The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, October 12, 1908, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
MONDAY, OCTOBER, 12 MRS. W- E- CLARK DIED IN LOUISVILLE SATURDAY Announcement Is made in Augusta of the death of Mrs. W. E. Clarke, which occurred Saturday at hes home in Loulßvtlie, Ga., after a short 111-! neBS The deceased la survived by a husband, seven children and a host of friends, to whom the news of her death came as a great sorrow. Fu neral services were conducted Sun day afternoon at Louisville. | Social Qossip , is- -6 Faith and Love went up the hill, To fill a heart with laughter, Faith fell down and broke his crown And Love came tumbling after. —Ex. AN AUTUMN WEDDING. An effective and cheap house dec oration for thj bride who will be mat tied early in the fall is golden rod and purple aster. Do not mix the purple and yellow indiscriminately, but have masses of a solid color flanked on either side with the con trasting one. Both the golden rod and aster can be found along the highways for the gathering, or often can be purchased in the markets. Sometimes arrange ments can be made with the milk man to bring in quantities of the flowers the day before the wedding. Dip them well in a tub of dear water to remove the dust of the road, or spray them thoroughly. If you cannot And the wild aster the cultivated can be used, though it is not so artistic with the golder rod. To accentuate the two colors in the table decorations, have yellow shades on the candles; ice the small cakes with violet and orange icing, and fill the bonbon dishes with can died violets and glace oranges. If you prefer white as a floral decoration for the table, use masses 4% The Planters Loan and Saving Bank 705 Broad Street. The Oldest Savings Bank In The 1 City. In successful operstion 38 years and growing more popu lar with the people and strong er In their confidence each year. In selecting a bank for your Savings Account do not fail to Investigate the facilities and strength of this bank. Resources Over $1,000,000.00 Safe as “Safest.” The same careful attention to small accounts as to the larger ones. Deposits may be made by mail. L. C. HAYNE, President. CHAB. C. HOWARD, Cashier. And in the Meantime It is Howard's Savoy on the corner you want to go and talk It over with your friends—or to refresh yourself with a glass of How ard's soda water. The quality it there, the crowd is there and that welcome feel ing exists there. Howard’s Savoy On the Corner DON T FORGET OUR BULK CANDY DEPARTMENT. Agency for Balk’s Nursery, Cut Flowers & Plants. DIAMONDS. FINE JEWERLY. RICH CUT-GLASS. STERLING SILVER. FANCY GOODS. VJm. Schweigerf & Co. 7th and Broad St. Have You Heard of “Bevo f" It is a new soft drink Just being in troduced by Anheuser-Busch. A spark ling. non-intoxleating drink, made of the best barley, malt and hops. Guar anteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Act. and contains less than one-half of 1 per cent, of alcohol by volume. Served at all pleasure resorts and soft drink stands. lof tht> white aster and (lank it on | either side with low plats of purple and white grapes with a few apricots mixed through them. SAVANNAH'S DEBUTANTES. Among the pretty Savannah girls who will make their formal bow to society this winter are; Miss Audrey Deßeane, Miss Dorothy Baldwin, Miss Jane Meldrim, Miss Saphie Mel- I drim, Miss Margaret Haines, Miss Rosa Gtbbes, Miss Fanny Phillips, Miss Lilia Nicholls Miss Elinor Shot ter, Miss Deborah Adams, Miss Eliza beth Malone and Miss Sidney Gab bett. A TIP TO MISS BIGGAR. Chicago has a municipal cow. She was bought by a woman health de partment inspector. Dr. Carolina Hed ger, to produce pure milk for desper ately sick babies in a crowded tene ment district, and. according to re ports, this latest Chicago experiment in municipal ownership has been a great success. “1 purchased the cow for the department,’’ said Dr. Hedger. “I told Commissioner Evans I needed a cow to save the lives of the sick babies out my way, and he told me to buy one; so I did. Some friends of mine are taking care of her, milking her and taking the milk direct to the sick infants. It doesn't go through a dozen hands before it. reaches the ba bies. We get enough