Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, AUGUST 8
You ought to know
that vinegar is not
just a sour taste.
Real vinegar has quality, fla
vor, aroma and delicacy, secured
by the careful selection of the
materials that go into it and by
slow aging and mellowing.
Heinz Vinegars are real vine
gars. Once you taste their flavor
compelling qualities you will
never be content with the ordi
nary, crude, sour concoctions that
have no name and no flavor.
It surely is not an extrava
gance to pay a fraction of a
cent more to make a salad really
delicious.
m
PURE
megars
Read HERALD WAN 1 ADS
SyrSbftSiU&Hair
\daVit\e
1 *HAIR DRESSING
i matter how coarse and your hair with Wavin' Stum*
ly your hair is now. you K? H *!*™' •pp | »
L I . . I Wavin'. Il slop, [ailinghair.ie
l nave long, Straight, moves dudrull and ts guaranteed
vyhairbyAting Waving. *“*
hot comb necasaaiy. Just A/iuggisls « by'uwL fc jf
What they say about
Picnic Flour is true
Yes, Picnic Self-Rising Flour is made of
the very same wheat as the famous Dainty
Flour —from the best soft winter wheat
of the entire crop. That is why it makes
such unusually fine biscuits. Its quality
shows in the baking*.
Give your family a treat! Order a sack of
Picnic today and have hot biscuits'tonight.
Be sure that you make plenty—Picnic
biscuits go fast.
C. E. SCHUMACHER FLOUR CO.
Wholesale Distributor!, 930 Walker St., Phone 634, Augutta, Ga.
SOCIETY
O. K. K. SORORITY MEETS
The regular meeting ot the Oml
cron Kappa Kappa Sorority was
held last Friday afternoon at 4
o'clock at the homo of Miss Janie
Tontmins. An enjoyable time was
spent by those present. Iced refresh
ments were served which were deli
cious on such a warm afternoon.
* • •
LADIES AUXILIARY OF U. C. T.
TO ENTERTAIN WITH
POND PARTY
The Ladies Auxiliary of the U. C.
T. will have a party at Plunkett's
pond Friday evening, the 15th. Kv
erybody is asked to meet at the
pond at 6:30 and bring lunch.
■ • *
Miss Mattie Leo Swindell, of
Nashville, Tenn., is spending some
time with her aunt, Mrs. George
K, Lombard.
• • •
Mr. Ralph Rogers, who motored
down from Asheville to spend the
week-end, was on his return, ac
companied by his sister, Miss Edna
Rogers, who will visit friends in
Asheville and Biltmore.
* * *
jffllr. C. V. McAuliffo’s friends will
rgret to learn he is at University
hospital for treatment.
• • *
Miss Margaret Sullivan has re
turned from Tybee where she visit
ed friends.
• • «
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
White, Jr. will learn with pleasure
that Mrs. White’s condition is much
more satisfactory. Mrs. White was
taken suddenly ill with appendicitis
and subjected to immediate treat
ment at University hospital.
♦ * *
Miss Louise Hankinson has re
turned to Wilmington and Wrights
ville Beach where sh 6 is visiting
Mrs. James D. Sprunt.
* * *
Mr. Archibald Blacksliear, Mr.
Bowdre Phinizy and Mr. Bowdre
Mays are at French Lick Springs.
* * •
Mr. and Mrs. Walton Jameson’s
friends will bo interested to learn
of the birth of a little daughter who
will be called Virginia. Mrs. Jame
son is remembered as Miss Kathe
rine Egbert.
• • •
Miss Jennie Kennedy, of Metter,
Ga., who is spending this week with
Mrs. Henry Godin, will return home
Monday accompanied by Julian
Owens.
...
Misses Gretchen and Beryl Bred
enberg leave Sunday morning for a
tw r o weeks’ stay on Sullivan’s Is
land.
...
Miss Mibbs Kocher, of Altoona.
Pa., is tlie attractive guest of Miss
Marianna Vaughan.
...
Miss Lucy Whatley of Pine Grove
avenue, North Augusta, is visiting
friends in Greenwood and Ninety-
Six, S. C.
...
Mr. Leo Swedenborg has joined
Mrs. Swedenborg and children in
Asheville.
...
Miss Ethel Miller of Atlanta Is
is visiting Miss Isabelle North. Miss
Laura Kcab will corns down from
North Carolina next week to spend
some time with Miss North.
