Newspaper Page Text
TWO
Scientists Hunt Prehistoric Monster in Wilds of Patagonia
Mail Orders For “Blossom Time ,, Now Receiv
ed. Seat Sale Opens Saturday.
The Enchanting Operetta to Play a Return Engagement
at the Imperial Tuesday Night Only.
"Blossom Time," the cnrhsntlnc
Franz Schubert operate*, will be the
attraction at the Imperial theater
when It pla.va a return engagement
for one performance Tuesday, Octo
ber 2*. under the direction of the
Messrs. Lee and J. J. Khubert.
It has had a remarkable triumph
everywhere It haa ployed and has
created a veritable furore, In addi
tion to which It haa broken every
known record for receipt* In all
the larger cities of the United
States Including New York, whero
IMPERIAL
TUESDAY NIGHT
ONLY
RETURN OF
BRILLIANT
BEAUTIFUL
MEMORABLE
npfffM
K TINS'
THE
musical
THE AGES
EXCEPTIONAL
Augmented Orchestra.
PRICES 60c, *I.OO, *1.50, *2.00
and *2.50 Plus Tax
BEAT SALE SATURDAY
MODJESKA
BROKEN
BARRIERS
with
Jamas Kirkwood
Mao Busch
Robert Agnaw
Adolphs Msnjou
Ruth Stonehouta
Norma Shearer
Winifred Bryson
Goorgo Fawcett
Robert Frazer
The Conflict of New
Moral With Age Old
Conventions.
—ALBO—
AGAIN”
TUXEDO COMEDY
■ . .
wi , mm? <
&■ Jr I® 1
i*i '
Mis* Elis Gergely, at the Vivacious “Mitzi”, Mist Marjo
rie Hatrriman, as the Piquant "Fritzi”, Mr. Arthur Geary,
as the handsome nobleman, Baron Schober, and Miss
Bemardine Brady, as the Winsome "Kitzi" in "Blossom
Time". The sweetest story ever told. Coming to the
Imperial Theatre Tuesday evening, October 28th.
AUGUSTA HERALD’S
New Universities
Dictionary
Bfctey ,f w *V*
i•: '• $ «
22 DICTIONARIES IN ONE
All Dictionaries published previous to this one are out of dale
It ran for two years, Chicago, Bos
ton and I‘hlladelphla. "Blossom
Time" Is without exception the most
successful musical offering the
stage has ever had,
Dorothy Donnelly Indicated her
splendid capacity as adapter by the
rewriting of the book and supply
ing a pew set of lyrics for the
same. In the original this musical
play was by A. M. Wlllnecr and 11,
Reichert. The score Is made up of
music from the melodies of Franz
Hchtibert, new Viennese music, by
11. Ilerte, and a new score adapted
by Sigmund Romberg. "Blossom
Time" was staged by J. C. Huff
man and the entire production made
under the personal direction of Mr.
J. J. Khubert. The Messrs. Hhu
bort have gone to great lengths to
provide a fitting production for this
charming piece and a singing and
acting company of the first qual
ity. Among the (Important mem
bers of tho large cast will be Jo
seph Mendelsohn, Ell* Gorgely,
Marjorie Hardman, Rernardlno
Brady, I-Vnlta do Soria, Robert I.eo
Allen, Arthur flsary, Juleys E pally.
I<Mward Orchard. Frank Horn, Har
ry’ H. Hoot t, Ralph Remhlfton. Ulys
ses Morrell, John Eagcn, Gone Wal
lin, Isnliello Vernon, Marla Dante*,
Flo Kcely. Thomas A. Hart.
IRIALTQI
i V aSw
A
INoJiKTti "v
Mouse
mit/i Wv v iuJ ha in'
<W ,
MdlgOtTllC
Marsh * i.
—ALBO—
THE USE? ’’
ANDY OUMP COMEDY
COUPON
How to Get it
For the More Nominst Cost ol
Manufacture and Distribution
3 Cou JT‘ 98c
Secure tbls NEW authentic
Dictionary, bound in black
anal grain, illustrated with full
pages in color.
41 Present or snail to tbia
paper three Coupons with
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coat of Handling, packing,
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Add tor Postage:
I MAIL l'p to 150 tn'>l«s Sff
OHULKS l'p to dU) miles .10
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tv— ‘c
\ • / i- <■ J ■a*TA<iOtft A
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j - " ..y
UPPER LEFT—THE ALLOSAURUS (LEFT) DOES BATTLE WITH THE TRACHODON. UP
rE RIGHT—GAYNE DEXTER, WHO WILL LEAD AN EXPEDITION TO LAKE ESGUEL IN THE
HOPE OF CAPTURING ONE OF THESE GIANT ANIMALS. BELOW—THE TIUCERATOPS, A DAN
GEROUS FIGHTER.
