Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1922
MONUMENTS
FIRST CLASS WORK
MARBLE & GRANITE
jOtfice ou Caviller Street and G. M. Ry.
WINDER MARBLE GRANITE CO.
J. W. NICHOLS, Mgr.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
RICHARD B. RUSSELL, JR.
Attorney-At-Law
WINDER, GA.
j Office in Caritliers Building.
Practice in All the Courts
G. D. ROSS JULIAN E. ROSS
ROSS & ROSS
Attorneys-At-Law
Winder, Ga.
Office Over City Pharmacy
Practice in all the Courts. —
I COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY
J. C. P R ATT
• Attorney-At-Law
Winder, Ga.
Office in Bush Building
Practice in all Courts
JOSEPH D. QUILLIAN
,Attorney-at-Law
Office Ovef DcLaPerriere ’s Drug store
Winder, Georgia.
G. A. JOHNS
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Office Over Caritliers Bank.
Practice In All Courts.
W. H. QUARTERMAN
Attorney at Law
Prentice In All Courts
Commercial Law a Specialty
T. ELTON DRAKE
Attorney-At-Law
Office in D'eLaPerriere Building. .
Winder, Georgia
W. L. DeLaPERRIERE
Dental Surgery
Fillings, Bridge and Plate Work
Done in Most Scientific and
Satisfactory Way.
Dfy C. J. DECKER
Successor to
DR. J. C. BLOOMFIELD AND
DR. R. A. YERDIER
Eye, 'Ear, Nose and Throat
510 Southern Mutual Bllg.
Athens, Ga. 19-6 mo
DR. C. S. WILLIAMS
DENTIST
Offices in the Winder National Bank
Building.
Rooms 313-314
Residence Phone 234—Office Phone 81
WINDER, GA.
DR. R. P- ADAMS
General Practice
Bethlehem, Georgia.
Phones: Office 24. Residence 6
Dr. L. C. Allen Dr. Myron B. Allen
/ DR. L. C. ALLEN & SON
Hoschton, Ga.
Office Hours:
Sundays: 9:00 A. M. to 11:00 A. M.
Wednesdays: 8:00 A. M. to 12:00 M.
Saturdays, all day* until 3:00 P. M.
All other time when not attending calls
R. HENRI BARNES, D. C.
(Doctor Chiropractic)
CHIROPRACTIC
Is the adjustment of the spine to re
move the cause of disease.
fepiNAL ANALYSIS FREE
Hours: 9t012A. 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.
S. M. ST. JOHN
Jeweler
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Cut Glass
and Silverware.
Repair Work Done Promptly
Broad Street Winder, Ga.
W. M. THOMA S
Cleaning—Pressing— Altering
Phone 49—Jackson Street
Winder, Georgia
WHEN YOUR BATTERY OR
AUTOMOBILE IS SICK
CALL NO. &—The AUTO DOCTORS
Office Hours All Day and Night
AUTO SALES CO.
ATHENS STREET
THONE 88
CITIZENS PRESSING CLUB
For Your
Cleaning, Pressing an Altering
Shop over Williams Bros. Cafe.
W. B. WILSON, Prop.
Winder, Georgia
The Ideal Purgative.
Asa purgative, Chamberlain's Tab
lets We the exact thing required.
Strong enough for the mo-t robust,
mild enough for children. They cause
an agreeable movement of the bowels
without any of that terrible griping.
They are easy and pleasant to take and
agreeable in effect. —AdrL
BELL MFG. CO. RECEIVES LETTER
FROM FRANCE ASKING FOR
QUOTATIONS ON GOODS
Antwerp, June 19th, 1922.
(The Bell Overall Mfg. Cos.
! Winder, Ga.
| Gentlemen:
I beg to kindly let me have your low
est actual prices cif, (charges, interest
and freight) Antwerp for blue and
kliuki denim work trousers and coats,
taken by large quantities.
I bought the U. S. Army work cloth
ing stock in Antwerp and found your
address on label.
