Newspaper Page Text
A farm with three tenant houses,
within one-half mile of the corporate
limits of Winder. 112 acres good land
on two public roads, pasture, wood and
water. A great bargain at $40.00 per
acre. Terms can be arranged for part.
Seize this opportunity and secure this
place NOW.
FOR HOMES AND FARMS SEE
Quarterman-T oole-Ross
Real Estate Agents
WINDER, GEORGIA
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
S. T. ROSS
Winder, Ga.
Physician and Surgeon.
woms 303-304, Winder Banking Cos.
Building.
W. L. MATHEWS, M. D.
Office: Winder Banking Cos. Building.
Rooms 101-2-3.
Calls answered promptly day or night
Office Phone 10
Residence Phone 213.
JNO. T. WAGES
Practicing Physician
Office in Rainey Building.
Phones:
Office 62. Residence 98
G. A. JOHNS
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Office: Over Carithers Bank. Prac
tice in all the Courts.
K. P. Carpenter R. H. Kimball
CARPENTER & KIMBALL
Attorneys.
Office: Winder Bank Bldg.
W. H. QUARTERMAN
Attorney at Law
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the Courts. Con*
mercial Law A Specialty.
G. D. ROSS
Attorney at Law
WINDER, GA.
Office: Court House, Second Floor.
W. L. Do La PERRIERE
—DENTAL SURGERY
WINDER, GA.
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-Work don*
in most scientific and Sat
isfactory way.
■——— ~t
S. M. St. JOHN
JEWELER.
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Cut Glass
and Silverware.
Repair Work Done Promptly.
Broad St., WINDER, GA.
SPURGEON WILLIAMS
-DENTIST
WINDER, GEORGIA.
Office: Over Carithers Bank. All
Work Done Satifsactorily.
PHONES —Office 81. Residence 234
c. H. APPLEBY
Public Stenographer
Phone 162.
WINDER, GEORGIA.
FOR SALE
Notice of Administrator’s Sale.
Agreeable to an order of the comrt
of Ordinary of Barrow county, Ga.,
passed at the August Term, 1915, will
be sold at auction at the court house
door of said county, on the first
Tuesday in September, next, within
the legal hours of sale, the following
property, to-wit:
That tract of land known as the
home place of the late J. C. Patrick,
deceased, situated in Chandler’s dis
trict, Barrow r county, Ga., on the Win
der and McClesky’s bridge public
road, at Oak Grove, containing nine
ty-five and 88-100 acres more or less,
adjoining the Mulberry river and
lands of Suddath, Hodges, Lay and j
others. This tract is strong red land j
and is well improved with three dwel
lings, good barns and other out bulid
ings, wood and fine pasture; 4-horse
farm.
|
I
Second tract known as the Clayton
Craft place situated in formerly San
ta Pee district of Jackson county, Ga
on the west side of the Oconee river,
adjoining lands of Emma Dodson, Ge
Thurmond, R. S. D. Lanier and oth
ers. Said tract is divided and will
be sold, in four lots as follows: Lot
No. one consists of 138 and 3-4 acres
and has two 3-room dwellings; barn
out buildings, pasture, wood and a 5-
horse farm in cultivation.
Lot. No. two contains 72 and 1-2
acres, has one 3-room dwelling, good
barn, pasture, wood saw" timber and
a two-horse farm open in cultivation.
Ix>t No. three contains 93 acres,
has a 4-room dw'elling, barn, pasture
wood, saw' timber and a 3-horse farm
in cultivation.
Lot No. 4 contains 114 and 1-4
acres, has one 3-room dwelling, wood,
and a 2 and 1-2 horse farm in cultiva
tion.
All of this tract Ss strong product
ive land and in a good state ofculti
vation and the buildings are in good
condition.
surveyed by C. O. Pittman,
county survey of Jackson county;
plats of same may be seen at offtce
W. H. Quarterman, Winder, Ga.
All of said property sold as the
property of Jas. O. Patrick, late of
said county, deceased. Terms one
fourth cash, balance payable Januarj
1, 1916. Sold for the purpose of pay
ing the debts of said estate and for
distribution among the heirs.
