The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, October 06, 1908, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR IHF AUGUSIA HEKALD 731 Broad St., Auguiti, 0» Published Every Afternoon During th% Week and on Sunday Morning by THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO. Entered at the Auauata Pottofficft as Mail Matter of the Second Cleft*. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily and Sunday. 1 year 6b. 00 Pally and Sunday, t month* 3.00 Dally and Sunday. 3 month* .. .... I.IW Dally and Sunday, 1 month .. SO Daily And Sunday, 1 week 13 Sunday Herald. 1 year TOO Weakly Herald. 1 year 00 TELEPHONES. Busins** Offloe 207 City Editor 2M Society Editor 296 No communication will be publifthed in Tha Herald unle*t the name of the writer I* Honed to the article. NEW YORK OFFlCE—Vrteland-Brn- Jamln Agency. Orunewlck Building, 225 Fifth Avenue, New York City. CHICAGO OFFICE —Vreeland-Benja min Agency. W H. Kentnor, Mgr., 1108 Boyce Building, Chicago, 111. The Herald i« the official advertising medium of the City of Auguata and of the County of Richmond for all legal no fleet and advertising. Addrtt* all buainetft communioatlona to i III! AUGUSTA 111 KALI). 731 Broad St., Auguata, Oa. { "IF YOU WANT THE NEWS YOU NEED THE HERALD." Augusts. 0» Tuo.iUy, Oct. 6, 1908. Circulation of The Herald for 8 Months. 1908 Vb ruary . 21C,4f1a Min ch 22%.*/% Sty .24..5et. June 241.52 V July.. . 1*1,202 A HfTuei 119,700 Sef t**mhei 232,49% j DAILY AVERAGE. FOR 8 MONTHS. 7784. DAILY DETAILED STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION FOR THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER. 1 ......... 7.769 I 1% 7,60% | . 7.760 17 7,64* ! • 7.67# 1« 7,622 | ) 7.SIS It 7JWO » 8,161 20 7.84% A l.tS<i 21 7.6 V. 7 /.6%f» 2# 7.643; 11 7.5X6 26 8.177 1| 7.663 ; 27 7.734 a 7,967 2« 7J§6 y 7.§62 29 7,‘>2i 16 7.657 30 7.865 Tefal for ftepternhei 232,466 Thar# it no better way to roach the home* of the pioeperoua people of thla Ally and aertlon then through the e#Uimn* of The Herald Dally and Sunday Partita leaving Auguata can have The Herald »ent them by mail each day. ’phone 297, Circulation Department, II you leave Augueta, «o that The Herald can reach you each day One nmn "ho will not b#* *ur|irlh<(l by Ihr rrault of thr elurtion tomorrow w,.i bo ('apt. Ysncpy CMrter. (’hauncrv Heprw »*>• Jhlft ta thr Koiririi ugr of polllU'h Should tic not riUiiT hftvr tilled it the oily »#»•? tup fttitomobitc rontlmts# to k«*f|> tip tha aplnndWl reputation It in limit tug si % man klltci Don't ftirgpt to put In your little ballot tomorrow for Jo*' Brown ami iSe fttifTritKc •mcridincnt. The Thotnaa vllle Time* tCntcrprlHc •p«akk of him now u foot John Archibald' 'All the bold on** taken oat of ihftt hold. hu«t iimn i tittup' They uftv <* found nu oil belt In Africa Nns look for » Riirkif.il,,r •o b# fPUIIiI lo iimkr It lh<- Imnli of ■ trust Now ihnt ft n v.nr mayor of Tlmp •on Tax*. la rtnsrt Htsrwul (hr poor tallow ‘o ilruilv on lh« atarvallon ii ary tboy paid him without a douhl. Jl«n .Irffrlr* killed a hoar w|(h hi* lift thr othor day Regular bear killing lima, thla Thrrr will hr a hip ma.aarrr of Teddy llrar. in a f*« day - "Between fhr devil and the drop blur ae*'' la a hail predlcatix-m to ha la. hut allll It Isn't aa had a, (hat lo which Ihr dlvrr found hlluarlf wfcan hr waa at'nrk.d by a dryll fl*h at tha bottom of Ihr lira II la nonr too oprly lo begin train in* Ih. damocrallr rooatna lo crow victory Wa ahould hatr a well trained rooster chorua rradi hy hr ftma wr nerd It. which will he on November * And now a artenttat ha* dlacovrrrd that Ihr perron who ha* not *ot a ahlvorln* *plnr ha* no aritatlr *antl manl If thla hr rrally irur. how the rapuhllcan* now mua( hr full of artla tic artnlmrnt Vr» Faullne, || la doubtless dla agreeable for vouna Teddy Roosevelt lo Work icn hoot* a day n n carpet factory, hot ts tt help* to caich votoa lor papa * candidate tt will hr worth thr trouhlr for a month A campaign port rhyme* t'hafln wlih laughing Thr rhycue I* had hot thr arurr I* atltl wor*r lor alt that Chafln ha* *oi nut of thr cam paten la a brickbat In hta face, and that wa* no laughing matlrr. Praaldctr Roosevelt cant be held bach much longer from taking ihr •tump Thr sootier hr atari* out th* mar* will It brnrflt thr democrat* It I* all coming our wav now but rrary llttlr bit mnrr help* ts you haven't yai communed to th# teiu-ia’lc eamiiaign fund you have Ire* than four work* left It will make you frrl good men the