Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
I Have In Hand $25,000.00
To lend, in sums to suit borrowers, on Real
Estate located in Augusta and Summerville
AT SIX PER CENT.
Applications passed on without delay.
WM. E. BUSH
No. 4 Library Building.
FOR RENT
Houses and Cottages on Broad, Centre, Bill is, Lin
coln, Greene, Telfair and loth Streets and Walton
Way.
Martin & Garrett
Dyer Building.
STOCKS
Orders executed to buy and sell stocks, bonds
and investment securities on the New York Stock
Exchange. We solicit your business.
ARGO & JESTER
7 Library Building. Phone 12.
30 year* It) the Ravings Hunk Business.
PERCY E. MAY, President. DR. THOMAS R. WRIGHT, Vice-Prest.
J. G. WEIGLE, Cashier.
“CHIROPODY.”
AND MANICURING AT HICKEY’B HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
ROOM 213 HARISON £. JIL3ING.
“Hickey’s Barber Shop.”
221 EIGHTH STREET.
1 Money To Loan.
3 to 5 Years, On City And Summerville Im
proved Property, And For Building Purposes.
JNO. JAY COHEN & CO.,
Keynville Social News.
KEYBVII.OE. (Ja.—The continued
illness of Ml»s Eula (MhOi In a souro*
of regret to her muny friends.
Mrs. l.ouisu C'liirk who hns benn
the guest of her son, Mr. John (’lurk
left lust Tuesday for l.ouisville to
spend a while.
Your Trip To Savannah
will not be complete unless
you make your headquarters at
The New Pulaski,
Stubbs Keen, Props
Want to Contract
-For
-1,000 tons of Tomatoes
100 tons of Sweet Pota
toes.
100 tons of Beans.
100 tons of Peaches.
Augusta Canning Co.
FRANK ROUSE
Pres, and Treas.
’Phone 477.
Are You Ihinkinij of Purchasing A Diamond?
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS, HAVING THE LARGEST STOCK IN
AUGUSTA.
L. J. SCHAUL & CO., Popular Priced Jewelers,
840 BROAD SlKttT.
Repairing,
Engraving,
Diamond Setting.
IS THE ONLY ON.E TO ADOPT.
Why not put thin principle to practl
cal use by opening a Savings Ac
count with ilio Augusta Savings
Hank? You will find it a move in
the right direction for ft will enable
you to cultivate many good qualtios
which will benefit you In the future,
besides your money will earn 4 per
cent Interest. The policy of this In
stitution Is to accord all Its patrons
every courtesy consistent with sound
banking and to afford savings proper
protection. Why not open an ac
count TOMORROW?
The Augusta Savings Bank,
Mr, B. H. Eve is quite ill at his
home near here. His daughter, Mrs.
l/Ogue and his son, Rob arrived Tues
day night and will remain with him
some time.
Mr. Wilton Jones I’arker, the clev
er youg substitute on route No. 2
served on the route last Saturday in
the absence of the carrier, Mr, J, W.
Cook, who spent the day in Augus
ta.
Miss Daisy Uoullncau entertained
liter pupils with a Valentine party on
| Saturday afternoon at Oakley school
I house.
Miss Skinner entertained In a sim
ilar manner on Friday afternoon at
her school here.
Miss Bessie Houllneau visited her
sister Miss Daisy, last Saturday and
Sunday.
Mr. "Fertile" Richards passed
through our vlllngo Monday on his
usual weekly round.
THE ARCADIUM
HARISON BUILDING
QUALITY VAUDEVILLE
BINGHAM AND GABLE,
The instrumental Trio.
EDNA FARLOWE.
Singing and Dancing Soubrette.
THE WREN TRIO,
Comedians.
THE BEST MOVING PICTURES.
Admission 5c and 10c
Moving pictures changed daily,
front 2:30 to 5 and 7 to 81 Vaude
ville, 6 to 7 and 8 to 11.
Complete Stock of—
Watches.
Diamonds.
Jewelry and
Silverware.
Rose Hat Pins *1.25.
Large Rhine Stone
Hat Pins $1.25.
WANTS UNWRITTEN
LAW APPLIED TO
WOMEN
Mrs. H. Johnston-Wood,
the New York attorney,
who has just aroused great
interest hy declaring that
if the unwritten law is
good for men, it is also
good for women.
POSTOFFICE WILL
OBSERVE BIRTHDAY
OF WASHINGTON
Postmaster Vaughn calls attention
to the fact, that two holidays come to.
gethor this month, i. e. next 811:1 d; •
arid Monday, the latter being Wash
inglon’s birthday.
