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{SEASON'S OUTING HATS ATTRACTIVE AND VARIED STYLES AHE OFFERED. Bmallf Close Shape ls the Best Liked1 j -Smart Models in Sailor Designa -Ratine and Linen Combine With Taffeta. Outing hats of this season are of many shapes and kinds and on the Tvhole are more attractive and varied thi-.n usual. Any of the small close [hats popular for street wear will serve tfor motoring, but it is well to have' .something dustproof for summer tour ing and many women object to being .swathe^ in all-enveloping dark veils with or without the shields over the eyes. A hat of burnt straw has a rounded crown o? the same straw, not too high, and fitted lightly ?down around the head without drooping too low over the forehead. In fact, there is a little curve or dent up at the left front which adds greatly to the be comingness of the j model. This hat ;Is extremely light Rubber and Silk. ?In weight, and its ?only trimming ls a folded band and a |bow of black patent leather lying close ly against the hat and looping exceed ingly smart against the yellow straw. The sailor takes on various forms 'this season. One smart model is made of glistening black rubber. The hat 'has a shapely crown and the narrow, ?slightly turn-down brim is lined in red ?taffeta. For riding. Bailor and con tinental shapes are the popular sum mer hats, but for winter and formal ; equestrianism the derby holds first 'place. English women rather like a ,rather wide brim derby or fine straw, and it has its merits, but it has not jbeen accepted here. Sailors are alwayB in vogue for gen eral outing wear, but the popular out ting hats of the summer are likely to be the panama, peanut, leghorn and other .scupple straws with brims that may be ; straped or caught as the wearer {pleases. Some good models have wide brims {drooping slightly all round and trimmed ifiimply with a *band of black velvet. lOthers are turned up directly in front or at the side and held by some sort of ornament, or perhaps the wide, soft ;brim merely rolls upward toward Its edge at the left front and is not caught up at all. Ratine and linen is also made up in icombination with taffeta. The white : ratine or linen on the outside with the 'under brim faced with black, blue, red or green taffeta. A fold of the col ored taffeta ear rounding the round shaped crown of the hat and held in place by little tabs of white material. An attractive and picturesque model of the felt and straw combination .s trimmed around Manila. ^s ^ow? ^at crown with a band of .Bulgarian embroidery. The brim is ;wide and drooping, making an excel lent protection for the sun, shore-wear | or canoeing on mountain lakes. There are a great variety of bathing .caps this season and the very newest (thing shown in this line perhaps is the two-piece rubber cap. The cap is of jtannish-colored ribbon, edged with black. There is a large, round shape, which is laid over the head, which, '.when placed on the head, falls in rip iples around the face. A scarf of the ?rubber is swathed around the head, ?holding the round piece of material In iplace, and ls tied in large loops and ?ends at the sides. * ?CACHET FOR THE PETTICOAT ?Band of Ribbon at the Knees Adds to Effect of Costume-Also May Be Worn Around Bust. The question of petticoats is a most {Important one just now, for with the ?narrow skirts and the lacy underslip* j required by fashion, one wonders hovi a girl is to acquire even that semi clothed look that ?B rather expected oi her, for her colored stockings wiL' show at the knees if she wears a lace petticoat, and there is no room for het skirts-however, a band of ribbon about six or seven inches wide can be run on flat at the knees and will great ly add to the effect of her costume. An other wide ribbon may be worn straight around the bust under th? arms and will bring out the lace bras (siere on top of her princess slip, and ?In the uncorseted days, if the ribbon I he boned slightly at front and back, j may really be worn with a well-made jlace brassiere instead of a corset, il .one be of the ultra slim figure that is |now en regie. Square Necks Worn. A peasant bodice cut out square to ?the bust line and filled in with folds ?of soft chiffon or net ls gradually win ning by a neck over the pointed d?col lette. As with all necks, whether round, square or V-shaped, lt has its omnipresent ruche of plaited lace or -net, and an original note on some of these gowns shows a fall of lace In the middle of the back from the up standing de Medici rafi-a jabot worn behind. &3 asi St? Perkins Sar^i and Door Company Manufacturers of High Grade Millwork Hardwood work a Specialty Rough and Finishing Work. Estimates on Request. AUGUSTA, GA. Fall Goods Ready We have