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MRS. JOINER GAINS
THIRT-FIVE POUNDS.
Engineer's Wife Says Her Health
Was Completely Broken Dav.n
“I have just finished my third bot
tle of Tanlae and have gained thirty
five pounds,” was the truly remark
able statement made by Mrs. Willie!
mina Join* r, wife of Richard Joiner,
the well-known engineer on the M.
D. & S. railroad, resided at 11 i>
Third itreet, Macon, Ga.
"Before J b< gan taking the medi
cine my health was so brdken and J
was so broken and 1 was in such a
badly run-down condition, I couldn’t
give suffich lit nourishment to my
young baby— in fact, 1 was complete
ly broken in every way.
“1 suff< r< J . in nervous indiges
tion and have - 'r. in a general run
down condition. In fact, for nearly
two years I have suffered from ner
vous prsotraticn brought on by this
troHble.
”1 tried doctors, I tried medicines,
I tried marly everything you could
think of trying to get relief, but it
just seemed like the harder I tried
to get well, the worse I would get.
Finally my condition got so I could
not eat any solid food of any kind
without suffering torture. It just
looked like I was on the verge.of a
physical de cliue, and sometimes I al
most despaired of ever getting well
and strong again.
"That’s just the condition I was
in when I began taking Tanlae, and
it wasn’t any time hardly after I be
gan taking it before I began to im
prove. My nerves got better at
once and I got so I could enjoy a
good night’s sleep. Then my appe
tite returned, and it just looked like
I couldn’t get enough to eat. I
could just eat anythink put on the
table, and everything seemed to taste
good and nourish me. And the baby
whn you just ought to see it. It is
Just thriving and is getting plenty
of nourishment. My complexion has
cleared up, too, und I have a good
color now for the first time in years.
Before I began taking this Tanlae I
was as yellow as a lemon.
"My husband thinks there is no
medicine on earth like Tanlae, and
my friends are all talking about how
I have improved. I am only too
glad to tell you what it has done
for me, ns it has been nothing short
of a blessing in my case.”
Tanlae is sold in Winder by I)r.
G. W. DeLal’crriero and in Bethle
h m by Leslie & Hendrix.
The Home-Coming .
At Nazimth of Harrow, not that
Nazareth of Gallilee from which il
seemed no good could come, there
tnet last Saturday yuite a concourse
of people. They came, some of
them, from quite a distance. The
rain kept many away. At the begin
•
ning cf the service they sang sev
eral beautiful songs; then followed
a powerful appeal In prayer by Rev.
John Yarbrough.
At the II o’clock hour Mr. Yar
brough preaclud a fine sermon on
“SI eping While Croat Opportunities
Pass Us fly.*’ After the sermon
Prof. W. M. Holsenbeck. O. S. S.,
made a splendid talk. Then came
dinner hour, which was fine and en
joyed by all present.
In the afternoon Mr. W. T. Rob
inson made quite an interesting talk
on his trip to Baltimore. Following
Jiim was Prof. J. P. Cash, cf the
Winder Public Schools. His was a
very appropriate talk and fit in well
with the sermon.
The last speaker was Mr. Paul
Wheeler who mr.de a strong appeal
to the young.
Asa whole the day was a success
and me long to be remembered by
those present.
COAL
From Mines to Consumer
llouiiu •feliiro (Ion!
Delivered in Windi r t Georgia.
June Shipment per ton
July Shipment $4.05 per ton
August Shipment $4.20 per ton
Hamilton Fuel Supply Cos.
Knoxville, Tenn.
HOME-COMING DAY FOR
WHITE PLAINS CHURCH.
There will be a home-coming day
for the White Plains Church on the
fifth Sunday in July. This will be
the beginning of a two weeks revival
meeting, and we would rejoice to see
the entire membership there on that
day. We are expecting the greatest
meeting in the history of the church,
and that means one that will be felt
far and near.
The subject for Sunday may be
found in the fifth chapter and twen
ty-seventh verse of Daniel. “Thou
art weighed in the balances and art
f: und wanting.”
Services night and day for at
least ten days.
J. T. Grizzle, Pastor.
The Sarepta and Tugalo S. S. Con
ventions.