This sth day of August, 9115.
Lyke L. Patrick, Administrator,
Estate of Jas. C. Patrick.
The Winder News, Thursday Afternoon, August 26, 1915.
Pecans.
Choice Budded Paper
Shell Pecan Trees,
50c Each.
Order Direct.
Catalog Free.
Empire Pecan
Company
Parrot, Ga.
Texaco Axle Gease
Try it, and you will agree with
them that a few ounces of Texaco
Axle Grease saves pounds of horse
flesh.
Texaco Axle Grease stays where it
is put. It prevents cutting and un
due friction on journals.
Texaco Axle Grevse will not stiffen
It easee the running gear and keeps
it easy.
Throw off that drag of use lea fric
tion.
Texaco Ancle Grease will do it for
you.
Another Texaco Product that the
horse owner can use with profit i?
Texac oHar ness Oil
It lengthens the life and improves
the appearance of the harness.
It preserves the natural oils of the
laether, prevents cracking and de
terioration by sweat, moisture and
strain. Sold by
J. E Callahan,
i“THE HARNESS MAN”
Winder, Ga.
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure Rheumatism, Neu
ralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic
Sprains, Bruises, Cute, Bums, Old
Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ec
zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne,
used internally or externally. 25c
THE GOSTLY COW TICK.
There is no need to support the
costly tick. One-third of the tick-in
felted districts of the South have
proved that it ii> easy to set rid of
the tick forever and to build up a
great and profitable cattle tndus*try.
All that is needed is for the People,
the county, the State, and the United
States Department of Agriculture to
get together and dip catle.
Dipping cattle in an arsenical bath
will kill the ticks and enable the
animal to give more, milk or to put
on flesh and bring a better price
in the meat markets.
Less than 50 centfc a head cover*
the entire cost of erecting dipping
vats in the counties, supplying arseni
oal baths for all cattle and paying
the dipping inspectors. The indiv
idual owner's share of this 1 50 cents,
will be very small. The immediate
profit to owners, it is conservatively
estimated, will be from $5.50 to
$9.50 a head.
When the tick has been dipped out,
the farmers can combine to import
pure-bred bulls, which, with native
cows will produce better stock and
increase the yield of beef or milk
and butter fat.
With the tick out. sound farm man
agement, that use idle pasture lands
and waste products, keep up fertility,
and permits all-year profitable se of
labor, becomes possible. Forty a crew
with cattle free from ticks will pro
duce as much as 60 acres where cat
tle free from tick will produce as
much as 60 acres where cattle are
kept out by the tick.
The arsenical bath puts into the
pockets of the farmers the heavy
cost of the tick’s incessant meal. It
P costs the South $50,000,000 a year
to board the tick.
Every county, as soon as it has
dipped its cattle, is in ilne to devel
op dairying and meat raising and tak
its share of the $50,000,000 increased
revenue possible in the tick-free
South.
You can free your county from this
pest in one year. Do it this year.
A letter or postal card addressed to
the Secretary fo Agriculture, Wash
ington, D. C., will promptly bring
full information.
The Clerk Guaranteed It.
“A customer came into my store the
other day and said to one of my
clerks, ‘have you anything that will
cure diarrhoea,’ ar.d my clerk went
and got a bottle of Chamberlain’s
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy
and said to him, “if this does not
cure you, I will not charge a cent
for it.’ So he took it home and came
back in a day or two and said he
was cured,’’ writes J. H. Perry & Cos.
Salt Creek, Va. Obtainable every
where. advt.
DO TRIFLES ANNOY.
What a blessed thing it is that we
can forget. Today’s troubles look
large, but a w< .. li :: e ... / will be
forgotten and !.: ' and cut of sight.
Says one writer: “If you would kee
a book and dady put down the thing!
that worry you, and see what be
comes of them. It would benefit you.
