Newspaper Page Text
EIGHT
Jarrmijne
The rnfiSt drliphtiul laxative. The up-to-date method of overcoming torpid
liver, constipation and biliousness, Use them once and you mill never go
back to strong purgatives that taste so bad.
Lamarine W afers taste good— just like candy. Just eat or dissolve one or
two on the tongue.
At all drug stores 30c per bottle. Use according to directions with each
bottle.
MArfUFACTITFP IJY
LAMARINE LABORATORIES,
ATLANTA, GA.
-JERNIGAN & WALL
318 Jackson Street.
—Dealers —
MAXWELL
Pleasure Car and Truck
A car of the Boulevard, yet built sturdily to
withstand the savage trails of the great outdoors.
The Mighty Master Truck.
Ask Any Owner.
Lyons ’
BEVERAGES
Sold to Merchant* Only in Kegs and Barrels
To obtain the highest j?rade non-alcoholic drinks
order Muscadine, Peach, Apricot, Loganberry and Ap
ple Punches and Cherry Tip, Gin Rickey and Mexican
Hot. They are big sellers everywhere.
We also make the I/J llo(ri Qi*c Put U P in
highest trrade of If lllcydl o barrels only.
Pare Apple Cider VineftaT, “Gold Dust” brand,
“Villaße Belle” brand, “Lion” brand and Malt-distilled
Pickling Vinopar.
LYONS BROTHERS COMPANY
ATLANTA, GA.
To Our Out of Town
Friends
Make the Augusta Battery Service Station
Your Headquarters.
Free Water Free Testing
Owiuna)
“THRU SERVICE WE GROW.”
W. S. Eaton, Mgr.
AUGUSTA BATTERY SERVICE
Northwest Corner Fifth and Broad Sts.
Phone 177.
TOR HEALTH’S SAKE
SCREEN YOUR HOUSE!
SCREEN
DOORS
$2.00
. and
up.
Air«’nt* for the famous Miller Ratine. Excelsior
Cook Stove and Florence Automatic Oil Stove. Beet
for hot weather.
LOUIS P. SPETH
PHONE 616. 1046 BROAD STREET.
I'
9 SCk t F POO If 'jj
‘ I
mp : ;r 3
SCREEN
WINDOWS
50c
and
up
Knock H. Out of H. C. L.
Richard Spillane, Foremost American Economist, Sees
Two Ways of Doing This
BY RICHARD SPILLANE,
(Noted Economist Who Writes on Busi
ness, Financial and Kindred Topics
for The Herald.)
One-half of America does not know how
the other half lives. The east in its prids
thinks it is the center of knowledge, cul
ture* and progress. It does not know that
oraotirally < •• .erythlng that is new, re
formative or logical, whether in politics,
BUILD FIRM FLESH
AND STRENGTH BY
TAKING PHOSPHATE
Nothing Like Plain Bitro-Phosphate to
Put on Firm, Healthy Flesh and
to Increase Strength, Vigor
And Ncrvo Force.
The average person is beginning to
realize more and more that the of
physical strength and nerve exhaustion
(frequently evidenced by excessive thin
ness) are the direct cause not only of the
failure to succeed in life’s struggle for
the necessities of existence, but also for
the handicap in one’s social aspirations.
Compare the thin, sickly, angular frame
with the well rounded form which is
|r<t> a
/ff the seaside Ino. the plump well
rounded figure is most admired.
usually accompanied by the bloom of
health and attractiveness.
That millions of people are conscious
of this handicap Is evident from the con
tinued appearance in newspapers and
magazines of many suggestions propos
ing various remedies in food or medi
cine or exercises, either of which might
or might not be appropriate for a given
case
Authorities, however, agree that
healthy nerve tissue is absolutely essen
tial to a strong, robust body and mind.
Wejik nerves, while indicated by a multi
tude of different symptoms, more im
mediately and generally result in lack
of energy, sleeplessness, irritability, de
pression. etc., which conditions gradu
ally consume the healthy flesh, leaving
ugly hollows, as fiat chest, bony neck
and scrawny arms and legs.
Our bodies need more phoosphate than
most of them are able to extract from
the foods we eat nowadays, and many
opinions affirm that there is nothing
which may b<* taken into the human
system that so effectively supplies this
deficiency as the pure organic phosphate
known as bitro-phosphate and sold by
Howard Drug Store in Augusta and good
druggist* everywhere.
