PAGE FOUR
lilt AUGUSTA HERALD
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Auguata. Oa., Saturday, April 17, 1908
No communication will -e pabllahad
In Ttie Herald unleae the name of the
trrtler in alfrned to the article. __
Thi"Herald la Hto official advertlainf
medium of the City of Auguata and of
the County of Richmond for all legal
notloM And adtwtlilni
Tbeira la no batter way to reach the
horoea of the proaperoue people of th •
city end eeotlon than through the col
umns of The Herald. Dally and Sunday.
""Telephone the Circulation Department.
Phone 337. when leaving Auguata, and
srrange to have The Herald sent to you
by mall each day __________ ,
Th* Auguata Herald haa a laeg-r olty l
clroulattoa then any other paper, and u
lar*«r total circulation than any otn* r
AMftigtfl paper This haA )>««n pfovon
by the Audit Ce., of Ns* York.
ADVERTISE OR QUIT.
Millennium of Antl-publlclty Merchsnt
Near at Hand, Saya Ad Man.
A. B. Hutchins of Kari Hits City, a
former president of the Southwestern
Ad Clubs of America, who was hilled
to apeak before the meeting of the
Topeka Ad club recently, did not nr
rlv# Id time. But It so happened that
r. 1., Blanchard, representative of the
Btlkkh-YounKShoiu! company adver
Using agency of New York, wna In
tCwn, and consequently he war se
cured to fill th* vseanoy. Mr Blanch
ard aald In part.
The avorsgu small advertiser
think* that he knows all there Is
a built advertising to he known when
he starts to advertise, and falls lo
appreciate the value, of an analytic,
critical specialist, who has spent
years In acquiring his peculiar line of
knowledge.
The next ten or fifteen years will
see remarkable developments In ad
vcrtlslng, and It Is only a question of
n few years when firms will lie er|/
palled in exploit the advantages of
their goods or retire from business.
\V<- all know that at Ihe present lime
It In the "dead ones" who do not ad
vertlso the ones whose shelves are
laden with IlySpeoked and shelf worn
gt ods. The live wires of every com
munity are the men who keep their
ware* and their names constantly be
fore the public.
"From pillar to post" would seem
lo fit Castro’s case, If steamboat
wharves on one side nf the Atlantic
had pillars, and on ihti other side
posts.
The name of the Servian crown
prince has been changed from AleY
sndor to George The chances are
the next time II Is changed It will
be "Mud." Rome Tribune Herald.
Aunt Hstty Green ha* gone to live
with har aon-ln law. Ami the old ;
ladr bna »o much money that ho can't
•von afford to anub her, much less to j
Invite her to return to her own flat.
It la suggested that the quaatton: i
"What ta whiskey?" will never be
Bettled ao lona as samples are sup j
piled the Investigators. Yet without
samples It will be Impossible to de
(ermine, and there you are.
It la now denied that the suit case
stolen trout the Edgefield man on the
train contained 18,000. Tlut a denial
In this ease vain't necessary every
body knew that Edgefield men don't
carry 18,000 around In suit eases
An Indiana man was sentenced to
ten months In Jail for stealing four
bottles of whiskey. Even In Indiana
the value of whiskey Is being appre
ciated. To steal a bottle of the stuff
will probably Ire made a capital crime
after awhile
It Is asserted that the beat of the
Georgia peaches weigh front 100 to
IK*O pounds each and that they are
of the cling variety. Hut wouldn't
one of those JOQ clings clinging to yo\t
on a warm summer day he a melting
proposition ?
The Jacksonville Ttmea-l’nion de
clares that "All the ladles who wear
stockings are kicking at the proposed
tariff tag.'* Hy that token there mint
he quite a number of female Jerry
Simpsons, since many ladles seem to
be very little concerned about it.
It did aeem a bit theatrical when
Roosevelt attired himself In hit Rough
Rider toga to be Introduced to the
king of Italy, But perhaps ha thought
the natives of Africa wouldn't appre
elate them, and ha had taken them
along to wear sometimes
According to some authorities the
poems of Poe were written when the
author wra* drunk Still It will not be
advisable for any preseul day poet
to try that aame source of lnspira
tlon. for the particular brand of whis
key Poe drank hat all boon exhausted
With such a great blackberry crop
a> there Is In prospect now. It is a
win nnd a shame to haw a law for
bidding the making iff blackberry
wine and this part of our atate pro
hibition law will probably be Indi
vidually repealed In many cases
COFFEE ON THE TARIFF FREE LIST.
