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"WL FI 1 the hard 1U M 1
IHE QUALITY SHOP [ THE QUALITY SHOP | THE QUALITY SHOP
The business of custom tailoring fills no
incomplete rank in the industries of Win
der for there is a wide difference in the
style, comfort, fit and appearances of the
clothes cut and made by the merchant
tailor and those of the ready made clothier.
CALL AND SEE THE
FIT RIGHT TAILOR
-AT—
kk S\vop ”
j J. T. DeLIESSELINE & COMPANY |
New Bank Bldg. Candler Street.
HEADQUARTERS
For Up-To-Date Gents’ Furnishings
Hats and Shoes.
THE QUALITY SHOP THE QUALITY SHOP ~ THE QUALITY SHOP
THE REFORMER.
Berton Braley in LaFollette’s Magizine.
Dues it make you mad when you read about
Some poor, starved devil who flickered out,
Because he had never a decent chance
In t he tangled meshes of circumstance?
If it makes yon hum like the fires of sin,
Brother, you’re tit for the ranks—fall in.
Does it make yon rage when you come to learn
Of a elean-souled woman who could not earn
Enough to life, and who fought, hut fell
In the cruel smuggle and went to tell?
Does it make you seethe with an anger hot?
Brother, we welcome you —share our lot.
Whoever has blood that will tl >d his face
At the sight of the beast in the holy place,
Whoever has rage for the tyrant's might,
For the powers that pray in tin 1 day and night,
Whoever has hate for the ravening brute
That strips the tret* of its goodly fruit,
Whoever knows wrath at the sight, of pain,
Of needless sorrow and heedles gain,
Whoever knows bitterness, shame and gall
At the thought of the trampled ones doomed to fall;
He is a hrother-in-blood. we know,
With brain afire and with heart a-glow;
By the light in his eyes we sense our kin —
Brother, you Battle with us —fall in!
DANGER FROM GRIPPE
Lies in That Cough and Weak,
Worn-out Condition.
Grippe, pleurisy, pneumonia, these
tre greatly to be feared at this time
of the year.
To prevent grippe from being fol
lowed by either pleurisy or pneumo
nia, it is important to drive the last
traces of it out of the system quickly.
Our advice Is to take Vinol, our
delicious cod liver and iron prepara
tion without oil, and get your strength
*.nd vitality back quickly.
Mrs. A. A. Grabill, of Strasburg,
Va. says: "Grippe left me weak, run
down and with a severe cough, from
•which I suffered four years. 1 tried
different remedies, but nothing seemed
to do me any good until I took Vinol,
from which I received great benefit.
My cough is almost entirely gone, and
I am strong and well again, and I am
glad to recommend Vinol to others
who suffer as I did.”
Try Vinol with the certainty
that If it does not benefit
you we win give back your money.
_Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
Spring is here this time for
keeps.
I Very Serious I
8 It is a very serious matter to ask ■
9 for one medicine and have the K
8 wrong one given you. For this B
8 reason we urge you in buying to 8
■ be careful to get the genuine—
BLAck-DraugHT
Liver Medicine
I The reputation of this old, relia- I
ble medicine, for constipation, in- 8
digestion and liver trouble, is firm- 8
ly established. It does not imitate R
other medicines. It is better than 8
others, or it would not be the fa- B
vorite liver powder, with a larger 8
sale than all others combined. ■
SOLD IN TOWN F2 1
Cure* Old Sores, Other Remedies Won’t Cun
The worst cases, no matter of how long standing,
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Ur.
Porter’s Antiseptic oJ>ng Oil. It relieves
Vain and Heals at the same time. *6c, vvc,
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out
Malaria and builds up the system. A true tonic
and sure Appetizer. For adults and children. &oc.
REMEMBER
We send off Laundry every Wed
nesday p. m. We want yours. We
will call for it by that time. Please
have it ready and where we can find
it. Should we fail to find it be
g ure and send it to Woodruff’s
store with your name on it.
Shirts 10 and 12 l-2e.
Collars - - 2 l-2c
Cuffs - 4 and oc
Spreads -10 c
Hubert Jacobs,
Winder, Ga.
Early King Cotton Seed
I have a few more bushels of
Early King Cotton Seed for sale.
P. W. Quartlebaum, Winder Ga.
The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The REXALL Store
The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The REXALL Store
We Guarantee What We Recommend.