It was the writers’ good fortune to
be able to attend two Sunday school
conventions last week, the Sarepta
at Sandy Gross, in Oglethorpe coun
ty, the Tugalo at Martin in Steph
ens county. The first is one of the
largest religious bodies which meets
in the state, with a constituency of
ten thousand comprising the counties
of Barrow, Banks, Jackson, Clarke,
Oconee, Oglethorpe, Elbert, Madison.
It was a pleasure to be with the peo
ple of a former pastoral charge and
to speak four times during the ses
sions. Dr. Gilbert Dobbs, of Com
merce, preached the convention ser
mon. He is one of the most elo
quent preachers in the state. The
occasion was inspiring and he tvas
at his best. Time and space fail me
to tell of Weaver and Davis, Burrell
and Cnuningham and the many
active workers who participated in
the program and helped to make the
meeting an epochal one in the histo
ry of the body.
The Tugalo has some 6500 mem
bers and was royally entertained by
the good people of Martin, meeting
on Thursday and Friday.
It was a privilege indeed to preach
the introductory sermon to such a
Drgs and enthusiastic crowd of Sun
day school workers. A splendid
program had been prepared and was
carried out with ability by the pas
tors and Sunday school workers of
the territory.
The crops along the road were
flourishing. Of course the bottom
corn was injured by the high water,
hut the corn is the finest I ever
saw, ami the cotton has a weed
that promises much for the fall gath
ering.
And chickens. Well, they are
pretty nearly as numerous as the
peaches and watremelons and that
means enough said.
These two great religious bodies
are doing much for the advancement
of the spiritual interests of this sec
tion. W. H. Faust.
A Fact We Overlooked.
We hear men lamenting their stu
pid.ty of other days, hut at the same
time forgetting jhe opportunity that
kn cks at their doors now. We have
all been hearing men say, “Forty
v ars ago 1 could have bought that
farm for two dollars an acre, but
now you would have to pay one
hundred dollors per acre.” Or “I
rs member when that house and lot
it for $3 00.” There is the lamenta
seld for SSOO, new you can't touch
ticn cf the business world. Where is
the opportunity? In (the very fact
t at in the next forty years there is
g ing to be the same proportionate
increase, if not greater, In the same
pr perty or other property that may
be on the market. Most of us per
suade ourselves that property is just
as high as it ever will be. Many of
us are looking for mighty hard times
next year or the year following.
Maybe this cautious movement Is
a providentially provided holding
back start and it is true that it
takes the same power to hold back
a lead that it takes to pull it.
Well it may be that we are like
j lots of folks —see many opportuniti s
I to buy simply because we have no'h
ing with which to make the pure! a
- Hat hem-st4’ it does set in that the
business world never presented
greater opportunities for the youth
of our country.—Conyers Times.
Many a severe cold ends in tuber
, eu.o-is.’
The Winder News, Thursday July 27, 1916.
VCTi 4 Compare
These Prices
k Grey Non-Skids with the plain tread
A styles of several other standard makes:
V hill \\ 3 x3O . - 10.40 4*x35 . . 31.20
CpTA 3’x3o . . 13.40 4‘x36 . . 31.55
]L \ 4x33 . . 22.00 5x37 . . 37.30
Then you will begin to understand wlw
Fisk users consider
Time to Re-tire ? The Best Tire Buy on the Market
(Buy Fisk)
THIS year Fisk Tires are making greater mileage records
than ever before. Fisk Service at more than 125 Direct
L Fisk Branches-- -dealer and tire user alike are assured of the
promptest attention and service. The Fisk Branch or
ganizatiefn is the most complete and widespread in the .
JKOQ// / \ w^°le country. '
mR(( Woodruff Hardware Company ;
THE MIDDLE MAN.
I have no apology or excuse tS
make for the farmers or the farmers
union, other than that they seem
to be able to take care of themselves
and are willing to divide a good thing
with their less fortunate neighbors.
