Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Me? lies Warm Homes
' h
The Gas Light Company
t
OF AUGUSTA.
. ft GOOD HORSE
DLSLRVES
0000 FEED
Ingredients Otto Weiss Horse Feed —
Ground Alfalfa 35 per coal and (15
per cent Coni Chop, Shorts, Bran
and Linseed Oil Meal, in the right
proportions, with analysis- Crude
Protein 12 to 15 per cent; Car
bohydrates -53 to 59 per cent; Fat
3.50 to 1 tier cent; Crude Fiber
from 8 to 15 per cent. Feed 15
quarts per day. Cost per month
per horse about $0.50.
Alfalfa Hay (From Colorado)
Choicest green color the finest liny
known to the world —100 lbs $1.35;
ton $26.00.
Write or see
N.L.WilletSeed Go
Quality Feeds.
The Arcadium
Harison Building
QUALITY VAUDEVILLE.
STANLEY'S EDUCATED GOATS.
FRANCO. *
Tho Mnn of 100 Faces.
WALLY CLARK.
German Comedian and Whistler.
THE BEBT MOVING PICTURES.
Admission 5 and 10c
Moving Pictures changed dally,
from 2; 30 to 4:30 and 7 to 8.
Vaudeville & to 7 and 8 to 11, 10c.
PEERLESS THEATRE
662 BROAD.
Vaudeville and Moving Pictures.
WEEK Die. 28 TO JAN 2d.
MR. AND MRS. JACK GORDON
Presenting a German Coinedv Play,
let entitled a C. O. D. Huron.
MISS GEORGIA CLARK
Boubrette, Scotch Songs, etc.
Picture Matinees, 2 to 5 and 7 to
8 p. m.—B to 5 Heels Films Run
3,000 to 6,000 feet- 5c and 10c.
Vaudeville and Pictures, 5 to 7 and
8 to 11 v m
ADMISSION 5 & 10 CTS
We’re OFF!
New Year’s track's open. The race is
lo be run and irs will run as your
health gives brain and physical force.
Pad bowels, liver and stomach kill more
GOOD EFFORT than any other trouble.
CASCAKI-. TS w ill keep you healthy
THEN you can produce results Take
CASCARKTS keep tuned up—your
liver working-yand then you can go it
for all you're worth.
CASCARUTS- toe ho*— week's l rest,
n-.ent. All itluggist* llig*rM seller
ru the world. Million boxes s month.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
We Idealise reality In order to es
cape It.
have not coughed cnee all day ?
Yet you may cough tomorrow! Bitter be prepared for it when it
comes. Ask your doctor about keeping Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral in
the house. Then when the hard cold or cough first appears you
■HMatfMHyMutdiyubaLhaiui. Your doctor’s approval of its use
BRILLIANTS.
I <• «
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
He pl'ii}till l>. I c.ho loveth o s'
All thin qf both great and small;
For the dear God who loveth us,
lie made and loveth all.
—Coleridge.
Hi' lhal roars for liberty,
Faster hinds a tTyrant's power;
And the tyrant's cruel glee,
Forces on the freer hour.
—Tennyson.
He that, to his prejudice will do
A nable action and a gen'ious too,
Deserves to w< at' a more resplendent
crown
Than he that hath a thousand bat
tles won.
■—Pom fret .
He who holds no laws In awe,
lie must perish by the law.
—Byron.
Send up hosannas to the armament!
Fields where the bondsman’s toll
No more shall trench the soil
Seem now to husk In a serener day;
The meadow birds sing sweeter, and
the airs
Of heaven with more caressing
softness play,
I Welcoming man to liberty Ilk" theirs.
A glory clothes the land from sea
to sea,
For the great land and all Its coasts
are free.
--William Cullen Dry ant.
PILES CUR Ed‘ In' 6TO HD AYS
I’AZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to
cure any ease cf Itching, Blind,
i Bleeding or Protruding Plies In li to
1 14 days or money refunded sf>c.
AMOROUS TO HEAD
CITY FINANCIERS
Special to The Herald.
ATLANTA, tin. -Mayor-elect Kobt.
F. Maddox, Is still engaged on his
committee appointments, and It Is
probable that lie will not definitely
decide upon all of them until next
Monday, oil tin evening of which day
they will be read to the general coun
cil. These appointments have as
sumed the proportions of a nightmare
to the new chief executive, and It Is
reported upon apparently good au
thority, that the original list of chair
manships has several times been re
vised.
A rumor so persistent as to force
credence was prevalent Wednesday
morning to the effect that the mayor
elect had decided to make Martin F.
