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A Great Opportunity
■ i^m— ww—— ■■—w ■ ————
A class in Business training will be organized
l
at once to be taught here in Winder, for the benefit
of the young folks of this community. Think of it.
An opportunity to secure this training without leav
ing home. Book-keeping and Shorthand, including
books, $110.00; Book-keeping, including books,
$62.00; Shorthand, including books, $55.00. These
prices are for an unlimited, life scholarship, good
until courses are completed. We secure positions
for all graduates, and assist in securing promotion
and better positions.
If interested write or see Mr. W. H. Mathews,
Winder, Ga., or write the
A thens Business College
ATHENS, -:- GEORGIA.
ER CROPS\AJ
WM BIGGER PRQFITJ yW
a : '■ss Are assured through a liberal use of high- "*
grade, guaranteed brands of fertilizer. It
33|Sj costs as much to cultivate an acre, poorly
*§|Pl fertilized, as it does the acre well fertilized. lip
%rjms Your profit depends upon your crop, and
your crop depends upon your liberal use of
|FERTILIZERS I
To get the best results from the liberal use HK
of fertilizer, the brand should be suited to
MB the land. We mix fertilizers, especially
suited to the different grades of Georgia soil. Egg
H vour lands are gray or loamy use our fBBf
gray LAND FERTILIZER; if your land is
otEPsP stiff clay or red, use our RED LAND hER- S3SX
TILIZER. Our brands are machine-mixed, H
of£?|j§| which insures uniformity, from the best con- Bragg
centrates; our fertilizers are dry and drills
ble, all the time; our deliveries prompt; our MmO
prices right and our customers pleased.
: ; 3-\ Manufactured by
Elf PORTER FERTILIZER CO.. Atlanta, Ga. W
fejW FOR SALE BY
f J. N. HODGES, WINDER. GA.
best MACHINERY Factory
J Woodruff Shingle Mills
a ' J)|f/ rr l c, r Woodruff Hay Bidets
egkjX U ■■"■ - Farquhar Steam engines
Farquhar Crain Separators
▼ Reeves Gasoline Engines
■Arc the very best, all sizes and styles
Woodruff Machinery Mfg.
WINDER, GA. and ATLANTA, GA.
Insurance! Insurance!
Kilgore & Radford
Winder, Georgia.'
great mass of proof.
Reports of 30,000 Cases of Kidney
Trouble, Some of Them.
Winder Cases.
____________ i
Each of some 6 000 newspapers
of tlie United States is publishing
from week to week, names of
people in its particular neighbor
hood. who have used and recom
mended Doan’s Kidney Pills for
kidneys, backache, weak kidneys
bladder trouble and urinary dis
orders. This ina s of proof in
cludes over 30,000 testimonials
Winder is no exception. Here is
one of the Winder eases.
W. A. Handers, Winder, Ga.,
says : “You may continue to pub
lish tlie endors unent of Doan’s
Kidney Pills 1 gave in 1908. I
can add to that statement the
cure this remedy g ves has b en
permanent, sharp, knife-like pains
in my kidheys mule it hard for
me to stoop. When I did manage
to do so it was all Ii could do to
straighten. The kidney sections
were painful in passage and
often filled with sediment. I
tried plasters and remedies but
not until I got Doan’s Kidney
Pills at the Wages S}p;*arnan
Drug Go. (now the Dr. J. T.
Wages Drug Co.,)did Ii get re
lief? The contents of four box<s
| entirley relieved my trouble and
1 restored my kidneys to a normal
I condition,'”
For sale by all dealers. Price
jSO cents. Foster-Milburn Go..
| Buffalo, New York, sole agents
I for the Ijnited States.
Remember the name—Doan s—
and take no other.
Ram’s Horn Brown.
Xo tna'i can wo.*ship a Rod he
ofannot trust.
Nobody li.h.s much use tor the
man who lias a poor opiniotn of
himself.
There is no such tiling as
committing a little s'n and stop
ping there.
llow far we will go with Chrit
generally depends on what we
try to take with us.
The r ligion of some people
depens much on whether the
tree is in bloom or not.
When amm begins to talk
about n-c ssity for economy, he
a'wavs lo >k' st ai ht i t h s wi‘e.
PART IN HISTORY OF TENNESSEE
Banks of River and Mountain Gulches Around the
City of Chattanooga, Where Confederates Are
Soon to Gather, Were the Scene of Many of the
Redskins’ Atrocities on the Early Settlers.
Chatt nooga, TANARUS n i.„ April 13.
Tile Tenn ssee river a (list, nee
of fifty mih s above and below 1
Chattanooga figured consj ie,;;-
ously in the early annals of TANARUS n
- or rather in tin* early his
tory of this section of tin* United
States.
A number of Imi an trib s
fought each other as only the
American Indians could fight, for
poss “ssi n of this stream. From
these c nfliets that lasted
through a long term of years,
there has come down to the pres
ent generation a wealth of leg
endary history and well estab
lished facts that do not grow old
by< repetition.
Wh< n the wh’t* man penetrat
ed into the wilderness west of
the Virginia and North Carolina
mount o ins, t e Te n ssee r.ver
was his main route of travel. A
number of expeditions b> white
men were made into this terri
tory as early as 1773. but they
either lost their lives in tin* tor
tuous channels and tumultuous
waters of the Tenn'.’S'ee, <r were
by bndiuns.
