Newspaper Page Text
YOUR WINTER CLOTHES
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We have received this week, two more large shipments of Clothing and Ladies’ Ready
to-W ear goods from Ben H. Schiff Cos., and T Weinbery & Sons, both of New York, with
instructions to us to dispose of them at once and send them check less our discount. We
are going to sell these goods at some price-—we don’t care how low, as the loss is the firms
who shipped us the goods for disposal and not ours. -
Hundreds of people have visited our store during the sale last week and they all had
but one remark to make, “THIS IS THE GREATEST SALE EVER HELD IN WINDER." Many people have
bought enough goods to last them all through the winter, knowing that they would have no
other opportunity soon to buy such high class merchandise at so ridiculously low prices.
We Have Had a Great Business for the Past Several Days Especially.
sl2 50 Men’s Suits at $ 9 85
18 50 Men’s Suits at 13 75
22 50 Suits at 17 45
Fifty Men’s Suits,all sizes,worth
up to sl4 50, sale price 7 50
Job, 2 00 boys suits 1 38
2 50 boys suits 1 75
4 00 boys suits 2 95
5 00 boys suits 3 45
2 00 pants, all wool filling at 1 54
3 50 pants, all wool, at 1 98
Fifty odd coats in a job, at 2 25
100 odd coats in a job, at 3 45
2 00 shoes at 1 45
Special Prices on Friday, Saturday and Monday, Nov. 14, 15, 17th.
Come in and see us at any time—Make our store your headquarters when here. I am
having extra clerks to wait on you during this sale.
&. £>. Saw\, Clotte
Broad Street - „ Winder, Georgia.
SOCIETY.
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Mrs. Olara Jon?s spent Tuesdry
in Atlanta.
Mrs. John Williams was in Atlan
ta Monday.
Mrs. Woolwine spent a few days
in Atlanta this week.
s .
Buy home-made candy at the
Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 27th
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Mr. C. 0. Niblack was in Atlan
ta Monday inspecting touring cars.
MisS Ruth Carithers is spending
this week in Waycross with friends.
Mr- Ike Whitworth, of Law
renceville, was in Winder Sunday.
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Mrs. Walter Jackson has returned
from a pleasant visft to Monroe, Ga.
Mrs. R. H- Cannon, of Conyers,
was the guest of friends here Mon*
day.
Mr. D. W. Cason, of Atlanta,
spent a few hours with friends, here
Monday.
Miss Cora Webb, of Ijoganville,
is expected soon to be the guest of
Mrs. A. A. Camp.
. Mrs. J. C. DeLaperrier<? is in At
lanta attending the Woman V Mis
sionary Union of Georgia.
M iss Lona Burson, of Atlanta, 1
was the attractive guest of Miss Ta
"v e Mathews for the week-end-. •
Rev. A. B. Ecuquaid., pruprie
tor. of the Winder Five And Ten
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•Cent Store,, filled the. pulpit at the
Methodist church Sunday-night and
-eivtrrtifid4iis>hearers with a fihe
discourse. ■* v -
Mrs. Kelley, of Monroe, is ex
pected next next week for a visit to
Mr. and Mrs. L. S- Radford.
Miss Ora Lee Camp, who has
been the attractive guest of Miss
Nellie Lou Hamby of Augusta, re
turned home Monday.
Mrs. G. L. Chastain, of Atlanta,
will be the guest of Mrs- R. O. Ross
next week while Dr. Chastain is at
tending Conference in Elberton.
Mr. Jim Burson, of near County
Line, has accepted a position with
the Maynard Shoe Company, where
he will be pleased- to greet his
friends. <' *
Rev. A. B. Reeves. Messrs. Claud
Mayne, W. 0. Perry, Mrs J. M.
Jackson, Mrs. Mary Smith and Mias
Lois Smith have returned from Ma
con. where they went to attend the
state meeting of Missionary Socie
ties of the , Christian Churches of
Georgia, in session this week in
that city.
Messrs. Evan Gregory, Tommy
Oliver and Claud Prather, of Ath
ens, were guests Sunday of Harvey
Parnell. With Mr. Parnell these
young men form a quartet that has
been pleasing big audiences in the
playhouses of Classic Athens, it is
said. It is possible this quartet
may be heard here in the near fu
ture.
Buy your candy in Winder
from the Rexail Stores. You can
get, what you want you
want it. 12 l-2e to SI.OO . per
pound. Ai*L OtfOlL Dr. J. T.-
Wages Drug 0o n and Red Offtowr
Pharmacy, tile Rexall Store*.
1 50 Ladies’ every day shoes 1 15
1 25 Ladies’ every day shoes 98c
15 Ladies’ Coat Suits at 9 75
I have received 50 Ladies’ 10 00 to
15 00 coat suits, in a job, at 7 65
10 00 Ladies’ coat suits 5 90
5 00 Ladies’ cloaks at 2 95
7 50 Ladies’ cloaks at 3 75
8 50 Fur cloaks 4 90
10 Caracul coats at 5 95
All wool Serge, 75c grade at 47c
35c grade dress goods at 19c
Heaviest Outing at 8 l-2c
56 inch Broad cloth, 75c grade 39c
Stumped.
