The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, September 26, 1908, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR THt AUOUSIA HI;KALI) 731 Broad Cl., Augi-sta. Ga, Publlahed Afternoon During the Weak and on Sunday Mrrnlng by THE HERALD PUBLISHING CD. Entered at the Augueta Poe.office a: Mail Matter of the Second Class. SUBSCRIPT ION RATES Dally and Sunday, 1 year Sfe o Dally and Sunday, 0 month* 3.00 Daily and Sunday, 3 months . 1 ' Dally and Sunday. 1 month b>j Dally and Sunday, 1 week. * Sunday Herald, 1 year I*du Weakly Herald, 1 year . • * TELEPHONES. Butlnaaa Office City Editor £* 9 Society Editor .... . . -»i No communication will be published In The Herald unless the name of the writ la S'Qr.ad to tho article. NEW YORK OFFICE Hen Jnmln A*»*nry. Mrun*wlck h’llldinv. Fifth Avenue. New Vnrk f, l'v CHICAGO OFFICf: rrid Itenl.i min A*enry W If fOn»n«r. Mr. NO* Boyne Hulldlntf. Chlcfiyo, 111. The Herald la the offlelftl adverttalne mr.Uurr Of o.e 'Mfy o' Au»tiat*» and i the County of Richmond for all I***l DO tlcea and advert lain* Addreaa all bust neat communication! to IHI AUGUSU HIKALD. 7*l Broad St , Augutts, Os, “ir YOU WANT THE NEWS YOU NEED THE HERALD. Augusta, Ga., Saturday, Sept. 28, 1908 Circulation of llie llorald For 7 Months. 1908 JEabrnary 219,488 March 226,578 April -’22.012 Mas 242.808 Juna ..241.229 July 211.202 August. DAILY AVERAGES. Tor 7 months 7.045 For A 7,840 Thors la no b«ltt>r way to reach the horns* of tha proaporour, pco pic of thin city f.nd Sff’tltiii than through the rolnnina of Tha Her aid Dally and Sunday, Psrtlet leaving Auguata can hava Tha llrrald aent them by mall eaeh day. Plton* 297, Circulation Depart ment. If you le»v» Auguata, ao (hat The Herald can reach you each day. Wonder If Mr, tlcarat lake* lilh parly seriously? , Mow would you like lo he Iho iiutii on tho water wagon? Ho LaFollctla seem* lo bo getting hla aUo. Now Atlanta haa a man who la go ing to perfect tho alrahlp. Thought ao. Toddy mual liavo n dark '‘Bryan" leeto In hla inniiih after hla call down Tho iitgliirldera aro after tho wrong people It la not lho plant ora they nood lo Halil, but tho “Iloara.” B<> Bon Tillman want* to got back homo and got guild combi , ad lo cal. Ho never forgot* hla "rainin' " And allll ennto pooplo aro rruol enough lo aa.v Augiiala la .ia wol now •a before the Aral of January laal. No. Pauline, borauao rich pimple own nutomobllcg t* no reason they waul lo pay a big price Tot gasolene Mayor Hurum, of Summerville, la a groat believer In water ami thouaaiula of Auguatana are tndelitod to him for trw.lt water alnoo tho flood The pen 1* uaed more than the •word, whethet It t» mightier or not. Otic town to Kng laud niaho 2it0,000 OOP pona a week. Henietnhor the proatdont "baa kill ed" many Hears, but lie had hotter leave that "Haakoll" hualne.* alone now If ho tan't looking for real trim bis Ty. Cobb tho boy all Auguata hold* In high < aiecm - to bo g.Hliig In hard atandtug with lit* boaaea Now ly juat wipeout your cyoa md bat tn a tew home runa sum for fun, There ta altuoat aa much iutoroat h. re tn the pennant race m the big league* aa there waa 111 the Hally. The favorltea are Detroit and the (Slants Three oompantoa are playing tho devil 111 CUMSS But thl rained aa much hell aa llcarat did all by himself making a few specchc* In tho Weal. Now It la Mark Twain* house w hich haa been robbv d That man fcurcly ha* a talent tor becoming the victim of more different kind-, of sharper* and robber* than any man ever read of. Tho present year ha* boon the most proltflc year of big fort's! Una on rtH-v.rd \nd the biggest burning of political hearts coil i* yet to come on November | wlien IN Bit el Ihe pie pie's anger shall strike the (S. o P iJttle .toe Brown Is said tvv have developed into a ran lint. d ■ spegk. i But this Isn't strange - tor 8 man always talk* tell when lie talk • Unit something he loves, and Little Joe love* Bryan The people of Brunswick are sald