S. CANNON
DISTRIBUTOR.
521 BROAD. PHONE 1037.
the walls. These were stopped with
rugs or hides in cold weather—and so
oi itfihaieu curtains.
Later taii.i* tne window with wooden
or iron hiiutters, closed lor protection
when street .-ligating v. us common, and
always shut ,u night. The cioseu-win
tiow hahat lingers on.
imany < ao.e u amducenl iiorn or
paper; with giar.i, there arose a need
oi privacy, a.so a cnance io: uiap<ay.
tio the oidtirne useiui hangings and
routtcis became Iransiormeu into fancy
curtains.
Today, insofar as curtains are needed
for pnva y, they have a baaiu in logic,
nut e Ver> neeoiess trill is a sactmee
at tiie aitar oi imilatioh—that nuar at
wiiicii most housewives blindly worship.
The ideal bedroom oI course, is a
sleeping porch. Land ties* oxygen adds
quarter or a third to anyone's eiti
ciency. Kven in cnmates wnere sleep-I
lug porches are impossible, there are
iiaifway devices almost as good.
Windows may be removed altogether
and awnings installed. Casement win
dows. when v/ide open, give just twice
as much air as the sliding kind.
Aluny modern homes devote the entire
outer wail to one large wire screen,
within are French doors or several fold
ing doors on tracks.
Ti.e wali-bed mat retires during the
day into an iilventiiated or damp cubby
hole is likely to produce a poor duality
of sleep, to say nothing of colds and
low vitality. As a machine in a factory,
its W'ork m decidedly below par
But the built-in bed that stays out
in tile fresh air and hunstiine is super
ior to the purchased bed, for the simple
reason that it takes less capital.
how much is spent on your bed for
mere fashion?
If you want to figure this exactly,
W'u*ko nut a diagram, a sheet of paper
with five columns, in the left hand
column list the bed itself, spring, mat
tress. blankets, quilts, sheets, pillow
iuhch, and so on to the "fancy" adjuncts
pillow shams, covering, etc.
in the second column write the high
est possible cost of each article sup
uofdhg you hud trie finest mahogany
bedstead, costliest spring, (Iricst linen
anil bo on. 'I hut W'lli give you the most
"faidiiohublc’' st andard.
in < olumn three write the cost of your
own bed and articles. In ('olumn -I put
down the minimum cost of a bed that,
would be, from the merely practical
standpoint. Just as good to sleep in
Kinaiiy, in < oiumn &, put down the cost
of n military or army bed-the lowest
of all.
f on quire the totals.
Now how much is wasted on fashion
in your bed?
Try a somewhat similar test with your
wmurohe Just all the lyticlcs with their
■ ostr. under four lieatTings "Ccrernon
ial." Business. Work, and Spurts,"
Have you tied up too much money in
"< Vreruonhil * clothes?
Just i worn as to clothes closets.
Probably you < annul change yours Hut
la it efficient?
Tin* wide, shallow closet, no deeper
than the width of a < oafhanger with
ihrce or lour im ties of spare on each
M ’de, is Hi#* Ideal. It may even have
iouble doors. All it needs is a pole run
ning tile width of It, a step at the back
in keep shoes off the floor, and a shelf
bat* above the pole. 'Phe venlila
*on should lead into the room not out
ioors win re tiie dust comes from
No hooks hooks destroy the shape of
s'urun im and tin garments themselves,
they spend money for you
I hi' object of the efficient bedroom
s Just tin main object of the entire
ionic factory to get the biggest returns
or Ihe least money.
(To Be Concluded )
ME WIGGILY
AND THE ROSES
Copyright, 11*19, by Mct'lure Newspaper
Syndicate.)
(By Howard R. Garik.)
•Tan' You're II" cried Ilaby Hunty,
he bide rabbit Kiri, (*ne mornlns, as
'ln ran around on the porch of the Itol-
OW stump bungalow ami lapped Uncle
A igglly on ills tall silk hut with her
,mvv.
"Oh, dear! Now I suppose I've got to
base you! exclaimed the rabbit gen-
Hcman. us be started his pink nose to
twinkling "And I’m so stiff 1 can
hardly run this morning!"
But Mi IdOiiKcur* chased the little
rabbit girl, and he really felt better
ifter a lively race around the hollow'
"tump bungalow, so that some of hiH
Mlffries* was gone as he set forth, a
Bile later, to hop through the woods
Adth Hunty.
"What sort of atj adventure do you
liink well have today. Uncle Wlgglly?'
inked Baby Hunty, as she hopped along
leslde the rabbit gentleman.
“Oh, you never can tell," he answered.