The essential phosphoric food elements
In bitro-phosphate assimilated by the
nerve cells should soon produce a pleas
ing change In nerve energy, and hence
increased vitality and strength. With the
burdens of nervousness, sleepleasnesa,
lark of energy, etc., lifted, normal weight
with its attractive fullness and ruddy
glow of health replaces the former pic
ture of skin and bones.
('AUTION: —AIt hough Hitro-Phosphate
is unexcelled for the relief of nevousness
and attendant disorders, owing to its
tendency to increase weight, one should
watch the scales while taking It unless
it is the desire to put on flesh.
LIFT OFF CORNSi
MAGIC! NO PAIN
Drop Freezone on a touchy corn
then lift that corn off
with fingers
n
W Tiny bottles cost
5 only a lew cent*.
0
Drop a little Freexono on an aching
ram, Inatnntly that com stops hurting,
thwti you lift tt right out. It doesn t
pain one bit. Yes, magic!
Why wait? Your druggist sells a
tiny bottle of Freerono for a few cents,
sufficient to rid your feet of every
hard com. soft corn, or com between
the toes, nnd culliiws, wlthtvut sore
ness or Irritation. Froenone la the much
talked of other discovery of a Cin
cinnati genius, mlv.
AMERICANS
MAKING GOOD
AT SIXTY-FIVE
Don’t worry about old **e A Bound
man is (cod at any age Keep your
body in good condition and you can lie
as bale and kearty and able to "do your
bit" a* when you were a young fellow.
Affections of the kidneys and bladder
are among tbe leading causes of early
or belcless sgr. Keep them clean and
the outer organs in working condition,
ud you will have uotbing to fear.
Drive the poisonous wastes from the
system and avoid uric acid aceuaiula
tioß" Take' GOLD MR DAI. Haarlem
Oil t’siwe’-s periodically and you will
And that you are as good a« the next
fellow. Your spirits wdl be lejuve
nsted. your muscles strong and your
mind krlii ruou |fc for any task.
OOT.D MEDAL Haarlem CHI Capsules
will do the work. Hut he sure to get
ths origii.al imported uOI.D MKDAL
Haarlem Oil Capsule' They are re
liable and should help you. or your
money will lie refunded. For sale by
d*> . msta. In aealed packages
three ..ata.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
mechanics or general industry begin# in
me a cat u.nu giauiotiij wono> caaL
. aotniiig strange m tma. Ago,
weaun and son oily are conducive 10 con
aervaiiafn. a new piay rarely nas us
trial in a metropolis, it costs iesa to try
it out elsewhere. Trolleys were known to
towns Deiore tney came to tne ug cities,
experiment is cheaper in a small way
man in a big.
a man 01 me east traveled Ln the mid
ale west wiinin the dast month, tie saw
many things novel to him yet taking root
and soon to be common in tne middle
west. A year or two irom now tney may
reach tne Atlantic seanoaru in their tuil
eiiecL
rue west and the middle west are on
the road to reducing the high cost of
living, in Cleveianu, tne visitor found
some of the largest hotels had transiorm
ed their grill rooms into serve sell res
taurants where a patron could get tne
same character of lood and the same
quantity ior one-third less than in tne
general restaurant of the establishment.
I ENANT SUPPLIES
ONLY THE RENT.
lie found apartment bouses where the
tenant when ne a<gried a lease got not
only the apartment but every furnishing
irom knives and lorka and napery to bed
and bed clothes, rugs pictures, lounges,
decorations. Practically nothing had to
ue supplied by the tenants but their
clothes and the rent.
An inventory was taken when the ten
ant leased the apartment and a bond
given lor the good care oi the contents.
When the tenant gave up the apartment
another inventory snowed if anything was
missing.
Tosaipjy the general run of persons do
not appreciate the radical economies at
tending these innovations.
Hotel and restaurant keepers say the
patron who orders a la carte usually or
uers more than he eats. That means
waste. The person who serves himself
rarely takes more than he requires. That
is economy.
The greater saving is in the abolition
of tile useless waiter and the tip.
it is estimated that between iO and 13
per cent of the meals eaten in America
are served in hotels and restaurants. The
servo self plan nas its limitations, but it
it effects one-third of the patrons of res
taurants when it comes into its fullest
utilization it should result in a pronounc
ed saving. '
WAITERS NEEDED
IN OTHER LINES.