From all reliable accounts, tlx*
Chiekamauga Indians c used the
wli’t * pioneeis more tr üble and
aunoya :ce than all o'hers coinhin
ed in this territory. They were
a worthless, murderous tribe and
enlisted under their staindard
every outcast white man that
came am ii; them and wruild
promise to unite with t'm fin linns
ip their campaigns of pillage and
murder.
The Chi de tuning; s bui’t a vil
lage at the in uth of Chiekam u
ga river, some five miles above
the pres‘lit city ot < halt Jioo.a
They had for a general hiding
place, when too clos ly pur m and
by a i en my, a large c ve on t'm
side of Sand Mountain t i ty
mil s below Omtanog'. 'I h.is
civ. rn is known rs Ni k A*J c.k
cave and is in pla : n view from
tin* (l-*pot at Slielliiufiuid, Ala.,
on the lin * of the Nashville, C at
anooga and St. Louis railway. A
story founded largely on legod
has it that this cave was giv.n
its present name from the fact
that a runaway in g.o si .ve from
North Carolina made it h s bid
ing place. Ilis name was -Jack.
The bn lians called him Ni g-r
Jack, and finally mined the cava
Nick-A Jack.
Niek-A- .Jack is < ne of the la*g
est caverns in the Oumberland
range. The Indians used it rs
a storing place for th.“ a'tie cs
from tin* white man, and
for refuge in time of trouble
Finally, they built a village n* r
the cave and fortified it against
any lu> t ie foe.
From the village wear th*
mouth of Chickamauga river
above (,'hittanooga, tins** Indians
would glide down the Tennessee
in their canoes erne al them
selves in the numerous mountain
coves and gorges below tbe pre
sent site of the city, and pounce
expedit ors of white men
izo to explore the rive*.' Whole
families of white people were
butchered by these Indian •, Some
of the stories of their murderous
deeds have no paralle in In lian
war fa re.
Women and children were slain
in the presence of hush, nds and
fatli us, a d childr n were carr’ed
away to the Indian villages and
either burned at tin* stake or held
in the most brutal captivity.
The story of the melancholy
fate of the family of Col. William
Brown, of North Car linn, a m n
who fought under Light Boise
Harry Lee in the Revolutionary
war, is more or less familiar. Col.
Brown came down the Tennessee
in a houseboat, having with him
h. : s entire family, <w ns Vi gof his
wife and seven children. Two of
his sous were grown. The other
children were small. On the* boat
were his servants and his cattle
with which lie intended to estab:
lisli a home in the new world. Tin
expedition was attacked in the
most treacherous m mer by tin*
Chi hainauga Indians ;t. h’u
ning Water, near pres nt site
of a great hydro-electric plant
constructed by A. N. Brady, of
New York. Col. Br wn and his
wife, together with four young
men who had asked to be allow
ed to accompany them on tin* ex
pedition, we e killed. I lie two
grown sons were also murdered.
Tcs *ph Brown, a boy of tender
y. ars, a <1 two of bis small sist.e s
were taken, into captivity by the
l)ili’n; and were saved from
death by an old Clmr kee chief
and Ids wife.
Joseph Brown lived with tie* e
Indians unt l lie reached manlio< and
lie worked his way out of Ihe
Indian country, however, ;ml
finally guided an expediti -n of
white men to the Ni k A-lack
village in 171)4, which resulted in
the total detruction of the Chi k
ainaugas. This exf edith n was
organiz’d at Nashville under the
directions of .John Roberts n and
co.inn nh and by Ma;. o*e. Brown
fund bis si iters ; nd one broiler
amo g the In li ns, sue e ded in
rescu ring tin m and tie* remnant
of the famTy w nt to a point
near Columbia, Tciui. where
Joseph Brow n bee nn* u b<*lov* and
divine (f tlx* Cumbe-1 nd Fias
byt *rian ebu ch.
The < ’hiekam ugas el inn and to
be members of the (’b -rokee
nation, but tliey were n tlx* main
outcasts fr m all Indian trib* s
Tlx* Si ti n aiou and Chattanooga
su fei* and m re from t mm lb.au all
other Indi n . A t‘r th * Chick
amaugis were wiped out by the
white m< nat Ni< k-A-Jaek, the
count y ai'< und Ch ittanoogn e -
joyed p uc
Pin.: in the Stomach. ’
If you Continually.colnplain of
pains in the stomach,your liver or
your kidneys are out of order.
Neglect may 1* ad to dropsy,kid
ney trouble, diabetes or Bright’s
disease. Thousands recommend
ed Eleetrict Bitters as the Very
best stomach and kidney medi
cine made. 11. T. Alston, of
Raleigh X. C. who suffered with
pain in the stomach and back,
writes: “My kidneys were de
ranged and my liver did n 0 t Work
right. 1 suffered much, but Elec
tric Bitters was recommended
and 1 improved from first dose
h now feel like anew; man” It.
will improve you too. Only 50c
and SI.OO. Recommended by
ill druggists.
When a man has stopped hat* -
ing he is no longer able to teach.