...
Mrs. Ralph Croslty and her
two children. Mary Lou and Ralph,
Jr., have arrived from Philadelphia
for a visit witlj Mr. nnd Mi's. A. N.
Stothart on lower Broad street.
...
Augusta friends of Dr. and Mrs.
Roger G. Doughty, of Columbia, will
be interested to learn of the birth of
a little daughter.
...
Friends of Mrs. R. S. Dunbar will
regret that she has been confined
to her home for the past several
days by an attack of ptomaine
poison.
...
Col. nnd Mrs. R. 1.. Chambers. R.
L. Chambers, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J.
1,. Chambers and little Miss Doro
thy Durst left Tuesday for Ashe
vlile, N. C.
• • •
Mrs. J. L. Oliver has returned to
Macon.
...
Mrs. P. L. Downes nnd Misses
Downes, of Wilmington, N. C., were
in the city yesterday.
...
Mrs. E. L. Knight and Misses
Knight, of Atlanta, were in the city
yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McNair have
returned from Atlanta.
• • •
Mrs. 3. C. McNair Is back from
Atlanta. ...
Mrs. P. A. Amos and Miss Amos
are visiting friends in Greensboro,
Ga ’ ...
Miss Mattie Sue Redding, of La-
France, Ga., is in the city.
. . .
Mr. and Mrs. P.’J. Hast and Miss
have returned to Cordin, Ky.
. . .
Misses Zella and Estelle Shelton
are In Norwood, Ga., for a few days.
mm*
Mrs. E. R. Schults has returned
from Atlanta.
. • *
Miss Elizabeth Arnolds, of Deca
tur, Ga., was in the city yester
day ’
Miss Tlcia Miner of Union Point,
Ga., Is in the city,
• • •
Mr. nnd Mrs. R- To Ross, of
Mathews, Gn„ spent yesterday in
the city.
. . .
Mrs E. % Diggers and Miss Rig
gers of Atlanta are visiting Augus
ta friends.
. • •
Miss Louise Chavous left yester
day for Kvlacauga, Ala , to visit her
cousin, Ida Julia Cates.
. . •
Miss I.ennle Adams has returned
from Hendersonville. N. C.. and
Greenwood. S. C., where she spent
several weeks.
. • •
Miss Leslie Verdery has returned
from a delightful visit with Mr. and
Mrs. A. H. Cooper In Atlanta.
• • •
Mr. arnlMrs. K. G. Kalbflelsch and
Masters John nnd Howard Pierce
have returned from Atlanta where
they visited Mr. nnd Mrs. Joseph
Hogan, making the trip In their
car.
...
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. A. li.
Verdery. of Alabama, who have
been visiting their parents, Mr. and
Mrs, W. B. Verdery, will be Interest
ed to learn they nave gone to Ashe
ville. where they will make their
home.
. . .
Misses Rebecca and Mary Printup
are visiting friends in Warrenton,
Ga.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA-
WHAT A WOMAN
TOLD ME.
THAT—
Don’t scold the ice man if he’s
a little late these hot days and a
little underweight with your Ice.
The average iceman serving city
householders delivers two tons of
ice daily to SO refrigerators, and
carries each of these pieces 60
feet. It's a good day’s work, nnd
he Is deserving of more considera
tion than he gets.
THAT—
The present asphalt being laid
on Broad street will have an
other coat, the middle of the
street being given a double pnvo
on account of the traffic being
greater down the middle than
the sides.
THAT—
There are twelve thousand
yards Of cotton thread on a two
dollar and a half spool.
THAT—
There are. one hundred nnd
twenty-five girls in Camp Grey
stone, at Tuxedo, N. C.
THAT—
Constance Talmage in "Gold
Fish" 1h the image of Cecil*
Carr Smith.
THAT—
Elkun Naumberg, pleasantly
known here by friends made
during his several winters spent
at Hampton Terrace and later
at Bon Air, died July 31st at
Briarcliff Lndge, Brlarcliff Ma
nor, N. Y. Naumberg was great
ly interested in music and was
a man whose splendid qualities
called for the best in all who
knew him, and whoso death
leaves the community in which
ho passed his long life, immeas
urably poorer. Mr. Naumburg
was ninety years of age.