As regards to saleability I refer to
the U, S. Army base at Antwerp, 6
Canal des Brasseurs.
Yours faithfully,
A Van Den BERGH,
04 Place St.-Jean, 04
ANVERS.
Suffice to say that the Bell Mfg, Cos.
will not consider shipping overalls over
to France in the face Of the strike con
ditions and the 'uncertainty of the
goods reaching their destination.
It merely shows what advertising
will do. Four years after the war is
over and since these war goods were
made up. the label on a garmeut brings
an order for an unlimited amount.
BUILDING OF
AUTO TIRES
Great progress in the perfection of
automobile tires has followed the de
velopment and completion of laboratory
apparatus that enables the tire design
er to study intelligently and accurate
ly various methods of construction and
different kinds of materials.
In the great Goodyear factories at
Akron, Ohio and Los Angeles, Cal.,
where the famous All-Weather Tread
tire was developed, all of the ordinary
equipment and many exclusive pieces
of apparatus are used in making thou
sands upon, thousands of experiments
in the search for better ways to build
better tiles.
Only bj the development and appli
cation of machinery for the testing of
tire materials and tires have the man
ufacturers been able to reach the pres
ent high standard of uniform quality.
PENTECOST
Mr. Alvah Ray of Bishop si*Mit the
week-end with Mr Ray Pricked.
Mr. and Mrs. Job Haynie and chil
dren were the guests of Mrs. 11. A. Hai
digree Sunday.
Miss Grace Prickett, Messrs. W. T.
and Ray Prickett were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. R. L. Ray at Bishop and Mr.
and Mrs. Will Wylie at Greensboro
last week.
Miss Myrtle McDonald spent Satur
day night with Miss Jewell Williamson.
Misses Lillie Bell and Era Mincey
and Norma Ilardigree were guests of
Miss Lucille Miller Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs .Joe Spence spent last
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
M. L. Williamson.
Master Ernest Elder spent Sunday
with Master Johnnie Patton.
Mr. Charles Hardigree spent Sat
urday night and Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. John Greenway.
Miss Edna Williamson was the guest
of Miss Grace Prickett Saturday and
Sunday.
Mrs. R. L. Patton and children, Ellis,
and Lillian, spent Sunday afternoon
with Mrs. H. A. Hardigree.
Messrs H. E. Haynie and H. G.
Segnrs attended the singing at Corinth
Sunday afternoon.
County Line News
Mr. Long Bill Maxey visited his un
cle Sunday afternoon at Habersham,
Ga.
Prayer meeting at Nazareth is pro
gressing nicely; let everybody attend.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Maxey had as
their guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. W .
B. Patrick and son, I’ete, Mr. and Mrs.
W. M. Maxey,
Mr. and Mrs. George Adams are the
proud parents of a 12 pound girl.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Dalton and family
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Than Skinner.
Mr. G. W. Hardy gave Mr. ,T. G. At
tawa.v a pop call Sunday afternoon.
Mr E. D. and children and Mr.
and Mrs. G. T. Murphy spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Greeson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Greeson, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Goodman and Miss Bessie
Maxey spent Sunday with Mr. ZacL
Aycock.
Messrs. Gertie Maxey and Short Bill
Greeson spent a while with Miss Bfer
tie House Sunday afternoon.
King Had Faith In Women.
The famous Emperor Charley V,
who was accounted one of the ablest
rulers of hts time, bad such
jenoe In the ability of women to gov
ern that he appointed three soc.-es-
Stvely as regents of the Netherlands.
What Will Become of Him?
The ungrateful son Is a wart on th\e
father’s face; to leave It Is a blemish;
!o cut It off is painful.—Eastern Prov
trb.
Southeastern Fair
Is Great Educa
tional Institution
Exposition to Be Held in Atlanta Octo
ber 12-21, Gives True Reflection of
South’s Progress.
Few universities are enabled to dis
seminate as much knowledge along
the lines of all of life’s activities as
does the Southeastern Fair, which will
hold its seventh annual exhibition in
Atlanta, October 12 to 21. For the
people of the state generally, the an
nual Southeastern fair is a veritable
fount of information about the things
they are most concerned in with their
everyday existence.