The money part is considerable. So Is
the food. The bigger is in the changing
over of the waiter from what practically
is an unproductive employment to a pro
ductive one for t*ms of thousands oX these
servitors naturally will be forced into in
dustrial lines.
No one need expect the waiter to dis
appear from the sceme in America. There
always will be plenty of persons willing
to pay for personal service whether for
show or because they like* attention, but
the high cost of living has knocked the
props from under the waiter as a class
and he never is likely to come back to
his former state of greatness and pros
perity. Lately he has been almost pluto
cratic.
The standardized apartment seems des
tined to become an institution. It is well
that it should. The American family is
tho most migratory of any on earth un
less it be the Arab. In every city the
Mover, that is, the man who makes a
business of moving household goods, Is
übiquitous.
THREE MOVES
EQUAL A FIRE.
The wastes of moving are so well es
tablished that it has become an axiom
that three moves equal a fire. 1* urruture
not infrequently sutlers more from one
moving than one year of service while
fragile articles, particularly glassware
and crockery, rarely escape whole.
The new standardized apartment should
minimize this loss and make housekeep
ing simpler. Americans, as a rule, have
too much furniture. This is so well rec
ognized that some foreign visitors say we
are slaves to our household belongings.
With various other nations, the Japanese
in particular, tt is the reverse. The aver
age Japanese family of means can pack
all its household goods on one push cart.
Standardization of apartments does not
mean absence of variety any more than
standardization in the automobile trade
meant an end to variety, but it doeri mean
that through such standardization the
costs of furniture by reason of bulk or
wholesale buying will be much [educed.
This applies to everything from the wall
paper, the curtains, the knives an® the
lurks to the rugs, the. beds, the Cnairs,
C 1 Somehow every problem comes sooner
or later to solved. Ihe high cost of
living is a problem in many millions of
households The serve
and the standardized apartment and flat
do not solve the probiem, but they pojjt
the way. They tend to reduce the waste
som« of the necessities of life
clown in prk-e They are JM*
headway is being made. That is rood.
Prices never are going to get back to
whore they were before the war. but
there is no reason why they should not
come down considerably from where they
are today if we eliminate the wastes.
PLAN TO BRIDGE
SANTEE RIVER
Sumter, S. C.—The state need of a
crossing of the Santee was recognized
Monday at a meeting of good road en
thusiasts. who hope to help accomplish
something to meet this need. The meet
ing was presided over by R- B. uelser.
who suj a member of the legislature laet
winter lea the tight that failed to e«ab
sh the state hi eh, way system. Mr. Bel
ter too Is president of the Sumter Auto
mobile Association, under whose ausnices
the meeting was held.
Mr Reiser displayed the map of the
proposed Swstem of State Highways, and
explained the proposed location of the
tmssage of the river The Highway <
mission has already surveyed and esti
mated costs in connection with project,
so It is a. sanctioned scheme in that re
snect Tin- people of Clarendon County
have already made a move toward »ec ur -
Ing the road and bridge and had called on
Sumter for co-operation. Th* meeting
passed a resolution 'approving or the
Highway Commission's choice, or pas
sages. the location at Pinckney s l-rinding.
It passed another resolution approving ot
the building of the bride and road by a
corporation to he formed th»t pur
noao as its committee to carr> 0,11
wishes and to confer those Inter
ested In other counties K. B. l'elser. 1-.
p. Jennings M M Platt. M. U 1 arioi
"The proposition started In Clarendon
was to take up a public aubTOHptlon In
•he interested counties with which to
build the bridge. The Idea
rnthcring was to form a .J!* 1
utility corporation which would build the
■' “lee and operate It as a toll Proposl
tdn or turn it over to »he commissdon
whenever the commission It. The
Idea was to have tl\e people In all the
counties t)iat would he benefit ted hr this,
subset .lie to stock In the proposed cor
, oration, so that It would truly b* *
lie mutter, ntut not one for tne gam oi a
few capitalist*. _
VARNVILLE NEWS
» _
Special to ’ Herald. , _
Varnvlhe. • C.-Dr. C. P Vlncentjlr..
and family an visiting r, ‘ la,l '.'s
Mr.' Jaims Goethe wan railed to ner
I forint r horn In Pennsylvania Tu'jJjJ
of thli week to the bedalde of Ikt aged
father who l* extremely 111.
