Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, APRIL 27.
FAMILY CURED OF
SKIN MOLES
Two Little Girls had Eczema Very
Badly—ln One Case Child's Hair
y Came Out and Left Bare Patches
Father's Head Sore from Child
hood—ln All Three Cases
CUTICURA MET WITH
ITS USUAL SUCCESS
“ I have two little girls who have been
troubled very badly with eczema. One
cf them bad it on her lower limbs. I
did everything that I could hear of for
her, but it did not give in until warm
weather when it seemingly subsided.
The next winter when it became cold
weather the eczema started again and
also in her head where it would take the
hair out and leave bare patches as large
as a quarter of a dollar. At the same
time her arms were sore the whole
length of them. I took her to x phy
sician and he said that she had two
distinct types of eczema. I OSttijiued
with him for several weeks and the
child grew worse all of the time. Her
sister’s arms were also affect®, in the
same way. My husband caurt home
one dav with a box of Cutic.ra Oint
ment and a cake of Outicura 3oap. I
began using them and also the Nutieura
Pills and by the time the second lot was
used their skin was soft and smooth as
it had not been before for the winter.
We keep the Cuticura Soap and Cuti
cura Ointment constantly by us and
when any little roughness or irritation
appears on their skin I quickly dispel it
with the Cuticura Remedies. My husband
has used them with most satisfactory
results for a sore head which has troub
led him from childhood. Mrs. Charles
Baker, Albion, Me., Sept. 21, 1908.”
Cuticura Ointment is one of the most
successful remedies for torturing, dis
figuring humors of the skin aad scalp,
including loss of hair, of infanta, children
and adults, ever compounded, in proof
of which a single anointing with it, pre
ceded by a not bath with Cuticura
Soap, and followed by mild doses of
Cuticura Pills, is often sufficient to afford
immediate relief in the most distressing
forms of itching, burning and scaly
humors, eczemas, irritations and inflam
mations, permit rest and sleep and point
to a speedy cure when all else fails.
Cuticura Roap (25c.), Ointment (50c.), Resolvent
(50c.), and Chocolate Cob ted Pills (25c.). arc nokl
throughout the work). Potior Drug & Chem. Corp„
Bole Props.. 137 Columbus Ave.. Boston.
iYF~Mailed Free. Cuticura Book on Skin Diseases.
SOCIETY
MRS. CLOUDMAN'S PARTY
FOR MISS LOIS RENNIE.
Next Friday at the Piedmont Driv
ing club Mrs. .1. D. Cloudman will en
tertain the senior class of Washing
ton Seminary at a lovely paaty in
special compliment to Miss Lois Ren
nie, one of its most popular mem
bers. Receiving with Mrs. Cloudman
and Miss Rennie will be Misses Grace
-Mooney, Annie May Lester. Nan
Young, Leora Wright and Jean Aus
tin, and assiting in the entertainment
of the guests will be Mrs. T. H. Ren
nie, Mrs. W. R. B. Whittior, Mrs.
James Morrow, Jr., Mir*. Frederick
Everhard Foster, Mrs. L. C. Mansell
and Miss Ethel Fischer.—Atlanta
Georgian.
—Mies Alma Clarke is visiting in
Hephzibah.
4% 4%
The Planters
Loan And Savings
Bank,
705 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
The Pioneer Savings
Institution of Augusta.
(In Operation 38 Years.)
Resources Over One
Million Dollars.
This bank pays 4 per cent
Interest to depositors and gives
the same careful attention to
small accounts, as to the larg
er ones.
Safe as the “Safest.”
The accounts of thrifty, ener
getic conservative people solic
ited. Deposits may be made by
mall.
L. C. HAYNE President
CHAS. C. HOWARD Cashier
Diamonds
OF RARE BEAUTY, blue, white and perfect. Every
stone selected with the greatest care to suit people
of good taste. Prices always the lowest.
Wm. Schweigert & Co.
MR. F. L. WOOD WEDS
MISS AMOSS TOMORROW.
The marriage of Miss Olivia Re
becca Amosß and Mr. Frederick 1,.
Wood will take place tomorrow, Wed
nesday afternoon, at three o’clock at
the home of the bride's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. "Ernest Pounds, 564 Rey
nolds street, and not at five, on ac
count Of a change In the railway
schedule. After the ceremony the
young couple will leave on the four
o'clock Southern train for a visit In
South Carolina.
There will be a number of out-of
town guests in attendance at the wed
ding. The c9fentony will be perform
ed by Rev. Richard Wilkinson.
