Newspaper Page Text
W. E. YOUNG, The Shingle Man
Dealer In
Lumber, Lime, Shingles, Brick, Hardware, Cabinet
Mantels . Doors, Sash, etc. Agent for the Celebrated
Rubberette Roofing. Warehouse on Candlei St.
PROMPT ATTENTION QUICK SERVICE
SUMMER TME IS ICE TIME.
We handle Ice made by the Winder Ice and Man
ufacturing Company.
We are the exclusive retail dealers of the city.
Patronize Home Industry.
Yours to keep cool,
GRIFFETH & SEGARS.
Phones 3064.
DIRECTORY
Methodist Episcopal Church.
Rev. A. W. Quillian, Tastor. Preaching
every Sunday at 11:30 a. tn. and 8 p. m.
Sunday School 10:30 a. tn., W. H. Toole,
Superintendent. Prayer Meeting every
Wednesday evening at usual hour.
Christian Church, .
Rev. J. H. Wood Pastor. Preaching
Ist 4th and sth Sundays at 11:30 a. tn.
and Bp. 111. Sunday School 10:30 a. in.
Claud Mayne, Superintendent. Prayer
meeting every Thursday evening at usual
hour.
Baptist Church,
Rev. R. D. DeeWeese, Pastor. Preaen
every 2nd and 4th Sunday at 11:3o a. tn.
and'B p. tn.. Sunday School 10:30 a. tn.
W. L. Blassingatne, Superintendent.
Prayer every Wednesday even
ing at usual hour.
Presbyterian Church.
Services on the Ist and 3d Sundays ar
11 a. ni. and at 8:30 p. tn. Rev. Fritz
Rauschenbitrg, pastor. Sunday school
eAery Sunday at lo:30 a. m. W. H.
Quartertnan, Superintendent.
Holiness Church.
Preaching second Sunday at 11 a. m.
and 7:30 p. ni. Rev. and Mrs. Graham,
pastors. Sunday school every Sunday
at 3:30 p.m. T. J. Morgan, Superin.,
tendent. Prayer meeting every Satur
day and Sunday nights at 8 p. m t\ j
erybody invited.
Winder Lodse No. 333, F. & A. M.
Meets ever 2d Friday night over Winder j
Banking Cos. H. C. Mayne, W. M.; G.
W. Woodruff, S. W.; L. S. Radford. J.
W.; F'.. W. Bondurand, S.- D.: A. P.
Copeland, . D.; R. D. Moore, Secretary;
I. J. Hall, Tyler.
Russell No. 99, K. of P.
F'. W. Bondurant, C. C.; J. H. Turner
V. C ; B. A. Julian, Prelate; P FI Durst,
K of R and Sand M of F'; J K < allahan.
M of W; H PI Milli Kin, M A; H P Stan
ton, I G; FI C McDonald, O G
Winder Lodge No. 81, I. 0. 0. F.
S T Maughon, N S; T ECall han, V G:
N B Lord R S; R L Griffeth, F S; W J
Smith, Treas
Navajo Tribe No. 42, 1. 0. R. M.
Meets every 2nd and 4th Monday nights
R L Griffeth, Sachem; J C Pentecost
Sr Sagamore; C H Cook, Jr Sagamore
FI A Starr, G of R;
Camp Joseph E. Johnson U. C. V
Meets every 3rd Saturday evening
at 8 p. m., sun time, in City Hall.
H. J. Cox, Commander; E. M.
Moulder, Secretary.
Joseph E. Johnston Chapter.
The Joseph E. Johnston Chap
ter of the United Daughters of the
Confederacy meets every .Wednes
day after the third Sunday in each
month.
City Directory.
Mayor. J. T. Strange; Couneil
men, J. J. Wilson, J. B. Williams.
G. \V. McDonald, T. A. Robinson
At Large A. A. Camp, H. S.
Segars.
WANTED
Cue thousand pairs of sec
ond hand shoes in the next
sixty days.
F. Hofmkister,
Winder, Ga.
