Newspaper Page Text
3"HE WHITE TERROR. A MOVIE
• WITH PUNCH AND PURPOSE. ,
r-Reel Picture Produced in Co- j
Operation with National Tubercu
losis Association.
How the “movies” may tell a dra
matic story in an effective way and
yet carry vital lessons in the preven
tion of disease and the protection
ofPftealth is well illustrated in anew
four-reel picture to be issued next
week, entitled “The White Terror.”
The film has been produced by the
Universal Film Company in coopera
tion with The National Assocaton for
the Study and Preventon of Tubercu
losis. j
The picture described certain con
ditions in Everytown, where Boyd
with his political henchman, Duncan,
own and control all of the industrial,
political, and social avenues of life.
All Boyd cares for, except for his
beautiful daughter, Eleanor, is money
He pays his employes starvation
yages; he forces them to live in ram
shackle tenements full of dark, ill
smelling rooms; he makes them work
under filthy, unsanitary conditions in
hazily lighted and ventilated shops;
he, grinds up the little children in his
and, above all, he manufactur
ersl and sells to his employes and
others, a fake cure for consumption,
Sac-Ozone, and a cure-all for every
thing else, Multikurol.
When Cole, the editor of The Clar
ion, the only newspaper in the town,
dares to publish an article partially
disclosing conditions in Everytown
.and Boyd’s control, Duncan quickly
silences the paper with the threat to
take away its advertising. But not
without result was the publication of
the first article. Matthew Brand,
an idle, rich young man, who is des
perately in love with Eleanor Boyd,
has been spurred on by her to do
something worth while for the city.
H;£ sees conditions himself, and real
ized thr g Cole has not told half
vf
enough. it is for the pur
pose of tmhting the father of the
*girl he lo<fs, Brand buys The Clarion
and begins new attacks on Boyd and
his~*methods.
So vigorous are the new attacks
that Boyd orders Duncan to silence
The Clarion at any cost, and after
many vain attempts, Duncan resolves
to dynamite the plant and kill Brand
antP-Cole.
Meanwhile Eleanor has contracted
a cold which the doctor pronounces
tuberculosis on the very night . when
Duncan plans to blow up The Clarion
office. The shock of this calamity;
the doctor’s denunciation of Boyd
and his methods of selling fake cures
the premature explosion at The Clar
ion, causing the death of Duncan in
stead of Brand or Cole —all of these
things in one night coming to Boyd
unnerve him, and after a troublesome
series of dreams, he resolves to be
£ better ms|i and to make amends for
the wrong fie has done. The result
was that a year later Everytown
could show greatly, improved work
ing conditions in all of Boyd’s facto
ries; a series of new model homes
for workingmen; a tuberculosis san
itorium; an open air school; visiting
nurses, and other adequate protec
tion /or the public health.
The picture will be shown in thea
ters thnoughout the United States and
will be released simultaneously on
June IS in thirty-eight different cit
r
If You
f are troubled with heartburn, gases and
>' ah distressed feeling after eating take a
D £ p b ? e f.
| before and after each meal and-you will
1 obtain prompt relief, bold only by us, Hoc
Dr. J. T. Wages Drug Cos.
Took Him at His Word.
Frederick Md. —Rev. Geo. White-
Jde, preaching a sermon on the sub
frct “Take Unto Thyself a Wife,”
n by H. C. Rockwell
Nellie Barger, who taking
e preacher at his word, arose from
eir places in the congregation and
arched down the aisle to the pul
t, where the young man requested
1e minister to marry them. After
conversation the cere
>ny performed. The sermon
is never 1 finished, for the affair
is turned into a reception.
Temperance Notes.
(By Mrs. Harry Segars.)
Big Gathering of Prohibitionists
Fully five thousand Georgia pro
hibitionist are expected to go to
Atlanta June 22, the day before the
legislature meets, for the big get-to
geher convention of the anti-liquor
forces in this state.
“Come with your war paint on,
your belts buckled tight, and your
jaws set hard,” is the message sent
out by Dr. G. W. Fichelberger of
the Georgia Commonwealth, who as
leader of the prohibition forces pro
poses that some real fighting shall
be done this summer.
