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EVERYBODY KNOWS THE
STUDEBAKER WAGON.
- - On Sale at - -
ROGERS’ WAREHOUSE.
LAUNDRY AGENCY.
I represent the Athens Empire Laundry
Cos., which is one of the oldest and best laun
dries in the state, Everything in their place
is kept clean and sanitary, and they turn out
work of the highest quality; A trial will con
vince you and make you a regular customer.
My basket goes off every Wednesdayand isjre
turned Saturday. Leave your laundry at
Griffeth, Hill & Co.’s store for me. Work
called for and delivered in the city.
PAGE C. GREGORY.
Insurance! Insurance!
Kilgore & Radford
Winder, Georgia.
SCHEDULE
Gainesville Midland Railroad Effective Aug.
25, 1913.
South Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday.)
No. 21— A. M
Arrive Winder, 10:d4
Leave Winder- 11:00
No. 28— ’ 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 Winder with Seaboard for Atbm
ta, at Belmont for Gainesville and Athens. No. 24 with Sea
board going North and South, at Belmont for Gainesville
and Athens. advt
Coming and Going of
SEABOARD
TRAINS.
/'
f ' North Bound
No. 6 ’ Arrives 3:20 P. M.
No. 12 “ “ 11:26 P. M.
No. 30 “ “ 9:55 A. M.
No. 18 “ “ 7:00 P. M.
South Bound
No. 5 Arrives 4:19 P. M.
No. 11 “ “ 5;41 A. M.
No. 29 “ “ 7:OOUP. M.
No 17 “ “ 7:54 A. M.
'North Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday )
No. 22 A. M |
Arrive Winder 6 :49
Leave Winder, 7:05
No. 24 P. M
Arrive Winder, 2:25|
Leave Winder, 2:35
No. 26 (Sunday Only.) A. M
Arrive Winder, 7:19
Leave Winder, 7:20
No. 28— P-_i
Arrive Winder, 2:50
Leave Winder, 2:51
LIVER BUTTONS FROM
HOT SPRINGS, ARK.
Balky Liver and Upsat St—latfct Quickly
Pat ■ Piw— C—**—.
When the beat physicians in thb
world’s greatest health resort don't
bother to write
pr e actiptions,
bat just say “Get
• box of Hot
Springs Liver
Buttons for your
bowels and liv
er, M then all who
suffer ought to
know enough to
out out Calomel,
and get a bo* *o-day. They suroly
pat your liver and bowels ia regular
working order— 23 cent*.
For Sale by
Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
Winder, Ga.
HOT
SPBINGS
LIVER
BUTTONS
' i tiLxrri CTlJlo Un r u
I THE STATE BOARD
Screen Your Houses, and Cover Up
Filthy Places Where the Flies
Breed and Feed.
Atlanta, Ga. —The house-fly will
eventually become as extinct as the
mastodon and diuosaurus, if people
will only wake up to the realisation
of what a horribly dangerous and
filthy thing the fly is, declares the
Georgia State Board of Health.
Despite its tiny size, the common
fly is a monster infinitely more deadly
than any of the extinct beasts of pre
historic times. The house-fly is death's
advance agent. There are about 12
varieties of tlies known in Georgia,
but they are all alike in the respect
that they carry disease.
The most common fly of all is
the ordinary house-fly, called the
musca domestica by scientists —and
by various other names by the bald
headed man. This fly, familiar to eve
rybody, comprises about 98 per cent
of the flies found in garbage cans,
dining rooms, stables, kitchens and
so on. The remaining two per cent,
of flies in Georgia is principally made
up of the blue-bottle fly, sometimes
called the blow fly or meat fly. But
they are all disease breeders alike.
The fly has the most filthy habits of
any living creature. He doesn't care
where he gets his meals or what he
eats. He had just as soon eat the
bread and vegetables and meat on
your plate, and he had equally as soon
have some nauseating and unspeaka
ble kind of filth —which is just where
the trouble lies. If the fly would stick
to either kind of diet, he would not
be so dangerous. But the trouble is
a fly will make part of his meal on
some abominable refuse and a minute
afterwards, unless you keep him from
it, will fly in through your window and
make his dessert on your jam or rice
pudding, or on the baby’s milk bottle.