MRS FAROO ENTERTAINS.
Mrs. Joseph Fargo entertained tour
tables of bridge players yesterday as
ternoon.
MISS VIRGINIA ANDERSON
ENTERTAINS FRIDAY.
Miss Virginia Anderson has sent
out cards for a dancing party at the
Country club on Friday evening at 9
o'clock.
MR. J. W. VAUGHN WEDS
MISS SARAH MILLS.
The marriage of Miss Sarah Mills
and Mr. J. W. Vaughn, of Waynes
boro, took place last evening In
North Augusta. Rev. Mr. Stokes of
ficiating. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn will
make their home in Waynesboro,
where Mr. Vaughn is In the furniture
business.
BRILLIANT AUDIENCE AT
THE MUBIC FESTIVAL.
It has been a long time since there
has been a more brilliant or repre
sentative audience at the Grand than
that last evening to greet the world’s
famous singers musicians, and
the picture presented of the rarely*
beautiful gowns, the lights and flow
ers, the general air of enjoyment Of
one of incomparable beauty. From
pit to dome the vast house was filled
and theYe was not a person In the au
dience that did not add to the pic
turesqueness of the beauty. There
were many little theatre parties all
over the house and there were sev
eral brilliant box parties. Entertain
ing in the boxes were Mr. and Mrs.
James tl. Jackson, Mrs. Pillotson,
'Mr. and Mrs. Landon Thomas, Mr.
Jack Cranston, Mrs. John W. Herbert,
Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Pope.
MRS. JOSEPH EVE CAMPBELL
ENTERTAINS CARD CLUB.
Mrs. Joseph Eve Campbell will en
tertain her card club on Thursday.
—Mrs. Robert Yancey and Miss
Florence Lancey left today for their
home In Rome, after a delightful visit
with Mrs. Charles Phinizy and Miss
Mary Lou Phinizv.
—Mrs. H. H. Townes, of Edgefield,
and Miss Dosia Wertz, of Johnston,
were guests of Mrs. J. W. Swindell
for the Music Festival.
Tutt’sPills
FOR TORPID LIVER.
A torpid liver deranges the whole
system, and produces
SICK HEADACHE,
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
There Is no better remedy for these
commoo diseases than DR. TUTT’S
LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove.
Take No Substitute.
ANEW
DECLARATION
OF INDEPENDENCE
Perhaps you thoroughly endorse
every word of the Declaration of
American Independence, but at
the same time you fail to take
steps to make yourself
Financially
Independent
The way to beoome so Is to start
a savings account in our Bank,
and add to it from week to week
or month to month.
Irish American Bank,
“The Bank For
Your Savings”
Pays 4 per cent, computed semi
annually. It is the Bank that
treats you right, is Safe, Central,
Progressive, Accommodating.
QUALITY ENTERS FIRST INTO EVERY PURCHASE WE MAKE
If there is one thing more than anything else, we wish to emphasize it’s the reliability of the goods you buy here. If mistakes
should creep in you have our strong guarantee that we will make it right. That’s worth a great deal especially in buying
White Goods.
QUALITY WHITE GOODS AT ANDREWS’ REDUCED FOR TOMORROW.
FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY.
10-4 Bleached Utica Sheeting, at .28 cts
9-4 Bleached Utica Sheeting, at ..26 cts
Alpinse Rose Sheeting, Genuine( Labeled)
at, 10V 2 c
Lonsdale Cambric, best quality, (Labeled)
at ' 10V 2 c
No Phone Orders.
Phone
!83
Misses Annie and Julia Co'lins, of
Savannah their sister, Mrs. W. H.
Leaker.
—Mrs. Cornelius Moses, of Savan
’nah, is the. admired guest of Mrs.
Henry Cohen.
—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butt will
leave next week for Texas, where
they will visit a number of the larger
cities of that state. To the regret
of their hosts of friends here, Mr.
and Mrs. Butt will next autumn go to
Dallas to make their home.—Atlanta
Constitution.
—Miss Hazel Brand, of Florence,
and Miss Brand, of Wilmington, N.
C., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. VV. S.
Brand.
—Mrs. Frank Beane will leave to
morrow for Greensboro, Ga., where
she goes to attend the funeral of Mrs.
Minnie Knowles Jones, which takes
place tomorrow afternoon.
THRO'A LORGNETTE
For the Support of the Children's
Hospital—Light Mourning—Time
for Courtesy—lndustrial Depart
ment of the Y. W. C. A.
