Newspaper Page Text
THCRSPAY, OCTOBER 12. 1922.
MONUMENTS
FIRST CLASS WORK
MARBLE & GRANITE
Office ao Candler Street and G. M. Ry.
WINDER MARBLE & GRANITE CO.
J. W. NICHOLS, Mgr.
***********
* PROFESSIONAL CARDS *
***********
RICHARD B. RUSSELL, JR.
Attorney-At-Law
WINDER, GA.
Office in (.'anthers 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.—
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY
J. C. PRATT
Attorney-At-Law
Winder, Ga.
Office in Bush Building
Practice in all Courts
JOSEPH D. QUILLIAN
Attorney-at-Law
Office Over DeLaPerriere”s Drug store
Winder, Georgia.
G. A. JOHNS
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Office Over Carithers 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 DeLaPerriere Building.
Winder, Georgia
W. L. DeLaPERRIERE
Dental Surgery
Fillings, Bridge aud Plate Work
Done in Most Scientific and
Satisfactory Way.
X UK. C. J. DECKER
Successor to
DR. J. C. BLOOMFIELD AND
DR. R. A. VERDIER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Tlvroat
510 Southern Mutual Bllg.
Athens, Ga. 19-Gmo
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
t ' ~
R. HENRI BARNES, D. 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 Build.ng.
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.
wTm. THOMAS
Cleaning—Pressing—Altering
Phone 49—Jackson Street
Winder, Georgia
WHEN YOUR BATTERY OR
AUTOMOBILE IS SICK
CALL NO. 6—The AUTO DOCTORS
Office Hours All Day and Night
AUTO SALES CO.
ATHENS STREET
PHONE 86
' 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 are the exact thing required.
Strong enough for the most 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.- —Advt.
Legal Advertisements
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Barrow county.
By virtue of an order of the Court
of Ordinary of Barrow county, grant
ed upon the application of W. W.
Hosch, as administrator of the estate
of Mrs. Callie Hosch, deceased, late
of said county, to sell the lands of the
said Mrs. Callie Hosch, deceased, for
the purpose of paying debts and dis
tribution, there will l>e sold before the
court house door, at public outcry, to
the highest bidder, in the City of Win
der, Ga., between the legal hours of
sale, on the first Tuesday in November,
1922, as the property of the said de
ceased, the following described lands,
to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land lying
and being in 249th district, G. M„ Bar
row county, Georgia, formerly Wal
ton county, and known ns the Walton
Sims old home place. Beginning on a
rock on Appalachee river, running
down said river north of branch up
said branch 28225 chs. to oak, thence
X. 17 W. 14.7:? chs. to rock corner at
road, thence up said road S. 92 \\
11.55 chs. to rock corner on road, theme
S 25% E. 60 chs. to beginning corner,
containing sixty-one (61) acres, more
or less, hounded as follows: On the
north and west by C. L. Sims, east by
Harrison lands, south by Appalachee
river.
Terms of sale cash.
This October 9th, 1922.
W. W. HOSCH,
Administrator of Mrs. Callie Hosch,
Deceased.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
GEORGIA—Barrow county.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
November next, at public outcry, at
the court house in said county, within
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash, certain property of
which the following is a full and com
plete description:
“All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing and being in Barrow county, Geor
gia, fully described in deed from G. S.
Bowman to Walter E. Elder, dated
January 9, 1920, and recorded in the
office of the Clerk of Barrow Superior
Court on January 9, 1920. in Book
“C” page 555, and particularly de
scribed ns follows: All that tract or
parcel of land lying and being in said
state and Barrow county, 240th Dis
trict, G. M., formerly in Jackson, be
ing tract No. 3 of the subdivision of
the land of Green S. Bowman, deceas
ed. fully described in plat thereof made
by Surveyor W. T. Appleby and at
tached to the deed to said tract made
by W. G. Bowman as the administrator
of G. S. Bowman, deceased, containing
thirty-four and thirty-one-hundredths,
(34.301 acres, more or less, and de
scribed as follows: Commencing at a
rock corner of sub-division 2 of the
said Bowman lands: thence N. 32% E.
