The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, October 06, 1908, Page PAGE TEN, Image 10

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PAGE TEN FOR RENT. 55* Broad, 9 rooms ... ...$36.00 134 V llruad Hired, 6 room* 25.00 SOS Ellis 8 treat, .1 vooni* 2 00 hi;; (iKi'i.t htru t, 9 room* sooo J 344 Crpen Street, * room* 45.00 | 106 Reynolds Street, 6 rooms 12.50 j 336 YVtiout Vitr< i-i tl room* 25.00 *45 Telfair »»r«<>t. :• .(, «,• «•,» -sot. *42 Reynolds street, 8 room* *33.33 STORES. 1224 Broad Btreot. 35.00 1262 Broad S‘—"»t 66.00 524 Campbell Street 45 00 OH* Broad Street, 11 rooms 30.00 6*i Broad Street 00.00 OFFICES. No 765 Broad Street $20.83 No 8 Library Bid'* .. 18.33 OtTlrea |n the Planters Ixian A Having* Bank Building WILLIAM E. BUSH, FOR SALE Three fine lots on Walton Way, best neighbor hood. Property in this section rapidly enhanc ing in value. Also have two nice lots in Sum merville at a bargain. MARTIN & GARRETT 137 Bth St. —STOCKS Orders executed In buy and -tdl slocks, bonds and investment -<■ uritics on the \Cw York Stock Exchange. We solicil your business. ARGO & JESTER 7 Library Building Phone 12. SHOWING HOW DEPOSITS OF ONE DOLLAR MADE IN THE M AUGUSTA SAVINGS BA OF H H MONTH, WILL ACCUMULATE IN FROM ONE TO FIVE ' 1 YEARS WHEN INTEREST IS COMPOUNDED HALF YEARLY AT FOUR PEI 4 CENT; H 1 year sl2 26 ■ I ' I* an !<• aav. Try ■ The Auglisto h'tivlngM I '/ink A' I ,AF( S P R I IN O « v ' . : v ' r . > ' • :: WE MANUFACTURE ALL GRADES OF Springs and Mattresses FROM $2.50 UP. Our ROYAL MON \RCH Single Cone Spring Guaranteed to be Stronger Thin Anything of its Price on the Market. You Will Dream Sweet Dreams on Our WHITE EAGLE, SamtAry Felt Mattress- Ask the Furniture Dealers. AiKjustd Mattress a p d Mfq. (twpdny READ HERALD WANT ADS. Aug ista, Ga„ Aug. 10, 1908. Mess Taylor Bros., Winston, N. C. Gentlemen: Yours of 7th to hand. In regard to your ‘ Red Eye” Tobacco would say that every customer to whom we have sold it buys it again. Respectfully, Murphey & Co. r '*_ yr- *i v *.* r 4. •r' ’ r 'T 7''^' v *1 */-• C : &.J * ' ' 'j ■ - •> "•ffli. \ . ‘ .1 ROSEMARY GLOSZ, the Hiinp;arlah Prlma Donna in “Tile Me rry Didow.” ♦ CALENDAR ♦ ♦ Tomorrow Matinee (3 p nt.I —Al. G. Field's Minstrel —Seats ♦ ♦ selling now ♦ ♦ Tomorrow Night (6.30 p. m.) Al. G. Field's Minstrels —Seats ♦ ♦ selling now ♦ ♦ 11..0 -lie Matlm-e (3:00 p. m !—"Human marts' Seats ready ♦ ♦ tomorrow ♦ ♦ Tluh'ml . Night (8: 30 j. m.) —"Human Hearts' —Seats ready# ♦ Fuesd .♦ ♦ I'n.l Night is i) p 111 i The Merry Widow"—Seat salt now ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ i Matlm-e, (. 00 p. ml — The Merry Widow"—Seat sale ♦ ♦ now on ♦ .-a I. Night (8 ."0 p. m l —" The Merry Widow" —Seat sale ♦ ♦, now on ♦ 4 Mail oicl. is received for Merry Widow’ with remittance only. ♦ The Al. G. Fields Greater Minstrels Tomorrow Matinee and Night. The flutter spectacle In the first, part of the Al. (!. Field Greater Min at ret* this season la one of the twen tieth century wonders of stage craft. To be accurate, Mr. Field, who Is ii.niewlmi of a botanist, made a study ft those flowers which change their elors, ami In his conservatory scene he Illuming us tin blossoms and the hanging of the colors Is exactly what he flowers do In the wild The -Instrel magnate rails It his f a try u»er arena. One of the bods of tlou.-i is the mutable phlox At iiinrlse It Is blue, and the afternoon it la pink. The bed to the right of the stage Is hibiscus hibiscus mil tublll* It goes through three changes !n a day. from white in the morning ■ rose at noon and ml at sunset. mattrfsses 1 ' "—-'■l! l| v _ - TOMMY DONNELY, Corned.tin with “Al. G. Field's Minstvcls.” at the Grand tomorrow, matinee and night. The be.i til..ns the buck near the elec * trie fountain. In the lantatia, the lan t tana It* yellow one day, ora use the i next ami red the third Ita change* are alow The other flowers that change In Mr Field's stage hot house includes the rhelranthus ehanielo, 1 that shifts from white to yellow and from yellow to red; the gladiolus ver aloolor that's brown In th<- morning and blue In the evening, and th > co a«a