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We’ve started in to save this week, we’re
pinchin’ every nickel;
Pa’s carryln’ his lunch to town—a slice
of bread and pickle;
Ma’s (fatherin' up all the scraps that
formerly were wasted;
The stuff we get for breakfast is the
worst I’ve ever tasted.
We’re savin’ up in every way and cuttin’
down expenses;
We don’t turn on the lights no more as
soon us night commences;
We sit around in darkness now to keep
the gas from burnln’;
I wish I’d something good to eat, but
there’s no use in yearnin’.
We’ve got to do our best this week to
keep the hills from rlsin’;
Kach member of the family’s hit we’re
all economizin’;
The baby’s cryln’ for a bone to suck—
poor little sinner—
We’re savin’ ’cause next Sunday we’ll
have company to dinner.
t Glorious.
“My! That must have been a love
ly dream you were having,” said the
ingenue, when the train stopped with
a sudden jerk, causing the leading
man to wake up and catch his hat
as it was rolling to the floor of the
car. “1 never saw such a pleased ex
pression as you had on your face.”
“It was a beautiful dream,” he ad
mitted. "The most glorious dream 1
ever had.”
‘‘What was it?”
‘‘l was dreaming that the manager
had agreed to pay me as much aB the
press agent says I am getting.”
WHAT HE SAID.
"Did I under-
SSfSB that you consider
l '3 SS B~ a common
\ jP Bchool education
sufficient for your
i said 1 wanted him to learn
to spell and write even if he had to
stay in the grammar grades until he
was grown up.”
Her Own Opinion.
She rouged her cheeks and blacked
her brows,
She put some whitewash on her
nose;
She daubed some red stuff on her lips
And pinned on braids in ample
rows;
She fastened on a hat bedecked
With artificial sprigs and fruit,
And felt as natural as life,
And fancied that she was "a beaut.”
Silly Wish.
“I wish,” said Smithson, "I could
live in some country where there
were no poor people—where wealth
could be distributed equally.”
“Goodness!” replied his wife, "why
should you have such a silly wish as
that? If we lived in such a country
we could never afford anything that
the people next door wouldn't be able
to get.”
No Hope for Them.
“There would be no old maids,” he
ventured to remark, “if women had
the privilege of proposing.”
“Pshaw!” she answered, “Of course
there would. Do you think a little
thing like the right to propose would
make any difference with the woman
who can’t catch a man as things are
are now arranged?”
The mind unlearns with diffi
culty what it has long learned. —
Seneca. .
-ovo e/vsssartTT I
• mm. ■**■..* TtTi.s. i
between labor and capit; 1, wit!,
tlie consuming public always for<
<‘d into i painful role of snf
forer ot‘ t!v third part, is lead
ing toward public ownership fas
ter than is welcome to tin
ranks of the Socialists, says the
Macon Telegraph .
Highly interesting In this <-jn
nectien is Cincinnati’s tempor
ary seizure of the local ice bus
iness. As usual, the strike of
the ice factory employees ocur
red at the time of the greatest
public need of the article of conl
ine re. The factories shut down
and for three weeks in miusum
mer Cincinnati suffered all the
horrors of an ice famine. Heat
prostrations multiplied, milk
soured, babies died, and still
labor and capital fought .
Warned by the physicians of
worse tilings to come, Mayor
Hunt finally impounded eight
of privatly ownede ice factories
and put them in operation**undei
union conditions-/ with their for
mer crews.” Then the ice manu
facturers brought suit to enjoia
the mayor and the city from opei
ating the plants. Hut the cry
of sick and dying children and
the wailing of mothers were more
eloquent than the appeals of the
ice manufacturers’ lawyers, and
the court ruled in favor of tli
ormer. The ci'.y temporarily
retained the plants it deized, giv
ing bond to make good any dam
age they might sustain. Then the
manufacturers and strikers mad'
a virtue of nceessby and reach
ed a peace agreement to last a
year.
The comments show that the
resolute action of Mayor Hunt
in a crisis was approved not only
by the people of Cincinati but
by the American public generally
The convserative New York Trib
une, for example, remarking that
no great while ago few judge?
would have approached any such
‘‘dictatorial interference with pri
vate property in a favorable
mood,” goes on to say; “A con
siderable change has come over
ttye spirit of the law. It is now
fairly well recognized—and no
where more clearly than in the
Supreme Court of the United
States —that the law should be
the people’s will not its tyrant,
keen to uphold a necessary public
power as to protect ;l private
right.”
We may add that all the indi
cations point to a coming time
when private property must of
neeohity be handled s 0 that the
rights and welfare of the pub
lic will not be endangered. The
community is/ more important
than the individual.
MORE FAIRY TALES
Once upon a time a large motor car
passed slowly through the city.
“Do not let that bother you,” said
the landlord; “your rent is only a
few months overdue. There is no need
for you to pay it for ‘a year or two.”