lo lie laying their plan for ’ when the trolley cars come" They had Mtcf 4>e laying by their nlcklea, If they , v pact to rids on I hem Trollev car* are the most insatiable rakerstn of Btcklca Ural are known. ROOSEVELT AND HASKELL. That President Uoosevelt haa low >• ' I himself 111 the estimation of tilt American peoplr by this Haskell mat •or there can be no doubt. In this he president baa come down to the in* hods of the ward politician, and stands humiliated by tho method ]u*t ns he ban been beaten In the pur pose lor which he Stooped BO low. Senator Foraker, one of Taft’s ri val* for the republican nomination and one of the leading men of tha’. party, had been exposed as a creat ors of the trusts, and It had become necessary tn kick him out and Insult him in order to make the people be lieve that Ihe party »■»« better than Its leaders. To still more break the force of this blow to the republican parly President Roosevelt picked up th, charge made by Mr Hcarst. that Haskell, 100, was tarred with the same slick. Mr. Roosevelt asserted lhal Haskell, the democratic party treasurer, was no belter than For aker. the republlenn candidate flor president before the eonventlon, be cause Haskell had aeted as the agent ol the oil truHt In an at I amp ted bri bery rase in Ohio. lb did Hilb for the purpose of making the people believe that the democratic parly was no better than ihe republican parly, and equally dominated hy the predatory trusts. If lie rotild lead the democrats lo kick mu Haskell, a* the republicans had liecn compelled to kick out For aker, It would give color to this charge. Mr. Hr,van demanded that the pres* Idem furnish proof of the charge he had brought against Haskell, and h" made this demand In a way the pres ident could not Ignore. Then a plt|. ml spentgrltt was presentej Instead | of furnishing the proof be should have hud ready at hand before mak- | lug the charge, the president calb d | together Ihe wise men of his parly. He and they sweated over the task. Then he called his cabinet together, j and they sweated over It for two | hour* After all this combined work j for twenty-four hours or longer, the j answer demanded by Mr Bryan wa* ! ready It dropped entirely the sped 1 fle i lunge that bad been made, and Instead brought forward oth»r j charge*. Why? The charge us lo Hsskell’s mlsdo- ] lug* .n Ohio were bated on Idle ru j niora which lout been circulated years iigo. which had never been verified, | and at last were explained to havo refer euci to another lljiakell And lln * cud of munfiilly mid honestly mak log this reply to Itrysn. some other old stories which bail been circulated In Oklahoma against Haskell were substituted for the original charge What a pitiable subterfuge: what a despicably small trick for a man os teemed a highly as Mr. Roosevelt haa been, to resort to! Doubtless there are all sorts ol , lories eltg ulsied In Oklahoma about j Haskell, lie Is at present governor, j He bus been u prominent politician j a long time. And doesn't everybody i know that when a mutt consents to { become a landldute, the opposition | stalls si kinds of stories’ What [ lutsn l been oild In our stale about I (lovernor Hoke Smith, or fkivernor- ■ elect Joe Brown? Knottgh, ts true, to Indicate that both men were out and i out villains who should be tn the penitentiary. So also shout Haskell, and every other candidate who runs for office against strong opiaisltlon. inll kliula of stories are circulated But would a man In Roosevelt's po allien lie justifiable to tlso such j stories under Ihe conditions he uses I them? Me has come down from the post tlon of high honor whl(*h he oecuple*. nnd stooped to the dirtiest methods of the ward politician Mr lb van has met this Roosevelt trick lit manly, honest fashion He did not kick out Haskell, as Ta't had been compelled lo do with For aker That was what Roosevelt w*ss j plating tor. Instead he affirmed lit* i faith In hi i lieutenant and his