CAROLINA FAIR
Now In Full Swing at Co
lumbia
COLUMBIA, S. C.—An exhibition
of some of tho beat (specimens of
horse flesh In the stato, horse and
pony races, a high school football
game, band concerts and free acts
sum up the evening nnri the morn
ing of the second day of the South
Carolina fair, now lu full swing In
Columbia,
The state fair grounds were op-i
enod to larger crowds Tuesday
than on tho opening dny as several
thousands seeking amusement vis
ited the grounds from Cplumbla,
while numbers arrived from va
rious parts of the state.
This was designated ns "Colum
bia Day." Band conceits were giv
en on the grounds by tho Saxon
Mills W. O. W. hand, while In tho
steel building the music wae - fur
nished by a similar organisation
from the South Carolina Industrial
School for Hoys at Florence.
Human muscles and tendons vied
with equine frames lu providing
amusement for tile onlookers, for
there were apparently endless vau
deville and acrobatic acts between
heats In the races. In addition the
hoys of Hyatt l'nrk High Hrhool
turned out and walloped the Bales-
High aggregation
3* to 7 on the football field.
Always considered a big day of
ths fair, Wednesday "Agriculture
Hay" Is expected to prove more
than usually successful, according
to those In charge. In Its portray
al of the farm and livestock pro
gress of the state. There will he
other band concerts, more horse
races and another night horse
■now. .
The first collegiate football game
of the fair will be played at noon
Wednesday when the Purple Hur
ricane of Furman meets Davidson.
BYRNES RETURNS
To Aiken After Tour of Ohio
and West Va.
~ p - P.—Congressman Jus.
*• Byrnes has returned to Aiken
rrom a trip to Ohio and West Vir
ginia. where he made ten speeches
in behalf of tha democratic party.
Mr. Ityrnca says that the candi
dacy of La Follettee has made It
most difficult to make any proph
cy as to the election. He said that
in the section of Ohio In which he
had spoken the majority of those
favoring I-a Follettee were repub
licans, but that In the city of Cleve
land a great majority of those who
are advocating I-a Follette have
heretofore voted the democratic
ticket. The prevailing opinion, he
says. It thaht unless there la change,
within tha next few weeks. Coolldge
will carry Ohio, since the republi
cans are better organised and have
a campaign fund, while the demo
crats have had absolutely no money
with which to employ worker* to
get the voter* registered.
The congressman says that the
chances are that the democrats
will carry West Virginia, normally
a republican state. In that state
feeling la Intense, and Mr. Byrne*
aays that when he spoke at Hlpiy
iaat Saturday afternoon the repub
lican* held a meeting at the same
time on the earn* grounds, with the
result that at the conclusion of the
two meetings belligerent members
of the two parties got together and
there were two or three fist fight*
on the court houee square. The
democrats claim that after they had
announced their meeting the re
publicans announced a meeting at
tlie earns time and place. The
democrats offered to make the oc
casion a Joint debate, but the re
publicans declined. Insisting, how
ex er. upon trying to break up the
democratic meetlng.-
Congressman Byrnes eays that
even If the democrats should not
carry the country the prospect It
that they will control the senate.
Chat* Hatr Cu'
Hotel Richmond barber Shea
THE AUGUSTA HERALD. AUGUSTA. GA-
TOURIST TRAVEL
By Way of Swainsboro Is
Picking Up
SWAINSBORO, Ga.—The tour
ist travel between Augusta, Ga., and
Florida noints by way of Swalns
boro Is picking up at a great rate,
owing to tho bridge at Millville and
the fill on tho Emanuel county hide
of the bridge, having been placed in
first-class condition, and from the
increasing number of cars passing
this way eacli <lny. It Is evident that
tho news has spread rapidly
through tourist ranks. The mails
have been seraped und are In per
fect condition.
j j
Chafed, irritated skin
quickly relieved
TJATIIE freely with Resinol
u Sosp and warm water to
thoroughly cleanse the skin.
Dry by patting lightly—then
apply Resinol Ointment gently
with the finger tips. This
treatment was prescribed nearly
thirty years ago by a physician
and has been used by physi
cians ever since to clear away
eczema, rashes, blotches, chaf
ing and other forms of skin
trouble. There is nothing bet
ter to promptly relieve itching
and burning.