“Jokers” have been pointed out that were snugly hiden In various
sections of the Payne tariff bill. The biggest joker of all has been found
In the section relating to coffee. It was shown up by Congressman
Hardwick In his speech in the house on the tariff bill on March 27.
Under the present (Dlngley) tariff law coffee is on the free list.
It Is imported Into the country without the payment of any duty. With
a great parade over this fact It has been presented that the Payne
tariff bill proposes to leave coffee on the free list.
But to this exemption was added this proviso:
"Provided, That If any country, dependency, or colony shall Im
pose an export duty or other export charge of any kind whatsoever,
directly or Indirectly, upon coffee exported into the United States,
a duty equal to export duty, tax, or charge shall be levied, col
lected, and paid thereon.”
What would he the effect of such a law?
Of the $67,682,901 worth of coffeo Imported last year $48,317,377
worth, or 72 per cent of the total amount, came from Brazil. Nearly all
the common grades of coffee, used by the poorer and middle claas
people, come from Brazil
That country levies an export tax of 2 cents per pound on coffee.
This tax Brazil cannot remove. Last year the Brazilian government
wont Into the coffee holding business. The Brazilian coffee growers
were much In the game fix as our cotton, growers. They were com
pelled to market their crops at once, causing a lowering of the price
during the selling season and a loss of millions to the coffee growers.
To prevent this the government warehoused the crop, to sell It. as the
market demands should warrant. Just as has long been proposed should
he done with cotton. To carry out this warehousing plan the govern
ment. of Brazil borrowed nearly $100,000,009 from foreign money lenders,
who agreed to finance the coffee warehousing plan upon the govern
ment’s pledge to levy an export tax on coffee of not less than 5 franks
per bag
Bo Brazil, from which more than two-thirds of our coffee Is and
must continue to be Imported, cannot, take off the export tax. It Is
bound by Its agreement with the money lenders, and If due regard for
her own national faith did not prevent her breaking this pledge, the
English, French and Herman governments have a way of protecting
their subjects by forcing other countries to keep faith with them. So
It Is certain that Brazil will r.ol rescind her export tax on coffee.
Thus, under the provisions of the Payne bill, our government wouid
impose a duty of 2 cents on coffee Imported from Brazil, It would be
added lo the price charged the consumer. This would also fix the mar
ket. price of coffee, and the Importers would pocket an extra 2 cents a
pound profit on all coffee imported from other countries than Brazil.
Nor Is this all. The Brazilian coffee warehouses are now filled with
coffee, which Is being held under the coffee warehousing plan. This cof
fee may he bought by American importers, and Imported before the
countervailing duly proposed by the Payne bill Is put into effect, allow
ing the Importers to charge the 2 cents per pound additional to the con
sumers, which would not go to the government but into the pockets of
the exploiters.
Ho here is the Joker in the coffee schedule of the Payne bill. While
pretending to leave coffee on the free list as It Is now, It would place
a duty of 2 cents a pound on all the common grades, allowing only the
finer grades to come In free of duty, and incidentally allow the few
men who control the coffee importing business to rob the people of sev
ers! million dollars a yesr.
GROWING GOVERNMENTAL EXTRAVAGANCE
"Another Deficit Is In Sight," walls the Birmingham Age-Herald, dis
missing the Aldrich tariff bill in Us Insufficiency without an income tax
addition to raise sufficient revenue for the government. This 1h need
less worry. Our statesmen In congress, sorry lot as In part they may
be, are sufficiently up to their business to get the ta"iff bill In such
shape before Its final passage, that it will bring in sufficient revenue for
the needs of the government at the present time. Then It will go on
as before, until In a few years the growing extravagance shall again
tiring on a deficit, and further tu Iff revision or other tax legislation
will he needed to bring In more revenue.
So It has been ever since the time of Andrew Jackson, and especial
ly Blnco the advent of the republican party.
