Winder weekly news. (Winder, Jackson County, Ga.) 18??-1909, May 14, 1908, Image 7

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li *tlia o^uX4- t€AA "£c 4/-UK- CX/HO4jU)xJ[uuftiy(v-lW OclH E'jf' r T L o' HHHHHHHHHH That is 2rother of their good features, an important one, as hun -dreds of fires occur annually from sparks settling cn the rod. Better put them cn the roof new than v. id. you had later. They're cheap enough. Last a life-time. Never need repairs, and they turn V e appearance cf any house into a her e. Come in and see them. LEATHERS & EAVENSON, Winder, Ga. Winder Lumber Company. We build anything. Sell every thing. Does this interest you? Phone 47. That’s all. Are You in the Market for a We can fit your pocket book, please you in style and give you the best value for your money For a short time nve are offering some special bargains in Buggies. We have a complete line of Steel and Rubber Tired Buggies and Surreys, and a fine lot of Harness. We have the genuine HYDE CULTIVATORS. the best on the market. We have sold more than 300 of them. Be sure to look for the name A. B. HYDE & CO. on the beam of every one. Yon can buy the imitation at al most any old price, but you will regret it if you buy an imi tation. Come to see us when you need any kind of farm im plements — Cane Mills, Planters, Distributors, Harrows, Etc. A full line of the Best Paints, and any kind of HARDWARE Yours to please, WOODRUFF HARDWARE & MANUFACTURING GU. The Oldest, Strongest and p^st a(; iixty* We insure your Life, Health and Property. We buy and sell REAL ESTATE. We make leans and write bonds. We give Satisfaction. Ouarterman. Toole & Norman. ► ♦ • Office in FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING, WINDER, GA, TAX RECEIVERS NOTICE. THIRD ROUND. I will be at the following places on dates named for the purpose of receiving State and County Taxes fur the year 1908. Chandlers Court Ground, May IS, 9 to 10. Statham, May 18, 11 to 8 p. m. Johnson’s Academy May 19, 9 to 10 a. in- I. W. Ethridge’s, May 19, 11 to, 12 a. rn. Clarksboro, May 19, 2 to 8 p. m. Shackelford’s Store, May 19, 8 tt> 4 p. m. Center, May 20, 9 to 1.1 a. rn. Nicholson, May 20, 1 to 8 p. m. Brockton, May 20,4 to o p. m. Apple Valley, May 21, 8 t<> 9 a. m. commerce, May 21, 10 to 4. Maysville, May 22, 9 to 12 a. m. Miller’s Court Ground, May 22 4 2 to 8 p. rn. Talmo, May 28, 8 to 9 a. rn. Pendergrass, May 28, 10 to 12 a. m. Gregory’s Store, May 28, 1 to 2 p. rn. Hosehton. May 2-",, Bto and p. m. Winder, May 2d, 9 to 8 r>. rn. Jefferson, Id, 27, 28, 29, 80. The Tax Colli et-or will be with me at most important places. N. B. Loro, Tax Ilocciv'-r Jackson County. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the firm of L. W. Mathews, W. W. Edwards and E. W. Bond, tradii g under the name and style of Farm ers’ Supply Company is this day dissolved and the business will con tinue under the same name and style by the new firm composed of E. W. Bond and W. W. Edwards. The new firm will assume the lia bilities of the old firm and all notes and accounts due the old firm will be payable to the new firm at the same old stand. This April 10, 1908. All parties at interest take notice accordingly. W. W. Edwards, KlLLthe couch *hj CURE the LUNGS v - :ith Or, King's Hew Discovery FOR Ooids 3 JSk. AMP ALL THROAT IMP LUNG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY OR HONEY REFUNDED I WANTED One thousand pairs of sec ond hand shoes in the next sixty days. F. Hofmkister, Winder, Ga. Education. (By Preston blouse.) Schoolmates, will you give me a few moments of your time and read these few line? Although it may not be very much to you at first glance, but read this article and give the subject of education your serious thought. l)o you realize what you go to school for? Von go to school to get an education. An education means something that will do yi u good; that will you in future years; something which will enable you to cope with your fellow men in the avenues of Education is one of the greatest-: blessings to humanity. Just think whatakiml of a world this would have been bad it not been for edu cation. This world would have been a wilderness had it not been for the teachers of the Word of God and the seekers after education. Every boy arid girl has so • e kind of tab nt and they should im prove it. There is always room at the top, and we should take ad vantage of our talents and make the be-l of them. Now, school mate you have a talent of some kind, so do your Dst at school and put your- if in a position to im prove the t.d'i nt (bid 1 as given you. It is impossible to be pi rfeet in all things, but by hard study you can accompi -ii much. Echcol is about out, Who can look back tv r L> work arid say: "I have a- ne my best?"’ Remember your best means ail that you could have done. Th< se who have mat done their duty have hurt no one but them selves by slighting their work at school. Valued Same as Gold. B. G. Stewart, a merchat of Cedar View, Mies., says: ‘‘l tell my customers when they buy a box of Dr. King’s New Life Pills they get the worth of that much gold in weight, if afflicted with constipation, malaria or bilious ness.” Sold under guarantee at G. W. DeLaperriere’s drug store. 25c. A Card of Thanks. To our neighbors, frienos and physicians who so untiringly and patiently stood by us in the sad hour of sickness and death of our daughter, wife and mother. have always known the sur rounding country is blessed with noble hearted people, but have never appreciated them so much as now 7 . * We especially desire to thank the good ladies of the neighborhood who -howed us so many kindnesses. Rest assured you will never be for gotten, but always appreciated. J. T. Wood and Family. Religious field. A Column Devolcd to Subjects ot In terest to Church People. Foreign immigration has long been a serious problem at the North, where for many years the better class of immigrants received fiom the Teutonic and Celtic races have been nlore and more supplanted by Slavs, Huns and the people of Southern Europe; but it is only of late years that, outside the city of New Orleans, any large number of foreign* rs could be found in the South. The change is a rapid and growing one. r l he opening of the West Virginia coal fields has brought in thousands of Hungarians and Italians of the lowest class, ig- H rant alike of our language, our laws and our religion. In Tam |,>n, E’.a., side by side with our large Cuban population, has sprung up in a few months a mushro-unlike col nv of sev< n thousand Italians. In Texas, Bohemians and Hunga rians have already possessed them selves of two < ntire counties and parts of others, win re they have built up a colony alien to our speech, our institutions and our Protestant creed. Immigration agents have been sent out recently by Southern corporations —so the Daily papers stat* —to import low-priced Euro pean labor to till tic places of ne groes who have be* n found incapa ble or unreliable. These things are but the begin ning With Northern and foreign experts examining for investments the South's coal, iron, oil, marble and gold fields, with the great ex-, pansion of the Southern lumber trade and of Southern agriculture, the enormous growth of our manu factures, the large immigration of native Americans from the North and West, and the near opening of the Panama Canal, the South is at the outer edge of such an influx of new peoples, new customs, new life as we have as yet scarcely imagined. The women of our Horne Mission Society are vitally conce rned with these tilings as Americans, as moth ers, as Christians. Every new con dition presents two paths. One is of opportunity, and leads to wider* better, fuller life; the other is of neglect, and leads to anarchy, Christlcssncss and'ruin. Along cue or the other of tie se paths we must lead our share of the South. Wfi j cannot stand -till. The greatness of the danger is < qualed by the greatness of the opportunity. Each of these always i!:‘T v <r * the other. • AMONG THE WORKERS. We are in the world to Ik- used, not to be saved from use. Such a saving would Ik- dead loss. Kvery one of us is inti rested, or ought to be, in using out powi rs to the best possible advantage. There is, per haps, some danger of overwork — this is called “burning the candle at both ends.” But there is still greater danger of under-work- The man who is afraid to use himself up is in that danger. We are here to be used up; we must not forget that. To do anything worth doing costs vitality. As John R. Mott said the other day, speaking at the Young People's Missionary Conven tion in Pittsburg on “The Consecra tion Adequate to Victory”: “We are to be careful of our health, yet not too careful. 1 do not forget that while we should not burn the candle at both ends, the candle melts away if it gives out light.” The undiminished candle makes a pretty ornament where no light is needed, and that is all. It lias got to grow less when it really gets down to business. So must we. No healthy person has any right not to feel used up when bedtime comes. —Sunday School Times.