Newspaper Page Text
SIX
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
AUGUSTA. GA.
Daily—Afternoon Sunday—Morning
Entered at the Augusta, <Ga., Postoffice aa Mail Matter ot the
Second Clasa
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Aasociated Pres, 1* exclusively entitled to the use of re
publication of all % news dlEputcbea credited to It or not otherwise
credited In this paper and also the local news published herein
A THOUGHT
L i>
Whoso bossteth himself of a false
01 st It like cloud* and wind without
rain.—Prov. 25:14.
The less people ajwak of their
gnntneM* the more wc think of it.—
Bacon.
LINCOLN’S ROAD TO AUGUSTA
Lincoln county wants cloaer rela
tion* with Augusta. That’s natural.
Augusta has been the natural trading j
point for Lincoln county folk a from »
the year One. When General Elijah
<’larke was flgurlhg in Georgia’s co
lonial history during the Revolution
ary War, Augusta waa Lincoln's trad.
Ing point for there Wa* no other place
to go.
Even before the time of General
Clarke, Augusta was Lincoln’s trading
poftnt, and before Georgia waa settled
aa a colony the Indians from Eaton
ton and the wide scope of country
beyond were In the habit of coming i
to this point where Augusta wns des
tined to be, to trade deer and bear
skins and peltry for beads,*.gingham
and fire water. The I’eterahurg road
waa then an Indian trail tfod by 4.000
pack horses, and the Savannah river
was alive with Indian canoes. Cer- j
talgly Lincoln should have a road to
Augusta, and a good one.
Later, Mr. Eli Lockhart had a buck
et factory on the site of the old
Planters hotel, and Glendenntng's
marble yard waa Just across McCar
tnn street. Still Mr. Lockhart owned
Lockhart's ferry, and his grandson.
John Gletidcnning ran a Petersburg
boat that made a round trip once a
week each week, wfiile his son-in-law,
John Thomson, had a cotton mill at
Anthony Shoals and used to boat the
goods from Hroad rrver to Augusta
And Dre*7 Cade, owner of the Savan
nah Valley mills, ran a boat, while
Benny Cade, hi# brother, on the oppo
site side of the Tugalo, had one of hit
own Mcßride, McDaniel, Alex Searlea t |
a colored man, had boats; and a num- j
her of people higher up the river *
had boats.
But. to get back to the ’’Hoad to
L ncoln."
The Petersburg road is still In exis
tence and Augusta is still doing bus
iness at the asm# old atand. The Lin
coln folks have waited a long time,
but If they mean business they can
have the Petersburg road made a
state b ghway and Augusta will whirl
ip and help them do it. Lincoln, Mc-
Cormick and Edgefield ara similar
point* Edgefield is not/ at work build
ing a highway to Augusta, and McCor.
mick want* a bridge at Curry's ferry. J
When they get them, both will be ax- i
cellent tourist points as w ell aa flflf i
points for people from * Augusta to
spend the summer. Here le Lincoln’s
opportunity to get into the game.
Of course Augusta will do all In (
her power* (o aid Lincoln In getting '
the state highway built. We have
always felt that the two blank spaces
left on the map, one on each aide of
the river, looked llko the Sahara
Edgefield bag leas transportation fa
cilities than any town in South Caro- ,
Una. and Lincoln le about nip-ami- .
tuck with her We know that Augusta j
merchants pave been for the j
lost trade of Lincoln and the Up- <
country.’ and we hear there are many ,
fine old country seat* abandoned to j
the bats and owls up there. This la
all natural as they have no good road.
They must have them if they keep up
with the procession,
You can tell aprlng by the In
crease In medicine advertisements
It Is a wise man who looks things
over instead of overlooking things.
About the wrest Job on eartT la
telling cheap cigars and having to
•moke the aamp'es.
It THIS THE KNOXVILLE AND
AUGUSTA?
