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rULiUCItfUfYIAn FIMO
STRONG RIGHT ARM
* ' * V/ *. .. , -
Drags Prisoner From Gar and
Holds Him For Patrol.
Chicago.—Some of Chicago's newly
appointed policewomen believe that
duty has been fully performed when
they have detected a lawbreaker and
summoned one of the male members of
the force to make the uctual arrest.
But not so with Mrs. Mary Boyd.
That militant official demonstrated
that a policewoman cun do other work
than counsel mothers of wayward girls
and trap mashers.
She backed up her police star with a
muscular right arm, yanked a man
who tried to resist arrest off a street
car and backed him up against a post
while she summoned a patrol wagon.
Mrs. Boyd was on a car at North
Clark street and West North avenue.
Toesel Wendt, a Janitor at 1545 Wells
street, was arguing with the conductor
about a transfer and nsing more or leas
vigorous language. Finally the two be
gan to fight Wendt was getting the
better of the conductor when Mrs.
Boyd, presenting her star, told him he
was under a ires t
He replied with an oath and tried to
slap her face, she told the sergeant
afterwards. Mrs. Boyd hadn’t pulled
gasping bathers out of the lake at the
Fourteenth street beach all summer
without developing a muscle. She rode
to the station with her prisoner and
preferred a charge of disorderly con
duct
HOG KILLS A HORSE.
Is Attacking a Mule When Subdued by
Men With Clubs.
Wilson. La.—A large hog belonging
to J. S. Smith ran amuck here and
caused great excitement by attacking
and killing a valuable horse and near
ly putting to death a mule.
The hog is two years old and is
noted for its vicious temper. It got
out of the lot where it was kept and
ran through the streets.
The horse, belonging to J. S. Single
tary, was tied in front of a store when
the hog. whose tusks are long and
sharp, attacked and lacerated it so that
it died soon after.
The vicious porker then attacked a
mule standing near, but a crowd, with
ropes and clubs, finally overpowered
the animal.
He Proposes by Wireless.
New York.—Mrs. Francis D. Stephen
son. widow of a naval architect of
Leith, arrived from Glasgow by the
Anchor line Caledonia with a sheaf of
wireless messages she received from
an old lover. Frank Mclntyre. One of
the messages was a proposal of mar
riage. and the widow, who is young
and handsome, says she will consider
it while on her way to her brother,
head of the Superior Shipbuilding com
pany of Superior. Wis.
To Prevent Biood Poisoning
pply at once the wonderful old reliable DR
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anm iri-orMMI
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Chicago. Hi. -•
For sale by
Dr. J T. Wages Drug Cos.
Winder, Ga.
I SHSSST m V
H “ ■ ~ * I v ftf
Rheumatic
Twinges
yield immediately to Sloan’s Lin
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swollen parts instantly. Reduces
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SLOANS
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Kills Pain
gives quick relief from chest and
throat affections. Have you tried
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Relief from Rhea mat mi
“My mother has used ene 600. bottle
of Sloan's Liniment, and although the
is over 83 years of a*e, she has ob
tained great relief from her rheuma
tism." — Mr*. H. E. Lind*leaf, Gilroy. CaL
Good for Cold and Croup
"A little boy next door had croup. I
gave the mother Sloan's Liniment to
try. She gave him three drops on sugar
before going to bed, and he got up with
out the croup in the morning.”— Mr. IT.
H. Strange, 3,21 Elmwood Ave., Chicago, IU.
Neuralgia Gone
“Sloan’s Liniment is the best medi
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At all Dealers. Price 25c., 50c. & SI.OO
Sloan’s Instructive Booklet on
Horses sent free.
DR. CARL S. SLOAN, Inc., BOSTON, MASS.
TO POLE BY AEROPLANE.
SHackleton Will Have Sledges Drawn
by Airship.
London. —The keenest interest is felt
in the news that Sir Ernest li. Sback
leton, who already has written his
name indelibly on the antarctic roll of
fame, is about to iead another British
expedition to the south pole. The
main object of the expedition will be
to cross the antarctic continent from
sea to sea. making the south pole the
halfway house on the great journey
and thus at one stroke recover for
Britain the prestige and place in poiar
exploration that were here till four
years ago.