Not that the republican party Is entlrelyy responsible for this
stale of affairs. The foundation for Uilh governmental extravagance
was laid when Andrew Jackson announced the principle that "To the
Victors belong the spoils." This has been adopted by all political
parties, and ns the result we find spollamen in office, and the people
burdened with ever growing taxes duo to governmental extravagance
Not only does this apply to the national government, but to state
and municipal governments as well. Not only does It apply to govern
ments controlled by republicans, hut equally to governments controlled
by democrats. Our alate government has been democratic since 1870
We have had only democratic governors, state officials and almost solid
ly democratic legislatures. Yet our state government Is In exactly the
Bame boat ait Hint In which the republican national government finds
Itself- facing a dcfiolt, aud under the necesalty of laying additional
taxes. /
Just so our city government, v hlch has been non-partisan. Its ex
penses have Inoi eased from year tc year. Every admin Ist ration her
created uew offices, Increased th" salaries of old offices and started
now) spigots to tap the municipal treasury. Where all this is to enc
the Lord only knows. Our oountiy Is a wonderfully rich country, but
the limit of taxation must surely be reached soma time, with this con
stent Increase.
It Is high time to call a hall to this extravagancce, but one might
as well slug ptu tins *u u dead horse as to preach retrenchment in gov
ernmental expenditures, for all the effect It will have. After all, ihe
government only reflects the character of the people, aud are we not, as
a people, the most Improvident ly extravagant people In the world ?
Bo these recurring deficits In our governments should be view f
with philosophic equanimity; and as the additional taxes are imposed
the raise them we should direct our efforts to preventing the discrim
ination In the distribution of these burdens, which really works greater
harm than the aggregate burden Itself.
WHAT IS WHISKEY?
It seems strange that just now, while u prohibition wave Is sweep.
Ing over the country, and county after county and state after state Is
trying to suppress the sale of liquor, the question “What Is whiskey?”
should b<d> up ns an unsettled question that drmnnded settlement by tha
highest authorities. Yet such Is the case.
The question has been put up to President Taft by a strong array
of lawyers. Among them were Joseph 11. Choate, former ambassador
to Great Britain, and John G. Carlisle, former secretary of the treas
ury. In addition, there were present the representatives of practically
nil the big distilleries of this country. Mr. Choate appeared for tha
Canadian Interests. Mr Carlisle represented the distillers of his native
slate, Kentucky, Attorney General Wickereham, Secretary of Agriculture
Wilson, and Dr. Harvey W W’lloy, the pure food expert, were lunong the
government representattves. For more than two hours they piled tha
president with varied Information on the subject, anil the result was that
Mr. Taft was compelled to side-step.
That Is always the case. Ixn anyone ask President Taft what is
whiskey, and he will be able off-hand to give complete information and
Indicate all the good points and the best brands. Hut after a bunch of
lawyers have explained, the clearest thing Is a muddle and nobody feels
certain of anything.
But how does It happen that now, when it seems that nobody should
care what whlakey Is because over half of the country is dry and the
dry area ts constantly spreading. It should require the highest authori
tative definition of what It la?
Under a ruling of former Attorney General Bonaparte, In consonance
with an opinion by Dr. Wtley, all whiskey not aged and freed from fu
sel oil by several years of storage In white onk barrels, which have been
charred on the tnstde, has been made subject to labelling under the head
of 'imitation" or "compound'' whiskey The distillers who purify tholr
product by higher forms of mechanical rectification and redistillation are
anxious to have this ruling reversed declaring they are suffering dam
age from the system of labeling now In vogue, whereas their whiskey is
as pure and free from deleterious Ingredients as the whiskey rectified in
the old fashioned w ay, and now regarded as the only ' straight" whiskey
on the market Most Scotch whiskies and some higher grades of rye
and sour mash In use in this country are classed as "Imitation" at pres
ent,
President Taft has referred the matter to other officii Is for fur
ther Investigation. Meanwhile those who have the passive!d and the
slnsoleons to get It will have to take what Is labeled whtskev and be
satisfied therewith.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
THE PRICE OF COTTON
Only Sur« Way to Raise it is by Growing Smaller Crops—Erazil’s
Experiment With Coffee Warehousing Recalled
Dan Sully is not a populist politi
cian and is doubtless not imbued with
the / same zeal in behalf of the dear
people that once Inspired “Cyclone ’
Davis, “Sockless" Simpson and some
other politicians of the latter eighties
and early nineties to demand the es
tablishment of government ware
houses for farm products, in ordei
that the prices of the same might
be fixed at a profitable figure. Dan
Is no politician at a! and has not
heretofore ranked as a philanthropist.
