Newspaper Page Text
/)ea r Ci my :-
j(9 on ’£ you £ A infc i£ ii foolish foA people lo
g ive -u a efe-s A wedding pAeAenlA, when “rriA. and
TTI rA. boxing Couple" Aeally need AenAil/le IhingA
lo help Ihem slaAl wilh?
a? jxiAl gol an invilalion lo TTlaymes wedding.,
and ofm going lo give heA a nice Ao ck ing chaiA.
cThiA will always eome in handy. /SeAideA TTlayme
needA Ihings. Charlie hasn'l gol m\ich, you know.
a? Ihink f\i rnilxiAe makeA Ihe veAy LeAl kind of! a
wedding preAenl .
and Ihoxighl you'd like lo heaA TTlayme is lo Le
ma r r ied.
jCoxi,
(P. £.-af'm going lo Iruy Ihe AockeA foA TTlayme from
W. T. ROBINSON
Winder, Georgia.
SHAVING PARLOR—HoteI Winder.
JlfF if
Up-to-Date Tonsorial Service
W. M. CHASTAIN, Manager.
Insurance! Insurance!
Kilgore & Radford
Winder, Georgia.
MACHINERY
j, ifif -'■ Woodruff Saw Mills
f**g,m&omdh* ~ v _ wfl Woodruff Shingle Mills
A. r , c . r Woodruff Hay Balers
Mji 7 • Farquhar Steam Engines
>llißWrri"tniih Farquhar Crain Separators
▼ Reeoes Gasoline Engines
Are the very best, all sizes andstyles
Woodruff Machinery Mfg.
Company 1
WINDER, GA. and ATLANTA, GA.
In Mpsffii
Itself Comparatively Harmless,
It Often Serves as Deadly
Disguise for Real Meas
les and Scarlet Fever.
Atlanta, Ga. —If an innocent-looking
and apparently haimlesg little ail
ment comes tapping at your door this
spring, and says "1 am German
Measles,” don t you take anybody's
word for it except that of your phy
sician.
"German Measles’’ whose other
name is "Rubella,” is a mild-man
nered fellow himself, who will likely
not do you any harm, but there are a
couple of grand rascals masquerad
ing in his guise, and if one of them
gets into your house there may be
trouble. One of them is named true
measles and the other is scarlet fe
ver. Roth are exceedingly dangerous
guests, according to the Georgia
State Board of Health, and have of
ten accomplished their most dire re
sults when carelessly mistaken for
rubella.
Of course nobody wants to have
German measles if he can help it,
and when the disease breaks out in a
community, the State Board of Health
urges that all the regular precautions
against any epidemic be taken; but
the principal danger lies in the fact
that the other more serious diseases
may be mistaken for it.
For many years German measles,
which is sometimes also called
French measles or roseola, was con
fused even by physicians with meas
les and scarlet fever, as the skin
eiuption sometimes resembles the one
and sometimes the other. But Ger
man measles is now recognized as
an entirely separate and distinct dis
ease, which bears no relation what
ever to the regular measles or scarlet
fever.
It is Highly Contagious.
While not a dangerous disease as
compared with the two latter men
tioned, German measles is highly cou
tagous and persons attacked with it
suffer from many of the unpleasant
symptoms that accompany true meas
les. Single cases are seldom seen.
The disease usually makes its appear
ance in a community in epidemic
form. The winter and spring months
are the usual times. German measles
can be communicated during the en
tire course of the disease, but is most
contagous during the earlier stages.
The only persons immune are infants
under six months, and persons who
have already had it. The fact that
vou may have had measles before,
gives you no immunity from German
measles, nor does an attack of Ger
man measles protect you from meas
les germs in the future.
The first thing to do in a case of
German measies is to make sure
that it is really German measles. A
simple method of diagnosis, after the
rash appears, is to see if the glands
at the back of the neck are enlarged.
If they are, it is probably German
measles. But this mode of diagnosis
is not always sure and the only saie
plan is to have a doctor.
The diagnosis once established,
there is very little danger from Ger
man measles. It usually runs a mild
course, and if the patient receives
the proper attenion during the attack,
there will not likely be any complica
tions or after effects.
The treatment is simple. The pat
ient should be isolated to prevent the
spread of the disease; should be put
to bed and kept on a liquid diet. The
physician will sometimes prescribe
such drugs as the circumstances may
demand; or in some cases no medi
cine at all may be needed.
Course of the Disease.
After one has been exposed to the
disease, it usually takes ten to twenty
days for it to develop. The appear
ance of the rash is usually the only
first symptom, though it may be ac
companied by catarrhal symptoms
and a general ‘sick" feeling. Fever,
if present at all, is usually slight.
The lymphatic glands at the back of
the neck are nearly always swollen.
The rash usually appears first on
the face and then spreads; but in ex
ceptional cases it may appear first on
any part of the body. Sometimes it
appears as small pimples, sometimes
as large pimples, and sometimes in
large irregular reddish splotches.
The eruption usually lasts three days
tyit sometimes runs to six. Convales
cence is exceedingly rapid, if proper
cre is taken of the patient.