partv. which Is m> great that he ta willing jto stake the result of the election ti|H>n tt And he Is right If the republicans can now prove jthat Haskell Is the tool of the trusts Mr Roo-evelt ha* charged him with being, It will prove that the demo italic party Is no better than the republican, and that there Iw no rs.t Ison win anybody should support It lln preference If the republican* can not prove these charges, and the Jury of the great public. In the search light that will now be thrown upon him shall decide 'hat Haskell Is all right nnd Bryan's trust tn him was tight, the democratic partv will stand a* worth) of the trust of the peo ple. and everybody who believes (n r square deal between the corporations and Ihe people should support Its ticket, the cholera epidemic. Cholera has broken out almost at multaneousD tn different parts of the world In the BhtUpplne* numerous case* have appeared, but It ta In Ru ropean Russia and espeebvil) In St Petersburg where It Is ragtng with fearful mortality From the Muscov ite Capital come horrible stories of the ravage* of this disease II strikes alike the hovel ami the palace, claim img hundreds of victim* daily, A state of demoralisation and panic pra vgUt. The victims of the disease In the capital are burled far out tn the country, to which place special ftp neral train* are twin* run, snd so great la the mint but of victims that. j according lo report, graves cannot be | dug fast enough and the corpses are ! piled in warehouses awaiting their turn to be burled. Panic prevails in -St. Petersburg, and the people are fleeing from the stricken city. Those who can are try ing to get out of the country, and the German government, to protect, that country, has put on a quarantine, and all passengers are held at the frontier In detention camps. Notwithstanding these precautions, suspicious cases have appeared in Berlin, and It is believed that even now ehoiera exists in Germany. The ocean on each side protects us, but ehoiera may cross even the ocean If eare to guard against its Introduc tion Is not exercised. Steamers ar rive regularly from Manila and Eu ropean ports, and on these the disease may be brought over. But adequate measures have been taken to guard against the In trod net ion of the dis ease by the Federal health authori ties. t’holera Is not a disease^which is spread by contagion, like scarlet fe ver, against which protection is dif ficult. Neither Is It spread by in serts, like l he plague or yellow fever. None of the terror of mystery attends a disease whloh ran only flourish amid filth, and which can be ‘'caught" only by being swallowed. Only the packages—not their contents —could possibly be contaminated, and disin feetion will be thoriowh. This can be relied upon because Ihe necessity for it is known, as It was not when we last bad a cholera scare. Nobody then knew why cholera sprang up sporad ically in iho Interior of the continent, and along watercourses and railways particularly. It was afterward learned that It happened because filthy cargoes and passengers were allowed to go Inland. This can hardly happen now. Quarantine will be necessary, of court j, certainly regarding Russian steamships, and even possibly against oth.rrs, for a case Is reported from Berlin, But the Interruption to travel or commerce will be of a negligible sort. There ran be no excuse for any such fright as used to attend quaran lines when their functions were little understood, because diseases were thought mysterious, with the result lhat preventive measures were more stringent than Iff necessary now. QUEER DOINGS IN ATLANTA. From Atlanta comes a strange story It Is to Ihe effect that a gen tbman put In hls appearance in that city, and remained several days. Dur ing this time he was busy, though the nature of hls business he did not disclose to Ihe public. However It seemed to be exclusively with fed- I cr»l officeholders, for It was these Ihe sought out ami conferred