He will wipe his dirty feet on it and
leave the disease germs he brought
from filth.
You can see a rattlesnake or a lion,
but unfortunately you can’t see the
deadly germs that the fly has smeared
on your food. You will go ahead and
eat it, germs, filth and all, and by so
doing you take your life in your hands.
The health germs in your body may
kill the disease germs and they may
not. If they don’t, illness or death is
your portion.
Not Theories, But Facts.
In the hot summer, when flies are
most plentiful, the average person’s
constitution is more or less run down
and offers less resistance to disease
germs. If the public could just be
made to realize that these are not
theories and mere words, says the
State Board of Health, but that they
are actual facts, and that one tty light
ing on your food is a deadly abomina
tion, such a sentiment would be arous
ed as to eventually exterminate the
fly and to save untold mysery and ill
ness and death in human beings.
For a hen to lay two hundred eggs
during the course of three hundred
and sixty-five days is considered pret
ty good, but for a fly to lay one hun
dred egsg during the course of one
day is nothing unusual. In fact, it is
stated by the United States govern
ment expert that a fly lays on the aver
age of one hundred and twenty eggs
at a time, and that each female fly
lays four such batches. This expert
also states that these eggs hatch out
into magots and become full grown
flies in ten days and begin to lay eggs
themselves and raise up families.
Flies won’t sit on their eggs to
hatch them; they are too busy carry
ing disease around to waste time that
way. And, besides, in times past they
have always found that human beings
I were willing to look after these lit
| tie details for them by leaving horse
manure around, by letting garbage
cans stay open, and by leaving other
filth and refuse uncovered. So all
: the time the fly loses is in laying the
eggs in such places. The heat of the
sun, or the heat generated in the man
ure pile, will do the rest.
In times to come, however, and that
not very far off, the Board predicts
that the fly is going to find that hu
man beings have gotten wise to his
murderous ways and have all screened
their houses against him and have
built sanitary privies and have screen
ed the manure piles and learned to
keep garbage cans, slop barrels and
i other refuse containers covered or
screened.
Methods of Killing Him.
In the meantime, the State Board of
Health earnestly calls on the indi
vidual people of Georgia and on the
health officials of towns and cities to
do their share of this important work.
Every time a fly lights on your food,
remember where he may have come
from.
The State Board of Health gives the
following three suggestions as prac
tical and serviceable in killing flies:_
Mexico is a fine Gentry to
stay out of..
Winder Citizens Cannot Doubt It
Doan s Kidney Pills were used.
They brought benefit.
The story was td and to Winder
residents.
Time has strengthened the evi
dence.
Has proven the lasting.
The testimony is from tins lo
cality.
The proof convicting.
Mrs. Glennie Harlow, 243 8.
Jackson St., Athens, G a ., says:
“Doan's Kidney Pills cured our
littt.e girl of various kidney coin
plain’s and J| will he grateful t<
them always. The cure they
made has been permanent, for
tlie chiwd lias been in tile best of
health ever since. Im my public
statement, I gave before, I told
how my daughter had suffered
terribly from kidney disease, how
it came on her when sfie was twe
years of age, running down her
system and making her unable
to walk. The child lay helpless
for months and nothing the
doctors cod’d do, seemed to ben
efit her. When I was advised to
try Doan’s Kidney Pills, 1 did
so and the results of their use
were marvelous. Our girl im
proved quickly and she became
strong and healthy. I have tak
en thik remedy myself and have
had prompt relief from kidney
weakness. ”
For sale by all dealers. Price
30 cents. Foster-Milburn Cos., Buf
falo, New York, sole agentfor
the United States.
Remember 'the name —Doan’s—-
and take no other .
Suffered Eczema Fifty Years—
Is Now Well. ;
Seems a long time t,?> endure
the awflil burning, itching smart
ing, skin disease known as “tet
ter” —another name for Eczema
Seems good to rea’ize, also, that
Dr. Hobson’s Eczema Ointment
has proven a perfect cure.
