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EVERYBODY SEES A
CHANGE IN FATHER.
Farmer Suffered for Over Twenty
Years and Paid Out Many
Thousands.
“My father has suffered from
chronic stomach trouble for over 20
years and has paid out thousands ol
dollars on medicines and doctors,’
said G. W. Slayton, a well-known
Cobb county farmer, wlho live® near
Smyrna, a short distance out of At
lanta.
“We tried nearly everything trying
to cure him, and he went off to the
springs, thinking maybe the watei
would help him, but it juist looked
like nothing would reach liis trouble.
Then he tried dieting, and lived on
liquid food until he almost starved) —
but even that failed to db any good,
and he just kept going from bad to
worse.
“I don’t guess there ever was a
case as stubborn as his, and if there
ever was a confirmed dyspeptic he
was one of them, and I guess he
would have been one yet if it hadn’t
been for this Tanlac.
“The first we heard of this med
icine was when my father saw an
advertisement in the papers from
parties he knew in Tennessee, who
were friends of his, and he knew
what they said about it was the
truth—so he got it right away and
and began taking it.
“Well, sir, it acted just like magic
—and everybody notices the change
in father snow^—why, he is just like
a different man, and sits down to
the table and eats like a farm hand.
Only yesterday he ate pork and
turnips for liis dinner, and ate so
much we were actually afraid he was
overdoing the thing, but he laughed
and said nothing hurt him now, and
that he was hungry and expected, to
eat and make up for lost time.
“Now, when a medicine will do
things like that, I think people ought
to know about it, and I want to say
right now that I would not give one
bottle of Tanlac for all the other
medicines and health resorts in the
conutry put together.” Sold exclu
sively in Winder by G. W. Be La
Perriere and in Bethlehem by Les
lie & Hendrix. Advt.
First Baptist Church. |
There is a beautiful story in the
Book of Kings of a poor widow in
Zarephath, whose oil and mend was
about to give out and who gave first
to the Lord’s prophet and at last
had more than she needed for her
self. God’s child must not put his
claims first. Many churches feel
they must have elegant buildings*,
elaborate furnishings, rich belicose
and splendid pipe organs but the
fact is Christianity should be charac
terized by p'a'n living, high think
ing and lapge giving.
\"Ve need to cultivate the grace of
giving for it is more blessed to giv'fj
than to receive. It helps the giver
and receiver. Some of us give like
the farmer’s cow, said he, ‘‘She gives
nothing voluntarily, but if a strong
man caught her into a corner where
she can neither hook nor kick she
will give eleven quarts.” God is
a good collector. Illustration, Eu
rope today.
Sunday at 11.30. “Make Me First.
7.30. “The Grace of Giving.”
Come out and worship with us.
W. H. Faust, Pastor.
FARM LOANS AND INVESTMENTS
I negotiate loans on Barrow county
farm lands; interest is 6 per cent
to 7 per cent, and is payable annu
ally. No delay in getting the mon
ey if the titles to your Lands are
good. Make your application any
time of the year and the interest and
principal both will not be due until
the fall of the year.
I can place money for individuals
or estates in amounte from SIIOO.OO
upwards in loans secured by first
lien, on improved farm lands in Gwin
nett, Jackson, Barrow or Walton
counties and paying 7 per cent net
to the lender. All farms are inspect
ed by a good mian who knows values
and the titles to the lands are care
fully examined. In other words, youi
money is placed right here at home
on farms. I col’ect interest for in
vestors free of charge. I am in Win
der every Friday. For further in
formation, write S. G. BTown, Atty.,
Lawrenceville, Ga. 12mo.
MISS CELESTE PARISH COMING.
She Will Conduct January Teachers’
Meeting at the Court
House.
County School Superintendent W.