Resinol Soap is unsurpassed
for the complexion, bath and
hair. An ideal soap for babies.
Resinol
WHY WOMEN LOOK
60 AT 40
With dark circles under their eye*
sallow complexions, drawn expres
sions, drooping shoulders, a lagging
step, many women of forty have the
appearance of women of elxty. In
many cases this condition it caused
by overwork or neglect of such warn
ing symptoms, ns headaches, bark
aclie, nervousness, displacements and
irregularities which ImlicHte ailments
peculiar to women It all women so
afflicted would only rely upon Lydia
K. rinkham't Vegetable Coinpouna
It would re-tore them to a normal
healthy condition, and the prematura
signs of nge wilt soon disappear.—
Adv.
OUCH! LUMBAGO!
RUB BACKACHE AWAY
Kidneys cause backache! No!
Your backache is caused by lum
bago, rheumatism or a strain and
jthe quickest relief t*
soothing, penetrat
ing St. Jacob's Oil.
Rub it right on
your painful back,
and Instantty the
soreness. attffness
and lameness dis
appears. Don't stay
crippled! Get a Si
cent bottle of St
Jacobs Oil from
vour druggist. A
moment after It I*
applied you'll won
der what became of
the hacknche or
lumbago patn.
JppMtv x a, ’X
- —l
In use for *5 years for lumbftgo.
backache, sciatica, neuralgia, rheu
matism or sprain*. Absolutely
harmless. Doesn't burn the skin. —
Adv.
FRANK REYNOLDS,
AUGUSTA FIRE CHIEF,
DIED LAST NIGHT
Continued From Page On*
line of duty, carrying several scars
to his death as silent testimony of
his heroism. It Is said of him that
he neved missed a general alarm,
until he was taken down with his
last Illness, unless he were absent
from the city, which was seldom.
When his death became known
at fire headquarters Tuesday night
Acting Chief William P. Battle,
life-long bosom friend of the de
ceased head of the department,
gave the signal for 87 taps on the
big alarm bell, thus sounding the
sad tidings throughout the city.
This signal was given on orders
from President Harry 11. Jones, of
the Civil Service Commission, em
blematic of the 37 years service of
Chief Reynolds. Shortly after the
taps had been sounded, quiet little
groups of uniformed ‘firemen gath
ered at headquarters, just across
the Street from tho chiefs home,
talking In hushed tones of their be
loved leader who had Just passed
on.
FUNERAL TO BE
HELD ON SUNDAY
Funeral services for Chief Rey
nolds will lie hold at Sacred Heart
Church Thursday morning at eleven
o’clock, with the entire personnel of
the fire department in attendance and
a special squadron or mounted police
as an escort of honor. All the firs
apparatus In the city will also be In
the procession to the church and to
the union station.
A handsome floral cross, given by
the Augusta Civil Service Commis
sion, will he on the casket when It
goes Into the rhnreh, this being the
only floral decoration of any kind to
accompany the body for the services.
The remains will he shipped on tho
1:30 train over the Southern Railway
to Brooklyn, N. Y.. where Interment
will take nlaee. It is understood that
on v relatives and Intimate friends
will accompany ths body to Brook
lyn.
High School Instructor Is
Accused of Punishing
Students in “Electric Chair”
( Continued from Page One)
trying to mako a ■cate' out of this,
hut they will not succeed. They
have been taking the side of the
pupil* all year and we have had a
hard time In getting discipline. I
rea'lxe that I made a mistake but
I think It will bring to their at
tention the absolute necessi'.y of
discipline. As to the reported ‘severe
cuts on the Tenneson boy's leg*'
that is merely plain bunk."
Face* Death Rather
Than to Admit
Disobedience
NKW YORK.—Like the Spartan
youth who let a fox he had con
cealed tin ier his coat gnaw at his
vital* without a murmur rather
than admit his thievery, five year
old refer Katolefax faced death in
preference to admitting disobedi
ence to his mother.
Rather than tell his mother that
he had disobeyed her frequent in
junctions not to put things In hie
mouth, the boy allowed a screw
from a toy airplane to remain lodg
ed in his throat for four day* while
puxzied phvslclans worked franti
cally to relievo a wracking cough
that slowly was sapping hi* vital
ity.