W J Oliver, formerly of Augusta
but later a plow manufacturer and ;
railroad contractor, waa building a
railroad through the Blue Ridge moun
tains when the World War came on
and the w«ck was*stopped. Oliver had
a bid on the panama canal,
but for some reason his Md was not |
successful.
A dispatch from Greenville now ,
states that aurveys to determine what j
would be necessary to complete the
aeventy mile link in the mountains
tit the ra Irotd started some twenty
yeate ago between Greenville amt
Knox\ Jlle, Tenn . with a view to tak
ing steps to promote it* construction,
has been undertaken by the traff'c
btuenu of the Greenville chamber of
commerce. The dispatch also says ef
forts will be made to Inter Knox
ville rs well aa Greenville capital.
This le probably in the Interest of
the (touthern railway. The Carolina,
Cumberland Gap and Chicago waa be
ing bud! from Aiken up to Abbeville
8. C , but when the work waa com
pleted as far aa Edgefield the work
suddenly stopped. Tb s would give
the (Southern an excellent line from
Knoxville to Augusta, and also to
Charleston. It would solve the prob
lem f«a the Southern of piercing the
Hlue ltidge and entering the coal field*
with the r own Independent line
When they sign a treaty in the
Bazars it la usually just for the
week-end.
Ma'l robber escaped in Chicago
Since they catch so few of them they
should watch them mate ooit’j
The real problem of this hofid
Court they art arguing about is
"Who will he the policeman?”
Ford la building a plant in Den-
but this lent what is gotten
there.
ADVERTISING SOUTHERN
MARKETS.
The Southern Newspaper Puhliah
ers‘ Anoclatlon haa appropriated the
sum of *IOO,OOO to be taken from
j the organisation's fund which will he
used to advertise the market, of the
South. Alabama I" selected aa the
firat state for exploitation.
Thla aaaoelatlon la an organisation
of newspaper publishers who are ex*
pert. In the art of publicity. Includ
ing the matter of effective placement
and the method of presentation of the
advertising matter. The fund of *IOO,-
! 000 will probably be more effective In
Introducing Southern products and
developing the South's markets, than
five times the amount not so Judic
iously expended.
WOMEN WANT A NEW PARTY.
A dispatch Washington says
that the women are threatening to
start a new political party. At the
closing session of the woman's com
mittee for political action, Mrs. Har
riet Stanton JHlatch declared that the
time for expecting anything progres
siva out of either of the old parties
was past, and women would have to
carry the country forward. The hop#
of victory for a new political party
lies with the women.
"This new party should not be a
l third party. One of the others can
i die," said she.
Charles Edward Russell had urged
the women to enter one of the two
dominant parties and take with
them tlielr aplendld platform. Mrs.
Ulatch's clarion call for a new party
was In answer to Mr. Russel.
"What Is the use of carrying this
magnificent platform to a group ot
rascals on the one hand and a group
of stupid people on the other," she
said. "Men are the orthodox con
aervatlst sex. They haven't had a
new political thought elnce iB6O.
Women are not afraid of change,
"We believe that America Is not
fairly represented by oui present
political alignments."
WORLD COURT PLANS
NOT UNDERSTOOD
BY PUBLIC
By Charlss P. Stewart
WASHINGTON.—First you hava to
mulerntand how a "Deitfua of Na
tions" differs from an "Association of
Nations,'
Then maybe you’ll be aid© to under
stand how an "International Tribu
tial” differs from an "International
Court."
A "League’ was President Wilson's
Idea.
An "Association' was President
Harding's,
That’s how THEY differ.
It MUST be they differ, because
Harding s eisettun was mainly a repu
diation of WUsoA's idea The Wil
son idsa having heen repudiated in
his favor, Harding would hardly have
l»ut forward an Idea of his own that
meant the same thing.
The "Internallnna! Tribunal* was a
scheme of Hecretary of State Hughea.
Senator Lodge’s pwn friends sat
the senator's principal hope wss to
"kill off" the proposed "International
Tribunal" when he suggested the "In
ternational Court.' If Lodge likes the
notion of an "International Tribunal"
*•* little that he wants to "kill It off,"
It isn't reasonable To suppose the "In
ternational Court" he offers as a sub
stitute is Its twin.