\
There is a Different REXALL Remedy
for Nearly Every Ordinary Human 111.
j
Each one the Original Prescription |
of Some Eminent Physician.
i
WE PERSONALLY GUARANTEE
each and every one of these prescriptions j
and give your money back in every in
stance if you are not absolutely satisfied {
with results. -
Red Cross Pharmacy Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
Winder, Georgia. Wiuder, Georgia.
The REXALL Stores.
BOTH PHONES 62. J
The REXALL Store Th e REXAIL Store The REXALL Store The REX/jILL Store
HUH I Uf- $4,000 ON 337
AGUES OBTAINED Iff RAILROAD
By Andrew M. Soule, President Georgia State College of Agriculture.
[HE QUALITY SHOP | THE QUALITY SHOP j THeT”'3UALITY~SHOp
A little more than a year ago the
Central of Georgia railroad under
took the establishment of a series of
forty-acre test farms, to demonstrate
to the farmers the value of advanc
ed methods. J. F. Jackson and T. O.
Chastain were put in charge. The
Georgia State College of Agriculture
acted in an advisory way. The first
year's results have been obtained and
though the year was a poor one from
the .standpoint of weather conditions,
vet the eleven farms on which data
j has been collected all showed a prof
it. The actual figures from the 337
acres under cultivation showed a crop
value of $11,782.74. The cost of mak
ing the crops was $7,481.81. The
items of expense were: man labor $2,-
112.01, horse labor $1,137.88, fertilizer
$2,364.51, harvesting $1,176.73, seed,
LH TO GRADE COTTON
R. J. H. DeLoach, Professor Cotton
Industry, Georgia State College
of Agriculture.
A young man who owns a large in
terest in a cotton mill and warehouse,
states that his knowledge of cotton
grading gained by atlending a course
in this subject given during the Sum
mer School has been worth about $5,-
000 a year to him.
A number of merchants who have
taken the course have entered the
business of buying and selling cotton
and have made a success of it.
The course referred to here, is that
offered during the Summer School at
the University of Georgia and the
Georgia State College of Agriculture
June 30-August 2. The first, week
will be given to studying middling cot-
left me with a frightful cough ana
very weak. I had spells when I could
hardly breathe or speak for 10 to 20
minutes. My doctor could not help
nie, but I was completely cured by
DR. KING’S
New Discovery
Mrs. J. E. Cox, Joliet, 111. "
50c AND SI.OO Af ALL DRUGG'STS.
Now is the time to swat the fly
and save your health.
marketing, ginning and bagging
$689.78. Charging off $990 for rent,
there is left a profit of $3,310.93.
Mr. Jackson, summarizing the re
sult. says; “Dividing the profit by
337, the number of acres in cultiva
tion, gives an av* rage profit % of $9.52
per acre on land the average value of
which is $27.30, or hirty-six per cent,
net profit. By adding the rent to the
profit, the total income from the land
after the farmers have been paid for
all their work and all their expenses,
is $4,300.93, which is an average in
come of $12.75 per acre, and is more
than forty-six per cent, on the value
of the land.’’
Had this 337 acres been located in
one farm and operated by improved
and economical machinery, the profit
■would have been materially greater.
ton, The second week to a study of
the upper grades of cotton, the third
week to the lower grades and during
ihe fourth week the laboratory will
be turned into a cotton market.
Jbe nine grades of cotton estab
lished by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture will be the ba
sis on which the course will be stud
ied. Government samples will be on
display which can be referred to for
verification.
How to handle cotton to make the
most of it both through a proper
knowledge of grading and also by
proper methods of gathering and mar
keting will be covered in the course.
Students taking the regular course
at the Summer School will find op
portunity to take the cotton grading
work and by diligent application rhe
student will be able to buy cotton and
take care of a warehouse.
Those who contemplate taking this
course should address President An
drew M. Soule, or Prof. R. J. H. De-
Loach, Georgia State College of Ag
riculture.
Death cf Little Babe.
The little infant daughter of
|Mr. . B. Lord died at the home
of its aunt, Mrs. R. L. Hill, with
whom the baby had been living
since the death of its m<ther,Wed
nesday night.
The babe was ten months old
and had been ill only a ,short
time.
The funeral will occur this af
ternoon at 5 o’clock and the in
terment will be in Rsoe Hill cem
etery. Rev. A. B. Reeves, of
this city, pastor of the Christian
church, wfill conduct the services.
The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The REXALL Store The RECALL Store