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Flanigan & Flanigan’s
GIGANTIC DISPLAY
,=.-QF=
PIANOS, ORGANS,
BUGGIES and AUTOMOBILES.
Two solid car loads (72) Organs just received.
Car load Pianos will be here Monday.
Nothing makes a more lasting Xmas present
than a Musical Instrument. No house com
plete without one. All these must be sold
within the next two weeks, as we move into
our new building January 1, 1910.
Prices guaranteed. Terms to suit.
Yoursto please,
FLANIGAN & FLANIGAN.
Howington Bros.
WE HAVE just opened up business in
the first door of the Opera House
block, and most cordially invite the people
of Winder and surrounding country to call
and inspect our line of Dry Goods and Gro
ceries. We will guarantee prices and good
stuff. So come and give us a trial.l
HOWINGTON BROS.
Winder, : : : : Georgia.
CHARLEY .JOE
THE LAUNDRYMAN
Opera House Building,
Behind Express Office.
First-Class Work. Satisfaction Guaranteed^
All kinds of laundry neatly done.
Clothes cleaned and pressed . .
PRICES: Collars, 2c; Shirts, 10c; Cuffs, 4c Pair.
NEW ORDERS FOR THE NEW YEAR
must now be considered, and business
?nfP* ' wbuL will soon be looming, therefore had
(mSw\i^\ you better not get a move on you and
be ready to start building as soon as
i // the season opens. By giving us your
JJ orders at an early date deliveries can
•'' be facilitated and delays guarded
°° against. Every line of lumber we
WINDER LUMBER CO.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LEWIS C. RUSSELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Winder, Ga.
Offices over First National Bank.
G. A. JOHNS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Winder, Ga.
Office over Smith & Carithers’
Bank. Practice in State and U.
S. Courts.
W. H. QUARTERMAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the courts
*
Commercial law a specialty.
ROBERT T. CAMP,
Attorney at Law,
Winder, Georgia
Offices over First National Bank.
W. L. DkLaPERRIERK
DENTAL SURGERY.
Winder - - Georgia
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-work
done in most scientific and satis
factory way.
Offices on Broad St.
Spurgeon williams
DENTIST,
Winder ... Georgia
Offices over Smith & Carithers
bank. All work done satisfac
torily,
Phone 81.
RALPH FREEMAN,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Hoschton, Ga
All calls promptly aswered day and
night.
DR. R. P. ADAMS,
BKTHLKHEM,GA.
General Practice. Telephone.
Office Hours —7 to 9a m ; 7 to
9 p, m.
DR. S. T. ROSS,
PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON,
Winder, Gh.
Offices Rear Turner’s Pharmacy.
ALLEN’S ART STUDIO.
All kinds of Photographs made
by latest methods. All work do au
promptly. Office on Candler j?t.,
Winder Ga.
A WOMAN’S BACK.
The Aches and Pains Will Disappear
if the Advice of this Winder Citi
zen Is Followed.
A woman’s back has many
aches and pains.
Most times ’tis the kidneys’
fault.
Backache is really kidney ache:
That’s why Doan’s Kidneys
Pills cure it.
Many W inder women know this.
Read what one has to s.iy about
it.
Mrs. May Kin Hey, Factory
Hill, Winder, Gu., says: ‘“I gla i-
Iv recommend Doan’s Kidney
Pills, as I consider them to be a
sure cure for kidney trouble. I
was firmly in the grasp of tin
complaint for a long t ime. My
kidneys were very weak and 1 was
caused much annoyance bv too
frequent passages of the kidney
secretions. I suffered from a
pain in the small of my back and
sometimes arose in the morning
so lame and stiff that 1 could
hardly get about. Doan’s Kidney
Pills, procured at Turner’s Phar
macy, helped me at once and 1
continued iheir use until I was
free from kidney complaint.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-MilburnCo., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the
United States.
Remember the name —Doan’s —
and take no other.
MUST GET IT IN PERSON.
The express company will turn
your order down if you semi by
another fellow to get that package
of Jacksonville mineral water.
The national law in regard to the
shipment and delivery of whiskey
went into effect Saturday. It will
now have to be labeled whiskey and
no one can get it but the consignee.
If the agent delivers it to anyone
else, he will la? subject to a fine of
SS,(XX). It cannot be delivered on
a written order. In other words,
each fellow will have to go after his
own liquor, and it cannot be ship
ped to a fictitious party —Athens
Banner.
