Newspaper Page Text
THT T RSDAY, AUGUST 24. 1022.
MONUMENTS
FIRST CLASS WORK
MARBLE A GRANITE
Office in Dr. Bush New Building
WINDER MARBLE A GRANITE CO.
J. W. NICHOLS. Mgr.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
RICHARD B. RUSSELL, JR.
Attorney-At-Law
WINDER, GA.
Office In Carithers Building.
Practice in All the Courts
G. D. ROSS JULIAN E. ROSS
ROSS & ROSS
Attorneys-At-La w
Winder, Ga.
Office Over City Pharmacy
Practice in all the Courts.—
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY
j. C. PRATT
Attorney-At-Law
Winder, Ga.
Office in Bush Building
t Practice in all Courts
JOSEPH D. QUILLIAN
Attorney-at-Law
Office Over DeLaFerriere"* Drug store
Winder, Georgia.
G. A. JOHNS
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Office Over Caritheys Bank.
Practice In All Courts.
W. II QUARTERMAN
Attorney at Law
Prentice In All Courta
Commercial Law a Specialty
j. ELTON DRAKE
Attorney-At-Law
Office in DeLaPerrlere Building.
Winder, Georgia
W. L. DeLaPERRIEUE
Dental Surgery
Fillings, Bridge and Plate Work
Done in Most Scientific and
Satisfactory Way.
Dlt. C. S. WILLIAMS
DENTIST
Offices in the Winder National Bank
Building.
Rooms 313-314
Residence Pbone 234 —Office Phone 81
WINDER, GA.
I)R. R. P- ADAMS
General Practice
Bethlehem, Georgia.
Phones: Office 24. Residence 6
Dr. L. C. Allen Dr. Myron B. Allen
DU. L. C. ALLEN & SON
HoNchton, Ga.
Office Hours:
Sundays: 9:00 A. M. to 11:00 A. M.
Wednesdays: 8:00 A. \l. to IJ:*w) M.
Saturdays, all day until 3:00 P. M.
All other time when not attending calls
It. lIENItI BAItNES, I). C.
(Doctor Chiropractic)
CHIROPRACTIC
is the adjustment of the spine to re
move the cause of disease.
SPINAL ANALYSIS FREE
Hours: 9 to 12 A. M.
2 to 5 P. M.
Saturday 9 to 12:30 A. M.
Office New Bush Building.
B. E. PATRICK
Jeweler
Room 403, 4th Floor
, Winder National Bank Bldg.
Winder, Ga.
8. M. ST. JOHN
Jeweler
Watches, .Clocks. Jewelry, Cut Glass
and Silverware.
Repair Work Done Promptly
Broad Street Wluder, Ga.
W. M. THOMA S
'Cleaning—Pressing—Altering
\P4ietic 49 —Jackson Street
Winder, Georgia
WHEN YOl’R BATTERY' 01t
APTOMOBILE IS SICK
CALL NO. 0 The AUTO DOCTORS
Office Hours All Day and Night
AUTO SALES CO. „
ATHENS STREET
PHONE SO
CITIZENS PRESSING CLUB
For Your
Cleaning, Pressing an Altering
Shop over Williams Bros. Cafe.
\y it WI LSI N. Crop.
Winder, Georgia
Hunger, Hie Best Sauce.
Sauce is used to create an appetite or
relish for the food. The rigid way is
to look to your digestiou. When you
have giwal digestion you are certain to
relish your food. Chamberlain’s Tablets
improve t te digestion, create a healthy
appetite and cause a gentle movement
of the bowels. Ad\t.
It must be tine to l>e a detective and
get baffled one and occasionally.
SNAP SHOTS
vr. H. FAUST
If some of tie Georgia legislators
had to ride to Savannah over the rough
roads, and also to Brunswick, instead
of in paid-for Pullmans, they would be
more in earnest about good roads.
*
Things may be bad now but suppose
street cars were pulled by soft eoul
burners?
i
We would like to ask the capitalists
and the strikers what good results are
coming to the general public from pres
ent conditions?
§
Every fellow who feels that the
world is soon to be ideal bail just as
well realize that out of Christ it is
a destined failure.
i
You have no doubt noticed that men
never boast of their poor start in life
until they have good, fat bank accounts.
I
And after all success may not be so
much due to the wisdom of the suc
ceeder as to the foolishness of the
masses.
I
Democracy is fine down here hut with
limitations removed most of us want
n king in heaven.
S
If our public schools were to teach
more of the Constitution and less of
dead languages we would have more
real live-wire citizens.
8
Why “cuss” and rear so much about
the necessity of teaching English in
our schools and exclude German, and
continue to teach other dead foreign
languages?
f
One hundred per cent Americanism
demands that we speed proportionately
as much on the lower grades in school
as we do on those higher up.
i
Short skirts will attract some men
for a time, but gingham aprons usually
hold them longest.
I
Some men are so peculiar that they
feel that about the only place for a
woman in life is in the kitchen.