The fact that a strictly up-to-date
children’s hospital is to be erected
and equipped in Augusta means a
great deal, but it does not mean that
the women who have so faithfully
worked to bring about what is now
announced as a certainty through the
generosity of a stranger to our city
are free from all financial responsi
bility in this matter. It is a foregone
conclusion that they will take the
most active part in thp administration
of business matters connected with
the hospital, but there has been some
misunderstanding in regard to the ti
nanctal responsibility. The generous
woman who will erect and furnish the
building has not proposed to support
the institution, and so It is absolutely
necessary that our Children’s Hospital
Association raise the money necessary
for this support. The encouragement
given the association by the erection
of the building makes them doubly
eager to raise the money for running
expenses, and every effort is being
made towards that end.
It is a doubly popular chord that
has been struck with the decision to
bring the Coburn players to Augusta
for the benefit of the association, for
naturally everybody In the city cares
a great deal, a very great deal, for
the object in view, and there Is natu
rally intense Interest expressed in the
prospect of a great Shakespearean
play being produced out-of-doors, some
thing that is entirely new to Augus
tan*. The Coburn Players have a
trtmendous reputation and deserve to
be enthusiastically received on their
own merits, but the benefit they have,
chosen entitles them to an additional
cordiality of welcome.
The society reporters tell us they
have been very much puzzled, even
bewildered, by the shadowy distinc
tion in regard to mourning made by
certain people who go out and who
yet don’t go out. Perhaps some Il
lustration may be afforded them by
a little paragraph in the May "Lippln
cott."
Mrs. Baker—“ Mrs. Smith is wear
ing light mourning.”
Bobble—" What is light mourning,
Ma?”
Mrs. Baker—"lt’s the kind that per
mits you to go to matinees but not.
to evening performances.”
An exceedingly busy Augusta wo
man who has a i housand-and-one inter
ests that constantly pull her In one di
rection and then pother was recently
telling a friend how her strenuous ey.
Istence was making her lost to all
the graces of life; how it was al
most impossible for her to enjoy for
a minute over the allotted time r,.ic
pleasure offered her because she was
thinking of the time thus robbed from
an hour set aside for something else.
The friend who was slightly older
and Infinitely wiser, strongly advised
a retrenchment somewhere, and went
on to tell how her father, who was
brilliantly successful both socially
and in the business world, had made
It his Invariable rule never to make
any engagement that did not allow
ample margin for the amenities of
life. Then came the query, could her
lather have done this If he were Hy
ing In this first ten years of the
Twentieth Century?
All existence Is with us such a
rush and whirl that all anybody thinks
of Is how they can best save time
and save time and save time, until
one elimination and then another of
courtesy is made with the result that
politeness Is regarded as an altogeth
er superfluous commodity, and some
thing that If carried too far will mili
tate strongly against success.
It is within the past few months
that the manager of a telephone com-
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
JiMDREIVS BROS. CO.
pany in a largo city Issued instruc
tions to the girls that in asking what
number was wanted they should nev
er say “please.” By actual count, he
said, the girls had been saying
"please” nine hundred thousand times
a day. Allowing half a second for Its
utterance, here was an awful daily
waste of one hundred and twenty-five
hours, a sheer loss of sixty months
In every year.
Does this portend a world-wide
change? Such a change can by no
means be regarded as a reform. Good
morning, for instance, is doubtless
said a hundred million times every
day in the United States, but who
wants to eliminate the exchange of
greetings between friend and friend?
No, the reform needed is that which
will dictate that no task or pleasure
shall be undertaken that cannot be
at least comfortably and courteously
carried through, and that will make it
Augusta Woman’s Shopping Mecca
Mullarky & Sullivan Co.
Silks, Foulards and Taffetas
In a Big: Reduction Sale
THAT ASSUREDLY PRESAGES A THRONG TOMORROW. SUCH AS YOU HAVE DOUBT
LESS SEEN HERE UPON SIMILAR RARE OCCASIONS FOR WOMEN KNOW THAT WHEN WE
MARK SILKS AT SUCH A REDUCTION IT PAYS TO DROP EVERYTHING AND BE HERE.