It so happened that once upon a
time a man arrived at his home at
four o’clock in the morning in a most
boisterous condition, and was greeted
pleasantly by his wife.
Once upon a time a waiter in a
West end restaurant drew’ himself
up haughtily and, in deeply injured
tines, exclaimed; "Sir, it is against
my principles to accept tips. Your
offer of money is an insult.”
A sunny temper girds the
edges of life's blackest cloud. —
Guthrie.
To men press’d by their wants
all change is ever welcomed —
Ben Johnson.
Why be constipated when you
can buv LIV-VER-LAX at DK.
J. T. WAGES DRUG CO.
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v A'ST k JTi \f {vo -v “v
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NORMAN BUGGIES
All Styles
Plain Top Buggies
STICK STEEL TWO IN ONE BUGGIES
Steel Tire and Rubber Tire. All of the HIGH
GRADE JOBS. *
NORMAN
Come at onec and select one before they are gone.
Woodruff Hardware Cos.
WINDER, - GEORGIA.
Cholera!
Hog Cholera, Chicken
Cholera, and other diseases
of stock and poultry, make
you lose money. Can this
loss be avoided? The
answer is: YES I Give
Bee Dee
STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE
promptly, when the first
symptoms appear. It acts
on the liver, and gets it to
working freely. A disor
dered liver causes these
(and most other) troubles
of stock and poultry.
Price 25c, 50c and SI.OO per can.
‘‘Bee Dee Stock & Poultry Medicine
is a splendid cure for liver trouble, roup,
ducken cholera and other disease*."—
P. f Stowe, Purcell, Okla. P. A, 15
Constipation
“For many years I Avas trc.bled, in
spite of all so-called remedies I used.
At last I found quick relief and cure
in those mild, yet thorough and
realiv wonderful
DR. KIND’S
New Life Pills
Adolph Sckingeck, Buffalo, N. Y. _j
25 CENTS PER BOTTLE AT ALL DRUGGETS. [
Minister Praises This Laxative.
Rev. 11. Stubenvoll of Allison,
bln., in praising Dr. Kings New
Life Bills for constipation, says:—
‘‘Dr. King’s New Life Bills are
such perfect pids no home should
be without them.” No better
regulator for the liver and bow
els. Every piM guaranteed. Try
them. Price 2oe. at Dr. J. T.
Wages Drug Cos.
Cow For Sale.
Cow, fresh in milk. Gives
three gallons per day. See
A. B. Harwell, Winder, Ga.
Credit System Rumens PmcV.ce.
If there is any one thing that
is doing the southern farmer
more harm than another, it is
doubtless the credit system. On
May 1 of this year the cash price
of. a bushel of corn was 94 cents
and the credit price was $113:
a difference of 19 centd in favor
of paying ca>l. Now, some will
say, what is the farmer goipg to
do if he hasn’t the money but
get these supplies) on time ? lij.
the first place the proper tiling
is to grow these supplies. But
in case this is not done, it is
far better to borrow money and
pay. 6, 8 or even 10 per cejnt in
terest rather than buy on a cred
it on such a basis as this .
There is no sensie in a man
being forced to pay 19 cents mor*
a bushel for corn by reason of
obtaining it on a credit, to be
paid for six or eight months la
ter, writes the editor of South
ern Farming. Now, Ave have no
desire to unjustly criticize any
man or any set of men, but any
one avlio Avill be prefectly sincere
and frank with himself will ad
mit that this is unfair to the far
mer.
The merchant will doubtless
Say that on account of poor col
lections and the great risk he
takes, lie is obliged to charge
this much more. Yes, to a cer
tain extent this i iJ true, but the
principal trouble comes in by t<o
many irresponsible shiftless ne
groes receiving credit along with
the better white farmer, wheth
er white or black, to have to
[ carry a part of the burden of tin*
irresponsible, shiftless class,
whether white or black. A change
in this respect should be forth
coming, and will be sooner or la
ter. but it will have to be brought
about by the farmer himself.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
pply at once the wonderful old reliable DR.
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a sur
| gical dressing that relieves tain and heals at
'.he same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. SI.OO.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
B. E. PATRICK.
Watchmaker
Winder Banking Cos. Bldg.
Second Floor.
G. A. JOHNS,
Attorney at LaAv.
Winder, Ga.
Office over Smith & Carithgrs >
Bank. Practice in all the courts
except City Court of Jefferson.
W. H. QUAETERMAN.
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the Courts
Commercial laAV a specialty.
SPURGEON WILLIAMS
Dentist,
Winder, Georgia*
Office over Smith & Carithers
bank. All Avork done satisfac
torily, Phone 81.
W. B. DeLaPERRIERE
Dental Surgery.
Winder, Georgia
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-Avork
done in most scientific and satis
factory Avay.
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 Co,*
A N D
Red Cross Pharmacy.
Both Phones 62.
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.