I
When you watch I lie conduct of some
men you begin to cultivate a profound
respect for goats, fishworms and ants.
Don’t quarrel if you would not have
I
the other fellow in the game know that
you are ns big fool as lie is.
Mrs. H. T. Jennings
Passes Away Tuesday
On Tuesday at eleven o’clock, at a
hospital in Atlanta, Mrs. 11. T. Jennings
passed away. The news of her death
will he a great shock to her family and
friends in this section.
Mrs. Jennings has been in ill health
for several years, and during her res
idence in Hus county, underwent sev
eral surgical operations. She moved,
with her family, to Atlanta last No
veinher, and since going there has been
an Inmate of a hospital in that city,
but all the medical skill of expert prac
titioners failed to bring relief, and site
succumbed to the attack of a complica
tion of diseases.
Mrs. Jennings was a Miss Haralson,
and was reared in Mississippi, later
moving near Winder. She was the wife
of Mr. 11. r Jennings, and is surviv
ed by her husband, three sons and four
daughters. She was about 43 years
old.
Her body was interred in a cemetery
in Cobh county, near smyrna on Wed
nesday.
Mrs. Jennings was a good woman and
her death is a source of great sorrow
to her family and friends.—Jackson
Herald.
FIGHT ON WEEVIL
MUST NOT CEASE
After toiling all night the fishermen'
were thoroughly tired out and discour
aged and were ready to give up. Then
the Lord told them to make another
effort -try the other side of the ship.
When tiie boll weevils seem to have the
farmer on the run, then is tile time to
make the tight for life for the family
and death to the weevil, even though
the odds seem overpowering and almost
useless. By a supreme effort it is pos
sible to raise at least n small crop of
cotton. A crop cannot be made by
letting up. To tight everlastingly is
the only hope of cotton growers in F.l
bert county. To do less is to Invite dis
aster. The farmers have fought hard
and successfully thus far. and it would
In* suicide to quit the tight as long as
there is a holl weevil in sight. - Eibor
ton Star.
Eve repented, of course; but it is
probable that site spent many twilight
hohrs in later years thinking how good
the apple was.
News Want Ads r>e line.
PROF H. R. GARRETT
ENDORSES HUBBELL
The following letter is from Prof.
H. R. Garrett, formerly of Southeas
tern Christian College, endorsing Dr.
Geo. A. Hubbell, new head of South
eastern Christian College.
Harrowgate, Tenu, Aug. 1, 1922.
Mr. Claud Mayue,
W’iuder, Ga.
Dear Mr. Mayne.
I hear with much pleasure that Dr.
Geo. A. Hubbell lias undertaken to fi
nance Southeastern Christian College
located at Auburn, Ga.
It is needless to say that I am great
ly Interested in the success of an in
titution to which I have given six years
of my life.
Knowing Dr. Hubbell as I do and
having ever before me the visible evi
dences of his successful efforts during
a period of twelve years, I am made to
look with expectancy to the future of
8. C. C.
I am greatly impressed when I look
about me and see the wide stretch of
farming lands so well equipped with
necessary implements, the splendid
barns, the creamery, the woodworking
building, the chicken farm, the great
expense of timber lands along the
mountain side, and nearer at hand, Av
ery, Grant, Lee, I). A. It. and Norton
Halls, the music conservatory, the El
len Mvers School, the best engineering
building, together with the cottages for
teachers all dedicated to the education
of people of this section, and when I
see a procession of seven to eight hun
dred within a year taking advantage of
the opportunities offered, the larger
per cent of whom are enabled by some
kind of work to pay a part of their ex
penses, I realize the great service lie
has rendered to the people of the
Mountain country. I know too that it
is largely due to his Interest in human
welfare and untiring labors that all
this has been realized, and I am hop
ing that some like vision with refer-
ence to his new undertaking may pos
sess him and that he may be wonderful
ly successful in its accomplishment.
Auburn is well fittisl for just such a
plant. It is sufficiently accessible and
at the same time secluded enough that
the school may be the greatest local
attraction and interest and its influence
thus count for full value.
Thou, too, lands can be had at rea
sonable prices and buildings and im
provements nude at a minimum of ex
pense.
The possibilities for A splendid
school nro there. The field is a good
one, and the people will respond with
money and patronnge when they
,foel assured of the school’s success.
The school is needed and it may yet
be counted the greatest service of his
life. T wish him great success.
With personal regards. T am.
Cordially yours.
11. R. GARRETT.
OGLETHORPE COUNTY SINGING
COM ENTION
The Oglethorpe County Singing Con
vention will meet at Arnoldsville, 12
miles below Athens down the Georgia
railroad the First Saturday and Sun
day in September, and we give Barrow
county singers a special invitation to
eime and he with us. L. If. Sheridan,
President.
Play doubtless would be very tire
some if we had to follow it to earn a
living.
