Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1920
TAKES TANLAC ON
HIS HUNTING TRIP
i
Eugene Bates, Well-Known Florida
Guide Gives Tanlae Credit
“Well, I’m leaving shortly for a flve
months’ fishing and hunting trip tnru
the 'Everglades, and as Tanlae has
helpsl me so much already I’m going
to carry a supply along with me” said
Eugene Bates Atlantic Hotel, Tampa,
Fla., as he made a purchase of the
medicine of the Economical Drug Cos.,
the other day.
Mr. Bates is well known in Florida,
having for years been in local waters
acting as pilot and taking out tourist
parties on hunting and fishing trips.
“,I had been in badly run-down con
dition for more than a year,” said Mr.
Bates, “and Tanlae has simply made
anew man of me. Before taking the
medicine my appetite was very poor
and my digestion so bad that what lit
tle, I did eat seemed to give me no
strength.
“My stomach seemed sour and upset
all the time and I was seldom free
of gas and heartburn. My nerves got
in such a bad condition 1 was very
easily excited, couldn’t sleep well and
always felt tired and worn out.
“Well, I took several different med
icines without getting relief, but Tan
lac has -fixed me up to where- I am just
fine I eat anything I want and as
much as I want witnout suffering with
my stomach, sleep like a log nights and
never feel tired and worn out. I like
to tell what Tanlae has dime for me,
and above all I like to keep some on
hand all the time.”
Tanlae is sold in every town by one
good druggist.
IMPORTANCE OF REGISTERING
YOUR BABY’S BIRTH
“Why should I have my baby’s birth
registered?” recently asked a motner
of the lied Cross Public Health Nurse
who was giving the mother and the
baby care during the first weeks after
its birth. The baby looked like a very
-little piece of humanity but it loomed
large on the horizon of the mother, and
.she could not imagine how any one at
any time in the future could possibly
fail to remember all the important
things about her baby’s birth; to her
the day and hour, the place, the year,
even the moment when it saw the light
seemed too important ever to be for
gottn. But this fond mother, like hun
dreds of others, failed to remember that
this importance was largely in her own
mind; that every baby is a potential
citizen of the country, the state, the
county and the town in whicli it is
born and it may become most impor
tant to that baby itself when it shall
become a man to have the facts con
nected with its birth recorded on the
statute books of its native place
The nurse who was asked the ques
tion quoted about the need for regis
tering that particular baby’s birth told
this mother a few facts that all moth
ers and fathers, too, should remember.
Birth registraton is not yet a law in
Georgia; it is in many other states and
should be in all states. But individual
parents should always insist on their
baby’s birth being registered for the
following reasons:
1 To prove the child is old enough
to enter school.
2. To prove it is old enough to vote.
8. To prove it is old enough to serve
in the army or navy.
4. To prove its legal right to marry ;
some countries require a birth certiti
cate before a marriage license is issued
5. To prove its age, its relationships
etc., if it should inherit property.
0. To prove it is old enough to work
and to protect it from workng too
young.
7. To establish its citizenship if it
, liould ever at any time be questioned
These reasons are strong enough and
have been shown to be important
enough to make birth registration a
law much desired. If we know how
many babies are born we may know,
too, how many die for death registra
tion is also important, and we may
then take steps to save many babies
who may die of preventable diseases
or from neglect or ignorance of par
ents
The' Red Cross nurse urges birth
registration just as she doe any other
community meaure which it has b’een
proven to be for the best good of
the people and which can only result
in developement and improvement.
♦
SOME COW.
“Want ad.” in The Wichita Falls
Times: For Sale —a full-blooded cow,
giving milk, three tons of hay, a lot of
chickens and several stoves.
PLEATING SKIRTS
Try the Hemstitching Shop. 313 Hol
man building, Athens, Ga. Buttons
made to order. 11-4-43
FACES IN THE FIRE
By W. H. Faust.
Years ago a mutual friend intro
duced to me a man whose life has
proven a great blessing to me. From the
depth of my heart goes out to the in
troducer continual gratitude.
A good friend said to me not long
since, “Do you like Boreham?” I didn’t
know, l>ecuuse I hadn’t met this great
modern essayist who is the peer of
Emerson, but now I know him from
having read his books, “The Luggae of
Life,” “Faces in the Fire,” “The Utter
most Star” and “The Bunch of Ever
lastings.”
The Australan essayist and preacher
is popular now throughout the world.
Not to know him is to have a treat
ahead that is joyous in the extreme.
When you read his essay on “Straw
berries and Cream” or “The Jackass
and Kangaroo,” or “at Pins and But
ton Hooks” you get anew perspective
of life of the real kind Here is a sam
ple from “The Angel and the Iron
Grate”.
“The iron gate represents the return
to reality. After our most radiant
spiritual experiences we come abruptly
to the humdrum and the commonplace.