srandei.s, that moves slowly from greenish white to a deep yellow All of these plants and flowers are electrically articulated and It Is the first time In the history of a big pro duetlon tht any one has Insisted upon such accuracy In scenic accessories as Mr Field has In this particular in stance The Al O. Field Minstrels will appear here tomorrow, matinee and night at the Grand Prices for the matinee tomorrow lower floor, 7&c and 50c Entire balcony so cents. | Children under 14 veers of age, 25 , c«nu to all parts of the house. Uvst 10, 1908. COMING PLAYS THE AUGUSTA HERALD seats tomorrow night SI.OO. Seatß selling now at the box office. “Thu show you know." "Human Hearts.” Matinee and Night. On next Thursday matinee and night the stage of the Grand will be devoted to the presentation of the populai and highly successful play "Human Hearts” with a company of superior excellence and strenght. 'The author of the play is an actor of wide ex perience and .fully understands the art of play making from the stand-; point of both the spectator and the actor. His effects are produced quick ly. hut none the jess does he hold pa tent sway over the passions of his auditors. The play Is almost too well known to require more than a passing word upon the plot. The main thread of the story centers around Tom Logan, who Is unjustly accused of murder, and sentenced to life imprisonment. His ttife, Jeannette, who is a proud ambitious woman, runs away with an old lover, and goes to New York Even in n woman degraded as she is, the in st!m t, of motherhood prompts her to return to the old home to try to gain posse-don of her child Grace. She Is frustrated In her design, and new evidence being submitted to the Governor of th> state, he pardons Tom out of Jail. Jeannette dies, her paramour Is ar rested for the murder of Tom’s father, and Tom marries lluth Lar kins, and the clouds of adversity are dispelled ov the sweet sunshine of a true woman's love. Thursday matinee will be "bargain I matinee” 25 and 50 cents ali oxer the i house Prices nt night. 25 cents to 51 00. Scats are selling now Interpreters of "The Merry Widow" in Various Lands. We have the authority of a great Ijilln (unfortunately the names of I poets are apt to elude one's memory, blit If It wqs'nt Horace It was most likely Ovid! to tne effect that It is j most pleaa-.mt to have been present at the birth of a new thing—Olim Fortass.- Meinlnlsse Juveblt Consider for a moment how pleased are those of us who are old enough to remember wlien the stlllftourlsh tug Pinafore" was the latest thea trical novelty and its songs ami say ings were still everywhere lu evi dence. Consider the ovule and Jov of be ing able to narrate to a new and strange generation that you were one of the first to be told about the beauties and blandishments of Little Buttercup*; that you saw some long dead comedian caper nimbly around the stage when as the ever-amiable Admiral he expounded his ideas of discipline or. as the stern Captain of the Pinafore, explained that he was never w*|| harldy ever, slek at sea "H M 8. Pinafore" has passed Into literature and history; we of the vonnger generation know !t only as |i Is spasmodical!! produced by stock rompantse Consider then what tnus< have been the Impressions produced upon our fathers and our mothers our aunts and our uncles, when for the first time, thev listened to It* wonderful lilt. Its superb Invention its sh'rioue youthful effervescence i Having considered all this carefully. H BICE WILL GOSTJBS.OOO Commissioner of Public Works Provides For Drawbridges in Proposed Structure. In a communication to fflty council at its regular meeting “Monday night Commissioner Wingfield estimated that the cost of reconstructing Center street bridge will be $65,000. Of this amount it will take $20,000 to put the piers In shape and to provide for the draw span. The superstructure will require $45,000 to complete It. Council moved that as soon as May or Dunbar returned steps be taken at once to secure bids for rebuilding the bridge and that as soon as the contract was awarded work be pushed rapidly forward. In reference to an auxiliary pump