Mrs. D. L. Kenney writes:—
“Ijeannot sufficiently express my
thanks to you for your Dr. Hob
son’s Eczema Ointment. It has
cured rny tetter, which haf
troubled me for over fifty years.*
A 1 druggist, or by mail, so c.
PREIFFER CHEMICAL CO.
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa.
Look out for lice —they kill
your poultry profits. Conkey '/§
Lice Powder for dusting hens
and in nest; Conkey’s Head Lice
Ointment for little chicks and
Coukey’s Lice Liquid for spray
ing houses and roost, these are
the real profit makers. P'or sale
at Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
STOP IN ATLANTA
AT HOTEL EMPIRE
Oposite Union Depot, on Pryor
St. Renovated and refurnished
thruout. Reservations made on
application. Hot and cold water,
private baths, electric* lights and
elevator.
First class accommodations at
extremely moderate rates. Euro
pean plan 75c up.
JOHN L. EDMONSON
Proprietor.
FlyToison.—Dissolve one drachm of
bichromate of potash in two ounces of
water; add sugar or honey. Place in
a saucer where children cannot get to
It, as it is slightly poisonous. The
flies drink it and quickly die.
Another effective fly poison is made
by placing a teaspoonful of formalin
in a saucer of water, to which milk
or sugar or honey has been added.
This should also be placed out of
reach of children, as it is likewise
somewhat poisonous.
To Make Fly Paper.—Boil two
pounds of ordinary rosin in a pint of
castor oil and apply with a brush to
the paper or to any surface desired
to be used to catch flies. This makes
an excellent and effective fly paper.
Clips Financial Wings of Wall
Street—Currency Bill to
Pass at Once
f
Washington ,D. C., August 11,
1013. Heretofore when the mon
ey become tight owing to the
great demand at crop-moving
time, the Secretary of the Treas
ury would make large deposits :'Jn
the great Wall Street hanks to
relieve the stringency. Whether
O” not such money was used for
crop-moving is not known. Wall
street always uses money for her
own enrichment. President Wil
son has announced through hip
Secretary of Treasury McAdoo
that $30,000,000 are now ready
to be deposited in the banks
of the South and the West for
crop-moving purposes. This
policy shows the difference be
tween President Wilson and bio
predecessors who always favored
Wall street while President Wil
son goes direct to the relief of
the people and the farmers with
out consulting Wall direct. This
policy spells the doom of the fi
nancial domination of Wall St.
More than ten millions have been
called for by the bankers of the
South and West .
The President has at last
brought congress to realize that
the public and tbe business men
of the country demand immedi
ate reform in our currency laws,
as outlined in the administration
bill reported by chairman Carter
Glass of tlie House Banking and
Currency committee. Wall St.
is bitterly opposed to this curren
cy bill which while taking the
financial control of tlie country
out of Wall St., will make it im
possible for any combination of
bankers to bring on a panic in
the future, and in fact a finan
cial panic will be impossible.
Although Congrss has been in
Session months, yet so far noth
ing had been enacted, and the
only members of Congress who
have done anything at all are
those who happen to he on the
committees which have onsid
eration of the tariff hill and the
currency bill. And while l con-
gress has been loafing the entire
summer through they have been
urging that a tariff bill and a
currency bill were too much to
pass in one special session. How
ever, every senator and repres
tative have been “hearing from
home.” and they have learned
that the people are demanding
the passage of the Wilson tariff
hill and the Wilson currency bill
not only at this session but as
quickly as those two mear&res
can be put through. )
A fight will be made towards
amending the bill so that ware
houqa receipts for corn and wheat
and cotton and tobacco are to be
accepted as security for loans
from the government re. c ffrve
banks. It Isn’t expected that this
amendment will prevail as
the President does not want the
bill to be too full of radical, de
partures from our present fi
nancial system but it is very
likely that in a short while af
ter the inauguration of the new
currency system that such amend
ment will be made. Heretofore,
the Treasury Department has
been a “branch office” for Wall
street and it is only right that it
should at last be run partly in
ih e interest of the farmers by
allowing them to obtain loans
|on their crops for the farmer*
are the foundation of our nation
al wealth and prosperity. ’
One ungrateful man does an
injury to a 1 who stand in need.
Publius Syrius. !