made large purchases tor the fall season, and invite our friends to call to see us. Many of the nev/ goods ii ave arrived and there are others yet on the way. We have never before been in a better position to serve our friends than we are this fall. Come in and let us show you through erv department. J. W. PEAK. FIRE INSURANCE E. J. NORRIS, Agent Edgefield, South Carolina Representing the HOME INSURANCE COMPANY, of New York, and the old HARTFORD, of Hartford, Connecticut. The HOME has a greater Capital and Surplus combined than any other company. The HARTFORD is the leading com pany of the World, doing a greater Fire business than any other Co. See Insurance Reports PRUDENTIAL rwIFE "HAS THE STRENGTH OF GIBRALTAR." E. J. Norris, FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE. David Sltssky, Wholesale and Retail ROOFING MATERIALS Tin plate, galvanized corrugated iron shingles, rubber roofing, etc. Galvanized iron cornice and sheet metal work, skylights, ete. Stoves, ranges, mantels, tiling, grates, paints, oils, varnishes, etc 1009 Broad St., AUGUSTA, GA. Farm Land-Bargains 50,000 acres of improved and unimproved landsat prices that will sell them. These lands are situated in "Wire-Grass Georgia" the best farm ing section in the state. No terracing and no irrigation. 202? acres, 65 under cultivation, 85 acres fenced, mostly wire, 55 cleared, not broke. Near three churches, good school; on one public road and nearing another. Good 4-room frame house, two fire placts, irood barn and good well. 10 miles to two good markets. Rents for ?300 cash per year. Will sell for $15 per acre cash. 175 acres, one and one half miles from Lumber City, Ga.; 90 acres cleared, stumped and under cultivation; extra good 4-room house, two fire places; good barn; good well also spring on place. 130 pecan trees three years old and all under good wire fence. For quick sale wil^l take $25 per acre. These lands have good clay sub-soil and we have a number of others which we can not describe in this space. If these no not suit you let us hear from you and we will give you further information. If not as rep resented will pay your railroad tare. A. J. Wismer & Co. Lumber City, Georgia. CUTS INTERVIEW SHORT PLAIN CITIZEN DRAWS HIS WATCH ON PRESIDENT. Baltimore Man Thinks of Engagement With Wife, and Habit Made Him Run From the Presenco of Wood row Wilson Without Saying Goodby. It isn't often that a plain citizen like any one of us draws his watch and cuts short an in terview with the president of the United States Just because his wife has made him put on gray silk socks and other gay rags to attend an outing to the sea shore. That's what John Driver of Balti more did the oth er day. He knew his wife was wait ing for him, and it was just habit which made him snap his watch and run from the presence of Woodrow Wilson. "Gee," said Driver, in telling the story to friends. "I didn't know Pat Tumulty had gotten up in the world like that! Pat and I used to work in Newark, N. J., together 15 years ago, when we were kids, and we al most upset the town with our tricks taking pasture bars down and letting cows into the corn, filling wagon bot toms with water, overturning rain bar rels and the like. "Then we moved away. Pat got married and had children and so did I. I've been too busy lately reading trade journals to find where I can sell sashes, doors and blinds, to read any thing but the headlines of newspa pers. "My wife reads all the papers. She can tell you what the president or King George or Emperor William are doing Lay minute, and sometimes she's ashamed of me. "On Wednesday I came to Wash ington to try to sell some goods. I certainly was looking slick, if I do say it myself. My wife had eveD man icured my nails the night before. "Say, as I was walking along Penn sylvania avenue, who should I see driving dowu it in a great big automo bile but Pat Tumulty, my ?old friend Pat I puts my hands to my mouth to make a trumpet, and I yells at him: 'Hey, you Jersey skeeter, what you do ing up in that buzz wagon?' "Pat turned around, and when he sees me he runs the automobile up to the curb and grabs me and hugs me. 'What you doin' over here?' he says. I tells him, and we talks a few min utes, and then he says he's got to go. 'What you doinT I asks. 'I got a job up to the White House,' he says. 'Come and see me.' Then he has to go. "When I gets through my work, I goes around and I asks a man in a uniform for Mr. Tumulty. I supposed Pat was a doorkeeper or something like that. 'Are you Mr. Driver?' the man asks, and when I tells him I am, the fellow grins and shows me in. "Say, Pat Tumulty's in a great big room, and he's got a desk with a top to lt aB wide-" Driver looked about in desperation-"it's as big as this room! And shiny! 