The convention will be an all-day
affair at the Baptist Tabernacle, be
ginning at 10 a. in. and ending at 10
p. m. In the aftrenoon at 5.30 o’clocl
there will be a big parade with ban
ners.
Among those prominent on the pro
gram will be Congresman E. Y. Webb
of North Carolina; Mrs. T. E. Pat
terson, Dr. L. G. Hardman, of Com
merce.
Liquor Problem the Biggest
“The high cost of living, the tariff
and the other issues are insignificant
compared with the liquor problem,”
says Mr. J. Denny O'Neil, an offi
cial of Allegheny county, Pa. “The
salons would have been knocked out
long ago except for the false idea
that so many men have, that they
must be tolerated for the revenue
they produce. Last year it cost Al
legheny county $728,839.37 to support
institutions made necessary by the
whisky business. The county’s share
of the license money was $89,098.04.
If we will give the liquor business
credit with the above amount, it
leaves a balance of $639,741.93 in fa
vor of knocking out the business on
a strict money basis.”
Poilce Records
“In wet Spokane the police records
show last year, out of 4414 arrests,
3643 were due to liquor. The clerk
of the police court states at least sev
ty-five per cent of vagrancy cases are
due to liquor. Dr. D. F. Sells, county
physician, in a letter states: ‘Of the
180 cases at the county poor farm sev
enty-five per cent are the result of
alcoholism and at the city jail 90
per cent. Of the 400 commitments at
the Washington penitentiary last year
10 were abstainers and 390 were sa
loon patrons. Ten wet counties sent
317 prisoners, five dry counties sent
none.
“Because the sins of the saloon
are undebated facts is why the cham
ber of commerce, in all its publicity
of Spokane, deliberately, studiously,
advisedly omits mention of its saloon,*
breweries, cafes and like places. The
chamber of commerce is ashamed of
the saloons and has not a word in
their behalf.”
Who Pays the Revenue.
That state and national prohibition
are the only methods of successfully
combating the liquor traffic was the
conclusion reached liy Micheal .1. Fan
ning in a masterly address in Salt
Bake City, Utah, delivered at a meet
ing under the auspices of the local
W. T. C. U. He said in part:
“I am told that the liquor traffic,
like other industries, is governed by
the law of supply and demand. The
only thing wrong about that state
ment is that it 'sn’t true. When we
have the evils of saloons to confront
we are confronted with the truth
from which you cannot get away,
that it is the supply that creates the
demand. People do not try to secure
what they know they cannot have.
Cut off the supply of liquor and the
question of the abolition of demand
for it will be only a matter of a few
years. The supply of liquor feeds
and fosters the demand for it. Stop
furnishing the supply and you have
solved the problem.
“But we’re told that we must have
the liquor traffic for the revenue it
yields, for the vast sum that flows
annually into the coffers of the na
tion through infernal-internal revenue
Who pays this revenue. Not the li
quor dealer. The average liquor deal
er in the United States last year
took in ?8,700 and paid out an aver
age of $.720, the difference being the
liquor dealer’s toll, which in the last
analysis is paid by starving wives,
besotted husbands, helpless orphans
*
betrayed maidenhood, blasted careers,
wreck, ruin, despair and death.”
The Winder News, Thursday Afternoon, June 10th, 1915.
THROW OUT THE LINE
Give Them Help and Many Winder
People Will be Happier.
“Trow Out the Life Line.”
Weak kidneys need help.
They're often overworked —they
don’t get the poison filtered out of
the blood.
Will you help them.
Doan’s Kidney Fills have brought
benefit to thousands of kidney suf
ferers.
Winder testimony proves their
worth.
O. L. Fuller, Broad St., Winder,
says: “Both myself and others of
our family have used Doan’s Kidney
Pills for kidney trouble and have al
ways had the very best of results. I
can recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills
highly.”
Price 50c at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy—
get Doan's Kidney Pills —the same
that Mr. Fuller recommends. Foster-
Milburn Cos., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
Carter Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Homar Starn visit
ed Mr. and Mrs. Henry Queen Sun
day afternoon.
Mr. Tom Peppers visited relatives
in Atlanta Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Adcock, of
Bethlehem visited Mr. and Mrs. J.