victor' la won to know that you i hipped In to halp win It. THE ELECTION TOMORROW. Tomorrow Ik th<- dat< of Ihc g'a'e rice ion, which e\ery voter ahould bear in mind. Not a aiiiglo rm;Utt er i d > olor, unless (t be absolutely impoa 110 for him lo art so ihe I oil* tfould fail to (.'el In hi* vote. Tho primary haa aettltd Mn: ques tion a- In ;|io choice of governor arid mb. i r.i ir house officers and Ell the primary nominees will be elided. The opposition of the Hear*! candidate may be entire I '/ dlsr- u rd--d, fm the vote he wlff re ceive Hill be Inconalderable. So far as (he slate officer* are concern ed the vote tomorrow will be merely complimentary, ratifying officially the verdict of the primary. Kven so th>- complimentary vote caat for them should In as large aa poar.lble. A*lde from thai, however, tha contiltuilonal amendment In regard to the new registration law la to b«' voted on, and It nmat be ratified As there Is consider;.hie OppOtioOn to thla It behooves all those who favor lie ra'lfii .lion to «ec to It tha: tlp.-lr bio.i I go. b Into the bo* Hut more 'han ai! this, n large vole and a substantial majority wilt have an Immense bearing on the na tional election. Georgia has been paraded In the north and west a* a doubtful mate Bryan and Taft aro now running neck and nock, despl* : Ihe Immense majority polled for 'he republican ticker four years ago. if tomorrow Georgia should Indicate In no uncertain manner that so far from being a doubtful state she Is en Ibuslasllcally end ovet whelmlnglv democratic It would have such an enthusing effeil upon the democrat* In all tin doiihlful stales 'hit they would sweep all before them, and Bryan would bu elected in a whirl wind of enthusiasm. l,«l every good democrat be sure to get In his vole tomorrow. Tlk democracy of the slate looks to every voter to do hts duty In this supreme hour. . mtm ■ ' GEORGIA SAFE FOR BRYAN A prominent Georg tali In New York last week attracted consider ! aide attention hy hta blustering pro ' fesr.ed desire to wager money that | Bryan would not get the electoral vote of Georgia. Whether he was accommodated, or whether he was merely bluffing and crawfished when : hi* hand was called. I* not known But if anybody really de»lred lo win money on an election tret, they might have covered ull this Georgian had lo put up, nt ,-iiiy odds desired, wl‘h tin absolute assurance that *hi» o t would be won For Bryan to lose Georgias olec (oral vole, under present conditions, Is simply Impossible. This might have been the case hnti there been tin agreement between (In I nders of tin Blown faction ttnd Mr, Wa'son that Georgia's votes should he given lo him. thich a trade was believed to have been made, and there wore many thltn.* some months ago lo corroborate this rumor. But Mr. Watson ha-- d* chtteil that there was no trule, that Mr Brown hts friends are uaiß'r no obligation lo him and that he dues nol expect their supimii and Mr Brown has taken the stump for Bryan Th's makes It certain that Mr. Watson will gel no support except the vole, of ht* own follower*, and even ho does not rlalnt lhai they eonatltiito now. nt have cifnalltutod at any tlmo In the past, u majority of all thu voter* In the state. Including she re pub l lean a. So Mr WaMan cannot poaniMv n majority of the that will be polled in (Ununla on November 3. N«ftb«*r can Mr. Taft, and iiobody la wild ennutib to make aitch a Mr Hlhror, or rather ht» run»lti< nmtf. John IVmple Graves, ran at b*»iit ho i*o to £«'t only % few vote* !u n few counties out aide of Fill’on. and the prohibition «rd socialist parties will i at HI i. Non** of the* » minor party mndiriates could a majorlt) nt «l| the vote# caat. and onh a craty man would make anch a claim There hasn't been up tt* thla time been found a man bughouJoF to thla extent Will Mr. Hryan Rel majority of tfw* Thla la a uuettlon which can nol I**» answered until the vote* arc counted If all the old popu* Hat % ahould vole lor Wat eon, and if all the iH»|trt>e« and while repubH cans vote for Taft, and If Mr. Gravoa be it ten a *<whl romp!tm»nt*ry vo"* for the ude(tendance party elector**, and If the prohibitionists poll mb many vole* as they polbsl in lift*, the year of their greatest strength in this *%G and If the train .*%* natch as they claim they will train and * few votes be cast for Sid ney Tapp who u *et to be nominated t>y still another nvaf ,>«rty—then In Joixi Mr Hryan may fall abort of having a malortty voto c**t for him Hut this I* quite g largr hunch of '•lf» and probably non# of thorn will mai.r'alits, Mr W xtaon ma not get ti many '■,««*„ | Tt I*M .Many nepnva *H! tt€M >f>?v for Taft on account of th?