Sunday is, of course, a regular holi.
New Spring
Stock in
STIFF
and
SOFT HATS
McCreary’s
742 Broad Augusta, Ga,
KNIGHTS ARE CELEBRATING
ANNIVERSARY OF THE ORDER
Grand Chancellor John P.
Roes, of Macon, is Here
Assisting Local Knights
in the Observance of the
Day.
Grand Chancellor John P. Ross Of
the Knights of Pythias of Georgia
will arrive in the city Friday after-
|p§d
,>nJ l*\ B'mg Han far-
IB CURE DANDRUFF lI M
WB STOP FALLING HAIR IW
Wi «od ITCHING SCALP \W
!■ to two weeks, or money
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
CHRONIC COUGH.
Mr. Gray, of EM, !nd.,
Declares Vinol Cured His
Daugtitefs Chronic Cough
After All Other Means Had
Failed.
ISAYS SHE OWES LIFE TO VINOL
•'.My fourteen year old daughter had
a very bad cough, was weak, emaci
ated, and had no appetite. Two of our
best physicians had done her no good
On advice I procured for her a bottle
lof Vinol and she soon began to im
prove. She continued until she had
taken several bottles of it, and she
has completely recovered her health.
“We undoubtedly owe her life to
Vinol, as I am certain that If It had
not been for it she would have been
dead ere this. We never miss the
opportunity of saying a good word
i for Vinol." James Gray, Elwood,
: Ind.
Many oases like the above are con
:-tantly coming to our attention where
: this cod liver and iron preparation
, Vinol has cured chronic coughs, colds
and bronchitis and built up health
i and strength for old people, delicate
children, run down, weak and debili
tated people after all other means
had failed.
Try Vinol. If it does you no good
we will return your money; that’si
your guarantee, but we know it will
| benefit you. Alexander Drug Co.,
| Augusta, Ga.
day, and the usual holiday hours are
observed. The general delivery,
, stamp and registry windows will be
I open front 10 to 11 o’clock a. m., and
Spring Derbies are ready for pick
ing. Splendid crop too.
There’s sort of a band-boxy fresh
ness about all of them.
$3.00, $3.50 or $5.00
OUR LEADER
However, we’ve got a favorite.
A Hat we believe to be the best
Hat for the money. It’s Our
HAWES $3.00 STIFF OR
SOFT HAT.
In selling this hat we simply give
you the biggest Three Dollars’ worth
of stylish Hat on the market.
Try a Hawes Hat and you'll fall in
lino with the rest of our admirers.
noon to pay an official visit to the
Augusta lodges at night.
Friday ends the forty-fifth year of
the existence of the order and in every
city where a Pythian castle floats
from its flag staff the emblem of the
organization to the humble hamlet
where a devoted band of Knights are
carrying out the principles exampli
fled by the devotion of Damon and
Pythias, the day is being observed.
The Augusta Knights are proud of
the opportunity to have with them the
head of the order in Georgia during
their observance of the anniversary.
The Gnind Chancellor will attend
the meeting of vigilant Lodge, which
in reality will be a mass meeting of
the Knights of the city, He will be
received by Grand Honors by the as
sembled Knights, and will make an
address to them.
The address of welcome to the
Grand Chancellor will be made by
Past Grand Chancellor, C. Henry Co
hen of Augusta.
Other nddresses will bo made,
among which will be one by Mr.
Dan Fogarty, on the prospects of the
Pythian Realty Company, which has
acquired a new building to be con
verted Into a Pythian Castle.
On his arrival in the city in the
afternoon the Grand Chancellor will
be met by a delegation of the local
Knights and escorted to the Albion
Hotel, where he will be quartered
while he is in the city. He will prob
ably leave tomorrow mornlug.
The lodge w ill be called to order at
7:30 o'clock in order to get an early
start at the quantity of business to
be transacted. Vigilant lodge has a
large number of candidates to put
through several rauks, and this will
occupy a considerable portion of the
evenings program.
The Knights of Pythias were or
ganized In 1865, the closing year of
the war between the states. Justus
Rathbone led the little band in Wash
ington who organized the first lodge
of the order. Mr Rathbone became
the first Grand Chancellor and the
first Supreme Chancellor of the order
and his memory Is revered by all loy
jal knights The first lodge was or
j ganized with nine members. The or
! der has now grown beyond 900.000
j and bids fair in a short time to go
1 beyond the million mark.