Amorous chairman of the finance com
mittee instead of Alderman AN. A
Hancock. This same rumor had it
ihni Alderman Hancock will be vie -
chairman of the tax committee.
li Is said that Councilman F. .1
Sprntlliig Is still scheduled for tho
chairmanship of the police commit
! tec; that Councilman Frank Foster
will head the committee on hospitals
and charities, and that Councilman
Press Huddleston will be chairman of
the street committee.
It is understood tbai Major Mad
dox will give to Alderman John W
Grant the appointments which ho had
intended tor Alderman Walter A. Tai
lor. deceased Among these. it is
said. Is the chairmanship of the com
mittee on sanitary affairs, which
gives the holder a seat ou the board
of h<xalth.
j Although Mr. Grant has not yet
[ been elected, it *s safe to presume
that he will be. as he has no opposi-
Hon, and none Is ’\pooled to develop.
The mayor-elect will probably tempo
rarily bestow upon Uderman James
It. Key the appolntnu nts designed for
j Mr. Grant, as the official holds over
] until his successor is elected and
j Qualifies
<*■ BRILLIANTS. «
♦ ♦
Have more than thou showest.
Speak less than thou knov- est,
land less than thou owes:.
Learn more than thou trnwest,
Set less than thou throweat.
—Shakespeare.
Better to slrive and climb.
And never reach the coal,
Than to drift along with time,
An aimless, worthless soul.
Ay, better to climb and fall.
Or sow, though the yield be small,
Than to throw awav
Day after day, (
And never strive at all.
Words are mighty, words are living;
Serpents with their venomous
stings,
Or bright angels crowding round us,
With heaven's light upon their
wings.
'Every word has its own spirit,
True or false, that never dies;
Every word man’s lips have uttered
Echoes in God's skies.
—Adelaide A. Proctor.
[ Ah, gentle soul, how gracious, how
benign
Breathes through .our troubled life
that voice of thine.
Filled with sweetness born of happier
spheres.
That wins and warms, that kindles,
softens, cheers.
That calms the wildest woe and stays
the bitterest tears. .
—Oliver Wendell Holmes.
PROGRESS MADE IN
TUBERCULOSIS WAR
More Work Done Last
Year to End the Plague
Than Ever Before.
NEW YORK. With the opening
of the new year the campaign against
tuberculosis lu tho I’ntted States ex
hibits the most remarkable progress
that any movement for social better
ment has ever shown In this coun
try. During the past year, the amount
of activity and the number of peo
ple who have been reached by this
[activity lias been far in excess of
similar work that has been carried
ion during, the four years previous.
Measured by dollars, the campaign
against tuberculosis In tho Putted
States during the year 1908, has cost
i well over a million. Measured in the
.number of workers, the campaign has
enlisted hundreds of thousands in its
ranks. Measured by the number of
institutions and organizations that
have been established dining the
year 1908, more work of this sort has
been accomplished than during the
entire period before January 1 of the
; year just closing. For instance, bo
] fore January 1, 1905, there were only
19 dispensaries in the United States
■providing special treatment for tuber
culosis cases. Up to the year 1908
this number had increased to slight
ly over 100. During the year 1908
alone, over 100 dispensaries provid
ing special treatment for tuhercelo
sts patients have been opened The
number of tuberculosis sanatoria and
[hospitals opened In the year 1908 is
more than SO. n figure which Is four
times that of the amount of progress
shown in th.s line In anv » »er year
before 190 S. The number of associa
tions having for their object the stmlv
,or prevention of consumption .estab
! Itshed during tho year 1908, totals
up to 120. which figure again is more
than the entire number which had
j previously been established in .lie
United States.
| Hut net only in tho number of In
stitutions but also in the variety of
people Interested and in the increase
in workers, can the progress oi the
anti-tuberculosis campaign be meas
ured Never before In the history of
the United States have so many move
meats co-operated and allied to fight
the common foe, the white plaguy
Never In r.nv single year have s <
m&nv different organizations and so
many different ranks of people been
stirred to activity in a movement f -r
the betterment of the condition of
t»an, as during the year -190 S For
instance, -during the past year from
rrlE AUGUSTA HERAXTI.
lack Johnson, Champion
Jack Johnson, the new heavy weight champion. Re
heat Tommy Burns in hollow style.
one end of the country to the ether,
the labor unions and working men
have been startled to a realization
of the fact that consumption is a dis
ease which affects them, and they
have been arming from east to west
for the fight against this common foe.
Hand In hand, the movement of the
; labor unions has been the stimulus
given to the clergymen and the
churches throughout the country.