You allow' a thing to annoy you, just
as you allow a fly to settle on you
and plague you; and you lose your
temper and you justify yourself by
being thrown off your balance by
causes which you do not trace out
But if you could 'see what ft wasi tbit
threw you off your balance before
breakfast, and put it down in a lit
| tie book, and follow it up and follow
it out, and ascertain what becomes
of it, you would see what a fool you
were in the matter.” The art of for
getting is a blessed art, but the art
of overlooking is quite as important.
And if we should take time to write
down the origin, progrens and out
come of a few of our troubles, it
would make us so shamed of the fuss
we make over them, that we should
be glad to drop such things and burv
them at once in eternal forgetfulness
Life La too short to be worn out in
petty worries, frettings, hatreds an'
vexations.
Another Story.
Financier —That is not th© same
tale that you told me a few days ago.
Beggar—No, sir. But you didn’t
beLieve that one.
COMBAT POSSIBLE HARD TIMES
BY KEEPING MONEY AT HOME.
Atlanta, August 24th.—As one of
the strongest weapon with which
to combat possible hard itmes in the
south, there is a spontaneous reviv
al in this section of the “keep mon
ey at home’’ policy, which does not
merely mean to keep money in Ceor
gia, but means that if you live in
Murray county, or Lowndes, or in
Douglas, or Carnesville. the thing to
do is to buy right there without ev
iln. going out of your home town or
your home county.
People have begun to ak them
selves more generally in the south
than they used to what good on earth
a Georgia dollor does the home folks
if it is sent away to Kokomo, or
Kalamazoo or Oshkosh. Spent in
the home town, or the nearest large
town thereto if you simply can’t get
it at home, it at leasit remains with
in the state and keeps working for
state development.
It is a matter of uncontrovertible
fact that a good deal of money now
being sent out of Georgia could be
kept here with satisfaction to all con
cerned by the ecersbe of a little
thought. Of course, unfortunately
for Georgia and the south, thousands
of people are still patronizing mall
order houses in Chicago and sending
cash wiith each order while asking
credit for articled of immediate need
which they buy from the home mer
chant, but the light it* beginning to
dawn.
For a Sprained Ankle.
If you will get a bottle of Chambei
lain’s Liniment and observe the di
rections given therewith faithfully you
will recover in much less time than
is usually required. Obtainable ev
erywhere. Advt.
FOR THEIR NEIGHBORS.
The hardest housekeeping in the
world is the housekeeping that peo
ple do for their neighbors. Half the
troubles we have are caused bj) wor
rying about what people think. What
difference does it make what they
think, anyway. No one can live his
own life and two or three other peo
ple’s lives besides. What’s the use
of setting up housekeeping on the
roof or on the outside walls for the
benefit of the neighbors. You would
rightly be judged insane if you sug
gested anything of the kind, and that
; practically what half the people
do. They can’t do thksi because the
neighbors would talk, and they can’t
do that because the neighbors won
der if they could not afford to do
something else. They may not say
’ in so many word/s, but they mean
it, and it Is simply a great vacum
in some of our natures where moral
courage ought to be. Half th© sting
of poverty or small means is gone
when one keeps house for himself
and not for his neighbors.
The Land of By-And-By
There Lh a Land, as I’ve heard, tell
where nothing’s ever done; the peo
ple who therein do dwell, no work
have y©t begun. “Tomorrow” j a the
watchword there, and “Pretty soon’’
the cry-the name of this unpleasant
land—the Lind of By-and-by .
Procrastination there is king; he
rules with a high hand, but makos
no laws or anything to benefit the
land The lessons they are never
learned-no use to question why; the
chords are left unfinished in the Land
of By-and-By.
And if you put things off and say
you’ll do them pretty soon, and shirk
your tasks from day to day, perhaps
some afternoon, they’ll take you off
to this bad land-no friend wHI heed
your cry—and there is no Tomorrow
in the Land of By-and-By.
PAINT NOW.
If you ought to have painted last
year and waited how much do you
think you made.
You’ll buy an extra gallon this year
There’s $-7 or $6 for paint and labor.
You think you won’t, but you will;
you can’t stretch paint.
It is always so; the longer you
wait, the more paint and wages. Be
sides what paint is for. What its. it
for DEJVOEr.