In stating that German measles is
a mild disease, two things must be
borne in mind; first that it is highly
writes Mrs. L R Barker,
of Bud, Ky., “and can do
all my housework. For
years I suffered with such
pains, I could scarcely
stand on my feet After
three different doctors had
failed to help me, 1 gave
Cardui a trial. Now, I feel
like anew woman.”
iCARDUI
Tho Woman’s Tonic
A woman’s health de
pends so much upon her
delicate organs, that the
least trouble there affects
her whole system. It is
the little things that count,
in a woman’s life and
health. If you suffer from
any of the aches and
pains, due to womanly
weakness, take Cardui at
once, and avoid more seri
ous troubles. We urge
you to try it Begin today.
Plenty Paul and Silas Kind
Atlanta Ga., May 28 —There is
plenty of tlie “Paul and Silas"
style of old time religion among
some of the Presbyterians, de
spite all tin* high sounding theo
logical discussions about Hindu
Philosophy a nd heresy.
Some wonderfully strong eon
trasts have been offered during
the past couple of weeks in At
lanta.
While the learned dignitaries n1
the ehure.h were discussing the
free thought charges again 1 1 the
Union Seminary, and the elect
infant clause, and whether oi
not every ordained Presbyteriai
minister had to believe in the fin
maculate Conception, two or
three other men, including the
Lumber -Tack preacher, the tfky
Pilot and a square jawed evan
gelist, named Biederwolf, won
holding noon meetings inan ope/a
house, praying over sinners and
telling them earnestly that il
th ‘y ,lj,J ri( q believe in the at r
ing power of .Jesus Christ, they
Would surely go to hell.
For fine split and technical tho
ological dismission it would he
hard to beat some of the ques
tions that were raised on the
convention floor. For plain old
time religion, Atlanta has never
heard anything that could heat
the revival meetings.
I)i*. Kind’s New Life Pills will
relieve constipation promptly and
get your bowels in healthy condi
tion again. .John Supsie, of San-
Imry, Pa., says: “They are the
b<*st pills li ever used, and I ad
vis*. everyone to use them for
constipation, indigestion and liv
er complaint.” Will help y0u.25
cents. Recommended by all drug
gists.
One wonders what rfilroad pre
idents will do with the stockhold
er’s money now that they can
n* longer contribute fortunes to
campaign funds.
contagous aiid that just as much care
should be taken in its isolation as in
any other epidemic disease, and,
second, that like many other intrin
sically mild diseases it can easily
enough result in serious complications,
if not treated with reasonable care.
In cases where the epidemic breaks
out in a community, the usual precau
tions should be taken by the families
in which the disease appears, and by
the local health authorities. Isolation,
and the sterilization by burning, boil
ing or fumigation of everything that
comes in contact with the patient,
aie the principal piecautions.
/ ► *
Ino wriCci ur
saw the times now on us. For
surely the wrong Was not in boil
ing a kid in its mother’s milk;
but it was in killing the kid so
young. What a waste of good
beef we see daily in the killing of
calves. How long can we hold out
and raise any beef at home at the
rate we are going? i
Every good cow in the country
is hunted up, brought to town,
sold for a fancy price,and when
dry she is turned over to the
butcher. Iler calf is not even kept
to carry home,hut sold for veal to
the butcher.
Instead of trying to increase
our number ofcattle wie slay them
wjiile they are too small to make
palatable meat and thus thin out
the er<>p of cattle. Right here in
Cobb county, hundreds arc killed
every year to supply our own
and Atlanta markets. The News
would like to see a law passed
forbidding the killing of calves
that Were not twelve months of
age. We’d letter take our eye off
the game law awhile and save oui
cattle. —Marietta News.
Best Medicine for Colds.
When a druggist recommends
a remedy for colds, throat and
lung troubles, you earn feel sure
that he knows what he is talk
ing about. C. Lower, Druggist,
of Marion, Ohio, writes of Dr.
King’s New Discovery: “h
know Dr. King’s New Discovery
is the best throat and lung medi
cine 1 s 11. It cured my wife of
a severe brfachial cold after all
other remedies failed." lit will
<lo tin* same for you if you are
suffering with a cold or any hr on
chin], throat or lung cough.
Keep a bottle on hand all the
time for everyone in the family
to use. It is a home doctor. Price
50c and SI.OO. Guarantede by
all druggist.
The Country Boy’s Creed.
] believe that the country
which God made is more beauti
ful. firm ibe city which man mad<
that life out of doors and in
t• m*'li with the earth is the natu
ral life of man. 1 believe that
work is bard wherever I find it,
but that work with Nature is
more inspiring than work wjitii
tin* most intricate machinery. 1,
believe that the dignity of labor
depends not on vvhat yon do, but
on li i\v you do it ; that opportuni
ty ooiir*B to a boy on tin* farm as
often as to a boy in the city,
that life is larger and freer and
happier on the farm than in the
t )wn; that, my success depends
not upon my location, hut upon
myself not upon my dreams,
but up n what I actually do; not
upon lu 'k, hut upon pluck. I be
lieve in working when you work
and in playing when you play,
and in giving and demanding a
square deal in every act of life.
- -Edwin Osgood Grover.
The Newspaper Liar.
The tragedy of the recent death
of San dr rtf Walker was one wiltie.l
touched every heart in Georgia
which heard of the slow, in
evitable fate which he faced
bravely for days. It was a pity
that the newspaper liar shonild
have added weight of sorrow and
annoyance to the hearts intimate
ly related.
There are sabred circles into
which the newspapers! report
should not intrude and in this
case that circle was not only in
vaded but absolutely false storks
sent out —to sell papers.— At her..?
Banner.