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LIFE INSURANCE
FOR LIVE STOCK
Merchants insure the goods in their
stores. "Manufacturers insure tlje ma
chinery in their plants as well as their
factory buildings.
Your horses and cows are a part,
of your stock in trdae —a part of the
machinery of your business. On-them
you depend for at least a portion of
your income. There is as much reason
for insuring your live stock against
death by accident or disuse as there is
for insuring your buildings against loss
by fire.
You insure your buildings against,
lire because they may burn and it
would dost you money to replace them.
There is even a greater liability that
a tesjjm of your best work horses may
be ' fatally injured in an accident, or
that an epidemic may break out among
your dairy cattle. Such a misfortune
would mean the loss of considerable
money, if your animals were not in
sured. If, however, you have taken
the precaution to insure your live stock
as you have your buildings and your
crops, the insurance company, and not
you, must stand the loss.
Insure Your Live Stock
as You do Your Barns
“Hartford" Live Stock Insurance 1
makes it possible for you to secure
the same protection upon your live
stock th&t, you have upon your build
ings and crops. “Hartford” Live Stock
Policies protect ypu from loss by death
of your animals from any cause what
soever —disease, accidental injury, hie,
tornado, or lightning.
Don’t Try to “Carry
Your Own Insurance”
Sometimes a man will tell us that he
prefers to “carry his own insurance.”
His idea is that, since an insurance
company is obviously in the business
for profit, he might as well save that
profit for himself by “carrying his own
insurance.”
In reality there is no such thing as
“carrying your own insurance. You
may do without, protection; you may
take your own chances; but in so do
ing you simply have no insurance at
all. 1
Imagine for a moment that you are
a small insurance company, and that
you have the opportunity to carry the
risk on one large dairy herd for the
full amount of your capital. A single
thought would remind you that if a
serious epidemic were to break out in
y.his herd the loss would cripple your
company. A second thought would
convince you that there would be much
less danger of losing your capital if
you were to divide among ten, twenty,
or fifty herds in different parts of
the Country.
if is the wide distribution of its risks
that is one of the reasons why the
insurance company can carry your risk
more safely than you can take your
own chances.
“Hartford” Live Stock
Insurance is Reliable
“Hartford’ Live Stock Insurance is
backed by the Hartford Fire Insurance
Company, of Hartford, Connecticut,
and its associate companies, the Hart
ford Accident and Indemnity Company,
of Hartford, Connecticut, and the Hart
ford Live Stock Insurance Company
of New York. The “Hartford” organ
ization has a history of unblemished
honor extending over more than a cen
tury. In case of loss, a “Hartford”
policy is “as good as a gold bond.”
Ask your banker.
F. W. BONDURANT
& COMPANY
INSURANCE
Winder, Ga.
WE ARE BACK IN BUSINESS
After a couple of years we are back in business at the same store
room on Candler street. We make a specialty of all kinds of Country
Produce and will pay the highest cash prices for butter, chickens and
eggs—in fact for any kind of farm produce. Let us supply your demands
for fancy and heavy groceries of all kinds. Feedstuff's a specialty.
All goods sold at a close margin of profit. Your patronage solicited
and your trade will be appreciated.
J. B. LAY & SON
PHONE 43
CANDLER STREET. WINDER, GEORGIA.
WHY PREACH TO EMPTY
PEWS, ASKS 1)R. REISNER
How can ministers of the gospel con
tent themselves with preaching to emp
ty pews? Pews do not need to be con
verted—such a question is asked by
I)r. Christian F. Reisner, president of
the Church Advertising Department of
the Associated Advertising Clubs of
the World.
“1 have never seen a church adver
tise without, building up a good atten
dance,” he said, “and considering that
fact in connection with the fact that
it does not pay to preach to empty
pews, one would wonder that more
churches are not employing paid ad
vertising space.”
In speaking of the church advertis
ing conference which will be held in
connection with the world convention
of advertising, at, New Orleans, Sept.
21 to 25, l)r. Iteisner predicted an un-.
usual interest, because he said the or
iginal objection to the use of advertis
ing by the church —that it tended to
rob the church of its dignity —had fall
en, especiallyeduce the Government has
employed advertising so widely and
with such marked success, to help win
the war.