This will be the biggest i>olar journey
yet attempted and will open up in the
Weddell quadrant a vast unexplored
region which is still blank on the map.
It is notable that no attempt to reach
the south pole has yet been made from
Weddell sea. the point of departure
for the new expedition, all other jour
neys having been made from Boss sea,
on the other side.
The distance from sea to sea that
will be covered is roughly 1,700 stat
ute miles, of which more than one-half
will be over an entirely new route.
BOYS CLUB TEACHER.
Principal of Tennessee School Rescued
by Women.
Memphis. Teun. Five young men.
students of the Victory Consolidated
school, are under arrest on the charge
of having assaulted their teacher, Pro
fessor Willis Mills, principal of the
school, with clubs.
Professor Mills sustained a fractured
arm and other Injuries. During the en
counter Misses Blocker and Cranford,
teachers at the school, bravely came to
the assistance of Professor Mills and
defended him as best they could. The
young women hurled themselves in
front of their principal and prevented
to some extent the further use of the
clubs.
After Professor Mills had been felled
Misses Blocker and Cranford carried
him safely inside the school building,
locking the doors on the attacking par
ty. They summoned help by telephone,
and the trustees and several physicians
hastily responded. Professor Mills in
a statement declares It his belief that
a plot exisunl to murder him.
PNdJfiiuraA |
left mo with a frightful cough anil j
very weak. I had spells when I could j
har'i'y \ y or sr-oaV: for 10 to 20•
.-"intn Mi doctor could not help'
, o.A I .vi COL. Vt< ty cured L„ .
TV S- VVt jV 5 Cj
L -J LV e i' *, .1 & A*. |
; tro**? f■'t ** -Tf"-’W ! ’~
•Immediately” There May Mean Now
or Next Month.
Impatience among the .JnpauC.se Is a
thjug you will rarely observe as you
travel about through their strange and
beautiful country. if. on the other
hand, you yourself in tourjng Japan
might, upon occasion, grow somewhat
impatient, you will only become the
quiet laughing stock—behind your
back—of the little Japs themselves.
An hour, or even a day. more or less
in this oriental country of little ac
count, and matters cannot be made
to move any the quicker because of
any irritability. In fact this latter
acts as an obstacle to your progress as
well as to one’s peace of mind. If. for
example, your jinricksha coolies wish
to stop for a meal just after you have
started on a trip, you will find it ex
pedient to accept the delay philosophi
cally. "Storming” will not mend mat
ters in the least
If you might chance to be in a large
Jap town with its steamship docks
lying only a mile or two distant, you
naturally would expect to receive re
liable information as to the dates and
hours of sailing for the steamships.
You will often be told upon inquiry
at th# botel offices—and In perfectly
good faith, too—that the steamers
leave dally. Upon arriving at the
docks on schedule time, you find fre
quently that your particular steamer
leaves but once in three days, and the
vessel you sought left yesterday. Get
ting excited will not remedy the situa
tion in the least. The Jap word "ta
daima.” meaning immediately, may in
reality mean any time between now
and next month.
To all of your queries the natives
will say “shlkataganaL”—“it can’t be
helped”—which brings an end to the
matter, so far as the native Is con
cerned. Incidentally, you might us
well imitate his example. It will safe
you much waste of energy and loss of
comfort, and if you are to enjoy your
travel in Japan you will readily learn
the art of “resignation’’ to your fate,
and you oftentimes will have many
good opportunities of studying Japa
nese life in its natural pictorial set
ting. Don’t get annoyed, either, if
nearly every casual Jap acquaintance
you meet asks you a lot of personal
questions. To ask personal questions
is the Jap way of showing kindly in
terest in your welfare.—Clyde Winner
in Philadelphia North American.
GOT HER THREE WISHES.
But They Sank Her Beneath the
Waves of the Social Sea.
The late King Edward of England,
while a very gracious and genial man.
could be very severe with those who
oversteppeu the rules of etiquette, and
Frederick Townsend Martin in “Things
I Remember” recalls what happened
to an American girl who offended him
when he was Prince of Wales.
At a society bazaar the winner of n
lucky lottery ticket bad the privilege of
askiug three wishes from the Prince
of Wales, and fate favored a young
lady from the United States.
“What Is your first wish?” asked
11. R. 11
“Oh, sir; it is to have your photo
graph.”