M. Holsenbeck has arranged) to have
Miss Celeste Parrish, one of the
state supervisors of rural education,
come to Winder on the 14th and 15tli
of January, Friday and Saturday. U
the weather will permit, Prof. Hol
senbeck expects to visit some of his
schools on Friday, taking Miss Par
rish with him. Saturday will be the
day for the regular monthly institute
of the teachers of Barrow county
for January and sdie will conduct this
meeting. By special request Miss
Parrish will deliver an address on
the intervening Friday night in one
of the churches of Winder. Her
subject will be announced later.
Miss Parrish is one of the leading
educators of the country, andf Win
•
der and Barrow county are to be con
gratulated in securing her for these
two days. She was for a long time
a member of the faculty of the State
Normal School at Athens. Two years
ago she was chosen as one of the
state school supervisors by the state
board of education. Her wide knowl
edge of school affairs and) her long
experience has made her one of the
most efficient school workers ot
Georgia. She lectures in a pleasing
and entertaining manner. Both teach
ers and parents, in town and coun
try, are especially urged to hear her
Friday evening address, aind all
others who will come. Visitors will
be welcome to the teachers’ meeting
ing on Saturday.
Down on His Back.
“About two years ago I got down
on my back,” writes Solomon Be
quette, Flat River, Mo. “I got a 50c
box of Foley Kidney Pills and they
straightened me right up. I recom
mend them to all who have kidney
trouble.” Rheumatic aches and pains
soreness and stiffness, sleep disturb
ing bladder trouble, yield quickly to
Foley Kidney Pills. Sold everywhere
Advt,
TOP DRESSING TALKS
WE want to talk with you a little once in a
while about Top Dressing. These talks will
IXU. ± appear in successive issues of this journal, and
we hope that they will arouse your interest and
perhaps afford you some valuable information.
Putting on a fertilizer as a top dressing is quite
customary in the South, but it is by no means so
widely practised as it should be. Yet truck crops
and fall grains on all soils, and general crops on
sandy soils actually demand some quick-acting
nitrogenous fertilization in the Spring. The only
difficulty has been the lack of a nitrogenous ma
terial that was easy and economical to apply.
This want has now been supplied by ARCADIAN
Sulphate of Ammonia.
ARCADIAM Sulphate of Ammonia is the well known standard
article that has done you good service in your mixed fertilizers for
f I years past, especially kiln dried and ground to put it in splendid
I mechanicarcondition. Ammonia guaranteed. In bags of
ARCADIAN I 100 and 200 lbs. Ask your dealer.
DRIED AND orouno i
Ct/LPH4"b I FOR SALE BY AGENTS 0F
I ARMOUR FERTILIZER WORKS.
( fif I ARCADIAN
Ammonia SULPHATE of AMMONIA
The Winder News, Thursday, January 6th, 1916.
ACT QUICKLY.
Delay Has Been Dangerous in Win
der.
Do the right thing at the right
time.
Act quickly in time of danger.
In time of kidiiey danger Doan's
Kidney Pills are most effective.
Plenty of Winder evidence of their
worth.
Mrs. M. V. Fuller, Winder, says:
“I was in a bad way with wlhat the
doctor said was kidney trouble. My
back bothered me both day and night
During the day it ached constantly
over my kidneys and I could hardly
be about. My housework was a
burden and it was hard for me to
straighten after stooping. Occa
sionally dark spots blurred my sight.
The kidney secretions also caused mi
much annoyance. The doctor recom
mended Doan’s Kidney Pills and 1
began taking them. In a short time
my kidneys became normal and the
backache went away. I have had n<
trouble from my kidneys since.”
Price 50c at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan's Kidney Pills' —the same that
Mrs. Fuller had. Foster-Milburn
Cos., Props, Buffalo, N. Y.
NEW YEAR APOTHEGMS
Many sermons have more of co
caine and morphine than dynamite oi
a spiritual nature in them.
Present day churches need real
soldiers of the Cross a vast deal
more than they do newly enlisted re
cruits on dress parade.
The church gives the people what
God wants them to feed upon. The
theater gives them wihat the Devil
wants them to fatten on.
Some Winder Christians attend the
movies a vast deal oftener than they
do the stated prayermeetings l of their
church which shows that Charlie
Chaplin is uppermost in the heart
cleansed by the power of the Son of
Man.