1 suppose the skillery-scalery altiga
or. or the bud old Hipsisewah will coma
Bong und "
Hardly had Uncle Wlgglly said these
ew words than he and Baby Hunty
ieurd a sad little voice saying
"oh, dear’ oh. dear, me! Here ITn
aught in a sasnafraN tree!"
"Who’s that*" asked Baby Runty.
"I don’t know who It In, but I know
vho It Isn’t!" exclaimed Uncle Wlgglly.
"Then who isn’t it?" asked Baby
lunty.
"It isn’t the IMpalnewah,** spoke the
■A bblt gentleman. "He never uses
*oetry, though lie did cut some of your
lugary frosted chocolate cake the other
lay Hut 1 must see who this is. This
nay need help "
"Indeed l do!" went on the sad little
•nice.
"Who are you?" asked Uncle Wtggily
“A lightning bug. was the answer.
Some persons call us fireflies, and
hat's a good name. too. Hut I am
aught fast by my legs In the sticky
:um on tlife* sassafras tree, and l can’t
jet loose."
"I'll help you," said Uncle Wlgglly.
"So will I." added Huby Hunty.
She and Uncle Wlgglly looked. And
hey saw a little brown Aitd drab bug
>t» the branch of a sassafras tree not
far away.
"You don't look like a lightning bug,"
*i%hl liaby Hunty. "You don’t shine at
ill."
’I only shins In the dark." said the
>ug
"Yes. that Is true; many times 1 have
•eon >ou or your friends. ' admitted
,’ncle \N igglly. Then he gently set the
ht Doctor A way From Homs Whtn
Moat Needed
l*eop|e are often very much disappoint
d to find that their family physician is
way from home when they most need his
••r vices IBsctttfe* like pain In the slum
fill and bowels, colic and diarrhoea re
wire prompt treatment, and have in many
tistances proven fatal before medicine
ould be procured or a physician sum
moned. The right way is to keep at
and a bottle of t'hamherlaln’s Colic and
Marrahoea Remedy No physician can
rt'seribe a better medicine for these dis
it.iw By having it in the house you es
**pe much pain and suffering and a V
Isk. Buy it now ;it may save life Adv
AMATEUR NIGHT
-
firefly free from the sticky gum, and
the little bug flew away. But before
it left it said:
"If ever i can help you, or Baby
Bunty, I shall be most glad to do to.
Untie Wiggily."
"Oh, pray don’t mention it," spoke
the rabbit gentleman, diffident-like and
shy.
Uncle Wiggily and Baby Bunty tratft
eled on and on over the fields and
through the woods, looking for an ad
venture, but they could not seem to
find any, unless you call helping the
lightning hug an adventure.
And pretty soon it began to get dark,
b*r Uncle Wiggily had stayed out later
than ho meant, to.
"Oh, dear!" sighed Baby Bunty.
Hadn't we better get back to your hol
low stump, Uncle Wiggily?"
"Yes. 1 think so," said the rabbit gen
tleman. But when he tried to find the
path that led to home and Nurse. Jane
he could not It was too dark.
"Oh, we are lost in the woods and the
bud Bipsisewah will get us," cried Baby
Bunty.
"Hush!" raid Uncle Wiggily*. "tt will
be all right I’ll light a fire here on
this big stone The Bipsisewah, or no
other wild animal, will come where
there is a fire'"
"Then please light one,” begged Baby
Bunty.
But when Uncle Wiggily tried to make
the fire he found he had no matches
And then, all of a sudden, there wat
heard a crackling and rustling in tin
bushes.
"Oh, the Bipsisewah is coming!" cried
Baby Bunty.
"He'd soon go away W I could rnakf
these sticks burn!" said Uncle Wiggily
trying again to find a mutch, but lit
could not.
The Bipsisewah came nearer and
nearer, howling for rabbit-ear souse
And then, all of n sudden, a little bright
and shining light flew through the air,
and came down on the flat atone when
Uncle Wiggily had placed the sticks tc
make a fire. And, in another moment
ten thousand other little points of ligh!
came flying along They dropped down
among the dry sticks and branches at
the spot where Uncle Wiggily had tried
to make the blaze until if looked as il
the whole place wore bunting.
"Oh, look!" cried Baby Bunty. "\V«
have a bonfire!"
And the Bipsisewah, seeing the bright
light, gave a grumble and growl and
quickly sneaked away.
"Just my luck!" he said. "I thought
I’d have a bit of souse, but I don't even
dare to go near the fire!"
And Uncle Wiggily, looking among
the sticks, said:
"This Isn’t burning fire at all; t’s* just
a lot of lightning hugs crawling on tli«
pieces of wood."
"Yes. that's what we ar«. said a voice.
"I am the lightning bug you saved from
the sticky gum. and these are my cou
sins ami my sisters and my aunts."