Experts point out that neither the
"International Tribunal’ nor the ’'ln
ternational Court" In to b© confused
with the "Permanent Court of In
ternational Justice," which ths "Lea
gue of Nations" estahllMhed. or with
the "Court of Arbitration," organised
hy "The lingua Conventions of 1899
and 1 !♦<»?.'•
What! You don’t understand it
yet' r
Neither does anybody else,
Cochran’s Daily Poem
Like a mate of color, such was she,
or a rainbow In the sky; and sho
mad© me think of a sun-kissed day as
she calmly sauntered by. Her hat. her
gown, well, everything, it neemrd,
wss just that quaint to make you
think of the harmony that a psintei d
like to paint.
And who am I that I Judge this
ml**? Well, she looked In my di
rection. and her smile that day, as
she glamed my wav. was the last
w«»rd In perfection. How often l have
seen that girl, the vls ton quickly told
me. and 1 walked right up and spoke
to her cause 1 knew she wouldn't
scold me.
Then we sauntered up the avenue
to a small but good case, where we
pa»*ed perhaps an hour or t*o (and a
five-buck bill) away Ami then hi
talked of a movie show. and. of
course, that's where we went And.
my, oh. my, how the time does fly.
for another hour was spent
When the film was o'er and there
wae no more, and we had no place to
roam, well, we took a car and we
traveled far till we finally landed
home 'Twas a night well spent for
a girl and gent, and ready for
another; 'cause l oft partake, and
f-*r her d«ar sake, the girl 1 take's my
mother.
LITTLE JERRY
AN IDAHO COW ATE
UP A POLL OF BILLS
WHICH HAD BEEM
concealed in a
haystack— she’d
OUCHTA GIVE NICE
R\CH MILK
IT -
Speaking The Public Mind
How Will City Get Money Except
by Taxation?
To The Herald: I have always
avoided rushing Into the newspa
pers w'lth my vie,,' a and thoughts
on problems of the day, as I have
realized that they were In all prob
ability In most instances about as
useless as the fellow who Is for
ever harking at the public through
the press on the one hand and
speech making on the other. It Is,
therefore, with some reluctance
that I ask you to give this com
munication space In your valued
publication.
If there ever was a time when
foolish arguments were being pre
sented to prop an empty dream,
audit Is taking place relative to the
city aporoprUtlng *125.000 for a
boat to be run on the river. Ho great
is the burden of taxation that a
thing of this kind makes a man's
fighting blood boll. We fellows
who are struggling to pay for a
little home for wife and baby and
lighting against the. poverty of old
a;;a, do net sit by and smile at
mounting taxes, nor do we huve
visions about fool things.
It Is announced that .Mayor Ju
lian M. Smith has a great financial
t*cheme. He Is to raise thin *135,000
by extracting *35,000 per year. In
cluding Interest. This, it la sold,
la not increasing the taxes. How
does the c*y rulse money ? Does I
not the bulk of It come through
taxation? In order to get the addi
tional *35,000 a year, me city will
liavu to Pick on one addltlona) mill
for the period ot three years, and
we still nave to pay three mills to
get the *135,000. Hy prolonging the
agony by paying *#5,000 each year
Interest In the case will be greater.
Then It is said tnat the expendi
ture of *135,000 tor the city and
some "people ot vision ' to specu
late with will not increase thu tux
rate!
It Is usserted that the govern
ment will spend millions to deepen
the channel of the (Savannah river
until It Is fifteen feet at the Au
gusta gauge at low water mark. 1
suppose, Mr. Editor. that an ap
propriation of money will bring
into existence water that has nev
er been before In the fciuvannah
river. If this Is true then let's beg
thu government not to appropriate
the millions too fast. We will have
to raise our levee and prepare
against a flood.