with. IHo far as known he talked with no one else. After a stay of several days in the city he left as suddenly jattd as quietly as he had come, with out having taken anybody into his confidence as to the nature of the business that had brought him to At lanta. But after hls departure several federal officeholders exhibited re ceipts for amounts equal to 15 per !eent of a full year's salary, which had been given them by this Inter eating stranger. To them ho had represented that he was collecting money for the re publican campaign fund. The G. 0. I*, is In desperate straits, and needs [money to keep the campaign wheels turning round. So this gentleman whs being sent around lo solicit and collect contributions. The democrats are also collecting money for cam paign purposes, but their method Is hv voluntary contribution. This Is also the republican method, except I that a special collector Is sent to certain parties, who figures out the | exact amount which Ihe party so i Helled Is expected to pay. nnd whoso winning ways or convincing argu nienls are so Irresistible that he sue j coeds In getting the money he asks for i In other words, the republican par ty has resorted to the method of lax ling federal officeholder* to get money to conduct the campaign for the eler 11ion of Taft ami Sunny Jim Sherman. Only tn this way can the doings of th - campaign fund collector In Atlan ta bo explained. ! Several years ago a law was pass, ed to put a stop to this manner of collecting campaign funds When (he republican party managers had learn ,-d the art of frying fat from Ihe large predatory corporations, tt remained !no longer necessary to squeexe the money out of the little officeholders When "My dear llarrlman wilbnclv hntided over a quarter of a million |to help elect Roosevelt, and the In j surance corporations and other big robber ooucerns sent in large checks ilt was not necessary to make hard working poatoffiee employes and oth er federal appointees stand up and deliver 15 per cent of their year « earnings The O. O I* took a fit of morality and passed the law forbid ding such collections. But this 'ear ■ the fat frying of the big corporations has not been successful. It Is not believed shat Mv dear llarrlman has come sen's* with $280,090, nor the big Insurance companies, nor oth er predatory trusts And so. In plain violation of the law. the old plan>vf ! making the federal officeholder* sup ply the campaign hind ha* been re vised | Doubtless It Is done under sonic technical evasion of the law. so that [ the chairman of the republican cam paign committee and Ms subordinate* mav e*eape the penitentiary; but It 1 It the same old Iniquity. Another charge against the repub | licsn party, at the *an;e time whil" 1 (‘resident Roosevelt In approved Slop Thief sole t» raving and rsn! j Ing about Haskell, the treasurer of oho democratic campaign committee THE AUGUSTA HERALD ♦ ♦ . TALKS ABOUT THE HERALD * ♦ ♦ Waiting For a Sky Pilot. "Gel ready lor the airship," says the Augusta Herald. Been ready tor years.—Columbus Ledger. Can Drink Something Else. ■'Don’t waste water," is the advice of She Augusta Herald to its readers Thev -tall drinking water wasting it in Augusta.—Houston Dost. A Modern Moses and Aaron. The Augusta Heraid says that since Mr. Hlr.gen hts been in Geor gia it has been discovered that he can t make a speech. Hut then he has John Temple right by Ills side —a sor' ot Moses and Aaron arrange ment, It would seem. —Jacksonville Tin.os-Union. The Water Wagon in Augusta. The Auguata Herald alleges that ihe water wagon remlns one of tha most popular Jnsiitntions tn Angus la. Why not use It to rid.- across the North Augusta bridge on.— Rome Tiispme-Herald. Where Plumbers Close Their Eyes. The Augusta Herald says the plumbers in that tfxrn shut thilr eyes when they make out the hills. Bet those who get the bills open their eyes, however, and also their mouths in loud lamentations. —At lanta Georgian. The Blue Flag of Truth. Here's a red rag wav'd in Atlan ta's face by the Augusta Herald, which says, "An Attgtisia man saw Orville Wright make his great rec nrd-breaklng flight In hts aeroplane. Few important things happen in which Augusta-Is not represented in some way."