PROIESSIONAL CARDS
.1. F. HOLMES,
ATTORN EY-AT-I.AW,
Statham, Ga.
Criminal and Commercial Law a
S pee ialty.
SPURGEON WILLIAMS
DENTIST,
Winder - Georgia
Offices over Smith & Carithers
bank. All work done satisfac
torily,
W. H. QUARTERMAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the courts
Commercial law a specialty.
W. 1,. DkLaPERRIERE
DENTAL SURGERY.
Winder - - Georgia
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-work
done in most scientific and satis
factory way.
Offices on Broad St.
ALLEN’S ART STUDIO.
All kinds of Photographs made
by latest methods: All work done
promptly. Office on Candler St.,
Winder, Oa.
hinder Train Schedules
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Eastern Time.
Taking effect Sunday Jan. 5, OH.
Eastern Time is 88 minutes fas
ter than Sun Time.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
RAILWAY.
EASTWARD.
No. 52, - - 10:08 am
No. 82, - - 2: - r >o pm
No. 88, - - 10:35 pm
Westward.
No. 41, - - 5:20 a m
No. 88, - 3:50 pm
No. 58, - - 7:4S p m
Above schedules are shown as infor
mation, and are not guaranteed.’'
Gainesville Midland Railway
south bound
No. 11 —Lv H : pi a. m.
No. 18 —Lv. 1 :15 p. m
No. 15 —Lv. 10:35 a in: Sunday
only.
NORTH 'BOUND
j No. 12 — Vi . 12:00 m.
t No. 11 —Ai. :505 p m.
No. HV —A.. 5:23 p m; Sun.onlv.
No. 12 will run to Winder re
gardless of No. 18.
j Yard limits at Winder arc ex
tended ‘"south’’ to Seaboard Air
i Line junction-
All trains going through Winder
yard mint be under full control.
KILL™* COUGH
AND CURE THE lungs
w,th Dr. King’s
New Discovery
for CSldI* 3
AND AMLTHRO4T AND LUNG TROUBLES.
flrr tttiA VTF.ED SATISFACTORY
OB MONEY REFUNDED.
Application For Charter •
GEORGIA. Ja< kson County —To
the Superior Court of said county.
The petition of W. A. Pledger,
.1. N Yonderlieth, T. J. Wof.
ford, J. C. Will ams. A. S Wil
lingham, W; M. Fite, M F.
Whitehead, J B. Cheek and D.
W. Snow, ail of,said state ami
county, respectfully shows:
First. That they desire for them
se’ves, their associates, successors
and assigns to tie incorp trated
under the name and style of
“Statham Lumber and Furniture
Cos.”
Second. The term for which
petitioners ask to be incorporated
is twenty years, with the privilege
of renewal at the end of that
tine.
Third. The capital stock of the
corporation is to be $5,000 divid
ed into shares of SIOO 00 each.
Petitioners ask, however, the priv
ilege of increasing said capital
stock from time to time, not ex
ceeding in the aggregate $25,000.
Fourth. 40 per cent of said:
capital stock of $5,000.00 has al
ready been actually paid in.
Fifth, 'die object of the pro
posed corporation is pecuniary
gain anj profit to its stock
holders.
Petitioners propose to carry on
a Lumber, Furniture and Under-’
taking business, to run a planing]
mill, saw mil' and such machines
as may be necessary and expe
dient in the manufacture of Lum
ber, Furniture and Caskets, to
deal in all rough material and
finished products of said business;
buying and selling for cash or on
credit all the materials that’onter
into the manufacture and market
ing of said products, and all such
articles and things as may be
profitably, handled and sold in
cyfinection therewith; acting as
'general or special agents for other
persons or companies in selling or
handling and manufacturing such
products and articles similar
thereto.
To buy and sell machinery and
the necessary real estate for use
in making said articles, to make
and execute all necessary con-
tracts pertaining to said business,
and to exercise the usual powers,
and to do all usual, necessary and
proper acts which pertain to, or
may be connected with said busi
ness. To have and to use a cor
porate seal, to sue and be sued.