We publish the above for the
benefit of those who have been roast
ing the local agent for following the
letter of the law. If you drink
booze, you should not be ashamed
to order and receipt for same in
your own name.
SHE TOLD HIM ALL.
A good story is going the rounds
about a drummer and a pretty wait
ress, says the Cleveland Ledger.
Here is what happened, accovding
to the report.:
The dapper little traveling man
glanced at the menu and then look
ed at the pretty little waitress.
“Nice day, little one,” la* began
“ Yes, it is,” she answered, “ard
1 1
so was yesterday, and my name is
Ella, and I know I’m a little peach,
and have pretty blue eyes, and I’ve
been here quite a while and like
the place, and 1 don’t think 1 am
too nice a girl to be working in a
hotel; if 1 did I'd quit my job;and
my wages are satisfactory; and I
don’t know if there is a show or
dance in town tonight, and if there
is I shall not go with you, and I’m
from the country, and I’m a re
spectable girl, and my brother is
cook in this hotel, and he weighs
200 pounds, and last week he wiped
up this dining room floor with a
fresh SSO-a-month traveling man
who tried to flirt with me. Now,
what’ll you have?”
The dapper little traveling man
said he was not very hungry, and a
cup of coffee and some hot cakes
would do.
GEN. ROBERT E. LEE
Independent of Whnt Is Known as
Hall of Fame
It makes little difference whether
Robert E. Lee’s statue is placed in
the Hall of Fame or not. It matters
little that Cornwell's statue was for
years refused'' an official place in
English public buildings. It mat
ters little that Cato died while in
arms against the constituted author
ity. History does not care whether
England considers Washington a
patriot or traitor. Lee wrote bis
name across the heavens indelibly.
He carved it in the base of Fame’s
own statue at Cbancellorsville ami
Gettysburg. He wrote it on th *
brow of Peace at Appomattox. II *
traced it in every brick of that in
stitution which he directed in the
years after the war. No blot has
ever touched his memory. From
the minute lie entered West Point
to the day when he journeyed gently
to ‘‘that undiscovered country from
whose bourne no travelorjreturns ’
his record, his character and Ins
life were an inspiration.
No opprobium can attach to the
memory of Lee if his statue does
not grace the Hall of Fame. The
place where it should be would
merely stand forever as the symbol
of wretched narrow-mindedness, of
ignoble animosity, of the lingering
sectionalism of men who have been
paid year by year in money for the
part which they took in the War
Between the States. The glory of
Lee is the heritage of mankind. It
cannot be destroyed by protestation
from Michigan or from Ohio. It is
out of the reach of the small, who
cannot appreciate it, or of the vici
ous, who cannot comprehend the
nobility of the man they would as
perse,
The Hall of Fame will be the
poorer if the statue of Lee does not
adorn it. The country will be the
poorer if tin m ichin ition* of little
men shall prevail. If Lee were a
traitor, may kind Providence give
us more like him. Benedict Arnold
was technically the ptlriot ai l
Waghington the traitor. Better a
minute the latter than an aeon of
the former. Soldier, teacher, hus
band, man, there has been no
greater or truer American thin
Robert E. Lee.
OUR LANbUAGE.
“Have you something that would
be good for my headache? ’ ’ asked
the pale customer
‘‘Yes, sir,” responded the drug
clerk, “strong cigars, spiritus fru
menti, and other nerve exciters —
but wouldn’t you have something
that would he good for you and bad
for the headache?”
Horse Play with Senator.
When Senator Dick, of Ohio,
stopped in to chat a hit with Pres
ident Taft the other day he had
occasion to illustrate a point with
ian antedote, s iys the Cincinnati
Times Star. This happened in the
callow days of Dick’s c ire .*r, when
he was yet in the hay and feed
business in Akron One day he
was called to the telephone to take
an order.
“I want a hale of hay,” said the
distant voice.
“A bale of hav,” repeated Dick,
taking copious notes.
“And 20 bushels of oats.”
“Yes, sir ”
“And half a load of straw.”
“Yes, sir- Anything else.”
No; that’s all. Send it right
away.”
“Yes, sir,” said Dick politely and
who is this for?”
Why, who do you suppose”
the other demanded, angrily.”
It’s for the horse, of course, yon
darned fool. Don’t get gay with
me.”