The Southeastern fair exhibits show
the best that is produced in agricul
ture, livestock, dairying, poultry, farm
ing machinery, industrial work of va
rious sorts, arts and sciences, school
work, home work, such as needle
work, handicraft work, garment mak
ing, canning and numerous other
sorts of domestic endeavor. No mat
ter in what line or variety of lines any
person is interested, he can find much
of an instructive nature among the
fair exhibits. ,
The Southeastern Fair has taken
rank with the best In the whole of
America. Its coming show will be
greater in scope than any previous ex
hibition and it wil be the moet in
structive exposition of its kind to date.
“More than ever, the Southeastern
Fair has become one of the South’s
leading educational institutions,” said
President Oscar Mills, of the associa
tion, In discussing this feature. “It
shows better than any other way how
the state is developing and what It is
accomplishing. It brings the people
of the state together—the farmer, the
manufacturer, the business man, the
professional man, the women interest
ed in industrial or domestic matters,
and the children who arc just becom
ing interested in some line of the ac
tivities of life.
“It shows to each one the best that
is being accomplished with what he
is most concerned with, and it gives
to each one an opportunity to see
what others are doing. Few people real
ize how great an educational institu
tion the fair is, and what tremendous
efforts are put forth each year by
the fair officials. It is a known fact
that both in the 1920 and in 1921 the
fair association spent in premiums
and for educational exhibits and in
struction approximately the same
amount of money that the state legis
lature appropriated at its last session
for the annual maintenance of the
University of Georgia.”
The fair is a great mirror of prog
ress and this year it will have more
progress to reflect than in any year
of its history.
Language of Eskimos.
Eskimos are scattered thromrh
Greenland Canada. Alaska and Si.
oerla to the number of about 32.000,
all of whom seem to speak rhe same
stock language, using the same stem
words and affixes. The chlet char
acteristic of the language Is thßt sin
gle words of complex structure are
used ro express Ideas that In Eng
• ish would he conveyed by a whole
sentence.
"Feeling
Fine!”
“I was pale and thin, hardly
able to go,” says Mrs. Bessie
Bearden, of Central, S. C. ‘‘l
would suffer, when 1 stood on
my feet, with bearing-down
pains in my sides and the lower
part of my body. I did not rest
well aad didn’t want anything
to eat. My color was bad ana
) felt miserable. A friend of
mine told me oi
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
and 1 then remembered my
mother used to take it.. . After
the first bottle 1 was better. 1
began to fleshen up and I re
gained my strength and good,
healthy color. 1 am feeling fine.
1 took twelve bottles (of Cardui)
and haven’t had a bit of trouble
since.”
Thousands of other women
have had similar experiences in
the use of Cardui, which has
brought relief where other
medicines had failed.
if you suffer from female ail
ments, take Cardui. It is a
woman’s medicine. It may be
just what you need.
At gour druggist’s or dealer’s.
E 92
THE WINDER NEWS
Crossing Locals.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Griffeth spent Inst
Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. W
I*. McEniannon and family
Mr. and Mrs. Tommie McDonald and
Miss Grace McDonald spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Oren McDonald and family of Bold
Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hendrix
spent Saturday night and Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. McElhannon of
Campton.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Dunagan and
family from Paradise spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Clarence McElhannon of Bethlehem.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hendrix and
family from Athens spent the last two
weeks with Mr. Z. N. Hendrix and Mr.
and Mrs. Will Smith of New Chapel.
Miss Charlie Mae Sims spent Sunday
with Miss Maryelle Harrison.
Mrs. M. .1. Austin and daughter left
Sunday for Athens for a weeks stay
with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Austin and
family of Athens.
Mr. Z. N. Hendrix and Mr B. C.
Hendrix were in Atlanta on business
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Sparks Conner from
Monroe spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Kilgore and family.
Mr. Steve Austin and Mr. Carl Har
rison attended the singing at Old Field
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McElhannon from
Orangeburg, S. C., will make their
home for a while near Campton.