Sixth. The principal office and
place of business of the proposed
corporation will be in the town
of Statham, said state and eoun
tv, and petitioners desire the
right and privilege of establishing
branches of their said business at
''ther places in the discretion of
their board of directors.
Wherefore, Petitioners pray to
be made a body corporate under
the name aforesaid, entitled to
the rigrts, privileges and immu
nities and subject to the liabili
ties fixed by law.
This May 1, 1908.
W. H. Quarter man.
Attorney for Petitioners,
GEORGIA, Jackson County— l,
8. J. Nix. Clerk Superior Court of
Jackson county, said state, do
hereby certify that the foregoing
is a true and correct copy of a pe
tition for charter filed in this of
fice for the Statham Lumbar and
Furniture Company on Mav 16,
19D,s. This May Iff* 1908.
S. J. Nix,
Clerk Superior Court.
HUMAN MACHINERY.
The marvelous mechanical inventions |
of today are hut mere toys compared to j
! the human body. This is one machine j
that must Ik- given constant and intelli- j
! gent care. Once permitted to run too
| far without skillful repair, the wreck is j
| just ahead.
STUART’S BUCHU AND JUNIPER
| has repaired more human ills, relieved
tijp strain on weak parts and completely
j checked the cause than any other invigo
| rating cordial. It relieves kidney dis
: eases, catarrh of the bladder, diabetes,
dropsy, gravel, headache, dyspepsia, pain
ill the back and side, loss of appetite,
general debility, neuralgia, sleeplessness,
rheumatism and nervousness. SI l AH I S
BUCHU AND JUNIPER positively re
lieves these diseases. At all stores, Sfd.QO
per bottle. Write for free sample.
Stuart Drug Manufacturing Cos.,
Atlanta, Ga,
rod ro p.t)sp:rity.
This is th ' r >.vl w ■ all wish to
travel. T.nuv h 1 vc leva for the
past few months serious obstacles
in tin' wiy. We are all anx’ous to
see these removed.
When a rock rolls 1 >wn the hill
and lands in th* roul, sitting on
the fenc-* an 1 talking ah >u‘. it will
n ver lift tli 1 ro:k ut of tin- way
of the wapn. Th ' cis> deminds
that sen -one pull >ff his coat and
and > some lifting
The time has come for a long
lift, a strong lift and a lift all to
gether at the rocks in the road to
prosperity.
This id 1 recently culminat'd in
the organ iz it ion in St. I, mis of the
National Prosperity Association.
Affiliated associations arc to be
formal throughout th* country.
Tiic purp isos of this organization
are: ‘‘To k *ep th • dinner-pail full;
to keep the pay car g >ing; to keep
the factory busy; to keep the work
men employed, and to keep present
wages up.”
The chairman of the executive
committee of the St. Louis associa
tion is Mr. E. C. Simmons, presi
dent of the Simmons Hardware
Company, the largest hardware
house in the world.
The opinions of a man repre
senting such large business inter
ests as to the methods by which
national prosperity is to be assured
arc of exceptional interest These
arc set forth in a recent issue of the
St. Louts IJepublie under the sig
nificant title: “The Gospel of
Good Cheer.” The idea empha
sized by Mr. Simmons is that the
way to have prosperity, is to be
lieve in -prosperity, alk pros
perity and act as though we felt
prosperity. He goes on to show
why this action is reasonable —
why prosperity is natural:
“Fundamentally everything is
all right. The basis of our pros
perity comes from the soil, and the
products of the soil have never had
greater value than at present.
Kvcrything which is the basis of
prosperity is all right; all that L
necessary now is to restore confi
dence, so that the wheels of com
merce begin to move again.”
This means that prosperity be
gins with good prices for farm
crops.
One further statement of Mr.