When the cause of ailment was
learned Tuesdny and the screw re
moved, the operating physician* de
clared that w-lthln a ehort time
death would have ensued. Because
of the lad - * persistent denial* that
he had swallowed anything physi
cians diagnosed the cough ae croup.
The boy will recover.
STRANGE ANIMAL
REPORTED SEEN
BY SEVERAL
BY CHARLES P. STEWART.
WASHINGTON,—It was in the
wilds of the Patagonian Andes,
where no stronger beverage than
water is obtainable, that Lieuten
ant Commander Bevllaqua, of the
Argentine navay, saw, or thought
he saw, a brontosaurus.
Bevllaqua was hunting. In the
Andean foothills he stumbled on a
trail of enormous footprints which
he followed to Lake Esquel and
there, frisking In the water, was
this 50 or 00-foot brontosaurus. At
least thaht's what Bevllaqua took It
to be.
Before he could fire a shot the
creature submerged and that was
the last the lieutenant commander
saw of it.
A few days later, however, Mar
tin Sheffield, an American oil pros
pector, had a glimpse of the same
animal or one a good deal like It,
but In his opinion it was a trlcera
tops.
Bevilaqua and Sheffield told their
stories to Curator Onelll, of the
Buenos Aires zoo.
Indians Saw It, Too.
Inasmuch as scientists previous
ly had supposed the brontsaurus
aand tlrceratops families to have
been extinct for some millions of
years, Onelll was tremeduosly In
terested.
The first thing he did was to
wt&r-
c Apointer on tobacco:
SJ
Granger Rough Cut
—made and cut
exclusively for pipes
Ijcezrr A Mrzzs Tobacco Co.
1 send a party Into Patagonia to In
vestigate. The party found no
monster but it did run across 11 In
dians who said they had seen It.
From their descriptions Onelll de
cided it was a trachodon.
Now a group of scientifically cu
rious Americans have undertaken to
see If they can't solve the mystery.
They have engaged Gayne Dexter,
an American explorer, to lead an
expedition to Lake Esguel and try
to capture one of the reported an
imals.
Dexter has Just sailed for Buenos
Aires to organize this party. His
theory 1s that tho brute, If any, is
an allosaurus.
■ No photograph of real live bron
tosauruses, triccratopses, trachc
dons or allasauruses are available,
nobody living ever having seen any
such beasts, with the possible ex
ception of Lieutenant Commander
Bevilaqua, Martin Sheffield and the
II Patagonian Indians. And they
had no cameras with them. But the
American Meseunt of Natural His
tory has made effigies guaranteed
by scientists to be just about as
good as the originals.
The museum's experts, starting
on one of these effigies, first build
a wooden skeleton, padded It out
with cotton and then drew a rubber
skin over the whole thing. Bits of
papier mache are pasted on next to
represent scales, warts, wrinkles
1 and what not. A coat of varnish fin
! lshes the process.
These make-believe animals look
natural enough to scare anybody.
They're life size, too.
A big brontosaurus was about 75
feet long and weighed 4 tons but
he was a vegetarian and not a bit
quarrelsome. The trlceratops was
not more than half a brontosaurus'
size but a dangerous fighter. The
trachodon, like the brontasaurus,
was herbivorous.
Of all prehistoric animals the al
losaurus was the meanest. He was
about 40 feet long, with a six-foot
Stumped
Cut coarse
for pipes—
not ime
v •
% % ♦
Bums slower
this way s'
hence cooler y
lasts about
50% longer
No frills -no tins-
FOIL wrapper,
hence
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22
head and teeth that could have bit
ten an Iron bar In two If they'd had
any such thing then. He was u
meat eater.
Commits Suicide,
Wantß Dog to Die
In Same Manner
CHICAGO —-Mrs. Clementine Gil
bert, 35, separated from her hus
band, Oliver C. Gilbert, of Texas,
committed suicide Tuesday night
by asJMiyxiatipn, leaving a ten dol
lar bill pinned to a note to a friend,
asking that her dog, a gift from her
husband, meet death In the game
manner.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
I
M/tfMmgm) indk|| gy
6 Bell-ans
Mot water
Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
25t *nd 75$ Packages Everywhere
* FUNERAL NOTICES
BOWEN—DIED IN THIS CITV. Oc
tober 21st, 1924 at 5:40 p. m. MRS.
IDA ADELL BOWEN. The rela
tives and friends are Invited to at
tend the funeral services at Elliott
& Sons Funeral Home THIS (Wed
nesday) AFTERNOON at 4:00
o’clock. Interment West View Ce
metery. Elliott & Sons In charge.