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Only National Bank Between Atlanta and Athens.
We want your business. We offer you every accommodation that your account and business
standing will justify. Government supervision.
THL FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WINDER.
Capital Stock S>S'OOOO.2S ■'
OFFICERS: DIRECTORS:-
W. H. TOOLE, President S. W. ARNOLD L. I. BELL (
rdt mv ( * a V[K j W. T. ROBINSON L. 0. BENTON •
‘ ; v Prests W. L. BLASINGAME J. B. WILLIAMS
J. B. WII.MAMB A. H. O’NEAL T. C. FLANIGAN
W. L. JACKSON, Cashier. s. T. ROSS W. H. TOOLE.
In Loving Reinjmbrdnce.
Eittle Herln-rt Elmo Smith de
parted this life May IP, HMM, aged
one year and one month, lie bore
his suffering three weeks and two
days. Herbert was a sweet, bright
little bstbe and was loved by every
one who knew him. It was so hard
to give him up. but God knew best.
Those who have never followed
the little casket from their own
homes know not the grief and sor
row the bereaved have to l>ear.
Jesus said: “Suffer little children
to come unto rue and forhid them
not, for of such is the kingdom of
h<*aven. ’ ’
To the father and mother 1
would say that your precious baby
lias gone from whence no traveler
ever returns, but witli God’s grace
we can go to him. No more will
he ever look into papa and mam
ma’s face like the morning sun
shine, no more will he play with
his little toes nor wear his little
shoes.
The angels are hovering around
the throne aliove anti little Herliert
is there robed in spotles white* with
outstretched anus, beseeching mam
ma and papa and loved ones to
come on. The gate through which
In* has passed to joy and peace un
speakable ill left open that we in
due time may follow. oil will
sadly miss him here, hut over on
that shore we all can nieetjagain to
part no more.
Your home is now a lonely place,
but, while this great bereavement
brings deep sadness to your hearts,
remember tint your loss is his
eternal gain.
Written bv a loving aunt
Mrs. E. Y. Bkam.ky.
It Was, It Was the Pup.
She had Urn looking around the
drug and toilet goods deparment of
one of the hig shops for some time
when a clerk approached her.
“Haven't you nothing harder
{than these ?" she asked, holding
up a rui r teething ring.
“None," responded the clerk,
“those are the hardest that come. ’
“(>h, dear," said the woman,
““he has ehew<* lup three of these
already. ’’
“Chewed them up?" exclaimed
the clerk. “I don't see how a
baby —”
“Oh, it isn’t a baby," she ex
plained. “I want it for my little
dog.” —New York Press.
The Best Pills Ever Sold.
“After doctoring 10 years tor
chronic indigestion, and spending
over two hundred dollars, nothing
has done me as much good as Dr.
King’s New Life Pills. I consider
them the best pills ever sold:
“writes B. F. Aysoue, of Ingleside,
N. 0. Bold under guarantee at
G. W. De Tat per rie re's drug store.
2- r K*.
Necessity is the mother of inven
tion, but she isn't always proud of
Not a New Discovery.
“In New York the other day sur
geons took out four ounces of a
man’s brain, plugged him up and
told him he would get well, says
the Savannah News. “And hej is
doing it. After a while the surgeons
will Ik* able to remove all ot the
brain, pour in a scramble of eggs
and turn a man out probably bet
ter than ever.”
Shortly Indore the war a little
negro, about ten years old, who be
longed to one of the largest plant
ers in this section, had his head
mashed almost Mat in the cog
wheels of the motive power of a
gin. He was laid on the ground
for dead. His skull was fractured
in many places and his brain was
oozing out upon the ground. The
planter had a son and two sons-in
law who were young physicians.
Neither had much experience, hut
they were summoned and . were
given an opportunity to practice on
the hov. They found a little life
left, attended to the broken skull,
took out seven spoosful of injured
brain, sewed up the wound,£ mak
ing a most excellent job. When
they finished they fmm I that there
was still some life in tin* hoy. They
took him home, nursed him well,
and lie is alive today.