Simmons seems to us to be partic
ularly important: “It is absolutely
essential to the welfare of this coun
try that the railroads should again
prosper, because more than one and
a half million of men arc in th>
employ of the railroads today, and
as many more arc dependent upon
their revenue from railroad invest
ments. Hence it is deemed almost
impossible that we should return to
a full measure of prosperity except
ing the railroads participate in tin
same.' ’
We believe this statement asserts
an incontestable fact. You may
not believe in this view, but you
recognize the importance of the
matter. You are disposed to lie
fair-minded.
There has been a spasm of an
tagonism to the railroads sweeping
over the country. As in every great
popular movement, there was orig-
I inally reason culminating in un
reason.
It became popular to believe that I
the interests of the railroads and of
the people were antagonistic. That
much railroad management has
been detrimental to the interests of
the public cannot be questioned. It |
is equally true that much of the j
effort to correct- these evils by leg
islative control has been excessive
and extreme.
It has been popular to think of
the railroads as owned by a clique
of Wall street speculators, whose
only object was to squeeze the last
j possible cent from the public.
1 Admitting facts which may ex
case such conception, there is an
other fact which should have equal
weight with rational people.
The railroads are not actually
owned by the few men associated
in the public mind with their
management. The roads are large
ly owned by the common people.
Their stocks represent the savings
and investments of thousands of
individuals in every section of the
whole country.
Let us show this fact in a single
state.
Stock in railroads in Georgia is
owned by about 2,500 ladies, by
nearly 1,000 estates and by nearly
every endowed charitable and edu
cational institution in the state.
Among the latter are the Daugh
ters of the Confederacy, the Baptist
State Mission Board, Emory Col
lege, State Academy for the Blind,
Female Orphan Benevolent Society,
Domestic Missionary Society, Mer
cer University, Protestant Episco
pal Orphans’ Home, Savannah
Hospital, W esleyan Female College
and both the North and South
Methodist conferences.
When the railroads of the state
earn dividends these ladies, these
widows, orphans, Confederate Vet
erans, these sick people and these
e locational institutions have their
needs supplied. When the rail
roads cease to earn dividends there
is suffering and want under many
a Georgia roof.
The railroads needed a lesson, you
say. Well, they had it; had it good
and plenty. Meanwhile many pin)
pie have not had a plenty of what
they most needed —work, food,
clothes, common necessities.
It is time for a return to ration
alism and moderation. Time to
call a halt on extremes, on radical
ism, fanaticism and alxive all on
too much law-making. Time for
the thinking majority to suppress
the blatant minority, particularly
the local demagogue.
Do you doubt the power of this
majority? Go back to the very be
ginning of the late panic. It was
caused lay the fact that more people
took money out of certain banks
than put money into them. The
majority had lost confidence. This
majority made the panic. Confience
returned to this majority, again
more money was deposited than
was withdrawn. The panic was at
an end —stopped by the majority.
We, you and I, are a part of this
majority. We are still suffering
from the effects of the panic,though
that was long ago ended. We can
remove its last vestige by acting the
confidence we claim; by doing the
things which make business; by
not doing ourselves, or allowing our
political representatives to do, the
things which destroy confidence,for
confidence paves tie* road to pros
perity. —Southern Ruralist.
Out of the Mouths ol Babes.
(Chicago News.)
“Why should a soldier never lose
his head in battle?” asked the
teacher.
’Cause he’d have nothing to
hang his hat on if he did,” an
swered small Harold,
One day last winter little Eloise.
was looking at a fall of unusually
large snowflakes. “Oh mamma!”
I she exclaimed. “Look at the
popped rain coining down.”
rattle Elmer, upon seeing his
baby sister for the first time, was
told that she had just arrived from
heaven.
“Hurry up, baby,” he said,
“and tell us all about heaven !*>
fore you forget it. ’
“Johnny,” said his mother, “you
have outgrown your shoes.”
“What I’d like to hear you say,
mamma,” replied Johnny, “is
that l have outgrown your slipper.”
...
The love of money may lie the
! root of all evil, but money itself ie
'good— as far as it goes.