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iOi tt uini>ii
Only
Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine V/ine
is prepared expressly for the ail
ments of women. It contains
ingredients which act directly on
the delicate female constitution,
mildly and pleasantly—yet it ex
ercises a most beneficial effect
all through the system.
DR. SIMMONS
Squaw Vine
Wine
Overcomes weakness, nervous
ness and irritability. Gives prompt
relief from the depressing bear
ing-down pains, backaches, nau
sea and irregularities which cause
so much suffering and despond
ency. It has a most happy effect.
Restores strength, renewed hope,
cheerfulness and the energy and
will to perform the duties of the
household which formerly were
so trying and distasteful.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers
Price $1 Per Bottle
C.f.SIMMONS MEDICINECO.
ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI
FOR SALE BY ,
Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
A Mother’s Creed.
I believe in little children as
the most precious gift of Heaven
to earth..
1 believe that they have immor
tal souls created in tlie image of
God, coming from Him and to re
turn to Him.
I believe that in every child
Ihere are infinate possibilities
for good or evil, and that the
kind of influences with which
we surround them in early child
hood largely determines their fu
ture character.
1 believe, too, in work suitable
to childhood, and that the joy in
doing such work should come to
the child largely from the doir*g
of it well.
1 believe in freedom but not
in license.
I believe in wisely directing
rather than stifling activity.
! believe in regularity, accu
racy, punctuality, industry and
application. i
1 believe that in all this my ex
ample counts for more than my
precept. ' ; ■
I believe in cultivating the in
telleet and the will, and 1 be
lieve too, in soul-culture, and that
out of this cultivation comes the
more abundant life, bringing
forth, the fruits of the Spirit
kindness, gentleness, joy, peace,
truth, hope, faith, love, reverence
for God, respect for age, consid
eration for one another and
thoughtfulness for all Gods low
ly creatures.
I belieVe that the calling of
motherhood is the holiest, and
should be the happiest of all the
earth’s tasks.
I believe that Christ, who was
himself a child, born of human
mother, is Jin* one never-failing
source tor perplexed, discourag
ed. or wearied motherhood.
Since to this work. Father,
thou hast called me, help me to
give to it all thou hast given me
■of understanding and wisdom and
strength and love and gentleness
and patience and faithfulness.—.
1 repan and hy the Mother’s Circle
of th> Bedford Presbyterian Bi
ble School.
Ulcers and Skin Troubles
P you are suffering with any
old, running or fever sores, ul
cers. boils, eczema or other skin
troubles, get a box of Bucklen s
Arnica Salve ;md you will get re
lief promptly] Mrs. Bruce Jones,
of Birmingham, Ala., suffered
from an ugly ulcer for nine
months and Bueklen s Arnica
Salve cured her in two weeks.
Will help you. Only 25c Rec
ommended by Dr. J. T. Wages
J)rug Cos.
. I J lii. .4* a ; .. japtWosxv
When They Enter Cayenne.
Cayenne—red pepper to the world at
large, hell to the few thousand of eou
vkr.s transported to this isolated
nottheaslern eorner of equatorial South
America. Here, it was rumored, exist
ed one of the world’s most antiquated
and revolting penal systems, where
thousands of men are exiled and doom
ed to a living death Men from French
Guiana had intimated conditions which
vied with the cruelties of the old con
viet ships.
Groups of convicts lounged about or
lay si'-k and incapacitated on the ve
randas At night the barred iron door
of each dormitory is looked, and out
side paces a guard, revolver In hand
Sometimes under cover of darkness the
inmates settle feuds. Occasionally to
establish lenders rival gangs fight with
cudgels, knives and even paving stones
Some disabled, others dead, the most
indomitable are reconciled and form s
tyrannical secret society.
Many a poor wretch dreads the
night hours, and one suspected of in
forming may be set upon by an en
raged pack. Occasionally murder is
committed In profound silence, and
daylight finds a dead or dying convict
in the passageway or entrance. Ques
tinning Is useless, nnd few guards will
risk life in entering the barracks when
smothered cries and cursings warn
them of internal strife.
All the men I talked with were well
disposed toward me. one in particular—
a fall, well educated man with a pair
of dark rimmed glasses and large eyes
fearfully strained through inability to
secure proper lenses.
“You must not lose hope.” I told a
group and almost swallowed my own
words “Hope!” burst out the rich,
tremulous voice of the tall man. "It is
always the same: there is no hope
here.” “So: no hope here!” was the
echoed murmur of his comrades.—
Charles Wellington Furlong in Har
p*r’s Magazine.