Mrs. LAWRENCE PHIPPS
| ' ■ /
l . . .
t--. . . i
Mrs. Lawrence C. Phipps,
who has been separated
from her husband, but be
tween whom a reconcila
tiou is expected on account
of a yachting trip they are
to make to Cuba.
on Monday, the national holiday,
similar hours will be observed.
The postmaster says that patrons
of the office would save the clerks a
deal of work by calling at the gen
eral delivery window on Sunday and
Monday for their mail. Otherwise the
volume will bank up, and Tuesday
will be a heavy day.
STILL TRYING TO GET
DeLOACH OUT ON BOND
Mr, Floyd Sawyer, the attorney
for Munce DeLoach, who is in the
Richmond County jail, awaiting the
decision of Gov. Smith, whtether he
will be sent back to South Carolina
to face trial for assault with intent
to commit, murder, is still making ef
forts to gdt him out on bond.
Mr. Sawyer has had considerable
correspondence w r ith Gov. Smith about
the amount of bond, and matters of
a like nature. Gov. Smith has not,
yet announced whether DeLoach will
be allowed bond.
The relatives of Mr. DeLoach liv
ing in Augusta are willing to go on
his bond as soon as Gov. Smith an
nounces the amount.
Deafness Cured By
HYOMEI
■ 8 (psmmp hm-o-m) 8
If you are deaf and the deafness is
due to catarrh, then read this honest,
straightforward statement of one who
had lost all hope.
Read This Letter.
"I suffered intensely some two
years from a bad case of catarrh,
which left me very deaf.
I doctored and used various rem
edies, said to be good for catarrh.
The disease bothered me over a
year, when I became deaf. Then I
commenced to doctor, to get rid of
the deafness. I became discouraged
at the outlook and well I might be,
for there was nothing I used that
helped me.
JSHR
x \IW i
tMr. Earl Howe
\ ALLEGAN, MICH.
A\F> t'
The trouble continued until I was
advised to try Hyomei and I procured
a treatment. I used Hyomei thor
oughly as per directions for a few
weeks and much to my surprise the
deafness and catarrh left me entirely.^
Since using this wonder!# 1 remedy,
there has been no return of the trou
ble whatever, my hearing is good and
there is no catarrhal trouble what
ever, and for this reason I know I
have abundant cause for calling
Hyomei a wonderful remedy and en
dorsing its use.” —Earl Howe. 202
Cherry St., Allegan, Mich. October
9, 1908.
Hyomei lias become known the
world over, as an almost certain cure
in any catarrhal condition of the nose
and throat. It is easy and pleasant to
use, you simply breathe In the heal
ing, antiseptic air. made from the con
centrated extract of the mighty eu
calyptus trees of Australia, through
a hard rubber inhaler, and as this
\ penetrating air passes over the dls
j eased and germ ridden membrane. It
promptly kills the germs of catarrh
and allays the inflammation. Any
I leading druggist will sell you a eom-
I plete Hyomei outfit, including a bot
tle of Hyomei and a neat pocket in
haler, for only SI.OO and he guaran
tees it to cure catarrh, bronchitis,
asthma, coughs and colds or money
back.
Hyomei sold in evezv towu in Amer
ica.
WALKOVER 1
FORMATION OF THE
TOBACCO TRUST
Commissioner of Corpora
tions Tells How the Com
bination Acquired Con
trol.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—ln a report
transmitted to President Roosevelt
Thursday, Herbert Knox Smith, com
missioner of corporations, presents
some highly interesting history of
the organization of the “Tobacco
Combination,” which, in the magni
tude of its business operations, is one
of the greatest organizations in
America. The report is a result, in
part, of an extensive investigation
into’ the tobacco industry made by
the bureau of corporations. Subse
quent reports will deal with the con
trol of the tobacco industry, with
prices and profits, and w'ith competi
tive methods.
Combinations Rise.
The report sets forth the rise of
one of the great combinations of the
country. In his letter of transmittal,
Commissioner Smith says that it
"deals with the history, from the
standpoint of its organization, of the
great Tobacco Combination. Starting
in 1890 as the American Tobacco
Company, a manufacturer of cigar
ettes, with a capital of $25,000,000, the
combination has now a net capitaliza
tion (excluding inter-company hold
ings) of $316,346,821. It has absorbed
about 250 separate concerns, and now
controls substantially four-fifths of
the output of each important kind of
tobacco manufactured in the United
States, with the exception of cigars.
Financial Transactions.
“Its history also presents impor
tant features of stock manipulation.