Never before have so many sermons
on tuberculosis been preached from
tho pulpits of the various churches
of the country. The schools, too,
have been aroused both through spe
cial Institutions for the treatment of
[tuberculosis children and by means
of special Instruction to the chil
dren in the regular grades in tho
| schools. Hundreds of children have
been instructed on the dangers of
I tuberculosis. State legislatures, gov
ernment officials, business concern?,
factory owners, social workers, men
and women of all sorts of classes
have during this past year been aroua
ed to renewed interest in the cam
paign against consumption.
Of the influences which have con
tributed to pr. dr.ee this result, prob
ably the most weighty, has been the
international congress on tuberculosis
which was held in Washington during
the latter part of September and the
first part of October, attracting, as it
did, the attention of men and women
In every s’ate in the union. Repre
sentatives were present from almost
every section of the country, and tao
benefit derived from this Insplrlrg
gathering lias doubtless ■ given tne
greatest impetus to activity In the
fight against consumption that this
country has ever experienced. The
National Association for the Study
and Prevention of Tuberculosis by
means of its constant propaganda and
its two traveling exhibits, has also
helped to contribute to the success
of the campaign. Particularly is this
so in regard to the work being car
ried on in the South. The Red Cross
stamp campaign, with Us 25.000,000
stamps, has been one of the greatest
mediums of education on tuberculo
sis as well as a means of raisn.g
money that has ever been used lu
this country.
The managers of the campaign
against tuberculosis are realizing that
they have n hard fight ahead of them,
and every means that will'bring home
to the Ignorant the gospel of health
Is being employed. It is safe to pre
dict that with the present rate of
Increase In activity against tubercu
losis maintained the white plague
will he ranked in a class with some
of the least dangerous of the infec
tious diseases within less than fifty
years.
Cheney's Expjctorant cuts coughs
and colds short. Cures babies and
grown people. 25c.. all druggists.
Behaviour is a mirror In which ev
ery one shows his image.
The grave is a narrow escape from
life.
The societv of woman is the ele
ment of rood manners.
The mere absence of comedy in life
Is tragic.
i Tnere are very few peer sinners,
most of them beinr rich.
One "BROMO QI'LNINEV' ifcat is m
laxative pronto ouinine on ever^
.'■arts a Cold in One Day. Cripin * Day*
ITEMS OF INTEREST
IN AND ABOUT AIKEN
The Holiday Season Brings
Many Visitors to the City
I
AIKEN.—Capt. John W. Dunbar,
! our clerk cf court, will receive ap
| plications from all persons who are
entitled to pensions from the stato
during the month of January.
It has been many years since the
roses have bloomed in our parks as
they are on this the last day of De
cember.
Postmaster Carman states that the
mail during the past xveek has been
the heaviest that has ever passed
through tho Aiken postoffice.
Capt. Osran Hutson, commandant
at the Porter Military Academy, at
Charleston, is in the city.
Col. Elbert H. Aull, of Newberry,
president of the South Carolina Press
association, was in Aiken Monday.
Mr. Ripley Henderson, who is at
tending college in iVrginia, is at home
for the holidays.
Mr. George Sanford, from New
York, is here for the season.
Mr. and Mrs. James Wyman, of
Bamberg, are visiting in the city.
Miss Ella Croft, from Converse Col
lege, has arrived here for the holi
, days.
— _
Hon. D. S. Henderson is visiting
relatives at Walterboro, S. C.
Mr. Joseph H. Ropes and family ar
rived here last week from Boston
and are located in the Richardson
house for the season.
Mrs. Andrew Smith came in last
evening and will occupy the Rogers
1 cottage.
Messrs. Edward and Croft,
two prominent young attorneys of
i Greenville, S. C„ are spending the
holidays with their family.
Mr. Rudolph Seigling, a student of
Princeton, is visiting the family of
Mr. Pinckney Brown.
Henry Henderson. Esq., of Bam
berg. is here for a few days.
Miss Estev, proprietress of the Pal
[ motto Inn. is preparing to open the
j hotel for guests January 10th.
Mrs J. C. NVoodrufT, of Atlanta. Ga..
is visiting her sisters, the Misses
Ford, of this city.
""
Miss Cora Pitner. daughter of the
late John Pitner, deputy sheriff of
this county, was married to Mr. Ed
gar Rawls Mlddieton. formerly of
Edgefield county, but now of Ala
bama. on December 30th.
On Wednesday, the 23rd instant,
Representative-elect John F. Wil
; linnis was happily married to Miss
Eta Turner, of Granltvllle, and lett
immediately for a short bridal trip
\ to Alabama.