1 was very much amused at the
reported speech of Air. James To-
Idri In favor of the city throwing
its money away. The thing that
struck me more forcibly than any
thing else, was that Mr. Tobin did
not tell city council ot a single Ume
that he shipped ull that heavy In
crease In cotton by boat, or us
much as one Uile by the boat, or
what ills saving wns. 1 suppose
Mr. Toldn's vast wealth caused him
to make light ot the mere trifle of
*3s,uuo. If such an amount of mon
i y is of no consequence to this gen
tleman, suppose we ask him to do
nate a like amount, just, to start the
hull to rolling, ills argument,
about freight rates Is ns full of
holes hh the boat ventures are of
failures. He was thinking back
years ago—this is 1924.
Respectfully,
"ONE TO WHOM *35,0U0 LOOKS
lUO.''
Doss Augusta Need Another Mile
of Warehouses on ths
River Bank?
To The Herald: I liUAO heen
doing a little figuring on mo need
of Augusta for more warehoimea to
accommodate the river freight in
case the city buys a boat to navi
gate ths river. I find it will take
tho present boat on the river Juat
lti years lo fill the present ware
house space now available In Au
gusta. and In order for it to do
this. It must not iolhs a trip during
all this period, and of course if the
’ warehouses arc to stay full, none
of the river freight put in during
thin period must he withdrawn
otherwise the boat line could never
do the trick.
Of course it may be possible with
the proposed boat capable of car
rying twice as much freight as the I
present boat to fill our present ,
warehouse space say ih half the
time, K years, hut If those freights
THE HERALD'S
DAILY PATTERN
1^^4753
r *1
Q
4753—A ALIASING FROCK FOR
MOTHER'S GIRL.
In XYhlt© or co!. nrd linen this will
make a very **t.>factory 'wash dress’
for warm da vs. It is also pretty in
crepe or toil# Drawn work, bead
or floss embroidery or braiding would
be aitrsctiN© for decoration The
skirt of this model Is Joined to an
under body miJ Is finished separately.
The pattern Is cut In four sites: 9.
9. !•* and If years A 10-year else
requires yards of 32-tnch material.
Pattern mailed to any address on
receipt of 12c tu silver or stamps.
Aridr,,, a || order* lo
THE HERALOT
All ord#r* will h*v* prompt
attention. Cut out tbi* slip and
fe*wir*d #t once, pncloaing 12
cent, for tech pattern and le ad
ditional (or poetago.
Sit*
Name
Addr*,a
Street No.
State
A* thtee pattern, mult be sent
ter, a week , reduced to (ill or.
dare.
THE AUGUSTA HERALP, AUGUSTA, GA
should go out of the warehouse for
any purpose, even the new boat
could never get the Job done of fill
ing our present warehouse space.
it seems to me that If there Is
one thing that Augusta Is fairly
well equipped with at the present
time It is an abundance of ware
house space. It would be an eco
nomic mistake to build another
mile of warehouses on the river
bank at the present time.
WAREHOUSEMAN.
A Suggestion on the Proper Way to
Utilize the Bavannah River.
To The Herald: There are a
good many reasons why Augusta
as a city should not undertake to
use the taxpayers money to buy-a
boat, especially such a lo rut and
broad boat as recommended, to
navigate the Savannah river with
Its present channel. It can't be
done for two reasons. First, It Is
Illegal to use the taxpayers money
for any such purpose, and In the
second place such a boat cannot
navigate successfully the river un
til the channel Is deepened and
widened and possibly straightened
also.
However, If the legal obstacles
can be gotten out of the way by a
■constitutional amendment to the
constitution of the state, and a city
council can do anything It wants to
with the taxpayers money, even to
spending It outside the city limits
and where It chooses In the United
Rtates, then wo suggest that the
Savannah river be used as the first
commercial seaplane freight carry
ing route In the United States. In
this way freight could be trans
ported much more quickly than ei
ther hy boat or the rail lines and It
might be possible In time to ex
tend the service to Canada to the
north of us and to Cuba to the
south of us. The railroads would
find It much more difficult to com
pete with such a fast service and in
self defense would ho forced to
materially reduce their present
rates.