"Ami you saved us from the Bipsise
wah!" said Uncle Wiggily. and so the
lightning bugs had Then the-firefly
hug flew on ahead, lighting the path
to the hollow stump bungalow for tha
bundles, and all was well.
And If the loaf of bread doesn’t hide
in the flower |>ot when the rice puddlm;
wants It to help catch the raisins lor .1
pie. I’ll tell you next about Uncle Wig
gilj* and the roses.
TWO SHOT TO DEATH
IN STRIKE RIOTING
Situation Becomes Serious In
Toledo— Mayor Calls
For Help
Toledo, Ohio.—Two men were shot to
leath and twit others were dangerously
wounded in a riot late Tuesday night
growing out of the lalxtr disturbances In
volvlng 13.000 enq loves of th« Wilys-
Llverland Automobile Company. The vic
tims. presumably Idle employes of th%
'©mpunv were killed by discharged sol
tilers who are guarding the plant The
killing was the culmination of three riots
Tuesday and last night, which result'd
n Injury to thirteen persons
The killing occurred in front of a fire
Button near automobile plant where 11
iliechnrg'd soldier guard with u woman
PomtNtnton had nought refuge from n
threatening crowd The guard In! been
sal king through a residential district or
•mploves of the automobile eompanv ?*
uul fled to the fire station when a crowd
■»f men hooted him and made mer.acm
remarks
('alls for assistance brought two motor
ruckloads of soldi »r guards from the f
tomobito plant When th«" arrive'! at the
nation one of them fired a pistol into
the sir The guard* then fired their
rifles and pistols Into the crowd
Colombo*. Oft k— At
Mavor Scheiber of T ie to w ed Govern
»r Cox saving "send tr#op« Immediate!’
to Toledo".
The mayer **td nil axnilnhV ’minty
iherifTs had boon sworn In but that he
*as *‘i nable to cope w »h the sit nation"
COUNCIL OF FOUR TAKES
UP BOUNDARY CASES
PiHr-TlM* i-o»iu ;1 of four met this as.
ternoon U* ~er** on territorial <pies»
lions and reparation* nui with tht
council ft i* 'iii iwool Iht the clauses
of the Austrian penes treaty dsaHng
'* Bh reparuUou* no* lt*v« bvvii coin
CHE AUGUSTA HERALD
Sensations of An Artist’s Model
Bohemia Frolics and Fakes
In these chapters, Manya Rudina,
Russian-born New York artist’s mod
si, concludes the story of the Vlen
icse artist’s love tragedy, and ends
:he series, "Sensations of an Artist’s
Model" with inside stories of the life
n New York’s Bohemian art studios.
BY MANYA RUDINA.
Famous New York Artist’s Model.
rile only place in New York where it
possible to get the atmosphere of real
hernia is at ft Benguin party. Never
ill 1 forget my first Benguin party,
t. was all very impromptu. One eve
tg after a sketching session somebody
Id: "Let’s, have a party.” Everybody
re«*d to the suggestion. So the tele
one was busy and in less than an hour
• pai ty started. There were about 40
us.
hirst of all we made the punch. This
is cooked in a pail on the stove, "Little
■11." It consisted *of red wine, water,
mpes. nuts, cloves and a bottle of rum.-
Try body took a hand In stirring it
>r luck." We drunk the punch from tin
ps filled with an old dipper.
Then wo ail tvont into the large room,
lore the picture show's are held, and
need An old graphaphone provided
t* music. We also had some exhibition
ncing. Mlchlo I to, the clever Japanese
ncer, performed with his partner. Tulle
ndahl. i cave a Russian folk dance.
\Vx: \\> piay--d "statues." We had lots
fun burl, squelng famous groups of
ituary and paintings of historical in-
Ht iii’h as "Washington 'Tossing the
law are" and Rosa Bonhem-'s "Horse
dr."
After this the artists cot up a jazz
ml. the instruments being a comb and
per. a pail, a poker and stove, a piece
sheet iron and a tin cup. The effort
is quite successful.
1 had a good time. It was so different
>m most parties. Everybody was so
*e ami natural. Even the older artists
ted like a lot of young and boisterous
tiool boys.
We broke up at 3 in the morning. A
rty of us then went over to the Green
ch village ball at Webster llail. This
is a very stupid affair. It was suppos
to be an artists' ball, but. I don't be
ve there were more than half a dozen
lists present. Most of the people came
>m uptown and thought they were in.