* vllle matter The )cdei>cn<lcno* lwA§ucra # the prohibitionist* and the soetallsta will probably be much i disappointed In the returns, and Hid. ! Tapp will nol even get electors on the ballets. When all these facts arc considered It Is quite probable that Mr. Bryan will not only get. ai majority of all the votes that will be caat, but that he will get the old time democratic majority. But suppose that he also should fall lo get a majority, what then? Our state law provides that In this event the legislature shall elect, the | ( lectors. If Mr. Taft or Mr. Wat ! iron should poll more votes than Mr. Bryan, If both of them should poll more votes, and If each of the other six candidates should poll more votes | than Mr. Bryan, It would still de volve upon the legislature to name the electors to cast Georgia’s vote lit the electoral college. And the man who harbors the Idea that a Georgia legislature would choose any olher th'an the regular democratic electors simply would write himself down as a wild vision ary, totally unacquainted with the people of this state Candidate Jim Sherman Is out on a slumping tour, but he lakos care trot to fttiempt any Marching through Georgia business, although the Taft lies once claimed this slate. MR. TAFT’B OPTIMISM. Mr. Taft has Just made a tour of the northwestern states. On a spe cial train, extensively advertised and with all the eclat that could be given It to make it attractive he has made | a dash through those states accord ing to a carefully mapped out Itiner ary, passing through all their prin cipal cities and making stops, with speeches, at us many of them as pos sible. And having so passed through several of them he made the declar fttlon that “I am now sure that I will be elected president.” That statement, founded on the be lief Induced by his experience on this j Journey, marks Mr. Taft as a wonder fully optimistic man. It was made In Omaha, after he had swung around tn a circle through Wisconsin, Minnesota, Aouth Dakota, lowa, Nebraska and other states. Be fore he made tilt* tour, tt is admitted that reports from these states wore very disquieting to the republicans Mr Taft made his journey. The peo pic came lo the statlpns to see him pass and shouted. Wherever he stopped In a city to make a speech j he had a large udlenee to see and to hear him, and th<-y showed an In 1 terest. And from thla Mr. Taft eon eludes that the majority of the prro pie are with him and for him. and he Is "now mire that I will be elected." , This Is un admission, In the first j place, thst previously he had his 1 doubts about the result His conclu sions had been based upon the most | reliable reports that were obtainable, I nmdt> by the various local leaders to 1 the natlonnl committee. Prom these reports, consolidated and averaged by experts, the outlook for success seemed very discouraging to Mr. Taft and his friends. But he made his trip i through a number of these doubtful states, and because people came to 1 shake hi* hand, wave their hats as his i train passed by, and turned out to hear him spesk Mr Taft feels sure ■ that he will he elected. Alt uncer talnty has vanished. All feeling of i doubt has been dissipated. The local leaders are a set of chump* *ho are nol as well acquainted with their peo- I pie as 1* Mr Taft, who had never ; acen them before What an example |of optimism for of course Mr. Taft was not talking for effect, nor ! whistling to keep his courage up. j Yet If Mr. Taft were to puss! .through the Southern states, he would meet with the same experience Peo-1 j pie would go hi hear him apeak, and partisan friends In the audience would nppiaud. for even in each of the larger elties of the South Mr Taft and the rerubllran party have friends enough lo make up a good nudlence. At the stations people would gather I to see him paa*. for this happens In variably when a free attraction I* on exhibit. Mr Taft would see more evi dence of the certainly of hi* coming ' election— and yet he will not get a single electoral vole In the entire i South. Because he waa not rotten egged on his northwestern tour because the town* were not draped In mourning over bis coming and because he was treated with civility and applauded by his frlsnd*. Is no certain Indication j of hts carrying any state. Kven as ; sumlng that every man he saw. tn hi* ! meetings and front