VISIONARY,
NEWSandVIEWS
—FROM—
U. S. CAPITAL
(By HARRY B. HUNT)
WASHINGTON. —The thorn In the
in the aide of Massachusetts
Republican* this year is David
Ignatius Walsh of Fitchburg.
Walsh, a Democrat, defeated John
W. Weeks, former senator and now
secretary of war, for the Bay State
senatorshlp In 1918. Hh is an aggres
sive, active, campaigner, popular botu
politically and personally, and his
friends are confident lie can turn the
trick again this year.
This in spite of the fact that, as
the home of President Coolldge, Re
publican standard bearer, every pos
sible trick of the game will be used
to pull Massachusetts over the top
with a majority for Calvin and his
congressional ticket.
WIDELY different in both physi
cal and mental makeup are the
two candidates around whom
the Massachusetts battle will
be waged.
Walsh Is a. good mixer. There is
a heartiness about him that makes
one feel at ease. He’s easy to ap
proach, easy to meet, easy to know.
He’s a big man. strong-featured,
smoothly shaven, weighing around 225
pounds. Fifty-two years old. his six
sedentary years in the Senate have
swollen Ids waist Bne. but not his
head. As a bachelor, he's much In
demand at dinners and social affairs
where unattached males of import
ance are at a premium. He dances
passably, but It is at the dinner tabic
rather than on the dance floor that
he shines.
SPEAKER FREDERICK GILLETT.
who ms administration candidate
will undertake to unseat Walsh
and tpit Massachusetts safely in
the Republican column again, is a
trim, prim gentleman who exudes an
atmosphere of exactitude, precision
and propriety that is rather chilling
to new acquaintances. Where Walsh'S
appearance and attitude invite ac
quaintance and fellowship. Gillett’s
hearing and aura convey a sense of
exclusiveness that is hard to pene
trate.
Precise in appearance, In the trim
of his clipped gray beard, in the fit
of his carefully tailored clothes, In
the words with which he appeals for
the return of a rugged Republicanism,
Gillett is precisely the sort of candi
date one would expect to sweep Bos
ton’s Back Bay district, the faculty
precincts of Cambridge and Amherst
and those sections of the state where
the blue blood and ancient traditions
of the state are still held In awe and
reverence.
BUT IN THE factory districts. „in
the mill towns like Lawrence,
Lynn, Fall River and scores of
smaller centers where worker*
•re in the majority and where New
England ancestry and tradition are
no longer In the ascendant, Walsh
will make the greater appeal And as
a Democrat who served the state well
ns lieutenant governor, governor and
senator, he will hold In line the full
strength of the regular Democrats of
the state.
CONTEST between Gillett
and Walsh brings to the front
the Massachusetts penchant for
•electing bachelors for high
public office.
Gillett was a bachelor through more
than 20 years of his service in Con
gress. In 1915. however, at the age
of 54. he married Christine Rice Hoar
of Worcester, widow of Rock wood
Hoar, former congressman.
Walsh's only sweetheart Is Miss
Democracy.
George Holden Tinkham of Boston,
however. Is th*» state's only bachelor
congressman brave enough to an
nounce that fact In his official bio
graphy But then Grnrge Holden
hunts Hons In Africa as pastime.
TIDBI rs
—OF—
TOWN TALK
Sureljr thts 1* a Rifat age we
nri* ltvlnß In. The front i>:ige of one
issue of The Herald—lust Tuesday
—carried three Items that smack
of the preternatural, and which
well Illustrate the maxim that this
is an era of marvel*.