Guiranteed Eczema Remedy
The constant itching, burning,
redness, rash and disagreeable ef
fects of eczema, tetter, salt rheum
itch, piles and irratating skit
eruptions can be readily cum
and the skin made clear am
smooth with Dr, Hobson’s Ec
zema Oimnent. Mr.J. O. Evela,nd
of Bath, 111., says.- “I had ecze
ma twenty-five years and lmc
tried everything. All failed
When 1 found a cure.” This
ointment is the formula of a phy
sician and lias been in use foi
years -not an experiment. That
is why We can guarantee it. Dr.
J. T. Wages Drug Go., or by
miil. Price 50c. Pfeiffer (’hem
ieal Cos., Philadelphia and St.
Louis.
Girl’s Composition on “Boys.
The boy is not an animal, yet
they can be heard at a consider
able distance. When a bov ho]
lers he opens his big mouth lik
ii’ogs, but girls hold their tongue
till they arc spoke to and* then
they i nswer re pec able and t 11
just low it ws. A boy tilin' s
nimself smart because lie can
wade where it is deep, but God
made . tlx* dry land for every
living thing and rested on the sev
entli day. When a boy grows up
he is called a husband, and then
In* stops wading and stays out
at night, but the grew up girl
is widow and keeps house. A
big house is the hardest to keep
In muddy Weather boys are dread
ful in the house, for they won’t
wipe their feet and they sas.*-
the help. We should be genth
and kind to tin* boys for tin* Bi
ble says thou slialt not kill. —Ohio
Educational Monthly.
Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
is headquarters for LIV-VER
LAX. j __ , ,
Forgot About The Judge.
Two lawyers before a probate
judge recently got into a wvan
gle. At last one of the disputants
losing control over his emotions,
exclaimed his opponent: “Sir
you are the bigest fool 1 ever
bad the misfortune to lay eye?
on.”
‘‘Order, order." said the judge,
gravely. You seem to forget that
1 am in the room.”—National
Monthly.
The Best Hot Weather Tonic
GROVE S TASTE LESS chill TONIC enriches th(
blood, builds up the whole system and will won
>rfully strengthen and fortify you to withstant
depressing effect of the hot summer. SCc.
ss __ . /. J-4V
ST. AMY'S FIRE
Georgia State Board of Health
Explains Dangers of the
Disease, Erysipelas, and
Outlines Necessary
Precautions.
Atlanta, Ga. —“Mothers, warn your
children against the dangers of Saint
Anthony's Fire ” says the Georgia
State Hoard of Health, in an interest
ing bulletin setting forth the con
tageous nature of tills disease, which
is simply erysipelas under another
name, and which enters the body
through some wound, cut or abras
ion not properly cared for.
Erysipelas gets its other more pic
turesque name from the fact that it
is a virulant inflammation, accom
panied by an intense burning sensa
tion, which turns the skin a fiery,
heated red.
Erysipelas is a highly contageous
germ disease. The only safe way to
guard against it is to wash all scrat
ches, cuts and other wounds with
some simple but effective antiseptic
solution, and protect the place where
the skin is broken from outside in
fection.
Where a case of erysipelas already
exists the patient should be isolated
and the utmost caie should be taken
to pi event its spread to other peo
ple. All the precautions taken in
other contageous diseases should be
used, and above all on one on whose
hand there is the slightest scratch
should touch any of the bedclothes
or other articles that come in con
tact with the patient.
A scratch which would be too trival
to be remembered may be the point
of entrance of these germs. Mothers
at the time children are born, are li
able to the disease unless the strict
est antiseptic cleanliness is practiced.
Known to the Aucients.
Erysipelas is one of the oldest
diseases known to medicine. Greco-
Koman and Arabian physicians were
acquainted with it in ancient times.
Hippocrates and Galen both wrote
about it. It is common to all ages
and all countries.
Erysipelas seems to depend in all
cases on the existence of a wound or
abrasion. It usually manifests itself
in from three to seven days after the
germ has gained entrance through the
broken place in the skin. The skin
of the face is the most usual site of
the disease. There is a tingling soon
followed by an intense burning at the
point where the germ entered. The
spot soon becomes red and hot, slight
ly raised aoove the surface of the
surrounding healthy skin. The mar
gins are sharply defined. Very often
blisters form on the diseased surface.
Swelling as a rule is pronounced, and
when the face is the seat of the di
sease the patient is sometimes ren
dered unrecognizable during the ill
ness.
The disease spreads rapidly, but
the part involved today may be free
of the disease tomorrow. The general
condition of the patient during the
progress of the disease depends on
previous health, age and physical con
dition at the time. When patients are
not aged and are in otherwise good
health the symptoms are not ordi
narily very severe. There may be
slight chilliness, loss of appetite,
headache and fever for one or two
days.