ing station Mr. Wingfield stated that a steam pump of 10,000,000 gallons’ capacity would cosi approximately $05,000 to $75,000, but he recommend ed putting In two pumps of G. 000,000 gallons each and stated that he was of the opinion that one auxiliary pump w’ould be sufficient just now and tha It could be Installed for $40,000, in cluding foundations and boilers for an additional pump. These matters were the most impor tant brought up before council and action will be taken on them at once, one being referred to the bridges and wharf committee and the other to the canal and waterworks committee, both being asked to secure bids for the construction -of the respective util ities. Lame Back. This ailment is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles of the small of the back, and is quickly cured by applying ChaniDerlaln's Liniment two or three times a day and massaging the parts at each ap plication. For 3als by all druggists. consider next if you don’t mind, the fact that it Is only about once In a generation that a work of the quality of "Pinafore" appears, and yo'u arrive by what you can readily see Is a most subtle bit of introduction, at the sub ject of “The Merry Widow.” For years our musical comedies drag along In one weary rut. The authors take their plots from each other with a unanimity which as an evidence of fraternal feeliDg, Is truly gratifying. The same old inevitable show girls and ail the rest of the wearisome business reappears in one after another of them. As for the music, the librettists take the fami liar, simple "catchy tunes" and vary them to some slight extent; always careful, however, not* to make them so complex that they cannot be readi ly whistled or sung by the j*U*ry ■ gods or sung to C chords on tMrb*n jo or guitar by sixteen year old jnal dens. * ytajH Then some day there arises in nf» youth and impertinence a new com poser "w'lio knows not Joseph" and the customs of his forefathers; and he gives to the world something which by Its sheer brilliance dazzles his generation into a feeling of be wildered awe. At the hour og going to press “The Merry Widow" needs neither expla nation or eulogy. Not, even the fatal habit which Is so vicious a concomi tant of our American irreverence, of nan tig ci<eap and inartistic articles of v aring apparel after works of ar tistic worth, has been able to spoil It. Parody and burlesque, both theatrical and millinery, do not effect the ori ginal Just as happened in less de gree with “Pinafore” some thirty years ago, "The Merry Widow" has spread throughout the Occidental world. Unfortunate and rare Is that fanilv album which does not possess among I its treasurers a picture of Uncle ns Sir Joseph Porter or of Aunty as the Captain's Daughter as they appeared 'in the amateur theatricals held in ,18 . It seems most dkely that ; thirty years from now there will be no city so small or obscure, no ham- I let so detached or remote, that It Is 1 not able to point out farts concerning (he production of "The Merry Widow” therein It has been sung In German. French, English, Russian. Slavonic, as well as the minor dialects of the Atts ' t ro-Hungarian Empire. It has been interpreted by women ranging in ap pc-.raneo «Dd methods from one ex treme to the other. Soma might have stepped off the Montenegrin moun tain sides, which are the supposed loea'e f the play; while others are obviously unaccustomed to any coun tryside more rigorous than that to be found In the foothills of Broadway. One and al. the’- have been success- I ful All which brings us hack to the beginning and Justifies the compari son to 'Pinafore" With "The Merry Widow," as with the earlier play. It jis the play that eounts. Actresses Health Never Falls to Restore flair to Its Natural Color and Beauty. No matter how long it has been gray or faded. Promotes a luxuriant growth ts healthy hair. Stops Its falling out, ■nd positively removes Data* draft. Keeps hair soft and glossy. Re fuse all substitutes. . H times as much iu tl 00 as 50c. site. 1 Mot a Dye. 91 and 50c. bottles, at dropouts Sfßd k UfT tree Sin "Tlw Cifsst the Hear. •* C*. Nr.irS, N i. Hoy's Hartlna