THAT—
This is the way "Yankee Doo
dle" originated, or so says a
writer in The New York Times;
Dr. Rhuekberg, who lived in
the Van Renssalear Manor house
(called at the time Fort Crallo),
did not write tills jingle, us
stated.- He did, however, write
the ridiculous words of "Yan
kee Doodle" to an undent tune
which lie had in mind, having
heard it in Holland, which, ac
cording to Grove’s Dictionary of
Music, came into Flanders years
before from Italy and is of an
cient origin, author unknown.
The object of the doctor in
writing these words is interest
ing, and is the best part of the
story.
* The British troops who had
recently (1708) arrived In Alba
ny for a campaign against the
Indians were supplemented by
the Colonial troops from Con
necticut and other Colonies.
These Colonials were a seedy
looking lot, no uniforms, their
clothes in tatters. Rome of them
were mounted on small Connec
ticut ponies. Many of them had
hens’ feathers stuck in their
beaver caps by way of adorn
ment. They presented a ridicu
lous appearance to the villa
gers, tho small boys guyed them,
and all this inspired Dr. Shuck
berg to pen the satirical words
in derision of these fellows, to
the amusement of all who look
ed on.
The boys and girls of Albany
learned and sang the song as
the Colonial troops paraded the
village. Tho smart British
troops, who with their officers
had become popular with tho
Dutch burghers of Albany, de
spite their hatred of King
George nnd his Tory friends,
looking on at these proceedings,
took a liking to the song "Yan
kee Doodle," nnd had their flfers
piny It for a march for their
own use. Thus was this famous
song launched some sixteen
years before the Revolution in
the village of Albany. Tho lines
Stuck a feather In his cap
And called him macaroni
meant that these rugged Colo
nial troops, by thus decorating
themselves with hen’s feathers
In their caps, etc., in an en
davor to look "smart," llko
dandles, cut a very quixotic fig
ure. In England at that time the
Italian mode of dress for men
was in vogue, nnd the London
dandy was called a macaroni,
corresponding to our modern
dude.
THAT—
It was so much nicer on Broad
street when the work on the as
phalt necessitated the adjourn
ment of the traffic cop.
11l AT
Smiles are geting old-fashion
and a learned professor says it
will not be long before they are
completely extinct and that
generations yet unborn will al
lude to the "Smiling Age" Just
as we do to the "Stone Age.’’
THAT—
She hoe read so much, nnd
heard more, about the weeds in
the City cemetery, but she went
down there the other day and
thinks It a beautiful kept place
in comparison to the old Kollera
vllle cemetery where the weeds
and graae are walat high, and ehe
believes the malaria r ases In that
sectlbn of the town Is caused by
these Insect-Infested grass and
weeds.
THAT—
It is fifty years this week
since tha first "Chautauqua 1 '
was held. The name had been
given to a town, a county, a
lake and a geologic period. It Is
now known by millions who
have never heard of the ry< k of
this name belonging to th# Upper
Devonian period, or the place
of Its outcropping in Western
New York. Chautauqua is now
ns much a part of the Ameri
can educational system ns the
Chautauqua rock Is of its geo
logical formation. Other strata
may hide It in lithe. But It will
have niarle Its Imperishable de
posit in the building up of Amer
ican character and aspiration.
It is what Theodore Roosevelt
said when It was some years
younger, "the most American
thing in America.”
THAT—
Corn liquor left standing will
turn to wood alcohol. This
probably explains why so little
is left standing.
LB. M.
S.S.S. stops
Rheumatism
MY Rheumatism is all gone. I
feel a "wonderful glory
again in the free motion I used
to have when my days were
younger. I can thank S. S. S. for
it all I Do not
close your
eyes and
think that
health, free
motion and
strength are
gone from
you forever I
It is not so.
COO' , ri o UUI SO.
S. S. S. is waiting to help you.
When you increase the number of
your red-blood-cells, the entire sys
tem undergoes a tremendous
change. Everything depends on
blood-strength. Blood which is
minus sufficient red-cells leads to
a long list of troubles. Rheu
matism is one of them.” S. S. S.
is the great blood-cleanser, blood
builder, system strengthener, and
nerve invigorator.
*n S. S. S. is sold at all good
drug Stores In two sires. Tho
(Sn Bju larger sirs is more economical.
C C World's Best
({L-it eJ.L/.LX /flood Medicine.