milk to supply The babies of fourteen families.” Money Has Wings IF YOUR QUARTERS AND HALVES HAVE WINGS, IT MAY BE DUE TO THE EAGLES ON THEM. WISE FOLKS CAGE THEM IN OUR VAULTS. YOU KNOW THEY FLY TO YOUR AID WHEN YOU NEED THEM MOST. WE PAY INTEREST THE RATE IS 4 PER CENT. START AN ACCOUNT TO DAY. Irish-American Bank “The Bank for Your Savings.” JUDGE AND MRS. SPEER ENTERTAIN IN FAR WEST. Judge and Mrs. Speer have recently returned from their summer's outing in Alaska to their home in Mt. Airy. They were the recipients of many courteous attentions while in the great northwest. While at Juneau they were enter tained at dinner by the governor of Alaska, and in Seattle by United States District Judge Cornelius H. Hanford. Mr. George R. Peck, gen eral counsel of the Chicago, Milwau kee and St. Paul Railroad company, gave a luncheon in honor of the judge on his return trip at the Chicago club. There were present United States Cir cuit Judges Grosscup and Kolsat, Mr. Roswell Field, the author; Mr. Greg ory, who will be pressed by the mid dle west for attorney general in case Mr. Bryan Is elected; Mr. Hamlin, the son of Hannibal Hamlin, who was vice president with Mr. Lincoln; Mr. Calhoun, a distinguished Chicago law yer. and Mr. Miller, another famous lawyer of that city. The Georgia judge, though just elected as a member, was selected as one of the speakers at the banquet of the American Bar association in Seat tle. Ills theme was “Forensic Elo quence from the Standpoint of Judge.” Judge Speer had flue sport hunting while in Alaska, Mr. E. Y. Mallary, Dr. H. H. John son and Mr. Ned Willingham, of Ma con, were In the party, together with several gentlemen from Juneau and the Eagle River mine. Among much other game, two large brotwn grizzlies were killed, whose pelts, through the kindness of Judge Speer’s friends, are being mounted and will soon orna ment his library. ROAN-STORY ENGGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED. Announcement has been made of the engagement of Mrs. Folsome R. ■ Perkins Roan and Mr. Edward Story, the marriage to take place on the 1 12th of November at noon. IMPORTANT MEETING. ' There will be an important meet- I ing ors the Congregation Children of j Israel held tomorrow afternoon at i four-thirty o’clock at Ihe Sunday | school room. Business of paramount j Importance will be taken up for dis cussion and a large attendance of members is especially urged. I —Mrs. C. H. Hanklnson left today for Milledgeville, Ga., where she will join a pariv of friends on a month's visit to Chicago. i —Miss Ana L. Lyle is in New York, a guest al Hotel Wolcott. I —Mr. George Jones and Miss Ruth | Jones, of Herndon, Ga., who have been visiting Mrs. George L. Jones on Washington street, have returned home. —Miss Rhettft Whaley will leave ■ tomorrow for Atlanta. Why Colds Are Dangerous. 1 P.ecause you have contracted ordi nary colds and recovered from them without treatment of any Kind, do ] not for a moment imagine that colds ire not dangerous. Everyone knows that pneumonia and chronic catarrh have their origin In a common cold. Consumption Is not caused by a cold but the cold prepares (he system for the reception and development of the ! germs that would not otherwise have i tound lodgment. It is the sump with all infectious diseases. Diphtheria, 1 scarlet fever, measles and whooping i cough are much more likely to be contracted when the child has a cold You will Bee from this that more real danger lurks in a cold than in any other of the common ailments. Thu easiest and quickest wav to cure a cold is to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. The many remarkable cur'-j effected by this preparation have made It a staple article of trade over a large part of the world For sale by all druggists. UNREST IN INDIA. In connection with Mr. Friedman's scries of articles on present-day con dilions in India, the following para graphs from the London Times may be interesing: “The editor of the na tive journal Hind Swarajya, who was condemned on July 2 lo two years’ rigorous imprisonment for publishing two seditious articles, who appealed against his sentence, has been sen tenced to three and a half years’ im prisonment and ordered to pay a fine of 2.000 rupees ($065). In