Several cur-load* of gravel have been
dlatributed around the depot here, and
hr noon as it Ir packed it will make travel
much lighter knd eliminate some of the
duat. ..
One car-load of gravel on the •idr
walk from Mm realdence to the
residence of Mr. K. C. Glenn will make
It p tesihle for the Rchool children to
reach iichool without KOtnfr half a mils
out of the way. and It w*lll nlao make
it pons hie for those living In the neigh
borhot-d above mentioned to come down
•own without walking on the railroad
• track.
Mr nnd Mrs Newton, of Macon. Ga..
■*'••• with their daughter. Mrs. A. U
, aVs who was pain full v hurt in an au
tomobile accident last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dftvi* Pntertnio In Honor
of Seldltrt.
Mr and Mrs c\ M Davla entertained
tVcdnepdav iv, nlmf in honor of H. H.
’•* and Carlton Pavla, recently re
* -'d frtmi everasaa duty a*lth th«' Am
| ” *n rtp dlt‘onarv ferce tn FVnne#
v, ‘ c »he ci. lnvlfd w-o-n: Ml«^e«
Louise Croiby, Marls Dowling, Luc it 1.
Glover, Vivian Hunt, Estelle Hay and
Messrs. Hiers, J. E. Barnes, Joe Ginn,
Lloyd McMillan and E. W. Peeples, Jr.
Avery pleasant evening was spent, and
some of the experiences of the returned
soldiers were told. Refreshments were
served followed by music and dancing
It will be very gratifying to the many
friends of Mrs. J. P. Murdaugh to know
that her condition is smewhat improved.
Mrs. Murdaugh has been seriously ill for
tLe past two months.
Private J. A. Peeples has returned to
his home near Varnville after an absence
of one year and ten months. Mr. Peeples
enlisted at Charleston and was sent to
Fort Screven. Ga.. from there ho went to
The Mission of
Swift & Company
Sv/ift & Company has become one of
the large businesses of the world through
continuing to meet the growing needs of
a nation and a world.
Society has a right to ask how the
increasing responsibilities and opportu
nities for usefulness which go with such
growth are being used by the men who
direct its affairs—and the men have the
right to answer:
To promote the production of live stock and
perishables and increase the food supply;
To reach more people with more and better
meat;
To make a fair competitive profit, in order to
reimburse the 25,000 shareholders for the
use of their capital, and to provide for the
future development of the business;
To reduce to a minimum the costs of preparing
and distributing meat and to divide the
benefits of efficiency with producer and
consumer;
To live and let live, winning greater business
only through greater usefulness, with injury
to nothing but incompetency, inefficiency,
and waste; to deal justly, fairly, and frankly
with all mankind.
e
These are the purposes and motives of the men who
direct the policies and practices of Swift & Company.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
Augusta Local Branch, 918-920 Walker Street
R. M. Calkins, Manager
Nsw World*—
Now Life—
New Thought*—
New Word*—
■ Needed la Rome sad - . _ _ , _ _ . , _ ’
>1 office. Just Off- the Press—Pnmted From New Tysc Pjg
■ f''Wfa ml *" ua \ S dead as an -old newspaper—its in forma
'jt<' J&st tion won’t fit your work of to-day—out jj|l
H
handling. Distributed exclusively for readers by H
™ USTA HERALD I
AO Brand New This Year—2s Dictionaries in One
Eg J Thousands of new words never before in ANY
W i fuse in page and double-page color plates. *
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Varmont, to Long Island and then to
i ranee. He spent ne year and six movers
overseas.. *
SPIES IN BOLS ARMY
Omsk, Siberia.—There are three spies
to every fifty soldiers in the Bolshevik
army on the Ural front according to an
engineer who has investigated conditions
y ie . r ®- He Bays that the discipline of the
Bolshevik army is severe and effective
ana is trengthened by the reign of fear
caused by the operations of these spies.
Tne custom, he said, was to make the
Letts and Jew's commissioners in the
army and these commissioners ruthlessly
//q W322S
W£%F7 85% 571
\r£r/ja*Um£ll
NEW DICTIONARY
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4
*?hot down any officers and oldier sus
pected of intrigue or double-dealing or
whenever there was an error in strategv.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
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