What does Jesus think of the
church member who laughingly pays
$1.50 for a gallon of booze and
grudgingly hands over a nickle to
MEMORIAL AT GRAND CANYON.
Altar Erected by Interior Department
to the Memory of Major
Powell.
Washington, January 4. —Announce
ment is made today that the Depart
ment of the Interior lias completed,
on the rian of the Grand Canyon, in
Arizona, a memorial to Maj, John
VYesiay Powell, the intrepid pioneer
and celebrated scientist who first ex
plored the Grand Canyon. The me
morial is an altar decorated in Indiar
imagery and supporting a bronz tab
let, resting upon a pyramidal base
of rough-hewn stone. Fifteen steps
*
lead from the west up to the altar
floor, from w'hich one may gaze into
the very heart of the glowing niifle
deep canyon. It is a structure worthy
alike of the rugged, forceful person
ality of the man and of the titr.nic
chasm which it overlooks.
The spot chosen for the memorial is
Sentinel Point, a promontory south o.
the railway station, which commands
a particularly fine view of the Gran
ite Gorge and of the river, whose un
known terrors of whirlpool and cata-
ract the Powell party braved ini small
open boats. The structure, which is
built of weathered limestone from
the neighborhood, has a rectangular
base 21 by 28 feet. The altar car
ries on its east side a medallion
portrait of Maj. Powell in bronze
bas-relief by Leila l'slier and the
following inscription:
“Erected by the Congress of the
United States to Maj. John Wesley
Powell, first explorer of the Grand
Canyon, who descended the rivei
with his party in rowboats, tra
versing the gorge beneath this point
August 17, 1860, and again Septem
ber 1, 1872.”
the church treasurer.
The reason why some women weai
such short skirts is because they
have more in their heel® than their
heads.
The married woman who is never
satisfied unless she has some other
man’s arms about her in a dance is
a better social leader than spiritu
al guide.
Grateful Mothers
• Tell Experiences
Mrs. T. Neureuer, Eau Claire, Wis.,
writes’ “Foley’s Honey and Tar Com
pound cured my boy of a very sever®
attack of croup after other remedies
had failed. Our milkman cured his
children of whooping cough. I
recommend It to every one, as w®
know from our own experience that It
Is a wonderful remedy for coughs,
colds, croup, and whooping cough.”
Mrs. D. Gilkeson, Youngstown, 0.,
writes: “My little girl had a severe
cold and coughed almost continuous
ly. I tried lots of cough remedies, but
she didn't get any better. My sister
recommended Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound to me. The first dose I
gave her relieved the Inflammation
in her throat, and after using one
bottle the cough left her.’
This sterling old remedy has been
in use for years and Is just as effi
cient for adults as for children. It
gives relief for irritated and tickling
throat,• tight and sore chest, grippe
and bronchial coughs.
A NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION.
To be an optimist even amidst pes
simistic surroundings. To begin the
year with a smile and clot© it with
rejoicing. To remember each of the
365 days that there is someone
who has a little less to be grateful
for than I have, and thus encouraged
scatter sunshine along my road for
Uia benefit of the less fortunate who
j need warmth and good cheer.
To keep in a good humor in spite
of all sorts of adversities and: criti
cisms and to smile a bit over the
rough places, to render good for evil
and the oil of joy for the droppings
of pain.
To work hard; hit sledge hammer
blowis for truth. Fe loyal to my
friends; heap coal of fire upon
the head® of my enemies, by treating
them ala-GoMen-Rule and live each
day as unto God. This is worthy of
striving after in this good year of
our Lord, 1916.
Cold Weather Aches and Pains.
Many aches and pains, sore mus
cles, stiff joint® and much rheuma
tism attributed to cold weather have
their first causes in failure of the kid
neys to properly eliminate waste mat
ter from the system. Foley Kidney
Pills tone up weak and diseased kid
neys, giving prompt relief from
aches and pains. Sold everywhere.