When the disease is not complicated
by weakness other ailments or old
age, the prospects for recovery are
good. But in the aged and those de
bilitated by the presence of some
other diseases, such as chronic
bright's disease, chronic malaria, dia
betes, and the like, erysipelas may
produce alarming symptoms and not
infrequently cause death. In these
patients there is a dry tongue, high
fever, rapid pulse, labored breathing,
great prostrattion and delirium
Sometimes suppuration or gangrene
of the diseased skin may set in before
<ieath occurs.
Complications Go With it.
Erysipelas is sometimes complicat
ed by meningitis, pneumonia, pleuri
sy, inflammation of the kidneys, and
septicemia or so-called blood poison
ing. There may be also inflamma
tion of the lining membrane of the
heart.
Erysipelas is, therefore, an extreme
ly serious disease either for young or
old, and in all cases a competent
physician or surgeon should immed
iately be called In.
Parents and school teachers and
all otthers who exercise an influence
over children are urged by the Board
of Health to describe to the children,
in simple language, how this and oth
er dangerous diseases may result
from small cuts when not properly
treated, in order that they may be
made to understand Hie necessity of
\%FL
- —7 ,-3r and,
■—“The Family Friend”
ssfl/ Fgley'sHoneMar
If CONTAINS NO OPIATES' 1
For aii r ■ ■*-
yjf T lie M HOMER, GA., Mr*. J. N. Hill
0 LAJUVjriO ■ s y s: 1,1 cheerfully testify to the
■ y*/ 0 V merits of Foley’s Honey and Tar
*) I AND ■ Compound, having used it in my
H'J I r\ C ■ ifamily for years and reccommeded
I VAJI J J Itto my neighbors. I find it always
■ I cures our coughs and colds and
l\ Fnr rhilrlron I prevents croup. I have five children
l 1 I and it is all they ever take for colds.
W I We would not be without Foley’s
Iv, 'v Ik p u I Honey and Tar Compound in the
hv\. rersons I house and can not say too much
h l\ iV * J for iu”
For Sale by Ail Dealers.
B/Eh machinery "fair
Woodruff Saw Mills
Woodruff Shingle Mills
AjO Farquhar Steam Engines Woodruff Hay Balers
Farquhar Crain Separators
jßeeves Gasoline Engines
Are the very best, all sizes and styles
Woodruff Machinery Mfg.
Company
WINDER, GA. and ATLANTA, GA. 1,111
New Blacksmith Shop
I Have Opened up a Blacksmith Shop in the
J. T. WILLIAMS OLD SHOP
and will do general repair work and horse
shoeing. See me if you want anything in
my line.
Horses Clipped $1.75
Horses BootedLJ .50
F. W. DAVIS, Winder, Georgia.
SCHEDULE
Gainesville Midland Railroad Effective Aug.*
25, 1913.
South Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday.)
No. 21— A. M
Arrive Winder, 10:34
Leave Winder, 11:00
No. 23 P. M.
Arrive Winder, 6:05
Leave Winder, 6:20
(Sunday Only.)
No. 25 —- A. M.
Arrive Winder, , 10:32
Leave Winder, 10:23
No. 27 P. M.
Arrive Winder 6:08
Leave Winder/ 6:09
i Nos. 22 and 26 connect at W inder with Seaboard for Atlan
ta, at Belmont for Gainesville and Athens. No. 24 with Sfea
board going North and South, at Belmont for Gainesville
and Athens. advt
protecting even trival cuts from in
fection. This is a case in which an
ounce of prevention is truly worth a
pound of cure.
Erysipelas is found during all sea
sons of the year, and in all parts of
the country, but the period of its
most frequent occurence in this la
ttitude is during the spring months.
There is no epidemic or special pre
velance of erysipelas in Georgia at
this time, but the disease is always
more or less present in all commun
ities, hence the general timeliness of
the advice and warning.
Oh You Calomel
get out of the way and let LIV
VER-LAX do the work, purely
Vegetable, ask DR. J. T. WAGES
DRUG CO.
When a man does talk sense
tit least half the people don't rec
ognize it.
'North Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday )
No. 22 A. M
Arrive Winder 6:49
Leave Winder, 7:05
No. 24 P. M
Anive Winder, 2:25
Leave Winder, 2:35
No. 26 (Sunday Only.) A. M
Arrive Winder, 7:19
Leave Winder, 7.20
No. 28— P. \
Arrive Winder, 2:50
Leave Winder, 2:51
Ko-Ko-Kas-Kets
Powerful and effective
For Constipation and Torpid
LIVER.
60 DOSES for 25 cents.
Your money back if they fail.
Guaranteed by
Dr. J.T. Wages Drug Cos.
A N D
Red Cross Pharmacy.
Both Phones 62.
No man assumes the pose of a
political reformer as long as he
is in office.