—H.n.innah Press. »»««»* ♦Vi ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ , ♦ ♦ MEN IN THE PUBLIC EYE. ♦ ♦ ♦ *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ CANDIDATE HISGEN. Mr. Hlsgen may be able to find an enlarged inaiket for his. axle grease it. the south, when thm cam paign close-s. He should combine business with pleasure nnd carry some axle ' literature" along on hls stumping tours. —Brunswick Jour nal. MR. HARRIMAN. A New York reporter had tho nerve to ask llarrlman the other day if he was going to subscribe to the Taft campaign fund Hnrrlr'an didn’t answer the question. He was doubt less too busy thinking of that “My Dear Harrlman" letter and what came utter. —Amtrlcus Tllbes Re corder. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. The president !s going to have a party lo which he has Invited three thousand people. Whereby he snubs more than elchly millions, so It’s a good ihing he Is not a candidate.— Atlanta Journal. UNCLE JOE CANNON I ncle Joe Cannon, who has some 'hing more than a local reputation as a ' cusser.” Is said to lie turning the air blue, up In Illinois now. The old man Is up against the strongest opposition no ever encountered —the prohibition and labor forces, and ho is apparently trying to cuss" hls way tnrough it or around :t. —Val- dosta Times. MR. ROCKEFELLER. It Mr. Rockefeller wants to rank its a real and pre-eminent philan thropist he should tike personal charge of the experiments for kill ing mosquitoes with petroleum. Washington Star. HON. THOMAS E WATSON. Mr. Watson Is like a good many men who don't have to work lor a living, he can afford to Indulge him self In anything nnd he preft rs play ing with polities lo golf or automo biles. He cant kill anyone by his carelessness In politics, either.— Brunswick Journal. ,.Ut ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ WITH OUR CONTEMPORARIES^ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Cussing Watsyn tn Spanish. "Habe mas que Lepe Lepijo v su | hljo," says the Mexican Herald to Mr. Tom Watson. It the Herald wt 11 | say lhal to Mr. Watson In United States, it may hoar some.hlng to Ps dtsadv ant age! - Washington Herald. Certain Cures For Headache. It now develops that a roiling ptn i "111 drive away the headache. \Ve I don't doubt It. A Jump from a tw tv story window to escape one is in It l -elf sufficiently thrilling to drive I away the blues even.— Chatanooga Star. ohn Temple's Brother. And tt has been found out that John Temple Graves has a brother David. We never knew It before. Poor Dave! But why blame him. he cant lielj It and has kept the secret weil so fur. —Moultrie O server. Little Joe Fixed Him AM Right. Hon. Jo*- ph M. Brown disposed of Mr Yancey Farter übout as Beat ly and effectively as the job could have beeu done by the ablest Joint . debatei In he Di u tratic party.— i Vlbany Herald. * Must Label Their Elephants. We hereby notify the com'ng ctr j ruses that tt will he necessary for : them to iab-1 their elephants "not tv publican." Otherwise, our little boys | will not carry water for them and our flivck of trained donkeys are liable to kick them to death.— Houston l*n*t. What the Burglar Gel. Once Ip a v htle ihe h.irgtar hit* j the wrong party, tine utt tn Penn *y!tanta got Into th*- room with a nan who had an aching tooth. The burglar Is now in <the hospital where • vwrt* «r. trying to piece him to li.'cthvr lUkin.—Atlanta Georgiau. The Night Rider The secular press Is having a great deal to say just now about the Nigh' Riders, ard their apparent efforts to throttle Jhe ginning of cotton. It is needless to state that the Farmers' Union Is opposed lo the methods be ing used by these so-called Nigh: : Riders. The Farmers’ Union has always stood for law and order. We have a’.