32.71 chains to a rock at corner of sub
division 2; thence S. 41% E. 12.3.8
chains to a rock corner of sub-divis
ion 4; . thence S. 36% W. 24.38 chains
to rock: thence. S. 24% W. 5.05 chains
to rock on road at the corner of sub
division 4; thence N. 58 W. 11.62 elm.
to rook at the beginning corner.”
Said property levied on as the prop
erty of G. S. Bowman to satisfy an
execution issued from the Superior
Court of Barrow county in favor of W.
E. Elder and against G. S. Bowman,
said property being in the possession
of G. 8. Bowman.
Written notice given to defendant
and tenant in possession as required
by law. Property pointed out in quit
claim deed re-conveying the property
to G. S. Bowman for the purpose of
levy and sale.
This the lltli day of October, 1922.
H. O. CAMP, Sheriff.
WANTED
I will pay you the highest price for
your remnant seed cotton. See me at
my office, or Will Fuller at Camp Ware
house. W. G. GRAHAM. 4t
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.
North Bound
No. 30 arrives 9:15 a.m
No. 6 arrives Im3 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.
Train No. 4 arrives at 1:33 P. M.
More people ride on
GOODYEAR tires than
any other kind. tf
I Classified Ads.
WANTED
I will pay you the highest price for
your remnant seed cotton. Set' me at
jny office, or Will Fuller at Camp Ware
house. W. G. GRAHAM. 4t
Expert Welding & Ra
diator Repair Work.
All metals welded. No job too large:
no job too small. Radiators repaired
on all make cars. All work guaranteed
J. E. Casper’s Welding
Shop
Candler Street & Park Ave.
C. H. Stewart Old Stand
Registered Jersey Cow service at
Moore’s barn. Also hogs and shoals for
sale. 4tpd.
FARM LOANS
Can make Farm Loans on Government
Plan, 10, 15 or 20 year loans. Interest
rates low. Write or call.
L. W. JARMAN, Covington, Ga.
4t.
HlDES—Express hides to Athens Hide
Cos., Athens, Ga., also Beeswax and tal
low. Good weights, quick checks, high
est wholesale price. Stpd3l
Men and women average SI.OO per
hour selling hisierv, four pairs guaran
teed wear four months or new hosiery
free. We pay 30 per cent commission.
Free samples to working agents. Com
plete line of wool and hentlier mixtures
This is the big hosiery season. Expe
rience unnecessary. Eagle Hosiery
Works, Darby, Pa. tf.
Scholarship in Athens Business col
lege for sale cheap. Winder News.
We have been trying to give you a
readable paper through the summer
months. Won't you show your appre
ciation by renewing your subscription
promptly now.
FOR SALE.—-Some nice pigs and
shoats for sale. See E. Worth Jack
son. 6tpd.
Two cows, fresh in milk, 3 dry cows
in Xmas; 1 mule. You can buy any one
of these so cheap you will think you
\ptote them. See me now.—W. E.
.Young. 2t
WANTED —To hear from owner of
good farm for sale. State cash price,
full particulars. —D. F. Bush, Minneap
apolis, Mein. stpd. 28
We have several scholarships in the
Athens Business College we will sell
cheap—bookkeeping, shorthand, sten
ography.—See the Winder News tf
The Winder News needs that money
you owe it on subscription. Drop in
and pay it.
WILL PAY CASH FOR MIXES
WANTED.—To buy pair mules,
weight 1050 to 1100 pounds; not over
7 yea rs old. Will pay cash. —E Hew
itt, Winder, Ga. 2tpd.
WANTED
I will pay you the highest price for
yo.ur remnant seed cotton. See me at
my office, or Will Fuller at Camp Ware
house. W. G. GRAHAM. 4t
I will break up house keeping this
fall. All my farming lands and houses
are for rent to responsible parties only.
21 pd MRS. M. M. HORTON.
30 x 3% PLYMOUTH TIRES SB.OO.