Some believe that “The. middleman
must, a”d should be eliminated; that
the farmers organizations should cut
out the middle man and sell and buy
"direct.” Well, let us see how many
: middle men we can get rid of. First
I .we wiH cut out the corn mill, and
the cotton gin. We pay these men
a heavy toll, that should go into our
own p;ckets. Thin we will cut out
the cotton broker'and sell our cot
ton direct. We will also cut the lo
cal bank, keep our money at home
an 1 use it, and save to ourselves the
| ir.t rest t! at the bank would collect
on cur mi ney.
Tlun we would cut the supply store
land the department store, and buy
our sugar and salt and soap and '
shoes and nails and mule shoes from I
1
the factory in carload lots, and there I
by sac e the retailers’ profit. We
wiuld ship our cotton and any oth
er freight tlat we might' have over
our own rail'M.uis and tiru-> save the l
enormous freights now' paid to the
ruilrcadß of the country. We would
go to the factories and buy our do
mestic goods by the bale. Other
things we would buy in case lots, so
as to cut out the jobber and the re
tailer —middlemen.
There is as much sense to this
argument as there is in that of the
man who goes about trying to pull
down the other fellow, so that he car
build himself on the others’ broken
foundation. This is an unfortunate
spirit. The farmer needs the bank
and the blacksmith shop, as well as
the cotton gin, and the railroad. Get
closer together. Help one another.
Organize, co-operate. No man liveth
to hjmself. Visit your neighbor, see
things from his viewpoint. You may
yet learn thet the earth is the Lord’t
and the fullness thereof. The little
atom that we are allowed to make
and gather, is an exceedingly small
item of what it takes to make up the
conglomerate whole.
Farmers and business people of
Winder and Barrow county, get clos
er together. Our interests are mutual
j Our hopes and aims should be for
1 self help and to help one another.
| 1 see a wide field open for the
farmers union. I am glad of the
name, if it is a little clumsy. “The
Farmers’ Educational and Co-opera
tive Union of America.” Education
al i*isi. u s tueir i.,>pi vOiatioii o.
our needs. Let’s help. No one need
to hinder. Because I do not go up
to the lodge room and let them trot
i me around the wall on all-fours hunt
I ing bugs. (I don’t like bugs no how
' and especially the kind you kill in
the night.) Then I see myself sitting
on a high stool, a stalwart six-foot
er on each side of me. Two young
ladies at my back, armed with a pan
of water and two big spoons, then
they peur water trickling down be
h’nd my collar. No thank you, I
prefer taking bmy bath at a plunge.
I see the benefits of owning a
warehouse in Winder. Every cotton
grower ought to help, no matter
IN 1915 THE
NEW-YORK LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
PAID TO ITS POLICY-HOLDERS
$75,921,160.24
DURING THE YEAR
niwr*. ngwwamiw m i awaitwnßy ■ ■■■■—WKBKHBttKRB
Assets Jan. 1, 1916,
$822,917,849.00
Reserve Fund,
$123,564,466
Dividends paid to policy-holders in
1915 $16,672,582
nnp I TCI7 it has an honorable record of se v
DLv/WJiJLi enty-one years.
I TQF its policies protect nearly one mil-
V/1-* lion families for $2,403,800,878.
A | TCC it will pay in dividends in 1916
aJjlIi V/OL nearly 20 million dollars.
\ I TC|7 it is purely mutual; there is no
LivJOJLi capital stock; therefore no stock
holders to share the profits of the business which go to
the policy-holders, who arc the Company, who own the
Company, who alone receive the profits of the Company.
nrp A | TQI7 since organization the Company
OiLA*'■/**;&lias paid and now holds for its
policy-holders over 155 million dollars more than the
total amount received from them.
HOMER C. SMITH
LOCAL AGENT WINDER, GFORCIA-
whether he is a union man or not.
There is no public enterprise ever
started in Winder, that does not ma
terially benefit people in every dis
trict of Barrow county. Now come on
good people; everybody ru-’p.
The Winder Cotton Compress, The
Farmers Un ! on Warehouse, a whole
sale packing house for Winder, - a
central market in Winder for
versified products of Barrow county
productive farms. Then all work to
gether for a bigger town and a more
I prosperous county.
| Accept the tiuth wherever found.
On Chr'stian or on Heathen ground.
W, A. Hayes.