One Item told of ettv dwellers in
london hearing nightingales sing
In woods hundreds >*f miles away
j lnutoin! of leaving the rlty to tntne'o
with Nature, we are now twinging
Nature to the cilv. The nlghtln- 1
gules were Indeed Induced to *mg
;hy special music Iwlng rendered,
j and a delicate hr<ai<lc»»UTK instru
ment hidden In nie w oils caught
I the natural tone* of the birds and
I sent their song hurtling through :hc
air to scores of radio receiving sets
In London homes and public build
ings
Another Item toM of the tvsns*
mission of pictures hr telephone—
the picture w»s published In yes
terday's Herald—and the announce,
j ment that a test h - *d shown that
she same thing could he done bv
I radio. Still another Item told ot
man's conquest of the air the flight
|of American alrm«> nec >s« the
Pacific being completed and mark*
tng the movement of flying tna-
chines over every section of the
globe.
One day's newspaper now heralds
greater progress than was accom
plished in scores of years by an
cient civilization.
Some northern writers are
anathematizing the Spanish moss
that hangs In such wondrous gar
lands from the trees of the sunny
South, declaring It to be Injurious
to the tree and at the same time
giving a sepulchral touch to the
environs. A southern home ag a
setting for a moss-festooned grove
Is. to my mind, the most beautiful
sight to be found anywhere, and
It tends to disseminate a spirit of
peace and harmony and reverence
rather than to depress. And be
sides. as the strands of moss are
blown from the trees and settle
throughout the grove they form
the most luxurious and dainty car
pet Imaginable, and barefoot chil
dren besport themselves with glee
thereon. Nothing could be harmful
that brings pleasure and safety to
the child. On a group of trees Just
off of Lovers Lane there the Span
ish moss can be seen in all its
glory.
It’s nit being put to death that
is to lie dreaded, but rather the
dreary, awful days and hours lead
ing up to the fatal moment. So
spoke one of the trio of men who
were some months ago electrocuted
at Columbia. S. C.. for the murder
of a taxi-driver whom they killed
on the highway leading to Augusta,
and who were captured in this
county. Untutored though he was,
this man had lived the experiences
so graphically described by Victor
Hugo in his “Last Days of a Con
demned Man." The final statement
of this poor wretch, as he was be
ing led to the chair, was the most
dramatic indictment of capital
punishment I have ever read.
"These numerous conventions are
certainly keeping the town Jazzed
up," a citizen said to me the other
day. "If Augusta was ever In a
state of lethargy, as some have ac
cused, it Is all gone now and there
is a new spirit of bustle and push
that gives old Broad street more
of a metropolitan air than ever
possessed before. \
—BYMO.
m
Most crimes are staged at night;
evil loves darkness. Where there's
secrecy, something's usually being
hidden.
The purpose, in opening Income
tax returns to public Inspection,
would be mainly lo expose people
and corporations with large in
comes who manage to conceal part
of their earnings and get off with
low taxes.
More entertaining to the public
would be the exposure of four
flushers who make less than they
claim. Many a *IO,OOO-a-year front
masks a *3OOO-a-year Income.
A Chicago man, accused of a
*30,000 swindle. Is quoted as indig
nantly protesting to the court:
“What, me take 30 grand!. Not
me, judge. I don't waste my time
unless there's a hundred thousand
bucks in It."
It Is sometimes much safer to
steal a million than *5, unfortu
nately. when It comes to the law
and punishment. But the laW
doesn't make the distinction. It's
Just that the rich thief can afford
an army of crafty lawyers able to
find loopholes or delay the case.
The small-time crook Isn't able to
hire such an array ot “talent."
Cable from J,ondon reports* that
the British during the first four
months this year imported about
400 million dollars worth of goods
more than they exported. This
puts them ip the hole at the rate
ot ot 1200 million dollars a year.
And in this situation is the key
of present British diplomacy.
Above all. they want trade—cus
tomers. That's why they hand an
olive branch- to Russia and Insist
on a reparations settlement such
that Germany can get back to nor
mal production and buying power.
The flag follows trade more than
trade follows the flag.