“The church must sell itself by ad
vertising.” said the minister. “It must
meet the competition of Sunday golf
and automobiliug. If we accept the
statement made recently to the effect
that 50 million people do not go to
church we may then consider every
other person a possible customer.”
POISONING STARTED
TROUBLE SHE SAYS
Mrs. Dabney Was Almost In Despair
Over Her Long Suffering—De
clares Tan lac Saved Her Life.
“My health was so miserable that I
was almost in despair until some of
my friends got me to take Tanlac and
I honestly believe it has saved my
life," said Mrs. Blanche Dabney, 2901
Bookliout street, Fort Worth, Texas,
some time ago.
“About four years ago.” she contin
ued, “I had ptomaine poisoning, and
that was the beginning of my trouble.
Everything I ate would form gas that
pressed up against my heart and would
almost smother me at times. I had
severe cramping spells at times that
got so bad 1 could hardly stand them.
I was so nervous and restless that I
couldn’t sleep at night and would be
so fagged out and restless that when
morning came I could hardly get up.
I became so weak I had to give up
my housework.
“I tried all kinds of preparations,
but nothing did me any good until I
started taking Tanlac. I began to feel
better from the start and my appetite
improved so that I can now eat any
thing that I want. My sufferings are
all over now, I can sleep like a baby,
and get up in the morning feeling full
of life and energy and able to do all
my housework. Tanlac has done # so
much for me that I am glad to recom
mend it to others.”
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.
A Traveling Man’s Experience
You may learn something from the
following by W. H. Ireland, a travel
ing salesman of Louisville, Ky. “In the
summer of 1888 I had a severe attack
of cholera morbus. I gave the hotel
porter fifty cents and told him to buy
me a bottle of (’hamberlain’s Colic
and Diarrhoea Remedy and to take
no. substitute. I took a double dose of
it. according to the directions and Went
to sleep. At five o’clock the next
morning I was called by my order and
took a train for my next stopping
place, a well man.”
•
One reason for the outcry against
flatterers is that there are so few
good ones. Flattery is one of the nic
est arts in this life.
THE WINDER NEWS, WINDER, GA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1919.
WASHINGTON
WEEKLY CHAT
Will there be a recurrence of the in
fluenza epidemic this coming fall and
winter, like that which is still so
fresh in the minds of the country?
The Public Health Bureau is inclined
to the belief that as soon as cold and
wintry weather arrives that the “flu"
will return with it. Although exper
iments have been going on for months
in an endeavor to find a specific to
combat the malady, the Bureau an
nounces now that little or no headway
has been made and the the funds in
hand for investigating have been ex
hausted. Congress has been asked to
come to the rescue, and in all proba
bility it will do so promptly. An ap
propriation of $1,500,000 has been ask
ed in a bill introduced in the House;
a similar bill has also been introduced
in the Senate. Further research will
proceed immediately the money is
available, as the bills state that it is
the belief of the medical profession
that the second and third years of the
disease will show frightful after effects
unless specific remedies can be found.
The appalling loss of 500,000 lives,five
times our loss in the war, is cited as
the urgent need that the work of tin*
Public Health Bureau be continuous
ly maintained.
President Wilson is an early riser
these Simmer days. He must needs be
in order to attend to all the business
that comes before him, also to secure
a few hours of daylight recreation.
Since recovering from his recent, ill
ness he has been devoting considerable
time to playing golf, his favorite di
version. The start for the golf links
at the Country Club, across the Potom
ac river in the Virginia hills, is often
made before 8 o'clock in the morning,
long ahead of the time that many oth
er government officials have had their
breakfast. Since his return from
France the President’s automobile does
not attract so much attention when
he travels the-city streets or country
roads. He has dispensed with the se
cret service men who rode alongside of
his car on motorcycles. There were
usually four of them, and the noise
from their machines annoyed the Pres
ident, as well as made his car conspic
uous from all other cars. His sole
protection now are the secret service
men who occupy a large touring au
tomobile which follows directly behind
the limousine of the President.
Washington is fast becoming a city
of pedestrians, the revenues of tDo
street railway companies attesting to
the fact, and the crowded sidewalks,
morning and evening, making the
truth more evident. The pocketbook
of the public tort transportation from
point to point in the city is being touch
ed as never before. Not, so long ago
one could purchase six street car tick
ets for 25 cents. Then the fare was
made straight 5 cents cash. Still the
railway kicked and were allowed to
charge 2 cents for each transfer. And
now t,he cost of a ride is going up fur
ther —a 7-cent cash fare and 2 cents for
a transfer, 9 cents ill all. All that will
figure up $28.17 in year for the per
son going to and from home to office,
so there you have the reason for many
folks using “shanks’ mare.”
