The Augusta daily herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1908-1914, October 16, 1908, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR IHF AUGUSIA HERALD 731 Broad St., August*, Qa. Published Every Afternoon During the Waek and on Sunday Morning by THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO. Entered at tha Augusta Poatoffica aa Mail Matter of the Second Ciaaa- SUBBCRIPTION RATES Dally and Sunday, 1 year ffj.OG Daily and 6unday. t montha 3.00 Daily and Sunday, 3 months 1.50 Dally and Sunday. 1 month 50 Dally and Sunday. 1 week 13 Sunday Herald. 1 year 1.00 Weekly Herald, 1 year 50 ( telephones. Business Office Wl City Editor 2*o Society Editor . 296 No communication will be published In : The Herald unless the name of the writer Is signed to the article. NEW YORK OFFICE Vratland-Ben• Jamtn Agency, Brunawick Oulldlng, 225 Fifth Avenue, New York City. CHICAGO OFFICE Vrrrl.md Benja 'min Agency W. H Kentnor, Mgr., 1108 Boyce Building, Chicago, 111. The Herald la the official advertising I medium of the City of Augusta and of the County of Richmond for all legal no* j tices and advertising. Address all business communications to nir AUGUSI4 liIKALD. 731 Broad St., Augusta, Oa. **IF YOU WANT THE NEWS YOU NEED THE HERALD”. Augusta, Ga., Friday, Oct. 16, 1908 Circulation of Ihe Herald tor 8 Months, 1908 Kehnmry 410,488 March ~ .. .. •* ...228,87* April 222.01. M», 24i>fc» J ut ‘ 441.820 July •*41,802 Auk’i-U 218,700 Hfp.mber 23.’.400 OAILV AVfcRAGK F GIH 8 MONTHS.. 7784. DAILY DETAILED STATEMENT Or CinCLILAIION lOt. IHt MONTH OP S»Ef*l LMLER. 1 7.7t8 | 18 7.806 2 7,7*0 | 17 7.V,.' J 7,8/2 1B /y-J 4 7,818 1» 8 8.161 20 IM* i t. 160 .’1 £■}»• 7 7,f.» n 7.541 8 7.14* 21 £•**» •i rat* » 10 7 84.' 2» J.JJ2 11 7.8 J 28 .8,17’ f| 7.&1.3 j 27 7,711 11 . .7.887 24 I# 14 7.182 n 15 ... 7.557 JO ... 7,86 j iit ll to ' , .4- Ihrro in no beltur way to roach «ho hr, • ■ • nf the (;i perauo people ol thix r ,x ;~1 than tluougti trio aio • of Iho Ho, old Dolly ond Suiday. ;\irt.»« leaving A,.to con navo Th« In 1 tout thorn oy moll etch day ,4, 3nr circulation Department, il . CM cj|v P A., vista. »o that The Hsralf |>\ ( |]f, wav, what hurt tieroine of th; 1 r»nuh|'.4i * r Hint Hcsrst to , ttuHthh In Atlanta to help curry the stct«? for hiH ilekot? It hu,H beconio the fnuhlott now to contrltiutc to th»* domocrstlc cam pr.4ll turn! "A* well lif tifivrt at. lo l>« ou' of iho fashion." Ami thi n .another ndventage shout (he whoath gown Ik thui Uptakes te*l rlcoh to nmkf on# The more you look hi It, the more *""<1 point* does H reveal Th< Savannah Preaa »*\* thm there mv aiiin> respectable men in il>»- re publican party in Georgia. Hut the official count showed that there are uni many in the Independence party, A* thins* look now the candidate who Khali rarrv New York will 1“ elected. Nrithi'i Tat' mn Hi 'in will Itot vole* enough to bo ••l<*«'t«»<t with rail Now York* electoral vote*. The t'olumhla Ht i*t <• »«>» that "Qu-en Bea* ruff*. now ao popular wiili tho ladloa, make kissing moro diftli nit '* Thla ran i ba truo. for in thm ran* thov would quickly have loat thalr popularity A man In Florida ha* Invonicd i peanut harvoatar, k*'» tho Timor V'nion Match abow* ilia' need it allll tbo mother of Invouliou tho crop of poanut politician* I* growing ao largo that It require* machinery to gather it Now I'apa Klkin* will not |y l the nuke of Ahiotil marrv hi* daughtiT unless ha flr»t *ih>» to work Mu If Abrutti wattled to work he could do that in hi* own country without coining over here to marry an holt •at. It I* pointed out that alt the mem bar* of Grover Cleveland'* cabinet who are tit (he land of the living are out on the stump for Hryan Thoae wha are not lit the land ol tun living p*wh.