The financial transactions centering
around the organization of the Con
solidated Tobacco company in 1901
are especially noteworthy. At that
time a small body of directors and
stockholders in the combination be
lieved that the profits of the combina
tion could be greatly increased in the
immediate future. They organized
the Consolidated Tobacco company
and offered, its bonds in exchange for
the common stock of the American
and the Continental, in order thus to
secure for themselves most of the in
creased profits about to accrue. The
profits accruing to the common stock
of the American and the Continental,
after its acquisition bv the Consoli
dated, increased greatly, and the
small body of men controlling the
last named company—so small, in
fact, that six of them held a major
ity of its stock and thus controlled
fthe entire combination —became en
! titled to millions of dollars which, had
iV not been for the Consolidated trans*
action, would have gone to the or
i iginal common-stock holders."
Should Share Knowledge.
Commissioner Smith says that “in
fairness, it should be added that this
' offer of exchange was made with no
concealment of the fact that that of
! fer came from the principal officers
and directors of the two companies,”
but, he adds:
“The conduct of this group of men
is a proper subject for criticism, how
ever, because they could foresee much
Letter than outside stockholders the
large profits about to accrue. They
occupied a fiduciary relation to the
outside stockholders, and should have
~shared with them equally the special
; knowledge acquired by their posi
tion.”
The report discusses at length the
methods by which the Tobacco Com
bination has been developed, includ
ing the "bogus independent concerns"
of the Combination. It points out
clearly that “the leading purpose of
the men who have controlled it has
been to dominate the Tobacco Indus
try. The report contains not only
the details of the financial operations
Once
DEAF.
CAN
NOW
Hear.
f ix
-SHOES-
Your Health
Your health is dependent to a large ex
tent upon the fit of your shoes, so the doc
ors say. 111-fitting shoes make the feet feel
uncomfortable and also force the wearer to
walk unnaturally, which, by causing the
weight of the body to be distributed un
evenly on the foot, brings about various ner
vous disorders. If you feel all out of sorts
perhaps your shoes are to blame. Any wav,
get a pair of WALK-OVER SHOES and
note the restful feeling they will give your
feet.
$3.50, $4.00, $5.00.
Callahan-Dobson Shoe Co.,
Sole Agents
828 Broadway.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19.
of the combination in its rise, but also
many interesting sidelights on the
schemes employed to make the Com
bination paramount in the tobacco
industry.
Only One “BROMO QUININE"
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUIN
INE. Look for the signature of S.
W. GROVE. Used the world over
to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c.
BUFFET PARLOR CAR, AUGUSTA
TO JACKSONVILLE, FLA.,
VIA. CENTRAL OF GEOR
GIA RAILWAY.
A magnificent Pullman Buffet Par
lor car is now being operated between
Augusta, Ga., and Jacksonville, Fla.,
via. Savannah, Ga., over the Centrai
of Georgia railway and the Atlantic
Coast Line. Leaves Augusta daily
at 7:30 a. m. city time. Seats can
be reserved in advance at Union
Ticket office, 741 Broad street and
719 Broad street or Terminal station.
Feb 3 5 79 11 13 15 17 19 20
CRUISER CHESTER
JOINS THE FLEET
The Dixie Will Meet t v |
Fleet At Hampton Roads.
WASHINGTON. —A wireless re
ceived at the navy department from
Rear Admiral Sperry reports the
scout cruiser Chester has joined the
fleet. The Dixie sailed from Phil
adelphia and will meet the fleet at
Hampton Roads.
A Helping Hand
Is Gladly Extended by an Augusta
Citizen.
There are many enthusiastic citizens
in Augusta prepared to tell their ex
perience for the public good. Testi
mony from such a source is the best
of evidence, and will prove a “helping
hand" to scores of readers. Read the
following statement:
Mrs. W. C. Brown, 916 King St.,
Augusta , Ga,, says: “I suffered for a
long time from a constant, dull back
ache and sharp shooting pains in rr.y
kidneys. I could not stoop or lift
without suffering and in the morning
my back was so lame and sore that I
could "hardly dress myself. My kid
neys were very sluggish and the se
cretions contained a sediment. Since
using a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills,
procured at the Green & Horsey
Drug Co., the backaches and lame
ness have vanished, the headaches and
dizzy spells are a thing of the past
and my kidneys are normal. I give
Doan’s Kidney Pills the credit for
these good results”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y„
sole agents for the United States.
Remember the name—Doan’s —and
take no other.
Roller Skates
Bowen Bros.
908 Broad St.
JgyL