passing sentence the judge pointed out that the majority of the jury were fellow countrymen of the accused and he | expressed the hope that the prisoner would in future turn his abilities to rendering real service to his country j Instead of guiding her children to the prison and the gallows.” NEW BELTS. With tailor suits girls will wear soft, pliable belts of plaited braid run through a buckle In front. These aro the newest belts out. They can be gotten In different widths, although the narrow belt is the fashion this winter on short skirts that are cut off at the waist line. They can be made at homo quite simply, but the cost is not much less for the home-made one than the shop one. They are quite attractive because they are o supple that they fit Into] the lines of the figure and convey the ] lmpretilon that the waist Is smaller! than it actually Is. SIGK HEADACHE Posltirelf cured |>y threw; little Htl». They (Oao relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion and Too Hearty Rating. A perfect, rem edy tor Wiztneee. Kawa. Itrowslnem. Bui Taste fu the Mouth. Ousted Tongue, kxiti In Urn Ride. Toil 111, UVEH. T hoy CARTER'S W ITTLE ti IVER ff WH-S. ig&rr I I*"*b regulate tbe Bowel*. purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL BOSE, SMALL PRICE. Gsnulnts Mvtt B3=u Fac-Simile REFUSE SUBSTITUTES* [carters safirTll ;¥iver tsNLi THE AUGUSTA HERALD Andrews’ Coat* Section Is he Centre of At»t>ract>ion! Comparison has proven that Andrews’ assortment of Coats is unsurpassed for style, quality and lowest prices. The most fashionable stylos of the season are here, full and three-quarter lengths in nobby effects for the children, in serge, covert ami broadcloths, in all the flr (Mr wanted shades. School and dressy Coats in price from vO UJ Women’s (’oats in Short Fitted, Half Length, Semi Fitted and the very popular Long Empire Effects, all priced so reasonable; that’s the reason why the coat section is so (Me popular. Prices from ’ 111 <nr3 LEADERS IN EVERYTHING FASHIONABLE 862 broad stT ANDREWS BROS. CO. PHONF - n °- 163 MRS. OGDEN GOELET Mrs. Ogden Goelet, who has taken a villa at Cannes .ncl is expected to become a prominent figure in so ciety on the Riviera this winter. JAPAN TO WELCOME FLEET. Y'OKOHAMA. The preparations for the coming of Ihe American fleet have assumed tremendous proportions. The popular demand to participate in the reception to the American jnckles exceeds anything ever witnessed in Japan, not excepting the victorious home-coming of Admiral Togo’s fleet after the battle of the sea of Japan. READ HERALD WANTS. White’s Greatest Harvest Sale Is Now Augustas Town Topic THE ENORMOUS CROWD OF BUYERS, WHO CROWDED THE BIG STORE ALL MONDAY, SHOW THE KEEN APPRECIATION OF AUGUBTANS FOR VALUES WHEN OFFERED. Tuesday, the Second Day of the Harvest Sale, Will Be Second Only to Monday, in the Attraction of Bargains, and the volume of Sales. Every Counter Will Have Its Bar gains for Tuesday. In This Space We Can Only Mention a Few of Them. : : : i i SILKS SILKS Finest imported Crepe l)( Cherte, black, white and all colors, regular values SI.OO, $1.25 and $1.50. Tuesday’s Harvest ©q Sale 07C BEDSTEADS White Enameled, Brass Knobs, regular (T/i qo value $7.50, Tuesday’s Harvest Sale .. BED SHEETS | Heavy Soft Muslin, 72x90 inches, 59e qual a >ty. Tuesday’s Harvest Sale ~ .. ttZC Women’s Cotton House Dresses Embroidery and lace trimming, were sold at $5.00, Tuesday’s Harvest <t A Q Sale .... 4>Z/tO Muslin Underwear Sale at 48c. '£*!*% hT3 £££s E 4&. SPEND VjTT TT I T FT f Q HARVEST TUESDAY AT W ill 1 C D SALE jim m no IN MURDEH CHARGE! Coroner’s Jury Brought in Verdict Accusing; Him of Killing Charlie Sawyer. The inquest over the body of Charlie Sawyer, Ihc negro who was stabbed in the abdomen early Sunday morning, was finished Monday morn ing after being continued from Sun day. The jury returned the following ver dict: "Wo (lie Jury do find thut tho deceased came to his death from wounds Inflicted by the hand of Jim Byrd." The negro was found dead on South Boundary between Marhury and Mills streets. There were two wltncscs be fore the jury Monday and they throw more light on tho ease Ilian any of the others. Lottie Gilbert was the first witness. Her testimony was as follows: "1 came from Mr. O’Keefe's store to the corner of Mills St. I saw sev eral men shooting mips r stopped and watched them. Sawyer and Jim Byrd were quarreling about 60 cents. 