Citizens of Tomorrow
Thrift is the word today—Young and Old —Save.
4% '4% 4%
INTEREST ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS.
CITIZENS BANK
931 Broad Street.
P. S. NORTH, President. C. A. FLEMING, V. Prest.
M, C. DOWLING, Cashier.
«If.
I Sift Miff
* 1
A Wrong Number A
&£ljp£
On the telephone is annoying. Often times
it is caused by the subscriber calling a number
from memory or speaking indistinctly. It is
important to consult the directory 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 Telej&one <£ Telegraph Co.
8.
TURKISH BATHS ......
Rehabilitated!
Open from 9:00 a. m, to 11 p= m,, Harison Building.
C. S. SYLVESTER, Proprietor.
Yesterday Mr. Charles Pender, of
! Elenton, was married at Springfield
to Miss Mabel Smith, of the latte"
: place.
This community regrets the dea r h
of Mr. Center Hitchcock*, of New
York. He was an old visitor of this
! resort.
Mrs. Frances Lebby Aldrich, wife
jof our esteemed citizen, ex-Judge
; Janies Aldrich, died at her residence
[ about six miles south of Aiken, on
1 Monday, after a long illness.
The friends of Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Woodward will be grieved to learn of
[ the death of their daughter, Mrs. Net
tie Widener, which occurred on the
18th instant on York street.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. L. Bryant, of
the Talatha section of this county,
visited relatives and friends in the
city on Tuesday last.
Mr. Frank P. Toole, of Montmor
! enci, a successful farmer in that com
[ munity, was in the city Monday.
The many friends of Mr. John C.
Wade, of Montgomery, wTil regret to
j learn of his serious illness.
Messrs. Jason Woodward and Kel
! ley Toole, who have just completed
a large brick livery and sale stable
[ on Curve street, left last evening for
the west to purchase mules and
horses for the trade.
ITCH cured in 30 minutes by Wool
ford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails.
| Sold by G. P. King, Druggist.
MR. PHILPOT RE-ELECTED
CHAIRMAN OF COMMISSION
Resolution Passed on Re
tirement of Commis
sioner Flynn.
The first .-'teting of the Board of
Police Commissioners for 1909 was
held Friday night, were no,
trials and the first business after go
ing into executive session was the
electing of a chairman for the com
ing year. Mr. T. M. Philpot was
nominated an 1 re-elected.
Orderly Sergeant G D. Buchannan
, was unanimously re-e'ected secretary.
Sergeant Buchannan is really an ex
officio member of the board.
Mr. NV. A. Waters, who was elect
ed from the Third ward at the last
meeting of council to succeed Capt.
J. C. Flynn, was present at the meet
ing
Mr. R J. Edenfield offered the fol-/
lowing resolution anl it was unani
mously passed by th" board:
“Resolved, That this Board of Po
lice Commissioners part with Com
missioner J. C. Flynn with regret and
extend our thanks tc him for hi 3 able
and impartial service rendered the
board and city, while a member, and ,
we wish him a prosperous future." I
SATURDAY, JANUARY 2
Coal Weather
Is here and we're here with tha
Coal. There is heat in every
ounce of Coal we sell because It
Is clean Coal. See us before you
buy, whether you want a ton or a
carload.
CONSUMER’S ICE
DELIVERY CO.,
JOHN SANCKEN,
Phones 332 and 333. Manager
Fictures
—AND— ijT
Picture Frames
THE MOST EXQUIS
ITE AND VARIED
ASSORTMENT IN
AUGUSTA. % ti) sj
T. G. Bailie
8c Co.
THE GREAT
TAMPA BAY HOTEL
MTAMPA/ FLORIDA
*• • Vb.. ■ ... .
aiSpflflgypljljlllßg^DAVlD LAUtfR
' fourth run
Winter Season 1909
' THE ONLY
Fireproof Hotel in All Florida
■ 7
Climate Idoar- SeuthfiM, Flowcis, Mi-tic. Tcn-r,.
Boating." Mgtgring, Aiding, Fishing, i
■ ' A Minting aid Cr i
. . <, .. ,
. .»Information by any agent Seaboard Air tin;,;
Atlantic Coatt Unc and Southern R;. ; "vay, ali<P>
Mallory, Savannah and Clyde stramf?,»iinri r .
JgljßP.tamt*a RACES 7.
FLORIDA STATE FAIR'ASSOCIATION
• Fchruarf and HarcW," /* e
,1- MAKE RESERVATIONS tARLT