More than five thousand dollars has
been raised within a few days by pop
ular subscription In the Capital City,
for the families of the policemen, who
were killed during the race riots. The
sum is being increased daily. This is
being done as a testimonial to the
bravery of the men who endeavored to
protect the public and because their
families are in actual need of the
necessities of life.
There will be a considerable im
provement in the work of government
departments in Washington when the
retirement bill for aged and infirm
clerks becomes a law in the near fu
ture. Hundreds of clerks, now physi
cally incapable of performing clerical
duties, yet who hobble back and forth
from homes to offices every day, or
who employ public vehicles to trans
port them there, their actual presence
at the office being necessary for them
to draw their monthly pay, will be re
tired on about three-fourths pay, and
their places will be taken by younger
clerks. Many of these faithful ser
vants of Uncle Sam have been in his
employ for more than lift*’ years.
i
The Great Remedy
The merits of Chamberlain’s Colic
and Diarrhoea Remedy are well known
and appreciated, but there is occasion
ally a man who had no acquaintance
with them and should read the fol
lowing by F. H. Dear, a hotel man at
Dupuyer, Mont. “Four years ago I
used Chamberlain’s Colic and Diar
rhoea Remedy with such wonderful
results that I have since recommended
it to my friends.”
For to travel hopefully is a better
thing than to arrive, and the true suc
cess is t.o the labor. —Robert Louis Ste
venson.
ll ‘ ' -illllllllli “ Ppipe if you’re hankering for a hand
out for what ails your smokeappetite!
For, with Prince Albert, you’ve got anew listen on the pipe question
that cuts y° u '°ose from old stung tongue and dry throat worries!
' / Made by our exclusive patented process, Prince Albert is scot free
KB from bite and parch and hands you about the biggest lot of smokefun
that ever was scheduled in your direction!
||j| \ fj Prince Albert is a pippin of a pipe-pal; rolled into a cigarette it
beats the band! Get the slant that P. A. is simply everything any
'1111? ASKFKP man ever longed for in tobacco! You never will be willing to
£ figure up the sport you’ve slipped-on once you get that Prince
IP Albert quality flavor and quality satisfaction into your smokesystem!
fsili Jfp You’ll talk kind words every time you get on the firing line!
Toppy red bag a, tidy red tins, handsome pound and half-pound tin hami •
.' **' ‘ dors and that classy, practical pound crystal glass humidor with
: sponge moistener top that keeps the tobacco in such perfect condition •
) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. G,
GIRLS WANTED
4 ♦
One hundred girls wanted to make Overalls. Highest wages paid.
Steady work. Apply
SUPT. BELL OVERALL CO, Winder, Ga.
Money to Loan on Farm Lands at
6 Per Cent Interest
I make farm loans for five years time in amounts from $500.00 to SIOO,-
000. I have an office on the Third Floor of the Winder National Bank
Building and am in my Winder oiliee on Fridays of each week.
S. G. BROWN, Atty., Lawrenceville, Ga.
J. 11. HOUSE F. N. HOUSE
FEAR SERIOUS COAL SHORTAGE
There is a serious coal shortage anticipated for next Winter and
the Fuel Administration is sounding the note of warning. The buy
“NOW” advice is based on information received from the geological
survey with regard to general coal conditions. BUT—We can supply
you with BLACK BEAUTY AND MONTEVALLO COAL, the best
on the market at summer rates if you will place your order NOW.
PEOPLES FUEL CO. .
7/io a//- ffoar round so/f drink
For business men,
men of sports-- <>olf, bowlingtennis,
shoot! mf, riding. For every body, every
where, the year round, Bov© is hole
refreshment for wholesome thirst
an invigorating soli drink. Ideal tor
the athlete or the man in physical or
mental training— ~ sood to and
<£ain on. Healthful and appetizing.
ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST LOUIS
*
2-1
:h.>>ub- Henson Eros. & Fulbright, '
Wslmk-, Distributors WINDER, GA.