He is not on record as having given
much thought to the good of the pub
lie, but he was at one time a daring
plunger who came very nearly ‘doing
a groat thing for himself in the way
of a corner on cotton. Nevertheless
Dan’s later motives appear to be en
tirely pro bono publico, and he has a
scheme very nearly akin to that of
the former populist statesmen.
The price of cotton is at times
temporarily aliected by speculation
or other causes, but in the main it
depends, as does the price of nearh
all other commodities, on the basis
of supply and demand, and that is a
law Mr. Stilly has no'power to con
trol. The experience of Brazil in th?
attempted "valorization" of the Sao
Paulo coffee crops was an apt illus
.tration of such folly. That embodied
The Chumps of Shakespeare
(By Wex Jones)
I do not care a hang for art, but like to see a show
Where all the characters are folks just like tne ones we know;
That wear the niftiest things in clothes and sport the latest hats,
And look like people in the streets and live In Harlem flats,
And never say "Fair Maid’’ or "Zounds!” or "Prithee” and such stuff,
But spiel like you and me dc, and can that musty guff.
This Hamlet Shakespeare wrote about wore tights and talked erratic,
Enough to show an alienist he had mouses In his attic.
Why, if you talk to ghosts today the cops will quickly shelve you
In the panoramic, alcoholic, nutty ward at Bellevue—
That's why 1 say that "Hamlet’s” rot, the play is all a bunk,
And not a patch on modem shows, like all that ancient junk.
Tia same with al! his oilier shows—l laughed myself to death
Watching the tragedy he wrote about that boob Macbeth.
Instead of dodging quickly out before the row got hot,
The looney of the murdered stood talking to a spot!
They make me tired, these Shakespeare plays; It’s maybe that I’m
dense,
But give me .something up to date where the people’s got some sense.
SULLY’S SCHEME
Daniel J. Sully, the erstwhile
great cotton king, who once put more
money In the Southern farmer’s pock
et than any one man living, and got
treated like a dog for it when he
went broke on account of it, this
same Daniel Is now out with a great
scheme to help his unappreciative
Southern farmer so-called cronies, by
establishing a chain of warehouses
all over the South, so one-third of the
cotton crop can be held, which will
force tho price of the staple ’way
up. It is a good scheme, a grand
scheme, and if carried out success
fully would bring great piles of cash
to the South. But—our Daniel —whom
the South once failed to deliver out
of the lion's den —-doesn’t seem yet
to understand the Southern farmer
right good, and we are afraid his
great scheme will fall—though wt
trust and hope it will not.
The Southern farmer, as a whole
ought to be the richest farmer on any
of the satellites of the solar system.
Hut he is not. He Is Just the re
verse. IP- is the poorest. He Is
also one of the strangest compounds
of humanity in existence. We have
actually known him to abuse certain
things that were doing him the great
est good.
We think Mr. Bully's plan will fall,
though we hope it will not. There
is but one solution for the prosperity
"t>f the South, and that is more hog
and hominy and less cotton. When
the farmers learn not to depend on
the West for their meat houses an.t
coni cribs, then and not till then will
the problem of the South be solved
and she will he prosperous.—Madison
Advertiser.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦ POINT AND COUNTERPOINT ♦
♦ ♦
Cut Off Their Heads.
Of course the propensity to
steal may be cured hy surgery, as
a scientist claims. All that is re
quired is a simple amputation of
the patient’s bauds.—Augusta
Herald.
He might learn to steal with his
feet. The amputation of the head is
the only sure way that surgery offers
for curing a thief of the stealing habit.
—Jacksonville Tlmes-Unlon.
Cut ’Em Out.
I>r. Wiley declares that many of
the so called soft drinks contain
a deadly poison. Cut ’em out,
and make \he dope fiends drink
water, like the rest of us have to
do. —Augusta Herald.
That’s right. No use making fish
of one and fowl of another. —Dalton
Cltiten.
In Other Words, Hot Air.
Rome must have been visited
by a terrible storm. The Tribune-
Herald «a\> that "Rome real es
tate is up in the air." —Augusta
Herald.
It Is not real estate, hut the price
that Is up In the air.— Rome Tribune-
Herald.