<’ |y have a hoi enough time Without aolng oil the atunto (itvngressmau Hardwick I* the amalleat man phy*leally in the houae, and Governor Jiv ilrown a ll lw the amalleat governor, physically. In tba country Hut both are giaitt* iwe gred by the maJorHle» the voters give tltem A woman lit Kanaaa la stilus her husband for divorce In cause he had not taken a bath In eleven years Since our waterworks system la in operation again leara of divorce ault* in Auauata for (hi* reason need no longer be felt. It I* time to atop talking about lYmi Watson Irving to help Taft If he were trying to do that he would make speeches In Nebraska and Ir dl*n* which are dotthtdiil. Instead ol putr.ug In hi* lime in Georgia, which la absolutely safe for Hrvan ever though Watson abou.J puli the most. Wag THE CAMPAIGN SPEAKER. The campaign orator is a ready mark for aarcaatlc flings, "Campaign Spieler he is called; a dispenser of j hot air, a wind-jammer who saws the lair and furnishes amusement for the j people and argument for the opposi tion His friends in Ills audiences will applaud, and his opponents will de ,rlde; they will controvert what he ;ald, makii light of his efforts, and watch everything he says or does In !order to llnd something to discredit i him. This Is the campaign orator, and few of us give further thought to him. Of his arduous work, of the feat of endurance he presents, of Ihe tre mendous strain to which he subjects himself, few of us over think. And yet It is true that the campaign orator furnishes probably the most, splendid example of strenuous work, and of perseverance under the most trying physical conditions from devotion to a cause, which can be found. This •Ices not of course apply to the man who may make a political speech, be cause he has been^asked or because rlrctimstancea require It, but to the man who “takes the stump" moved by his desire to bring success through his efforts to the cause he has es poused. This Ih the campaign orator, who ; 1 uki-n the Mump when the campaign upon* nml kop* It Ull It ends. In every contented eftrnpalgn there lire such men. Hoke Hmlth ko took Ihe Mump in Georgia laid, spring. So Walaon l« Mumiiliig the at at** now. So Bryan mid Taft mid olhera are alumplng the country nl preaont. ' It |a no Hos t snap they have. It 1* not a plenaant jaunt. Continuous pub lle HpAiklng In large hallH or worse 1 till In the open ail Is the reverent I kind of work. Men like Sherman speedily take the gore throat, Few I have the physical Mamina and the i n solute apirll to keep II up long. Yet Ihere are aome who do, and regardless of what party they represent or upon what platform they Mand, they de nerve Hie homage of men for the ex-1 ample of exulted devotion they pro went. We talk of mlnli.ler*. and they are noble men, devoted 10 the cause of f Uglon which they r.erve with real I hey also are "aplelera," and ho ear neatly do they Hjilel that not a few of them oceartlonnlly auffer from Horn throat It la a conHequenco of thidr ■ levotlou to I heir cause. Hut mlnlMerH rarely pi each mere than twice a Week, and almost always In a church where the condlllnng for public speak leg arc most favorable. The cam paign 1 tutor on the Mump apeaka ey. or; day, lit all aorltt of plucea, and la undergoing the fatigue of travel when not speaking And often he apeakH several tlno s a day, Honie tlnn from a car platform or under other mn .1 living condition*. It la an Iniiplrtng exhibition of devotloa to a cause which even the ministry can not urpnas, and makes the campaign orator a subject deserving honor ot all men of every party. IP fan la siteh a man. It ulmoat passes human belief to read of the campaign wink he ia doing, which none hut a man the greatest physical excellence could do. Debs Ih such a man. who on ihe arrival of his train 111 Newark dropped from exhaustion and /was commanded by his doctors to Hike a rest, but made several *|n -ecbea the same dim and ntIII keeps a* it. Ivyll Waison is such u tnan, who has for three months been slump ing ilio stale and done work which would have laid up many a man phys hall} HI longer Imv larking the devo tion which keep* him at it. Taft is trying to be such a man, and the poor old fat fellow Is really doing the beat he can In that lino, although that lau't much It is all well enough to crack our Jokes at the campaign spielers, -but at the same lime let us not forget that in the work they do and the e\ ample they net Ihey are worthy of our highest admiration. The question; Do women drew* to I please men.'' is doubtless oue of those which admit Of affirmative and peg alive answer*. If sometimes they do. It i* equally certain IhaC some times they don't. Since they have (tinted to eiectro > tiling <•< ndemned criminal* in Vlr gliua It is caia-vtud that tile negroes will regard lynching with more favor It ts human nature to like the old (fashion wnv* beat, OR. OILMAN