W i
Unusual People
25,550 Kisses
In 70 Years
r - ESWM "•
Charles Cl. Darhy. of Youngstown,
P Ml MaMl hts wife it leas' I -
Sid tlm-a mot counting the estra
day In leap >««r« > For they have
been married fir Tfl years mid th«
Missus herself pr. udly say* that h«r
husband hn« ne\ r failed to kiss her
g-HJinght Ill's 9? md the a t*V
FOLKS! Just think of the magic power
a $2.00 bill has at this store. For a few
days only we are offering every one a
chance to buy a complete outfit at un
heard of easy credit terms. You can
select any of the combinations mentioned
below at a cash outlay of only $2.00.
Don’t Fail to
Take Advantage of This
Unusual Credit Offer
CREDIT TO ALL
SrWD°WN Buys This Outfit
™ 'W . A LADIES’ SPRING SUIT $29.75
A LOVELY BLOUSE $ 5.98
J|g| LATEST SPRING HAT ... $ 3.98
$gW DOWN Buys This Outfit
A LADIES’ SPRING COAT $19.98
A LADIES’ SPRING DRESS $14.98
JBf A LOVELY TRIMMED HAT $4.98
DOWN Buys This Outfit
“JP A STYLISH SKIRT $9.95
A BLOUSE TO MATCH ....$7.95
A STYLISH HAT $6.98
$ A DOWN Buys This Outfit
W A MAN’S TAILORED SUIT $29.7&
* 1 A SILK SHIRT $ 7.95
A NEW HAT $ 3.50
{&SKIH&HARIHECO!
VARICOSE VEINS
ARE QUICKLY REDUCED
No fsnsible person will continue to
suffer from dangerous swollen veins
or bunches when the new powerful,
yet harmless germicide called Emerald
Oil can read ly be cbtalned at How
ard Drug Co., or any well stocked
drug store.
Ask for a two-ounce original bottle
of Emerald* Oil (full strength) and re
fuse substitutes, is© as directed and
in a few days improvement will be
noticed, then continue until the
swollen veins are reduced to normal.
It is guaranteed and is so powerful
that it also reduces enlarged glands,
goitres and wens.—Adv.
6 6 6
i» a prescription for Malaria,
Chills and Fever, Dengue or
Bilious Fever. It kills the
germs.
WALL PAPER
FOR EVBRY ROOM
AWNINGS
MADE TO ORDER
PICTURES
T. G. Bailie & Co.
912 BROAD ST.
PAY FOR CURES ONLY
ARE YOU SICK. DISEASED. NERVOUS RUN.
30WN? Have you Blood Poison, Kidney, Bladder
1 ind Nervous Trouble? IF SO. CONSULT ME FREE.
I cure to stay cured, Nerve. Blood and Skin Dis
eases, Obstructions. Discharges. Varicose Veins. Kid
ney. Bladder and Rectal D Iseases and all Chronic and
Special Diseases of Men and Women.
Plica and Fiatula successfully treated. No knife no
pain, no detention from Business no chloroforming.
Immediate relief. Writs for references and pamph
lets of testimonials.
: oSsE§r*'- r : & Of. ■
OFFICE HOURS—S a. m. to 7 P m.—Sunday* 10 a. m. to 1 P. m.
DR. V. M. HAYGOOD, Specialist
ItSVfc Broad St., over Schwtlgert’a Jewelry Store. Augusta Ga. Phone 2117.
RESORTS
lb : :
(halfonte-Haddon Hah
ATLANTIC CITY
For more, than fifty years, these two hospitable, •
homelike hotels have been the choice of culti
vated interesting people—bent on happy health
giving dsvs by the sea Golf and yacht club
privilege*. American Plan Only. Always Open.
Rtt otuile rjtrs (UrJr for dimnoted folde »
LEEDS AND UPPINCOTT COMPANY
FRIDAY, MAY 23
H
DOWN BUYS THIS
W H OUTFIT
Ms A GIRLS’ COAT *9.98
A GIRLS’ DRESS 58.50
MMM A GIRLS’ HAT .*2.98
DOWN WILL DRESS
UP THE BOYS
W A SUIT AT ....*7.95
1 A SUIT AT ...*10.95
MfiMSt A SUIT AT' ...*14.95
RESORTS
I
X