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PAGE FOUR
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I HOGIESS LARD I
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FOR ALL COOKING PURPOSES
FIRST: Nature-grown in the fields of the Sunny South;
and obviously much purer and a great deal healthier
than the fat of the hog.
SECONDLY: More economical than hog lard; goes far
ther-much farther - every time.
THIRDLY: As good as butter for cake and bread mak
ing and for all kinds of cooking where butter or other
cooking fat is needed, and much cheaper, because
it costs less, in the first place and less of it has to
be used.
FOURTHLY: Its purity and quality guaranteed. Every
pound of it is made under United States Govern
ment inspection.
The Southern Cotton Oil Co
NEWYORKSAVANNAHNEWORLEANSATLANTACHICAGO
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MAXIM’S
•Im* ih** plHiiortihml »h«***m of Fmm
* brilliant opor*. 'The Mrrrjf
Wldnu. * A whirl) l).«H M r\r,
duptb uteri or **v«m by the
Viemornhl# prod or (ton a of <J liber t and
Hulitvnn • hitherto uit9uri*n»mibt«> r»tn|r
op9i.«A Inter* #t In the fammift
'life of Part* baa been stimulated In
thin country, both among the traveled
Mid the untraveled
Maxim's is* place by I'ss-lf, unique
and (’asmdully Parisian. There In noth
ing juat like it anywhere ela* in the
world and In Faria it«»lf It tn dint mot
ive. It could not be even nticennftilly
Imitated In the t’nltcd Htuten, berauac
n^'\ —~— ~ ' "' ' ~~
the atmosphere and temperature would
be larking. It needs a Latin p«*ople to I
give It junt the spirit it has. the Anglo-
Saxon in lacking In that peculiar phase
of vivacity.
Primarily. It In a case like many
others, but with a distinctly good and
justly fatuous cuisine and wine-cellar.
In many reapecta, it docs not differ es-
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
H '
■0 mm •
sentially from the multifile of flrst-clnss
eafea In Paris. But Maxim's is not on
ly a firat-class case, but aom< rltln.< more
much more. There is an indescribable
i air of Jollity and good-fellowship about
I It. ’Pt\e utmost liberty Is allowed, hut
this rarely degenerates into license. And
l although there is doubtless plenty of
wickedness underlying all the palely,
I there is hale or no vulgarity. What
TWO DEAD; RESULT
OP HUSBAND’S
JEALOUSY
MANASSAS, Va. — As the result ot
a hUßband's jealousy, two men are
dead and another wounded at Old Fair
Farm, at Canova, six miles from Man
assas. Edward Fair and his wife and
brother, Allen Fair, called on their
neighbor, Tucker Posey, Thursday af
ternoon. While there Edward Fair’s
attention was attracted to what he
regarded as an unusual friendliness
between his wife and his brother, Al
len.
Angered by their conduct he hur
ried from the Posey home and pro
cured a gun to avenge his fancied
Injury- Upon his return to the Posey
home he shot and instantly killed his
brother, and turned the gun upon his
wife, but was prevented from shooting
her by the interference of Tucker
Posey, who received the shot inteded
for the wife. During the struggle
that followed Posey took the gun from
Fair, and, striking him upon the
head, killed him instantly. The Fair
brothers were sons of the late Car
ter Fair, one of the best known men
of this county.
thi-re is of that is mainly contributed by
foreigners. No one claims that the
French are devoid of vice, but they cer
tainly know how to veil it in a sort ±>f
delicacy.
Immortality is suggested rather than
exposed. As some one very aptly has
observed "When vice loses all of its
vulgarity, It loses half of Its wicked
ness.'
Those Americans who go to Max
im's expecting, snd hoping perhaps,
to be shocked, are liable to come away
with a sense of disappointment. The
wit and the clever double entendre nat
urally escape most, of them. The "ar
got" or slang of Paris Is constantly
Changing, and even if one Is a good
French scholar, he needs to live in
Paris all the year round to keep In
touch with the varying phraseology. And
yet it has been stated by one prominent
writer that Maxim's Is a show place,
cut and dried, manufactured expressly
for curious foreigners, much as in some
of the larger cities of ths country cer
tain Chinese opium-joints are fitted up
and arranged beforehand for the sole ed
ification of the guide-conduct tourist
This opinion we believe, however, to
have little or no foundation in fact.
It is along toward midnight, and af
terward. that the fun at Maxim’s wax
es fast and furious. And a strange and
assemblage it is collected there.
H<-rc flocks artists In everv line, poets,
painters story-tellers, actors, and sln
gers celebrletles of all nationalities,
everything that is smartest and most
chic among the demt-mondaines, at d of
course the inevitable American and i
En-lish stgiu seers. Naturally, among !
so many brilliant people the wit is ot j
a superior quality, and many an epigram
destined to he famous has been first
uttered at Maxim's.
The music here Is rather beyond toe.
average of such resorts; and. more fre
quently than not, some violinist, pian
ist or singer of note will rontrbute voU.
untarlly an additional selection to the
regular program
To digress sligm.y, It is an odd fact
thnt much to the rrench taste as it is
an innumerable ways. * The Merry
Widow” while it Ims been received with
, THE fT^(J[TT
toymen who cape to ej?ess well
If you wear Barry Shoes your slip
pers will last a great deal longer thajj
they do now —your feet will be so
comfortable at night that you will have
no reason for change.
Your feet will always look well, too,
for Barry Shoes are fashionable as well
as comfortable.
They are well made shoes—manufactured by Un
ion labor out of splendid materials.
We want to show you these shoes and induce you
to try them after that you will always ask for them.
The J. Willie Levy Co.
822-4 Broad St. Augusta, Qa.
|lhe
enthusiastic, not to say frenzied ac- I
claim in outer principal cities of the
civilized world, has never ns yet been
produced in Paris. Why this should be
th? case is well nigh insoluble prob-
I lem.
Today it is no longer* necessary to
take a long and expensive journey to
feast one's ears and eyes with the
entraclng delights of Maxim’s. The
Merry Widow reproducte- the eielebr.iti»d
case in all its froth all its gaiety an its
ineffable charm. The third act is an excat
replica of it, in locale, in environment;
and the producers have even caught to
a remarkable degree its elusive atmos
phere. There is everything here that
the real Maxim’s possesses: The Hun
garian orchestra, the troubadours, the
I attentive waiters, the fascinating and
| exquisitely gowned Fi-Fis and zo-zoa
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9.
and Jou-Jous and Frou-Frous the
parties of society people “out on
a lark” the gay young men about
town and still gayer old beaux even to
the lounging bored Englishman, regard
loss of evening dress because he is not
in the right little ttght-little island but
what to hllta is a barbarian country so
far as the social amenities are concerned
because it is not England Here inyour
very midst is Maxim’s; Maxim's*' in
all its glory, all its fascinations.
And add to this, is what Maxim’s
never has had; the requisite music of
Franz Lehar’s marvelous achlevment,
and dancing which is the perfecting of
agility *and grace.
This act, in its own peculiar way. Is
a liberal education in itself, and one
that no one can afford to miss. Jt
brings the far-famed Maxim’s of Paris,
at a small cost, to your very dOors.