AND THE OSLERIAN THEORY. The death wa* announced last Wednesday of Dr. Daniel Colt Oilman, i president emeritus of Johns Hopkiue ; university, and the first president of ! the Carnegie Institution at Washing, ton. In hit death the country lost one of It* most prominent educators and men of learning. It wa* Dr Oilman who In |S7t> re . organised Johns Hopkins university 'on lines entirely new at that time. ;hut which have proven ao successful that they have been adopted in the main by all the great universities of the Kast. It is in connection with this, and hi* other great work of or gantgtng the Carnegie institution that Dr. tiilmau stand* a* a sbiniug tiius j (ration of the incorrectness of the ! Oslerlan theory. Dr. Osier holds that a mart's period ’ of usefulness is past when he roaches the age of sixty years. Ur. Gilman j was fifty when he instituted his new system of Johnß Hopkins, and he was past the Oslerlan limit when he car ] rled It to Its highest success. He had passed the biblical period of three score and ten when he laid down this burden, intending to enjoy the even | Ing of a well spent ilfe In pleasant leisure, but being selected by Mr. Carnegie as the best fitted man to organize and start off successfully his new Institution, he took up this new work with all the vigor of youth and carried It through to a splendid finish. He had only recently resigned from this position and had Just, returned from a trip to Europe. His death was sudden, eatixed by heart failure. He died almost In harness, doing splen did work up to the last, and In his life completely refilling the theory ad vanced by Dr. Osier that at the age j of sixty a man is no more good, and can best serve his day and generation , by taking the chloroform route out of the way of younger men. Thirty million pickles burned In a recent lire In New York. What a lot of colic pains that saved! "Bill hail a bUlboard. Dill also had a hoard bill. The board bill bored Hill, so Bill sold ihe billboard to pay his hoard hill. Bo after BID sold hi- billboard to pay his board bill, the beard bill no longer bored Bill." Dallas New Era. Mr. Taft recently climbed the ob servation tower built on the highest. I olnt In Cincinnati. I'erhaps, like Moses, he desired to take a view of the promised land towards which he had Journeyed but which it is written ho shall not reach? One of the candidates in Kansas is named Swindler, and tin exchange remarks that this Is a suggestively appropriate name. Wonder what that i paper would have thought of the firm name of a former Augusta feed and sales stable, which was Oalts and I Swlndel. BELGRADE ON THE DANUBE. One of the most Important points In the present compllcallons in the Balkan states Is Belgrade. This Is ihe capital of Sefvla, the buffer stale placed between Austria and Turkey. Aside from being the capital of Bervla, Belgrade Is a city of much Im portance. Il Is quite a manufacturing city, and from Its situation on ibe Danube Is Ihe gate city on ihe trade route between the near East and Cen tral Europe. Hi relation to the river It occupies a position similar to Vicks burg on the Mississippi The Danube Is the longest river In Europe, nav igable for many hundred miles from Its mouth in the Black sea and al most lo Vienna, the capital of Aus tria. It Is through the valley of the Danube Dial the road lies through the mountains which separate Southeast from Central Europe, and Belgrade commands this valley. This consti tutes Its great strategic- Importance, and has made It the point around which the fiercest struggles have ceu tered In the wars between Christian and Turk, Belgrade moans "white fort," the name given II from the location ot it h strong fort I float ions upon th white rucks It was the frontier fori of the ll.vxautine empire .and held by it ns sm-h until it was captured in lo7:i by (lie Hungarians. Alter that (or three centuries it was held alter nately by the Greks, Bulgarians, Bos nians and Servians, until these latter sold It in the beginning of the four teenth century tp the Emperor Sigls mund. Then came the invasion by the Turks In 1447 it was unsuccess fully besieged by them, but was stormed in MSP, to be retaken a few years later by the Hungarians. In 1522 it was again rapt tired by the Turks, in less Maximilian of Bavaria retook it