It was Mary’s Sunday night out. Mary
you must know is a housemaid in a big
boarding establishment, and her life is
by no means an easy one. But Mary is
also a member of the church. One Sun
day she was in her favorite seat. Per
haps it was that she was specially
hungry for some up-lifting word, or per
haps it was that the message was pe
culiarly suitable to her condition; but
be that as it may the service that night
seemed to carry poor Mary to the very
gate of heaven. The communion ser
vice hat followed completed her ec
stasy, ad Mary seemed scarcely to touch
the pavement with her feet as she hur
ried home. She fell asleep crooning to
herself he hymn with which the service
closed:
“ ‘O Love, that will not let me go
I rest my weary soul in Thee;
I give Thee back the life I owe,
That in Thine ocean depths its flow
May richer fuller be.’
“She knew nothing more until in the
chilly dark of the morning, the alarm
clock screamed at her to jump up, clean
the cold front steps, dust the great si
lent rooms, and light the tire. ‘And she
came to the iron gate.’ There come
KNOW
ME
I HAVE OPENED A FIRST-CLASS MEAT MARKET IN
REAR OF J. C. RAY & CO.’S STORE FOR THE PURPOSE
OF FURNISHING THE WINDER TRADE WITH THE
BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS AT PRACTICALLY BE
FORE WAR-TIME PRICES. ..BELOW WE MAKE COM
PARISON:
Price List Old Price New Price
Western Steak 40c 30c
Roast Beef 30c 25c
Stew meat 20c 15c
Pork Chops 40c 30c
Pork Sausage 40c 35c
Mixed S'Uisage 35c 30c
Belona Sausage 30c 25c
Frankforts Sausage 30c 25c
Breakfast Bacon, pound box 70c 00c
Sliced Bacon 05c 50c
Cheese 45c 35c
FISH AND OYSTERS AT GREAT SAVING.
The Place—J. C. Ray & Co.s Store
PHONE 177
The Name
J. W. Carrington
The Old Reliable Market Man
points in life at which poetry merges
into the severest prose; romance yields
to rality; the miracle of the open prison
is succeeded by the menace of the iron
gate.
“The iron gate opened to them." Of
course it did. Who could suppose that
the prison doors had been opened by
angel’s hands, only that the prisoner
might be caught like a rat in a trap
outside? “The iron gate opened to them
of its own accord.” It did look like it.
“During my twelve years at Mosgiel,
I often went through the great woolen
factory. The machines were marvelous
—simply marvelous. As you watched
the needles slip in and out, or stood
beside the loom and saw the pattern
grow, it really looked as though the
things were bewitched. They s emod
to be doing it ull ‘of their own accord.’
But one day the manager snid, ‘Would
you like to see the power-house?’ And
he took me away from the busy looms
to another building altogether and there
I saw tin* huge engines that drove ev
erything. Neither looms nor needles
really work ‘of their own accord.’ Nor
do iron gates. A few minutes after the
gates bad opened, and the angel had
vanished, Peter ‘came to the house of
Mary, the mother of Mark, where many
were gathered together praying.’ And
then Peter understood by what power
th iron gates had opened, just as I un
derstood, when I saw the engine room
how the great looms worked. The pray
er meeting may not be artistic, or tin*
matter of that I saw very little in the
power house of the factory that appeal
ed to the sense of the esthetic within
me; but when the angels visit prisons
and iron gates swing open of their own
accord, there must be a driving force at
work somewhere. And Peter only dis
covered it when he suddenly broke in
upon a midnight prayer meeting.”
REMOVAL NOTICE
I have moved my Barber Shop into
the room in the rear of the Ordinary s
office. I will be glad to serve my old
customers and all new ones who will
favor me with a cal.
GEORGE ANDERSON
The Barber.
THE WINDER NEWB
Stranges’
Big Reduction sale Still
Satisfying Customers
People know that Strange has always made
every effort to build and help the farmer and
the public generally. The knife has gone
deep into our entire stock, and from one
third to one-half has been sliced off the for
mer price. Be wise and get in on these:
15 c
Best Tupelo Cheviots At *
2V
Best Navy Sterling Cheviots, 50c kind
121-2
Best 36-inch Sea Island, now A “ A **
17 1-2
Best 36-inch AAA Sheeting, now A " A
12 1-2
Best Apron Ginghams, now A
19°
Best Standard Outings, Lights find Darks, : v
25 c
Best 40c Drilling- lights —• "
OVERALLS
Best Bellgrade Overalls, Men’s 31 to 44 o\v $1.50
Best Bellgrade Overalls, juniors 26 to 30 sl*2s
Best Bellgrade Overalls, boys 4 to 16 SI.OO
~ OES
Best Shoes, were $6.00; now $3.50
— ■■ — r — ——■ —.■— - ——■
4
Men’s and Boys Clothing Now One-Third
and One-Forth Off.
An Edison pleases the family.
Your wife would like this for a Christmas
present.
A Ford would please your Boy or Girl.
Come in and look, if you need any*
thing to wear you can buy it for
less at Stranges.
J. T. STRANGE CO.
8UB8CIMPTION: $1.50 A YEAR