THOMAS & OLIVER tf
For Hogs—
to Sweeten
Swill
> —dissolve 1 tablespoonful of
Red Devil Lye in a pint of
water, then add this solution
to the slop or soft feed for 10
hogs. Or dissolve %of a can
in a quart of water, and add
to a barrel of slop. Stir
thoroughly and feed to hogs
night and morning.
Always demand the genuine
E ED DEVIL LYEI
Sure is Strong
THE WINDER NEWS
FOR SALE. —My house and 4-acres
of land, all well improved on Midland
Avenue.—D. R. STOVALL.
WANTED
I will pay you the highest price for
your remnant seed cotton. See me at
my office, or Will Fuller at Camp Ware
house. W. G. GRAHAM. 4t
Red Cross Roll Call
Heard World Around
The Annual Roll Call of the Ameri
can Red Cross for registration of the
membership for 1923 will begin on
Armistice Day, November 11, and
close on Thanksgiving Day, November
30. The ground work for this stu
pendous task of re-enrolling the mem
bership throughout the world has been
laid In a plan for the first complete
and comprehensive system of registra
tion of the Red Cross membership In
all its 3,300 active Chapters at home
and abroad.
An important feature of the round
the-world Roll Call campaign will be
a universal effort to re-enllst the serv
ice of war-time Red Cross workers in
the peace program by their partici
pation In the Roll Cali. In this way
the vast army of volunteers will once
more affiliate with the work of the
Red Cross In Its manifold phases. Co
operation also has been assured by
Government and private maritime in
terests In a deep-sea Roll Call that
is designed to reach every member
or potential member in every part of
the world who may be en voyage or
temporarily in any port.
Thousands of Chapters will adopt
the home canvass plan of enrollment
which originated in Pittsburgh, where
last year It resulted in a membership
increase of 50 per cent. All records
In this year’s campaign will be kept
cb standard sire cards to be filed by
each Chapter for future use.
yy Bums and scalds
I MENTHOLATUM 1
cools the pain and #
the Dlister^^r
A
Wish
•*I have taken Cardui for run
down, worn-out condition,
nervousness and sleeplessness,
and 1 was weak, too,” says
Mrs. Silvie Estes, of Jennings.
Okla. “Cardui did me just lots
of good—so much that I gave it
to my daughter. She com
plained of a soreness in her sides
and back. She took three
bottles of
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
and her condition was much
better.
“We have lived here, near
Jennings, for2f years, and now
we have our own home in town.
I have had to work pretty hard,
as this country wasn’t built up,
and it made it hard for us.
“I WISH I could tell weak
women of Cardui—the medicine
that helped give me the strength
to go on and do my work.”
E 95
Tires Vulcanized Right, Are [
Miles Saved
jyy Don’t throw your old tires away
w ! Bring them t 0 us> We will gladiy
W U inspect them, and repair them.
vw There are lots of miles in old
i|rj Y \M tires that are thrown away daily.
Ili ‘We ma^e re P a^rs that stand’.
’ * j Free Road Service
The Tire Service Station
Robert A. Camp
Athens St. Phone 203 Winder, Ga.
John T. Boifeuillet Is Well
Qualified For U. S. Senator
Railroad Commissioner John T. Boi
feuillet, who has announced his candi
dacy for the United States Senate, to
succeed the late Senator Thomas E.
Watson, has made the following state
ment to the people of Georgia with
reference to his candidacy and his
ability to render them good and ef
ficient service in that body:
To the People of Georgia:
I have a laudable ambition to repre
sent my native state of Georgia in the
Senate of the United States, and, in
furtherance of this aspiration, I am a
candidate for nomination in the pri
mary election on October 17, to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of the late
lamented Senator Thomas E. Watson.
I believe I have certain advantages
and experiences that qualify me for
the prompt and intelligent discharge
of the duties of a senator.