Mr FJrwin Thompson from Split
Silk spent Saturday night with his
aunt, Mrs. M. ,T. Austin and children
of near Bethlehem.
Mrs. George Martin spent last week
with her father in Atlanta.
S. A. L. Schedule
In Effect April 16. 1922.
South Bound.
No. 11 arrives 6:18 A M.
No. 17 arrives 8:42 a. m.
No. 5 arrives 4 :43 p.m.
No. 29 arrives 7 :00 P. M. i
North Bound
No. 30 arrives 9:15 a.m
No. 6 arrives 1:53 p.m.
No. 18 arrives 7:00 p.m.
No. 12 arrives 10:43 P. M.
Gainesville Midland
Schedule
Southbound
Train No. 3 arrives at 11:30 A. M.
Train No. 13 arrives at 2:30 P. M.
Northbound
Train No. 14 arrives at 7:30 A. M.
Trnin No. 4 arrives at 1:33 P. M.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
Signature of
WITH AN AMUSEMENT PROGRAM ABSOLUTELY UNRIVALLED—FEATURING MORE
EXCLUSIVE FEATURES THAN EVER BEFORE IN THE HISTORY OF THE FAIR
SIX DAYS THOROUGHBRED RUNNING RACES \ prn THREE DAYS WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP
OCTOBER 16-21 KAL-EO AUTO RACES—OCTOBER 12, 13, 14
The Greatest Racing Program Ever Presented In the History of the Southeastern Fair.
WORLD’S FOREMOST VAUDEVILLE, JOHNNY J. JONES' Exposition Shows, with the
PRESENTING THE BIGGEST THRILLS OF 1922. Lakewood Attractions, will Offer the Greatest
12 Big Grandstand Acts. ■ r\i jt i
MAGNIFICENT FIREWORKS AND FREE MIUWAY
MOVING PICTURES EVERY NIGHT Ever Seen at Any Fair or Exposition
NATIONAL HOG AND CATTLE SHOW
The Greatest Assembly of Pure Bred Livestock Ever Seen at a Southern Fair. MILLION DOLLAR LIVESTOCK
PARADE, Friday, October 20.
MAMMOTH PONT TRY SHOW biggest agricultural and horticultu
iviAivnviu i n ruuL, 11\ i onww ral exhibition ever seen in the south,
Featuring official show of the District Rhode Island With Displays of Boys’ and Girls' Club Work.
Red Club of America. A banner year for the ._ „ . rV DACITirkN
Poultry Breeders at the Southeastern Fair. '* GKLA I KAUIU LArUjI 1 lUIN
Reduced Rates on All Railroads. Ask Your Agent or Address R. M. STRIPLIN, Secretary, Box 1006, Atlanta, Ga.
Admission 50c: Children 25c; School Day 15c to all attending public or private school. Write for Free Premium List.
SOUTHEASTERN FAIR ASSOCIATION
Allan ta-Octobfi-1221
. - • ' ■- '
Piles Can Be Cured
(Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding)
Many sufferers have been made very happy
over the results obtained from the use of
PAZO OINTMENT—6Oc at any Drug Store.
(Follow the Directions Carefully.)
Bagging and Ties
See us before buying.
B. H. Merck
Wholesale Grocer
nFVAF
1/EivVJCi
BARN PAINT
*Right now a*
thief prowling Wound
I your barn j
TX7HEREVER there is a patch I
v V of bare or poorly painted sur
face, there he destroys the fibre and
steals the value.
His name is Rot, and he’ll rob you
every day until he is driven off and
kept off by the consistant application
Devoe Bam Paint defeats Rot for
years. It coats the wood with a
tough long lasting film that resists
the action of the air, sun and rain.
It makes farm buildings last longer;
look better; and worth more.
Devoe Products are time-tested and
proven, backed by 168 years’ experi
ence of the oldest paint manufacturing
concern in the U. S. Founded 1754.
The New Winder I.um.
Subscription Price: $1.50 Per Year.