Cheney Bros., Shower Proof Foulards—new, late
spring designs, in all leading shades, regular
stock goods, at SI.OO,
now **
40 Pieces Louisine Taffeta colored grounds,
striped effects, all shades, 85c grade, AQr
now ~
White China Silk—2o inches, | Q r
Washable, at 1
White China Silk —36 inches,
Washable, at O VC-
Black China Silk—waterproof, spot proof, per
spiration proof and fast black—four C Qr r
best cardinal virtues, 28 in., at
36 inch, at 75c and SI.OO
Black Taffeta —36 inches, Lyons 7^l^
dye, only .. J
bodies’ Muslin Gowns
1 BIG LOT OF GOWNS AND SKIRTS —regular SI.OO quality, lace and embroidery trimmings, care
fully made, artistically designed, at a closing out 59c
price
LADIES’ 25c MUSLIN DRAWERS--hemmed, tucked, full size, good muslin,
at •
20 PIECES, CREAM DANISH CLOTH -non shrinkable and washable, 15c
at
A Dress Goods Special of INote
10 PIECES HAIR STRIPE, WHITE GROUND SIOILLIAN, 50c and 59 39c
grade, at *"
1 BIG LOT OF DRESS GOODS—in newest shades, solid colors,, Ricillian, Brilliantinos, 39C
Serges, Albatross and Panamas, 50c and 59c, now cut, to
714 c, 40 inch Lawn, at 5 cts
10c, 40 inch Lawn, at 7)4 cts
15c, 40 inch Lawn, at 10 cts
19c, 40 inch Lawn, at 12)4 cts
42 inch Persian Lawn, 22c finality, 15 cts
45 inch Pc'.inn Lawn, 25c quality, 18 cts
seem ever more and more desirable
that leisure be obtained for all tn <
nmenltles of life.
The work of our Younq Woman's
Christian Association is being so sue
CMsfutly carried on that naturally
those who have made possible its
splendid results will be interested in
certain broader phases of the work
as they are undertaken in the larger
cities. The ladles’ World for May
has some rather important things to
tell of the Industrial department of
the association, a department thnl
lnighi be undertaken with profit by
our local Y. W. C. A.
The industrial department of the
Young Women's Christian Association
Is of far-reaching importance. It is
carried on in factories, hotels, laun
dries, bakeries, packing houses and
potteries and In some mining villages.
The idea Is to give the girls who live
40 inch liT‘.iM>i ,I ,ecl English Batiste, 25t
quality, at 19 cts
75c Sheets, no Seam, 81x90, 48 cts
15c Pillow Eases, 45x36, 9 cts
The best Poplins on the markekt —white,
black and all colors, at 25 cts
36 inch Imported English Rep., white on
ly, at 29 cts
far away from the association build
ngs ns many of Its advantages as is
possible during the noon hour, or dur
ing the evenings. It brings Into their
lives much that Is beautiful, teach
tfig them the arts of the home and
thereby molding them Into better sis
ters, daughters or wives. For in
stance, there are the educational
classes, such as nature study, passo
partoutlng pictures, talks on travel
or various practical subjects, cooking
(held In a room fitted up by the man
agement) and dressmaking. These
classes nr? interspersed with gymna
sium drills, games, music and the sto
ries of the Gospel, Self-governing
clubs are also organized, containing
social, religious and educational feat
ures. It Is in these clubs that the
girls truly find themselves and de
velop latent talents by having respon
sibilities of different character thrown
upon them.
36 inch Black Taffeta —superior finish, ft Or'
French make, a leader, at OVC*
36 inch Black Taffeta —never tear <PJ flO
quality, guaranteed, at «4/I«vr\/
36 inch Black Taffeta—sl.so grade, JQ
Seco Silk —used from sea coast to sea coast and
every where between and here for Augusta.
A silk that has stood the test, for wear, 3 Or*
28-in fancy novelty designs, at cFVv
Seco Silk drilling finish, in plain, all C/r
pastel and spring shades, colors, at
36 inch Black Habutai de Swiss—a <t| OO
cool, soft silk fir summer, at
10 cents Side Border Percales, .... 7&c
PAGE THREE
862
Broad
These young women’s clubs repre
sent. such varied walks In life—tha
mill girl, the millionaire’s daughter,
the shop-girl and the university stu
dent that the organization in Its pres
old developed state might be likened
to a great river fed by many tribu
taries. We trace some of these back
to their source, and we find that In
New York In 1858 were a group of
women who came together for tha
special purpose of caring for the wel
fare of girls, and that by 1870 It. had
developed into the Ladies Christian
Union. The hearts of the women of
Boston, who knew the lives of work
ing girls in the crowded atties of cheap
boarding houses, were stirred to unite
for the same purpose. In less than
two years unions were formed in sev
en other cities, and In 1870 ten more
were added.
THE LADY IN GREY.