for the German emperor, but only two years later it again fell into the hands of the Turks, after a most desperate resistance. The Duke of Croy unsuccessfully besieged it in 1693, but In 1717 It was taken by Prince Eugene, after a bloody tmttit) in which he defeated a Turkish army of 200.000 men. the greatest victory of this renowned warrior. Yet again, In 17,59, the Turks possessed them selves of the stronghold by stratagem, and held It (or fllty years when the Austrian* retook 7t but surrendered it back to Turkey by an article In the treaty of 1791. During the reign of Napoleon Belgrade wa* taken and held by the Servians, and under the readjustment of Europe after hi* fail II was made the capital of the new Servian principality, but until I*o7 garrisoned by a Turkish army. From this it egn be easily aoen what an Important place Belgrade Is from a military point of view, and if •he present complications should end In war in which Austria bv>conte* in volved another chapter will without a doubt be added to that city's record yyf sl-'g-’v and battle*. tu this connection It la of Interest to note that It was In a siege of Bel grade that Captain John .Smith tarn [own In ear!? Virginia history, ton his | flrst tame, and the.right to boar thrt«e j iuiks heads ou hi* shield. THE AUGUSTA HERALD The success of his lawyers in keep ing Thaw out of Matteawan half of 'he time since hiß commitment, in having him transferred to luxurious apartments in a county jail, and in ; relieving the monotony of waiting | for freedom by taking him about the countryside in automobiles to attend hearings in friendly trumped-up suits constitutes the most serious scandal in the history of criminal law in New • York. It exceeds the scandal of the i protracted and theatrical trials them selves. Thaw was sent to Matteawan jon February 1. His lawyers got him out In June, and he has been out ever since, aUhougl• e has been ad judged a criminal riiatlc by a jury and by two judgee'ihf the supreme court. The blame or this situation does not fall upon tie law alone. So 1 far as the law is concerned, he might still be confined In the asylum where lie belongs, despite every effort of his i lawyers. He hag had more than his 1 strict rights under our American sys ; fern, which errs, If at all. on the side of generosity toward persons in his • predicament. The Thaw case was so simple that it ought long ago to have been finally disposed of, and the public permitted to forget it. In England he would have been executed or securely lodged In an asylum in short order. Yet this wretch, whose whole life had been Pre Election Estimates. In the electoral college this year there are 483 votes, and of these the candidate chosen for president will have to receive 242. In 1904 Judge Barker received 140 votes, and, to win, Mr. Bryan will have to add to • hese 102 additional votes. Here is one way in which it has been figured out that the democrats can turn the nick: Taft Bryan Alabama .. .. ll Arkansas .. .. 9 California 10 Colorado 5 Connecticut 7 Delaware 3 Florida 5 Georgia l3 Idaho 3 / Illinois 27 Indiana l5 lowa. 13 Kansas 10 Kentucky l3 Loulsfnana 9 Maine 6 Maryland S Massachusetts 16 Michigan 14 Minnesota 11 Mississippi.. lO Missouri lB Montana 3 Nebraska , S Nevada 3 New Hampshire 4 New Jersey 12 New York -*• 30 North Carolina l2 North Dakota 4 Ohio 23 Oklahoma 7 Oregon 4 Pennsylvania 34 Knode Island 4 South Carolina 9 South Daktfta ■*>. 4 Tennessee l2 Texas lB Btah 3 Vermont 4 Virginia l2 Washington .. 5 West Virginia 7 Wisconsin 13 Wyoming 3 Total ...226 257 The above Would give Mr. Hryan a majority of :u, or 15 more votes than he needs The republicans may dis pute Maryland and West Virgnia tint New Jersey and Delaware, both doubtful, are placed in their column. They would probably also claim New York. Thtlr main reason P>r ttis, though, is that Roosevelt carried it overwhelmingly lour years *go, out conditions are vastly (liferent this -ear ami the result in New York will likely be the sunn-. Neithe- is New York necessary for d-.nricratic suc cess. With the above estimate it cun be exchanged (or Illinois, or for Ohio and Delaware, or for California and the Dakotas and Connecticut, and the democrats would still win. In this estimate, too. the republicans are given Ohio, Kansas, the two Da