My services during eight years in
the House of Representatives of Geor
gia, as a member from Bibb county,
and twenty years as Clerk of the
House, have given me a complete
knowledge of legislative procedure, and
perfect familiarity with parliamentary
law. I am trained in parliamentary
practice and discussion, by reason of
the frequency with which I have pre
sided over the deliberations of the
House, and the innumerable times I
have taken part in debates on the
floor.
I also have a ripe experience in the
usages of the United States Senate,
the result of having been private sec
retary to Senator Augustus O. Bacon
for eight years, and secretary of the
great and important Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations.
I am personally acquainted with near
ly all of the present Senators, and with
the senatorial corps and other officials
of the Senate; I am thoroughly famil
iar with the routine and general work
ings of all the departments of gov
ernment in Washington, and have a
pleasant personal acquaintance with
many of the principal officers thereof.
I have several warm friends in the
cabinet circle.
If, in the Providence of God, and by
the grace of the voters of this state,
I am permitted to take the oath of
office as Senator, it will be amid fa
miliar scenes and friendly faces.
When critical illness in my family com
pelled my resignation from the Ameri
can Embassy in London, where in two
years’ service during the world war, I
gained wide knowledge of foreign con
ditions and affairs, Ambassador Wal
ter H. Page, in a personal as well as
official letter to me, said:
“It is a very great personal mis
fortune for me, and a cause of great
regret to us all. that you cannot get
back here. Not only your most effi
cient service in the work of this em
bassy, but the personal pleasure that
we all got from association with you.
Junior Red Cross
Praised for Work
Influencing Peace
The advancing standard of the Jun
ior American Red Cross made two out
standing gains during the last year—
one in the field of domestic activity,
which is rapidly linking up the schools
with the Junior program, the other a
gain of a dozen countries in Europe
pledged to organize Juniors on the
lines of the American organization.
For this accomplishment the American
Juniors earned the hearty endorse
ment of the League of Red Cross So
cieties for its “creation of an inter
national spirit of human solidarity
among young people with a view to
preparation of anew civilization for
peace."
The forthcoming annual report of
the American Red Cross for the year
Subscription Price: $1.50 Per Te*r.
-x gl M
JOHN T. BOIFEUILLET, ,
Candidate for U. S. Senator.
make your inability to return, a grief
to us all.”
At the same time, Assistant Secre
tary of State William Phillips, wrote
me a letter, in which he said:
“I am very sorry that you have been
obliged to tender your resignation. It
will be a keen disappointment to Am
bassador Page and to the whole em
bassy staff, and 1 join with them in
expressions of deep regret, that we are
no longer to have the benefit of your
valuable services.”
If elected, my deliberations as Sena
tor shall be conscientious, and my atti
tude shall at all times be that of a
man with a wide and true human In
terest. I shall be found always re
sponsive to the patriotic sentiments
of the splendid people whom I repre
resent. My greatest ambition will be
to prove worthy of the place, to deserve
the approbation and continued friend
ship of those who so greatly honored
and trusted me; to promote industry;
to guard the personal and material in
terests of *he citizen; to preserve civil
and religious liberty; to uphold the
majesty of the law, the dignity of the
government and the rule of the people;
to advance education, and to keep aloft
the standard of the social and moral
v./tues.
I will deeply appreciate your support.
Faithfully yours,
JOHN T. BOIFEUILLET. j
ended June 30, 1922, will show 24,528
schools enrolled, with a total of 4,483,-
845 pupils wearing the “I Serve” but
ton of the American Junior Red Cross
—the badge of unselfish service earn
ed by each individual member through
personal sacrifice.
In international school correspond
ence 736 classes and schools engaged
in friendly communication with 623
schools in European countries, 90
schools in United States territories,
13 in South Africa and 10 in a miscel
laneous list of foreign countries. The
work in foreign fields in establishing
playgrounds, school libraries, sewing
and manual training classes, homes
for war orphans, school reconstruc
tion in devastated areas, encouraging
community gardens and many other
activities was financed through the
National Children’s Fund raised by
the Juniors at a cost of $338,237.40.
During the year $56,922.79 was con
tributed toward the fund, in which on
July 1 there was a balance of $201,-
361.58.