1 heard Byrd say; I want my 60 cents.’ Sawyer said. ‘Here it is; take it.’ Byrd lok the money and nn other negro standing by him said: 'Thirty cents of it is mine.’ Byrd handed 30 cents to the negro, whose name was Kid Vance. "Byrd drew his knife and startod to cut Sawyer then, but T grabbed him and would not let him do It. Kid Vance spoke up and said: ‘Turn that man uloose, Lottie, you haven't nny i thing to do with It.' I turned Byrd a loose and Sawyer started to running I up the street. Byrd started after him and caught him. lie grabbed him as I he turned; bo stabbed him in ■ the | stomach. 1 saw tho knife plainly." Mary Dunn tesUfled: "I board a! noise in front of my house and Jump-1 ed out of bed. I went to I lie ienco and saw tint umu lying there and soul my husband to get some hell). He was dead. Before l cauic mil id' I lie bouse 1 heard Jim Byrd nay: 'Give It up, give It up,’ and then a 111 tie later someone spoke, wit.mo voice 1 ! did not know, and said; "that will do, | you have done enough.' "Astor the crowd had gathered Jim ! Byrd came up and looked al the) body." The police are making every offorl (o got Byrd and it is possible that lie ! will be landed in the next day or t wo. SUNDAY SCHOOL HELD ORPHANS’ DA It SERV ICE Au Appropriate Aiul In teresting' Program Was j Rendered. An Orphans' Day service was held Sunday at the Baptist Sunday school in Hepli/.lliah, at which a collection | was taken fur the institut ion support-! ed by the State Association, and a very itnereatlng and appropriate pro I gram rendered. Among the young people who par ticipated In the exercises wore t lies j following: Misses Nellie Banks, Mln-j nle. I.oillie amt Mary Carswell, Helen Murphey, Ruth Banks, Chine Banka. Mildred Murphy, Allean Winter und Master Bose Hawkins Mr. Henry S. Jones acted ns master of ceremonies, and Mr. James A. Cars well took an active part In the pro gram. Keep rims In good order, straight und triie. Husl Is destructive. I’siu preserves. Washington Times. DRESS GOODS New novelties of fall 1008, in fancy self checks, stripes, mixtures, black and all newest colorings. SI.OO and $1.25 qualities, QO Tuesday’s Harvest Sale sOC OXFORD SUITINGS Fancy checks an<l stripes, regular 12 1 /5e Ql quaiity, Tuesday’s Harvest Sale ... . .... °*C BROOMS BROOMS Thai sweep clean, si eel bound, large size. 1 Q 10c quality, Tuesday’s Harvest Sale .... >'C Men’s Wool Undershirts and Drawers Broken sizes, cream and grey, regular $1.50, $2.00, and $2.50 prices, Tuesday’s qo Harvest Sale . ; 70C PAGE THREE Literary Advice. "Here." ; aid the author, "are soma real gems of thougt." "You ought to know better than to bring around such things," answered the publisher. "People don't want gems. Thej want something that hit* hard Stop bothering with gems and gel together some brickbats and can non balls." Washington Siar. Running a lire flat, even a short distance. Is sure to be costly. GOOD WORK Done Daily in Augusta. Many Citi zens Tell of It. Nearly every reader has heard of Doan s Kidney Pills. Their good work in Augusta still continues, and our citizens arc constantly adding en dorsement. by public testimony. No belter proof of merit can bo had than the experience of friends and neigh bors. Read tills case: G. W. Owens, living at 940 D'Antig tme street, Augusta, Ga., says; "I have used Doan’s Kidney Pills, and they did me more good than any thing 1 had previously used. I suf fered a great deal from backache and could not turn over in bed on ac count of the pain. I doctored and used plasters and liniments hut re ceived no relief mull u friend recom mended noan’H Kidney Pills to mo, and I procured them al. Green & Hor sey’s Drug Company. In a short, time the lameness and soreness left my back, Ihc secretions became more regular, and I fell stronger and bet ter In every way. I give Doan’s Kid liey Pills the credit for the great change In my condition." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Ml Iburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United 9tales. Remember the name—Doan’s- and take no other.