hts train, would • vote for him -which ts far from be I tng the case- this number compared ,to the whole vote that will be cast j In those places Is so small as not to, lie worth considering I'pon Just such evidence as this j upon which Mr Taft's new- found con fidence Is based Mr Hearwt Is (tabu tng Georgia for hi* ticket, and Mr Watson's friends are claiming the stale for hint. Yet Georgia's electoral ; vole I* as certainly Bryan * as Is South Carolina's or Vlabama'a Mr Taft. If he Is really as confident now *s he professes to Y*e, may have a rude awakening In atore for him, [about thirty days after date. THE AUGUSTA HERALD ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦A* * ♦ ♦ TALKS ABOUT THE HERALD ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦A I One Redeeming Feature The Augusta Herald Is consok-d by the fact that th<- Queen Bess ruff, which U worn around the neck will not interfere with the arrangement, of the sheath shirt. —Columbus Ledger. Nightriders in the Senate The Augusta Herald Is of the opin ion that, if the nightriders now start as they did after the tobacco planters, the cotton bears will probably go broke and so will many of the night rider* anatomies—Blberton Star. Circumstances Alter Cases United filates Treasurer Treat saya that we should eat seven time a day and rest frequently to keep healthy. And we would, says The Augusta Her ald, If wo had as good a stall at the public crib as he has. —Vicksburg Herald, Old Notion Needs to be Revised The Augusta Herald has come to the conclusion that it is about time to revise that old notion about pouring oil upon them will calm the troubled waters. "Bee what effect the pouring of Standard Oil upon the political waters have had,” says the Herald.— Columbus Ledger. Who Will C*me In ThirdT Since It has about been settled that Bryan will come first and Taft se cond in Uje November voting, the newspapers are beginning to figure on the probabilities of third place in the running The Augusta (Oa.) Herald predicts that Dabs will occupy third place after the votes are counted. Barlier In the campaign many believ ed that. Hisgen. Independence parly candidate, would be the third man in the contest. Just now the Star thinks 'that the Prohibition candidate, Chas- In, will pull Into third place. How ever, it is a little early yet to make figures on the final positions of the "also rans.”—Anniston Star. ♦ ♦ ♦ MEN IN THE PUBLIC EYE ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦A****** THEODORE ROOSEVELT. We predict thft* President Roose velt. within a year or two aßer his retirement from office, will enter the employ of William Randolph Hearst —Charleston News and Sourlor. JOSEPH M. BROWN. Joe Brown may not he an orator but he is certainly a good talker, and when he talks he talks sense. He will make it good governor all right. —Darien Oaxette. ALTON B. PARKER People are beginning to realize that Judge Parker isn’t as dead polit ically as they thought he was. He seems to be very much alive and is giving a splendid account of himself on the stump and elsewhere.—Colum bus Ledger. HERMAN RIDDER. Herman Bidder Is Just exsetjy tho man for the Job ho has hoen called to fill. Any man that can collect newspaper subscriptions can collect any other kind of did money— Brunswick News. WILLIAM H. TAFT How can a man like Taft, silent as a clsm, hope to carry out the poli cies of Roosevelt, which were all noise" Jacksonville Times-Unlot JOSEPH B FORAKER. The court records In Ohio do no: show that Foraker was ever openly engaged as atlorney for the Stand ard Oil Co.. In any of its suits. Joe did all of his work under cover.— Amerlcus Tlm» s-Recorder. JOHN W KERN We give Mr Kern eredlt for sin cerity, but he was undoubtedly mistaken when he said he and Mr Graves were agreed on everything but baptism Hoth want to he vice president. That's quite a disagree ment. —Commerce News. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#♦♦♦♦♦ » ♦ ♦ THE PRESIDENTIAL ♦ ♦ CAMPAIGN ♦ ♦ ♦ Parker's Accusation Justified. Judge Parker know of but could not prove the trust contributions, and was putMlcl) branded by Roose velt as "a w ilful and malicious liar.' —Savannah Press. Roosevelt's Meddling. Mr Roosevelt is so busy trying to make another president he hardly has time to devote to his own offi cial duties Even his own support er* are Becoming dlsg#led with the manner In which he Is using Ihc high office of president—Columbus Ledger. A Very Pertinent Question. If Got Haskell Is unfit for tress 1 urer of the democratic commmlttce | because he respected a franchise given the Prairie Oil and Gas com i pany. is not Mr Rooscveit unfit for ipresldtnl because he ordered the i granting of the franchise?