- j ways been opposed to old or young, big or little, rich or poor, violating j the law. We are anxious to secure j our price; we are determined; we propose to fight the battle out, we are fighting fair. We are fighting it upon a plane that the most severe critic cannot object to. Wa believe we will win. We are determined to win. The people who ard classing them selves as Night Rld'-rs, are liable -o destroy the very thing and the very purpose for which we are lighting, and it for the purpose of discourag ing the growth of this In the south that we are writing this article. We ask each and every member of vhe organisation, throughout the south to use every effort among their laborers and friends to keep them from in any way em list Ing in the methods or op erations used by the Night Riders. —Farmers Union News. Plain and Fancy “Uncle Joe.” The Brooklyn liagle solemnly de clares that at any rate Mr Cannon whatever his fortune and no matter where he got, it—does not splurge in well-tailored clothis and smoke ci gars of indisputable quality. Huh! So lhat Is all lhat Brooklyn knows of Mr. Cannon. Persons who have seen the speaker upon the stump charging the enemy like a vet eran war horse call him plain, blunt "Uncle Joe." As a mailer of fact he is plain and fancy by turns. In the woods, and when shelling the sam", Air. Cannon wears a 60-eent shirr and sometimes displays a dollar watch, and scorns the "tiles" worn by local dignitaries who meet him end escort him to the platform and introduce bint to the audience, but the operat ing expenses of Uncle Joe as a Wash ington institution arp not niggardly and not negligible. And if you're ask ed to accept one his cigars you aro in error it you decline upon the as sumption that the quality is question able. But, speaking seriously, Ihe person | al expenses, the tailoring of his j clothes and the cost of his cigars have no mole to do with the case than the flowers that bloom in the spring. Mr. Cannon, who didn't go; | hts fortune by ~.e crime of “selling wind and ink,” as he expresses it, may or ma> not have the $1,000,000 or $2,000,000 with which he is credi;- ed —or perhaps we- should say chnrg- j ed—but he has legislated in the inter- j ests of the autocracy and upon his record he Is to be judged, rather than , by the price of his cigars of the di mensions of his "wad." —Louisville ! Courier-Journal. ... Pine Oil And Its Uses A strUlng example of a seemingly useless waste product of tho forest which has developed into a market able commodity of tan small impor tance is what is known as pine oil. The crude wood turpentine obtained from Ihe steam distillation of eertaln species of pine must he refined with considerable eare before it can\be sold in competition with gum spints. the true turpentine of commerce. By rodistillation with steam this crude product is usually separated Into two substances. The first, which Is the larger fraction, consists almost en tirely of the product known technical ly as "plnene.” This closely resem bles gum turpentine except for a bare ly perceptible difference In odor. The other fraction Is a product somewhat, i thicker and heavier than turpentine, j with a yellow color and a very pleas- j ant odor. This Is known as “pine ; oil." Formerly this by-product had no market and was either burned or sold for almost nothing tn order to get rid of It: It was realized, however, that It was extremely poor business to waste three or more gallons of oil for every cord of wood without knowing certainly whether the oil was of value, and it was clearly up to the chemist to find uses for pine oil. and to the I salesman to create a market. Pine oil Is now sold In lank ear lots | to manufacturers of roofing paints | and varnishes Considerable quanti ties are consumed In the manufacture of insulating materials, metal polishes and cheap perfume. It has hoen found to yield very cheaply "terpene hy drate." a drug which at present is | manufactured by somewhat costly methods. Pine oil has also been sug . gestrd as an excellent solvent for var ! nlsh gums for the production of light 'colored varnishes. Further investiga tion may even lead to Its use as a raw material In the production of artlflcinl | camphor. Thus, from a worthless product. | pine oil has so much Increased In value that refined grades may now bo sold for front 49 to 50 rents a gal : lon. The very lowest grades soil for about 10 cents a gallon. TRUTH. The hlagest fool In all creation la the man who wears hi* life away accumu lating aomsthing he ttnn't need, an l makes no practical use of It. “Ia married life a wait*?" asks a { writer in the New York H'-rnid. Well. no. j it ts hardly as smooth as that. A good deal of It 1* made up' of hoedowns, and ocqaaloanUy both partie* realise thut the i •fig" t* up. The Board of Health Warn* vou about Malaria Fov.*- Mood tho warning and take J. * B. TONIC. The best. b> test. Sold snd reeontni' nded bv t’arrs Pharmacy, both stores; C S. Geotehtt* & Bro.; Alexander Drug Co.; Hansberger Pharmacy; Geo P. King: Broadway Fhar m*e>j J p Smith: RanUMs Pharmacy: .’sc and r-uc i bo\ GUARANTEED. J. & B. Medicine Co., Savannah, Ga. The Dorr. Special Derby Is A Wiener Every young man who buys one becomes a Dorr advertiser. Demand has been so great that we’ve bad to duplicate already —New lot has just ar rived. $3 and $3.50 DORR Tailoring, Furnishings for Men of Taste House Raiser J. W. G-iffin, practical house raiser and mover, can be found at 841 Broad St., McAuliffe’s Plumb ing Shop. For Sale 1485 Harper Street, 6 rooms, 50x100. PRICE $1,200.00 Apply to Clarence E. Clark 842 BROAD STREET. A Merry Widow Punch A doßclous conrectlon that Is rich and creamy. You wit! like It! Stop at Ualfw.-Us Soda Fountain when out ;ti tin- depot and become t merry widow punch ad min, v. Vo can’t help becoming s:t af ter one glass. Everybody concede Augusta to Caldwell on Coca-Cola D s “just right’’ because it'.i pure. ICE ICE ICE Telephone us your orders and we will see that they are filled promptly. Yiive the driver tin order for a coupon book and save trouble of making change. Ice delivered all the time, week days and Sunday. CONSUMERS ICE DELIVERY CO. 332 ’Phones 333. John Sancken, Mgr. George E. Payne & Co., 1106 Broad Street. Wishes tn announce to his friends and former patrons that he has established a soft drink, cigar and tobacco store next door below his old stand, and he solicits their patronage. SCHOOL BOOKS and School Supplies, as Bags, Straps, Pencil Boxes, Pads, Ink, Pencils, Pens. Second hand books taken in exchange for new ones. RICHARD’S ST£TI ONERY COMPANY. NOTICE! , WE WISH TO CALL THE ATTENTION OF OUR % ELFCTRIC LIGHT AND POWER CUSTOMERS TO NECESSITY OF NOTIFYING US IMMEDIATELY OF /ANY CHANGES THEY WILL MAKE ON OCTOBER IST, SO THAT WE MAY GIVE PROMPT ATTENTION TO THEIR WISHES. Augusta Railway & Electric Co. SATURDAY, SEPT. 26. OLD FASHION BLUE MOTTLED CASTILE Cl* (THE GENUINE ARTICLE.) Soap I got a Philadelphia house to make a special import order for me for this old favorite soap, and I positively assert that there is not another bar of it in the United States today ex cept what I have. The price Is 25 cents for a long bar. My profit at this price is 4 cents a bar. Garddle, DRUGGIST. DISINFECTANTS NOW IS THE TIME TO USE THEM SUN SANITARY FLUID. The Ideal disinfectant. True deod orizer and germicide; a powerful anti septic and purifier for the sanitary purification of dwellings, schools, hos pitals, water closets, sinks, slaughter houses, stables, etc. One pint 20c One quart 35 c One gallon SI.OO Five gallons, per gal 75c Special prices made on Barrols. N. L. WiLLET SEED COMPANY 309 JACKSON ST. ' ’Phone 498. T. G. BAILIE & COMPANY 832 BROAD ST. f Large assortment of Wall Paper and Compe tent Force of Workmen to do Prompt Work. Big Stock of MATTING, CARPETS AND RUGS. REASONABLE PRICES ON EVERYTHING