'What's this job you've got, Pat?' I asks. 'I'm secre tary to the president,' he says, and I almost drops dead. "And just then a man walks into the room yelling, 'The president of the United States.' Before I have time to touch my tie, in walks President Wilson and Tumulty says to him: 'Mr. President, I want to introduce my friend, Mr. Driver!" and he grins. The president grins, too. " 'Is this the man you were telling me about last night?' President Wil son asks. 'Yes,' says Tumulty. 'J want him to tell you the story of Par son Jones some time. There ain't no body can tell it like Jack.' "I opened my mouth-and Just then I think about the outing and my wife, and 1 grabs my watch out of my pock et, and it's two minutes to ll o'clock! "Two minutes to catch that train I 'Gee, I've got to get out of here,' I says, and makes a bolt for the door. 'Hey, wait a minute,' says Pat, laugh ins. The president was laughing, too. 'You can't neverTnake it that way*' And he presses a button and a black man comes and Pat says: 'Take Mr. Driver down to the train in the car, and make that train, do you under stand. Make it!' So I ducks without even sayin' goodby to the president, mind you. I'm ashamed of myself. "Well, the conductor had his hand on the bell cord when we were out side the station and I got up in the ma chine and yells: 'Hey, hold that car!' "The White House automobiles all have a coat of arms on 'em, you know. I wasn't thinkin' about that, but the station master sees it, and his arm stops as if it was paralyzed, and I jumps out and gets in. I ain't got much breath left." Demands of Vaudeville. "Vaudeville," says E. A. Woolf in the Dramatic Mirror, "now demands that the material in a playlet must be weighed with an idea; it must be free from horseplay; it must be developed in consistent character drawing; it must be along new lines; and, above all, it must be clean." Mr. Woolf writes thus encourageingly with the authority of one whose name last season "appeared upon more theatrical programs than that of any other author in the United States," according to the editor of the Mirror. The farmers are hereby notified that the Graniteville Mfg. Co. has re-opened its cotton market at Graniteville, for the purchase of cotton from wagons, and will probably buy cotton direct from the producers during the remainder of the season. Our market closes promptly at 12 o'clock on Saturdays. A. H. GIBERT, Secretary. Kara m *((?i iPfl*JViHffr.'- iHft.lP:r/?vir-W\\V>;p? i Fresh Seed For Green Lots and Cover Crops. The farmers of Edgefield county have learned the value of winter cover crops and are year by year by year increasing the acreage of winter crops. The sea son is approaching for sowing these crops, also for sowing green lots, and we have received large shipments ot Barley, Rye, Vetch, Crimson Clover And Appier Oats. We ordered these seed from the larg est and most reliable house in the South, therefore we knaw they are dependable and will germinate. Come in and let us supply your needs. W. W. Adams & Co. TM la r?~- . SJ! fi;- . >J o . -?J <i> ? tis Fire Proof Roofing What could be better for town or country buildings than a roofing that won't bum-won't leak-that is lightning proof-lasts as long as the building itself, and never needs repairs ? Cortright Metal Shingles meet every one of these requirements. Beware of imitations-None genuine without the words " Cortright Reg. U. S. Pat. Off." stamped on each shingle. For Sale b$ Stewart & Kernaghan Don't Read If not interested. But you are obliged to be interested where mon ey is to be saved in the purchase of necessities of life both for your self and livestock. We are now in our warehouse, corner of Fenwick and Cumming streets, two blocks from the Union Passeager Station where we have the most modern warehouse in Augusta with floor space of 24,800 squa.e feet and it is literally packed with Groceries and feeds from cellar to roof. Our stock must be seen to be appre ciated. Our expenses are at least $450.00 a month less since discon tinuing our store at 863 Broad street, and as goods are unloaded from cars to wareheose, we are in a position to name very close prices. If you really want the worth of your money see or write us . & CO. Augusta, Ga. - f The Gel More Eggs i?oii; whon QKZ prices are hiph. Winter cess cost no more than at other seasons, but thev sell for more. Feed your layers a varied ration and include Pr?!? Poultry Regulator Heavy egg production Is assured. "Your money back if it fails." Tn packages to suit your needs 28c. 60c, $1; 25-lb Pall. $2.50 l?O-pairo pouttrv book PRBH. Get Pratts Profit-sharing Booklet. W. E. LYKCH & CO., L. T. MAY, JONES & SOW, TIMMONS & MORGAN, Edgefield, ?od S. T. HUGHES, Trenton