• heart of Bohemia. Boor simple folks,
ey don’t know that it is Impossible to
ect Boheii'kurtsm. Bohemia is not a
ice; it is a gtate of mind. Some of
much-advertised restaurants in
ecnwieh village that are smothered in
tmosphere" are nothing but stupid car*
.tures of Bohemia. On the otlmr hand
have be«»n to honv's in the so-called
residential sections of New
•rk that breathe the real spirit of Bo
mb* That *1 because the |» ople
r«- were r'al Bohemians and didn’t j
wasrrTi ■’—■■irr innmMiia ■—
-TAKES OUT
THE KINKS
Hoot Soft, Straight Hair L&a
Photograph Btloa
gy Jum I
Ploiigh i DRESSING I
People mar Mtily have straight, soft, ®
lon« hair by simply applying Plough’* ||
Hair Dressing. In a short tima all your 1
kinky, snarly only, curly Hair, becomes 1
Soft, ulhy. smooth, Straisht, lon*, and can S
!'•’ Niiily handle.!, brush*d or
Plough's Bair Dressing, elegsntly per- £
funo d. m largo green can imcrc for your B
mcne> than auy other hair dressing*. -g
DPUG STORES AGENTS
* OC OR BY MAIL WANTED fl
PLOUGH CHEMICAL CO.
~ ~ ~~~
Oculists C
Glasses Prescriptions |
Properly mica. I
Fitted I
AUGUSTA j
OPTICAL CO.
PC3 Broad Street.
Ultta Leneet Creoke't
♦or Far Lenses for
•no Near Bun
Viston Glare
I
know it. When a man tells you that he Is
a Bohemian you can bet that he is noth
ing of the sort. He is probably only
lazy. And artists are never lazy.
The costumes at Webster Hall were
ridiculous. The semi-nudeness in which
many of the girls were clothed was just
plain vulgarity. I suppose this sort of
thing is the result of making policemen
the censors of morality. Policemen, in
their ignorance, permit vulgar perform
ances and shut up on artistic ones. It
is infinitely better to dance or pose in
the nude than to half conceal the body
in suggestive tights, or low cut dresses.
After some years of posing I And that
there is no embarrassment for either art
ist or model posing in, the nude. At the
Penguin the wife of one of the artists—
who had never posed professionally—did
not hesitate to pose in the nude as a
model for the sketching party at her
husband’s request. Jt is all In the attitude
of mind.
MRS. SANDS WAS
UNABLE TO DO
HER HOUSEWORK
»
Suffered WitfT Rheumatism of
Her Hip.
Prescription 0-2223 Gave Re
lief Where Others
Had Failed.
Mr. W. E. Sands. Owensboro, Ky.,
Route 6. writes February 26, 1919, as
follows:
"My wife had been suffering with rheu
matism of the hip for some time and
after trying a number of remedies with
out success. I saw Prescription C-2223
advertised and had it recommended to
me After using one large bottle, my
wife in able to be up and is now' doing
her own housework, which she was not
able to do before taking this medicine.
I think Prescription C-2223 a wonderful
medicine and want to recommend it to
»*Y£ry one suffering with rheumatism. I
would b’ glad to have any one ask me
about it."
Prescription C-2223 is giving relief to
hundreds »*very day. If you sufferer with
rheumatism, lumbago, gout, lame back,
and similar troubles, go to your druggst
today and buy a $1.50 bottle of Presc.rip-
Ition <'-2223 and a box of 2223 Liver Pills.
■ Your money back if you are not satisfied.
Prescription
czn 3
/fheuma t/sm
AN INVITATION
TO 011ß OUT OF TOWN FRIENDS
To express Our Appreciation to our Out-of-Town friends, and to be of more
real service to them, we gladly offer you the advantage of a place in our large store
for you to rest while in the city, eat your lunch, and keep your bundles.
We also offer you the service of our errand boys and our Telephones Meet
Your Friends Here.
You are welcome to all—entirely Free.
Yours For Service,
STANDARD SAfoPLE SHOE STORE
WHY
PAY
MORE?
KINO
■iy BLOOD
ureters
As the Lion is Monarch of
the Forest, so S. S. S. is King
of Blood Purifiers and Master
over all Blood diseases.
Pure, rich blood and a free
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Healthy blood stimulates the
excretory members and en
ables them to filter out of the
system everything that is not
necessary or beneficial to the
growth and development of
the body. Thus we are apt to
remain healthy unless there is
a weakening of the vital fluid
or an impure infection of the
circulation.
Imperfect blood, takes va
rious forms in its outward man
ifestation. A weak, watery
circulation denotes anaemia
with its attendant evils of pale,
waxy complexions, malarial
conditions, or perhaps some
more definitely marked disor
der is shown. Frequently the
blood becomes infected with
acrid humors, and Eczema,
Tetter, Acne, or some other
skin affection makes its ap
pearance, while an excess of
uric acid in the circulation pro
duces Rheumatism with its
pains and aches. Old Sores and
Ulcers are likewise dependent
on bad blood, these places be
ing kept open and in a state of
irritation by the drainage of
pollution whicto disordered
Read Herald Want Ads
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