Hi* is a negro of more than or
dinary sense, possesses a good char
acter, is a hard worker, but can
not hear. He speaks only the
words he learned prior to his in
juries. He is an adept with the
sign language, and can generally
make himself understood.
Only one of the physicians is now
alive, but he does not practice his
profession. Dublin Courier-Dis
patch.
A Grand Family Medicine.
“ It g yes me pleasure to speak
a good word for Electric Kilters."
writes Mr. Frank Oonlan of No.
tdb Houston St , New York. It 's
a grand family medioit e fordyspep
sia and liver complications, while
for lame hack and weak kidneys
it cannot he too highly recom
mended.’‘Electric Bitters regulate
the digestive functions, purify the
hlood, and impart renewed vigor
and vitality to the weak and
degilitated of both sex t *s. Sold
under guarantee at Dr. G. W.
DeLaperriere’s drug store. f>Oe.
Our Clubbing Offer
Watsons Weekly Jeffersonian and
W indot Weekly News, one year,
$1.50
Atlanta Georgian and Winder Week
ly News, one year,
$4.50
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitution
and W inder Weekly News, one year,
$1.50
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal and
Winder W eekly News, one year,
$1.25
Watson's Magazine and Winder
Weekly News, one year,
[2.00
A Real Fire Engine.
Tn all the varied list of curious causes |
of fires perhaps the most absurd was
the source of a conflagration that oc
curred in Worcestershire. England, in
1902. The Worcester Insurance com
pany decided to change its fire engine
from a horse drawn vehicle to one op
erated by a motor. The work was not
quite completed when the company re
reived warning of a fire which had :
broken out on a farm at nearby Kemp
sey village. However, the engine was ,
In sufficient running order to be sent
on forthwith under the action of the
newly installed motor.
Unhappily the engine’s funnel had
not been protected by a spark pro
tector. Asa result the trail of the |
snorting mechanism was embellished 1
with a gorgeous train of sparks. There
in lay the cause of trouble. In a lane
the fire engiue met a wagon loaded
with straw, which it promptly set on
fire. Unheeding. It hurried on its way
and in its course presently ignited
some stacks which bordered on the
road. It still pushed on relentlessly,
however, and came to a standstill only
when the water tube of the motor
burst. It was still some hundreds of
yards from Its destination, and there
It remained lngloriously helpless while
the fire at the farm burned itself out.
—Boston Post.
Ant* and the Weather.
“When you go out on a cloudy morn
ing and tind the ants busily engaged
in clearing out their nests and dragging
the sand and bits of earth to the sur
face, you may be sure that, no matter
how cloudy it is, there will be no rain
that day. and the probabilities are for
several days of good weather,” says a
gardener.
“On the other hand, if you see the
ants about the middle of a spring or
summer afternoon hurrying back to
the nest and a sentinel out trotting
round in every direction looking up
stragglers and urging them to go home
ns soon as they can get there you may
figure on a rain that afternoon or
night. When the last of the wander
el's is found the picket hurries in. and
the nest is securely sealed from
inside to keep out the water
very seldom that ants are
surprise by the approach of i sin wer,
but once in awhile when belated or too
far away to get home in time they
mount a shrub and ensconce them
selves under the thickest, broadest leaf
they can find, aud there they stay and
hold on until the rain is over. When
an ants’ nest is washed out and the
ants drown an examination will always ,
show that the disaster was due not so .
much to lack of preparation as to acei- j
dent, a stream from an unexpected di
rection flowing down between two j
bricks or a downpour that caused a
fail or the washing away of the bank
in which the nest was placed.”
Dangerous Ground.
“Bless me, Marlhy!’’ exclaimed Un
cle Cyrus, looking up from his maga
zine, says the Youth’s Companion.