The prince beamed. “Granted.” he
said. “And the next?”
*T would like you to bring me the
photograph in person.”
11. It. 11. hesitated, frowned and, re
covering from bis surprise, answered:
“That shall lie done. Now. what is
the last?”
Never was the truth of the saying
so apparent that “fools rush in where
angels fear to tread.” The young lady
disregarded the warning looks from
those around her. “The third wish,
sir, Is that you will present me to the
Princess of Wales."
The prince looked at her coldly.
“Granted.” he said ami walked away
without a word. The silly girl realized
that she had sinned against society,
which never forgives fools. She made
a hasty exit, and the waves of the so
cial sea closed over her forever.
Great Lovers of Water.
The Siamese are more devoted to the
water than any other nation in the
world. They are nearly always bath
ing, generally with their clothes on,
and they never go anywhere by land If
they can possibly go by water. The
streets of Bangkok are like those of
Venice, and the inhabitants say that
their idea of paradise would be a town
with canals where there were currents
in both directions, so that they might
be spared the effort of rowing.
It Wasn’t Love.
“Your former husband must still
love you.”
“Why so?”
“He tells me that be owes a great
deal to you ”
“He’s referring to the back ali
mony.”—Pittsburgh Post
Indeed He Couldn't.
“What can you do?” asked the
butcher of the applicant for a job.
“Most anything around a shop."
“Well. I'll start you at s<’, a week.
Can you dress a chickenV"
“Not on a week.”—Kansas City
Star.
against the estate of 0. S. Ityyes
or *L..L. Hayes,, they will please
jpreseut same to me for .settle
ment. Respectfully,
A. E. Biish.
WHENEVER YOU SEES
A GENERAL TOSIC - TIE GROVE’S
The Old Standard Groves Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally
Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver,
Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up
the Whole System. For Grown People and Children.
You know what you are taking when you take Grove’t Tasteless chill Tonic
as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well known
tonic properties of QUININE aud IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter
tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It Has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Weakness, general debility ar.d loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness without purging.
Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and
pnriflea the blood. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthener.
No family should be without it. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c.
Fire Insurance
A wisejmanj takes no risk —perhaps
you are wise but not aware of the fact
that we represent the BEST and
STRONGEST FIRE INSURANCE CO’S
of the world. Call in and let us
convince you that this is a fact.
CARITHERS, THOMAS & CO
WINDER, - - GEORGIA.
Insurance! Insurance!
Kilgore Sc Radford
Winder, -:- Georgia.
Have You a Liver?
IF so USE LIV-VER-LAX.
READ 101 LOWING STATEMENT (ROM PROMINENT WINDER DRUGGIST
We have recently received a large shipment of GRIGSBY S LIV
YER-LAX, the liver medicine which we recomcnd above all others.
When troubled with constipation or a disordered liver, do not t ike calo
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more universal satisfaction than any other liver medicine we ever sold.
Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos., and
RED CROSS PHARMACY.
SCI I BOTTLE
Gainesville Midland Railroad Effective Aug.
25, 1913.
South Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday.)
No. 21— A. M
Arrive Winder, 10:52
Leave Winder, 11:22
No. 28— P- M
Arrive Winder, 0:05
Leave Winder 6:20
(Sunday Only.)
No. 25 A. M.
Arrive Wi'nder, 10:50
Leave Winder, 10:51
No. 27 P- M.
Arrive Winder. 6:08
le ave Winder, 6:09
Nos. 22 and 26 connect, at W inder with Seaboard for Atlam
t.'t at B Imont for Gainesville and Athens. No. 24 with Sea
board going North and South., at Boimoift for Gainesville
and Athens. advt
of first-elasß young mules we gh
ing from 900 to 1100 pounds
Come in and see them. Our price
will interest you.
J. M. Brookshire and B:n.
'North Bound.
(Daily Except Sunday )
No. 22 A M
Arrive Winder 6:49
Leave Winder, 7:05
No. 24 P- M
Arrive Winder, 2:15
Leave Winder, 2:25
No. 26 (Sunday Only.) A. M
Arrive Winder, 7:19
Leave Winder, 7:20
No. 28— P- >
Arrive Winder, . 2:45
Leave Wijhder 2:46