Who is Responsible.
"The hair of Atlanta men must
be growing more bushy. lue bar
bers have found It necessary to
raise the price of a haircut to 35
cents." Augusta Herald.
The football player s tried this
thing and ho Armenian preachers and
Syrian missionaries have brought it
to a head. —Gainesville Herald.
an Idea similar to that which Mr.
Sully has in mind. The state gov
ernment of Sao Paulo first purchased
the coffee at a liberal price and stored
the surplus in warehouses waiting for
the rise in price in the foreign mar
ket and expecting small crops in the
years to come, but the price in the
foreign market never rose and the
production in the succeeding yearn
under the stimulant of this generous
aid was greater than ever. The re
sult was that the state was bank
rupt and the national government of
Brazil had to assume the debt and
take over the coffee, both of which
it still has.
The only way to insure a con
tlnued high price for cotton is to
grow less of it. During the Civil
war when little cotton was produced
the price of the staple reached a dol
lar a pound. It may be impractical
to secure that concentrated effort on
the part of planters that will reduce
the production, but If over the south
generally less land were devoted to
cotton and more to other crops there
is no doubt that southern agriculture
would be more profitable. This sound
doctrine has been preached for many
years without visible effect, but it is
more to be trusted that any scheme
Dan Sully may advance.—Nashville
Banner.
THE OFFENSES OF 1809
If Draco and Solon, the old-time law
makers, should revisit the earth, a
tour of investigation In these United
States would make it speedily clear
to them that we as moderns, as \»ell
as the ancients, busy ourselves pretty
much all the time with the framing of
new laws.
"I am fined for failure to provide
good drinking water on passenger
trains,” a Rhode Islander might say,
to which a fellow railroader in South
Carolina would add: “In this state a
jail sentence follows a neglect to pro
vide spittoons for every two seats in
our ears.” A man in Virginia says:
“I killed a partridge on February 2,
for which I must serve time in jail.”
In Tennessee a man must pay a fine
or serve three years' imprisonment
for killing fish with dynamite. In
Wisconsin a baker must serve three
weeks In jail for sleeping in his ba
kery. In California nurses are pun
ished by fine or imprisonment should
they fail, in the proper instance, to
notify the physician of certain phases
of illness in their patients. To wa
ter a bicycle path in the state of
Ohio is an offense punishable by heavy
fine and sometimes imprisonment.
In most of the states it is a penal
offense to tap a telegraph wire or to
sell kerosene that Is not up to the fire
test. If the old lawgivers were to
extend their tour of Investigation they
might learn of men fined or impris
oned for dropping advertising matter
In letter chutes; for gambling bv
means of slot machines, and for count
less other offenses, the very means
for committing which were unknown
100 years ago.—New York Financial
Review.
* men in the public eye ♦
♦ ♦
HON. THOS. E, WATSON.
"Half the time Tom Watson doesn't
know what he ts writing,” says the
Johnstown Democrat But you cannot
make people who have wrestled with
the ants-Tom end of an argument be
lieve It!—Washington Herald.
HON. CHARLEY EDWARDS.
\\ e would not think of discourag
ing Congressman Edwards In his ef
forts at well doing, but such evi
dences of disinterested patriotism in
these times of graft may be misun
derstood.—Columbus Enquirer-Sun.
ATTORNEY GENERAL HART.
Attorney General Hart is an un
usual man. He publicly disclaims
all credit from a successful suit Is
due him alone, and shares the praise
with his colleagues. The average man
wants to hog the praise and divide
the blame.—Rome Tribune-Herald.
HON. R. P. HOBSON.
There is no longer wonder why
Hobson has not been yelling about
the "yellow peril" and why the Chau
taqua circuits have been knowing;
him not of late. He has two chaps!
after his seat In congress.—Wilming
ton Dispatch.
MARK TWAIN.
Mark Twain had him a house built
recently among the Connecticut hills,
without seeing it until It was finished.
One of his s'ipulatlons was that it
should cost a certain sum. "Did it?"
! asked a friend of his recently. “Well,
j half of it did." replied the humorist,
sadly.—Atlanta Georgian.
Yen Never Saw a Finer
line of
SHIRTS
Than we are showing now.
It’s a regular Shirt Ex
position here these days.