Detroit Free Press.
Pa knows the situation down in
Mexico all right,
He could end the revolution in
that country over night;
He knows all about the tariff and
the present ills that vex,
He can settle all the problems that
oar congressmen) perplex.
But the money bill has floored him,
and he’s moping around the
flat, ' *
For he knows himself he does not
know the ins and outs of that.
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He can talk about the Balkans and
the row they are always in;
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In the recent war with Russia he
declared the Japs would win,
He knows why the cost of living
keeps on soaring to th&kv,
Why the Germans worry England,
and why radium is high.
He knows clearly what to others is
Still very vague and dim.
But the currency proposals area hit
too deep for him.
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Pa can talk on woman’s suffrage till
it’s time to go to bed;
He knows everything about it that
can sensibly be said,
He can discourse on eugenics, tell
the way to clean up vice;
Tell you just why steels and coppers
often fluctuate in price.
But he knows he can not answer,
and it makes him rage and
‘storm,
When some, ignoramus asks him,
“What is currency reform?” '
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ubcrij>tiou NQiW '
3 00 shoes in gun metal * 1 95
Good grade Calico at 4c
Good grade Checks at 4 l-2c
7 50 Ovorcoats at 4 90
10 00 Overcoats, long Cravanett 690
12 50 Overcoats at 9 85
6 00 heavy Overcoats, black or
blue at 3 90
Men’s 50c Fleeced underwear 37 l-2c
Ladies' heavy underwear 22 l-2c
Boys heavy underwear 22 l-2c
7 5o all wool dresses at 4 90
Children’s 250 Bear Skin Cloaks 175
Misses’ ss*oo Fur Cloaks 3 75
$6,000,000 MORE AWARDED
Arbitration Board Gives Employees
About Half What They Wanted.
New York. —The long-lived contro
versy between the railroads of the
east and their conductors and train
men over the latter’s demands for
more pay has ended. The employees
are granted an increase in wages av
eraging 7 per cent, and totaling $6,-
000,000 annually—about half of what
they wanted —from October 1 last ef
fective for one year. One hundred
thousand men will share In the in
crease.
Thus ends, by arbitration, under the
Newlands amendment to the Erdman
act, a controversy that threatened at
one time to tie up by strike the trans
portation faculties of all states east
of the Mississippi river and north of
the Ohio. The award of the arbitra
tion commission, filed in the Federal
district court, Is binding and final. The
two board representatives of the em
ployees filed a minority report in ad
dition and the two representatives of
the forty-one railroads a dissenting
opinion.
Lavished Money to Save Man He Shot
West Haven, Vt. —After he had shot
and fatally Injured Charles Gordon,
a hunter and trapper, William Koch,
Jr., a prosperous farmer of this place,
summoned three physicians on a spe
cial train from Whitehall, to attend
his victim and chartered a yacht to
hurry the injured man to a hospital
in a futile attempt to save his life.
The shooting followed a quarrel over
same traps Gordon had set on Koch’s
farm.
One by one the aeroplaaiata falL
Blushing is fast becoming a lost
art
' tf the meat gives out there will atm
be the free lunch.
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Jftme men, Ilf qyder t 6 vte the
verlri tuMeeMy
Two Important Farm Bills.
The culture of apples in North
Georgia and the improvement of long
staple cotton in the southern part of
the state, are the separate subjects of
important legislation pending in the
United States senate.
Two bills bearing on these subjects
were introduced a few days ago by
Senator Hoke Smith, and prediction
is that both will meet with favorable
consideration.
One measure seeks to appropriate
SIOO,OOO to enable the department of
agriculture to conduct investigations
and make experiments in the culture
of apple trees and apples in the south
ern portion of the Appalachian range,
in North Georgia, Eastern Tennessee
and Western North and South Caro
lina
The other measure seeks to appro
priate SIOO,OOO for the department of
agriculture to conduct investigations
and make experiments in the cultiva
tion of sea Island cotton, with a view
to improving the seed and staple in
Georgia, South Carolina and Florida.
The Egyptian long staple is now
competing with the American prod
ust, and the English government has
appropriated money for the purpose
of improving the strain in Egypt.
Committee to Welcome Scientists.
Plans are rapidly maturing for the
proper care of the great gathering of
scientists in Atlanta on December 29.
A meeting of the Atlanta executive
committee of the American Associa
tion for the Advancement of Science
met at the University club and named
a subcommittee who will compile a
list of names of well known Geor
gians who will act as a reception com
mittee to the 3,000 or more delegates
who will be in Atlanta for the con
vention. "This is the South’s first op
portunity to entertain a world-wide sci
entific body,” said Burton Smith, who
has been active In planning for the
convention.
Cotton Seed Me&l and Hulls.
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The Milisapß Ginnery is prepar
ed to sell you cotton seed meal
and hulls. Give me a call. Q. S.
Milhfaps. '