—Jackson vllle Times Union Standard Oil Fighting Bryan. It has leaked out at Whiting. Ind . I that the Standard Oil company has subscribed for two hundred ooptet |of Hartx'r'* Weekly to be sent reg - utaily to Its employes, and many of | the men reluse to take It from the postofflee* Harper's is vigorously . attacking Mr Bryan Memphis Times. Teddy Has Had Like E*p#rl#nce. Roosevelt ought really to sympa thise with Foraker. v Teddy knows him«e!t how tt is to have unpleasant letter* pulled on you Once upon » time they pubtiahed one front him headed M- Dear Hairtman Atn icm us Times Recorder. * Flowin’ Steers in Georgia- A unique athletic event will be seen at the fair to be held fn Rome, Ga. ; It Is a contest at plowing steers. It j is not told whether the steers are j to be big or little, -wild or tame, red j or spotted, or whether the plows are to be regular sodturners or the well i remembered bull-tongue. Georgia ought to have found enough excitement In the recent extra ses- i sion of the Tegislature, in the revela ! tlons of the convict lease system, in the presidential election. Then there j is the vice presidential campaign c.f j Col. John Temple Graves, the silver tongued. who pursued his editorial ca reer in Rome, jmd developed his star- | soaring oratory as he wandered along ■ the turfy banks of the Etowah and the Coosa, or climbed the Roman j hills and from their wooded crests ; looked over the wide, wide world, and j in his ambitious dreams foresaw the , fateful moment when he should trav el up and down in a wilderness cry- . Jug for the Independence party. But the outside world underrated 1 the Georgia capacity for fireworks. ! Rome must have a fair. The star j feature of that fair is not to be the hair-raising performance of the fes- j five trick mule, nor the three-headed - calf, nor an automobile race, nor the } bearded beauty, nor yet the active little pea under a shell. It. Is to be plowin’ steers. The plow ! Is to be drawn through the, soil. But not by a yoke of oxen, nor by the fashionable tandem. One steer is to be plowed at a time. He who can make the sfralghtest furrow between two posts wins the prize. The steer Is not to be muzzled. He may wander from the line to crop the grass, or to attack man and beast. His caudal appendage is to be left free to brush the stinging flies, or to express his bovine emotions. Excitement is intensified by lim iting entries to one class of contes tants. The steers are not to be plow ed by the farmer’s boy who is ac customed to haw and gee; nor by trie brawny timberman who has driv en the straining team from forest to mill. The plowmen are to he Georgia editors. Far be it from any to in timate that the athletes should re main at the same employment after the fair, as more dexterous In guid ing the plow than In pushing tho pen. These country-hred editors are an honor to American journalism. But how many of them can plow steers’! —Washington Times. Somebody has made the assertion ! that the lady on the new ?20 gold coin is draped in a sheath skirt, but \ diligent inquiry has Jhot yet located a man who can affirm or deny the story. Unsightly Advertising. “Not. many years ago the 'gutter-: I snipe'—a long bill with legends In block type—was posted on the outer side of the curbstone This has l passed out of existence in every half governed city, and even in some j cities that are governed ny political rings. The bills that were posted on telegraph poles, trees and tree j boxes are now rarely seen in cities, but may be met with in the back woods and back fields of the pump kin-growing districts. "It Is certain that the billboard poster—the wild and unlicensed va riety—will also pass from the life of a city. That (he regulation of post ers will be stricter and that a muni cipal tax will be paid on them as in Europe is extremely likely."