Indigestion
Many persons, otherwise
vigorous and healthy, are
bothered occasionally with
Indigestion. The effects of a
disordered stomach on the
system are dangerous, and
prompt treatment of indiges
tion is important. “The only
medicine I have needed has
been something to aid diges
tion and clean the liver,”
writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a
McKinney, Texas, farmer.
“My medicine Is
Thedford’s
BLACK-DRAUGHT
for indigestion and stomach
trouble of any kind. I have
never found anything that
touches the spot, like Black-
Draught. I take it in broken
doses after meals. For a long
time I tried pills, which grip
ed and didn’t give the good
results. Black-Draught liver
medicine is easy to take, easy
to keep, inexpensive.”
Get a package from your
druggist today—Ask for and
Insist upon Thedford’s —the
only genuine.
Get it today.
□ EM B
THE WINDER NEWS
Winder K. K. K Help*
Another Needy Family
Winder, Ga., Aug. 15, 1922.
Mr. It. E. Sheppard,
W’inder, Ga.
Dear Sir.
This package of food is intended for
Mr. J. It. Brown. Please deliver same
to him. Yours truly,
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
Mr. J. It. Brown, Winder, Ga.
Dear Sir: —We have been informed
that you are sick and in need of some
food, and are without means of buy
ing same. Therefore, we being a body
of men organized to look after charita
ble causes, we send this box of food,
and trust that its nourishment will aid
in restoring you to health.
If in need of further assistance from
ns, let us know. Yours truly,
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
The following note was received ac
knowledging receipt of the package of
food:
Winder, Ga., Aug. 16, 1922.
Winder Klan, No. 55. Dear Sirs:—
arid Friends:—M.v family and 1 do
highly appreciatte the package that
was sent to me by Mr. R. E. Sheppard
on August 15. It was received gladly
and thankfully, more than words cau
express. May the Lord he with the
Winder Klan No. 55.
J. R. BROWN.
BETHEL NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. .T. W. Adams a.id chil
dren were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. C. A, Edwards Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. (’. 11. Partin and little
daughter, Maryleen, were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Partee Sunday.
Miss Agnes Baggett was the guest of
her grand mother, Mrs. Julia Kilgore.
Wednesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. IV. C. Shore and litile
daughter, Lillie Ruth, wore guests of
Mr. and Mrs. .1. W. Partee, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Perkins of
Bethlehem were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
C. A. Edwards Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. ML Adams and Mr
and Mrs. T. W. Partee were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Adams awhile Sun
day night.
Miss Ara Partee was the guest of
Miss Agnes Baggett awhile Thursday.
Size isn't everything. The bigger they
are the harder they fall.
0/ The neu> Goodyear
H o*/ Cross-Rib Tread Cord
*
Discounting the “Discount
in Advance
You don’t have to be a shrewd bargainer to get the bottom price on
the new Goodyear Cross-Rib Tread Cord.
Instead of listing it at a high price, to enable the dealer to attract you
with a so-called “long discount,” we list it as low as we profitably can.
You see from the figures below that its advertised price is lower
than the net price you are asked to pay for many “long discount”
v tires of unknown value.
We believe the average man would rather buy tires on this frank and
open basis, and assure himself a product of recognized worth.
The new Goodyear Cross-Rib Tread Cord is made of high-grade
long-staple cotton, and it embodies the patented Goodyear method
of group-ply construction.
In design, materials and manufacture it is a representative Goodyear
product, built to safeguard the world-wide Goodyear reputation.
It has a different tread from the famous All-Weather Tread Cord—
a new tread with a deep, clean-cut, cog-like pattern—and it sells for.
substantially less.
Compare these prices with NET prices you are asked to pay for ”long discount ” tires
30 x3pi Clincher $12.50 32x4 Straight Side.. $24.50 33x4>£ Straight Side.. $32.15
30x3Uj Straight Side.. 13.50 33x4 Straight Side.. 25.2 5 34x4>£ Straight Side.. 32.95
32x iyi Straight Side.. 19.25 34x4 Straight Side.. 25.90 33x5 Straight Side.. 39.10
31x4 Straight Side,. 22.20 32x4>j Straight Side.. 31.45 35 x 5 Straight Side.. 41.05
These prices include manufacturer s excise tax
Goodyear Cross-Rib Tread Cord Tires are also made in 6, 7 and 8 inch sizes for trucks
FOR SALE BY
THE TIRE SERVICE STATION
Robert A. Camp,
Athens St. Phone 203 Winder, Ga.
O©OI#IAR
*
15* Always first
wherever
fyl Qualify Counts
SB Budweiser
Wgm Everywhere
fPlMvll I W ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC,, ST. LOUIS
Henson Bros. & Fulbright *
Distributors
Winder, Georgia
Insurance Bonds
WANTED
To make some Farm and City Loans
Large or small—Large ones preferred
interest and commissions reasonable
S. F. MAUGHON. Mgr.
Insurange Department
North Georgia Trust & Banking Cos.
Farm Loans City Loans
Subscription Price: $1.50 Per Year.