11. Austin and family Sunday.
Messrs. John Moore, Grady Smith
Wayman Parker and Jim Richerson
of Campton attended Sunday school
at this place Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Crow visited
Mr. and Mrs. John Mobley of near
Carl Sunday and Sunday night.
Rev. John H. Wood will preach at
this place June the 23rd at 8 P. M.
on the line of Christian Education.
Mr. and .Airs. John Booth visited
Mrs. Jim Day of Chapel Sunday.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, its they cannot roach
the dis<as<d portion of the < nr. There io
only on.' way to cure deafn< ss, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of tin mu
cous lining- of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling
sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is
entirely closed. Deafness is the result, and
unless the inflammation can be taken out
and this tube r> stored to its normal condi
tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine
casts out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condition
of the mucous surfaces
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that
cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure.
Send for circulars, frpe.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 7?c
Take Hail's Family Fills for constipation.
A Foretaste of Heaven.
A country vicar, writing in the No
voge Vremya, says of the changed
conditions in* Russia under prohibi
tion:
“The old women in the villages can
hardly believe their own eyes and
ears, so changed are their men-folk.
Not a hard word, not a row, but ev
erywhere peace, kindness and indus
try. War is said to be hell, but this
is like a foretaste of heaven.”
PIANOS
Buy your Pianos direct from the
Factory. HLILLET & DAVIS PI
ANOS. Highest Awards in Com
petition.
S. M. St. JOHN, Factory Agent.
High Grade Watches
Diamonds and Jew
elry, Lowest prices
just around the
corner from
Whitehall
Street.
E. A. Morgan
JEWELER
10 E. Hunter St., Atlanta, Ga.
Wanted.
At once; Twenty-five
young ladies; experienc
ed help preferred.
The Bell Overall
Company.
Winder, Ga.
THE BULL TRACTOR
ggggggggggggggg
The Self-Sterring One-Man
#
Agricultural Tractor
Now making a record in Walton county. W. P.
Briscoe, Monroe, Ga., is threshing wheat with a
large size grain separator. The Bull draws thesep
arator over the red hills and runs the thresher to
thresh grain at the rate of two to five bushels per
minute.
Capt. J. E. Godfrey, Madison, Ga., plowing with
a Sanders 3-disc plow. The Bull is doing the work
of ten [lO j mules.
Chairman Geo. O. Griffeth, of Danielsville, Ga.,
is working the roads with a Bull Tractor.
These are only a few of the many purchasers
of Bull Tractors.
The factory is selling and shipping out on an
average of one every 18 minutes. We have sold
from Winder and Atlanta SIX CcIT Loads 111
Six Weeks. (A Car Load a week dur
ing the summer months). The Bull
Tractor has merit. It is designed right for
plowing. The one large bull wheel runs in the
bottom of the furrow on the hard clay where it
can get TRACTION or FOOT-HOLD. The lugs on
the wheel subsoils or spades the bottom of the fur
row which is equal to almost two mules plowing.
The motor is double cylinder and has more uni
form power and starts a heavy load and carries it
at a uniform speed while the ONE-LEAD WHEEL
RUNS IN THE FURROW and STEERS the MA*
CHINE SO ONE MAN CAN OPERATE BOTH THE
TRACTOR AND PLOW.
Every car load is sold out by the time it reach
es Atlanta. There are many reasons for it: when
you see the Bull at work you can see that there is
MERIT TO THE BULL TRACTOR.
The price is $585.00 with freight added from
factory. Come and see us or write to us for free
booklet.
WOODRUFF MACHINERY
MANUFATURING CO.
State Agents for Georgia and Florida
Winder, Ga.
GOOD NEWS
TO WHEAT GROWERS.
Biggest and Best Roller Mill in this Section
of Georgia Will be Ready to Grind Your
Flour in a Short Time.
We are overhauling and renovating our big flour
mill and are spending hundreds of dollars getting
Ready to Make Fine Flour
and in a short time will have the mill in better
condition than it has ever been in for good service
Let Us Grind Your 1915 Wheat Crop. Ex
perienced Millers with Roller Process.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Winder Oil Mills Company
Winder, Georgia.