kotas, Illinois, lowa, Minnesota and California, any or all of which arr subject to a "tidal wave" and to fall into the democratic column Neithei Maryland. West Virginia, New Y'ork Connecticut, Rhode Island. Now Jer sey, Delaware, Ohio, Illinois. lowa Michigan. Minnesota, Washington. California. Colorado, North Dakota. South Dakota or Oregon arc certatn'y republican aiul of these the above ta ble claims only Maryland. \V st \7r ginla. Ni w York and Colorado, a claim which seems entirely reason able. It Mnrvland and West Vir ginla were both lost and the others remain a* set down, the democrats would win—Columbus Enquirer-Sun. «♦♦*»*♦«♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ MEN IN THE PUBLIC EYE. ♦ W V bO ♦ « SENATOR FORAKER. Foraker has been a bitter enemy of the South, but it was his own fellows who wrote lehabod across his fore head—Sparta lshmaelite. HON. NICK LONGWORTH. Mrs Nick had better embroider that adage "Hell Is paved with good Intentions" and paste it In Nicky's hat, —Brunswick Journal. ATTORNEY JEROME. Attorney Jerome has become angry enough to drop the Thaw case, but we will wager that Harry did not get mad. —Valdosta Times, HON. T. E. WATSON. It i* real moan tu Tom Watson to be telling the truth on the democratic party and Us leaders just at this time. Anderson Mall. MR. LONGWORTH. The Waahington Star is a staunch Roosevelt and Taft orjtun, but It bold* A Travesty of Justice. nothing but perversity and rottenness, was turned into a hero and avenger of thd sex, while his victim, whose public life had been of Inestimable value to the country, and whose pri vate life, even if all the unsupported charges against it were accepted as true, was certainly not worse than his slayer’s, was converted by a manipu lation of public sentiment into the vil lain of the tragedy. On this topsy turvy basis, with sensational journals pumping mawkishness into the masses of the public and making a sane hear ing difficult, the case was tried. The judges were powerless to hold the counsel to the issue and keep out the welter of sentimentalism. The first trial ended in a disagreement after forty-nine court days. The second trial, a year later, took twenty-one such days and ended in a verdict of insanity. The two trials cost the county of New York $50,000, all of that money and all of that time be ing spent to determine whether the defendant was sane or not. for that was the sole question really before the court. It would have taken about one day to try the case if Thaw had not been a man of wealth and hi*w victim a man of prominence. It would not have taken more than a week, as it was, in a commun ity not In the habit of occasionally making a travesty of criminal trials. —New York Tribune. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ HERALD ECHOES. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦• A Cause of Discontent. The Augusta Herald says: "A Sab 1 bath well spent brings a week of con tent. This shotiid furnish the key of discontent that may be experi enced during the week.—Columbus Ledger. A Windy Subject. Quoth The Augusta Herald: “Come to think of it, it does seem strange that no Atlanta man has ever trtep lo build an airship, and Atlanta such a place to generate hot air. ’ Now wouldn't that take the wind out ot your sails?—Wilmington Dispatch. Planting Small Grain. The Greene County Farmers’ Un ion, at its recent meet iA, passed a resolution that all its rdembers plant a. large crop of both wheat and oats. This, thinks The Augusta Herald, was a timely subject for ui=cusston, and wise action to take. If the farmers of Greene county will live up to this resolution they will cer tainly benefit themselves. And li the farmers of other counties would lake like action it. would result in great good.—Hartwell Sun. But Then— Since reading about Joe Cannon. •Toe Bailey and Joe Foraker the Rome Tribune-Herald doubts if Joseph is such a grand old name after all. Put then observes The Augusta, HeraW, there is our own Little Joe Brown,- you must remember.—Atlanta Jour nal . A Thorn in Teddy’s Side. The Augusta Herald*!s of *he opin. ion that Haskell promise's to he t» thorn in ihe side of the man with tho Big Stick. Teddy's ears will not cease burning him between now and November 2.—Beirburn News. (♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦« ♦ SOME SOCIETY NOTES. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦* MME. CALVE. Calve, one of the opera queens, is a thrifty soul. She is getting old and fat and will sell wine instead of song after this. As an advance ‘ad' she gave labels of the wine she will sell with her autograph attached, at a per formance recently.—Brunswick Jour nal. MRS. EVELYN THAW. The "Angel Child" picture of Evelyn Thaw sold In New York the other day for sl6. Still people who keep hack copies of the New Y'ork Journal can look at the pictures of Evelyn pub lished during the trial and feel Just as miserable. —Wilmington Dlspat/h. MRS. MABELLE COREY. Mrs. Corey, nee Mable Gilntan, has broken loose again. This time she is calling down Mrs. Dongworth for "undutifulness to her father." Mrs.- Corey declares emphatically that the president's daughter is “defying his views on race suicide.” Really the campaign Is getting interesting.— Antericus Times-Recorder. MRS. HETTY GREEN. Ever}' once in a while the big finan ciers get a good, rousing, rib-roasting lecture from Aunt Hetty Green. And that helps some! —Washington Her ald. . MISS EMMA GOLDMAN. If Emma Goldman gets seasick dur ing her trip to Australia a lot of peo ple will think it serves her right.— Washington Star. young Mr. Longworth to Ills indis creet utterances nil the game, and tip: conclusion it arrives at is not to be escaped: "Of course the worthy son-in-law of the president w-as a little foolish In his behavior, but the record stands. His utterance was open to Interpretation as a nomination of Mr. Roosevelt In 1916. anil when that interpretation was vociferously placed upon it in his presence he assented to It." —Virgin- ian Pilot. YOUNG 808 EVANS. Fighting Rob's son is about to be 'court-martialed. He Is a chip off the old block, and the man who tackles him will find that he can paint >ho atmosphere in lurid colors—Wayne* boro True Cttlaen. J. HAM LEWIS The Hon, J Hamilton Lewis is tra velii g with John VA Kern on the Lit ter* speaking tour, supplying -h* rhetorical flower* and gems which the Indiana hard-hitt'-r does not c.irr-' in stock It la a good team and judging from pr»-a» comment s-etps to he pleasing th • people generally, —Nashville Tennessean. Put in Your Order for Dorr’s Clothes Now Lots of satisfaction in wearing Dorr Clothes— you don’t have that un easy feeling—that dread that there’s something * wrong something “tacky” or in bad taste about your clothes. Dorr Tailoring Is the highest type of good dressing. 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 YOU INEED Shovels, Spades, Hoes, Rakes and Wheelbarrows to clean up your yard. WE HAVE THEM. BOWEN BROS. 908 Broad Street. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Men who borrow trouble seldom get out of debt. Tact is one of a business man's most important assets. How an ignorant man does enjoy handing out information! Only a man of nerve ever attempts to call a woman's bluff. Some family skeletons are too large for closet ornaments. The cook's kettle and temper are i apt to boll over simultaneously. A Wrong Number . On the telephone is annoving. Often times it is caused by the subscriber calling a number from memory or speaking indistinctly. It is important to consult the director}' before call ing a number. It is necessary to give the number promptly and distinctly. For Information, Efficient Service, Reason able Rates Call 9050. Southern Bell Telephone efr Telegraph Co. FRIDAY, OCTOFER 16. A Large Assortment ' * Of French and Eng lish Solid Back Hair Brushes to select ■fjomi Just Received. Prices to suit anybody. GARDELLES 620 Broad St. CRUTCHES AND TRUSSES We have a full line of crutches to fit anybody un fortunate enough to need them. We Have Hard Rubber and Elastic Trusses and Supporters. A full line of all such articles. ALEXANDER DRUG CO. 708 BROAD ST. For Sale 1485 Harper SVeet, 6 rooms, 50x100. PRICE $1,200.00 Apply to Clarence E. Clark 842 BROAD STREET. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION Jeanie Benson, Violin. * Olive Benson, Piano. Studio: Room 414, Harison Bldg. Telephone No. 1631. Teas Special blend mixed tea at SOc a lb. Unsurpassed for Iced tea. 25c will buy one pound of Republic Coffee, positively the best coffee In Georgia for the price. PHONE YOUR ORDERS. E. L DORIS Phone 933 1302 May Ava.