All the best shirt-makers
have contributed, and ev
ery manufacture! knows
that when we offer liis
products, it is an added
endorsement of their
worth. That’s why we
have first choice of the
productions of Savoy,
Manhattan, Majestic—all
the best because they are
Dorr’s.
$1 to $4
Tailoring, Furnishings
Broadway, Augusta
Wan! to Contract
—FOR—
-1,000 tons of Tomatoes
SB.OO Per Ton
100 tons Sweet Potatoes
$9.00 Per Ton
100 tons of Beans
100 tons of Peaches
Price not fixed on Beans
and Peaches yet
Augusta Canning Co.
FRANK ROUSE
Pres, and Ireas. PHONE 477.
12 LOTS
Near Gwiwnett Street
and Railroad Avenue.
Will sell separately or as
a whole, at a bargain for
cash. For sale by
Clarence L Clark
812 Broad.
20-H. P. Model T-4 Cyli
nder 5 Pass, Ford
built of Vanadium steel. No car
at any price has better steel. The
best touring car built for SBSO.
Roadster $825.
Bet us show you how quiet, easy
and smooth it runs, also all kinds
of auto supplies and repairs.
Lombard Iron Works and Supply
Co.
Lombard Iron Works and
Supply Co.
Cattle Feeds
Ground Alfalfa, mixed with
ground grains, “Otto Weiss" for
Horses.
Ground Alfalfa and grains for
Cows.
Choice Green Alfalfa Hay.
Very choice
Timothy Hay, good stock.
Johnson Grass, good roughage.
N. L, Willst Seed Gc.
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
HARGRAVE
112 We3t 72D Street,
New York City
"NEW YORK'S MOST ACCESSIBLE
HOTEL.”
Six lines of transit, including ELE
VATED and SUBWAY EXPRESS
STATIONS, on block. Ideated be
tween Central Park and Riverside
Drive An absolutely fireproof, mod
ern, high-class family and transient
hotel. Appointments, service and
cuisine unexcelled. All rooms with
private bath. European plan.
$2 Per Pay and Upward
Send for booklet and map. Also Grand
View Hotel, ADI RONDACKS. Lake
Placid, N. Y.
THOMAS PARKES.
aaiUfUJAT, APRIL 17.
Results are What
Count!!
You always get the results
your doctor expects when you
have your prescriptions filled at
Alexander's}
Our prescription department
is equipped with the purest In
gredients; and three careful
men to handle the business.
REASONABLE PRICES
TO ALL.
Alexander Drug
Company
708 BROAD ST.
PHONE 44
Dalmation
Insect Powder
Good powder will be very scarce
and high for the next 12 months.
There are all grades now on the
market, and when you are offered
any at less than 60 cents per
pound you are getting a second
grade of powder. I made a contract
Bix months ago for four kegs. My
usual high grade powder. Every
grain will tell. It means death to
files and roaches. The price is 60
cents per pound, and same in 5 lb.
lots.
L. A Gardelle
Druggist.
620 Broad Street.
Awnings
Wall Paper
Mattings
LG. BAILIE & GO. S
Base Ball
Goods
OF ALL KINDS.
WHOLESALE AND RE
TAIL. TENNIS GOODS.
Richards
Stationery Co.
Baths
Turkish SI.OO
Russian 75c
Shampoo 50c
TURKISH BATH HOTEL,
HARISON BUILDING.
Scholarships
We believe in High-grade
Work; Thorough Instruction;
Efficient Bookkeepers and Ste
nographers.
In our Commercial Depart
ment, we teach Practical Book
keeping from start to finish.
Our Penmanship is not sur
passed in Georgia.
We teach the famous Chartier
System of Shorthand. A Sys
tem so simple that a child can
learn it, can write It, and, best
of all, can read it. It can be
written faster and read better
than any other system in the
world.
The very fact that it can he
learned with so much less study
than Is required for other sys
tems, gives our students twice
the time for Typewriting, Let
ter-Writing, Spelling, and all
those subjects that are absolu
tely necessary for a practical
business suecess.
Business men of Augusta are
beginning to appreciate this and
are sending to the Moss Busi
ness College for their office
help. g
Day and night sessions.
Call, write or 'phone for
information. 'Phone 1090.
The ’
Augusta Business College
A. C. MOSB, Principal