“We’re getting a navy that don’t ueed
to take a back seat for any of them
Kurojieau nations. - ’ Aunt Martha con
tinued placidly measuring out the in
gredients of “mountain’’ cake and
manifestly was not unduly excited over
naval affairs.
“Just listen to this. Some fellow has
been making estimates. Any half doz
en of our big cruisers have engine
strength equal to the pulling power of
all the horses in the Russian cavalry!
The engines of one of our big battle
ships are strong enough—lf they could
be fastened somewhere—to pull the
hull United States cavalry into the
sea and’’—
“Mercy sakes.” cried Aunt Martha,
with arrested spoon, for the first time
Impressed with these interesting sta
tistics. “1 hope to goodness our cav
alry U keep away from the shore!”
* .
A Gentle Hint.
Tom —I>< you think it really does
any good to tell a girl she’s the first
woman yog ever loved?
Dick —No; for nine times out of
ten you’re not the first liar she’s
ever met. —Biltmore American.
Confederate Veterans’ Reunion
BIRMINGHAM. ALA., JUNE 911. 1908.
The usual very low rate of one-cent-a-iuile, plus 25
cents, will be granted from all stations by the
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY.
RATE FROM WINDER $4.65.
Regular double-daily service to Birmingham, in addi
tion to SPECIAL TRAIN from Chester, S. C., and all
intermediate points, also from Atlanta, Ga., on June S*
DATES OF SALE —June 6,7, 8 and morning train of June 9.
FINAL LIMITS —To leave Birmingham not later than midnight
of June 20, 190S.
STOP OVERS- U pon application stop-overs will be allowed at
Athens, Atlanta, Cedartown, Ga., and Borden
Springs, Ala.
SIDE TRIPS Very low rates will be made to round-trip tickets
to nearby points in Alabama, Georgia, Missis
sippi and Tennessee from Birmingham, tickets
to be sold June 11 and 12.
For information as to regular and special train sched-*
ules apply to
W. E. SISK, Agent, Winder, Ga.
J. J. PULLER, Asst. General Pasenger Agent. }
BETTER DO IT NOW
Too late for Fire Insurance after it burns. Too
late for Life Insurance after your health is im
paired. Make use of opportunity. See us to
day.
KILGORE & RADFORD, Insurancec Agents,
Office at The Winder Banking Company.
DOWNWARD COURSE
fast Being Realized by Winder People
A little backache at first.
Daily increasing till the back is
lame and weak.
Urinary disorders cjuickly follow.
Diabetes and finally Bright's dis
ease.
This is the downward course of
kidney ills.
Don't take this course. Hollow
the advice of a W inder citizen.
Mrs. May Findley, Factory Hill,
Winder, da., says: “1 gladly in
dorse Doan s Kidney Dills, for I
consider them a sun* cure for kid
ney trouble. When 1 first began
using them ! was grimly in the
grasp of this complaint. My kid
neys were so active that 1 often had
to got up at night. Besides this, I
had much pain in the small ot
my hack and some times would ris.
in the morning so lame and stifl
that 1 could hardlv get about.
Doan’s Kidney Dills, which 1
bought at Turner’s Pharmacy,
helped me at once and as f contin
ued their use, I sto'adily improved
until at the present time, 1 am not
bothered in the least!by my kid
neys.”
For sale bv all dealers. Price
50 cents. Foster-Mil burn Cos..
Buffalo, New York, sole agents
for the United States.
Remember the name—Doan’s
—and take no other,
PAINT
NOW
WITH THE
KURFEES PAINTS |!
(Pune Ld and Zinc Pnoducts) |j
For Inside and cut. walls, i
floors, barns, porches, |
I roofs etc, A particular
kind for each, job, and
each kind particularly
good. :: :: :: :: :: ::
SOJLD BY
Woodruff Hdw. & ,
Manufacturing Cos.
WINDER, GEORGIA, j