—Wash ington Star. It has been said of America, hy a foreigner, that the first act that im presses itself upon the visitor to our shores is that somebody's soap, or washing compound, scours the j world; that the next impression the i 1 visitor gets Is that the children of | New York cry for a patent tfiedicine, end. getting nearer the pier of d barkation, he next learns that it is of great importance to eat several cereal foods for breakfast. The unsightliness of American ad vertising has caused someoue else lo say that if the Alps were in this 1 country they would be used as a| ! back ground for advertisements, and j it is a fact that In the country the i billboard defaces nature, w hile in the city it defaces buildings and lots and destroys the attractions of adjoining property despite the refusal of some i owners to allow vacant lots and wall 1 spaces to be used for publicity pur . poses. The rights of property owners are 1 | trespassed upon when the owner of | adjoining buildings or vacant lots : is allowed so to deface his property | that the appearance of the entire | block is materially Injured. A muni i eipal tax in this country is less to lie desired as a regulator of poster ' advertising than state laws strictly iVogulating the nature of the posters i and prohibiting those that consti , tuts a nuisauce. The tax system may be upheld on the ground that a mutueipality i» entitled to ,t revenue ; from advertising that disfigures the'. ; landscape, but in what the Star culls i half-governed" or "rtug-govei d cities, that system might readily de , j generate Into a form of graft that I would offer allurements to the porch | climbing type of politician without | giving aay sort of protection to I | property owners.—Louisville Courier-' { Journal. Billie Hardwick la All Right. Billie Hardwick siiokc from the 1 same platform with Hon. Joseph M Brown In Columbus the other nigh' . and said all good democrats were i going to support the gubernatorial i nominee. Billie is all right, and while he is a hard political fighter he always keep* bis democracy on straight.—Dublin Tim#s ' 1 y' — Despicable Republican Trick. And «bat doe* the country think j of the desperatw method* that would stoop to desecrate the memory of la dead president' With the ■ xpoa 1 tire of the ao-ealled Cleveland letter favorable to Taft, aa a fake euro and simple, wbat doe* the country. Ir reapectlvx of partv affiliations, think of me'hod* that sullied the name of j a man no longer here to defend hl.t j name?-Atlanta Georgnn. Chilly Days 9 Mean Changes in Underwear We’ve every kind of Underwear comfort for man. Right now we are selling a Gauze Cashmere Underwear, $ 1.25. Very light weight but with just sufficient wool to keep off chills. DEIMEL LINEN MESH, TOO. Rut ours is the genuine kind. And we are sole agents for Jaeger wool for men, women and children. DORR Tailoring, Furnishings for Men of Taste T. G. BAILIE & COMPANY 832 BROAD ST. 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 READ HERALD WANTS REPA \ p S xßxffl SAWS. RIBS, Bristle Twine, Bp 1 - Ki 8 -SS of oln ENGINES, BOILEF • ■ v® and Repairs far same. Shafting lactsra. Pipe*. Valvas and fitters. Light Saw. Shingle, and lacn Mil Lane Mills in stock. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AC COMPANY. Augustst Ga. MEET ME AT HICKEY’S Where You Get the Best Work by the Best Workmen. Remember the place, 221 Eighth Street. HICKEY’S BARBER SHOP. The Reliable Babcc The carriage which it built to be good first, one w proved mechanical principles throughout. These p bodied in good materials and good workmanship. t avoids the freaks, fallacies and the experiments ot The earirage which combines Yhe efforts of brains skill and produced under complete manufacturing carriage irthe cheapest for the owner, and such a liable Babcock. H, H. Coskery, 749-751 b. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. ARE YOU BUILDIING* We Carry a Large Stock of TIN HARO WOOr RUBBER l2nAtjflo* CRATES Ah TAR PAPER PARIAN HO Blask and Galvanized Corrugated Iron, Tar and Ro ing Paper; Tin Shingles, Etc Estimate* cheerfully furnished on Tin Roofing, Gr vanlxed iron cornices, and skylights. DAVID SLUSK » . 1009 BROAD STREET. George E. Payne & Co. N 1106 Broad Street. Wishes to announce to his friends patrons that he has established a soft driiiK, c, h and tobacco store next door below hi* old stand, and he solicits their patre-age. TUESDAY, OCTOj Floor V St I Walnut. | Mahogany. | Cherry. Rosewood. i Oak (lie j In Pints, Quar I Gallon cans for J for John Lucas | La A. 1 I Paint L 620 Gra-v [PAINTS AND OILS a Have you moved into a 1 new home this year? Don’t 3 you wish to brighten it up a 9 bit? We can furnish you the J material and a good man to I put it on. For '* Xls , 3 you can do lots , 9 terior in making J and cheerful. I For a little mo f do the exterior. You will be pi e what you get fror ALEX AN. i DRUG C 708 BROAD GmO For 1485 Harp rooms, PRICE .. . App Clarence 842 BROAJ