Soap.,,™, Pi.pv., n»: rough usd Uiarerd tisn «, •• a all sXm ~is K-V-V, skis Sue an mV, JSc 4ru* ■•««, •■Bd k. lor Ini PjvS "Tbs Cart at tbs aet," An Enemy of Poverty A Savings Account, persistently improved, extracts the sting from the helplessness of age. $1 will open the account 4% Interest 4% Paid twice yearly, January and July Ist. Citizens Bank, 931 BROAD ST. P. S. NORTH, Pres. C. A. FLEMING, V. P. M. C. DOWLING, Cash. SCHOOL SHOES. Misses’ girls’ and boys’ Shoes of box calf with solid leather with extention soles, blucher and lace styles, dressy and durable. Every size and width in each style. MULHERIN & MARKS SHOE GO. “The Leaders.” S7O BROAD STREET. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. EDUCATIONAL. MISS PUNK’S Commercial School Ha-iton Bldg., Augusta, via. "’ea ties shorthand, typewriting, hook-.eeplng, penmanship Eugjlih gild arithmetic. Day Class Night Class Terms Reasonable. Write for catalogue or call <97. may come and go but the lay remains witji us and perhaps when we have become fathers and mothers, uncles and aunts, we may be able to talk to ! a generation not yet arrived about the beauties and blandishments of—an so on. Here the story ends. "The Merry Widow” comes to the Grand on next Friday and Saturday nights and Saturday matinee. Prices, 50 cents to |2.00. Mail orders when accompatned by remittances received. No free list for this engagement. Scats are now selling at the box of fice, which will remain open until 9 p. m. tonight. "The Traitor” in Richmond. RICHMOND, Va —Richmond sur rendered to "The Traitor" Monday night. The new Thomas Dixun play, the sequel to the famous "Clans man" was presented In this city foi the first time before an Immense and brilliant assemblage including Governor Swanson and a large num ber of other state and city offclals. No play in recent years ltss, created as much enthusiasm In this city as "The Traitor.” Particular Interest was ssanlfestod in the trial ! scene where John Graham, the hero of the play was tried tor his life by , a jury consisting of eleven negroes and one white man Local hlstorl cal concern was incres«-d by the fact that the character ol Judgt But |er was modelled aftar Judge Under wood who presided at the memorable trial ot JefTerson Davis In Rich mond. Throe ticket speculators were ar rested Monday night In front of the Academy of Music for annoying Richmond citlrens and endeavoring to obtain extortionate prlres for -ats. In view of the enormous sale of scats in this city and the reat Interest that la shown In "The Traitor" along it's route. It it stated (hat several speculators have an nounced their intention of sccom-1 panylng the play from town to > >wn and endeavor to reap a rich harvest ______ e e e .oeeeeeeeeee • e ♦ IN RECORDER'S COURT. e • • j ♦ eeeeeeeeoeeeee The police did a rushing business in the early hour* of the morning Tuesday and there were 13 defend ants before the recorder, J. C. Lee and Tom Whittle were given 22 50 or 5 days. D. L. Donnally was arrested tor TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6. ArTHE A. & P. TEA STORE Sauce Pan Premiums! Blue and White Enamel Sauce Pans is our Premium this week, with all pur chases of any of the follow ing articles. 31/2 lbs Java and Mocha Coffee... 50c 2 lbs Java Flavored Cof fee • 50c 21/2 lbs. Portorica Cof fee.. • 50c 1 lb Choice Mixed Tea • 50c 2 Bottles A. & P. Ex tracts 50c 1 Can A. & P. Baking Powder 50c Ilb Thea-Nectar Tea... 60c Remember we will give these Sauce Pans away as long as they last, beginning Monday, October sth. p % 844 Broad Street. 325 Stores in the U. S. being on a drunk Monday night. He has been before the recorder before and was given 1100 or 90 day*. Mose Johnson and Henry Jamea. two negroes were charged with strik ing some women The recorder gave Johnson $45 or 90 days and Jam»« 116 or 30 days. After going to the dock James decided that he would leave. He received 110 or 10 day* for his decision ♦ Sam Watts was given II or 2 dsvg tor violating the hack ordinance. Tom D'Antlgnac. colored, was give* 15 or 10 days for violation of the 4«oth section. "If vou want a Steatfi producer, km CUnchfltld." '