KEEP YOUR SCALP
Clean and Healthy
WITH CUTICURA
At the first sign of
skin trouble apply
Resinol
That patch of eruption is not neces
sarily a serious matterl Even in severe,
well-established cases of eczema, ring
worm or similar affections, Resinol
Ointment and Resinol Soap usually re
lieve the itching at once and quickly
overcome the trouble completely. How
much more, then, can this simple, in
expensive treatment he relied on to dis
pel skin troubles in their earlier stages,
Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment are aoM by
all drucirists. Tor samples of each, to
I>ept. 1-K, ltesinol, Hal timer c» Md,
I WmA
mmL L
Protects as it
Beautifies
Remember how ail good little
girls wore sunbonnets to pro
tcctthcirpctal-likcskins? Your
complexion still needs daily
protection from drying sun
and dust-laden winds,
Nadincl'ace Powder softens
and refines your skin—it pro
tects and beautifies. Nadine
clings, too —unusually well—
and the perfume is delightful t
Foryourskin’ssake— to make
nnd keep it lovely—begin to
day to use Nadine,
At toilet counter a, SOc. Sample by
mail, 4c. National Toilet Company,
Paris, TenneMee.
To frea the pttret at nluht and keep
she skin clear and fair , use tJadine
(Jlcaruing (Jrcam.
eNadirie
VacePowdcr
'Die Hire of 'Southern Jjyvcfiwus.
REDUCING
MADE SIMPLE
AND EASY
French Scientist Discovers
New Ingredient To
Dissolve Fat.
A French woman now in Amerira
reports (hat a new treatment for obesity
haa been found by a well-known French
scientist; it ia a simpJe, harrnleaa corn*
hmation of ingredient* put up in a amall
tablet railed "SAN <ikt NA,’* which
he|pa nature in throwing off unnecessary
fat forming elementa. thus making it im
possible f fir 1»t to form and a»cumulate
on the body. Already surprising reports
from all parts have been rereived. « ase*
of reducing vary from 10 to 50 founds in
a remarkably short time, with complete
restoration of health and marvelous
change in general appearance. While
"SANfiRI-HA" is mostly recommended
for reducing, it is also an invaluable
help to get rid of all-worn out, iired
feeling >doei away with puffing, and in
•tuny ease* entirely relieved high blood
pressure. f.uaranterd absolutely harm*
less. Recommended by specialists, phy
•icisns and nurses as a safe, positive and
• imple way to take >,ff from 5 to 6
pounds a week "SANfrKI NA” is sold
*t all leading drug or department stores.
H»n-Orl*Na In now on wile* at
Howard'*, Ooetchluii JJroB., and
Land J>ruic Htorca,
// 1 1
/; * //C 2*\\ !
\
THE HILL JEWELRY GO.
814 Broad St.
Is Going Out of
Business
This sale is
a b solutely
bona fide
All m er
c h a n disc
the regular
stock of
one of the
leading re
liable Jew
elers in Au
gusta.
■
VLD
«
OUR LEASE EXPIRES
OCTOBER m
50 Days to Go
Everything Sold at Less Than Actual Cost
All Goods Marked in Plain Figures.
Our entire stock of high grade Jewelry, Diamonds,
Watches, Silverware, Clocks, Cut GJass and China will be
sold regardless of former cost or value. Every man and
woman in the City of Augusta and surrounding territory
should attend this sale. You folks who want real good
merchandise of 'h reliable jeweler, attend this sale with
out fail. It will save you many a dollar. Our lease ex
pires October Ist. Our entire high grade stock and fix
tures must be sold in 50 DAYS. SALE BEGINS SATUR
DAY, AUGUST 0,9 A.M.
LOOK FOR THE
BIG NUMBER 814
AT OUR STORE
(f
§
All
Fixtures
for Sale
Cheap
including
show cases,
wall cases,
safes and
register.
Proprie
tor on
premises.
BROAD STREET
Next Door to L. Sylvester & Sons.
Doors Open Saturday 9 A. M.
CjJlff'
Every
thing
Must
Be
Sold
The Hill
Jewelry
Company
814
For the
Opening
Day
Sat., Aug.
oth at 10
o’clock
sharp
We will sell
25 Noritake
Gold Hand
Painted
Bon Bon
Dishes,
values to
?3.50 for
95c
Store will
be. closed
all day
Friday to
mark
down all
goods for
this sale.
FIVE